Blues vs. Flyers
Back to School
"It's
textbook," Blues defenseman Scott Gelin says in response to teammate Adam Berger’s
stepping into a Flyer as the former poked the puck off the latter’s stick.
Classic AMHL interference.
Late in the
second period, the teams tied at two, Flyers D-man Michael Moore conducts a
power play clinic.
The
Tonawanda (NY) native and Buffalo Sabres fan channels Tim Horton
and Phil
Housley as he mans the point. Moore fires a low shot, and faster than you
can say “power play goal,” the Flyers lead.
Less than two
minutes later, Moore targets another low shot on net. Rebound. Scramble for the
puck. Goal. 4–2 Flyers.
Up 5–2 in
the third period, Moore—an eight year AMHL veteran—crosses the Blues’ blueline,
dishes a neat pass to Vincent MacNutt, a right hand shot on the off wing. The AMHL
rookie shoots glove side, just inside the post. Score!
Mike Moore: Back Row (Second from Right) |
The Blues insert
themselves on the syllabus, converting a turnover into a goal—a shorty by Zach
Zacharakis—but the Flyers keep the tuition and win the Koffey Cup, 6–3.
Wednesday, August 22, 2012
Rangers vs. CanadiensThe Spirit of Stuart Smalley
“We’re
better than them…,” Rangers defenseman Mike DeLeo says to his teammates before
the third period against the Canadiens, the score 3–3.
“…And by
golly, people like us,” the AMHL Photographer completes the affirmation. “Isn’t
that Stuart Smalley?”
Sort of.
The Rangers
lost their first six regular-season games and must have wondered what it would
take for them to win. “That’s just stinkin’ thinkin’,” Stuart Smalley would
say.
With DeLeo’s
ever-abundant upbeat presence and the emergence of rookie sensation Mark Cavanagh
(23G, 14A), the Rangers turned a despairing season into Koffey Cup contention.
But down 1-3
against the Canadiens, the Rangers again encountered adversity. “Trace it. Face
it. Erase it,” Smalley would say.
Goals by Larry
“Breakaway” Brown (courtesy of DeLeo’s long pass), and Cavanagh bring us to this
second intermission, where they and the other six Rangers listen to their
leader. Will the Rangers believe DeLeo or permit thoughts of their dubious
beginnings to run amok?
And what
about the Canadiens? Collapse or reclaim their team-esteem?
Midway
through the third period, the score still three-all, the Blueshirts and Les Habitants battle their doubts and
each other. The Rangers kill a penalty. Confidence: the key to success.
Can the
Canadiens dispel their dismay and summon the spirit of a Saturday Night Live
skit?
With just
over seven minutes remaining, the hockey gods answer: DeLeo—skating right to
left across your AMHL imagination—steals the puck at the Canadiens’ blueline,
drives below the far circle, skates toward the crease, and then beats the
goalie.
The Rangers
convert this blossoming confidence into another goal and realize they are on
the (b)rink of victory.
Mike DeLeo: Front Row (Second from Right) |
The Rangers
pose for their championship photo and listen as the hockey gods repeat the
underdog’s mantra, this final Stuartsmalleyism, modified for the Koffey Cup
winners: “We’re the Rangers, doggone it, and people like us.”
Bruins vs. Capitals
ALL CAPS
It’s ALL
CAPS as the third period is underway and the Bruins lead, 3–2. Bruins netminder
Neal Hesler makes a save. His teammates clear the puck. Icing.
The game resumes:
Feisty play, fraught with frustration foisted upon the referees, prompts this
comment from the AMHL Photographer: ““Matt,” she says, referring to the iconic
AMHL arbiter, “must love these games.”
The gruff
and disgruntled combatants, their language as foul as the stench seeping from
their hockey sweaters and sweaty hockey socks, continue. Blades slicing ice.
Bodies crashing the net and into each other.
Hesler and
his counterpart, Dan Barros, are on their A games. The Bruins still lead, 3–2, when
Capitals forward Aaron Sherman—skating near to far across the Bruins’
blueline—accepts a pass, beats a would-be defender along the boards, and then
bears down on Hesler. The slimmed-down Sherman cuts toward the crease and scores.
3–3.
To OT, where
mayhem awaits: The three-on-three format, a partial power-play, time-outs.
Confusion. And ultimately no scoring after five minutes.
To the
shoot-out. In a championship game? How many players will participate? How many
goals to win? Best of five, the referees decide, and the Bruins will go first.
1.
Kevin Leverone (B’s): Barros says no. (0–0)
2.
Mike Losier (CAPS): Hesler slams the door. (0–0)3. Kevin Daigle (B): Barros won’t budge. (0–0)
4. Dave Losier (C): No juke and jive, just a shot…and a GOAL. (0–1)
5. Ben Budds (B): He skates, he stops…he watches Barros poke the puck away. (0–1)
6. Paul Webster (C): Alternating speeds… shifty and nifty…GOAL! (0–2)
7. Mike DeLeo (B): He must score. He does score. (1–2)
8. Aaron Sherman (C): Mr. Calm. Mr. Master the Moment. Goal. CAPS WIN THE CUP!
Mr. Master the Moment: Front Row (Second from Left) |
Friday, August 24
Stars vs. KingsIt’s Not Easy Being Green
Hi Ho hockey
fans. Kermit the Frog, guest amphibian/blogger, here at the, uh, hockey and
donut site.
It’s, uh, not
easy being me, as you know. And any Muppet would tell you it’s not
any picnic being the AMHL Stars. Not this morning anyway. Of course I’d prefer them
to win, their primary color being what it is and all. But it’s better to be
wearing white, grey and purple, folks.
The Kings have been a royal pain (go ahead, you old
geezers, guffaw) in the neck for the Stars. Tim Donahue, Friday’s perennial
points leader, and Scott Kessler, the normally smooth–as–Smuckers
(original)–peanut–butter forward, have lost control of the puck more times than
Fozzie Bear has delivered a wonderful pun-liner. Waka waka.
And any
momentum the Stars generate, well, they just can’t sustain the green energy.
Instead,
it’s the Kings who, like Miss Piggy, are hogging the spotlight: the Mike
Statkuses, T.J. Uminas, and the Jim Reichhelds—the AMHL dreamers who watch the
time on the clock like it’s a rainbow, connecting the joy of imminent victory
and the promise of donuts.
Ah, those
donuts affixed to the Koffey Cup…they are a sight to be seen…better to be a
King…than to be wearing green.
Not Pictured: The Banana King |
1 comment:
The AMHL is lucky to have you pen their ongoing narrative with such care and fairness.
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