For those of you that missed it, yesterday Bill Daly replied with an answer of "yes" when asked if there would be a season. Tough to take anyone involved with the CBA process at their word but that's the kind of thing that passes for good news these days.
Here's hoping they can return to the bargaining table in the near future.
In the meantime, another well crafted post game wrap up from our man on the scene in Binghamton. Introducing, Mr. Don Rieber. What have ya got for us today, Don?
B-Sens Comeback Leaves Penguins in Deep Freeze
The Binghamton Senators rallied from three goals down Wednesday night, scoring four unanswered goals in the final 16 minutes and skating past the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins 4-3, in front of 2,789 at the Broome County Arena.
“The first period we weren’t ready to play the game and they were,” said Binghamton coach Luke Richardson. “In the second when we tried to turn it on, that’s the problem when you’re not ready at the start, it doesn’t just turn on.”
The third period was a different story, as Shane Prince led the comeback brigade with two goals. Stephane Da Costa and Patrick Wiercioch dished out two assists each.
Wilkes-Barre/Scranton goalie Jeff Zatkoff was rolling along nicely, facing only 14 shots in the first 40 minutes. Binghamton turned the tables in the third, throwing the same number of shots his way in the third period alone.
It was Zatkoff’s first game back in about a week due to injury. He made 24 saves in the losing effort.
“After the first period the coaching staff was not happy and the players weren’t either,” Richardson said. “I’m sure they (Wilkes-Barre) were expecting a blast — and they got it.”
At the other end, Binghamton netminder Robin Lehner was under fire all night long, facing 33 shots in the first two periods and looked for all the world like he was going to lose his third straight game.
The Penguins were buzzing early, testing Lehner immediately. He made a handful of nice saves, before giving up a big rebound of a pad stop that Warren Peters knocked home, giving the Penguins a 1-0 lead 5:49 into the game.
After the goal, some pushing and shoving resulted in a power play chance for Binghamton but Zatkoff shut the door on a few good chances.
Bobby Farnham made it a 2-0 with 1:51 to go in the period, ripping one off the post and past Lehner from the left circle.
With 21.1 seconds left, Binghamton winger Hugh Jessiman was checked into the boards by Eric Tangradi. The hit looked good, but Jessiman took exception and went after Tangradi. Both men went down to the ice, with Jessiman punching him multiple times as the linesmen tried to break it up.
When all was said and done, Jessiman was hit with a two-minute instigator penalty, five for fighting, a 10-minute misconduct and a game misconduct. The end result was a seven minute power play, 6:39 of that carried over into the second period.
“We just weren’t ready to play in that first period and he’s a big physical guy and he took his frustration out,” said Richardson of Jessiman. “Sometimes you can’t blame a guy, but early in the game you can’t put your team in that situation. Jess felt bad and he’s been a big character guy for us. I’m sure he’ll buy the guys’ lunch for getting that win back for him.”
The penalty killing unit for Binghamton continued their stellar play, killing off all but 2:04 of that penalty. That’s when Wilkes-Barre’s Paul Thompson picked up a tripping call and made it a 4-on-4 situation.
“The penalty kill has been great and that’s sacrifice and hard work. It’s not an easy job, but it sure can be rewarding when you kill of penalties like we do.”
That said, the Penguins took advantage of the open ice on the 4-on-4 and Philip Samuelsson caught Lehner going one way, as the shot went the other and with 14:12 left in the second, it was 3-0.
The B-Sens looked like a different team as the third period got underway. They were able to keep the puck in the offensive zone and were rewarded when Silfverberg skated in and shot one that off Zatkoff got his arm on, but didn’t stop. That made it 3-1 with 16:08 to go. For Silfverberg, it was his team leading ninth goal of the season.
On the next shift, Zatkoff made a great diving save on a shot by Chris Wideman.
A penalty on Wilkes-Barre’s Brian Strait gave Binghamton their third power play moments later. It took just 20 seconds for Prince to roof one over Zatkoff. The play was reviewed, as the puck went in and came out quickly. After a somewhat lengthy review, the goal was upheld and in a span of 59 seconds, it was 3-2.
“That gave us a lift and I think it took a little bit of the wind out of their sails,” said Richardson of the second goal. “We kept the momentum building and played a real solid third period.”
Patrick Wiercioch got things started on the tying goal for Binghamton, when he let a low shot go from the slot that Zatkoff looked to have a play on, but Jean-Gabriel Pageau tipped it home, making it 3-3 with 4:42 left.
“Pageau has been a real solid player for us all year,” said Richardson. “His role offensively diminished a bit to more of a defensive and penalty killing role, but he works his butt off and I was really happy to see him get that goal.”
Prince got the game winner 1:57 later when Cole Schneider sent a backhand pass onto his stick and he shot it by Zatkoff, making it 4-3 and completing the B-Sens improbable comeback and sending the Penguins to their sixth straight loss (0-4-1-1).
He can really snap the puck home,” said Richardson of Prince. “You know if he gets to that slot area, where he scored both goals, he can rip it home.”
For Binghamton this is their second win in a row over Wilkes-Barre. Binghamton came away with a 3-1 win last Friday.
“This win says a lot,” Prince said. “Not many teams would be able to come back from a 3-0 deficit like that. It feels good to help out the team, especially in a game like that. It’s awesome for our boys to come out in the third like that.”
“It’s a character win, they deserve the credit,” Richardson said after Wednesday’s game. “It’s not always gonna be there. There’s still a lesson to be learned in not being prepared and ready to play at the start of the game and we talked about it briefly after the game, but they wanted to celebrate and they deserve to do that.”
Lehner bounced back to finish with 36 saves and moves to 9-4-1 on the season. Zatkoff dropped to 10-7.
Kids. Never give up. Go Bingo Go!!
For a minute and thirty one seconds, I forgot about the NHL lockout.
boooya!
Firstrowsports has it listed, I am at work so I can't see if it actually works or not...
http://www.thefirstrow.eu/watch/159739/1/watch-canada-vs-finland.html
Stéphane Da Costa = Joé Juneau 2.0 !
So I get him into bed, crack a beer, relax and tune in to hear the remainder of the game. Like a great Christmas Present being torn open, the game is now tied 3 - 3. As I continue to listen I hear the game winning goal by Prince. I have to say, I don't remember being that excited in ALONG long time. Thank you BSens!
MAN - the Bingo play-by-play guy (Grady Whittenburg ?) is really, really good.
I felt like I was listening to a 7th game of a Stanley Cup final.
NOT GOOD!
Guess now we know why his name kept popping up in trade scenarios.
Where was this reported? if its true, Now we can all understand why the stories have been few and far between in relation to his health. Keeping it under wraps and out of the media is important, but even in a trade scenario they would have to disclose that, so it may be a reason why we had no bites even with his name in the mix. Hard to say really.
Senators are still just saying health issues but this certainly looks like it's concussion related.
The ridiculous reasons for his absence have been piling up lately and it was pretty clear something else was going on.
So Team Canada takes one on the chin against Finland, edged 3 to 2. Can anyone tell me if they ran the expected tournament lineups?
Maybe they should've included Ceci and Puempel. BUT, as usual, Alberta and Toronto screw Sens players (think Spezza in the Worlds, CBC/TSN etc in the media, and now on the world Juniors).
Tough to cheer for a team that consistently screws over your hometown players.
OR
Maybe the Finland team had a photo of Turris in a team Canada jersey in their locker room.
Either way, I hope Glenn Healy has an awful holiday season. Up yours Healy.
~Peluso
Wel, done.
Maybe put them in the tab reserved for Yost way back when lol
Great comeback win.. Lehner still looks a little shaky the last few games since he's been back from having his wisdom teeth out... Hopefully he is soon back to his usual self.. amazing...
I agree... hopefully you continue with the weekly B-Sens update even if the NHL/NHLPA get off their egos and get a deal done..
Could have gotten Pronger instead of Daigle
My hindsight is perfect too
Sure is.
Or Doug Hamilton
I also wouldv'e been extremely happy with Hamilton ( he's a future top two or top one defender).
I understand that we needed an injection of offensive talent but the thing that concerns me w Zbad (concussions aside) is that he's never really put up impressive numbers anywhere to justify his draft status. I'd love nothing more than to see him light it up and he seems to have a great attitude w a complete game, I'm just not sure that we got the value for our pick.
I think Zibanejad is just one of those players, that will become a really good player within a couple of years rather than immediately.
I actually compare him most to Evander Kane, he was a power forward that was drafted fourth overall, however his first two seasons in the NHL were not impressive at all, and last year he all of suddenly scored 30 goals, before that he only had 14 and 19 goals.
I think Zibanejad may end up following the same development path, He may become a goal scorer once he figures out the tricks to the game and everything.
he gets healthy he should get better and better.Trust in Sens scouts.
Agreed, I think a lot more people are paying attention to bingo nowdays, and these detailed reports are great! :)
Or maybe he'll start his own blog BingoSenschirp. com haha
Regarding Zibanejad, I think by now we've all heard the interview where Tim Murray admitted Dougie Hamilton was higher on their scouting list, however at the time we were deep on D and lacking scorers in our prospect system. I do however agree that Couturier would have been a more guaranteed pick, but really after the top 2 it was a roll of the dice on who would have a better ceiling long term.
Let's not forget though, Zibanejad is still very young and we may not know for 3-5+ years what he could bring at the NHL level.
Also, if they had drafted Couturier, we probably would never have seen the awesomeness that is Kyle Turris!
Agreed, agreed, and agreed...
People are often too hung-up on "if we had picked this prospect, we'd have a better team", but there are so many "what-if" that you can't predict this. What if we traded that draft pick, then this would of happened, and that would of happened, and he wouldn't of gotten injured, and we never would of discoverd that other guy we brought up, and changed our rankings so we drafted higher than we should of, but we traded that for those 2 picks...etc...e tc...you can't get hung up on the small things.
though skipping marc staal sucks :(
HOPE YOU ALL HAVE A GOOD HOLIDAY SEASONS AND GET HOCKEY BACK SOON!!!
Cheers everyone, and argue with you after the holidays!
I agree it sucks, but you get no mulligans in this department. Usually after the top 3, the rest of the first round is basically a crap shoot. Close your eyes, roll the dice and pray your scouts have done a great job deciding who fits your system. But I can't say I've been disappointed with the drafting since the BM era. Go Sens Go!!!
And if I'm not back before next week, Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays to all and hug your families. Cheers and G`day folks!
What he mentions is what the NHL would/could do if the season came back as a short one, to win the fans over going into next season. He talks about how in the last lockout, fans were treated to the shootout and two-line passes. So he mentions an idea of having all 30 teams make the playoffs. First though, this blows. But if you think about it, that would be a great idea. Teams who suffer get that one chance to make a point. In the end, what does it matter anyway, whoever wins will always be frowned upon, as people will not consider it a true season anyway. Could you imagine what Leafs fans would say if Ottawa won it, or vice versa? "It wasn't a real season, it doesn't count".
So why not let everyone have a run at the cup and just use the short season to determine playoff positions? You could even consider the draft order via the playoffs, or just leave it as a lottery to be fair. I could think of much worse things? At least this way, we'll get more hockey and a MUCH longer post season :)
Cheers
Also Canada plays Sweden In exhibition tomorrow at 9am
Is now working :)
LOL
Silfverberg has now scored in three straight games. After a slow start to the season he's finally proving why he's so highly touted