Victoire blow 3-0 lead and lose 1st-place battle to Fleet in OT

by South Asian Star | Mar 15, 2026 | Sports | 0 comments


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In terms of heartbreaking losses to the Boston Fleet, the Montréal Victoire has lived that before. But after losing 4-3 in overtime to the first-place Fleet despite taking a 3-0 lead into the third period, the Victoire is now looking at the positives.

Unlike 2024 when the team lost three straight playoff games in overtime to Boston (9-5-2-3) and saw its season end in a sweep, 11 regular-season games remain and Montreal intends to move forward.

“I’d much prefer this happening now than later on down the road, that’s for sure,” Victoire head coach Kori Cheverie said from Laval, Que. “This is a great learning for us to have now instead of May.”

Added Montreal forward Laura Stacey: “The messaging, the feeling in the room is let it hurt tonight. We regroup, we have another game Thursday and we have to learn from it.”

And Stacey feels there’s plenty Montreal (9-4-1-5) can take away from the game.

“There’s a lot to learn, but there’s also some really great things to be proud of,” she said. “We’re up 3-0 against the first-place team in the league.

“Our power play is clicking; our penalty kill killed a five-minute major in the third period. The physicality, the first 48 minutes of the game, we owned it. The shots on goal. Frankel is a great goaltender, to get three on her that’s something to be proud of.”

WATCH | Fleet stay atop standings after downing Victoire:

Fleet edge Victoire in OT to remain 1st place in PWHL standings

Boston rallies with three goals in the third period then Ella Huber scores in overtime to defeat Montreal 4-3. The Victoire had their six-game win streak snapped and remain in second place, three points behind the Fleet.

Stacey’s words have weight to them. With Montreal defender Erin Ambrose on long-term injured reserve and captain Marie-Philip Poulin leaving the game in the first period, Stacey is the only member of the team’s usual leadership group remaining.

With just over three minutes remaining in the first and Montreal on the power play, Poulin collided with Boston forward Shay Maloney at the side boards. Instantly she started favouring her right leg.

It was the same leg she injured against Czechia at the Winter Olympics on Feb. 9. It forced her to miss two games at the Olympics, and Montreal’s first PWHL contest following the Olympic break.

This was Montreal’s fourth game after the Olympics.

“We’ve been batting some adversity here, and I think with that being said it’s pretty awesome to see how this team’s coming together, how everybody’s picking up the pieces,” Stacey said. “Nobody’s going to replace No. 29 out there, and we all know that.

“But what we can do is every little thing we possibly can to try and win it as a team together. When your captain goes down, to see the way the group responded, to see that feeling in the locker room of, ‘We got this,’ I think that’s what you want to feel, that your team not only wants to lift her up, but they want to do it for her.”

Abby Roque, who had a goal and two assists in the game, was asked to step up in Poulin’s absence. She moved to centre on the team’s top line, and in the third period when the team was down two defenders because of penalties, she even was asked to play defence.

“You go back to the drawing board,” Roque said. “I like to watch video the same night if I can get my hands on it, see what I did right, see what I did wrong.

“As a team we like to do it as quickly as possible because you do have to learn from games like this, but you also have to let go and think of the positives, and you look at both of those and take the good, try to throw away the bad and we have quick turnaround to play Thursday.”

Sceptres 2, Torrent 0

Raygan Kirk woke up in a grumpy mood Sunday.

Her Toronto Sceptres had gone more than three months between home wins at the Coca-Cola Coliseum and the second-year goalkeeper was determined to earn her keep.

She delivered a victory with her first career Professional Women’s Hockey League shutout, a 32-save effort in the Sceptres’ 2-0 win against the expansion Seattle Torrent.

“I woke up this morning and was a little bit mad I hadn’t won at home yet,” said the 25-year-old from Ste. Anne, Man.

She did make 23 saves in a 2-1 win against the expansion Vancouver Goldeneyes before 17,856 at Scotiabank Arena. But the only other occasion the Sceptres managed to win at their usual home was Dec. 4 when backup Elaine Chuli was in goal for a 3-1 win against the Ottawa Charge.

“I think we owed it to our fans after those past few home games,” Kirk said. “Taking advantage of being at home is a huge edge, and with this crowd and this energy, being able to sleep in your bed.

“That was my mentality coming in, and it worked out. We have had a lot of close games and we weren’t taking advantage.”

WATCH | Turnbull, Kirk lead Sceptres over Torrent:

Blayre Turnbull lifts Sceptres past Torrent

Toronto defeats Seattle 2-0 as Blayre Turnbull scores the game-winning goal in the first period and Sara Hjalmarsson sealed the victory with an empty netter.

The Sceptres have two wins, one overtime victory, five overtime losses and three more defeats in regulation for only 11 games at the Coca-Cola Coliseum. The 13 points are the lowest home total in the PWHL.

The Sceptres have scored just 41 goals in 21 outings this season. Only the Torrent, with 40 goals in 19 games, and the Goldeneyes, with 35 in 19, have scored fewer times.

With offensive standout Daryl Watts on the sidelines because of a lingering flu bug she picked up on the return trip playing for Canada at the Olympics, captain Blayre Turnbull provided some early offence.

She scored four minutes in, keeping the puck on a 2-on-1 break before a capacity crowd of 8,270. Sara Hjalmarsson added an empty-net goal with 7.8 seconds remaining in the third.

United States captain Hilary Knight (knee) and Olympic teammate Hannah Bilka (upper-body) were big absences for the visitors. Bilka tied for the Olympic tournament lead with four goals in seven games.



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