Chirps from Center Ice

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

Category Archives: WBS

The Heartbreak Kid Cole Schwindt — Pens LOSE 5-4

 @

4                           5

This one is going to sting for a bit.

The Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins, down 4-2 in the third period Tuesday night, pull themselves up by the bootstraps and rally to tie the game at four with a little over two minutes to play, when quickly developing Penguin killer Cole Schwindt scores with 1:31 left in regulation to sink the Penguins ion regulation. It’s Schwindt’s fifth goal against the Penguins.

I didn’t feel like recycling “Holy Schwindt” as a pun headline.

Penguins lose 5-4.

Rematch Wednesday.

Here’s how they lined up…

No lineup changes to speak of. They went with the exact same lineup they did on Saturday.

First Period: Valtteri Puustinen got the party going with a slick wrist shot that beat Knight that gave the Penguins a 1-0 lead.

Later, on a power play, Anthony Angello scores on a spin-o-rama play that beats Knight again for a Penguins power play goal.

But then it was Scott Wilson skating in and scoring on a ridiculous angle with a backhand roof job over the shoulder of Nappier that put the Checkers on the board.

Second Period: Penguins don’t score on a double minor power play after Taylor Fedun was split open by a high stick. Charlotte has a top ten penalty killing unit.

Max McCormick and Cale Fleury score :56 apart on screwy plays. On the McCormick goal, there was a loose puck in front of Nappier’s crease he pounced on and swept across to tie it. Then on Fleury’s goal, a shot from along the side hits Fleury’s blade and deflects in to give the Checkers a 3-2 lead.

Clear the crease on the first play. Nothing you could do on the second play.

Pens were shut down in the second period. No shots after the double minor power play expired until about 2 minutes to play in the period. You can’t really have that, especially after you come into the period up one and right after a double minor penalty you fail to score on.

Third Period: Kole Lind extends the Penguins deficit to two with this goal right after the Checkers killed a penalty.

Then the Penguins started their comeback sparked by Jonathan Gruden when he digs a puck out of the pads of Spencer Knight and sweeps it past him to pull the Pens within one.

Then the Penguins were awarded a power play and Michael Chaput scored to tie the game at four.

But that apparently was too much time left on the clock for the Checkers as Cole Schwindt would play hero on the night and score to make it 5-4 Checkers.

Oh, Schwindt.

The Good: Two power play goals scored and a nice comeback.

The Bad: Couldn’t find a way to get it to overtime and questionable man marking leads to the Schwindt tally.

Turning Point: Sometimes it’s obvious. Schwindt’s goal gets it here.

Around the Division: Only other game in the division on Tuesday was Bridgeport hosting Rochester. Amerks win 3-2 in overtime.

Standings: Springfield .622 percentage points – Hartford .619 – Hershey .600 – Providence .579 – Charlotte .568 – Penguins  .489 – Lehigh Valley .488 – Bridgeport .467

Wheeling Update: The Nailers were off tonight.

Video Highlights: 

Rematch Wednesday. More then.

Let’s Go Pens!

Weekend Preview – Charlotte on My Mind

Two losses went with a big gritty win in Allentown last week when the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins didn’t gain or lose any ground in sixth in the Atlantic Division. They didn’t have any offense at all in the two losses to equate with great defense (only seven shots allowed in the second and third periods total in Rochester Wednesday) and lost a close one Friday at home against Belleville. Goals :34 apart in the second period helped save their bacon Saturday in Allentown against the Phantoms.

The Setup

Two in Charlotte Tuesday and Wednesday and then a Saturday home game against a hot Springfield team. The Checkers are in fifth place in the Atlantic and only a couple percentage points off fourth place Providence. So yeah, it’s an important series.

Charlotte split a series last weekend at home against Bridgeport. They shutout the Islanders 2-0 Saturday behind 25 saves by Spencer Knight. Bridgeport beat them 4-3 Friday.

Springfield is suddenly the hottest team in the division, winners of three straight. The Thunderbirds don’t play at all this week and will be well rested when they come to town Saturday night.

The Pens can’t overtake the Checkers for fourth in the division with two clean wins, but they can get dangerously close. It’s more about preserving their hold on the last playoff spot in the division and trying to climb higher.

The Records

Penguins are 19-19-2-3, .500 and sixth in the Atlantic. Checkers are 23-18-2-0, .558 and fifth in the Atlantic. Springfield is 25-14-5-1, in first with .622 percentage points in the Atlantic.

Who’s Up, Who’s Down, Who’s Out?

Status quo with all the injuries. Sam Houde came off last week. Jamie Devane, Filip Lindberg and Chris Bigras are all out week to week.

Who’s in Goal?

Expect a split of Tommy Nappier and Alex D’Orio in Charlotte and likely whoever plays better in Charlotte starting Saturday at home against the Thunderbirds. Expect a split of Spencer Knight and Joey Daccord with the Checkers and then likely Joel Hofer on rest Saturday for the Thunderbirds.

What can we learn about the Penguins this week?

Are they serious contenders for a playoff spot or will they continue as a bubble team? Simple as that. If they go to Charlotte, a tough place to play, and get four clean points, then yeah, this is a team to keep an eye on. A split is more likely, just because you don’t go into Charlotte and sweep them unless you are an elite team. The Penguins aren’t that.

Springfield is a team that the Penguins have had success against, so maximizing six points this week is the game plan, obviously.

Who is running the show?

Riley Yerkovich and Jake Rekucki are the referees this week in Charlotte. Linesmen on Tuesday are Justin Johnson and Scott Senger. Wednesday sees Ken Radolinski and Shane Gustafson on the lines. Saturday back in WIlkes-Barre sees Michael Zyla and Mason Riley as the referees with Colin Gates and Josh Cleary on the lines.

Looking ahead…

A busy week to close out February. Tuesday trip to Hershey, Wednesday home game against Lehigh Valley then a Saturday trip to Bridgeport and a Sunday home game against Syracuse.

No Friday home games for the Penguins on back to back weekends. I’ll take it, but not at the expense of a Sunday afternoon home game.

Give us a bold prediction…

The Penguins sweep the week.

Solidly Sixth — Pens WIN 3-2

 @

3                            2

It’s not something to be that proud of, but the Penguins with this win Saturday night, are solidly in sixth place in the Atlantic Division after a dominating 3-2 win over the Lehigh Valley Phantoms.

Wait. Dominating? A one goal win if dominating? Since when?

Penguins outshoot the Phantoms 35-22. They didn’t take a penalty. They clearly were the better team from the jump.

It sets up a huge midweek showdown in Charlotte Tuesday and Wednesday. The Checkers currently hold the five seed in the Atlantic.

Tommy Nappier opposed Kirill Ustimenko.

Here’s how they lined up:

Lineup: Filip Hallander was out with a non-COVID illness. I guess we have to highlight COVID vs. non-COVID from here going forward. Sam Houde went to the top line. Will Reilly went in on defense for Cam Lee.

First Period: No scoring. No penalties. Pens showed flashes with under five to play highlighted here on the splay by Nathan Legare.

Shots were 13-4. Pens were good, but Ustimenko was better.

Second Period: Two goals :34 apart to open the period for the Penguins and it looked like the rout was on.

Taylor Fedun got the party going just :51 into the period.

Then :34 later, Nathan Legare with a pass to himself then a shot that bleeds through Ustimenko to give the Pens a 2-0 lead.

Lehigh Valley made a push late. Hayden Hodgson lays a big hit on Taylor Fedun which set up Cal O’Reilly scoring to cut the Phantoms deficit in half with a flick of a wrist.

(no GIF of it)

Referees Jordan Samuels-Thomas and Jeremy Tufts stayed out of the way and didn’t call any penalties.

Third Period: P.O. Joseph scored his 8th goal of the season, tying him for the lead in that department among  defensemen.

That is an NHL caliber wrist shot. If you want another example, scroll down to the Rochester recap and check out his goal in that one. He’s not long for the AHL if he keeps doing this.

The Phantoms though, stuck around and scored on a redirect by Maksim Sushko that brought them to within one yet again.

(no GIF of this one either)

The Phantoms called timeout and pulled Ustimenko but Nappier and the Penguins defense kept them out. They never found the equalizer.

Three Stars: 3) Maksim Sushko (goal) 2) Taylor Fedun (goal) 1) P. O. Joseph (goal)

The Good: Was a little shocked to see Nappier go in back to back, but having two good goaltenders is a great problem to have. Also good to see the Penguins bounce back and take two clean points out of an in-state rivals rink.

The Bad: Clearly the better team, let the opponent stick around to a one shot possibility. That formula isn’t going to work the later we go.

Turning Point: Joseph’s goal gets it here. Phantoms were better as the period wore on. Plan coming out of the third was not to let the Penguins score another to go back up two.

Around the Division: Checkers shutout Bridgeport 2-0.…Springfield blows up a depleted Providence side 5-1….Hershey wins a close one at home against Belleville 5-4….Hartford needs overtime to beat Rochester 2-1.

Standings: Springfield .622 percentage points — Hartford .619 – Hershey .614 – Providence .579 – Charlotte .558 – Penguins .500 – Lehigh Valley .476 – Bridgeport .467

Wheeling Update: Nailers win in overtime 4-3 against Fort Wayne. Sean Josling with the game winner in that one.

Video Highlights: If the pens post em I will edit them in.

Big one Tuesday against Charlotte. I’ll work on the Power Rankings Sunday and they will be up Monday. Weekend Setup looking at Charlotte and Springfield next Saturday Tuesday morning.

Let’s Go Pens!

Filip-Bustered — Pens LOSE 2-1

 vs.

2                                 1

You always wonder if treading away a prospect meant to come through your hallway is the right move or not.

Filip Gustavsson was that prospect.

He started in goal Friday for the visiting Belleville Senators and stole the show for the away team as the Senators win 2-1. 31 saves for Gustavsson earned him second star honors.

With that out of the way, this is a game that the Penguins would have easily won last week.

Thing is, the game evolves and teams get film on you. Troy Mann, the head coach of the Senators, is a hell of a coach and a guy I would take in a heartbeat to run my team. He had his team prepared tonight and while the Penguins were in the home black jerseys, everywhere they went on the ice, they were followed by a white shadow.

You could maybe make the same argument for Wednesday in Rochester too. Teams get film on you and if you don’t evolve, you get left behind.

Tommy Nappier opposed the aforementioned Gustavsson.

Here’s how they lined up:

Lineup Notes: Valtteri Puustinen and Michael Chaput were returned by the Pittsburgh Penguins Friday morning. Jan Drozg and Sam Houde came out of the lineup.

First Period: Parker Kelly wasn’t on my sheet I print off the AHL on game day mornings. Neither were Puustinen or Chaput. That’s because Kelly was also sent back to the minor leagues by his parent team Ottawa today. He scored in the first period on a rush that put the Senators on the board.

Someone told me walking out that it could have been 5-0 at the end of the first. With shots being 15-5 Belleville, they may have been onto something.

Second Period: Ex-Penguin Andrew Agozzino scores this dart to double Belleville’s lead:

Shots evened up in the second period a bit. No penalties to speak of either.

Third Period: Penguins finally break through on a power play goal by Puustinen.

The Penguins had a few more chances on the power play but couldn’t find the equalizer,

Back to my point about scouting. Late, the Penguins couldn’t even get Nappier off because they couldn’t gain entry into their offensive zone. That’s excellent coaching.

Three Stars: 3) Tommy Nappier (31 saves) 2) Filip Gustavsson (31 saves) 1) Andrew Agozzino (goal)

The Good: Power play is warming up…

The Bad: …not warm enough though. Could have used more than one tonight.

Turning Point: Keeping with the theme, down a goal late in the third with under 7 to play the power play didn’t come through.

Around the Division: Bridgeport beats Charlotte 4-3…Springfield beats Hartford 4-2. James Neal (yeah, him) with a pair of goals….Lehigh Valley beats Hershey 6-3…Providence beats Rochester 3-2 in a shootout.

Standings: Springfield goes back top with .614 percentage points. Hartford .610 – Hershey .605 – Providence .595 – Charlotte .548 – Penguins and Lehigh Valley .488 – Bridgeport .477.

Wheeling Update: Nailers win in overtime 3-2 over Atlanta. Josh Maniscalco with the game winner.

Video Highlights: 

Back at it Saturday in Allentown.

Let’s Go Pens!

Holy Prow! — Pens LOSE 3-1

 @

1                             3

So if you read the Weekend Preview earlier today (below this post) you read that the Penguins are building their success from the inside out. Goal and defense is good, offense is iffy.

That was on full display Wednesday night up in Rochester as the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins lose 3-1 and see their five game point streak end.

Penguins scored the only goal in the first, then clamped down defensively. Hard.

Four shots against in the second. Three in the third.

The bad news? One of them went in in the second and two of them went in in the third. One of them was an empty net goal.

It happens. The Penguins will win a heck of a lot more games then they will lose if they follow this blueprint.

Alex D’Orio opposed Aaron Dell.

Here’s how they lined up…

Rochester didn’t post lines.

Lineup Notes: Sam Houde and Nathan Legare were back for the recalled Valtteri Puustinen and Michael Chaput. Another note was the news that Niclas Almari is returning back overseas. The Penguins reassigned him back to Finland. Consider his North American career over. A fifth rounder who never really panned out stateside. He’s a free agent next year. That’s why you never buy stock in European players. You never know what you will get. A good majority of them never pan out.

Anyway.

First Period: Just 1:09 in and P.O. Joseph takes a nice pass from ex-Amerk Alex Nylander to give the Penguins a 1-0 lead.

Pens were outshot 13-12 in a high flying period otherwise. Rochester had the only power play in the period.

Second Period: Through a minefield of penalties called in the middle of the period, Brett Murray scores what will go down as an even strength goal.

Goal came four on four.

Wilkes-Barre only allowed four shots against in the period but sadly one of them went in.

Third Period: Ex-Penguin Ethan Prow scores on a saucy feed from JJ Peterka to put the Amerks up 2-1.

Nothing you could do about that one.

Penguins had a power play but had a few shots but none that were worthy enough to beat Aaron Dell.

Peterka scored an empty net goal to ice the game away. The Penguins did have a great chance to score with D’Orio pulled.

Three Stars: 3) JJ Peterka (goal, assist) 2) Aaron Dell (32 saves) 1) Ethan Prow (goal)

The Good: Give me more of this defensive effort.

The Bad: The Penguins badly missed Valtteri Puustinen tonight.

Turning Point: When the Penguins couldn’t score on that power play in the third, you had the feeling it was curtains for Wilkes-Barre.

Around the Division: Only other team in action tonight was Springfield, who hand the Utica Comets a clean loss 3-2.

Standings: Pens back to .500 and will hold in sixth. That matchup next week with currently fifth place Rochester looks like it may be important.

Wheeling Update: Nailers with a 4-1 win in Kalamazoo. Nick Hutchinson with a pair of goals.

Video Highlights: 

Belleville at home Friday. More after then.

Let’s Go Pens!

Weekend Preview – So, Now What?

Coming off of a week where we answered whether or not the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins turned the corner (answer: yes) with games against in division rivals Springfield, Bridgeport and Providence, the Penguins head up to Rochester Wednesday to make up a game scheduled there originally for December then host Belleville Friday and then hit the road for a key matchup against the Phantoms.

Wow, run on sentence.

The Setup

They have turned the corner. The gremlins and bugs have been worked out of them. They can hang with any team (not named Hershey) that they play. They are catching Rochester in a rut. Amerks are 3-4-2-1 and losers of two straight against Charlotte and Toronto. Belleville comes in as a cellar dweller of the North Division, but to be fair, the North is top heavy. We all know who Lehigh Valley is. An inconsistent team that can explode at any given time. Belleville shut out the Phantoms 5-0 in Allentown on Tuesday.

Is the Pacific Division really going with ten teams next year?

Hah, you may have seen Patrick Williams sit down with Scott Howson’s State of the League where he mentions that Coachella Valley will be playing in the Pacific Division and they aren’t expecting any divisional realignment this season. It’s bat (bleep) crazy if you ask me. Why not move Tucson and Colorado to the Central, Grand Rapids to the North for a clean 8-8-8-8 divisional setup? Everyone plays 72 games next year. 8 and 72 are good numbers, you play everyone in your division at least 6 times if you are Colorado because everyone is flying in to see you anyway. Take a weekend and hit Chicago, Grand Rapids and Milwaukee then set up your next two weeks and have the IceHogs, Wolves and Admirals fly in for a pair each. You can still maintain your rivalries with easy flights to San Jose and Bakersfield.

The Records

Pens are 18-17-2-3 good for sixth with .513 percentage points. Americans are third in the North with a 22-15-2-1 record and a .588 percentage point showing. Lehigh Valley will have played Hershey Friday before hosting the Penguins Saturday. They have a 15-17-6-2 record as of Wednesday, good for .475 percentage points.

Who’s Up, Who’s Down, Who’s Out?

Valtteri Puustinen and Michael Chaput went up to Pittsburgh on Monday after the NHL returned from their All-Star Break.

Goalie Filip Lindberg remains out with an ankle injury. Chris Bigras and Jamie Devane are week to week still and Sam Houde was upgraded to day to day. They all have upper-body injuries.

Who’s in Goal?

My guess is Alex D’Orio starts two and Tommy Nappier starts one. D’Orio is a lock for Rochester, so where to Nappier fit? My guess is with Belleville on Friday. But, D’Orio has had the lion share of starts (by happenstance because Nappier was down with COVID) so does D’Orio start all three? It’s a possibility.

One of the reasons Rochester has slowed down is because they have been a mess in goal. It’s been a merry go round. Mat Robson and Aaron Dell started both games for the Amerks this past weekend. My guess is Dell.

For Belleville, Mads Sogaard is the Senators horse, starting 20 games. Filip Gustavsson is the backup. The Penguins drafted and traded this guy away.

For Lehigh Valley, it’s anyone’s guess with it being a Saturday game. My guess will be Pat Nagle with Felix Sandstrom starting Friday against Hershey.

What can we learn about the Penguins this week?

They have turned the corner, now what? Can they keep winning without their leading scorer Puustinen?

I think they have figured out their goalie and the defense seems pretty set. I think they are slowly becoming a threat on the power play and the penalty kill seems OK for the norm. So building the house from the inside out is working. I guess the only question is how high can they go. What’s the ceiling?

Division leaders? I don’t think so. They have too many hurdles to get through to get to the top. Are they a playoff team? I have said yeah all along. Top three? May be a stretch. You are confident (obviously) as a three, four or five seed. I don’t like hanging at six. That’s the drop zone. One injury or one bad weekend can derail your momentum.

So really it is important to make sure that they keep the momentum rolling against two known tough opponents in Rochester and Lehigh Valley and an unknown with Belleville.

Who is running the show?

Conor O’Donnell and Kyle Lekun get the assignment Wednesday in Rochester with Brian Wasilewski and Adam Tobias on the lines. Friday sees Jordan Samuels-Thomas and Laura White in the orange armbands and Justin Johnson and Patrick Dapuzzo on the lines. Saturday sees Samuels-Thomas again with Jeremy Tufts and Richard Jondo and Bill Lyons working the lines.

Looking ahead…

Trip to Charlotte early part of next week, Tuesday and Wednesday, a Friday off then a Saturday home game against Springfield.

Give us a bold prediction…

The Penguins score a power play goal in each of their three games this week.

Corner Turned — Pens LOSE 2-1 (OT)

 vs.

2                             1

Said at the beginning of the week that if they took 5 or 6 points that the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins will have officially turned the corner.

As obvious as it has been for about a month or so now, the have officially turned the corner.

This game, a 2-1 overtime loss at the hands of the Providence Bruins, wasn’t so much about the result as much as it was about the way that they game was played.

They were competitive. They showed resolve. They didn’t cave.

Blitzkrieged by an 11-3 shot total in the first and a 10-5 shot total in the third, the Penguins gritted out a point against Providence who was the better team on the ice slightly. It’s a game that I think a month and a half ago they lose 6-1 or 7-3 or some crazy score like that.

Alex D’Orio opposed Jeremy Swayman. There were no lineup changes for the Penguins from last night but for who started in goal. Tommy Nappier from THEE Ohio State University backed up.

First Period: 11-3 shot disadvantage for the Penguins who also were on the penalty kill twice. No scoring. D’Orio performed well in the period.

Second Period: Roles reversed, the Penguins outshot the Bruins 15-5 in the period, had two power plays and scored at the expiration of one of them when Jonathan Gruden scored the only goal for the Penguins.

Third Period: P-Bruins opened with fire, got an early power play and Zach Senyshyn scored to tie the game at one early in the period.

(no GIF of the goal here, Providence does the bare minimum on social media)

Lots of back and forth. Take away the running total of shots and the teams looked to be dead even.

Overtime: Pens had a few good looks, then Providence, then the Pens for a minute but never could get set up. .It would be a Swayman save that set up Jesper Froden’s goal that thankfully the AHL tweeted in a video here:

They were scrambled eggs in their own end and the Bruins were laser focused. Ballgame.

The Good: You want a competitive game. If you expect them to win every game you are a maniac. They have been competitive. That’s all you can ask for. Carry this into Rochester next Wednesday.

The Bad: Providence comes to Wilkes-Barre on the skids and in front of the Penguins in the standings, seems like a golden opportunity to get all two points, clean, but it didn’t pan out.

Turning Point: Froden’s goal gets it here.

Around the Division: Hershey wins in Cleveland 4-1…Hartford gets four goals in the second to cruise to a 6-4 win against Lehigh Valley….Syracuse beats Charlotte 3-1 and Utica thumps Springfield 5-1.

Standings: Hartford .625 percentage points — Hershey .619 — Springfield .595 — Providence .583 — Charlotte .561 — Penguins .513 — Lehigh Valley .487 — Bridgeport .465

Wheeling Update: Nailers lose big to the Iowa Heartlanders 4-1.

Video Highlights:

Power Rankings Tuesday, Weekend Preview for Rochester (Wednesday) Belleville (Friday) and Lehigh Valley (Saturday) up on Wednesday morning as well.

Let’s Go Pens!