Whitehorse Daily Star

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Photo by Marcel Vander Wier

GETS THE CALL – Team Yukon goalie Brett Skookum sprawls across the goal crease to make a save on Nunavut forward Kenneth-John Putulik during the bronze-medal male midget hockey final Friday at the Arctic Winter Games.

Skookum backstops Yukon to hockey bronze

Goaltender Brett Skookum got a shot of confidence from his coach before the bronze-medal game.

By Marcel Vander Wier on March 24, 2014

FAIRBANKS – Goaltender Brett Skookum got a shot of confidence from his coach before the bronze-medal game.

One game after giving up four goals on nine shots before getting the hook, the 17-year-old from Carmacks made up for it, stopping 33 of 37 shots Friday afternoon after getting the call to lead the Yukon once more at the 2014 Arctic Winter Games.

The midget menʼs hockey team held on to defeat Nunavut 5-4 at the Big Dipper Ice Arena to win bronze.

"I wasnʼt really expecting it,” Skookum said of the starterʼs nod. "It showed the coaches had confidence in me. I was surprised, but I knew we were going to win.”

Having a bronze ulu fitted around his neck post-game was a special feeling, he told the Star.

"It means a lot,” he said. "Both my brothers came here and they won, so itʼs good to win one too.”

The young goalie played with the fingers on his right hand taped due to injury. Skookum admitted he had punched a wall following his performance in the Yukonʼs 8-6 semifinal loss to Alaska on Thursday.

Offensively, Alex Hanson led the way for the Yukon, scoring twice in the contest. Jarrett Malchow, Riley Pettitt and Wyatt Gale also had goals, with Galeʼs standing up as the eventual winner.

Gale led the tournament in scoring with eight goals and seven assists, while Pettitt was second with five goals and nine assists.

Nunavut forward Kenneth-John Putulik had a hat trick in a losing cause.

"Itʼs always an honour to represent the Yukon,” said Hanson, 16. "Itʼs nice to be able to contribute a medal to the count.”

Hanson, who spent the season with the NEBC and Yukon District Trackers in Dawson Creek, B.C., said the game was likely the last time this group would play together, as many will graduate from the junior ranks before the 2016 Games.

"It was nice to win a medal with them,” he said.

Yukon coach John Grant said the game was a fitting curtain call for a group he has helped to develop over the past decade.

"Iʼve had every single one of these kids, except two … some from novice at the age of six or seven,” he said. "To watch them grow into young men and to be able to have this group together one last time … it was a pleasure just to be around them and to see how theyʼve matured and grown both as young men and hockey players.”

Nunavut captain Max Shoo had two assists in the game, and finished fourth in tournament scoring.

"We definitely tried our hardest,” said the 18-year-old from Iqaluit. "We couldʼve scored a couple and couldʼve stopped a couple too. They played really good and hit hard.”

The Yukon played Fridayʼs game with only seven forwards with Curtis Carlick (abdomen injury) and Josh VanBibber (concussion) relegated to the sidelines.

"Theyʼre all sore and bumped and banged,” Grant said of his team. "They gave it everything they had.”

A former goalie himself, Grant said he had to give Skookum a chance to redeem himself after Thursdayʼs semifinal loss – when he was lifted for 15-year-old Tomas Jirousek.

"The mark of a truly good goaltender is how you react to the next start,” he explained of the decision. "We just felt that he had something to prove today and he certainly did it. I think of all the goals that were scored on us over the tournament, and I canʼt think of one bad goal. Not one.

"But goaltenders are a different breed, and they seem to carry the weight and the responsibility of every win and loss on their shoulders. He was really frustrated yesterday, but he bounced back really well.”

Host Alaska won gold Saturday, rallying to beat N.W.T. 5-4 in overtime.

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