Despite scoring eight goals in his first 11 games with Milwaukee, Admirals forward Linus Klasen is hardly content with his performance so far.
“Of course I am happy with my production so far, but I am never satisfied,” Klasen said. “I am going to keep working every day to try to keep producing even more. If you get satisfied, that’s when it can turn around on you really fast.”
The gifted Swede, who is scoreless in his last two games, hopes to reignite his offense this weekend against Lake Erie, a team that is missing its top goaltender. Longtime NHL veteran John Grahame is currently up with the Colorado Avalanche with starter Craig Anderson injured for an indefinite period of time.
Speaking of the Monsters, this weekend Milwaukee will see a team that has a lot of similarities to themselves. Lake Erie is a young and dynamic squad that is growing in confidence with every game.
“Grand Rapids and Lake Erie are both very good teams and fast teams, so we will be challenged (this week),” Milwaukee coach Lane Lambert said.
Several names on the Monsters should be familiar to Wisconsin hockey fans. Lake Erie’s fifth leading scorer is former Badgers forward Matthew Ford. At least three other Monsters played for the University of Minnesota, including R. J. Anderson, Ryan Stoa and Mike Carman.
Don’t look now, but the Admirals have won two shootouts in a row.
After the Admirals and Grand Rapids Griffins played to a scoreless tie through regulation and OT, goals from Mark “The Proof” Santorelli and Jamie Lundmark in the shootout were enough to give the Ads the win. Mark Dekanich turned aside all but one of the shots he faced.
The Admirals recap is here, the Griffins recap is here, the box score is here, and the AHL has a blurb about the game here. The win puts the Ads in 3rd place in the division with 17 points, and just 2 points out of first place. Milwaukee has played one less game than the 1st place Rampage, and 3 less games than 2nd place OK City. And yes, we should all be more concerned about how the standings look at the beginning of April than the beginning of November….but the team has made up some ground nicely over the last week.
Scoreless tie. Just four penalties the entire game. I asked Aaron Sims if it was an exciting battle or if the teams were kind of sleepwalking through the game, and he said that it was played at a good pace and was a pretty good game.
With the Admirals being outshot by 11 for the game, Mark Dekanich was easily the #1 star.
Former Badger defenseman Brendan Smith was the fifth shooter for Grand Rapids and had the chance to extend the shootout. And much like the 5th shooter in the Peoria game, he hit metal, giving the Admirals the win.
In the third period, Linus Klasen didn’t see as much ice time as some of the other skaters. That’s a credit to the GR defense, who were not giving him any space to be creative. Klasen was trying to be too cute, and kept turning the puck over. So his minutes diminished late in the game. A shrewd coaching move by Lane, for sure. And one I can make the argument for and against.
Speaking of arguing…
Questions For Discussion:
– Do you agree with the coach’s decision to take away minutes from one of your most skilled forwards if he’s being ineffective?
– The last time you saw a scoreless tie through overtime, did you walk away from the arena feeling like you watched an exciting or boring game?
And so it begins, the 10-game marathon road trip for the Milwaukee Admirals.
Today the team got on the bus and left for a franchise-tying travel adventure, visiting six different AHL cities along the way–Grand Rapids, Cleveland, San Antonio, Austin, Oklahoma City, Austin (again), Houston and San Antonio (part deux).
(Here is a google map of the trip just in case you wanted to follow Milwaukee on its cross country trek)
For coach Lane Lambert, the roadie presents an opportunity to find out a lot about his young squad.
“Though we’ve played six games already on the road, there will be some things that we will learn on this 10-game trip,” Lambert said. “We should get a good assessment (of our club).”
By the time Milwaukee leaves San Antonio on Sunday, November 28, the Admirals will have played 22 games so far this season or over a fourth of its 80-game total. Lambert expects Milwaukee to have its main team concepts polished up by the end of the trek.
“This is the time when we really need to solidify the systems in our game,” Lambert said.
Milwaukee currently stands in fourth place in the West Division with 15 points. Sitting in that position or better on December 1st will go a long way for the Admirals in 2010-2011, as in each month going forward Milwaukee plays more home games than road games.
Bonus: Some Fun Stats for the Trip and Beyond
1) If the Admirals cover the entire trip by bus they will have logged nearly 5,000 miles, or spent nearly three and half days just traveling.
2) Using an estimate of gas at $3 a gallon and traveling in a bus that gets 10 miles per gallon, Milwaukee will have spent $1,441.80 on fuel for the trip.
3) Using the best routes by bus, the Admirals will spend time traveling in eight different states: Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Missouri, Oklahoma and Texas (the team will miss a ninth, Kansas, by just a few miles).
4) Strangely, Milwaukee travels on no road trips longer than three consecutive games after November’s 10-game southern quest. In fact, this trip is only one all season longer than three games.
5) If you think Lambert is joking about assessing his club, check out my season preview.
Blake Geoffrion left Sunday’s game in the 2nd period after taking a blindside hit to the head from Wolves forward Spencer Machacek.
I’ve been told that they’re still not sure the extent of the injury, but he’s not making the trip to Grand Rapids for the Brunch-Game on Wednesday. Mike Bartlett has been recalled from Cincy and will make the trip.
Also — some video tape from the game has been sent to the league office, but I’m not sure if it’s regarding the Blake hit or the Lundmark mugging in the 3rd period. It may be both. We’ll see if the league offers any supplemental discipline.
There was some great discussion in the thread about the Admirals/Wolves game on Sunday…but there was also some parts that got a little out of hand.
I’m referring to the comments regarding the National Anthem performance.
We’re all part of the Admirals family here, and when we should have been supportive, we weren’t.
And as the editor of this blog, I let things get out of hand…which is unacceptable. I have removed/edited the comments in the previous thread that discussed this.
So on behalf of myself, and the readers, I’d like to offer an apology to “Chels” and her family. I dropped the ball on this one.
Chels, I hope that you’ll come back and perform again, and I know that if you do, you’ll bring the house down. Or you’ll raise the roof….whichever cliche you’d rather do.
I’m closing the comments on this post.
Thanks for reading. We’ll have some more content later today.
The Admirals kept the pedal to the metal, outshooting the Wolves 30-13 over the final two periods, en route to a huge 4-1 victory over Chicago, closing out this three game homestand.
The Admirals finished the homestand with 5 out of a possible 6 points, and will take to the road for the next 10 games. While 5 out of 6 sounds good, Coach Lane Lambert would have preferred all six.
More from Lane.
The Wolves were playing their third game in three nights, and didn’t seem to have the usual electricity in their play that we’re used to seeing from them. After Edward Pasquale had won the first three games of the season series against the Admirals, the Wolves didn’t even dress him tonight, electing to go with Peter Mannino in net, and Drew MacIntyre opening the bench door.
Likewise, Mark Dekanich made his first start of the season against the Wolves, and turned aside 26 of the 27 shots he faced. After the 14 shots he saw in the first period, he wasn’t particularly tested the rest of the way.
The Admirals scored the first goal on a shot from the point by Teemu Laakso. The shot went off of a Wolf defender and changed direction enough to get by Mannino.
Darren Haydar answered for the Wolves 3:16 later. He scores goals. That’s what he does.
But in the second period, the Admirals did something that we haven’t seen them do in awhile — they shifted into a higher gear.
Kelsey Wilson scored his 3rd of the year, again with a little bit of puck luck. Mark Van Guilder won the offensive zone faceoff back to Jon Blum at the near point. His slapshot busted his stick, as the blade went farther than the puck did. But the puck went right to Kelsey Wilson in the slot, who fired a shot that found the back of the net before Mannino could get back into position.
Mark “The Proof” Santorelli scored in his second straight game, this one a power play goal. Again, it was a Jon Blum shot from the post that got it going. Blum’s shot hit iron, but the rebound kicked to Santorelli on the right doorstep for the put-back.
Santorelli potted another power play goal at 13:29 of the 3rd. Roman Josi had a shot from the point that was saved by Mannino, but there was a scrum in front of the crease for the loose puck. Matt Halischuk got a stick on it, but couldn’t get a shot off. Santorelli was able to chip it it.
Don’t look now, but The Proof is 2nd on the team in goals behind Klasen.
Frustration really set in during the 3rd period for the Wolves. Darren Haydar was called for a retaliating slashing penalty after Gabriel Bourque went for a hard hit on him. The slash happened behind the play, and on an average night, would probably go unnoticed. But we had two referees tonight, and the trailing ref had the call.
Defenseman Boris Valabik let out some frustration on the backside of Jamie Lundmark’s head with about 6 minutes left in the game.
But the hit that stung the most was courtesy of Spencer Machacek. He had a blindside hit on Blake Geoffrion in the second period that sent him tumbling to the ice. Looked like he got his clock cleaned pretty good. No penalty was called on the play.
Blake skated off the ice with the trainer, and came back out for one shift later in the period, before missing the rest of the game. Here’s coach Lambert on the hit.
We can tell you that while we were waiting for Lane to come out, Blake came down the hallway in his suit and said hello on his way out to visit with folks. He didn’t come out with crutches or an ice pack on his head. But I’m not a doctor, and head shots are dangerous. We’ll follow up again with them this week on what his story is.
NOTES:
– Roman Josi and Jon Blum were paired together for most if not all of the game. And wow. Wow wow wow wow wow. Both played very well, especially on the power play. They were both on the ice for the last three Admiral goals. Josi had SEVEN shots. Either one of them can jump into the play to create scoring chances. They may end up being better than when Sulzer and Franson were paired together.
– This was the best I have seen them play all season with regards to putting pucks on net and then crashing the net. And they were good at it for 60 minutes. VERY high marks.
– Coach had one of his chalktalk sessions for the season ticket holders before the game, and I’d like to credit “D-La” for a great question in the Q&A session. Paraphrasing….she asked if there is any danger or worry of former players (ie: Nolan Yonkman) spilling the beans to their new teams about the Admirals systems. GREAT question. And Lane’s answer was pretty good too. They don’t worry about it so much. Yonkman probably can’t tell them anything more than what the coaches already know. The coaches spend a lot of time watching the film and they already have a good idea of what works and doesn’t work for opponents. The thing that they have to watch out for is a little extra adreniline from players who are facing their former team for the first time.
– Looked like Klasen was going to be held off the scoresheet for the game, but they later credited him with an assist on Laakso’s first goal.
– Aaron Johnson…. same old Aaron Johnson. Sigh.
– Cincy shutout Wheeling last night. Chet Pickard did not play. Drat. Their schedule this week is Wed, Fri, Sat, Sun.
Questions for discussion:
– Agree or disagree about the Blum-Josi pairing?
– Was this a “must win” game, heading into the long road trip against a team that had won three in a row against the Admirals?
– Do you like the two-referee system?
– The team is 2-0 with Jason Bohn as the timekeeper. Is Dean “The Dream” Zanoni’s job in jeopardy?
When the puck drops Sunday afternoon at the Bradley Center, Milwaukee will try to do something that they haven’t all season—beat Chicago.
In the three prior meetings with the Wolves, the Admirals have found three different ways to drop games. It started with a 3-2 loss in overtime at home on October 15, then a 3-2 shootout defeat the next night in Chicago, and finally falling 4-3 in a regulation decision on October 24 at Allstate Arena.
For Milwaukee coach Lane Lambert, the first step toward knocking off Chicago starts with better netminding.
“We have to get good goaltending,” Lambert said. “I feel like we should have won two out of the three games against the Wolves, but we didn’t get saves when we needed them.”
Lambert also believes that a consistent effort against Chicago will go a long way toward getting that first win against last year’s West Division champs.
“We have to string a full 60 minutes together against them,” Lambert said. “In the past we’ve had lulls and it hurt us on the scoreboard.”
Newly acquired Steve Begin, who played his first game with the Admirals against Chicago agrees with Lambert, but also believes Milwaukee needs to pay more attention to the little things.
“We made a lot of mistakes in that game,” Begin said. “But we can beat them if we skate for 60 minutes, have good communication on the ice and take care of the details.”
(Editor’s note: A special treat for you tonight… Back in press row for an encore that nobody asked for, tonight’s recap was written with love, from the man, the myth, the legend, the still-technically-retired, the father of two, the former star of the Admirals Short Shifts blog…..Please welcome back to the keyboard, ERIC W KENT!)
(Also, just so you know….”RiverDogs”…..that’s a knock at Jsonline…..trust us…it’s funny)
The Milwaukee Admirals made sure they didn’t cough up a third period lead Friday night against Peoria. The best way to do that? Make sure you never have a third-period lead to begin with. The Admirals played from behind at the Bradley Center, ultimately tying the game late before earning a 3-2 shootout victory.
The Admirals, and most of the 4,744 fans in attendance, thought Milwaukee had taken the lead at 13:21 of the first period. Blake Geoffrion tried to stuff a wrap-around past Peoria netminder Ben Bishop. Bishop made the left pad save, but subsequent attempts by Gabriel Bourque appeared to have pushed the puck over the line. Bishop’s left pad, which presumably made the save, was clearly two feet deep in the net. Referee Joe Sullivan, however, thought the puck was covered before then and told Coach Lane Lambert the whistle should have been blown.
Peoria would succeed where Milwaukee failed and tallied twice in the period – and made sure Sullivan saw it. I’m going to call out Scott Ford a bit for the first one. He let Ryan Reaves get behind him in transition, and Reaves was able to flip a shot in off Mark Dekanich. The second goal sort of gets blamed on Andreas Thuresson for taking a dumb tripping penalty. The Rivermen scored on the power play with just 27 seconds left in the period.
Coach Lambert came out early during the intermission, and had a two minute conversation with Sullivan. They talked about Life, The Universe, and Everything. They talked about Ben Bishop, and they talked about why the Admirals hadn’t been credited with that goal.
I’m not sure if that conversation had a direct correlation or not, but the Admirals got to play most of the second period with a man advantage. Over the period’s first 13+ minutes, the Admirals had a man advantage for NINE of them. Five Power Plays gave the Ads plenty of opportunities to cut into the Rivermen’s 2 goal advantage. To say they had mixed results would be…um…kind.
Power Play #1 – 1 SOG; 0 Goals
Power Play #2 – 0 SOG; 0 Goals
Power Play #3 – 4 SOG; 1 Goal
Power Play #4 – 1 SOG; 0 Goals
Power Play #5 – 0 SOG; 0 Goals
Sure, they got a goal on the third PP there – but I don’t think they’re too happy with the other four: a combined 0-4 with just 2 shots on goal. Of course, Lane is just happy they got on the board. He doesn’t want to think about how he would feel if they went through the entire game with just the one power play goal.
The Admirals tied the game with 6:53 left in the third due to a spot of well-timed luck. Jon Blum tried to initiate a dump-and-chase and fed the puck into the right corner. While Ben Bishop moved behind the net to intercept the puck, it hit a seam in the glass and kicked out into the slot – where Mark Santorelli was chasing the play. He popped the puck into the empty net to tie the game at 2.
The game would procede through overtime without any goals…and thus go to a shootout. Both teams scored on four of their first five attempts. Milwaukee’s Matt Halischuk scored to open round 6, putting the pressure on Peoria’s Phil McRae. The Rivermen center had Dekanich down on the ice, but his shot hit the crossbar and clanged away to safety – securing a hard-fought victory for the good guys.
NOTES
-Mark Santorelli, Linus Klassen, Jamie Lundmark, Mark Van Guilder, and Matt Halischuk all scored on their shootout attempts. Roman Josi was denied.
-The second period featured 42 penalty minutes, including 5 for Blake Geoffrion’s first professional fight. At least, it’s in the books as a fight. It was more like 5 minutes for “getting your face punched in until Kelsey Wilson decked Ben Bishop and we had to stop”. The refs don’t have a signal for that, though, so they gave him fighting.
-Also in that period, Jamie Lundmark got swept up in a Peoria line change and shoved onto the Peoria bench; Halishuk was denied by Bishops’ right pad on a great breakaway chance; Roman Josi fired a shot from the point that hit Dean Arsene in the gut and he went down like a sack of potatoes; dogs and cats started living together; tractors stopped working; and planes started falling from the sky. It was mass hysteria.
-The Lines were a bit jumbled tonight – as Blake Geoffrion was demoted. He played between Mark Santorelli and Gabriel Bourque, while Steve Begin centered Andreas Thuresson and Linus Klassen.
-Mark Dekanich has now surrendered 2 goals or less in 7 of his 8 games this season.
-Chet Pickard got another chance to put his woes behind him for Cincinnati…and failed. He gave up three goals in the first 8 minutes against Trenton before being replaced.
-Some Coffee Talk for all y’all. Mark Dekanich’s numbers are the best of his career. Granted, it’s only been 8 games. But my question to you is this: Are we witnessing Mark Dekanich altering his NHL prospects?
-Another question: Where was your confidence level as the Admirals headed to a shootout? We all know their struggles are well documented.
-Finally: Does anyone even really miss me anymore? Reading this drivel can’t be good for your brain cells. And in case there are any doubts, or anyone out that that doesn’t want me to crawl right back into retirement, let me ask this:
Does anyone know what’s going on with James Sixsmith?
The Admirals quest for the third goal remains after falling 3-2 in a shootout to Rockford Wednesday night. Milwaukee led the game 2-0 entering the third period and had outplayed the IceHogs through the first two periods, but a lazy penalty would lead to a goal, and a late IceHog goal forced overtime. With momentum, the IceHogs had the better chances in overtime but didn’t capitalize. But in the shootout Rockford scored on four of five chances and won the game.
The beginning of the end started with a Grant Lewis holding penalty in the third; on the ensuing power play Rockford held the puck in the zone and Kyle Beach took advantage of a loose rebound. Ivan Vishnevskiy took a slap shot from the point that rebounded off of Mark Dekanich to forward Ben Smith. He only got a piece of the puck, but Beach was able to bury it.
Here’s coach Lambert on the turning point…..
After icing the puck with less than 1:30 left in the third, Milwaukee called timeout to rest the players and discuss the following sequence. What happened next was not the outcome they were looking for. Rockford won the draw clean, and Ivan Vishnevsky made a pass to the side boards. Ben Smith then passed through two Admirals (Begin and Palin) to the backdoor and Jeffe Taffe tapped in the game tying goal with 1:09 left in the third.
Lambert’s take on the faceoff and goal…..
In overtime the Ads looked stunned; Milwaukee turnovers lead to a couple of Rockford chances but Dekanich stood tall. However, the shootout wouldn’t go as well…
Rockford scored on four of five chances with Taffe notching the winning goal in a shooter friendly shootout. Milwaukee scored on three of their chances but still fell short.
It wasn’t all gloom and doom for Milwaukee, Jamie Lundmark notched the first tally at 13:32 of the first taking advantage of a Teemu Laakso shot that went just wide of the net. It appeared that Toivonen and the Rockford defense hesitated and Lundmark had a wide open net. It was Lundmark’s third goal of the season, both Laakso and Roman Josi assisted on the goal.
Aaron Johnson scored his first goal of the season snapping a rebound past Toivonen giving the Admirals a 2-0 lead. Linus Klasen started the play moving from inside the blue line to the top of circle were he found Andreas Thurresson. Thurresson got a shot that Toivonen misplayed and the puck bounced to the slot and sat waiting for somebody to shoot.
Dekanich finished the game with 25 saves and Toivonen stopped 24 shots. The Ads play their second of only three November home games Friday against Peoria.
Talking Points…..
What did you think of Hugh Jessiman in a Rockford uniform?
Coach Lambert left the post-game presser with “you can edit that out” after recapping tonights game. How disappointing was it to only get one point out of tonight’s game? (“you can edit that out” was PG-13 language)
Brace yourself Admirals fans: Milwaukee’s schedule is about to take another nasty turn.
In the month of November the Admirals have just three measly home games and none past this Sunday’s game meeting with Chicago. Therefore this week’s matchups—games against Rockford on Wednesday, Peoria on Friday, and the team’s fourth meeting of season with the Wolves on Sunday—represent a vital stretch for Milwaukee to gain significant points in the AHL standings.
“We would really like to get the month off on the right foot considering we’re going on the road for the next ten games,” Admirals coach Lane Lambert said. “That’s the general objective for these next three games—for us to have a strong start.”
The other key to this week’s contests is that they are West Division games played against Milwaukee three closest geographic rivals. Currently, the Admirals sit in sixth place in the West, chasing both Chicago and Peoria. Milwaukee could move up the ladder by claiming four or more points on the week.
Obviously, the first days of November is far too early in the season to start worrying about Milwaukee’s playoff positioning. But a couple of big home wins this week would make life a lot less stressful on Lambert’s crew as the Admirals head south for the latter half of the month.
So, Roundtable: How many points do you think Milwaukee will get out of these next three games? Would anything less than four be considered a disappointment? Why?
News & Discussion Site For Your Milwaukee Admirals