Chirps from Center Ice

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

Category Archives: Postgamer

Big Goal Bigras — Pens WIN 2-1

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Oh boy, a lot happened Friday.

The Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins recalled Tommy Nappier from THEE Ohio State University earlier in the day. The reason is because the Pittsburgh Penguins play a back to back with one of the games in Canada (Saturday) so they recalled Louis Domingue to have him back up Casey DeSmith because Tristan Jarry will start Sunday in Washington.

Got all that? Good.

Filip Lindberg was the starter Friday night against the Charlotte Checkers, played two periods, stopped all but one shot but was no where to be seen for the third period.

Enter Tommy Nappier.

Nappier turns aside all 10 shots faced, the Penguins get a big goal by Chris Bigras late in the third period and edge past the Charlotte Checkers 2-1 Friday night.

Nappier may be sticking around for a while.

“Currently being evaluated” is coach speak for, “we really don’t know how bad it is yet.” So expect Nappier to play second fiddle to Louis Domingue once he gets back from his trip to Ottawa Saturday.

Shame, too, considering this was one of Lindberg’s better games of late.

Joey Daccord opposed for Charlotte. Here is how they lined up:

Lineup Notes: Taylor Fedun was sent back Thursday with Juuso Riikola but Riikola turned around and went right back up Friday because of Canada and their COVID rules. Fedun and Dylan MacPherson were in for Will Reilly and Chris Ortiz on defense. Jamie Devane returned form injury and replaced Justin Almeida.

First Period: Gregori Denisenko threw a changeup at net and it went in.

It may have deflected off of Bigras there. Still counts.

Penguins were getting squashed in their own zone, with Lindberg there to bail them out. Also, they had one paltry shot on goal more than halfway through the period.

Late, Pens get a goal from Valtteri Puustinen on this one timer:

Gotta get him going again if you want to have success.

Second Period: No scoring, roles reversed. Charlotte went a long stretch without a shot on goal, Penguins forechecked the hell out of the Checkers and got great goaltending from their guy.

Third Period: Out came Nappier, no where to be found was Lindberg.

There was one penalty a side in the first two periods. You didn’t want to see the game end decided by special teams. Seemed like the third period was full of it. Thankfully, they navigated through it all and it looked like they were headed to overtime.

Forecheck. Get good goaltending. And a little bit of luck.

Enter Chris Bigras.

They held on from there.

Three Stars: 3) Tommy Nappier (10 saves, first AHL win of the season) 2) Valtteri Puustinen (goal) 1) Chris Bigras (game winning goal)

The Good: Looked like it was another night of the game going off the rails from the get go, with Charlotte scoring early. Thankfully the goaltending was there from both players wearing oversized pads tonight.

The Bad: Pens were lucky to win tonight. Fall in a hole, get out in the same period, don’t score at all until late. Hang on to win. I don’t like that recipe.

Turning Point: Bigras’ goal is the clear, obvious choice.

Around the Division: Laval takes down Bridgeport in overtime 5-4…Providence obliterates Lehigh Valley 6-3…Hartford surges past Springfield 6-4.

Standings: Springfield .750 / Hartford .708 / Hershey .591 / Providence .545 / Penguins .542 / Bridgeport .500 / Charlotte .450 / Lehigh Valley .333

Wheeling Update: The Nailers go to Toledo and take down the Walleye 3-2. Alex D’Orio went the distance and is probably on a plane right now, stopping 24 shots.

Video Highlights:

Don’t forget Saturday’s game begins at 6:05.

Let’s Go Pens!

No Cigars in November — Pens LOSE 4-3

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One of my vices is a fine cigar. I prefer Ashton Churchills. Takes about an hour to smoke on a summer day.

One of the things I don’t like about the Fall is the fact that it gets too cold to have cigars and it’s way too cold too.

Anyway, the saying, “close but no cigar” applies to tonight’s game in Hartford, one that the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins lose 4-3 in regulation.

The Penguins trailed 4-0 in the third period and battled all the way back to 4-3 with just :43 left in regulation and never found the equalizing goal.

Seems like if the game was five minutes longer the Penguins would have indeed found the equalizing goal.

Regardless, after taking 5 of 6 points last week, the Penguins take 0 of 6 and are in a bit of a free fall. Shutout Wednesday in Allentown, outclassed on special teams Friday at home against Providence and time running out on what would have been an epic comeback Saturday in Hartford.

Schedule doesn’t get any easier, Rochester comes in Wednesday and then Charlotte for a pair.

Louis Domingue opposed Tyler Wall.

Here’s how they lined up:

Lineup Notes: Matt Alfaro was returned to Wheeling Saturday afternoon. Justin Almeida replaced Jan Drozg up front, Chris Bigras replaced Niclas Almari on defense.

Hartford never posted lines.

First Period: Pens try a D to D handoff in their own zone and Tanner Fritz scores to put the Wolf pack up 1-0.

Later Anthony Bitteto throws a puck at the net that may have been deflected in but it’s a 2-0 Hartford lead nevertheless.

Then Cam Lee runs over Patrick Khodorenko with this hit.

Lee was assessed a check to the head match penalty and was thrown out of the game. The Wolf Pack were awarded a 5:00 power play they did not score on.

Later the Penguins were awarded a power play but failed to score on that.

Second Period: The Penguins outchanced the Wolf Pack for a good stretch in the period. The fourth line in. particular did remarkably well and got a fair amount of shifts. Sadly, chances are just that. Tyler Wall played rather well for someone that played with a 3.58 GAA and a sub .865 SV% last season.

Tim Gettinger threw salt in the wound and scored a shorthanded goal.

Penguins were just :12 into a power play. So they lost power play in Hartford’s zone, sees the Wolf Pack skate in and Gettinger scores. Yikes.

They also continued to out chance the Wolf Pack with a breakaway by Kasper Bjorkqvist and an excellent chance by Sam Poulin.

Third Period: Lauri Pajuniemi scores a power play goal when a puck deflected off of Chris Ortiz and in that gives Hartford a 4-0 lead.

Then the Penguins score goals  :23 apart. Jonathan Gruden finds Felix Robert who scores to put the Penguins on the board:

Then Jordy Bellerive. seconds later on a blast an it’s 4-2:

Penguins would then go on the power play but failed to score. They had a lot of power plays tonight, seven to be exact, and failed to score on all of them.

Sam Poulin scores with an extra attacker with :43 left:

But the Penguins never found the equalizer. Jordy Bellerive had a last second shot.

Almost….

But there are no cigars in close hockey games and usually no cigars for this writer in November.

Three Stars: 3) Anthony Bitetto (goal) 2) Jonny Brodzinski (two assists) 1) Tanner Fritz (goal, assist)

The Good: Nice way to battle back despite the unfortunate result.

The Bad: Can’t go 0-for-7 on the power play. Especially when you are chasing the score. Power play is now 0-for the last 20.

Turning Point: The time out that Wolf Pack Head Coach Kris Knoblauch called after the Penguins second goal reset his club and the Penguins continued to press, but couldn’t find any success whatsoever on the man advantage.

Around the Division: Providence goes into Hershey and shuts out the Bears 3-0….Springfield still hasn’t lost in regulation and beats Bridgeport 4-1….Charlotte obliterates Lehigh Valley 7-3.

Standings: Springfield .889 – Hartford .750 – Hershey .611 – Charlotte .563 – Providence .556 – Penguins .550 – Bridgeport .400 – Lehigh Valley .222

Wheeling Update: Wheeling hosted Fort Wayne in the Nailers home opener and the Komets won big, 5-2 was the final score. Box here.

Video Highlights: If the Penguins get one up and I can get an edit in, it will go here.

Power Rankings Tuesday. Weekend Preview setting up Rochester on Wednesday then Charlotte Friday and Saturday hits the Wednesday morning.

Don’t forget to turn your clocks back.

Let’s Go Pens!

Blown Away by the Bruins — Pens LOSE 6-2

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Woof.

And Hartford, whom the Penguins play Saturday, beat up on Bridgeport 7-3.

Oh, and then Rochester, who probably has the best prospect group in the AHL, comes in Wednesday.

The hits, keep coming, like they did tonight.

The Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins were down just 67 seconds into the game tonight and it got worse from there. Providence goes up 2-0 in the first period, outshoots the Penguins 16-4 in the period, then runs it up to 4-0 before the Penguins make a goaltender change, get two back but lose 6-2 Friday.

Like I said, woof.

Little bit of a regression to the mean after starting 5-1. They look lost offensively and defensively they give up way too many changes and shot opportunities. You could have started Ed Belfour in net tonight and the result wouldn’t have mattered.

Filip Lindberg opposed Jon Gillies, making his season debut.

Here’s how they lined up:

Lineup Notes: Radim Zohorna was back from that nasty hit Tanner Kaspick laid on him last Saturday. Filip Hallander was back from his illness which kept him out of the game Wednesday. Sam Houde and Matt Alfaro came out of the lineup. On defense, with Taylor Fedun on recall to Pittsburgh, Chris Ortiz, up from Wheeling, made his debut.

First Period: $2 beer night at the Arena. Before the patrons could sip their first, the Pens trailed 1-0. Oskar Steen was the last to touch a puck I think was accidentally knocked in by Cam Lee.

Steve Fogarty tipped in a shot from the point on the back end of a double minor Mitch Reinke was serving that made it 2-0.

A 2-0 deficit is certainly manageable, but if you looked at the shot totals, 16-4 after the first, you would wonder if the Penguins knew the game started at 7:05.

Second Period: Bruins connect for another power play goal to go up 3-0. Zach Senyshyn tipped in a blast from the point that made it 3-0.

(the Bruins stopped tweeting GIFs of goals. Just be thankful you have the two they provided)

Chris Wagner made it 4-0 and the rout was on, if you didn’t realize.

That was all for reigning AHL goaltender of the month Filip Lindberg, you would swear that the award is cursed.

Louis Domingue settled things down slightly, Nathan Legare scores to make it 4-1.

Third Period: After a flurry of saves by Domingue, Kyle Olson takes a Jonathan Gruden pass and shoots for a goal that makes it 4-2. Life? Maybe.

Not if Eduards Tralmaks had anything to say about it. I’m glad I don’t have to type that name in often. Anyway he skated in the slot and took a pass from Joona Koppanen (no easier to spell) and ripped a shot past Domingue to make it 5-2.

Oskar Steen made it 6-2 on an empty net.

Three Stars: 3) Sam Asselin (two assists) 2) John Moore (three assists) 1) Zach Senyshyn (goal)

The Good: The response was there late, but they trailed by multiple goals and fought the clock.

The Bad: Too many penalties coupled with the fact that they weren’t ready to play spelled disaster.

Turning Point: Second period, Bruins take two penalties three seconds between each other. Pens down 4-0. Score one, get it to 4-1, see what happens with the leftover time, get lucky score agains and it’s 4-2 and a totally different game. They didn’t and the Bruins made it look easier than it really should have been.

Around the Division: Gave you the Hartford / Bridgeport final in my lede…Hershey loses in Springfield in overtime 3-2. The Thunderbirds still haven’t lost in regulation. Everyone else was off.

Standings: Springfield .875, Hartford .722, Hershey .698, Penguins .611, Charlotte and Providence .500, Bridgeport .444, Lehigh Valley .250.

Wheeling Update: Nailers were off.

Video Highlights: Look away, kids! Look away!

Hartford Saturday and a hope for better fortunes lies ahead.

Let’s Go Pens!

Shutout in Allentown — Pens LOSE 4-0

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They couldn’t get out of second gear tonight and, more importantly failed to score on eight power play tries. Facing off against an opponent they have seen three times prior who has yet to win yet, the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins lose 4-0 in Allentown to snap their five game point streak. Felix Sandstrom stops all 25 shots faced.

He opposed Louis Domingue.

Here is how they lined up:

Lineup Notes: Sidney Crosby and Brian Dumoulin are in COVID protocol in Pittsburgh because it’s another week and another round of Pittsburgh and the sloppy shop that they have up there having COVID run rampant there and in the locker room. Sure, there are other teams that have COVID absences, but not to this level. Sloppy shops are sloppy.

Anyway, Matt Alfaro and Michael Chaput (back from his one game absence) were win for Radim Zohorna and Filip Hallander up front. On defense, Mitch Reinke made his WBS debut for P.O. Joseph.

Injury details are as follows:

Devane’s injury is lower body. Angello is listed as day to day, but I wholly reject that assertion. The season is 3 1/2 weeks old and he hasn’t played a game yet. Don’t play me like a fool.

First Period: The Penguins were bad at even strength but didn’t spend lots of time there because they gave the Phantoms four penalties in the period. After Maxim Sushko fired home a one timer to put Lehigh Valley on the board early on, Tyson Foerster connected on a 5-on-3 goal to give the desperate Phantoms a 2-0 lead.

Pens had a shot to get a goal back late on a power play but they — you guessed it, took a penalty and lost whatever momentum they were building to that point.

Second Period: Penguins have four opportunities on a power play as they evened up from the first period and weren’t able to score. I can’t remember anything of substance in the man advantages.

Louis Domingue stopped German Rubtsov on a penalty shot with under two minutes to play in the period. If a comeback was to be had in the third period, that save loomed large.

Third Period: They opened with a power play on fresh ice and didn’t score. Later they had a 4:00 power play and didn’t score either. Whatever they did put up shot wise Sandstrom was stopping anyway.

Hayden Hodgson scored at the 4:27 mark and you got the sense that the game was a little too far out of reach at that point. Proved to be right.

Gerry Mayhew scored on an empty net when the Penguins got a little too aggressive and didn’t do anything with an extra attacker on.

Three Stars: 3) Tyson Foerster (goal) 2) Max Sushko (goal) 1) Felix Sandstrom (25 saves)

The Good: You can’t get anything good out of a performance where you get shutout on the road and your power play goes 0/8.

The Bad: You were shutout on the road and your power play went 0/8.

Turning Point: Boy, there seemed like there were a lot of them. Every time they Penguins didn’t score on a penalty which could have or would have cut it to one when it was 2-0 seemed large, with the way that the Phantoms had previously coughed up big leads prior to Wednesday. Let’s give it to Hayden Hodgson. His goal basically ended any hope of the Pens hope of a winning comeback.

Around the Division: They all watched us. Odd for a Wednesday.

Standings: Pens will lose a few percentage points. I’m not doing math on a work night.

Wheeling Update: Nailers were off as well.

Back at it Friday at home against Providence. What’s this, a new opponent?!?

Let’s Go Pens!

Overtime Power! – Pens WIN 4-3 (OT)

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I was really looking forward to this weekend and in particular this game to see exactly how the Penguins would stack up against the other teams in the Atlantic Division not named Lehigh Valley.

I still don’t know. If I had to give you an answer, I would say they are lucky.

They were lucky last night when they were grossly outplayed by the Hartford Wolf Pack, but gutted out a point in a shootout loss.

They were lucky Saturday in Springfield to build up a big early lead then ride Filip Lindberg as long as they could to eke out an overtime win thanks to Nathan Legare’s first goal as a professional and win 4-3 in overtime on a power play goal.

Sometimes you can be lucky and good. I think it’s a mix of both.

Filip Lindberg opposed Joel Hofer.

Lines were as follows:

Lineup Notes: Jan Drozg and Felix Robert were in for Michael Chaput and Jamie Devane who Pens radio man Nick Hart advised were out with lower body injuries and are day to day. Niclas Almari was out for Will Reilly. I thought that Almari was particularly and last night in Hartford so the lineup change was justified in my opinion.

First Period: Matthew Peca plays shorthanded catch with High McGing and the Thunderbirds strike first with a shorthanded goal, their second of the season.

Too much standing around.

Felix Robert meanwhile, makes the best of his opportunity and scores over the shoulder of Hofer and ties the game at one.

Radim Zohorna was taken out with a high hit at the blue line by Tanner Kaspick.

Zohorna went to the room, the Penguins went to the power play.

Watch to see if the AHL follows through with supplemental discipline in the form of a suspension to Kaspick. If I remember my rules right, if Zohorna is injured, the Penguins can ask the League to look at the hit again and make a call on a suspension. But that’s only if there’s an injury. I could be wrong.

Zohorna did not return for the second period.

Second Period: Wilkes-Barre tacks on two more goals to lead 3-1. They came out flying to start the period and got another goal from Felix Robert…

…and then a goal from their leading scorer Valtteri Puustinen…

So a goal from the guy that has been doing it all so far offense wise and a second goal from a guy who wasn’t even in the lineup Friday in Hartford. Nice.

Penguins found themselves in penalty trouble late and Springfield had :40 of two man advantage but Wilkes-Barre was able to sail out of there unscathed.

Third Period: You could get the sense that the Penguins were just hanging on by a thread as the period wore on. The Penguins were outshot 15-5 in the second period but that’s because they were killing penalties in the period. In the third, Springfield took it to the Penguins at even strength. It was only a matter of time before the Thunderbirds would strike.

Keean Washkurak scores to cut the deficit for the Thunderbirds to one.

Shades of last night, handing on by a thread.

Also shades of last night, the team that pulls the goalie for the extra man scores to force overtime.

Calle Rosen with a shot which deflects off of Penguins defenseman Cam Lee’s face and into the net for a goal. I mean look at this.

It was off to…

Overtime: Springfield takes a penalty, a retaliatory one when Steven Santini thought he was tripped / interfered with but no call was awarded. He got mad and slashed called someone. The Penguins call timeout and score a power play goal when Nathan Legare shoots and scores his first professional goal to win it for the Penguins.

 

Three Stars: Keean Washkurak (goal) 2) Felix Robert (two goals) 1) Nathan Legare (game winning overtime goal)

The Good: You took 5 of 6 points out of the week and 3 of 4 out of teams not named Lehigh Valley. They have not been pretty by any stretch, but sometimes that’s all you need.

The Bad: I still can’t get a handle on this team. Goaltending is there. Scoring is, I think as well. Defense is hit / miss, but such is life.

Turning Point: Boy there were a lot tonight, weren’t they? The kill at the end of the second and into the third, the Rosen tying goal off Lee’s chin. Have to give it to Legare though for the game winning goal.

Around the Division: Good night overall on the scoreboard for the Penguins. Lehigh Valley was up 2-0 to start the third at home against Syracuse and lost 3-2 in overtime. The Phantoms still don’t have a win. Cleveland beats Hershey 2-1 in a shootout. Charlotte beat Hartford 3-2. The Checkers visit the Thunderbirds Sunday. Bridgeport outgunned Providence and won 6-4.

Standings: Springfield (on percentage points) have 10 points because they haven’t yet lost in regulation yet… then the Penguins with 11, Hershey 8 on percentage over the Wolf Pack’s 9, Charlotte 7, Bridgeport 8 Providence 6 and Lehigh Valley 2.

Wheeling Update: Nailers are out in Wichita, Kansas and are down multiple goals when this blog post went up. Alex D’Orio was chased from goal after giving up 4 goals on 8 shots. Box here.

Video Highlights: 

November is here! Power Rankings Tuesday, Weekend Setup Wednesday then an away game against the Phantoms, again.

Let’s Go Pens!

Point Earned — Pens LOSE 3-2 (SO)

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Some nights, you need your goaltender to make a save or two.

Most nights, you need your goaltender to win a game.

Every night, your goaltender can’t do it all.

A dazzling 35 save performance for the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins net minder Louis Domingue tonight as the Penguins battle back to force overtime but lose in a shootout 3-2 on Friday night. A point earned draws the Penguins even with idle Springfield, who is the opponent Saturday night.

Domingue was the best player on the ice in road black tonight for the Penguins. If Wilkes-Barre gets him run support, then maybe he isn’t the best player on the ice (the guy putting up all the points would be) but tonight, with goals becoming scarce, Domingue was the best player on the ice.

That wasn’t a good thing, because the Penguins were lucky to earn a point Friday and by rights should have lost the game. It was only Sam Poulin’s goal with Domingue pulled that earned the Penguins a point.

We talked this week about how the Penguins really haven’t answered any questions about what type of team they can be because Lehigh Valley is a mess right now and they aren’t a fair measuring stick. The real test was going to come this weekend against a rested Hartford and Springfield side.

Saturday night in Springfield can’t get here fast enough.

Domingue opposed Keith Kinkaid.

Here’s how they lined up:

Despite what the graphic says, the game was played at the XL Center in Hartford,. Connecticut.

Lineup Notes: Kasper Bjorkqvist was returned from Pittsburgh Friday afternoon. He didn’t play while up there. He replaced Felix Robert.

First Period: The thing about Wolf Pack goaltender Keith Kinkaid is that he spills rebounds everywhere. The Penguins, as well as every other team that Hartford plays, are aware of this. Example:

Initially it was announced by Nick Hart as Nathan Legare’s goal, but the scoresheet says otherwise.

Hartford draws even in the last five minutes of the period. Here’s where I thought that the Penguins let off here. Wolf Pack race through the neutral zone and into their attacking side, draw Domingue out who lost his stick. The Wolf Pack would score this goal after video review by referees Mathieu Menniti and Dominic Cadieux:

Hartford outshot the Penguins 8-1 over the last five-ish minutes of the first period and it cost them a goal.

Second Period: Louis Domingue was the best player on the ice for Wilkes-Barre / Scranton this period. Hartford peppered the Penguins net minder with 13 shots and bailed his club out on multiple occasions when Hartford had the Pens hemmed in their zone for long stretches. No one scored.

Third Period: Penguins were hanging on, Domingue continued to make saves. Finally a penalty on Valtteri Puustinen for a hook, saw Morgan Barron score on a deflection of a Zac Jones shot that gave the Wolf Pack a lead:

The Pens would pull Domingue in favor of an extra attacker and Sam Poulin would score to tie the game at two late:

Big goal. Hartford let off for the first time since the first period and it bit them.

No one else scored in regulation and it was off to overtime.

Overtime: More saves by Domingue, a few by Kinkaid too.

Shootout: Tim Gettinger scored in the top of the fourth. Puustinen, Zohorna, Poulin and Bellerive all missed in their chances, in that order.

Here’s Gettinger’s attempt:

Three Stars: 3) Anthony Greco (goal, assist) 2) Keith Kinkaid (26 saves) 1) Tim Gettinger (assist, shootout winning goal)

The Good: They battled back for a point which will probably come in handy later in the season.

The Bad: I didn’t like how they couldn’t seem to get anything going offensively. Again, it seems. The lack of offense is being shielded now by winning games with defense and goaltending, but you are going to need goalscoring if you want to win games.

Turning Point: Poulin’s goal that got the Pens the point gets it here.

Around the Division: The woes for the Phantoms continue, losing 5-2 up in Utica….Providence beats Charlotte 4-3.

Standings: Three way tie for first with Springfield, the Penguins and Hartford on 9 points. Hershey 7, Charlotte 5, Bridgeport and Providence 6 (remember they rank by points percentage) and then Lehigh Valley on 1. Eventually I will switch to the points percentages when I start taking this section more seriously.

Wheeling Update: The Nailers started an hour after the Penguins because they are out in Independence, Missouri playing the KC Mavericks. Here’s your box. Nailers were down 2-0 when this post went up on the blog.

Large Zeta — Pens WIN 4-2

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Two power play goals and more than two goals scored in a track meet of a game of sorts compared to the games thus far and the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins are 4-1 after a 4-2 takedown of the Lehigh Valley Phantoms on Wednesday night.

Radim Zohorna led the way with a pair of goals on the scoresheet but it was an all around showing from the offense and defense that got the Penguins the win. A team effort win, if there was one.

Filip Lindberg opposed Felix Sandstrom. Here’s how they lined up:

Lineup Notes:

First Period: Wild, to say the least. There haven’t been many goals scored between these two teams this season. That all changed in the first period. Five total goals were scored in this period alone.

The Penguins got on the board first when Jamie Devane tipped in a Nicolas Almari shot from the point. Those two will get the headline, but Jonathan Gruden did all the work.

Gerry Mayhew for the Phantoms tied it on a power play on a tip in off a rush and the two teams were off to the races.

No GIF of it or any Lehigh Valley goal, just use your imagination.

Then later, Adam Clendening pinched from his normal defensive spot and got himself a goal off of a bit of a busted play to put the Phantoms up 2-1.

Felt like a little bit of a turning point here. Phantoms were being outshot and yet still led 2-1. Pens maybe were in trouble here and questions about Lehigh Valley’s potent offense were starting to come to life, how do the Pens respond here?

Michael Chaput scores on a power play with a Hallander screen in front to toe the game at 2, that’s how.

But they weren’t done. With 2.4 seconds left, Valtteri Puustinen has his ice taken away from him and Radim Zohorna bags his first of the season to give the Pens a 3-2 lead.

First time the Penguins have scored more than three goals in a game this year and they come all in one tidy period.

Second Period: Penguins add to their lead and get some good goal keeping to preserve their lead. It’s a Wednesday night and I have work in the morning, gotta move this along.

Radim Zohorna on a power play for his second of the night. Nice centering pass by Puustinen here.

Two power plays in one game? I love Wednesday night home games!

Phantoms start buzzing then Chris Bigras hooks Gerry Mayhew in front to take away what probably would have been a goal. Good penalty to take there which squelched the Phantoms momentum because they were unsuccessful on the power play chance.

Filip Lindberg robs Tyson Foerster going post to post to keep it a two goal Penguins lead:

Third Period: Special teams practice. Penguins had :51 of five on three advantage but weren’t able to ice the game away, the Phantoms had a few chances to get back into the game on their man advantage chances but were unable.

Three Stars: 3) Filip Lindberg (20 saves) 2) Valtteri Puustinen (two assists) and 1) Radim Zohorna (two goals)

The Good: Adversity stared them in the face, they stared right back and hit them in theirs. Nice way to come back from a deficit and hold the opponent off the score sheet the rest of the way tonight.

The Bad: Phantoms Head Coach Ian Laperriere probably isn’t long for this coaching world. His team is 0-4, at the bottom and fading in what looks to be a very competitive division and the firepower that the Phantoms possess look rigid and out of sync. Take the 4-1 start with a grain of salt, three wins so far have come against a Phantoms team that doesn’t look like they know what they are doing half the time, and that starts with the head coach.

Turning Point: Gave it to you in the first period. Penguins were down, picked themselves back up and ran away with the game from there.

Around the Division: Only other action in the division was in Hershey and the Bears lost their game in overtime to the Syracuse Crunch 3-2.

Standings: Pens are second, a point off Springfield for first. They could, conceivably, take the overall division lead Friday with a win at Hartford with Springfield idle that night. But a long way to go.

Wheeling Update: Justin Almieda playing hero for the Nailers out in Iowa tonight:

Am I reading that graphic right? The Nailers finished the game with 43 shots on goal to the Heartlanders 17? Tommy Nappier from THEE Ohio State with the win for the Nailers only two Wheeling skaters didn’t register a shot on goal. Nailers win 4-3.

Video Highlights: 

Catch you back here Friday to recap the meeting with the Wolf Pack.

Let’s Go Pens!