3
Final OT
2
Kalamazoo Wings @ Cincinnati Cyclones
NHL/a> and the Hamilton Bulldogs of the AHL. The Cyclones won their first game back in the ECHL on October 20 against the Pensacola Ice Pilots at U.S. Bank Arena with a score of 3-1. Head coach Chuck Weber was the runner-up for the ECHL's Coach of the Year award for 2006\u201307 following the season.<\/p><p style=\"margin-left:0px;\">In addition to the Montreal\/Hamilton affiliation, the Cyclones added the NHL's Nashville Predators and the AHL's Milwaukee Admirals as affiliates in 2007. The Cyclones' 2007\u201308 season saw the club break numerous franchise and league records. Through 50 games, the Cyclones were 31 games over .500. Attendance at games had increased nearly 40% over 2006\u201307 and the club had already surpassed their win total from 2006\u201307 (37). They achieved this mark in 24 fewer games.On February 22, 2008, the Cyclones tied the ECHL record for a single-season winning streak of 14 consecutive games, defeating the Johnstown Chiefs 5\u20132 in Cincinnati.On February 23, 2008, David Desharnais recorded two assists, extending his streak of games with at least one assist to 18, breaking the existing ECHL record of 17. In the same game, the Cyclones set a new ECHL record for a single-season winning streak of 15 consecutive wins when the Cyclones defeated the Elmira Jackals in a 5\u20134 shootout.<\/p><p style=\"margin-left:0px;\">The team finished the regular season with 115 points, earning them the Brabham Cup regular season championship. Individually, Chuck Weber was named ECHL coach of the year, earning him the John Brophy trophy. David Desharnais claimed three ECHL awards: Most Valuable Player, Rookie of the Year, and the Leading Scorer award with 29 goals and 77 assists for 106 points. In addition, Chad Starling won the award for the highest plus\/minus rating.<\/p><p style=\"margin-left:0px;\">The Cyclones entered the playoffs and defeated the Johnstown Chiefs four games to none. The Cyclones moved on to take on the Reading Royals, Cincinnati took the series in seven games to claim their second ever North Division playoff title. The Cyclones then defeated the South Carolina Stingrays, 2\u20131 in overtime, to claim the American Conference Championship in five games. With their victory, Cincinnati also claimed the E.A. \"Bud\" Gingher Memorial Trophy.<\/p><p style=\"margin-left:0px;\">The Cyclones then defeated the National Conference Champion Las Vegas Wranglers in the Kelly Cup Finals, clinching their first championship in team history in six games. After splitting the first two games in Cincinnati (Cincinnati 4\u20133 and Las Vegas 1\u20130), the series shifted to Las Vegas, where Cincinnati won games three and five to take a 3\u20132 series lead. In front of a record setting crowd, 12,722 fans, at US Bank Arena in Cincinnati on June 5, the Cyclones defeated Las Vegas in game six, 3\u20131, to take the championship and their 71st win of the season. Goalie Cedrick Desjardins was named the Kelly Cup Playoff MVP.<\/p><p style=\"margin-left:0px;\">Cincinnati's 2008\u201309 season was not as successful as the previous one, but they won 41 games for 87 points, repeating as North Division champions. They won a seven-game series against the Wheeling Nailers, including a double overtime game seven win, and swept the Elmira Jackals to win the North Division playoff title. However, the Cyclones were swept by the South Carolina Stingrays in the American Conference Finals.<\/p><p style=\"margin-left:0px;\">The 2009\u201310 season proved to be more successful with 44 wins and 91 points, the wins total being the most in the American Conference. Despite that, the Cyclones finished second in the North Division to the Kalamazoo Wings and fifth in the conference. This led to a rematch with fourth seeded, and defending champion, South Carolina in the first round, where Cincinnati defeated the Stingrays in five games. Veteran captain Barrett Eghotz scored in overtime for the 3\u20132 win in game five and was the third straight overtime game in the series. The Cyclones then faced the top seeded Charlotte Checkers, defeating the Checkers in game seven with a 2\u20131 victory.<\/p><p style=\"margin-left:0px;\">Cincinnati drew the Reading Royals in the American Conference Final. The seven-game made ECHL history when, after losing the first two at home, then game three at Reading, Cincinnati posted wins of 6\u20134, 5\u20130 and 6\u20133 to force the team's third winner-take-all game in the 2010 playoffs. In front of 5,340 fans, the Cyclones posted a 1\u20130 win to become the first team in ECHL history, and the sixth professional hockey team in history, to come back from a 3\u20130 deficit to win a best of seven series. The only goal of the contest was scored by Barret Ehgoetz 13:48 into the game.<\/p><p style=\"margin-left:0px;\">The Cyclones defeated the Idaho Steelheads in the 2010 Kelly Cup Final, four-games-to-one. Cincinnati scored game-winning goals within the last minute in the first two games, a 3\u20132 win on a goal by Mark Van Guilder with 49.2 seconds remaining on May 14, and a 1\u20130 win the next night, when Mathieu Aubin netted the only goal in the contest and only with 20.1 seconds remaining in regulation. The series shifted to US Bank Arena and witnessed an Idaho victory within the first minute of the second overtime of game three, as Evan Barlow received a pass at the bottom of the right circle and fired the puck into a largely vacated goal, as Cyclones goalie Robert Mayer had committed to the left side.<\/p><p style=\"margin-left:0px;\">In front of yet another ECHL playoff record setting crowd of 13,483 at US Bank Arena in Cincinnati, the Cyclones defeated Idaho in game five, 2\u20131, to take the championship. With the victory, the Cyclones clinched their second Kelly Cup title in three years. The game was also the Cyclones 24th Kelly Cup playoff game, surpassing the club record of 22 postseason games played by the 2008 championship team and is one more than South Carolina (23) had in its title run in 2009. Rookie Cyclones goaltenders Robert Mayer and Jeremy Smith were named co-winners of the Kelly Cup playoffs MVP. Cincinnati finished with a total record of 59\u201332\u20134.<\/p><p style=\"margin-left:0px;\">The Cyclones underwent several changes before the 2010\u201311 season when assistant coach Dean Stork became the head coach of the Greenville Road Warriors in June and head coach Chuck Weber was promoted to the American Hockey League as head coach of the Rochester Americans on July 27. On August 12, Cincinnati named Jarrod Skalde as the new head coach. After undergoing this major coaching overhaul and losing a large portion of their roster, the Cyclones earned a seventh seed in the ECHL playoffs, but lost in the first round to Reading Royals, 3 games-to-1.<\/p><p style=\"margin-left:0px;\">In 2011, Cincinnati would finish tenth in the conference, marking only the third time in their 20-season history that they did not make the playoffs.The Cyclones made a complete turnaround the next season, beginning the season unbeaten in regulation for the first nine games. Their 42 wins and 92 points won the North Division regular season championship, their third such accolade in six seasons, and placed them second in the Eastern Conference. The season earned head coach Jarrod Skalde Coach of the Year honors. Cincinnati would go on to win a pair of six-game wins against the Toledo Walleye and Gwinnett Gladiators before losing a five-game conference final to the top seeded Reading Royals, who went on to win the Kelly Cup.<\/p><p style=\"margin-left:0px;\">On July 9, 2013, coach Skalde accepted an assistant's position with the AHL's Norfolk Admirals, becoming the second consecutive Cyclones coach to be promoted to a higher level. Before the 2014\u201315 season, Skalde was appointed as Norfolk's head coach.<\/p><p style=\"margin-left:0px;\">Cincinnati came back strong under new head coach Ben Simon in 2013\u201314, with 41 wins and 91 points for a fifth-place finish in the Eastern Conference. Cincinnati would win three series against the <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" href=https://echl.com/"https:////en.wikipedia.org//wiki//Orlando_Solar_Bears_(ECHL)/">Orlando Solar Bears<\/a>, <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" href=https://echl.com/"https:////en.wikipedia.org//wiki//Fort_Wayne_Komets/">Fort Wayne Komets<\/a>, and Greenville Road Warriors, all in six games, earning their third trip to the Kelly Cup Finals. They faced the Brabham Cup winning Alaska Aces, but would lose the series in six games. Despite the loss in the final, Cincinnati goaltender Rob Madore was named Most Valuable Player of the 2014 Kelly Cup playoffs, becoming the first player from the losing team to win the award in the ECHL's 26-year history, and the fourth Cincinnati goaltender to either win the trophy outright or share the trophy. Madore earned the award after leading the ECHL with all 14 of Cincinnati's playoff wins, 1,493 minutes of play, and a Cincinnati record 756 saves while playing every second of Cincinnati's 24 playoff games.<\/p><p style=\"margin-left:0px;\">After the season, coach Simon accepted a role with the Toronto Marlies, the top affiliate of the Toronto Maple Leafs. Simon became the third consecutive Cyclones head coach to accept a role in the AHL. Following Simon's promotion, Matt Macdonald became Cincinnati's head coach. In the 2014\u201315 season, Cincinnati finished fifth in the North Division of the Eastern Conference with a record of 31\u201330\u20132\u20139. The team would miss the playoffs by only three points.<\/p><p style=\"margin-left:0px;\">On February 27, 2016, the Cyclones played in front of their first-ever sellout at US Bank Arena with 16,529 fans were in attendance for Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Night. While the game was a 3\u20132 shootout loss to the <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" href=https://echl.com/"https:////en.wikipedia.org//wiki//Indy_Fuel/">Indy Fuel<\/a>, the Cyclones set the record for the largest crowd for a professional hockey game in the 41-year history of US Bank Arena.<\/p><p style=\"margin-left:0px;\">After ten seasons, the Nashville Predators and Milwaukee Admirals ended their affiliation with the Cyclones prior to the 2017\u201318 season. The Cyclones then found affiliations with the Buffalo Sabres and Rochester Americans. This is the second time Buffalo has affiliated with a Cincinnati hockey team, after the Sabres' affiliation with the Cincinnati Swords in the 1970s.<\/p><p style=\"margin-left:0px;\">In August of 2018, the Cyclones named Matt Thomas the team\u2019s new head coach.A native of Maple Ridge, BC, Thomas has extensive head coaching experience in the ECHL, spanning 11 seasons with the Atlantic Boardwalk Bullies, Fresno Falcons, and Stockton Thunder from 2002-2013. Thomas served two seasons as an assistant coach with Atlantic City, including helping the Boardwalk Bullies to a Kelly Cup Championship in 2003, before assuming the role of head coach and Director of Hockey Operations with the team prior to 2004-2005. He compiled a 42-22-8 mark in his lone season as Atlantic City\u2019s bench boss, and also served as the head coach for the 2005 ECHL All-Star Game.<\/p><p style=\"margin-left:0px;\">He then moved on to Fresno prior to the 2005-06 campaign, leading the Falcons to a 43-15-14 mark along with a trip to the Western Conference Finals. Over the next two seasons in Fresno, Thomas compiled a 76-41-17 record, with trips to the second round of the Kelly Cup Playoffs on both occasions. He coached the Falcons during the first half of 2008-09, leading the team to an 18-10-2 mark before the team ceased operations midseason. Thomas was not out of work for long however, as he was named head coach of Stockton shortly afterand finished the year with a record of 22-16-3, and a trip to the second round of the Kelly Cup Playoffs.<\/p><p style=\"margin-left:0px;\">Thomas went on to coach the Thunder for four more seasons, amassing a mark of 141-111-36, reaching the post season each year, including a trip to the 2013 Kelly Cup Finals where they fell to the Reading Royals, 4 games to 1. He enters the 2018-19 campaign as the ECHL\u2019s sixth-winningest coach with a career record of 342-225-80, just one win back of fifth place all time. He is also the all-time leader in playoff games coached with 97, and ranks third with 49 playoff wins.<\/p>","nhl_affiliation_name":"Toronto Maple Leafs","nhl_affiliation_url":"https:\/\/www.nhl.com\/mapleleafs\/","ahl_affiliation_name":"Toronto Marlies","ahl_affiliation_url":"https:\/\/www.marlies.ca\/","tickets_url":"https:\/\/cycloneshockey.com\/tickets","video_url":"https:\/\/flosports.link\/4dVcToM","audio_url":"https:\/\/cincinnati-cyclones.mixlr.com\/","created_at":"2023-08-02T02:12:10.000000Z","updated_at":"2024-09-12T14:16:15.000000Z"},"published_highlights_video":null,"published_highlights_posts":[],"media":[],"game_streaming_url":null}">
Box Score
| Team | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | OT | Total T |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
KAL
|
0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 |
CIN
|
2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
Shots on Goal
| Team | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | OT | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kalamazoo Wings
|
6 | 4 | 14 | 1 | 25 |
Cincinnati Cyclones
|
11 | 14 | 9 | 1 | 35 |
Scoring
1st Period
3:08
Goal
Goal by #16 Spencer Cox, assisted by #18 John Jaworski and #9 Zack Trott.
10:00
Goal
Goal by #66 Ben King, assisted by #10 Jake Johnson and #45 Ryan Kirwan.
2nd Period
1:04
Goal
Goal by #43 Quinn Preston.
3rd Period
8:25
Goal
Goal by #43 Quinn Preston, assisted by #77 Hunter Strand and #42 Jayden Lee.
OT
1:09
Goal
Goal by #42 Jayden Lee, assisted by #51 Nolan Walker and #28 Zach Okabe.
Penalties
1st Period
1:00
Penalty
Collin Saccoman called for High-sticking - minor (2:00 minutes)
9:35
Penalty
Andre Ghantous called for Hooking - minor (2:00 minutes)
17:14
Penalty
Ben King called for Tripping - minor (2:00 minutes)
2nd Period
3:16
Penalty
Kylor Wall called for Holding - minor (2:00 minutes)
6:09
Penalty
Andrew Noel called for Roughing - minor (2:00 minutes)
13:48
Penalty
Justin Portillo called for Roughing - minor (2:00 minutes)
17:52
Penalty
Nolan Walker called for High-sticking - minor (2:00 minutes)
3rd Period
6:53
Penalty
Nick Rhéaume called for Tripping - minor (2:00 minutes)
OT
1st Period
0:00
Goalkeeper In
Tommy Scarfone is now in as goalie.
0:00
Goalkeeper In
Ty Young is now in as goalie.
0:15
Shot - Quality on net
#66 Colin Bilek shoots on #30 Tommy Scarfone
1:00
Penalty
Collin Saccoman called for High-sticking - minor (2:00 minutes)
1:46
Shot - Non quality on net
#66 Ben King shoots on #33 Ty Young
1:50
Shot - Quality on net
#46 Justin Vaive shoots on #33 Ty Young
3:08
Shot - Non quality goal
#16 Spencer Cox shoots on #33 Ty Young
3:08
Goal
Goal by #16 Spencer Cox, assisted by #18 John Jaworski and #9 Zack Trott.
5:32
Shot - Non quality on net
#33 Elijah Vilio shoots on #33 Ty Young
6:41
Shot - Quality on net
#5 Derek Daschke shoots on #30 Tommy Scarfone
6:51
Shot - Non quality on net
#16 Colson Gengenbach shoots on #30 Tommy Scarfone
7:26
Shot - Non quality on net
#4 Davis Pennington shoots on #30 Tommy Scarfone
8:14
Shot - Non quality on net
#9 Zack Trott shoots on #33 Ty Young
8:36
Shot - Quality on net
#46 Justin Vaive shoots on #33 Ty Young
9:19
Shot - Non quality on net
#27 Remy Parker shoots on #33 Ty Young
9:35
Penalty
Andre Ghantous called for Hooking - minor (2:00 minutes)
9:46
Shot - Quality on net
#46 Justin Vaive shoots on #33 Ty Young
10:00
Shot - Quality goal
#66 Ben King shoots on #33 Ty Young
10:00
Goal
Goal by #66 Ben King, assisted by #10 Jake Johnson and #45 Ryan Kirwan.
10:34
Shot - Quality on net
#25 Sam Stevens shoots on #33 Ty Young
15:50
Shot - Non quality on net
#26 Nick Rhéaume shoots on #33 Ty Young
17:14
Penalty
Ben King called for Tripping - minor (2:00 minutes)
17:59
Shot - Quality on net
#51 Nolan Walker shoots on #30 Tommy Scarfone
18:55
Shot - Quality on net
#43 Quinn Preston shoots on #30 Tommy Scarfone
2nd Period
0:25
Shot - Non quality on net
#27 Remy Parker shoots on #33 Ty Young
0:44
Shot - Non quality on net
#10 Jake Johnson shoots on #33 Ty Young
1:04
Shot - Quality goal
#43 Quinn Preston shoots on #30 Tommy Scarfone
1:04
Goal
Goal by #43 Quinn Preston.
2:18
Shot - Non quality on net
#5 Derek Daschke shoots on #30 Tommy Scarfone
3:16
Penalty
Kylor Wall called for Holding - minor (2:00 minutes)
4:39
Shot - Non quality on net
#10 Jake Johnson shoots on #33 Ty Young
5:38
Shot - Quality on net
#27 Remy Parker shoots on #33 Ty Young
6:09
Penalty
Andrew Noel called for Roughing - minor (2:00 minutes)
8:03
Shot - Quality on net
#11 Gunnarwolfe Fontaine shoots on #33 Ty Young
8:08
Shot - Non quality on net
#12 Nick Carabin shoots on #33 Ty Young
8:55
Shot - Quality on net
#45 Ryan Kirwan shoots on #33 Ty Young
8:58
Shot - Quality on net
#66 Ben King shoots on #33 Ty Young
10:51
Shot - Non quality on net
#25 Sam Stevens shoots on #33 Ty Young
10:55
Shot - Non quality on net
#16 Spencer Cox shoots on #33 Ty Young
12:59
Shot - Non quality on net
#43 Quinn Preston shoots on #30 Tommy Scarfone
13:48
Shot - Non quality on net
#16 Spencer Cox shoots on #33 Ty Young
13:48
Penalty
Justin Portillo called for Roughing - minor (2:00 minutes)
16:23
Shot - Non quality on net
#45 Ryan Kirwan shoots on #33 Ty Young
16:27
Shot - Quality on net
#45 Ryan Kirwan shoots on #33 Ty Young
17:32
Shot - Quality on net
#24 Antonio Venuto shoots on #30 Tommy Scarfone
17:52
Penalty
Nolan Walker called for High-sticking - minor (2:00 minutes)
18:30
Shot - Quality on net
#45 Ryan Kirwan shoots on #33 Ty Young
3rd Period
1:29
Shot - Non quality on net
#25 Sam Stevens shoots on #33 Ty Young
1:45
Shot - Non quality on net
#4 Davis Pennington shoots on #30 Tommy Scarfone
1:54
Shot - Quality on net
#19 Ryan Cox shoots on #30 Tommy Scarfone
3:02
Shot - Non quality on net
#23 Owen Cole shoots on #33 Ty Young
3:53
Shot - Quality on net
#26 Nick Rhéaume shoots on #33 Ty Young
4:10
Shot - Non quality on net
#23 Collin Saccoman shoots on #30 Tommy Scarfone
4:38
Shot - Quality on net
#5 Derek Daschke shoots on #30 Tommy Scarfone
4:58
Shot - Non quality on net
#45 Ryan Kirwan shoots on #33 Ty Young
5:56
Shot - Non quality on net
#8 Powell Connor shoots on #30 Tommy Scarfone
6:53
Shot - Quality on net
#16 Colson Gengenbach shoots on #30 Tommy Scarfone
6:53
Penalty
Nick Rhéaume called for Tripping - minor (2:00 minutes)
8:25
Shot - Non quality goal
#43 Quinn Preston shoots on #30 Tommy Scarfone
8:25
Goal
Goal by #43 Quinn Preston, assisted by #77 Hunter Strand and #42 Jayden Lee.
9:39
Shot - Non quality on net
#16 Spencer Cox shoots on #33 Ty Young
11:03
Shot - Non quality on net
#9 Evan Dougherty shoots on #30 Tommy Scarfone
11:15
Shot - Non quality on net
#24 Antonio Venuto shoots on #30 Tommy Scarfone
11:38
Shot - Non quality on net
#16 Colson Gengenbach shoots on #30 Tommy Scarfone
12:00
Shot - Non quality on net
#45 Ryan Kirwan shoots on #33 Ty Young
12:21
Shot - Non quality on net
#66 Colin Bilek shoots on #30 Tommy Scarfone
14:17
Shot - Non quality on net
#43 Quinn Preston shoots on #30 Tommy Scarfone
14:54
Shot - Non quality on net
#28 Zach Okabe shoots on #30 Tommy Scarfone
15:17
Shot - Non quality on net
#23 Collin Saccoman shoots on #30 Tommy Scarfone
16:49
Shot - Quality on net
#27 Remy Parker shoots on #33 Ty Young
17:42
Shot - Quality on net
#45 Ryan Kirwan shoots on #33 Ty Young
19:54
Shot - Quality on net
#20 Aaron Bohlinger shoots on #33 Ty Young
OT
0:46
Shot - Non quality on net
#25 Sam Stevens shoots on #33 Ty Young
1:09
Shot - Non quality goal
#42 Jayden Lee shoots on #30 Tommy Scarfone
1:09
Goal
Goal by #42 Jayden Lee, assisted by #51 Nolan Walker and #28 Zach Okabe.
Forwards and Defensemen
| Name | POS | Goals | A | +/- | SH | PIM |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Zack Trott
#9
|
F | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
|
Jake Johnson
#10
|
D | 0 | 1 | -1 | 2 | 0 |
|
Gunnarwolfe Fontaine
#11
|
F | 0 | 0 | -1 | 1 | 0 |
|
Nick Carabin
#12
|
D | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
|
Spencer Cox
#16
|
D | 1 | 0 | +1 | 4 | 0 |
|
John Jaworski
#18
|
F | 0 | 1 | +1 | 0 | 0 |
|
Aaron Bohlinger
#20
|
D | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
|
Owen Cole
#23
|
F | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
|
Lincoln Griffin
#24
|
F | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
|
Sam Stevens
#25
|
F | 0 | 0 | -1 | 4 | 0 |
|
Nick Rhéaume
#26
|
F | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 2 |
|
Remy Parker
#27
|
F | 0 | 0 | 0 | 4 | 0 |
|
Andrew Noel
#28
|
D | 0 | 0 | -1 | 0 | 2 |
|
Elijah Vilio
#33
|
D | 0 | 0 | -1 | 1 | 0 |
|
Ryan Kirwan
#45
|
F | 0 | 1 | 0 | 7 | 0 |
|
Justin Vaive
#46
|
F | 0 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 0 |
|
Justin Portillo
#62
|
F | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
|
Ben King
#66
|
F | 1 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 2 |
Glossary
- Name:
- Goals
- A:
- Assists
- +/-:
- +/-
- A:
- Assists
- SH:
- Shots
- PIM:
- Penalty Minutes
Goalies
| Name | SV | SV% | GA | PIM |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Tommy Scarfone
#30
|
22 | 88.000 | 3 | 0 |
|
Shika Gadzhiev
#50
|
0 | 0.000 | 0 | 0 |
Glossary
- SV:
- Saves
- SV%:
- Saves Percentage
- GA:
- Goals Against
- PIM:
- Penalty Minutes
Forwards and Defensemen
| Name | POS | Goals | A | +/- | SH | PIM |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Davis Pennington
#4
|
D | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 |
|
Derek Daschke
#5
|
D | 0 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 0 |
|
David Keefer
#7
|
F | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
|
Powell Connor
#8
|
D | 0 | 0 | -1 | 1 | 0 |
|
Evan Dougherty
#9
|
F | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
|
Andre Ghantous
#10
|
F | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
|
Colson Gengenbach
#16
|
F | 0 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 0 |
|
Ryan Cox
#19
|
F | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
|
Cam Knuble
#20
|
F | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
|
Collin Saccoman
#23
|
D | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 2 |
|
Antonio Venuto
#24
|
F | 0 | 0 | +1 | 2 | 0 |
|
Zach Okabe
#28
|
F | 0 | 1 | +2 | 1 | 0 |
|
Jayden Lee
#42
|
D | 1 | 1 | +1 | 1 | 0 |
|
Quinn Preston
#43
|
F | 2 | 0 | +1 | 5 | 0 |
|
Kylor Wall
#49
|
D | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
|
Nolan Walker
#51
|
F | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
|
Colin Bilek
#66
|
F | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 |
|
Hunter Strand
#77
|
F | 0 | 1 | -1 | 0 | 0 |
Glossary
- Name:
- Goals
- A:
- Assists
- +/-:
- +/-
- A:
- Assists
- SH:
- Shots
- PIM:
- Penalty Minutes
Goalies
| Name | SV | SV% | GA | PIM |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Ty Young
#33
|
33 | 94.286 | 2 | 0 |
|
Jonathan Lemieux
#72
|
0 | 0.000 | 0 | 0 |
Glossary
- SV:
- Saves
- SV%:
- Saves Percentage
- GA:
- Goals Against
- PIM:
- Penalty Minutes
Kalamazoo Wings
Cincinnati Cyclones
25
35
Shots on Goal
12%
6%
Shots Percentage
4
4
Power Plays
8
8
Penalty Minutes
33
22
Saves
94%
88%
Saves Percentage
Referee:
Logan Gruhl
Linesmen:
Bryan Gorcoff,
Will Anderson
KAL Management
Toni Will
(Governor/General Manager),
Joel Martin
(Head Coach/Director of Hockey Operations),
Billy McCreary
(Assistant Coach),
Tanner Sorenson
(Assistant Coach)
CIN Management
Kristin Ropp
(General Manager),
Ray Harris
(President),
Riley Weselowski
(Head Coach),
Louie Caporusso
(Assistant Coach),
Rob Couturier
(Goaltending/Video Coach)
Latest News
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Coach, Players added to 2026 Warrior/ECHL All-Star Classic
ECHL announces fine, suspension
ECHL Today - Jan. 14
Goals of the Week - Jan. 5-11
ECHL Transactions - Jan. 13
Norfolk's Yoder named Inglasco ECHL Player of the Week
Warrior/ECHL All-Star Classic to be televised nationally LIVE on NHL Network
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Toledo Walleye
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Trois-Rivières Lions
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Tulsa Oilers
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Utah Grizzlies
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Wheeling Nailers
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Wichita Thunder
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Worcester Railers
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