
Georgii Merkulov has 9-9-18 in his last 13 games and is fourth in the AHL in scoring with 28 points in 30 games. (Photo courtesy of Providence Bruins)
‘Twas the week before Christmas and the Providence Bruins made the rounds from Toronto to Rochester to Hershey, with middling results, before finally hitting the holiday break.
They started with a 7-3 loss against the Toronto Marlies on Wednesday, a game that got away from the P-Bruins in the third period.
Then it was on to Rochester, where Providence dug deep for a come-from-behind 6-3 win on Friday that snapped a four-game losing streak. Unfortunately, they lost Dan Renouf, who took a skate near his eye.
The team hit the road to Hershey, arriving in the wee hours. On Saturday, Providence was undermanned on defense because of Renouf’s injury and the recall of Ian Mitchell by Boston, but they hung in and turned in a respectable performance in a 4-3 loss to a Hershey Bears team that is running away with the Atlantic Division race.
Here’s the good, bad and ugly.
GOOD
— If there is a better player than Georgii Merkulov in the American Hockey League right now, well, please point him out to me. The second-year pro from Russia is driving his line and putting himself in good position for an NHL callup.
He had 1-1-2 against the Marlies and 2-1-3 against the Americans. Merkulov has 9-9-18 in his last 13 games and has moved up to fourth in the AHL in scoring with 13-15-28 in 30 games.
— Of course, Merkulov’s linemates, Justin Brazeau and Jesper Boqvist, are a big part of his success.
Brazeau had a goal and an assist in Toronto and two helpers in Rochester. He is tied for second on the team in scoring with 9-11-20 and plus-11 in 30 games.
Boqvist had a goal and an assist in both Toronto and Rochester. His goal on Friday was the game-winner. He has 7-11-18 games in 28 games.
— Anthony Richard scored twice against Rochester and once in Hershey.
— Trevor Kuntar took advantage of a turnover and scored on a quick wrister to give the P-Bruins the lead in Rochester. He was his typical snarly self in all three games, to the point where Hershey’s fearsome Dylan McIlrath was looking to get a piece of him on Saturday.
— Reilly Walsh had 1-1-2 against Hershey.
— Joey Abate’s hustle led to Vincent Arseneau’s goal on Saturday. Abate had a good bout with Brendan Warren of the Americans on Friday.
— Providence outshot Toronto, 17-2, in the first period on Wednesday night.
BAD
— Since winning seven in a row, Providence has gone 1-4-1 and been outscored, 29-17.
— Using three raw rookies on defense – two of them just up from the ECHL and another who probably would be well-served by spending some time there – is not a formula for AHL success, especially when you are playing the league’s best team on the road in front of a big Saturday night crowd. But the P-Bruins really had little choice but to use Frederic Brunet, Ryan Mast and Ethan Ritchie on Saturday night. There was no one else. Such is life in the AHL when injuries and callups hit.
— Brandon Bussi didn’t have very much support, but in two games against Toronto, he faced 42 shots and gave up 11 goals.
— Power plays were four to one in favor of the Marlies in Toronto. Not saying Providence didn’t earn its four penalties, but not convinced the home team didn’t deserve more than one.
— Luke Toporowski has gone 12 games without a goal.
— The P-Bruins gave up a goal 69 seconds into the first period and 14 seconds into the third period against the Marlies.
UGLY
— After tying the game in the third minute of the third period in Toronto, Providence was blitzed for four straight goals and lost, 7-3. Two of the goals, 1:12 apart, were while the teams were playing four on four.
— Injured: Dan Renouf, Jakub Zboril








