In the opening round, we had the first-place Millionaires against the red-hot fourth-place Bearcats in one semifinal series and the league's most storied rivalry -- the Victorias against the Bulldogs -- in the other. Here's how it all went down!
Semifinal 1: Millionaires vs. Bearcats
- Game 1 of the first semifinal opened with a bang as Bruce Stuart of the Bearcats and Jimmy Gardner of the Millionaires took early penalties for roughing up members of the opposing teams. When tempers cooled and everyone got down to playing hockey, Joe Malone tallied twice to stake the visiting Cats to a 2-0 lead by the midway point of the second period. The Millies soon found their footing; franchise icon Barney Stanley scored, followed shortly thereafter by rookie George Hay, and the game remained tied late into the third period. Defenseman Phat Wilson launched a long-range slapper that eluded Riley Hern to give the Millies their first lead, and despite a furious assault by Malone in the closing seconds, the home team eked out a 3-2 victory.
- The Cats turned the tables at home in Game 2; despite Mickey MacKay and George Hay scoring on back-to-back shots in the first, the Cats notched the next four goals -- by Frank Patrick, captain Harry Trihey, Didier Pitre, and superstar Joe Malone -- to claim a 4-2 win. However, an injury to Patrick cast a long shadow over their victory.
- Game 3, back on the Millies' home ice, opened with Harry Cameron and Didier Pitre trading goals, but tallies by Mickey MacKay and Jimmy Gardner allowed the Millies to build a 3-1 lead by the end of the first. Frank Foyston tacked on a power-play goal in the second, and the Millies cruised to a 4-1 victory and 2-1 lead in the best-of-five series.
- On the road in Game 4, the Millies started slowly with a goal by MacKay in the first, then exploded for five more -- another by MacKay, two from Foyston, and one each from George Hay and Harry Westwick -- in the second, while the Cats could counter only with a power-play tally from Malone. Bruce Stuart scored for the Bearcats in the third to make it 6-2, but MacKay responded with his third goal -- giving him a hat trick and two assists for a playoff-record five points in a single game -- to seal the 7-2 win. However, a late injury to defenseman Phat Wilson muted the Millies' celebrations as they prepared to vie for their second Creighton Cup in franchise history.
Semifinal 2: Victorias vs. Bulldogs
- In the first game of the Victorias/Bulldogs series, the Vics held a 2-0 third-period lead on goals by Newsy Lalonde and Cyclone Taylor. Dogs defender Jack Laviolette scored to make things interesting, but Billy McGimsie's late goal sealed a 3-1 win for the home team.
- The Dogs hosted Game 2, and scores from Ollie Seibert and Tommy Dunderdale set up a 2-0 win that evened the series at one game apiece. Hap Holmes was absolutely brilliant in a 33-save shutout.
- A frustrated Vics team came out shooting in Game 3, but it was former Victorias winger Fred "Steamer" Maxwell who scored to give the visiting Bulldogs a 1-0 lead. Cyclone Taylor tied the game late in the first, and the score remained unchanged through the end of regulation. Gord Roberts won it for the Dogs in overtime, but Holmes was again the story of the game, making 35 saves in another stellar performance. Games like this are exactly why the Dogs made their blockbuster offseason trade to bring in a truly elite netminder.
- Game 4 began with Gord Roberts scoring twice in the first period, with Lalonde getting one back for the Vics. In the second, Billy McGimsie tied the score at 2-2, and it remained unchanged until the Vics' Marty Walsh tallied a late power-play goal to give the Victorias a 3-2 victory and even the series at two games each.
- Game 5, on the Vics' home ice, would be the winner-take-all finale. In the first, Roberts put the visitors up by one; with that lamp-lighter, the star left winger had scored the last four goals for the Dogs, dating back to the first period of Game 3. The Vics answered back on a goal by Billy McGimsie, continuing his strong postseason. In the second, Taylor tallied on the power play to give the Vics a 2-1 lead. In the third, however, sophomore superstar Jack Adams got his first goal of the playoffs and, two minutes later, Tommy Dunderdale scored as well. The Vics' 2-1 lead had quickly become a 3-2 deficit, and the score would not change again.
Next up: The Creighton Cup championship series between the Millionaires and the Bulldogs!
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