Barracuda edge Gulls 4-3, take commanding 3-1 series lead

Photo credit: San Jose Barracuda Twitter (@sjbarracuda)

By: Ana Kieu

SAN DIEGO — The San Jose Barracuda took a commanding 3-1 series lead with a 4-3 victory over the San Diego Gulls in Game 4 at Valley View Casino Center on Friday night.

The Barracuda were apparently ready to continue their success as they grabbed a 2-0 lead in the opening period on power-play goals by Barclay Goodrow (3) and Ryan Carpenter (7). Goodrow beat Jhonas Enroth five-hole at the 12:44 mark and Carpenter put home a rebound a little over six minutes later.

Shots were tied at nine apiece and the Barracuda led the Gulls 2-0 after 20 minutes of play.

Colin Blackwell made it 3-0 Barracuda at 11:30 of the second period. Blackwell scored his second goal in two postseason games.

The Gulls ended Troy Grosenick’s shutout bid at 13:29. Mitch Hults finished a dish from Spencer Abbott for his first of the playoffs.

Tim Heed netted third of the playoffs on a shot from the point to extend the Barracuda’s lead to 4-1 with 4:02 left in the second.

Shots were tied at 19 apiece and the Barracuda carried a 4-1 lead over the Gulls to the locker room after 40 minutes of play. Enroth left the game after allowing four goals on 19 shots. Dustin Tokarski stopped all seven shots he faced in relief of Enroth.

The Gulls responded with two unanswered goals in the third period and their last-minute comeback was great, but they ultimately fell short.

Nic Kerdiles deflected a shot from the point for his fourth of the playoffs just 3:35 into the period.

The Gulls pulled Tokarski for an extra attacker late in the period. Sam Carrick then made it a one-goal game on a play that was originally set up by Kalle Kossila.

The Barracuda beat the Gulls 4-1. Grosenick finished with 29 shots for San Jose.

The Barracuda lead the best-of-seven series 3-1.

Notes
Ryan Carpenter continued his red-hot postseason. On Wednesday, he recorded an assist and is now first in the AHL in points (11), goals (6), plus-minus (+9) and game-winning goals (2). In 16 career Calder Cup playoff games, he has 15 points, eight penalty minutes and a plus-13 rating. He recorded four points in seven games against the Gulls during the regular season.

On Wednesday, Timo Meier became the Barracuda’s hero with an overtime winner at 17:40 of the overtime period. He’s third on the Barracuda in points (6) during the playoffs and is first in the AHL with game-winning goals (2) and shots (31). He won a QMJHL Championship and appeared in a Memorial Cup Final with the Rouyn-Noranda Huskies in 2015-16.

Buddy Robinson has been a force throughout the playoffs. He totaled eight points, four penalty minutes and a plus-five rating. After being acquired in a trade with the Ottawa Senators in January, he collected 19 points, 53 penalty minutes and a plus-five rating in 33 games with the Barracuda. Before his acquisition, he recorded 12 points, 18 penalty minutes and a plus-four rating in 33 games with the Binghamton Senators. Before 2017, he had zero points in six career Calder Cup playoff games.

After signing a two-year entry-level deal with the San Jose Sharks in late March, Nick DeSimone has impressed from the get-go. He netted his first pro goal for the Barracuda in his fourth game and has five points in eight playoff games, tying for the team lead among defensemen during the postseason. He opened up the scoring for the Barracuda in their 5-1 win over the Gulls in Game 2.

Zack Stortini is by far the Barracuda’s most experienced postseason player. He skated in 61 Calder Cup playoff games over his 12-year career. He won a Calder Cup with the Hamilton Bulldogs in 2007.

The Barracuda fell down three separate times on Wednesday, but managed to force overtime before taking the series lead with a 4-3 victory over the Gulls at Valley View Casino Center on Wednesday night. Max Jones opened up the scoring for San Diego before fellow rookie Kevin Labanc tied the score for San Jose less than a minute later. In the second period, Sam Carrick made it 2-1 Gulls before Colin Blackwell evened the score at 2-2 in the third period. Spencer Abbott shifted the pressure back on San Jose in the final period, but Danny O’Regan forced the extra period at the 1:01 mark of the third with San Jose’s net pull. In the extra period, Timo Meier became the hero at 17:40 of overtime.

Up Next
Both teams return to action Saturday for Game 5 at 7:00 p.m. PST on AHL Live and AM 1220 KDOW.

Timo Meier’s OT goal lifts Barracuda to 4-3 win over Gulls for 2-1 series lead

Photo credit: San Jose Barracuda Twitter (@sjbarracuda)

By: Ana Kieu

SAN DIEGO — Timo Meier scored 2:40 into overtime to lift the San Jose Barracuda to a 4-3 overtime victory over the San Diego Gulls in Game 3 at Valley View Casino Center on Wednesday night.

Max Jones had something to celebrate as he scored his first professional goal just 3:28 into the opening period. Jones received the puck from Jaycob Megna on a play that was originally set up by Spencer Abbott.

The bank was apparently open late because Kevin Labanc stuffed the puck past Jhonas Enroth for the game-tying goal — his second of the playoffs — with 2:35 left in the period.

Both teams were tied 1-1 after 20 minutes of play. The Gulls outshot the Barracuda 11-3.

The Gulls took a 2-1 lead at 12:36 of the second period after Sam Carrick went top-shelf on Troy Grosenick for his third of the playoffs.

Shots were 26-23 in favor of the Gulls, who carried a 2-1 lead to the locker room after 40 minutes of play.

Colin Blackwell scored his first Calder Cup Playoff goal to extend the Barracuda’s lead to 3-1 at 12:49 of the third period.

Abbott netted his first Calder Cup Playoff goal to put the Gulls ahead 3-2 with 3:20 left in the period.

Danny O’Regan tied the score 3-3 with his third of the playoffs with just 1:01 remaining in regulation.

The game ended up being decided in an overtime period after the scoreboard was stuck in a 3-3 tie through 60 minutes of play. Timo Meier picked up a pass from Buddy Robinson and skated to the net to tally the game-winning goal — his third of the playoffs — and lift the Barracuda to a 4-3 overtime win over the Gulls. Grosenick stopped 32 of 35 shots in a San Jose victory while Enroth made 45 saves in a losing effort for San Diego.

The Barracuda lead the best-of-seven series 2-1.

Notes
On Wednesday, the Barracuda and Gulls shifted their best-of-seven series to Southern California, all knotted up at one apiece. During the regular season San Jose went 5-3-1-1 against San Diego at home, but 0-3-1-1 on the road.

Ryan Carpenter continued his red-hot postseason with his AHL-leading sixth goal on Saturday. He also added an assist. He’s first in points (10), plus-minus (+8) and game-winning goals (2). In 15 career Calder Cup playoff games, he has 15 points (eight goals, seven assists), eight penalty minutes and a plus-13 rating. He recorded four points in seven games against the Gulls during the regular season.

After going just 1-for-22 on the power play in their opening series against the Stockton Heat, the Barracuda are just 3-for-8 on the man-advantage versus the Gulls. San Jose finished the regular season with the AHL’s second-best power play unit (23.8%).

Buddy Robinson combined for six points (four goals, two assists), four penalty minutes and a plus-three rating in the playoffs so far. After being acquired in a trade with the Ottawa Senators in January, he collected 19 points (10 goals, nine assists), 53 penalty minutes and a plus-five rating in 33 games with the Barracuda. Before his acquisition, he recorded 12 points (seven goals, five assists), 18 penalty minutes and a plus-four rating in 33 games with the Binghamton Senators. Prior to 2017, he totaled zero points in six career Calder Cup playoff games.

After signing a two-year entry-level deal with the San Jose Sharks in late March, Nick DeSimone netted his first professional goal for the Barracuda in his fourth game. He has five points (one goal, four assists) in seven playoff games, tying for the team lead among defensemen during the postseason. He opened up the scoring for San Jose in their 5-1 win over the Gulls on Saturday.

Zack Stortini is the Barracuda’s most experienced postseason player thus far. He skated in 61 Calder Cup playoff games over his 12-year career. He won a Calder Cup with the Hamilton Bulldogs in 2007.

The Barracuda netted five goals and rolled to a 5-1 win over the Gulls at SAP Center on Saturday night, tying the second round series at 1-1. DeSimone and Carpenter each scored for San Jose in the first and Buddy Robinson made it a 3-0 game early in the second period. After Sam Carrick got the Gulls on the board, Adam Helewka cashed in on the power play to extend the lead to 4-1 in the second. Barclay Goodrow sealed the victory just 40 seconds into the third. Troy Grosenick picked up the win, making 31 saves on 32 shots. Jhonas Enroth allowed five goals on 35 shots, lasting 46:46.

Up Next
Both teams return to action Friday night in Game 4 at 7:00 p.m. PST on AHL Live and AM 1220 KDOW.

San Jose Barracuda AHL Calder Cup Playoff podcast with Ana Kieu: Series moves to San Diego tied 1-1 it’s still anyones second round to win

sjbarracuda.com photo: The San Jose Barracuda breath easier after tying up the AHL Calder Cup Series last Saturday against the San Diego Gulls at SAP Center. The Barracuda in celebration here as the series moves back to San Diego for three games starting Wednesday night

On the Barracuda podcast with Ana:

1. The Barracuda outshot the Gulls 38-16 but lost 3-2 in overtime in Game 1 of the best-of-seven Pacific Division Final series on Friday night.

2. Ana walks us through Kevin Roy’s game-winner in overtime on Friday.

3. The Barracuda suffered a playoff loss to the Gulls, but they bounced back in Game 2 with a 5-1 win on Saturday night.

4. Ana tells us more about the Barracuda’s 5-1 win over the Gulls in Game 2 on Saturday.

5. What does Ana have to say about the goaltending?

6. The Barracuda head to San Diego for the next couple of games. What do they have to do in order to prepare for the road playoff games?

Ana Kieu covers Barracuda hockey throughout the AHL Calder Cup playoffs for http://www.sportsadioservice.com

 

 

Barracuda even series with big 5-1 win over Gulls in Game 2

Photo credit: San Jose Barracuda Twitter (@sjbarracuda)

Barracuda even series 1-1 with big 5-1 win over Gulls 5-1 in Game 2

By: Ana Kieu

SAN JOSE — The San Jose Barracuda crushed the San Diego Gulls 5-1 in Game 2 at SAP Center on Saturday night.

The Barracuda looked to even their best-of-seven series with the Gulls after a 3-2 overtime loss on Friday night in the first game of the Pacific Division Final. During the regular season, San Jose went 5-3-1-1 against San Diego and 5-0 at SAP Center.

The Barracuda took an early 1-0 lead just 4:31 into the opening period. Timo Meier carried the puck into the zone and Nick DeSimone blasted it home for his first goal of the playoffs.

“We tried to get a break out there and Timo (Meier) came in,” DeSimone recalled. “He tried to take a backhander, but it got blocked and I was just following it up. I tried to get it out of break Scott Sabourin went to the box after receiving a penalty for goaltender inference at 14:45.

The Barracuda made it a 2-0 game on the man advantage at 12:47 of the period. Ryan Carpenter fired a shot far side from the faceoff spot for a power-play goal and his sixth of the playoffs.

The Barracuda outshot the Gulls 14-12 and led 2-0 after 20 minutes of play.

Meier recorded his second assist of the game as he sent a pass to Buddy Robinson, who fired it past Jhonas Enroth for his fourth goal of the playoffs, extending the Barracuda’s lead to 3-0 just 1:10 into the second period.

The Gulls ended the Barracuda’s shutout bid at 16:07. Sam Carrick scored his second goal of the playoffs. Carrick’s shot went through traffic and into the net past a seemingly oblivious Troy Grosenick who was unable to locate the puck.

Carrick was called for hooking with 5:31 left in the period. Adam Helewka put the puck in the net for a power-play goal — his first of the playoffs — but the play was under review. The officials confirmed it was a good goal and the Barracuda expanded their lead to 4-1 with 3:45 left.

“Special teams are important,” defenseman Julius Bergman said. “We got the win tonight, but of course, the PK (penalty kill) is also important. You win games with special teams.”

Grosenick made an incredible glove save to block a promising shot by the Gulls in the final seconds of the period.

The Barracuda outshot the Gulls 28-18 and brought a 4-1 lead to the locker room after 40 minutes of play.

The Barracuda increased their lead to 5-1 just 40 seconds into the third period. Barclay Goodrow collected a pass from Ryan Carpenter, skated down the slot and deposited the puck into the net for his second goal of the playoffs.

The action intensified in the period as two scuffles occurred. First, Marcus Sorensen dropped the gloves with Tyler Morley. As a result, both players received roughing penalties. Second, Carrick and Mirco Mueller were involved in a fight. Carrick was called for slashing while Mueller sat in the box for roughing.

The Barracuda had this game from start to finish. They beat the Gulls 5-1. Grosenick finished with 31 saves for San Jose. Enroth made 30 saves in a losing effort for San Diego.

“They got home ice from us, so we gotta go down there and win a couple of games,” head coach Roy Sommer responded when asked about the biggest challenges about playoff road games. “It’s a tough building to play in. They play different down there than they play up here. We’ve had really good success against them this year at home and even last year, but down there, we haven’t had a lot so we’re gonna have to try…It’s the playoffs so the guys are ready. We’ll take the challenge down there.”

Notes
During the regular season, three of the Barracuda’s five wins over the Gulls at home came through the shutout and San Jose outscored San Diego 15-4 in those five games. The Barracuda possessed the AHL’s best home winning percentage during the regular season and are 3-3 all-time at home during the playoffs.

Ryan Carpenter continued his red-hot postseason, netting his AHL leading fifth goal on Friday. He’s also first in points and plus-minus. He has 13 points, six penalty minutes and a plus-12 rating in 14 Calder Cup playoff games. He recorded four points in seven games against the Gulls during the regular season.

During the regular season, the Barracuda were first in shorthanded goals with 14 and finished with the eighth-best penalty kill at 83.7%. San Jose’s power play went just 1-for-22 in round one at 4.5%, but they scored a pair of short-handed goals including a game-winner down a man in a 2-1 overtime win in a decisive game five against the Stockton Heat on Tuesday night.

Buddy Robinson contributed to the Barracuda’s success in the first round. He totaled five points, two penalty minutes and a plus-four rating in five games. After being acquired in a trade with the Ottawa Senators in January, he collected 19 points, 53 penalty minutes and a plus-five rating in 33 games rating after recording just 12 points, 18 penalty minutes and a plus-four rating in 33 games with the Binghamton Senators. Prior to 2017, he totaled zero points in 6 career Calder Cup playoff games.

Troy Grosenick submitted a career regular season. He went 30-10-7 and accumulated 10 shutouts along with a 2.04 goals-against average and .926 save percentage and went on to receive the Baz Bastien Memorial Award as the AHL’s most outstanding goaltender. He went 5-3-1 with a 2.46 goals-against, .914 save percentage and three shutouts in 10 games played against the Gulls. He’s 4-3 with a 2.74 goals-against and a .897 save percentage in nine career Calder Cup playoff games.

Zack Stortini is by far the Barracuda’s most experienced postseason player. He skated in 61 Calder Cup playoff games over his 12-year career. He won a Calder Cup with the Hamilton Bulldogs in 2007.

Up Next
The best-of-seven series will shift to Valley View Casino Center for Game 3 Wednesday at 7:00 p.m. PST on AHL Live and AM 1220 KDOW.

Barracuda drop 3-2 OT decision to Gulls in Game 1

Photo credit: San Jose Barracuda Twitter (@sjbarracuda)

By: Ana Kieu

SAN JOSE — The San Jose Barracuda dropped a 3-2 overtime decision to the San Diego Gulls in Game 1 of a Division Final series at SAP Center on Friday night.

The Barracuda dominated in the opening period. They held the Gulls shotless until the 12:48 mark.

The Barracuda also struck first on the power play. Sam Carrick was called for hooking at 10:45. Shortly after, Joakim Ryan accepted a pass from Danny O’Regan and put it into the Gulls’ net, beating Jhonas Enroth for his third goal of the playoffs.

The Gulls responded with a power-play goal to tie the game 1-1 with 2:14 left in the period. First, Tim Heed was called for tripping. Then, Ryan Carpenter went to the box for hooking. Kalle Kossila took a pass from Kevin Roy and fired a long-range wrist shot past Troy Grosenick for his second goal of the playoffs.

Both teams were tied at one apiece after 20 minutes. The Barracuda outshot the Gulls 14-2.

The Barracuda surrendered just one even strength shot on goal in the second period.

Yet, the game remained in a 1-1 deadlock as the Barracuda outshot the Gulls 26-10.

The Barracuda took a 2-1 lead with 7:52 left in the third period. John McCarthy set up Carpenter, who skated down the middle and tipped the puck into the net past Enroth for his fifth goal of the playoffs.

“Yeah it’s tough, but we can’t dwell on it too much,” Carpenter said when asked about the tough loss. “We played pretty well, but I guess the team hung around and had some good players that capitalized on their chances.”

Things got chippy late in the period as Marcus Sorensen dropped the gloves with Zac Larraza for a fight. As a result, both players received and served roughing penalties.

“I think we played pretty good,” Sorensen commented. “There were many shots to the net. We probably to be around the net more.”

The Gulls weren’t done yet. They tied the game 2-2 with 3:56 left in regulation when Nate Guenin blasted a wrist shot from the blue line that found its way through traffic for his first goal of the playoffs.

Fans in the arena received a treat of free hockey as Guenin’s game-tying goal forced the contest into overtime.

The game was in favor of the Gulls as Roy scored the game-winning goal just 36 seconds into overtime to lift his team to a 3-2 victory over the Barracuda in Game 1.

The Gulls lead the best-of-seven series 1-0. Enroth finished with 36 saves for San Diego whereas

Grosenick made 13 saves in a losing effort for San Jose.

“If you look at it, I think they had six scoring chances and three goals,” Barracuda head coach Roy Sommer recalled. “I think the biggest thing is that we gotta get to (Jhonas) Enroth…Look at the last series against the Ontario Reign. He was the difference.”

Notes
During the regular season, the Barracuda went 5-3-1-1 against the Gulls and a perfect 5-0 at SAP Center.

Three of the Barracuda’s five wins over the Gulls at home were shutouts. San Jose outscored San Diego 15-4 in those five games. The Barracuda had the AHL’s best home-winning percentage during the regular season and are 3-2 all-time at home during the playoffs.

Ryan dominated in the Barracuda’s first-round series against the Stockton Heat. He recorded seven points (four goals, three assists) and currently leads the AHL during the playoffs. He also had a league-high plus-eight rating. He has 12 points (six goals, six assists), six penalty minutes and a plus-13 rating in 13 career postseason games. He scored four points (two goals, two assists) in seven games against San Diego during the regular season.

During the regular season, the Barracuda were first in shorthanded goals with 14 and finished with the eighth-best penalty kill at 83.7 percent. San Jose’s power play went 1-for-22 in round one at 4.5 percent, but they scored a pair of short-handed goals, including a game winner down a man in a decisive Game 5 overtime victory on Tuesday night.

Buddy Robinson totaled five points (three goals, two assists) in five games, two penalty minutes and a plus-four rating in round one. He was acquired in a trade with the Ottawa Senators in January. He collected 19 points (10 goals, nine assists) in 33 games, 53 penalty minutes and a plus-five rating after recording just 12 points (seven goals, five assists), 18 penalty minutes and a plus-four rating in 33 games with the Binghamton Senators. He had zero points in six career postseason games prior to 2017.

Troy Grosenick had a promising regular season, going 30-10-7 with a 2.04 goals-against average, .926 save percentage and 10 shutouts. He received the Baz Bastien Memorial Award as the AHL’s most outstanding goaltender. He went 5-3-1 during the regular season in 10 games played against the Gulls with a 2.46 goals-against, .914 save percentage and three shutouts.

Zack Stortini is the Barracuda’s most experienced postseason player. He played in 61 playoff games through his 12-year career. He won a Calder Cup with the Hamilton Bulldogs in 2007.

Up Next
Both teams return to action for Game 2 on Saturday night at 7:00 p.m. PST. You can tune into the game through AHL Live and AM 1220 KDOW.

San Jose Barracuda podcast with Ana Kieu: Cuda shoot for a second round of wins as they meet San Diego in divisional

sjbarracuda.com photo: San Jose Barracuda celebrate their division advance last Tuesday night as they head to the next round of the playoffs against San Diego in the best of four out of seven games starting Friday night at SAP Center

On the podcast with Ana today:

1. The Barracuda changed the opening round, divisional semi final series with a 5-3 win over the Heat in Game 3 at Stockton Arena on Friday night. Tell me more about that win.

2. Troy Grosenick earned the win despite allowing three goals. He made 30 saves on 33 shots. Walk me through his overall performance.

3. The Barracuda had a chance to clinch a second round berth with a win over the Heat. What went wrong?

4. What are your takeaways from the Barracuda’s Game 4 loss to the Heat on Sunday?

5. The Barracuda punched a ticket to the second round with a 2-1 overtime win over the Heat on Tuesday. What are your three takeaways from Game 5?

6. The Barracuda host the San Diego Gulls in a best-of-seven Divisional Final series that begins this Friday. Do you have any thoughts on this upcoming Pacific Division matchup?

 

Barracuda edge Heat 2-1 in Game 5, advance to second round against Gulls

Photo credit: San Jose Barracuda Twitter (@sjbarracuda)

by Ana Kieu

SAN JOSE — The San Jose Barracuda edged the Stockton Heat 2-1 in overtime in a do-or-die Game 5 at SAP Center on Tuesday night.

The Heat served three penalties in the first period, but the Barracuda were unable to capitalize on the power play. Rasmus Andersson was called for roughing at 11:56. Mike Kostka went to the box for high-sticking at 10:58. Hunter Shinkaruk received an elbowing penalty at 16:39.

The Barracuda served just one penalty as the officials sent Mirco Mueller to the box for unsportsmanlike conduct with 1:23 left in the period. As a result, 37 seconds of Mueller’s penalty rolled over.

Both teams skated to a scoreless deadlock after 20 minutes. The Barracuda outshot the Heat 15-9.
David Rittich left the game and never returned. He stopped all 15 shots he faced.

Jon Gillies entered the game in the second period in relief of Rittich.

The Heat broke the scoreless deadlock at 10:38. Brett Kulak fired a shot from the left slot that went wide of the net, but Jamie Devane picked up the loose puck and put it into the net, beating Troy Grosenick for his first goal of the playoffs.

Shots were 38-13 in favor of the Barracuda, but they trailed the Heat 1-0 through 40 minutes.

The speed of both teams increased during the third period. The Heat finally managed their first shot on goal of the period around 12:40.

Timo Meier beat Gillies top-shelf for his second goal of the playoffs, tying the score 1-1 with 9:47 left in the period.

“I was pretty confident it was going to happen,” Meier said. “So it was just a matter of time…I had some good chances early in the game…It was obviously a relief to finally have it bounce in and we went from there and just kept going.”

Mike Angelidis fired a shot that was supposed to go into the net, but Grosenick made an impressive glove save to keep the score tied 1-1 late in the period.

Hockey fans inside the arena received free hockey as a treat as the decisive Game 5 headed into overtime. Both teams were tied 1-1 after 60 minutes. The Barracuda outshot the Heat 48-23.

Ryan Carpenter scored on a breakaway to lift the Barracuda to a 2-1 overtime victory over the Heat. Grosenick finished with 27 saves for San Jose. Gillies made 37 saves in a losing effort for Stockton.

“I lost the draw and then the puck went back and forth so we just tried to stay in the shot lanes and the guy made a bad pass and then (Barclay) Goodrow pounced on it,” Carpenter said when asked to describe his game-winning goal. “He continued to protect the puck…It was wide open in the slot and I couldn’t ask for an easier chance. Just tried to get on it quick.”

“If I stopped that goal, we would’ve won in regulation,” Grosenick said when asked about the first goal he allowed. “But that’s hockey. It was kind of a weird bounce off the board and I felt it hit my blocker and I just didn’t quite know where it was on the net so I was just trying to seal the post and it squeaked through. It’s kind of one of those weird plays, but hey, their puck counted and they found a way to put it in and our guys battled back and got the big goals, and it is what it is, we won.”

The Barracuda won the best-of-five series 3-2.

“It was one of those games,” Barracuda head coach Roy Sommer said. “Their other goalie (Jon Gillies) played really well. He (David Rittich) got sick and left because of something…The other guy (Gillies) stood on his head and made like 15 or 18 point blankers, and then Grosy (Grosenick), what can you say? He made great plays late in the third period like the ones on (Mike) Angelidis and (Hunter) Shinkaruk. I thought it was over. He hit the post, went behind him…Every team that goes a long way, there’s always a huge scare somewhere…That kind of described us tonight, but I thought we deserved the win.”

Notes
After finishing the 2016-17 regular season with the AHL’s second best power play, the Barracuda’s power play unit went ice-cold during the postseason. San Jose is just 1-for-17 on the man advantage, ranking 14th out of the 16 playoff teams.

After being held off the scoresheet in the Barracuda’s first two postseason games, Danny O’Regan has three points (two goals, one assist) over his last two games. O’Regan is the AHL’s Rookie of the Year, leading all of the league’s freshmen in points (23 goals, 35 assists) during the regular season. He finished second in San Jose with 11 points (five goals, six assists) against the Heat in 11 games played.

Ryan Carpenter netted his third goal of the series on Friday. He now has six points (three goals, three assists) in four postseason games. In his three-year career, Carpenter scored 11 points (five goals, six assists) in 12 career playoff games along with a plus-12 rating.

After signing an entry-level contract with the Sharks fresh out of Union College, Nick DeSimone played just four regular season games for the Barracuda before the playoffs. He has four points (zero goals, four assists) in four postseason games along with a plus-four rating. He leads all defensemen in points during the series and ranks third in points among all defensemen during the postseason. He scored his first professional goal in San Jose’s final regular season game of the year on April 15.

Zack Stortini is the Barracuda’s most experienced postseason player. He played in 61 playoff games over his 12-year career. He won a Calder Cup with the Hamilton Bulldogs in 2007. He appeared in San Jose’s first two playoff games, but wasn’t featured in the lineup in Games 3 and 4 at Stockton Arena.

Up Next
The Barracuda host the San Diego Gulls in Game 1 of the second round on Friday night at 7:00 p.m. PST on AHL Live and AM 1220 KDOW.

Heat forces a Game 5 with 5-3 victory over Barracuda

Photo credit: San Jose Barracuda Twitter (@sjbarracuda)

STOCKTON — The San Jose Barracuda lost 5-3 to the Stockton Heat in Game 4 at Stockton Arena on Sunday.

By: Ana Kieu

The Barracuda didn’t waste any time getting on the board as Danny O’Regan fired a shot past David Rittich short-side just 58 seconds into the opening period. Kevin Labanc and Nick DeSimone were credited with the assists on O’Regan’s second goal of the playoffs.

The Heat’s defense was superb in the period. Rittich made three notable saves, blocking two shots from Rourke Chartier and one shot from Timo Meier.

The Barracuda outshot the Heat 10-6 and led 1-0 after 20 minutes.

The Barracuda’s defense remained solid in the second period. Both teams exchanged chances and Andrew Mangiapane almost scored the game-tying goal, but Grosenick made an incredible left pad save to hold onto a 1-0 lead. However, Stockton made it a game after Hunter Shinkaruk picked up a loose puck on Matt Frattin’s turnover for the equalizer and his second goal of the playoffs.

The Heat grabbed their first lead of the game at 12:05 when Garnet Hathaway knocked in the puck for the go-ahead goal, his second of the playoffs.

Doetzel bodyslammed Timo Meier, who received a roughing penalty at 11:07. The officials also assessed a roughing penalty to Frattin at the same time. The game went into a four-on-four.

The Barracuda were back on the power play shortly after Michael Kostka got out of the box. Hathaway took a tripping call with 5:45 left in the period.

Buddy Robinson got a lucky bounce that found the back of the net for his third goal of the playoffs, tying the game 2-2 with 2:05 left.

Both teams were tied at two apiece after 40 minutes. Shots were 23-22 in favor of the Barracuda.

The Barracuda retook the lead when Tim Heed fired a long-range shot from the right point that went top-shelf to beat Rittich at 15:22 of the third period. Meier and Chartier notched the assists on Heed’s second goal of the playoffs.

Mangiapane scored his first goal of the playoffs on a shot that went top-shelf to beat Troy Grosenick on the far side, tying the game 3-3 with 5:05 left in the period.

The Heat went ahead with 2:56 left in regulation. Linden Vey picked up a pass from Shinkaruk and put it into the net for his third goal of the playoffs. Vey added an empty-net goal to seal the scoring.

The Heat forced a Game 5 with a 5-3 victory over the Barracuda. Rittich finished with 34 saves for Stockton. Grosenick made 28 saves in a losing effort for San Jose.

Notes
The Barracuda finished the 2016-17 AHL regular season with a 43-16-4-5 record. They won both the Bud Poile Trophy and John Chick Trophy. They went on a 14-game winning streak from January 21 to March 1.

Ryan Carpenter netted his third goal of the series last Friday. In his three-year career, Carpenter has 11 points in 11 postseason games along with a plus-12 rating.

After leading the Barracuda with 25 goals during the regular season, Barclay Goodrow netted his first playoff goal on Friday. In his three-year career, Goodrow has five points in 11 postseason games.

After finishing fifth in the AHL regular season with 49 points among defensemen, fifth with 39 assists and fourth with a plus-27 rating, Joakim Ryan recorded two goals, one assist and a plus-four rating in his two-year career. He has six points in seven postseason games.

Zack Stortini played in 61 postseason games over his 12-year playoff career. He won a Calder Cup with the Hamilton Bulldogs in 2007.

Up Next
The best-of-five series will shift to San Jose for Game 5 on Tuesday night at 7:00 p.m. PST on AHL Live and AM 1220 KDOW.

Barracuda take 2-1 series lead with 5-3 win over Heat in Game 3

Photo credit: The AHL Twitter (@TheAHL)

By: Ana Kieu

STOCKTON — The San Jose Barracuda beat the Stockton Heat 5-3 in Game 3 to take a 2-1 series lead at Stockton Arena on Friday night.

Barracuda fans were loud and energized, shouting the “Bar-ra-cu-da” chant just moments before the opening faceoff in enemy territory.

Barclay Goodrow helped the Barracuda grab an early 1-0 lead at 16:11 of the first period. Goodrow knocked in the rebound from Ryan Carpenter’s wraparound attempt, beating David Rittich for his first goal of the playoffs.

Kevin Labanc tipped in a shot from Danny O’Regan to give the Barracuda a 2-0 lead with just 15.1 seconds left in the first.

Shots were 10-8 in favor of the Barracuda, who held a 2-0 lead over the Heat after 20 minutes.

The attention shifted to the Heat in the second period.

Buddy Robinson was called for tripping at 11:02. Just 46 seconds later, Andrew Mangiapane swayed in front of the net and Mike Angelidis beat Troy Grosenick to score a power-play goal —his first goal of the playoffs — and cut the Barracuda’s lead in half.

Brandon Bollig hammered home the rebound to tie the game 2-2 with 6:44 left in the second.

Both teams were tied at two apiece after 40 minutes. Shots were 23-20 in favor of the Barracuda.

The Barracuda were back on top 3-2 with 4:43 left in the period. Carpenter beat Rittich top-shelf, short-side for his third goal of the playoffs.

Timo Meier added an insurance goal to give the Barracuda a 4-2 lead just 1:26 later. After Rourke Chartier got out of the box for goaltender interference, he sent a pass to Meier, who fired it into the net for his first goal of the playoffs.

The Heat didn’t sit and back and relax just yet. Mike Kostka buried a shot from the point to make it a one-goal game with 27.9 seconds left in regulation.

However, the Heat’s comeback fell short as the Barracuda took Game 3 with a 5-3 victory. Buddy Robinson scored an empty-net goal to seal the scoring. Grosenick finished with 30 saves for San Jose.

Rittich made 28 saves in a losing effort for Stockton.

Notes
Barracuda starting lineup
Troy Grosenick
John McCarthy
Barclay Goodrow
Ryan Carpenter
Joakim Ryan
Tim Heed

Barracuda defenders
Joakim Ryan – Tim Heed
Mirco Mueller – Julius Bergman
Jacob Middleton – Nick DeSimone

Up Next
Both teams return to action for Game 4 in Stockton Arena on Sunday at 4:00 p.m. PST. You can tune into the game on AHL Live and AM 1220 KDOW.

Warriors Too Fast And Furious for Portland 128-103 — Winning series 4-0

Golden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr, left, talks with TNT broadcasters Brent Barry, center, and Marv Albert before Game 4 of an NBA basketball first-round playoff series Monday, April 24, 2017, in Portland, Ore. Kerr is not coaching the game due to illness, but is in the arena. (AP Photo/Craig Mitchelldyer)

By Barbara Mason

Could tonight be the last time the Golden State Warriors see the Blazers this season? A win in Portland would give the Warriors a lengthy rest before they take on their next opponent, and of course hopes are that sometime during the playoffs Head Coach Steve Kerr would be able to rejoin the team. Although Kevin Durant was back in action, Livingston and Barnes were still unable to play. Of course the last thing that Portland wanted was to be embarrassed in front of their home crowd.

The first quarter was all Warriors as Durant hit a number of threes, not missing a beat as the Warriors had Portland rattled from the get go. As the quarter wore on, it began to rain three’s for Oakland as the Blazers were shell-shocked unable to mount any kind of comeback trailing 30-7 with five minutes left in the quarter. It was a perfect beginning for the Warriors controlling the game and rendering Portland helpless, unable to stop the onslaught. The most points ever scored in an opening playoff quarter for Golden State was 41 but thanks to some brilliant play by Javale McGee that record was broken as the Warriors led after one by the score of 45-22.

The Warriors were half-way home as the second quarter came to an end. Golden State led 72-48 playing ferocious basketball in front of a stunned and silent Portland crowd. Curry led the way with 21 points followed by Thompson with 16.

As the Warriors came bursting out of the locker room, they showed no signs of slowing down one little bit. They extended their lead to thirty points leading 78-48 five minutes into the third quarter. The Warriors from deep were crazy in . the score after three quarters was 106-80.

The fourth quarter was the icing on the cake as the Warriors bench took over. With five minutes left in the game Portland fans began to exit the building in disappointment. The final was 128-103. Steph Curry finished the game with 37 points.

So as if turned out the first quarter set the stage for the Golden State series win. This was by far their best game yet as the team seemed to play better and better as they got deeper into this series. The only thing that could have made this game more enjoyable was to see Coach Kerr on the sidelines.