CHARLOTTETOWN -- The Charlottetown Islanders have a new name and a winning start to the Quebec Major Junior Hockey season. Vapormax Flyknit Pas Cher . Charlottetown scored four times in the third period en route to a 5-2 win over the defending champion Halifax Mooseheads on Friday. Alexandre Goulet scored twice while Matej Beran, Jack Nevins and Kameron Kielly added singles for Charlottetown (1-0-0), which changed its name from the P.E.I. Rocket in the off-season. Daryl MacCallum stopped 26 shots for the Islanders. Andrew Ryan and Danny Moynihan scored for Halifax (0-2-0), while Kevin Darveau made 40 saves. --- Titan 4, Screaming Eagles 1 BATHURST, N.B. -- Jacob Brennan made 34 saves as the Titan rolled past Cape Breton. Adam Stevens, Riley Scott, Alexandros Soumakis and Rafael Lafontaine scored for Acadie-Bathurst (1-0-0). Rafael Corriveau opened the scoring for Cape Breton (0-1-0), while Maxime Lagace stopped 30 shots. The Screaming Eagles power-play unit still has work to do -- they went scoreless in six opportunities while the Titan went 2 for 5. --- Sea Dogs 5, Wildcats 3 MONCTON, N.B. -- The Sea Dogs offence exploded for four goals in the third period to rally past the Wildcats. Noah Zilbert, Michael Abbott, Nathan Noel, Kelly Bent and Stephen Anderson each scored for Saint John (1-0-0). Conor Garland, Ivan Barbashev and Christophe Lalonde replied for Moncton (1-1-0), while goaltender Alex Dubeau allowed four goals on 24 shots. Sea Dogs goalie Antoine Landry meanwhile made 33 saves. --- Tigres 4, Cataractes 1 VICTORIAVILLE, Que. -- The Tigres offence swarmed Shawinigan for an early lead and their defence did the rest in the third period. Angelo Miceli, Michael Rheaume, Gabriel Gagne and Mathieu Ayotte each scored for Victoriaville (1-0-0), which took a 4-0 lead into the third. Frederick Gaudreau scored for the Cataractes (0-1-0) in the third as his team outshot the Tigres 14-10. Steven Veilleux made 24 saves for Victoriaville, while Marvin Cupper stopped 25 for Shawinigan. --- Sagueneens 4, Remparts 3 (OT) CHICOUTIMI, Que. -- William Gignac scored in overtime to lift the Sagueneens past Quebec. Gignac scored 2:29 into OT against Remparts goaltender Callum Booth after Chicoutimi rallied to force extra time. Loik Leveille, Thomas Gobeil and Samuel Roussy, with the game-tying goal in the third period, also scored for the Sagueneens (1-0-0), while Julio Billia made 27 saves. Raphael Maheux, Brent Turnbull and Fabrice Herzog replied for Quebec (0-0-1) and Booth finished with 30 saves. --- Oceanic 5, Drakkar 4 BAIE-COMEAU, Que. -- All Rimouski had to do was show up for the second period in a win against the Drakkar. Rimouski scored five goals in the second while firing 13 of their 22 shots of the game against Baie-Comeau. Zachary Fortin made 30 saves for the Oceanic (1-0-0), who got goals from Samuel Courtemanche, Michael Thibault, Simon Fortier, Michael Joly and Guillaume McSween. Gabriel Verpaelst, Alexandre Chenevert, Campbell Pickard and Alexis Vanier scored for the Drakkar (0-1-0), while Simon Lemieux allowed four goals on nine shots before being replaced by Philippe Cadorette. --- Armada 5, Phoenix 2 BOISBRIAND, Que. -- The Armada needed a period to find their offence in their home opener. After being outshot 9-7 in the first, Blainville-Boisbriand replied in the second with three goals while outshooting the Phoenix 16-6. Emil Aronsson, Julien Bahl, Christopher Clapperton, Frederic Bergeron and Marcus Hinds scored for the Armada (1-0-0). Mitchell Lundholm and Jean-Francois Plante scored for Sherbrooke (0-1-0). Samuel Montembeault had an easy night in the Armadas net with 15 saves, while at the other end Francis Desrosiers stopped 26 shots. --- Voltigeurs 6, Huskies 3 DRUMMONDVILLE, Que. -- The Voltigeurs capitalized on a penalty filled game to beat the Huskies. Nikolas Brouillard, Joey Ratelle, Matthew Boudens, Jeremy Auger, Guillaume Gauthier and Olivier Caouette each scored for Drummondville (1-0-0), which scored five of 12 with the man advantage. Steven Mercier, Marcus Power and Mathieu Lemay scored for Rouyn-Noranda (0-1-0), which failed to score on seven power-play opportunities. Joe Fleschler made 20 saves for the Voltigeurs, while Carl Hozjan stopped 32 for the Huskies. --- Olympiques 5, Foreurs 2 GATINEAU, Que. -- Jean-Simon Deslauriers scored twice to help the Olympiques win their first game of the season. Simon Tardif-Richard, Vaclav Karabacek and Jake Coughler also scored for Gatineau (1-0-0). Maxime Presseault and Guillaume Gelinas replied for Val-dOr (0-1-0). Olympiques goaltender Robert Steeves made 21 saves. Keven Bouchard, meanwhile, allowed four goals on 18 shots in net for the Foreurs. Vapormax Plus Pas Cher Chine . -- Clayton Kershaw and Hyun-Jin Ryu will be the Dodgers starting pitchers in their two-game season-opening series in Australia against the Arizona Diamondbacks. Air Max 270 React Soldes . The South Africa international, who rejoined the club last month on loan from Tottenham, opened the scoring in the sixth minute with a powerful shot into the roof of the net. http://www.chaussurepascherchine.fr/grossiste-air-max-95/nike-95-homme-solde.html . Anaheim Ducks Reassign D Colby Robak to Norfolk Admirals (AHL). - Team Website D Eric Brewer (foot) removed from injured reserve.Kelly Russell knows younger sister Laura is never too far behind her on the rugby pitch. And thats good news for Canada. Kelly, who plays No. 8 at the back of the scrum, is captain of the Canadian womens team. Younger sister Laura is a prop, plying her trade at the forwards coal face. "We know each others tendencies on the field so its always great to play with her," said Kelly, who at 27 has two years on her sister. "Shes a hard worker, so anywhere Im around the pitch shes there too. I always know shes got my back." Kelly Russell has 24 more women behind her as Canada gears up for Fridays Womens Rugby World Cup opener against Spain in France. A quiet leader, Russell has the respect of her Canadian crew. "Kellys amazing," said veteran centre Mandy Marchak. "Shes very focused, very strong-minded. She understand what it is to be a part of such a big team and she leads by example. Shes quiet but when she speaks, it speaks volumes. She backs everything she says by how she plays. "Shes very strong on the field -- individually and for the team. Shes a really important part of the team. Kelly and I have been friends for a pretty long time and (shes) somebody I look up to." Marchak and Russell share a moment before each game. "Something I feel I personally have shared with Kelly throughout the years has been the final minutes before running onto the pitch, I turn to Kelly and she gives me this nod," Marchak wrote in a 2012 blog. "I know this nod very well. Its a nod saying were ready, we know what we need to do, lets just go out and do it. "It has actually been the one thing I feel I look forward to, as it calms me and gives me that last ounce of believe." Russell, who also played in the 2010 World Cup as well as two sevens World Cups, sees good things ahead for this Canadian team which she describes as a mix of experience with "want-to-impress" new blood. Originally from Bolton, Ont., Russell is one of about 20 women, all tied into the sevens program, who are centralized in the Victoria area. Vapormax Homme Pas Cher. Other players have moved west to train with them. Part of their regimen involves working with UFC bantamweight Sarah Kaufman at the ZUMA gym in Victoria. Kaufman helps them with condition and grappling -- wrestling takedowns are similar to tackling to rugby. "A real help," said Russell. Canada, which finished fourth in 1998, 2002 and 2006 and a disappointing sixth in 2010, is in a pool with England, Samoa and Spain. The three pool winners and the runner-up with the best record advance to the semifinals. New Zealand has won the last four tournaments, defeating England in the last three finals. The Russell sisters -- including an older sibling -- followed their fathers footsteps into rugby with the Toronto Nomads. Kelly was 14 or 15 when she took up the sport. Now she leads Canada out on rugbys biggest stage. "When I started, it was just about playing rugby and trying it out. And I just loved it right away," she recalled. "So the natural progression was just to keep pursuing higher levels." She got her first cap in 2007 and has 35 going into the World Cup -- no small feat considering womens rugby internationals are few and far between. Named to the 2010 World Cup all-star squad, Russell was named Rugby Canadas Womens Fifteens Player of the Year for 2013. Canada last faced Spain at the 1991 and 2006 World Cups, winning 79-0 and 19-4. "Were expecting Spain to play a lot of rugby (Friday) with a lot of ball in play, fast pace and a lot of running, similar to the style we play and they play with no fear," Canadian coach Francois Ratier said in a statement. "This is the World Cup. And its important for us to set the tone with a big effort against Spain. We need to focus on our game and dont change our style or philosophy because its been working -- just push up the intensity." ' ' '