Too Little Too Late, Ads fall 5-4 in Texas

The Admirals lost 5-4 against the Texas Stars Saturday night. Once again, the Stars had a lethal second period effort that proved to power them on to victory. The Ads did managed to claw back into this game. After trailing 5-1, the Ads scrapped out three late third period goals to nearly make for a stunning comeback. Though, time ran out on the late push for the Ads who go on to drop their second straight game in regulation.

“We gave up five goals,” said assistant coach Stan Drulia after the game on Sports Radio 1250 WSSP. “Most of them were from transition situations where we had puck possession and [the Stars] do a good job of that. We ran out of time at the end, but it’s a sixty-minute game and we didn’t push hard enough at the start.”

As far as roster shake ups ahead of this game went, it was nothing as drastic as the days ahead of this weekend with call ups and call downs. Instead, Scott Valentine stepped into the forward role to fill in for the injured Mike Liambas. This opened up a spot on defense for Charles-Oliver Roussel to return to the lineup. Still no word on how long Liambas will be out. For now, expect a roster similar to what the Ads dished up tonight.

The Texas Stars opened the scoring this go-round. Taylor Peters fired a shot off of Darling and the loose puck was hammered into the net by Francis Wathier.

Just seconds after an Admiral power-play expired, the team kept the gas on and came away with an equalizing goal. The initial shot by Filip Forsberg was stopped by Stars goaltender Allen York. It was then spilled out into the path of Austin Watson who popped in the rebound for his third goal of the season.

A big opportunity came for the Ads at 16:59 of the opening period. After some rough stuff behind the play, both marked as interference calls, the Ads received a full two minutes worth of five-on-three power-play time. There were too many passes taking place on the power-play and just not enough pucks to the net as you would want with that much space to attack. In the end, the opportunity went without a goal as the pesky Stars penalty kill escaped without damage.

The previous night Texas produced twenty shots in the second period. Tonight? They did it again. The Stars outshot the Ads 20-11 in the second. Of those twenty shots three went past Darling.

“We were fairly happy with our first period,” said Drulia on Sports Radio 1250 WSSP. “In the second period we turned the puck over twice at their blue line. Took an offensive zone penalty which lead to their power-play goal. Three situations that we were well in control of that ended up going into the back of our net.”

Texas restored their lead after Curtis McKenzie slipped the puck underneath a poke check of Darling. The shot squeaked between his legs and the Ads trailed 2-1.

The next goal for Texas came off of a power-play opportunity after a Mathieu Tousignant roughing call. A Kevin Connauton blast from the blueline was deflected by Mike Hedden to push the Stars lead to 3-1.

Late in the second, the Stars produced their third unanswered goal of the period. Jamie Oleksiak slapped in a bomb from the faceoff dot making it a 4-1 Stars lead.

Magnus Hellberg started the final period in net. Not quite by anyone’s choice. Scott Darling had an equipment issue at the beginning of the third period, went off the ice to fix it, Hellberg went in the net, and Darling never returned to the game. As it turns out, Darling’s skate broke just as the team went back out on the ice… tough break for a first career AHL start.

The Stars incredible penalty kill unit was at it again tonight by scoring another shorthanded goal. Ex-Admiral Chris Mueller generated an Ads turnover from the blue line and sent Toby Peterson loose on a breakaway. He went the distance and finished off the shorthanded break with a backhanded finish through Hellberg’s five-hole.

Then came the drama. The Ads were trailing 5-1 with 7:18 remaining in the game.

Off of the same power-play that cost the Ads a shorty, Zach Budish answered the call. Budish was at the goal mouth and kept plugging away at the puck for a goal to end the Stars run of four unanswered goals scored.

The Ads then answered with another goal to make it a 5-3 game. Simon Moser kicked the puck with his skate out to Filip Forsberg who picked out the eventual goal scorer, Colton Sissons. That’s Sissons fifth goal of the season.

Hellberg then went to the bench to bring out an extra attacker for the Admirals. With forty-one seconds remaining they scored with the extra attacker on the ice to make it a 5-4 hockey game. The pace and effort of the Ads right out of the goal from Sissons shook the Stars. This goal was scored by Anthony Bitetto for his team-best sixth goal of the season.

Milwaukee managed to have a few more cracks at tying the game up. In the end, there just wasn’t enough time on the clock for them to draw back level with the Stars. It ended 5-4. The loss in net actually end up being credited to Magnus Hellberg who played the third period but conceded the game-winning goal… ouch.

Thoughts on tonight’s game? The late response by the team? What do you think can help the Admirals start games quickly and more effectively? Can it be corrected in time for their game in San Antonio tomorrow afternoon?

Point Streak Over, Ads defeated in Texas 7-4

The Admirals lost 7-4 against the Texas Stars Friday night. It is the first time this season the Ads have lost in regulation and ends the eight-game point streak to start the season.

This game marked the return of Magnus Hellberg and Kevin Henderson to the Ads lineup. It also marked the AHL debut of Filip Forsberg.

For Hellberg, this wasn’t him at his sparkling best. He made thirty-three saves, good. But he also let in six goals, ouch. This was his first game in net since an October 26th cameo in Nashville. Since then it has been a combination of practices, warm-ups, and sitting on the Nashville Predators bench. He only played 12:12 of ice time in that lone NHL appearance. Perhaps a reason why his timing was just -that- much off tonight.

Henderson returned to the Ads lineup for his first game since October 18th in a road win against the Grand Rapids Griffins. He didn’t factor too much into the score sheet: no points on one shot with a plus/minus of -2. Yet, his presence to the team on both sides of the puck is a plus. Was he overwhelmed in his return from injury? Hard to say. But expect #15 to be a factor as he gets his legs back under him.

Making the headlines going into this game was the AHL and Admiral debut of Filip Forsberg. How did he play? Great. He scored a goal and an assist tonight. Even better than that was his work rate on the ice, drawing penalties, and producing chances for his teammates. He spent a lot of time on the ice with Colton Sissons and Simon Moser tonight. That line seemed to be one of the better groups on the ice in this game.

The Ads did manage to score the opening goal in this game. Joonas Jarvinen scored his first goal of the season after his shot was deflected en route to the net. This was the third straight game where the Ads managed to open the scoring after a lengthy drought in which they failed to do so since the opening game in Abbotsford. Slow starts have been a talking point of the Ads. Clearly they’ve been working to jump out of the gates much faster.

An early turning point in this game happened by way of injury to Mike Liambas. It sounded as though he took a hit near the boards, stayed down briefly on the ice, and skated off to the Ads bench. Liambas has been a part of the Ads most effective line early in this season: with Tousignant and Rask/Budish. Him leaving so early in the game left a hole in the forward group and a physical presence few forwards in the team can match. According to assistant coach Stan Drulia after the game, Liambas was “looking good” and walking around in his suit after the game. No word as to whether or not this is a short term or long term injury, but he will be reevaluated tomorrow morning.

The first period would end at a 1-1 tie after a goal from Jamie Oleksiak. The Stars, from the middle of the first period and whole of the second period, really began to tilt the ice against the Ads. Oleksiak let loose a slap shot that bested Hellberg in net to level things in the opening frame.

Enter the second period. Enter a horrific period of hockey for the Admirals. Penalties really gashed the Ads in the second. How bad did it get? Mark Van Guilder received two-minutes for roughing. No joke. In total, the Ads took five penalties for ten penalty minutes. This gave the Stars multiple power-play chances – including two lengthy 5-on-3 efforts.

Texas produced quickly in the second period with a power-play goal off of one of those two-man advantage situations. Travis Morin scored with a backhanded shot to give the Stars a 2-1 lead.

Moments later, yet another power-play goal for the Stars. This go-round it was Colton Sceviour with a wrister from the left circle.

It wasn’t all Stars on the power-play, though. The Ads managed to answer with one of their own. Miikka Salomaki smashed a one-timer through heavy net front traffic to draw the Stars lead back, 3-2.

Just thirty-four seconds later, wind right out of the Admirals sails, and puck being picked out of the net yet again. The Stars picked out Morin in the slot, he beat Hellberg five hole, and scored his tenth goal of the season – restoring a two-goal lead.

The advantage in shots for the Stars through two periods was rather cringe-worthy. They managed to outshoot the Ads 33-12 in the opening two frames – including 20-6 in the second period alone.

The third period did start just as the Ads would have wanted to. The Ads scored a power-play goal off of a blistering one-time shot by Forsberg. The score was again cut to a one goal Texas lead, 4-3.

Now, in my opinion, here comes the biggest talking point of the game. While the Ads clearly weren’t playing their best hockey. They were still doing what they do best: scrapping it out and staying in striking distance late in a game. So, when the Stars netminder Josh Robinson mishandled a puck and it went into the net… you would be thinking the Ads clawed back yet another two-goal Texas Stars lead. But, the officials blew the play dead instantly. The goal didn’t count. It was still a 4-3 hockey game. The error by Robinson wouldn’t haunt the Stars.

Not only did it not haunt the Stars. The very next puck drop of the game lead to a blocked shot that sent the Stars on a two-on-zip breakaway. Brett Ritchie had Toby Petersen but finished it himself. The two goal lead was restored for the Stars, 5-3.

The Ads did manage to score another power-play goal in this game courtesy of “Mr. Power-Play” Anthony Bitetto. This goal drew the game to a 5-4 scoreline, and it goes down as Bitetto’s fifth goal of the season and third on the power-play.

The backbreaker would come just three minutes after Bitetto’s goal as the Stars scored shorthanded. Colton Sceviour zipped down the left wing and sent a backhander past Hellberg on the short side of goal – yet again restoring a two goal cushion for the Stars.

Hellberg slammed his stick in disgust after conceding the shorty… and that’s how his night would end. He stopped thirty-three of thirty-nine shots before giving way to Admiral debutant Scott Darling.

Darling faced one shot and made one save before the Ads pulled him off the ice for the extra attacker. Scott Glennie of the Stars would cap off the game by scoring on the empty net. Game. Over.

Rough night after a lengthy time off. Still, there were some real positives to the Ads game tonight. Miikka Salomaki had a four-point night for the Ads (1 goal and 3 assists). Salomaki factored into all Admirals goals and, were this game to have finished a little differently, would have easily been the big star of the night. Meanwhile, Forsberg played real well in his debut outing as an Admiral. He put up two points, drew penalties, and was an effective player tonight in an otherwise rough game.

The point streak ends at eight consecutive games. The Ads finally lose in regulation. Yet, the team is set to bounce right back against these same Texas Stars tomorrow night.

Your thoughts on tonight’s game? Salomaki? Forsberg? How do you feel about Hellberg’s performance tonight? Was Hellberg’s night in net just a sign of a goalie who hasn’t played in a game for awhile or something more? How do you think the Ads bounce back after conceding seven goals?

Stars: Scouting the Enemy – The Sequel!

Hey, remember these guys? Me too.

The Ads took two of two against the Stars in their last homestand. The games didn’t start pretty, both starting with two goal deficits, but the Ads scrapped out the Stars, battled back in both games, and won them both.

Saturday, October 26: Ads 4 – Stars 2.

Wednesday, October 30th: Ads 3 – Stars 2 (OT).

In both games the Stars skated circles around the Ads in the first period. They chipped pucks behind the Admirals’ defense and set up plenty of odd man breaks that required Marek Mazanec to bail out his defense. The Stars penalty kill stood out in the two meetings as well. The Ads went 0-7 against the Stars PK unit and conceded a shorthanded goal in the first meeting to Taylor Peters. The aggressiveness of the Stars PK unit featured very active sticks with forwards on the kill primed to attack the moment the puck was cleared out of the zone. No doubt the Ads looked into footage regarding the Stars penalty kill of these two games ahead of this weekend’s clashes.

Since they last squared off the Stars played two games against the Iowa Wild. They lost the first game, 4-2. Despite picking up the point for taking the Ads to OT, that loss in Iowa was their fourth consecutive defeat. How did they respond the next night? By pummeling the Wild 5-0.

The Stars have been resting up since that game. The Ads have been resting up since their Sunday win over that same Iowa Wild group. It’s going to be interesting to see how both handle the time off as well as how the two match up in this second set of games against one another. Yet, Mr. Evason seems upbeat about what this weekend will bring for the team.

How do you expect this weekend to go? Does the point streak end in Texas? How will Magnus Hellberg fair in his return to the Admirals net? Will Filip Forsberg make an immediate impact as an Admiral?

Filip Forsberg to the Ads, Taylor Beck to the Preds

The roster moves for the Ads keep on coming. This go-round it’s a swap of forwards. The Nashville Predators have decided to recall Taylor Beck and assign Filip Forsberg to the Milwaukee Admirals.

Beck this season has 3 goals and 2 assists in the opening 8 games. He might have started the season fairly slow, by what we’ve come to expect from him, but his form in recent games has shown Beck is right back at it: 2 goals in his last 2 games while firing off 8 shots. Last season in the NHL, Beck played in 16 games scoring 3 goals and 4 assists with the Predators.

This will be Filip Forsberg’s first time playing with the Milwaukee Admirals. Last season this top prospect was traded from the Washington Capitals to the Nashville Predators for Martin Erat and Michael Latta. The 11th overall selection of the 2012 NHL Draft suited up for 5 games last season for the Predators after his trade. He scored his first point, an assist, in a 4-3 Predators victory over the Calgary Flames. This season he picked up his first career NHL goal, but has had a relatively quiet opening 11 games to this point: 1 goal and 4 assists.

That being said, that’s a quiet start for a 19-year old top prospect within the organization. There is a big ceiling with Mr. Forsberg. Depending on how long he stays with the Ads team, just for this upcoming three-in-three or longer, it adds an entirely new dimension to an already red hot Ads team that has yet to lose in regulation this season.

Thoughts on the move? How will Forsberg do this weekend? Will Forsberg be an Admiral past this weekend? Do you think Beck was deserving of this call-up or would you have liked to have seen another forward head to Nashville?

The Ol’ Switcheroo: Mazanec Up, Hellberg Down

The Nashville Predators have made a move within the organization this morning. They will be sending down Magnus Hellberg and calling up Marek Mazanec.

This is Mazanec’s first ever NHL call up in his first professional season of North American hockey. To this point with the Ads he has won five games in five starts while posting a solid 1.97 GAA and a .933 SV%.

Mazanec has yet to look flustered as an Admiral. This call up comes at a stretch for the Predators where they are playing seven-straight games on the road. In Pekka Rinne’s absence, the netminder of choice has been Carter Hutton the previous four games.

Magnus Hellberg’s first taste of the NHL was fairly brief. He made his first NHL appearance in relief of Hutton in a 6-1 defeat to the St. Louis Blues. In 12:12 of ice time Hellberg faced four shots and let in a power-play goal by Alex Pietrangelo. After that? He’s been sitting on the bench.

While you can’t deny that practicing with the Predators has its benefits in terms of learning the NHL game… you also can’t deny that starting and playing games between the pipes on a regular basis is what will keep a goalie razor sharp. That to me is what this move says. Give Mazanec a look at the NHL level. Possibly give him some action to see how he handles the pace of the NHL. Meanwhile, keep Hellberg from gathering and rust by allowing him to start regularly with the Ads.

These two goalies have been marked as a 1a/1b goaltending duo right out of camp. It looks as clear as day that the Nashville Predators feel precisely the same way.

Thoughts on the switch? Good call? Bad call? Would you have liked to see Magnus Hellberg play more with the Predators? How do you feel Mazanec will fair in his first rodeo with the NHL?

Ads Grind Out the Wild, 5-2

The Admirals won 5-2 on the road against the Iowa Wild late Sunday afternoon. Penalties were pretty abundant in this one: 64 combined penalty minutes. Yet, goals from five different Ads (Budish, Beck, Rodney, Cehlin, and Van Guilder) kept the point streak alive through eight games. The Ads have yet to lose in regulation this season. Netminder Marek Mazanec now has five wins in five starts. How about this team right now?

“It was not the type of game we expected today,” said assistant coach Stan Drulia after the game on Sports Radio 1250 WSSP. “We knew [the Iowa Wild] were playing three games in three nights and we had a fairly late travel day coming over yesterday. We were hoping to play a game of five-on-five hockey, but we got into all the penalties, power-plays, penalties. It shut a lot of guys down in certain situations. It was kind of feast or famine for both teams.”

As expected, the defense was given a slight shake up ahead of the game. Bryan Rodney returned to the lineup after serving his two-game suspension for an illegal check to the head. Also suiting up, for the first time all season, was Joonas Jarvinen who had been sidelined with an undisclosed injury. The roster shake up meant Teddy Ruth was sent down to the Cincinnati Cyclones. Ruth had played in four games for the Ads, didn’t score a point, and had neutral plus-minus. Perhaps the time down in the ECHL could help Ruth in the same way it did Bitetto last year.

The Ads managed to score the opening goal for the second straight game. Zach Budish scored his first goal of the season off of a one-time shot beat Wild netminder Johan Gustafsson. The goal was set up by Mark Van Guilder and Miikka Salomaki.

Iowa tied the game up in the final minute of the first period on the power-play. A shot from Steven Kampfer was denied by Marek Mazanec. Another robbery by Mazanec took place on Erik Haula. Yet, all the net front pressure meant that any rebound would be a tap in. That’s exactly how the power-play for the Wild would end when Jason Zucker backhanded the rebound to tie things up with thirty-nine seconds remaining in the first period.

Just forty-five seconds into the second period the Wild put a puck past Mazanec to give them a 2-1 lead. The goal, scored by Steven Kampfer, squeaked through the arm of Mazanec on the short-side.

Fight I. was between Mike Liambas and Corbin Baldwin in the second period. Talk about fearless. Liambas (5’9”) versus Baldwin (6’5”). With Aaron Sims call, this sounded like a pretty good one. Here’s hoping the YouTube machine cooks up some footage!

Fight II. took place moments later. This go-round was Mathieu Tousignant against Raphael Bussieres. Much quicker scrap. Take down for Bussieres in the end.

Fight III. was between Anthony Bitetto and Jake Dowell. Bitetto was called for slashing and lined up the experienced tough-man Dowell. The tussle was the third fight in the space of 3:02 of ice time. Egads!

The Ads responded to the Wild’s late first period goal with one of their own to end the second period. Taylor Beck managed to knot the game up at 2-2 with twenty-six seconds remaining in the period.

Bryan Rodney scored a power-play goal in the third period to give the Ads a 3-2 lead. This has to feel great for Rodney. First game back after suspension and he scores a rocket on the Ads PP unit. That is his first goal as a member of the Ads.

“[Rodney] is a real presence on the bench,” said Drulia on Sports Radio 1250 WSSP. “Saying the right things. Leading the group. On the back end, adding Jarvinen today for his first game of the year. The [defensive] core changed drastically overnight with the insertion of those two players. We have so much veteran leadership on the back end. They play hard. [Rodney] is so calm, cool, and collected with the puck. He makes things happen.”

Rodney continued his good return when one of his shots from the point would be cashed in by Patrick Cehlin. That’s Cehlin’s second goal of the season and it put the Ads up 4-2.

The third period, much quieter by the second period’s standards, was capped off by a Van Guilder empty netter. It would seem the three-in-three did just have a slight effect in the third period. The Ads were in relative control most of the period. Shots on Mazanec were managible. The game finished 5-2 and the Ads remain the AHL’s lone team to not have a loss in regulation.

“They have tremendous work ethic,” said Drulia on Sports Radio 1250 WSSP. “I think it goes to your leadership group. Scott Ford, we brought him back last year for a reason. We didn’t want [Ford] to leave when he opted to sign with St. Louis and end up in Peoria. Bringing [Ford] back is a huge factor for us. [Ford] makes a difference on and off the ice. I think we’re just a calm group.”

Thoughts on Rodney’s return performance? How about Mazanec’s run in net? Hey, how about this team in general? In the words of Aaron Sims in his post-game show, “What is going on?” The Ads are the only team in the AHL unbeaten in regulation. They have earned a point in all games played. What do you all feel is the biggest factor in this great start to the season?

Wild: Scouting the Enemy

Time for brief history lesson. Last season, after the Minnesota Wild were unable to reach a lease agreement with the Toyota Center, the Wild said “happy trails” to the Houston Aeros. What became of that failed negotiation would be a return of an AHL team in Des Moines, Iowa. Previously they had the Iowa Stars (2005-06 through 2007-08) and lastly the Iowa Chops (2008-09). It’s been two seasons in the making for Iowa hockey fans but they now have the Iowa Wild. 10,213 fans showed up for the home opener and they are averaging 5,636 fans a night to make the Wells Fargo Arena a great atmosphere to play in front of.

History lesson over. Now about that team…

The Wild boast a roster built on team success. There is a grand total of 19 players on the roster who have scored at least a point. There is a three-way tie for most points scored on the team with 6 points and a a five-way tie with players who have scored 5 points.

Top goal scorer? Erik Haula and Brett Bulmer with 3 goals each.

Top in assists? A pair of defensemen: Brian Connelly and ex-Admiral Jonathon Blum who both have 5 assists.

In net the team has been sharing the load between Darcy Kuemper and Johan Gustafsson. Through seven games, Kuemper appears to have the edge and that was slammed home with his winning effort in relief of Gustafsson against the Chicago Wolves. He’s started every game since that relief appearance and won two out of three starts.

Perhaps the single most important factor comes on this lovely Saturday. Both the Ads and Wild played last night. Both won. Yet, the Ads have the day off. The Wild are set to play the Texas Stars for the second straight night before finishing off a three-in-three when the Ads storm in Sunday afternoon. The Ads finally had a quick start last night against the Rockford IceHogs. With a tired Iowa Wild team on deck, expect the Ads to pounce on them early and have an extra gear in the third period thanks to the Saturday off.

Do you think the Ads point streak extends past this match up? Your thoughts on the return of Blummer against his old team? Will the day off for the Ads be the difference maker in this game? Banter! Banter! Banter!

Admirals Stay Hot

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(Photo courtesy of Scott Paulus)

The Admirals won 4-2 against the Rockford IceHogs Friday night. Goals scored by Shalla, Salomaki, Bitetto, and Beck powered the Ads to their third-straight win. The victory also holds the point streak to seven consecutive games. The Ads have yet to lose in regulation this season.

The Ads finally snapped two ugly stretches by scoring the opening goal of the game on the power-play. Entering the contest, the Ads were on an 0-9 run on the power-play. Plus, it was the first time since the opening game of the season where the Ads managed to score the first goal. How? Scott Valentine took a one-timed howitzer that IceHogs goalie Kent Simpson couldn’t get full grasp of. Right there to reap the benefits was Joshua Shalla who poked the puck in for the opener and his second goal of the season.

“We were great in the first period,” said Admirals head coach Dean Evason. “We took the game to them. We were physical. We didn’t turn pucks over. We got pucks to the net. [The team] did exactly what they wanted to do in order to give them a chance to have success.”

Mark McNeill managed to score his seventh goal of the season to tie things up quickly for the IceHogs. McNeill was on the Marek Mazanec’s doorstep after a deflected shot from the point knuckled in on goal. Mazanec was down and out with the entirety of the net for McNeill to shoot into.

After a two-on-one between Watson and Rask broke down on the way to goal, the puck fell behind Miikka Salomaki who spun around and let fly. The 20-year old Fin managed to sling his shot past Simpson for his first career AHL goal to restore the Ads one goal lead..

In the second period an outstanding shift put in from a line consisting of Liambas-Tousignant-Budish led to an Anthony Bitetto goal. Crafty skating and puck movement by Tousignant set the stage for a series of passes that eventually went to the tape of Bitetto, who skated in, went with a backhander, and snuck one by Simpson. That’s Bitetto’s fourth goal of the season.

“It’s a good story,” said Evason of Anythony Bitetto’s performance this season. “He got sent down last year. Came back with absolutely the right attitude. He was in tremendous shape. We asked him to drop his body fat, to get into shape, that he’s going to be a key guy for us this year and or the Nashville Predators organization. He did all the right things. He came in [this season] in tremendous shape and it shows. You watch him carry the puck up and lug it out of our zone. The best breakout is if a defenseman can carry it all the way down to the other end and make a play with it. He does that every game.”

Rockford clawed back with a power-play goal after an unnecessary play from Salomaki saw him off for interference. The goal was set up by a behind the net pass by Dylan Olsen that picked out Alex Broadhurst on the right wing. Broadhurst let fly and scored his fourth goal of the season and close the score to a 3-2 Admiral lead.

Taylor Beck put the finishing touches to the game by scoring an empty net goal on an Ads power-play. The goal for Beck is his second of the season and acted as a nice reward for a good defensive night for the more typically offensive puck wielding Beck.

Another game and another win under the belt for goaltender Marek Mazanec. It wasn’t as flashy as some of his outings during this four-game homestand, but he is proving more and more reliable as he gets the chance to start games on a regular basis. Tonight’s game he produced twenty-eight saves and the two goals he allowed weren’t soft by any means.

The Ads are now off to Iowa where they begin the first of a four-game road trip.

How long will the point streak last? Who impressed you the most this opening homestand? Discuss! Discuss!

IceHogs: Scouting the Enemy

As we all know, the Rockford IceHogs are evil incarnate. They are in your face, tooth and nail, nasty. Last season the IceHogs averaged 22.6 penalty minutes per game for a league leading 1716 penalty minutes. The year before that? They had the second most penalty minutes in the AHL with 1391. The IceHogs are fierce, physical, and are a team that have scrapped it out with much success against the Admirals in recent years. The season series last year went to the IceHogs who went 7-4-1-0 in 12 meetings against the Ads. The year prior was even worse: the IceHogs won 10 of 12 contests.

Rockford will enter tonight’s game in Milwaukee with the best record in the Western Conference, 7-3-1-0 (15 pts). They have played a league high 11 games, though. Including a 5-3 loss in Rockford last night against the Charlotte Checkers. That game saw the IceHogs post 30 penalty minutes with ex-Admiral Brad Winchester taking center stage. He received a 5 minute major for interference and a 10 minute game misconduct to boot. No footage of that incident online yet (please link to that if you find it), but it does tell me enough about the IceHogs entering this first match against the Ads this season. They are entering that little bit tired off of a tough game against the Checkers. They are also entering with a chip on their shoulder. …so, IceHogs, Ads, chippy affair, what else is new?

To me, the standout player for the IceHogs has been Antti Raanta between the pipes. This is the Fin’s first professional season State-side after spending 5 years in the Finnish Elite League. Raanta has enjoyed the majority of time in net over Kent Simpson through 11 games. He has a .920 SV% to go with 5 wins in 8 starts (including 2 wins in the shootout). In the pre-season contest between the Ads and IceHogs, it was the Raanta and Hellberg show as they matched each other save for save right up until the last shootout attempt in the tenth round of the shootout. Small sample size, but Raanta really impressed me with his play in net. He wasn’t fooled by anything the Ads threw at him in that game. The only two pucks to get past him in the game came from a Roussel shorthander and a Tousignant shootout attempt. With the Ads desperately looking for a fast start to a game they must challenge Raanta early and often if they’re going to hit the net.

Your thoughts on tonight’s game? Will the Ads point streak to start the season continue? Who do you see on the score sheet for the Ads and can we expect more than one fight tonight?

Comeback Kings: Ads defeat Stars in OT, 3-2

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The Admirals won 3-2 in overtime against the Texas Stars Wednesday night. Yet another 2-0 comeback was required for the Ads to reach OT. Goals from Anthony Bitetto and Austin Watson leveled the score. 33 saves from Marek Mazanec kept the Stars in-check. And veteran Mark Van Guilder sealed the game with a GWG in OT to preserve the Ads hot start to the season.

“We can’t continually get down,” said Milwaukee Admirals head coach Dean Evason. “We praised them for not giving up and continuing to push forward, but we have to be better to start hockey games. There is no question about it. We can’t continually do this all year. It’s going to bite us for sure.”

With last game in mind, the Ads started much better than their last outing as far as pace was concerned. They generated some chances from the boards to the net. Best of all, they weren’t letting the Stars blaze past them with their speed.

Sadly mistakes started to mount and the Stars cashed in with the opening goal. A turnover in the Ads defensive zone almost turned into an instant goal. Thanks to a hook by Scott Ford it went down as a power-play chance instead.

Unfortunately, that chance would net the opening goal for the Stars. A skipping and loose puck around the net couldn’t be cleared or closed down by the Ads. Colton Sceviour wound up popping in the loose puck above a scrambling Mazanec. This is the fifth straight game where the Ads failed to score first. The lone time they managed to do so was in the opening game of the season in Abbotsford.

The pace continued ramping up for the Stars. By the end of the first period it proved to be too much for the Ads to handle as they conceded again. This was a goal generated by speed and stellar passing from the Stars. Jyrki Jokipakka to Mike Hedden to Brett Ritchie. Tic. Tac. Toe. The shot by Ritchie was an absolute rocket that flew by Mazanec to give the Stars a 2-0 first period lead.

Period number two featured no scoring but some chippy moments out on the ice. Mathieu Tousignant, not once but twice, was hit to the head by Stars d-man Cameron Gaunce. The second “coming-together” lead to a roughing call against Gaunce which laid out Tousignant.

Next up in the sniper-scope was Mike Liambas. The Ads go-to enforcer dropped the gloves at the end of the first period with Francis Wathier (I call it a draw on the fighting scorecards). Late on in the second period Liambas was slashed on the way to the net by Aaron Rome. Liambas looked to the linesman for a slashing call, looked back down for the puck, and was planted into the boards very awkwardly. There was absolutely no call for boarding. The slashing call was the lone call on the play. Fortunately for the Ads, Mr. Liambas skated off and did not miss a shift despite being down face first in pain after the hit.

Anthony Bitetto continued his hot start to the season as he put the finishing touches off on a great breakout play. The entry into the zone saw the Ads stay wide as a group, keeping the Stars somewhat frozen, and passes by Simon Moser and Joonas Rask set Bitetto up for an open shot. That’s Bitetto’s third goal of the season. He had just one goal all last season.

The comeback was capped off by Austin Watson with 5:50 remaining in the third period. A no-look backhanded pass by Tousignant went straight to the net, bounced off Rask, and into the patch of Watson to make it two goals in two games for the Michigan native.

“I think for me it’s just a little confidence,” said Austin Watson of his recent performances. “I thought I had some good chances the first few games and nothing was going in for me. Credit to [Tousignant] tonight. He grinds the puck out for twenty-seconds. I was on the ice for five-seconds and he hits me for an open net, almost. Guys are putting pucks in the right places and I’ve been fortunate enough to put myself in the right spot to have the chance at a goal scoring opportunity.”

The Ads were getting trapped in their own zone late in OT and allowed a full line change to the Stars before Patrick Cehlin managed to fight the puck out of the zone. Then the unthinkable. Cehlin didn’t dump the puck. He kept skating, skating, skating, and before you knew it the Ads chewed out an OT winning goal off the stick of Mark Van Guilder. The Ads might have skipped a line change on the charge down the ice. Given they scored off of that rush lead by Cehlin – no harm, no foul.

“A win is a win,” laughed Anthony Bitetto. “If we comeback or come out and beat a team early, a win is a win. Yeah we want to come out of the gate a little bit quicker and get on the right page early but, at this point, a win is a win. We just have to keep rolling with it.”

The Ads are undefeated in regulation through their first six games. They are 4-0-2-0 and have claimed 10 of 12 points to start the season. Next up the Ads cap off the homestand with a game against the evil –EVIL– Rockford IceHogs.

Thoughts of the Ads to this point? Scrappy? Too slow at the start of games?