HALLOWELL â First impressions being important and all, the Kennebec Riverhawks made a good one in the opening game of a central Maine high school hockey tournament doubleheader Saturday at the Camden National Bank Ice Vault.
âIt does feel like playoffs. Everybody wants to win it just as much,â said Kennebec senior captain Nate Newgard, who eclipsed the 100-point mark for his career with a four-point night in a win over Cony/Hall-Dale/Monmouth/Erskine. âItâs become a little more normal playing (in empty arenas), but it is still a little bit awkward.â

Thatâs the only awkwardness that remains for Newgard, who stepped into the RiverHawk program as a sophomore. He was afforded the opportunity to play with Tom Tibbetts that season, and then last year with Cody Ivey as his pivot in the middle.
This season, while heâs got Brandon Mason as a fellow senior with some offensive flair in his game, Newgard has been one of the horses pulling the Kennebec cart.
The change to a leadership role in the dressing room has only been one of the improvements to Newgardâs duties in the No. 91 sweater.
âI think my role has become increasingly more important,â Newgard said. âEvery year it has. I think with Cody gone, it made me need to score a little more maybe.â
âYouâve got to remember, too, that last year he played half of the season at defense,â Kennebec coach Jon Hart said. âHeâs one of the most unselfish players we have. Heâs our best puck handler and has been for years. When he has the puck, itâs the closest thing you can get to a deep breath â you know good things will happen.

âI just canât say enough about him. Heâs smart with the puck, heâs unselfish, and he could probably have more points.â
Newgard finished off his hat trick with 6:10 remaining on Saturday, helping lift Kennebec to an 11-4 win over Cony/Monmouth/Hall-Dale/Erskine in the RiverHawksâ opening effort of the âCOVID Cupâ central Maine hockey tournament. Kennebec will finish off its round-robin play against Camden Hills on Wednesday. With a win, theyâre guaranteed a spot in Fridayâs championship game.
In the other game Saturday at the Camden National Bank Ice Vault, Messalonskee beat Capital Region for the third time this season, 3-1. The Eaglesâ own 100-point club member Myles Hammond had a goal and an assist in the victory, including the game-winner less than two minutes after the Hawks tied the score midway through the second half.
The Eagles will play Gardiner on Monday night, and with a victory Messalonskee will punch its ticket in the title contest. Capital Region beat Gardiner, 3-1, in the opening game of the tournament last Thursday.
âThe go-ahead goal, itâs always a little bit crazy,â Hammond said. âYou donât really know what happens after you score, you just kind of celly.â

Messalonskee finished with a 40-14 shots on-goal advantage, but had trouble finishing off plays until late in regulation.
âWhen you come back and the shots are 15-4 (at halftime) and youâre only up by a goal, you feel like youâre killing them but youâre not,â Hammond said. âThe only thing that counts is goals, and it gets frustrating. We did a good job staying at it and not changing what we did.â
But the early statement Saturday was made by Kennebec, with the Riverhawks looking in the offensive zone like a team skating with an extra attacker. Extra passes in and around the slot set up some easy tap-in scores, with both Sam Lloyd and Don Gurney each netting a pair of goals in the win. Mason, Chris Williams, Jared Newgard and Peter Sack each finished with two-point nights.
It was a far cry from Kennebecâs 9-3 season opening loss to Cony.
âI thought it was the best passing and movement weâve had,â Hart said. âWeâve talked a lot about commitment to team play, and I think thatâs what we did.â
Newgard was just happy to have the win.
âI donât think itâs that important,â Newgard said. âI think itâs less important than winning. If Iâd have gone out there and not gotten 100 points and we still won, Iâd have been just as happy.â
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