Chirps from Center Ice

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

Monthly Archives: October 2023

Weekend Preview – Jekyll and Hyde

So full disclosure here I was looking for, “Jekyll and Hyde” themed YouTube videos and came across one, but it included shout rock and someone loading bullets into a gun. I’m a) not into shout rock and b) staying away from videos showing someone loading a gun.

Anyway, the idea here is that the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins are like Jekyll and Hyde. Great at home, lost on the road.

The good news is that they have three straight at home starting this Wednesday at home against the Providence Bruins. Hershey stops by Friday and Belleville makes their only stop of the season on Saturday.

A Quote…

Just as we have two eyes and two feet, duality is a part of life.
— Carlos Santana

The Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins are 3-0 at home, 1-3 on the road. That’s not good. But does that mean that these three games at home will be easy cakewalks? No, but the odds are better in their favor.

They won the first game of the season on the road in Charlotte. They followed that up with a clunker in the rematch. They then went to Hartford and got pasted by the then red hot Wolf Pack. They travelled to Hershey this past Sunday and out of the gate were down 2-0 before their goaltender registered a save and the game got away from them from there, which often happens to teams who travel to the Giant Center.

So how do you fix it?

I don’t think you do, really. I think it’s a matter of coincidence.

Charlotte in back to back games don’t lose two straight at home. It doesn’t happen that often. Hartford was a team on a hot streak to start and I don’t care where you are in the AHL, giving up your first two goals before the goalie makes a save is a recipe for disaster.

I guess what I am tryting to say is this is less of a concern for me at the beginning of November then say, the beginning of December. If the Pens are still junk away from the Mohegan Sun Arena at Casey Plaza in mid-December, then they are not just Jekyll and Hyde but extremely one dimensional and we have bigger problems.

The Setup

Providence comes a calling on Wednesday after getting swept by a resurgent Springfield team, losing 5-2 in Springfield and 3-2 in overtime at home in Rhode Island.

The Bruins are 1-3-1-2 and off to a bad start, for a team we thought would be at the top of the Atlantic Division all season.

Hershey is a good team, as we all know, and sit at 6-2 in the division good for 12 points. They crushed in-state rivals Lehigh Valley 4-0 and Wilkes-Barre 6-1 this past weekend. The Bears will rematch with the Phantoms on Wednesday before stopping by Wilkes-Barre on Friday.

Belleville will report into Wilkes-Barre looking to get out of the middle of the pack in the North Division. They beat the Toronto Marlies 2-1 in overtime last Friday and lost in a shootout to the Marlies on Saturday 4-3. They will be in Springfield Friday.

Records

Gave you Providence and Hershey’s above. Belleville is 3-2-0-1 and the Penguins are 4-3.

Who’s Up? Who’s Down? Who’s Out?

Colin White was day to day with an upper body injury last weekend. Magnus Hellberg, Vinnie Hinostroza and Radim Zohorna are up in Pittsburgh. Taylor Gauthier is up from Wheeling, presumably because either Garret Sparks or Joel Blomqvist are hurt. Andreas Johnsson has yet to play (dealing with a family issue) and Austin Rueschhoff, Justin Lee, and Matt Filipe are on the sides of milk cartons, having not played in I can’t remember when.

What can we learn about the Penguins this week?

Do they collect all six points? Do the road woes bleed over into home ice? Will the power play keep clicking?

They should beat Providence, hypothetically, because it seems like the Bruins can’t get out of their own way. They could beat Hershey because they have already once last week and Belleville remains an outlier because you don’t see many North Division teams that often because you have to play the likes of Hershey and Lehigh Valley 25,000 times in a given season.

Will they? If they play careless against the Bruins, Providence will kick their heads in. You almost need to play a perfect game against Hershey in order to even have a prayer of winning and who knows about Belleville in back to back nights in what will likely be Garret Sparks again in goal, or possibly Gauthier.

Leading to…

Who’s in goal? 

Joel Blomqvist was in the running for some October rookie goaltender awards I thought I heard in the third period on Sunday on the radio with Nick Hart then, but then J.D. Forrest put him in anyway in the hopes that the rookie netminder would somehow turn things around for the Pens. That didn’t happen and Blomqvist gave up two goals. It could have also been because Sparks was injured, we just don’t know yet.

You will probably see him out first Wednesday and Friday and either Taylor Gauthier or Garret Sparks Saturday against Belleville unless they do a switcheroo somewhere and Gauthier / Sparks goes Wednesday (unlikely) or Friday (I wouldn’t do it)

Brandon Bussi for the Bruins, probably Clay Stevenson (just a hunch) for the Bears on Friday and backup Leevi Merilainen for the B-Sens on Saturday, denying us a chance to see leviathan Mads Sogaard, all 6’7 of him.

Who’s Running the Show?

Bobby Jo Love and Peter Schlittenhardt are here Wednesday with Patrick Dapuzzo and Ryan Knapp on the lines.

Don’t know yet about Friday or Saturday’s crews. Sometimes the AHL updates them, other times (like this week) they don’t.

Looking ahead…

Friday up in Syracuse to visit the Crunch, then back home Saturday to pay off a home and home with the old rival from Central New York.

Give us a bold prediction…

Austin Rueschhoff returns, plays all three games and gets a hat trick in one of them. Pens win all three games by a combined 15-4.

Bear Attack — Pens LOSE 6-1

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I don’t think they are a very good team on the road.

A 6-1 pasting Sunday afternoon by the Hershey Bears. They give up the first two shots faced, and it was all really downhill from there.

Here’s how they lined up:

Lineup Notes: It was the WBS debut for Libor Hajek as the Penguins went 11 forwards, 7 defensemen. Avery Hayes drew the short stick.

First Period: Disaster start for the Penguins and Garrett Sparks in general.

Hershey scores twice before Sparks records a save. Ethen Frank scores twice, starting at 1:11 into the contest, and this was the first goal allowed in the first period by the Penguins.

Then the Bears strike on a power play and Frank notches his second.

Couple things here. First, Sparks needs to be better here, especially on the second goal by Frank. There’s time and space and a goaltender as experienced as Sparks has to make that save.

Jack Rathbone continues to really unimpress me, being on the ice for the first of Frank’s goals here. Be better.

Speaking of, just what in the sam hill is this disaster?

A 2-on-0? Really?

The Penguins as a whole, were out to lunch that period and the defending champion Bears punished them rightly for being so unprepared.

Second Period: Penguins have a would be Corey Andonovski power play goal swiped off the board when referees Alex Lepkowski and Patrick Hanrahan adjudge that the puck was deflected in on a high stick. It is not a reviewable call (it should be) but on the few replays I did see, it looked borderline.

Later, Sam Poulin scores a legal power play goal the traditional way with a hack and whack slam dunk.

But Hershey would respond in kind when Joe Snively scores his second goal of the game on a power play goal left unmarked on the far post.

Third Period: Joel Blomqvist came in for relief of Garrett Sparks and it mattered little.

A loose puck put in by Jimmy Huntingdon made it 5-1.

Later, Bogdan Trineyev scores his first AHL goal on the trot.

Seriously, the guy never loses a step and just charges at the net where Nic Aube-Kubel sets him up for a goal that makes it 6-1.

Three Stars: 3) Ethen Frank (two goals) 2) Jimmy Huntingdon (goals, two assists) 1) Joe Snively (two goals, assist)

The Good: Somehow Valtteri Puustinen, Xavier Ouellet and Taylor Fedun ended the day even.

The Bad: Jack Rathbone was a -3. Gotta tighten up there buddy.

Turning Point: The second shot of the game for Hershey gave the Bears all the momentum necessary for what turned into a blowout win for the 12 time league champions.

Around the Division: Springfield beats Providence in overtime 3-2 and sweeps the weekend….Hartford salvages theirs with a 4-1 win in Allentown.

Standings: Hershey extends their lead over the Penguins by four points at the top of the division. Bears have 12 points, Hartford 10, Charlotte, Penguins and Springfield have 8, Lehigh Valley 6, Providence and Bridgeport 5.

Wheeling Update: Nailers were off.

Video Highlights:

Back at it Wednesday at home against Providence. Weekend Preview will be up Wednesday morning.

Let’s Go Pens!

In Memoriam: There was news last night that was devastating to learn regarding ex-Penguin Adam Johnson, who tragically passed away during a hockey game overseas. Johnson played the bulk of his AHL time in Wilkes-barre but also had stints in Lehigh Valley and Ontario. The Hershey Bears held a moment of silence for Johnson before the start of the Sunday afternoon game against the Pens.

 

Special Teams — Pens WIN 4-2

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Getting on a bit of a roll here.

The Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins won their third straight game at home, defeating the suddenly slumping Hartford Wolf Pack 4-2 Saturday night in Wilkes-Barre.

Special teams carried the day for the Penguins, who did all of their scoring in the first period with a shorthanded goal and a power play goal. They held the Wolf Pack to just 8 shots through the two periods before Hartford nudged a little closer, but not too close to the point to where it may become uncomfortable.

Hershey Sunday and a chance to sweep the week.

Here’s how they lined up:

Hartford didn’t post lines and never does.

Lineup Notes: Vinnie Hinostroza went up Thursday, Corey Andonovski came back. That was it, D pairings stayed the same.

First Period: A blitzkrieg for the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins.

Valtteri Puustinen receives a nice stretch pass and doesn’t miss for a 1-0 Penguins lead.

I don’t know if Puustinen reads the blog (please don’t) but ever since I said he should be scratched, he’s responded with goals.

Penguins go on the penalty kill and Joona Koppanen skates in all alone and scores a shorthanded goal.

Jonathan Gruden on a hack and whack job and the rout was on.

And then Rem Pitlick scores a power play goal for the cherry on top.

Now I was expecting Hartford starting goaltender Dylan Garland to get the yank but Kris Knoblauch stayed with him. After the Pitlick goal, Garland shut it down from there.

I really thought that had the Penguins scored a fifth, Garand’s night would have been over.

Second Period: Seemed at times a bit tamer, which I think played more in favor for Hartford and less so for the Penguins.

Jack Rathbone and Xavier Ouellet cross wires and Turner Elson scores to put the Wolf Pack on the board.

Third Period: Hartford had a leftover penalty from the second, and Jonny Brodzinski rifles one home just :39 into the period to make the game a lot closer.

Said this at the time…

Sometimes I tweet things to set things up for the blog. If Hartford scores again, then yeah it’s a lot tigher and I use foreshadowing to set up the rest of the blog entry, If the Penguins score to make it 5-2, it’s likely an easy win for the Penguins. Either way, the tweet still stands.

Only no one scored again.

Jansen Harkins came close on a breakaway, but Dylan Garand was a completely Dylan Garand in the second and third periods then he was in the first.

Hartford had a few chances late with Garand pulled and a power play, but never got any closer.

Three Stars: 3) Ty Smith (assist) 2) Valtteri Puustinen (goal) 1) Jonath Gruden (goal)

The Good: Jump all over the opponent in the first and send them scrambling. The Penguins have not allowed the opponent to score at all in the first period so far this season. It’s a good trend, you’d like to see it continue.

The Bad: Boy oh boy, they nearly blew that one until the didn’t. Take the two points and move on.

Turning Point: Turns out that Gruden power play goal was big at the time back in the first period as it stood up as the game winning goal.

Around the Division: Charlotte shuts out Bridgeport 2-0 at home….Hershey does the same to Lehigh Valley 4-0.Lehigh Valley had eight power plays…Springfield beats what looks like a bad Providence team 5-2. The Thunderbirds scored three power play goals.

Standings: Hershey 10, Penguins, Charlotte and Hartford 8, Lehigh Valley and Springfield 6, Bridgeport 5 and Providence 4

Wheeling Update: Nailers are down big in Fort Wayne. Box here.

Video Highlights: 

Hershey Sunday at 3 in Hershey. Don’t be late. Talk to you then.

Let’s Go Pens!

Sam’s Bear Trap — Pens WIN 5-1

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Sam Houde has four points in two games.

Yeah, he’s not coming out of the lineup any time soon.

The Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins continue to be the kryptonite to the Hershey Bears and throttle the defending champions at home 5-1, handing the Bears their first road loss of the season.

The Penguins are 2-0 at home, important to note also. Gotta defend that home ice.

Work night, school night, so let’s get this over with already.

Lineup Notes: Just Sam Poulin for Colin White. Corey Andonovski went up and Radim Zohorna came back down. The Penguins also recalled Magnus Hellberg.

First Period: Good start, the Penguins score first, in the first period, to boot.

Alex Nylander on a power play.

I don’t know which idiot on this blog suggested the Penguins scratch Nylander.

Penguins played an overall quiet, disciplined first period. Didn’t take a penalty and scored on the on power play they were awarded.

Second Period: Joe Snively, one of my favorite non-Penguin player and definitely my favorite Hershey Bear, scores his first of the season with this snipe.

So next goal was crucial here in this overall, to this point, even headed hockey game.

Enter Sam Houde.

A St. Ivany blast from the point that Joona Koppanen and Sam Houde get deflections on and it’s 2-1 Penguins.

Third Period: So the question coming in here was whether or not the Penguins could hold the lead and hold the Bears back when the inevitable charge came.

Not only did the Penguins hold the lead, they extended it and the 12-time Calder Cup Champions never made that charge.

A second power play goal? In one game? In this economy?

Sam Houde again.

Marc Johnstone picks Vinnie Iorio’s pocket, or Iorio gave it away like the kid who sees the bully coming and Johnstone didn’t miss.

And then Vinnie Hinostroza scores another breakaway goal and the rout was on.

Goals came fast, and they came furious, 4:32 to be exact provided my math is right.

Penguins continued to play disciplined and it never really felt like the game was going to get out of hand for the home team.

Three Stars: 3) Joel Blomqvist (19 saves) 2) Alex Nylander (goal, assist) 1) Sam Houde (two goals)

The Good: Kind of the game you wish you could bottle up and keep. They played their most complete game of their young season, did mostly everything right and there were no weak points in this one. Hershey is a good team, a championship team, and not a pushover by any means. But for some reason, for all the pitfalls that befell this Penguins team, whenever the Bears come around, it’s like a completely different hockey club.

The Bad: When I got nothing, I got nothing. Moving on….

Turning Point: The Houde power play goal in the third period was the breathing room that the Penguins needed here when they were nursing a one goal lead as the third period started. It ripped the game open and the once close game turned the game into a laugher.

Around the Division: Charlotte loses up in Rochester 4-3.

Standings: Hartford / Hershey 8, Penguins / Phantoms 6, Bridgeport 5, Charlotte / Providence 4, Springfield 2

Wheeling Update: Nailers were off.

Video Highlights: 

Rare Friday off for the Penguins and then Hartford comes calling Saturday night. Let’s see how they show up then. Good start to the week, however.

Let’s Go Pens!

Weekend Preview — Cat Scratch Fever

The Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins are .500 and host the defending Calder Cup Champion Hershey Bears and the still undefeated Hartford Wolf Pack in a trio of games starting this Wednesday at home against the Bears. It’s a rare Friday off for the Pens, then a Saturday game against Hartford at home and then a Sunday afternoon trip down I-81 to visit the defending champs on Sunday.

Music to Set the Mood…

I’ll get to what this means in a second.

A Quote…

In any moment of decision, the best thing you can do is the right thing, the next best thing is the wrong thing, and the worst thing you can do is nothing.
Theodore Roosevelt

Sam Houde produced two points in his first game of the season Saturday against Springfield and was instrumental in the win over a sputtering Springfield team, helping set up Rem Pitlick for a power play goal in the third period and assisting on the Jansen Harkins empty net goal which sealed the fate and the win for the Penguins.

Meanwhile Valterri Puustinen has appeared in every game so far, has zero points and is a -6. Say what you want about the plus/minus stat, but he’s on the ice when goals are scored. He doesn’t play defense and I have noticed more and more that he takes liberties when the puck is on the edge of his stick.

It’s time to scratch him if the message isn’t getting through or at the very least sit him down and advise him in whichever language he understands best that what he is doing (or isn’t doing) is not cutting the mustard.

The Penguins were rebuilt, but Puustinen was a leftover from last years team. Sure, he was one of the offensive producers last year, but that team finished dead last. So far this year? It ain’t good enough, pal. Sam Houde is stewing in street clothes watching his team get their heads kicked in in game two in Charlotte two weeks ago and shutout last Friday in Hartford. He only goes out against Springfield and produces two assists and overall brought positivity for a team still trying to find itself in this very young season.

I’d make one or two lineup changes if I am J.D. Forrest. Scratching Puustinen and Alex Nylander is one of them and trying to find room on defense for Libor Hajek (if you can) for Taylor Fedun or one of your other defensive black holes.

Am I advocating for scratching the team captain and two of the bigger offensive threats? Yes I am, because it’s a two way game now. Hershey and Hartford are offensive juggernauts. You need forwards that play defense and not need to be pushed into the play (see the second goal scored against the Penguins on Friday) and get guys into the lineup who want to contribute on every inch of the 200 foot surface.

The Setup

Kind of gave it to you in the paragraphs above. Hershey at home Wednesday and on the road Sunday and Hartford at home Saturday.

Records

The Penguins are 2-2 and are .500 with 4 points. Hershey is 4-1 with 8 points and Hartford is still undefeated at 4-0 and good for 8 points at the top of the Atlantic Division.

The Wolf Pack will host Springfield Friday before traveling to Wilkes-Barre Saturday. They beat the Pens 5-0 last Friday then beat the Lehigh Valley Phantoms 5-1 Saturday. They have scored three or more goals in every game they have played thus far.

The Bears swept Providence in a pair of games in Rhode Island Friday and Saturday and then needed overtime to beat Bridgeport Sunday 3-2 on the road; after playing the Pens on Wednesday, they will also get Friday off and then host the Phantoms on Saturday before the Pens come knocking on Sunday.

Who’s Up? Who’s Down? Who’s Out?

Radim Zohorna is up and may stay there. Since last week, Coal Street never sent anyone else down to Wheeling and hasn’t called anyone up. I don’t know what’s up with the injuries. I think Corey Andonovski has something and so does Sam Poulin.

What can we learn about the Penguins this week?

Are you cool with .500 so far? I’m not. I’m also a realist. Do I expect the Penguins to win every game? No. Would I like for them to? Sure, I’m a fan. You don’t go into a contest saying, “ah, we’ve won enough, let the other team win.”

If the team gives their all and comes up short, I’m fine with that. But if they look like a bunch of losers and look lost every night, then no I am not cool with it. The loss in Charlotte was a power play problem. The loss in Hartford was a breakdown in execution and game plan. Both were blowout losses and the one in Hartford was a shutout. Will you have a few of those in a 72 game season? Of course. Is it asking too much, too soon to be perfect? In October, yes it is. But bad habits usually trend into bad teams, like you saw last year. Make changes while you still can, mix in Nylander and Puustinen when you can, but just not now.

Who’s in goal?

I still don’t know who number one is yet. I suppose we will find out this week. I’d go back to Joel Blomqvist Wednesday, go Magnus Hellberg against Hartford again Saturday then go Blomqvist Sunday again in Hartford. Or, swap Blomqvist Saturday and Hellberg Sunday. But that means Hellberg goes over a week without seeing live fire. So I don’t know. But he’s a veteran and should be used to this. Blomqvist is supposed to be your future. Get the kid reps so you know what you have in him.

Figure Mitch Gibson Wednesday for the Bears, old buddy Louis Domingue Saturday with Hartford and either Gibson again for the 12 time champs or Clay Stevenson.

Who’s Running the Show?

Mason Riley and Jack Young are here Wednesday with Ryan Jackson and Chandler Yakimowicz on the lines.

Saturday sees Beau Halkidis and Alex Lepkowski with J.P. Waleski and Jud Ritter on the lines.

Sunday in Hershey sees Lepkowski again with Patrick Hanrahan and on the lines it is Bill Lyons and John Rey.

Looking ahead…

Calendar switches to November. Three home games to start out the chute. Providence on Wednesday, Hershey again on Friday and Belleville stops in for their only visit this season on Saturday.

Give us a bold prediction…

Puustinen and Nylander combine for 9 points this week between them, Penguins win all three games and we quickly forget about the two losses and start inflating our unreasonable expectations about this hockey club.

What’s the Frequency, Pitlick? — Pens WIN 3-1

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Here’s a hot take for you, Springfield and Wilkes-Barre are a lot alike.

I got that sense after watching about 40 minutes of these two teams battling Saturday night in Wilkes-Barre in a game that the Penguins would win 3-1, their home opener.

No score after the first, 1-1 after the second, the two teams couldn’t separate from one another until a Rem Pitclick power play goal put the Penguins ahead for good and a Jansen Harkins empty netter sealed it late.

Here’s how they lined up:

Lineup Notes: After that effort last night, Alex Nylander was a scratch. So too were Corey Andonovski and Austin Rueschoff. In were Sam Houde, Jansen Harkins (making his WBS debut) and Matt Filipe. For Filipe and Houde, it was their season debuts.

No changes to the defense or the pairings from Friday in Hartford.

First Period: Another scoreless first. After seeing him on the road on AHLTV and now seeing him in person, Marc Johnstone busts his ass every shift. Like every shift he’s methodical in his positioning and gives 100%. Early fan favorite in my opinion. Give me a team full of Marc Johnstone’s.

Penguins failed to score on two power plays, so they have gone 0-for-15 to open the season.

Second Period: Vinnie Hionostroza opened his account with a breakaway goal to open the middle frame.

Nice little cueball pass there by Rem Pitlick, setting up the breakaway for the veteran Hinostroza. He shouldn’t miss these and didn’t. Big goal.

A little over a minute and a half later, Xavier Ouellet is in his defensive zone and goes to rim a puck around the wall. Valtteri Puustinen was closely and assumed that the puck would do it’s thing and goes where he thought it would go.

You know what happens when you assume, right?

I enjoy the use of the pun there.

Third Period: Things got chippy about halfway through. Will Bitten was caught with his head down and needed help off. A few minutes later Penguins get a power play and it’s Marc Johnstone (that man again) setting up Rem Pitlick for a power play goal (a what?!?!?) that gives the Penguins a 2-1 lead.

A few more heart in your throat moments however as Wilkes-Barre would get tagged with too many men putting Springfield on the power play and with starting goaltender Vadim Zherenko pulled for an extra attacker for the power play, Springfield would not find the equalizer and indeed Jansen Harkins would seal the victory for the Penguins with an empty net goal.

Three Stars: 3) Joel Bloimqvist 31 saves (first AHL win) 2) Vinnie Hinostroza (goal) 1) Rem Pitlick (goal, assist)

The Good: Don’t make any lineup changes. Roll with this for the Wednesday game against Hershey, J.D. Please, I beg you. Sam Houde had two assists, hasn’t played yet.

The Bad: I you had to make one move though, J.D., I’d scratch Valtteri Puustinen cause the guy doesn’t play any defense and thinks he’s Superman out there when he has the puck.

Turning Point: Wilkes-Barre’s special teams in the third period. They scored a power play goal and came up with a huge stop late to deliver the win.

Around the Division: Hershey wins their third straight, taking down and sweeping Providence 5-4 in a shootout….Charlotte wins 3-2 in Toronto….Bridgeport beats Utica 2-1 in overtime and Hartford earns the 1,000th goal in franchise history with a 5-1 win over Lehigh Valley 5-1.

Standings: Hartford 8, Hershey 6, Charlotte, Lehigh Valley, Penguins, Providence and Bridgeport 4 and Springfield 2.

Wheeling Update: Nailers started an hour and a half later then the Pens, she they are finishing up what should be a season opening with against the Cincinnati Cyclones. Box here. Taylor Gauthier in net. Lukas Svejovsky with a goal and assist. Nailers have three power play goals! 🤯

Video Highlights: 

Hershey Wednesday. Notes as they come if I have time, etc.

Let’s Go Pens!

Wolf Smacked — Pens LOSE 5-0

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I think I have reused this headline before.

Penguins lose 5-0 in Hartford Friday night. Their old habits from last year bubbled up and the game got out of hand quick on them.

They lost puck battles, their offensive “threats” were taking liberties with the puck, which led to goals for the other team.

Say it with me now, it’s only the third game of the season. It’s only the third game of the season. It’s only the third game of the…

…you get it.

Here’s how they lined up…

(Hartford didn’t and doesn’t post lines)

Lineup Notes: Sam Poulin was out, day to day with something. I didn’t catch what was likely a very detailed description of the injury from Nick Hart pregame. Liens were jumbled from last weekend in Charlotte. Pittsburgh recalled Radim Zohorna and sent down Jansen Harkins, who wasn’t in the lineup Friday…Alex Nylander was back in as was Jagger Joshua. On defense, Jack Rathbone made his WBS debut, Xavier Ouellet was back in. Justin Lee was out. Mark Friedman was traded, as you know from this week.

First Period: Hartford’s power play carried them to a pair of wins last weekend, but in the first period Friday, it didn’t do anything for them as they had two power plays in the opening period but didn’t score. The Penguins seemed to get some jump out of those penalty kills in what was a bit of a feisty period by current AHL standards, as there were two fights in the period. Corey Andonovski and Taylor Fedun fought.

Second Period: Penguins had a pair of power plays in the period but didn’t score on them and that brings them to 0/11 to start the season on the man advantage.

Hartford would score a pair of goals at even strength (they didn’t get a power play in the period) when Brett Berard would score a fluky goal.

Pinballing puck, fluttering a bit, Berard takes a poke at it and high sticks Xavier Ouellet in the process (no call on that) and Hartford is on the board first.

Later, Wolf Pack captain Jonny Brodzinski scores a goal scorers goal which extends the home teams lead to 2-0.

It was Brodzinski’s 300th AHL game, as well.

A lot of things wrong on that play. Colin White shoving Alex Nylander, who never plays any defense, trying to encourage him to either a) get the hell out of his way or b) play defense, was something there and Avery Hayes trying to break up the pass was an effort, but a miss and Brodzinski with all the time and space he needs, didn’t miss.

Last years habits creeping into this years team. Great.

Third Period: A two goal deficit is usually nothing for a team to overcome.

But when you have bad habits, they usually die hard.

Riley Nash beats Jack St. Ivany to a race to the net and catches a pass for an easy tap in and it’s 3-0.

The wheels straight up fell off from there.

Hartford won every puck battle. Pens were one and done when they entered their offensive zone. The bad habits quickly rubbed off on the newcomer Jack Rathbone, who gets beat in a race by Adam Edstrom who had a good chance which was denied by Hellberg.

Has Kyle Dubas kept his receipts?

It’s only the third game of the season…It’s only the third game of the season….

Anyway.

Under 5 to play with the game slipping out of control and there are five black jerseys watching a player shoot.

Alex Nylander didn’t have a great game. A homer backhand chance from the crease went about 15 feet wide. Then, he tries a cross ice pass to a team mate with the Penguins having an empty net and Connor Mackey intercepts it for an easy empty net goal and a 5-0 lead.

The Hartford fans wouldn’t stop throwing stuff on the ice, so the bench was given a delay of game penalty. Referees Jackson Kozari and Chris Waterstradt weren’t messing around.

But the Penguins couldn’t score on the power play that ensued, even getting a 5-on-3 when the WolfPack scored another empty netter that made it 5-0.

When it rains, it pours.

0/13 on the power play to start the season by the way.

Three Stars: 3) Riley Nash (goal, assist) 2) Brett Berard (goal, assist) 1) Louis Domingue (35 save shutout)

The Good: You tell me. 🤷‍♂️

The Bad: Nyalnder doesn’t play defense and thinks he’s superman out there. Cure your vet problem by benching this bum. Series clinching goals against Hershey be damned.

Turning Point (hey I remembered this time!): The Riley Nash goal made everything worse, putting the game out of reach for Wilkes-Barre.

Around the Division: Hershey beats Providence 3-2 in Rhode Island….Lehigh Valley thumps Springfield 5-2. Charlotte and Bridgeport were off.

Standings: Hartford 6, Lehigh Valley and Hershey 4, Providence 3, Charlotte, Springfield, Penguins, Bridgeport 2.

Wheeling Update: Nailers open their season Saturday in Cincinnati.

Video Highlights: If they post them, I’ll work in an edit.

Back at it Saturday when they host Springfield. Hopefully it goes a bit better then this flaming disaster in the Connecticut capital.

Let’s Go Pens!