Hockey·MEMORIAL CUP

5 storylines for Huskies-Mooseheads final

The Canadian Hockey League has gone from 60 teams to the final two, with the host Halifax Mooseheads facing the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League champion Rouyn-Noranda Huskies in Sunday's Memorial Cup final at 7 p.m. ET.

Rouyn-Noranda seeking 1st title while host Halifax won in 2013

Benoit-Olivier Groulx, second from right, and the Mooseheads will attempt to capture a second Memorial Cup title for Halifax and first since 2013 when they tangle with goalie Samuel Harvey and the Huskies in Sunday evening's final. Rouyn-Noranda is searching for its first tournament title. (Darren Calabrese/Canadian Press)

The Canadian Hockey League has gone from 60 teams to the final two, with the host Halifax Mooseheads facing the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League champion Rouyn-Noranda Huskies in Sunday's Memorial Cup final at 7 p.m. ET.

The Western Hockey League champion Prince Albert Raiders were first to bow out of the four-team tournament after going 0-3 in preliminary play. Then Ontario Hockey League champion Guelph Storm fell to the Huskies in the semifinal, setting up a final with the Mooseheads, who earned a bye after topping the round-robin.

Rouyn-Noranda made the 2016 final before falling to the London Knights 3-2 in overtime and is still searching for its first Memorial Cup title, while Halifax won its only championship in 2013.

Here are five storylines to look for in the Memorial Cup final.

Familiar foes

Rouyn-Noranda and Halifax have played each other seven times already this month following a hard-fought QMJHL final. The Huskies beat the Mooseheads in six games to win the President Cup and then put up a 4-3 victory against Halifax in the round-robin portion of the tournament.

The Mooseheads and Huskies will meet for an eighth time this season on Sunday night in the Memorial Cup final in Halifax. But it will represent only the second time two teams from the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League will face off in the championship contest. (Darren Calabrese/Canadian Press)

It's just the second time two teams from the QMJHL will meet in the final, with the Quebec Remparts beating the Moncton Wildcats in 2006. A Halifax win could be a redemption moment with junior hockey's biggest prize on the line, but the Huskies were ranked No. 1 in the CHL for a reason.

"That was an intense final and I think it'll be the same thing.

Both teams want to win," said Huskies forward Joel Teasdale.

"We battled through a lot so it's rewarding to be in the final of the Memorial Cup," said Mooseheads forward Benoit-Olivier Groux.

Titan touch

Huskies bench boss Mario Pouliot coached forwards Samuel Asselin and Antoine Morand, as well as defenceman Noah Dobson and the Acadie-Bathurst Titan to the Memorial Cup championship last season before joining Rouyn-Noranda in the summer.

Pouliot made a trade to acquire Dobson, the captain of the Titan, in January after he returned from representing Canada at the world juniors, while Morand and Asselin are going for back-to-back championships with the Mooseheads.

"Two [appearances] in a row, not a lot of players that can say they did that. But my goal is win two times in a row," said Morand.

Home crowd advantage

This year's Memorial Cup has had strong turnouts, even for the games not featuring the hometown Mooseheads, and is sold out again for the final after packing in 10,095 for the Storm-Huskies semifinal on Friday.

While it'll be a pro-Mooseheads crowd at Scotiabank Centre, the Huskies will have a section of travelling fans including friends and family that made the trek east.

It'll be a pro-Mooseheads crowd at Scotiabank Centre on Sunday night when host Halifax faces Rouyn-Noranda in the Memorial Cup final. The Huskies will have a section of travelling fans including friends and family that made the trek east from Quebec. (Darren Calabrese/Canadian Press)

"Since the start of the tournament it's been a dream for all of us playing in front of a crowd like this," said Morand. "It's all we wanted as kids and it's finally here."

"We'll need to stay calm because obviously the crowd will be behind them," said Huskies forward Felix Bibeau.

Dobson the minute eater

Dobson was acquired by Pouliot exactly for a moment like Sunday's championship game. The 19-year-old blue-liner was named QMJHL playoff MVP after producing 29 points in 20 games, and was out on the ice every second shift in a semifinal win over Guelph.

Not only was he expected to shut down the Storm's top line, he paced the offence and still had the energy to create a breakaway opportunity leading to a penalty shot (missed) late in the third period. He has one goal and two assists in four games, but could easily have five goals with the scoring chances he's creating.

"We're not looking at ice time. We managed his ice time during playoffs, during season, but do-or-die it's no choice," said Pouliot. "We'll have to use him."

WATCH | Huskies edge Storm, advance to Memorial Cup final:

Game Wrap: Huskies edge Storm, advance to Memorial Cup final

6 years ago
Duration 1:36
Rouyn-Noranda Huskies beat Guelph Storm 6-4, will face Halifax Mooseheads in the Memorial Cup final.

MVP race wide open

With just one game to go, no single player has cemented himself as the tournament's most valuable player. A clutch performance on Sunday may be enough to earn the hardware.

Huskies forward Felix Bibeau leads all scorers with four goals while teammate Jakub Lauko is tied for the tournament lead with seven points in four games. Meanwhile, the Mooseheads have had the strongest goaltending of the four teams, with Alexis Gravel putting up a 2.33 goals-against average and .929 save percentage in three round-robin games to lead all netminders.

"Alex has been MVP for us, he's been there in big moments," said Mooseheads forward Arnaud Durandeau. "He was great in the [QMJHL final] series and kept it up at Memorial Cup."

Mooseheads goalie Alexis Gravel is in the tourney MVP conversation entering the Memorial Cup final on Sunday against Rouyn-Noranda. In three round-robin games, he fashioned a 2.33 goals-against average and .929 save percentage to lead all netminders. (Darren Calabrese/Canadian Press)