Wild Grind Out 3-1 Win Over Spokane, Push Home-Ice Magic Number to 5
Photo Courtesy: Russ Alman/Wenatchee Wild
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WENATCHEE, Wash. – Two goals remain just steps away for the Wenatchee Wild and the Spokane Chiefs following Friday’s Western Hockey League matchup at Town Toyota Center. The Wild knew they could make some serious progress toward their goal, home-ice advantage in the first round of the Western Conference playoffs. For the Chiefs, a magic number remains in play as well, and a celebration will have to wait at least one more day.
Wenatchee earned a 3-1 win over the Chiefs, snapping a three-game skid against Spokane – their victory, coupled with Kelowna’s loss at Everett and Vancouver’s home win over Kamloops, dropped the magic number for the Wild to clinch first-round home-ice advantage to just five points. The Chiefs remain in need of a single point to take the final Western Conference playoff spot away from Seattle, who was idle on Friday. Spokane slipped to 27-31-5-1 for the season, while the Wild climbed to 33-26-4-0 with the victory.
Their offense was far from idle, firing 19 first-period shots on the Chiefs net, and burying a chance at 3:21 when Kenta Isogai found Evan Friesen out front for a pop-up shot into the top corner of the net over Dawson Cowan’s right shoulder. Wenatchee also dominated at the faceoff dot in the opening stanza, 16-6.
The second period initially saw more of the same from Wenatchee, as Graham Sward’s shot from above the faceoff circles was redirected by Maddix McCagherty for a 2-0 lead at 2:05 of the period. Karter Prosofsky walked the puck to the right dot and zipped a wrist shot past Cowan at the 7:09 mark, giving Wenatchee a 3-0 cushion.
Ty Cheveldayoff pivoted a shot to the middle of the slot for a wrister from Cameron Parr at 13:12 of the period, cutting the Wenatchee lead to 3-1. The Wild were limited to five shots on net in the final period, but the hosts held on to the two-goal advantage to the final horn.
“I think it was a good way to start the weekend, getting two points at home with a big weekend and coming down to crunch time at the end of the season,” said assistant coach Andrew Sarauer. “We’ll take the two points for sure. It was a sloppy game at the start – pucks were bouncing all over the ice, and guys couldn’t handle the puck. We were turning the puck over more than we wanted to, but give the guys credit – they hung in there, and found a way to win.”
Prosofsky had the game’s only multi-point showing, with a goal and an assist, while McCagherty earned the second game-winning tally in his WHL career. Brendan Gee made 24 saves, earning his 16th win of the year, his third against the Chiefs in as many decisions. Cowan stopped 30 Wenatchee shots in the loss for Spokane. The penalty-killing units were a perfect 7-for-7 in the game, but the Wild dominated the battle at the faceoff dot, 39-22.
The final home game of the regular season will see the Portland Winterhawks stop in on Saturday for the last of the six meetings on their schedule. Saturday’s game is also Wenatchee’s “FANtastic FANale,” presented by Ag Supply, with the opening puck drop set for 6 p.m. Tickets for that game are on sale now at 509-888-7825, online here or by visiting the team office at Town Toyota Center. Wild playoff packages and 2024-25 season tickets are now on sale as well – updated news and information on Wild hockey are always available through the team’s website and on the team’s social media platforms on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube.
Spokane 0 1 0 – 1
Wenatchee 1 2 0 – 3
1st Period-1, Wenatchee, Friesen 24 (Isogai), 3:21. Penalties-McIsaac Spo (holding), 4:34; Streek Spo (tripping), 14:12; Feist Spo (tripping), 17:11; Friesen Wen (hooking), 19:08.
2nd Period-2, Wenatchee, McCagherty 10 (Sward, Prosofsky), 2:05. 3, Wenatchee, Prosofsky 10 (Bukarts, Arp), 7:09. 4, Spokane, Parr 4 (Cheveldayoff), 13:12. Penalties-Parr Spo (too many men), 15:49; Isogai Wen (inter. on goaltender), 19:42.
3rd Period- No Scoring.Penalties-Parr Spo (too many men), 18:00.
Shots on Goal-Spokane 7-8-10-25. Wenatchee 19-9-5-33.
Power Play Opportunities-Spokane 0 / 2; Wenatchee 0 / 5.
Goalies-Spokane, Cowan 17-19-2-1 (33 shots-30 saves). Wenatchee, Gee 16-9-1-0 (25 shots-24 saves).
A-3,332
Referees-Adam Forbes (62), Kacey Walker (156).
Linesmen-Michael Bean (148), Ron Dietterle (121).