It’s Hershey in five, which seemed a common pick beforehand but didn’t seem so bright after two games. It’s as if it got to where it should have, but in some oddball path that makes you wonder just what happened here.
Bridgeport probably should have won Game 1, could have won Game 2, and the Sound Tigers head home with a chance to shock the league anyway, but they blow up in the second period of Game 3, then come back against a non-desperate team to win Game 4, and then…
What was this?
“They came out pretty hard,” Dustin Kohn said. “They got a couple of goals early, a couple of bounces on the first one, another after that. It’s tough to play in their building.”
But even after giving up the first eight shots — and almost comically failing to register their first on a short-handed two-on-one, with Greg Mauldin fanning on Jeremy Reich’s pass — they recover and set up Dylan Reese for a short-hander. It’s 2-1. Shots are 8-1, but it’s 2-1.
And two minutes later, they’ve reverted and are behind 3-1.
And then shots are 23-1 before you know it.
“They seemed loose before the game, ready to go,” Jack Capuano said. “For whatever reason, we didn’t get anything going.”
So they’re left to pack up (break-up interviews tomorrow, not wasting any time — hey, the brass flew in tonight, they’re probably home and in bed already) and look back not only on this kooky playoff series, a closer-than-it-looked 4-1 series that finished with the most-dominant 4-1 game ever, but on an up-and-down season that was saved with one long, late upstretch.
“Like I told them, a lot of guys came a long way,” Capuano said. “No one counted us in the playoffs a month, a month and a half ago. We battled hard.”
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The Sound Tigers last won a playoff series in 2003. Since then, 20 of the 29 teams in the league have won one. If you include the old two-game preliminary round, add Norfolk and make it 21. If you consider Lowell one contiguous franchise, Lock Monsters-to-Devils (which the league does not), make it 22. Springfield, Abbotsford, Lake Erie, Texas, Peoria and San Antonio are the six others who have not won a playoff series since 2003, though obviously four of those got a later start (and two of them are alive right now.)
Four others that are now defunct have also won one: Iowa, Cincinnati, the Worcester IceCats and, in a preliminary round, the Cleveland Barons.
So, sadly, got to stick with what I wrote last year at this time. How to win a playoff series again? Maybe get the heck out of this division.
And, you know, stay the heck out of this division.
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On the bright side, Koskinen stopped the last 18. On the other hand, his teammates only took six shots in that stretch.
Even with the one more win that would have avoided Hershey, of course, it wouldn’t have been easy. Worcester, which gave Bridgeport fits all year, finished off Lowell tonight in five. (Of course, Koskinen beat the Sharks. Maybe… Nah, who knows.)
Here are the division finals schedules, if you’re still up for road trips. The quick end to the two East Division series means Albany can keep all its home games at the Times Union Center; Game 6 would be a day before the circus arrives.
Our buddy Tom Liodice pushes Frans Nielsen for Lady Byng consideration. Works for us. We remember the time Nielsen had 10 PIM in 56 games for Bridgeport, then took three minors in six games at the Worlds…
Odessa lost Game 7. Utah plays Friday. We’ll poke around and see if anyone might join the Grizzlies from here to try to bring that team back from 3-0 down.
That’s former Amity hockey star Brian Kownacki making this flying leap. (Wow, two Fordham references in one day.)
And RIP, Dorothy Height, Juan Antonio Samaranch and Keli McGregor.


Hopefully this organiztion teaches these kids how to win and what it takes to win, at this level and above since this is all about “player development, player development, player development”. Hey Cap, winning is also about development too look at Washington from the East coast league, the American league, to the National league. Guess they figured out how to “develop” ey…????
Comment by Section 106 — April 22nd, 2010 @ 5:57 am
Seven shots between the pipes….what team came to play last night? Hard to take any bright spots from this series. The Sound Tigers were out played and certainly out coached………again. Everyone says the system works, but looking at the Islanders results as well as our…does it? Another season in Bpt. that ends with a whole lot of woulda, shoulda, coulda.
Comment by Doug Faulds — April 22nd, 2010 @ 9:49 am
Once again thanks Mike for your great coverage. Since our goal is to get players ready for the next level I think we had a good year.
Since Hershey’s goal is to win the Calder cup they may also have a good year.
For years we have yelled for Ricky to stay in the net. I think it is time for the organization to get him out of the net. You can point to anything but the rehab games in my view got us to Hershey instead of Worcester or higher..also got the big club into a spiral they couldn’t get out of.. IMHO … of course…
Comment by BILL105 — April 22nd, 2010 @ 12:22 pm
I believe that there was a little “hometown” scoring with the shots on goal. There were a couple of “shots” that reached the goalie but didn’t register as a shot. That had usually been the case at Bridgeport, clearing passes that reached the goalie between the pipes registered as a SOG. They were outplayed last night. Remember how this team was built, with focus on the younger players. I don’t know what the organizations expectations for this team was but remembering the long scoring droughts, the fact that Matt Moulson was signed with the intention to be in Bridgeport this year ended up leading the big club in goals this year. This is farther than I would have thought back in January and aside from the second period of game 3 and game 5 this team held its own against an offensive powerhouse of the Hershey Bears.
Comment by Jeff S — April 22nd, 2010 @ 1:55 pm
Bport ran into Hershey. No team in the AHL matches up with Hershey. Teaching the kids how to win is 1 thing but providing very good AHL lifers like Aucoin is a whole nother story. Hershey/ Washington spend a lot of money on tweener talent unlike Bport, especially this season.
Hershey had a mix of good young players coming of age and tweener talent that can basically score at will in the AHL.
Comment by Sneekypete — April 22nd, 2010 @ 4:04 pm