Monarchs Related News Articles
Regular Season OCTOBER 2004
10/31/04
The
Red Hot
MONARCHS shiver the timbers out of the Portland Pirates 3 - 0 and
remain UNDEFEATED ! 7 - 0
Monarchs
goals scored: 1st period...; 2nd period...
Kostopoulos; 3rd period...
Cammalleri Lehoux;
Garon in goal gets his 2nd shutout...
Clarke
ups himself to a +10
rating...
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more game details
10/30/04
The STREAKING MONARCHS ground the Springfield Falcons 4 -
2
Monarchs
goals scored: 1st period... Lehoux
Clarke; 2nd period... Giuliano
Smyth
Hauser in goal...
Cammalleri gets 3 assists today ... Rullier
back on ice after missing the 3rd period yesterday...
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more game details
10/29/04
The Monarchs take a 5 - 0 victory from the Bridgeport
"SOUNDLESS"-Tigers.
Monarchs
goals scored: 1st period... Schmidt; 2nd period...
Cammalleri Lehoux Flynn Kostopoulos;
Garon
was right on in goal...
Lehoux picks up another 3 points...
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more game details
10/23/04
The "UNDEFEATED" Monarchs stuff a 5 - 0 victory down the throat of the Utah Grizzlies.
"Brick" Hauser
was rock solid in goal...
Monarchs goals scored: 1st period... Milam; 2nd period...Lehoux Smyth Milam; 3rd
period...Brown
Lehoux picks up another 3 points...
Flynn crushes Utah's Doull
Attendance... 10,074 (capacity for 18,500)
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more game details
10/20/04 MONARCHS caged
the Grizzlies in Utah 5 - 3
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more game details
10/16/04
MONARCHS
maul
the Penguins giving them a 7 - 3 loss and a few black eyes
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more game details
a few game photos
10/15/04 MONARCHS were definitely no pussy cats in their 5 - 2 season opener Victory
over the Worcester IceCats
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more game details
a few game photos
11/01/04 Monarchs
notch another win
Special to The Union
Leader
PORTLAND, Maine — Goaltender Mathieu Garon had 31 saves and right wing Tom Kostopoulos, center Michael Cammalleri and center Yanick Lehoux each had goals as the Manchester Monarchs remained perfect with a 3-0 victory over the Portland Pirates yesterday afternoon.
The shutout for Garon was his second in four starts this season. Through four games, he has allowed just five goals to the opposition.
The Monarchs, now 7-0-0-0 on the season, are off until Friday.
The Monarchs gained the lead early in the middle period by pouncing on a loose puck in the slot. Kostopoulos backhanded the loose puck into the Portland net at 3:37. Left wing Noah Clarke and defenseman Mike Weaver each assisted on the goal, the second of the season for Kostopoulos.
The Monarchs doubled their lead early in the third period when Cammalleri converted on the Monarchs' seventh power play chance of the game with his fifth goal. Wings Brad Smyth and Dustin Brown assisted on the goal, scored 60 seconds into the period. With the assist, Smyth extended his team-best scoring streak to seven games (4 goals, 5 assists, 9 points).
A big hit along the boards in the Monarchs zone by defenseman Tim Gleason keyed the next Monarchs goal. Seconds after the hit, Lehoux and Kostopoulos entered the Pirates zone on a 2-on-1. Lehoux backhanded a Kostopoulos centering pass over Ouellet and into the Portland net at 9:52. The goal for Lehoux was his team-leading ninth on the season.
10/30/04
Monarchs keep
high-scoring ways at Verizon
By KEVIN PROVENCHER
Staff Sports Writer Union Leader
MANCHESTER — Spooky.
The Monarchs remain undefeated after the Bridgeport Sound Tigers suffered a nightmare on Elm Street last night, losing 5-0 to Manchester before 8,010 in Verizon Wireless Arena.
A scary offensive team, the Monarchs are off to their best start in history at 5-0-0-0 and have not trailed in a game. They lead the AHL in scoring. Tom Kostopoulos, Ryan Flinn, Yanick Lehoux, Mike Cammalleri and Chris Schmidt lit the lamp last night.
The Sound Tigers are 4-4-0-0, with those four losses coming in their last five outings.
It was a punchless New York Islanders affiliate with leading scorer Jeff Hamilton having defected to the archrival Rangers’ affiliate Hartford Wolf Pack on an AHL deal during the lockout. The “Silent Tigers” are scoreless in their last 148 minutes of hockey. And ensuring it was veteran netminder Mathieu “Le Guarantee” Garon with his third win in as many Monarchs starts.
The equally fearsome Monarchs defense certainly deserved credit, bringing Garon his first shutout of the season. That defense has not allowed a goal in 125 minutes over the last three games.
One of the least penalized teams in the AHL last season, the Sound Tigers have given up a power play goal in eight straight games. Their sins led to a monster mash in the second period. A pair of power play tallies pushed the Monarchs out to the 4-0 lead. Lehoux deked down two defensemen, patiently wristing in his team-leading seventh goal of the season, and Flinn camped out in front to finish Lehoux’s center on the power play with 3:16 left in the middle stanza. Cammalleri had made it 2-0 midway through the second.
Kostopoulos’ first goal of the season 1:13 into the third period iced it, 5-0.
Chris Schmidt’s shorthanded breakaway just 3:19 into the game stood as the only goal of the opening period. Despite playing more than eight minutes shorthanded, the Monarchs outshot the Sound Tigers, 11-4, in the initial stanza. In fact, they outshot Bridgeport in every period.
10/24/04
'Hockey Day' turns into a minor event
In the last sunlight of the evening at the corner of 11th and Figueroa on Saturday, a wrist-pass away from the statue of Wayne Gretzky, sat the very picture of an L.A. hockey fan in troubled times.
He was from Michigan and wore a Chicago Blackhawks sweater but called himself a Kings rooter. He looked California cool in wraparound shades and a tiny hoop earring. He beamed with fatherly pride as he talked about his hockey-playing 16-year-old.
And he sounded apprehensive on a night when the Kings were supposed to be playing the Phoenix Coyotes at Staples Center, but the NHL lockout forced the hockey faithful to settle for the minor-league Manchester (N.H.) Monarchs and Utah Grizzlies.
"I want to see an NHL game, that's for sure," Bill Humphrey, a TV engineer who lives in Alta Loma, was saying from the edge of a planter near the ticket windows. "The fans are definitely suffering. (Television) ratings are already low. If this goes on, fans are going to find something else to do. I worry about hockey in the United States.
"In the early part of the year, a lot of people haven't picked up on the fact hockey isn't here. But if they don't have hockey by Christmas, there's going to be trouble."
It's Day 39 of the owners vs. players standoff with no end in sight. The sides haven't sat down to negotiate in all that time. The season was to have begun Oct. 13.
In the darkened arena, more than an hour before the Monarchs-Grizzlies faceoff, a man with a Stanley Cup playoff logo on his chest and a McDonald's bag on his lap sat and watched the Zamboni go round and round.
"I think it's a travesty there's a strike," said John Spiller, who came from Kittery, Maine, and is a bookkeeper in Canoga Park. "The losers are the fans and all the people who work the concessions here.
"It blows. I love watching live hockey. (During the lockout) you're watching these old games on TV. You've got to watch live hockey. Basketball, you know who's going to shoot. Hockey, put 12 guys out there, who knows what's going to happen?"
Spiller was a Kings season-ticket holder for two seasons but didn't renew for this year when he saw the lockout coming.
"In Canada, in the North, where I grew up, it (hockey) will be missed," he said. "Here, they'll find something else to occupy their time."
Kings management had proclaimed Saturday "Hockey Day in L.A." -- you could buy a commemorative T-shirt for a princely sum -- originally scheduling a triple-header of a youth game, the AHL Monarchs-Grizzlies game and Kings-Coyotes. The lockout reduced the occasion to a test of hockey fans' craving. Attendance of 10,074 was announced; it looked like half that.
Manchester, the Kings' top farm club, beat Utah, a Phoenix affiliate, 5-0, with defenseman Troy Milam scoring two power-play goals, and Adam Hauser stopping 20 shots.
In the mezzanine, a young man in a Czech Republic hockey jersey stood with a soda and a bowl of nachos and called it a bittersweet day.
"It's nice of Kings management to bring this game here, but it isn't the same," said Mike Slemp, a high school teacher from Simi Valley. "I love hockey, I'll come to this game. But if they try to use replacement players (from the minor leagues), they'll lose fans. I don't think the NHL is big enough in the U.S. to (survive) a strike."
Through the Staples Center doors came fans in Kings jerseys, Flyers jerseys and Ice Dogs jerseys. Ziggy Palffy jerseys, Rocket Richard jerseys and Hanson brothers jerseys. The uniforms of the exclusive club that is L.A. hockey fandom.
"People talk about L.A. as a big (sports) market," Slemp said. "(For hockey) it's a small market. It'll take a long time to recover."
On an evening when top-ranked USC was playing Washington at the Coliseum and the Boston Red Sox and St. Louis Cardinals were opening the World Series on TV, a few thousand hockey fans took advantage of free admission for Kings season-ticket holders or paid $15.50 to $45.50 per seat to watch the finest practitioners of the sport they're likely to see in the city of Los Angeles this season.
Baseball, football and basketball lost parts of seasons to owner-player strife, and it was hard to feel sorry for the most vocal fans, whose attitude was a spiteful "How could they let down so many people?"
Hockey loses part -- or all -- of this season to the owners' fight to control their own spending, and you sympathize with the few diehards, who wonder if their little corner of the sports world will ever be the same.
Power play drives Monarchs past winless Grizzlies
LOS ANGELES - The Manchester Monarchs experienced a power surplus Saturday night in front of 10,587 fans at the Staples Center. They converted four power-play goals in a 5-0 victory over the winless Utah Grizzlies.
Troy Milam converted on two power-play goals for Manchester (4-0) and Yanick Lehous added three points, including his team-leading sixth goal of the season. The Monarchs had three goals in the second period to lead 4-0 after 40 minutes. Brad Smyth and Dustin Brown also scored for Manchester.
Monarch's goaltender, Adam Hauser, earned his eighth career AHL shutout. David LeNeveu made 30 saves and fell to 0-2.
The Grizzlies (0-4-0-1) had nine power-play chances, including two five-on-three chances in the opening period. The Grizzlies were outshot, 35-20.
Utah returns home Friday night to play Milwaukee.
Utah Grizzlies (0-4-0-1) versus Manchester Monarchs (4-0-0-0)
at the Staples Center (Los Angeles, California)
Saturday, October 23, 2004
Referee- Dean Morton Linesmen- Craig Kneale & Rob Fay
Scoring:
Grizzlies- 0-0-0 0
Monarchs- 1-3-1 5
Shots:
Grizzlies- 4-10-6 20
Monarchs- 10-14-11 35
Goal Scorers:
Grizzlies-
Monarchs- Troy Milam PP-(1, 2), Brad Smyth PP- (1), Yanick Lehoux - (6), Dustin Brown - (2)
Win- Adam Hauser (2-0-0), 20 saves
Loss- David LeNeveu (0-2-0), 30 saves
Power Plays:
Utah- 0 for 9
Monarchs- 4 for 10
Los Angeles, California
The Grizzlies had two 5-on-3 opportunitties in the first period but failed to cobvert. Manchester took advantage of their first power play opportunity when Troy Milam's pass went off Matthew Spiller past LeNeveu for his first goal of the season at the 9:59 mark of the period. Manchester outshot the Grizzlies 10-4 in the first period.
In the second period, the Monarchs jumped on the Grizzlies early as Yanick Lehoux scored his sixth goal of the season just over two minutes into the period. Brad Smyth and Milam each added power play goals in a choppy period that saw each team have numerous power play opportunities. Martin Sonnenberg was called for a five minute major at the end of the period for high-sticking making the start of the third period look very ominous. Utah was outshot 14-10 in the period.
In the third period, they took advantage of an early 5-on-3 power play and made the score 5-0 after their fourth man advantage goal of the game. Dustin Brown would get credit for the marker his second goal of the season.
Manchester would outshoot the Grizzlies 35-20 in the game as Adam Hauser improves to 2-0 after making 20 saves. LeNeveu made 30 saves dropping to 0-2 on the year.
The Monarchs finished the night 4 for 10 on the power play, while Utah missed on all nine chances they had.
The Grizzlies return home on Friday, October 29th when they face the defending Calder Cup champion Milwaukee Admirals.
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Three Stars:
1. Yanick Lehoux (MAN) 2. Adam Hauser (MAN) 3. Troy Milam (MAN) - The Grizzlies suffered from a power outage on Saturday night in front of 10,597 fans at the Staples Center as they watched the Manchester Monarchs score four power play goals en route to a 5-0 victory. With the win, the Monarchs remain unbeaten at 4-0 and the Grizzlies continue to struggle falling to 0-4-0-1. Yanick Lehoux had a goal and two helpers and Troy Milam scored a pair of power play goals in front of Adam Hauser who improves to 2-0 after making 20 saves.
10/20/04 Monarchs Stay Unbeaten With 5-3 Win
WEST VALLEY CITY, UT – The Manchester Monarchs ran their record to 3-0 on the season with a 5-3 win over the Utah Grizzlies on Wednesday night at the “E” Center in West Valley City, Utah. Five different Monarchs scored in the game as the Manchester joined five other teams with unbeaten records in the 28-team American Hockey League. The Grizzlies remain winless after four games (0-3-0-1).
The Monarchs dominated the early stages of the opening period, attempting the first nine shots of the game. The Grizzlies didn’t register their first shot until 8:32 remaining in the period.
Center Michael Cammalleri, who nearly beat Jean-Marc Pelletier (34 shots, 30 saves) on a rebound chance in the game’s first minute, assisted on the only goal of the period, scored at 3:22 by defenseman Joe Rullier. Left wing Dustin Brown also earned an assist on the play. The Los Angeles Kings first-round selection (13th overall) in the 2003 NHL Entry Draft took Cammalleri’s drop pass at the right point, skated into the slot, and fired a wrist shot that tipped off Pelletier’s glove. The loose puck next bounced out to the left circle for Rullier, who slammed it home.
The Monarchs added to their lead in the second period with goals from Brown and left wing Noah Clarke. Brown jammed Cammalleri’s corner feed into the net at 14:25, and Clarke jabbed a loose puck over the outstretched glove of Pelletier with the Monarchs short-handed at 18:07. Right wing Brad Smyth recorded an assist on Brown first goal of the season. Right wing Tom Kostopoulos and defenseman Mike Weaver shared assists on Clarke’s first goal of the season.
The Grizzlies took advantage of Monarchs penalty problems and scored their first goal in the final minute of the period. Left wing Martin Sonnenberg slid his shot past goalie Mathieu Garon (39 shots, 36 saves) with the Grizzlies holding a 5-on-3 man-advantage. Right wing Fredrik Sjostrom and defenseman Matthew Spiller assisted on Sonnenberg’s first goal of the season, scored at 19:30.
The Grizzlies, who opened the third period on the power play, enjoyed sustained pressure in the Monarchs zone but failed to slip anything by Garon early. Instead, the Monarchs added to their lead at 7:18 when right wing Greg Hogeboom’s centering pass from the end boards clipped Pelletier’s left skate and caromed into the Grizzlies net. Left wing Petr Kanko and Weaver assisted on Hogeboom’s first goal of the season.
Two penalty calls against the Monarchs put the Grizzlies back on a 5-on-3 power play advantage later in the period. Weaver was assessed a major penalty for high-sticking at 8:31, and defenseman Tim Gleason joined him in the penalty box with a high-sticking minor penalty at 9:49.
The Grizzlies scored their second power play goal less than a minute later to cut the Monarchs lead to 4-2. Former King Jon Sim beat Garon from the right circle with center Jeff Taffe and defenseman Keith Ballard assisting.
The Grizzlies collected the next goal as well, with center Erik Westrum finishing a 3-on-1 break into the Monarchs zone with his first goal of the season. Right wing Randall Gelech assisted on the short-handed goal, scored at 14:38.
The Grizzlies applied even more pressure after Westrum’s goal, and the top affiliate of the Phoenix Coyotes nearly tied the game with 2:35 remaining. But defenseman Troy Milam blocked Taffe’s wrist shot from the left side of the crease.
With 1:12 remaining in the contest and a faceoff in the Monarchs zone, the Grizzlies pulled Pelletier for an extra attacker. But instead of netting the equalizer, the Grizzlies surrendered an empty net goal to Cammalleri at 18:58. Kostopoulos and defenseman Denis Grebeshkov assisted as Cammalleri ran his goal-scoring streak to three games.
10/17/04

10/16/04
Monarchs cruise
in season-opener against the IceCats
By CRAIG N. LIADIS
Manchester Union Leader Sports
MANCHESTER — The Manchester Monarchs made sure the 2004-05 season did not begin the way last year ended. The Monarchs dominated the Worcester IceCats early and often in a 5-2 season-opening win before a sellout crowd of 9,916 at Verizon Wireless Arena last night. The same IceCats ousted Manchester in the first round of the American Hockey League playoffs last spring.
"For sure we had a little bit of revenge in mind," said Manchester centerman Yanick Lehoux, who scored twice and added an assist. "Obviously, when the last team that keeps you out of the playoffs is the first team you play, it's fresh in your mind."
Manchester scored four goals in the first period to end any suspense, unlike last year's Game 5 playoff that went to triple overtime. Worcester won that game, 3-2, on its way to a six-game series win, the third straight season the Monarchs were eliminated in the first round.
Manchester, which hadn't led in any of its three preseason games, was relieved to go ahead early.
"You always want to come out of the gate strong," Lehoux said. "Tonight we did that."
Lehoux was one of four Monarchs to score in the game.
"I liked how we spread the goals around," said Manchester head coach Bruce Boudreau. "We had three lines participating, and that's how we like it."
Boudreau also liked the play of goalie Mathieu Garon, who made 28 saves to earn the victory.
"He did pretty well the whole game," Boudreau said. "In the third period they were coming on, coming on, and he had to make some great saves.""
Worcester's attack was too little, too late.
Lehoux got the offense started early in the first period on a four-on-four. He stole the puck in the neutral zone and made a quick pass to Tom Kostopoulos, who gave it right back as Lehoux skated alone into the offensive zone. The 6-foot-1 center beat goalie Jason Bacashihua short-side to give the Monarchs a 1-0 lead at 2:31.
A minute later, with Manchester on a two-man advantage, Dustin Brown handled the puck deep in the left circle and tried to dump it across the crease to centerman Michael Cammalleri. Instead, the shot deflected in off right winger Brad Smyth's foot for a 2-0 lead.
Cammalleri answered next. After a slapshot from the point by defenseman Troy Milam, Cammalleri grabbed the rebound behind the goal. He circled around to the front with Worcester defenseman Mike Stuart on his back, and, while falling, swept a shot past Bacashihua for a 3-0 lead at 13:56.
Lehoux made sure the fans would get their free McDonald's french fries (when Manchester scores four or more goals) before the first period ended.
From behind the net, left winger Noah Clarke backhanded a pass out front to Lehoux, who wristed it top-left side with 42 seconds left in the period.
After centerman Matt Ryan's first professional goal gave Manchester a 5-0 lead early in the third period, Monarchs enforcer Ryan Flinn added to the insult when he handily won a fight with Robin Gomez. The crowd replied with a rousing ovation.
The evening began with a greeting from Gov. Craig Benson at center ice and the raising of a banner recognizing the Monarchs as hosts for the AHL All-Star game in February. After the main lights went out, a movie montage highlighting Monarchs players was shown on the scoreboard and a few fireworks were launched.
Then Monarchs players one at a time skated out from beneath an oversized blown-up head of Max the Mascot —- with Nashua's own Jeff Giuliano receiving the loudest ovation. The teams lined up on the blue lines for the playing of the National Anthem, which included a dozen members of the U.S. Armed Forces holding a large American Flag at center ice.
Then the real fireworks began.
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