Goaltender Kelly Guard (Image Credit: Jacques Bolssinot)
Memorial Cup magic lives again

In old audio from 2004, the Rockets relive a championship night

May 19, 2026 | 6:00 AM

Twenty-two years later, the voices still sound alive.

The noise inside Prospera Place. The disbelief. The laughter. The pride. The relief.

In May of 2004, the Kelowna Rockets didn’t just win the Memorial Cup. They gave the city one of the defining moments in its sports history.

The archived audio, which RocketFAN stumbled over while listening back to old mini-disk recordings, begins with the chaos of the championship game itself. Chances at both ends. Bodies flying. The crowd is roaring so loudly.

Then came the moment.

“Justin Keller… Kelowna.”

The rookie had scored the go-ahead goal in a 2-1 Memorial Cup final victory, and even the broadcasters paused to absorb the atmosphere.

“I’m just having fun listening to the crowd,” radio colour analyst Roger Snow said at the time. “What an atmosphere. I’m surprised the roof hasn’t blown off yet.”

For Memorial Cup MVP Kelly Guard, the celebration still felt surreal moments after the final horn.

“I was asking guys on the ice if this is for real and telling them to wake me up,” Guard said in the archived interview. “This is something you experience once in a lifetime.”

Guard had entered the tournament carrying pressure and criticism, but delivered when the Rockets needed him most.

“I just had a strong tournament and gave the guys a chance to win,” he said. “Together as a team, we’ve done that.”

Then he turned the spotlight elsewhere.

“The biggest thanks to the most important person in my career right now is Bruce Hamilton, who gave me a chance to play in Kelowna.”

The game-winning goal belonged to Keller, whose rookie-season finish became part of Rockets lore.

“I traded it all just for the win,” Keller said. “I didn’t care if I scored or whatever, as long as we won.”

Keller described the play simply: a pass into the middle, a step on a defender, and a shot toward the net.

“I guess shooting is never a bad place.”

He also remembered the atmosphere inside the building.

“You couldn’t even hear the whistle in the third,” Keller said. “They were just crazy.”

Defenseman Mike Card spoke about the bond inside the dressing room, especially sharing the moment with lifelong friends.

“I’ve been best friends with Justin Keller and Kyle Cumiskey since I was 10 years old,” Card said. “It’s a pretty cool feeling.”

He called the Rockets the closest team he had ever played on.

“We were always in it together for each other.”

That theme carried through nearly every interview.

Veterans talked about sacrifice. Younger players talked about learning what winning truly meant. Parents stood in awe watching their sons celebrate hockey’s biggest junior prize.

One of the most emotional moments came from Pat Gorges, the father of Captain Josh Gorges.

“I said to my dad, your name’s on that trophy now,” he said through emotion. “That’s very special.”

He credited the organization from top to bottom, pointing directly at ownership and coaching for creating a culture that players believed in.

“Marc got these guys on board,” Gorges said of head coach Marc Habscheid. “They followed him all the way through.”

Habscheid himself kept returning to one word: deserve.

“They work, and they compete, and they believe, and they commit to one another,” Habscheid said. “They found a way.”

General manager Bruce Hamilton remembered the turning point coming early in the season, when the coaching staff changed systems and the players fully bought in.

“We’ve never looked back,” Hamilton said.

He singled out Guard specifically.

“A person who deserves a lot today is Kelly Guard,” Hamilton said. “Today, I think he had the last say.”

Hamilton also believed the crowd helped carry the Rockets through the final period.

“I honestly believe our crowd helped us win this hockey game,” he said. “Our players just responded.”

And maybe that’s what still echoes most from those interviews all these years later.

Not just the championship itself, but how connected it all felt.

Players talked about grandparents in the building. Parents talked about shivers walking into the arena. Coaches talked about belief. The city talked about healing and pride after a difficult previous year, when the Okanagan Mountain Park Fire forced tens of thousands of evacuations in Kelowna and destroyed more than 230 homes.

“You get what you deserve,” Habscheid said at the time.

On that night in 2004, the Rockets believed they deserved it. And in front of a deafening home crowd, they became Memorial Cup champions forever.

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