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Wellington Dukes pull off epic upset of Wenatchee at RBC Cup

The Dukes are off to the championship game after downing the Wild 2-1 Saturday at Prospera Centre.
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You’ve heard of any given Sunday? Welcome to any given Saturday at Prospera Centre as the Wellington Dukes pulled off one of the biggest upsets you’ll ever see.

Huge underdogs in a semi-final matchup against the BCHL champion Wenatchee Wild, the Dukes scratched out a 2-1 win.

Wellington goaltender Jonah Capriotti stood on his head as his team was outshot 51-14, making save after save after save until Wenatchee ran out of time,

Bryce Yetman and Daniel Panetta scored for the Dukes, who move on to tomorrow afternoon’s RBC Cup final, while the team everyone expected to win heads home empty handed.

The Wild outshot Wellington 19-2 through opening 20, with the puck barely leaving the Dukes zone, yet somehow the underdogs escaped the first period with a 1-0 lead.

Capriotti was pulled in the preliminary round after giving up four goals on 18 shots. Looking for revenge in the rematch, the Hamilton native was on point in period one, helping his team weather the storm. At the other end, Austin Park could have pulled up a chair and read a book between shots, but the one scoring chance that came his way was a dangerous one that ended up in the net.

With his team under siege, Dukes D-man Declan Carlile cleared a puck up the left wing. The puck caromed off the boards to Yetman, who was behind the Wenatchee defencemen. Outracing Slava Demin to the net, Yetman cut across the goamouth and snapped a glove-side shot past Park at 15:52.

When you’re facing a high-octane offence like Wenatchee you need to bury every chance you get, and that’s why Yetman might have been kicking himself had this game ended in a different way.

With his team killing a penalty midway through the second period, the forward poked the puck away from Wild blueliner Zak Galambos in the neutral zone and had a breakaway from the blueline in. The Whitby, Ontario native threw a dozen stick moves at Park, but the netminder didn’t bite, stretching out with the right leg pad to make the save on the goal line.

On the next shift Galambos made Yetman pay with a wrist shot from the left point that threaded its way through traffic and past screened Dukes keeper Capriotti for Wenatchee’s first goal at 9:30.

That’s the only puck that evaded either goalie in the middle frame.

Despite being outshot 35-9 through 40 minutes, Wellington somehow skated into the third period with a chance to pull off an epic upset.

Panetta made that idea a lot more real at the 6:56 mark of the final frame when he scored the game-winning goal, crashing the crease, getting his stick on a Frank Pucci pass from the left wing and directing it through the legs of Park.

A couple shifts later the Wild thought they had the equalizer when the puck appeared to sneak across the goal-line during a scramble around the Wellington net. Dukes D-man Andrew Barbeau pulled it off the line and out of trouble. Wenatchee players frantically pointed up to the big screen, pleading with the stripes to take a look. The refs consulted the goal judge and stuck with their no-goal call.

When replay officials at Prospera Centre put a zoomed in version on the big screen it was clear the refs got it right.

The puck didn’t make it all the way across the line.

Wenatchee still had time to net the equalizer, but Capriotti made sure it wasn’t happening, slamming the door in the final minutes.

Wild coach Bliss Littler pulled Park with 58.3 seconds remaining for the extra attacker, and called timeout to rest his big guns for the last push. But Wellington survived to the final whistle, celebrating the win while the despondent Wenatchee players tried to figure out what just happened.



Eric Welsh

About the Author: Eric Welsh

I joined the Chilliwack Progress in 2007, originally hired as a sports reporter.
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