Chirps from Center Ice

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

Weekend Preview – Whose Land?

I don’t know about you, but I thoroughly enjoyed not having a Wednesday game to have to watch or write about this week. Won’t last long, as they have a home game next Wednesday against Syracuse.

This week, it’s Cleveland Friday and Providence Saturday this weekend for the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins, both at home.

Music to Set the Mood…

There’s even a bear! The Providence Bruins! Hooray relevancy!

A Quote…

Don’t let others think for you…
— Unknown

There’s a lot of back and forth I have seen from what’s left of the media in this town about J.D. Forrest and his job performance and job safety. I kind of just laughed it off and kind of ignored it, but if you the fan, think that the head coach sucks and isn’t doing a good enough job in doing what he is paid to do and what you paid money to see, then don’t let someone else who gets paid to cover the game and gets in for free dictate to you how to think. You pay the money to watch the product. Unless or until those who tell you to think otherwise fund or pay for you to attend or watch these games, feel how you want to feel.

I certainly am not going to tell you how to feel.

The Setup

Not your uncle’s Cleveland Monsters and the mercurial Providence Bruins come to town.

The Monsters have led the North Division for a couple of weeks now which made me think of something in the lead up to Friday’s game. Would you rather be a Monsters fan or a Penguins fan? Columbus has a ton of really good prospects in the pipeline in Cleveland and the Penguins have Joel Blomqvist and that’s it. The Monsters have the right mix of veterans (Trey Fix-Wolansky) to blend with exciting prospects (Kent Johnson, currently on recall) that has Cleveland at the top of the North and setup for success all season.

I mean the Penguins have been OK, certainly better than last year, but struggle with great teams (Hershey) and can’t play like the better team when met with equal teams (OT win and loss against Springfield last week)

Providence has been OK, slightly worse than the Penguins, and more inconsistent then the Pens, if you could believe that.

Records 

Wilkes-Barre / Scranton is 10-8-3 and in fifth place with 23 points in the Atlantic.

Cleveland is 14-5-1 and in first place with 29 points in the North.

Providence is 11-8-1-2 and in third place with 25 points in the Atlantic.

The Pens had a 3-1 lead against Hershey at home Wednesday and lost in frustrating fashion 7-5 then split a pair of overtime games with the Springfield Thunderbirds Friday and Saturday in a home and home.

Cleveland split a pair with the Utica Comets at home this past weekend then went to Hartford Wednesday and won in overtime 4-3.

Providence swept Bridgeport in a home and home this past weekend and beat Lehigh Valley at home Sunday. They will be in Allentown on Friday, and have won five straight coming into the weekend.

Who’s Up? Who’s Down? Who’s Out?

Pittsburgh: Dmitri Samorukov, Jansen Harkins, Joona Koppanen, Alex Nylander and Vinnie Hinostroza. I may give Hinostroza the Radim Zohorna treatment going forward and consider him permanently up.

Up from Wheeling: Justin Addamo, Raivis Ansons and Lukas Svejkovsky.

To Wheeling: Owen Headrick.

On Loan from Pittsburgh: P.O. Joseph.

Injured: Avery Hayes, Sam Poulin, Colin White and possibly Sam Houde, who got injured on a hit by Hunter Skinner on Saturday. Skinner was assessed a checking to the head match penalty.

Svejkovsky has been on a tear with Wheeling, as he should be as a guy who spent all season in the AHL. Joseph will be here for the weekend and likely recalled Sunday.

What can we learn about the Penguins this week?

Hypothetically, they should go 2-0. They own Cleveland at home and Providence has more open holes than the Penguins it would seem. Will they? Let’s examine.

If they go up early against either team will J.D. Forrest be able to get his team to maintain the lead and win, which he wasn’t able to do against Hershey at home Wednesday?

If they give either team eight power plays like they did Saturday against Springfield, they may not be so lucky with the offensively powerful Cleveland team.

If they put together a solid twenty minutes consistently, like they did in the third period, down 0-2 in Springfield Friday, then it should be a much easier path for them. Will they? I guess that’s all part of the joyride.

Who’s in Goal? 

Both goalies in Joel Blomqvist and Magnus Hellberg showed well last week. I’d go Blomqvist Friday and Hellberg Saturday.

For Cleveland, you will probably see Jet Greaves in goal Friday and on Saturday likely Michael DiPietro.

Who’s Running the Show?

Riley Brace and Alex Normandin are here enforcing the AHL Rule Book and John Rey and Bill Lyons are manning the lines making sure they stay onside and handling face-offs.

On Saturday, it will be referees Liam Maaskant and Adam Tobias with Bob Goodman and Richard Jondo on the lines.

Looking ahead…

New York, New York! Syracuse at home on Wednesday, a trip to Utica Friday and then Rochester drops by Saturday.

Give us a bold prediction…

One of the Penguins goaltenders gets a shutout this weekend.

Thunderstorm Warning — Pens LOSE 4-3 (OT)

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Man, these two teams are so evenly matched.

After beating the Thunderbirds in Springfield Friday night, the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins lose a penalty fest thriller 4-3 at home to Springfield Saturday.

At times because the two teams are mirror images of one another, it made for a boring game, like in the first period. But if you were a fan of special teams then the game was for you as there were thirteen power plays given out by referees Patrick Hanrahan and Jack Young.

Penguins get some much needed time off and will next play Friday at home against the Cleveland Monsters.

Here’s how they lined up.

Lineup Notes: Joona Koppanen was recalled to Pittsburgh Saturday afternoon, which explains his absence Friday. Raivis Ansons was in for Libor Hajek as the Penguins returned to the more traditional 12 forwards, 6 defensemen personnel setup.

First Period: Two power plays a side for either team, no scoring.

Second Period: Peter Abbandonato opens the scoring with a power play goal after a hack and whack of a Sam Houde offering.

But then Zachary Bolduc scored on a five on three for Springfield to bring it level for the Thunderbirds.

But the story of the period was the nonstop penalties taken by the Penguins, three in total in the period, which killed any type of momentum they could muster.

Third Period: They leapfrog goals in this frame. Drew Callin sweeps in a puck that Joel Blomqvist makes a save on but doesn’t get all of.

Then the Penguins answer right back on a delayed call on Springfield when Valtteri Puustinen puts a puck in and its tied at two.

Sam Houde was drilled into the boards by Hunter Skinner. Skinner was assessed a match penalty for a check to the head. A 5:00 major ensued. But, refs Young and Hanrahan give Austin Rueschhoff a penalty for instigating.

Here’s where I have a problem with that call. Skinner crushed Houde into the boards and injures him. What do the officials expect Rueschhoff or any Penguins player on the ice to do in this situation? “Hey man, good check!?” The guy throws the hit, gets the penalty and should have to fight if he injures the other guy. That’s the way it’s been for years. I get player safety, but if you  completely strip the code out of the game, you won’t have much of a game left.

Then Springfield strikes yet again on a power play when Matthew Peca puts in a goal that gives the visitors a 3-2 lead…

That’s also Taylor Fedun, who either fell down or took a penalty in the contest, slamming his stick in anger and being given a misconduct for abuse of officials by referee Hanrahan.

But then, with time dwindling and Blomqvist on the bench, Peter Abbandonato comes to the rescue again and ties the game at three.

They manage to get to overtime again.

Overtime: After a bit of a back and forth, Matthew Kessel scores to give the Thunderbirds the extra point.

Three Stars: 3) Drew Collin (goal) 2) Peter Abbandonato (two goals) 1) Matthew Kessel (overtime game winning goal)

The Good: The Peter Abbandonato trade may end up saving the Penguins bacon. The guy has made an immediate impact after the trade with Chicago.

The Bad: Too undisciplined. Springfield scored twice on eight power plays. That has to get tightened up.

Turning Point: Like Rathbone last night, Kessel’s goal in overtime gets it here. I thought about giving it to Abbandonato’s second goal, full disclosure.

Around the Division: Hartford beats Lehigh Valley 5-4 in overtime….Hershey wins their ninth straight with a 5-2 win in Charlotte….Providence beats Bridgeport 4-3.

Standings: Hershey 36 – Hartford 30 – Springfield 24 – Penguins 23 – Providence 23 – Lehigh Valley 22 – Charlotte 20 – Bridgeport 13

Wheeling Update: Nailers lose 4-3 in overtime to the Indy Fuel. Hey, affiliate synergy! Jordan Frasca had three assists.

Video Highlights: 

Back at it next week against Cleveland, who are at the top of the North Division and should provide a stiff challenge for the Penguins. More with the Weekend Preview probably Thursday.

Let’s Go Pens!

Bad to the Rathbone — Pens WIN 3-2 (OT)

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They looked great Wednesday in the games first twenty minutes and lost the final forty. They lost that game.

They looked lost in the games first forty minutes Friday and great in the final twenty minutes. They managed to get to overtime.

This is where Jack Rathbone cooked.

Rathbone’s overtime game winning goal gives the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins a 3-2 overtime win.

Gosh these teams are a lot a like. Frustrating for both fan bases.

If you are a Springfield fan, you feel the way the Penguins fans felt on Wednesday. You had them right where you want them, let off and lost. Yeah you got a point, but the team that you are going to be tied to all season comes in, plays a great twenty minutes when it mattered most and beats you.

Best part, they get to do it all again Saturday night in Wilkes-Barre.

Here’s how they lined up:

Lineup Notes: Joona Koppanen, Justin Addamo were out. Corey Andonovski and a debuting Will Butcher went in. 300th AHL game for Alex Nylander.

First Period: Springfield didn’t play Wednesday, the Penguins scored five goals on Wednesday. The Thunderbirds had eighteen shots on goal in the period. Yes, they had two power plays in the period but still, that’s a lot of shots to give up in the first period when you only had six shots yourselves.

Second Period: Thunderbirds make it 2-0 in the period when Nathan Walker and Ryan Suzuki score. Suzuki’s came on a power play. Walker’s goal was, in my opinion, way too easy.

I’m trying to figure out who Ty Smith is engaging with behind the goal line there. Don’t know if that was his man or not, but Nathan Walker waltz down the slot and just picks a corner. Too easy.

Ryan Suzuki scored out of a brief review of a possible Penguins goal when the red light came on behind Malcolm Subban’s net. After a small review which clearly showed no goal, Ryan Suzuki came out off of the ensuing face-off and scored.

Pens had one power play through two periods and it looked alright, but obviously didn’t offer up a goal.

Third Period: Wilkes-Barre wakes up and gets a goal from Rem Pitlick to kickstart the comeback.

I am telling you if they can figure out the rest of everything else which is wrong, this power play they have hums and can straight up win them games. They get a goal here and that starts the rally.

Matt Filipe with a deflection in front and it’s tied.

Hindsight, if I am Springfield head coach Drew Bannister I call timeout here. He didn’t, the Penguins had another power play but didn’t score and it was off to…

Overtime: Penguins possessed the puck the entire overtime period and sixty-eight seconds in, Jack Rathbone ended it:

Three Stars: 3) Nathan Walker (goal, assist) 2) Magnus Hellberg (36 saves) 1) Jack Rathbone (overtime game winning goal)

The Good: We came out with torches and pitchforks for head coach J.D. Forrest on Wednesday. Good on JD Forrest for not letting off and scheming them a way to win. What they were doing in the first two periods seemingly wasn’t working, whatever changes he made (if any) won him the game.

The Bad: This formula of a bad first two periods and a miracle third is not a recipe for success.

Turning Point: Rathbone’s goal gets it here, as any Penguins game winning overtime goal would.

Around the Division: Hershey wins their eighth straight, beating Charlotte 4-2….Hartford thumps Lehigh Valley 7-3….Providence doubles up Bridgeport 6-3.

Standings: Hershey 34 – Hartford 28 – Penguins 22 – Springfield 22 – Lehigh Valley and Providence 21 – Charlotte 20 – Bridgeport 13

Wheeling Update: Nailers lose 3-2 at home to Toledo.

Video Highlights: Aren’t up yet. Bookmark the AHL’s VideoCenter instead.

More after the rematch Saturday.

Let’s Go Pens!

Five Goals Ain’t Enough — Pens LOSE 7-5

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You score five goals, you are supposed to win the hockey game.

You score five goals against the best team in the AHL, you are supposed to win the hockey game.

You score five goals against the defending Calder Cup Champions, you are supposed to win the hockey game.

They did not win the hockey game.

Wilkes-Barre loses a fire fight with the defending champion Bears 7-5 Wednesday night. It was a combination of a lot of things, in my opinion.

First, a hot start. Two goals by a returning from injury Sam Houde in the games first five minutes and they are off and running. Sure, Hershey scores one back but they get the two goal lead right back less than a minute later and they look like they are on cruise control and world beaters.

Second, Hershey storms out of the gate in the second period to the tune of four unanswered goals and stun the Penguins and their fans and lead 5-3 after two periods.

Third, they replace goaltenders and Magnus Hellberg relieves starting goaltender Joel Blomqvist to start the third period and lets a puck bleed through him and then later the Bears hit an empty net, while the Penguins cut the deficit to one each time in the period.

Go back to the first. They get out to a hot start but Bears head coach Todd Nelson has a masterclass in coaching and gets his team to respond for four goals and completely change course on the hockey game. J.D. Forrest? Are we trying to protect the lead or play to extend it or are we fine with winning the games first twenty minutes? Hockey is a sixty minute affair, last I checked. Forrest was outclassed this game by his counterpart.

In the second, the Penguins, showed their ugly side and didn’t have a response at all for what was happening run front of them on the ice. You can criticize coaching all you want till you are blue in the face, you still have to go out and execute. They didn’t and let the Bears score four unanswered on them.

Ty Smith leads the team in points, had two assists Wednesday but was a -2. Going down the list, the only active player who has a positive in the +/- category is Xavier Ouellet at +1, but he was -3 Wednesday.

Consistent inconsistency. Score a lot of points. Get scored on a lot, too.

Say what you want about +/- against your fancy stats. No one understands your fancy stats. If they did, they would matter more and be featured where +/- is. They aren’t, so grab your soy latte and take a hike.

A total lack of execution top to bottom in the second period by the Penguins and the defending champion and best team in the AHL took advantage. It’s what great teams and championship caliber teams do. But if you have a two goal lead you have a head start. If you are prepared the way you are supposed to be, you should be in the advantage.

So the third and final point in the game was the coach made a change in goal and it seemed to help. Hellberg shut down the Bears when he needed to. But there was one goal that he would have liked to have back and he absolutely has to make a save on. Ivan Miroshnichenko throws a puck at the Penguins goaltender that bleeds through and trickles in to re-establish Hershey’s two goal lead. If he makes that save maybe, just maybe, it’s a different outcome and a complete reversal of fortunes for them in this one.

Gotta make that save. Gotta have a better response against the defending champions when you have your boot on their neck. You let off. You had them where you wanted them, let go and walked away. Meanwhile they come up from behind you and hit you over the head with a crowbar.

Consistently inconsistent.

I’m not going to hit you with all 12 goals because it’s a work / school night and I am not a madman. If you want them bad enough, they should be in the AHL’s VideoCenter.

Pens / Bears was the only game in town division wise, so you aren’t missing anything on that front.

Wilkes-Barre stays in fifth, on 20 points, with an all of a sudden really important home and home series inbound against the Springfield Thunderbirds, on 21 points.

A parting note on Hershey, who the Pens won’t see again until after Christmas…

12-time fixing to make it 13-time, and there’s not a damn thing you or anyone else can do about it.

More Friday. Talk to you then.

Let’s Go Pens!

Weekend Preview — Home and Home with Thunder!

The Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins have a home game this Wednesday against the Hershey Bears (these guys again?) and then a home and home against the Springfield Thunderbirds.

Music to Set the Mood….

I love the summer but hate thunderstorms. Go figure.

A Quote…

If there’s thunder in the winter, we’ll have snow 7-10 days later
– Unknown

God, I hope not.

Anyway…

The Setup

Home against Hershey then a home and home starting Friday in Springfield then Saturday back at home against the Thunderbirds.

The Penguins had what I am calling their toughest week of travel last week and came out 1-2. Competitive in Hershey last Wednesday, a scheduled loss after Thanksgiving travel on Friday then a dominant win on Saturday with 44 saves from the best goaltender in the organization in Joel Blomqvist. Not bad, shows to me that they are competitive, but also kinda shows that they don’t have what it takes to lead the division quite yet.

I think that is fine, by the way. They have been like this for the past two months now. Come to think of it, all of the teams pretty much have been what they have been the entire first quarter of the season. Things start to break around the all star break, which we are approaching, so we will see if the Penguins can maybe push to that upper echelon of teams or are content with playing between third and sixth like they have.

Hershey hosted Iowa this past weekend and won both games 2-1. Consistency in Chocolatetown would have been the name of the blog post Sunday after that second 2-1 win over the Wild on Sunday.

Springfield beat Bridgeport on Wednesday, lost to Hartford on Friday and pasted Utica 7-0 on Saturday.

Records

The Bears lead the division with a 15-4 record, good for 30 points and number one overall in the AHL.

Springfield is 10-8-1-0, good for 21 points and fourth in the division and the Penguins are fifth with 20 points and 9-7-2-0 record.

Who’s Up? Who’s Down? Who’s Out?

Up are Justin Addamo, Raivis Ansons from Wheeling.

Up to Pittsburgh are Dmitri Samorukov, Jansen Harkins and Vinnie Hinostroza.

Alex Nylander was returned back to Coal Street from Pittsburgh on Wednesday.

Reassigned to Wheeling on Wednesday was Jordan Frasca. Cedric Desruisseaux was released from his PTO and returned to Wheeling in the same transaction.

Out of the organization: Mark Pysyk was released from his PTO Tuesday.

New to the organization: Peter Abbandonato and Owen Headrick acquired in a trade with the Chicago Wolves for future considerations.

Injured: Avery Hayes, Sam Poulin, Sam Houde, Colin White.

What can we learn about the Penguins this week?

I kinda gave it away in the setup. I think they are a good to great team. I don’t think they are lead the division type team. They aren’t anywhere close to championship contender type.

They can beat Hershey. They are one of only a very few that can lay stake to that claim. What other team gives the Bears fits more than the Penguins? Lehigh Valley? Possibly.

They should beat Springfield, who are a very explosive team that can run you over. Adam Gaudette can score at will and is a sure fire AHL All Star this year. He leads the AHL in goals coming into the week. Are the Thunderbirds one dimensional? Maybe, given the record and seemingly mirror image that they are to the Penguins in points.

Who’s in Goal?

Gotta go Blomqvist Wednesday and probably Saturday. You have two games at home this week. Give your #1 goaltender a break on the road, let Magnus Hellberg get that start and roll with Blomqvist Wednesday and Saturday.

It will likely be Hunter Shepard Wednesday for the Bears and then some combo of Malcolm Subban and Vadim Zherenko for the Thunderbirds Friday and Saturday.

Who’s Running the Show?

Stephen Hiff and Laura White are here on Wednesday with Tyler Loftus and J.P. Waleski running the lines.

Friday up in Springfield sees Justin Kea and Michael Zyla in the orange arm bands and Cameron Carlson and Trevor Disbennett keeping ’em onsides and out of trouble in between whistles.

Saturday in Wilkes-Barre sees Jack Young and Patrick Hanrahan with Patrick Dapuzzo and Chandler Yakimowicz on the lines.

Looking ahead…

No Wednesday game! Look at that! Friday at home against Cleveland then Saturday at home against Providence.

Give us a bold prediction…

The song title for the following weeks games (home against Syracuse, on the road against Utica, home against Rochester) will be Frank Sinatra’s, “New York, New York”

(provided  I remember)

Second City Saints? Coal Street Makes a Trade…

Announced today by the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins was a trade.

Link to the news here.

They liked Abbandonato because he was in Pittsburgh’s camp on a PTO. I couldn’t tell you the first thing about the other guy other than he was the ECHL’s Defenseman of the Year.

AHL Chicago is independent this season and as a result are struggling. They are last in the Central Division and are realizing that the concept of being independent may have worked 10 years ago, but not so much in today’s day and age. I think they are coming around to this fact and you are starting to see them take NHL contracted players on. Abbandonato and Headrick are just guys that they casting off to any team that will take them. They made a similar, “future consideration” trade with Hartford last week.

I’d assume that Abbandonato and Headrick will slot right into the lineup and you may see some reassignments back to Wheeling for guys like Jordan Frasca and Cedric Desruisseaux get sent back to Wheeling.

Abbandonato has a goal and two assists with the Wolves in twelve games. Headrick has one assist in five games. Not eye popping numbers, but the Wolves are rudderless in a league where you need to have an NHL partner. A change could do these guys good.

I also couldn’t tell you which is which in the photo tweeted by the Penguins above.

More later this week with the Weekend Preview coming at you guys noon Wednesday. Talk then.

The Kid’s Good — Pens WIN 4-1

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Joel Blomqvist is going to be an NHL starting goaltender one day.

Sooner rather than later at this rate.

A 44 save performance by Blomqvist and the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins salvage their week with a 4-1 win in Charlotte.

Not much else I don’t think can be written about the kid at this point, none better and finer in the first period of this contest with the Penguins seemingly on cruise control when Blomqvist was making really difficult saves from very difficult positions.

After another period of solid Blomqvist play and a power play goal by the Penguins, it was auto pilot from there.

Here’s how they lined up:

Lineup Notes: I like when the team tweets the lineup changes from the night before so I don’t have to. Pens went 11 forwards and 7 D. Taylor Fedun played in his 600th professional game.

First Period: Three quick goals in seven minutes of action for the Penguins sees Valtteri Puustinen, Joona Koppanen and Raivis Ansons find the back of the net.

Couple things, Charlotte had three power plays in the period and couldn’t score. The setup by Marc Johnstone and this guys overall hockey sense is something really to behold, setting up Ansons for his goal the blew the game open.

Second Period: Evan Cormier’s night was done, enter Ludovic Waeber in goal for the Checkers.

This time it was the Checkers taking the parade to the penalty box, taking all three penalties doled out in the period. Jonathan Gruden cashes on one of the power plays.

Nice pass by Jack Rathbone there to get it to Gruden for the easy tap in. I like Rathbone’s vision on the ice.

Third Period: Checkers pepper Blomqvist with 19 shots and one of them goes in when noted Penguin killed Will Lockwood scores to break up the shutout bid and allow for the teddy bears to fly and hit the ice and get the Checkers on the board.

This came at the end of a power play.

Three Stars: 3) Jonathan Gruden (goal, assist) 2) Valtteri Puustinen (goal, assist) Joel Blomqvist (44 saves)

The Good: Nice response by the Penguins to salvage what looked like an overall disappointing weekend.

The Bad: This is another one of those pause for a sec typing this up and watch the cursor blink type entries. Let’s just move on.

Turning Point: I think the Ansons goal really put things out of reach for the Checkers, considering how the game was going at that point and the frustration which was mounbtying every time they tried something on Blomqvist.

Around the Division: Providence beats Bridgeport 2-1….Hershey beat Iowa 2-1….Lehigh Valley beat Rochester 5-4….Springfield plasters Utica 7-0….Hartford beats Belleville 4-3 in overtime.

Standings: Hershey 28 – Hartford 26 – Lehigh Valley and Springfield 21 – Penguins 20 – Charlotte 20 – Providence 19 – Bridgeport 11

Wheeling Update: Nailers hosted the Iowa Heartlanders and lost 6-2.

Video Highlights: 

Back at it against Hershey on Wednesday. More then, before I set the week up for you with the Weekend Preview.

Let’s Go Pens!