Tree of Life

07 Mar

Pittsburgh connection: put Beau Bennett in the same role as Brandon Saad by Jon Pennline

published in category: Pittsburgh Penguins on Thursday, March 7th, 2013 – 8:29 am

In case you haven't heard, the Chicago Blackhawks have gone 23 games without losing a game in regulation. They've also won ten in a row (a franchise record), amassing a record of 20-0-3.

All with a rookie playing on their top line.

Pittsburgh native Brandon Saad has played in all but one of those historic games so far this season. He is currently playing on a line with captain Jonathan Toews and Marian Hossa; big company for a 20 year old kid. The result has been a modest four goals and four assists with a plus six rating.

Saad, a second round pick in the 2011 draft, was considered a future top-six forward when he was selected by the Blackhawks. Less than two seasons later, the future appears to be now for both Saad and the first place Hawks. While his point total doesn't scream Calder Trophy, and the team would still be plenty talented without him, Chicago views Saad as a major impact.

"He's an absolute beast out there. He's so strong and fearless," said captain Jonathan Toews, "he's got his head up more and more, and you see those plays with Hossa and I. We're getting better and better as a line." (quote courtesy of ESPN Chicago)

That should be the same pathway for Beau Bennett and the Pittsburgh Penguins.

While Bennett is seen less as a power forward (like Saad) and more as a playmaker, he still fits on a line with Evgeni Malkin and James Neal. Bennett's skill set allows him to play on a line with world-class talent, something that eluded Eric Tangradi and Zach Boychuk during his tenure in Pittsburgh.

Bennett has the ability to score goals and keep up with the big boys. He also added a little physicality to his game, allowing him to play effectively in Dan Bylsma's system. At 6'2, 210 he is almost identical in size to Brandon Saad only with better puck-handling and more professional experience if you include the AHL. He can make an impact on an already dangerous scoring line possibly lifting Malkin and Neal's game up just a little higher.

But it is going to take some time, which the Penguins currently have at the moment. The trade deadline is a month away giving Ray Shero the perfect window to see whether or not Bennett is ready for a top six role this season. If he produces, Shero could focus on other needs like a veteran defenseman and bottom six forwards.

I don't think production will be an issue for Bennett and the Penguins. Just through these eight games it's pretty clear the stage isn't too big for the former roller hockey player from California. He'll make rookie mistakes along the way, but he'll also battle for pucks in the corner, setup his teammates for scoring chances, and cash in on chances of his own.

It's up to Dan Bylsma to keep Bennett on that second line, even if he struggles every now and then. Remember, it took Brandon Saad nine games to score his first goal and he started the season on the top line. It took Bennett five games to light the lamp. If he's going to play with elite players, he needs more than a few shifts. The Blackhawks were patient with their rookie, it would be wise for the Penguins to learn from them; especially since the teacher has yet to lose.

Posted in Pittsburgh Penguins

 

06 Mar

Wednesday on TribLIVE Radio

published in category: Pittsburgh Penguins on Wednesday, March 6th, 2013 – 8:42 am

9am-Gerrit Cole on his impressive start yesterday.

9:20am-Robert Morris Hockey Coach Derek Schooley

9:40am-Tom Barton of TomBartonSports.com on college hoops

10am-Jag Off of the Week Voting

10:40am-Dan Rosen of NHL.com

1pm-Alby Oxenreiter

1:30pm-Lyle Richardson of the Hockey News and Spector's Hockey

2pm-Kevin Gorman Show

3pm-Inside High School Hockey

Posted in Pittsburgh Penguins

 

05 Mar

Tuesday on TribLIVE Radio

published in category: Ike Taylor, Pittsburgh Pirates on Tuesday, March 5th, 2013 – 8:45 am

9am-Broadcasting live from Pirates Spring Training-exclusive interviews with players and coaches.

1pm-Dejan Kovacevic Show live from Pirates Spring Training with Special Guest A.J. Burnett

2pm-Ike Taylor Show-listen today to win a signed Ike T-Shirt Today.

3pm-7p-Wrestling Reality with Justin LaBar

Posted in Ike Taylor, Pittsburgh Pirates

 

04 Mar

Monday on TribLIVE Radio

published in category: Pittsburgh Pirates, Pittsburgh Steelers on Monday, March 4th, 2013 – 9:12 am

Broadcasting Live from Pirates Spring Training featuring interviews with Bucs GM Neal Huntington and Closer Jason Grilli.

10am-Junker and Laird count down top 5 sports stories of the weekend.

10:30am-Penn State's Michael Mauti joins the show.

10:45a-11:15a-Dejan Kovacevic joins us on the set live at Pirates Spring Training.

1pm-Steigerwald vs. Fedko brought to you by Eastern H2O and Reactor Watches

4pm-NFL Draft Preview

4:30pm-Big East Tournament Preview

Posted in Pittsburgh Pirates, Pittsburgh Steelers

 

04 Mar

Time to get defensive…again by Jon Pennline

published in category: Pittsburgh Penguins on Monday, March 4th, 2013 – 9:09 am

The Pittsburgh Penguins are currently in a rut. While the standings may show otherwise with the team leading the division and second in the Eastern Conference, the team's recent performance has mirrored last April.

To correct the issues from last season, one that concluded with 26 goals allowed in six games against the Flyers, Dan Bylsma preached a more defensive-minded game. His system would stay relatively the same, but the attention to detail and discipline needed to be ramped up, especially in the defensive zone.

Through their first 15 games, the Penguins looked to have corrected their defensive lapses, save for a few excruciating home losses to Toronto and Long Island. In their first 15 games, the Penguins surrendered just 35 goals while scoring 48, good enough for second in the Eastern Conference.

Then something happened. It's tough to put a finger on what exactly caused the shift and why, but the Penguins started getting back to their run and gun ways from last season.

It started in Buffalo, where the Penguins got out to a quick 2-0 lead before having to climb out of a 3-2 deficit in the third period to win. The offense was explosive, as usual, but the defense gave up way too many scoring chances. That carried over to the Flyers' game, where the Penguins, again, got out to a 2-0 lead before allowing Philadelphia to climb back into the game. The Penguins came back, again, but this time the Flyers would walk away with the win.

Just as the late-season game against the Senators last year -in which the Penguins gave up eight goals- the Philadelphia game was met with a shrug, yielding to the idea that the Flyers were simply a desperate team trying to stay in the race.

To an extent, that's correct; however, there is no excuse to losing to a team like the Panthers less than a week later. The Penguins gave up four power play goals and Tomas Fleischmann scored the game winner on an odd-man rush. The reason for the two on one break? Kris Letang recklessly going for a puck instead of staying disciplined.

And that's really been the major problem with this team. The defensemen aren't responsible in their own zone and the team, as a whole, is taking way too many penalties. Is that a reflection on the coach? Probably not. Bylsma cant control how players use their stick to steal the puck. These are professional hockey players, they should know what causes a penalty.

Kris Letang has been mentioned as a future Norris Trophy winner for the last few seasons. He has more than enough talent to become that type of player and when he plays a controlled game, he is one of the best in the league. Lately, he's been erratic and it has negatively affected his game. It's tough to say on player on a defensive corps comprised of six people can make a huge impact on how the team plays defense, but if Letang can get back on track, so can the Penguins. He's that good.

The Penguins have given up 23 goals in their last six games. Their penalty kill is now ranked 19th in the league and their 5 on 5 goal ratio has fallen out of the top 5 to ninth. To make matters worse, Paul Martin is dealing with a lower body injury that will probably keep him out for the next couple games. Five of their next six opponents are currently in the playoffs including the Boston Bruins, and tonight's opponent, Montreal.

It's time for the Penguins to get back to defensive-minded hockey and what better place to do that than Montreal, against a team that is currently sitting atop the Eastern Conference, with an old friend behind the benches leading the way. Michel Therrien taught some of these young Penguins how to play defense in the NHL and now it's time to show him what they've learned. This team may need a top six winger or veteran defenseman for the playoffs, but to make the playoffs, they need to be a better defensive team starting right now.

Posted in Pittsburgh Penguins

 

03 Mar

Pirates Spring Training Report: The 5th Starter Battle

published in category: Pittsburgh Penguins, Pittsburgh Pirates, Pittsburgh Steelers on Sunday, March 3rd, 2013 – 10:30 pm

Welcome to Bradenton, Florida for Pirates Spring Training 2013.

Next up in my series of reports from my time spent here in Bucco camp: the battle for the team's 5th starting spot.

The Pirates starting rotation has four of their five season opening spots about locked up, mostly due to Francisco Liriano's bizarre offseason injury to his non-throwing shoulder and Charlie Morton's rehab from Tommy John surgery on his right elbow which will continue into the summer.

Pirates General Manager Neal Huntington confirmed that on Sunday.

"We've got the four starters that are relatively set in the rotation in AJ Burnett, Wandy Rodriguez, James McDonald, and Jeff Karstens," Huntington said. "James McDonald has got to do some things to hold down that spot, just like Jeff Karstens does. But those are four guys we feel very good about that can keep us in ballgames and give this offense a chance to score enough runs to win."

The Pirates are hoping an obvious #5 emerges in the month ahead.

"The fifth spot is between a handful of guys," Huntington continued. "Our goal at some point this summer is to have too many starting pitchers. Which you never have, but that's our goal. You look at Jeff Locke and Kyle McPherson, two young guys that we're very excited about; the trade for Jeanmar Gomez; if we can get Jonathan Sanchez on the right track. Now you get Charlie Morton and Francisco Liriano healthy. And Phil Irwin is a guy that we've liked for our future as a potential starter for us, and he's had a good camp so far. You can never have enough pitching, it's a game of attrition."

Realistically, it looks like Locke v McPherson for the job, with Locke having an edge in that he'd be giving the rotation a second left-hander out of the gates. Locke also has a larger body of work of Major League experience, if only a ten start to three advantage.

The 25-year old Locke, whose four-seam fastball averages about 91mph, slows it down with both a curveball and a change-up at about 80mph. The curve was his choice 44% of the time when ahead in the count in 2012. He actually had better splits against right-handed batters, with righties hitting .255 against him and lefties .297. He did strike out 11 of 40 lefties faced, however. His was a strikeout-per-inning guy in 2012. He had a high BABIP of .313 indicating a bit of bad luck, and his xFIP of 3.7 suggests an above average future performance.

In 2012 Locke was called up from AAA and made five starts in September with the big club. In four of those five starts he had one inning that did him in, allowing three or more runs in the frame.

In his second Grapefruit League start in 2013, that 'big inning' tagged Locke again as the Boston Red Sox jumped out to a 3-0 first inning lead Friday at JetBlue Park in Ft. Myers before Locke settled in to throw scoreless second and third frames.

Pirates manager Clint Hurdle is aware of the trend, but not overly concerned.

"It has been one of the little rocks in his shoe last year when you look at the starts, the big inning," Hurdle said. "At the end of the season, the last game he pitched, he went six innings and went through the meat of the [Atlanta] order twice in key situations to nail it down and get his first victory. [That] wasn't a situation he had a lot of similar situations with in the minor leagues, so we'll see. It's the big leagues, sometimes it just happens a few times in a row where maybe that inning gets away with you. If it's the same reason, maybe you get too quick [or] you lose a little focus, those are some things I think he'll mature through."

Focus may have been an issue on Friday for Locke under the lights of 'Fenway South' in Ft Myers against a Boston team he grew up routing for in New Hampshire.

"We're used to getting up at the crack of dawn every day and being home by 3pm," Locke said after the game. "The game's at 7:05 it's like, 'holy smokes!' But it feels good to get back again. There was a little nervousness in there. If you're not nervous you just ain't right. I'm from New Hampshire, grew up a Red Sox fan. To come out here and pitch against them under the lights in a replica Fenway, it's a pretty cool experience. All in all, I felt good. There's a few pitches I wish I could have back in the first inning or so, but it's all about learning and getting better every time out."

Kyle McPherson, also age 25, made three starts in late September of 2012 after starting the year on the DL with right shoulder inflammation and building his way back up from AA Altoona. His 3.68 ERA (14.2 IP / 6ER) in his three Major League starts included six scoreless innings against the Cincinnati Reds in an eventual 2-1 Pirates victory.

McPherson is known for his control, with a four-seam fastball at about 94mph, as well as a curveball that drops in at 78mph and a change-up around 84mph. His curve is his preferred out pitch as well.

McPherson last threw on Sunday against Houston, and pitched two solid innings before surrendering 4 ER thanks to two walks and a few strange hits: a topped roller for an infield single and a wind-blown pop-fly double to deep short-stop that cleared the bases after McPherson left at his pitch count.

"I felt good," McPherson said. "Definitely a cold day, but it was good to be out there on the bump again. Stuff was good, it was good work. A couple of calls that could have gone either way, but walks can cost you. All in all, it was a good outing. Just working on angle, keeping the ball down in the zone and execution of pitches. It's go time, nothing to hold back, it's all on you now. This early in spring it's just locating the fastball, getting the two-seamer in the zone. I'm getting a lot of swings on that. Change-up is a good mix pitch that I use to get back in the count. I don't really focus on trying to spin too many curveballs, I let that pitch slowly develop over the course of the spring and into the season. The curve is the out-pitch for the most part. Today it worked for me, I was able to throw it for strikes and balls to get check swings on it. I'm pleased with where it's at right now. I'll let the fastball and two-seamer take priority as well as the change-up before I worry about that pitch."

"The first two innings very effective, then got the swing over the top that rolls in the infield and extends things," said manager Clint Hurdle of McPherson's Sunday performance. "Kyle's a tough kid, we all know that. Good makeup kid with good stuff, so we got to see some of that stuff play out. Getting into that third inning his pitch count got him to the point we needed to get him. He's a tough kid, we like him. I like the composure he had throughout the game today."

McPherson said despite the competition, he and Locke are on speaking terms.

"He's a good friend of mine," the Mobile, Alabama native said of Locke. "Great guy, great athlete, great pitcher. It's a fun competition. He pulls for me just as much as I pull for him, but when it comes down to it we'll let them make the decision. "

Posted in Pittsburgh Penguins, Pittsburgh Pirates, Pittsburgh Steelers

 

03 Mar

Pirates Spring Training Report: The Bullpen

published in category: Pittsburgh Penguins, Pittsburgh Pirates on Sunday, March 3rd, 2013 – 9:01 pm

Welcome to Bradenton, Florida for Pirates Spring Training 2013.

I've been checking out the newest edition of the Bucs for the past week and conducting numerous interviews; Ill be posting a series of notes and observations from what I've seen and heard around the team coming up here in the next few days.

First topic up is the Pirates bullpen, which lost its' All-Star closer to trade in the offseason as Joel Hanrahan is now in Boston.

Last year with Hanrahan anchoring the back-end the Pirates 'pen finished 7th in the National League in ERA at 3.36 just two years (2010) after they finished dead last in the category. They converted 45 of 59 save opportunities last year, 3rd best in the NL.

Pirates GM Neal Huntington has largely been solid during his tenure of assembling quality bullpens, and he's hoping to do so again by promoting 36-year old Jason Grilli from set-up man to closer, and likely using trade-return Mark Melancon as his new 8th-inning man with Jared Hughes and Tony Watson matching to silence the 7th inning.

"Well, now that you've jinxed us," Huntington began as I complemented his bullpen track record. "It's a good spot to build around Jason Grilli, Tony Watson, and Jared Hughes and what they did a year ago. We have really strong indicators on Melancon, who had a strong September; a guy with two quality major league pitches and has had success in the National League Central before as a closer. And then we've got three spots that are going to be competed for aggressively here in Spring Training. Clint [Hurdle] has been very open about ideally having two left-handers, maybe in a perfect world getting three out there. We've gone out aggressively and tried to add some left-handed depth whether it's from within our system with Justin Wilson or Kris Johnson or outside the system with a guy like Mike Zagurski or Andy Oliver. We've got some good left-handed depth. The goal is to take one of them north to complement Tony Watson and we'll see where it plays out."

Melancon threw a perfect inning on Saturday in Lakeland, Florida against the top of the Detroit lineup, including retiring Triple Crown winner Miguel Cabrera on a groundout to third-base. Hurdle liked what he saw from the man that Grilli has named 'The Silent Assassin.'

"He had a clean inning," Hurdle said of Melancon on Saturday. "He was ahead, down, threw some change-ups to some right handed hitters. We like him. We're glad he's with us. Every club down here tries to get their back inning leverage guys in [the game] a little bit sooner than later."

Melancon agreed that facing the top of the Tigers' lineup was a good early guage for him.

"Obviously they're working on things, I'm working on things," Melancon said of the Spring Training sample. "At least you kind of know where you stand. Not that [facing] three hitters is going to give you a great indicator but at least it's better than nothing. I've faced Cabrera a few times. Got him on a change-up. I was just trying to work on my change-up and fastball down-and-away. I know my fastball is going to be there, and getting location down is always a task. It's like a hose, there's always a leak somewhere it seems like so you try to patch one hole and the next hole pops open. It'll be like that for the rest of my career and probably everybody else's. You have an idea on what's going on with all four [pitches] but rarely are they working perfectly at all times."

Pirates catcher Michael McKenry caught Melancon for the first time on Saturday, and raved about his four-pitch repertoire.

"He's got four plus pitches," McKenry said of Melancon. "He's a special dude with a competitive nature that can really help us. He's got four pitches he can strike you out on and he's got some ground ball pitches, as well. I think he's going to pitch very well to the situation and the guy that's up there. His curveball is definitely his power-out pitch but I would would say his cutter, fastball, and change-up could all be an out pitch. I'm excited about getting to know him and work with him. That's the biggest thing about Spring Training is just to get in rhythm with guys and know what they like to do in certain situations."

Melancon had a terrible start to his 2011 season with the Red Sox, and was demoted to AAA until he was re-called in June to much better results.

"A lot like Joel [Hanrahan] when we acquired him, he had some struggles in Washington and he lost his closer's job," Huntington said. "He was in the middle of a pretty tough season with his ERA well over 6 when we traded for him. Sometimes a change of scenery and a fresh start; and also ERA is the worst way to try to evaluate a reliever in baseball. But there are some good things there, it's a hard breaking ball and a good fastball when it's where it's capable of being in the mid-to-low 90s with velocity, a change-up that can keep hitters honest. And he's a strike thrower. He had some early struggles [in 2012] and gave up some home-runs and his ERA was toast for the year, a little bit like we experienced with Clint Barmes on the offensive side a year ago; you have two months like he had and it's tough to overcome it."

As for Grilli, he departed Sunday for the World Baseball Classic and Team Italy after a scoreless inning of work that day against Houston. Grilli, whose grandparents grew up outside of Rome and emigrated to the United States, said he thinks the competition at the WBC will be good for him.

"I'm very excited," Grilli said. "I'm going out to Phoenix. I know some of the guys from previous Classics. I'm making a habit of it, if I can play like Jose Contreras, who is here, get to to his age I could get to four of these things. It's a good time. The intensity level is awesome. I know it breaks up Spring Training a little bit but every time I've played in it it's definitely gotten me a little bit more prepared a lot quicker for the season. We all have it in there, we're all ready. It's not like years past where if you didn't do anything during the offseason then it would make it tougher. But everybody around here knows what their responsibilities are. You sure don't go there with the intentions of playing easy. These are fun games but they're meaningful games. It gives you a glimpse of what the season is going to be like."

Hurdle had no issue with his closer departing Pirates camp for a while.

"I was happy he got out of here healthy," Hurdle said Sunday. "He faced four hitters [today], ticked [hit batsman] one of them but got the strikeout at the end so he's ready to go. He says Italy is going to shock the world so we'll see. We've got constant communication, our pitching coach, our general manager, all our of us have the [phone] numbers for our guys that are going out. All of that's in a good place. That was one of the staples that was put into place in the beginning because everybody understands the bigger role to play after the Classic is over. I don't think it's anything we can't work around and work through. Hopefully it'll be a good experience for everybody involved."

Posted in Pittsburgh Penguins, Pittsburgh Pirates

 

01 Mar

TribLIVE Radio High School Athlete of the Week

published in category: Sports Talk Radio on Friday, March 1st, 2013 – 3:19 pm

Congratulations to Butler's Tanner Gilliland for winning the TribLIVE Radio High School Hockey Athlete of the Week. Tanner has 20 goals and 21 assists on the season for 41 total points.
Listen to Inside High School Hockey every Wednesday 3pm to 4pm on TribLIVE Radio.

Posted in Sports Talk Radio

 



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