Chirps from Center Ice

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

Atlantic Division Semifinal Game 1: Providence Bruins

vs.     15PRO

Atlantic Division Semifinal — Game 1

AHL Game: B1

Who: Providence Bruins

Where: Mohegan Sun Arena at Casey Plaza

When: 7:05 p.m.

Series: Tied 0-0 (Best of Five)

Media Kit

Season Series: Oct. 9: WBS 2 @ PRO 1 (OT) — Nov. 27: PRO 0 @ WBS 3 — Jan. 24: WBS 2 @ PRO 5 — Feb. 28: WBS 2 @ PRO 3 — Mar 26: PRO 5 @ WBS 0 — Apr. 16: PRO 3 @ WBS 1

Top four scorers for the Penguins vs. the Bruins: 1. Dustin Jeffrey (11 GP*, 0-8-8, -5) – 2. Kael Mouillierat (6 GP, 1-3-4, -1) – 3. Carter Rowney (6 GP, 2-1-3, -1) – 4. Dominik Simon (6 GP, 2-1-3, -1)

Top four scorers for the Bruins vs. the Penguins: 1. Seth Griffith (5 GP, 3-3-6, +4) – 2. Colby Cave (6 GP, 2-3-5, +4) – 3. Frank Vatrano (4 GP, 3-1-4, +2) – 4. Max Talbot (2 GP, 2-2-4, +3)

What to watch for: Penguins defense vs. Providence’s offense. One is going to win here tonight and that will decide this game and probably the series. The Penguins must contain the high potent Providence offense if they want to start this series the right way.

Referee(s): Kendrick Nicholson / Peter MacDougall

Linesmen: Francois Dussureault / Jud Ritter

Twitter: @wbspenguins / @WBSGameDay / @AHLBruins

Facebook: /WilkesBarreScrantonPenguins // /providencebruins

Instagram: wbspenguins / ahlbruins

Beat Writers: @CVBombulie / @TLTomVenesky // @MarkDivver

Broadcasters: For WBS: Mike O’Brien @MikeOBrienWBS / For PRO: I don’t know the guys name or if he is on Twitter.

Fan Bloggers: @nafsnep

Radio: For WBS: WILK NewsRadio / For Providence: WNRI 1380 AM

Television: AHL Live

When is Game 2?: Thursday night, tomorrow, in Wilkes-Barre at 7:05

* – Dustin Jeffrey’s numbers agains the Bruins include his 9 games played with the Springfield Falcons

Penguins / P-Bruins Series Preview

wbs14_200          cc16_200          15PRO

The Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins are the current leaders in the American Hockey League for most consecutive seasons (14) where they have qualified for the Calder Cup Playoffs. It is a remarkable feat for a modern day minor league team in a 30 team league that is so consistent in qualifying for a postseason berth giving itself the chance at the ultimate prize for any hockey player, coach, front office employee or fan. That is a championship trophy and celebration when it is all said and done that all the hard work of the season from preseason camp in September, to weekend three in threes, to grueling travel have led to this very moment where you can say that you are the champion.

For the Penguins, that day will come. Is this the year?

If the Providence Bruins have anything to say about it, the answer is no.

But let’s break it all down anyway.

Schedule

Atlantic Division Semifinals – Series “B” (best-of-5)
A2-Providence Bruins vs. A3-Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins
Game 1 – Wed., Apr. 20 – Providence at W-B/Scranton, 7:05
Game 2 – Thu., Apr. 21 – Providence at W-B/Scranton, 7:05
Game 3 – Sat., Apr. 23 – W-B/Scranton at Providence, 7:05
*Game 4 – Mon., Apr. 25 – W-B/Scranton at Providence, 7:05
*Game 5 – Tue., Apr. 26 – W-B/Scranton at Providence, 7:05

* – if necessary

Forwards

The Providence Bruins have a very talented forward corps that starts with Seth Griffith (24-53-77) and is followed by Alexander Khokhlachev (23-45-68) and Austin Czarnik (20-41-61) and ends with Frank Vatrano (36-19-55) Czarnik and Vatrano are probably pegged for full time NHL work with parent Boston next season. This rookie duo have a combined 56 goals scored among them, just seven shy of the Penguins Dustin Jeffrey (20) Carter Rowney (24) and Tom Kostopoulos (19) combined. Vatrano took home Co-Rookie of the Year honors and in 36 games played for the Bruins, has 36 goals.

The Penguins offense heavily relied upon the aforementioned Jeffrey, Rowney and Kostopoulos. Dominik Simon, Kael Mouillierat and J-S Dea are the other three active Penguins who have 20 or more goals scored for Wilkes-Barre this season.

Advantage: Providence. I didn’t even mention Alexander Khokhlachev’s name after the first sentence. The Penguins have one, maybe two, scoring threats on the ice at any time. Providence can mix and match and have a threat to score every second of this series.

Defensemen

Since there are not analytics at this level, I am forced to strictly rely on the dreaded +/- category. In this, Providence’s defense corps of Matt Irwin (+1) Chris Casto (even) Tommy Cross (+5) and Ben Youds (+9) are a combined +15, while Wilkes-Barre’s Tim Erixon alone is a +14. Even shutdown defenseman Steve Oleksy is a +8.

Tracking players on ice when there is a goal scored, I maintained a chart that I updated weekly for all Penguins players. Tim Erixon leads active Penguin defensemen with a 61.62% GF% and offensive defenseman Will O’Neill is next on the list with a 60.39% GF%. O’Neill was on the ice 93 times when the Penguins scored a goal, or 40.4% of the time when you take into account that the Penguins scored a total combined 230 goals in the 2015-16 campaign.

Advantage: Penguins, strictly based off of numbers only.

Goaltending

The Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins goaltending situation has been in a state of flux ever since Matt Murray was called up to Pittsburgh in late February to back up Marc-Andre Fleury. Rookie goaltender Tristan Jarry was handed the reins and started nearly every game in March until being recalled when Matt Murray was injured in the final regular season game the Pittsburgh Penguins played in Philadelphia against the Flyers.

To make matters even worse, Casey DeSmith, whom the Penguins signed to a PTO when Jarry went up to Pittsburgh, was apparently injured in Wilkes-Barre’s final regular season game against Hershey with an apparent lower body injury and is day to day. Head Coach Clark Donatelli hasn’t named a starter for Game 1 Wednesday but it could be Sean Maguire, a rookie out of Boston University that joined the Penguins after his college season ended or it could be Brian Foster, currently with the Wheeling Nailers, who has a disastrous 3.51 GAA and a .857 save percentage in just nine appearances for the Penguins.

I don’t even have to mention anything about Providence’s goaltending situation. Projected Game 1 starter Jeremy Smith was loaned out to the Iowa Wild at the beginning of the season but was recalled back when Malcolm Subban went down with injury in February and has a 2.02 GAA with a .934 save percentage since his return to Providence.

Advantage: Providence. End of story.

Intangibles

Coaching and special teams gets a mention here. Providence’s Bruce Cassidy is in discussion for a promotion to Boston come the Fall. He always has his team ready to play and in contention to win most nights. Clark Donatelli took over for Mike Sullivan once Sullivan was promoted to the head coaching position of the Pittsburgh Penguins. Donatelli’s record since assuming the coaching position is 25-22-4-2. To be fair, when Donatelli took over, most of the pawns that got the Penguins off to such a hot start were either recalled to or on their way to being recalled to Pittsburgh. In Donatelli’s defense, he has done a fair job of steering the ship towards a playoff spot. I can’t see one coach outfoxing the other in any circumstance here in a quick five game series.

Special teams wise, the Bruins had the AHL’s best power play, scoring 22.6% of the time, but only once in 29 tries against the Penguins in the six game regular season series. The Penguins have the seventh best power play in the AHL but only struck once in 25 tries against the Bruins. I’m still going to slightly lean towards Providence in the special teams department given all the firepower up front and the question mark for the Penguins in goal.

Social Media Coverage

For the Penguins…

Twitter: @WBSPenguins / @WBSGameDay
Radio: @MikeOBrienWBS / @_NickHart
Beat: @CVSethLakso and @TLTomVenesky
Facebook: /WilkesBarreScrantonPenguins
Instagram: wbspenguins

For the Bruins…

Twitter: @AHLBruins
Radio: No idea.
Beat: @MarkDivver
Facebook: /providencebruins
Instagram: ahlbruins

Prediction

Bruins in four. Providence’s high powered offense overmatches the Penguins disarray of flavor of the week goaltending and Wilkes-Barre is blown away in four games. Penguins steal one game, probably a nail biter in overtime but that’s all she wrote. Additions from Pittsburgh in the form of either a goaltender in Tristan Jarry or more offense in the form of Daniel Sprong, whose junior season ended Sunday, do little to help the Penguins who will likely be overmatched and run out of the building by names like Vatrano, Khokhlachev and Czarnik.

Hey, I would love to be wrong, but I’m calling it as I see it. Gameday for Game 1 hits the blog Wednesday afternoon at 3.

2016 Calder Cup Preview

cc16_200

The 2016 Calder Cup Playoffs are upon us. I’m shaking things up this year on the blog and just doing one preview for the blog instead of breaking down the Western Conference one day and the Eastern Conference the next.

Pretty much self-explanatory. I go out on a limb and offer predictions in each series (except the Penguins / Bruins series, which gets the full work-up Tuesday) and give a thumbnail sketch on each team.

So let’s get to it…

Eastern Conference

HER   Hershey (A1) vs. Portland (A4)   POR

How the Bears got here: When Wilkes-Barre got off to its strong start, it was looking like the Penguins were going to run away with things, but then injuries befuddled the Penguins organization and the Bears remained steady in winning games and staying on pace. The rest of the division was too inconsistent. Bears won the division easily.

How the Pirates got here: Portland played slightly better than Bridgeport and Hartford down the stretch for fourth place in the final weeks of the season, going 6-3-1 to Bridgeport’s 4-5-1 and Hartford’s 5-5.

How they match up: The Bears went 5-5 against the Pirates, including one overtime win. Hershey is the third highest scoring team in the AHL, Portland was 11th in defense.

Key Player for Hershey: Chris Bourque, league MVP is the obvious choice.

Key Player for Portland: Rob Schremp. The Pirates All-Star led Portland in games played and points.

Prediction: Bears in five. Of all the series in the East, this one goes the distance.

PRO   Providence (A2) vs. Wilkes-Barre / Scranton (A3)   WBS

How the Bruins got here: When parent Boston missed the playoffs, the Bruins offense was injected with Frank Vatrano who has scored a goal per game for the Bruins. Providence won their final five games in a row to edge past the Penguins for the two seed.

How the Penguins got here: Started the season strong, lost personnel to recall to Pittsburgh as well as their head coach. Have played at or near .500 since. Could not withstand Providence’s late charge in final weeks.

How they match up: Wilkes-Barre won the first two games in the six game season series, but Providence rattled off the last four wins. The P-Bruins have the leagues best power play but only scored once in 29 tries against the Penguins. They also have the leagues second best penalty kill.

Key Player for Providence: Co-Rookie of the Year Frank Vatrano, who scored 36 goals in 36 games.

Key Player for Wilkes-Barre / Scranton: Carter Rowney. The little known Rowney played his way into an NHL contract with Pittsburgh next season and led the Penguins in points.

Prediction: I am not giving it away here. Check back Tuesday for the full series breakdown.

TOR   Toronto (N1) vs. Bridgeport (A5)   BRI

How the Marlies got here: By being the best team in the AHL from wire to wire.

How the Sound Tigers got here: Qualified on the last weekend of the regular season. Couldn’t win to improve their seeding and drew the odds on favorite to win the Calder Cup.

How they match up: These two teams did not face each other so it’s the classic David vs. Goliath matchup.

Key Player for Toronto: Defenseman of the Year T.J. Brennan, whose +/- was +34. He overshadows fellow defenseman Andrew Campbell, who had a +/- of +39.

Key Player for Bridgeport: Bracken Kearns led the Sound Tigers in scoring.

Prediction: Toronto in three. Marlies will make this round look easy.

ALB   Albany (N2) vs. Utica (N3)   button_uti200

How the Devils got here: They played in the wrong division. Albany would have won the Atlantic if they played there. They flew under the radar all season on strong defense and timely scoring.

How Utica got here: Comets feasted on the bottom feeders in the division, going a combined 20-10-3-1 against Syracuse, St. John’s Rochester and Binghamton.

How they match up: The Devils went 6-0-2 against Utica this season. Albany is the stingiest team in the AHL for shots allowed, suppressing opponents to 24.41 shots per game. The Comets led the AHL in shorthanded goals for with 17.

Key Player for Albany: Strength in numbers. Nearly every Devils player has a positive plus minus. Scott Wedgewood went 14-3-3 with a minuscule 1.55 GAA and a .933 SV%.

Key Player for Utica: Carter Bancks. Heart and soul of this Utica team and a guy that appeared in every game for the Comets.

Prediction: Albany in four. Comets steal a game early, but the Devils correct, lock down and don’t let go.

Western Conference

Admittedly, didn’t see much Western Conference this season, maybe but for the occasional game here or there on AHL Live. Buyer beware on these predictions…

button_15mil200   Milwaukee (C1) vs. Grand Rapids (C4)   button_15gr200

How the Admirals got here: Winners of the Central Division, consistently stayed well above average the other contenders in the division. Only other team with 100 or more points was Toronto.

How the Griffins got here: A team primed at the start of the season to run away with the Central and be a strong contender for the Calder Cup stumbled out of the gate. Streaks chased this team all season long.

How they match up: Every game was decided in regulation. The Admirals went 3-5 against the Griffins this season. Milwaukee has the leagues second best power play. Grand Rapids is 5th in the AHL in offense and 6th in the AHL in defense.

Key Player for Milwaukee: Goaltender Juuse Saros. The rookie Saros went 29-8 and was overshadowed in the West when it came to awards.

Key Player for Grand Rapids: Eric Tangradi 28 goals and 28 assists in 72 games for the power forward.

Prediction: Milwaukee in five. One of two series out West that goes the distance.

button_le200   Lake Erie (C2) vs. Rockford (C3)   button_rfd200

How the Monsters got here: Remained consistent in the face of inconsistency around them with the likes of Rockford and Grand Rapids.

How the IceHogs got here: Fizzled in the final month but finished strong.

How they match up: The Monsters were 4-4 over the IceHogs this season, with one overtime win. If Lake Erie scores first, forget about it. The Monsters went 28-2-3-3 when scoring first. The IceHogs were 3-10 in the gimmick known as three on three overtime.

Key Player for Lake Erie: Group effort. T.J. Tynan led the Monsters with 46 points. Lake Erie was the third stingiest team in the AHL on defense. It’s no one player that can beat you, which makes the Monsters so dangerous.

Key Player for Rockford: Vinnie Hinostroza. The rookie center led the IceHogs in scoring.

Prediction: Lake Erie in five. Monsters methodical, come at you from all sides tactics is enough to dismiss Rockford in the short five game series.

button_ont200   Ontario (P1) vs. San Jose (P4)   button_sjb200

How the Reign got here: The reincarnate Calder Cup Champions never missed a beat and remained a force in the Pacific Division, where they led wire to wire.

How the Barracuda got here: Got in on the last day of the playoffs. Their .537 winning percentage is lowest amongst qualifying playoff teams.

How they match up: The Reign went 9-3 against the Barracuda this season, with three overtime wins. Ontario was the top defensive team, allowing just 2.03 goals to opponents per game.

Key Player for Ontario: Peter Budaj. The AHL’s best goaltender went 42-14-4 with a 1.75 GAA and a .932 save percentage. He will be the difference maker.

Key Player for San Jose: Ryan Carpenter. San Jose’s leading scorer was also a team best +20.

Prediction: Ontario in three. It won’t be pretty for San Jose.

button_sd200   San Diego (P2) vs. Texas (P3)   button_15tex200

How the Gulls got here: Defended home ice, 20-10-3-1 at Valley View Casino Center.

How the Stars got here: If the Stars played in a division where everyone played the same amount of games, in this division they still face San Diego, but would have home ice.

How they match up: The last team the Gulls wanted to face were the Stars, who they only beat once.

Key Player for San Diego: Rookie Defenseman Brandon Montour. 57 points that tied him with Chris Mueller in the team lead in points.

Key Player for Texas: Stars had nine players with 40 or more points. They can come at you from all angles.

Prediction: Stars in four. San Diego steals one, probably in overtime, but the matchup heavily favors the Stars to advance.

Let me know if you are agree or disagree here. My full Preview of Pens / P-Bruins with an actual prediction hits the blog Tuesday.

AHL Power Rankings: Week 28

Another year in the can for the American Hockey League, their 80th and one of the best yet.

You have two teams in the East and the West which were the classes of the field. You have two teams that are serious dark horses to knock off the favorites.

How I do this, as I have in prior years, is that all 16 teams that qualify for the postseason are in your top 16 in the final rankings. The division winners are your top 4. This year, your dark horses are five and six.

I won’t keep you because it is this seasons last version of this. I have done this for three straight years and this by far is my most read, most popular piece on the blog because it brings in fans from all over the AHL here every Monday at 4 p.m.

Hit the jump if you didn’t link in direct…

Read more of this post

Vitek Yourself Before You Vanecek Yourself — Pens LOSE 2-1 (SO)

WBS        @       HER

1                                         2

In a game that meant nothing to Hershey seeding wise and a game that still had substance to a Penguins team who needed to win and get outside help to overtake the Providence Bruins for the two  seed in the Atlantic Division and home ice, it was the play of Bears ECHL callup Vitek Vanecek that helped the Hershey Bears defeat the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins 2-1 in a shootout.

Vanecek is a name that Penguins fans need to get familiar with as he is next in the Hershey pipeline of excellent goaltenders that have gone through there. With half of a team in front of him with the Bears resting regulars like AHL MVP Chris Bourque, he stopped 25 of 26 shots and was perfect in the shootout round to help his team win a meaningless points game for them but showed a preview of coming attractions of sorts for the Bears fans, coaching and management.

He opposed Casey DeSmith.

Lines were…

Kael Mouillierat – Dustin Jeffrey – Dominik Simon
Jake Guentzel – Carter Rowney – Tom Kostopoulos
Mattias Plachta – J-S Dea – Jarrett Burton
Josh Archibald – Teddy Blueger – Patrick McGrath

Ryan Parent – Steve Olesky
Tim Erixon – Ethan Prow
Will O’Neill – Barry Goers

Casey DeSmith – Sean Maguire

Lineup Notes: Tom Sestito was sent down from Pittsburgh in the morning. Niclas Andersen and Harrison Ruopp played Saturday but were out of the lineup for Ethan Prow and Ryan Parent. Adam Krause and Tyler Biggs were out as well with Jarrett Burton and Patrick McGrath in for Krause and Biggs. Casey DeSmith started his third game in a row, making it the first time since John Curry did it for the Penguins back in January 2011.

First Period: No scoring but the Penguins had two power plays they couldn’t do anything with on Vanecek making is AHL pro debut up from South Carolina in the ECHL. Pens looked like they carried the momentum in the period but couldn’t get anything past. Shots after one were 10-5 Penguins.

Second Period: It was shaping up to be one of those games where the only thing that happened was a team taking a penalty. The Bears took one, the Pens took three. Neither team scored. The Penguins only had two shots on goal through about 11:30 played in the period. One sequence that happened was Ryan Parent chipping a puck past a Bears defensemen and centering to Patrick McGrath that nearly chipped one past Vanacek.

Third Period: Riley Barber finally broke the scoreless deadlock with a rocket of a shot on the power play…

…that game the Bears a 1-0 lead.

J-S Dea took a penalty and Vanecek denied Dustin Jeffrey shorthanded.

Then a moment which may be a bit of a concern for the Penguins going forward, Madison Bowey took a shot that clipped DeSmith up high…

…DeSmith would finish out the shift but at the next stoppage was replaced by Sean Maguire who was making his pro debut. Talk about getting tossed out of the frying pan, into the fire, right?

Casey DeSmith would go to the locker room and was not seen at all the rest of the game.

Dustin Jeffrey scored on a nice drop pass by Josh Archibald that tied it and spoiled the Vanecek shutout…

Pens took two penalties late which gave the Bears a 5-on-3 power play heading into…

Overtime: Wilkes-Barre was able to kill it all off then after a stoppage played three on three with 1:40 to play. No one scored.

Shootout: Christian Djoos and Riley Barber scored in Rounds 2 and 3, Carter Rowney and Dustin Jeffrey were both denied in their attempts and the Bears took home the extra point.

Three Stars: 3) Casey DeSmith (21 saves on 22 shots) 2) Jakub Vrana (power play goal, even) and 1) Vitek Vanacek (25 saves on 26 shots)

Donatelli to Tom postgame on the status of DeSmith:

Around the Division: Lehigh Valley beats Syracuse 5-2…Providence beats Bridgeport 6-1 and as a result are the two seed…Portland beats Springfield 3-1.

Wheeling Update: The Nailers were actually pulling into Wheeling, West Virginia just as the Pens / Bears game went final. They took a sleeper bus down and back to Estero, Florida. Game 3 is this week between the Nailers and Everblades.

Note: Daniel Sprong’s junior team was eliminated from the playoffs tonight. Sprong is tabbed to join the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins fairly soon.he was 4-11-15 in 12 games for his Charlottetown Islanders side.

Here is the first round playoff schedule for the Penguins and Bruins:

AHL only makes teams travel once in the first round. It must be a building issue for the Bruins with the Penguins opening up playoffs Wednesday.

Anyway, if I see video highlights of tonight’s game and can work in an edit, I will put them up later.

I will update my charts for the final time this regular season and have the final AHL Power Rankings up on the blog sometime Monday. I haven’t decided when. I would like to do a quick AHL Calder Cup Playoff Preview for all the teams and offer predictions before the full workup for Pens / Bruins on Tuesday. Stay tuned here on the blog.

Let’s Go Pens!

GAMEDAY: @ Hershey 4/17

@     her14_200

Away Game: 38

AHL Game: 1115

Who: Hershey Bears

Where: Giant Center

When: 5:00 p.m.

Media Kit

Last Game: Last night at home against the Providence Bruins, the Pens lost 3-1. Carter Rowney scored the only goal for the Pens in the loss. For Hershey, the Bears sewed up the Atlantic Division championship with a win against the Lehigh Valley Phantoms by a score of 4-2. Ex-Penguin Zach Sill had a goal and an assist in the win for the Bears.

Last Meeting: Last Sunday in Wilkes-Barre, the Pens lost 5-3. Will O’Neill assisted in all three goals.

Record: For WBS: 43-27-4-1 (91 pts., 3rd place Atlantic Division) — For HER: 42-21-5-7 (96 pts., 1st place Atlantic Division)

Why you should care: The Penguins still have home ice to play for against the Providence Bruins. A Penguins win coupled with a P-Bruins regulation loss sews it up. The question is whether the Hershey Bears will make it easy or not. The Bears have nothing to play for and will probably give everyday names the night off. Expect Sean Maguire to make his pro debut for the Pens this afternoon.

Referee(s): Pierre Lambert / Michael Mullen

Linesmen: Shandor Alphonso / Bob Goodman

Twitter: @wbspenguins / @WBSGameDay / @TheHersheyBears

Facebook: /WilkesBarreScrantonPenguins // /TheHersheyBears

Instagram: wbspenguins / thehersheybears

Beat Writers: @CVSethLakso / @TLTomVenesky // @davesottile

Broadcasters: WBS: Mike O’Brien @MikeOBrienWBS / HER: Scott Stuccio @ScottStuccio

Fan Bloggers: @nafsnep / @ChocHockey

Radio: For WBS: WILK News Radio / For Hershey: 1460 The Ticket 

Television: AHL Live

Other Game to Watch: Only game that matters to the Pens is Providence against Bridgeport in Bridgeport.

Playoff Preview — Pens LOSE 3-1

   button_adk200       vs.       WBS

  3                                           1

The Providence Bruins and the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins better get used to one another. They will be seeing a lot of one another in the coming weeks.

That is because with a Hershey Bears win over the Lehigh Valley Phantoms tonight, the Bears win the Atlantic Division and the Providence Bruins and Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins are playing for second place and home ice in their five game series which should begin next weekend.

So tonight, a 3-1 Bruins win, was a playoff preview.

Long and short of things, this was a competitive game that the Penguins were in until the very end. The issue that doomed the Penguins besides the fact that they faced a well coached team with its full compliment of players was the 0-f0r-6 on the power play. The Penguins could not score on the power play tonight in a close game and it cost them. How many times is that said, seen or heard in these types of games?

So tomorrow decides home ice. Pens are in Hershey facing a Bears team with nothing left to play for in their final game of the regular season as division champions and the Providence Bruins head to Bridgeport where the Sound Tigers are still jockeying for playoff positioning. Here is how the scenarios can play out on the AHL’s final day of the regular season:

For this game, Casey DeSmith opposed Jeremy Smith. No lineup changes were made for the Pens but for Harrison Ruopp in for Etahn Prow on defense.

Pens had their awards pregame, here is who went home with what:

First Period: Providence jumped out early and took control but it was Casey DeSmith that made a diving save to keep the Pens in it and the game goalless. Pens had a power play that they couldn’t score on but had many looks. Then, Jake Genteel led Carter Rowney up ice on a two on one and Rowney finished to give the Pens a 1-0 lead…

Every whistle was met with pushing and shoving. The Penguins were the more physical team on the ice and it was frustrating the Bruins.

Shots at the end of one were 20-9 Penguins. Wilkes-Barre subtly dominated the period.

Second Period: But with a lineup full of starts like Austin Czarina, Alex Khokhlachev and Frank Vatrano, in a one goal game, that isn’t enough.

Through two consecutive power plays, the Pens only had one shot on the board.

Finally the Bruins were moving their skates to a point to where they forced a Penguin power play. It did not take long for Providence to finally break through and score on their first power play of the season against the Penguins. Austin Czarink scored on the far dot off of a one timer and it was a tie game.

DeSmith came up big denying Co-Rookie of the Year Frank Vatrano on a breakaway.

It was 1-1 going into the third. Tom had this observation…

And this was a period where it was 10-3 in shots favoring the Bruins.

Third Period: Czarnik again. Quick transitioning play and it was 2-1 Bruins.

Pens had two more chances to score on the power play in the period but couldn’t. With DeSmith eventually pulled for the extra man, the Penguins never found the equalizer.

I tweeted this with 18.2 seconds left…

What a jinx I am.

Three Stars: 3) Alex Khokhlachev (two assists, +1) 2) Carter Rowney (goal, -1) 1) Austin Czarnik (two goals, +1)

Around the Division: Hershey beats Lehigh Valley 4-2 to lock up the Atlantic Division Championship…Bridgeport loses in Albany 3-0 in a game that had 280 penalty minutes. No, that’s right, two hundred and eighty penalty minutes….Hartford loses in St. John’s 2-1…Springfield beats Portland in overtime 3-2.

Standings: Hershey (.640 points percentage) — Providence (.620) — Penguins (.607) — Portland (.587) — Bridgeport (.580) — Hartford (.559) — Lehigh Valley (.487) — Springfield (.400)

Wheeling Update: The Nailers lost 4-1 in Game 2 of the Kelly Cup Semifinals to the Florida Everblades that ties the series 1-1. The series shifts to Wheeling April 20. Anton Zlobin had the goal for the Nailers in the loss.

Pens and Bears go off Sunday at 5. Gameday setup for that hits the blog Sunday at 1.

Let’s Go Pens!