Introducing the โ€œWhy Not Usโ€ Whale.

It looked like a typical Whaleโ€“Pride game after two periods Wednesday night. Boston struck first on the scoreboard late in the opening frame and held Connecticut to just two shots on goal in the second.

The Whale proved you can never count them out. Not even against Boston.

After a huge penalty kill, Tori Howran snuck a shot from the point past Bostonโ€™s Victoria Hanson to even up the score. Katelynn Russ banged one in from the crease 2:20 later. Connecticut never looked back, firing 20 third-period shots at Hanson and scoring on four of them.

This was more than just an exorcism of Boston demons. This was a statement to the rest of the NWHL that, in case you didnโ€™t already know, the 2021 Whale are legit.

For context: the Whale had not beaten the Boston Pride since Feb. 2, 2018. Thatโ€™s a three-year wait. They were 0โ€“6โ€“1 last year, counting the postseason, got outscored 33โ€“7, and led once for all of 11 minutes across the entire season series.

That Whale team has completely transmogrified into a legit Isobel Cup contender, sitting at 2โ€“1โ€“0 while Boston toils at 1โ€“3โ€“0.

How did this happen?

โ€œItโ€™s great to have that depth,โ€ commented head coach Colton Orr following the win. โ€œWe know we can roll our lines and get scoring from all the way down our lineup.โ€

Orr is right: the Whale are as deep as theyโ€™ve ever been. Alyssa Wohlfeiler has been a beast in driving the play up ice, using her speed and her power to make plays happen in the attacking zone. Rookies like Howran, Russ, and Amanda Conway are coming up big in clutch situations.

Not to mention last yearโ€™s leading goal scorer Emma Vlasic, who โ€” after failing to register a single assist in 24 games in 2019โ€“20 โ€” logged three helpers plus a goal of her own Wednesday night.

โ€œWe definitely have good support,โ€ Vlasic beamed. โ€œWohlfie and Russ were in great spots today, itโ€™s been great playing with them. Thatโ€™s a part of my game Iโ€™ve wanted to work on … We were definitely finding each other out there tonight.โ€

The Whale were able to turn on the jets in the third period in a way that they have never been able to do in their franchiseโ€™s entire history. They killed off four uninterrupted minutes of shorthanded time and still managed to badly outshoot Boston in the frame. Theyโ€™re averaging 39 shots on goal per game. Theyโ€™re tied with Minnesota for the best scoring offense in the entire league with nine goals in three games.

Plus, theyโ€™re among the better shot suppressors in the league.

Itโ€™s more than just numbers, though. Something about this collection of players feels more … alive. The bench is rowdy. Goal celebrations are wrought with emotion โ€” particularly from captain Shannon Doyle.

Doyle embodies the Whale plight. She has carried this franchise on her back since the beginning, loading all of the teamโ€™s burdens on her back; โ€œWhale Bad Luck,โ€ she calls it. She declared over the summer that this would be her final season in the NWHL, and she appears to be squeezing every last drop from it.

She knows itโ€™s her final chance at reaching the Isobel Cup Final, too โ€” something the Whale have never done.

โ€œWe are producing, which is amazing,โ€ Doyle said of her teamโ€™s offense after a close 4โ€“3 loss to Metropolitan on Sunday. โ€œWe have a lot of really young, talented forwards. Definitely improved, 100 percent.โ€

โ€œI think that weโ€™ve been able to play with a lot of energy right now,โ€ Orr elaborated. โ€œWhen you get Tori [Howran] scoring goals, you get everyone contributing, you get everyone rolling and everyone involved, it just really helps with that energy. It keeps everyone positive.โ€

The paradigm shift is noticeable. Yes, the Boston Pride were without captain Jillian Dempsey and Jenna Rheault. But a 23โ€“1โ€“0 record in 2019โ€“20 is otherworldly. Dempsey or no Dempsey, the Pride are still great.

โ€œLast year, it felt like [Boston] would always beat up on us,โ€ Vlasic laughed. โ€œIt was always a battle … we just couldnโ€™t get over that next step to beating them. It feels really good to get over that hump and beat this team.โ€

โ€œ[This group has] tremendous confidence to go down [on the scoreboard] and stay with things,โ€ Orr added. โ€œLast year going down to Boston 1โ€“0 felt like the biggest hole to dig out of. When weโ€™re sitting there with this group, whether weโ€™re down 2โ€“0 to the Rivs [Sunday] or 1โ€“0 to Boston [tonight], we just had that confidence on the bench. We knew we could come back, we knew we could win this game.โ€

Orr has played a key part in the Whaleโ€™s fundamental turnaround, as noted by Pride head coach and Orrโ€™s former NHL teammate Paul Mara.

โ€œUnbelievable,โ€ he said of Connecticutโ€™s improvement. โ€œ[Orr] has done a fantastic job with that team. From the way they started last year to now, itโ€™s a totally different team. Tip your hat to him. Itโ€™s just unbelievable.โ€

It bears repeating: this team has a swagger to them thatโ€™s so captivating to watch. Itโ€™s more than just energy. Itโ€™s a resiliency that comes with having nothing left to lose as a franchise and wanting to wash the stink of last place clean from their shoulders.

Scratch that, itโ€™s not wanting to escape last place. Itโ€™s wanting first place. The Connecticut Whale have their sights on first place. Isnโ€™t that something?

Insert Paul Rudd meme here. โ€œHey. Look at us. Who would have thought?โ€

โ€œBeing a new player, we always heard about the Boston Pride being one of the top teams,โ€ said Howran. โ€œTo come out on top against them in this bubble shows how much weโ€™ve worked in the offseason together as a group and how much weโ€™ve come together and grown.โ€

Connecticut is now tied with the Metropolitan Riveters for second place in the round robin. Since the Riveters own the head-to-head tiebreaker, Connecticut will need more points outright to earn a bye to the Semi-Final.

They take on the Minnesota Whitecaps on Thursday at 8:30 p.m. While the โ€™Caps are the last unbeaten team, it has taken two bonkers finishes โ€” including a 5โ€“1 comeback over Toronto and a literal last-second goal against Metro โ€” to get them there. Theyโ€™ve white-knuckled it to the top. Nothing is impossible.

If Connecticut can finally slay the dragon from Boston, all bets are off.

The โ€œWhy Not Usโ€ Whale are ready to roll.

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