Photo credit: youtube
Connor Howe gave Prince Albert a moment nobody in that rink was ready for when the 5-foot-6 forward dropped Cameron Dillard.
On the sheet, this looked like a mismatch you usually talk about for the wrong reasons.
Howe was listed at 5-foot-6 and 155 pounds, while Dillard came in at 6-foot-4 and 218.
That is a massive gap in a fight. Nearly 10 inches. More than 60 pounds.
Most of the time, that kind of size spread is the whole story before the first punch even lands.
Not this time.
Howe went in without any pause, and that is what changed the clip from a normal junior scrap into something people will keep replaying. He did not circle forever. He went right at Dillard.
And once it started, the size edge stopped meaning much.
Howe got inside, stayed aggressive, and finished the sequence by putting the bigger Rebels defenceman on the ice.
That is why this one took off so fast.
Hockey people love talking about reach, leverage, and weight, but sometimes a fight turns into pure timing and nerve.
Connor Howe gave Prince Albert a jolt
For Prince Albert, this was the kind of moment that can light up a bench in a hurry.
A 16-year-old center stepping into that kind of challenge tells teammates plenty about where his head is at.
It also says something about Howe beyond the scrap itself.
Smaller players spend their whole careers hearing what they cannot do, who they cannot handle, and where they are supposed to back off. He did the opposite.
Dillard is still a big, imposing 17-year-old blueliner, and that is exactly why the clip carries so much juice.
This was not Howe taking down another player close to his own size.
This was a much smaller forward going straight through a heavyweight frame.
That kind of scene always follows players online.
For Howe, it turns into a fearless highlight that Raiders fans will love.
For Dillard, it becomes one of those clips people bring back every time size comes up.
The bigger point is simple. Junior hockey can get chaotic fast, and once gloves hit the ice, nothing is guaranteed just because one player looks like the stronger matchup from the opening faceoff.
Howe proved that in one sequence.
A 5-foot-6 forward took on a 6-foot-4 defenceman, and the smaller player walked away with the moment everybody will remember.
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