Posts Tagged ‘Anthony Noreen’
Phantoms Can’t Get Back On Track After Break, Lose 5-2 To Indiana
The Indiana Ice jumped to a 4-0 lead in the first 31 minutes of the game, and the Youngstown Phantoms were unable to chip away in time, falling 5-2 Friday in the Pepsi Coliseum. Dylan Margonari and JT Stenglein scored for the Phantoms (16-7-2, fourth East), but an 0-for-5 night on the power play helped secure the victory for Indiana (16-7-4, second East).
The Phantoms, buoyed by three power plays, outshot Indiana 12-5 in the first period, but the Ice made the most of what few chances they had. At the 10:25 mark, Emil Romig found Justin Bailey sneaking into the slot and he swept the puck past Matt O’Connor to give Indiana a 1-0 lead. The Phantoms had a plethora of opportunities in the remainder of the period, but Jon Gillies turned away them all and the Ice carried a 1-0 lead into the first intermission.
Youngstown started the second period short-handed and went two down after a hooking call on
At that point, Noreen replaced O’Connor with Sean Romeo, who shutout the Ice for the remainder of the game.
“We wanted to get Matt some rest – we’re going back to him tomorrow – and we wanted to spark the team a little bit,” Noreen said. “Sean came into a tough situation – coming in cold off the bench against maybe the most explosive team in the league – and he shut them down.”
Margonari put the Phantoms on the board in the final minute of the period. The Minnesota State – Mankato commit intercepted a pass in his own zone, blew past the flat-footed blue liner and roofed the puck on Gillies, knocking the netminder’s water bottle off the top of the net. The goal, scored with 55 seconds left in the period, made it a 4-1 game after 40 minutes.
“We talk about not looking at the scoreboard and that’s something Margo doesn’t do,” Noreen said. “He plays hard start to finish.
Less than five minutes into the third period Stenglein cut the Ice’s lead in half. The Greece, N.Y., native got the puck with speed at center ice, navigated through the Indiana defense and beat Gillies with a low wrist shot on the far post for his team-leading 14th goal of the season. But the Phantoms were unable to capitalize on a pair of late-period power plays, and Tarasov scored an empty-netter to seal win for the Ice.
“Our guys don’t like losing – we’re not going to accept it,” Noreen said. “Hopefully we’re going to learn from it and have a better level of execution tomorrow.”
in the first minute. Daniil Tarasov capitalized on the two-man advantage and put a one-timer past O’Connor to give the Ice the two-goal lead 46 seconds into the period. Sean Kuraly made it 3-0 when he won a foot race and beat O’Connor all alone. Then John Doherty stretched the lead to four goals at the 11:05 mark.
Jack Up The Rev – What It Is And Why You Need To View It
For years, the Jambar has turned out a quality product featuring objective viewpoints from student writers and photographers at Youngstown State University. Lately, technology has allowed a few of the Jambar student-writers freedom to be more imaginative and try their hand in video-journalism. Joe Catullo Jr. has spent a whole bunch of time compiling editions of Jack Up The Rev. Not a conventional name by any means, the video clips are entertaining and the quality is surprisingly good. All-in-all, it is a well produced minicast of what is going on. Congratulations to Dustin Livesay, Nick Mancini, and Catullo for taking their vision as far as they can and continued expansion and growth to who comes next.
The name can be amusing to those who have never heard it. I have watched YSU football coach Eric Wolford make Catullo cue him on what was to be said several times before a take was completed. I am completely honored to be the featured presenter to Volume #12 (above). Catullo has chased down Wolford, Bob Boldon, Zach Humphries, Anthony Noreen, Jim Brown, and anyone else they have been able to get to say their catchphrase as a show lead-in.
I recently caught up with Catullo (below) to explain the concept, the purpose, the future, and the past of Jack Up The Rev.
Paneech: Where did you come up with a name like, ‘Jack Up The Rev’?
Catullo: The name Jack Up The Rev came in February. I was sitting with reporter Patrick Donovan who was telling me about his weekend. When he finished, I told him it seemed like he was really trying to jack up the… jack up the rev or something. I don’t know where it came from or how it happened, but it did. About an hour later, the entire Jambar staff was saying it.
Paneech: Does each episode have a set time limit?
Catullo: We try to keep each episode about four minutes or less. It only goes over if we have a lot of content we need to use.
Paneech: What goals have been set for the show?
Catullo: My main goal is that this will help me in my future. I want to show future potential employers what I can offer. Also, short term, to give the audience a look back at what YSU has done in the past week with some comedy involved.
Paneech: Who are some of the people involved with you in the project?
Catullo: Our online editor, Chris Cotelesse, brought the idea to the table that we could try to produce a sports show. He is also the creator of the theme song. He played the guitar and we sang all of the lyrics. Our editor-in-chief, Josh Stipanovich, gave his blessing to call the show Jack Up The Rev. Sports reporter Nick Mancini and photographer Dustin Livesay help in filming games.
Paneech: Where do you come up with ideas to keep the content entertaining?
Catullo: Personally, I feel that the sports are entertaining enough. For other people to think so, I try to present the content in my own entertaining way. I don’t really know where I come up with the ideas. It is mostly improvision and the ideas are created and followed through upon on the spot. I generally don’t write a script.
Paneech: Once you graduate and leave YSU, will you take Jack Up The Rev with you, or is it something you would want future students to expand with?
Catullo: I will still be attending YSU next year, so Jack Up The Rev will definitely continue, even if I am not the sports editor. Afterwards, I can dream that a company would decide to buy the name and keep me on it. It would be awesome to see myself on ESPN doing the show.
Paneech: Typically, how long does it take to build a single episode?
Catullo: It takes a long time to build a complete episode. You first have to take the time to import and export video. In a good week, there can be three or four hours of video content that would take anywhere from seven to eight hours to import and export. My segments on camera used to take over an hour, but we have been able to scale that back to about twenty minutes. Putting the video together is the toughest part and usually takes about six hours to complete. The theme is the toughest thing because there are so many clips to look at and each one can only last about five seconds to synchronize with the theme song. A whole episode can take up to two full work days to complete.
Paneech: When you ask someone to do a show intro, how confused are they and how many times can you expect to tell them what to say?
Catullo: Every time I tell a new face the name, they are always stunned and can’t figure out the meaning. I just tell them that it is the name of my new show and that it is a motivational saying. They are still usually confused afterwards. A perfect example is Episode 6 when I had Coach Wolford saying it. That episode now has the second highest hit total next to the first.
Click the above link and check out the effort that goes into this project by Catullo and staff. They do fantastic work for having limited resources.
Phantoms Offense Clicks Big In 7-4 Victory Over Des Moines
The Youngstown Phantoms followed up a marquee win over first-place Green Bay Friday night with a convincing 7-4 victory over the Des Moines Buccaneers Saturday night to secure the second place slot in the United States Hockey League’s Eastern Conference heading into the holiday break.
The Phantoms (16-4-1, T-second East) got a pair of short-handed goals from Mike Ambrosia and Austin Cangelosi, and five other players – Soren Jonzzon, Dylan Margonari, Alex Gacek, Jordan Young and Eric Sweetman – found the back of the net to give them a win in one of the United States Hockey League’s toughest road arenas. Goaltender Matt O’Connor made 33 saves to enter the break with a league-leading 13 wins.
“Before the game, we said, ‘If we are going to get to where we want to get, we’re going to need to win on the road in a hostile environment,’” Head Coach Anthony Noreen said. “[With the break coming up] we wanted to treat this game like a playoff game.”
Jonzzon put Youngtown on the board just 34 seconds into the first period, netting his first goal in a Phantoms uniform. Des Moines (10-11-1, fifth West) answered just 73 seconds later when Mac Olsen deflected a centering feed from Garret Allen just past O’Connor to knot things up at one apiece.
Margonari retook the lead just 2:19 into the second when Cangelosi fed him in the slot on an odd-man rush. Less than two minutes later – and short-handed to boot – Cangelosi blew past the Des Moines defense and beat Kasdorf with a low wrister on the blocker side to put the Phantoms up 3-1. But the Buccaneers came roaring back, scoring two unanswered goals to tie it again. Kevin Irwin redirected a puck past O’Connor while short-handed at the 12:35 mark and less than four minutes later, Trent Samuels-Thomas poked one past him in the midst of a scrum to tie the game at 3-3.
The Phantoms found themselves on a short-handed 2-on-1, but Cangelosi sent his shot wide. The puck, however, took a fortuitous bounce off the end boards and floated right onto Ambrosia’s stick, and he threw it on net and past Kasdorf, who was caught out of position, to give the Phantoms the 4-3 advantage heading into the third period.
At the 2:40 mark in the third, Gacek intercepted a failed Buccaneers’ clearing attempt on the right-wing half wall and beat Kasdorf with a wrist shot for his second goal in as many nights. The Buccaneers pulled Kasdorf in favor of backup Christian Frey, but he did not fare much better, and Young beat him with a point shot less than two minutes later to stretch the Phantoms’ lead to 6-3.
Anthony Greco made it a 6-4 game when he beat O’Connor on a 5-on-3 power play at the 6:41 mark, but Sweetman regained the three-goal lead when he beat Frey with a wrist shot from the left point. O’Connor weathered the remaining Buccaneers chances, and the Phantoms skated off with their third straight road win.
The Phantoms resume USHL play on Dec. 28 when they take on the Cedar Rapids RoughRiders in Iowa. The puck drops at 8:05 p.m. EST.
Phantoms Knock Off Top Dog Green Bay, 5-3
Earlier this week, Youngstown Phantoms right wing Ryan Belonger said the team might need a lucky bounce to beat the first-place Green Bay Gamblers. On Friday night, the Green Bay native provided that bounce. Belonger redirected a rocket point shot from Mike Gunn off of his skate with 13:06 remaining in the third period to give the Phantoms (15-6-1, T-second East) a 4-3 lead en route to an eventual 5-3 win over the Gamblers (19-4-1, first East) in the Resch Center. Luck, however, had little to do with it.
Mike Ambrosia had a pair of goals to go along with an assist, while JT Stenglein and Alex Gacek also scored for the Phantoms. Austin Cangelosi added a pair of helpers on both of Ambrosia’s goals while Matthew O’Connor made 26 saves to secure his 12th win of the season.
“Is it nice to get a win going against what’s probably the best team in the league? Absolutely,” Head Coach Anthony Noreen said. “But I don’t think we treated it very different from any other game.”
“It was a good confidence builder to know we have the ability to do it, but it took 20 guys going hard for 60 minutes to do it”, said Noreen.
The Phantoms did not take long to get on the board, taking a 1-0 lead just 2:23 into the first period off of Gacek’s fifth of the season. Daniel Renouf stepped into a slap shot from the top of the right circle and the rebound caromed to Gacek on the backdoor. The Miami University commit got it on his backhand, spun around to bring it on his forehand and threw it past Green Bay goaltender Ryan McKay into an open net.
The Gamblers tied it up a little more than three minutes later when Alex Kile found Sheldon Dries alone in the front of the Youngstown goal after a failed Phantoms clearing attempt. Grigory Dikushin put Green Bay up 2-1 at the 12:41 mark on an odd-man rush after a great feed from Peter Maric.
Belonger nearly tied it up with 15 seconds left when Cangelosi dropped it to him in the slot, but the Green Bay native’s backhand was knocked away by McKay and the Gamblers carried that lead into the first intermission.
Stenglein knotted things up on the power play 7:50 into the second period. The Greece, N.Y., native walked around the Gamblers defenseman to go in alone on McKay and then reached around the netminder to push the puck into the back of the net.
“He just willed that puck in,” Noreen said. “He had a bad angle coming in and his only chance to score was to walk around the goalie and he did that and put it in with one hand.”
Alexander Dahl earned a penalty shot when he was hauled down by Jordan Schmaltz after sneaking past the Green Bay blue-liner, but McKay made the save on his backhand attempt to preserve the tie.
Green Bay then retook the lead on a power play with 6:51 to go in the second. The Gamblers simply outmanned the Phantoms down low in front of the net and Sam Herr dug it out of a scrum and swept it past O’Connor. But just 79 seconds later, Ambrosia tied it once again. Cangelosi put a puck in Ambrosia’s wheelhouse and the Phantoms captain’s shot deflected off a defender’s stick past McKay. The teams ended the second period locked at 3-3.
After Belonger’s goal gave the Phantoms the lead, Ambrosia sealed the game with his second of the night. Cangelosi fed it to him on the half wall and he fired it low and past McKay to make give the Phantoms the two-goal cushion.
“I tell the guys all the time that if they want to know what our team is all about, just look at No. 14,” Noreen said. “Just the way he acts off the ice, watch the way he plays the game and watch what he does in crucial situations down near the end. Then, to hear him after the game in the locker room say, ‘this is what we expect to do, it’s no big deal’ – that’s the reason he’s our captain.”
Phantoms Finish 2011 Home Schedule With 3-1 Win
The Youngstown Phantoms created memories for more than just their fans Saturday night at the Covelli Centre. The Phantoms (14-6-1, T-second East) defeated the Chicago Steel 3-1 and gathered nearly 700 stuffed animals to donate to Akron Children’s Hospital of Mahoning Valley from their third annual Teddy Bear Toss.
JT Stenglein scored two goals and Ryan Belonger netted one as well while Mike Ambrosia andAustin Cangelosi both added a pair of assists. Goaltender Matthew O’Connor turned away 24 of 25 shots to record his 11th win of the season.
“I can’t remember seeing him give up one rebound the entire night,” Head Coach Anthony Noreen said of his goaltender. “He ate up everything.”
Chicago (7-14-1, eighth East) took the lead on the power play just under 11 minutes into the first period with Stenglein in the box for interference. Michael Fallon grabbed the puck off a failed clearing attempt, skated it in and wristed it past O’Connor.
But less than seven minutes later, Stenglein redeemed himself on the man-advantage. Cangelosi handed it to Ambrosia on the half-wall and the Princeton commit skated it in the corner, drew the Chicago defense, then backhanded a pass through a miniscule opening and Stenglein punched it in on the backdoor.
The goal triggered a downpour of hundreds of stuffed animals from the stands that halted play for nearly five minutes as staff and players cleared the ice. When it was all said and done 681 stuffed animals were collected and the Phantoms and Steel entered the first intermission tied at one.
Stenglein found the back of the net again at the 12:08 mark in the second to put Youngstown up 2-1. Cangelosi skated the puck out of his zone and moved it over to Ambrosia, who got the puck on net from the left side. The rebound caromed out into the high slot where Stenglein was trailing and quickly wristed it back toward goal for his 12th of the season.
Belonger, who left the ice in the first period after a collision with Chicago’s Patrick Polino, stretched the lead to two goals 2:13 into the third. Steel defenseman Ryan Trentz lost the puck behind his net and Belonger got it on the goal line and beat Mathias Dahlstrom from the nearly impossible angle – especially for a right-handed shooter – to cap the scoring.
“It was a bit scary for us when Ryan got banged up in the first period,” Noreen said. “But he got cleared and goes out and scores a goal. Maybe that hit cleared him up a bit.”
Phantoms Lose Heartbreaker In A Shootout Loss
The Youngstown Phantoms came into Thursday’s game against Sioux Falls winners of their last four games. For about 80% of this game, a 2-1 shootout loss, the Phantoms looked like the dominant team. A late goal and getting beat in a shootout, the Phantoms fell to 12-5-1. Sioux Falls pulled through in a nailbiter to end the Phantoms recent dominance and nab a big road win.
The Phantoms got their only goal in the first period despite being outshot 10-7. Stephen Collins found the back of the net with 2:26 to go in the first third of the game. The goal by Collins was his first of the season. Richard Zehnal and Pat Conte picked up assists on the goal.
In the second, both teams had powerplay chances. In Fact, Sioux Falls had three of them compared to the Phantoms one. Give credit to the defense of the Phantoms and Matt O’Connor to keep the Stampede off of the scoreboard through two periods. After 40 minutes of play, the Phantoms clung to a 1-0 lead. The Stampede had 23 shots compared to Youngstown’s 19.
In the third period, the Phantoms played more physical but Sioux Falls was able to tie the game with 4:22 remaining in regulation. Ed McGovern scooped up the puck just to the right of O’Connor’s stick side of the crease and pushed it past before O’Connor could turn to make a play on it. The shots on goal still favored the Stampede after three at 29-22.
In the overtime, O’Connor made a couple of sensational glove saves to keep the Phantoms afloat. Stampede goaltender Stephon Williams made some pretty saves in the extra session as well. In the end, nobody scored and this game went to a shootout.
In the shootout, Austin Cangelosi scored as Coach Noreen’s first shooter, but that was it. For Sioux Falls, Justin Selman and Kyle Rankin scored. Mike Ambrosia tried to tie it, but his shot sailed the crossbar and hit the glass securing the win for the Stampede.
“The negative was that we set a bar as to what our potential was,”, said Coach Anthony Noreen afterwards. “We played ok and I even thought we played good at times, but we definitely did not to play to our potential. The positive is that we got a point out of it and head out to our rival, Muskegon, to compete for four huge points.”
The Phantoms hit the road for games at Muskegon on Friday and Saturday.
Phantoms Earn Hard-Fought Victory Over Sioux City
The Youngstown Phantoms seem to have more gusto in their step than in years past. JT Stenglein and Ryan Belonger both scored twice to vault the Phantoms to a very physical 5-4 win over Sioux City. Despite being outshot 26-19, the Phantoms were able to push the puck when it counted. The win was the fourth in a row for the Phantoms (12-5-0).
Ryan Belonger got the Phantoms on the board first. Belonger, crashing in from his right wing position, beat Matt Skoff (above) from just outside the goal crease. The action started when Mike Ambrosia put a shot on net that deflected out to Austin Cangelosi who fired back in toward the goal. Cangelosi was credited with an assist on Belonger’s seventh goal of the season coming with 5:48 left in the opening frame.
Sioux City responded with 2:46 left in the first to tie the game at a goal apiece. Kyle Criscuolo netted his fourth goal of the season beating Matt O’Connor. The goal was scored at even-strength and Cliff Watson earned an assist for the Musketeers. The first period ended without further scoring and the Phantoms outshot Sioux City, 8-5.
The Phantoms did well killing off a two-man penalty about halfway through the second. Dan Molenaar picked up a slashing penalty putting the Phantoms in a powerplay opportunity. JT Stenglein made the Musketeers pay at the 13:11 mark as he found the net for the eighth time. Jordan Young gathered an assist on the go-ahead goal.
“I told our guys that if we could kill that 5-on-3 penalty that we were going to win. We went out there and drew up in practice how we were going to kill a 5-on-3, and to our guys credit, they executed it. I don’t even think that they [Sioux Falls] had a great shot at scoring during the penalty“, said Coach Anthony Noreen. “From a pure effort standpoint, that was the best effort we had all season.”
The opportunistic Phantoms went up 3-1 when they got an extra attacker on the ice awaiting a delayed penalty call. The strategy worked to perfection as Richard Zehnal became the third different Phantom to put one between the pipes on the evening. Zehnal’s goal was his third and came with 2:50 left in the second. Young was credited with his second assist of the game. Sioux City cut the lead to 3-2 when Brad Robbins went top shelf on O’Connors glove side with just 15.3 seconds remaining in the period.
With 16:37 remaining in the third period, David Henry gathered a rebound off of a Jackson Leef shot that O’connor blocked. Call it a bad luck goal that tied the game, 3-3.
Stenglein gave the Phantoms the lead at 4-3 with 6:49 left in the game on an unassisted goal, his second. Stenglein wound up from the top of the right face off circle and his shot tapped the post and went in. The Phantoms added an empty-netter with 51 seconds left in the game. Belonger got the freebee to push the lead to 5-3. The Musketeers wouldn’t go away without a fight. With 34.5 seconds left, the Musketeers scored to make it 5-4. O’Connor and the defense survived the onslaught of offense in the final half minute to secure the win.
“It was definitely two of the bigger goals in my career”, said Stenglein. “The coaches are putting us in position where we can make a lot of plays and my line has been playing really good.”
“Everything has been going my way lately. You kind of are getting to a point in the season where you know that your line mates are going to be in certain spots. We aren’t invincible, but we do expect to win, and we have a will to win. It doesn’t matter whether we are down by five or up by five, we are going to stay even keel“, added Stenglein.
Phantoms Roll Right Along, 3-1, Over Fargo
The Youngstown Phantoms were nothing if not opportunistic Friday night, pouncing on turnovers and poorly placed rebounds to beat the Fargo Force 3-1. The game was Youngstown’s third win in a row and league-high seventh win on home ice.
JT Stenglein (above) extended his goal-scoring streak to five games while Alexander Dahl and Sam Anas also found the back of the net for the Phantoms (11-5-0). In goal, Matthew O’Connor was the confident, economic netminder that fans and coaches are coming to expect, turning away 19 of 20 for his league-leading ninth win of the season.
“He [O’Connor] was really calm in there – didn’t give up a lot of rebounds,” Head Anthony Noreen said. “Even after he let in the one, and they came at him with a little flurry, he was just what he’s been lately: the backbone for our team.”
Stenglein put the Phantoms ahead of the Force (5-10-3) in the first-period on the power play. Mike Gunn sent a feed for him across ice that was tipped by Fargo’s Austin Farley and into open ice in the high slot. Stenglein grabbed it and whipped a snap shot on net, beating goaltender Zane Gothberg on the glove-side for his seventh goal of the season.
Just 42 seconds later, Dahl notched the first goal of his United States Hockey League career to put the Phantoms up two. Defenseman Kevin Liss led a rush the other way and took a shot on net from the right half-wall. The rebound caromed into the high slot and Dahl, whose father made the trip from his hometown of Eau Claire, Wis., to watch the game, fired it straight past Gothberg.
“It felt so good to get it out of the way,” Dahl said. “It’s been a big chunk of the season with no goals and I was kind of frustrated, but it was nice to finally get going. I’m excited to show dad the puck. Really excited.”
Anas extended the lead to three goals with a little more than two minutes remaining in the second period. Fargo defenseman Justin Wade coughed up the puck below the left circle and the Potomac, Md. native gobbled it up and then fired it five-hole for his sixth of the season.
“There aren’t many people on our team or in hockey in general that can score that goal from that angle,” Noreen said. “And don’t think for a second that Sam wasn’t aiming for exactly that, because we see him do that all the time in practice.”
Dubuque Manages To Win, 4-3, To Split Two-Game Series With Phantoms
Less than 24 hours after the Youngstown Phantoms handed defending champion Dubuque a 5-2 setback, the Fighting Saints returned the favor. The Phantoms trailed 4-0 but fought back to make it 4-3 but never got closer. Sam Anas had a pair of goals for the Phantoms in defeat. Tyler Lundey also tallied twice for the visiting Dubuque team.
John Doherty got Dubuque on the board when he knocked the puck in for the third time this season. Doherty was assisted by Mike Matheson on the opening goal that came 8:33 into the first period. The Fighting Saints picked up another goal before the end of the period. Eliot Grauer got his first goal of the season with 1:30 left in the first to put Dubuque ahead, 2-0.
The second period saw the Fighting Saints put up a couple more goals to take a 4-0 lead. Tyler Lundy connected twice for the visitors to notch his fifth and six goals of the season. The first goal came at even-strength and the second was with a man advantage.
At that point, something kicked in for the Phantoms, namely Sam Anas. Anas helped the Phantom get back into the game with his third and fourth goals of the year. Both of the goals scored by Anas were on powerplay chances, a department the Phantoms have really been struggling with. Before the first Phantoms goal, the home team was 0-29 in their most recent powerplay drought. J T Stenglein and Richard Zehnal picked up assists on the first score. Anas connected from a bad angle, something he has been pretty proficient with, unassisted to cut the score to 4-2 at the end of the second period.
Sean Romeo (above) got a start because Matt O’Connor was between the pipes in both, the Friday and Saturday games. Romeo struggled at times but stopped some good shots by Dubuque to keep it close. A three game stretch in three days is tough for a young team to perform at the USHL high-level brand of hockey.
In the third period, the Phantoms nudged closer when Stenglein picked off a pass and scored a shorthanded goal 7:34 into the final stanza. Dubuque watched a 4-0 lead go to 4-3 with over ten minutes left in the game and the result still hanging in the balance. The Fighting Saints were whistled with 3:37 left in the game for slashing. Unfortunately, the Phantoms only got one good shot, whereas the Fighting Saints took two.
The Phantoms were right there, one would get the feeling if there were three minutes extra to play, that they somehow would have found a way. With the win, Dubuque raised its record to 9-3-1. The Phantoms fell to 8-5-0 and showed a whole bunch of heart in the loss. Many teams fold up the tent and switch everything. Credit Anthony Noreen for sticking to his guns, as it almost paid off tonight.
“We did not play 60 minutes tonight, we only played about 40”, said Noreen. “The first twenty minutes we did not play to our standards. I told the team not to pay attention to the scoreboard and they were able to get back in the game. In years past, this game may have ended up 9-0 instead of 4-3 because there would have been some pouting and they would not have stay focused.”
Without their best defenseman, Chris Bradley, and their leading scorer, Austin Cangelosi, away at a World Junior Tournament, give Noreen and the boys credit for being so competitive. Both Bradley and Cangelosi scored goals for Team USA earlier in the day and Noreen surely could have used the points in Youngstown.
“The thing I liked about our powerplay tonight was that things just seemed more urgent”, commented the coach. “I want our powerplay to go out there and outwork the penalty kill. ‘Want’ to get to the net, ‘want’ to score goals. There are a lot of teams in this league that we could hit that probably would not hit back. That team [Dubuque] is the most skilled team in the league, but they are also one of the most physical. I thought our physical play, for playing our third game in three days with a shortened lineup, was impressive.”
Cangelosi Scores Two More, But Phantoms Fall, 5-4
The Youngstown Phantoms saw their four-game winning streak come to an end Saturday in Ann Arbor, Mich., when they fell 5-4 to Team USA. The Phantoms got a pair of goals from Austin Cangelosi and Ryan Belonger with the net empty, but ran out of time and USA skated off with its first win in five games.
“I think if there were a few minutes left in the game, we would’ve had a chance to tie it,” Head Coach Anthony Noreen said. “That’s not an excuse though. That’s why you need to take care of business within the 60-minute frame.”
It was a back-and-fourth first period that saw the Phantoms take the lead twice only to have Team USA knot it back up. Defenseman Kevin Liss opened up the scoring 6:58 into the period when he knocked in a rebound off a Mike Ambrosia shot. USA tied it up on the power play less than two minutes later when Anthony Louis snuck one low past goaltender Matthew O’Connor, who was screened.
Ambrosia regained the lead for the Phantoms on a fluke play minutes later. The Chatham, N.J. native got the puck in from center ice wound up and knocked it deep toward net for a line change but USA goaltender Hunter Miska was caught off guard. He mishandled it and the puck bounced past him and into the net to put Youngstown up once again.
“You’re going to get them both ways – lucky bounces and unlucky bounces – but that was fortunate for us,” Ambrosia said. “We’ve got to manufacture goals, so it’s whatever it takes.”
But with 5:19 remaining in the period, Connor Chatham found Evan Allen open on the back door and he had no trouble popping it in to make it 2-2 heading into the first intermission.
The second period belonged to Team USA, which took full advantage of a four-minute double minor to Mike Gunn. Defenseman Keaton Thompson scored a pair of power-play goals – the first by knocking in the puck after a bad bounce off the glass behind the net, and the second via a screened shot from the point – to give Team USA a two-goal cushion after 40 minutes.
Connor Clifton put Team USA up 5-2 near the midpoint of the third off a shot from inside the blue line that O’Connor couldn’t handle. Then, with 3:41 remaining, Team USA center Tyler Kelleher was boxed for tripping and Noreen elected to pull the goalie to make it a 6-on-4 power play. Team USA was able to kill off the penalty but the Phantoms retained possession and Cangelosi was able to knock in a rebound from a Chris Bradley point-shot to cut the lead to two with 1:32 remaining.
With the net empty again, Belonger shoved a puck five hole on Miska to make it a one-goal game with 25 seconds left, but the Phantoms ran out of time and Team USA skated off with the win.
“I think we showed that we’re not going to stop until the final buzzer,” Ambrosia said. “But we didn’t bring it for the full 60 minutes tonight. It’s disappointing but we’re still 4-2”