Chirps from Center Ice

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

Pens / Bruins Chart Refresh

I am getting the hang of this whole building and maintaining a chart thing. I think I may use this concept next year for the Penguins but spill this onto a page instead offing a blog post every time. Hell, I have a whole summer to play with the idea.

But let’s not start thinking about the summer, shall we? Here’s the updated charts for the Penguins and Providence Bruins through Game 2 of the Eastern Conference Calder Cup Semifinals.

First, the Penguins “big” chart. Please click to enlarge…

My tweet kind of spells it out. Anton Zlobin’s has yet to be on the ice for a single goal against for these playoffs. Also, Brendan Mikkelson was on the ice for five of the six Penguin goals scored last night. I have been waiting for him to make an impact, and he did just that, Saturday night. He also had two assists last night, his first points of the series.

Brian Dumoulin has been a beast in these playoffs.

Now Providence. The GF% numbers for the Bruins took a dive last night…

Once again my tweet spells it out. No one on the Providence team has a 90% or higher GF%. Now, I’ll sound smarter next year when I see what the average is for a team throughout a 76 game slog.

Here’s Providence’s point totals.

Keep Khokhlachev, Spooner and Griffith in check like the Penguins did last night and you will win, like the Penguins did last night.

I still want to break down the head to head between these teams and will probably put those numbers up tomorrow or Tuesday. Check me out then.

Power Players — Pens WIN 6-1 (Series Tied 1-1)

   button_adk200       vs.       WBS

  1                                     6

The Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins power play has been crud all season long. 28th overall in the AHL this season and just something that is never used the right way.

Not tonight. The Penguins scored three power play goals and crush the Providence Bruins by a score of 6-1 and even the series at a game a piece as the series shifts to Providence for Game 3 Wednesday.

Crush they did. The Penguins were scored on four times very early in Game 1 Friday, but continued to lay the body on the Bruins all night long. That continued into tonight and, with a little bit more sound defensive structure, wore the Bruins down to the point of frustration which reached its peak in the third period.

Let’s take a look at the penalties assessed in the third, shall we?

Penalties-Casto Pro (roughing), 4:18; Casto Pro (roughing), 6:00; Robins Pro (roughing), 6:00; Drazenovic Wbs (roughing), 6:00; Harrington Wbs (unsportsmanlike conduct, roughing), 6:00; Trotman Pro (roughing, misconduct – continuing altercation), 9:02; Kobasew Wbs (roughing, misconduct – continuing altercation), 9:02; Knight Pro (misconduct – continuing altercation), 12:29; Moore Pro (misconduct – continuing altercation), 12:29; Robins Pro (roughing, misconduct – continuing altercation), 12:29; Dumoulin Wbs (misconduct – continuing altercation), 12:29; Mikkelson Wbs (high-sticking, roughing, misconduct – continuing altercation), 12:29; Lindblad Pro (misconduct – continuing altercation), 15:18; McNeill Wbs (misconduct – continuing altercation), 15:18; Farnham Wbs (roughing, unsportsmanlike conduct), 16:06; Zolnierczyk Wbs (roughing), 19:02.

Nine misconducts. No fighting majors. 138 penalty minutes in sum.

One of the things that happened that isn’t listed in the box is after starting goaltender Niklas Svedberg was pulled after allowing the fifth goal to the Penguins, a Tom Kostopoulos power play goal that basically iced it, backup goaltender Malcolm Subban was called in for relief. After a scrum involving all 10 skaters on the ice not wearing pads, Subban skates out to his blue line and challenges Peter Mannino. Mannino would have none of it, basically coming halfway out and directing Subban back to his crease and laughing the entire situation off.

I guess you can say that the Bruins handled being blown out in a playoff game a lot worse than the Penguins did last night, because none of this stuff happened then. You could also say that the Bruins were tired of being pushed around and manhandled by the Penguins during play, that they decided to go after the Penguins after play.

I’m burying the lead here, and that is that Wilkes-Barre played a damn good hockey game.

After a scoreless first period, Conor Sheary got the scoring started cashing a rebound left by Svedberg for his first professional goal to put the Penguins ahead 1-0. Providence scored on a power play when Justin Florek roofed a shot over a sprawling Mannino that tied the game at one. Prior to, the P-Bruins were held without a shot for about the first ten minutes of the second period.

Then the floodgates opened, led by Anton Zlobin, back from injury.

Zlobin picks two corners from essentially the same spot on the left circle and it’s 3-1. His second goal came on a power play.

Simon Despres floats a shot in from the blue line that Chuck Kobasew got a piece of and the rout was on. 4-1 Wilkes-Barre. Three goals in the span of 4:02 for the Pens.

In the third, the Penguins put away the Bruins with a third power play goal from Tom Kostopoulos that chased Nik Svedberg. In between all of the shenanigans, Brian Dumoulin skates wire to wire and wrists home a seemingly innocent shot that goes under the glove of relief goaltender Malcolm Subban for a 6-1 Penguin lead.

I don’t know if any suspensions will come of all of the hijinks that ensued. Jared Knight for Providence left the bench to join in on a scrum and Bobby Robins, after being placed in the penalty box, leaves it to re-join the same scrum Knight got involved with.

Lineup wise, Anton Zlobin replaced Carter Rowney. Lines were jumbled, but that was the only move. Andrew Ebbett missed his second straight game.

Three Stars: 3) Simon Despres (two assists, even) 2) Tom Kostopoulos (goal, assist, even) and 1) Anton Zlobin (two goals, assist, +1)

Game 3 is Wednesday in Providence.

Elsewhere in the Eastern Conference: St. John’s takes a 2-1 series lead with a 5-3 win over Norfolk. Ol’ buddy Brad Thiessen stopped 26 of 30. Game 4 is Monday.

Wheeling plays Game 6 Monday against Greenville. They need a win to force a decisive Game 7.

SendToNews Highlights: Let’s do YouTube instead…

Sunday will be used to update and create charts. I’ll update the ones for Providence and Wilkes-Barre and do a head-to-head one as well. So it will actually be a grand total of eight charts. It’ll be a chart explosion! Check that out in some form Sunday evening.

Happy Mothers Day to all the moms out there, including my mom, who sometimes reads this blog. Love you, Mom!

Let’s Go Pens!

Eastern Conference Semifinal Game 2: Providence Bruins (PRO leads 1-0)

vs. 2012_PRO

Eastern Conference Semifinal Game 2 — Providence Bruins

AHL Game: J2

Who: Providence Bruins

Where: Mohegan Sun Arena at Casey Plaza

When: 7:05 p.m.

Series: PRO leads 1-0 (best of seven)

Media Kit

Last Game: Last night in Wilkes-Barre, the Pens were blanked 4-0. Goaltender Niklas Svedberg had a 20 save shutout and Rookie Alexander Khokhlachev had two goals and an assist as the Providence Bruins snatched away home ice from the Penguins.

What to Watch For: Improvement. Penguins will need it tonight or else they head to Rhode Island next week down 2-0.

Referee(s):  Trevor Hanson / Chris Ciamaga

Linesmen:  Bob Goodman / Francis Trempe

Twitter: @WBSPenguins / @WBSGameDay / @AHLBruins

Facebook: /WilkesBarreScrantonPenguins // /providencebruins

Instagram: wbspenguins / ahlbruins

Beat Writers: @CVBombulie / @MarkDivver

Broadcasters: WBS: Mike O’Brien @MikeOBrienWBS / PRO: Nick Gagalis @NickGagalis

Fan Bloggers: @nafsnep 

Radio: For WBS: SportsHub 102.3 / For Providence: WNRI 1380 AM

Television: AHL Live

When is Game 3?: Wednesday night, May 14, in Providence at 7:05

Next Time, I’ll Wear a Hat — Pens LOSE 4-0 (PRO leads 1-0)

   button_adk200       vs.       WBS

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I walked out of my house this morning and didn’t realize that I had walked out of the house without a hat for tonight’s game. I forgot it. So tonight, I watched tonight’s 4-0 Penguins defeat at the hands of the Providence Bruins without one.

Suffice to day, when I walk out of the house tomorrow to come to Game 2, I will have a hat with me, on my head.

The Providence Bruins took it to the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins early in the first period.

The Penguins had the jump to open the period. Superstar rookie sensation Alexander Khokhlachev scores on a busted play by the Penguins to put the Bruins on the board just 1:33 in. Just a weird sequence where the Bruins pounced on a Pens player on the wall and dish to Khokhlachev, who scored.

Then the Penguins took a penalty and here is where the game spiraled out of control for the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins.

Craig Cunningham knee drop one-timer on the far post on a nice tic-tac-toe pass play. 2-0 Providence at 7:03 on the power play.

Pens quickly respond off the face-off with a line of Jayson Megna Adam Payerl and Harry Zolnierczyk and almost make it 2-1. They don’t. Back the other way, a man unmarked in front of starting goaltender Peter Mannino and it was 3-0 Providence. That unmarked man was Andrew Cherniwchan. Goal comes :45 after the Cunningham power play goal, at 7:48.

Before the Pens knew what hit them, Alexander Khokhlachev finishes off a 2-on-1 and it’s 4-0 Providence at 8:03.

Yep, if you followed that correctly, that was three Providence goals in the span of sixty seconds.

It’s the second playoff game in a row that the P-Bruins have scored four first period goals and the third game in a row that three goals are scored in the first period. Credit.

Penguins buttoned down from there. They started to hit and out skate the Providence Bruins.

But, the forgotten man in all of this was none other than Niklas Svedberg, who was outstanding tonight for the Bruins in goal. He smothered up all pucks sent his way tonight and was seeing the puck large. Several Wilkes-Barre one time attempts were stopped by Svedberg.

Penguins had a late 5-on-3 but didn’t score in the second period. The Penguins did all they could to get back into the game in this period but couldn’t get anything past Svedberg.

In the third period, the Providence Bruins bucked down and locked down the Penguins. They didn’t allow a single Wilkes-Barre shot for the first sixteen minutes. If you are a team that needs five goals in twenty minutes, not registering a shot on goal in the periods first sixteen minutes isn’t going to help your cause.

The Penguins were at one point down to four defenseman. Reid McNeill broke a skate and Brendan Mikkelson took a shot up high that drew blood but both returned.

Three Stars: 3) Matt Lindblad (two assists, +2) 2) Alexander Khokhlachev (two goals, assist, +2) and 1) Niklas Svedberg 20 save shutout.

This game reminded me a lot of Game 1 in the Eastern Conference Finals against the Syracuse Crunch last year, a game that the Penguins won. In fact, the ONLY game that the Penguins won. The Pens had just completed a historic comeback against this same Providence Bruins club after being down 0-3. Nothing was going to stop them in Game 1. The Providence Bruins are in the same boat. They needed a pair of 6-3 victories against the Springfield Falcons to survive and advance after being down 3-1 in the best of five.

I don’t know. The Pens played one bad minute that cost them big and couldn’t get any pucks past Svedberg or muster anything resembling a great chance.

Lineup Notes: Anton Zlobin took warmups but was scratched. Conor Sheary played again. Andrew Ebbett did not, out with what the Pens are calling an “upper body” injury. Nick Drazenovic went in Ebbett’s place. Jayson Megna played, didn’t really notice him. Blueline was intact.

Elsewhere in the Eastern Conference: Game 3 of St. John’s and Norfolk gets going again tomorrow at Scope. The series is tied 1-1.

Wheeling Update: The Nailers are on the brink of elimination after being defeated by the Greenville Road Warriors tonight by a score of 4-1. Greenville goes up 3-2 in the best of seven series. Game 6 is Monday in Wheeling.

SendToNews Highlights: I don’t think that Coal Street is making a YouTube highlight package for this one and rightfully so. SendToNews highlights are here.

Game 2 is tomorrow. Gameday for this will be up at 3:00 p.m.

Let’s Go Pens!!

Eastern Conference Semifinal Game 1: Providence Bruins

vs. 2012_PRO

Eastern Conference Semifinal Game 1 — Providence Bruins

AHL Game: J1

Who: Providence Bruins

Where: Mohegan Sun Arena at Casey Plaza

When: 7:05 p.m.

Series: Tied 0-0 (best of seven)

Media Kit

Season Series: Jan 17: WBS 1 @ PRO 5 — Jan 19: WBS 5 @ PRO 1 — Feb 22: PRO 4 @ WBS 3 (SO) — Mar 26: PRO 2 @ WBS 1

Top Four Scorers for the Penguins vs. the Bruins: 1. Spencer Machacek (7 GP, 5-1-6, +3) 2. Nick Drazenovic (4 GP, 1-2-3, even) 2. Tom Kostopoulos (4 GP, 1-2-3, +1) 4. Cominik Uher (3 GP, 1-2-3, +3) (note: Mahachek’s production vs. PRO includes six games played with Springfield before his trade to Wilkes-Barre)

Top Four Scorers for the Bruins vs. the Penguins: 1. Craig Cunningham (4 GP, 3-2-5, -3) 2. Alexander Khokhlachev (4 GP, 2-2-4, +1) 3. Justin Florek (4 GP, 2-1-3, -1) 4. Zach Trotman (2 GP, 1-2-3, +3)

How the P-Bruins got here: They defeated the Springfield Falcons in five games, winning games 4 and 5 by a score of 6-3.

How the Penguins got here: They defeated the Binghamton Senators in four games.

What to Watch For: Special teams. Both squads have been vanilla on the power play / penalty kill so far. The first team to gain an advantage in this category gains advantage in the series.

Referee(s): Trevor Hanson / Dave Lewis

Linesmen: Bob Fyrer / Francis Trempe

Twitter: @WBSPenguins / @WBSGameDay / @AHLBruins

Facebook: /WilkesBarreScrantonPenguins // /providencebruins

Instagram: wbspenguins / ahlbruins

Beat Writers: @CVBombulie / @MarkDivver

Broadcasters: WBS: Mike O’Brien @MikeOBrienWBS / PRO: Nick Gagalis @NickGagalis

Fan Bloggers: @nafsnep 

Radio: For WBS: SportsHub 102.3 / For Providence: WNRI 1380 AM

Television: AHL Live

When is Game 2?: Tomorrow night at 7:05 in Wilkes-Barre.

Penguins / P-Bruins Series Preview

2012_WBSahl142012_PRO

They say that revenge is a dish best served cold.

For the Providence Bruins, what the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins did to them last May was nothing short of historical. The Bruins, at the time the Eastern Conference Champions and regular season champions, were the first team in AHL history to lose a 3-0 series lead and lose Game 7 at home. The Penguins stormed back from being down 3-0 to the Bruins and outscored them 14-2 in Games 4 through 7 including a 5-0 whitewash in the decisive Game 7.

The Bruins did all they could to close out the Penguins in six games, but backstopped by the heroic 46 save performance by then goaltender Brad Thiessen and done in by Trevor Smith’s wraparound overtime game winning goal at 3:36 in overtime, it was not to be.

The Bruins are out for revenge.

There are only eight players on that doomed Providence squad that will return to the scene where their season ended, the Eastern Conference Semifinals. The Bruins didn’t come close to their 105 point season they put up a year ago, Providence finished with a record of 40-25-2-9 good for 91 points and third place in the Atlantic Division. The Bruins needed the last weekend of the AHL season to make it into the Calder Cup Playoffs.

The Bruins dispatched the Northeast Division Champion Springfield Falcons in five games. The Bruins were down 2-1 in the series with the Falcons, and used a pair of 6-3 victories in Games 4 and 5 to complete the comeback and pull of the upset against Springfield.

The Penguins played the Bruins four times this season. They split a weekend series with the Bruins by identical 5-1 scores in January and lost in a 4-3 shootout in February and 2-1 regulation loss in March at home in Wilkes-Barre.

Providence is led by rookies Seth Griffith and Alexander Khokhlachev, who paced the Bruins with a combined 107 points. Griffith has 6 points in the Calder Cup Playoffs and is joined by fellow teammates Matt Fraser and Ryan Spooner in the Top 10 in postseason scoring.

The Penguins, on the other hand, are paced by veterans Chuck Kobasew and Andrew Ebbett in scoring in the postseason.

The Bruins used youth to their advantage to rally and dispatch a 100 point Springfield team in five games. The Penguins, on the other hand, used experience to oust a young Binghamton Senators team that beat the Penguins in all facets during the regular season and won the East Division Championship by four points over the Penguins.

It is your prototypical “old lion vs. new lion” matchup. Will the new lion continue to outpace the old lion or will the old lion use its experience to oust the new kids in town? Read on.

Schedule

Eastern Conference Semifinals – Series “J” (best-of-7)
6-W-B/Scranton Penguins vs. 7-Providence Bruins 
Game 1 – Fri., May 9 – Providence at W-B/Scranton, 7:05 
Game 2 – Sat., May 10 – Providence at W-B/Scranton, 7:05 
Game 3 – Wed., May 14 – W-B/Scranton at Providence, 7:05 
Game 4 – Fri., May 16 – W-B/Scranton at Providence, 7:05 
*Game 5 – Sat., May 17 – W-B/Scranton at Providence, 7:05 
*Game 6 – Mon., May 19 – Providence at W-B/Scranton, 7:05 
*Game 7 – Wed., May 21 – Providence at W-B/Scranton, 7:05

* – if necessary

Forwards

Outside of the aforementioned Griffith and Khokhlachev, the Bruins top point getters are LW Craig Cunningham, C Ryan Spooner and RW Nick Johnson. Cunningham (47 points) Spooner (46) and ex-Penguin Johnson (42) are a nice combination to supplement the pace set by rookies Griffith and Khokhlachev. The Penguins are led by their captain, Tom Kostopoulos, with Nick Drazenovic, Andrew Ebbett and Harry Zolnierczyk part of the supporting cast. The Ace in the Hole is Chuck Kobasew, who scored at over a point a game pace since clearing waivers and being assigned to Wilkes-Barre late in the season.

Playoffs has seen the same familiar names at the top of both clubs lists.

Advantage: Push. Two arguments can be made here, the youth of the Bruins and the experience of the Penguins, but in this type of comparison they both cancel each other out. Who takes hold of the advantage in the early stages of the series will define the outcome in all likelihood.

Defense

The Bruins are led by offensive defensemen David Warsofsky and ex-Penguin Joe Morrow. The names Scott Harrington, Simon Despres, Philip Samuelsson and Scott Harrington need no introduction to fans of the Penguins.

The Penguins led the AHL in defense, limiting opponents to 2.43 goals per game. The Bruins were balanced this season and were 11th in defense and 11th in offense.

When it comes to blueline depth, the Penguins are the ones that tip the advantage in this category their way. The collective team effort of being the stingiest team in the AHL throughout a 76 game grind coupled with dependable names such as Reid McNeill and Barry Goers and you have a defense corps that you can feel good about going into a seven game series.

Advantage: Penguins

Goaltending

The P-Bruins used both Nik Svedberg and Malcom Subban this season pretty regularly and that spilled over into playoffs with both appearing in multiple games in their first round matchup against Springfield. Both carry the pedigree that would tell you that someday, both will be manning an NHL crease in the future. The Penguins have Peter Mannino, whose NHL ship may have sailed, but still remains a solid AHL netminder winning Goaltender of the Month in March. Wilkes-Barre cannot turn to Jeff Drouin-Deslauriers, who was ruled out for the remainder of the season and won’t turn to Eric Hartzell, whose confidence was shaken after winning the Goaltender of the Month Award in January and 19 year old Matt Murray would be a last resort for Hynes & Company.

You don’t even have to look at past numbers or anything like that. The advantage in this category is Providence’s based on depth at backup alone.

Advantage: Providence

Intangibles

Starting with coaching, there is no way that John Hynes gets outcoached by Bruce Cassidy. Hynes’ group conducted the masterful comeback last year by at one point breaking down every single shift in one of the games. The Penguins have the advantage in coaching….Neither team has been spectacular on special teams this postseason, although the Penguins penalty killing unit did a masterful job in Games 3 and 4 of the Binghamton series in shutting down the dangerous Senators power play. Providence was slightly better on the power play in the regular season but average on the penalty kill. Depending on scenarios, whoever takes hold of this category could be ahead early as the series wears on. Push.

Social Media Coverage

For the Penguins…

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

For the P-Bruins…

Twitter: @AHLBruins
Radio: @nickgagalis
Beat: @MarkDivver
Facebook: /providencebruins
Instagram: ahlbruins

Prediction

Penguins in six. Experience wins out. This isn’t a five game series, this is seven. Coaching, defense and veteran savvy from the likes of Kobasew, Kostopoulos and Ebbett win this series for the Penguins and they advance to the Eastern Conference Finals.

But again, they don’t play these games in cyberspace or on paper. The Gameday Setup for Game 1 vs. Providence will hit the blog Friday at 3 p.m.

Tuesday Notebook

With a whole week between games, there’s not much to blog about. One post down is an in depth look at some numbers between Providence and Wilkes-Barre that’s been up since Sunday. I probably won’t blog again until the Series Preview between the Pens and P-Bruins. But I managed to scrape together the following….

— Wilkes-Barre got help today in the form of Jayson Megna. He wasn’t seeing any playoff ice time with Pittsburgh, so they sent him to Wilkes-Barre where he will undoubtedly be inserted into the lineup for the Penguins.

Megna is an interesting case this year. I’ve sort of carried the schtick that he’s not my favorite player in spite of the fact that he has seen more NHL games (36) than AHL (25) this year. So with only 61 games played this season, you can bet that he’s going to be chomping at the bit to get into a game and knock some bodies around and hopefully score some goals in the process.

— Glens Falls will have a team again next season, in the form of Calgary prospects. The AHL’s Board of Governors approved the move Monday. Good that the League maintains a 30 team marriage with the 30 clubs in the NHL.

I thought about this and it’s been debated on Twitter, Facebook and beyond, where do you put the new Glens Falls team? The Eastern Conference? The Western Conference? Do you go 16 East teams and 14 West teams? Realignment is usually announced in July. I think that the AHL goes back to the four division format and adapts the same concept in the NHL presently.

— The Norfolk Admirals are becoming the unscratchable itch. They steal home ice away from the St. John’s IceCaps with a 3-1 win Tuesday. Goaltender John Gibson was stellar again for the Admirals, stopping 42 shots. Seemed like to me, if I was following the game the right way on Twitter, that Norfolk used, “bend but not break” and ground out a huge road victory. Gibson was beat on a deflection on the tail end of a power play and the Admirals answered right back minutes later. Game 2 is Wednesday.

Anaheim is in a battle with Los Angeles, currently down 2-0 in that series. If the Ducks do get bounced, they could get Emerson Etem, Devante Smith-Pelly and Rickard Rackell back from recall. That’s quite a calvary.

But let’s not get ahead of ourselves in Wilkes-Barre, shall we?

The Pens / P-Bruins Series Preview will be up Thursday at noon.