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Lakeshore Canadiens win 5-hour Ontario junior hockey game in record-setting battle of attrition

As the clockticked past 12:30 a.m. Thursday in the semifinal playoff game in Wheatley, Ont.,Leamington Canadiens' Marco Sladoje got the puck on a breakawayand snuck it bythe Sharks' goalie, ending the longest game in Provincial Junior Hockey League history, after over five hours,and Wheatley's season.

Exhausted Canadiens beat the Wheatley Omstead Sharks in marathon PJHL match

The Lakeshore Canadiens celebrate after scoring a 5-4 win over the Wheatley Omstead Sharks in a game that lasted 145 minutes 32 seconds.
The Lakeshore Canadiens celebrate after their 5-4 overtime win over the Wheatley Omstead Sharks, in a PJHL semifinal playoff game that took five overtime periods to complete. (Lakeshore Canadiens)

Marco Sladoje has never experienced such afeeling of relief andthe same could likely be saidfor all of his Lakeshore Canadiens teammatesas well as the Wheatley Omstead Sharks.

Exhausted physically and mentally as the clockticked past 12:30 a.m. Thursday at the Wheatley Area Arena,Sladoje, 19, got the puck on a breakawayand snuck it bySharks goalie Ethan Handley. That made it5-4 for Lakeshore, endingthe longest game in Provincial Junior Hockey League historyand Wheatley's season.

Lakeshore took the PJHL's Stobbs Division best-of-seven semifinal 4games to 2. The60-team Junior C leaguehas teams incommunities across Ontario.

"I was just so relieved. I just put my hands up and put my head up," Sladoje said of the celebration after the game, which began at 7:27 p.m. on Wednesday and wrapped upat 12:45 a.m. Thursday. "And I just had the team come around me. It was a lot of relief and a lot of excitement as well. The little adrenalinyou do have left was still pumping. It was a great moment in my hockey career, for sure."

You're looking at 11 periods of gruellingplayoff hockey in less than 24 hours. That's incredible.- Mark Seguin, GM, Lakeshore Canadiens

Sladoje, who's from Belle River,said he hasplayed in overtime games before, but nothing like this. There are usually three 20-minute regulation periods, but during the playoffs, a tie goes to 20-minute overtime periods until there's a winner.

To put that in perspective, atypical hockey game (incorporating times when play stops for penalties, offsides, player injuryor other reasons)lasts between 90 and 120 minutes. Lakeshore and Wheatleyplayed for over 5 hours.

"It was honestly the most gruelling, I won't say worst experience. But it was worse than any bag skateror any physical endurance we had to do." Sladojesaid. "I think at one point everyone was taking like 10- to 15-second shifts. Guys were falling all over the place. It was hard. It wasn't easy, that's for sure."

Sladoje joked that at one point, they were wondering how much longer they could keep playing.

"There was a lot of cramping in the legs. But nobody wanted to ice their legs because you don't want to do that in the middle of a game. There were a lot of guys putting on BioFreeze[pain rub]to keep them going."

During the intermissions, Sladoje said, the players took in lots of fluids and proteins to keep going.

192 shots later

Canadiens general manager Mark Seguin saidbecause they were on the road, the team began to run out of supplies.

"You don't factor in eight periods of hockey," Seguin said. "We bring lots of Gatorade, water, bananas, protein bars and other food for the players. But after 11 p.m., the stores are closed in town. At one point, all we had left was water."

During Game 6, Canadiens goalie Nicholas Bolton made 96 stops on 100 shots, whileHandleystopped87 of 92 shots.

"What people forget is these two teams played in Lakeshore the night before," Seguin said. "So you're looking at 11 periods of gruellingplayoff hockey in less than 24 hours. That's incredible."