The Goffstown Grizzlies hockey team played host to the Alvirne Broncos last night at St. Anselm College. On paper, the standings and previous results pointed to this as a blowout type game, dare say, and easy win for the Grizzlies. See Alvirne entered play with a record of three wins and twelve losses, while Goffstown entered play with twelve wins and two losses. In the end, the Grizzlies prevailed by a score of 10-6, but there were a few different sides to this story.
In an after school special type of story line, the mighty powerhouse of a team that works hard to achieve their results comes into the contest as the heavy favorite. Meanwhile the team with little success and the poor record comes in as the underwhelming underdog. The strong team starts out great, and works hard to get early success in the contest. They distance themselves from their opponent by executing their game plan over and over, while skating hard, and playing as a team. Because the results are still largely favoring the stronger team, maybe they haven’t even noticed that their opponent’s commitment and resolve is greater than they gave them credit for. Then, the favorite lets off of the gas, mentally, physically, or both, and all of the sudden the gap that they thought was wide and insurmountable, turns out to be nothing much at all. The opponent had already raised their game and now the tides had turned, as they always do. Sometimes the tides catch us off guard more than other times.
Then, the pride felt from the execution of game play at a higher level than most, turns to a different feeling. Maybe panic, or disgust, or frustration because it’s not as easy to start the powerful engine as it is to keep it running. When blame enters the picture then certainly we know that the finger pointed, pales in comparison to the fingers aimed back at the one doing the blaming. In the end, the favored team wins, but not without some pain and suffering which hopefully carries a lesson learned. The underdog teaches all of us for the millionth upon millionth time because we seem to forget this lesson often, to never give up and to keep trying regardless of where logic may rate your chances. As if sport, in and of itself, doesn’t teach us enough about how narrow the line is between winning and losing, then a game like this certainly should. To operate as a team, above that fine line that separates the teams who win from the teams that just fall short, is to play in rarefied air and is never to be assumed that it is just available whenever we want to get there. So, with all of that said, let’s get to the action.
It’s not always easy to show up and put your best foot forward, especially when everyone expects absolutely nothing less. The Grizzlies though, they were ready to play. Freshman, Grady Chretien scooped up an errant wrap around attempt by the Broncos, skated to the high slot and scored through the five hole for Goffstown, just 1:58 into the game. Then in a span of two minutes and twenty-four seconds, Chretien completed a natural hat trick and gave Goffstown a 3-0 lead. Chretien’s first goal was unassisted. His second goal, on the power play, came off of a rebound from a shot that was taken out high by Colby Gamache after a lead pass to Gamache was made by Brett Lassonde. Then he nabbed his third goal of the night on a beautiful set up by Theo Milianes from behind the net and Brett Branscum who hustled in a won a puck in a corner battle. Sebastian Beal made it 4-0 at 7:30 of the period on the power play. Max Lajeunesse whistled a wrist shot high and wide of the net, but Noah Charron was there to collect the rebounds off of the glass and feed it to Beal at the goal mouth for the goal. It was also the 100th goal scored by the Grizzlies this season. A couple of minutes later Beal added his 18th goal of the season to make it 5-0 Goffstown. Noah Charron wrestled a puck away from the defender, spun, and fed a pass to Beal who finished the play with the goal. At the end of the first period, Goffstown led 5-0 and also had 13 shots on goal, to just 3 for Alvirne.