PRINCE ALBERT — Game one wasn't what the Moose Jaw Warriors were looking for, but game two saw the top-ranked team get back closer to the game that they want to play.

With the series tied at 1-1, the Warriors now head into Prince Albert’s Art Hauser Centre on Tuesday night for game three and are looking to steal back home-ice advantage and take control of the series.

“We had a bit of a slow start, but we've seemed to have found a way in the second game and getting that win was exactly what we needed,” said forward Jayden Halbgewachs. “Coming in here, it's basically nothing-nothing now and we start all over, so we've got to bring our 'A' game, steal a couple wins here in P.A. and it will be what we need.”

The last time these two teams met in the playoffs, the Warriors split their two games on home-ice, but won every game at the Art Hauser Centre. Moose Jaw went 2-2 in Prince Albert during the regular season.

The players know that they're going into hostile territory, but are confident that they can get the job done.

“P.A. has some pretty good fans and I imagine the rink will be sold-out, so it's going to be a grind of a game, the fans are going to be into it and we're going to have to use their fans as momentum for us, create momentum by quieting them down,” said Halbgewachs.

The Warriors have done a good job through two games of limiting the scoring chances for the Raiders. Defenceman Brandon Schuldhaus said that they know Prince Albert is going to bring a strong attack and they just have to be ready to respond.

“They've played us really hard and haven't really let anyone off the hook whether its our forwards or our D, so that’s something that good teams do and we're going to have to work through and ideally we'd like to do the same thing to them and make it hard on their forwards and D,” said Schuldhaus, who returned from a two-week absence due to an injury for game one of the series.

The Raiders have been specifically hard on Halbgewachs, who led the Western Hockey League with 70 goals in the regular season. The 20-year-old forward has two assists through two games, but said he knows he’s going to have to battle through their attack to get going offensively.

“I just need to keep my feet moving and make them draw penalties because eventually they're not going to be able to stick with me the whole time,” said Halbgewachs. “I just need to beat them to the net and beat them in tight and I'll be alright.”

The Warriors and Raiders lock horns for game three at 7 p.m. Tuesday night. You can catch all the action live on Country 100, starting with the Pre-Game Show at 6:40 p.m.