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Soundin' Off

Soundin' Off

Bridgeport Sound Tigers

Category: O’Neill

High maintenance

A different set of days off today, this time for Brandon Svendsen (one of those who stepped off early yesterday) and Benn Olson (whom I was worried I’d jinxed until I saw him in workout clothes from across the rink). Dylan Reese remained out, though. Pat Bingham said he’s getting that upper-body injury examined; it’s nagging.

Pretty much everybody else was back on the ice, including Wes O’Neill in a full practice for the first time in a while. There were 12 forwards — 13, excuse me, with Andy Hilbert in a white practice jersey — and six defensemen out there.

If you missed it last night, all of 111 seconds into his return from a nine-game suspension, Trevor Gillies went forearm vs. head on Cal Clutterbuck. And there go Bertino and Ferguson back into the penalty box*.

Bad news for Hartford and the Rangers: Michael Del Zotto is out a month or more with a broken finger.

Nice piece from Milwaukee TV on Andi Lambert, Lane’s wife.

And our crew will be blogging the MAAC basketball tournaments from Harbor Yard.

*-Just in case.

Posted in 'Round the League, Alumni watch, Gillies, O'Neill, Reese | Add a comment

Springfield pregame (rescheduled)

Jason Pitton didn’t make the trip, and Rhett Rakhshani isn’t ready to return, so the Sound Tigers have all seven defensemen dressed again. The wrinkle tonight: In warmup at least, Wes O’Neill was the big guy on the left wing. Interesting.

BRIDGEPORT
F: DiBenedetto-Ullstrom-Castonguay
O’Neill-Hisey-Leisenring
Gallant-Marcinko-Svendsen
Bourbeau-Romano-Figren
D: Kohn (A)-Klementyev
Katic-Reese (A)
Motherwell-Wotton (C)
G: Koskinen
Martin

SPRINGFIELD
F: Smith-Wilson-Sestito (A)
Filatov-D’Alvise-Kubalik
Byers-Guite (C)-Kana
Tarnasky-Frischmon (A)-Goertzen
D: Sigalet-Commodore
Holden-Savard
Moore-Regner
G: Wesslau
LeNeveu

R: J.Koharski, Skilliter. L: Briggs, F.Murphy.

(We’ll fill in the other Springfield letters. They’re in their warmup jerseys with red sleeves and no TV numbers.)

We’ll see if that Feb. 8 postponement tradition holds up. (Once is a trend, right?)

Referee Graham Skilliter draws his first Bridgeport assignment. Been working in the AHL and ECHL this year, from the looks of it; has had some international assignments and was in junior last year for a scary situation.

Edit: No Phil tonight, BTW. You can listen to Mike Kelly instead.

Posted in O'Neill, Pregame, Rampant nostalgia, Springfield | Add a comment

Get better. (No, get better.)

Dustin Kohn scores three points last night and gets scratched today. Not good enough, clearly. (Can only assume they’re bringing him along slowly coming back from being banged up.) Wes O’Neill also did not make the trip.

So Dustin Friesen gets back into the lineup on defense after signing a new pro tryout after his first one expired last night.

Only see one ‘A’ out there for Bridgeport, and the Falcons’ hyper-red-sleeved warmup jerseys don’t have any. Got to update with the Bridgeport scratch anyway, so check back.

BRIDGEPORT
F: Bourbeau-Ullstrom-Svendsen
Pitton-Hisey-Joensuu
Haley (A)-Marcinko-Figren
DiBenedetto-(Romano-scratch)-Labelle
Leisenring
D: Motherwell-Wotton (C)
Katic-Wishart
Friesen-Klementyev
G: Martin
Koskinen

SPRINGFIELD
F: Sestito (A)-Wilson-Byers
Mayorov-D’Alvise-Kubalik
Tarnasky-Guite (C)-Regner
Harvey-Frischmon (A)-Goertzen
D: Sigalet-Ruth
Holden-Savard
Moore-Goloubef
G: LeNeveu
Wesslau

R: T.Koharski, Binda. L: Patry, Briggs.

So the Sound Tigers have scored five or more goals six times. Three are against Worcester. Two are against Springfield. A Massachusetts thing? Bring Lowell back. (The other was the 6-5 loss the second night in Charlotte.)

Posted in Friesen, Kohn, Martin-Joel, O'Neill | Add a comment

Re-signation

Wes O’Neill and Olivier Labelle signed new PTOs, so they’re sticking around for at least another 1-25 games.

The pink ice is reportedly in and ready. And not red. So that’s a start.

Posted in Labelle, O'Neill | Add a comment

Crunched late

Late win for the Sound Tigers in Syracuse after they gave away a two-goal lead early in the third. Wes O’Neill scores his third goal, and can you collect any three more-clutch goals in a month from a stay-at-home defenseman? Three points for both Bailey and Rakhshani.

Here’s Lindsay Kramer‘s gamer.

I missed it, didn’t even listen — did I mention here? Sorry; know I did on Twitter — to witness the official end of #ctfb season. (St. Joseph 49, Ansonia 28.) So we’re all but officially into #cthk season, right?

Had a couple of links I’d wanted to post. Don’t know where I put them. Oh well. One was that Ryan Johnson signed with Rockford, set eventually to play in the AHL for the first time in over a decade.

Prescout. Goal for Jason Pitton.

The big club… man.

And finally: Hail, men of Fordham, hail.

Posted in 'Round the League, Alumni watch, New Haven, O'Neill, Postgame, Syracuse, The Big Club | Add a comment

What happened here, Vol. 371

We’ve seen some crazy stuff around here. We’ve seen Louis DeBrusk send a playoff series to Game 7. We’ve watched Drew Fata take a penalty in the last two minutes, and Bridgeport score short-handed to tie it. We’ve seen a couple of last-second tying goals.

Has it ever been more unlikely than a big defenseman, the one who wasn’t a good enough skater to get an NHL contract, busting past a defenseman for a breakaway to turn this thing around?

“The big man was legging it out,” Pat Bingham said with a smile.

“It gave us a huge spark. We fed off that.”

Rhett Rakhshani knocked it away from Jeremy Williams (making me regret my third-star pick, seeing on replay who it was) to give O’Neill the chance. He flat outraced Pavel Valentenko to get the breakaway. He got the penalty shot. He shot the puck. He scored.

Rakhshani scored a few seconds later. And then who’s open, wide open, at the end? Wes O’Neill.

One of the players said this reminded him of two years ago, when no two-goal lead was safe, when they found ways to win games they had no business winning.

“Every team has its own unique personality,” Bingham said. “There’s experience from the past you can draw on. Whoever it was who said that was part of a pretty special group that didn’t quit*.”

Bingham said he could point to several cases tonight where players could have done something selfish, could have taken a shortcut. Stuff like Robin Figren almost throwing his face in front of a shot late in regulation.

“Micheal Haley so desperately wanted to take a swing at” Devin DiDiomete, Bingham said — but he couldn’t do it without giving up a power-play chance. “Down 3-0 at that point, if he takes that penalty, I don’t think we win this game.”

…..

Dylan Reese, Jon Sim and Travis Hamonic are on the transactions as sent down tonight. Unclear whether they’re here to play, or if it’s just paper to save money.

Both O’Neill and Bingham said they were sticking with what brought them through two periods. But once Hartford took that 3-0 lead on Williams’ goal, Bingham wanted to change up the forecheck, get a little more aggressive. But he didn’t want to do it piecemeal. He figured he’d do it at the 14-minute time out. Trouble: They didn’t get the 14-minute time out until 11 minutes and change remained. They got it figured out.

I went back and forth on whether that should have been a penalty shot. On third thought and second look, Valentenko got his stick between O’Neill’s legs from behind, so under the modern, looser standards, probably the right call.

Bridgeport shooters are 9-for-17 all-time on penalty shots, including goals on the last five in a row. The last three have come against Hartford (Martin vs. Valiquette, Tyler Haskins vs. Chad Johnson).

Bingham saw some looks in the shootout, begging for him to put O’Neill in. The coach thought about it. It was coming. Colliton went and won it first. “(Colliton) turned around and made eye contact,” Bingham said. “He really wanted to go.” He noted, also, that O’Neill and Colliton both shot the puck. No deking.

Bailey was unremarkable until late. O’Neill gave him plenty of credit on the tying goal, fired it across, “a saucer over two sticks,” he said.

Not on the send-down list but back in town: Jesse Joensuu, today’s game-winning goal-scorer on the Island, who watched and stopped in to congratulate the team. He received some of his own.

On Petr Prucha’s arrival in San Antonio.

And so ends the Hartford Wolf Pack era: 571-346-66-49-30, a Calder Cup championship and a mixed finish. At least tomorrow we’ll get to hear the song again. But we’ll miss that name, those sweaters (most of them, anyway), and that ping.

*-”We never quit.” –Jack Capuano

Posted in 'Round the League, Alumni watch, Bailey, Figren, Haley, Hartford, Joensuu, O'Neill, Postgame | 1 Comment

Former former future/once and future

Mark Wotton and Jeremy Yablonski are reported as doubtful for the weekend with undisclosed injuries. Fascinating are the names coming in to replace them on pro tryouts.

At forward will be Olivier Labelle. You may remember Labelle from 2007-08: gritty, physical, contributes offensively. He was producing in Reading.

On defense: Wes O’Neill, one of the prototypical Former Future Sound Tigers. Well, guess we can drop the “former” part. O’Neill’s the captain in Kalamazoo after three years in the Colorado organization. The Islanders drafted him in 2004 but didn’t sign him in 2007.

Neither was here this morning, but they were on their way.

Dustin Kohn (day off, should be good for tomorrow) and Rhett Rakhshani (ill) didn’t skate. The lines were a bit jumbled for practice, but given that they had 10-4-3 out there, we’ll wait and see what tomorrow brings.

Posted in Labelle, O'Neill, Transactions, Wotton, Yablonski | Add a comment

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