Chirps from Center Ice

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

Category Archives: WBS

J-S Dea Reclaimed; Assigned to Wilkes-Barre

In follow up to the news on Wednesday that the New Jersey Devils placed Jean-Sebastien Dea on waivers, news Thursday on his whereabouts was revealed.

It’s Wilkes-Barre.

That will certainly help a Penguin team at the bottom of the penalty kill in the AHL. Dea’s speed is unmatched.

What isn’t clear is whether Dea makes his way to Rochester this Friday or Toronto this Saturday. I’ve not seen or heard anything to the contrary yet as to his availability, but one would have to assume he will play either Friday or Saturday if not both games. I’m sure Clark Donatelli and the Penguins coaching staff are chomping at the bit to get Dea back on the ice in a Penguins sweater.

Gameday setup for Friday’s matchup against the Rochester Americans will be on blog at 3.

Two for Thomas in a Hundred — Pens WIN 3-1

       @       

3                                             1

Place any kind of spin on how the Penguins played this past weekend, they needed this one.

Thomas DiPauli, playing in his 100th AHL game, made sure that the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins got the advantage early and the Penguins defeat the Hershey Bears on Wednesday night 3-1.

DiPauli scored two goals in the win.

The Penguins didn’t allow a power play goal against, ending the streak of extra man goals allowed at twelve.

Anthony Peters got the start in net and was a large reason that the Penguins won the game. After going up 3-0, the Bears relentlessly fired shot after shot on the Penguins net minder and were scored on :28 into the third period. Peters buttoned things up and nothing else leaked past him.

Much needed two points heading into the weekend for Wilkes-Barre, who head to North Division leading Rochester Friday night and defending Calder Cup Champion Toronto on Saturday.

Peters opposed Ilya Samsonov.

Lines were…

Lineup Notes: Troy Josephs was inserted in the fourth line, replacing Pat McGrath. Besides the steady pairing of Czuczman and Prow, Head Coach Clark Donatelli shook up his pairings. Tim Erixon paired with Chris Summers, Matt Abt with Stefan Elliott. No Will O’Neill for the Penguins tonight. Up front, Cramarossa was dropped to the fourth line with Josephs.

News: J-S Dea is on waivers from the New Jersey Devils. Taylor explains how the Penguins could reclaim him and assign him to Wilkes-Barre.

First Period: Anthony Peters had to stop a Liam O’Brien penalty shot for, what seemed to me, like the only real threat that Hershey had on the Penguins all period.

Then Thomas DiPauli scored twice. He picked off a blue line pass by the Bears, raced all the way in and gave the Penguins a 1-0 lead.

Then, Teddy Blueger blocked a shot and DiPauli collected the puck and raced in and doubled Wilkes-Barre’s lead.

Wilkes-Barre was running the Bears around a bit at the end of the period, easily picking off exit attempts and getting very good looks at possibly extending the lead to three or more, but Samsonov held the fort.

That’s ten points (6-4) for DiPauli in his last nine games.

Second Period: Ryan Haggerty scored his first goal in 37 games on a power play goal when he parked at the front of the net when a puck essentially deflected off of him on a pass or shot by Adam Johnson when he had his stick tangled with Bears defender Tyler Lewington.

Referees Jordan Deckard and Furman South gave the play a very long look on replay and confirmed their call on the ice of a good goal. They were looking for a kicking motion, but there just was no way possible with the way the puck slowly crept across the line and into the net.

The Penguins clamped down from there and didn’t really get a good look after that power play marker by Haggerty. Hershey came with fire after that, only Anthony Peters wasn’t listening. He denied all 10 Bears shots.

Third Period: :28 into the third, Jayson Megna scored to put the Bears on the board.

Peters had a huge stop on Riley Barber that otherwise would have been a 3-2 game and the entire complexion of the game would have changed.

Penguins had to get a few kills late on but got out of them unscathed. Penguins were more aggressive on the penalty kill I thought. Teddy Blueger had a shorthanded bid which was was denied via poke check by Samsonov. Bears were offside a few times and even took a few penalties, killing their man advantage chance.

Troy Josephs quietly had an effective game, just missing a chance in the third when a Burton shot caromed off the back wall. Josephs collected the puck but shot it wide with a man on him.

The Good: DiPauli and Peters put the team on their backs and took the Penguins to a victory in Hershey…Penalty Kill was flawless and aggressive against a notoriously dangerous Hershey man advantage…Anthony Peters is quietly establishing himself as the number one goaltender while Tristan Jarry is up in the NHL. John Muse hasn’t been given much of a chance yet, but if the team is struggling to get points (which the Penguins have) the coaching staff is going to rise the hot hand. Expect Muse to get the start probably Saturday.

The Bad: Bad puck luck, penalties and running into a hot goaltender in Peters killed the Bears tonight. But they shouldn’t have had the opportunity to even regain their pulse, going down 3-0. The Penguins let the Bears dictate pace in the second half of the game tonight and were lucky it only cost them the Megna goal :28 into the third.

Three Stars: 3) Jayson Megna (goal) 2) Antony Peters (26 saves on 27 shots) 1) Thomas DiPauli (two goals)

Around the Division: Springfield beats Bridgeport 5-2 in the only other Atlantic Division action tonight.

Standings: Charlotte 33 — Bridgeport 27 — Springfield 24 — Hartford 23 — Lehigh Valley 22 — Penguins 22 — Providence 19 — Hershey 19

Wheeling Update: Nailers were off.

Video Highlights: 

Penguins will probably head to Rochester Thursday afternoon for their Friday matchup against the Americans at 7.

Check out my AHL Power Rankings Thursday morning and likely a blurb or something if the Penguins reclaim J-S Dea. Regardless, stop by some time Thursday.

Let’s Go Pens!

GAMEDAY: @ Hershey 11/28

@     

Who: Hershey Bears

Where: Giant Center

When: 7:00 p.m.

Last Game: Sunday at home against the Providence Bruins, the Pens lost 4-2. Adam Johnson and Jarrett Burton netted goals for Wilkes-Barre in the loss. For Hershey, the Bears last game was last Saturday against the Penguins, where they won 3-2. Sergei Shumakov scored for the Bears and John Muse, making his Penguins debut, stopped 31 of 34 shots.

Record: For WBS: 8-8-3-1 (20 pts., 6th place Atlantic Division) // For HER: 9-10-0-1 (19 pts., 8th place Atlantic Division)

Referee(s): Jordan Deckard / Furman South

Linesmen: Bob Goodman / Tom DellaFranco

Why You Should Care: Special teams. If the Penguins want to put themselves in position to win the game tonight, they should be perfect on the penalty kill. Wilkes-Barre has allowed a power play goal against in twelve straight contests.

Listen: Nick Hart on the call on WILK.

Watch: AHLTV is new and improved and a lot cheaper.

Other Game to Watch: Two teams jockeying for position in the Central Division, Chicago and Grand Rapids, square off tonight in Michigan.

Next Five Games: @ RCH 11/30, @ TOR 12/1, vs. CLE 12/7, vs. BRI 12/8, @ HER 12/9

Troy Josephs Recalled 11/26

The Wheeling Nailers have scored 41 goals as of November 26, 2018.

Troy Josephs has factored into 44% of them.

The Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins recalled Troy Josephs Monday afternoon. Josephs has 12 goals, 6 assists and 18 points for the Wheeling Nailers. He was the ECHL Player of the Week last week.

A few things on this recall.

– Wilkes-Barre has, at times, struggled offensively. Introducing Josephs back into the lineup may provide enough of an offensive boost that the Penguins desperately need.

– Up top, the Patric Hornqvist concussion may be more of a longer term issue for Pittsburgh thus leaving Garrett Wilson up in the NHL. The Penguins don’t have Tobias Lindberg for a few days and I doubt that Patrick McGrath is the answer for a team that is 2-5-3 in their last ten.

– Troy Josephs may just be too good for the ECHL.

Do I see Josephs as a savior? No. That’s silly. Injecting him on the first line is throwing him in the deep end. Putting him on the fourth line and giving him seven minutes a night is a waste also. Same if he is the thirteenth forward. Can he help? Only one way to find out and that’s this Wednesday in Hershey.

Out the door, a comparison.

Talk to you Wednesday.

Puck Luck? No Luck — Pens LOSE 4-2

       vs.       

4                                          2

I tweeted this at some point early on in the third period when the Pens were down 3-1.

For context, the running theme for the Sunday home game was a kids get in free deal and you could wear your pajamas.

But then I looked at the shot board. Wilkes-Barre was badly outshooting their opponent, today the Providence Bruins.

34-19 would end up the final tally in shots for the game favoring the Penguins.

4-2 was the scoreline where it counts most for the Providence Bruins, who win Sunday afternoon.

A team that is down, which I will openly admit that the Penguins are, 2-5-3-0 in their last ten, normally are run around the ice and quickly disposed of in games.

The Penguins trailed 3-1 for about half the game Sunday, and had another power play goal scored against them running the streak of power play goals allowed to twelve.

But bad teams pack it in and things go south in a hurry. Fights, penalties, scrums after every whistle. That didn’t happen today.

You’ll often see me say that in the AHL there are great teams, good teams and bad teams. Are the Penguins a great team? Right now, no. Are they a bad team? I wouldn’t argue with you but in a broader scope my argument is that they are a good team with no luck luck right now.

And I don’t know what it is about Zane McIntyre, the Providence Bruins goaltender, but he owns the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins, even going back to the playoffs two seasons ago. How he wasn’t named a star of the game Sunday is a travesty.

Anthony Peters opposed the aforementioned Zane McIntyre.

The Pens didn’t put out a lines graphic, so here is what they looked like from my seat:

Lineup Notes: Tim Erixon made his Penguins debut for Chris Summers who was the scratch. Tobias Lindberg was injured in the first period Saturday against Hershey, Head Coach Clark Donatelli told Tyler postgame that it isn’t serious and he should only miss a few days. Patrick McGrath took Lindberg’s spot on the fourth line.

First Period: Providence wasted no time on a power play, their first of the game when Ryan Fitzgerald connected on a tic tac toe play that gave the Bruins an early 1-0 lead.

You know, I think that may have been the turning point of the game. The Penguins can’t stop the opponent from scoring on the man advantage, so what better way to establish yourself against Wilkes-Barre on the road by dialing up an early power play goal to give your team the lead?

The puck luck theme I lead with was apparent here in this sequence…

Adam Johnson connected on the back end of a Olivier Galipeau double minor for high sticking Jarrett Burton and the Penguins were tied with the Bruins.

Second Period: Two goals within 65 seconds gave the Bruins the cushion they needed to shell up and ride McIntyre to the final whistle.

Will O’Neill pinched, this right after he turned the puck over in his own zone to set up the whole sequence.

Unmarked in the slot. That’s a no-no.

Shots at the end of the second were 21-13 Wilkes-Barre.

Third Period: Penguins don’t score on a power play, then Sam Lafferty is denied by an impossible pad save by McIntyre far post, Joe Cramarossa had a mini breakaway and shot wide.

Puck luck. Puck luck. Puck luck.

Jarrett Burton scored falling down to cut the deficit to one with 4:04 left.

But then Providence hemmed the Penguins deep in their own territory with under 90 seconds to play. The Penguins, with Peters vacated for the extra man, were never able to find the equalizer.

The Good: They stayed in both games to the end this weekend. Bad teams don’t stick around for this let alone twice in less than 24 hours.

The Bad: Special teams, and the inability to grab a game, take control and not let go. How often have the Penguins teams in the past commanded a game and not let something like a goal or two bother them, then get the necessary materials to carry them to a win? You aren’t seeing that with this version, currently, but I believe that it is there and just needs to be spotlighted.

Three Stars: 

Around the Division: Charlotte sweeps Laval, with a 3-1 decision Sunday…Bridgeport beats Springfield, who have lost two straight, 4-3. Everyone else had a quiet Sunday.

Standings: Charlotte 33 — Bridgeport 27 — Hartford 23 — Springfield 22 — Lehigh Valley 22 — Penguins 20 — Providence 19 — Hershey 19

Wheeling Update: Nailers with a big home win against Cincinnati Sunday afternoon, Nick Saracino factored into every goal for the Nailers with a goal and two assists, Wheeling wins 3-2.

Video Highlights: 

The Penguins are back in action for some midweek hockey Wednesday night in Hershey. But for anything newsworthy between now and then (the Penguins have a scheduled day off Monday) check out the Gameday setup here on the blog Wednesday at 3.

Let’s Go Pens!

RAPID RECAP – Pens LOSE 4-2

No puck luck right now.

Outshooting the undermanned Providence Bruins 34-20, the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins lose 4-2. Jarrett Burton and Adam Johnson scored for the Penguins.

More in a bit.

GAMEDAY: vs. Providence 11/25

vs.     

Who: Providence Bruins

Where: Mohegan Sun Arena at Casey Plaza

When: 3:05 p.m.

Last Game: Last night at home against Hershey, the Pens lost 3-2. John Muse made his WBS debut and stopped 31 shots. For Providence, the Bruins were in Allentown last night taking on the Phantoms and went down 2-0 before the game was 70 seconds old and won 6-3. Austin Fyten and Cameron Hughes both scored two goals.

Last Meeting: November 11 in Providence, the Pens lost 5-2. Anthony Angello and Derek Grant connected for the goals for the Pens and Ryan Donato scored two for Providence.

Record: For WBS: 8-7-3-1 (20 pts., 6th place Atlantic Division) // For PRO: 7-8-3-0 17 pts., 8th place Atlantic Division)

Referee(s): Jason Faist / Alex Garon

Linesmen: Bob Goodman / Ryan Knapp

Why You Should Care: Penguins, I get the sense from last night, were not impressed with the way that they played against Hershey in a losing effort. I get the sense that the last place Providence Bruins are coming in as a wolf in sheeps clothing and that he Pens need to take very seriously their opponent today. I don’t want to say that anything in November is must win, but today surely feels like it, with last night’s performance still fresh in our minds.

Listen: Nick Hart on the call on WILK.

Watch: AHLTV is new and improved and a lot cheaper.

Promotion(s): Kids Free Sunday (Fans 14 and younger are free with paid adult ticket)

Other Game to Watch: Springfield heads to Bridgeport to take on the Sound Tigers at 3 Sunday.

Next Five Games: @ HER 11/28, @ RCH 11/30, @ TOR 12/1, vs. CLE 12/7, vs. BRI 12/8