Category Archives: CT Whale

Norfolk Admirals 4, Connecticut Whale 3

By Brian Ring

Hartford, CT, May 6, 2012 – The Connecticut Whale were defeated by the Norfolk Admirals, 4-3, Sunday night in Game Three of their second-round playoff series at the XL Center. Mike Angelidis had the game-winning goal for Norfolk, which has now won two straight against the Whale in the series. Casey Wellman scored twice for the Whale.

CT WhaleThe Whale trail the Admirals in their best-of-seven series, two games to one, with Game Four coming up Monday night in Hartford at 7:00 PM.

“I thought we had a good start, I thought we showed good resolve at the end of the game, and we had a few mistakes in the second period that were pretty costly,” said Whale head coach Ken Gernander. “We’ve got this one put behind us, time to focus on tomorrow night’s game and come out flying tomorrow night.”

The Whale struck first, as Wellman blocked a pass by Norfolk’s J.P. Cote an blasted a shot from the right-wing side past Norfolk goaltender Dustin Tokarski (19 saves) for the 1-0 advantage 5:20 into the opening frame. The goal came unassisted on the Whale’s first power-play opportunity of the game.

Ondrej Palat would tie the game for the Admirals just 2:41 later, as Norfolk broke up a Whale power-play chance. Palat emerged from the Connecticut end with the puck and went in on a shorthanded breakaway, deking out Whale goaltender Cam Talbot (26 saves) with a move to the backhand for the equalizer.

Connecticut would take the lead again with 2:38 left in the first period, enabling them to make it a 2-1 game after one period. Andre Deveaux managed to push a loose puck past Tokarski after winger Marek Hrivik muscled the puck to the front of the Norfolk cage. The goal was Deveaux’s second in as many games.

The Admirals would tie the game back up at two with six seconds remaining on a second-period power-play, as Alex Killorn snapped one from the right circle past Talbot. Killorn’s third of the postseason was assisted by Mike Kostka and Alexandre Picard at 11:31.

Norfolk took a 3-2 lead just 45 seconds later, as Trevor Smith sent his third goal of the playoffs past Talbot to give the Admirals their first lead of the game. Smith’s goal was a deflection of a shot by Mark Barberio, and was also assisted by AHL MVP and Rookie of the Year Cory Conacher.

Angelidis extended the Admirals’ lead to 4-2 with 2:20 left in the second period, as he converted a pass from Michel Ouellet past the outstretched leg of Talbot. Radko Gudas also assisted on the score, Angelidis’ first point of the playoffs and the eventual game-winner.

Wellman would get the Whale to within one with his second goal of the night 1:06 into the third, as Connecticut scored their second power-play tally of the game. Wellman’s slapshot from just inside the Norfolk blue line beat Tokarski, with assists going to Kris Newbury and Tim Erixon.

The Whale, however, could not even the score despite several close chances during a last-minute scrum in the Admirals end, and find themselves down for the first time in the series.

The series resumes Monday night at 7:00 p.m., as the Whale host the Admirals in Game Four of their second-round series at the XL Center (“The Rock” 106.9 WCCC-FM, www.ctwhale.com, live video streaming at www.ahllive.com).  Game Five is this Wednesday, May 9, a Whale home game that will be played at the Webster Bank Arena in Bridgeport, CT at 7:00.  Tickets for Game Four are on sale now at the Public Power Ticket Office at the XL Center, and Game Five tickets are available at the Webster Bank Arena box office.  Tickets for both Games Four and Five can be purchased on-line at www.ctwhale.com and through TicketMaster Charge-by-phone at 1-800-745-3000.

Playoff ticket packages are also available that include tickets to all possible home playoff games.  To speak to a Whale account executive about a playoff ticket package, call (860) 728-3366.  More information is available at www.ctwhale.com.

To continue reading, please click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

Norfolk Admirals 4 at Connecticut Whale 3
Sunday, May 6, 2012 – XL Center Veterans Memorial Coliseum

Norfolk 1 3 0 – 4
Connecticut 2 0 1 – 3

1st Period-1, Connecticut, Wellman 2   5:20 (PP). 2, Norfolk, Palat 2   8:01 (SH). 3, Connecticut, Deveaux 2 (Hrivik, Newbury), 17:12. Penalties-Valentenko Ct (interference), 0:14; Smith Nor (boarding), 3:53; Segal Nor (slashing), 6:23; Bourque Ct (hooking), 8:59.

2nd Period-4, Norfolk, Killorn 3 (Kostka, Picard), 11:31 (PP). 5, Norfolk, Smith 3 (Barberio, Conacher), 12:16. 6, Norfolk, Angelidis 1 (Ouellet, Gudas), 17:40. Penalties-Oberg Nor (hooking), 0:56; McIlrath Ct (high-sticking), 9:37; Deveaux Ct (roughing), 18:51; Picard Nor (roughing), 20:00.

3rd Period-7, Connecticut, Wellman 3 (Newbury, Erixon), 1:06 (PP). Penalties-Barberio Nor (holding the stick), 0:43.

Shots on Goal-Norfolk 8-7-7-22. Connecticut 11-14-5-30.
Power Play Opportunities-Norfolk 1 / 4; Connecticut 2 / 5.
Goalies-Norfolk, Tokarski 4-1-0 (30 shots-27 saves). Connecticut, Talbot 4-2-0 (22 shots-18 saves).
A-3,319
Referees-Chris Ciamaga (24), Geno Binda (22).
Linesmen-Jim Briggs (83), Paul Simeon (66).

Follow Ian on Twitter @soxanddawgs. And be sure to like us on Facebook as well.

Norfolk Admirals 4, Connecticut Whale 1

Norfolk, VA, May 4, 2012 – Mike Kostka and Tyler Johnson had a goal and an assist each, and Dustin Tokarski made 27 saves, as the Norfolk Admirals defeated the Connecticut Whale, 4-1, Friday night at Scope Arena in Game Two of their Eastern Conference Semifinal series.

CT WhaleThe best-of-seven series is now even at one game apiece.

Penalties hurt the Whale in their first postseason loss in five games, as Norfolk was 2/11 on the power play.  The Whale were 1/7 on the man advantage, as Andre Deveaux scored the only Connecticut goal of the game on a second-period power play.  Cam Talbot absorbed his first playoff loss in the Whale goal, despite making 36 saves.

The Whale generated numerous chances in the first period but could not beat Tokarski, and the Admirals would bury a pair of opportunities at the other end.

Alex Killorn gave Norfolk the game’s first lead at the 3:00 mark, after a good forecheck by defenseman Keith Aulie worked the puck loose.  Pierre-Cedric Labrie centered to Killorn, who snapped the puck past Talbot.

After furious Whale power-play pressure was fought off by Tokarski, Kostka scored a second Admiral goal at 17:44.  Alexandre Picard, who had served three minor penalties in the period, threaded a pass from the right-wing side across the slot to the defenseman Kostka, whose low shot beat Talbot.

The two teams then traded power-play goals in the second frame, starting at 9:02 when Deveaux, a 20-goals-scorer in the regular season got his first of the playoffs off of a goalmouth scramble.  A Deveaux pass went off of Marek Hrivik’s skate and into the goal crease.  Kelsey Tessier, who was going hard towards the goal, was knocked down into the net, and Deveaux found the loose puck and poked it in.

Norfolk replied on a five-on-three, however, after Kris Newbury took a cross-checking penalty at the 15-minute mark with Wade Redden already in the box for roughing.  Johnson had a pass from the left side of the goalmouth blocked, but the puck went off of a Whale defender right back to Johnson, and his shot just eluded a diving Talbot for a 3-1 Norfolk advantage.

The Admiral man advantage unit struck again at 4:41 of the third period to create the final margin, after a tripping call against Newbury at 3:40.

The best-of-seven series now switches to the XL Center in Hartford for Games Three and Four, which will be this Sunday, May 6 and Monday, May 7, with faceoff at 7:00 both nights (“The Rock” 106.9 WCCC-FM, www.ctwhale.com, live video streaming at www.ahllive.com).  Tickets for Games Three and Four are on sale now at the Public Power Ticket Office at the XL Center, as well as on-line at www.ctwhale.com and through TicketMaster Charge-by-phone at 1-800-745-3000.

Playoff ticket packages are also available that include tickets to all possible home playoff games.  To speak to a Whale account executive about a playoff ticket package, call (860) 728-3366.  More information is available at www.ctwhale.com.

To continue reading, please click the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

Connecticut Whale 1 at Norfolk Admirals 4
Friday, May 4, 2012 – Norfolk Scope

Connecticut 0 1 0 – 1
Norfolk 2 1 1 – 4

1st Period-1, Norfolk, Killorn 2 (Labrie, Aulie), 3:00. 2, Norfolk, Kostka 1 (Picard), 17:44. Penalties-Grant Ct (interference), 3:03; Picard Nor (boarding), 5:11; Picard Nor (slashing), 7:15; McIlrath Ct (interference), 11:16; Picard Nor (tripping), 14:58; Audy-Marchessault Ct (slashing), 18:39.

2nd Period-3, Connecticut, Deveaux 1 (Hrivik, Tessier), 9:02 (PP). 4, Norfolk, Johnson 1 (Smith, Kostka), 15:45 (PP). Penalties-Grant Ct (roughing), 3:24; Deveaux Ct (holding the stick), 6:19; Cote Nor (roughing), 6:19; Oberg Nor (double minor – high-sticking), 6:28; Redden Ct (roughing), 14:20; Newbury Ct (cross-checking), 15:00; Redden Ct (roughing), 19:54; Tessier Ct (unsportsmanlike conduct), 20:00; Picard Nor (unsportsmanlike conduct), 20:00.

3rd Period-5, Norfolk, Conacher 1 (Johnson, Barberio), 4:41 (PP). Penalties-Newbury Ct (tripping), 3:40; Deveaux Ct (interference, fighting, game misconduct – jersey, game misconduct – persisting a fight), 6:08; Hrivik Ct (misconduct – unsportsmanlike conduct), 6:08; Newbury Ct (unsportsmanlike conduct), 6:08; Segal Nor (fighting), 6:08; Conacher Nor (goaltender interference), 12:16; Wellman Ct (boarding), 12:48; Killorn Nor (interference), 16:11.

Shots on Goal-Connecticut 13-7-8-28. Norfolk 12-14-14-40.
Power Play Opportunities-Connecticut 1 / 7; Norfolk 2 / 11.
Goalies-Connecticut, Talbot 4-1-0 (40 shots-36 saves). Norfolk, Tokarski 3-1-0 (28 shots-27 saves).
A-4,859
Referees-Graham Skilliter (48), Jamie Koharski (84).
Linesmen-Matt MacPherson (83), Tom George (61).

Follow Ian on Twitter @soxanddawgs. And be sure to like us on Facebook as well.

CPTV Sports to Air Game Four of Whale vs. Admirals Series Live

HARTFORD, May 3, 2012:  Whalers Sports & Entertainment announced today that Game Four of the Eastern Conference Semifinal Calder Cup Playoff series between the Connecticut Whale and the Norfolk Admirals will be aired live state-wide on CPTV Sports this Monday, May 7.

CT WhaleGame Four, which faces off at 7:00 PM Monday night at the XL Center, will be CPTV Sports’ first live broadcast since their statewide expansion in April. Check cptvsports.org for cable channel locations on Cablevision, Charter, Cox, Comcast and Thames River cable systems.  Monday’s telecast will also be the first Whale franchise playoff game to be televised since the 2004 postseason.

Game Two of the best-of-seven series, which the Whale leads, 1-0, is Friday night at Scope in Norfolk (7:30 PM faceoff, “The Rock” 106.9 WCCC-FM, www.ctwhale.com, live video streaming at www.ahllive.com). The series then switches to the XL Center in Hartford for Games Three and Four, which will be this Sunday, May 6 and Monday, May 7, with faceoff at 7:00 both nights.

Tickets for Games Three and Four at the XL Center are on sale now at the Public Power Ticket Office at the XL Center, as well as on-line at www.ctwhale.com and through TicketMaster Charge-by-phone at 1-800-745-3000.

Playoff ticket packages are also available that include tickets to all possible home playoff games. To speak to a Whale account executive about a playoff ticket package, call (860) 728-3366. More information is available at www.ctwhale.com.

The Tavern Downtown, at 100 Allyn St. in Hartford, will host a special viewing party for Friday’s Game Two. The ahllive feed will be shown on at least one TV at The Tavern Downtown, which will offer Happy Hour specials of $1 off draft and bottled beers, $2 off mixed well drinks, $2 off house wines, $1 off shots, and $4 Whaler Ales, which include the customer keeping the glass. Appetizers will be out for Happy Hour from 5-7 PM, and there will be $2 sliders starting at 7 PM. There will also be raffles and handouts.

Follow Ian on Twitter @soxanddawgs. And be sure to like us on Facebook as well.

A Tale of Two Thomas’

By Bob Crawford

The pressure cooker of pro sports can make for some strange situations, and hockey history has seen many a family battle, with gentlemen sharing the same last name going up against one another in opposing jerseys.

CT WhaleMost of those have been sibling clashes, with brother combinations like Phil and Tony Esposito, the Staal brothers, the Sutter clan, Scott and Rob Niedermayer, Keith and Wayne Primeau, etc., knocking heads.

The current Connecticut Whale vs. Norfolk Admirals series, though, features a father and son locking horns, in the Whale’s Christian Thomas and his dad, Steve.

Christian Thomas joined the Whale from the Oshawa Generals of the Ontario Hockey League April 4 and played in Connecticut’s last five regular season games, and all four playoff contests to date.  Steve Thomas is Player Development Coordinator for the Tampa Bay Lightning, Norfolk’s parent club, and while he is not an official member of the Admirals’ coaching staff, often assists Head Coach John Cooper and Assistant Coach Mike Flanagan, both in practice and behind the bench.

Game One of the Whale/Admirals series Wednesday was the first time the two Thomas men had faced each other on opposing sides.  Given that his pride and joy was going to be front and center in the opponent’s lineup, Steve Thomas was conflicted, right up to the start of Wednesday’s game, about whether he should go back behind the bench.

To continue reading, please click the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

“It’s going to be a bit odd, but I’m looking forward to it,” Steve said Wednesday morning.  “It’s a hard kind of thing, but he’s playing pro hockey now and it’s what he wants to do.  He’s in an environment , the playoffs, right now, luckily enough, and he’s worked hard to be in this position.  So he’s made his bed, and playoff hockey’s intense, it’s played with a lot of passion, and whatever happens, happens out there.  It’s beyond my control.”

So, not surprisingly, dad had some mixed feelings.  The younger Thomas, on the other hand, didn’t seem the least bit fazed by the situation, although he did acknowledge its out-of-the-ordinary nature.

“It’s pretty weird seeing him on the other bench, that’s for sure,” Christian said.  “He’s always coached me in minor hockey.  He was on my bench, so he always helped me out, but now he’s helping out the opposition.  It’s going to be pretty cool, though.”

Anyone who has kids of their own would certainly forgive Steve Thomas if he became a little distracted in this series, struggling with keeping his mind on his own job and not getting caught up in watching his son.  That is a line, however, that Thomas the elder is familiar with straddling.

“I coached him in Minor Bantam, Bantam and Minor Midget, and I treated him like I would any other player,” Steve Thomas said, “and I think that’s the approach I’m going to take [in this series], for sure.  More than anything I want our team to win this series, at the same time I’d really like to see my son do well.”

Competing in the heat of battle is one thing, and doing one’s best to help a loved one achieve their goals is another.  Steve Thomas, a 20-year NHLer who scored 421 goals and 933 points in the Big Show, is in a great position to use not only his playing experience, but his player-development expertise, to advise Christian on the younger Thomas’ quest to succeed in the pros.

“I think it’s a big transition, playing Junior hockey and making the jump to playoff hockey in the American Hockey League,” Steve said.  “You’ve got guys out here that had stints in the National Hockey League, and it’s one step closer to his goal.  I think coming out of Junior, that transition, more than anything, is playing well defensively in your own zone.  And I think as an offensive player, that makes it that much more of an adjustment because in Junior, it’s all about winning.  Guys take chances, they cheat the game a little bit, and you just can’t do that at this level, players are too good.  So that transition even becomes more magnified because it’s that defensive mode you kind of have to have yourself in, because ultimately everything starts in your own end.  Play good defensive hockey, you get your offensive chances.”

For his part, the 19-year-old Christian Thomas, a second-round draftee by the New York Rangers in the 2010 NHL Draft, takes dad’s advice to heart, and is quick to give the old man credit for knowing what he’s talking about.

“He’s pretty much spot-on,” Christian said of Steve’s counsel.  “He said guys (in pro) are bigger, stronger, it’s quicker and you have less time to make plays.  First game, I found that out right away, and it was just a bit of adapting I had to do.  I feel pretty comfortable out there right now, but playoff hockey is obviously a lot quicker, and it’s going to be a tough series.”

Christian Thomas is already a veteran of one AHL playoff battle, the Whale’s first-round sweep of Bridgeport.  Although he did not get on the scoresheet in the three games, he saw significant time on right wing on the Whale’s top line with center Kris Newbury and left-wing Jonathan Audy-Marchessault, another great growth opportunity.

“It was tough, it was my first playoff series in the AHL and it was pretty quick, only playing five games of regular season,” Christian said, “but it was another step up, but playing with two guys like that just makes it a lot easier.  They’re so good on the ice and they only help you.”

Christian Thomas, at 5-9 and 170 pounds, is similar in stature to Steve, whose playing dimensions were listed at 5-11 and 185 pounds.  The son also exhibits other traits that were hallmarks of his dad’s game, like a quick, hard shot and a willingness to navigate any kind of traffic anywhere on the ice.  Still, it’s not exactly like looking in the mirror for Steve when he watches Christian.

“I think he’s a different player than I was,” Steve said.  “I don’t think he’s near as physical as I was.  I tried to be first in on the forecheck, take the body, go to the net, go to the dirty areas, and he does that.  He’s not the one that’s going to initiate a hit that’s going to put a kid through the glass or anything like that.  I think he’s more of a finesse player.  He shoots the puck as well, if not better, than I ever did, and I think he’s got a better skill set than I had.”

Even if that were an exaggeration of fatherly pride, it is certainly high praise, as Steve Thomas wasn’t exactly a plumber.  And now he gets to try to help his own organization defend against that skill set that number 23 in a Whale jersey possesses.  Conversely, the potential of having something big to crow about at the summertime family dinner table provides Christian with some extra motivation.

“I know the coach of their team and their other assistant,” Christian said, “but it would be cool, beating these guys in the playoffs, and it’s kind of like bragging rights with my dad.”

According to Steve, who had to battle his way to the NHL after being undrafted out of Junior, his young fellow already has something to hold over his head, what with having been the 40th pick his draft year.

“He’s got that on me, and he passed me last year in my goal total for the Junior levels,” Steve chuckled.  “But I’ve really enjoyed watching him play, I really do.  Obviously as a dad you hope your son does well, but it’s a bit of a different ballgame now.  I’m with this organization and he’s over there, and like I said, I hope he does well, but at the same time I’m hoping we get through this series.”

The most important question might be, who is Christian’s mom, Lori, rooting for in this matchup?

Christian’s answer to that was rather diplomatic, as he said, “That’s a good question, hopefully she’ll be rooting for me, but she’s coming up to Connecticut for the three games there, so we’ll see what she says.”

Steve, on the other hand, harbored no illusions at all about who his wife would like to see prevail.

“She’s going to definitely be rooting for him, for sure,” the proud dad quickly conceded.

 

Gernander: Stay Humble, Stay Hungry

It was all but a day off for the Whale Thursday, after the 3-2 overtime win over the Admirals in Wednesday’s Game One.  Most of the game participants stayed off the ice for an optional practice, while the extra players had a short skate.

The Whale coaching staff was extremely glad to have gotten the jump on the Admirals and continued the Whale’s unblemished postseason record, but was already looking ahead.

“We’ve got to stay hungry,” was Head Coach Ken Gernander’s simple message.  “We’ve got to stay humble, stay hungry.  One game, in and of itself, is not much in a seven-game series.  So we’ve got to continue to build off where we left off the other night, but again, stay humble and stay hungry.

“It was a great start, but it’s a long journey and that’s just the first step, but we were real pleased with getting the win here in the first game.”

The Whale are now 4-0 in the playoffs, and Gernander traces the genesis for this run back to the Whale’s last game of the regular season, a 2-1 shootout loss in Syracuse in a game that was meaningless to the Whale in the standings but was huge for the Crunch.

“I’ve been saying it all along that I really admired the way our team finished the season in the game against Syracuse, and I think that set us off on the right foot,” Gernander said.  “It was unfortunate that we lost in a shootout that game, but I thought we played well, played hard considering what was at stake for both teams, and it just kind of carried over into the playoffs and the guys have been doing a very good job up to now.”

The Whale had lost all four regular-season meetings against the Admirals, a team that came into Wednesday’s Game One having come out on top in 31 of its previous 32 contests.  Gernander harbors no illusions that his club will not face its share of adversity as the matchup goes forward.

“It’s going to be a good, competitive series,” he said. “We had a little bit of breakdowns in our defensive zone and paid the price there and they got two (first-period) goals.  You just have to go through their lineup, they’re a strong lineup and it’s going to be a good, competitive series.  Nothing really struck me or stuck out, we expected a tight game and a very capable opponent, and we have to play our best hockey.”

The game-winner by Andreas Thuresson at 2:53 of overtime was a pure illustration of the value of simply getting the puck at the net.  Thuresson sent about a 45-foot, off-wing half-slapshot on goal, and it hit Admiral goaltender Dustin Tokarski’s stick, deflected up over his shoulder and dropped behind him and over the goal line.

“Get pucks and bodies to the net, and good things happen,” Gernander said of the play, which capped a strong night for a line of Thuresson on right wing, Jordan Owens and center and Ryan Bourque on the left side.

“I think they’ve all stepped up their game since the playoffs have started,” said Gernander of that threesome.  “Bourque, he worked hard all season long but he seems to have found another level, another gear, drew a penalty earlier in the game, he just did a lot of good things, his penalty kill has been very good for us.  Jordan Owens has been an important part of the equation too, and I think they seem to have kind of formed some kind of chemistry as a line.  Thuresson, I think his production is up from what it was in the regular season.  So that’s great, that’s what we’re looking for.”

The Whale’s other two goals came in the first period, 12 seconds apart, which was only one second short of a team playoff record.  Both goals were scored by rookies, the first by regular-season team points co-leader Jonathan Audy-Marchessault and the second by emerging offensive kingpin Marek Hrivik, his fifth in the last three games.  Hrivik’s scoring play was started by fellow newbie, and former Ranger first-round pick, J.T. Miller, who got his first pro point with an assist.

“J.T. started it with a good forecheck,” Gernander said, “got in on the forecheck, created a turnover, and Wellsie (Casey Wellman) to Hrivik net-front real quick, that was great.  Marchie’s (Audy-Marchessault) been doing it for us all season long, and I don’t know if you would consider Thuresson secondary scoring or somewhere in between, but a big overtime goal.  So a lot of good things happened in that regard.”

Follow Ian on Twitter @soxanddawgs. And be sure to like us on Facebook as well.

Connecticut Whale 3, Norfolk Admirals 2 (OT)

Norfolk, VA, May 2, 2012 – Andreas Thuresson’s goal at 2:53 of overtime gave the Connecticut Whale a 3-2 win over the Norfolk Admirals Wednesday night at Scope Arena, in Game One of the Eastern Conference Semifinal series between the two teams.

CT WhaleThe victory kept the Whale perfect in the postseason, as Connecticut now sports a 4-0 record in 2012 playoff games.

Thuresson’s winner, his first career pro playoff OT goal, was a long slapshot from the left-wing side that Admiral goaltender Dustin Tokarski stopped with his stick.  The puck went off of the stick and up in the air, though, and found its way over Tokarski’s left shoulder before trickling over the goal line.

“Owie (Jordan Owens) was driving good to the net,” Thuresson said about the game-winning play, “and I just shot it through his legs and through the defenseman’s legs, hopefully for a rebound for him or for Bourqueie (Ryan Bourque) driving the net, and it ended up going in.  That’s what happens in playoffs.”

The overtime win was the second straight for the Whale, who completed a three-game, first-round sweep of the Bridgeport Sound Tigers with a 4-3 extra-time victory April 22 at the XL Center.

Cam Talbot kept his personal playoff record perfect with 31 saves for the Whale, and Jonathan Audy-Marchessault and Marek Hrivik also scored for Connecticut.  Norfolk got goals from Ondrej Palat and Pierre-Cedric Labrie, and Tokarski made 26 saves.

The series got off to an entertaining start in the first period, which featured four goals and numerous physical battles.

Norfolk’s Palat started the scoring at 5:43, with his first career North American pro postseason goal.  A shot by Brandon Segal was partially blocked, but got through to Talbot, who inadvertently kicked it right to Palat, allowing him easily to bury it from the left side of the slot.

The Whale then responded with two goals in 12 seconds, starting with the second of the postseason for Audy-Marchessault at 8:18.  Tim Erixon kept the puck in the offensive zone near the left-wing boards and threaded a pass to an unguarded Audy-Marchessault to the right of Tokarski.  Tokarski stopped Audy-Marchessault’s first bid, but the Whale rookie was able to lift his own rebound into the net.

The Whale then took their first lead on the very next shift, with Casey Wellman finding Hrivik all alone in front of Tokarski, with a pass from the right boards.  Hrivik put home his fifth goal of the postseason, and fifth in the last three games, and rookie J.T. Miller nabbed his first pro point with the secondary assist.

The two goals in 12 seconds was one second short of the franchise record for two fastest playoff goals.

Norfolk was able to draw back even, though, with 3:04 left in the period, as Labrie netted his second of the playoffs.  Labrie’s pass went off of teammate Alex Killorn’s skate right back to Labrie, and he beat Talbot with a high shot.

After that four-goal period, the second frame was scoreless, despite Norfolk having three power plays and the Whale four, including a two-man advantage of 1:03.

The best chance of the period for either team came with Erixon serving a holding minor and only 1.6 seconds left.  The puck came to the left-handed-shooting Killorn along the goal line to Talbot’s left and Killorn snapped a hard, low shot on net.  Not only did Talbot stop the shot with his left skate, but also was able to hold the puck underneath his boot to stop the play.

The Whale, outshot 24-15 through the first two periods, had a 12-9 advantage in that department in the third frame, but could not victimize Tokarski prior to Thuresson’s overtime strike.

Game Two of the best-of-seven series is Friday night at Scope (7:30 PM faceoff, “The Rock” 106.9 WCCC-FM, www.ctwhale.com, live video streaming at www.ahllive.com).  The series then switches to the XL Center in Hartford for Games Three and Four, which will be this Sunday, May 6 and Monday, May 7, with faceoff at 7:00 both nights.

Tickets for Games Three and Four at the XL Center are on sale now at the Public Power Ticket Office at the XL Center, as well as on-line at www.ctwhale.com and through TicketMaster Charge-by-phone at 1-800-745-3000.

Playoff ticket packages are also available that include tickets to all possible home playoff games.  To speak to a Whale account executive about a playoff ticket package, call (860) 728-3366.  More information is available at www.ctwhale.com.

The Tavern Downtown, at 100 Allyn St. in Hartford, will host a special viewing party for Friday’s Game Two.  The ahllive feed will be shown on at least one TV at The Tavern Downtown, which will offer Happy Hour specials of $1 off draft and bottled beers, $2 off mixed well drinks, $2 off house wines, $1 off shots, and $4 Whaler Ales, which include the customer keeping the glass. Appetizers will be out for Happy Hour from 5-7 PM, and there will be $2 sliders starting at 7 PM. There will also be raffles and handouts.

To continue reading, please click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

Connecticut Whale 3 (OT) at Norfolk Admirals 2
Wednesday, May 2, 2012 – Norfolk Scope

Connecticut 2 0 0 1 – 3
Norfolk 2 0 0 0 – 2

1st Period-1, Norfolk, Palat 1 (Segal, Smith), 5:43. 2, Connecticut, Audy-Marchessault 2 (Erixon), 8:18. 3, Connecticut, Hrivik 5 (Wellman, Miller), 8:30. 4, Norfolk, Labrie 2 (Barberio, Killorn), 16:56. Penalties-Nightingale Ct (boarding), 2:14; Smith Nor (tripping), 13:56; Deveaux Ct (roughing), 20:00; Nightingale Ct (roughing), 20:00; Angelidis Nor (unsportsmanlike conduct), 20:00.

2nd Period- No Scoring.Penalties-served by Picard Nor (bench minor – too many men), 2:45; Gudas Nor (interference), 5:21; Bell Ct (high-sticking), 5:47; Oberg Nor (hooking), 8:22; Cote Nor (tripping), 9:19; Redden Ct (interference), 11:43; Erixon Ct (holding), 19:00.

3rd Period- No Scoring.Penalties-Owens Ct (hooking), 4:10.

OT Period-5, Connecticut, Thuresson 1 (Owens, Bell), 2:53. Penalties-No Penalties

Shots on Goal-Connecticut 8-7-12-2-29. Norfolk 11-13-9-0-33.
Power Play Opportunities-Connecticut 0 / 5; Norfolk 0 / 6.
Goalies-Connecticut, Talbot 4-0-0 (33 shots-31 saves). Norfolk, Tokarski 2-1-0 (29 shots-26 saves).
A-3,223
Referees-Graham Skilliter (48), Jamie Koharski (84).
Linesmen-Matt MacPherson (83), Mark Hamlett (81).

Follow Ian on Twitter @soxanddawgs. And be sure to like us on Facebook as well.

Whale vs. Admirals: to the Deeper Go the Spoils?

By Bob Crawford

The Eastern Conference Semifinal series matching the Connecticut Whale against the Norfolk Admirals is a matchup of two clubs that have made excellent use of their depth in winning their first-round series’.

CT WhaleThe Whale swept the Northeast Division-champion Bridgeport Sound Tigers while getting a total of only one goal from their top two regular-season scorers, Kris Newbury and Jonathan Audy-Marchessault.  Similarly, the regular season league-champion Admirals were able to knock off the pesky eighth seeds, the Manchester Monarchs, despite having half of their dynamic rookie forward duo, Tyler Johnson, miss the last three games of the series due to injury, and the other half, AHL MVP and Rookie of the Year Cory Conacher, held without a goal.

“You need depth,” Admirals head coach Jon Cooper, this year’s AHL Coach of the Year, said after the Admirals’ practice Tuesday.  “If you’re going to go far in the playoffs, you need depth, and I feel our team’s got some of that and so do the Whale.  If you’re just depending on one or two guys to get it done for you, you won’t last very long in the playoffs.  Newbury didn’t get a goal in the first three games, and you look at for us, Conacher doesn’t get a goal, but both of us advance.  If you can just out-depth teams, you really can improve your chances to win.

Whale head man Ken Gernander expressed similar sentiments.

To continue reading, please click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

“You look, and it was a three-game series and a four-game series,” he said.  “It’s not like it’s gone on for a monumental, extended period of time.  So from our end of things, as long as they (Newbury and Audy-Marchessault) were getting their chances, their offensive opportunities, they did a lot of things for us aside from scoring.  They were killing penalties, taking big draws, defensive zone draws, and they did draw the attention of the other team’s checking line for two road games.  So there was a lot going on, but I thought they did a lot for our club and were an important part of our win.”

“Johnson’s barely played,” added Cooper.  “He’ll be back in this series for sure, it’s not a matter of if, it’s a matter of when.  Conacher’s helped out a lot.  He’s getting points, he’s just not used to not being the guy that is denting the twine.  He’s done a great job, he’s been drawing penalties, he’s kind of been a thorn in a lot of teams’ sides.

“This is not the first time Cory Conacher’s gone four games without scoring a goal.  It happens throughout the year, it’s just happening right now for him.  You look no farther than our last game of the (regular) season, he had three.  Really, he’s got three goals in our last five games, but people look at it as the four (games in the playoffs), and he doesn’t have any.  But he’s been really good for us.”

The good thing for both teams, too, is that with the top lines drawing extremely close checking from the opposition, other sources of offense have made huge contributions.

“We got some secondary scoring early on, in the first game, and then in the second game, that was a pretty big goal by Marchie (Audy-Marchessault) to get us a 1-0 lead in Game Two,” Gernander said.  “We had defensemen scoring, we had power-play scoring, so we were getting it from all areas, and I thought for the most part we were real good defensively.  So it was kind of a good combination.”

The biggest share of that secondary scoring was turned in by 20-year-old Marek Hrivik, who had back-to-back two-goal games in the last two contests of the Bridgeport series, in just his 10th and 11th pro games since finishing his Quebec Major Junior Hockey League season with the Moncton Wildcats.  While the Whale hope that Newbury and Audy-Marchessault can return to their regular-season levels of production, the objective in relation to Hrivik is to help keep him on his current roll.

“His (Hrivik’s) stint here, everything’s new to him, everything’s novel, he should be real excited and enthusiastic about being here,” said Gernander.  “And that helps keep him mentally sharp or mentally ready, playoffs notwithstanding.  He’s got a lot on his plate, we just try to encourage him to do whatever it is he does well and really accentuate his strengths.”

It was a veteran who became the scoring ace in the first round for the Admirals, who shattered the previous AHL record for longest winning streak by stringing together an incredible 28 consecutive victories to end the regular season.  Alexandre Picard, a seventh-year pro, exploded for eight points, four goals and four assists, in the Manchester series, after being held to six goals and 25 points in 42 regular-season games.

“He’s a pro, he’s a vet, he’s been down these roads before,” Cooper said of Picard.  “Ironically, he was on that team in Syracuse (in the 2007-08 and ’08-’09 seasons) that won 18 games (the league record prior to the Admirals’ streak this year).  So he’s been part of two of the longest streaks in league history.  But he’s really battled injuries this year, I think he played less than half the season.  And it’s really tough to get in any kind of groove when you play five, six games then you’re out for two weeks, and that was kind of the story of his season.  But for us to advance, to move on, for us to try and get through Connecticut, you need those guys that have been there before to get it done for you.  And by far and away he was our MVP against Manchester.”

The Admirals’ otherworldly streak finally came to an end with a 5-2 home loss in Game Two against the Monarchs, one win short of 30 straight.

“We just had everything in motion together,” Cooper responded, when asked what the key to the amazing run was.  “If our goalies weren’t playing too well, we scored a bunch of goals.  But for the most part, our goaltending was outstanding the whole streak, and we didn’t need a bunch of goals to win.  We found ways.  We got the lead a bunch of times in the streak, so I think that really helped us out, and our special teams really improved.  And the other thing is, we had a lot of breaks, a lot of things went our way.

“It was really frustrating for our guys in the Manchester series, we didn’t get a lot of breaks.  We took a lot of penalties, whether the calls were right or wrong, they didn’t go our way, pucks didn’t go our way.  And it was kind of odd for us because we hadn’t really seen that for two-and-a-half months.  So I think the fact that that happened, it was probably really good for our egos, to have the bubble burst a little bit and say, hey, we’ve got to get back to doing what we do best.”

The Admirals finally slew the determined Monarchs on an overtime goal by forward Alex Killorn, sealing a 4-3 win in Game Four on Friday in Manchester.  And as if Norfolk hadn’t already gotten enough big contributions from young players this year, Killorn is another rookie.  In fact, the Halifax, Nova Scotia native, like the Whale’s Hrivik, is brand new to the AHL, having joined the Admirals on an Amateur Tryout March 19 out of Harvard University.

Of Killorn’s addition to the squad, Cooper joked, “We lost J.T. Wyman two-thirds of the way through the year (to recall to the parent Tampa Bay Lightning) and he was a Dartmouth grad, so to pull in a Harvard guy, we feel like we have a next President in the making here somewhere on our team.

“He’s been a pleasant surprise, and he’s just gotten better with every game.  It’s been a quick audition for him because he only got maybe eight to ten games in the regular season to finish off, and boom, he goes right into playoffs.  He’s, again, given us more depth.  He can really get around the ice, he’s got a big body (6-1, 197), and he’s really, really helped us out.

“Manchester was an extremely tough series.  It was really tough for us because we hadn’t seen them all year, so Game One was an opening, I think, for both coaches, finding out what each team had.  But they were a gritty bunch, they gave us everything we could handle, and I’m really glad that Killorn ended it in overtime there because I did not want to go to Game Five up there.”

The Whale’s first-round series also ended on an OT goal, of course, and that came off of the stick of Casey Wellman.  While less of an out-of-nowhere surprise than Hrivik, Wellman is also a player the Whale are still learning about, as the season was already more than half over when he was acquired February 3 from Minnesota.  With three assists to go along with his series-winner in Game Three, Wellman tied his linemate Hrivik for the series points leadership.

“He played on a line with Hrivik and, at times, (J.T.) Miller, for the most part a fairly young line, and did very well for us in the middle, creating offense,” Gernander said of the second-year pro Wellman.  “There was a lot of checking going on, and it was nice that their line was able to create a lot of scoring chances for us and convert for some goals.  And he had a big hand in all of that.”

As almost all successful teams do, both the Whale and Admirals have relied heavily on team defense to win games.  The Whale rang up the first back-to-back postseason shutouts in franchise history in Games One and Two against Bridgeport, and allowed a total of only three goals in the three games, while the Admirals had the third-best team goals-against average in the AHL during the regular year, allowing an average of only 2.37 goals per game.  Norfolk also boasts the talents of the defenseman judged to be the highest-achieving at his position of any in the league this year, Eddie Shore Award-winner Mark Barberio.

When asked about the season turned in by the second-year pro Barberio, who led all AHL blueliners in points (61), assists (48) and plus/minus (+28), Cooper analyzed, “The one thing is about Barbs, we were all new last year, and I think probably that helped save Mark from going to the East Coast League.  He was pretty much pegged to go there last year, and we happened to get a couple injuries right out of the gate.  So Mark hung around when he probably shouldn’t have, and there was just something we really liked about him as a staff, and we were really pushing management to keep him here, just to see how well he could adapt.  And the longer we kept him, the more we knew we couldn’t send him back.

“He really grew as a player last year, but he really grew as a pro this year, really toned his game down.  Everything wasn’t rush, rush, rush, he saw the game better, and look no farther than his stats.  Everybody’s like, oh, he had almost 70 points or whatever, but I want everybody to look at his plus/minus.  He was a marginal plus/minus player last year, and now he was [close to] the plus 30s.  It just goes to show you that he’s really rounded out his game.”

The Whale did not have any individual D-man put together the profile that Barberio did, but Gernander was very complimentary of his group’s collective work in the sweep of Bridgeport.

“I thought all three pairs, all six D, played exceptional,” he said.  “I think (goaltender) Cam (Talbot) would agree if you talked to him.  I thought just our team defense in general was pretty good.  I thought we had some good tracks through the neutral zone by forwards to take away time and space and force dumps or chips.  I was real pleased with our whole team defense.

“You look at the shots (against, an average of 43.3 per game), but you also have to look at how many of them were scoring opportunities, how many came through screens and how many were second and third opportunities.  And really, I thought a large portion of the shots were first shots, which Cam was able to see, make the save on and retain the rebound.  And when the rebound retention wasn’t there, I thought we did a great job of boxing out, that they had very few second and third opportunities.  If Cam gets a good look at a shot, we’re pretty confident in him making the save.”

When Game One of the series hits on Wednesday, the Whale will have had no fewer than nine days off since finishing off Bridgeport last Sunday, and until Norfolk won their series Friday, the Whale did not even have an opponent to prepare for.  That presented some challenges, but according to Gernander, the club did a good job of turning it into a positive.

“With a stint that long, you want to get some good rest, and we were able to do that, but you also don’t want to neglect your conditioning,” he said.  “So those first few days, we focused on our team, on our conditioning and just keeping that level of competitiveness up and just staying sharp.  And then we had a day off (Saturday) in the middle there, and when we came back we knew our opponent, so we could concentrate our efforts a little bit more on what we would be seeing in this upcoming series.  And I think the fact that they now had an opponent to draw their attention to heightened everybody’s intensity level, and I think we had three real good days of practice leading into (Wednesday night’s) game.”

While Connecticut-Norfolk is hardly a time-tested rivalry, there is certainly a greater familiarity level between the two teams than there was between the Admirals and Manchester.  The Whale and Admirals met four times during the regular year, with the Whale going 0-3-0-1, so the Whale have a strong appreciation of what made the Admirals a virtually unbeatable opponent the last two months of the regular season.

“There’s a lot of balance,” Gernander said of Norfolk’s game.  “They get scoring from their back end, they have two strong goaltenders, a lot of depth up front and guys that can do multiple tasks if they’re called upon.  They can be offensive guys and play in your top six and on your power play, and they seem pretty accepting of a role that would be like a checking role and shutting down the opposition.  So there’s a lot of balance to their team, and they’re obviously a formidable opponent.”

On the other side of that coin, the balance the Whale showed against Bridgeport was clearly a huge key to their success in that upset.

“I think we’re probably about as balanced right now as we have been all season,” Gernander agreed.  “Some of the young kids that we’ve added to our lineup since the playoffs started have played some pretty important roles at times in different games, and we’ve got some scoring from guys that didn’t put up huge offensive numbers, but had been with us all season.  Cam Talbot played well in goal, and I thought our defensive corps has been great throughout the three-game series.  So there’s a lot of positives to be drawn out of our series with Bridgeport.”

Cooper’s take on the four-game regular-season series was, “I don’t think people realize, if you really digest the box scores, we were behind in a lot of those games.  As what happened in that streak, and a lot of things that happened to us at the end of the year, we just found ways to win games.  I remember vividly that last game against the Whale, and it was a nail-biter.  Our goaltender came up with some big-time saves to keep us in that, and we pulled out some wins.

“But we know exactly what Connecticut brings, and especially with a team with a bunch of new additions and is going to throw a little different look at us, and the fact that they beat, I thought, a superb Bridgeport team and swept them from the playoffs, they seem to be playing extremely well.”

“They were close and they were competitive,” Gernander said of the regular-season games against the Admirals.  “They were a red-hot team all season long.  And quite honestly, we’ve made some changes to our lineup, so it won’t be the exact same team that was facing them in the regular season.  And the little wrinkles that we’ve made, changes that we’ve made, hopefully that’ll make the difference.”

Follow Ian on Twitter @soxanddawgs. And be sure to like us on Facebook as well.

Whale Announce Roster Changes

HARTFORD, May 1, 2012:  Connecticut Whale general manager Jim Schoenfeld announced today that the parent New York Rangers have reassigned defenseman Dylan McIlrath to the Whale from the Moose Jaw Warriors of the Western Hockey League, and that forward Shane McColgan and defenseman Samuel Noreau have been released from their Amateur Tryout (ATO) agreements.

CT WhaleMcIlrath, 20, was the Rangers’ first-round selection (10th overall) in the 2010 NHL Draft.  The 6-5, 215-pound Winnipeg, Manitoba native skated in 52 games with the Warriors this season, scoring three goals and adding 20 assists for 23 points while serving 127 minutes in penalties.  Those totals were good for second among team defensemen in assists and a tie for second among Warrior blueliners in points.  McIlrath led all Moose Jaw defensemen, and finished second overall on the team, in PIM.  In 14 WHL postseason games, he amassed six assists and 12 penalty minutes.

This will be the second career stint with the Whale for McIlrath, who has played in 232 career games with Moose Jaw over four seasons, notching 16 goals and 58 assists for 74, along with 551 PIM.  He suited up for two games in a Whale uniform last season, following the completion of his WHL season, going scoreless with seven PIM.

DYLAN MCILRATH’S AMATEUR AND PROFESSIONAL RECORD

McColgan, who signed an ATO with the Whale April 4, was scoreless in five AHL games after the end of his WHL season with the Kelowna Rockets.  Noreau did not see any action after being inked to an ATO April 19, from Baie-Comeau of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League.

The Whale begin their Eastern Conference Semifinal playoff series against the AHL’s regular-season champions, the Norfolk Admirals, this Wednesday, May 2, with Game One at Norfolk Scope Arena, with faceoff at 7:15 PM (“The Rock” 106.9 WCCC-FM, www.ctwhale.com).  Game Two of the series is this Friday, May 4, at 7:30, before the series switches to the XL Center in Hartford for Games Three and Four, which will be this Sunday, May 6 and next Monday, May 7, with faceoff at 7:00 both nights.

Tickets to Games Three and Four are on sale now at the Public Power Ticket Office at the XL Center, as well as on-line at www.ctwhale.com and through TicketMaster Charge-by-phone at 1-800-745-3000.

Playoff ticket packages are also available that include tickets to all possible home playoff games.  To speak to a Whale account executive about a playoff ticket package, call (860) 728-3366.  More information is available at www.ctwhale.com.

Follow Ian on Twitter @soxanddawgs. And be sure to like us on Facebook as well.

Whale to Meet Regular-season Champion Norfolk in Second Round

HARTFORD, April 27, 2012:  Whalers Sports & Entertainment (WSE) announced today the schedule for the Whale’s Eastern Conference Semifinal playoff series, in which the Whale will battle the AHL’s regular-season champions, the Norfolk Admirals.

CT WhaleThe first two games of the best-of-seven series will be at Norfolk Scope Arena, this Wednesday, May 2, with faceoff at 7:15 PM, and Friday, May 4, with faceoff at 7:30.  The series then switches to the XL Center in Hartford for Games Three and Four, which will be next Sunday, May 6 and Monday, May 7, with faceoff at 7:00 both nights.

If a Game Five is necessary in the series, it will be a Whale home game, but due to scheduling conflicts at the XL Center, it will be played at Webster Bank Arena in Bridgeport, CT on Wednesday, May 9, with faceoff at 7:00.  Details on ticketing issues for that game will be announced soon.

“Scheduling is always a challenge this time of year, and happily for Hartford, the XL Center is extra busy this spring with premier events,” WSE president and COO Howard Baldwin, Jr. said.  “We have worked hard with our partners at AEG and the XL Center to come up with the best possible schedule for this exciting matchup, and we appreciate them agreeing to have us move Game Five to Bridgeport in order to schedule the series in a way that works best for the teams and our fans.”

Chuck Steedman, XL Center Senior Vice President & General Manager said, “We can’t wait to get the Whale back on the ice for the second round games at the XL Center.  We hope that fans will come out in big numbers to support the team as they continue their quest for the Calder Cup.  In the event that a home game is played off site, we would encourage fans to cheer even harder so we can continue to host more playoff hockey at the XL Center.”

Games Six and Seven, should they be necessary, would be at Scope Friday, May 11 at 7:30 and Sunday, May 13 at 5:00.

Whale playoff schedule

The Whale defeated the Bridgeport Sound Tigers in the Eastern Conference Quarterfinals in a three-game sweep.  The Admirals, who finished first overall in the AHL during the regular season with a 55-18-1-2 record for 113 points, ousted the Manchester Monarchs in four games in their quarterfinal series.  Norfolk took an AHL-record 28-game winning streak into the postseason, and it reached 29 before a 5-2 loss to the Monarchs in Game Two.

Tickets to Whale home games can be purchased at the Public Power Ticket Office at the XL Center, as well as on-line at www.ctwhale.com and through TicketMaster Charge-by-phone at 1-800-745-3000.

Playoff ticket packages are also available that include tickets to all possible home playoff games.  To speak to a Whale account executive about a playoff ticket package, call (860) 728-3366.  More information is available at www.ctwhale.com.

Follow Ian on Twitter @soxanddawgs. And be sure to like us on Facebook as well.

Whale Try to Sustain Focus, Intensity

By Bob Crawford

The Connecticut Whale now “hurry up and wait”, as they enjoy the rewards of having won their first-round series against Bridgeport in three straight games, and in a span of only four days.

CT WhaleSince completing their sweep of the Sound Tigers on Sunday, the Whale have been joined by the Toronto Marlies, Oklahoma City Barons and Abbotsford Heat as AHL teams to have advanced out of the first round, but the Whale-Bridgeport series remains the only Eastern Conference matchup to have been concluded.

The Hershey Bears kept their season alive at home Wednesday night, defeating the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins, 4-3 in overtime, and avoiding a sweep.  In the other Eastern Conference series’, both of which were also in action Wednesday, top-seeded Norfolk downed Manchester, 5-2, in Manchester, and second-seed St. John’s also won, 5-1 at home over Syracuse.  All three of those battles resume Friday, so the Whale could know their next opponent before they go to bed Friday night.

If both Norfolk and St. John’s win again Friday, then the Whale will play the Admirals in the Conference Semifinals, regardless of who wins between Wilkes-Barre/Scranton and Hershey.  If either the Admirals or IceCaps lose, then word will have to wait until after Saturday’s action, as a series loss by either Norfolk or St. John’s would pit the Whale against the Penguins/Bears winner, and if both the top seeds were to blow their 2-1 leads and lose their series’, the Whale would play Syracuse in the next round.

No matter what happens, the Whale are most likely looking at close to a week more of game idleness before their next series starts.  Getting a break is certainly not a bad thing either, with plenty of bumps and bruises that could use some time to heal.

To continue reading, please click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

“Especially for an old guy like me, a couple of days off really helps, to get the body back where it needs to be,” Whale defenseman Brendan Bell said Thursday, after the Whale returned to practice after two days of rest.  “But we know that when we’re out there, we’ve got to go hard, to keep your legs going, to keep your wind, stuff that’s important come next week when we’ve got to go (play) again.  It’s kind of that fine line, of trying to get that rest but also trying to get your work in when you need it.

“It’s tough to do, especially when you get the intensity up and ramp it up come playoff time, and then you’ve got to cool off for seven or ten days or whatever it’s going to be.  It’s difficult to keep that intensity up in practice, but that’s important.  We try to do some team-building stuff, we had a golf outing last week, probably go for dinner once we find out who we’re playing here.  You try to keep things status quo and keep the intensity up and not let things get too lax.”

From a coaching perspective, the Whale staff is doing its best not to get caught up in thinking too much about who the next opponent will be, and simply focusing on keeping a positive frame of mind.

“I think the important thing right now is to focus on our team, try to stay in good shape and in good spirit as well,” Assistant Coach J.J. Daigneault said Thursday.  “Obviously we’ll know by Saturday who we’re playing and then we have enough time to sit down and scout and start adjusting.  We’ll have four days until the next series after Saturday, so there’s plenty of time to do our scouting then.

“We’ve been practicing for the past two days.  Tomorrow (Friday), we have a plan to scrimmage.  We have plenty of guys, we have some extra players who came out from college, some young kids that came out of Junior that the organization wanted us to have a look at.  So we have ten defensemen, probably six lines.  We’re going to have a full-ice scrimmage, to keep the players sharp.

“I think it’s important for the guys to stay sharp, push themselves and stay ready.  Saturday might be a day off for us.  We’re not sure yet, but we might just have the guys stay home and relax and enjoy themselves and their families, and then back to work on Sunday.”

As the man who calls the shots for the Whale’s defense crew, Daigneault is extremely proud of the effort in the opening-round series, which saw the Whale give up a total of only three goals in the three games, and put up shutouts in the first two.

“I broke down the first game (on tape),” he said, “I’m breaking down the second game right now, I’m three-quarters into it, and I kept preaching to the players on the ice to try to limit secondary chances.  We gave up some scoring chances from wide drives and some scoring chances from around the net, but very rarely did they get a secondary chance.  So the defensemen did a good job either taking the first shot away, or they did a good job of eliminating (opposing attackers and their sticks) in order not to give up a secondary chance.”

The blueliners themselves are also encouraged by how the first round played out.

“I think our defense is probably the backbone of our team,” Bell offered.  “We’ve got a lot of guys who are veterans back there, guys that have played a lot in this league, obviously a couple of guys like myself, Wade (Redden) and Nightie (Jared Nightingale), who are older than most.  I thought we did a really good job, we upped our game in the playoffs and we didn’t give them much.  Talbs (goaltender Cam Talbot) was a wall through the first two games, giving up 40 shots was too many, but when you’ve got him stopping everything, that goes a long way.  It’s nice to see when guys perform like that.”

The one player who probably would have most preferred to avoid a long layoff was Talbot, who carried a red-hot hand throughout the victory over Bridgeport, after a very strong finish to the regular season.  The second-year man stopped 127 of the 130 shots he faced in the first round, and now has a 0.97 goals-against average and a 96.9% save percentage in his last nine appearances, going back to the regular season.

“I think you have to stay focused, and just keep working hard in practice,” Talbot said, when asked how he was trying to keep his roll going.  “The biggest thing for a goalie, I think, is the mental preparation behind us, so you can’t really tail off during practice.  You’ve got to stay focused for the next nine or ten days, and just wait to find out who our opponent is and prepare for them.”

According to Daigneault, who enjoyed several long NHL playoff runs as a player, including a Stanley Cup championship with Montreal in 1993, if the Whale as a team can maintain that focus, the rewards could be tremendous.

“As a hockey player, for anybody that’s gone far in the playoffs, your game improves every series,” he said.  “The team improves, the structure, the system, everybody plays better, and individually you play better.  So if guys understand that, they’re willing to put in the work in practice during the week that we have right now, in the game they’re going to reach their full potential if we advance again.”

Follow Ian on Twitter @soxanddawgs. And be sure to like us on Facebook as well.

Bourque Takes it to a New Level

By Bob Crawford

That the Connecticut Whale swept division-champion Bridgeport, a team that had played better than .700 hockey since the turn of the New Year, was surprising enough.  That they did it without their regular-season scoring leader, Kris Newbury, registering a point, and with second-leading scorer Jonathan Audy-Marchessault being held to one goal, borders on amazing.

CT WhaleSecondary scoring became primary in the three wins against the Sound Tigers, and the biggest contributor was Marek Hrivik, with his four goals in the last two games.  Not far behind on the stepping-it-up scale, though, was Ryan Bourque.

Bourque added plenty of hustle, effort and speed to the Whale throughout his rookie season, but the offensive numbers didn’t exactly flow easily for the younger son of Hockey Hall of Famer Ray Bourque.  Ryan Bourque scored a total of six goals in 69 regular-season games, with two of those coming in a 6-3 win over Springfield February 17, and totaled 14 regular-season points.  He tasted immediate offensive success in the postseason, however, notching a key insurance goal in the Whale’s 3-0 win in Game One in Bridgeport, after having set up Jordan Owens for a score earlier in the game.  Bourque then found the net again in the Game Three clincher in Hartford, giving him three points in the series’ three games.

“Everyone’s accountable, but we need to just focus on our role and our job,” Bourque said of himself and players like Owens, Hrivik and Kelsey Tessier, who assisted on both of Bourque’s goals.  “And we’re going to be matched up against those (opposing) teams’ top lines when we’re on the road, and it’s just important that we kind of flip the page and kind of bring the pace to them.  If we can play in their end (of the ice), we’re doing our job, and we know our big guys and our leading scorers are going to do their jobs.”

Although he is only 21, Bourque has played in a number of huge games already in his hockey career, most notably an overtime win for Team USA over Canada in the gold medal game of the 2010 World Junior Championship.  He was still amazed and energized, however, by the increase in intensity in the Calder Cup playoffs compared to the regular season.

To continue reading, please click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

“It was crazy, I’ve never really experienced anything like that,” Bourque said.  “You don’t really realize it until you’re actually there in the moment, how cool of a feeling it is.  It’s different than the regular season, and it’s so much fun going into the playoffs.  It’s a whole new level, and it’s a lot of fun to be a part of.”

Bourque enjoyed a strong chemistry in the first round with Tessier, who was Bourque’s Junior hockey teammate with the Quebec Remparts of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League for part of the 2009-10 season.  Bourque and Tessier were not regular linemates in the Bridgeport series, but found themselves together several times late in games when the coaches shortened the bench, and hooked up on a pair of third-period scoring plays.

The first of those was in Game One, when Bourque buried a rebound of a Tessier shot off the rush.  While it looked simply like a fine save by Sound Tiger goaltender Kevin Poulin, according to Bourque it was a set play, where Tessier was intending to put the puck off the goaltender’s pads to create a fat rebound for his fellow forward.

“We do that drill hundreds of times during the regular season and throughout the week (in practice),” Bourque said.  “It’s kind of, play it off the left pad for him (Tessier, on that particular play), but depending on the side you’re coming on, you try to place it at an angle where it will pop out for the guy that’s going hard to the net.  It was a loose puck that Tess beat his guy to, but at the same time he was at a really tough angle to get a scoring chance.  So he knew that if he could put it on net low, on his pad, it would probably have a good chance to pop out to me.  That’s what he was trying to do, and I was fortunate enough to beat my man to the puck and lucky enough for it to go in.”

That players nowadays have to resort to banking the puck off the goalie’s pads to generate scoring chances is a good indication of how few and far between those opportunities are in today’s game, especially in the postseason.

“It really is a game of inches, and you’ll see it even watching the NHL playoffs now, how very hard those chances are to come by,” Bourque said.  “You’ve just got to capitalize and make the most of them and just keep chipping away, because a lot of the goals you see in playoffs are either grimy, greasy goals or goals that you’re going to get from rebounds or screens, or whatever it is.  But that’s playoff hockey and that’s when it’s at its best.”

Tessier had a fine series in his own right, scoring a breakaway goal that touched off the Whale’s three-goal, third-period burst in Game One in addition to his two setups of Bourque.  Tessier and Bourque are similar both in stature and in their approach to the game, and Tessier was not surprised that the two read off one another well.

“You want to just keep playing your simple game with anyone,” Tessier said, “and my chance came with Bourqueie, and we played a few times together in the past and in Juniors, so we kind of click a little bit.  The first [Bourque goal] was off the (goaltender’s) pad and I saw him going wide side of the net, so I threw it off the pad, and the second one he did all the work.  I just had to pass it across for the open net for him.  He’s working hard, and just makes it look a lot easier than what it is.

“He’s playing just with high confidence and making sure that he’s keeping the play simple and moving his feet, and that’s what makes him a great hockey player.  That’s how he was in Quebec also, when I played Juniors with him.”

Whale head coach Ken Gernander was happy to see Bourque get rewarded on the scoresheet for what has been a consistent commitment to giving a full effort every night.

“I don’t know if things just kind of fell into place for him, he got on a roll, or what have you, but he’s been a hard worker all season long,” Gernander said.  “It’s important to get scoring from everybody, and it was a great boost for our team to get goals from Bourque, Hrivik, Owens, Tessier.

“I’m not going to fault him (Bourque) for his work ethic or his habits or anything like that.  That wasn’t the issue.  It’s just one of those things where the production wasn’t off the charts, but you felt that there was a little bit more there, and if things fell into place for him that there could be a little bit more offense.

“He wasn’t on the power play a lot of nights and different things like that, and it wasn’t that you were asking him to actually physically exert himself more, it’s just that there were times when things weren’t falling into place.

“A lot of times, too, the last thing to come around for forwards is the offensive play.  Sometimes it’s merely a matter of that extra fraction of a second getting your shot off quicker, or changing your (shooting) angle so that someone has to move to make a save or the lane doesn’t get shut down on you.  It’s just little subtleties of offensive play that sometimes are the last to come around.”

Now that the numbers have started to flow better for him, at the most important time of the year, Bourque’s confidence has certainly received a boost, and with the recent additions to the Whale roster from the Junior and college ranks, he is now surrounded by a crowd of guys right in his age group.

“It is a competition to try to value your spot,” said Bourque of there being so many excellent young prospects around, “but it’s a great environment to have here, to have these young kids, including myself, and the guys that we’ve had all year and the guys that we’ve had come in from Junior or college, or whatever it is.  It’s just a great environment to have, and to be able to share ideas with each other, and for those guys that are coming in, try to help them out and ease them into this organization and environment, it’s a lot of fun.

“For me, to have a bunch of veterans out here all year long, to have kind of a youth movement come in, it’s fun for me.  I’m always trying to act a little more mature and above my age, but now I can act my age and kind of mess around with the young guns, and it’s a lot of fun for me.”

That fun has translated into excellent production for the indefatigable Bourque, and Gernander likes the look of the balance that gives his lineup, emphasizing that his regular-season scoring leaders weren’t exactly no-shows in the sweep of Bridgeport.

“They still played big roles,” Gernander said of the likes of Newbury and Audy-Marchessault.  “You look at the attention they were given on the road there in Bridgeport, with that checking line (Bridgeport’s trio of Trevor Frischmon centering Justin DiBenedetto and Sean Backman), and they have a lot of defensive responsibilities.  They’ve become two of our better penalty-killers, things of that nature.  Everybody was contributing in one shape or another, and actually Marchie (Audy-Marchessault) had the big first goal to get us off on the right foot in Game Two.  So who knows, maybe if they had needed to be called on at a different point in time in the series, it (offensive numbers) would have come, but they’ve played sound defensively and done a lot of good things.”

 

The Kids are Alright

Sound Tiger head coach, and former Hartford Wolf Pack blueline warrior, Brent Thompson several times during the series referred to the Whale as a “veteran team”, and beat writer Mike Fornabaio pointed out in Wednesday morning’s Connecticut Post that Wade Redden’s career total of NHL playoff games-played outstripped the AHL playoff game total of the Sound Tigers’ entire roster.

This is certainly true, but what is also true is that it was the Whale’s youngsters who did the majority of the heavy lifting in Connecticut’s win, at least in terms of stats.

Let’s not forget, Cam Talbot is only a second-year pro and had never started a pro playoff game before Thursday.  And of the ten total goals the Whale scored in the three games, seven came from rookies, including four from Hrivik, who is an undrafted tryout player, and Casey Wellman, Sunday’s overtime hero, is only a second-year man as well.

With Christian Thomas and J.T. Miller having logged significant time for the Whale in the series, fellow Ranger draftee Shane McColgan having come out of the WHL and pitched in some quality shifts, and tryout finds Hrivik and Steve Moses making impacts on the scoresheet since their arrival, it seems as though the Ranger scouting department is on a roll as far as making astute judgments.

“It’s critical to what we do,” said Gernander of the depth of quality talent drafted and uncovered by the Rangers.  “They’re good players, there’s lots of potential there, but off the ice they’re good quality kids.  And that helps as far as us being able to work with them, but I think it makes a big difference in their development, too, when they’re good kids, receptive kids, disciplined.  I think the organization has done a great job in that regard.”

Rangers Prepare for Game Seven, Hope Callahan is OK

Game Seven of Rangers vs. Ottawa is set for 7:00 PM on Thursday, the second of three Eastern Conference Game Sevens (how’s that for a great first round?).

The Rangers will be hoping for a repeat of the Conference Finals from the Cup year of 1994, when they beat New Jersey on the road in Game Six, in the Mark Messier “guarantee” game, before “Mat-teau!  Mat-teau!” at Madison Square Garden in Game Seven.

One dark cloud from the rousing win in Ottawa in this year’s Game Six was an injury to Ryan Callahan, who hurt a finger blocking a shot (what else?) in the third period.  Callahan sat out the Rangers’ practice today, in what was termed a “maintenance day” to the New York media.

Having to play two do-or-die games this early in the playoffs is certainly a stern character test, but if the Blueshirts pass it, their workmanlike, even-keeled approach will receive another affirmation.

“We haven’t changed,” gritty forward Mike Rupp said to New York reporters. “There’s been no panic. There’s been no celebration. So, it’s been good, we’ve just gone about it. That’s what we’ve been doing all year.”

Follow Ian on Twitter @soxanddawgs. And be sure to like us on Facebook as well.