Good, bad & ugly from Providence Bruins weekend

clean

The first 3-in-3 weekend of the season for the Providence Bruins couldn’t have gone any better. They beat Springfield on the road, 5-2, then returned home to beat Belleville in a shootout, 3-2, and Laval, 4-1.

Coach Jay Leach’s take: “Our game Friday was just OK. We were fortunate on our special teams. (Saturday night) we had a really strong game from start to finish. We were down and we stuck with it and obviously we were rewarded in the end. (Sunday) I think it carried through – and they’ve got some talent on that (Laval) team.”

Here’s the good, bad and ugly.

GOOD

***The line of Danton Heinen, Jordan Szwarz and Austin Czarnik was on fire, accounting for eight of the P-Bruins’ 11 goals, including all five in Springfield.

*** Szwarz scored five goals and six points in three games, plus the shootout winner against Belleville. He had a total of 12 shots.

*** Czarnik put up two goals and six points, in addition to 13 shots.

*** Heinen scored a goal and seven points, with 8 shots.

***Providence scored two shorthanded goals and a power play goal in Springfield.

*** The P-Bruins started three different goalies on the weekend – Jordan Binnington on Friday, Dan Vladar on Saturday and Zane McIntyre on Sunday. All three earned victories.

*** Vladar stopped a breakaway in overtime and stuffed all three Belleville attempts in the shootout.

*** Down by two goals, Providence scored twice in 3:59 with under eight minutes left on Saturday before winning in the shootout.

***Anton Blidh had a two-goal game on Sunday.

***Providence finished the weekend in a tie for first place in the AHL with a winning percentage of .833.

BAD

***One 3-in-3 weekend down, 13 more to go.

*** Slow weekend for Jacob Forsbacka Karlsson: one assist and two shots in three games.

*** Peter Cehlarik was held out of Sunday’s game as a precaution with soreness from an undisclosed injury (not his shoulder). He is expected to practice with the team on Tuesday.

UGLY

***The P-Bruins allowed a goal just 11 seconds into the second period on Saturday night.

P-Bruins on a roll

danton

Danton Heinen (43) looks for a passing lane during a second-period power play on Sunday.

PROVIDENCE — Lots to like about the Providence Bruins this weekend. They won all three of their games and are now tied for first in the AHL with a 5-1 record and a .833 win percentage. Here are five quick hits:

JESSE GABRIELLE

After being a healthy scratch on Saturday, the 20-year-old rookie ”brought some serious energy” on Sunday, said coach Jay Leach.

“He’s like all these guys. They’ve got to find their way. Sometimes it’s not necessarily a punishment to take you out.

“In Jesse’s case, we sat down and I said, ‘Watch what happens out there (on Saturday). Watch (Jordan Szwarz) and these guys and the way they are responsible defensively and the way they make the right decisions and use their speed and do all those sorts of things.’

“He took that to heart. He came out today and he was very effective and he was doing the right things. I’m glad he took the right approach and he responded great,” Leach said.

Gabrielle nearly scored his first goal as a pro on Sunday, roaring in on a breakaway and firing a shot square off the post.

ZACH SENYSHYN

With Peter Cehlarik out of the lineup as a precaution on Sunday, Senyshyn moved up in the lineup and held his own with three shots, skating alongside Ryan Fitzgerald and Jakob Forsbacka Karlsson.

“He’s slowly coming along and understanding it. (In his first five games) he never really hurts us, by any means,” said Leach.

“We’re starting to see a little bit more of the speed and when he plays with Fitz and JFK, they’re able to create offensively and he’ll find himself in those spots and maybe he’ll get a couple of looks. It was good for him to play up there with those guys and I thought he asserted himself well.”

JAKUB ZBORIL and JEREMY LAUZON

I’ve liked what I’ve seen to this point from the two 20-year-old rookies. They’ve shown signs that they could be good players down the road.

“Usually with young defensemen in this league, you’re going to have your mistakes and they both, I would say, had some on the weekend, but you could argue (that happens with) any D. As far as playing their fifth or sixth game as a professional, they have been consistent,” said Leach, who went on to offer a little glimpse into their personalities.

“They are both really good kids. They’re different kids. One is really energetic and wants to just go everywhere and the other is a little bit more methodical. I like when they hang out together and hope that each one rubs off on the other.

“Lauzy is a little bit more high energy and wants to get in there. Jakub is more methodical and thinks the game. They’ve done a nice job, the two of them. They want to learn and they want to be good and they’re fun to work with.”

HEINEN–SZWARZ-CZARNIK

The Agostino-JFK-Cehlarik line carried the P-Bruins in the first three games of the season. In the last three, the Heinen-Szwarz-Czarnik trio has been on fire.

On the weekend, they combined for 8-11-19, plus Szwarz’ shootout winner on Saturday.

“They’re all in a good frame of mind. Obviously, (Heinen and Czarnik) came down from Boston after relatively good stints with them. Then Szwarzy came off a little bit of an injury. They are all excited to play with each other and you can tell,” said Leach.

“Like I’ve said about Peter Cehlarik – they look like they are on a mission. They want to make a difference, and they’re certainly doing so.”

DEEP IN NET

How’s this for depth in goal?

Providence started three goalies on the weekend — Jordan Binnington on Friday, Dan Vladar on Saturday and Zane McIntyre on Sunday. All three came away with wins.

“Vladdy was huge for us (on Saturday night) down the stretch when we were pushing, and when you push you give up some chances. He was excellent,” said Leach.

“Binner – I don’t know when his last game was. For him to come in to a tough building (in Springfield) and play really, really well – he looked good. And then Mac coming in from Boston. All three of them did a great job.”

P-Bruins Game Day — Season’s first 3-in-3 starts in Springfield

binner

Goalie Jordan Binnington gets some work in at this morning’s skate at The Dunk.

PROVIDENCE — With Zane McIntyre in Boston, Jordan Binnington gets his first start tonight for the Providence Bruins in Springfield.

“Quick, butterfly kid. This will be our first time getting to see him live,” Mike Dunham, Boston’s goalie development coach, said this morning.

“I think he probably just wants to get out there and play some games and show what he can do. I’m sure he’s excited to play.”

Coach Jay Leach has taken notice of Binnington’s work ethic.

“The other day, Czarnik, Szwarz and Heinen were firing pucks at him and he was all about it. He’s got a nice appetite. Probably something to prove, to be honest.  A little chip on his shoulder,” said Leach.

A third-round draft pick of St. Louis in 2011, Binnington is on loan to the P-Bruins. Dan Vladar will be the backup tonight.

Leach said no decisions have been made on who will play goal on Saturday against Belleville or Sunday against Laval, both home games.

Injury questions in Boston leave tonight’s P-Bruins lineup in flux.

Very tentatively, the lineup could look like this, but it might change depending on what happens up top. Don’t assume that anyone not listed here won’t play tonight.

Fitzgerald-JFK-Cehlarik

Heinen-Szwarz-Czarnik

Blidh-Cave-Senyshyn

Gabrielle-Hennessy-Porter

Lauzon-Cross

Grzelcyk-Zboril

Breen-Johansson

Binnington

Vladar

Power play units could look like this:

Czarnik-Heinen-Hennessy-Szwarz-Cross with Hennessy as bumper

Henny bumper

Grzelcyk-JFK-Fitzgerald-Cehlarik-Cave with Fitzgerald and Cehlarik possibly alternating as bumper

A had-to-have-it win

nucksBOSTON – They simply had to have this one. The Boston Bruins got their best player back at last – Patrice Bergeron —  and got their ship pointed in the right direction with a badly needed 6-3 win over Vancouver.

With Tuukka Rask laid low by a concussion, Anton Khudobin stepped into the breach and stopped 26 shots. The scrambly Russian may not inspire a ton of confidence, but a win is a win is a win. The Bruins are going to need more of the same from Khudobin while Rask is out.

Here are three quick hits from the game.

BERGERON! BERGERON! BERGERON!

What can you say about the superstar center that hasn’t been said before in his 900-game NHL career? Without him, the Bruins stumble to a 2-3 start with some losses against eminently beatable opponents. He returns from injury and Boston rolls to a win behind his goal and three assists.

Afterward, coach Bruce Cassidy had a nice take on the value of Bergeron beyond goals and assists: “I think it’s just morale as much as anything, on the bench and in the room. Those intangibles, leadership. First shift of the game, he’s standing up. They had scored a goal and (Bergeron is) kind of settling the troops down, talking about the details of the game. Finishing your routes on the forecheck, reloading all the way to our zone. Stuff that coaches preach a lot, but goes in one ear and out the other sometimes. And when you hear it from the leaders of the group, it means so much more.”

THE POWER PLAY

Mick Colageo of The New Bedford Standard Times mentioned this after the first period and he was right on the money. How many times over the years have we seen the Bruins get an early, extended power play, fail to take advantage and then allow that failure to cast a pall over the rest of the game?

Not last night. The Bruins took advantage of a five-minute PP by pouring in three goals in 1:37 and driving starting goalie Anders Nilsson to the bench.

“If you can make a team pay, you’re hoping on a major to get one, maybe two. All of a sudden you get three in there and especially at home, we need a little juice,” said Cassidy. “Great response by the guys, both units.”

SCHALLER STEPS UP

Successful teams need guys like Tim Schaller. Whether it’s blocking shots, finishing hits, chipping in offensively or engaging in the occasional fight, he is ready to do whatever needs to be done.

When Eric Gudbranson drove Frank Vatrano’s face into the end boards, Schaller went right after the big Canucks defenseman.

“I’m going to stand up for my teammates so I jumped in,” Schaller said.

“I don’t think they want me to be a flashy guy. I’ve got to do the dirty work. I like to think I sparked the team a little bit tonight. Hopefully, I can, not necessarily fight every night, but just get the energy going for the guys.

He did just on Thursday night.

Notes from Friar practice

schneidPROVIDENCE — Stopped in at Providence College’s Schneider Arena this afternoon and gathered a few nuggets of news:

*** Erik Foley won’t play this weekend when the Friars visit St. Lawrence and Clarkson, but he’s expected to return “sooner rather than later,’’ according to coach Nate Leaman. Foley sat out Sunday’s loss to Boston College with an upper body injury.

*** The coaching staff made a couple of changes on the top two lines involving Josh Wilkins and Scott Conway. Wilkins, who played center in the first three games of the season, is back at right wing next to Brian Pinho. Wilkins put up 31 points as a freshman last season with Pinho as his center. Kasper Bjorkqvist is the left wing on the line.

Conway, who  was given a maintenance day on Wednesday, is back at center after starting the season on Pinho’s right side. Conway’s wingers on Tuesday were Brandon Duhaime and Ryan Tait.

*** Mental toughness has been a topic this week after PC blew a three-goal lead in Sunday’s loss

“Our brains went haywire – no mental toughness. That’s all we talked about. Mental  toughness to execute. Stay with the game plan. Stay with the forecheck. Stay with the D zone. We were a mess after we went up 3-0,’’ Leaman said.

*** Even though St. Lawrence is 0-4 – losing to Penn State, Michigan and North Dakota twice – Leaman expects PC to be tested at Appleton Arena on Friday night. “We know how tough it is to go up there and play. I don’t think their record indicates the type of team they have,’’ he said.

Clarkson, Saturday night’s opponent, is 3-0-1 with wins over Penn State and Michigan and a win and a tie Western Michigan. The Golden Knights are ranked 10th in the USA Today/US College Hockey Magazine poll and 12th in the USCHO.com rankings.

*** Playing tough opponents will pay off for the Friars, Leaman says. “We do not have an easy schedule. We come back and we’ll have BC, BU and BU again. It gives us a real good opportunity to grow. If we had a real soft schedule and were 6-0, maybe you grow and maybe you don’t. I can tell you this, with the challenges we have, we’re going to grow and get better. That’s the bonus,’’ he said.

“We’re seeing officials from three different leagues, too, in three different weekends. I like the mental challenge with that also. The way the game was called at home was very different from the way it was at Miami, which is probably different from the way it will be at St. Lawrence/Clarkson. That’s another aspect that is healthy for us — to grow the mental aspect of the game, learn to adjust and play the game.’’

*** PC will practice at Schneider on Thursday morning and then hit the road for the six-plus hour trip to upstate New York.

P-Bruins top line is rolling

jfk1

Long after his teammates left the ice, Jacob Forsbacka Karlsson is still at work on Tuesday.

Assistant coach Trent Whitfield on Providence’s top line of Agostino-Forsbacka Karlsson-Cehlarik:

“They read off each other well. They dump pucks when they have to dump it and they go get it. They forecheck hard, they reload. Most of their goals have come off forecheck and reload, quick on the puck and attacking again.

“It’s fun to watch and it good for our young kids to watch how to do it the right way. Yeah, some of their moves are highlight reel moves and that’s all well and good. But it’s how they got the puck back before that that’s impressive to me.

“Kenny obviously drives that ship. For JFK, it’s a great learning tool for him to see how hard (Agostino) works and how hard he is on pucks. Peter Cehlarik, coming off an injury, to come out of the gates the way he has, it’s phenomenal. Good on him. He put in the work. He’s on a mission to get back to the NHL. If he keeps playing like this, I don’t think he’s too far away.”

You can read my Providence Journal column on the line here: http://www.providencejournal.com/sports/20171017/mark-divver-top-line-for-p-bruins-is-off-to-torrid-start

Good, bad & ugly from P-Bruins weekend

clean

It was a solid weekend for the Providence Bruins. They won one and lost one, both at home. They beat the Springfield Thunderbirds for the second straight time, after an opening night victory on Oct. 7. Then they  lost by a goal to a talented Toronto Marlies team. Here’s the good, bad and ugly.

GOOD

***If the line of Kenny Agostino, Jakob Forsbacka Karlsson and Peter Cehlarik isn’t the best line in the AHL right now, I’d like to know who has a better one. Agostino, the reigning AHL MVP and scoring champ, had a total of 2-3-5 for the weekend and was named AHL Player of the Week.  Cehlarik had 1-2-3 and JFK had 1-1-2. They are a possession nightmare for opponents. They’ve had 40- to 50-second stretches in the offensive zone where the opposing team hasn’t touched the puck. Enjoy it while you can. Any one of the three – or all of them – could be gone before long.

*** Special teams have been good to this point. The P-Bruins are seventh on the PK at 90% (18 for 20) and eighth on the PP at 27.3% (3 for 11). Providence has scored a PP goal in all three games.

*** Among defensemen in the AHL, Tommy Cross is tied for second in goals with two.

BAD

***Providence has taken 20 penalties through three games, including five for hooking, four for slashing, three for tripping and two for holding. That’s too many. Their opponents have been penalized only 11 times.

***Don’t know what referee Peter MacDougall thought he saw before whistling Justin Hickman for tripping on Saturday night. Hickman gave a Springfield player a push in the area of the hips. The player fell down. That’s not a trip.

***Providence ran into a red-hot goalie in Toronto’s Calvin Pickard (33 saves) on Saturday. The stop he made on Adam Payerl late in the second period is the early leader for save of the season at The Dunk.

*** JFK was slow in controlling the puck inside the offensive blueline against Springfield on Friday and it led to a shorthanded goal by Chase Balisy of the Thunderbirds.

UGLY

The injured: Jordan Szwarz (lower body).

 

Quick hits from P-Bruins-Marlies

game1

Providence’s Peter Cehlarik (22) and Kenny Agostino hunt for the puck in the Toronto end.

PROVIDENCE — Calvin Pickard (33 saves) was the difference as the Toronto Marlies sent the Providence Bruins to their first loss of the season, 3-2, on Saturday night.

Despite the loss, P-Bruins coach Jay Leach was satisfied with the way his team took it to an excellent Marlies team.

“As the game went on – maybe from the 15-minute mark of the second period – I thought we really started to come and find our game, started to simplify and get pucks where we wanted to,” he said.

Here are three quick hits:

AGOSTINO-JFK-CEHLARIK

Toronto had better luck defending against the big line than Springfield did, but the trio was involved in both Providence goals and was a going concern all night.

I asked Toronto coach Sheldon Keefe for his impressions.

“There’s a lot of skill there. We haven’t seen a line play at that level. It’s my first time seeing (Kenny) Agostino. Clearly, he shows why he’s at the top of the league, the skill that he has. He’s in control of things out there. So it’s definitely a threat for them all the time when they’re out there. They’re definitely dangerous and they played a lot tonight. (They were) a headache for us,” he said.

CAVE and BLIDH

Neither has a point yet and they are a combined minus-7, but linemates Colby Cave and Anton Blidh played well on Friday and Saturday with a few different players on their right wing.

“They had a good weekend, energy all night, both nights. Really good on the kill.  We’ve been killing a lot of penalties and they’ve been excellent,” Leach said.

“Caver is starting to hold onto pucks a little more, which is nice to see. Bleeder, as well, has shown a little bit more of that good puck play that you saw when he went up (to Boston) last year, starting to be a little more polished there. Really, every shift they were out there, they made something happen. They were good.”

PENALTIES                                                                                                    

Penalties have been a problem for the P-Bruins through three games. They’ve been hit with a total of 20 penalties while their opponents have been assessed 11.

Blame the referees if you want, though only a handful of the calls have been shaky. Many of the penalties have been deserved.

Maybe the tide started to turn in the third period last night, when all three penalties went against the Marlies.

“(Toronto took) penalties when we start to take it to them and give the refs a reason (to call penalties on Toronto). It goes hand in hand. You can give (the refs) a little nudge, but it’s on us to draw penalties, to get them in the offensive zone, put (opponents) in a position to take those penalties that we were obviously taking in the first half of that game. It’s on us to make them make those calls,” said Leach.

P-Bruins Game Day — Marlies in town

marliePROVIDENCE — Tonight it’s the Toronto Marlies’ turn. They’ll try to do what the Springfield Thunderbirds couldn’t do: Stop Providence’s superb line of Kenny Agostino, Jakob Forsbacka Karlsson and Peter Cehlarik.

Cehlarik (2-3-5), Agostino (1-4-5), and JFK (2-1-3) have been simply dominant through two games. I can’t imagine there is a better trio in the AHL right now.

“The thing that’s going on with that line that I find the most impressive — and obviously they are all skilled players who can make plays — is they track the crap out of pucks and hound it,” said coach Jay Leach.

“You’ve seen some lines in the past everywhere that just have more skill than everyone else. I’m not diminishing (the JFK line’s) skill, but the thing that they are doing so well is they just hound pucks. It’s fun to watch.”

For the P-Bruins, Colton Hargrove and Emil Johansson will make their season debuts tonight as Leach goes with 11 forwards and 7 defensemen.

“We’ve got a lot of guys; we’ve got to get them in,” Leach said.

It will be Johansson’s first game since he went down with a concussion on a high hit by Buffalo’s Hudson Fasching in the Prospects Challenge last month.

Here is tonight’s lineup:

Agostino-JFK-Cehlarik

It’s wait-and-see on the other lines. The rest of the forwards will be Fitzgerald, Senyshyn, Blidh, Cave, Gabrielle, Porter, Payerl, Hargrove

Lauzon-Cross

Breen-Grzelcyk

O’Gara-Zboril

Johansson

McIntyre in goal with Binnington as the backup.

Scratches: Szwarz (lower body), Clifton, Hennessy, Acolatse, Hickman

3 takeaways from Friday night

pink

It was ‘Pink in the Rink’ night at The Dunk as the P-Bruins played the Thunderbirds.

PROVIDENCE — The Providence Bruins did enough to get the job done on Friday night, beating Springfield, 3-2. “Overall it was good. Our puck management was OK in the first, didn’t love that. Some of our penalties again ….,” said coach Jay Leach. “We were better in our D zone — and we skated. (The Thunderbirds) might not have a lot of finish, but they competed like bastards. I was happy with the way we matched that.”

Here are three takeaways:

AGOSTINO-JFK-CEHLARIK

Wow, they are good. It was another entertaining and productive night for Providence’s top line of Kenny Agostino (1-2-3), Jakob Forsbacka Karlsson (1-0-1) and Peter Cehlarik (1-2-3). Springfield simply has had no answer for them in the first two games. There were shifts again on Friday night where the line barely allowed the Thunderbirds to touch the puck. Enjoy it while it lasts.

PENALTIES

After being penalized seven times in Game 1, the P-Bruins were whistled for seven more on Friday. They weren’t what you’d call aggressive penalties: Three for hooking, one each for holding, tripping (that one, on Justin Hickman, was a weak call), slashing and delay of game. It’s too many. A skilled Toronto club will be in town on Saturday. If the P-Bruins aren’t more careful, the Marlies’ power play could really make them pay.

ADAM PAYERL

I like what the big center/right wing brought to the lineup after being a healthy scratch on opening night. A straight-line player, he had some good moments on the penalty kill and finished his checks. “He was excellent. He skated. Competed. Had a couple of chances on the kill. He was effective,” said Leach.