
Whale Win Big on the Road
Published on December 3, 2011 under American Hockey League (AHL)
Connecticut Whale News Release
Springfield, MA, December 3, 2011 - The Connecticut Whale defeated the Springfield Falcons, 6-3, Saturday night in Springfield, rallying from a two-goal deficit with the help of five power-play goals in the third period.
Andre Deveaux scored twice for the Whale, while Jonathan Audy-Marchessault collected a goal and two assists, helping to move the Whale's winning streak to four straight games, and their record against the Falcons to 4-0-0-0. Chad Johnson made 39 saves for Connecticut in game that saw them heavily outshot, 41-26.
Dane Byers scored twice for Springfield.
"The power-play really cranked it up at the end there," said Whale coach Ken Gernander. "There were a lot of players that had a big third.that stepped up in the third."
"Even if we're not playing our best hockey we find ways to win," said Johnson. "Five minutes or one period can make the game."
The Whale were outshot, 10-2, in the game's opening period, a result of spending nearly half of the period killing penalties during a run of four straight infractions from 3:48-8:14. Brilliant penalty-killing work by Connecticut for the second straight night helped to keep the two teams scoreless headed into the first intermission.
Byers finally helped the Falcons break through with the man-advantage at 2:34 of the second period, putting Springfield ahead with the first goal of the game. Byers was left with an easy rebound stuff-in opportunity against Johnson, with the assists going to Alexandre Giroux and Nick Holden.
The Falcons extended their lead to two goals at the five minute mark, as Tim Spencer notched his first goal of the season, assisted by Wade MacLeod and Ryan Garlock.
Ryan Bourque got the Whale on the board at 8:09 of the second, his shot from the left-wing half-boards going through Falcons goaltender Allen York (21 saves). Audy-Marchessault assisted on the goal, extending a personal points streak to six games, as did Wade Redden.
Byers put the Falcons ahead by two goals with his second of the night just 2:17 into the third period. That would be the end of the scoring for Springfield, who ended up taking 25 minutes worth of penalties in a wild third period.
The Whale began their comeback at 7:44, scoring their first of five power-play goals in the frame. A Pavel Valentenko slapshot from the point was tipped past York by Deveaux for his first of the night, getting the Whale within a goal at 3-2. Deveaux scored again less than four minutes later, tying the game up for Connecticut.
Audy-Marchessault netted the game-winner at 14:22, putting a Francois Bouchard rebound into an empty net for his eighth goal of the season.
The Falcons' Adam Mair took a five-minute major and was ejected from the game for a high hit on Deveaux, which gave the Whale a power-play from 16:25 on.
The Whale went on to put the game out of reach, scoring another two goals, on Newbury's seventh of the season, coming at 16:56 on a stuff-in chance, and Aaron Voros' second of the year with just 59 seconds remaining in the final period.
Connecticut's five power-play goals tied the team's records for both power-play goals in one game and in a single period, while the Whale penalty kill successfully stopped six of seven Falcons opportunities.
"We just battled through it, battled through the penalties, killed them, just stayed the course and worked to the very end," said Johnson. "It was a big win and we have to focus on tomorrow now."
The Whale, looking to make it five straight wins, returns home Sunday afternoon, when Connecticut will host former Wolf Pack forward Corey Locke and the defending Calder Cup champion Binghamton Senators at the XL Center (3:00 PM).
American Hockey League Stories from December 3, 2011
- Heat Stiffle Hogs with Late Game Tally - Rockford IceHogs
- Back and Forth Game Goes Admirals Way - Peoria Rivermen
- Griffins Claim Third Straight Win, 5-4 in OT Over Chicago - Grand Rapids Griffins
- Monarchs Conquer Khudobin - Manchester Monarchs
- Rampage Edge Barons, 2-1 - San Antonio Rampage
- Crunch Dominate Penguins for 5-2 Win - Syracuse Crunch
- Sharks Slip Past B-Sens, 2-1 - Binghamton Senators
- Falcons Fall Short to Whale - Springfield Falcons
- Poulin Backstops Sound Tigers to 3-1 Win Over Devils - Bridgeport Islanders
- Whale Win Big on the Road - Connecticut Whale
- Stars End Checkers' Streak - Charlotte Checkers
- Ads Take 3-2 Win Over Peoria - Milwaukee Admirals
- Johnson's Buzzer-Beater Beats Phantoms - Norfolk Admirals
- Bears Rout Pirates for Second Consecutive Win - Hershey Bears
- Late Norfolk Comeback Ends Phantoms Win Streak - Adirondack Phantoms
- Bulldogs Sneak Past Amerks for 3-2 Win - Rochester Americans
- Recap: Crunch Top Penguins, 5-2 - Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins
- Mancari's Hat Trick Not Enough as Wolves Fall 5-4 in Overtime - Chicago Wolves
- Devils Split with Sound Tigers - Albany Devils
- Bulldogs Snap Winless Streak with 3-2 Win Over Americans - Hamilton Bulldogs
- Balanced Scoring Helps Stars Double up Checkers 4-2 - Texas Stars
- Sharks Score Late, Sexsmith Holds On - Worcester Sharks
- P-Bruins Earn Point in Shootout - Providence Bruins
- Pirates Clawed by Bears - Portland Pirates
- Marlies Blank Aeros 4-0 - Houston Aeros
- Wolves Send Friesen and Testwuide to Missouri - Chicago Wolves
- Mueller Recalled by Nashville - Milwaukee Admirals
- J.F. Jacques Recalled to Anaheim - Syracuse Crunch
- Aeros Broadcast Alert - Houston Aeros
- Brett Sterling and Cade Fairchild Return to Rivermen - Peoria Rivermen
- Barons Game Notes - December 3 - Oklahoma City Barons
- Gameday Preview - Texas Stars at Charlotte Checkers - Texas Stars
- Admirals Recall Forward Philip-Michael Devos from ECHL's Florida Everblades - Norfolk Admirals
- Falcons Host the Whale Tonight - Springfield Falcons
- Tickets for AHL Outdoor Classic on Sale Now - Hamilton Bulldogs
- Red Wings Assign Brunnstrom to Grand Rapids - Grand Rapids Griffins
The opinions expressed in this release are those of the organization issuing it, and do not necessarily reflect the thoughts or opinions of OurSports Central or its staff.

