Chirps from Center Ice

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

Eastern Conference Final Game 1: Syracuse Crunch

Eastern Conference Final — Game 1

AHL Game: M1

Who: Syracuse Crunch

Where: Onondaga County War Memorial at Oncenter

When: 7:00 p.m.

Series: Tied 0-0 (best of seven)

Media Kit

Season Series: Oct. 21: SYR 3 @ WBS 1 — Oct. 27: WBS 4 @ SYR 1 — Nov. 30: SYR 3 @ WBS 5 — Dec. 15: WBS 0 @ SYR 4 — Dec. 22: WBS 3 @ SYR 2 — Dec. 31: SYR 2 @ WBS 1 — Feb. 17: SYR 3 @ WBS 0 — Mar. 20: WBS o @ SYR 1

Top Four Scorers for the Penguins vs. the Crunch: 1. Trevor Smith (8 GP, 4-1-5) 2. Riley Holzapfel (8 GP, 2-3-5) 3. Brian Dumoulin (6 GP, 1-2-3) 4. Dylan Reese (6 GP, 0-3-3)

Top Four Scorers for the Crunch vs. the Penguins: 1. Brett Connolly (8 GP, 3-4-7) 2. Tyler Johnson (7 GP, 3-4-7) 3. Ondrej Palat (7 GP, 0-6-6) 4. Richard Panik (7 GP 3-1-4)

How the Crunch got here: Swept the Portland Pirates in Round One then swept the Springfield Falcons in Round Two.

How the Penguins got here: Swept the Binghamton Senators in Round One then won in seven games over the Providence Bruins in Round Two.

Referee(s): Geno Binda / Jamie Koharski

Linesmen: John Grandt / Jud Ritter

What to Watch For: How much momentum will the Penguins have coming into this series vs. how much “rink rust” the Crunch have after sitting idle for over a week. Will the Penguins be able to slow down a more complete Syracuse team? Will the Crunch get to Penguins goaltender Brad Thiessen early?

Twitter: @wbspenguins / @SyracuseCrunch

Facebook: /WilkesBarreScrantonPenguins // /syracusecrunch

Beat Writers: @CVBombulie / @PSCrunchHockey

Broadcasters: For WBS: Tom Grace @TGracePens and Mike O’Brien @MikeOBrienWBS / For SYR: Dan D’Uva @Dan_DUva

Fan Bloggers: @nafsnep / @Allovimo

Radio: For WBS: 102.3 The Mountain / For Syracuse: The Score 1260

Television: AHL Live

When is Game 2?: Tomorrow night in Syracuse at 7:00 in Syracuse

 

Penguins / Crunch Series Preview

2012_WBS cc13_primary 2012_SYR

Halfway there.

The Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins have just completed an improbable comeback, stunning the regular season champion Providence Bruins and completing a “reverse sweep” in winning four straight games after being down three games to none. The Penguins became the first team in AHL history to win Game 7 on the road after being down 0-3 in a series. A remarkable, if not inconceivable, accomplishment.

However, the battle is only half over.

Standing in the way of the Calder Cup Finals are the Syracuse Crunch, who, haven’t lost a game in the postseason. They swept the Portland Pirates in Round One and then did the same thing to the Northeast Division Springfield Falcons in four games in Round Two.

The Penguins were 3-5 against the Crunch during the regular season. The Crunch shut out the Penguins three times, with three different goaltenders. It seemed, at times, that the Crunch just had the Penguins number this season.

The Crunch are led by Tyler Johnson, Brett Connolly and Ondrej Palat. Johnson is your MVP of the AHL. The trio have combined for 33% of the Crunch regular season goal scoring and a sum +71 combined!

With the Tampa Bay Lightning’s affiliation swap from Norfolk to Syracuse this off season  a lot of what is leftover from the team that won the Calder Cup makes up this Syracuse Crunch team. That guy Trevor Smith plays for us now and G Dustin Tokarski was traded to Montreal this season, but G Cedrick Desjardins is equally as formidable.

The people of Syracuse expected this unit to do exactly what they have accomplished to date. East Division Championship? Check. MVP of the AHL? Check. Sweep first round series? Check. Sweep second round series? Check. Sweep third round series?

Not so fast my friend. Here is the breakdown:

Forwards

The Crunch had ten forwards with ten or more goals during the regular season. The Penguins had only seven. The aforementioned Johnson, Connolly and Palat collectively were 81-99-180. The Penguins top three scorers were Chad Kolarik (31-37-68) Trevor Smith (23-31-54) and Riley Holzapfel (21-30-51) who are collectively 75-98-173. It actually isn’t that much of a difference on paper, but given the fact that the Crunch have three more forwards than the Penguins that have scored 10 or more goals, the advantage has to go the Crunch’s way in this department.

Advantage: Syracuse

Defense

The Crunch were tenth in the AHL in goals allowed in the regular season at 2.64 GA/game. The Pens led the league in goals allowed during the regular season at 2.34 GA/game. The Crunch relied more heavily on offense to win them games. That league leading 3.25 goals per game stat tells that story.

In the postseason, the Pens rank 4th in defense only allowing 2.20 / goals a game. The Crunch have only allowed 2.14 goals against in the postseason. The Penguins, after falling in an 0-3 series hole, only allowed the Providence Bruins to score two goals in four games.

Individually, take Mark Barberio’s 8-34-42 out of the equation and you have an even match up on defense. Looking at the numbers, it appears that all of the Crunch blueliners chip in offensively and put up decent enough numbers.

Advantage: Penguins, slightly, based on regular season. Penguins running away in the postseason.

Goaltending

The Crunch will rely heavily on Cedrick Desjardins. His backup is Pat Nagle, who spent all of the regular season in the ECHL. The Penguins have a 1A-1B option in goal. Although, after this historic series with Providence, Brad Thiessen is taking this Penguins team all the way.

Advantage: Penguins

Intangibles

The Crunch were slightly ahead of the curve on power play this year, ranking in at 12th, succeeding 17.4% of the time. The Penguins power play floundered in bottom third of the league for the most part all season before settling in at 22nd overall. However, in the postseason, the Penguins power play brought them back from the brink of elimination and sit at the top of the AHL in postseason play at 25.5%. That all said, I don’t think that a game in this series is going to be too heavily decided on special teams but if if does it’s still a toss up in my opinion.

The Penguins had far and away the best penalty kill all season. The Crunch showed themselves well, settling for 9th, but the Penguins get the edge in the penalty kill department.

The Crunch were a ridiculous 35-3-4-2 when scoring the first goal, best in the league. A fast start usually lead to a great finish for Syracuse this season. The Penguins were 7-2 in overtime this season while the Crunch were a very unimpressive 3-6. However, the Crunch are 2-0 in overtime in playoffs currently and the Penguins 2-1.

Rob Zettler pilots this Crunch team. He is the big unknown because Penguins Head Coach John Hynes hasn’t matched wits with him this season. Jon Cooper was “called up” to replace Guy Boucher after he was fired as head coach of the parent Lightning. I am going with Hynes here on the fact that he has guided this Penguins team to the second round of the playoffs for the third consecutive year and now past the second round in thrilling turnaround fashion. His adjustments as the series with Providence wore on turned the tide in favor of the Penguins. He and his staff broke down every.single.shift from Game 6.

Social Media Coverage:

For the Penguins:

Twitter: @WBSPenguins
Radio: @MikeOBrienWBS // @TGracePens
Beat: @CVBombulie
Facebook: /WilkesBarreScrantonPenguins
Fan Blogger: @nafsnep

For the Crunch:

Twitter: @SyracuseCrunch
Radio: @Dan_DUva
Facebook: /syracusecrunch
Beat: @syrhockey
Fan Blog: @Allovimo of Chairman How’s Glorious Army

A lot of teams were obliterated by last years Norfolk Admirals team, a squad that tore through the final four and a half months of the AHL season last year. That core moved to Syracuse. This current team sustained the success that was left over the year before. But the luster seemed to wear off as the season wore on. Yes, the Crunch won the East Division, the toughest division in the AHL. But the Binghamton Senators stayed in lockstep with the Crunch all season long and finished one point behind Syracuse then were swept away by the Penguins in the first round. The Crunch needed overtime twice to beat the Portland Pirates. Credit the resolve of the Crunch to never give up the fight, but what were they doing there in the first place? Then they dismantled a very solid Springfield team by sweeping them. However, I don’t think the Penguins are scared of the Crunch at all. That said, anyone wearing blue and white for the Crunch have the same mutual feelings for the Penguins. I see a dogfight brewing…

Prediction: Penguins in six. Goaltending, coaching and overall team defense is going to be the difference in this series. Yes, the Crunch may jump out to a lead in a game or a lead in the series. No, that won’t faze the Penguins.

Gameday for Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals will be up here on the blog Saturday afternoon at 3 p.m.

History in Words

What was accomplished yesterday in Providence by the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins drew the attention of the national media, as well as put into words by people familiar to you and me.

— Leading off, the historic accomplishment was picked up by NHL.com
— Always nice to see Puck Daddy writing nice things about you.
— The Salt City has us on their radar now.
— Love when the AHL braintrust dedicates ten paragraphs to my favorite team.
— Then when they come back the next day and use, “Penguins” and “elite” in the same sentence.
— Wilkes-Barre’s own log on its legacy left.
— The great Jonathan Bombulie with his perspective.
— Across town, Tom Venesky’s story from today’s Times Leader.
In case you missed it.

No rest for the weary. The series preview of the Eastern Conference Finals will be out Friday at noon. Check that out then.

Let’s Go Pens!!!

Seventh Heaven – Pens WIN 5-0 (win series 4-3)

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It is rare that I ever reference my real job here on the blog or anywhere in social media.

I’ll remember the following exchange with one of my supervisors for the rest of my life.

After losing last Wednesday, 2-1 in overtime and facing a potential sweep by the regular season champion Providence Bruins on Friday, he pokes his head into my office. Here’s how it went:

Him: “So how did the (Wilkes-Barre / Scranton)** Penguins do last night?”
Me: “Lost 2-1 in overtime, are down 0-3 in the series”
Him: “Don’t worry, it’ll just make coming back from down three games all the more sweeter.”

At first I laughed off his prophecy.

There’s a reason he has a corner office and I, a simple row one.

The Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins have made history tonight.

Never before in AHL history, with a team down 0-3 in a series, has a club rattled off four straight wins with the fourth and final one coming on the road.

It happened tonight.

The Penguins win this game 5-0 and are off to play the Syracuse Crunch for the right to represent the Eastern Conference in the Calder Cup Final.

While a tremendously historic feat, one that may not be accomplished for another 70+ years of AHL history, I am even keel as I sit and write this postgame blog recap.

Calder Cup or get out of my face. If the Penguins get dismissed by the Crunch next round or in the Cup Finals, the fact that the Penguins did what they did tonight will be nothing but a footnote to whoever it is that wins the Calder Cup this year.

Tom Grace had a quote on Brad Thiessen I shared on Twitter. It went like this:

 

Thiessen’s numbers? .986 save percentage, 0.70 goals against. Two shutouts, 177 saves on 181 shots.

After falling behind three games to none, Wilkes-Barre outscored the Bruins 14-2 the rest of the way.

Something magical is brewing, pardon the obvious pun.

The Penguins did their damage in the second period of this game.

With the score tied 0-0 at the end of twenty minutes and the Penguins being outshot 11-5 by the Bruins, the Penguins opened the second period and quickly found themselves on a power play.

Chad Kolarik takes three shots at goaltender Niklas Svedberg. His initial offering is blocked, he side steps a defender, shoots, collects his own rebound and puts it past a fallen Svedberg for a 1-0 lead.

Later, the Penguins would score on three consecutive shots. The first being a Joey Mormina point shot through a crowd that Warren Peters gets a stick on for a 2-0 lead. Then Adam Payerl snaps a drop pass home for a 3-0 Penguins lead. Prior to this, a Chris Collins centering bid by Brian Gibbons almost made it 3-0 but the Penguins were on the come regardless. Then Dominik Uher, in for Dylan Reese and making his series debut, chips a puck out of the defensive zone and up ice. He dumps it deep, centers to Payerl who drops to Zach Sill who makes it 4-0 Penguins.

At this point the rout was on.

Providence would come out in the third with Michael Hutchinson in goal but it would not matter. The Pens would drop back into full on prevent defense. To the Bruins credit, they threw everything they had at Thiessen, but could not get one past him. Trevor Smith scores late on a drop pass by Chad Kolarik to make it 5-0 to ice it.

Mentioned on radio that Head Coach John Hynes broke down every single shift (emphasis added) from Game 6. Adjustments were made and there is the result.

Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals open Saturday in Syracuse.

Content wise, the preview for that series will be up Friday at noon.

The schedule for the Eastern Conference Finals looks like this:

Eastern Conference Finals – Series “M” (best-of-7)
3-Syracuse Crunch vs. 5-Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins

Game 1 – Sat., May 25 – W-B/Scranton at Syracuse, 7:00
Game 2 – Sun., May 26 – W-B/Scranton at Syracuse, 7:00
Game 3 – Wed., May 29 – Syracuse at W-B/Scranton, 7:05
Game 4 – Fri., May 31 – Syracuse at W-B/Scranton, 7:05
*Game 5 – Sat., June 1 – W-B/Scranton at Syracuse, 7:00
*Game 6 – Mon., June 3 – Syracuse at W-B/Scranton, 7:05
*Game 7 – Wed., June 5 – W-B/Scranton at Syracuse, 7:00

*if necessary… All times Eastern

I wanted Norfolk last year. That did not happen obviously with the defeat in Game 7 last year to the St. John’s IceCaps, who were swept by the Admirals and went on to win the Calder Cup. That Admirals team reincarnated into this years Syracuse Crunch team who won the East Division and have not lost in the postseason yet this year. I finally have what I wished for last year standing right in front of me, eye to eye.

We have a few days to break it all down. Celebrate the history tonight. We have more games to win.

Let’s Go Pens!!!

** – he used that word I detest.

Eastern Conference Semifinal Game 7: Providence Bruins (series tied 3-3)

2012_PRO

Eastern Conference Semifinal — Game 7

AHL Game: I7

Who: Providence Bruins

Where: Dunkin’ Donuts Center

When: 7:05 p.m.

Series: Series tied 3-3

Media Kit

Last Game: Monday in Providence, the Penguins won in overtime 2-1. Brad Thiessen stopped 46 of 47 shots and Trevor Smith scored the overtime game winning goal to send this to where we are today.

Referee(s): Graham Skilliter / Mark Lemelin

Linesmen: Bob Bernard / Alex Stagnone

What to Watch For: Anything, as anything can happen in Game 7.

Twitter: @WBSPenguins / @AHLBruins

Facebook: /WilkesBarreScrantonPenguins // /providencebruins

Beat Writers: @CVBombulie / @MarkDivver

Broadcasters: WBS: Tom Grace @TGracePens and Mike O’Brien @MikeOBrienWBS / PRO: Nick Gagalis @NickGagalis

Fan Bloggers: @nafsnep 

Radio: For WBS: 102.3 The Mountain / For Providence: WNRI 1380 AM

Television: AHL Live

Tuesday Buffer

On the eve of game seven tomorrow night in Providence, here are a couple of stories for you to check out:

First, check out Jonathan Bombulie’s post game blog recap from last night. He used the adjective “unbelievable” regarding the performance of Brad Thiessen and meant it.

Mark Divver from The Providence Journal sets up tomorrow’s series finale between these two clubs.

edit: Literally as soon as I hit “publish” on this post, Jonathan did the same for his look ahead at tomorrow. Here it is.

Peeking ahead, here is the potential schedule for the Eastern Conference Final. And that’s all I have to say about that.

The Gameday setup for tomorrow’s Game 7 will be up here on the blog Wednesday afternoon at 3 p.m.

Let’s Go Pens!

Stretching it to Seven – Pens WIN 2-1 (OT) (series tied 3-3)

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The odds were against us.

Providence is the regular season champion.

They won 50 games this season. Fifty. They only play 76.

They lost 9 games at home this season. Nine. Some teams lose nine in a month, they lost nine all season.

The shot disparity tonight was 47-18 Providence tonight. Since the five minute mark of the second period, 37-8 Providence.

I said in the Gameday setup that the Penguins needed to treat this game like Providence was on the brink of elimination. Sometimes the blind squirrel that I am finds a nut every now and again. The Penguins, led by none other than Brad Thiessen, shut the door on the P-Bruins advancing tonight and have done something only four teams in AHL history have ever accomplished and win tonight 2-1 in overtime.

Game 7 is Wednesday.

Brad Thiessen vs. Nik Svedberg. Dylan Reese was back for the Pens on the blueline as the seventh defenseman. Wilkes-Barre dressed the dreaded 11 forwards, 7 defenseman lineup tonight. Scratches were Cody Wild, Dom Uher, Steve MacIntre and Bobby Farnham who was injured in Game 6 with an upper body injury and was not on the trip.

First Period: Great opening jump by the Pens. Then Providence made their push. Jamie Tardif had a wraparound attempt that was labeled for the back of the net but somehow Thiessen got his pad over and denied the shot. Pens would continue to turnover the puck and have difficulty exiting the zone. Somehow, the period broke with no goal scored. Pens were sharp in the opening half, Providence sharper and Thiessen sharpest in the period.

Second Period: Pens would have to kill off a carryover penalty from the first. They do, but on a line change forget about the P-Bruins on the ice with the puck. It would set up to be a three on none on Thiessen and Craig Cunningham would finish it off to put the P-Bruins on the board first. Pens would get a power play, not score. It looked really bad. Pens find themselves all of a sudden in a 5-on-3 situation and Brian Dumoulin would pick a corner and tie the game.

Providence would tighten up and really start to roll the Pens. Wilkes-Barre would be badly, badly, outplayed. Thiessen made miraculous save after miraculous save.

Third Period: Providence throws everything but the kitchen sink at Thiessen. But he literally kept the season alive for the Penguins. He had a huge save on another wraparound bid. Shots this period were 20-2 Providence.

Overtime: Shots were 3-0 Pens in overtime. Then Trevor Smith did this:

Three Stars: 3) Craig Cunningham (goal, +1) 2) Trevor Smith (game winning overtime goal, assist, +1) and 1) Brad Thiessen (46 saves on 47 shots)

Anything goes in Game 7, Wednesday.

Will the Penguins close out the Bruins? The Bruins threw everything they had at the Pens tonight and could not knock Brad Thiessen or Wilkes-Barre down. It all comes down to Wednesday. Will the Pens shake the second round and out curse they have going?

No matter what happens, we all ride together.

Buy the ticket, take the ride.

Cardiac Penguins FOREVER.

Let’s Go Pens!!! All In!!!