Head Coach Derrick Martin (Image Credit: RocketFAN)
The test begins

Rockets carry ‘No Easy Days’ mindset into game one

May 20, 2026 | 6:01 AM

Before they ever drop the puck at the Memorial Cup, one message has followed the Kelowna Rockets everywhere.

“No Easy Days.”

It’s on the backs of training shirts and visible during warmups outside the dressing room, worn as the group moves through its daily work. It isn’t a secret, and it isn’t meant to be. In today’s WHL, team mottos are part of identity-building; each club chooses a season-long message, and most are now displayed openly as part of the culture that defines a year.

For Kelowna, that message has become more than words on fabric. It’s a standard.

And now, inside Prospera Place, it’s finally game time.

Game one of the Memorial Cup arrives Friday night, and for head coach Derek Martin, the 35-day gap between meaningful games has been both a challenge and an opportunity.

But Martin never treated the break as a problem.

“You’ve got no choice,” he told RocketFAN. “This is the hand you’re dealt. You’ve got to find a way.”

That approach has shaped everything since Kelowna’s last playoff game back on April 17. While other teams arrive fresh off recent series wins, the Rockets arrive from a different kind of preparation, one built on structure, repetition, and internal accountability rather than playoff adrenaline.

At times, it could have gone the other way. Long breaks can create rust. They can blur timing, dull urgency, and make teams feel like they’re waiting instead of preparing.

Instead of chasing intensity every day, the Rockets built a plan around balance. High ice volume, structured practices, and a focus on detail, but also controlled recovery. Rest, as Martin puts it, became part of the training toolset.

“You don’t want to run guys into the ground,” he said. “Rest is a weapon. There’s a fine line.”

That balance was overseen by the club’s performance staff, including strength and conditioning coach Scott Hoyer, who helped ensure the group arrives in peak physical condition.

“The body fat is down, the weight is down,” Martin noted. “These guys are well-conditioned.”

But physical readiness was only part of the equation. The bigger challenge in a long layoff is mental sharpness, the daily urgency that normally comes from a playoff series suddenly replaced by practice reps and scheduled sessions.

Martin credits his group for handling it well.

“They’ve shown up,” he said. “There’s maybe been one off practice, and they responded really well after that.”

The Rockets leaned into team-building, time together away from the rink, and shared experiences that don’t exist in the grind of a playoff series.

It wasn’t about escaping preparation. It was about protecting perspective.

“If you don’t get away from it, it becomes a burden,” Martin said. “We didn’t want this to feel like that. We wanted it to feel like a privilege.”

That mindset has carried through the entire group.

Still, the challenge now shifts. Three opponents. Three different identities. One short tournament where momentum can swing in a single shift, and there’s no time to recover slowly.

Among those opponents is the Kitchener Rangers, an Ontario Hockey League champion built on structure, depth, and discipline. Martin and his staff have done their homework, but he’s clear about where the focus has to remain.

“We have an identity,” he said. “And we’re not going to play to what they do. We’re going to play to who we are.”

That identity has been forged over an entire WHL season and tested in playoff adversity. It’s fast, physical, and detailed, but flexible enough to adjust within a game rather than abandon its core.

In short tournaments like this, Martin believes identity becomes the separator. Systems matter, scouting matters, but habits under pressure matter most.

“You’re chasing to find it in a short competition,” he said. “But we already know who we are.”

Because the Memorial Cup doesn’t allow slow starts. There is no series to settle into. No room to grow gradually. Every shift carries weight.

“You need some puck luck,” Martin admitted. “But you earn it. You embrace one-goal games. You have to be comfortable there.”

Then there’s the question of usage. In a tournament like this, benches shorten naturally. TV timeouts, game flow, and urgency all lead to top players seeing heavier minutes. But Martin is direct about how that works.

“It’s up to our best players,” he said. “They’ve got to show up. You can’t wait to find your game here.”

Depth will matter just as much as stars. So will quick adjustments. So will which group responds when momentum shifts.

As for game one, Martin isn’t interested in overthinking it. The Rockets won’t be reinventing themselves for the moment. They won’t be chasing something unfamiliar.

They’ll lean on what’s carried them here.

“Our identity is our identity,” he said. “And when we’re playing our game, we believe we can play with anyone.”

That belief was tested in a hard-fought series against Everett, where Kelowna proved they could match elite competition even in defeat. It reinforced something that matters just as much as wins: they belong on this stage.

Outside perception may label them as an underdog as the host team facing league champions from across the country. Inside the room, that conversation doesn’t take hold.

“Our goal is still the same,” Martin said. “To lift a trophy together. That doesn’t change.”

And so Friday night arrives not as a conclusion, but a beginning. The noise returns, the pace tightens, and the margin for error shrinks instantly.

Thirty-five days of preparation come down to one puck drop.

And for the Kelowna Rockets, with “No Easy Days” visible in every step of their preparation outside the dressing room, it’s finally time to find out what it all means.

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