Sunday 30 October 2011

Stingrays denied by leaders

Excel Hull Stingrays 1 - 3 Belfast Giants

The Excel Hull Stingrays were tonight agonisingly denied a fourth consecutive Elite League win by the Belfast Giants, as the league leaders completed a slightly fortuitous hit and run on Stingrays in a tightly fought 3-1 victory.

Without British rookie Bobby Chamberlain through suspension and player-coach Sylvain Cloutier - who remained on the bench as the club's 11th import - the Stingrays could have potentially lead moments into the game. Derek Campbell - who stood out once again for his strength and determination - only managing to fire into the body of Giants netminder Stephen Murphy after hard work in the corner from line mate Jason Silverthorn.

That is about as good as it would get for the home side in the first period though as a combination of poor discipline and the Giants good form - having beaten Nottingham a night earlier - saw Doug Christiansen's dominate the opening period.

It was thanks to that that the visitors came closest to opening the scoring after ten minutes, Rays defenceman Sam McCluskey clearing off the line after a shot had uncharacteristically snuck through netminder Christian Boucher on the powerplay.

The Stingrays keeper was tested regularly throughout the game but thankfully came out on top more often than not, particularly in the first period, as his side killed off three powerplay's.

Having worked so hard to snuff out the Giants powerplay, it was perhaps typical that the Northern Irish side would net the games opening goal,, typically shorthanded on a Stingrays powerplay. Agitator Darryl Lloyd deservedly handing the Giants a 1-0 first period lead having outshot the home team 21-3.

Cloutier's side improved early in the second period, firing shots in on Murphy in an attempt to force an error from the GB international.

Though the Giants somewhat comfortably held their one goal lead for the majority of the second, with seven minutes remaining in the period the Stingrays - almost out of nowhere - turned it on, pressurising the Giants into their own end.

Their play and continuous pressure during this spell was the polar opposite of their first period showing and seemingly materialised from nothing. First Martin Ondrej hit the post as he searched for his first goal in Rays colours before Frantisek Bakrlik was prevented from forcing home close in and Dominic Osman was denied in a double effort - the second of which was a diving shot which Murphy gratefully turned away in a Stingrays onslaught.

Then on 36.06 new addition Kurtis Dulle added his first goal of 11/12 to go with his 12 of 10/11, duly scrapping the puck home after hard work from Dan Scott - who netted his first point as a Stingray - and Tristan Harper.

The goal was no less than the Rays deserved in a seven minute spell that surely rates as the Stingrays best of 11/12. Nevertheless, despite having all the momentum, they failed to capitalise on further chances in the remaining four minutes and the sides went in to the second intermission level.

More of the same followed as the Rays began the third as they finished the second, Murphy time and again coming up with saves in front of an atmospheric Hull crowd that believed they were about to witness a home win for just the third time this season.

Their biggest chance to snatch the win came on 50 minutes, as Jereme Tendler - who had an uncharacteristically below par 60 minutes - was denied by the Belfast keeper on a breakaway.

Having missed that opportunity, the key moment in the game followed as a controlled and threatening Stingrays powerplay attempt bore no fruit and was abruptly ended by a Dmitri Rodin interference call, giving the Giants a moment of respite.

That momentary rest, spent all in the Giants offensive zone, allowed Christainsen's side to regroup having largely been outplayed by the home team in the final period and a half.

That continued until the 55 minute mark when referee Andy Carson failed to call a blatant trip on defenceman Dulle - who was bringing the puck out of the defensive zone - handing possession of the puck to the Giants in a threatening position before Beniot Doucet inadvertently and luckily saw his shot deflected home in off a Stingray.

The eventual game winning goal knocked all the wind out of the Stingrays sails as the Giants went on to net a shorthanded, empty net goal through Mark Garside with 38 seconds left on the clock to seal the score at 3-1 in favour of the league leaders.

The defeat was a bitter pill to swallow for the Rays who, first period aside, played as well as they have all year, continuing their recent turn in form following last weekend's loss to Edinburgh.

While tonight's truly was a team effort, special praise must go to netminder Boucher who kept the Rays in it during a particularly difficult first period.

Despite a run of three wins in five games over a two week period - a record that, despite the home Edinburgh loss, Cloutier would have been happy with from the outset - the Rays boss must now release one import, having observed and coached from the bench during the last three games following Dulle's arrival.

Over the previous two games it is fair to say the forwards have put their case forward, racking up 13 goals, while tonight's performance was a team effort in which no one disappointed.

Cloutier is expected to make his decision early next week ahead of two full weekends of Challenge Cup fixtures - a competitive they are all but mathematically out of - including a home double header to Coventry and Sheffield next weekend.

Rays Rating
8

FBB Three Stars
1 - Christian Boucher (41 saves)
2 - Derek Campbell (0+0)
3 - Frantisek Bakrlik (0+0)

Saturday 29 October 2011

Stingrays make it three in a row

Fife Flyers 1 - 6 Excel Hull Stingrays

In their first visit to Kirkcaldy in more than six years, the Excel Hull Stingrays tonight made it three consecutive Elite League victories and 15 goals in two games with a comprehensive 6-1 victory over the Fife Flyers.

Hoping to build off their first two consecutive wins of the year in Dundee and at home to Braehead, the Stingrays got off to the worst possible start, conceding to a Mike Hamilton goal after less than two minutes.

Oozing confidence offensively having hit Braehead for nine in midweek, the Stingrays replied convincingly with three first period goals from Dominic Osman - his seventh of the season - defenceman Dmitri Rodin and  Derek Campbell - shorthanded.

A second goal of the night from Osman and a Jason Silverthorn goal - which, together with his earlier two assists put his points tally to ten in the last three games - then gave the Rays a 5-1 lead heading into the final stanza.

Frantisek Bakrlik added his first of the night and second shorthanded goal in two games six minutes into the third to end the scoring in favour of the visiting Rays, putting their win streak at three.

Sylvain Cloutier's Stingrays now return home for a Sunday evening fixture against a Belfast side that tonight beat the Nottingham Panthers by three goals to two, as the Rays hope to make it four wins in a row.

Wednesday 26 October 2011

Emphatic Stingrays hit nine against Clan

Excel Hull Stingrays 9 - 4 Braehead Clan

In an extraordinary turnaround following last Saturday's home loss against the Edinburgh Capitals, the Excel Hull Stingrays tonight convincingly triumphed over the Braehead Clan by nine goals to four with alternate captain Jason Silverthorn helping himself to a hat-trick and three assists.

Boosted by the return of former captain Kurtis Dulle, the Stingrays defensive corps boasted three lines of six players for the first time this season and with 20 year old Telford Tigers forward Andy McKinney - who made his EIHL debut - the club's forward ranks also looked healthy ahead of a fixture against former Stingray Drew Bannister's Braehead Clan.

Though it was the Clan that fired the first warning shots, hitting the post after less than 30 seconds after the Rays D had been caught high before being denied by netminder Christian Boucher on an incisive breakaway, it was the home side that would strike first.

Captain Joshua Mizerek - who, it would be fair to say, has endured a difficult start to his career in the UK - scoring a speculative effort from the point thanks in part to Jereme Tendler screening Clan netminder Jaako Suomalainen in front after 2.42.

In an action packed first period the Glasgow based side soon responded, standout forward Jordan Krestanovich easily tapping home a powerplay goal at the back door of Boucher's goal to level the scores six minutes in.

The Stingrays then crucially netted two goals in nine seconds, taking control of a period in which they would score eventually record four goals from ten shots. First Jereme Tendler bagged his eighth of the season thanks to some hard work and perseverance before Dominic Osman - who has really hit form in recent weeks - pounced on a loose puck in the Clan zone to clinically fire home for a 3-1 lead and his fourth of the year.

Not ones to give up a fight, Bannister's second year Clan side responded again, Mike Bayrack pulling a big move on Boucher before jamming home to cut the lead to one moments after a high-stick on Rays forward Frantisek Bakrlik had gone unpenalised at the other end.

Derek Campbell - who was influential with four assists in his best game for the Rays - then made a great pass from the boards to set up Silverthorn for his first of the night, rifling past Suomalainen only for Matt Haywood to peg Cloutier's side back with 47 seconds remaining in the period.

Aware of the dangers of a tight lead, the Stingrays had to come out strong in the second period and, though American Osman took a two minute hooking penalty, his side were still able to capitalise with their fifth of the game. Frantisek Bakrlik - who has had a frustrating time of it recently - denied before forcing home a shorthanded goal for a 5-3 lead.

Three minutes and 55 seconds later they netted the goal that broke the Clan's back. Silverthorn recording his second of the night on a Drew Bannister delayed penalty for a check from behind. The hit understandably riled Rays forward Campbell, who received a roughing penalty following the goal for his reaction to the Clan coach after he had remained on top Osman, the victim of the hit, after the penalty was awarded but before the Clan touched the puck.

Nevertheless, the goal all but ended the Scottish sides resistance for the night as they replaced Finnish keeper Suomalainen with rangy backup Michael Will.

On 31.09 Silverthorn completed his hat-trick, scoring a first past Will at the second time of asking having mishandled the first attempt. With the scoreline at 7-3, and the Stingrays having scored six goals in less than 20 minutes of hockey, the home team soon got a reality check and were forced to reevaluate and reel in their enthusiasm and confidence as a lack of numbers at the back allowed Brit forward Haywood to add his second of the night on a breakaway goal which Boucher may have hoped to prevent.

A great outlet pass from Silverthorn then put Osman in on his own breakaway to restore the four goal lead at the end of the second before Bakrlik one timed his own second of the night in off the post with less than three minutes remaining in the third for the Rays ninth of the game.

A night and performance to be proud of for players and fans alike, the Stingrays extended their win streak to two following Sunday's win in Dundee.

Good individual performances all around, special mentions must go to season debutant's Dulle and McKinney as well as Silverthorn, Osman and Campbell - who all stood out in particular. Dulle - not long arrived in Britain - played alongside Mizerek and didn't put a foot wrong - adding an assist - while spark plug and top flight debutant  McKinney was the real surprise of the night, providing speed and controlled physicality on a full shift on the third line. He could have very easily made it a dream debut by grabbing himself a deserved goal if only for a little more composure in front of net when presented with a perfect third period opportunity.

In short this was easily the Stingrays best performance and result of the 11/12 campaign. Forget about playing well and not winning, or not playing well and just winning, this result had it all. Clinical and emphatic, the two-weeks notice put out by Cloutier during the second intermission of the Edinburgh game appears to have worked wonders.

The Rays boss now has a new dilemna, a good dilemma but a dilemma nevertheless. Who goes, who stays or - if it is even financially possible - does he remain on the bench for the foreseeable future as long as his side and players perform?

One thing is for sure, it would take a tough critic to break up the team that dismantled the Clan tonight.

Cloutier and team must now look to forward and focus on ensuring tonight's victory is not a false dawn.


Rays Rating
8

FBB Three Stars
1 - Jason Silverthorn (3+3) 
2 - Derek Campbell (0+4)
3 - Kurtis Dulle (0+1)

Tuesday 25 October 2011

Former captain Dulle returns to Hull

31 year old defenceman and last season's Excel Hull Stingrays captain Kurtis Dulle has today made a surprise return to the club.

The blueliner registered 12 goals and 31 assists last season before leaving at the end of his contract to sign with Sydney Bears of the Australian Ice Hockey League - whose season  spans the British summer - for what was expected would be the final stop in a six year professional career.

Former longtime CHLer Dulle notched eight goals and 19 points in 21 games down under but returned to North America from Australia unsure as to whether he wanted to end his career in the sport.

He and Sylvain Cloutier kept in touch throughout the summer but with the Rays struggling in the early season, particularly in defence - having won just one game and claimed just three points in 13 fixtures - Cloutier put the wheels into motion a couple of weeks ago and offered a contract to the Rays former captain.

Dulle was originally signed in 2010 as a late replacement for captain-to-be Joshua Mizerek and he went on to become one of the captures of the summer last season alongside fellow imports Jereme Tendler and Andrew Coburn.

He thrived alongside former NHL veteran and last season's assistant coach Drew Bannister - who joined the club in November - as they lead the club to a record year. 

The kind of all-around defenceman that the Stingrays have lacked since offensive blueliners Kevin Young and Craig Minard donned club colours, Dulle thrived in Hull and Cloutier will be hoping he will have a similar influence on what has so far this season been a lacklustre defensive corps. He said:
"He played a huge part in our success last season. He reads the game well, he can play defensive byt also jump in on the play if necessary. It will take the pressure off our young defencemen and help them out too...Kurtis brings a lot of experience and leadership, he knows me, he knows the team, the league and the city, so there will be no adjustments there so that will be key."
While his influece on-ice on the current roster may not be called into question after a standout year in yellow and blue last season, the effects his signature has on the other nine imports and their future job prospects does.

Dulle's signature brings the Rays up to 11 imports - one more than is allowed on any EIHL match day roster. Part of Cloutier's thinking in bringing back his former captain is that, not only will he improve the playing roster in the short term - boosting the squads defensive numbers to six - but it will also allow the Stingrays coach to analyse, assess and tackle any weaknesses in the squad.

Once player-coach Cloutier decides to return to the ice there will be tough decisions and at least one cut to be made dependant on where he has spotted frailties.

At present, netminder Christian Boucher, defenceman Dmitri Rodin and forwards Jason Silverthorn and Jereme Tendler will - provided their performances don't deteriorate in the near future - be safe, while recent outings have also seen Dominic Osman raise his game and settle somewhat in the UK.

That leaves defencemen Martin Ondrej, captain Joshua Mizerek and forwards Frantisek Bakrlik and Derek Campbell in a particularly prone position. Nevertheless, with Cloutier stepping onto the bench, one thing he has made clear is that no player will be safe - whether they have impressed, or not, at the start of the season - if they don't perform in the next handful of fixtures.
"All the guys' jobs are on the line, so whoever doesn't produce over the next week or so could lose their job. Whether it's a forward or a defenceman it doesn't matter, someone's going to be gone."
It has been confirmed that Dulle should be back in the UK in time to face former team mate Bannister's new Braehead Clan side on Wednesday as they face the Stingrays for the first time this season at the Hull Arena.

Also making his Stingrays debut that night will be Telford Tigers British forward Andy McKinney. The 20 year old - who has joined the club on a two-way contract - will be hoping to help the Stingrays look build on a topsy-turvy weekend in which they lost to bottom side Edinburgh at home before beating Dundee in Scotland.

Breaking news: Dulle returns to Hull

31 year old defenceman and last season's Excel Hull Stingrays captain Kurtis Dulle has today made a surprise return to the club.

The blueliner registered 12 goal and 31 assists last season and he left the UK to play in Australia during the summer with the intention that it would be the final stop before retiring.

He will return to the Hull Arena for the first time since their playoff defeat to Cardiff last April, joining up with the squad in time for Wednesday nights fixture against Drew Bannisters Braehead Clan.

More soon...

Sunday 23 October 2011

Stingrays bounce back in Dundee

Dundee Stars 1 - 2 Excel Hull Stingrays

The Excel Hull Stingrays tonight dug deep and found a way to end their seven game losing streak, beating the Dundee Stars 2-1 in Scotland for just their second win of 11/12

Player-coach Sylvain Cloutier led by example, giving the Stingrays - who went down to lowly Edinburgh last night - the lead with less than two minutes remaining in the first period.

Defenceman Dan McGoff struck back for the Stars three minutes into the second, though Jason Silverthorn bagged the crucial game winning goal, shorthanded for the Rays after 38.12.

Rays man of the match, netminder Christian Boucher, was called upon regularly in the third but turned away 13 shots for a 37 save night with his side clinging on to claim a much needed and welcome two points and second win of the season.

The victory is the Stingrays first in four trips to Tayside after Dundee racked up four straight wins at home over the Rays having joined the EIHL in the summer of 2010.

Perhaps more importantly, the win ended Cloutier's sides seven game losing skid, eking out a victory - and a first win on the road in 11/12 - when few gave them any chance.

While the Rays coach will still be wanting to improve a squad that seemingly surrendered to Edinburgh 24 hours earlier, the result is a big morale boost to the existing squad - who were placed on two-weeks notice midway through the loss.

Cloutier - who will sit out the club's next couple of games - has already confirmed that there is a new player - to be announced next week - set to jet in and join the club, hopefully in time for fixtures in Fife and at home to Belfast next weekend, though he has not ruled out making more than one change.

Match Highlights: Excel Hull Stingrays 2-3 Edinburgh Capitals

Saturday 22 October 2011

Wretched Stingrays beaten by bottom side Edinburgh

Excel Hull Stingrays 2-3 Edinburgh Capitals

The Excel Hull Stingrays season tonight hit a new season long low at the Hull Arena, as they were defeated for the 13th time in 14 games, going down by three goals to two against a well drilled, hardworking Edinburgh Capitals side that sit bottom of the Elite Ice Hockey League.

Looking to get a six game losing streak off their backs, the Rays shot out of the traps, defenceman Martin Ondrej forcing his way between two defenceman for a breakaway before narrowly firing over after just seconds. 16 year old rookie Bobby Chamberlain then came agonisingly close to bagging his first senior goal but could only crash one off the post after eight minutes.

This would be as good as it would get for the Stingrays though as a minute later Slovakian sharpshooter Rene Jarolin shot home on the powerplay to give Edinburgh the lead.

Peter Holecko then doubled the Capitals lead in the second having been allowed time and space with his back to goal to weakly backhand one past Boucher.

Minutes later Boucher came up with a big double save to prevent Edinburgh from going three goals up before Dominic Osman squeaked home his second goal in three games on a goal Caps netminder Nathan Craze may want back.

A third and - in the end - crucial Edinburgh goal came on 37 minutes as Jarolin netted his second of the game and tenth of the season on a lovely, well worked powerplay move from Richard Hartmann's side.

Down 3-1 after two periods of play, Stingrays boss Sylvain Cloutier - angry at his sides display and lack game winning ability over the season - issued each player with two weeks notice and this, in turn, saw an improved third period showing.

Though this served as a big wake up call for his squad, despite a typically clinical finish on the powerplay from Jason Silverthorn, the Stingrays could not force a much needed further goal and crashed to their 13th loss of the season.

As well as revealing all players were put on two-weeks notice during the second intermission, in the post-game interview coach Cloutier revealed he would be sitting out the next few games to allow a new - as yet unnamed - import to take to the ice. An announcement, possibly a defenceman, on that signing is expected early next week.

Rays Rating
2

FBB Three Stars
1 - Jason Silverthorn (1+0)
2 - Christian Boucher (22 saves)
3 - Dominic Osman (1+0)

Sunday 16 October 2011

Stingrays out of the Challenge Cup

Coventry Blaze 4 - 2 Excel Hull Stingrays

The Excel Hull Stingrays were tonight knocked out of the Challenge Cup, losing their fourth straight game in the competition and sixth on the bounce overall, in a four goals to two defeat to the Coventry Blaze.

Coming into the game at the Skydome Sylvain Cloutier's side were all but mathematically out of the competition following two defeats against Nottingham and another against Cardiff, however, tonight's loss ends their slim hopes of qualifying from the "Group of Death" for another year in a competition they have never progressed from the first stage.

Ownership rivals Coventry - having been beaten 4-2 in Braehead last night despite facing just 11 shots - took the lead through Luke Fulghum in the first but were pegged back by Jereme Tendler four minutes into the second.

New Blaze signing Dustin Wood then put the home side back into the lead before a quick fire double from Owen Fussey and Shea Guthrie extended their lead to 4-1.

Having been deprived of secondary scoring for much of the year, the Stingrays finally received some help offensively last night as Matty Davies and Dominic Osman recorded their first and second goals of the season and that continued tonight as Jack Watkins bagged his first of the season on the powerplay, ably assisted by Osman and Davies.

Once again though the shorthanded Stingrays - again without Ryan Lake, Tristan Harper and Derek Campbell - fell some way short of their opponents, particularly defensively as they allowed 50+ shots on netminder Christian Boucher for the second Sunday in a row.

The Stingrays performed somewhat admirably in somewhat tough circumstances this weekend, however, with the losing streak now at six games and few visible improvements on-ice, the pressure continues to mount on both coaches and playing staff.

The next four fixtures sees Cloutier's men take on Dundee, Edinburgh, Braehead and Fife in a welcome change from the opening month and a half of the season - in which they have faced the other bottom sides just twice.

Needless to say results and performances are a must for each and every player.

Match Highlights: Excel Hull Stingrays 2-3 Nottingham Panthers

Saturday 15 October 2011

Panthers claw second tight win over Stingrays

Excel Hull Stingrays 2 - 3 Nottingham Panthers

The Excel Hull Stingrays tonight once again found themselves on the wrong side of a 3-2 scoreline against the Nottingham Panthers at the Hull Arena, losing out to a Marc Levers second period goal.

Beginning the match minus a full forward line - with Ryan Lake and Tristan Harper sidelined through injury and Derek Campbell serving the second of a three match suspension - the Stingrays began the game with Kingston Jets forward Andy Ward, 16 year old Bobby Chamberlain and defenceman Dan Scott spread throughout their top three forward lines.

Despite drafting in replacements to make up for the short bench, it was soon clear that it would be a lack of quality bodies and certainly not a lack of hard work that would cost the Rays in the long term.

The Panthers opened the scoring with a moment of sheer genius from forward Jordan Fox, who dipsy-doodled around defenceman Dmitri Rodin having picked up the puck from a Stingrays giveaway, neatly slotting home shorthanded past Christian Boucher after four minutes.

The visitors deservedly doubled that lead on 17 minutes, a routine powerplay one timer from the blueline by David Clarke finding twine as Nottingham's deep bench took a two goal lead into the second and certainly didn't look like letting up.

Stingrays forward Dominic Osman - having easily his best all around game in a Stingrays jersey yet, just days after coach Sylvain Cloutier publicly stated he and Campbell needed to step up offensively - then got the home side on the board, robbing the puck from Nottingham player-coach Corey Neilson before ghosting in on Craig Kowalski to delightfully fire home and halve the Panthers lead shorthanded.

Somehow heading into the third the home team found themselves still in a game that, based on offensive cohesion, they had no right to be in. Still, work rate and an all in attitude to defence saw them just one goal down, though Marc Levers extended the Panthers lead to two with an easy backdoor finish on a two-on-one which materialised as a result of another Rays turnover in their own end.

The home team continued to battle however, and a very well worked powerplay opportunity between Matty Davies, Osman and Cloutier, saw Davies all alone in front to net his second of the year on a feed from behind after 49 minutes to cut the deficit to one once again.

That would be as close as the Stingrays would come though as they tried to no avail to snatch a point in the final ten minutes that their workrate deserved but their performance in comparison to the Panthers did not.

Cloutier looked thoroughly displeased with his side after they went into the first intermission 2-0 down and, at that point, the odds for player changes next week looked short. Still, an improved second and third period and yet another tight result against a top four side with three players missing will be encouraging to him. Still, critics will say that merely papers over the cracks which - despite the work rate - were once again visible tonight.

The Rays boss takes his team to Coventry tomorrow night in an effective dead rubber in Challenge Cup Group B with qualification for both sides unlikely.

Perhaps crucially, after tomorrow nights game the Rays play Scottish quartet Edinburgh, Dundee, Braehead and Fife. Whether he makes changes before these games in order to create momentum or waits to see what his team can produce in fixtures against their so called bottom five mini-league remains to be see.

Changes do seem more likely than not at present - though only if Cloutier can find the right player or players available, as he did last year, miraculously bringing in veteran Drew Bannister for young Latvian Kriss Grundmanis.

Rays Rating
6

FBB Three Stars
1 - Dominic Osman (1+1)
2 - Sam McCluskey (0+0)
3 - Christian Boucher (29 saves)

Sunday 9 October 2011

Four without success for Rays in Dundee

Dundee Stars 3 - 1 Excel Hull Stingrays

The Excel Hull Stingrays tonight made it four games, four losses in Dundee, losing out to the Stars for the first time this season - going down by three goals to one - to add to three defeats there on Tayside last season.

Having run the league leading Belfast Giants close last night at the Hull Arena, the Stingrays were expected to be in with a shout of their second victory of the 11/12 campaign.

However, a strong first period showing from the Stars saw them outshoot Sylvain Cloutier's team 19-10 and lead 1-0, from an Alan Mazur point shot, and the home side did not look back from there on.

Though the shot count against the Rays - who were without Derek Campbell after he received a match penalty last night - continued to rise rapidly in the second and throughout the game, Jereme Tendler was able to level the scoreline after 37 minutes on one of just six shots in the period - handing Jack Watkins his first point as a Stingray along the way.

However, despite the late second period goal the Stars persevered into the third, netting through player-coach Dan Ceman and American Jarrett Konkle to deservedly claim their first two points of the league season and leapfrog the Stingrays into seventh place.

One positive for the night was netminder Christian Boucher - who deservedly picked up the Stingrays Man of the Match award having turned away a staggering 56 Dundee shots - on what was an off night for Sylvain Cloutier's side - who are now four games without a win for the second time this season.

It seems to be a constant week-to-week struggle for consistent performances for Cloutier and the Stingrays, and there are no let ups next weekend as they take on Nottingham at home in the league before travelling in Coventry in the Challenge Cup.

Match Highlights: Excel Hull Stingrays 3-4 Belfast Giants

Giant effort from Stingrays not enough to hold back Belfast

Excel Hull Stingrays 3 - 4 Belfast Giants

The Excel Hull Stingrays tonight went down by four goals to three to Elite Ice Hockey League leaders the Belfast Giants despite having lead 3-1 after 24 minutes thanks to three powerplay goals.

The special teams, and particularly the man advantage, has perhaps been the brightest spot for the Stingrays during their opening seven league games this term and the first 24 minutes would go a long way to proving that.

The tone for a penalty strewn first period was set just six seconds in, Stingrays Derek Campbell and Belfast enforcer Adam Keefe dropping the gloves from opening face-off in a fairly uneventful fight which the league leaders man may have edged.

What followed that opening tussle was a seemingly unstoppable procession to the penalty box as referee Andy Carson dished out an incredible 35 minutes to Belfast and 17 to the Stingrays in the opening 20 minutes - 14 of those going to the Giants Ryan Crane.

Given their clinical ability on the powerplay so far this season, this favoured the home side as they raced into a deserved two-goal lead after 16 minutes.

For once the Stingrays were afforded the opportunity of a good start in the frantic opening minutes, Jason Silverthorn rifling one past an unsighted Stephen Murphy in the Belfast net after 2.45 - on a goal that gave Tristan Harper his first point in a Stingrays jersey.

Campbell then added to his earlier fight with a deserved first goal for the Stingrays - tipping in a unconvincing blueline shot from Dmitri Rodin to double the lead.

With the intermission of an entertaining period closing in the home team leaked a crucial goal to the Giants, Martin Ondrej losing the puck in his own end before Brock McBride ghosted into as the extra man to halve the lead with less than 20 seconds left on the clock.

Save for the late goal, the Stingrays continued the second as they had ended the first, though former Steeler  and new Belfast signing Robert Dowd missed what appeared to be an open goal sitter three minutes in.

Silverthorn then added his second of the night and fifth of the season on the Stingrays third powerplay goal of the evening, again firing past Murphy to restore the two goal lead having been set up by a move from Frantisek Bakrlik which saw two Giants nearly collide mid-ice.

Though it is fair to say their ability on the powerplay had, at this stage, somewhat helped them into a two-goal lead at, the Stingrays had been more than competing with the reigning playoff champions.

That was until the 25th minute, immediately following what would be their last goal, when the Giants turned up the pressure and forced the Stingrays into their own end, sustaining that pressure continuously for the first time in the game.

It is no coincidence that the Giants first real period of superiority came at a time when they were finally, for the first time in the game, at full strength.

Following Ondrej's earlier mistake for Belfast's opener, it was two further defensive mistakes combined with the Giants unrelenting offence that forced the visitors back into the game as the Rays continually struggled to clear their lines.

First McBride added his eighth of the season and second of the game, profiting from captain Joshua Mizerek losing the puck in the corner. Then, both Dominic Osman and Dan Scott failed to fire the puck out of the defensive end, allowing Beniot Doucet to level the game for the Northern Irish side - much to the dismay of Osman, who proceeded to smash his stick on the bar of Christian Boucher's net, frustrated at letting the game slip from the Rays grasp.

Having weathered the majority of a whirlwind Belfast storm, the Stingrays may have perhaps been thankful to have been heading into the final stanza level and not behind. If the first period belonged to the home side thanks to the man advantage, the second saw Belfast's superiority five-on-five come to the fore.

The deciding point in the final stanza, and indeed the game, came nearly ten minutes into the third. Stingrays agitator Campbell compounded an eventful night and a generally good all-around performance with a moment of madness.

The 31 year old reacted badly to a big hip-check from Daryll Lloyd in the corner, hitting his stick against the plexi and firing verbals the way of referee Carson for his lack of call - to which Carson dished out a 10 minute penalty for abuse of official - before being handed a five plus match penalty for excessive roughness after frustratedly throwing a number of gloved punches at Lloyd.

That foolish penalty gave the Giants a five minute powerplay which they would capitalise upon for the first time in the game, netting what would turn out to be the game winning goal through defenceman Jeff Mason on a rebound four minutes into the advantage, after the Rays had impressively and easily killed 80% of the powerplay.

From this point on the Giants shut up shop and with less than six minutes remaining the home team found it tough to break down Doug Christiansen's side - unsurprisingly five-on-five - as the away side claimed a hard fought win for the second time in two weeks at Hull Arena.

Sylvain Cloutier's side may have yet again failed to finish off a top four side - as they did last week against Nottingham - and admittedly struggled against the Giants in that even strength period in the second, however, the positives more than outweigh those few negatives.

The Stingrays are continually referred to by people outside the club as a hard working team and eventually this hard work will surely pay off for the club after a tough early season schedule.

Naturally, there are areas of their game that can - and probably will - be improved. Defensively, three of four Belfast goals came from defensive turnovers in their own end. Offensively, the much mooted lack of depth is a problem, with most of the offensive reliance on Silverthorn, Rodin and Jereme Tendler, though this certainly shouldn't be a terminal problem, at least at this stage.

It is indeed, far too easy to focus on the negatives, particularly against a team like Belfast that boasts so much firepower and should be there or there abouts when the season comes to a close.

On the other side of things, tonight's improvements alongside last week's performance prove it is not impossible for the club to compete with the top teams, and also show Cloutier and team are getting to a level of performance they will be happy with, even if wins are not forthcoming.

While team work ethic, Silverthorn, Rodin, Tendler and netminder Boucher - who continues to defy early season critics - are amongst the other numerous positives, it has to be said the all around performance has improved three fold in the week since a demoralising 6-0 loss in Sheffield.

The Stingrays meet just their second none top five side of the season tomorrow night as they travel to Dundee to take on the Stars - who have lost all five of their opening league games, two in overtime.

Rays Rating
7

FBB Three Stars
1 - Jason Silverthorn (2+1)
2 - Christian Boucher (33 saves)
3 - Dmitir Rodin (0+3)

Sunday 2 October 2011

Stingrays bounce back in tight loss

Excel Hull Stingrays 2 - 3 Nottingham Panthers

The Excel Hull Stingrays tonight bounced back from a moral sapping 6-0 defeat in Sheffield with a confidence inspiring tight 3-2 loss to the Nottingham Panthers in Challenge Cup Group B.

Desperate for a performance after a season changing 60 minutes in Sheffield, the Stingrays were narrowly outshot 14-13 in a first period that saw Derek Campbell ejected with a 5 plus game for a check from behind.

The scoresheet kicked into life in the second period, Frantisek Bakrlik netting the Rays 12th powerplay goal of the season before Matt Francis levelled with a shorthanded goal for the visitors.

The Rays once again lept into the lead 46 seconds into the third, defenceman Dmitri Rodin bagging his third goal in four games and the home sides second man advantage marker of the game.

Again, the Panthers bounced back however, Scott Champagne leveling four-on-four before a slapshot from player-coach Corey Neilson proved the difference in a tight 3-2 win for his side.

After the hysterical outcry following the thrashing in Sheffield, it was a much improved performance from the Stingrays who proved they can play with anyone on any given night, as the peppered Craig Kowalski in the Nottingham net with 35 shots, ultimately falling agonisingly short in an entertaining but even encounter.

This defeat appears to have effectively ended any slim hopes of the Rays qualifying from the Challenge Cup group of death which contains Nottingham, Sheffield, Cardiff and Coventry - all league contenders in their own right. Though this may not necessarily be a bad thing, allowing the club to focus on league play while utilising the remaining five fixtures as practice, somewhat free of the pressure of competitive cup action..

Next weekend Sylvain Cloutier's return to league action as they on high flying league favourites Belfast at the Hull Arena before travelling to Dundee to face Dan Ceman's Stars - who remain winless this term.

FBB Three Stars
1 - Christian Boucher (36 saves)
2 - Dominic Osman (0+0)
3 - Sylvain Cloutier (0+0)

Saturday 1 October 2011

Stingrays shut out and hit for six in Sheffield

Sheffield Steelers 6 - 0 Excel Hull Stingrays

In their poorest showing of a disappointing season so far, the Excel Hull Stingrays were tonight embarrassingly hit for six - for the fourth time this term - and shut out - for the first time this season - by Yorkshire rivals the Sheffield Steelers.

Perennially slow starters, the Stingrays were in trouble after just one minute.

A big hit from Martin Ondrej behind his own net left Sheffield defenceman Chad Huttel seeing stars and the Slovakian heading to the bin for a clear elbow. Mike Ramsey capitalising on the ensuing powerplay, rifling in off the post for the games opening goal and a 1-0 Sheffield lead.

A mid-ice mix up from Rays forwards then turned the puck over to the Steelers, and allowed Ashley Tait to tap home and double the reigning champions lead - an assist going to Lee Esders. Esders former team failing to compete in all areas at this point.

Though the Rays showed their first signs of life following the goal on 12 minutes, the Steelers relentless and clinical play afforded the visitors no time to get into the game.

A lovely team move, which started behind their own net, saw numerous pinpoint passes up the ice and was finished off in front by Neil Clark, typical of what the Steelers were doing so right and the Stingrays doing so wrong as they extended their lead to three.

Though the Rays came out and showed some fight in the second, notably as Dominic Osman dropped the gloves with Sheffield's Matt Stephenson, there was little more to be positive about heading into the final stanza three goal's down.

Still, for the first time the Stingrays forced sustained pressure on the Steelers net at the beginning of the third but failed to capitalise on their possession before, typically, the home side rushed up the ice and bagged their fourth through Tait's second of the game.

Poor positioning from captain Joshua Mizerek as the Steelers attacked once again then allowed Ramsey to bag his second of the game after Boucher had made the initial save before player-coach Ryan Finnerty completed the rout at 6-0 with a finish on a clinical break.

The Stingrays were, it goes without saying, convincingly beaten.

At the best the defence was scrambled collapsing on top of helpless netminder Boucher - who was hung out to dry - while the offence - believed to be one of the team's strong points - was unsurprisingly shut out for the first time this season, forcing shots that hit bodies in front or missed the target completely due to a lack of creativity - an all too familiar story.

Even the man advantage, which has been very good this season, failed to turn up effectively. Mid-ice collisions with team mates, miscontrolled passes and all around lack of on-ice chemistry summed up the other main areas of concern.

Naturally, there were few positives.

Derek Campbell - clearly wanting to perform well against his former side, stood out for his work rate, though most of the time this did not translate into sustained offence. Boucher couldn't have performed much better with what was at his disposal, while Jason Silverthorn and Dmitri Rodin were the best of a bad bunch up front and at the back.

It would be easy to sweep the game under the carpet as a one off because the reigning EIHL champion Steelers were the opposition. Good as they were, there are deeper problems in the Stingrays camp, most concerning of all is the lack of cohesion throughout the ranks.

More hard work and, dare it be suggested, changes, may soon be required.

Of course, a positive performance against Nottingham, albeit in the Challenge Cup, may go a distance to erasing the memory of tonight's drubbing

Rays Rating
3

FBB Three Stars
1 - Derek Campbell (0+0)
2 - Jason Silverthorn (0+0)
3 - Christian Boucher (24 saves)