As you might have heard by now, the Rouyn-Noranda Huskies won the QMJHL Championship last week thanks in no small part to Avalanche prospects Julien Nantel, Jean-Christophe Beaudin and Anthony-John Greer. It was a dominating performance losing just 4 times, scoring 88 goals while letting in only 31 in 20 games. Besides the glory of hoisting the Presidents Cup Trophy, they also won a trip to Red Deer, Alberta to compete for the Memorial Cup against OHL champ London, WHL champ Brandon and the host team Rebels.

Instead of a dry recap and preview littered with stats you'll never remember, I decided to try something different and do a chat with friend of the show tigervixxxen, who has far more knowledge of the team than I do and writes about Avs prospects for the Burgundy Brigade.

Keep in mind this is an experimental format and I'm definitely no Dick Cavett so bear with me here, there's plenty of good info below. That said, let's get to it.

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earl06: I thought the 1st game of the finals showed how good the Huskies really were and might have been where they won it all. No Meier because of the stupid flying elbow in the final Moncton game and no Beaudin more or less from halfway in the 1st on, they buckled down and used what they had wisely. Chase Marchand was excellent in net and a clutch goal from Brouillard with less than 2 minutes remaining got them a win in a game where they were outshot and horrible in the faceoff circle. Good depth and a great game plan made on the fly got them the first victory and it carried through the whole series.

tigervixxxen: Pushing through adversity was really the story of the Huskies' championship run. They didn't have to come back in games often but when they did in Game 1 and nearly pulled it off in Game 4 the Huskies can just pull goals out of thin air when they needed them. They always bounced back after a loss with a strong effort and a win. For me, it was getting through the bizarre situation of Game 2 when the game was postponed after the first period due to one of the on ice workers puncturing a coolant hose and making the ice unplayable for the night. There was a lot of doubt if the game could resume in Rouyn-Noranda at all or if Game 2 had to be moved to Shawinigan. At one point the league announced even if they could play the following day in Rouyn-Noranda that their 2-1 lead would be wiped out and the game restarted at 0-0. After careful inspection of the rule book and the on ice repairs, the Huskies did resume the following afternoon and turned their 2-1 lead into a 4-1 victory. It must have been very unnerving and stressful through those 24 hours and neither Bouchard nor the team ever complained and they just went back out and finished their business. The Huskies also had to deal with not only their top center Beaudin going down in Game 1 but they were also without the services of their top defenseman Jeremy Lauzon since he suffered a life threatening cut to his neck from a skate blade in the last game of round 2.*** The Huskies incredible depth allowed them to pick up and just keep going even through suspensions to Timo Meier and Francis Perron at various points as well.

e: Yeah, If game 1 set the tone then game 2 was a gut punch for Shawinigan. It also was where AJ Greer really put his mark on the series, scoring what turned out to be the winning goal then backing it up with insurance 20 hours later. He was impressive against Moncton but the way he elevated his game in the finals was just awesome. In today's stat-heavy world, things that can't be measured like heart and attitude and confidence get dismissed too easily. Greer's got plenty of talent and the numbers to back it up now but the way he played in games 2 & 3 was a testament to his mindset and more than justified the Avs picking him at #39, which I can now honestly say worried me at the time. From where I sat he was the best player for Rouyn-Noranda in that series.

Just to add a note about Beaudin, first of all I was really bummed he couldn't play (much) because I think he too could have thrived in the finals plus I really wanted to watch him play. Second of all, his absence highlighted how good he is on faceoffs and how much that meant to the team. He was around 65% in the Moncton series, which is amazing, and I doubt the Huskies were above 50% in the finals with him out.

tv: It was really nice to see Greer get some attention and credit for the season he put together since arriving in Rouyn-Noranda. He had found his scoring touch in February but five goals in five finals games including one in each game they won is pretty incredible. Stephane Leroux from RDS said the media considered Greer for the playoff MVP award. Even though the Huskies added Timo Meier at the trade deadline, some of the media considered Greer the Huskies' best mid season addition. Greer is really the power forward they needed, to give them some size and bite in their lineup who can score goals too. It was incredible to see just how different of a player he was once he got to play his game.

When Beaudin went out I almost knew they'd win the Cup because of course it would be a bit bittersweet. He really should get credit for everything he does for that team and it's a bummer people couldn't see it. I'm glad Greer got his coming out party but Beaudin deserved one too. I'm glad you got to see what he can do vs. Moncton at least. I'm hoping the injury isn't that bad or else why try playing him and risking making it worse? Hopefully the 10 days or so off for him helps. I bet they run him out there in some capacity to give him the Mem cup experience but I hope it's more than that.

e: Moving to some of the earlier rounds, I wanted to get your take on the Moncton series. I thought that was much more even than the Finals and the games that the Wildcats were really physical (albeit generally dirty too) against RN were the ones that were the most troublesome. I thought for sure Shawinigan would try that approach but they either couldn't or just didn't.

Not much to say about Drummondville, the stats paint a picture of the bottom team in the bracket vs the top. I don't know what's more impressive, averaging over 8 goals a game or giving up only 4 total. Either way, that was pretty much a bye and got Sergei Boikov to San Antonio as quickly as possible.

Blainville-Boisbriand was another dominant run. Aside from getting shut out 1-0 in the 1st game they had a pretty easy time of it only allowing 2 goals in 5 games. I guess the impressive thing about the 1st 2 rounds was taking care of business and not playing down to the level of the opponent. Probably the toughest job Coach Gilles Bouchard had was keeping everyone's compete level up and staying ready for the tougher teams beginning in the 3rd round.

tv: It's funny originally I didn't want the Huskies to draw Drummondville in the first round. Not that I was really afraid of a first round upset but of the potential low seed opponents they were not my favorite draw. For whatever reason Drummondville was a thorn in their side as a division opponent and took the Huskies to OT three times over the course of the season and even beat then in a SO in one of their last losses before going on a 14 game win streak into the playoffs. Drummondville wasn't very talented but I figured through gooning it up and cherry picking they might get lucky a few times. So the fact that the Huskies held them to four goals and flat took care of business was most impressive.

The series against the Armada was tougher than on paper because they were another division opponent and had just knocked off the powerful Val-d'Or Foreurs. The Armada goalie Samuel Montembeault stood on his head in front of a team who was more than happy to play an extremely trappy style and the Huskies experienced a scoring drought after the light show that was the Drummondville series. This is where the Huskies defense and goaltending had to match the Armada's and they had to overcome the adversity of Perron's two game suspension.

I agree the Moncton series was the toughest and obviously stretched the longest even with the Huskies most dazzling and heroic series clinching comeback in game 6. It was the team that was able to put the most physical pressure on the Huskies coupled with the ability to convert on their opportunities. They were also the most unfamiliar opponent hailing from the Martimes and had also just knocked off a formidable foe themselves in the Gatineau Olympiques. Shawinigan was a skilled dream team put together at the deadline via something like 12 trades. I believe they fell in love with the hype over their skill and on paper potential. Certainly Shawinigan was tough to shut down entirely as they got their goals in game 4 but the Huskies were a much more complete team and it showed in the end.

e: Other than common fan paranoia, was there ever a time during the playoff run where you thought RN were in trouble as far as winning the President's Cup?

tv: I'm an anxious, prepare for the worst sort of fan to begin with but deep down no, not really. I knew this team was special from the very beginning and they always bounced back, they never even lost two consecutive games in the playoffs. Once Val-d'Or and Gatineau went out in rounds 1 and 2 respectively, those were the two teams with size, physicality and defense that might have created a tough series for the Huskies, their path was pretty clear and the Huskies were on a mission.

e: Yeah, the only time I was a bit concerned was in the 2nd period of game 6 vs Moncton. At that point you're still looking at a team that was 11-3 so... no biggie.

Before we get to some of our own guys I'd like to talk a little about Chase Marchand. Ever since that beautiful 1-0 shutout vs the Wildcats, I've been beating the drum for the Avs to seriously consider signing this kid. His stats in the playoffs were marvelous, 15 wins, 6 of them shutouts, and .946 Sv%. He had a couple shaky performances too but I was actually glad to see that because it showed that he was just playing normal rather than having "hot goalie" syndrome. The Avs have a hole to fill at goalie and he's at prime age to step into the 5th spot on the depth chart. Unlike with skaters I think signing with Colorado is attractive for goalies thanks to Allaire & Filiatrault. The Avs have to be vigorously pursuing Marchand, right?

tv: The Avs definitely have to figure something out for the 5th spot in their goalie depth chart especially with the departure of Roman Will and could certainly do worse than to look in Marchand's direction for help. His stats are of the eye popping variety and set several QMJHL records, which is a big credit to the Huskies' team defense in front of him but six shutouts is six shutouts. Marchand's journey really adds to the storybook quality of the Huskies' run. Twice waived, including one time he even ended up in the OHL to play in Mississauga with Spencer Martin, Marchand was just about out of options and resigned to go back to junior A. As fate would have it, one of the Huskies goalies quit a couple games into the season and they snagged Marchand off of waivers in their own desperation. Marchand was lights out most of the season but a concussion kept him out most of the final month of the regular season. Huskies' goalie of the future Samuel Harvey played very well in his absence to the point I wasn't sure if Marchand would get the net back for the playoffs. Credit to coach Gilles Bouchard for making the tough call there and it paid off with Marchand's dazzling performance start to finish.

e: Marchand just makes so much sense from both sides, I can't think of a good reason why it wouldn't happen other than the rookie year in Ft Wayne deal. Even so, whoever gets that spot will play ~10 games in San Antonio, which is nice.

Speaking of San Antonio, one guy we know will be there is Julien Nantel. He performed pretty admirably filling in for Beaudin but I was really impressed with him on the wing as a shutdown guy. He's very quick in the d-zone covering the points and starting the breakout. I loved the way as soon as he gets the puck away from an opponent he's just gone the other way. Lots of great instinct, skating and puck moving talent, maybe even some leadership and winning attitude that should help the Rampage out a bunch. What did you see over the course of the season as far as development and areas he improved?

tv: Nantel is truly one of those LW/C guys that can and have played both positions quite a bit. I like him on the wing better myself, like you said can really use his speed and creates more from that position. The Huskies might have used Nantel in more of a complimentary role this season but always turned to him when they needed a center or someone to move up in the lineup. I know the Avs asked Nantel to work on being more physical as well as consistency and I think he achieved both this season. He works well along the boards and uses his speed defensively. Another aspect where I saw improvement this year was better control of the puck when he would get a turnover and turn on the jets, in the past he seemed to want to go faster than the play would allow and now he can turn a play into a shot or a good pass more often. I'm very much excited to see what Nantel can do at the pro level with San Antonio next year, he should give them a good dose of speed and skill.