Leafs, Leafs, everywhere!
Nothing more can be said except it was a typical Jordan Sigalet game. The problem was, Brock Hooten was in goal, trying to spell Sigalet to see if he could improve.
Instead, the Baby Buds ran roughshod on the Bruins.
In the first period, Joni (still not a chick) Lindlof scored two goals almost four and a half minutes apart, at 10:08 and 14:42 for his/her/its eighteenth and nineteenth of the year. One was unassisted, one saw Petr Prucha and corey Perry notch assists.
In between, Alexander Ovechkin scored number eleven on the year as he tied Hooten up in a knot. But isn't it fun to say Brock Hooten? That alone should make him the starter of Sigalet, which sounds like the pack of candy Sixlets.
Corey Perry scored the fourth goal of the game for Toronto at 17:23, with Lindlof and Vaclav Zavoral adding the assists. The period ended 4-0, Toronto, with the Baby Buds dominating every aspect of the game, including a 19-7 edge in shots on goal.
The second frame may as well have just been highlights of the New Jersey Devils trap. Only ten shots between the two teams were taken (with Providence holding the six-to-four edge). Six tickey-tack minor penalties were called (three each), and the only highlight of the period was the Paul Gaustad - Chris Heid rematch of the previous game, which ended up going to a draw. As the 10,000 members of the Baby Bud Brigade began to file out of the arena, the second period came to an end.
They would miss a mounted comeback. Dimitri Pätzold played the role of rented mule at 02:50, as the Bruins' Martin Samuelsson attacked the net with fury and abandon, beating Dimitri in the top glove corner with a beautiful open-ice slapshot.
The Bruins fell silent after that, though. Jiri Jakes scored with just under four minutes to go, but unlike the Light Brigade, the Bruins went quietly into the night.
Brock Hooten was saddled with his third loss of the year to move him to 0-3-0. Pätzold improved to 7-8-0 as the backup got a shot to play, and the Buds were two-for-six on the power play.
The Providence Bruins head to St Louis for their next match up.
Instead, the Baby Buds ran roughshod on the Bruins.
In the first period, Joni (still not a chick) Lindlof scored two goals almost four and a half minutes apart, at 10:08 and 14:42 for his/her/its eighteenth and nineteenth of the year. One was unassisted, one saw Petr Prucha and corey Perry notch assists.
In between, Alexander Ovechkin scored number eleven on the year as he tied Hooten up in a knot. But isn't it fun to say Brock Hooten? That alone should make him the starter of Sigalet, which sounds like the pack of candy Sixlets.
Corey Perry scored the fourth goal of the game for Toronto at 17:23, with Lindlof and Vaclav Zavoral adding the assists. The period ended 4-0, Toronto, with the Baby Buds dominating every aspect of the game, including a 19-7 edge in shots on goal.
The second frame may as well have just been highlights of the New Jersey Devils trap. Only ten shots between the two teams were taken (with Providence holding the six-to-four edge). Six tickey-tack minor penalties were called (three each), and the only highlight of the period was the Paul Gaustad - Chris Heid rematch of the previous game, which ended up going to a draw. As the 10,000 members of the Baby Bud Brigade began to file out of the arena, the second period came to an end.
They would miss a mounted comeback. Dimitri Pätzold played the role of rented mule at 02:50, as the Bruins' Martin Samuelsson attacked the net with fury and abandon, beating Dimitri in the top glove corner with a beautiful open-ice slapshot.
The Bruins fell silent after that, though. Jiri Jakes scored with just under four minutes to go, but unlike the Light Brigade, the Bruins went quietly into the night.
Brock Hooten was saddled with his third loss of the year to move him to 0-3-0. Pätzold improved to 7-8-0 as the backup got a shot to play, and the Buds were two-for-six on the power play.
The Providence Bruins head to St Louis for their next match up.
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