Binghamton at the Twenty Game Mark

The Binghamton Senators have reached the 20-game mark so it’s time to take stock and see how the team and the players are doing (for the previous ten games go here).  Binghamton was 9-1-0, placing them 4th in their conference and 2nd in their division.  Their 64 goals-for put them tied for 10th in their conference, while their 48 goals allowed is 2nd best in the conference.

Player’s stats (INJ=games missed due to injury, SCR= scratched, SUS=suspended, NHL=games in the NHL, ECHL=games in the ECHL):

Jakob Silfverberg 10-5-6-11 +7
Pat Cannone 10-4-5-9 +12
Derek Grant
10-7-1-8 +8
Andre Benoit
10-4-3-7 +3
Patrick Wiercioch 10-3-4-7 +7
Corey Cowick 9-1-5-6 +1 SCR 1
Cole Schneider 6-2-3-5 +6 SCR 4
Shane Prince
9-2-3-5 +4 SCR 1
Tyler Eckford 10-3-2-5 +7
Mike Hoffman 10-1-4-5 +5
Stephane Da Costa 3-3-1-4 +4 INJ 7
Mika Zibanejad 6-1-3-4 Even INJ 4
Hugh Jessiman 10-1-3-4 Even
Fredrik Claesson 10-0-4-4 +9
David Dziurzynski
10-0-4-4 +6
Jean-Gabriel Pageau 10-0-4-4 -1
Eric Gryba 7-2-1-3 +10 INJ 3
Mark Stone 10-2-1-3 +3
Mark Borowiecki 8-0-2-2 +8 INJ 2
Andre Petersson 7-1-0-1 -3 SCR 3
Chris Wideman 5-0-0-0 -3 [ECHL 1-0-1-1 -3]
Jack Downing DNP [ECHL 12-4-8-12 Even]
Louie Caporusso DNP [ECHL 11-4-6-10 +3]
Dustin Gazley DNP [ECHL 6-1-5-6 -3]
Darren Kramer DNP [ECHL 6-1-2-3 Even]
Danny New DNP [ECHL 8-0-2-2 +2]
Brad Peltz DNP [ECHL 3-0-1-1 Even]
Ben Blood DNP [ECHL 11-0-0-0 -2]
Jared Cowen DNP (injured)
Wacey Hamilton DNP (injured)

Robin Lehner 4-1-0 1.75 0.947
Ben Bishop 5-0-0 2.73 0.932
Nathan Lawson DNP
Marc Cheverie DNP [ECHL 3-4-0 2.52 0.920]

Most players had solid to good results, with the exceptions of Andre Petersson who is struggling in a sophomore slump and Mark Stone whose offensive numbers have dwindled since he returned from injury.  There’s also some disappointment that Mike Hoffman hasn’t been able to put his game in gear offensively.  Silfverberg and Cannone‘s numbers are no surprise and the former has played a huge role in Cannone bouncing back from a slow start to the season (he also lead the team in plus/minus over the stretch).  Derek Grant‘s numbers are a pleasant surprise, particularly given that his linemates (Dziurzynski and Stone) did not produce much.  On the blueline performances are largely as expected, although Fredrik Claesson looks like he’s well ahead of schedule in putting up unexpected points along with solid defensive play.  On the down side Ben Blood has been underwhelming even at the ECHL level.  Goaltending has been stellar, particularly with Ben Bishop back in his usual form.

I don’t expect Binghamton to maintain this pace, but their performance shows just how strong they can be.  The main concern is on the blueline if the NHL lockout ends, but it’s possible Blood and Wideman will be more useful players in an AHL drained of its highest talent.

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Senators News: December 10th

-In expected news the NHL has now cancelled games through December 30th.

Stefan G:son quotes the VP of the Swedish Hockey Federation on Mika Zibanejad‘s status for the WJC:

We’ve had a good dialogue with Senators management this past week, but Mika have not been able to be on the ice for ten days due to medical reasons. … Ottawa want Mika to get healthy and we understand that now that he’s been ill for a long time. They waited over the weekend to see if he would get better, but he didn’t. Had Mika been healthy, Ottawa would’ve liked to see him play at the WJC.

None of this really fits with what the Senators brass has been saying, but there’s no doubt Mika isn’t healthy at the moment (I think Stefan’s speculation about a concussion is pushing things a bit far).

-After picking up a point in Elmira Brad Peltz has been recalled to Binghamton.  Elmira has also signed forward and former San Jose draft pick Justin Daniels (3-62/08) who has been playing for Augusta in the SPHL (6-1-0-1 -8).

-As an illustration of what to look for when deciding if an article is substantive or not I’ll quote John Shannon who talks about the financial distress of NHL franchises:

I’ve been told that 18 teams in the NHL lost money last year.

That’s great John; I’ve been told the world will end because of the Mayan calendar–being told something isn’t presenting facts.  You can see the counterpoint to this idea here and Stu Hackel takes his time in examining the facts as he is able to ascertain them.  I think fans get too riled up by vague polemics from journalists (much like in politics) and don’t step back to look at the quality of the information being provided.  Shannon isn’t an idiot so presumably his sources are within the NHL, but he’d be better off revealing that and writing a more balanced opinion piece.  This is the kind of thing that made me blow up at Marc Spector a few weeks ago–it’s just lazy journalism.

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Senators News: December 9th; Binghamton 1, Norfolk 3

-Binghamton lost 3-1 to Norfolk last night, putting an end to their nine-game winning streak.  The B-Sens struggled to solve Frederik Andersen despite firing 40 shots his direction; Robin Lehner made 32-saves in the loss.  Derek Grant scored the only goal for Binghamton, his league-leading third shorty off a turnover he created.

Luke Richardson talked about the loss:

For the most part I think the whole night was just a little bit off for everybody, including me. I think we all get a little bit complacent at times. I think we were striving to get better and pushing as far as we could, and playing better as a team, but (Saturday) it caught us. We just weren’t at our best, from start to finish.

I like that Richardson includes himself as a factor in the team’s performance–it fits the idea that the team winning and losing together includes the coaching staff.

Jakob Silfverberg talked about his watershed moment in the AHL:

We were up 5-0 [on Syracuse] then all of a sudden, hell breaks loose. Ending up in a game like that was a big difference for me. I knew there was fights going on (in games here), but I didn’t really imagine there would be that many in one game. But even that was a good experience, even though we ended up losing. I learned a lot from that game.

Richardson talked about Derek Grant‘s future:

[He] has been the guy that’s bloomed into a real good two-way forward. He’s a going to be a great checking forward because he’s got size and he’s got a great stride, he can skate with anybody. He’s getting stronger and stronger on faceoffs, and you he’s getting a bit of an offensive touch. Not to compare him to Mike Fisher, because he has a totally different style of play, but when you get a so-called checking centre that can score goals, and kill penalties … that’s a dangerous thing. I don’t know if he’s ready yet, but he’s getting close. He’s a guy that’s really put himself in a great spot.

This is exactly what most players have to do when making the transition to the NHL–become defensively reliable.

-Elmira also lost 3-1 last night, with Cheverie in net and Caporusso and Peltz providing points among those with Binghamton connections.

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Senators News: December 8th; Binghamton 6, Portland 1

-The Binghamton Senators crushed the Portland Pirates 6-1 last night (I was able to watch some of the third).  Ben Bishop made 40-saves to earn the win, while Pat Cannone and Patrick Wiercioch each scored twice and Jakob Silfverberg and Hugh Jessiman added singles.  Cannone, Jessiman, and Wiercioch each had three-point nights.  With the game out of reach things got a little goofy (Brett Hextall went after Jean-Gabriel Pageau for no particular reason).  Bobbykelly was able to watch the entire game and has an entertaining piece about it.  Here are the highlights.

-Tonight Binghamton faces off against Norfolk (9-12) who are lead by Peter Holland (21 points) and backstopped by Frederik Andersen (6-6).

Brad Peltz has been loaned back to Elmira (the Jackals have played a man short the last couple of games).

-Speaking of Elmira, they lost 7-4 to Reading last night with Louie Caporusso and Jack Downing each having three-point nights.  The teams play each other again tonight.

Hockey’s Future has weighed in with their team rankings and placed Ottawa fourth.  They write:

Strengths: Ottawa has a talented group of talented, versatile forwards led by Mika Zibanejad, Jakob Silfverberg, Stefan Noesen, and Matt Puempel. Further down the depth chart, the Senators have many players with top-nine potential such as Shane Prince, Mark Stone, and Andre Petersson. They also possess a diverse group of defensive prospects led by offensive defenseman Cody Ceci and stay-at-home defenseman Fredrik Claesson. Goaltending prospect Robin Lehner is among the top netminders in the AHL.

Weaknesses: While the organization has several quality goaltending prospects, they are short on depth at that position. The Senators could also stand to add some more depth on the right wing.

Top 5 Prospects: 1. Mika Zibanejad, C; 2. Jakob Silfverberg, RW; 3. Robin Lehner, G; 4. Stefan Noesen, RW; 5. Cody Ceci, D.

One could quibble with where players are positioned, but it’s a fair assessment and the nuance of who is where within the top group isn’t terribly important.

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Senators News: December 7th

-Not much happened yesterday beyond more of the CBA back and forth–brief moments of optimism were followed by consternation and anger.  The soap opera continues and I’ll get excited when a deal is struck.

-Binghamton plays Portland (10-9-2) tonight; the Pirates are lead by Alexandre Bolduc (22 points) and backstopped by Chad Johnson (7-5-0).  Former B-Sen Rob Klinkhammer and former Sen David Rundblad are also part of the crew.

Don Brennan reports that Mark Borowiecki is doubtful for tonight’s game after suffering a neck injury when he was jumped by Eric Neilson.  He also indicates Chris Wideman has been recalled from Elmira and is expected to play.

Luke Richardson talked about Jakob Silfverberg‘s improvement through the season thus far:

I was talking with Ben Bishop about him the other day. He scored a goal on Sunday night or afternoon, we had a late afternoon game. He ripped one top corner and there was no windup on the release; it was just a rocket. That’s what Ben said, ‘You know he’s going over the glove and you still can’t get there quick enough.’ He has that spot picked and he’s dangerous every night. Not only did he score the last couple of games, but he is creating chances and now he is creating so much awareness that he is so dangerous in small areas. And he is getting comfortable in those small areas and the smaller, tighter surface with the tighter checking and the physicality. He is getting more comfortable with it, as we’ve talked about. People are paying more attention to him, so that’s just going to make more people on the ice open and available for those great, little plays that he makes. Not only does he have the big cannon, but he does make great, little plays in small areas. So he is coming along great, and he’s a competitor. When things don’t go well on the power play, he comes off the bench and slams the door because he’s frustrated because he wants to make something happen all the time.

It’s more of the same from Richardson, but illustrates that the adaptation phase for Silfverberg seems to be ending.

-Richardson then talked about Stephane Da Costa:

He had a little bit of an illness at the summer that held him back. He had a little medical procedure that just kind of slowed him down in preparing for camp. So when he came into camp, he was a little bit… not out of shape but not in top shape. I think that hampered him in the fitness testing and it wore on his body and he had a bit of a sore back because of that. In his first game back after that, after missing a few games at the start of the year, he got slashed on his baby finger and that split open and he broke the tip of it. So that was very sore, especially when the centerman takes draws, for a while. And then in his first game back from that, he had a great game in Norfolk and in the next game, he flew into the boards and hurt his knee. So then he just had a rough start; very frustrated. His body was beaten up and he was very down on himself. We took him right out. We gave him a week of just gym exercises to build up his body. And then he skated all last week and to his credit, we challenged him to work hard and push himself and build his body and he did that. He had a smile on his face all last week. He didn’t get into the game on Friday because we had a healthy lineup. We dressed him in warmup and he still had a great attitude and worked his butt off every day. He got in there Sunday and just continued to work hard and things went well with Shane Prince. It really clicked and they got off to a good start in the game; they were one of our best forechecking lines and he got rewarded with three goals and an assist that game. He was the game’s first star, I believe. He just looked engaged. He’s a special player and he makes very good plays – not just scoring goals but he can really find people. He has great vision. If he can continue to build his body, because he’s not a big guy, but play in a big man’s league in big games over here on smaller ice surfaces, he will continue to grow and get better because of his talents. He just has to make sure that he keeps up that drive, that inner drive and the compete level. And he’s proving that right now, so we just have to make sure that we remind him every day to continue to build on that.

A big info dump from Richardson, but it provides context to Da Costa‘s slow start.

-Richardson moved on to Mika Zibanejad:

He just had his four wisdom teeth out last week and a throat infection, so that put him on the sidelines for the weekend, last weekend. But other than that, he’s on the mend and hopefully he’s back in the lineup in the next game or two. He’s doing really well on the smaller ice surface. We have tried him on the wing. We have had him at center and he’s very versatile. He kills penalties very well and he’s starting to get engaged and use his body a little more. But we’re just trying to get him skating and getting used to skating into areas where maybe he doesn’t get enough room because it is a different dimension to look at out there on that smaller ice surface. But just feeling myself, I didn’t really have much input into it. I just gave my opinion in that I think that he’s coming along fine and if you send him over there for two weeks to a month for the world juniors, then you’re right back onto the bigger ice surface again. You’re holding onto the puck too long. You’re skating to the wrong areas and looping in the neutral zone. It’s not the same style as it is here, so when he comes back, you’re starting all over again at the adjustment stage. If you’re making a commitment and hopefully the lockout comes to an end soon, the intentions of Ottawa is to develop and keep developing here in this type of game – the North American game and the North American ice size – and give him a real chance to vie for a roster spot when the lockout ends or soon after. So that was the thought process and it kind of makes sense to me.

The message boils down Zibanejad not yet adjusting to the North American style and Richardson wants the team to spend with him to get him there (the focus seems to be in timing and offensive positioning).

Finally, Richardson talked about Patrick Wiercioch:

He came to training camp in great shape. He suffered an injury during training camp, but he has come back strong at the time Jared Cowen left us. He really knew how to seize this opportunity. He plays more than often with Andre Benoit. Because he has improved defensively, we’re not afraid to use him in crucial situations. He had to improve defensively to play in the NHL. In Ottawa, he knows he will never be the number one offensive defenseman.

The refrain about Wiercioch all season is praising his conditioning and how much that comes into play with his ability to perform.

-Elmira plays Reading (14-7-1) tonight; the Royals are lead by Denny Urban and David Marshall (20 points each) and backstopped by Philipp Grubauer (11-4-0).

-Speaking of Elmira, Danny New has been placed on the 21-day IR.

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Senators News: December 5th

Stephane Da Costa talked about his goals for the season:

I just want to be more of an all-around player. Physically I want to be a little better, too. I got a little better physically, I think. I can take impacts a little better. We played simple, because that was my first game back and it was a hard game. I’m trying to make an impact, trying to show I can play here. I need to work hard, and I think I can make it there again. I just want to have a really good year. I’m trying to take it week to week and we’ll see what happens.

Stefan Noesen has made the preliminary US roster for WJC.

D. J. Powers writes about NHL prospects in the NCAA, but other than a passing reference to Jeff Costello offers nothing on the Sens.

Brochenski writes about former Sen Brandon Bochenski and I bring it up only for this:

Even Don Cherry was on the Bochenski Bandwagon, as he picked him to win the Calder Trophy that year, despite Bochenski up against a stacked rookie class which included the likes of Crosby and Ovechkin. Oops.

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Senators News: December 4th

-The debate over Ottawa’s decision to keep Mika Zibanejad continues, but nothing has changed since yesterday (nor is anything expected to change).

-Here’s the weekly prospect update (for players with more than 10 games played I’ve indicated where they are in scoring; for blueliners they are compared to other defensemen on the team):

CHL
Matt Puempel (OHL Kitchener) 26-21-7-28 (1st) (injured)
Cody Ceci (OHL Ottawa) 30-7-23-30 (1st)
Stefan Noesen (OHL Plymouth) 23-16-8-24 (3rd)
Jordan Fransoo (WHL Victoria) 23-2-6-8 (t-2nd)
Jakub Culek (QMJHL Cape Breton) 8-4-3-7 (9th)
Jarrod Maidens (OHL Owen Sound) (injured)
Chris Driedger (WHL Calgary) 15-4-2 2.26 .922
Francois Brassard (QMJHL Quebec) 15-6-1 2.54 .909

Allsvenskan (Swe)
Mikael Wikstrand (Mora) 27-9-9-18 (1st)

KHL
Nikita Filatov (Salavat) 31-8-9-17 (3rd)

NCAA
Ryan Dzingel (Ohio) – 14-6-7-13 (1st)
Jeff Costello (Notre Dame) – 12-5-7-12 (t-2nd)
Bryce Aneloski (Nebraska-Omaha) – 14-2-8-10 (2nd)
Max McCormick (Ohio) – 14-4-4-8 (3rd)
Michael Sdao (Princeton) – 10-3-4-7 (1st)
Tim Boyle (Union) – 6-0-2-2

USHL
Robbie Baillargeon (Indiana) – 21-5-8-13 (6th)

Stu Hackel warns against being too optimistic about the player-owner meeting today, which seems only sensible.

The Ottawa Sun is finally going down the path of requiring a paid subscription to read the erudite thoughts of Don Brennan et al.  I wonder how well that will do for them, as The Ottawa Citizen went the same route long ago, but was forced to make most of its sports coverage free with Senators Extra to avoid complete oblivion.  I don’t really see a way forward for newspaper sports journalism unless they make most of their content free–it’s available from far too many sources for fans to have to pay for it.

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Senators News: December 3rd; Binghamton 5, Syracuse 2

-Binghamton’s streak continues at eight as they defeated Syracuse in a game I was unable to watch (here are the highlights).  Stephane Da Costa celebrated his return to the lineup with a hat trick and a team-leading four points; Silfverberg and Wiercioch had the other goals.  Da Costa‘s line (Prince and Schneider) were all +4 and Ben Bishop earned the win facing23 shots.  The game entered the goofy zone when the B-Sens made it 5-2, with Syracuse goon Eric Neilson earning 27 penalty minutes for attacking Mark Borowiecki wh0 talked about it in the post-game.

-Elmira defeated Trenton 6-2 last night with Cheverie picking up the win while Downing had a three point night and Caporusso picked up an assist.

-WJC Swedish coach Roger Ronnberg has asked the Swedish federation to intervene with Ottawa in the hopes of getting Mika Zibanejad to Ufa.  He said:

It is a big disappointment that Ottawa does not want to release Mika to join the team for the World Juniors. I have asked our federation to intervene and I am confident they will. Having said that, I must focus on the players I have and I can’t let that [Ottawa not releasing Zibanejad] steal energy from my work.

As expected Sens prospect Mikael Vikstrand was named to the team.

-Speaking of the WJC rosters, neither Cody Ceci nor Matt Puempel were invited to Canada’s camp.

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Senators News: December 2nd

-Binghamton faces conference leading Syracuse (13-4-2) this afternoon.  The Crunch are lead by Tyler Johnson (22 points) and backstopped by Dustin Tokarski.

-Highlights of last night’s game are trickling in: watch the slick pass by Silfverberg to set up Pat Cannone; here’s Mark Stone‘s goal.

Chris Wideman was recalled from Elmira, while Dustin Gazley was sent back to the Jackals.  Speaking of Elmira, Darren Kramer was placed on 21-day IR.

-Elmira faces the Trenton Titans again this afternoon.

Brian Cazeneuve wants the NHL All-Star game fixed by having it decide home ice advantage ala MLB.  This is a terrible idea.  The game is meaningless, it will stay meaningless, and a half-assed attempt to make it matter is just going to irritate players (and fans).  If the game has to be played at all (and the NHL will never get rid of it), I’d rather see it played at the end of the season, but that’s just not going to happen.  As things stand I don’t foresee any meaningful changes to the game.

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Senators News: December 1st; Binghamton 7, Adirondack 4

-Binghamton defeated Adirondack last night in a game I was unable to watch, extending their winning streak to seven games.  Ben Bishop made 45 saves and Andre Benoit scored twice with Mark Stone, Pat Cannone, Derek Grant, Mike Hoffman, and Jakob Silfverberg adding singles.  Benoit lead the way with three points and Grant and Eric Gryba finished the night +3.  Full highlights of the game haven’t been posted yet, but here’s Silfverberg‘s goal and Adirondack coach Terry Murray‘s post-game comments.

-Through the month of November (where Binghamton went 8-1-1) Jakob Silfverberg, Andre Benoit, and Tyler Eckford lead the team with 8 points each; Patrick Wiercioch (and Eric Gryba) were each +8.  Among the team’s regulars only Andre Petersson had a rough month (2 points and -5).

-Elmira lost 4-2 to Wheeling last night with Cheverie taking the loss; among B-Sen signee’s Caporusso and Wideman each had assists.  Tonight Elmira faces the 7-9-1 Trenton Titans who are lead by Andy Bohmbach (18 points) and backstopped by Scott Wedgewood.

-Speaking of the Jackals, they traded defenseman Jimmy Martin to Utah.

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)