Nine players and a coach, 13 Stanley Cup Rings, and years upon years of NHL experience and nostalgia graced Affinity Place Sunday afternoon for the Montreal Canadiens Alumni Game in support of OSI-Can. 

In net for the Canadiens, Vezina Trophy winner Richard Sevigny who played for Montreal and the last player to were the number 33 for the Canadiens before Patrick Roy retired it, Richard Sevigny.

Up front, the first ever Russian player to play for the Montreal Canadiens back in 1992, right winger Oleg Petrov. Joining him at centre was Keith Acton, a former Stanley Cup winner in 1988 with the Edmonton Oilers, and on the left wing Pierre Dagenais who had 133 points in 60 games in junior hockey with the Rouyn-Noranda before playing five season with the Canadiens.

Glenn Metorpolit was the other centreman for the alumni who played eight season in the NHL with seven different teams, and Jesse Belanger was the other man up front who had a Stanley Cup ring from his three seasons as a Canadien.

On the defensive side, Mathieu Dandenault played with the Detroit Red Wings for three Stanley Cups between 1995 and 2002, Marc Andre Bergeron who had one of the nastiest hip checks in the entire NHL in his ten year career, and Patrice Brisebois, who won the cup in 1993 at the beginning of his 14 year tenure in Montreal.

On the bench as the coach, Steve Shutt who was the third man on the line with Guy Lafleur and Jacques Lemaire when they won five Stanley Cups and the first ever player to score 60 goals in a single NHL season.

Getting a chance to play with the star studded lineup were two men from Estevan, Brad Ford and Ron Klassen. Ford says it was one of the best experiences he could've ever asked for.

"They treated us like we were part of the team, just getting out there I felt like a kid in a candy store just to be on the ice with them. It was just amazing."

Klasson added, "Just the chance of a lifetime."

The game was fun and light hearted with the Alumni working up to a 16-7 score and lots of fun along the way. Jessie Ewen did end up with the first goal of the game for the Bruins and the Alumni lined up for a photo at centre ice with the scorer before getting a bunch of shaving cream to the face as he posed for his photo opp.

Estevan Bruins assistant coach Jeff Smith was on the ice against the Canadiens, and while Smith has played some pro hockey, he says these guys were still on another level.

"They were probably going about 1/10th, 1/100th of the speed they should've been going. They're crisp, their skill level is outrageous but they had fun. That was the best thing is they had fun with it, they new the talent on our team so they just had fun with it."

Smith along with the rest of the Bruins team fell victim to another one of the Alumni's antics on the bench when Brisebois went down in the corner, faking a knee injury for the distraction so one of the Canadiens could fly by the bench with a bucket of water being dumped on to all of them on the bench. 

As well, the kids got to have some fun on the ice when the Estevan Novice Bearcats suited up against the Alumni and end up getting the win during the intermission. Marc Andre Bergeron was sent on a breakaway and wound up his stick for a slap shot, which he once clocked in at 103.5 MPH at the 2006 Edmonton Oilers skills competition, but luckily for the seven year old goaltender, the shot missed wide.

Details on what the game raised will be updated as soon as those numbers are available.