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AHL Morning Skate: June 12, 2024

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AHL Morning Skate: June 12, 2024

The Monsters blue line got a boost in Game 6 when Jake Christiansen returned to the back end for the first time since May 3.

Christiansen delivered the overtime winner to force the deciding Game 7 tonight at Giant Center.

Head coach Trent Vogelhuber paired Christiansen with rookie Denton Mateychuk, who was playing just his third game as a pro. The duo clicked immediately.

“They looked great,” Vogelhuber said.

Christiansen, part of a contingent that represented the Monsters at the 2024 AHL All-Star Classic, tied for fourth in scoring among AHL defensemen in the regular season with 46 points (13 goals, 33 assists) in 62 games.

“It was killing him not to play,” Vogelhuber said. “He would have been back in a week if the doctors let him. He would have played through anything. He kept himself in great shape… Was the best teammate you could ask for through the whole thing. When you approach it like that, you’re ready to play when the time comes. We weren’t expecting any rust.”

The 19-year-old Mateychuk, who assisted on Christiansen’s overtime winner for his second point in three games, joined the Monsters after his Moose Jaw team lost in the semifinals of the Memorial Cup tournament on May 31.

“He’s been with his (junior) team, emotionally invested all year, Memorial Cup, and you lose a heartbreaker,” Vogelhuber said. “He’s so steady, which is rare for a kid coming out of junior. I think that’s the biggest difference to get to the NHL, just clean execution on a consistent basis, and he does that. He executes.”

Said Christiansen of partnering with one of the game’s top prospects, “I loved it. I mean, he’s a smart player. Really easy to play with. Awesome guy. So hopefully we can build on that and keep going here.”

The Calder Cup Playoffs are about taking an opportunity and stepping up, and Bears forward Henrik Rybinski did that on Monday.

With Pierrick Dubé out of the lineup for the third consecutive game, head coach Todd Nelson reworked his roster for Game 6. Rybinski got an opportunity on a line with Alex Limoges and Jimmy Huntington, and provided the Bears’ opening goal. In addition, Matt Strome drew in for Matthew Phillips, who had played Games 4 and 5.

The Bears lost leading goal-scorer Ethen Frank to injury during the second period of Game 6. His status for tonight is unknown.

There have been four previous Game 7’s in Calder Cup Playoff history after one team had started out with a 3-0 series lead:

April 10, 1960 – Rochester 4, Cleveland 1
A standing-room-only crowd of 7,762 fans jammed the Rochester War Memorial to watch the Amerks defeat the Barons, 4-1, to become the first AHL team ever to win a playoff series after losing the first three games. Pat Hannigan scored the winning goal late in the second period and Ed Chadwick made 28 saves.

April 30, 1989 – Adirondack 2, Hershey 1 (OT)
Adam Graves scored 10:31 into overtime to give the Red Wings a 2-1 win over the Bears at the Glens Falls Civic Center. Hershey had won 19 of its previous 20 playoff games, including a perfect 12-0 run through the 1988 postseason, before Adirondack won the final four games of the series.

May 24, 2011 – Houston 4, Hamilton 3
Aeros captain Jon DiSalvatore scored with 1:13 left in regulation to send Houston to the Calder Cup Finals with a 4-3 victory over the visiting Bulldogs. Hamilton, which had trailed in the series 3-0, erased 2-0 and 3-2 deficits in Game 7 before their comeback bid ultimately fell short.

May 22, 2013 – Wilkes-Barre/Scranton 5, Providence 0
Brad Thiessen followed a 46-save performance in Game 6 with a 34-save shutout in Game 7 as the Penguins became the first team to complete a 3-0 comeback by finishing the series on the road. Thiessen, who currently serves as goaltending development coach for the Cleveland Monsters, went on to allow four goals on 181 shots (0.70, .978) after coming on in relief during Game 2.

― with files from Patrick Williams

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