Chirps from Center Ice

A fan blog about the AHL's Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins

Monthly Archives: January 2013

Thursday Potpurri

A few things swirling around today worth a mention. Here we go…..

—> Pittsburgh claimed Zach Boychuk off of waivers from the Carolina Hurricanes. There should be no immediate impact to Wilkes-Barre / Scranton with this move. Jonathan Bombulie had some thoughts along with a Thursday practice update this afternoon on the Penguins Insider. If anything, it means that the forward corps is safe on Coal Street and that there shouldn’t be any recalls at least in the immediate future.

—> Ex-Penguin Brian Strait was inked by the New York Islanders to a three year contract. I am happy for him. He belongs in the NHL.

—> Hershey made a move today. They traded Zach Hamill to Florida / San Antonio in exchange for Casey Wellman. Wellman will report to Hershey. He’s 7-16-23 in 37 games with San Antonio. He’s also a non-vet, which eliminates the Bears veteran issue. Since January 21, the Bears lost Tomas Kundratek to recall to Washington and Hamill to trade, or 48 points this season. They also may not be done yet.

—> Binghamton made a few moves today as well, recalling three players from ECHL Elmira.

Cleaning up a few leftovers, I guest blogged for my pals at Sweetest Hockey on Earth regarding the Outdoor Classic. Link here. Also, if you are too cheap to buy a newspaper, here’s my Monday entry and Tuesday offering for the Times Leader. I would like to publicly thank Tom Venesky for having me pinch hit for him in Providence.

Penguins back to a three-in-three this weekend with Manchester, Adirondack and Hershey, starting tomorrow. Gameday for Manchester here at 3:00 p.m.

Let’s Go Pens!

All-Star Classic Wrapup

The Western Conference defeated the Eastern Conference by a score of 7-6 in one of the more controversial games of current memory.

There was a blatant penalty. Then a ticky-tack one.

Wait. Sounds like a normal game to me.

Chad Kolarik had two goals, one in the first period and one in the second. Curtis McElhinney was playing a solid game in the second period until he was interfered with blatantly and the West scored on an open net. Referee Ryan Fraser allowed the goal to stand.

Then in the third period, Fraser calls a penalty on Peoria’s Mark Cundari for a trip. With how he let the McElhinney non-call go and let numerous other stick fouls go, a bit ticky-tack, no?

Hold on. This was all for fun tonight. I may as well crumble up my game sheet provided to me by the Providence Bruins staff and chuck it as far as I can, maybe I can hit the ice from here. No wait, that wouldn’t be good.

Kolarik played on a line with Manchester’s Tyler Toffoli and Hershey’s Jeff Taffe. I got a few quotes from Kolarik after the game that you will have to buy a newspaper tomorrow to read. Preferably a Times-Leader.

Kolarik’s line for the night was 2-0-2, even, with three shots. Providence’s playing captain Trent Whitfield took the most shots for the East, with five.

Toronto’s Ryan Hamilton stole the show and had a had trick for his Western Conference squad, scoring the last three goals for his club, the last coming with 11.2 seconds left in the third period. He was named MVP.

There’s not really a whole lot to recap here other than what I just gave you. I let my literary juices flow for the story for the paper, so we’ll have to see what makes it past the editing floor tomorrow morning.

Home tomorrow. Back to reality Wednesday. What a time. I’ll try and scrape together things worthy to read on the blog between now and Friday.

State of the League

AHL President David Andrews held his yearly State of the League press conference. The entire press conference can be found at the bottom of this post. Here are the bullet points.

— 126 players who played in the AHL during the lockout were recalled to the NHL once a new Collective Bargaining Agreement was made.
— Ticket sales are up 13% in revenue throughout the league and has been maintained or exceeded even after the lockout.
— TheAHL.com had 4M visits to the website in early January 2012. Thru early January 2013, 7.6M visits.
— TheAHL.com had 19M page views last year. This year, with the lockout, the had 36M page views, during the same period.
— 790K people follow AHL teams on social media sites such as Facebook and Twitter.
— Good to be back to business as usual in the AHL post lockout.
— The AHL had about 1,000 transactions last week with the lockout ending with player movements up and down. About 180 players were invited to NHL training camp.
— TV in Canada and overseas flourishes.
— Off site games are a success.

Andrews took questions. The main topics of said questions are in bold.

Affiliations. Are stable. It is a financially stable, healthy league right now. There is quality ownership.
Attendance. Providence bucks the trend in the Northeast hockey market, consistently in the top five in attendance. There is growth in Springfield and Portland. Worcester is stable and Manchester is rebounding.
Scheduling. No immediate plans to reduce or expand the schedule. If anything, the schedule will reduce more vs. expanding.
Expansion out West. The AHL would like a west coast presence and hired a consultant to do a feasibility study due mid to late February or early March. The AHL will work with any NHL based Western Conference team to house a team in the western part of North America. They may have a Western Division which Andrews calls “doable” but “we are not there yet.”

— Andrews called the Charlotte and Abbotsford markets sustainable and is not worried about their long term viability.
— One or two affiliation agreements expire at the end of this season and two or three building leases end at the end of the season.
— Rangers deal with the xl Center expires at the end of the year. The affiliation between the Connecticut Whale does too. It is a more unusual situation in Hartford because the building management contract is up at the same time. The Rangers haven’t been able to negotiate a new lease because there isn’t anyone to negotiate with. Ideally the plan is to still have the Rangers and the Whale there into the future.

Hybrid icing. The NHL liked the idea. The AHL liked it a lot. The AHL moved away from it simply to make it easier on the players going up and down. The voting to do away with the hybrid icing rule was not unanimous. It’s unknown if the NHL will adapt the hybrid icing next season.
— The league feels that Glens Falls is an AHL city even after the Phantoms leave for Allentown. The Phantoms will vacate if a new team is found for Glens Falls.
— On Allentown, the AHL feels that expansion to the Lehigh Valley will be a success, simply by the close proximity to Philadelphia and close proximity to natural rivals in Hershey and Wilkes-Barre / Scranton.
Head injuries. The AHL tracks them, still has a strict standard to head shots. Have had more suspensions, reviews and discipline from contact to the head and checking from behind. A high percentage of concussions are not caused by illegal plays according to AHL data. 70% of the concussions that were suffered last year were from legal hits. The teams have the opportunity to submit plays to the AHL for supplemental discipline if they would like. They haven’t seen many requests for reviews of illegal hits more recently. They haven’t solved the concussion problem by reducing or eliminating head shots.
NHL CBA and the impact on the AHL. Performance enhancing drug testing coming to the AHL. Now that they have the support from the NHL they will begin to test, but they don’t know how or where to begin. The players want it and it is seen as a positive step. The four recall rule after the trade deadline has been eliminated. Any player making over 900K count against the salary cap in the NHL.
Replay. Have seen a lot more replays that they had thought. There have been a total of 111 replays, and 80% of the calls made by the officials have been correct. 20% have overturned the call on the ice.

Here is the audio:

More after the All-Star Classic later.

Let Me See Your Skillzzz…

So a fun event was had tonight as the Western Conference rallied to beat the Eastern Conference 12-11 in the final competition of the night.

Newcomer Chad Kolarik found himself in the last event and the final event. Kolarik lost out to Lake Erie’s Andrew Agozzino in the anchor leg of the second heat and scored on his attempt in the final event, the breakaway relay against Abbotsford’s Barry Brust.

I always am intrigued in these events by fastest skater and hardest shot.

Fastest skater went to Portland’s Chris Summers, with a time of 13.324 seconds, a Skills Competition record.

Hardest shot went to Rochester’s Brayden McNabb, with a speed of 101.8 mph. Texas’ Jamie Oleksiak had his two attempts disqualified as he failed to hit the net from about 10 feet away.

The hardest shot is kind of a letdown, because every year you expect three or four guys to top 100 mph, and it rarely happens.

State of the League is tomorrow with AHL President Dave Andrews. I have always been intrigued by this and tomorrow actually get to sit in and be a part of it. I don’t plan on asking any questions cause, you know, I am covering for an actual paid professional, but I’m most interested in how the new replay system is going, whether it is a success or not and how healthy the 30 team league is.

My plan is tomorrow to have audio of the State of the League here on the blog for anyone who is as intrigues by this fireside chat with the AHL President, as I am. I’ll probably have another write-up after the All-Star Classic tomorrow too.

That’s all from Providence for now.

Shoot It and Good Things Happen – Pens WIN 3-1

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Shoot the puck.

That was the message delivered this morning by head coach John Hynes to his team.

Shoot the puck.

It worked.

The Penguins roll into Toronto and sweep the season series from the Marlies winning this afternoon 3-1. They hit the All-Star break winners of six of their last seven games.

Jeff Zatkoff vs. Mark Owuya

Joey Mormina, Cody Wild, Beau Bennett and Steve MacIntyre were the scratches. Warren Peters returned from injury and Dominik Uher replaced Steve MacIntyre.

First Period: If the Penguins lose this game, it is because they were handed four straight power plays and could do nothing with them, including a 5-on-3 for 1:23 that saw a turnover by the defensive pairing of Alex Grant and Brian Dumoulin and a shorthanded chance by the Marlies. John Hynes even used his timeout to draw something up during the extended 5-0n-3, but the Pens and Marlies went scoreless.

Second Period: Bobby Farnham gets in the way of an Alex Grant slapshot and takes a puck off an unprotected area on his leg. He’d turn out to be fine. The Penguins were throwing everything at Owuya. He wasn’t necessarily sharp, but the shots offered by the Penguins made it easy on him to save. Finally, Riley Holzapfel dangles the puck like a yo-yo and scored to put the Penguins out ahead 1-0.

The Penguins would continue to throw everything at Owuya. It was at this point that he was sharp, because he would stop three or four shots every sequence. Second period shots on goal were 19-3 in favor of the Penguins, just one off the season high.

Third Period: Tim Connolly, down from the NHL, has two goals in two games. Well, make it three goals in three games. At the top of the slot on the power play, he wrists one past Zatkoff to even things up at one a piece.

At this point, maybe six games ago, the Pens allow the floodgates to open and the opposing team to dance and dangle all over them and continue to put in goals. Not so.

:59 later, Paul Thompson picks off a Toronto clearing bid and puts a shot on Owuya that he fumbles with the glove and lets into the goal to put the Penguins up 2-1. Then, on the power play, Adam Payerl chases down his own rebound and scores to put the Penguins up 3-1. It would be all the run support that Zatkoff would need, as with Owuya pulled the Marlies generated good chances but couldn’t stick one past Zatkoff.

Three Stars: 3) Adam Payerl (goal, even) 2) Riley Holzapfel (goal, +1) 1) Jeff Zatkoff (27 saves on 28 shots)

Notes: Tom Kostopoulos has really helped guys like Payerl and Zach Sill. Payerl had six shots on goal this game alone, mostly from passes from Kostopoulos. … Marlies were an AHL best 13-2-0-1 at home coming into this game. … Three Marlies players made their AHL debuts today from the ECHL.

Around the Division: We were all watching the wrong game tonight as there was a goalie fight in Syracuse tonight as the Crunch triple up the St. John’s IceCaps by a score of 6-3. Binghamton beats Hershey in a shootout 3-2 and Norfolk whitewashes Bridgeport 5-0.

Standings: Binghamton 58 — Syracuse 56 — Penguins 45 — Hershey 44 — Norfolk 39

Conference: 1) BNG (58) 2) SPR (56) 3) POR (52) 4) SYR (56) 5) PRO (47) 6) MCH (46) 7) WBS (45) 8) WOR (45)

Wheeling Update: Nailers win 3-2 in Trenton tonight.

SendToNews Highlights: Aren’t up yet. May not be, I’ll check again in the morning.

Penguins break now for the All-Star break. I will be heading to Providence tomorrow and pinch hitting for Tom Venesky from the Times Leader and writing stories for that newspaper for Monday and Tuesday. Make sure you pick up a copy. I’ll probably have stuff here for the blog as well.

Let’s Go Pens!

GAMEDAY @ Toronto 1/26

Away Game: 20

AHL Game: 633

Who: Toronto Marlies

Where: Ricoh Coliseum

When: 5:00 p.m. EST

Media Kit

Last Game: Last night in Rochester, the Pens lost 4-2. Newcomer Chad Kolarik scored a goal in his first shot on his first shot in the first period. For Toronto, Thursday they were in Lake Erie and lost 4-2. Tim Connolly and Nicolas Deschamps scored the goals for the Marlies in the loss.

Last Meeting: November 24 in Wilkes-Barre, the Pens won 2-1. Paul Thompson had a goal and Jeff Zatkoff stopped 31 of 32 shots.

Record: For WBS: 20-18-2-1 (43 pts., 3rd place East Division) — For TOR: 23-12-2-2 (50 pts., 2nd place North Division)

Why you should care: The Marlies are one of the elite teams in the Western Conference. The Penguins skate in looking to all of a sudden get back into the win column after winning five straight before last night’s setback to Rochester. They will need a full 60 minute effort in order to win tonight.

Referee(s): Tim Mayer / Mark Lemelin

Linesmen: Jason Finley / Matt Traub

Twitter: @wbspenguins / @TorontoMarlies

Facebook: /WilkesBarreScrantonPenguins // /TorontoMarlies

Beat Writers: @CVBombulie // @KyleTheReporter

Broadcasters: For WBS: Tom Grace @TGracePens and Mike O’Brien @MikeOBrienWBS / For TOR: Jon Abbott @HockeyAbbs

Fan Bloggers: @nafsnep

Radio: For WBS: 102.3 The Mountain / For Toronto: TSN 1050

Television: AHL Live

Other Game to Watch: Hershey travels to Binghamton to take on the Eastern Conference leading Binghamton Senators. B-Sens on a bit of a roll, Bears floundering. Should be an interesting matchup.

Next Five Games: MCH 2/1, ADK 2/2, @ HER 2/3, @ NOR 2/8, @ NOR 2/9

Defensive Disaster – Pens LOSE 4-2

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Take the tape of all the defensive plays and burn them.

A forgettable defensive effort tonight by Wilkes-Barre and they lose tonight 4-2 in Rochester.

Rochester is one of the highest scoring teams in the AHL, averaging 3.44 goals a game. Coaching knows this. The players know this. The effort just was not there tonight defensively. Hopefully its a learning experience and you move on.

Brad Thiessen vs. David Leggio

Lineup Notes: Chad Kolarik started on the second line with Brian Gibbons. He and Gibbons worked well tonight. Beau Bennett is still battling the flu and also has a small lower body injury. His status for All-Stars at Providence is up in the air. Philippe Dupuis didn’t take morning skate in the morning and should be ready after the All-Star break. Cody Wild has the flu. Warren Peters is on the cusp of returning. He may tomorrow. Dom Uher took warmups but was scratched.

First Period: In his very first shift, on his very first shot, newcomer Chad Kolarik scores a goal for the Penguins to push Wilkes-Barre out to a 1-0 lead. Kolarik’s impact could be felt almost immediately, with his vision making the players around him better. No scoring the remainder of the period, mainly because the goalies were sharp.

Second Period: Nightmare period for Wilkes-Barre. Mark Pysyk blows by a D-man and wrists one past Thiessen to tie the game. Later, Tom Kostopoulos keeps a puck in and throws it at the net, Adam Payerl hacks and whacks at it and Zach Sill swoops in from out of nowhere to push the Pens out ahead 2-1.

Then, with the Amerks on a power play, Mark Mancari throws a puck cross ice that deflects off of the skate of Brian Flynn and into Thiessen’s net. That one surprised everyone. Then, Phil Varone wheels around the net, gets a step on Joe Morrow, passes to Adam Pardy who one times the puck home past Thiessen to put the Amerks out front 3-2. Then, with 7.2 seconds left and two Penguins draped all over him, Kevin Sundher scores a wrist shot after falling down to make it 4-2.

It would be the second time this season that the Penguins gave up four goals in the period. Three goals in the final six and a half minutes, too.

Third Period: Jeff Zatkoff comes in to relieve Thiessen. Amerks play prevent defense, allow the Penguins 10 shots on goal, Leggio stops all of them. Penguins pull Zatkoff late, but don’t score a goal.

Three Stars: 3) Adam Pardy (goal, +1) 2) Mark Mancari (two assists, +2) and 1) Mark Pysyk (goal, assist, +1)

Around the Division: Binghamton beats Syracuse in Syracuse 1-0. St. John’s beats Hershey 3-1 and Norfolk beats Bridgeport 2-1.

Standings: Binghamton 56 — Syracuse — 54 — Penguins — 43 — Hershey 43 — Norfolk 37

Conference: 1) BNG (56) 2) SPR (56) 3) POR (50) 4) SYR (54) 5) MCH (46) 6) PRO (45) 7) WOR (44) 8) WBS (43)

Wheeling Update: Nailers beat the Bakersfield Condors with FOUR defensemen tonight 3-2 at home.

SendToNews Highlights: Rochester hasn’t posted them yet. I’ll check again in the morning.

Penguins are in Toronto for a 5 p.m. start. Gameday setup will be here tomorrow at 1 p.m.