Chirps from Center Ice

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

Category Archives: WBS

Eastern Conference Quarterfinal Game 3: Binghamton Senators (WBS leads 2-0)

@ 2012_BNG

Eastern Conference Quarterfinal – Game 3

AHL Game: D3

Who: Binghamton Senators

Where: Mohegan Sun Arena at Casey Plaza

When: 7:05 p.m.

Series: WBS leads 2-0 (best of five)

Media Kit

Last Game: Sunday in Binghamton, the Pens won 3-2. Warren Peters second period goal with under two seconds to play held up as the game winning goal.

What to Watch For: A desperate B-Sens squad. If the Penguins look like the Penguins who last took the ice in Wilkes-Barre in the regular season, that is, a lackadaisical Pens team, the B-Sens will win and Game 4 is Saturday. The Pens are definitely looking to sweep this club and rest up for Round 2.

Referees: Dave Lewis / Chris Ciamaga

Linesmen: Kiel Murchison / Jud Ritter

Twitter: @wbspenguins / @BSens_Hockey

Facebook: /WilkesBarreScrantonPenguins // /binghamtonsenators

Beat Writers: @CVBombulie / @PSBSens

Broadcasters: WBS: Tom Grace @TGracePens and Mike O’Brien @MikeOBrienWBS / BNG: Grady Whittenburg @BSensRadio and Bob Howard @PPPShow

Fan Bloggers: @nafsnep

Radio: For WBS: 102.3 The Mountain / For Binghamton: Big 107.5

Television: AHL Live

When is Game 4?: Well if the Pens win, the series is over. If the B-Sens win, Game 4 is Saturday in Wilkes-Barre.

B-Sens on Brink – Pens WIN 3-2 (WBS leads 2-0)

WBS          @          button_bng200

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As Penguins fans, I think we can all say we have been there before.

Blood rival in a playoff game. Their best player sinks an OT game winner to deliver a heartbreaking loss. So you come back the next day, and it seems that everyone is against you, including the referees.

For Binghamton Senators fans, I think that is how they are feeling this Sunday evening.

The Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins take a 2-0 series lead with a 3-2 win on the Southern Tier of New York and can sweep the series Thursday in Wilkes-Barre. It seemed at times that referees Jon McIsaac and Jamie Koharski were wearing Penguins jerseys with orange arm bands with some of the so-so calls being made against the home team, which incited the ire of the faithful at the Broome County Veterans Memorial Arena.

Or maybe Binghamton played undisciplined and the Penguins played sound, calm cool hockey. Who knows. I guess it depends on what team you pull for.

One lineup change to note the Penguins way. Chris Collins was in for Dominik Uher. For a more in-depth reason as to why the change, may I direct you to the great Jonathan Bombulie’s blog recap.

Turns out though, that the Collins swap for Uher was money in the bank. Collins scored a goal in the second period of the game that broke a 1-1 tie. It had appeared, to that point, that the B-Sens were slowly gaining enough momentum to make a series out of it, but then Collins fools everyone in what Bombulie described as a no look shot that absolutely fooled everyone in the arena, especially starting goaltender Nathan Lawson.

Jeff Zatkoff was astounding once again. He lets in a goal on a rush late in the first when Matt Puempel finds himself in the high slot after a pass and he shoots it blocker side on him. Earlier, Riley Holzapfel finished off a goal mouth scrum on the back end of a Derek Grant double minor for a high stick.

Warren Peters had an excellent game as well, blocking shots, winning face-offs, clearing pucks, etc. He scored with 1.9 seconds left in the second to put the Penguins ahead 3-1 at the time.

Penguins would be the beneficiaries of the whistles of McIassac / Koharski with an extended 5-on-3 power play in the third period, but they could not score on it.

Stephane Da Costa for Binghamton got close twice in the game, drawing iron on two separate occasions including once late in the third. Chris Wideman scored late on a power play with Lawson pulled but the Pens held on and took command of the series and will look to end it Thursday.

B-Sens kept the top line of Kolarik-Smith-Holzapfel pretty much in check all night but for the goal scored by Holzapfel on the back end of the double minor late in the first. Assists from Sill, Megna, Gibbons with goals from Collins and Peters is about as balanced of a scoring effort that you can ask for, in my opinion.

If you happened to be wondering who the teams are that came back from down 0-2 in the best of five, wonder no more. The great Tim Leone has it covered for you. (hint: he’s only doing this because Hershey is up 2-0 on Providence in their series)

I will be back this week with a look at the other series in the East and West and what could be shaping up for the Penguins in Round 2, provided we don’t see a repeat reversal of 2005. I think we will know quick, especially if that Game 3 goes three overtimes. Binghamton doesn’t have anyone named Armstrong though.

Let’s Go Pens!

Eastern Conference Quarterfinal Game 2: Binghamton Senators (WBS leads 1-0)

@ 2012_BNG

Eastern Conference Quarterfinal – Game 2

AHL Game: D2

Who: Binghamton Senators

Where: Broome County Veterans Memorial Arena

When: 5:05 p.m.

Series: WBS leads 1-0 (best of five)

Media Kit

Last Game: Last night in Binghamton, the Pens won 3-2 in overtime on Chad Kolarik’s overtime game winning goal. He had two goals in the contest.

What to Watch For: With Game 2 being the most important game in a five game series, the best effort from the trailing team, that being Binghamton. The Penguins, with an exact copy of last night with maybe some better bounces, can take control of this series.

Referees: Jamie Koharski / Jon McIsaac

Linesmen: Mike Emanatian // Steeve Lemay

Twitter: @wbspenguins / @BSens_Hockey

Facebook: /WilkesBarreScrantonPenguins // /binghamtonsenators

Beat Writers: @CVBombulie / @PSBSens

Broadcasters: WBS: Tom Grace @TGracePens and Mike O’Brien @MikeOBrienWBS / BNG: Grady Whittenburg @BSensRadio and Bob Howard @PPPShow

Fan Bloggers: @nafsnep

Radio: For WBS: 102.3 The Mountain / For Binghamton: Big 107.5

Television: AHL Live

When is Game 3?: Thursday, May 2 in Wilkes-Barre at Mohegan Sun Arena

Cool like Kolarik – Pens WIN 3-2 (OT) (WBS leads 1-0)

WBS          @          button_bng200

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Other teams hate him. Says he’s too flashy. Celebrates too much.

He scores goals. He plays for the Penguins. Go ahead, try and stop him.

I am talking about Chad Kolarik, who scored two goals tonight for the Penguins including the overtime game winner, as the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins go on to beat the Binghamton Senators 3-2 in overtime in this best of five series.

Game 2 is tomorrow afternoon at 5:05. The second game in a five game series is the most important one in the series. The series comes back to Wilkes-Barre with the Pens up two games to none or split with new life for the B-Sens.

Jeff Zatkoff vs. Nathan Lawson – Cody Wild took warmups but he and Chris Collins were among the regulars scratched.

First Period: The Penguins jumped out of the gate and controlled every aspect of the game. B-Sens would get the puck in, a defender is there to take it off him and it’s back out. Puck possession. Puck possession. Puck possession. Brian Dumoulin passes to Brian Gibbons who taps it past Lawson to make it 1-0 Pens. Gibbons was everywhere early. B-Sens don’t register a shot on goal until 5:54 remaining in the period. Then, the Pens force a turnover behind Lawson’s net, find Kolarik who cuts to the slot and snipes it home for a 2-0 lead. B-Sens late and on a power play score when Penguin killer Shane Prince backhands a shot past Zatkoff to bring things to 2-1.

Second Period: Pens looked to have all the momentum when they find themselves on a 5×3 with 1:28 but three seconds later it gores to 4×3 when Derek Nesbitt high sticks a B-Sen off the ensuing faceoff. No dice with the penalties. Penguins continued puck possession.

Taking this to a second paragraph. The puck possession I talked about earlier? Gone. Shifted completely over to the Binghamton side like the teams were on a see saw. They had every bit of the chances and it was a matter of time before they scored and sure enough Mark Stone forechecks Philip Samuelsson backwards and takes the puck from him and scores to tie it. Absolutely back breaking goal at the time.

Third Period: Pens bend but don’t break. Both club gets a chance on the power play. The Brian Gibbons Breakaway of the Game™ was seen but Lawson made the save. On to…..

Overtime: Zatkoff with some unreal saves. Kolarik ends it from the top of the slot.

Three Stars: 3) Nathan Lawson (30 saves on 33 shots) 2) Jeff Zatkoff (34 saves on 36 shots) and 1) Chad Kolarik (2 goals, +2)

Have worried that the goal scorers that we have would ball up and fade away like last season but Trevor Smith had two assists, Riley Holzapfel had an assist and Kolarik two goals. Derek Nesbitt chipped in with an assist too. One game does not a playoffs make.

Game 2 is at 5:05 tomorrow. Gameday for that is up at 1 p.m.

One final note before I go, Beau Bennett was scratched in Pittsburgh’s final regular season game. Will he be sent back to get playoff action? Time will tell.

Get ready for Binghamton’s best tomorrow.

Let’s Go Pens!

Eastern Conference Quarterfinal Game 1: Binghamton Senators

2012_BNG

Eastern Conference Quarterfinal – Game 1

AHL Game: D1

Who: Binghamton Senators

Where: Broome County Veterans Memorial Arena

When: 7:05 p.m.

Series: Tied 0-0 (best of five)

Media Kit

Season Series: Oct 13: WBS 1 @ BNG 2 — Nov 7: BNG 0 @ WBS 1 (SO) — Dec 14: BNG 3 @ WBS 1 — Dec 19: WBS 3 @ BNG 4 — Jan 4: WBS 1 @ BNG 3 — Jan 9: BNG 3 @ WBS 1 — Feb 12: BNG 5 @ WBS 1 — Feb 16: WBS 5 @ BNG 2 — Mar 27: BNG 2 @ WBS 4 — Mar 30: WBS 3 @ BNG 2 (SO)

Top four scorers for the Penguins vs. the Senators: 1. Trevor Smith (10 GP, 6-3-9, +1) 2. Chad Kolarik (4 GP, 3-5-8, even) 3. Riley Holzapfel (10 GP, 0-5-5, -3) 4. Brian Gibbons (9 GP, 2-2-4, -3)

Top four scorers for the Senators vs. the Penguins: 1. Hugh Jessiman (10 GP, 4-2-6, +5) 2. Shane Prince (9 GP, 4-1-5, +3) 3. Stephane Da Costa (6 GP, 1-4-5, even) 4. Corey Cowick (10 GP, 1-3-4, -4)

What to Watch For: Special teams. The B-Sens led the AHL in shorthanded goals for. For the Penguins, success on the power play is key.

Referees: Darcy Burchell / Keith Kaval

Linesmen: Jim Harper / Jud Ritter

Twitter: @wbspenguins / @BSens_Hockey

Facebook: /WilkesBarreScrantonPenguins // /binghamtonsenators

Beat Writers: @CVBombulie / @PSBSens

Broadcasters: WBS: Tom Grace @TGracePens and Mike O’Brien @MikeOBrienWBS / BNG: Grady Whittenburg @BSensRadio and Bob Howard @PPPShow

Fan Bloggers: @nafsnep

Radio: For WBS: 102.3 The Mountain / For Binghamton: Big 107.5

Television: AHL Live

When is Game 2?: Tomorrow night, April 28, at 5:05 from Broome County Veterans Memorial Arena.

Penguins / B-Sens Series Preview

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The most wonderful time of the year can also be the most frustrating time of the year.

For the eleventh straight season, the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins have qualified for the Calder Cup Playoffs. With the amount of roster turnover that goes on year to year, team to team, making playoffs eleven consecutive times as a minor league hockey franchise is a remarkable achievement.

For these Penguins, its been ten years in and ten years out with no Calder Cup. Meanwhile Hershey, Norfolk and the opponent in our way in Binghamton have all lifted the championship trophy in recent years. The Penguins started off the season with a strong lineup and fine-tuned as the season wore on with the additions of Chad Kolarik and Derek Nesbitt. The journey begins tomorrow night in Binghamton and hopefully ends in June with a party.

But before we let visions of grandeur enter into our psyche too vividly, there is a series to breakdown.

The Penguins open the 2013 Calder Cup Playoffs Saturday night on the Southern Tier of New York vs. a Binghamton Senators team which defied expectations all season long. The B-Sens have used the term “pesky” to describe themselves and played their way to a 4 seed and nearly snuck up on the East Division Champion Syracuse Crunch.

The Penguins went 4-6 vs. their closest rival this season but some of that is obscured by the NHL lockout that ended in January. Goaltender Robin Lehner was called up to Ottawa shortly after the labor strife ended peacefully and then the Penguins started having success. Lehner is not available for Binghamton this go around.

And now it’s time for the breakdown:

Forwards:

The B-Sens have three rookies in Mark Stone, Shane Prince and Cole Schneider who are among the top five in scoring for the team. Their best players are first year guys who are going to be experiencing Calder Cup playoffs for the very first time.

Wilkes-Barre has Chad Kolarik, Trevor Smith, Riley Holzapfel and Derek Nesbitt which pace the team in points. Nesbitt was a late add and only has a game with the team. Smith, who won a Calder Cup last year with the Norfolk Admirals centers Kolarik and Holzapfel.

The Penguins are the lowest scoring team in the Calder Cup Playoffs. The Penguins look like a one line team on paper. Shutdown one or two of the top line if you are Binghamton and you have a good chance of winning.

Advantage: Binghamton

Defense:

Both teams play stingy defense and were both in the top five in goals allowed. Wilkes-Barre has allowed the fewest goals in all the AHL and that defense has flat out won games for the Penguins this season.

Advantage: Push

Goaltending:

The Penguins have Brad Thiessen and Jeff Zatkoff, winners of the Hap Holmes award for fewest goals allowed. Yes, the defense for the Penguins has been the best all year long in the League but the duo of Zatkoff and Thiessen have been better.

Binghamton has Nathan Lawson and Marc Chevrie. Pens fans may remember Lawson from the Bridgeport series a few years ago. Lawson has been dealing with an injury this week and has not practiced. The backup to Chevrie is Scott Greenham, who has played 11:00 of AHL hockey in mop up duty Sunday.

Advantage: Penguins

Intangibles:

John Hynes is the winningest coach in Penguins history. Luke Richardson some say is the primary reason why the B-Sens are where they are. Coaching advantage goes to Hynes slightly, only because the Pens have been to and have had success in the Calder Cup Playoffs with him at the helm in the past. The B-Sens and Penguins won’t be putting on any clinics on how to score on the power play, both teams were in the bottom third in the League in this category. To make up for this, the Penguins have been at the top of the penalty kill all season long and the B-Sens are top ten. Special teams may be a push, but could slide to either side as the series goes on.

Social Media Coverage:

For the Penguins…

Twitter: @WBSPenguins
Radio: @MikeOBrienWBS // @TGracePens
Beat: @CVBombulie
Facebook: /WilkesBarreScrantonPenguins
Fan Blogger: @nafsnep

For the B-Sens…

Twitter: @BSens_Hockey
Radio: @BSensRadio // @PPPShow
Beat: @PSBSens
Facebook: /binghamtonsenators
Front Office: @KateKrenzer

Prediction: Penguins in four. The Penguins have to get the advantage in the series early because the longer that the “pesky” B-Sens stick around the more dangerous they become. I don’t think anyone in Wilkes-Barre wants to see this series go the distance.

Gameday setup for Game 1 drops tomorrow at 3 p.m.

Fourth Quarter Grades

The Penguins concluded the 2012-2013 regular season with a 3-1 loss to the Manchester Monarchs at home on Saturday night. They have qualified for the Calder Cup Playoffs for an eleventh straight season. They are the five seed and will face off against the Binghamton Senators.

But before we look ahead to the future, it’s time to pass out grades for the final time this season.

The Penguins finished 12-6-1 in the fourth and final quarter, which included a seven game win streak and undoubtedly sealed the Penguins fate for the playoff push.

Here is a look at each player who participated in the 19 games:

Forwards

Chris Collins — (15 GP, 1-3-4, -2) — With the acquisition of Derek Nesbitt at the trade deadline, may be odd man out for the playoff run. In the fifteen games he appeared in, didn’t set the world afire, but held his own. Grade: C

Bobby Farnham — (19 GP, 1-4-5, even) — Plays with an edge. Sometimes goes over the top. Will get under your skin both on and off the ice. He needs to continue to walk that razor thin line in order for the Penguins to succeed. Grade: C+

Brian Gibbons — (19 GP, 1-8-9, -4) — When I sat down and started working out these numbers, was disappointed in what I saw from Gibbons for the quarter. I expected more. However, you do notice him game to game and normally not for bad things, so there’s that. Grade: B-

Riley Holzapfel — (19 GP, 5-11-16, +1) — Top line player was a huge part in the surge to get into the playoffs. Obviously you hope that the trend continues all the way till June. Grade: A

Chad Kolarik — (18 GP, 11-10-21, +2) — Teams best player for the entire season, even though he didn’t start the season in Wilkes-Barre. (traded by Connecticut for Benn Ferriero) Got close to the AHL scoring lead, but fell short. Grade: A+

Jayson Megna — (18 GP, 2-2-4, -5) — Gives me headaches watching him play. Yet night after night he is there in the lineup. Has the worst +/- on the team for the quarter. Grade: C-

Adam Payerl — (19 GP, 1-2-3, even) — Has become a third / fourth line staple. Not a liability. Although, some nights he’s barely noticed. Good thing? Grade: C+

Warren Peters — (19 GP, 2-3-5, +3) — Numbers aren’t anything to write home about, but if the AHL kept faceoff statistics would probably be tops in the League. Grade: B

Zach Sill — (19 GP, 2-2-4, -1) — Is the heart of the team. If he returns next season, is a front runner for the “C” if Mormina doesn’t return. Grade: B

Trevor Smith — (18 GP, 6-10-16, +6) — Found a home on the top line centering Holzapfel and Kolarik. A line which will be relied on heavily to score in the postseason. He knows what it takes to win a Calder Cup. Let’s hope he hasn’t forgotten. Grade: A

Paul Thompson — (19 GP, 5-1-6, even) — Back from injury from early in the season. Team missed Thompson when he was out. Has heated up of late. You want him to get hot and stay hot. Grade: B+

Dominik Uher — (14 GP, 3-0-3, even) — I love this kid. Plays sound hockey. Surprised everyone scoring all of his points in Newfoundland. If he can chip in offensively here and there in the postseason, we all will be happy. Grade: B

Defensemen

Brian Dumoulin — (19 GP, 2-6-8, +2) — Has improved significantly from the beginning of the season. Played a great fourth quarter for the most part. Grade: B

Alex Grant — (19 GP, 2-10-12, -4) — May be playing for a job next season. Flourishes on the power play. Has maybe been the lone bright spot on the struggling power play this season. Grade: B-

Joey Mormina — (19 GP, 1-5-5, -3) — The Captain. Numbers don’t reflect how much of an important piece he is to the defensive corps and the overall success of the team. Grade: B+

Joe Morrow — (8 GP, 1-2-3, -4) — Morrow was moved at the trade deadline to the Dallas organization where he is now with the Texas Stars. He was a pawn in the trade for Brenden Morrow, a result of Pittsburgh having many defensemen. Grade: Withdrawn

Dylan Reese — (19 GP, 4-5-9, +3) — Best all around defenseman for the Penguins. Has played consistently like this all season long. Grade: A

Philip Samuelsson (19 GP, 0-1-1, even) — Won most improved player at Team Awards Night. I will go ahead and endorse that. Hasn’t been a liability, that’s all you really can ask for. Grade: B-

Cody Wild — (6 GP, 0-2-2, +2) — Because Joe Morrow got traded away, Wild gets to play. Hardly a liability. Has been here before, skating with the Penguins last season. Grade: C+

Goaltenders

Brad Thiessen — Appeared in seven games, posting a 4-2-1 record with a 3.10 GAA and a 0.890 save percentage. Will probably back up Zatkoff in playoffs and may be looking for a new employer next season. Not knocking Thiessen, just saying that he has not played like the #3 goaltender in the Pittsburgh organization for two seasons now. Grade: B

Jeff Zatkoff — Appeared in thirteen games, posting an 8-4 record with a 2.01 GAA and a 0.920 save percentage. Saddle up, we are riding Zatkoff to the promised land. Grade: A

The “five or under” Club

Not grading here, simply acknowledging the players who appeared in five or less games in the quarter.

Beau Bennett — (4 GP, 0-3-3, -3) — Depending on health of the Pittsburgh forward corps, Bennett may be gone totally. Is currently playing in Pittsburgh like he never wants to get sent back to Wilkes-Barre.

Robert Bortuzzo — (3 GP, 0-1-1, +2) — A bit troubling that Bortuzzo’s, +/- is higher in three games than it is for four Penguins defensemen who played the whole quarter. But that may be why Bortuzzo has graduated to the NHL.

Steve MacIntyre — (3 GP, 0-0-0, even) — Baddest man in hockey. Only question is whether he returns next season, retires or goes elsewhere.

Reid McNeill — (2 GP, 0-0-0, +2) — Has shown himself well, that he belongs at this level. Will probably be a full time staple on the WBS blue line come the Fall.

Christiaan Minella — (4 GP, 0-0-0, -2) — Will probably walk the ECHL – AHL tightrope again next season.

Derek Nesbitt — (1 GP, 0-0-0, -1) — Bombulie called him the biggest AHL trade deadline day acquisition in Penguins history. If he can fit in and contribute in the postseason, the Penguins will be an extremely tough out.

So there you have it for another season of grades. If you disagree with my grades, please say so why in comments.