Apr 30, 2009

Permalink 13:00 pm, Patrick Williams / 2008-09, 1313 words  

Phantoms depart long-time Philly home

The Philadelphia Phantoms passed away quietly last Friday night in a 1-0 road loss to the Hershey Bears, ending the AHL's 13-year run in Philadelphia.

Hershey, a Calder Cup favourite this spring, closed out the Philadelphia Flyers' AHL affiliate with a four-game sweep that led even Philadelphia head coach John Paddock to concede the Bears' superior roster depth.

"It's a sad ending to something that was very special to all of us," said goaltending coach Neil Little, a mainstay in Philadelphia's net for years.

Now the Phantoms will head to Glens Falls, N.Y., and take their Flyers affiliation with them after the AHL approved the move on Tuesday. The team's Philadelphia home, the Spectrum, will be demolished at an unknown future date to make room for a retail complex.

Glens Falls, a town of 14,000 in upstate New York, hosted the AHL for 20 seasons before the Adirondack Red Wings went dormant a decade ago. The Phantoms are under new ownership after Comcast-Spectacor, the Phantoms' former owner, sold the club on February 4. The 4,806-seat Glens Falls Civic Center will house the club, and a team name will be announced at a later date.

The season-ending loss concluded with a low-key and silent Philadelphia dressing room, a playoff roster mostly devoid of the proven AHL veterans. The quiet punctuated Philadelphia's low-key disappearance from the AHL map. Only a furious late-season run in which the Phantoms clawed away at a 12-point gap that the Binghamton Senators once owned had even allowed Paddock's club to slip into the final playoff spot on the final weekend of the season.

Little was quiet and low-key around the Phantoms a decade ago, however. A veteran-packed roster that won the Phantoms a Calder Cup in only their second season, three consecutive 100-point seasons and sell-out crowds at the storied 17,380-seat Spectrum quickly made Philadelphia an elite AHL franchise in the late-1990s and fostered a fierce, often blood-spilling Pennsylvania rivalry with the Bears.

AHL stars Peter White, John Stevens and Neil Little helped anchor the Phantoms' roster of that era, and legendary AHL enforcer Frank "The Animal" Bialowas and a cast of enforcers made the blood flow on Broad Street once more. Bill Barber, enshrined in the Hockey Hall of Fame, stepped behind the Philadelphia bench and guided the Phantoms through their first four seasons while waging a heated coaching battle with Hershey's Bob Hartley.

The Phantoms spawned two NHL coaches in Barber and Stevens. Patrick Sharp, Brian Boucher, Antero Niittymaki, Mark Eaton, Richard Park, Alexandre Picard and Dennis Seidenberg are among the players the club graduated to the NHL duty. Current Flyers stars Jeff Carter, Mike Richards and Claude Giroux logged brief AHL stints in Philadelphia. A host of well-known AHL names that includes Peter Vandermeer, Brad Tiley, Michel Picard and Dennis Bonvie spent time with the Phantoms.

Those days now gone, the Phantoms spent the past weekend conducting exit interviews at the practice facility that they have shared with the Flyers in Voorhees, N.J., a Philadelphia suburb. The players' departure leaves only what remains of a skeleton front-office crew to tend to the club's final off-ice business affairs before the AHL departs Philadelphia.

The new owners, Pittsburgh-based Brooks Group, have publicly indicated a desire to eventually locate the Phantoms in Pennsylvania's Lehigh Valley, an area located an hour north of Philadelphia that also hosts a Triple-A baseball team. However, the area does not have an arena capable of hosting hockey and while there has been some political support for building an AHL-capable arena, no firm plans have been announced. A deadline to reach a building deal has been set for August 1.

Philadelphia's departure from the AHL saddened Bialowas, who remained in the Philadelphia area following his retirement and returned to the Spectrum for the club's final regular-season game on April 10.

The Phantoms played 1,116 regular-season and playoff games over their 13 seasons. A sell-out crowd of 17,380, the Phantoms' 21st Spectrum sell-out, closed out the Spectrum's regular-season slate for a Bears-Phantoms tilt. The Phantoms dominated the Bears that even, taking a 5-2 decision that nudged the Phantoms into the playoffs and a spring date with the archrival Bears.

Phantoms fans dished up a typically rowdy Philadelphia atmosphere. Now those fans who wish to still see live hockey will be forced to pay NHL ticket prices for the Flyers, head to Hershey or Wilkes-Barre/Scranton for AHL play or sample nearby ECHL (Reading and Trenton) and NCAA clubs (Princeton).

"The bottom line is for the fans," Bialowas said. "It's terrible for them. I don't think that I ever thought (the Phantoms would leave Philadelphia)".

Joining Bialowas that evening was long-time Phantoms defenceman John Slaney, who scored his first NHL goal in the Spectrum while a member of the Washington Capitals. The AHL's all-time leading scorer among defencemen spent seven seasons with the Phantoms earlier this decade.

"The town is a hockey town," Slaney said. "A sports town, I should say."

Bialowas, Slaney and Little joined Boyd Kane, Philadelphia's final AHL captain, in an on-ice pre-game ceremony before that final regular-season home tilt.

Also on hand was Barber, who is the only person to win both a Stanley Cup as a Flyer and a Calder Cup as a Phantom at the Spectrum. Barber's Flyers won the Stanley Cup in May 1974 on home ice, and Barber coached the Phantoms to their first Calder Cup in 1998, taking out the Saint John Flames in six games.

"I was one of the fortunate guys to experience championships here at the NHL level, and also the Calder Cup in 1998 was a great thrill," Barber said.

The Phantoms sold-out the Cup-clinching game on a June evening in 1998 and sold 13,000 of those tickets in fewer than two days for the contest. The Phantoms secured their first Calder Cup against a Flames team that featured Martin St. Louis, Jean-Sebastien Giguere, Denis Gauthier, Marty Murray, Clarke Wilm and Jim Dowd, among other future NHLers. In 2005, the Phantoms took out a Chicago roster that included Jay Bouwmeester, Braydon Coburn and Kari Lehtonen to capture the club's second Calder Cup, this one coming on home ice before 20,103 fans at the Wachovia Center.

Former Phantoms chief operating officer Frank Miceli grew up near the Spectrum and guided the Phantoms off the ice for 12 of their 13 seasons before departing for a job last year in San Antonio. Miceli recalled that Philadelphia was seen as something of a gamble when plans were announced in 1995 to relocate the Flyers' AHL affiliation from Hershey to Philadelphia. The Phantoms would serve as the Spectrum's new tenant after the Flyers headed to the Wachovia Center.

Philadelphia had hosted previous incarnations of the AHL, but the Phantoms leave town as the city's biggest AHL success story by far. Prior to the Phantoms, the AHL's first return to Philadelphia since 1979, the AHL was largely restricted to small markets. Baltimore was the only large market hosting the AHL when the Phantoms debuted in 1996, and the Maryland city had long endured box-office troubles. Philadelphia's early success spurred movement into Toronto, Winnipeg, Chicago, Houston, Cincinnati and other big-city homes.

Miceli believes that securing Barber as the club's first head coach to go along with Bob Clarke as the club's first general manager gave the Phantoms immediate credibility in the crowded Philadelphia sports marketplace. The club also targeted families and priced tickets well below the local norm for Philadelphia sports fans accustomed to major-league prices.

"We really hung our hat on that affordability angle," Miceli explained.

Those days are now gone, as is apparently the AHL's presence in the City of Brotherly Love. It was left to Little, the only Phantom to spend time with both the 1996-97 and 2008-09 clubs, to offer a eulogy for his club after its final game.

"It's been a fantastic franchise," Little summarized, "and I think that everyone is quite sorry to see the end of a very good thing."

Williams
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Apr 10, 2009

Permalink 09:00 am, Patrick Williams / 2008-09, 252 words  

Bears, Phantoms to close down Spectrum

SLAM! Sports will be on hand in Philadelphia on Friday night as the hometown Phantoms and Hershey Bears close down the 42-year-old Wachovia Spectrum.

A sell-out crowd, the Phantoms' first Spectrum full house in more than nine years, will greet the two long-time bitter AHL rivals.

Both clubs will wage playoff fights of their own as this weekend they conclude what has been one of the AHL's fiercest rivalries during the past 15 years. The clubs will wage one final regular-season Saturday night at Hershey.

A Hershey win in Philadelphia combined with Wilkes-Barre/Scranton loss in regulation, overtime or a shootout would give the Bears their second division title in the past three seasons and clinch top spot in the Eastern Conference. Hershey also continues to battle Manitoba and Milwaukee for the overall top spot in the AHL and a chance to earn home-ice advantage through the upcoming Calder Cup playoffs.

The Phantoms have stormed back from the Eastern Conference's doldrums to contend for a playoff spot. One available ticket to the postseason remains, and John Paddock's Phantoms are battling the Binghamton Senators for that invitation. The Sens and Phantoms both have 91 points, with two games remaining, but the Phantoms currently hold the first tie-breaker with 42 wins to Binghamton's 41 victories.

While Philadelphia must face the Bears twice this weekend, the Senators have a Friday home date with Norfolk, the second-worst team in the Eastern Conference, and a Saturday visit to Albany and an encounter with another non-playoff team in the River Rats.

Williams
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Jan 26, 2009

Permalink 22:30 pm, Patrick Williams / 2008-09, 190 words  

PlanetUSA takes 14-11 decision over Canada

WORCESTER, Mass. -- Philadelphia's Jared Ross poured in one goal and six assists to power PlanetUSA to a 14-11 win over the Canadian team and take home MVP honours at the AHL All-Star Game on Monday night.

Before 7,245 fans at the DCU Center, the six assists and seven points from Ross set AHL All-Star records. Ross was a late addition to the event and missed last season's All-Star Game after an appendectomy.

PlanetUSA erased a three-goal second-intermission deficit to take the win. As part of a record nine-goal third period, PlanetUSA poured in four goals in a span of 5:16 against beleaguered Canadian goaltender Tyler Weiman that erased a 11-10 that Canada had held late in the contest.

Wilkes-Barre/Scranton's Jeff Taffe, part of a dominant line with Ross, had a hat trick for PlanetUSA, a team made up of non-Canadian players. Ryan Potulny, Michael Ryan and Martins Karsums all logged two-goal games.

Former Hamilton Bulldog Corey Locke, who is now with the Houston Aeros, contributed four goals for Canada. Los Angeles prospect Teddy Purcell registered five assists. Locke and Purcell are now tied for the all-time AHL All-Star lead in points with eight.

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Permalink 21:30 pm, Patrick Williams / 2008-09, 393 words  

AHL map a series of "moving pieces"

WORCESTER, Mass. -- The AHL map figures to get another makeover in time for the 2009-10 season.

The hottest topic of debate, relocation-wise, at Monday's press conference addressing the state of the league
focused on the fate of the Philadelphia Phantoms.

The AHL affiliate and neighbour of the Philadelphia Flyers will be homeless at the close of the season when the Spectrum closes its doors.

Comcast-Spectacor, owner of both the Flyers and Phantoms, so far has failed to find a new home for the Phantoms. Speculation centres on Glens Falls, N.Y., which hosted the AHL for 20 seasons before the Adirondack Red Wings departed in 1999.

AHL president Dave Andrews stated that the Glens Falls Civic Center would require improvements to its infrastructure in order to become AHL-ready, but he noted that Glens Falls remains a possibility.

Keeping the Phantoms close to Philadelphia may not be an option. Trenton, N.J. and Reading, Pa. both have AHL-suitable arenas, but those facilities host ECHL clubs, and the AHL is loathe to infringe on ECHL territory. Earlier speculation had the Phantoms possibly playing a portion of their home games at the Wachovia Center, but that building hosts the NHL and NBA and finding available dates would be quite challenging.

Elsewhere, Austin, Tex., a locale that Andrews termed a "booming market," is slated to be the new AHL home for the Dallas Stars. The club is already selling season-subscriptions packages, and construction on a 6,800-seat arena is underway.

However, Austin still lacks an actual AHL franchise. Andrews said that no franchises, including the inactive Edmonton franchise, is on the market, something that is he is "not certain" how to resolve at present.

Another potential western outpost could be Abbotsford, B.C. A new arena will be ready for next season, and published reports last month had the Calgary affiliation on its way to the city located just 75 kilometres from Vancouver.

A group representing Abbotsford interests was on hand for the AHL All-Star event, but no franchise application has been submitted.

Andrews did not rule out Abbotsford, but geography remains an issue. Abbotsford would need to provide travel subsidies for visiting franchises.

Expansion to the West Coast has been debated at various junctures in recent seasons, but were it to happen, Andrews said that it "ideally" would involve multiple clubs going westward in order to ease the travel burden.

Williams
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Permalink 21:00 pm, Patrick Williams / 2008-09, 295 words  

AHL examining fighting

WORCESTER, Mass. -- has been one of the most-debated topics in North American hockey over the past month, and the AHL is not immune to the discussion.

The AHL drew fight-related headlines of its own this past weekend when series of punches from Manchester enforcer Kevin Westgarth knocked Philadelphia's Garret Klotz to the ice during a bout two seconds into last Friday's Monarchs-Phantoms game in Philadelphia.

Klotz crumpled to the ice and suffered a seizure. Remaining on the ice for several minutes, Klotz was taken off the ice on a stretcher and was hospitalized overnight before being released.

Westgarth, at 6-5 and 247 pounds, is among one of the AHL's elite enforcers.

Andrews disclosed on Monday that the AHL is "obviously looking at" the fighting issue, part of which will involve talking to the likes of Gary Bettman, Bill Daly and Colin Campbell. Andrews has been in hockey in a variety of capacities -- as a player, coach and executive -- and said that he understands both sides of the fighting debate.

Fighting has always held a prominent role in the AHL. Enforcers are often among the most popular players with fans, and, as Andrews pointed out, players test each other every night. In a sense, the "law of the jungle" often serves as the standard in the AHL each night.

However, while Andrews said he understands the sentiment that fighting can serve as an outlet for escalating tension as well as self-policing players, Andrews explained that he did not care for staged fights and that fighting need not be a part of the game.

For his part, however, Andrews said that his role in the ongoing debate as it relates to the AHL will be to stage the debate and let the respective sides hash out their differences.

Williams
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Patrick Williams

Every new rule you see now in the NHL was likely conceived in the AHL. Check out Patrick Williams on SLAM! Sports all season long for the latest AHL rumours, gossip and gripes.

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