Chirps from Center Ice

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

Pens Lose 5-2? Weal-ly?

WBS       @       button_lv200

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Throw everything that you know or you think you know about the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins for a second and let me hit you with some statistics:

– The Penguins have been outshot 90-63 in these two games.
– AHL MVP Brian O’Neill and his line mate Jordan Weal are 2-3-5 and 3-1-4 respectively in the series.
– First team AHL AHL All-Star, Rookie and Goaltender of the Year Matt Murray has a 3.35 GAA and a 0.899 SV% while J-F Berube has a 1.83 GAA and a 0.921 SV%.
– The Kuhnhackl / Rowney / Ebbett line is 1-1-2 through two games.

We often laugh off other teams in other divisions in this Conference because of the wars we wage with the Binghamton’s, Hershey’s, Lehigh Valley’s and Norfolk’s of the East Division, but the Manchester Monarchs of the Atlantic Division are as good if not better than advertised in this playoff series and are every bit as good as advertised as the AHL’s regular season champions. The Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins, through two games can’t stop and haven’t contained the regular season champions yet in this series and haven’t had a lead in the series yet and now trail the Monarchs 0-2 after a 5-2 loss tonight. The series shifts to Wilkes-Barre for Game 3 Saturday.

One of the things that I am struggling with in comprehending is how the Monarchs were taken to five games in the first round by the eighth seeded Portland Pirates. The Penguins are a class level above the Pirates as far as skill level top to bottom, but you wouldn’t be able to tell the difference between that if you have watched this series so far.

Matt Murray vs. J-F Berube.

Lines were…

Conor Sheary – Andrew Ebbett – Tom Kostopoulos
Scott Wilson – Jayson Megna – Josh Archibald
Tom Kuhnhackl – Carter Rowney – Dominik Uher
Bobby Farnham – J-S Dea – Oskar Sundqvist

Brian Dumoulin – Taylor Chorney
Scott Harrington – Barry Goers
Reid McNeill – Derrick Pouliot

Matt Murray – Jeff Zatkoff

Lineup Changes: Kasperi Kapanen was out for Josh Archibald on the second line, Oskar Sundqvist made his pro debut on the fourth line for Pierre Leblond. Matia Marcantuoni took warmups but was scratched, J-S Dea took his spot.

First Period: The Monarchs showed no ill effects of the three overtime thriller from the night before, turning on the offensive pressure like you would a lightbulb switch in your favorite room in your house. Just when you think the Penguins were going to set the offensive tone, they got no shots, and were back in their own end trying to stifle the endless pressure of the Monarchs offensive forwards. Finally about halfway though, Brian O’Neill digs a puck out of a corner, cuts to the net, avoids the sweeping poke checks from the Penguin defenders and roofs the shot over Murray for a 1-0 Manchester lead.

I don’t think a first period that saw the Penguins trailing in shots 7-2 and 12-3 at points in the period was due to fatigue as much as it was the Monarchs just opening up an imaginary beach umbrella in front of Berube’s net and managed to block or deflect aside any shot headed in their goaltenders direction.

Second Period: Penguins best period of the series so far. Not much in the way of shots to the net, but the offensive zone time was there. Penguins scored on a power play goal on this goal by Conor Sheary that went to review…

[tweet https://twitter.com/nafsnep/status/596469755919339521]

:09 later, Justin Auger found himself room and scored to make it 2-1. Big time response by the Monarchs and bad coverage by the Penguins who watched Auger walk in and before they realized his actions were too late to do anything to stop it.

But Wilkes-Barre answered right back off of the face-off on this finish by Dominik Uher…

[tweet https://twitter.com/nafsnep/status/596470452337385472]

Three goals in :23. The Penguins would have been absolutely crushed if they played as well as they did to have the momentum snatched away from them as quickly as they built it.

But wait, the period wasn’t over yet.

Brian O’Neill found Jordan Weal all alone on the near dot on a nice cross ice pass that Weal one timed over Murray’s shoulder for a 3-2 lead. I noticed after the Uher goal, the Penguins didn’t have any offensive setup at all and the Monarchs continued their relentless pressure and finally got the goal from Weal that put them ahead heading into the…

Third Period: Penguins had a nice jump to open but took a penalty and who else but Jordan Weal scored on it to extend the lead for the Monarchs to 4-2. Murray couldn’t freeze it and the puck was shuffled over to Weal who poked it across for the first multi-goal lead in the series and the first power play goal allowed by the Penguins in the post season.

The Monarchs iced the game away with two key penalty kills on the Penguins. Brian O’Neill hit an open net with Murray vacated that made it 5-2. Despite the fact that the Penguins had a better start and looked improved compared to the other periods, even with the benefit of two power plays and an extra man with the goaltender pulled, the Monarchs still outshout the Penguins 10-8 in the third.

Three Stars: 3) Brian O’Neill (two goals, assist, +2) 2) Michael Mersch (three assists, +1) and 1) Jordan Weal (two goals, assist, +1)

No other action in the Eastern Conference tonight. Hartford and Hershey play their Game 2 Friday in Chocolatetown.

So the Penguins are down 0-2 with the series shifting to Wilkes-Barre for an important Game 3 Saturday. Silver lining is the fact that the Monarchs have not won a game on the road yet this postseason and the Penguins have the next three at home (provided they win Saturday or Monday) so the series is far from over yet, but the Penguins must come up with some way to slow down the hectic offensive pace that the Monarchs are setting.

One note before we wrap it up, Josh Archibald left the game with an apparent injury and did not return and I didn’t hear Barry Goers name much in the second half of the game but he was on very late. Got to wonder if a defensive move is made in favor of Nick D’Agostino, Ryan Parent or Danny Syvret for Game 3 Saturday.

I’ll update the postseason charts and may individualize the charts exclusive to this series sometime Friday and will tweet a link. Look for the Game 3 setup Saturday at 3 p.m.

Let’s Go Pens!

Eastern Conference Semifinal Game 2: Manchester Monarchs (MCH leads 1-0)

manch white

Eastern Conference Semifinal Game 2 — Manchester Monarchs

AHL Game: I2

Who: Manchester Monarchs

Where: Verizon Wireless Arena

When: 7:00 p.m.

Series: MCH leads 1-0 (best of seven)

Media Kit

Last Game: The Penguins lost 4-3 in triple overtime last night. Zach O’Brien scored the game winning goal at 4:13 of the third overtime. Matt Murray made 52 saves on 56 shots.

What to Watch For: Two things. First, conditioning. You have to think that last nights triple overtime thriller took a lot out of both teams, moreso maybe Manchester because they have played more games than the Penguins in the past week. Second, adjustments. Scott Wilson did not finish the game Wednesday, does that mean that Oskar Sundqvist makes his North American pro debut? Does anyone else shuffle into the lineup and if so what impact do they make?

Referee(s): Mark Lemelin / Evgeny Romasko

Linesmen: Jeremy Lovett / Joe Ross

Twitter: @wbspenguins / @WBSGameDay / @MonarchsHockey

Facebook: /WilkesBarreScrantonPenguins // /MonarchsHockey

Instagram: wbspenguins / monarchshockey

Beat Writers: @CVBombulie and @TLTomVenesky

Broadcasters: WBS: Mike O’Brien @MikeOBrienWBS / MCH: Ken Cail @kenmonarchs

Fan Bloggers: @nafsnep 

Radio: For WBS: WILK Newsradio / For MCH: WGIR 610 AM

Television: AHL Live

When is Game 3?: Saturday in Wilkes-Barre at 7:05 p.m.

Penguins Tripped in Triple OT — Pens LOSE 4-3 (3OT)

WBS       @       button_lv200

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Nick Shore scored at somewhere around 7:01 Wilkes-Barre time.

Fast forward four and a half hours later, Zach O’Brien scored in triple overtime to give the Manchester Monarchs a 4-3 win in triple overtime and a 1-0 series lead.

The second longest game in Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins history.

Instant classic doesn’t even begin to describe this one. You don’t win a series in the first game nor do you lose one. But yeah, the team that wins the first game only needs to win three more to advance. The Penguins played the game from behind the whole game and probably needed this cold slap in the face to get them pointed in the right direction.

We hope.

Not much long to wait for retribution, Game 2 goes off at 7 p.m. Thursday.

Matt Murray vs. J-F Berube.

Lines were…

Conor Sheary – Andrew Ebbett – Tom Kostopoulos
Scott Wilson – Jayson Megna – Kasperi Kapanen
Tom Kuhnhackl – Carter Rowney – Dominik Uher
Pierre Leblond – Matia Marcantuoni – Bobby Farnham

Brian Dumoulin – Taylor Chorney
Scott Harrington – Barry Goers
Reid McNeill – Derrick Pouliot

Matt Murray – Jeff Zatkoff

Josh Archibald took warmups but was scratched in favor of Matia Marcantuoni from Game 3 vs. Syracuse. We are still waiting for the debut of Oskar Sundqvist and the returns of Nick Drazenovic and Bryan Rust.

First Period: Monarchs got the jump on the Penguins eighteen seconds in with Nick Shore scoring off of a turnover in front of Murray that put the Monarchs on the board giving them their fastest goal scored in their playoff history and Wilkes-Barre’s first deficit in the post season. The Pens never trailed once in the three game sweep of Syracuse.

Taylor Chorney answered a little over three minutes later. An offensive zone face-off win by Jayson Megna found its way to Chorney who scored.

[tweet https://twitter.com/nafsnep/status/596090055980130304]

Manchester continued to press. Quick through the neutral zone and into the offensive zone. Wave after wave after wave. Finally, Manchester edged ahead again when Brian O’Neill pushed a puck past an out of position Murray after the Penguins netminder failed to control a rebound.

Penguins scored on a power play in the final minute after Bobby Farnham drew a hook on Jeff Schultz. Six seconds into the power play, Scott Wilson from the high right slot one timed a puck in for a tie game.

[tweet https://twitter.com/nafsnep/status/596097254039093248]

So the AHL’s top defensive units all season long score a pair of goals on each other heading into the….

Second Period: Penguins started to edge ahead of the Monarchs in chances to open, outshooting the home team 4-1 in the first ten minutes, but Jordan Weal continued to dominate the face-off dot. He won one back to Colin Miller who rifled it home for a 3-2 Monarchs lead. Shots were an even 7 a side for both teams as the Monarchs turned up the offensive pressure in the final seven minutes.

Third Period: Penguins came back in the period and it was all set up by this Matt Murray ten bell save on Michael Mersch…

[tweet https://twitter.com/nafsnep/status/596116234128732161]

Conor Sheary tied it a few minutes later when he played a puck off a wall and backhanded it past Berube.

[tweet https://twitter.com/nafsnep/status/596117500707905536]

Penguins needed to balance offensive pressure while not maintaining anything dangerous for the high power Manchester Monarchs team.

Notable: Kasperi Kapanen was placed on the ‘KRU’ line with Dominik Uher up with Scott Wilson and Jayson Megna as John Hynes was looking to shake up lines looking for offense. nothing doing heading to…

First Overtime: Kapanen was placed back with Wilson and Megna to open. Both goaltenders came up big with saves. Manchester was coming in waves…Tom Kostopoulos past the half way point of the period nearly ended it but Berube came up big.

Berube made a save in a pile of bodies that went to review but the refs took a look at it and ruled no goal.

Close call for Wilkes-Barre late as the Penguins were playing late with two players without sticks.

Pens had a late power play to close out the first overtime but allowed Manchester a few looks shorthanded, but did not score and the teams headed into the…

Second Overtime: Scott Wilson took one shift but was missing on the top line for the Penguins for most of the second overtime. Lines were jumbled for the Penguins. Both teams had chances to end it but didn’t. Monarchs had a 12-3 shot advantage in the second overtime.

Third Overtime: Zach O’Brien ended it at 4:13 of the third overtime on a busted coverage of who had who by the Penguins.

Three Stars: 3) Jordan Weal (two assists, +1) 2) Conor Sheary (goal, assist, +1) and 1) Zach O’Brien game winning third overtime goal, +1)

Like I said from the open, the Penguins played from behind in this one from the open and just could not recover enough from a standpoint to take a lead in regulation. That they took Manchester to the third overtime means that you are looking at a knock down, drag out battle to the end between the two sides.

Elsewhere in the Eastern Conference: Hershey and Hartford went into overtime in their first game and ex-Bear Chris Bourque ended it in the first OT at 16:47 to give the Wolf Pack a 2-1 overtime win and a 1-0 series lead. Game 2 is Friday in Hershey.

Game 2 of this best of seven will be Thursday at 7. Gameday for that goes up at 3 p.m. Rest up.

Let’s Go Pens!

Eastern Conference Semifinal Game 1: Manchester Monarchs

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Eastern Conference Semifinal Game 1 — Manchester Monarchs

AHL Game: I1

Who: Manchester Monarchs

Where: Verizon Wireless Arena

When: 7:00 p.m.

Series: Tied 0-0 (best of seven)

Media Kit

Season Series: Oct. 12: MCH 4 @ WBS 1 — Nov. 22: MCH 3 @ WBS 2 — Mar. 6: WBS 3 @ MCH 6 — Mar. 7: WBS 3 @ MCH 0

Top Four Scorers for the Penguins vs. the Monarchs: 1. Tom Kuhnhackl (4 GP, 1-2-3, -1) 2. Dominik Uher (4 GP, 1-2-3, -1) 3. Carter Rowney (3 GP, 0-3-3, -1) 4. J-S Dea (2 GP, 2-0-2, +1)

Top Four Scorers for the Monarchs vs. the Penguins: 1. Jordan Weal (3-3-6, +3) 2. Brian O’Neill (2-2-4, +2) 3. Colin Miller (1-3-4, -3) 4. Nic Dowd (4 GP, 0-4-4, +2)

How the Monarchs got here: Defeated the Portland Pirates in the Eastern Conference Quarterfinals in five games.

How the Penguins got here: Swept the Syracuse Crunch in the Eastern Conference Quarterfinals in three games.

What to Watch For: Who scores first. In their five game series against the Pirates, if the Monarchs scored first they won. If Portland scored first, Manchester lost. The Penguins never trailed once against the Syracuse Crunch so who scores the first goal tonight will will make for an interesting evening in seeing how the other team responds and if they can come back and win.

Referee(s): Evgeny Romasko / Geno Binda

Linesmen: Brian MacDonald / Alex Stagnone

Twitter: @wbspenguins / @WBSGameDay / @MonarchsHockey

Facebook: /WilkesBarreScrantonPenguins // /MonarchsHockey

Instagram: wbspenguins / monarchshockey

Beat Writers: @CVBombulie and @TLTomVenesky

Broadcasters: WBS: Mike O’Brien @MikeOBrienWBS / MCH: Ken Cail @kenmonarchs

Fan Bloggers: @nafsnep 

Radio: For WBS: WILK Newsradio / For MCH: WGIR 610 AM

Television: AHL Live

When is Game 2?: Tomorrow, Thursday from Manchester, at 7 p.m.

Penguins / Monarchs Series Preview

wbs14_200          cc15_200          MCH

They made it look easy.

For the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins in the Calder Cup Playoffs, it was a 3-0 sweep of the Syracuse Crunch by a combined 14-3, utterly dominating the Crunch in all facets.

For the Manchester Monarchs, they dominated the AHL all season from the jump back in October and ran away with the Macgregor Kilpatrick Trophy as the AHL regular season champions. The Monarchs were the first team to qualify for the Calder Cup Playoffs this season.

Coach of the Year in Mike Stothers? Check.

MVP and scoring leader in Brian O’Neill? Check.

They made it look easy.

But playoffs are a different animal. Especially when you are dealing with one team standing in your way in a seven game series vs. a litany of other teams on any given three-in-three weekend.

For the AHL’s best team, it’s the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins.

Let’s break it down.

Schedule

Eastern Conference Semifinals – Series “I” (best-of-7)
1-Manchester Monarchs vs. 4-Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins 
Game 1 – Wed., May 6 – W-B/Scranton at Manchester, 7:00
Game 2 – Thu., May 7 – W-B/Scranton at Manchester, 7:00
Game 3 – Sat., May 9 – Manchester at W-B/Scranton, 7:05
Game 4 – Mon., May 11 – Manchester at W-B/Scranton, 7:05
*Game 5 – Tue., May 12 – Manchester at W-B/Scranton, 7:05
*Game 6 – Fri., May 15 – W-B/Scranton at Manchester, 7:00
*Game 7 – Sat., May 16 – W-B/Scranton at Manchester, 7:00

*if necessary

Forwards 

Brian O’Neill ran away with the scoring title by ten points over the second place finisher and Jordan Weal finished third in overall scoring. The Penguins, obviously, must come up with a game plan to contain or shut down this duo. Wilkes-Barre is paced by Conor Sheary’s 45 points with Andrew Ebbett and Tom Kostopoulous a point behind. In the series against Portland, the Monarchs got the majority of their scoring from Michael Mersch (5-3-8) and Weal (5-2-7) and got scoring from 17 different players. It’s a deep and dangerous Manchester team that can have any line from one through four attack offensively. Wilkes-Barre’s postseason scorers are Conor Sheary (2-3-5) and Carter Rowney and Kasperi Kapanen (2-2-4 and 3-1-4 respectively) it’s a smaller sample size from that of Manchester’s based solely on the fact that the Penguins swept the Crunch in convincing fashion in three games.

Advantage: Manchester for now. The battle of who wins the series will probably be decided on which forward line produces the most. The Penguins have a potent scoring line which is their third line of Tom Kuhnhackl, Carter Rowney and Dominik Uher and have potential with a possible Oskar Sundqvist, Jayson Megna, Kasperi Kapanen pairing for the series and have long had the top line production of Sheary, Ebbett and Kostopoulos. But you are talking about two players on a line that scored a combined 149 points in the regular season against your top line of three players in Wilkes-Barre that scored a combined 133.

Defensemen

Both teams were 1-2 in the AHL in defense, with the Penguins allowing just 2.14 goals per game vs. Manchester’s 2.32 goals / game. Colin Miller was near the top of the AHL in defenseman scoring, coming in third place in points and second place in goals to Binghamton’s Chris Wideman, who won AHL defenseman of the year. The Penguins have more of a pack mentality when it comes to defense. For what it is worth these days, Taylor Chorney and Brian Dumoulin finished fourth and fifth in +/- rating and missed the final weeks of the regular season due to NHL recall duty in Pittsburgh.

Advantage: Penguins. Wilkes-Barre is deeper on the blue line than the Monarchs are. When you have to scratch AHL veterans Ryan Parent and Danny Syvret as your seventh and eighth defenseman, you are very deep on the defensive end.

Goaltending

It’s Matt Murray’s show and will remain as such. Murray won the AHL’s Rookie of the Year award, led the AHL in shutouts, save percentage and goals against. A case could be made for honorable mention for Manchester’s Jean-Francois Berube, who led goaltenders in wins, but some of the luster is knocked off of that shine because Berube needed five games and essentially the third period in the final game to advance past the eighth seeded Portland Pirates.

Advantage: Penguins

Intangibles

Mike Stothers won the AHL’s Coach of the Year fair and square, but that may have been a cop out on behalf of the media, voting for the coach who coached the league’s best team. AHL bloggers like myself don’t get votes, but my candidates would have included Travis Green in Utica, Tom Rowe in San Antonio or Troy Mann in Hershey. Taking nothing away from the job Stothers has done in Manchester and coupling that with the defensive minded assassin in John Hynes here in Wilkes-Barre, where his clubs have led the AHL in defense for four out of the last five years, I see a push.

Manchester had the AHL’s top overall power play in the regular season, edging Binghamton out by a percentage point at 20.7%. The Penguins were a modest 14th overall (17.2%) Manchester was 16th in penalty kill followed closely behind by the Penguins at 17th (83.6% to 83.2%) So far in the postseason, the Penguins have not allowed a power play goal and lead the Calder Cup Playoffs in power play with 42.9% conversion rate while Manchester is 13th (14.3%) on the power play and 12th (71.4%) on the penalty kill. I see a push initially. You can’t take anything away from what Manchester did in the regular season on the power play and must know that the Penguins numbers on special teams in the postseason are a bit inflated for the simple fact that Syracuse was near the bottom in power play and penalty kill at the end of the regular season. While I don’t see this series being won and lost on special teams, whichever team which gets the edge on the other in this seven game series will most likely advance.

Social Media Coverage

For the Penguins…

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

For the Monarchs…

Twitter: @MonarchsHockey
Radio: @kenmonarchs
Beat: None that I know of.
Facebook: /MonarchsHockey
Instagram: monarchshockey

Prediction

Penguins in six. Again, may be a bit generous here, but there are doubts on both sides. For one, Syracuse didn’t really put up much of a fight against Wilkes-Barre and anyone that followed the final month of the season that saw the Crunch lose 9 of their last 10 games would know that likely any team would have swept them out of the playoffs. For Manchester, they needed five games to dismiss the eight seed Portland Pirates and were in a 3-3 deadlock against the Pirates in Game 5 heading into the third period after coughing up a 3-0 lead in the game and getting blown out and shutout in Game 4. If Manchester allows the Penguins that space, Wilkes-Barre can and will capitalize. Both teams have firepower up front, but the Penguins are the deeper and better team on defense and Matt Murray didn’t seem to miss a beat against Syracuse and there is no reason to believe that he cannot win the Penguins a game or two in this series. Ultimately defense and goaltending will win the day. I see a split coming out of Manchester this week then the Penguins winning at home Saturday and Monday, Manchester winning Game 5 to force it back to New Hampshire and the Penguins closing the series out next Friday to advance, for the third time in as many seasons, to the Conference Championship to face the winner of the Hartford / Hershey series.

The Gameday setup for Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Semifinals hits the blog Wednesday at 3 p.m.

Make it the Monarchs

We have a second round opponent.

It’s the Manchester Monarchs, winners 5-3 in the deciding Game 5 against the Portland Pirates. I took the game in on AHL Live. Here’s the thumbnail summary….

Manchester scored twice in the first two minutes of the first and third period to ice the game away. They have scored first in the first two minutes at home in all three home games against the Pirates.

Portland had the better of the chances in the first period I thought, despite getting out shot 17-8 in the first period.

Portland had one shout on goal in the first half of the second period and Manchester went up 3-0, then the Monarchs imploded and the Pirates got three quickly, at the midway point in the second, with about five minutes left and with 0.5 seconds left in the second for a 3-3 score heading into the third.

Manchester scored twice in the opening 1:36 and Portland didn’t have another comeback in them.

Here is your schedule for the Eastern Conference Semifinals…

Eastern Conference Semifinals – Series “I” (best-of-7)
1-Manchester Monarchs vs. 4-Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins 

Game 1 – Wed., May 6 – W-B/Scranton at Manchester, 7:00
Game 2 – Thu., May 7 – W-B/Scranton at Manchester, 7:00
Game 3 – Sat., May 9 – Manchester at W-B/Scranton, 7:05
Game 4 – Mon., May 11 – Manchester at W-B/Scranton, 7:05
*Game 5 – Tue., May 12 – Manchester at W-B/Scranton, 7:05
*Game 6 – Fri., May 15 – W-B/Scranton at Manchester, 7:00
*Game 7 – Sat., May 16 – W-B/Scranton at Manchester, 7:00
*if necessary… All times Eastern

You can check it out for yourself here. You can also see the Hershey and Hartford series as well and note that the Wolf Pack will play two games at the home of the Worcester Sharks because the circus is in town in Hartford.

Lots to break down here. Pens were 1-3 against the Monarchs this season. That one win was the Matt Murray shutout of the Monarchs en route to his shutout streak record. What I saw out of Manchester is that they play fast and loose game, really quick, which has been their modus operandi all season. Portland at times gave them difficulty in this particular game that I watched tonight and did run the Monarchs to the brink of elimination to the final period of the final game. What does it mean going forward? Stay tuned.

Pens practiced at Coal Street today since sweeping the Crunch. Bryan Rust and Nick Drazenovic both practiced in full and are possibilities for Round 2.

I updated the Postseason chart page to include the Monarchs production in their five game series win against the Portland Pirates. Check that out here. I am debating doing an overall chart, like you normally see, then a chart for the series itself. I’ll welcome any input thrown my way.

Let’s Go Pens!!!

A Penguin, A Bear and a Wolf Walk Into a Bar….

…I forget the punchline, but the Penguins playoff opponent for the second round got a lot clearer. Here’s what we know:

– The Hershey Bears defeated the Worcester Sharks and are on to the next round with a 10-4 drubbing of the Sharks in Game 4.

– The Hartford Wolf Pack won in overtime in the decisive Game 5 against the Providence Bruins by a score of 3-2.

So the 2, 3, and 4 seeds are onto the second round. The AHL re-seeds in the second round. Here’s what can happen tomorrow when Portland and Manchester lock up tomorrow in their deciding Game 5:

– First off, the Penguins cannot play the Bears in the second round. That means…

– If Manchester wins, the Penguins play the Monarchs and the Wolf Pack play the Bears in Round 2.

– If Portland wins, the Penguins play the Wolf Pack and the Bears play Portland.

Pick your poison, Pens fans. Portland rallied from two goals in the third period on the final day of the regular season to qualify for the postseason, and have won two straight against the Manchester Monarchs. The Monarchs have lost back-to-back for just the second time this season! The last time was way back in October. The Pirates shutout the Monarchs 5-0 Thursday. Even if the Monarchs rally, they are still the best team in the AHL and will likely use those mistakes made in Games 3 and 4 against Portland to ensure a similar fate doesn’t occur against the Penguins.

If Portland does pull off the reverse sweep, you are getting a Hartford team that won the Northeast Division that knows how to win close games. The Wolf Pack played the P-Bruins to triple overtime in Game 2 of that series. Neither team, Manchester or Portland, will be easy.

We will know more tomorrow. I’ll have a blog piece up at the conclusion of the game Saturday with opponent and schedule, if available.

Elsewhere, I played radio with the Great Bob Howard. Link here. I am somewhere around the half hour mark.

Let’s start a new joke… a Monarch or a Wolf walk into a bar….