ST. JOHNS, N.L. - Kael Mouillierat didnt like what he saw in his first appearance for the St. Johns IceCaps since sustaining an injury in early March. After a three-goal third period from the Hartford Wolf Pack — including two goals from J.T. Miller — St. Johns fell 7-2 on Saturday, leaving the IceCaps unhappy with his teams effort. "From top to bottom, I dont think we had enough guys that showed up to play tonight," Mouillierat said. "We cant just turn it on for the playoffs, it has to be every night. Every game matters." Rookie goalie Eric Comrie allowed seven goals on 30 shots, but Mouillierat said the loss was on the shoulders of the team. "Its not his fault," he said. "We played like crap in front of him. We left him out to dry." Justin Vaive, Danny Kristo, Oscar Lindberg, Marek Hrivik and Nick Latta also scored for the Wolf Pack (35-31-7). Austen Brassard and Jerome Samson answered for the IceCaps (43-23-7). Mouillierat, who had seven penalty minutes and zero points in his return to the ice, said he felt fine. "Once I got my legs under me, I felt a little better," Mouillierat said. "That is too be expected when youre out for that amount of time. Hopefully I can feel better by the time playoffs roll around here." St. Johns head coach Keith McCambridge said Hartford was the better team on the night. "Hartford is playing some real strong hockey," McCambridge said. "Thats their seventh win in a row, and (our team) not being at the level we need to be at tonight. I liked our start but other than that I didnt like our execution. "On home ice, or on the road, to have seven goals against, thats not the level we need to be at." Brenden Kichton put a shot off the post and Brassard finished it into a wide-open net to open the scoring for the IceCaps 1:39 into the game. Hartford tied it up when Vaive capitalized on a scramble in front, scoring a tap-in 3:30 into the first period. Kristo put the Wolf Pack ahead 2-1 with a toe-drag move to a wrist shot, beating St. Johns IceCaps rookie goalie Eric Comrie high blocker from the left faceoff dot at the 7:21 mark of the first period. While shorthanded at the 6:24 mark of the second period, Lindberg pivoted toward the net and fired a shot high glove in the slot, making it 3-1 Hartford. Samson pulled the IceCaps within one with a one-time slapshot from right of the slot at the 7:09 mark of the second period. Hrivik got on the board for Hartford when he one-timed a slapshot off a perfectly-set pass in the slot with 1:34 left in the second period. Miller buried a shot from the slot on the power play at the 9:18 mark of the third period for Hartford, off a Kichton turnover. Miller added another, redirecting a shot high over Comrie with 7:01 left in the game to make it 6-2. Latta finished off a 2-on-1 rush for Hartford with 30 seconds left. Comrie made 23 saves for the IceCaps. Hartford goalie David LeNeveu stopped 31 shots. Ryan McMahon Jersey . LaQuinton Ross scored 17 of his 20 points in the first half, hitting his first four 3-pointers, to send No. Charlie Blackmon Jersey . A strong fastball. A big, bending curveball that can buckle hitters at the knees. Against the Detroit Tigers on Sunday, Elias put the entire package together against one of the leagues strongest lineups. http://www.rockiesgearproshop.com/Rockie...-Kids-Jersey/.J. Hardy to avoid a three-game sweep after blowing a big early lead. Odour had a leadoff single in the seventh and scored the tiebreaking run with the help of two errors by Hardy as the Rangers went on to beat the Orioles 8-6 on Thursday night. Pat Valaika Jersey .The rookie goalie made 36 saves to help the Calgary Flames blank their Pacific Division rivals 1-0 on Saturday following a 48-hour ordeal that included lost baggage, a cancelled flight and a new pair of contact lenses. Todd Helton Jersey . Patrick Kane and the Chicago Blackhawks were proof of that on Wednesday night.COLUMBUS, Ohio -- After sitting out six games with an injury, Evander Kane wanted to make up for lost time. Kane returned to score a goal and added an assist, leading the Winnipeg Jets to a 3-2 victory over the Columbus Blue Jackets on Monday night. "I put on my skates and I tried to help this team win -- thats just how I am," said Kane, who had been out since Nov. 29 with a lower-body injury. Mark Scheifele and Bryan Little also had goals for the Jets, with Al Montoya making 22 saves. "I felt confident and the team did a good job tonight. I cant say that enough," said Montoya, who got the start because Ondrej Pavelec had given up five goals in a 6-4 home loss on Saturday. "(The Blue Jackets) didnt have too many chances." A slow, checking game with few good scoring opportunities for most of the first two periods turned into a sprint in the third period, with the teams scoring three times inside 3 minutes. Kanes goal proved to be the winner. "I thought (Kane) looked good for a guy whos been out for a little while," Winnipeg coach Claude Noel said. "His shot on the 3-on-1 was great. And his pass to Scheifele was also good." R.J. Umberger and Fedor Tyutin had the goals for the Blue Jackets, who had a first-period goal disallowed. They had picked up points in five of their past six games (4-1-1). The Jets, coming off an 0-2-1 homestand, opened the scoring when Scheifele notched his fourth at the 13:59 mark of the second. Finding his teammate on a nifty 2-on-1 pass below the hash, Kane sent a pass to Scheifele that he lifted high into the top of the net. Thanks to a double-minor for high sticking against Cam Atkinson, the Jets made it 2-0 at 2:28 of the third. A seemingly innocent one-timer from the blue line by Dustin Byfuglien was redirected by Little, who merely stuck out his stick. The puck ricocheted off it and also off the skate of Columbus defenceman David Savards skate. Umberger collected a pass from Matt Calvert behind the net and scored on the wraparound to cut the lead to 2-1 at 8:48. Moments later, however, David Savard got caught pinching in and it resulted in a 3-on-1 rush with Kane blistering a high shot to push the lead back to two goals at the 10:35 mark.dddddddddddd "We played solid with the puck," Kane said. "When youve got a 3-1 lead youve got to put them away. We played a solid game. But its nothing to jump up and down about, though." Once again the Blue Jackets countered, this time when Nick Foligno stole the puck in his offensive zone. Montoya stopped his shot, but Mark Letestu then fed Tyutin, who was crashing the net from the wing to make it 3-2 at the 11:39 mark. Mike McKenna, who had 29 saves, was starting his fourth consecutive game since backup Curtis McElhinney (lower body) was injured -- in relief of last years Vezina Trophy-winning goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky (groin strain). In the final minute of the scoreless first period, there was a wild scramble in the crease led to Calvert being checked into the cage just as the puck went past Montoya into the net, possibly off the stick of Jets defenceman Jacob Trouba. But referee Tim Peel immediately waved off the goal while the crowd booed loudly. Peel said Montoya did not have room to make a play. "I didnt see a goaltender interference on that play," Blue Jackets coach Todd Richards said. "Youre disappointed in the call, but that was one play of many, many in the game." The crowd booed louder each time the replay was shown on the centre ice monitors. The officials deliberated for 45 seconds, but Peel then announced that the call was non-reviewable. "I felt I was pushed in and I tried to dodge (Montoya)," Calvert said. "I thought the puck was in the net before I was but it was a situation where the official had to make a quick call." Notes: The Jets were without RW Anthony Peluso, suspended for three games by the NHL for a hit on Saturday against Dallas Alex Goligoski. ... The Blue Jackets should get RW Marian Gaborik (sprained knee) and D James Wisniewski (upper body injury) back this week. ... Columbus D Dalton Prout (upper body) and C Derek MacKenzie (lower body) were both hurt in the first period and did not return. ... Blue Jackets C Ryan Johansen extended his points streak to a career-best nine games (four goals, seven assists). ' ' '