(Image Credit: Steve Dunsmoor)
4-1 loss on home ice

Rockets control play, Silvertips control series

Apr 14, 2026 | 10:39 PM

The result said one thing. The game said another.

Despite a 4-1 loss Tuesday night to the Everett Silvertips, the Kelowna Rockets delivered what may have been their most complete effort of the series, only to watch it slip away on a handful of costly mistakes.

The defeat gives Everett a commanding 3–0 series lead, but it hardly tells the full story of how Game 3 unfolded inside Prospera Place.

For long stretches, the Rockets were the better team.

They were faster. More physical. More engaged.

And for 20 minutes, they controlled the game.

Kelowna stormed out of the gate with purpose, setting the tone on the very first shift when Tomas Poletin delivered a heavy hit that ignited both the bench and the crowd. The Rockets followed that up with sustained pressure, outshooting Everett 16–4 in a dominant opening period that, by all measures except the scoreboard, belonged entirely to the home side.

“We got off to a great start,” associate coach Don Hay said postgame. “We were going to the net hard, had good energy, and did a lot of good things.”

But playoff hockey has a way of punishing missed opportunities.

Kelowna generated quality looks, six legitimate scoring chances by Hay’s estimation, but couldn’t beat the Everett goaltender. And as the game wore on, that missed opportunity began to loom larger.

“We’d like to be up 3-0 after that first,” Hay admitted. “You’ve got to bear down and take advantage of your chances. We didn’t, and it comes back to haunt you.”

It did so quickly and decisively in the second period.

In a span of just 24 seconds, the Silvertips turned the game on its head.

A turnover. A bad goal. 2-0.

“We made four self-inflicted mistakes, and they capitalized,” Hay said bluntly. “That’s the difference. They don’t give you anything free, and when we make a mistake, it ends up in our net.”

Everett would add another before the period was out, stretching the lead to 3–0 after 40 minutes.

To their credit, the Rockets didn’t fold.

Early in the third period, they finally found a breakthrough on the power play. Poletin blasted home Kelowna’s first man-advantage goal of the series, cutting the deficit to 3–1 and injecting life into the building.

It felt, briefly, like a turning point.

“We had them back on their heels,” Hay said. “That’s the chance to get momentum going. We got the first one, but we couldn’t finish the deal.”

Despite sustained pressure and a noticeable edge in emotion and physicality, Kelowna couldn’t solve Everett again. Shot lanes were clogged. Attempts were blocked. The Silvertips bent, but never broke.

A turnover led to a penalty shot, and Everett capitalized once more, restoring the three-goal cushion and putting the game out of reach at 4–1.

It was, in many ways, the perfect snapshot of the series to this point.

Kelowna pushes. Everett waits.

Kelowna creates. Everett capitalizes.

“They’re not making mistakes at critical times,” Hay said. “That’s why they’re up 3–0.”

But the margin for error against a team like Everett is razor-thin.

And right now, it’s proving unforgiving.

“You can’t get frustrated,” Hay said. “You can’t show bad body language. You’ve got to focus on your next shift. That’s what matters.”

Now, the Rockets face the ultimate test.

Down 3–0 in the series, there is no room left for anything less than perfection, or something very close to it.

“You need that effort again,” Hay said. “That’s automatic. But we’ve got to take the mistakes out of our game. We almost have to play mistake-free hockey, and that’s hard to do. But that’s what it takes this time of year.”

If the Rockets can replicate the effort they showed in Game 3 and finally align it with execution, the result might start to match the performance.

Game four is Wednesday night, where the Rockets face playoff elimination.

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