Admirals Sign Zac Larraza to PTO Contract

(Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)
(Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)

Ahead of the Milwaukee Admirals first game of the 2016 Calder Cup Playoffs they have added a familiar face to the roster in the form of forward Zac Larraza. The 23-year old had previously signed a PTO Contract with the Admirals back in mid-December. He now signs yet another PTO Contract at the dawn of the AHL’s playoff season.

With the Admirals Larraza managed to play 10 games while scoring 3 points (1 goal, 2 assists). He collected 13 shots on goal and did not take any penalties while holding an even plus/minus rating. This season has been his debut season of professional hockey and, while the better majority of his time spent has been with the Manchester Monarchs of the ECHL, he has played for two other AHL teams than the Admirals: Portland Pirates and San Diego Gulls. In total, Larraza’s 2015-16 campaign across the AHL and ECHL has garnered 38 points (23 goals, 15 assists) from 63 games of work.

Of note, Larraza’s first stint with the Admirals saw him wearing #28 with the team. That has since been claimed by defenseman Corey Potter. As such, Larraza will become the first Admirals player to wear #20 since Miikka Salomäki who wore it earlier this season.

Be sure to keep updated with Admirals Roundtable through social media platform of your choice: follow along Twitter, like us on Facebook, get photo updates on Instagram, and listen along on SoundCloud.

Griffins: Scouting the Enemy

(Photo Credit: Mark Newman)
(Photo Credit: Mark Newman)

The time has finally arrived. The Milwaukee Admirals are back in the AHL’s Calder Cup Playoffs. It may have only been a year’s absence but, after twelve straight seasons of playoff hockey in Milwaukee, that simply felt like a decade ago. Fortunately for everyone they get to voice their appreciation and welcome playoff hockey back at the BMO Harris Bradley Center tonight and tomorrow with the Admirals, as Central Division champions, controlling home ice against the Grand Rapids Griffins in the first round of the 2016 Calder Cup Playoffs.

~Kind of Grand, Sort of Rapid, Flock of Griffins~

The Grand Rapids Griffins finished the regular season with a record of 44-30-1-1 (90 points). In their second to last game of the season they found themselves in a tie for the third seed of the Central Division with the Rockford IceHogs and in a showdown against them to really help dictate how the playoff picture was going to look. The Griffins lost that game on the road 4-0 and then proceeded to lose on home ice 3-2 the following night to the Bakersfield Condors. They finished with a 0.592 points percentage and claimed fourth place of the Central Division.

There was a time where it looked like the Griffins were going to be the team to beat in terms of winning the Central Division crown. They set a franchise record winning streak by putting together fifteen straight wins and would pull off another winning streak of thirteen-games roughly two months later.

A harsh reality of the Griffins 2015-16 season is that they are a particularly streaky team. As fantastic as those winning streaks both sound their season began in misery. The Griffins took five-games before finally earning their first win of the season and were a rough 2-8-0-1 (5 points) from their opening eleven-games prior to marching to that franchise record fifteen-game winning streak.

The Griffins currently head into the playoffs on a losing streak which matched a season high. They have lost five-straight games in regulation going into the opening round series against the Admirals. The first time they lost five straight games in the regular season they won 9-1 over the IceHogs on the road before dipping and diving before their then thirteen-game winning streak.

Again, this team is either extremely hot or extremely cold. A major question that should get answered early in this series is whether or not the layoff from the end of the regular season to the first round playoff match-up against the Admirals helped to get these Griffins back on track after squandering away third place in the Central Division with a rough patch to their regular season. What Griffins are going to show up: a refocused group that has corrected its recent faults or more of the same?

~The Playoff Rewind~

There are many names on this season’s Griffins roster who were part of the 2015 Calder Cup Playoffs. For those in need of having your memories refreshed the Griffins were able to enjoy a solid run one-season ago that ended in the AHL Western Conference Finals.

In the first round the second seeded Griffins faced the seventh seeded Toronto Marlies in a best-of-five round series that went the distance. That series featured something that will not be happening when the Griffins face the Admirals. It was a 2-3 playoff format in which the Griffins, as the higher seeded opponent, was able to chose between starting the series on home ice for the opening two-games or ending it at home for the final three-games. It worked a treat if only to make them earn their home ice as the Marlies won the first two games of the series in Toronto. The Griffins would sweep the final three games that were held in Grand Rapids to advance. This season the Griffins and Admirals best-of-five series will have a more functional 2-2-1 format that sees the Admirals host the first two-games of the series and the possible fifth and decisive game.

In the second round the Griffins advanced to face the fourth seeded IceHogs where they would win the best-of-seven series 4-1. The Griffins claimed the first two-games on home ice, lost the first contest in Rockford, and then snagged the final two-games in Rockford to close out the series before the final two-games held in Grand Rapids were even needed.

The Western Conference Finals last year were between the Griffins and the top seeded, and totally West if you ignore Geography, Utica Comets. The Griffins would push the Comets to six-games but fall 4-2 to the top seed. The Griffins earned a Game 2 victory in Utica but dropped the first and last games they had of their three at home. That opened the door for a Comets finish to the series in Utica where they punched a ticket to the Calder Cup Finals in Game 6.

Of the expected Griffins roster, going into tonight’s game, there will be nineteen returning names from last season’s Griffins playoff roster. That is just a little under 60% of last year’s team that nearly punched a ticket to the Calder Cup Finals that will be available to the Griffins against the Admirals.

~The Stanley Cup Playoffs Effect~

Before the puck has even dropped on this series the Stanley Cup has already made an impact on the way this series between the Admirals and Griffins will be played. The Griffins parent club, the Detroit Red Wings, were eliminated from the Stanley Cup Playoffs last night by the Tampa Bay Lightning. This allows for the Red Wings organization to disengage properties that could contribute at the AHL level and bring recent Stanley Cup Playoff playing experience with them.

The Griffins are set to see the return of forwards Andreas Athanasiou and Joakim Andersson to their ranks from the Red Wings. Both players featured in all contests of the five-game playoff series for the Red Wings. Athanasiou scored a goal while Andersson tacked on an assist during their playoff run.

Athanasiou has played 37 games at the NHL level this season and produced 14 points (9 goals, 5 assists). As a member of the Griffins this season he has added 16 points (8 goals, 8 assists) in 26 games. Last season in the Calder Cup Playoffs he was able to produce 9 points (5 goals, 4 assists) from 16 games.

Andersson’s career split to this point between the NHL and AHL is rather tight in terms of games played. He has logged his entire North American professional playing career under the Red Wings banner but has seen varied to lesser results while playing at the top flight. In his NHL career he has logged 205 games, scored 36 points (15 goals, 21 assists), has a plus/minus rating of -11, and has 27 games of playoff experience where he has 8 points (2 goals, 6 assists). At the AHL level in his career he has logged 208 games, scored 106 points (41 goals, 65 assists), has a plus/minus rating of +8, and has 20 games of playoff experience with 11 points (4 goals, 7 assists).

The Admirals parent club, the Nashville Predators, currently find themselves locked up at 2-2 in their opening round playoff series against the Anaheim Ducks. That series now effectively has become a best-of-three series. That might oddly work to the Predators favor should the series trend of no home team having won yet holds to the finish. The Ducks host Game 5 and Game 7 if it is needed.

Should the Predators be eliminated while the Admirals remain active in the Calder Cup Playoffs their returning faces would include team captain Colton Sissons, last season’s top scorer for the Admirals Viktor Arvidsson, and effectively this season’s captain when the true captain wasn’t in the AHL Cody Bass. All three of the possible returning names to the Admirals made their debut to the Stanley Cup Playoffs during the Predators current series against the Ducks.

~All Top Scorers Must End In An “E” Sound~

The Griffins offense this season was the second most potent in the Western Conference. As a team they recorded 238 goals which was only bettered by the Texas Stars (277 goals) and edged out the third closest team -the Admirals- by 14 goals. While the Admirals feature a rather balanced scoring group the Griffins have a few players that do separate themselves from the pack.

Andy Miele was the Griffins leading scorer in the regular season. He managed to follow up what was a highly successful first season with the Griffins in 2014-15 with a rather close effort this year: 62 points (18 goals, 44 assists) in 75 games with 77 penalty minutes and a plus/minus rating of +18.

Miele is followed on the Griffins scoring list by the team’s leader in goal scoring, Eric Tangradi. After bouncing around a few organizations for the past three-seasons Tangradi appears to have found a place of renaissance in the Red Wings organization. He has contributed 56 points (28 goals, 28 assists) in 72 games as a member of the Griffins with a plus/minus rating of +17 which were all career bests.

Third in scoring for the Griffins is Mark Zengerle. In his second professional playing season since finishing up a playing career for the Wisconsin Badgers he set a career high in the scoring department with 47 points (9 goals, 38 assists) in 72 games. His performance this season bettered his first professional season as a member of the Griffins by 10 points.

There are then a few hot shots worth keeping an eye on in the series. Anthony Mantha, who has scored 45 points (21 goals, 24 assists) in 60 games. Martin Frk, who has scored 44 points (27 goals, 17 assists) in 67 games. Mitch Callahan, who has scored 32 points (19 goals, 13 assists) in 62 games. Robbie Russo, who was the Griffins top scoring defenseman this season with 39 points (5 goals, 34 assists) in 71 games. And the oddity that is Louis-Marc Aubrey who has scored 29 points (12 goals, 17 assists) in 75 games this season which includes being the Griffins top scorer against the Admirals in this season’s head-to-head with 7 points (6 goals, 1 assist) in 8 games.

~Solving The Coreau Woes~

The Griffins possible secret weapon to this series could come in net in the form of Jared Coreau. This season he appeared in 47 games, held a record of 29-15-2-1, 2.43 goals against average, 0.922 save percentage, and locked down 6 shutouts.

In his career he has faced the Admirals Coreau has played in 12 games, made 11 starts, holds a record of 8-3-0-0, has stopped 273/293 shots on goal for a 0.939 save percentage, has a 1.94 goals against average, and has earned 3 shutouts over the course of three-seasons. He has played in two-games against the Admirals that have spilled past regulation and won each of them (once in overtime, once in a shootout). He has also been yanked from a start once against the Admirals this season.

If there were any question mark to Coreau it would be the simple fact that he has played in only one career AHL playoff game and lost. It came in last season’s Calder Cup Playoffs in Game 2 of the Griffins opening round series on the road against the Marlies. He stopped 21/24 shots on goal for a 3.10 goals against average and 0.875 save percentage.

What are your expectations for this first round series for the Milwaukee Admirals? What is the most concerning thing to you about the Grand Rapids Griffins? Does the fact that both teams had less than ideal finishes to the regular season, Admirals losing their last two-games and the Griffins losing their last five-games, make a difference in the form that these two teams enter the playoffs with?

Be sure to keep updated with Admirals Roundtable through social media platform of your choice: follow along Twitter, like us on Facebook, get photo updates on Instagram, and listen along on SoundCloud.

Chatterbox, Vol. 128

(Photo Credit: Daniel Lavender)
(Photo Credit: Daniel Lavender)

Today the Milwaukee Admirals hosted a Media Day with the playoffs officially beginning tomorrow night at the BMO Harris Bradley Center. You might think not much would have changed in terms of the on-ice product from yesterday but that simply wasn’t the case.

The Nashville Predators officially assigned defenseman Alexandre Carrier to the Admirals this afternoon. Not only was he on-hand for this morning’s practice but he was joined by fellow member of the Gatineau Olympiques Yakov Trenin who, I suppose like Janne Juvonen and Joonas Lyytinen, is unofficially here. Carrier and Trenin were both selected by the Predators in the 2015 NHL Draft and have each already signed their entry level contracts. This group follows that of Jack Dougherty, Aaron Irving, and Anthony Richard who all joined the Admirals before the end of the regular season. As far as uniform numbers are concerned they all go as follows: #5, Trenin… #15, Dougherty… #24, Richard… #30, Juvonen… #38, Lyytinen… #49, Irving… #64, Carrier…

There was then the fantastic news that came about just as Media Day was coming to a close that the Predators organization has signed Admirals forward Adam Payerl to a one-year, two-way contract that will keep him around for the 2016-17 season. That’s quite a special story given last off-season he couldn’t even find a job at the AHL level and took to the Cincinnati Cyclones because of the chance to participate in Admirals pre-season camp. He impressed then. He’s impressed since. And he’s impressed so much so this season that it put him on the Predators radar.

~Chatterbox~

This being Media Day meant there were countless other news stations around to join the media scrums. There will be a fair bit of different voices asking questions along the way. As far as the usual suspects go they went as follows: Dean Evason, Max Görtz, Kevin Fiala, Marek Mazanec, Corey Potter, and Jamie Devane. These were the sounds from rinkside earlier today.

Comments from the comments from today’s practice? Would you like to see a few of the new additions to the Milwaukee Admirals enter the fray come playoff time? Would that add a new twist that the Grand Rapids Griffins wouldn’t have expected or would making a professional playing debut with the stakes being so high be a tad too risky for the Admirals?

Be sure to keep updated with Admirals Roundtable through social media platform of your choice: follow along Twitter, like us on Facebook, get photo updates on Instagram, and listen along on SoundCloud.

Predators Sign Payerl to One-year, Two-Way Contract

(Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)
(Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)

The Nashville Predators have announced this afternoon that they have signed Milwaukee Admirals forward Adam Payerl to a one-year, two-way contract that will see him stay within the organization for the 2016-17 season.

Press Release via Nashville Predators:

Nashville, Tenn. (April 21, 2016) – Nashville Predators President of Hockey Operations/General Manager David Poile announced Thursday that the club has signed forward Adam Payerl to a one-year contract worth $575,000 at the NHL level and $75,000 at the AHL level in 2016-17.

Payerl, 22 (3/4/91), has spent the 2015-16 campaign with Nashville’s primary developmental affiliate, the American Hockey League’s Milwaukee Admirals, posting 29 points (13g-16a) and 114 penalty minutes in 74 games and helping the club claim the Central Division title. The 6-foot-3, 215-pound native of Kitchener, Ont., has appeared in 204 career AHL contests since 2012 with Milwaukee and Wilkes-Barre, amassing 60 points (23g-37a) and 284 penalty minutes, in addition to playing in two NHL games with Pittsburgh during the 2013-14 campaign (0pts, 2 PIMs).

Never drafted, Payerl played five seasons in the Ontario Hockey League with Barrie and Belleville from 2007-12, posting 143 points (60g-83a) and 303 penalty minutes in 306 games.

Payerl entered this season as property of the Cincinnati Cyclones after not having any other AHL offers on the table. The Admirals brought him into their pre-season camp with a few other names from the Cyclones roster and Payerl instantly made a huge impression on the Admirals coaching staff. This season he has reached AHL career highs across the board having contributed 29 points (13 goals, 16 assists) from 74 games.

Be sure to keep updated with Admirals Roundtable through social media platform of your choice: follow along Twitter, like us on Facebook, get photo updates on Instagram, and listen along on SoundCloud.

Scott Ford: Trading Sticks for Suits

(Photo Credit: Christina Shapiro)
(Photo Credit: Christina Shapiro)

One of the true daunting questions that a hockey player has to inevitably face is the “what next” element when their playing career comes to an end. At some point the NHL window closes, the wheels don’t spin as fast as they used to, or the game simply passes one by. Fortunately for former Milwaukee Admirals captain Scott Ford he was able to go out on his own terms and find an immediate answer to that itching question of “what next” by finding work in a familiar place.

The story behind how a kid that grew up in Fort St. John, British Columbia, Canada that found a home away from home as a man in Milwaukee, Wisconsin comes from the path traveled on the road that comes with being a professional hockey player.

“This has basically become my home,” said Milwaukee Admirals assistant coach Scott Ford. “The community is awesome. There is so much stuff going on. The people are fantastic. The Midwest is great and then just this area with all that it has to offer. I’m excited to be here and to continue after my playing days. I’m just fortunate.”

After a four-year college playing career at Brown University Ford would take a journey over the next four-years of his life playing professionally for numerous organizations: Fresno Falcons, Cleveland Barons, Providence Bruins, Trenton Titans, Bridgeport Sound Tigers, Dayton Bombers, and Utah Grizzlies. It wasn’t until the 2008-09 season that he would find the Milwaukee Admirals. That would mark the start of a relationship between the player, the team, and the city itself.

(Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)
(Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)

Ford’s professional playing career spanned eleven-seasons. In the Admirals fifteen-season existence as members of the American Hockey League (AHL) Ford managed to suit up and play for the Admirals in seven of those seasons. He was the Admirals all-time leader in the AHL era of the franchise for games played (378) up until Mark Van Guilder eclipsed the mark (383) a season ago. He also logged the second most penalty minutes (577) in the AHL era of the franchise trailing only Kelsey Wilson (699). For two full-seasons (2011-12 and 2013-14) he was named team captain of the Admirals.

There were two key moments to Ford’s career in and out of the Admirals. The first of which came in the 2012-13 season when he decided to leave the organization to pursue a chance of being able to play in his first career NHL game.

(Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)
(Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)

He opted to sign for the St. Louis Blues organization and was stationed with the Peoria Rivermen where he was named team captain. He played 43 games for the Rivermen but, during that time, the Admirals were missing a little bit of everything that he had provided in season’s past. So, on 2/19/13, the Predators organization opted to trade Jani Lajunen to the Blues in order to require their former captain. Ford’s return came in concert with the excellent form of then first-year goaltender Magnus Hellberg and the Admirals were able to squeak into the playoffs as the eighth and final seed of the Western Conference. The Admirals would be eliminated by the top seeded Texas Stars in four games of a best-of-five series.

Ford would stay-on with the Admirals the following season and take up the duties of being team captain once again. Yet, the second key moment for Ford’s career actually came while spending the bulk of his time not only out of Milwaukee but out of the AHL.

(Photo Credit: Jeff Hanisch)
(Photo Credit: Jeff Hanisch)

In the 2014-15 season the AHL options for a 34-year old defenseman are limited. This was the boat Ford found himself in. His decision to continue his playing career despite the lack of AHL hockey being on the table saw him join the South Carolina Stingrays in the ECHL. When Ford laced up the skates for the first time as a member of the Stingrays he was a few days shy of seven years since playing in his last ECHL game with the Grizzlies. It would feel like this is where the story should get sad but it couldn’t have been any further from that. Ford’s time as a member of the Stingrays proved to be quite memorable. The Stingrays would set an ECHL record for a winning streak while he was around by earning wins in twenty-three consecutive games. As the Stingrays were nearing their playoff push Ford signed a PTO contract to once again wear an Admirals jersey and provide some short-term help to the organization on and off the ice. He dressed for twelve more games with the Admirals before being sent back to assist the Stingrays in the 2015 Kelly Cup Playoffs where Ford’s team would fall in the final to the Allen Americans.

Once the dust settled on the 2015 Kelly Cup Finals that question of “what next” turned its ugly head once more to Ford. It was time to strongly consider his professional playing career as over and move on to a new profession. Fortunately for him, his time in the game left a major impression to one organization in particular. The one where he found his home away from home.

In the most recent off-season Nashville Predators General Manager David Poile reached out to the long-time member of the Admirals with a job offer. The job was to join Dean Evason and Stan Drulia as part of the Admirals coaching staff. Ford may not have had prior coaching experience which would put him on an even playing field to Evason for Drulia but he offered constant experience and natural leadership qualities throughout his time as a player in the Admirals locker room to take young up and coming talent under his wing. Despite continually maintaining high fitness, and having the drive to still achieve that ever allusive first career NHL game, it was time to transition from the ice to behind the bench.

“It just felt right,” said Ford. “I felt like I was able to do things on my own terms as far as playing that final year. Having just an unbelievable run with South Carolina and, obviously, coming back [to Milwaukee] at the end of the season. I had an opportunity with Nashville and I felt like it was the right time to step away.”

The move was a perfect fit. Ford always seemed to migrate back to Milwaukee regardless of the Admirals season because it became home. Despite only being around the team briefly at the end of the 2014-15 season he still was highly familiar with the coaching staff, his surroundings, and numerous players throughout the system. He could be the gap between the locker room and the coaching staff.

“[Scott Ford] been great,” smiled Milwaukee Admirals head coach Dean Evason. “I’m telling ya, he’s been a real real great addition for [Stan Drulia] and I. He doesn’t work any harder than us, clearly, but he is such a nice presence within the room. He’s obviously just removed, he’s played with some of these guys, but he’s found that balance of separating. He’s in the room, and he’s communicating with the guys, but its not – he’s going down there and telling us their stories. He’s found a nice balance between buffering with the players and the coaches. And he’s taken on some real good responsibilities as far as our pre-scout, our preparation, does a lot of that. Helps Stan and I with special teams and he’s a good person. You talk about the room and the players and having good hockey players. Well, it’s great to have a good coach but if he’s not a good person it’s not going to work. He is a good person. And he is a really good coach as well.”

(Photo Credit: Daniel Lavender)
(Photo Credit: Daniel Lavender)

For as long as Ford was in the game becoming a coach provided new challenges as well as getting out of trends he became so familiar with. He logged 694 games of experience in his professional playing career. So, when a whistle were to blow at an Admirals practice earlier in the season, it was hard for him to not take a knee with the rest of the players as his former coaches spoke up. It was just one of many areas in which he needed to account for aspects of the coaching role that most players may generally overlook. As a player the mindset can be to head to the rink, go on autopilot, and let the game be the game. As a coach there is a business mentality to conducting the parts and pieces that make the team go. There are day-to-day communications from the Admirals to the Predators so that everyone is on the same pulse. Preparations far exceed simple readiness for a game but extend to even as small as how practices should be mapped out and schedule in accordance with how hectic the league schedule can already be in its own right. It is a constant administrative effort to see that each individual player can perform to the best of their abilities while all coming together to form the best Admirals team that it can be. In his first season behind a bench as an assistant coach Ford just so happened to be part of one of the best Admirals teams in their history as a member of the AHL.

“We’ve had a successful year,” commented Ford. “Our group is a group. It’s not just one guy or two guys that have led the charge. If you look at our stats and our scoring it’s very balanced. It’s just been a total group effort right from the top to the bottom.”

This season marked the return of the Admirals to the AHL’s Calder Cup Playoffs after a one-year absence. It might sound like a blip on the radar but the Admirals had made the playoffs for an twelve consecutive seasons up until last season. Out of those twelve straight playoff seasons Ford contributed to half of those playoff teams. In his first outing behind the Admirals bench he is back to playoff hockey. All he has done since his last appearance is trade some sticks for suits.

Be sure to keep updated with Admirals Roundtable through social media platform of your choice: follow along Twitter, like us on Facebook, get photo updates on Instagram, and listen along on SoundCloud.

Chatterbox, Vol. 127

(Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)
SOON. (Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)

This morning I attending practice to get a better glimpse of what’s what with the Milwaukee Admirals as they are days away from starting off the 2016 AHL Calder Cup Playoffs on home ice against the Grand Rapids Griffins. There was a fair bit to take in. Here is what I saw.

Reinhart-Gaudreau-Åberg
Fiala-Kamenev-Payerl
White-Girard-Görtz
Richard-Pendenza-Devane

Oligny-Potter
Näkyvä-Elliott
Murphy-Mullen
Lyytinen-Dougherty (Irving)

Saros
(Mazanec)

I know what you’re probably eyeballing right away. Who is Lyytinen? Well, that my friends would be defenseman Joonas Lyytinen who was drafted by the Nashville Predators in the fifth round of the 2014 NHL Draft. He played for KalPa in Liiga (Finland) and has been part of their program for the entirety of his career dating back to the 2009-10 season as part of the U-16 program. He turned 21-years old at the start of this month, is a left-handed shot from the blueline, and has yet to officially sign an entry level contract or ATO with the Admirals.

That last line is an important one to note because there also happens to be another Finnish player in Milwaukee with the team right now that isn’t officially signed by either the Predators or Admirals. At the moment goaltender Janne Juvonen is with the Admirals. He did not participate with the team in practice today but has been with the team for roughly a week now. He was another fifth round draft choice by the Predators in the 2014 NHL Draft which is now invading the city of Milwaukee. The only member of that draft class that isn’t here right now is Justin Kirkland whose Kelowna Rockets are still doing solid work in the 2016 WHL Playoffs.

There are then two other names of interest that could be joining the Admirals, Yakov Trenin and Alexandre Carrier. Both are members of Gatineau Olympiques of the QMJHL which was eliminated from the second round of the 2016 QMJHL Playoffs by the Moncton Wildcats in a six-game series. Trenin was the Predators first selection, taken in the second round, of the 2015 NHL Draft and Carrier was selected in the same draft class two rounds later. Both have already signed entry level contracts with the Predators organization. Trenin was reportedly in Nashville last night.

News on the Taylor Aronson front remains silent. He is still not with the team due to personal reasons. Also still not back with the team is Cody Hodgson who has been out for awhile now due to back spasms. It’s unclear whether or not Hodgson, who missed the last twenty-games of the Admirals regular season, will return at all during the playoffs.

~Chatterbox~

After practice was completed I had the opportunity to speak with Milwaukee Admirals head coach Dean Evason as well as Pontus Åberg and Jimmy Oligny. If you are wondering why the Oligny interview starts off with laughter it is because he informed me that he named dropped me on WISN-12 who was doing a feature with the French Fries before the interview. I was taken aback by that so hilarity ensued. … I digress. … Here’s what they had to say a few days ahead of the Admirals opening round series against the Griffins.

Comments on the comments? Are there any concerns on your part if the Milwaukee Admirals end up without Taylor Aronson during this playoff run? With all these new prospects coming in does the future wave of Admirals excite you knowing how well the Predators have been drafting in recent years?

Be sure to keep updated with Admirals Roundtable through social media platform of your choice: follow along Twitter, like us on Facebook, get photo updates on Instagram, and listen along on SoundCloud.

Fifteen with Stefan Elliott

(Photo Credit: Stephanie Moebius)
(Photo Credit: Stephanie Moebius)

One of the major occurrences that took place during the Milwaukee Admirals 2015-16 season was seeing a mid-season overhaul of the way the defensive group was structured. In January the organization shifted away from the likes of Victor Bartley and Conor Allen in favor of balancing the defense’s left-handed dominant shooting group with some right-handed shots. The Nashville Predators acquired Stefan Elliott and Patrick Mullen in mid-January and even added Corey Potter at the NHL’s Trade Deadline for an extra bit of veteran ability to the Admirals mix.

If there were anyone that most fans with the Admirals would be familiar with of those brought it in would be Elliott. The 25-year old defenseman was drafted by the Colorado Avalanche in the second round of the 2009 NHL Draft and played nine games against the Admirals while a member of the Lake Erie Monsters from 2012-13 season to the 2014-15 season. He scored two-goals against the Admirals in that last playing season within the Avalanche organization before moving on and signing with the Arizona Coyotes organization last off-season. He played in 19 games this season for the Coyotes and scored 6 points (2 goals, 4 assists) in that time before he was acquired by the Predators and sent to the Admirals.

There is no denying that Elliott provides a great two-way ability to the ice yet it is his offensive ability from the blueline that really sets him apart. In his AHL career he has been a 0.49 point per game player. As a member of that Admirals that figure went up to 0.54 as he notched 19 points (8 goals, 11 assists) in just 35 games. Late in the season he was able to head up to the Predators and assist their efforts while Ryan Ellis dealt with a minor injury and logged a pair of games for his second NHL team of the 2015-16 season.

A big thanks goes out to Stefan Elliott for taking the time out to have this interview. As far as Fifteen interviews go there just aren’t many players left to get for the 2015-16 season. Who haven’t you heard from that you want to hear from next? Does he speak Russian? Because, if he does, chances are I just can’t quite pull that one off yet. Not unless I improve my own personal Russian which sounds a lot like me speaking like I normally do which some call English.

Be sure to keep updated with Admirals Roundtable through social media platform of your choice: follow along Twitter, like us on Facebook, get photo updates on Instagram, and listen along on SoundCloud.

AHL’s Pacific Division Growing in 2016-17?

Springfield Falcons
The Springfield Falcons’ 21-year AHL run appears to be over as the Arizona Coyotes will likely move the franchise to Tucson. Logo via Chris Creamer’s SportsLogos.net

There is an interesting report surfacing in recent days in regard to the Arizona Coyotes and the Springfield Falcons.

Last week ArizonaSports.com made it known that the Coyotes were interested in purchasing an AHL team and relocating them to Arizona to setup shop in Tucson. Arizona’s second largest city is just a short drive south of the Phoenix Metro area.

The initial ArizonaSports.com feature did not cite which team would be relocating, but a report on WWLP.com cited the Falcons as the likely party. This morning Falcons announced the news on their website, and it was reported on MassLive.com that team owner Charlie Pompea confirmed the news.

In August 2015 the Coyotes signed a three-year affiliation with the Falcons, who did not make the AHL playoffs this season. Previously Arizona had been affiliated with the Portland Pirates.

Springfield, Massachusetts has housed an AHL team nearly every year since 1936 and is currently home to the offices of the American Hockey League.

The potential Tucson team would join the Pacific Division per the ArizonaSports.com report. It would likely play its games at the Tucson Convention Center beginning as early as 2016-17, but that timetable is still to be resolved according to the MassLive.com report.

If Springfield to Tucson is the only offseason relocation for the AHL, my initial guess on how the divisions would shake out is this:  Charlotte would move out of the Central Division and into the Eastern Conference, while Tucson would slot into the newly formed Pacific Division. The Pacific Divison would then have eight teams and the Central would be left with seven.

The sale and move of the franchise is not yet official as it needs a final sign off by the American Hockey League’s Board of Governors.

So Roundtable . . . What do you think of year one of the AHL’s Pacific Division? Are you sad to see another longtime AHL city lose its team? What are your thoughts on the Admirals potentially playing Tucson in the future?

Be sure to keep updated with Admirals Roundtable through social media platform of your choice: follow along Twitter, like us on Facebook, get photo updates on Instagram, and listen along on SoundCloud.

 

2015-16 Regular Season Retrospective

(Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)
Not everyone you see here is here in Milwaukee by season’s end. Such is life at the AHL level. Something that makes the 2015-16 Milwaukee Admirals season quite a special one. (Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)

It is the most wonderful time of the year. The playoff season in the world of hockey is upon us and the Nashville Predators, Milwaukee Admirals, and Cincinnati Cyclones are all featuring. It’s a great reflection of the organization and of how it has rebounded a season removed from the Predators AHL and ECHL affiliates missing out on playoff hockey.

When this 2015-16 season began my preview listed a few key points of discussion: (1) The impact last season might have on Dean Evason‘s job security if the Admirals poor finish to the 2014-15 season trickled into the start of the new campaign. (2) The new faces entering the team, either prospects or new additions from the off-season, and how the add to the Admirals. (3) The battle between Kevin Fiala‘s ears. (4) How will the Admirals defense work with familiar names no longer around? (5) How will Marek Mazanec‘s contract year go? (6) How will Miikka Salomäki look in his return from a shoulder injury that ended his season from mid-February to the finish line?

Now, some of what I said in that preview ended up never really making too huge of a dent in Milwaukee. Anthony Bitetto started, stayed, and played in Nashville this entire season with the exception of a conditioning assignment to the Admirals very early in the season. Salomäki started his season in Milwaukee but that didn’t last very long. He’s now up where he belongs. The rest though? They are all worthy of reflecting back on because most of those early season questions have been answered.

~Behind the Bench~

Evason was the recipient of a lot of heat from Admirals fans as last season came to an end. That heat has vanished after a resoundingly positive season from himself and his coaching staff. The Admirals went from a last place finish in the Midwest Division in the 2014-15 season to winning the Central Division in 2015-16. It was the Admirals first divisional crown since the 2010-11 season when Lane Lambert was behind the bench. The Admirals record of 48-23-3-2 (101 points) was the first time since that 2010-11 season in which the Admirals eclipsed 100 points and was the sixth time from fifteen AHL seasons that the Admirals were able to accomplish the feat. The Admirals 0.664 points percentage ranks them third best among the Admirals previous fifteen AHL seasons: 2005-06 (0.675) and 2008-09 (0.669).

(Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)
(Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)

All of those numbers and accomplishments are made all the more special when remembering what the Admirals are: an AHL hockey team. The roster is an ever changing chameleon. There were twelve players who played on the Admirals season opener who also played the season finale. Right now there are eight players with the Predators that featured at some point on the Admirals. There were four players currently on the Cyclones roster that logged ice-time for the Admirals. And eight players who dressed for the Admirals at some point that are no longer in the system – be it a PTO contract or the allure of playing in Russia again. For all of what happened last season the biggest issues the Admirals, as a team, seemed to have was being and playing like a team. When certain players were hurt, called up, cleared waivers and sent down, the Admirals were never able to find stability. This season it hasn’t mattered one bit who was in the locker room on gameday. This season’s Admirals showed up game after game, stuck to the identity and game planning established from Evason and his coaching staff, and found consistent results from start to finish. It was a joy to watch seeing so many different permutations of the Admirals deliver on a regular basis. That comes from a multitude of angles, be it the players tasked with entering the team or the veteran leadership group taking people under their wing, but the be all end all falls on the coaching staff to see it all come good. It did. And that shouldn’t be overlooked when considering the flack Evason took a season ago.

I feel a great deal of lessons were learned last season. Even if you happen to be reading this out of Nashville, Cincinnati, or abroad you’ve no doubt probably become familiar with the term suspended for a violation of team rules. This Admirals coaching staff has clamped down on poor behavioral traits. Late to a practice? Late to a team meeting? It doesn’t matter who you are, what round you were drafted in, or the prestige you had in a different country. If you weren’t accountable to behaving like a professional hockey player you were going to be held accountable for your lack of professionalism. It was strict parenting but parenting that needed to be done. There weren’t an alarming number of these situations this season but those that became public knowledge were first offenders who didn’t have those situations happen again. The right work ethic at the AHL level is certainly needed to achieve success at the NHL level. That’s precisely what I viewed the coaching staff doing when these situations occurred. Consider it tough love.

~The New Recruits~

This season’s new additions have been nothing short of impressive. There are many first year professionals or first year pros to the North American game that looked as though they made a seamless transition to life in the AHL with the Admirals. Let’s give a quick jog through a few of them, shall we?

(Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)
(Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)

Juuse Saros entered this season with what felt like all the hype in the world. He had been talked up before even signing his entry level contract. Once he did sign it became clear that one of the two goalies that the Admirals had in 2014-15 wasn’t going to return. The goalie left out in the cold would be Magnus Hellberg with Saros joining Mazanec for the 2015-16 season. Saros isn’t the prototypical Predators mountain sized goalie but you’d never know the difference looking at his end-season numbers alone. Saros is so smart at reading plays, so quick laterally, and so competitive at snagging pucks in around the crease that his height is simply irrelevant. In his debut season playing professionally in North America where the rink is smaller, the game is faster, and the art of crashing the net more could throw off most newbies from Europe – Saros went 29-8-4-0 in net from 38 starts. He won 76.3% of his starts as a 20-year old first year pro. He also a 2.24 goals against average and 0.920 save percentage which were both bests among rookies in the AHL. What’s been most exciting has been the idea of this is a goalie in the early stages of learning this North American pro game and look at what he’s accomplished while learning.

(Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)
(Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)

When the news hit that Vladislav Kamenev was indeed making the leap from Russia to get his North American playing career going. Initial rumblings sounded as though he would be ushered in slowly and placed on the wing. That never happened. He was one of the Admirals top centers from day one and looked shockingly polished for a kid that turned 19-years old just two months before the Admirals regular season opener. He had played a full-season of senior level hockey in Russia with Metallurg Magnitogorsk of the KHL prior to this season but his numbers in Milwaukee blew those out of the water. In the KHL last season he scored 10 points (4 goals, 6 assists) in 41 games. In the AHL for the Admirals this season he has produced 37 points (15 goals, 22 assists) in 57 games. He’s been placed in all situations and performed well in all situations. No matter what the language barrier has been for him it hasn’t once manifested itself into his play on the ice and he should only get more comfortable with the language and North American game over time.

(Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)
(Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)

Tying the aforementioned violators of team rules this season with the current topic and you would find Max Görtz as the dead ringer under both keyword searches. After all, there was a reason why the man who ended up as the Admirals second highest scorer this season was kicked down to the ECHL for a cup of cold coffee. The thing that one quickly appreciates with Görtz is his honesty. He knew he did wrong. Admitted him turning up late for practice was embarrassing and quickly turned a corner. Görtz provided the Admirals with a unique skill set that they’ve not had in awhile. He offers good size, skates well, and had what Evason describes as a world class shot. Görtz set career highs for himself as a pro hockey player while competing in North America for the first time this season with 47 points (18 goals, 29 assists) from 72 games. Perhaps the best part to his season was the sheer consistency of his scoring. Görtz scored in 36 out of 72 games this season which effectively meant he scored every other game. For a debutant to North America – that’s pretty reliable.

(Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)
(Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)

Often times when looking at the way certain organizations build their future up it is done by snapping up players that flew under everyone else’s radar. Trevor Murphy has to go down as one of these players who I feel like many teams right now out to be kicking themselves over for not giving the undrafted defenseman playing in the Ontario Hockey League (OHL) the past four-seasons a phone call and contract. The Predators did so much and look at the results. Murphy was a veritable Swiss Army knife for the Admirals. He rarely had a consistent defensive pairing and has been kicked up to play as a winger on many occasions. Why? Well, his skill set is such that if you take the job title away it makes a good deal of sense because of his speed, grit, and whopper of a slap shot. More accurately as to why simply came down to numbers most of the time. The Admirals have lots of defensemen. When you score 6 points (3 goals, 3 assists) on your debut at wing for the Admirals I have to imagine that also tickles the interest of trying it some more. No matter, Murphy’s first professional playing season ended with 32 points (11 goals, 21 assists) from 59 games. That was the most goals scored by an Admirals defenseman in a single season since Bitetto accomplished an 11 goal season in 2013-14.

(Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)
(Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)

For the run through of these players so far I think the vibe has been all kinds of positive. Let’s change that up a bit with a chat about Kristian Näkyvä who has had a mixed bag of a season. When the 25-year old Finnish defenseman arrived to the Admirals from Luleå HF of the Swedish Hockey League (SHL) it felt like he was being signed on as an offensive minded defenseman. His 2014-15 season in Sweden ended with him producing 29 points (10 goals, 19 assists) in 55 games. What became apparent right away with Näkyvä though was he, more than most, was being overwhelmed by his debut to the North American pro game. And that’s understandable. It’s far easier to skate up ice as a forward than it should be skating backwards as a defenseman. There were many occasions at the start of this season where Näkyvä was being turned inside out or being at the wrong place at the wrong time in his own zone. This was compounding to the fact that, for what he looked like he was signed on to do, he wasn’t providing offense nor being given much of a chance to run the Admirals power-play. Fortunately he has steadied his game as the season has gone on but his offensive upside just hasn’t manifested itself is all.

~Fiala vs. Fiala~

I’ve written in great length about Fiala’s maturity this season. It all comes in a simple package of his building up this summer, being cut in pre-season camp by the Predators when he felt like he was going to make the opening night roster, starting slow and boarderline uninterested in Milwaukee, suspended by the AHL for flipping off the Lake Erie Monsters bench, and then well and truly getting the wheels to find traction on the tarmac.

(Photo Credit: Stephanie Moebius)
(Photo Credit: Stephanie Moebius)

In the lag period to Fiala’s 2015-16 season he went 10 games until his suspension from the league came down. He had 5 points (0 goals, 5 assists) in that time and it took him 12 games until finally netting that first goal of the season. He was his own worst enemy at the time. He was either doing too much on the puck or looking like the ghost of Fiala on the ice. The scariest part to me in the beginning stages of the season was that, for how much better of shape he got himself into, he lacked any sort of explosiveness. There wasn’t even that “take over” factor of being the guy playing like his job was on the line every shift that could help make a moment like this one possible. He needed a reboot. Call it fate or not but his suspension seemed to be that reboot. Heading into December Fiala had 6 points (1 goal, 5 assists) from 15 games. In the month of December he provided 12 points (5 goals, 7 assists) in 14 games – in December alone.

There is a reason why Fiala ended the season as the Admirals leading scorer with 50 points (18 goals, 32 assists) in 66 games. He’s that good. The reason for all the immaturity moments have just as easy of an explanation. He’s still only 19-years old. There’s more than a simple on-ice development at work here in Milwaukee with Fiala and his road to Nashville will benefit because of that. He’s aware of the bigger picture. He wants to be an NHL level talent now. But he also knows that he has areas to his game that need brushing up still. That’s a sign of maturity. And that’s a sign to Nashville that they’re going to be having another energetic winger capable of playing NHL hockey a season from now.

~The Retooled Veteran Defense~

This was a big storyline to me when the 2015-16 season was starting up. There wasn’t going to be a Scott Ford anymore on the ice. He was moving to the bench. The Admirals were going to be without their captain and best out-and-out defenseman from a season ago, Joe Piskula, because the Predators opted to let him sign with the Anaheim Ducks organization in the off-season. Instead, the Predators brought in Conor Allen and hoped some of the younger lads like Jonathan Diaby or Garrett Noonan or even a returning to health Johan Alm could step up. None of that happened. And it wasn’t until January until the reset button was pushed.

(Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)
(Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)

In January the Admirals made a major change to the way they played defense. Evason wanted to make for an even three-lefties and three-righties approach so the team managed to acquire Stefan Elliott and Patrick Mullen. At the NHL Trade Deadline this went even further when the Predators added yet another right-handed shooting veteran defenseman in Corey Potter. Not too shabby considering Taylor Aronson was effectively the lone true right-handed shot on the Admirals blueline for about a season and a half until these changes were made. The impact of Elliott, Mullen, and Potter have been nothing short of incredible. From Mullen’s debut game for the Admirals on 1/15/16 the team went a shocking 25-10-1-2 from their last 38 games of the season for a 0.697 points percentage in the time the defense was restructured.

It is questionable from an organizational perspective as to why these sorts of changes weren’t implemented from the very beginning. If having a three-left and three-right defensive group was so important why not plunge into or attack the developmental platform right away to purge out some of the surplus of lefties and ship in righties on defense? What was the real draw for adding Allen if only to dump him for Mullen in January? It’s questionable. But, I suppose, a lesson learned from all parties involved. Besides. The same people involved with composing the team at the start of the season were smart enough to make the changes in January, right?

~Out of the Headlights~

This season was as important of a season that Mazanec will have played in his professional playing career. His contract is up after the 2015-16 season ends and it is followed in synchronous fashion with the ending of Predators back-up goaltender Carter Hutton‘s contract as well. With Saros entering the organization this season, and it look more and more likely that Janne Juvonen isn’t far behind him, it’s safe to say that every time you watched Mazanec play a game in net this season it was taken like a job interview for the Predators 2016-17 back-up role to Pekka Rinne.

(Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)
(Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)

What Mazanec managed to do this season was perform his best wire-to-wire season since making the trek to North America from his native Czech Republic. In 39 apperances, 38 of which were starts, Mazanec held a record of 19-15-5-2 with a 2.45 goals against average and 0.912 save percentage as well as earning 4 shutouts. If not for that stinker of a defensive outing for the Admirals in the regular season finale, where he was made to suffer a 7-1 loss, Mazanec would have either surpassed or matched career bests in all of those major goaltending categories. It’s quite frankly a shame that he was hung out to dry in that game because it reflects poorly to his numbers and hints that he laid an egg when it just isn’t true. This was perhaps the first season in North America where Mazanec didn’t once have a deer in headlights level performance. He was solid from the start of the season all the way to the end of the season and did it all while under the pressures of a hungry young Finnish goaltending prospect sharing net time and a cloudy future of what could happen to him in the next off-season. Never once did Mazanec and Saros seem flustered by one another. It was an internal competition, yes, but a friendly one. The two really pushed each other hard and did it all while being supportive of who got tabbed as the starting goaltender. There isn’t really much else you could have asked for out of the Czech.

(Photo Credit: Kristen Jerkins)
(Photo Credit: Kristen Jerkins)

If this was a job interview then for Mazanec: did he get the job? For my money I could see this hilariously coming down to money. Hutton had a fantastic season backing up Rinne in Nashville by logging 17 appearances with a 7-5-4 record, 2.33 goals against average, 0.918 save percentage, and a pair of shutouts. When Hutton first signed on with the Predators organization you have to remember he did it with barely having any NHL experience to his name. The goalies competing for the back-up job at that time all lacked serious NHL experience with Hutton, Mazanec, and Hellberg all vying for the role. Now that three-seasons have effectively passed the back-up role likely comes down to Hutton and Mazanec with the much younger Saros expected to take on a far more significant role as the Admirals number one goaltender in 2016-17. Should Mazanec beat out Hutton it would simply be down to the money factor. He won’t cost near as much as Hutton would. For a Predators organization that still need to lock up Filip ForsbergCalle Järnkrok, and possibly even Petter Granberg you have to think the lesser the money given to the back-up to Rinne, who will still carry the weight of games on his shoulders, is beyond attractive. The only question is whether or not Hutton would be willing to play for even less than he already does. Because I feel Mazanec, to be an NHL back-up, would take less if it meant a one-way contract was on the table.

~By The Numbers~

When you start looking more at the numbers that the 2015-16 Admirals put up you start to truly have an appreciation for what they actually accomplished. For starters, their 48 wins this season only trailed the likes of the 2005-06 and 2008-09 squads which earned 49 wins. What makes that all the more special is that the two squads with 49 wins did that in an AHL era of an 80-game season as opposed to the current 76-game season the Admirals exist in today. The 2015-16 Admirals points percentage is just behind both of those teams but that sets them apart as the third best Admirals AHL team from fifteen seasons of operation.

(Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)
(Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)

When viewing the 76-game era this year’s Admirals team managed to: earn the most wins (48), most points (101), score the most goals (224), allow the second least amount of goals (193) with only the 2011-12 team allowing fewer (190), and they took the second fewest penalty minutes (1045) only coming up shy to the 2012-13 team (1013). Not only did this year’s Admirals team become the first in the 76-game season formula in the team’s AHL history to break the 0.600 points percentage barrier they ended with 0.664. The next closest to that margin in five-seasons was 2013-14 which narrowly missed the barrier with a 0.599 points percentage.

And then there is a statistic specifically aimed at you. Yes, you – the fans. The 2015-16 season wasn’t just a smashing success for the Milwaukee Admirals on the ice but around the ice. Attendance hit 234,404 fans on the season for an average of 6,169 fans per home game. That is the highest attendance figure since the 2011-12 season (6,226) and only the fourth time in fifteen AHL seasons that the Admirals averaged over 6,000+ in attendance for a season. If there were any way to end this retrospective of the regular season it is like that. The team was brilliant. And so were all of you.

What were some of your favorite moments from the regular season? What were some of the big surprises that cropped up during this season? Is the success of the season a sign of even better things to come as the Nashville Predators drafting and scouting has provided the Milwaukee Admirals with such a solid and young team for this season?

Be sure to keep updated with Admirals Roundtable through social media platform of your choice: follow along Twitter, like us on Facebook, get photo updates on Instagram, and listen along on SoundCloud.

Admirals Release A.J. White from ATO Contract

(Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)
(Photo Credit: Scott Paulus)

According to AHL Transactions the Milwaukee Admirals have release forward A.J. White from his amateur try-out (ATO) contract. This move comes two days after White suited up in the Admirals regular season finale which was his fifth appearance with the team.

White joined the Admirals from UMass-Lowell where he had just finished his college playing career. He had played 153 games at UMass-Lowell and contributed 79 points (28 goals, 51 assists). He also happened to be teammates at the college program with current Admiral Joe Pendenza. White made his professional playing debut with the Admirals on 4/2/16 in Milwaukee against the San Antonio Rampage. In his five appearances with the team he didn’t score a point of offense, didn’t take a penalty, and had a plus/minus rating of -3 which all came in his last two outings of the season.

Be sure to keep updated with Admirals Roundtable through social media platform of your choice: follow along Twitter, like us on Facebook, get photo updates on Instagram, and listen along on SoundCloud.