2013–14 Hartford Wolf Pack season

2013–14 Hartford Wolf Pack
Division 1st Northeast Division
Conference 3rd Eastern Conference
2013–14 record 7–3–0–2 (16 pts)
Home record 3–3–0–2
Road record 4–0–0–0
Goals for 39
Goals against 37
Team information
General Manager Jim Schoenfeld
Coach Ken Gernander
Assistant Coach Jeff Beukeboom
Pat Boller
Captain Aaron Johnson
Arena XL Center
Team leaders
Goals Danny Kristo (8)
Assists Aaron Johnson (11)
Points Aaron Johnson (14)
Penalties in minutes Dylan McIlrath (45)
Plus/minus (+) Dylan McIlrath (+5)
(–) Michael Kantor (–3)
(–) Oscar Lindberg (–3)
Wins Cameron Talbot (4)
Goals against average C ameron Talbot (2.49)
< 2012–13 2014–15 >

The 2013–14 Hartford Wolf Pack season is the 17th season for the American Hockey League franchise, which began on October 5, 2013. After three seasons as Connecticut Whale, the season marked a return to their team's previous Wolf Pack name, due in part to new management at the XL Center.

Off-season

Management and name changes

In February 2013, Hartford's Capital Region Development Authority selected the Philadelphia-based Global Spectrum, a management company owned by Comcast Spectacor, to run the XL Center arena after the 2012–13 season. The contract gave them control of day-to-day business, marketing and ticket operation, and ensured Connecticut Whale would continue to play in Hartford through 2016, with a provision that could extend the term another three years[1] Speculation nevertheless persisted that the team could relocate to the Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Uniondale, New York, when The Madison Square Garden Company announced its intention to bid on the arena following the New York Islanders' departure from it. In discussing their plans, MSG officials said they would seek to renovate the arena and move at least one of its sports franchises there, which could have included Connecticut Whale.[2] But officials said there was never a specific plan to relocate the Whale,[3] and a group headed by Barclays Center developer Bruce Ratner ultimately won the rights for the Nassau Coliseum.[4]

After three seasons as Connecticut Whale, the team was renamed the Hartford Wolf Pack following the end of the 2012–13 AHL season, returning to the name they held for 13 years from 1997 to 2010. The decision was formally announced by the Madison Square Garden Company and Global Spectrum on May 14. Jim Schoenfeld, assistant general manager for the New York Rangers, said returning to the Wolf Pack name signaled a return to the franchise's roots and emphasized the team's ties to the Hartford community. But MSG executives had also pushed for the change to distance the franchise from Whalers Sports & Entertainment, which had taken over the franchise three years earlier.[5] The new name also meant the return of mascot Sonar, a seven-foot-tall wolf who had been the Hartford Wolf Pack mascot for all 13 years they had previously used the name.[6]

Roster changes and preseason games

Hartford saw significant roster changes during the off-season, including the loss of the previous season's seven leading scorers: Kris Newbury, Christian Thomas and Benn Ferriero were traded, while Nick Palmieri, Logan Pyett, Brandon Segal and Michael Vernace were lost to free agency.[7] Newbury, who had led the team with 62 points, was traded to the Philadelphia Flyers for former Adirondack Phantoms defenseman Danny Syvret,[8] while Hartford received winger Danny Kristo for Thomas,[9] and defenseman Justin Falk for Ferriero.[10] Hartford players Matt Gilroy and Kelsey Tessier also left the team via free agency.[7][11] The Wolf Pack re-signed forwards Brandon Mashinter and Andrew Carroll,[12][13] and signed several new players including defensemen Charlie Dodero,[14] Mike Marcou,[15] and Brendon Nash;[16] forward Andrew Rowe;[17] and goaltender Jeff Malcolm, who had 36 saves in a shutout to lead the Yale Bulldogs in their NCAA Division I championship last year.[18]

After a training camp that ran from September 20 to 24 at the XL Center,[19] started first of four preseason games with a 5–2 victory over the Worcester Sharks on September 25. Winger Brandon Hynes, playing with Hartford on a tryout basis from ECHL's Greenville Road Warriors, scored two goals, including the game-winner.[20] The Wolf Pack lost 4–3 to the Albany Devils in a shootout the next day. After Hartford tied the game with two power play goals, Hynes and Ryan Bourque both scored in the shootout before Albany won it in the fifth attempt.[21] Hartford next played two games against the Springfield Falcons, starting with a 7–0 shutout loss on September 27, in which winger Alex Aleardi scored four goals.[22] Aleardi scored twice more against the Wolf Pack during Springfield's 4–3 victory in Hartford's preseason finale on September 29.[23]

2013–14 Preseason Game Log: 1–2–0–1 (Home: 1–1–0–1; Road: 0–1–0–0)
# Date Visitor Score Home OT Decision Record
1 September 25* Worcester 2–5 Hartford Malcolm 1–0–0–0
2 September 26 Albany 4–3 Hartford SO Missiaen 1–0–0–1
3 September 27 Hartford 0–7 Springfield Talbot 1–1–0–1
4 September 29** Springfield 4–3 Hartford Missiaen 1–2–0–1
* Game played in Champions Skating Center in Cromwell, Connecticut
** Game played in International Skating Center of Connecticut in Simsbury

At the conclusion of the preseason, Hartford loaned Carroll, Dodero, Malcolm, Marcou and Rowe to Greenville,[24][25] and released several others to the team including Hynes, Sean Ambrosie and Matt Kirzinger. Others released altogether by Hartford included Scott Arnold, Sam Klassen and Jason Lepine.[24] The New York Rangers sent several of their players to the Wolf Pack, including forwards Chris Kreider, Marek Hrivik, Oscar Lindberg, Darroll Powe and Mashinter, as well as Conor Allen and Stu Bickel.[26] Forward J. T. Miller was also sent down to Hartford after played in New York's season opener, a surprise move officials said was prompted in part by the anticipated return of injured Rangers captain Ryan Callahan.[27] Wolf Pack head coach Ken Gernander those new players with National Hockey League experience, as well as other veteran Hartford players like Micheal Haley, could provide balance the team and provide leadership toward the newer, less experienced players.[28]

Regular season

October

J. T. Miller led Hartford with four goals in three October games for Hartford before being recalled to the New York Rangers.

The Wolf Pack went their first six games of the season without a regulation loss,[29] starting on October 5 with a 3–2 shootout loss to the Norfolk Admirals. Hartford forced overtime after winning a face-off with 4.5 seconds remaining in regulation, allowing Powe to score a tying goal at 0.4 seconds left in the game, but Kristo was the only one of five Hartford skaters to score in the shootout.[30] Hartford won their next five games,[31] starting with a 4–3 victory over the Albany Devils on October 6, in which Miller scored two goals and Dylan McIlrath scored the game-winner, marking first AHL goal.[32] The Wolf Pack next played a home-and-home series against the Adirondack on October 11 and 12, winning the first game at home 5–4 after Kristo and Miller scored in a shootout. Both had also scored in regulation, including Kristo's tying goal.[33] Hartford also won the second game 3–2, after Brodie Dupont scored by deflecting a shot from Tommy Hughes with 2:07 left in the game.[34]

The Hartford roster underwent some changes after New York Rangers goaltender Martin Biron retired,[35] Callahan was again injured,[36] and forward Arron Asham was sent down to the Wolf Pack.[37] Talbot and Jason Missiaen were each called up for alternating games to serve as Henrik Lundqvist's back-up goalie,[37][38] while the Rangers also recalled Powe and Miller,[37] the latter of whom led the team with four goals in three games for Hartford.[36][37] Malcolm was recalled from Greenville to serve as the Wolf Pack's back-up goaltender.[39] Hartford won their next two games on October 18 and 19,[31][40] including a 4–3 shootout over the Manchester Monarchs after Hrivik and Aaron Johnson scored twice within 24 seconds in the third period to tie the game, and Talbot stopped a penalty shot with 24 seconds left in overtime.[40] Talbot, Kreider, Mashinter and Missiaen were all recalled to the New York Rangers immediately after those games.[41][42]

The newly-reduced Hartford roster lost their next two games, giving the Portland Pirates their first win on October 23,[29] and allowing the Albany Devils to score three unanswered goals on October 25. Hartford turned away two separate Devils penalty shots by winger Harri Pesonen, with Malcolm stopping one in the first period and back-up goaltender Scott Stajcer stopping another in the third. It marked the first time in at least 21 years that a player failed to convert on more than one penalty shot in the same game.[43] After winning their last two games of the month,[44][45] Hartford was loaned forward Jesper Fast by the New York Rangers.[46]

November

The Wolf Pack started the month with two consecutive losses to Springfield on November 1 and 2.[47]

Standings

Divisional standings

    Northeast Division[48] GP W L OTL SOL Pts GF GA
    1 Springfield Falcons (CBJ) 14 10 3 0 1 21 38 32
    2 Albany Devils (NJ) 17 10 6 0 1 21 44 39
    3 Hartford Wolf Pack (NYR) 17 8 7 0 2 18 48 58
    4 Adirondack Phantoms (PHI) 15 7 6 0 2 16 36 38
    5 Bridgeport Sound Tigers (NYI) 14 4 8 1 1 10 36 51

    After games of November 20, 2013

    Conference standings

      Eastern Conference[49] Div GP W L OTL SOL Pts GF GA
      1 *y– Manchester Monarchs (LAK) AT 76 48 19 3 6 105 244 188
      2 *y– Springfield Falcons (CBJ) NE 76 47 23 1 5 100 247 212
      3 *y– Binghamton Senators (OTT) ET 76 44 24 3 5 96 276 232
      4 x– St. John's IceCaps (WPG) AT 76 46 23 2 5 99 258 207
      5 x– Albany Devils (NJD) NE 76 40 23 5 8 93 220 193
      6 x– Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins (PIT) ET 76 42 26 3 5 92 206 185
      7 x– Providence Bruins (BOS) AT 76 40 25 2 9 91 233 210
      8 x– Norfolk Admirals (ANA) ET 76 40 26 3 7 90 201 192
      9 e– Hershey Bears (WSH) ET 76 39 27 5 5 88 221 213
      10 e– Hartford Wolf Pack (NYR) NE 76 37 32 1 6 81 202 220
      11 e– Worcester Sharks (SJS) AT 76 36 34 4 2 78 189 226
      12 e– Syracuse Crunch (TBL) ET 76 31 32 4 9 75 198 232
      13 e– Adirondack Phantoms (PHI) NE 76 30 38 2 6 68 182 225
      14 e– Bridgeport Sound Tigers (NYI) NE 76 28 40 2 6 64 183 238
      15 e– Portland Pirates (PHX) AT 76 24 39 3 10 61 222 284

      * = Division leaders are seeded 1, 2, and 3 in Conference standings.
      The top eight teams in each conference qualify for the playoffs.

       y–  indicates team has clinched division and a playoff spot
       x–  indicates team has clinched a playoff spot
       e–  indicates team has been eliminated from playoff contention

      Schedule and results

      2013–14 Game Log – Regular season
      November: 0–1–0–1 (Home: 0–1–0–1 ; Road: 0–0–0–0)
      # Date Visitor Score Home OT Decision Attendance Record Pts Gamesheet
      11 November 1 Hartford 2–3 Springfield SO Missiaen 2,888 7–2–0–2 16 Gamesheet
      12 November 2 Hartford 2–3 Springfield Stajcer 3,009 7–3–0–2 16 Gamesheet
      13 November 8 Providence Hartford
      14 November 10 Hartford Providence
      15 November 15 Albany Hartford
      16 November 16 Hartford Bridgeport
      17 November 20 Hartford Albany
      18 November 23 Hartford Springfield
      19 November 27 Portland Hartford
      20 November 29 Hartford Bridgeport
      21 November 30 Manchester Hartford

      Legend:       Win (2 points)       Loss (0 points)       Overtime/shootout loss (1-point)

      Player statistics

      Skaters

      Note: GP = Games Played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/− = Plus/Minus; PIM = Penalty Minutes
      Updated as of November 3, 2013[50]

      Regular Season
      Player GP G A Pts +/- PIM
      Johnson, AaronAaron Johnson 12 3 11 14 3 16
      Kristo, DannyDanny Kristo* 12 8 5 13 0 4
      Lindberg, OscarOscar Lindberg 12 2 6 8 −3 8
      Syvret, DannyDanny Syvret 12 0 8 8 1 2
      Hrivik, MarekMarek Hrivik 11 2 5 7 −1 4
      McIlrath, DylanDylan McIlrath 12 3 2 5 5 45
      Allen, ConorConor Allen* 12 2 3 5 −2 8
      Miller, J. T.J. T. Miller 3 4 0 4 2 6
      Kreider, ChrisChris Kreider 6 2 2 4 −1 16
      Haley, MichealMicheal Haley 12 2 2 4 2 38
      Bourque, RyanRyan Bourque 11 1 3 4 2 2
      Yogan, AndrewAndrew Yogan 12 1 3 4 3 21
      Mashinter, BrandonBrandon Mashinter 6 0 4 4 3 7
      Nash, BrendonBrendon Nash 6 0 4 4 2 10
      Rowe, AndrewAndrew Rowe 5 2 1 3 2 2
      Bickel, StuStu Bickel 8 1 2 3 0 14
      Jean, KyleKyle Jean 8 1 2 3 2 4
      Hughes, TommyTommy Hughes* 9 1 2 3 −2 0
      Powe, DarrollDarroll Powe 9 1 1 2 1 17
      Fast, JesperJesper Fast* 3 0 2 2 −1 0
      O'Donnell, ShawnShawn O'Donnell* 9 0 2 2 4 5
      Dupont, BrodieBrodie Dupont 10 1 0 1 −1 8
      Asham, ArronArron Asham 3 0 0 0 0 0
      Klassen, SamSam Klassen 3 0 0 0 −1 0
      Kantor, MichaelMichael Kantor* 4 0 0 0 −3 0
      St. Croix, MichaelMichael St. Croix* 6 0 0 0 −1 2

      Denotes player spent time with another team before joining team. Stats reflect time with the team only.
      Left the team mid-season
      *Rookie

      Goaltenders

      Note: GP = Games Played; TOI = Time on Ice; W = Wins; L = Losses; GA = Goals Against; GAA = Goals Against Average; SV = Saves; SA = Shots Against; SV% = Save Percentage; SO = Shutouts; G = Goals; A = Assists; PIM = Penalty Minutes
      Updated as of November 3, 2013[51]

      Regular Season
      Player GP TOI W L GA GAA SV SA SV% SO G A PIM
      Talbot, CameronCameron Talbot 5 313:38 4 1 13 2.49 158 171 .924 0 0 0 0
      Stajcer, ScottScott Stajcer 3 136:18 1 1 6 2.64 45 51 .882 0 0 0 0
      Missiaen, JasonJason Missiaen 4 243:33 2 2 12 2.96 49 56 .875 0 0 0 0
      Malcolm, JeffJeff Malcolm 1 40:00 0 1 4 6.00 19 23 .826 0 0 0 0
      Totals 733:29 7 5 35 2.86 321 356 .902 0 0 0 0

      Left the team mid-season
      *Rookie

      Milestones

      Player Milestone Reached
      Danny Kristo 1st AHL Goal October 5, 2013[52]
      Oscar Lindberg 1st AHL Game October 5, 2013
      Tommy Hughes 1st AHL Game October 5, 2013
      Michael Kantor 1st AHL Game October 5, 2013
      Dylan McIlrath 1st AHL Goal October 6, 2013[32]
      Oscar Lindberg 1st AHL Assist October 6, 2013
      Conor Allen 1st AHL Assist October 11, 2013
      Shawn O'Donnell 1st AHL Game October 11, 2013
      Tommy Hughes 1st AHL Assist
      1st AHL Goal
      October 12, 2013
      Conor Allen 1st AHL Goal October 19, 2013[31]
      Shawn O'Donnell 1st AHL Assist October 19, 2013[31]
      Jeff Malcolm 1st AHL Win October 25, 2013[53]
      Brendon Nash 1st AHL Assist October 25, 2013[53]
      Scott Stajcer 1st AHL Win October 26, 2013[44]
      Oscar Lindberg 1st AHL Goal October 26, 2013[44]

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