P-Bruins Notes: Toughness by committee

warm1PROVIDENCE – The days when nearly every AHL team carried a heavyweight or three on the roster are pretty much over.

In Providence, the departure of Tyler Randell, a top five pugilist in the league for several seasons, leaves the team without a go-to hard guy.

Coach Jay Leach, who logged 64 bouts during his playing career, believes his team won’t lack for toughness.

“I don’t think we have an issue with that. We’ve got guys that are gamers. Tommy (Cross), Breener (Chris Breen), they all can handle themselves if something gets out of hand. And we’ve got Sena (Acolatse) as an option, Hick (Justin Hickman), Adam (Payerl), Taylor Doherty. We’re fine,’’ said Leach.

“Identifying one guy, I always found that to be a little unfair. It’s a lot to put on a guy. And I don’t know how much it does for your team. If everyone just lets Tyler Randell take care of things and they can go do what they want …  to me that wasn’t a fair play for a guy like that.

“I would prefer us to be responsible for our teammates on the ice every shift, no matter if Adam Payerl or Hick or Sena’s out there or if it’s a skill line, they can all still get in there and take care of each other,’’ he said.

No wallowing

The disappointment of being cut by the NHL club in training camp is one of the hurdles that P-Bruins players have to get over, whether they are high draft picks or free agents.

“That’s part of being a pro. Managing  adversity.  Getting through some challenges. It’s part of the learning process. How they react to adversity and overcome it is part of the learning curve, part of professional development,’’ said John Ferguson Jr. , Providence general manager and Boston’s executive director of player personnel.

Leach, who played 12 seasons as a pro, feels their pain.

“You have to validate that. A lot of them had nice camps and they pushed. That’s what we asked; that’s what they did. We would never want to discount that, first and foremost. And then I think  you’re going to try to get them to a place where they accept where they are and build from there,’’ said Leach.

“Some it takes a little longer than others. Ultimately, they all figure out that it doesn’t do them any good to wallow. And I don’t think a lot of them, if any of them, do. On a personal level, I can share some experiences where I had a little bit of bitterness in me and it did affect me throughout the year. I will definitely share that experience.

“Training camp is a grueling time for a young kid. He shows up for the rookie tournament. Organizations are watching him play every single day for a month. They’ve got to perform under that microscope. If they’ve done well, we should – and we do – make sure they understand that we’re proud of them.  They probably need a day or two to just breathe,” Leach said.

Danton Heinen, for one, went right back to work after being sent down last week.

“He was firing pucks in practice, he was working on his sticks. He was ready to go,’’ said Leach.

Senyshyn on the board

Zach Senyshsyn got his first pro goal out of the way in the first game of the season on Saturday, burying a feed from linemate Chris Porter 45 seconds into the third period.

“I thought that overall he was good. I lost him in the second (period) when we had a lot of penalty kills,’’ said Leach.

“We got him right out there at the end of the second and in the third with (linemates Porter and Josh Hennessy) and they did an excellent job on the forecheck and (Senyshyn) was consistent the rest of the way through. He showed signs of his skating ability and disrupted some forechecks and in the neutral zone, so he was good.”

Playing with veterans such as Porter and Hennessey should be good for Senyshyn.

“Porter can really skate and obviously finishes (his hits) and it’s tough on defensemen. Zach and Ports, with that speed, it’s pretty nice.”

 

 

3 takeaways from P-Bruins opener

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PROVIDENCE –Just like in Boston on Thursday night, the kids came through in impressive fashion in Providence’s 5-2 win in Saturday’s opener. Four of the goals were by rookies Jakob Forsbacka Karlsson, Ryan Fitzgerald and Zach Senyshyn and second-year pro Peter Cehlarik. Here are three takeaways:

CEHLARIK

Jay Leach put it best: “Peter Cehlarik looked like a man on a mission.’’ Did he ever. Cehlarik made Springfield defenseman Josh Brown look foolish and scored a pretty goal in the first period. Then he froze goalie Harri Sateri and fed Forsbacka Karlsson for an easy score. Impressive for a guy who did not play any preseason games after undergoing shoulder surgery in May. After the game, rink rat Cehlarik was at the stick rack working on a stick, even though the P-Bruins have Sunday off.  With Don Sweeney (who was at the game) mulling a callup after the injury to Noel Acciari in Boston, Cehlarik picked a perfect time to have a great game.

McINTYRE

Zane McIntyre delivered some very timely saves on Saturday. Springfield had chances to take the lead early, but he shut the door. Guarding the lead in the second period, he made a pair of terrific stops and the P-Bruins finished the period up by three. “Early on in the season you’re going to have breakdowns. Zano was huge on those breakdowns for us,’’ said Leach. McIntyre had a great season a year ago. If he can come to close to matching that this season, Providence will be in great shape.

ROOKIE DEFENSEMEN

The American Hockey League can eat up rookie defensemen, but Jakub Zboril, Jeremy Lauzon and Connor Clifton acquitted themselves well on Saturday. They’ll have their struggles at times, but Saturday was a positive, confidence-building start. “We’ll have our (video) clips for them. We have some stuff to work with, but I thought that throughout the game they started to find their feet a little bit, and see the structure,’’ said Leach. “First pro game (for all three) with a good crowd, playing with some pretty good players, there’s probably some expectation there – our forwards want the puck, so get it to them. I thought throughout the night (the three rookies) got better as every shift went by.’’

P-Bruins Game Day — Opening Night

cleanPROVIDENCE — It’s a clean sheet for the Providence Bruins until just after 7 tonight when the puck drops for the first game of the season vs. Springfield.

“As long as we play hard, that’s all I really care about. We’re going to make mistakes. It’s really just a baseline to get going, so we can figure out where we’re at with everything,” said coach Jay Leach. “Everybody’s excited. I’m ready to go. It’s been a long training camp.”

This will be the 26th season for the P-Bruins. Their first home game was on Oct. 16, 1992, when they crushed Hershey, 9-3, before a roaring sellout throng of 11,909.

Tim Sweeney and Jozef Stumpel had 2-2-4 and Jim Vesey had 2-1-3 for the P-Bruins, who went 4-for-8 on the power play.

Chris Winnes went forehand-backhand on a penalty shot to beat the Bears’ Scott LeGrand, who left Boston College early to sign with Philadelphia.

There was a fight between Chris Jensen of Hershey and Denis Chervyakov.

Mike Bales made 45 saves for the P-Bruins.

Earlier that week, team captain Peter Laviolette had predicted a 9-2 victory. So he only missed by a goal.

We can only hope for that much entertainment tonight.

I’ll have pregame, in-game and postgame tweets from the Dunkin’ Donuts Center.

The lines:

Heinen-Szwarz-Fitzgerald

Agostino-JFK-Cehlarik

Blidh-Cave-Gabrielle
Porter-Hennessy-Senyshyn

Defense:

Lauzon-Cross

O’Gara-Zboril

Breen-Clifton

Goal

McIntyre starts, with Vladar as the backup

Scratches: Johansson, Hickman, Hargrove, Payerl, Acolatse, Doherty (injured)

P-Bruins preview

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The P-Bruins listen as coach Jay Leach makes a point during Friday morning’s workout.

PROVIDENCE — I’m looking forward to the season opener between the Providence Bruins and Springfield Thunderbirds on Saturday night. My P-Bruins preview will be in tomorrow’s paper-and-ink Providence Journal. Or you can read it here:

http://www.providencejournal.com/sports/20171006/mark-divver-plenty-of-reasons-to-be-excited-about-p-bruins-season

Opening night quick hits

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BOSTON – How about those kids?

Jake DeBrusk (1-1-2), Charlie McAvoy (1-1-2) and Anders Bjork (0-1-1) had some exciting and encouraging moments in Thursday’s 4-3 win by Boston over Nashville in the season opener on Thursday night.

They weren’t the only youngsters who played well. Matt Grzelcyk was good. And let’s not overlook steady Brandon Carlo, who is no longer a rookie but is most definitely  a kid, and dynamic David Pastrnak – starting his fourth season at age 21 – who scored the first goal of the night.

Boston has said it is committed to its young players. That will mean riding the rollercoaster as they figure some things out.

As good as Game 1 was, there are valleys ahead, without question. It’s part of the learning curve that kids have to experience.

The Bruins should be rewarded down the road.  Thursday was a tantalizing look into the future.  It could be a fun ride.

Thoughts on three of the young guys:

DeBRUSK

He can finish, as he demonstrated with a nifty goal early in the second period. He nearly had a second goal a couple of minutes after the first one. And he made a play or two, including an assist on McAvoy’s goal.

DeBrusk played with pace and had four shots on goal, tying Pastrnak for the most on the Bruins. I liked the play he made with about four minutes left, where he ate the puck along the boards rather than make a risky pass.

All in all, it was an impressive debut.

McAVOY

Nineteen-year-old defensemen are going to make mistakes. McAvoy took three minor penalties – two for holding and one for hooking. But his goal and assist made up for the time in the box.

He joined the rush to score his first NHL goal off a beautiful set up from David Krejci and Bjork.

I liked the subtle play he made in the defensive zone midway through the third period where he put a hip into Nashville’s Scott Hartnell, muscled him off the puck in the corner and calmly cleared the zone.

BJORK

After the first period, an NHL scout told me he thought Bjork had been Boston’s best forward, and I agreed.

The speedy winger from Notre Dame didn’t have a shot on goal in the game, although he was ready to one-time the Krejci pass that McAvoy scored his goal on.

Despite the lack of shots, Bjork had the puck a lot and made some smart plays that showed off his offensive IQ. Leading up to DeBrusk’s goal, Bjork made a perfect touch pass to Krejci.

For sure, Bjork is going to be fun to watch.

Hennessy hoping for R.I. homecoming

PROVIDENCE – For the first time in a dozen seasons as a pro, Josh Hennessy is in training camp without a contract.

Rest assured, the 32-year-old center isn’t losing any sleep over the uncertainty of his situation. Quite the opposite.

“I’ve actually kind of enjoyed it, to be honest. It gives you energy every day, keeps you pretty sharp. I’m really excited. It’s been fun so far,’’ said Hennessy, who is competing for a job with the Providence Bruins.

Hennessy spent the 2011-12 season with the P-Bruins before heading to Europe, where he played in Russia, Switzerland and Sweden over the last few seasons.

A return to the P-Bruins would be a great fit for the Hennessy family – Josh, his wife Amelie and their four children, including three-year-old twin boys. They bought a house in East Greenwich in the spring of 2013.

“We ended up being really comfortable and falling in love with Rhode Island, which was funny, being from Boston, we never spent time down here. The kids were approaching school age and we were looking for a nice town with good schools. The year we had (with the P-Bruins) we really enjoyed,’’ said Hennessy, who grew up in Rockland, Mass.

He played in both of Providence’s preseason games over the weekend and Providence coach Jay Leach has been impressed so far.

“He’s cerebral. You can tell he’s been around. He looks good out there. Low to the ice. You can tell he knows the deal,’’ said Leach, who had Hennessey centering first-round pick Zach Senyshyn and veteran Chris Porter on Saturday night.

Hennessy has scored more than 20 goals five times in the AHL, including a 30-goal year with Binghamton in 2009-10.

“I remember him being a little bit more one-dimensional, from when I was playing against him. Now he looks very aware in every situation. He can probably play in a lot of different spots,’’ said Leach.

The pro game has gotten faster since Hennessy, a second-round pick by San Jose in 2003, broke in as a pro with the AHL Cleveland Barons in 2005.

“Pretty much everybody can move, everybody can skate. Guys are flying out there, up and down the lineup. It speaks to the depth in hockey in general, in the world,’’ he said.

“I couldn’t believe when I first got to Europe how good a lot of the players there are who we’ve never heard of. Some of them haven’t even tried to come over here. They’re just amazing hockey players that, given the opportunity, would probably do really well over here, too. There’s just good players coming from everywhere.’’

One of those players is Artemi Panarin, a 30-goal scorer in his first two NHL seasons. In Hennessy’s first season in Russia with Chekhov Vityaz of the KHL in 2012-13, Panarin was his linemate.

“We had a lot of fun. He made my transition that first year pretty smooth. Looking back, our coach was pretty hard on him, only because he was a young guy. If our line wasn’t producing for a couple of games, he would be the guy who got moved off the line, which now seems pretty comical,’’ Hennessy said.

“He’s an awesome kid and an amazing talent. I’d tell my buddies when I got home, ‘I just played with a guy over there that has the best hands I’ve ever seen, including anybody in the NHL.’ And they were like, ‘Come on.’

“When he was in Chicago his first year, I was texting all of them saying, ‘I told you.’’’

P-Bruins release 9 players

PROVIDENCE — The Providence Bruins today released nine players from tryout contracts.

They are: Dylan Blujas, Ryan Penny, Alex Gacek, Phil Lane, Chase Witala, Lindsay Sparks, Zach Malatesta, Nick Luukko, Brendan Leahy.

Gacek, Lane, Witala and Malatesta have ECHL deals with Atlanta, Boston’s affiliate.

Here’s who is left in Providence camp:

Defensemen: Tommy Cross, Connor Clifton, Chris Breen, Ben Marshall, Jeremy Lauzon, Taylor Doherty, Jakub Zboril.

Forwards: Zach Senyshyn, Josh Hennessy, Justin Hickman, Sena Acolatse, Jesse Gabrielle, Ryan Fitzgerald, Colton Hargrove, Anton Blidh, Chris Porter, Colby Cave, Adam Payerl, Jordan Szwarz.

Goalies: Zane McIntyre, Dan Vladar, Matt Ginn, Mac Carruth.

Hennessy, Acolatse and Carruth are on PTOs.

All the rest are on either NHL or AHL contracts.

The P-Bruins’ roster will remain in flux until Boston makes its final cuts over the next couple of days.

Kenny Agostino has arrived in Providence after clearing waivers on Saturday.  To my knowledge, he hasn’t been officially assigned to the AHL by Boston. How long he stays in Providence remains to be seen.

The P-Bruins’ opener is Saturday night.

P-Bruins GameDay – Preseason ends tonight

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The Providence Bruins had an optional skate this morning at the Dunkin Donuts Center.

PROVIDENCE — The biggest news of the day for the Providence Bruins is that Kenny Agostino went unclaimed after Boston placed him on waivers.

He hasn’t been assigned to the P-Bruins at this point, but they should get a big lift from the reigning AHL scoring champion and MVP if and when he does arrive.

Tonight, Zane McIntyre gets the start in net when the P-Bruins play their second and last preseason game at the Dunkin’ Donuts Center.

The opponent — as it was last night and will be on opening night of the regular season on Oct. 7 — will be the Springfield Thunderbirds. Tonight is Fanfest at The Dunk; doors open at 5:30 p.m.

The T-Birds beat the P-Bruins last night in Springfield, 2-1. Phil Lane scored the only goal for Providence and Mac Carruth went the distance in net.

Tommy Cross, Chris Breen, Jakub Zboril, Jordan Szwarz and Connor Clifton won’t be available tonight. They are traveling to Chicago with Boston for the parent club’s final NHL preseason game.

2015 first rounder Zach Senyshyn will skate with veterans Josh Hennessy and Chris Porter tonight after playing alongside Alex Gacek and Chase Witala on Friday.

Coach Jay Leach on Senyshyn:

“He’s got a lot of ability in regards to his skill, his speed. He’s got assets that a lot of guys don’t have. It’s going to be our job to give him some guidelines in order for him to take advantage of those things.

“(Hennessy) obviously been around and is a smart, two-way player. Porter is a guy with a lot of veteran experience, as well, and a lot of pace to his game. So, hopefully, Senny can read off the two of them and get into that mindset.

“Senny’s a first-round pick, so obviously there’s going to be expectations. He’s here, he’s going to play and when it’s time, it’s time. There’s no real timetable with that stuff, there really isn’t. There is no protocol on how guys make it.”

Clifton is expected to skate in Boston’s warmup in Chicago tonight. It remains to be decided whether he is in the lineup.

Leach on Clifton’s play on Friday night:

“Clifty was active, I’ll give him that. He’s like a lot of young defensemen – very eager to grab the puck and go. We showed him some stuff this morning on getting him to simply, being OK with just moving the puck and joining (the rush). Stuff that has probably been said to young defensemen forever.”

Tonight’s lines:

Chris Porter-Josh Hennessy-Zach Senyshyn

Colton Hargrove-Colby Cave-Adam Payerl

Jesse Gabrielle-Alex Gacek-Justin Hickman

Anton Blidh-Lindsay Sparks-Sena Acolatse

Defense pairs:

Ben Marshall-Taylor Doherty

Jeremy Lauzon-Dylan Blujas

Dom Malatesta-Nick Luukko

Goalies:

Zane McIntyre

Mac Carruth

Not playing: Witala, Lane, Ryan Fitzgerald, Ryan Penny

 

P-Bruins Game Day — preseason edition

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At the Dunkin’ Donuts Center this morning, coach Jay Leach talks to the players who will make the trip to Springfield for Friday night’s preseason opener.

PROVIDENCE — Mac Carruth will start in net for the Providence Bruins when they hit the road to play the first of two preseason games against the Springfield Thunderbirds tonight at the MassMutual Center.

Two groups of players skated at the Dunkin’ Donuts Center this morning. The first group will play tonight. Most but not all the players in the second group will be in the lineup on Saturday night when the P-Bruins and T-Birds play again at The Dunk.

Boston is expected to take a handful of Providence players to Chicago for their final game of the NHL preseason on Saturday night.

Zane McIntyre will start in goal for Providence on Saturday night.

Some cuts are expected to be made on Sunday.

Here are Providence’s lines tonight:

Lindsay Sparks-Josh Hennessy-Adam Payerl

Anton Blidh-Ryan Fitzgerald-Justin Hickman

Chase Witala-Alex Gacek-Zach Senyshyn

Colton Hargrove-Ryan Penny-Phil Lane

D pairs:

Ben Marshall-Dylan Blujus

Dom Malatesta-Taylor Doherty

Connor Clifton-Nick Luukko

Goalies:

Mac Carruth

Brendan Leahy