Saturday, October 31, 2009
Sleepless in SoCal: Trojans Wake Up Too Late in 3-2 Loss to UCLA
Friday, October 30, 2009
Attack of the Bruins: Trojans Lose Second Straight OT Game 5-4
Game 1 of the Crosstown Cup was Thursday night/Friday morning out in Panorama City. USC was coming off of being swept out of their own building by the Ducks. The hope was that the team would turn things around against UCLA. Here's what happened:
Period 1
The Bruins let USC know early on that this was not going to be an easy night. On a powerplay, UCLA captain Neal Parsons launched a shot from the point. It deflected off of some traffic in front of USC netminder Phil Adams and got past him into the net. 1-0 UCLA. The Trojans responded fairly quickly. Faceoff winning machine Mitchell Landsinger stole a puck from Parsons on the penalty kill, broke in alone and tucked it past Bruin goaltender Al Ricciardelli to knot the game up. Then on a powerplay chance for the Trojans, defenseman-turned-forward Matt Lewis took a shot from the doorstep. Ricciardelli partially blocked it, but Scott Mason found the loose rebound and slid it home. 2-1 Trojans entering the period break.
Period 2
The momentum of this period seesawed back and forth. On a Bruins man advantage, Alex Horowitz glid from behind Adams to the front of the net. He then flipped a puck past Adams to tie the game again. Mason answered for USC on a beautiful chemistry play. Max Szentveri dropped the puck back to Lewis who then slid a pass from the near point to the far faceoff circle. Mason gathered it in and scored it. The Bruins tied again on another Horowitz goal and seemed to have all of the momentum behind them. They gained more momentum when Alex Hite hit speedy Bruin forward Nick Panzica face-first into the endboards during a foot race for the puck. Panzica was alright, but Hite received a major penalty and a game disqualification (keeping him out for Friday's game). The Trojan penalty kill stood strong though, handily killing all 5 minutes and heading into the locker room with the tie preserved.
Period 3
USC took the lead for the third time in the game early in the third period. It came on the powerplay once again. Lewis broke in along the far boards, found a loose puck and snapped a top shelf shot past Ricciardelli. The Bruins kept fighting back. Panzica shot another puck through traffic that beat Adams. With the game deadlocked at 4 apiece, both teams had their chances to finish the game in regulation. Adams stood on his head almost literally on a few chances, including some on the breakaway. The Trojans failed to scored on a nearly full 5-on-3. With around 2:30 remaining in the game, Szentveri was cleanly stuffed on a penalty shot. USC also had a powerplay chance for the last 90 seconds of regulation, but couldn't do much. And so, for the second game in a row the Trojans headed to overtime.
OT
The OT period did not last long. With only a minute gone by, Jason Bush took out a Bruin away from the puck and headed to the box on an interference call. Early in the penalty kill, Zack Tenney walked into the Trojan zone along right wing, crept into the slot and beat Adams top shelf. The Bruins poured out onto the ice as they celebrated a hard fought win.
Some news and notes:
- This was UCLA's first win over USC since an essentially meaningless Crosstown Cup Game 5 during the 2007-08 season. The Bruins last Game 1 win in the Crosstown Cup came back during 2005-06. They actually won the first two in that series before USC won the last three.
- USC has a major attendance problem and keeps unintentionally creating excuses for itself. Zacuto, Adler, and Frazier were out for various reasons. That's half of the Trojans' top six forwards right there. McClanathan was out to serve a DQ. Coach Wilbur was in Chinese Taipei on business. It's tough to completely gauge the level of this hockey team right now because it's rarely all together in one game.
- Alex Hite is a huge loss on the blue line. It means that the Trojans have to move Lewis back from forward to defense to even have 4 guys. This is a bit of a shame as Lewis was productive at forward, scoring 3 points in Thursday's game.
- One Bruin who didn't get on the scoresheet but should be a huge factor tonight is Daniel Vaynter. He is speedy, draws penalties and has great instincts. Look for him to give the Trojan defense problems on Friday.
- Make no mistake, the Bruins won the game and certainly were the better team on the ice Thursday. They outshot the Trojans in a major way. If Ricciardelli had been better for UCLA or Adams worse for USC, the Bruins could have easily won by two or more goals.
Should be an exciting game tonight!
OFFICIAL TROJAN SCORING
1st Period
Landsinger - 3 SH
Mason - 2 (Lewis) PP
2nd Period
Mason - 3 (Lewis, Szentveri)
3rd Period
Lewis -1 PP
OT
NONE
Saturday, October 24, 2009
Horseshoes and Hand Grenades: Trojans Close But Not Quite in 4-3 OT Loss to the Ducks

Hey everyone,
Two Games in One: Bipolar Trojans Fall to Ducks 6-3
Hey everyone,
Oregon has had USC’s number for the last 3 seasons. Since the Trojans’ dramatic 4-3 Pac-8 Championship victory in 2007 over the Ducks, Oregon has not lost once to Troy. This season, unlike last, the games are in Anaheim. Did it make a difference? Short answer, no. Oh… you want the long answer? Read on.
Period 1
The Trojans must have gone to bed early, because they looked like they were sleepwalking in a devastating first period of play. The game stayed scoreless until first line forward Ian Law gave the Ducks a 1-0 edge a little before halfway into the period. Then the dam broke open… two powerplay goals and another rebound tally by Derek Wolfson gave Oregon a crushing 4-0 lead. Starting goaltender Phil Adams was under absolute siege in the first, facing 24 shots in the frame. Meanwhile, USC’s illness-ridden offense (more on that later) tallied only 3 shots in the entire period. Against San Jose State just three weeks earlier, the Trojans seemed to pack it in facing a similar deficit. But….
Period 2
The Trojans woke up. Just like in the second period of “The I-5 Game”, USC stopped the bleeding without healing the four-goal wound. USC had several close calls, but were shut down by Ducks netminder Jack Barry. A misconduct penalty to Adam Zacuto and a 5-minute boarding major to Max Szentveri kept the USC offense from getting on the scoreboard. Shots in the period were still 13-4 in favor of the Ducks, but that doesn’t reflect the changed Trojan team out on the ice. Coach Wilbur, despite still facing a 4-0 deficit, was pleased with the team’s turnaround.
Period 3
And then the Trojans broke through. Early in the third period, Nick Helmer took a long pass from Alex Hite, blew by the Ducks defenseman, and deked around Barry for the goal. That goal triggered inspired Trojan Hockey for the rest of the period. The offense buzzed around Barry, giving the Ducks defense all it could handle. But then one moment unraveled comeback hopes that evening and seriously hurt USC’s chances the following night. Oregon forward Carter Achilles was skating with the puck in an arc inside of Trojan territory. What happened next is up to who you ask. If you ask my broadcast partner Max Ernst, team video man Jeff Lewis, or defenseman Michael Gawlik, Achilles was laid out with a clean (albeit slightly high) hit. If you ask some of the other Trojans watching from the bench or, more importantly, the referees, Gawlik’s elbow came up and hit Achilles in the head. Either way, it sent Gawlik and Achilles off to the locker room. Achilles with a head injury and Gawlik with a 5 minute elbowing major and a game disqualification (kicking him out for Saturday’s game). Initially, the Trojans kept the energy up starting off the long penalty kill with a nifty 2-on-1 shorthanded goal from blueliner Dante Caravaggio. That narrowed the deficit to 4-2, but then the Ducks finished. They took advantage of their extended man advantage with 2 more powerplay goals. The Trojans kept fighting, with Zacuto scoring on a beautifully executed penalty shot, but the deficit was too much to overcome.
Here’s some news, notes and observations from the game:
- This Ducks team does not miss star goalie Wren Arbuthnott as much as you might expect. Jack Barry proved he is a capable successor with some truly unbelievable goals.
- Phil Adams had a chance to take a solid lead in the goaltender battle, but a sloppy first period kept things fairly even with a chance for Zack Keith to make an impression Saturday morning.
- In addition to losing captain Mike Gawlik for tomorrow’s game, first line forward Cory Adler may be absent. Word from the Trojan locker room is that he may have some type of head injury incurred during the first period (possibly a concussion).
- USC is not immune from the flu bug going around campus. Josh Frazier will miss this weekend’s series with a severe flu, while Max Ernst and Scott Mason are both out for similar illnesses. Ernst may play tomorrow, but it remains to be seen.
- As I mentioned during tryouts, Adam Zacuto may have the best penalty shot move I’ve seen. It doesn’t look like much until he brings it onto his forehand at the last second and picks the absolute top corner of the net. Absolutely unstoppable.
- Oregon may have the perfect strategy for handling the I-5. They all came down on one bus straight from Eugene. That way they either all make it or none of them make it. That is one hell of a drive though.
- It’s tough to tell whether Alex Hite or Dante Caravaggio is the best defenseman so far for USC. Hite is arguably more solid defensively, making great plays on the back check and consistently clearing pucks away from dangerous areas. Caravaggio is a gambler to be sure. He plays fast and loose in his own defensive end and loves to hit. Dante also shows no fear in hopping into the attack as evidenced by tonight’s shorthanded goal. Both have devastating slapshots, absolute cannons. Hite sent in some lasers from the red line while Caravaggio is equally dangerous from the point.
Early morning game in Anaheim tomorrow. I’ve got to get some rest or my own version of the flu is only going to get worse.
OFFICIAL TROJAN SCORING
1st Period
NONE
2nd Period
NONE
3rd Period
Helmer - 8 (Hite)
Caravaggio - 2 (McClanathan) SH
Zacuto - 5 PS
Thursday, October 15, 2009
Revenge!: USC Avenges Earlier Defeat With 6-1 Win Over Cal
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
BREAKING UPDATE: USC vs. Stanford Cancelled
I'd hinted in last game's recap that the games this weekend might be cancelled.
It is official. No games this Friday or Saturday. According to Coach Wilbur, Stanford canceled the games. Not sure what the exact reason was.
But for anyone heading out this weekend to Anaheim Ice, just know that you'll be there to skate, not to see a hockey game!
Alex