Chirps from Center Ice

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

Category Archives: The AHL

AHL Previews: Pacific Division

Back for yet another year are the Chirps from Center Ice AHL Team Previews. I have been doing previews for as long as I have maintained this blog. It’s just my quick snippet of every team in the American Hockey League, broken down into divisions.

I start in the Pacific Division, will have the Central on Tuesday, the North on Wednesday and then the Atlantic on Thursday.

I tweaked some things this year. Twitter, Facebook and Instagram are all consolidated in “Social Media Coverage” and I am altogether nixing the media coverage otherwise. Most teams don’t have a full time beat anymore and these newer teams in Laval and Belleville just have general coverage that I have seen so far. If you are a fan of a team not named, “Penguins” that happens to read this blog, you know where to get your team coverage.

One more thing before we start, the St. Louis Blues don’t have a full time affiliate this season. St. Louis is splitting placing their prospects in Chicago and San Antonio. It will balance out next season with 31 NHL teams being serviced by 31 AHL clubs, but not this year.

Here we go, starting in the Pacific. The Penguins don’t play anyone here. Note: The social media tags are Twitter first, Facebook second and Instagram third.

NHL Affiliation: Edmonton Oilers

Record: 33-29-5-1 (72 pts., 5th place Pacific Division)

Playoffs: Did not qualify.

Head Coach: Gerry Fleming

Arena: Rabobank Arena

ECHL Affiliation: Wichita Thunder

Offseason Moves: Yohann Auvitu, Mitch Callahan, Eddie Pasquale, Ryan Stanton

The Case For: Bringing in proven veterans should bolster the Condors and push for a playoff spot.

The Case Against: Other teams upgraded too, so are the Condors keeping up or catching up?

Social Media: @Condors // /BakersfieldCondors // condors

Broadcaster: Ryan Holt

NHL Affiliation: Los Angeles Kings

Record: 36-21-10-1 (83 pts., 3rd place Pacific Division)

Playoffs: Lost in Round 1 in five games to the San Diego Gulls.

Head Coach: Mike Stothers

Arena: Citizens Business Bank Arena

ECHL Affiliation: Manchester Monarchs

Offseason Moves: Jamie Devane

The Case For: Ontario always puts out a good product and are extremely well coached. Reign will be looking to get back to the top of the Pacific Division this season.

The Case Against: Pacific looks loaded this year. Reign may not be a top four team this year.

Social Media: @OntarioReign // /ontarioreign // ontarioreignhockey

Broadcaster: Joseph Zakrzewski and Cameron Close

NHL Affiliation: Colorado Avalanche

Record: 27-42-5-2 (61 pts., 8th place Pacific Division)

Playoffs: Did not qualify.

Head Coach: Eric Veilleux

Arena: AT&T Center

ECHL Affiliation: Colorado Eagles

Offseason Moves: Andrew Agozzino, Sam Britain, Dave Warsofsky

The Case For: Finished dead last in the Pacific last season. Only way to go is up.

The Case Against: May be a lame duck season with the Avalanche with rumors swirling that the ECHL affiliate Colorado Eagles will be the AHL affiliate a year from now. Could be another long year in the Alamo.

Social Media: @sarampage // /sarampagehockey // sarampage

Broadcaster: Dan Weiss

NHL Affiliation: Anaheim Ducks

Record: 43-20-3-2 (91 pts., 2nd place Pacific Division)

Playoffs: Lost in Round 2 in five games to the San Jose Barracuda.

Head Coach: Dallas Eakins

Arena: Valley View Casino Center

ECHL Affiliation: Utah Grizzlies

Offseason Moves: Reto Berra, Derek Grant, Steve Oleksy

The Case For: Gulls should be a contender out of the box looking to build on last years success and early exit to San Jose.

The Case Against: It feels like it’s San Jose’s division to lose.

Social Media: @SDGullsAHL // /SDGullsAHL // sdgullsahl

Broadcaster: Craig Elsten

NHL Affiliation: San Jose Sharks

Record: 43-16-4-5 (95 pts., 1st place Pacific Division)

Playoffs: Lost in Round 3 in five games to the Grand Rapids Griffins.

Head Coach: Roy Sommer

Arena: SAP Center

ECHL Affiliation: Allen Americans

Offseason Moves: Brandon Bollig, Antoine Bibeau

The Case For: Nothing is a given, but with a team like the Barracuda who only lost 16 regulation games and have a future Hall of Fame Coach in Roy Sommer, you can pencil in San Jose as a playoff team now.

The Case Against: With all of that said, the Barracuda got shredded by the Griffins in the playoffs and a lot of weaknesses were exposed. Did other teams take notice?

Social Media: @SJBarracuda // /SJBarracuda // sjbarracuda

Broadcaster: Nick Nollenberger

NHL Affiliation: Calgary Flames

Record: 34-25-7-2 (77 pts., 4th place Pacific Division)

Playoffs: Lost in Round 1 in five games to the San Jose Barracuda.

Head Coach: Ryan Huska

Arena: Stockton Arena

ECHL Affiliation: Kansas City Mavericks

Offseason Moves: Luke Gazdic, Marek Hrivik

The Case For: If you are looking for a sleeper team in the Pacific, the Heat should be a team to watch.

The Case Against: Any string of losses to a team that only plays 68 games with five other teams that play the same amount could be a big hole to dig out of.

Social Media: @AHLHeat // /AHLHeat // ahlheat

Broadcaster: Brandon Kisker

NHL Affiliation: Dallas Stars

Record: 34-37-1-4 (73 pts., 7th place Pacific Division)

Playoffs: Did not qualify.

Head Coach: Derek Laxdal

Arena: H-E-B Center at Cedar Park

ECHL Affiliation: Idaho Steelheads

Offseason Moves: Mike McKenna, Greg Rallo, Brent Regner, Brian Flynn

The Case For: Texas is a team that missed playoffs last season in surprising fashion. With these offseason signings, don’t expect history to repeat itself.

The Case Against: Not exactly spring chickens brought in. Are the younger guys ready?

Social Media: @TexasStars // /TexasStars // txstarshockey

Broadcaster: Brien Rea

NHL Affiliation: Phoenix Coyotes

Record: 29-31-8-0 (66 pts., 6th place Pacific Division)

Playoffs: Did not qualify.

Head Coach: Mike Van Ryn

Arena: Tucson Convention Center

ECHL Affiliation: Fort Wayne Komets

Offseason Moves: Mike Sislo, Andrew Campbell, Zac Larrazza, Zac Rinaldo.

The Case For: Last years pesky Roadrunners looked good out of the box but slowly ran out of gas. This is a team, like Stockton, worth keeping an eye on as the season progresses.

The Case Against: Four teams will make playoffs and four teams won’t. Right now, many have Tucson on the side that doesn’t make it in.

Social Media: @RoadrunnersAHL // /RoadrunnersAHL // roadrunnersahl

Broadcaster: Tom Callahan


Back tomorrow with a look at the Central.

Thursday Notes 9/28

Couple things to touch on this evening that happened today…

Tom Sestito is on waivers. Provided he clears, the Penguins will be down to 25 players. They need to be at 23 next week. It was suggested that the Penguins may cut Jay McClerment and put Patric Hornqvist on injured reserve. That gives them time to leave the window open on auditions for the 3C position and gives them time to continue to evaluate Derrick Pouliot.

Utica is getting the AHL All-Star game again, the second time in three years, last hosting in 2015. This is actually late in the game for the League to announce a host site and usually when things like this happen it means that no other team in the AHL wanted the event. That Utica gets it again for the the second time in three years pretty much speaks to it. I guess it is better than no game at all.

Coal Street cut four players today, Daniel Leavens, Tom Mele, Kenny Ryan and Danny Pick were released and sent to Wheeling. Cam Brown, Hunter Fejes, Dan Milan, Kevin Schulze, Nick Sorkin, and Colin Stevens are the Wheeling contracted players who remain in the AHL with the Penguins.

Penguins will be using more regulars in the lineup Friday against Binghamton. I’ll be there and will have a blog post after the game with a final score and write-up of the game like Wednesday night.

One Fell Swoop, See You Soon Kid

Pittsburgh finally trimmed their roster today, and they did so all at once seemingly with the following players sent to Wilkes-Barre today.

Forwards

Zach Aston-Reese
Teddy Blueger
Jean-Sebastien Dea*
Thomas Di Pauli
Adam Johnson
Sam Miletic**
Dominik Simon
Colin Smith
Daniel Sprong
Christian Thomas
Freddie Tiffels
Garrett Wilson*

Defensemen

Lukas Bengtsson
Frank Corrado*
Kevin Czuczman*
Ethan Prow
Chris Summers*
Jarred Tinordi*
Zach Trotman*

Goaltenders

Casey DeSmith
Tristan Jarry

Key

* – players who need waivers
** – Miletic signed a three year entry level contract with Pittsburgh on Monday. At age 20, he is eligible for and look for him a lot, with Wilkes-Barre this upcoming season.

The roster in Pittsburgh stands at 26 players. They need to be at 23 in time for the beginning of the season. Here is a look at the current roster.

Jonathan had some thoughts today regarding the roster spots still up for grabs. He believes, as do I, that the final roster spot comes down to Josh Archibald and Derrick Pouliot. Both need waivers. Pouliot is a bargaining chip that Pittsburgh could flip for a third line center, but that hasn’t happened yet. So if you are looking at it from a perspective of sending a guy out, it’s probably going to be Archibald because he’s less expendable in that he has less of a trade value vs. Pouliot.

Analysis

Wilkes-Barre’s camp stands at 49 players if no one goes claimed tomorrow at noon in waivers. There are no roster limits in the AHL, mind you.

Anyway, my thoughts on Pittsburgh are that they release Jay McClerment from his PTO and send Tom Sestito to WBS when he’s healthy after getting banged up in practice from a collision with Ryan Reaves. That leaves the Archibald / Pouliot decision to be made. I think it’s Archibald that gets the short end. My first three guys to go up after Archibald, and this is assuming that no one gets claimed on waivers, are Sprong, Aston-Reese and Johnson in that order. Sprong is going to get the Jake Guentzel treatment in Wilkes-Barre and go up full time in January. Johnson needs to learn the pro game. Depending on how he takes the demotion to the AHL and how he handles the pro game determines his success down here and future with Pittsburgh. I can’t wait to see a healthy Zach Aston-Reese tear up the Atlantic Division.

My second three are Dea, Simon and Garrett Wilson in no order. If you forced me, Simon, Dea and Wilson in that order. Competition in Wilkes-Barre camp and production in the first 20 games of the regular season can change first three and second three.

On defense, Jonathan likes Trotman a lot. I am going to defer in this category here because it is a large amount of players coming from all over with very high pedigrees. Competition here will only benefit the good of the order as far as a team perspective.

Finally, DeSmith and Jarry are going to probably split starts the first 10 games of the season and Pittsburgh’s management will leave the decision of who the number one starter will be here in Wilkes-Barre up to Clark Donatelli and his staff here. I would not want to be him in making that decision because it is going to be extremely tough with all of the firepower up front and the stacked blue line playing ahead of either Casey or Tristan.

From Wilkes-Barre’s camp, Tom reported that Troy Josephs had some kind of surgery and won’t practice for at least a month. Sean Maguire was hurt Monday and did not practice Tuesday but Tom reported that it’s not serious and he’s day to day.

Tyler had thoughts on Day 1 and Day 2. When he posts Day 3, I will edit it in.

Penguins host the Hershey Bears in preseason action Wednesday night. I would be very interested in seeing who plays in that contest.

In case you are new here, I don’t go full bore in setting up or recapping preseason action. I’ll be at the game and there will be a brief recap of the action and who stood out, who didn’t, etc. Penguins host Binghamton Friday before bussing down to Hershey Saturday and then up to Bingo Sunday.

So but for anything breaking here Wednesday morning / afternoon, check out the blog again Wednesday night after the first preseason game for a recap.

First Round of Cuts

It’s probably a false headline because all of the roster cuts Pittsburgh made from its roster Monday were all players who they returned to their junior clubs. They were, Jan Drozg (Shawinigan Cataractes), Zachary Lauzon (Rouyn-Noranda Huskies), Connor Hall (Kitchener Rangers) and Alex D’Orio (Saint John Sea Dogs).

One junior player remains, and will actually play Tuesday night in Pittsburgh’s preseason game against Buffalo. His name is Jordy Bellerive, fresh off signing a three year entry level contract on Saturday.

Here’s the lineup Pittsburgh is putting out for Tuersday’s affair against Buffalo, in case you are wondering.

Other stuff…

Hershey signed five guys to PTOs. I thought at the time that they loaded up like Hershey always does but one name out of that quintet jumps out at me the most, the others are likely depth guys or heading to the Bears ECHL affiliate in South Carolina.

Matt Carey in case you were wondering, is the player that jumped out at me the most. He was good on a bad Hartford team last year. Put him on an offensive juggernaut like 11-time, watch out.

Mike O’Brien checked in from Pittsburgh, his thoughts here.

More later, probably this week.

Thomas the Scoring Train

Coal Street continued its summer of blockbuster signings with the announcement Wednesday afternoon that they have signed forward Christian Thomas formerly of the Hershey Bears.

Big time signing here. Thomas co-led the Bears in goals with 24 last season, 12 coming on the power play which was fifth overall in the AHL in that department.

For a team like the Penguins in desperate need it seems every year of a power play punch, the Thomas signing shores up that doubt for a team which is improved in defense and forward. Mind you, the Pens won the regular season overall, so it is shaping up like the Penguins may be as good or better than last season, if that is even conceivable.

It’s an AHL contract for Thomas in case you were wondering. It may be a bit of a surprise to some that Thomas went to the middle of September to be signed by a team. He most likely was looking for full time NHL work but with camps opening this week took the next best option in signing with a good AHL team in Wilkes-Barre.

Tyler has more, including the headline I was going to use.

Elsewhere, the Penguins won the Prospects Tournament this weekend and goaltender Alex D’Orio impressed enough people that he signed with Pittsburgh today to a three year entry level contract. D’Orio is an undrafted player who will return to juniors this season.

Pittsburgh opens camp Friday. They didn’t announce a roster when they made the news public Tuesday, so expect that to come Thursday.

We are getting there.

Getting to Be About That Time…

Oh, hello there!

Word of my demise here on the blog has been greatly exaggerated. No, I haven’t given it up. Yes, there hasn’t been anything of substance to blog about. J-S Dea finally signed his qualifying offer and Sahir Gill signed with the Rochester Americans as Jason Botterill continues to poach last years players from Coal Street.

There, you are caught up since the months time or so since I have been in the Chirps from Center Ice living room.

Some other notable things to blog about include the Penguins Rookie Tournament which gets going this weekend in Buffalo. Coal Street put out a nice press release about who is all going here complete with a roster and going next level by sharing the tournament guide complete with in depth player bios.

Notable names like Lukas Bengtsson, Ethan Prow, Jeff Taylor and Dylan Zink lead the blueliners. Forwards Zach Aston-Reese, Teddy Blueger, Thomas DiPauli, Reid Gardiner and Daniel Sprong lead the punch up front.

Pittsburgh will carry the games online through their website if you are itching to watch some hockey four weeks before the start of the regular season.

I’m going to get cracking soon on the AHL Previews and will share a date on when they will roll out in the coming weeks. We are not too far away from the first preseason games. Business is going to pick up again here shortly.

Wydo You Stay A While?

Coal Street announced another signing today. Cody Wydo, who had a three game stint with the Penguins last Spring, signed an AHL deal Wednesday morning.

If you are thinking, “big whoop” think again. Wydo is essentially a point a game player at every level of hockey he has played at. He led the Wheeling Nailers in goals (30) and co-led the Penguins ECHL affiliate in points with 60.

Players like this don’t necessarily grow on trees. Smart of the Penguins to lock up Wydo for a season.

Elsewhere, one time Penguin and former captain Joey Mormina was named assistant coach to the Hartford Wolf Pack on Tuesday. We will be seeing Mormina’s towering frame in a suit and tie when the Wolf Pack come to visit the Penguins for the first time on October 21.

My puns are bad, but I don’t feel bad. Enjoy August!