Chirps from Center Ice

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

Weekend Preview – It’s Syracuse

The Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins have a home and home against an old rival, the Syracuse Crunch. The Crunch and Penguins play four times this season and half of that season set will be burned off this weekend.

The Penguins were 33 seconds away from nailing down 4 of 6 possible points in the week but saw the visiting Belleville Senators tie it in regulation then win it in overtime. Wilkes-Barre settles for three points in what’s shaping up to be, if early returns are to be believed, an extremely competitive Atlantic Division. Every point is going to matter.

Music to set the mood…

I can’t tell if this is supposed to be funny, or just is what it is, a song about Syracuse.

A Quote…

The best part about Syracuse is leaving.
— Tom Grace

I am actually quite surprised Syracuse hasn’t had any snow yet because it’s Fall and it usually snows up there for six months out of the year. I have only been there a few times and while I think personally it’s a decent city, the fact it gets blasted a lot with lake effect snows isn’t for me.

The Setup

A home and home starting Friday in Syracuse.

Records

Syracuse is 5-2-0-2 and played the Penguins last opponent, Belleville, up in Canada on Wednesday and lost 3-2 in a shootout. They are third in the North Division.

Last weekend the Crunch split a home and home with the Rochester Americans 7-4 (win) and 5-4 loss in a shootout.

The Penguins are 5-4-1-0 and have 11 points and are currently fifth in the Atlantic Division.

Pens got drilled by Providence last Wednesday to a tune of 3-1, had a literal last second shot from Marc Johnstone go in Friday against Hershey and lost to the aforementioned Belleville Senators in the fashion I described above.

Who’s Up? Who’s Down? Who’s Out?

Recalled are Radim Zohorna and Magnus Hellberg. Injured are goaltender Garret Sparks and recalled from Wheeling is Taylor Gauthier. Joel Blomqvist went up because Tristan Jarry was injured Tuesday. In that same transaction, Pittsburgh sent Vinnie Hinostroza back down. Colin White got the hell beat out of him blocking a number of shots but finished the game Saturday. After a week, perhaps he is good to go but adrenaline and swelling may spin a different tale.

I saw Sparks at Penguins practice this week, if the photos the team posted on Coal Street are accurate, so maybe he is good to go. Coal Street has yet to make another recall from Wheeling, likely David Tendeck, if they need one.

Andreas Johnsson hasn’t appeared in a game yet (family issue) and his contract was terminated Thursday and he signed overseas. Mark Pysyk, signed to a PTO by Coal Street last week, hasn’t played yet for the Penguins.

I think we can consider Zohorna permanently recalled. I think they realized it was a mistake starting him in the AHL and they quickly corrected that error.

What can we learn about the Penguins this week?

If they sweep or take 3 of 4 points away from the Crunch, then they can hit at an above average clip and, as long as they stay consistent throughout (tough to do at this level) they could play as a 1 to 3 seed in the Atlantic. If they, which I am predicting, split the series with the Crunch this weekend, they will toil at the 4 to 6 seed the whole season and they are a rash of injuries / schedule of hot teams better than them from being a playoff contending team.

I don’t think that Coal Street gets caught with its proverbial pants down, with what you have seen with the signings to PTOs, veteran statuses be damned, so I think it’s in between both, but you never know.

I don’t think they are championship caliber, but I also don’t think they finish dead last in the division, save for an epic collapse or miracle.

You probably can say the same about the Crunch, all things considered.

Who’s in goal?

Well if Blomqvist goes up, it will be Taylor Gauthier probably both nights, depending on Sparks’ status. I can’t see J.D. Forrest having fourth string goalie David Tendeck, who’d likely be the recall from Wheeling if Sparks can’t go, start Saturday against the Crunch. For Syracuse, Hugo Alnefelt Friday and Pyotr Kochetkov on Saturday.

Remember Gauthier is made of glass and historically can’t stay healthy, so it’s only a matter of time before he gets hurt.

Who’s running the show?

Jordan Samuels-Thomas and Austin O’Rourke with Dylan Blujus and Spencer Knox on the lines Friday and Mathieu Menniti and Jim Curtin with J.P. Waleski and Chandler Yakimowicz Saturday.

Looking ahead…

Home against Hershey on Wednesday, then they take to the road for five straight beginning with a pair next Friday and Saturday in Providence.

Give us a bold prediction…

Wilkes-Barre sees its first foot of snow before Syracuse.

Victory Snatched — Pens LOSE 3-2 (OT)

vs.

3                                   2

Taylor Gauthier and Colin White deserved better.

With about 40 seconds left to play, Colin White blocks his second shot of the night, is hobbled again and goes back down the tunnel. Seconds later the Belleville Senators score to even the game at two.

In overtime Belleville scores to steal the extra point. Penguins lose 3-2 in overtime.

Taylor Gauthier was shelled in the third period by the B-Sens when it was 1-1. He singlehandedly kept the Penguins in the contest and was stellar.

3 points out of a possible 6 this week. They were tracking to 4. That lost point is going to come in handy come April I fear.

Here’s how they lined up:

Lineup Notes: Forward lines unchanged from Friday. Jack St. Ivany for Libor Hajek on defense.

First Period: Austin Rueschhoff scores a power play goal on a deflection of a Xavier Ouellet shot through traffic to put the Pens on the board.

Belleville was held to not many shots on goal then started to turn it on. Foreshadowing.

Second Period: Colin White blocks a shot and goes to the locker room. He returns, then goes back to the locker room. He got beat up pretty bad in the game.

Meanwhile, Angus Crookshank scores a goal off of a face-off to make it 1-1.

Problem here is that the B-Sens weren’t getting a ton of shots, but were living in the offensive zone for what seemed like an eternity. Eventually, you wear down your opponent enough and get a greasy goal.

Third Period: As I mentioned in the open, Taylor Gauthier was under bombardment.

His finest save of the period, right there.

Also, Belleville scored two other times in the game but they were waved off. First was on a high stick, second was on a tripping call.

Colin White scored a power play goal which was fitting, considering the absolute beating he took Friday.

Time dwindling, Belleville head coach David Bell pulls goaltender Leevi Merilainen for an extra attacker, uses his time out, and finds the equalizer.

Always has to be an ex-Hershey Bear.

It was then onto….

Overtime: Jack Rathbone gets caught on a two on one, tries to direct Marc Johnstone to cover Angus Crookshank, Crookshank gets the puck, shoots, shot blocked back to Jacob Larsson who scores.

Three Stars: 3) Colin White (goal) 2) Garrett Pilon (goal, assist) 1) Jacob Larsson (game winning goal)

The Good: They scored two power play goals, which you never say no to.

The Bad: I don’t want to start getting into the practice of having to learn how to close out games. They straight lost Wednesday against Providence. They scored with .5 seconds left Friday against Hershey and coughed up a lead with :34 to play Saturday against Belleville. Gotta finish!

Turning Point: Inevitably the Pilon goal which forced overtime gets it here because Belleville winning seemed like a formality after that and it was.

Around the Division: Cleveland exacts some revenge on Providence, beating them 5-4…Springfield wins in OT against Lehigh Valley 3-2….Charlotte wins 5-4 in overtime against San Diego…Hershey beats Bridgeport 3-1 and Hartford beats Utica 3-2.

Standings: Hershey 16 / Hartford 13 / Charlotte and Springfield 12 / Penguins 11 / Lehigh Valley 10 / Providence 9 / Bridgeport 5

Wheeling Update: Nailers win 3-2 in their home opener over the Reading Royals. Justin Addamo two assists.

Video Highlights: 

Home and home with Syracuse next week. Look for the Weekend Preview sometime Thursday or Friday.

Let’s Go Pens!

Written in Stone — Pens WIN 2-1

vs.

1                                     2

I think I may have a new favorite player.

Not since Casey DeSmith was an AHL goaltender have I had a favorite player.

Wade Brookbank. Ben Lovejoy. Casey DeSmith.

That’s it. That’s my list.

They may have to make room for Marc Johnstone.

Saw it when they were on the road in Charlotte opening weekend. Guy busts his ass every shift and plays like he is 10 foot tall. Smart with the puck. Doesn’t make any errors. Goes and goes and goes.

Who else but Marc Johnstone, the hero, with .5 seconds left.

Wilkes-Barre wins 2-1 over Hershey Friday night.

Close game that they nearly lost a dozen times and couldn’t win with multiple power plays late. They needed a hero and it came in the form of Marc Johnstone.

Here’s how they lined up:

Lineup was Matt Filipe for Corey Andonovski who took warmups and Taylor Fedun for Jack St. Ivany.

Bears score in the first on a power play goal from Mike Vecchione on a nice setup from Mike Sgarbossa and it was 1-0 Hershey.

I didn’t like the way referees Mike Dietrich and Jake Kamrass ran things early, and they stick around and will be the referees Saturday against Belleville.

Penguins get a goal the gritty way when Alex Nylander camps out in front of the net and Jansen Harkins sets him up for the tying goal in the final minute of the second period.

In the third, I became incredibly frustrated with the Penguins power play.

J.D. Forrest throwing things at the wall. Jonathan Gruden on the power play?

I figured their power play out, though.

Johnstone won it late, as documented above. Thought it was deflected in with a high stick, but it was not.

Three Stars: 3) Joel Blomqvist (19 saves) 2) Alex Nylander (goal) 1) Marc Johnstone (game winning goal)

A note about Blomqvist – I don’t want to say he stole the game cause he kept the team in it and his guys won it for him. I also don’t want to rush him, but I think he is quickly becoming the best goaltender in the organization, all things considered. Keep it up.

Also, Hershey has three regulation losses and the Penguins gave them two of those losses.

The Good: Marc Johnstone. What else can I say? What a player. Give me a team full of Marc Johnstone’s.

The Bad: Power play coulda used a goal.

Turning Point: Johnstone’s goal with .5 left gets it here. Obviously.

Around the Division: Cleveland has been in the AHL as the Monsters since  2007. This is the first ever meeting with the Providence Bruins, a team that plays in the same conference as them. Providence wins 7-3….Lehigh Valley beats Hartford 5-4 in overtime….Springfield beats Belleville 6-3.

Standings: Hershey 14 / Hartford 11 / Penguins / Charlotte / Springfield 10 / Lehigh Valley and Providence 9 / Bridgeport 5

Wheeling Update: Nailers were off.

Video Highlights:

Back at it Saturday against Belleville at 6:05.

Let’s Go Pens!

Lack of Providence — Pens LOSE 3-1

vs.

3                                    1

Dictionary defines “providence” as timely preparation for future eventualities.

Well tonight, you can state that the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins lacked providence because the team that bears the name came in and beat them 3-1.

First home loss for the Penguins, in what would best be defined as a feckless offensive effort.

Work night. School night. Let’s get into it.

Lineup Notes: Sam Poulin, Valtteri Puustinen (both injured) out for Austin Rueschhoff and Colin Smith. Smith returns from injury. Garret Sparks was the one injured, which explains why he didn’t come out for the third Sunday in Hershey and why Taylor Gauthier was recalled. On defense, Taylor Fedun was out. Libor Hajek stayed in. I think they still have veteran issues.

First Period: Shots were 9-3 Penguins in the period. Wilkes-Barre jumps out to a 1-0 lead on a power play goal from Rem Pitlick:

But Providence hits back 90 seconds later when John Farinacci, who sounds like a Pittston Area gym teacher, tips in a shot from the point that makes it 1-1.

Second Period: Providence ratcheted up the offense and gets a goal from Vincent Areseneau which I initially thought was an own goal from Dmitri Samorukov, that made it 2-1 Bruins.

Third Period: I waited for a comeback that never came. The Penguins took their second too many men on the ice call, the third time they had such an issue in the evening but that one time they didn’t have the puck. How does that happen? Twice one game?

Turning point of the game was when the Penguins had a power play with 4:28 left to play and failed to score.

Somewhere in there Brandon Buss made a ridiculous save to keep it a one goal game for the visitors. I don’t want to say that he won the game for the Bruins, but he was a big big part.

Providence hit an empty net, which essentially sealed their fate. Jesper Boqvist scored it.

Three Stars: 3) Brandon Buss (26 saves) 2) Rem Pitlick (goal) 1) Vincent Arseneau (goal)

The Good: Optimist says they held the Bruins close, offense wasn’t there when it needed to be against a really good AHL goaltender. Also, the penalty kill went 6/6.

The Bad: They essentially have a fourth line that consists of Jagger Joshua and Marc Johnstone, who bust their ass on every shift every game, and Jonathan Gruden who does the same, but plays third and sometimes second line minutes. That’s all. Jansen Harkins has shown flashes of brilliance but the defense is out to lunch half the time. Samorukov ain’t it. Jack Rathbone I don’t think is either. Ty Smith is in the wrong system, jury is out on Hajek and Ouellet does what he can with who he’s paired with. St. Ivany has flashes. He’s young, cut him some slack.

Every team has clunkers every once in a while. This Penguins team is not championship caliber, so you are going to have more.

Maybe they get the proper coaching and accountability. Hershey is here Friday. It better come quick.

Around the Division: Hershey beats Lehigh Valley 4-3 in overtime and are 7-2. I didn’t think the Bears could somehow be better than last year, yet here we are. They are in Friday.

Standings: Hershey 14 / Hartford 10 / Charlotte / Penguins / Thunderbirds 8 / Lehigh Valley and Providence 7 / Bridgeport 5

Wheeling Update: Nailers were off.

Video Highlights: You may have to go hunt and peck for them yourselves if you are so inclined. I am off Thursday and not going to be near a computer for most of the day.

Back at it Friday against Hershey.

Let’s Go Pens!

 

Dennis Bonvie, Hall of Fame

On Tuesday, the American Hockey League announced its latest Hall of Fame Class. The Hall of Fame Class for 2024 will include Dennis Bonvie, among others:

Considering the AHL’s Hall of Fame consists mainly of Rochester Americans and Hershey Bears, it’s nice to see a Penguin go in. If you consider John Slaney before him, that’s the second WBS Penguin player to be inducted into the AHL’s Hall.

Slaney and Bonvie are already in the WBS Penguins Hall of Fame. Bonvie went in with the inaugural class. Slaney went in in 2014.

More later after the Pens and Bruins game.

Weekend Preview – Jekyll and Hyde

So full disclosure here I was looking for, “Jekyll and Hyde” themed YouTube videos and came across one, but it included shout rock and someone loading bullets into a gun. I’m a) not into shout rock and b) staying away from videos showing someone loading a gun.

Anyway, the idea here is that the Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins are like Jekyll and Hyde. Great at home, lost on the road.

The good news is that they have three straight at home starting this Wednesday at home against the Providence Bruins. Hershey stops by Friday and Belleville makes their only stop of the season on Saturday.

A Quote…

Just as we have two eyes and two feet, duality is a part of life.
— Carlos Santana

The Wilkes-Barre / Scranton Penguins are 3-0 at home, 1-3 on the road. That’s not good. But does that mean that these three games at home will be easy cakewalks? No, but the odds are better in their favor.

They won the first game of the season on the road in Charlotte. They followed that up with a clunker in the rematch. They then went to Hartford and got pasted by the then red hot Wolf Pack. They travelled to Hershey this past Sunday and out of the gate were down 2-0 before their goaltender registered a save and the game got away from them from there, which often happens to teams who travel to the Giant Center.

So how do you fix it?

I don’t think you do, really. I think it’s a matter of coincidence.

Charlotte in back to back games don’t lose two straight at home. It doesn’t happen that often. Hartford was a team on a hot streak to start and I don’t care where you are in the AHL, giving up your first two goals before the goalie makes a save is a recipe for disaster.

I guess what I am tryting to say is this is less of a concern for me at the beginning of November then say, the beginning of December. If the Pens are still junk away from the Mohegan Sun Arena at Casey Plaza in mid-December, then they are not just Jekyll and Hyde but extremely one dimensional and we have bigger problems.

The Setup

Providence comes a calling on Wednesday after getting swept by a resurgent Springfield team, losing 5-2 in Springfield and 3-2 in overtime at home in Rhode Island.

The Bruins are 1-3-1-2 and off to a bad start, for a team we thought would be at the top of the Atlantic Division all season.

Hershey is a good team, as we all know, and sit at 6-2 in the division good for 12 points. They crushed in-state rivals Lehigh Valley 4-0 and Wilkes-Barre 6-1 this past weekend. The Bears will rematch with the Phantoms on Wednesday before stopping by Wilkes-Barre on Friday.

Belleville will report into Wilkes-Barre looking to get out of the middle of the pack in the North Division. They beat the Toronto Marlies 2-1 in overtime last Friday and lost in a shootout to the Marlies on Saturday 4-3. They will be in Springfield Friday.

Records

Gave you Providence and Hershey’s above. Belleville is 3-2-0-1 and the Penguins are 4-3.

Who’s Up? Who’s Down? Who’s Out?

Colin White was day to day with an upper body injury last weekend. Magnus Hellberg, Vinnie Hinostroza and Radim Zohorna are up in Pittsburgh. Taylor Gauthier is up from Wheeling, presumably because either Garret Sparks or Joel Blomqvist are hurt. Andreas Johnsson has yet to play (dealing with a family issue) and Austin Rueschhoff, Justin Lee, and Matt Filipe are on the sides of milk cartons, having not played in I can’t remember when.

What can we learn about the Penguins this week?

Do they collect all six points? Do the road woes bleed over into home ice? Will the power play keep clicking?

They should beat Providence, hypothetically, because it seems like the Bruins can’t get out of their own way. They could beat Hershey because they have already once last week and Belleville remains an outlier because you don’t see many North Division teams that often because you have to play the likes of Hershey and Lehigh Valley 25,000 times in a given season.

Will they? If they play careless against the Bruins, Providence will kick their heads in. You almost need to play a perfect game against Hershey in order to even have a prayer of winning and who knows about Belleville in back to back nights in what will likely be Garret Sparks again in goal, or possibly Gauthier.

Leading to…

Who’s in goal? 

Joel Blomqvist was in the running for some October rookie goaltender awards I thought I heard in the third period on Sunday on the radio with Nick Hart then, but then J.D. Forrest put him in anyway in the hopes that the rookie netminder would somehow turn things around for the Pens. That didn’t happen and Blomqvist gave up two goals. It could have also been because Sparks was injured, we just don’t know yet.

You will probably see him out first Wednesday and Friday and either Taylor Gauthier or Garret Sparks Saturday against Belleville unless they do a switcheroo somewhere and Gauthier / Sparks goes Wednesday (unlikely) or Friday (I wouldn’t do it)

Brandon Bussi for the Bruins, probably Clay Stevenson (just a hunch) for the Bears on Friday and backup Leevi Merilainen for the B-Sens on Saturday, denying us a chance to see leviathan Mads Sogaard, all 6’7 of him.

Who’s Running the Show?

Bobby Jo Love and Peter Schlittenhardt are here Wednesday with Patrick Dapuzzo and Ryan Knapp on the lines.

Don’t know yet about Friday or Saturday’s crews. Sometimes the AHL updates them, other times (like this week) they don’t.

Looking ahead…

Friday up in Syracuse to visit the Crunch, then back home Saturday to pay off a home and home with the old rival from Central New York.

Give us a bold prediction…

Austin Rueschhoff returns, plays all three games and gets a hat trick in one of them. Pens win all three games by a combined 15-4.

Bear Attack — Pens LOSE 6-1

@

1                                 6

I don’t think they are a very good team on the road.

A 6-1 pasting Sunday afternoon by the Hershey Bears. They give up the first two shots faced, and it was all really downhill from there.

Here’s how they lined up:

Lineup Notes: It was the WBS debut for Libor Hajek as the Penguins went 11 forwards, 7 defensemen. Avery Hayes drew the short stick.

First Period: Disaster start for the Penguins and Garrett Sparks in general.

Hershey scores twice before Sparks records a save. Ethen Frank scores twice, starting at 1:11 into the contest, and this was the first goal allowed in the first period by the Penguins.

Then the Bears strike on a power play and Frank notches his second.

Couple things here. First, Sparks needs to be better here, especially on the second goal by Frank. There’s time and space and a goaltender as experienced as Sparks has to make that save.

Jack Rathbone continues to really unimpress me, being on the ice for the first of Frank’s goals here. Be better.

Speaking of, just what in the sam hill is this disaster?

A 2-on-0? Really?

The Penguins as a whole, were out to lunch that period and the defending champion Bears punished them rightly for being so unprepared.

Second Period: Penguins have a would be Corey Andonovski power play goal swiped off the board when referees Alex Lepkowski and Patrick Hanrahan adjudge that the puck was deflected in on a high stick. It is not a reviewable call (it should be) but on the few replays I did see, it looked borderline.

Later, Sam Poulin scores a legal power play goal the traditional way with a hack and whack slam dunk.

But Hershey would respond in kind when Joe Snively scores his second goal of the game on a power play goal left unmarked on the far post.

Third Period: Joel Blomqvist came in for relief of Garrett Sparks and it mattered little.

A loose puck put in by Jimmy Huntingdon made it 5-1.

Later, Bogdan Trineyev scores his first AHL goal on the trot.

Seriously, the guy never loses a step and just charges at the net where Nic Aube-Kubel sets him up for a goal that makes it 6-1.

Three Stars: 3) Ethen Frank (two goals) 2) Jimmy Huntingdon (goals, two assists) 1) Joe Snively (two goals, assist)

The Good: Somehow Valtteri Puustinen, Xavier Ouellet and Taylor Fedun ended the day even.

The Bad: Jack Rathbone was a -3. Gotta tighten up there buddy.

Turning Point: The second shot of the game for Hershey gave the Bears all the momentum necessary for what turned into a blowout win for the 12 time league champions.

Around the Division: Springfield beats Providence in overtime 3-2 and sweeps the weekend….Hartford salvages theirs with a 4-1 win in Allentown.

Standings: Hershey extends their lead over the Penguins by four points at the top of the division. Bears have 12 points, Hartford 10, Charlotte, Penguins and Springfield have 8, Lehigh Valley 6, Providence and Bridgeport 5.

Wheeling Update: Nailers were off.

Video Highlights:

Back at it Wednesday at home against Providence. Weekend Preview will be up Wednesday morning.

Let’s Go Pens!

In Memoriam: There was news last night that was devastating to learn regarding ex-Penguin Adam Johnson, who tragically passed away during a hockey game overseas. Johnson played the bulk of his AHL time in Wilkes-barre but also had stints in Lehigh Valley and Ontario. The Hershey Bears held a moment of silence for Johnson before the start of the Sunday afternoon game against the Pens.