Philadelphia Flyers
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Takeaways: Phantoms fall to the Syracuse Crunch 3-1 despite strong effort from Aleksei Kolosov
Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/p...1-despite-strong-effort-from-aleksei-kolosov/
The Lehigh Valley Phantoms didn’t muster much offense on Sunday afternoon, losing 3-1 to the visiting Syracuse Crunch and losing both games over the weekend. The loss overshadowed a rather impressive performance by Aleksei Kolosov.
The basics
First period: 16:08- Dylan Duke (Ethan Gauthier, Conor Geekie) (PPG)
Second period: 10:47- Brendan Furry (Gabriel Szturc, Matteo Pietroniro)
Third period: 13:16- Tucker Robertson (Unassisted), 18:45- Mitchell Chafee (Jakob Pelletier)
SOG: 19 (LHV) – 31 (SYR)
Some takeaways
Snowden screed
After losing to the Cleveland Monsters on Saturday night, Phantoms coach John Snowden didn’t mince words regarding the team’s current malaise, particularly the second period which he wasn’t pleased with. Snowden said he was “sick and tired of it,” with nobody wanting to stand up and make a difference. Toss in comments about “gifting” the Monsters three goals and it certainly should’ve provided some bulletin board material to rally around.
The Phantoms had a great chance to take the lead when Anthony Richard beat Crunch goalie Ryan Fanti but not the post. Devin Kaplan had a chance on the rebound but he was denied by Fanti. Lehigh Valley are beginning to mimic the big club as they have a rather difficult time getting the game’s first goal. But perhaps the biggest problem was that Snowden’s comments didn’t seem to galvanize his club. At least not in the opening 10 minutes. And certainly not after the opening 20 as Syracuse had a baker’s dozen while Lehigh Valley had just a pair.
Kyrou, Gendron out
Phantoms defenseman Christian Kyrou and forward Alexis Gendron were both healthy scratches on Sunday afternoon. Whether it was due to poor play or just trying to shake the Phantoms out of their funk was unclear. In their place, the Phantoms dressed forward Sawyer Boulton and defenseman Roman Schmidt.
Phantom power play menace?
Lehigh Valley got the game’s first power play. It took them about a minute to establish control, but couldn’t muster many quality chances. In fact, the Phantoms didn’t register a shot during the man advantage. Meanwhile, defenseman Adam Ginning was called for a slashing infraction he vehemently didn’t agree with. Lehigh Valley — who have had their share of penalty-killing problems — ran into a hot power play in Syracuse. And Ethan Gauthier scored to give the Crunch a 1-0 lead.
Minutes later, it was groundhog day, as Ginning took another penalty in his own end. The Crunch, firing the puck around quite quickly and accurately, didn’t get a second power play goal as the Phantoms held their own. Ginning later on took a huge hit in the second period that knocked him on his backside but he didn’t leave the game.
Late in the second, the Phantoms had a chance with another power play to cut the lead in half but Syracuse had a great passing play that nearly made it 3-0.
Third period comeback
Whether it was the fact Lehigh Valley was playing the second of a back-to-back or just that they couldn’t muster anything, the Phantoms looked somewhat defeated the longer the third period carried on. There was very little creative plays and a lot more dump and chase which Syracuse was more than confident they could fend off.
However, just when all hope seemed lost, Lehigh Valley got on the scoreboard when Tucker Robertson scored a short-handed goal. The Phantoms then pulled the goalie for an extra attacker which just over two minutes to go. But Syracuse but the game on ice when Mitchell Chafee potted an empty-netter to make it a 3-1 lead with 75 seconds to go. To throw salt into the wound a bit, former Flyer Jakob Pelletier got the primary assist on the Crunch’s third goal.
Alex Bump finding his footing
Alex Bump made his return on Saturday night and didn’t have a great night. Well, on Sunday afternoon it wasn’t much better. Outside of a glorious chance late in the second that Fanti stoned him on to keep it 2-0, Bump wasn’t really much of a factor overall. In the third Bump got into a tussle with Lucas Mercuri of the Crunch. Neither one delivered many punches. It just appeared that frustration had taken over given the last five periods and change of hockey. The Phantoms ended up with a power play but Kolosov made a game-saving stop on a breakaway by Gabriel Szturc.
Kolosov gets the nod
Aleksei Kolosov has had a rough go after being deemed one of the American Hockey League players of the week some weeks back. Heading into the game he had lost his last four. Kolosov saw the puck cross the line but after a whistle had blown. The Syracuse forward was approached by Garrett Wilson who didn’t appreciate the move but nobody dropped the gloves. Kolosov was rather busy starting off as Syracuse had six shots in the first six minutes, the best of them being a wrist shot by Mitchell Chafee Kolosov swallowed up. He also had a huge miscue on what should’ve been a simple covering, nearly giving Brendan Furry a gimme.
The goaltender probably had one of his better periods in the first and followed it up with a decent second period, including getting a piece of a Dylan Duke shot around the halfway point of the second. Overall Kolosov had a decent game, keeping the Phantoms in it despite the team not really creating a lot of offensive prowess. Overall, Kolosov stopped 29 of 31 shots on the afternoon for one of his better performances of late.
Second period message sent
The Phantoms opened the second period like a house on fire, flying and having some quality scoring chances. Zayde Wisdom had a great opportunity which Fanti got a piece of. And Alex Bump led a rush up ice which was a start contrast to what Lehigh Valley offered up most of the first period. It’ not that the Phantoms were generating a ton of shots, but there seemed to be a lot more jump in their step. To say they looked engaged compared to period one would be an understatement. However, by the halfway point of regulation, the Phantoms still only had six shots on goal.
Sadly, the Crunch doubled their league soon afterwards when Brendan Furry beat Kolosov to make it 2-0. For a team that has been having problems burying chances, the two-goal deficit seemed more like a four-goal lead for Syracuse. A three-on-two chance for Lehigh Valley saw Maxence Guenette barge in on Fanti but unable to capitalize.
Source
Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/p...1-despite-strong-effort-from-aleksei-kolosov/