PROVIDENCE – With the big club off for the Olympic break, the Black and Gold Blog ventured down to Providence to get a look at some of Boston’s top prospects.
The Providence Bruins had been one of the hottest teams in the American Hockey League, but they had their four-game winning streak snapped by Syracuse today at the Dunkin’ Donuts Center, and they have nobody but themselves to blame for it.
The visiting Crunch took full advantage of the Bruins’ undisciplined play, converting 3 of 5 chances on the power play to post a 7-4 win before 6,651 at the Dunk.
“Some nights it just seems like when a team starts to get a little hot on the power play it just feels like you’re never going to be able to kill a penalty again,” said Providence coach Rob Murray. “We’ve been playing very well. (Goalie) Dany Sabourin didn’t have as good a game as he would have liked to, and we were undisciplined. Our undisciplined penalties gave them the opportunities on the power play and they took advantage of it.”
Things started off a bad note when rookie Lane MacDermid took a pair of offensive-zone penalties in the first 8:12 of the game, and Syracuse cashed in with goals on both power plays. Providence battled back to tie it when Zach Hamill scored the first of his two goals, then Jamie Arniel scored from MacDermid at 5:27 of the second. MacDermid continue to redeem himself when he dropped Syracuse tough guy Kevin Harvey in a bout off the ensuing face-off, getting two-thirds of the way toward a Gordie Howe hat trick in a two-second span.
But the Crunch closed the second with two more goals, the first short-handed after killing off a 1:50 5-on-3 advantage. Syracuse made it 5-2 early in the third before Mikko Lehtonen scored on a power play and Hamill struck again just after a Syracuse penalty expired. But a Guillaume Lefebvre elbowing penalty in the offensive zone led to another Syracuse power-play goal, as Alexandre Picard completed his hat trick with 6:14 left to make it 6-4. A Derek Mackenzie empty-netter closed out the scoring with 1:39 to play.
“Of the top of my head, I don’t know if we had a penalty taken in our defensive zone,” said Murray. “Every penalty was taken in the offensive zone, and a couple were undisciplined. One was a slash and one was an elbow where we were undisciplined. … We haven’t done that a lot this year.”
Providence falls to 27-25-3-0 with the loss, but not everything was negative. After struggling offensively most of the year, the Bruins continue to convert their chances of late, with Providence now having scored 39 goals in the last eight games.
“Even tonight, we got four goals,” said Murray. “Four goals was a weekend for us a couple weeks ago. We lose a game 7-4, but we’re still having some offensive success.”
Providence captain Trent Whitfield agreed.
“It was unfortunate tonight, those penalties really cost us the game tonight,” said Whitfield. “We’ve been playing well. It’s not like we played horrible tonight. It’s just that undisciplined penalties come back to bit you and they bit us tonight.”
The Baby B’s are off until Friday, when they host Abbotsford.
Some quick observations on the prospect front:
- Hamill impressed with his nose for the net. It’s been a shaky year for the former first-round pick, but he’s picked it up of late. He now has three goals and three assists in his last four games. Murray noted that playing with John Lammers, Hamill’s linemate with Everett (WHL), has helped Hamill pick up his game. Lammers was signed to a PTO on Jan. 13.
- Brad Marchand is a force at the AHL level. He was all over the ice and in everyone’s face all game long. He started a scrum on the first shift of the game and neither his mouth nor his skates slowed down all afternoon. He picked up an assist and delivered the hit of the night, obliterating Dylan Reese along the boards at the blue line. It’s no coincidence that Providence, which fell under .500 while he was out with a foot injury, is 7-4-0 since his return with 43 goals in those 11 games.
- Jordan Knackstedt, who found himself in Claude Julien’s doghouse when he showed up out of shape for training camp, has turned his season around of late. Murray noted he’s dropped his body fat from 12.9 percent at camp to 7.5 percent. He didn’t score in this one, but had four shots and some solid bids. He had 3-4-7 totals in his previous three games and is skating on the top line with Marchand and Whitfield.
- Adam McQuaid was sent down to Providence before the game, but did not suit up. His return after a strong showing in Boston should help settle down the Providence blue line and penalty kill.