(Image Credit: Steve Dunsmoor)
Eleven players hit the scoresheet

Rockets roll to 3-0 series stranglehold

Mar 31, 2026 | 10:23 PM

The push came, just like everyone inside Sandman Centre knew it would.

But this time, the Kelowna Rockets didn’t just survive it, they answered it.

Powered by a dominant night from Tij Iginla and Vojtech Cihar, who combined for eight points, the Rockets rolled to a 7-4 victory over the Kamloops Blazers Tuesday night, seizing a commanding 3-0 lead in their opening-round WHL playoff series.

It was the kind of game that had everything: early control, a pushback, and a response that said more about this team than any lopsided scoreline could.

Kelowna didn’t just win. They showed they can handle the chaos.

“We started the game really well,” said Rockets assistant coach Brandon McMillan. “That first period, we played our game and got up three. But we knew they were going to push back, and they did in the second.”

The Rockets burst out of the gate with a 3–0 lead after 20 minutes, dictating pace and execution. Iginla and Cihar were at the center of it, driving play and capitalizing on opportunities, while the supporting cast ensured it wasn’t a one-line story.

In total, 11 different players recorded at least a point, a stat that quietly told the real story of the night.

This wasn’t just star power.

This was depth.

Nate Corbet, Ryan Oothoudt, Dawson Gerwing, and Rowan Guest all found the back of the net. The seven goals marked the most the Rockets have scored in a playoff game since the 2018 postseason, a wild 9-7 loss to the Tri-City Americans.

Still, the game turned in the second period.

The Blazers made a goaltending change to start the frame, and slowly, the ice tilted. Kamloops began to find its footing, hemming the Rockets in their own zone and chipping away at the lead.

For a stretch, momentum belonged to the home side.

“We got on our heels a bit,” McMillan admitted. “They fought their way back into it, and you could feel it. That’s playoffs. Teams are going to have their pushes.”

The challenge, in those moments, isn’t just to defend.

It’s to reset.

“It’s a fine line,” McMillan said. “You want more urgency, but you also need composure. You’re just looking for a line to go out and grab the game, hold onto pucks, get some offensive zone time, and shift the momentum back.”

After regrouping in the second intermission, the Rockets came out for the third period with purpose, re-establishing control and quickly rebuilding a four-goal cushion.

“We settled ourselves down in the room,” McMillan said. “Went over what we wanted to accomplish, and then came out really strong in the third. That was a big response from our group.”

On multiple occasions, offensive pressure from one line carried into the next, leading directly to goals.

“We had some really good shifts where they ended up icing the puck,” McMillan explained. “Then we could put a fresh group out, sometimes Iginla’s line, against a tired group, and we capitalized. I think we scored twice off situations like that.”

And it’s also where the secondary scoring becomes more than a bonus; it becomes essential.

“You need that,” McMillan said. “There are going to be nights where your top guys don’t score. In playoffs, sometimes it’s a 1–0 or 2–1 game, and it’s a fourth-line goal or a defenseman that makes the difference. So it was great to see different guys contributing.”

Even Guest’s empty-net goal carried meaning.

“We’re starting to hold each other accountable,” McMillan added. “It’s not just the coaches anymore — it’s the players. That’s what makes great teams.”

In a game that demanded composure, execution, and response, Kelowna checked more boxes than it missed.

And now, they sit one win away.

“The finishing game is always the hardest,” McMillan said. “We can’t be complacent with where we’re at. We want to finish it, but it’s not going to be easy. We’re expecting their best.”

That next test comes Wednesday night, again at Sandman Centre, where the Rockets will look to close out the series and complete a sweep.

Through three games, the numbers are telling: Kelowna has outscored Kamloops 14–6.

But the deeper story is how they’re doing it.

With stars leading.

With depth following.

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