Chirps from Center Ice

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

Weekend Preview – Shaky Ground?

Let’s take a look at a snapshot of the AHL standings in the Atlantic Division real quick coming into this weekends action. Remember that the top six qualify.

4 – Hartford Wolf Pack: 13 games remaining, 29-23-5-2, .551 points percentage.
5 – Hershey Bears: 13 games remaining, 30-24-5-4, .548 points percentage.
6 – Bridgeport Islanders: 10 games remaining, 27-25-6-4, .516 points percentage.

7 – WBS Penguins: 14 games remaining, 28-26-4-4, .516 points percentage.

It is important to note that the Bridgeport Islanders are playing 72 games while the Penguins, Bears and Wolf Pack are playing 76. With the teams being ranked on points percentage, wins matter.

As it stands today, the Penguins are out of a playoff spot on tiebreaker. Now, let’s take a look at the strength of schedules for these teams:

Hartford: .563
Hershey: .536
Bridgeport: .533
PENGUINS: .538

Wilkes-Barre has the second highest strength of schedule of these four teams highlighted. Bridgeport has the lowest, or conceivably easiest, schedule the rest of the way.

The Islanders are on a 6-0-1 streak and 7-2-1-0 in their last ten games. They came back and won in Rochester on Sunday in impressive fashion, emptying the tank after a hellish week of travel that had them across the border in Toronto the night before. Down two goals, they tie it with seconds left to force overtime and win there.

It’s impressive, because here is who they have taken points from in this streak:

7-4 and 3-0 wins back to back over Providence.
3-2 overtime loss to division leader Springfield.
7-4 win over Syracuse.
4-1 win over conference leading Utica.
5-1 win over Toronto.
6-5 come from behind OT win over Rochester.

These aren’t cupcake teams. These are division heavyweights in Springfield and Providence and tough North Division teams. For some teams, their playoffs start when the season winds down and they start making a push to get into playoffs. You can say with full confidence that the Bridgeport Islanders are in full on playoff mode.

The Setup

Seemingly at the opposite end of the spectrum are the free falling Hartford Wolf Pack, who are nosediving and 3-7 in their last ten games. They are the Penguins opponent Wednesday. They were pummeled in Utica Monday and lost 7-3. They beat Hershey in a shootout Saturday and lost a pair of close ones to Springfield last Wednesday and Friday.

Lehigh Valley hosts the Penguins on Friday. The Phantoms are all but eliminated, nine points off the Pens and Islanders. They will be looking to spoil the Penguins push on Friday.

Bridgeport is the main event. The Penguins have two more matchups with the Islanders, Saturday being one of them. Is it must win territory? It might be, depending on how the week shakes out for all the teams I just mentioned.

The Records

Covered above. Pay attention!

Who’s Up, Who’s Down, Who’s Out?

Chris Bigras was given away for future considerations to the Chicago Wolves at the AHL trade deadline Monday. This was covered in depth on my blog post about it Monday. Radim Zohorna is still up with Pittsburgh. Anthony Angello, for some odd reason, joined him on Tuesday. The Pens signed Colin Swoyer Monday. He and Clayton Phillips, another guy that the Pens signed last week, are defensemen so look for one of them to get into a game soon. Pittsburgh also signed Ty Glover Tuesday, after they announced the Angello recall.

Who’s in Goal?

I’d go Louis Domingue against the playoff teams and Tommy Nappier in Allentown.

Keith Kinkaid, Felix Sandstrom and Jakub Skarek would be my guesses in who the Penguins will be shooting at this week.

What can we learn about the Penguins this week?

The Pens are getting a desperate, free falling Hartford team, a Lehigh Valley club looking to play spoiler and a rested Bridgeport team who will be waiting for the Penguins to return from their trip down the PA Turnpike this week.

Pens pumped then got pumped in back to back games in Toronto midweek last, beat a decent Belleville team Friday then lost on a late goal Saturday afternoon in Laval after battling back to tie. There is there, there with the Penguins, but they lack what they have lacked all season which is a pure finisher. They don’t have one. They need to rely on defense and goaltending and basically outgrit their opponents. Sometimes it works, like what you saw last Tuesday in Toronto and sometimes it works but they don’t, you know, score any goals, like what you saw March 18 at home against Syracuse, a game they lost 1-0.

5 of 6 points is necessary. The four seed is still within reach. You can get there with wins over all three teams. Anything less, such as 4 points or fewer, depending on how the game Saturday with Bridgeport breaks, and you may be packing for an early summer.

Who is running the show?

Michael Zyla and Carter Sandlak get the assignment Wednesday with Patrick Dapuzzo and Colin Gates on the lines. Friday in Allentown sees Sandlak again with Jake Kamrass and Tom George and Ryan Knapp on the lines. Saturday sees Kamrass again with Peter Schlittenhardt and J.P. Waleski and Patrick Dapuzzo on the lines.

Looking ahead…

Home game next Wednesday against Lehigh Valley and a Saturday trip to Syracuse.

Give us a bold prediction…

Pens will make it look easy this week, winning all three games, then will regress next week and lose both.

Bye Bye Bigras

This kinda came out of left field today…

Future considerations trade. Usually means the Wolves pay for the first round of drinks at the League Meetings over the summer. Or, it’s a gussied up way of saying they gave the guy away for nothing.

I don’t know if Bigras wanted out or anything. He has only played in 28 games due to being out with an injury which cost him about a month. He has 10 points. It’s not a trade that hurts Wilkes-Barre at all. Bigras is an expendable player. Warm body for warm body.

It’s also a, “play your kids” deal too. Bigras is not in the future for the Wilkes-Barre or Pittsburgh Penguins. Clayton Phillips, whom the Penguins drafted in the third round in 2017, signed an ATO last week with Coal Street. Pittsburgh signed free agent defenseman Colin Swoyer Monday. These kids are the potential future of the organization, not some lineup yo-yo defenseman who has played 28 games for a team battling for its playoff life.

More Wednesday, for the Weekend Preview teeing up Hartford, Lehigh Valley and Bridgeport this week.

Lost in Translation — Pens LOSE 5-3

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This one felt like a playoff game.

It has to be for Laval, who sit second in a razor thin North Division and the Penguins, trying to chase down a faltering Hershey team for the fifth spot in the Atlantic Division and stave off being chased by the Bridgeport Islanders.

Saturday afternoon’s results was a 5-3 Laval Rocket win over the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins.

A late goal by Nate Schnarr from a tight angle gave the Rocket a 4-3 lead after the Penguins battled back to tie the game at three off of a Chris Bigras goal. It looked like they were headed to overtime, but Schnarr and the Rocket had other ideas.

Louis Domingue opposed Cayden Primeau.

Here’s how they lined up:

Lineup Notes: Corey Andonovski for Kasper Bjorkqvist was the only lineup change. Bjorkqvist was recalled at 5 p.m. Saturday.

First Period: These two teams don’t play each other often, but this was an explosive start.

1:19 in, Louie Belpedio bullrushes Domingue and Kevin Roy puts the puck in the net.

Referees Mike Campbell and Mackenzie Nichol briefly discussed it but let the goal stand.

I don’t know. No one pushed Belpedio into Domingue and initiated contact. From the angle of the camera looked like Domingue was in his crease. What’s goaltender interference? No one knows.

Pens get the goal back when Michael Chaput scored to tie the game at one.

But then ex-Penguin J-S Des finds Cedric Paquette with a tape to tape pass that Paquette easily taps past Domingue for a 2-1 Rocket lead.

Ridiculous pass but a better finish.

Things settled down from there, a bit. There was about 1:20 of straight three-on-three action which spilled over to the…

Second Period: Wilkes-Barre couldn’t get anything going offensively because they were killing penalty after penalty after penalty.

But late in the period, J-C Beaudin takes a path toward the net, takes a shot which is blocked, then he gets the puck back and wheels around the net and finds Gabriel Bourque who scores to make it 3-1 Rocket.

One of those, “look out! damn!” moments watching it in real time.

But the Penguins get it back about 1:15 later when Sam Poulin scores to bring it back to one for the Pens.

Third Period: Wilkes-Barre had a chance on a power play and it was a good effort but a better kill by the Rocket getting out of it clean.

Chris Bigras scored to tie the game at 3 at even strength.

Kinda felt there was another goal out there with a lot of time left to play.

Sadly, the other team scored that goal. Nate Schnarr scores from a stupid angle and lifts the puck over the shoulder of Louis Domingue to score and make it 4-3 for Laval.

Pens, with Domingue pulled, see Rafael Harvey-Pinard score an empty net goal.

Three Stars: 3) Cedric Paquette (goal) 2) Rafael Harvey-Pinard (goal, two assists) 1) Kevin Roy (goal, assist)

The Good: Nice way to battle back to 3-3 midway through the game. It did truly feel like a playoff game.

The Bad: I don’t like scoreboard watching, and with this result that is what we will be doing the remainder of the weekend.

Turning Point: Nate Schnarr’s marker late in the third gets it here. Obvious choice.

Around the Division: Bridgeport pounds Toronto 5-1…Hershey loses in a shootout in Hartford 4-3…Providence beats Springfield in a heavyweight battle 3-2…Belleville beats Lehigh Valley 3-2 in a shootout.

Standings: Hershey five up on the Pens for the fifth spot. Bears aren’t in action until next Friday. Pens burn off their last game in hand on Hershey Wednesday against Hartford. Bridgeport is .008 percentage points off the Pens for the final playoff spot (the Pens have .516 percentage points)

Who plays who tomorrow: Hershey is off, Bridgeport comes back across the border and travels to Rochester.

Wheeling Update: Indy beats the Nailers 5-4 in overtime. Matt Alfaro and Patrick Watling score.

Video Highlights: If I see one I will run it here.

Pens will travel back to USA Sunday, figure to have a few days off and will host Hartford Wednesday at 7. More then.

Let’s Go Pens!

Back on Track in Belleville — Pens WIN 3-1

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That’s more like it.

The Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins after getting shelled and obliterated in Toronto 48 hours before, play a stay at home type game against the Belleville Senators and win 3-1.

It was a close game throughout, and if I am a Belleville fan I say that I deserved a better fate, but the Penguins are in win now mode and it went their way Friday.

Good news for the Penguins out of town too, more on that later.

Tommy Nappier opposed Mads Sogaard.

Here’s how they lined up:

Lineup Notes: Felix Robert and Nathan Legare for Jamie Devane and Corey Andonovski up front and Cam Lee for Matt Bartkowski on defense.

First Period: Nothing of substance, Robert and Drew O’Connor had a shorthanded chance that ex-Bear Colby Williams gets back to break up.

Second Period: Valtteri Puustinen finishes off a nice tic tac toe play to put the Penguins on the board first.

But soon after Logan Shaw scored on a backdoor play to bring the Senators back even with the Penguins.

(Belleville didn’t GIF the goal)

Shots were an even 19 each for both sides.

Third Period: Alex Nylander scores a rebound goal from a Sam Poulin shot for his first road goal for the Penguins.

Belleville had a late power play, but didn’t really get a good look at a Grade A scoring chance.

Jonathan Gruden hits an empty net to seal it away and that was the ballgame.

Three Stars: 3) Logan Shaw (goal) 2) Valtteri Puustinen (goal) 1) Alexander Nylander (goal)

The Good: Nice way to bounce back after that pounding the Marlies laid on Wednesday. We don’t see Belleville as much as we should and they beat the Penguins last time, so this was a good win.

The Bad: 0/4 on the power play. But that may be nitpicking.

Turning Point: The goal by Nylander, his first road goal for the Penguins, puts the B-Sens in a hole they were never able to climb out of.

Around the Division: That out of town good news I mentioned at the open? Hershey loses 2-0 in Providence…Cleveland beats Charlotte 1-0….Springfield beats Hartford 3-2….Laval piledrives Lehigh Valley 5-1.

Standings: Pens four points back of Hershey with a game in hand for fifth in the division. Pens four up on idle Bridgeport.

Who plays who tomorrow: Hershey travels to Hartford and Bridgeport is in Toronto.

Wheeling Update: Nailers beat the Kalamazoo Wings at home 4-1. The K-Wings only had 14 shots. Justin Almeida had a pair of goals.

Video Highlights:

More tomorrow afternoon after the 3 p.m. start in Laval.

Let’s Go Pens!

Weekend Preview – More, Canada!

The Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins took a split in Toronto earlier in the week and now look to wrap up the Canadian trip with wins in Belleville Friday and Laval on Saturday afternoon.

What did the Penguins do on Tuesday that they didn’t do on Wednesday? Wednesday was a lot of standing around and getting made a fool by Josh Ho-Sang and Nick Robertson. Tuesday was generating traffic in front of Michael Hutchinson’s goal and getting deflections for goals.

The Penguins didn’t make any lineup changes Wednesday. Toronto made a bunch. Tuesday’s Penguins never adjusted to Wednesday’s Marlies.

The Setup

A Friday game in Belleville then a Saturday afternoon game in Laval. The players are looking forward to the game against the Rocket because a lot of friends and family are going to be in attendance for the game. Well, they better show up.

The Senators beat the Rocket 2-1 on Wednesday in a shootout. Cayden Primeau stopped 40 shots.

Laval hosts Lehigh Valley on Friday.

The Records

Pens are sixth in the Atlantic, 27-25-4-4 good for a .517 points percentage.

The Belleville Senators are 29-23-3-0 and have a .555 points percentage. They are in sixth in the North Division. The Laval Rocket are second in the North with a 28-21-3-1 and a .566 points percentage.

Who’s Up, Who’s Down, Who’s Out?

Radim Zohorna is up, Juuso Riikola returned Tuesday. Taylor Fedun is not on the trip. Filip Hallander is day to day. No one is up from Wheeling. Filip Lindberg is done for the year.

Who’s in Goal?

I’d go Tommy Nappier Friday and Louis Domingue Saturday. Domingue got shelled Wednesday and was out there on his own. At some point, Domingue is going to need a break. Use it against the team lower in the standings, no matter how tight those standings are.

I don’t see any reason why Mads Sogaard doesn’t get the nod for Troy Mann on Friday and Kevin Poulin for Jean-François Houle on Saturday.

What can we learn about the Penguins this week?

It is getting tight. There is not a lot of margin for error. Hershey nullified the game in hand victory the Pens achieved on Tuesday with winning Wednesday. It’s a six point deficit to Hershey at fifth, and just a two point lead over Bridgeport for a playoff spot.

Have to beat Belleville. Have to beat Laval. There is no, “well maybe” here or out of town scoreboard watching and hoping.

How? Move your feet. Something they didn’t do much of Wednesday. Go back and watch those goals the Marlies scored. The Marlies were the bus pulling up to the station and the Penguins were the passengers. You can’t do that. Louis Domingue has you primed to move up in the standings and you leave him on an island to get shelled all night and provide him no offensive support.

Who is running the show?

Kyle Lekun and Graedy Hamilton, who the Penguins saw Wednesday, have the referee duties on Friday with Kevin Hastings and Tommy Hughes on the lines. On Saturday afternoon (the game begins at 3) Mike Campbell and Mackenzie Nichol get the assignment and Vincent Bigras and Maxime Bédard work the lines.

Looking ahead…

Pens return home for a Wednesday game against the Hartford Wolf Pack then travel to Allentown for a Friday game against the Phantoms then host Bridgeport on Saturday.

Give us a bold prediction…

Strap in, it’s going to be a bumpy ride to the finish.

Smoked in The Big Smoke — Pens LOSE 6-1

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The Toronto Marlies are not a team I would want to face in the playoffs. Reason? A result like you saw tonight, after watching them yesterday. They blast the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins 6-1 Wednesday.

This is the Toronto Marlies, a team that can look like the best team in the AHL one night and the worst team in the AHL the next. It’s a volatile problem to have playing in a volatile division such as the North Division, where you can go from second to sixth place in a weekend.

Louis Domingue, starting his sixth straight game, opposed Keith Petruzzelli.

Here’s how they lined up:

Lineup Notes: None for the Penguins, lots for Toronto.

First Period: No penalties, pretty even otherwise, until Josh Ho-Sang who was scratched last night did this:

That was disgusting. He takes it out of his own zone, splits two defenders in the neutral zone, then gets away from FOUR DEFENDERS and scores. Just wow.

Second Period: The Marlies continued to pummel Louis Domingue with goal after goal after goal. They scored three straight and outshot the Pens 2:1 with 16 shots to Wilkes-Barre’s 8. Domingue was keeping the Penguins in the game as best he could, but he was literally on an island out there. Toronto Marlies Head Coach Greg Moore’s 3,000 lineup changes seemed to be working. Here were all the goals.

That goal there was a power play goal.

Immediately after this goal, Michale Chaput came out and hit a post. It was something considering they were getting flattened in the period.

Then Toronto was called for a penalty, their first of the game, with :05 left in the period and Juuso Riikola unleashed a shot that Drew O’Connor got a piece of and it got past Petruzzelli to break up his shutout bid and Wilkes-Barre was on the board.

Third Period: Any faint hope of a Penguins comeback was smashed to bits when Nick Robertson found Josh Ho-Sang for yet another power play goal that made it 5-1.

This is silly. Ho-Sang is ALL ALONE right next to Domingue.

To make matters worse, the Marlies scored yet another power play goal when Bobby McMann scored this goal right here.

The Marlies called off the dogs after that.

Three Stars: 3) Josh Ho-Sang (two goals, assist) 2) Keith Petruzzelli (32 saves) 1) Nick Robertson (goal, three assists)

The Good: Moving on….

The Bad: Can’t go 2/5 on the penalty kill. But Toronto scored two power play goals in the third and the game was already decided, so it can’t be that.

Turning Point: Bobby McMann’s first goal, the one that made it 4-0, was the back breaker. The Pens could score one goal which leads to another which would then lead to another, but not a four goal deficit when the Marlies are a freight train running downhill.

Around the Division: Absolutely no help on the out of town scoreboard. Hershey wins 5-1 over the Lehigh Valley Phantoms….Bridgeport beats Utica 4-1.

None of anything else which follows matters, but Springfield beat Hartford 3-1.

Standings: Hershey in fifth with .557, Pens in sixth at .517 and Bridgeport in seventh at .500.

Who Plays Who: Hershey is in Providence Friday, Islanders are off.

Wheeling Update: Nailers are beat by the Indy Fuel 4-1.

Video Highlights: 

Pens are in Belleville Friday. More then.

Let’s Go Pens!

The Big Smoke — Pens WIN 5-1

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So this was a game in hand on idle Hershey that the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins have on the Bears. They have two. They now have one. Games in hand don’t mean anything if you don’t win them.

They won this one. Considerably.

After going down 1-0 in the first, the Penguins rattle off five straight and roll the Marlies 5-1 Tuesday night. The teams rematch Wednesday.

Louis Domingue opposed Michael Hutchinson.

Here’s how they lined up:

Lineup Notes: Jamie Devane for Filip Hallander. who is on the trip and day to day with a lower body injury. Jordy Bellerive went to the top line in Hallander’s place. Juuso Riikola was back in the lineup for Cam Lee. Taylor Fedun is not on the trip.

First Period: Pens trailed 1-0 on a Joey Anderson power play goal, the only power play of the period. They outshot the Marlies 13-11 in the period but seven of those shots were taken from just inside the blue line.

Easy, easy work for goaltender Michael Hutchinson, especially when you aren’t putting any traffic in front of the net an either screening or tipping pucks in front of the net.

Here’s the Joey Anderson goal. The Pens couldn’t win a faceoff and it cost them.

That’s a shot from just inside the blue line and a player screening the goaltender and tipping a shot for a goal. That’s how you do it.

Second Period: Hah. The Penguins must have gotten the message because they exploded for four goals. Two of the goals came off of tips.

Here’s the first, a Will Reilly shot that Kasper Bjorkqvist deflected for a goal that tied it at one.

Anthony Angello let a shot go that caught Hutchinson off guard, and I think he needs to take that shot more often.

:25 later, Jamie Devane put in a rebound and it was 3-1 Penguins.

Later, Kyle Olson deflected a Mitch Reinke shot and it was 4-1. The second deflected goal of the period.

Also Olson’s 23rd birthday. Birthday biscuits.

Third Period: Toronto started kicking the door down, but Domingue kept them out with some acrobatic saves. You kind of got the feeling that if Toronto scored one, they would likely score another.

Well, it didn’t happen. The Penguins only took one penalty in the period and then Michael Chaput created a turnover and scored off of said turnover.

If it wasn’t hugely evident leading up to it, it was clear after. Ballgame.

Three Stars: 3) Kasper Bjorkqvist (goal) 2) Will Reilly (two assists) 1) Louis Domingue (30 saves)

The Good: I’m assuming I wasn’t the only one that caught the points I raised in the first period recap. The Pens needed to generate more traffic in front of Hutchinson and in the second period and beyond they did. The second period effort won them the game because of lessons learned from the first.

The Bad: I couldn’t really find anything. Toronto is so Jekyll and Hyde. It was painfully evident in this game alone.

Turning Point: The goal :25 after the Pens made it 2-1, the one scored by Devane on a rebound made a tough night for the hosts even tougher and rougher.

Around the Division: They all watched us.

Standings: Hershey in fifth with .550. Pens in sixth with .525. Bridgeport in sixth with .492.

Who Plays Who Tomorrow: Pens are in a rematch against the Marlies….Hershey hosts Lehigh Valley and Bridgeport is in Utica.

Wheeling Update: Nailers were off.

Video Highlights:

More tomorrow for the rematch.

Let’s Go Pens!