
UPEI men's basketball team to battle for bronze at U Sports Final 8
The UPEI men's basketball team play the Ottawa Gee-Gees for bronze on Sunday at the U Sports Final 8 in Vancouver.
The UPEI men have never won a medal at the nationals.
The Panthers lost to the Calgary Dinos 87-54 in a semifinal on Friday.

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What's with the Oilers and this Pink Pony Club song?
It's the best-kept secret of the Edmonton Oilers ' playoff run. And it has nothing to do with who's starting in net, or whether Leon Draisaitl will play on the top line next to Connor McDavid . Everyone has become familiar with the Oilers victory song, La Bamba , which has become synonymous with winning at Rogers Place. But if you've been listening at all since the stretch drive prior to the Oilers' latest long playoff run, you would have heard another tune echoing off the walls in the bowels of the arena. Wayne Gretzky might not know if it's a band or a song, but Pink Pony Club , by Chappell Roan, has been adopted by the Oilers as their unofficial celebration song inside the dressing room. Start your day with a roundup of B.C.-focused news and opinion. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Sunrise will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. It's grown to the point where the organist plays a slow (and equally as popular among Oilers faithful) angelic version ahead of opening faceoff. But good luck getting any of the players to let you in on exactly why, what it means or where the new ditty even came from in the first place. 'I'm going to keep that one within the team,' defenceman Evan Bouchard said at the podium prior to the puck dropping on the Stanley Cup Finals earlier this week. Whether it's their musical version of a lucky rabbit's foot, or something that began as nothing more than an inside joke, the Oilers have to be laughing at just how much of a stir the song has created around not only Edmonton, but the rest of the NHL. The mystery has only deepened the longer their playoffs have gone. 'I was injured at the time, so I'm the worst person to ask,' said goalie Stuart Skinner, who sat out 11 of the final 13 regular-season games when the song began catching fire in the room. 'That's when I had that concussion, so I was getting the group text and I was feeling a little left out. I didn't really know what was going on. 'I mean, it's fun when you hear it because it means you won, right? So, that's kind of where it's at in my head.' The song didn't play for the first time in six games, with the Panthers winning 5-4 in double overtime Friday at Rogers Place to tie the best-of-7 series 1-1, but the Oilers will get another chance to keep on dancin' as the scene shifts to Amerant Bank Arena in Sunrise, Fla., for Game 3 on Monday (CBC, Sportsnet). Here are some other takeaways from Friday's Game 2: • Overheard in the press box after the Panthers took a 1-0 lead early on, as Brad Marchand got away with knocking the stick out of the hands of Oilers defenceman Mattias Ekholm, only to get the puck and fire it past both Ekholm and goalie Stuart Skinner for his first goal of the game: 'That's as Brad Marchand a goal as Brad Marchand will score.' • Does anyone else feel like the powder keg could explode at any point in this series? The fuse was lit with 7:47 to go in the opening period of this one, with Skinner laid out on the ice and team trainer T.D. Forss hustling over to the Oilers crease after Sam Bennett fell — conveniently — into the goalie. It's the kind of thing that gets remembered for later. • Speaking of Bennett, you've got to give credit where credit is due. With his 12th goal of the playoffs, the Panthers forward set a new NHL benchmark, besting Mark Scheifele's 2018 campaign. Bennet is also on a five-game road streak with a goal to set a new franchise record, breaking his own record he set earlier in this postseason. There's not a single bigger reason the Panthers are playing in their third consecutive Cup final. • How good has Leon Draisaitl been all playoffs long? In case you were living under a rock, and that rock didn't happen to be inside Rogers Place the past couple of months, Draisaitl scored his 10th goal of the post-season Friday. And that's significant. The 29-year-old German product became the third player in NHL history to reach double digits in goals in three consecutive playoffs, joining Mike Bossy (four from 1980-1983) and Wayne Gretzky (three from 1983-1985). E-mail: gmoddejonge@ On X: @GerryModdejonge