Remparts De Québec: Three Home Games, One Golden Chance as Ryabkin Will Miss Game 3

The remparts de québec have leveled their playoff series and now face a pivotal stretch at home, with the Islanders set to be without Ivan Ryabkin for the upcoming game following an ejection for abuse of an official. With the 2-3-2 format sending three straight contests to the Centre Vidéotron, Quebec arrives with momentum after …

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Remparts De Québec: Three Home Games, One Golden Chance as Ryabkin Will Miss Game 3

The remparts de québec have leveled their playoff series and now face a pivotal stretch at home, with the Islanders set to be without Ivan Ryabkin for the upcoming game following an ejection for abuse of an official. With the 2-3-2 format sending three straight contests to the Centre Vidéotron, Quebec arrives with momentum after a decisive road win and the chance to seize control in front of its fans.

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Home stretch: Remparts De Québec face three straight at Centre Vidéotron

The shift to a 2-3-2 format hands the remparts de québec the next three games at Centre Vidéotron, a scheduling dynamic that amplifies the importance of Game 3. After dropping the opener 5-3, the team responded with a 5-2 victory that evened the series 1-1 and restored confidence in coach Éric Veilleux’s group. Veilleux, head coach, Remparts, emphasized long experience and a measured approach: “I’ve coached for 25 years and have always taken it one game at a time… Our style of play is our identity, and it’s important to bring it whether we’re home or away. “

Discipline and depth: How the suspension reshapes the matchup

The remparts de québec benefit directly from Ivan Ryabkin’s absence: the Russian forward received an extreme misconduct for abuse of an official and will miss the next game. That loss removes one of Charlottetown’s key contributors and alters match-up planning for both benches. Quebec’s recent win was built on opportunism and an across-the-board lift: goal-scorers in the evened game included Charles-Antoine Dubé, Freddy Meyer, Nathan Quinn (two goals) and Alex Desruisseaux, while the team displayed a more physical edge that has already produced injuries on both sides.

Discipline remains a double-edged sword: the series’ physical style has left Charlie Morrison of Quebec and Charlie Leek of Charlottetown sidelined, and Mavrick Rousseau-Hamel is listed as uncertain. Veilleux has publicly urged the roster to raise its effort after an earlier setback, and the 5-2 result suggested that message was heard: “We asked everyone — forwards, defensemen and our goalie — to lift their game a notch. We don’t want perfection, but we needed more than before, ” he said, framing the victory as a collective response.

What to watch in Game 3: goaltending, toughness and availability

Goaltending will be a central storyline when the remparts de québec host Game 3. Patrick Déniger rebounded from a less convincing performance in the series opener to record 39 saves in the victory that evened the series, a showing that underscored his capacity to carry heavy workloads; the organization has highlighted his character and poise at a young age. If Déniger sustains that level, Quebec can rely on netminding to neutralize the Islanders even without Ryabkin.

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Beyond the pipes, Quebec must preserve its physical advantages while avoiding lapses that could prove costly in playoff hockey. The 5-2 win saw a late third-period relaxation that yielded two goals for Charlottetown, a sequence Veilleux called a “small lesson” and one he cautioned does not pass in playoff series. Availability of key rotation players — especially the uncertain statuses of Morrison and Rousseau-Hamel — will shape line combinations and special teams work heading into the home stand.

Statistically grounded and tactically significant, the remparts de québec arrive at Centre Vidéotron with momentum, a bolstered roster response and an opponent temporarily diminished. The next game will test whether Quebec can convert that opportunity into a series lead that, by format, could be decisive.

With a suspended opponent, a confident young goaltender, and three consecutive home dates, will the remparts de québec take control of the series and change the trajectory of this first-round matchup?

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Sports reporter covering women's athletics, college sports, and the Olympics. Advocate for equal coverage in sports journalism.