Category: Game Recaps

Ads Finish Season Series With Win Over Wolves

There were questions going into tonight’s game versus Chicago. Such questions as, would Engren start in net, would Deveaux be a goon, or would the T-Mobile- AT&T merger disrupt my service at all? All these questions will eventually be answered.  Like right now.

The Admirals torched Wolves goaltender Edward Pasquale for four goals, Deveaux was a non-factor, Engren opened the bench door, and my cell phone service rocked in the Admirals 4-2 win over Chicago Friday night.

Here’s Coach Lambert:

The Admirals were the first to strike at the 9:42 of the first period as Grant Lewis put one past Pasquale. Gabriel Bourque at the near side boards sent a pass to Scott Ford at the middle point. Ford wound up and sent a slap shot towards the net but was redirected off of a Wolves’ defenseman and directly to a wide open Lewis on the far side. From that position he was able to put the shot on net for the goal and beat Pasquale stick side (that ended up being a theme). It was one of those “you couldn’t have planed that” goals for sure.  Right place right time.

The Wolves were able to answer back at 10:50, off an equally fluky goal.  With Ryan Garbutt skating in just off the near side boards he had an Admirals defender on him the whole way. Garbutt put the shot on Smith just as he was shoved down the ice, the puck looked to have been stopped by Smith with the good ‘ole armpit save, however half a second later the puck trickled through and across the line to even the score.  That was definitely a goal that Smith would like to have back, and a goal that you just have to shake off for sure.

Just 1:44 later the Admirals once again took the lead off Dylan Hunter’s second goal of the season, moments after he was featured in the Subway Fact Or Fiction game.  With the puck in the neutral zone and the Admirals’ Mike Bartlett skating it along the near side boards, Bartlett sent a pass across ice and into the offensive zone to a wide open Hunter. Hunter was able to gather the leading pass, take a couple strides, and proceed to burn Pasquale for the Admirals second goal of the period.  Stick side.  Coach is happy to see Hunter cash in.

The Admirals extended their lead in the second as Kelsey Wilson lit the lamp for his 10th on the year. The Admirals have been putting a clinic on passing all game and this goal was no exception, with Mark Van Guilder playing the instructor in this example.  With Andreas Thuresson carrying the puck into the offensive zone he passed it to Van Guilder who was skating in along the far boards. Van Guilder then sent a pass across ice and backwards to a crashing Wilson, who gathered the puck and put a wrister on net from just inside the near circle beating Pasquale short side (read:  stick side).

The third period would get off to a slow start as we have become accustomed to when the Admirals have the lead. Unlike the past however, the Admrials would eventually add to their lead with a great move by Gabriel Bourque.  Ryan Thang was along the near borads at center ice when he sent a pitch fork clearing shot off of the glass. The puck eventually came down just past the blue line and found a speeding Bourque. He skated down through the near circle and cut across to the middle, deeking Pasquale out of his jock strap and putting the rock in the net to give the Admirals the 4-1 lead. Due to AHL and world federation of ice hockey equipment rules, Mannino had to come in to relieve Pasquale, because you can’t play without a jock strap.

The Wolves, refusing to go away, got a goal past Smith at the 11:40 mark.  With the Wolves skating into the zone, the Admirals were baited into chasing the puck making it an easy choice for Michael Davies to dish the puck to a wide open Spencer Machacek, crashing down the back door.  The goal looked to be off his skate but all doubt was removed when he got his stick on it just before it crossed the line.  The goal halved the lead, but that was as close as the Wolves would get.

NOTES:

Pretty good crowd tonight, don’t you think?  I think it was because of the gamehost (I’m already sucking up in hopes to be invited back to write next season).

Pretty typical Jeff Smith game.  Just a pair of interference calls in the second period.  There obviously were other infractions, but they weren’t called.  And that’s fine.  You know what you get with Jeff Smith.  And the good teams adjust.  And it seems that the players know what to expect too.  Got cross checked into the boards?  It wasn’t a whine and cheese fest.  They got back up and got back into the play.  And Coach Lambert would rather play these guys 5-on-5.

I thought Pasquale looked shaky from the start.  Smith looked shaky early on too, but some good D got the puck out of danger.  Oh, three Wolves shots hit the pipes.  Some nights those go in.  Some nights you sacrifice goats to the hockey Gods and you get metal and dark goal lamps.  Here’s the coach on Smith’s night at the rink.

Coach Lambert said that we should expect Atte Engren to make his United States of North America professional American Hockey League ice hockey debut tomorrow night in Rockford, Illinois, home of the IceHogs, Cheap Trick, and Beef-A-Roo.  Ok, we’re paraphrasing a bit….but yeah, Coach says Engren should get the start in Rockford tomorrow night.

San Antonio, Texas, and Houston all won, so the Admirals will hold on to first place, one point ahead of the Aeros.

QUESTIONS:

Knowing Engren is likely to debut, does that make want to go to Rockford tomorrow?  Pre-game Beef-A-Roo, and then the big debut?

Which line was the best one tonight in your opinion?  I think the Hunter – Bartlett – Flynn line was pretty sharp.

When did Bourque get so nifty with his stick?  He was a goal scoring machine on the roadtrip, his shootout goal on Tuesday was pretty badass, and he had that nice move to end Pasquale’s night tonight.

Do you like the whole Amtrak rivalry thing?  We don’t seem to be very good at winning the trophy….but can you live with that?

Admirals Sweep the Shootout, Outlast Oklahoma City 4-3

With a chance to retake first place in the West Division, Milwaukee’s normally dormant shootout skills caught fire Tuesday night, going a perfect four-for-four against Oklahoma City to deliver a 4-3 home win.

Admirals shooters Mark Santorelli, Mark Van Guilder, Gabriel Bourque and Ryan Thang all converted, while goaltender Jeremy Smith stopped two of three Oklahoma City attempts to preserve the victory.

With the two points, Milwaukee moves back into first place at 89 points.  The Admirals now sit one point clear of Houston, which lost 3-0 to Texas tonight.

Riding a fast start, Milwaukee opened the scoring 14:34 into the hockey game.  Off a transition pass from Teemu Laakso, Ryan Thang’s bad angle shot from the bottom of the right face off dot caught goaltender Jeff Deslauriers sliding and squeezed through the five-hole.

“It was quick little regroup play,” said Thang at the first intermission. “I beat their defense back up the ice, but I got a little lucky with the shot.”

In the final minute of the first period, Oklahoma City countered after Thang took a slashing penalty.  On their fourth rebound opportunity, Anthony Aiello scored into a wide-open Milwaukee net.

The Admirals regained a one-goal advantage seven minutes into the second period on a brilliant play from Roman Josi and Chris Mueller.   Off a breakout Josi found Mueller at center ice with a step on Aiello.  With a tape-to-tape 100-foot stretch pass, Josi sprung Mueller on a breakaway.  Mueller finished off the play with a brilliant deke.

Seven minutes later the Barons again tied the game, this time with a deflection goal by Andrew Lord.  Lord, who dressed for a pair of games with Milwaukee earlier this season, had his first AHL goal of 2010-2011 find twine off of goaltender Jeremy Smith’s mask.

Milwaukee countered yet again at the 17:38 mark of the second period, this time on the power play.  After Josi busted his stick, Andreas Thuresson found Kelsey Wilson alone in front of Deslauriers.  Wilson tucked a backhand shot through his legs, through Deslauriers’ wickets and across the goal line for a 3-2 lead after 40 minutes.

Pressing in the third period, Oklahoma City peppered Smith, finally scoring on a five-on-three power play in the last four minutes.  Mark Arcobello scored the tying goal on one-timer off of a cross-crease pass from Brad Moran.

Overtime saw bizarre string of four minor penalties in quick succession, resulting in an extended period of four-on-three and five-on-three power play time for Milwaukee, but the Admirals only managed a couple of marginal chances to leave the game tied at three after 65 minutes.

Despite allowing three goals on 38 shots, Smith was superb.  But the Admirals netminder saved his best save for the overtime, stretching across for a highlight reel right leg stop on a three-on-one in the first minute of overtime.

Smith now has 12 wins this season and sports a record of 12-6-2.

“The win felt really good for our team,” Smith said.  “We really stuck with it and played well tonight, but were not thinking of anything else other than finishing in first place.”

With Nashville’s 3-1 win over Edmonton tonight, the Predators organization went 2-0 against the Oilers organization on Tuesday.  Thanks to the one point gained, the Barons move up to 82 on the year to take over solo possession of fourth place in the West Division.

Milwaukee continues the home stand Friday night with their final regular season meeting with Chicago.

Tonight’s Admirals lineup (starters in ALL-CAPS):

Goaltender:  JEREMY SMITH

Defense:  AARON JOHNSON-BRETT PALIN

Roman Josi-Teemu Laakso

Grant Lewis-Scott Ford

Forwards:  KELSEY WILSON-MARK VAN GUILDER-ANDREAS THURESSON

Dylan Hunter-Mike Bartlett-Ryan Flynn

Gabriel Bourque-Chris Mueller-Ryan Thang

Brock McBride-Connor Shields-Mark Santorelli

Injury updates:  Forward Steve Begin is getting close to returning according to coach Lane Lambert.  Both Mark Dekanich and Linus Klasen remain a long distance away from returning.

Some questions for discussion:

1) With 10 games to play in the regular season, has Milwaukee finally found some playoff security with win 38 of the year?

2) Would Oklahoma City be a favorable match up for Milwaukee in the first round of the AHL playoffs?

3) Tonight was an on/off night for the Milwaukee power play.  Are some of the missing go-to scorers, Jonathon Blum, Blake Geoffrion and Linus Klasen, holding the special teams back?


Road Weary Admirals Lose To Lake Erie

When the schedule comes out every year, teams skim through it and they can immediately recognize the bum dates that will be awful for travel.

The last 24 hours for the Admirals have been rough.  They did get the big win in San Antonio last night, followed by a pre-dawn wake-up call, delayed flights, and then capped it off with their fourth game in five days.  Every team goes through these things, and it was the Admirals’ turn.  That’s life in the AHL.

The day ended with a 3-2 loss to the Cleveland Lake Erie Monsters, in a game that wasn’t nearly as close as the score suggests, as the Admirals didn’t get their two goals until the last minute of the game.

“I think we showed a lot of character at the end,” Coach Lambert said after the game.   “I know there was some fatigue involved.  You try not to make excuses, but it can factor in, there’s no question about it.  I’m proud of the guys and the way they battled.  But it was too little too late.  We needed to do more, on a more consistent basis.”

The Admirals came up dry on three power play chances in the first 12 minutes of the game, and then proceeded to give up two power play goals on five Monster chances.

The Monsters got on the board twice in the second period.  David Van der Gulik brought the puck in along the left wing, and his shot on Jeremy Smith was deflected by Greg Mauldin at the 14:49 mark of the period.  Roman Josi had Mauldin tied up, but not well enough to prevent him from getting a stick on the puck.

With 59 seconds left in the period, the Monsters tallied a power play goal.  Took them just 17 seconds of Dylan Hunter’s holding penalty to do it.  Justin Mercier tried to center a pass to a wide open Mauldin on the other side of the crease, but the pass was blocked by Scott Ford….right back to Mercier.  Smith had already committed to the pass, and was unable to get back in position to stop Mercier’s shot.

Julien Brouillette (who was in Admirals training camp this year) scored his first of the year, and it ended up being the game winner.  On a power play, Jeremy Smith made a great left skate save, and an Admiral defenseman (Laakso?) cleared the puck out of danger with a hand pass.  The puck went to Brouillette at the far point, and he put the puck right back on net, and it had eyes.  Or maybe Smith didn’t, as there were still a ton of bodies in front of him, and he hadn’t returned to his feet yet.

“The third goal they scored, I had a clear view of it from the bench, I still don’t know how it got through,” coach Lambert said.

It stayed 3-0 until the last minute of the game.  Brock McBride got his first goal as an Admiral with 49.9 seconds left, tipping a Jamie Bates shot past John Grahame.

The Ads got some puck-luck with 13.2 seconds left, as Chris Mueller had a shot go off of Cameron Gaunce and into the net, after a strong move from the left wing boards towards the net.

“I’m not going to freak out over this game whatsoever,” said the Coach.  “Because I knew there would be some fatigue involved, and we didn’t get much puck luck tonight either.”  (the 2nd Admirals goal, notwithstanding….)

NOTES:

I don’t think any of lines played particularly well tonight, but I thought Brock McBride had a pretty solid game, even before he scored his goal.  I thought Shields’ speed helped create some chances, and he shifted into another gear on a chance in the 2nd period.  Too bad his shot missed the mark.

Thuresson and Wilson didn’t play like 4th year players tonight.

In other news…..Goaltender Atte Engren arrived in Milwaukee tonight.  He watched the game from press row.  Now, it’s not unusual for young goalies to hang around the club on ATO contracts, after their seasons are done.  Dekanich was around and didn’t play, Chet Pickard was around but didn’t play when his junior season concluded.  So there’s no guarantee that we’ll ever see Engren in action this season.

But it sure might be nice.  And we asked Coach Lambert if there was a chance.  Here was his answer:

“There is a chance yeah, definitely.”

So we’ll see.  He didn’t rule it out, and he certainly had the opportunity to, or at the very least downplay the chance.  I think he’s excited to see what the kid can do.  Or I may just be projecting that.

Anyway….Engren is here.  That’s the news.  We’ll do a profile piece on him this week to let you know how his season was in Europe.

Dex is out for awhile.  He has a boot on his foot.  Van Guilder is day to day with an injury of some kind….couldn’t even get the usual upper-or-lower body description from anyone.

Scoreboard watching:  Houston and Oklahoma City won tonight.  Chicago, Peoria, and San Antonio lost (the Rampage had just 15 shots against Houston…)  The Admirals retain first place, now with a one point lead over the Aeros.  The Lake Erie win puts them in 2nd place in the North, two points out of 1st.

Questions:

Did you like Huey Lewis & The News?

Are you with the Coach, and not going to freak out about this game?

Was the power play working better than their oh-fer would suggest?

Did anybody stand out to you as being particularly good or particularly awful tonight?

Goals And Penalties In Bunches; Ads Cap Road Trip With Big Win

In a 2:02 span of the second period, the Admirals scored thrice, and 66 minutes of penalties were dealt out by referee Koharski-du-jour.

The rest of the game?  Not nearly as exciting, but the bottom line is that it was a 4-1 Admiral victory over the San Antonio Rampage Friday night.

With the win, the Admirals extend their lead on the Houston Aeros in the standings to three points, with two extra games to play.

After the scoreless first period, former Admiral Bracken Kearns scored his second goal in as many games against the Admirals, tipping in a pass from Matt Watkins 3:12 into the second period.

The Admirals answered back later in the period with three goals in 98 seconds.

The power play got the first one on the tail end of an Alexandre Picard roughing penalty.  An Aaron Johnson shot went off the stick of Matt Watkins and past Joe Fallon — who wasn’t originally supposed to play here today.  Matt Climie was a last-minute scratch.

The Admirals dominated play after the ensuing faceoff, and were rewarded with a goal after Randy Robitaille couldn’t clear the puck out of the zone.  Mueller played the puck back to Teemu Laakso, and his blast from the slot went over Fallon’s glove.

24 seconds after Laakso’s goal, Andreas Thuresson scored his tenth of the year from the near circle over the shoulder of Fallon.  Mark Santorelli deserves a lot of credit for his play with the puck and his vision, finding Thuresson going to the net.

And then 24 seconds after THAT goal, we got a slew of penalty minutes.

It started with Scott Ford and Dane Byers.  Lots of the other players on the ice started chirping at each other.  There was dancing.  And eventually Nolan Yonkman and Kelsey Wilson dropped the gloves.  Yonkman had a lot of swings and misses.  Wilson did a lot of clutching.  They both connected for one shot, pretty much at the same time, but Wilson’s may have been the better one.

Wilson and Yonkman were given game misconducts.

With all the gloves and sticks scattered everywhere, Aaron Sims said it looked like a 9-year-old’s bedroom on the ice.

I’m not going to go through all the penalties…you can check the box score if you want to see the damage.  But when you do check it out, note the people who were involved — the new guys.  New guys making a statement.  Think Coach Lambert liked seeing that?  I’d wager.

Chris Mueller added an empty net goal with 7.7 seconds to play — his third point of the night.

The Admirals benefited from some quick whistles towards the end of the game, as scrambles were blown dead before pucks were actually covered by Smith.

It’s now 14 straight road games with at least a point for the Admirals.

NOTES:

Chris Mueller has turned into an assist machine this month, with nine helpers in nine March games, and he had a part in six of the seven Admirals goals scored on this three game road trip.

Jeremy Smith was solid in net, stopping 29 of 30 shots.  He didn’t get any of the 3 stars of the game, but I think he should have been in the conversation.

Mark Dekanich joined Aaron Sims on his broadcast during the second intermission.  And he said the following:

“We’re not quite sure yet exactly what it is, or how long it’s going to take.  But I’m looking forward to getting back out there soon and I’ll try and rehab it as fast as I can.”

We are men of action.  Lies do not become us.  You don’t have to tell us what it is.  But don’t give us that weak sauce.

I’d like to apologize now, for using the phrase “weak sauce”.

Mark Van Guilder missed the game with an undisclosed injury.  He seemed to go out of his way to be unspecific too, when on the air with Aaron in the 1st intermission.

So the Admirals will wake up early to catch their flight back to Milwaukee, to play the Cleveland Lake Erie Monsters Saturday night.  The Monsters were terrible guests in Grand Rapids Friday night, scoring five goals in the 2nd period, on their way to a 7-2 win.  Let’s hope they got everything out of their system in that game.

Is everyone ready for Huey Lewis & The News?

Ads Get Point In Shootout Loss; Dex Leaves Game

Another road game, and another point for the Admirals (now in 13 straight road games).  But they couldn’t get the win, losing to the San Antonio Rampage 2-1 in a shootout.

Mark Dekanich’s bizarre week in Texas continued, as he left the game with 2:08 remaining in overtime.  Dex made the save on a Randy Robitaille shot that came up high on him.  But when he left the ice, he was favoring his right leg.  Assistant Coach Ian Herbers had no comment on Dex’s status on the radio after the game.

Jeremy Smith came in cold, and saved all three shots he faced the rest of the overtime period, which included 30 seconds on the penalty kill after a Mike Bartlett high-sticking call.  But he gave up shootout goals to Viktor Tikhonov, Ned Lukacevic, and Matt Beaudoin, while the Admirals were only able to get a score from Gabriel Bourque in the shootout.

They could only get a score from Bourque in regulation too.  Bourque was the recipient of another great pass after a great play from Chris Mueller.  Mueller used a spin move to get around the defenseman, and after falling to his knees, he still was able to feed Bourque for the goal.

Bracken Kearns had the only regulation goal for San Antonio.  It was a power play goal in the first period, deflecting a wrist shot from Viktor Tikhonov.

The Milwaukee power play had been performing well lately, but the unit went 0-6 tonight, often times passing up shots and getting a little too cute with the puck.  Bourque did have a power play goal waived off, as the officials ruled that he kicked it in.  Add this to our case study of reasons why the league needs video replay!

No game and no travel on Thursday, and then the Admirals will have a rematch with the Rampage on Friday night.  The point gained from the shootout does put the Admirals back in sole possession of first place, as the Houston Aeros are grounded until Saturday.

Dex Blinks, Admirals Lose In Overtime

Another game against the Aeros, and another one-goal game.  The Aeros came away with the W this time, a 3-2 win in overtime over the Admirals.

(Here is a link to the highlights from AHLLIVE)

Aaron Johnson coughed up the puck in the defensive zone, and the Admirals couldn’t control it in front of their net.  But former Badger Robbie Earl could, and he scored 1:25 into overtime, beating Mark Dekanich to pull the Aeros even with the Admirals in the points column of the standings.

But that goal wasn’t the most remarkable goal of the game.

15 seconds after Gabriel Bourque scored his second power play goal of the game to give the Admirals a one-goal lead in the 3rd period, Dex let it in a softy.  From 100 feet away.

Patrick O’Sullivan put the puck on net from the center ice dot, and it flew by Dex’s right elbow.  He never saw it.  And you just hope that he’s going to be strong enough mentally to wipe it from his psyche as soon as possible.

Dex had a weird moment earlier in the game too, channelling his inner Jan Lasak and skating away from the crease to play the puck.  Scott Ford bailed him out, preventing a Brandon Buck shot from going into the vacated net.

Outside of the those two plays, Dex was pretty good overall.  Matt Hackett was even better, especially in the 2nd period when the Admirals put 14 shots on net.

The Admirals were 2-for-3 on the power play, with the two aforementioned scores from Bourque.  Both of them came after strong plays to the net by Chris Mueller.  Bourque followed up a Mueller shot for his first goal, and cashed in on a great pass from Mueller for his second.

Peoria beat Oklahoma City in a shootout, so your West Division standings look like this…

1. Milwaukee 84 (66 games)
2. Houston 84 (70)
3.  Peoria 81 (69)
4.  Texas 80 (68)
5.  Chicago 79 (69)
6.  San Antonio 76 (65)
7. Oklahoma City 76 (67)
8.  Rockford 63 (66)

Short memory time.  The good guys are back in action Wednesday night in San Antonio.

Admirals Rebound With Big Win Over Rivermen

If the team wasn’t motivated by Coach Lambert to play with more energy and passion in this game, the Peoria Rivermen made them do it out of self-defense.

While the Rivermen likely won the hits stat category tonight, the Admirals scored twice in 11 seconds in the second period, en route to a 2-1 victory Sunday evening at the Bradley Center.

A much better game than Friday against the IceHogs.  Here’s Coach Lambert.

Mark Dekanich made 26 saves 31 saves (they added five after the game….gotta love it)  and the one that got by him was a great deflection from the slot by Derek Nesbitt.

Chris Mueller had a goal in the 1st period.  It didn’t count though.  After getting behind the defense, he beat Jake Allen glove side.  And the Oscar goes to….Jake Allen!  For his role in scooping the puck back out from behind the goalline, and keeping the play going.  Fooled the goal judge and the referee.  But replays clearly showed it should have been a goal.

We had Roundtable resident digital sketch artist Johnny B give us this re-enactment of Mueller’s goal.

It gives Coach another chance to plea for video replay.

Mark Van Guilder scored the first Admiral goal that counted.  Kelsey Wilson was skating with the puck around the boards behind the goal line.  But instead of taking it with him behind the net, he fired a quick pass to Van Guilder in front of the net on the near side.

11 seconds later (sure felt like less than `11 seconds), Mike Bartlett used his speed to get behind the defense for a breakaway, and beat Jake Allen glove side.  It was a pretty good move, and may move Bartlett up the charts a bit on the shootouts.

The two goals were the second quickest Admiral goals this season, with the fastest pair coming in at ten seconds against Rockford January 29th….featuring  Geoffrion and Bartlett.

Later in the period, Mark Cundari boarded Linus Klasen into the near boards.  He was assessed a five minute boarding major, a game misconduct, and we won’t be surprised if the league asks him to take a few more games off too.  All of the Rivermen were taking their shots at Klasen over the first half of the game, finishing their checks and making sure he heard footsteps.  Here’s the coach:

Klasen played on the power play that resulted from the hit, but did not come back for another shift after that.  And he won’t be making the road trip.

NOTES:

Lines:

Wilson – Van Guilder – Thuresson
Bourque – Mueller – Klasen
Flynn – Bartlett – Hunter
McBride – Shields – Thang

Thang moved up to the Mueller line after Klasen’s hit.

The Admirals were not penalized at all in the game.  In the last two games, they’ve just taken one penalty.  17 minutes for Cundari, and a bench minor for too many men on the ice.  Sounds like a typical Jeff Smith game.

Speaking of Jeff Smith – yeah, it’s frustrating to see some of the liberties that our opponent was able to get away with….but it’s a Jeff Smith game.  This is what happens in Jeff Smith games.  He lets them play.  He gets in the way of live play.  He looks bored most of the time.  Anything else would have been surprising.  I’m just happy to see he got the Cundari call correct.

Five of the Rivermen’s previous seven games were against the Wolves.  Maybe some Andre Deveaux rubbed off on them in preparation for this game?  Pretty awful scheduling quirk.

Houston also won, so the Admirals still will hold down the top spot in the division by one point.

Sutty is considering litigation against Roscoe after that cheese race.  Yes, Sutty dressed as Beer Cheese tonight.  But it’s Roscoe’s birthday, so I don’t think his argument will hold up in court.

Questions For Discussion:

Did you feel like our guys were getting beaten up?  Do you think the team did a good job using its speed to neutralize the physicality?  Are you surprised there wasn’t a fight?

Do you think the power play is better with or without Klasen?  We haven’t been able to give out our Mountain Fury power play bottles these last two games….

Do they look like a playoff team?  Do you remember the last time they played a full 60 minutes?

And why have goal judges if the referee won’t even talk to them?

“I’m Very Bothered By This Game.”

That’s head coach Lane Lambert after the IceHogs 2-0 victory over the Admirals Friday night.

Hannu Toivonen stopped all the shots he faced, and the IceHogs rode a power play and empty net goal to the victory.

“We didn’t play good enough.  He made a couple of fantastic saves, yes, but we didn’t generate enough opportunities.  I’m very bothered by this game.  I’m disappointed in our push, and the fact that we in my mind, didn’t come out and generate enough passion or energy into this game, and there’s no excuse for it.”

The first two periods came and went as the Admirals and IceHogs failed to record any goals, drop the gloves or really dent the scoresheet in any way. The first period came and went in about 32 minutes real time and contained as many whistle stoppages as the Daytona 500. ‘bout as exciting as it also. (Note: not a NASCAR fan)

(Editor’s note:  Sutty has been advised that he’s going to probably be flamed for that comment.  -RM)

The second period also went by very fast, but did however contain the game’s first two penalties. Rob Klinkhammer went to the bin for a slash, and Brandon Pirri served a too many men on the ice penalty for the IceHogs. I bet right about now you are wondering why we are talking about two rather uneventful penalties and frankly the only answer I have is, whelp, because that was all that was noteworthy. Did the Ads have shots on goals? Sure. Did they have good chances? Yep. Are you wondering why I am still typing? Me too!

The third period was a little more eventful.

At the 6 minute mark, Toivonen made a save that I am sure will go on his highlight reel.  With the Admirals driving the zone a centering pass was made in front of the net where the “down and out” Toivonen was able to sprawl out and knock the puck up into the air, eventually corralling it up, to the sadness of everyone cheering for the good guys.  One of the best saves we’ve seen this year.

The stalemate was broken at the 12:41 mark of the third period, when Brian Connelly scored from just above the near faceoff circle. Earlier in the shift, Chris Mueller got hit in the face with or by something and went down. The puck was cleared; Mueller got up but was unable to get off the ice. Connely re-entered the zone with the puck, as the slow moving Mueller was trying to defend the play. Connelly wound up and sent the puck past a defensive Mueller and past a shocked Mark Dekanich for the first score of the game.  Looked like it went off his helmet and in.

Coach Lambert doesn’t like the play that led to the penalty, that eventually led to the goal.

“We got caught out of position in the defensive zone and we had to slash.  We’re in game 64 now.  We work on positioning in the D zone all the time.  And it’s times like now….like I say, you never know when five seconds is going to win or lose you a hockey game.  Everything comes in to play.  Everything.  All the details.”

The Admirals pulled Dekanich with 1:23 left in the match and were unable to convert as the Icehogs added to their lead with an empty net goal by Igor Markarov during a much needed (but sloppy) Admiral line change.  Klasen had to have been out there for 3 minutes.

NOTES:

Mark Santorelli was scratched…perhaps by his cat before the game, and did not play as a result of the injury.  Shields, McBride, and Hunter played.  And Klasen and Josi returned after missing some time.

Did I mention it was a fast game?  It’s 9:31 right now as I’m typing this.  We should just be finishing up the third period about now.

Roscoe should have been better at the axe throwing contest.  I’m just saying.

Got to hand it to Dekanich and Toivonen.  Both made some outstanding saves.

Not happy about losing to Rockford.  Houston and Texas both lost in shootouts… so they inched closer, but Milwaukee holds on to 1st place.  Except for the game on the 26th, we’ll be cheering for Rockford from here on out, though.  Anytime they can beat someone else, that can only be good for us!

It’s a four game home losing streak now.  Here’s the coach:

“In those four games we’ve lost at home, we’ve played well enough to win three of them.  We’ve scored four goals in the four losses.  Total.  So you’re not going to win too many games when you score a goal a game.”

What kind of adjustment does the team need to make for Peoria Sunday?

“Have some life, energy, and passion.”

The question I’ll leave you with – Is Sunday evening against Peoria a MUST-WIN game to get the train back on the track?

Moose Trample Ads 4-2

After a huge win in Chicago last night, the Admirals were not able to make the most of their chances Saturday night, losing to the Manitoba Moose 4-2 at the Bradley Center.

Here’s the coach:

Entering the third period down a pair of goals, Ryan Flynn got one back 2:59 into the third, re-directing a shot-off-goal from Aaron Johnson.  It took great hand-eye coordination, and goaltender Tyler Weiman didn’t stand a chance.

Mark Van Guilder took an ill-advised Yonking penalty late in the game (of course, all Yonking penalties are ill-advised), and that really stunted any kind of momentum that was up for grabs.

After killing off the penalty, they pulled Mark Dekanich for an extra attacker, and Gabriel Bourque almost tied it….if he could have elevated his shot from the bottom of the faceoff circle, the roof would have blown off the BC.  After that save, the Admirals couldn’t get anything going, and Aaron Volpatti scored an empty netter in the closing seconds to make it a 4-2 final.

The Moose struck first, as Sergei Shirokov deflected a shot from the point by defenseman Keith Seabrook past Mark Dekanich.   Dex didn’t look very comfortable over the first 10 minutes of the game, but seemed to settle down the rest of the period.

The Admirals answered back with a Mountain Fury power play goal from Grant Lewis.  He had a shot from just above the top of the near faceoff circle, and his shot may have been slightly deflected by a sliding Aaron Volpatti.  Deflection or no deflection, it beat Tyler Weiman.

It seemed on that power play, the Admirals were trying their best to make sure plays went through Lewis.  He seemed to be in a Jon Blum kind of role, pinching and retreating and fielding cross-ice passes.  Nice to see it worked on that first power play.

Yann Sauve scored for the Moose 8:34 into the second period on a power play.  His shot from the near circle beat Dex stick side.  Dex may have had one eye on the puck, and one eye on Bill Sweatt, who was in the process of crashing the net, and was sure to gobble up any rebound.

Guillaume Desbiens scored the game winning goal the second a Moose power play ended.  Another deflection goal after a shot from the point by Shirokov.

—–NOTES—-

These linesmen were trash.  And they blatantly missed an icing call in the final minute that would have saved some time and brought a faceoff back to the Moose end of the ice.

Dex was a rebound machine for stretches of this game, but he really shut the door in the third period, making a few spectacular saves, bailing out his defensemen, who were watching forwards go around them.

Belak watch – stop watching.  According to Paul Fenton, Belak is staying in Nashville “in residence”. (We’ll have more thoughts from Fenton later this week)

Injury update – here’s the coach.

Houston and San Antonio lost tonight.  Peoria, Texas and Oklahoma City won.

Questions:

Was it just a matter of bounces tonight?

Did anyone stand out as having a good game?  Lewis, maybe?  Bourque was pretty good, despite his fail at the end.  Anyone else?

Thoughts on the new guys?  Think any of them have the chance to be on the clear day roster?

Admirals are off until next Friday….in your opinion, do they usually perform better after a long break like that?

Dekanich, New Guys Lead Ads Past Wolves

 

Despite being outshot 43-19 in the game, the Admirals were able to make the most of their chances, en route to a 3-1 win over the Chicago Wolves Friday night in Rosemont.

Connor Shields, Brock McBride, and Patrick Coulombe each scored their first points as Admirals, and Mark Dekanich played like an all-star, getting his 22nd win of the year.

Connor Shields scored his first of the year, putting home a shot after a Grant Lewis attempt missed the mark, and a Brock McBride shot hit iron.

Coulombe was boarded by Andrew Kozek at the 16:03 mark of the first period, and Andreas Thuresson turned into the Incredible Hulk after that and dropped the gloves with Kozek.  Thuresson got two for instigating, five for fighting, and a ten minute misconduct.  I’m surprised he didn’t get a game misconduct for instigating, though.  Didn’t there used to be an automatic suspension?  And I’m also surprised that Kozek didn’t get shown the door too.

Anyway, Kozek got five for boarding and five for fighting.  So when Thuresson’s instigator penalty concluded, that put the Admirals on a power play, and Ryan Thang was able to score as it was winding down.  27 seconds into the second period, he received a pass that was behind him, and twirled the puck into the net.

Arturs Kulda scored the Wolves only goal with a shot that seemed to be deflected en route past Dekanich.

And then Coulombe, who showed some toughness coming back from the board, gave the Admirals an insurance goal 3:42 into the 3rd.  After a neutral zone turnover, he brought the puck into the offensive zone, and his wrister from the top of the right circle went off the far post and in the net.

NOTES:

Steve Begin played his first game in awhile (since January 22nd), and they played him on a line with McBride and Shields.  But he didn’t finish the game.  He left in the 3rd period, and it’s tough to say what the outlook is for him.  We’ll ask Coach about it tomorrow.

The Admirals have points in 11 straight road games.  January 13th at Manitoba was the last regulation loss on the road for Milwaukee.  Maybe it’s too bad there are only five road games left?

The Moose come to town tomorrow after a 4-3 shootout win in Peoria Friday night.  Dave Scatchard (remember him?) had tied it for the Rivermen with less than a minute left in the third, but the Moose went on to win in the bottom of the 7th round of the shootout.