Weekly Faceoff: Geric, Stangs & Bangs

On February 12, 2011, in Blue Tongues, by Sam

The Weekly Faceoff is a regular weekly blog talking about all things Tongues, in and around the AIHL.

The 2011 AIHL season is just months away, and teams are now in the process of getting their rosters together.

Adam Geric

Adam Geric

Adam Geric on the Saskatoon Blades

Late this week the Gold Coast Blue Tongues announced the signing of Adam Geric to the 2011 squad.  Geric, a native of Victoria, BC, Canada is a gritty power forward who will bring a strong work ethic and physical aspect to the team.  Those who have seen him play compare his style to the likes of past Blue Tongue players, Mike Gough and last season’s Dallas Costanzo.  Geric is an experienced player and included on his resume are 2 seasons with the Saskatoon Blades of the WHL.

Melbourne Mustangs

One of the biggest changes to the league this season is the inclusion of the Melbourne Mustangs, the 2nd Victorian team in the AIHL.  The Mustangs are an enigma right now and have not had AIHL season experience, however aim to play hard and show they belong in the league.  The Mustangs will play their season partially out of the Ice House, where they will share the rink with the Melbourne Ice.

Bring The Pain

With the signing of Adam Geric, the Blue Tongues have some great physicality to the game.  The Tongues have always been one of the more physical teams in the AIHL, so it will be interesting to see how the Tongues play this season under new coach, Peter Nixon.  We don’t yet know who will be on the final roster, however if the likes of Dave Upton, Ben Spillane and Jon Bale return, the Blue Tongues could be a very hard team to play against once again.

I had an interesting conversation last week with a friend about our Blue Tongues, the AIHL Finals and what it would take to not only make the playoffs, but have a truly good shot at winning it all.

There is no blue pill that will transport this team out of the Matrix.  Yoda isn’t going to infuse the boys with the force and as much as we may like the idea, we wont be playing in a fancy rink with 1000 seats, good ice and glass.

What we will have is a team with potential and a very loyal fan base.

So what needs to change?  What is it that this Blue Tongues team needs to do to go to the next level?  Here are 5 changes which I believe will greatly benefit our team going into the 2011 AIHL season.

Improve Defense

They say offense wins games but defense wins championships. This could not be more true for our Blue Tongues. We know they can score goals year in year out, but the one thing that has been a weakness each season is the defense. Don Burke has been the heart of the team for years, but age has caught up with him and it’s time he stepped down, allowing a younger, more agile skater to take the spot. Last season saw huge strides in the game of Cam Trew who was by far the best local player in many games. Ross Howell and Ben Spillane were solid as always, although it appears that Spillane did not get as much ice time as he deserved. Bringing in import defenseman is a must for our team, although I believe 2 imports should be used for defense, one puck-moving defenseman to help boost the offense on the blue line and one who can shut down the other teams top scorers.

Rest Imports / Play Locals

It doesn’t take a genius to see that our teams coach likes to favour the imports over the locals. Understandably so, as the imports are indeed the better players. Saying that, last season we saw Mike McRae and Dallas Costanzo played to the point of near collapse while locals sat on the bench. Players lose effectiveness when they’re tired and imports are no exception. If our guys are tired, sit them for a shift or 2 and let the local lines play some. It is a risk, as the other team will try and match their lines and put out their offensive guns against our weaker lines, but that’s hockey. A benefit is that our locals get more experience and therefore hopefully improve more. We have some great players who get very little ice time, such as Ben Spillane. It appears to many that “Spills” is used more as the team enforcer than an effective player, which has bewildered fans for the last few seasons; especially those who have been following the Blue Tongues since before they moved south to the Coast.

Choose A Goalie & Have Faith In Them

Those who know me will know that the goalie situation with the Blue Tongues is a point of contention with me, as my previous posts have mentioned. I believe the team needs to have faith in their local netminders and show that by letting them play. 2 years in a row now we’ve sat in the stands and seen Luke Fiveash get shafted from the net; the AIHL finals in 2009 and midway through the season just gone. Using an import spot on the goalie position may appear to be a good idea on the surface, but doing so leaves wholes in the rest of the lineup, especially the defense. We already have 2 good goalies in Fiveash and Anderson, so maybe it is time we play them, have faith in them and start to build the team around them in net.

Coaching Change

There are probably over a hundred reasons why a coaching change could be needed on a hockey team. With the case of the Blue Tongues I believe it’s simply that a change is as good as a holiday. This team has a lot more potential than the stats and standings show. The coach deserves major kudos for how he has greatly improved his coaching over the last 3 seasons, however decisions on and off the ice have many fans wondering if maybe a new coach / leadership is needed in order for the team to move to the next level.

New Rink

This really is a given and applies to most teams in the league, but in many ways more so for the Blue Tongues. If you’ve not come up to the Gold Coast and seen our rink, you are in for a shock. The rink is simply unacceptable for a national league team. The ice surface is terrible, there are no shower facilities and overall, it is a health / safety risk. The problem is, building a new rink is costly and the team seems to struggle to bring in sponsors as it is, so getting the level of sponsorship needed to fund a new rink may simply be a pipe-dream at this time. Move the team back to Brisbane (Acacia Ridge)? That would definitely be a HUGE improvement to the facility issue however it would mean the team would be based back in Brisbane again, something I fear the current ownership would neither want nor allow.

Like Frodo and the Fellowship walking through Moria, we now face the long dark of the AIHL off-season. Let us hope the team does not have a cave troll.

Refs, Rule Books and Fans

On August 14, 2010, in AIHL, Blue Tongues, by Sam

I’ve been sitting on this post for the past week, wondering whether or not it was worthy of a blog post or not.

Last week the Blue Tongues were down in Melbourne taking on the Ice for back-to-back games.  There was an incident during the Saturday game which had Blue Tongues forward Dallas Costanzo dive to allegedly block a shot and inadvertently trip an Ice player who went down and got injured.  Costanzo was given a 2 minute minor for tripping and a game misconduct, meaning he would not be eligible to play on Sunday.  As these games were “must-wins” for the Blue Tongues, losing Costanzo was a serious blow to the Tongues.

The Ice ended up winning both games, all but ending the Tongues playoffs hopes.

Back to that tripping penalty though, as that is the central point to this post.  When it happened, the ref actually went and consulted with the AIHL rulebook before making the final ruling.  This move has angered a few Blue Tongues fans, who believe a 2 minute tripping minor was all that was warranted.  The ref, going out of his way to check the book ended Costanzo’s weekend, which had an impact on the Tongues playoffs hopes ending.  This penalty has been discussed at length on Hockeypulse since those games.

Was it warranted?  Did the ref go too far in making that call?  As fans, we could argue this til the cows come home.  Let me make it simple for you though.  The AIHL rulebook clearly states under Rule 539 – Tripping:

b) A player who injures an opponent by tripping shall be assessed, at the discretion
of the Referee, a:
➤ Major penalty + Automatic Game Misconduct penalty (5’+GM)
or
➤ Match penalty (MP)

You can read the rules here: http://www.iihf.com/fileadmin/user_upload/PDF/rules_part_two.pdf

Regardless of what we as fans think, the ref was 100% correct in making that call.  In fact, by going out of his way to read the rulebook, he did incredible justice to the AIHL.  Over the last few seasons we have seen and heard of our fair share of bad reffing. In this case, when a ref actually does the right thing, and goes above and beyond to ensure he does the right thing, people jump on him.  This doesn’t seem right.

As fans, our hearts get in the way of our minds at times.  I plead with you all though, for the love of the league and the Blue Tongues, be a a fair fan and unbiased.  Leave that to fans from other teams.  The penalty, while not to our liking, was a good call.

Twinkle Twinkle Little Northstars

On July 31, 2010, in Blue Tongues, by Sam

With just 4 games left in the regular season for our Blue Tongues, and all 4 of them against the Newcastle Northstars, the Tongues have just one thing on their mind… turn out the lights on the boys from Twinkletown!

Matches between the Northstars and Blue Tongues has always been some of the best hockey to watch, and these last few games shall be no different.  The Northstars bring with them a strong offensive lineup and solid netminding from Matt Ezzy (product of Gold Coast Ice Hockey, btw).  The Blue Tongues bring size, grit and a strong offensive scoring punch from imports Mike McRae and Dallas Costanzo.  This season the Blue Tongues have a new weapon however.  One that could play a huge role in these final 4 games; Reese Kalleitner. Reese has been solid in all his games played this season, and looks to continue his domination between the pipes this weekend.

Going into this weekends games, the Northstars have just 8 regulation wins, but have managed to pull off a whopping 7 shootout victories, ensuring their place in the standings with 39 points!  The Blue Tongues have 9 wins and 1 shootout victory and currently sit tied for 4th spot with 30 points.  While the Stars have put up more goals this season, the goals against for both teams (62 & 66 respectively) are both in the top 3 in the league.

The current standings are:

TEAM GP W L OTW OTL D PTS GF AVG GA AVG PCT L10
Newcastle North Stars 18 8 2 7 1 0 39 85 4.70 62 3.40 0.722 7-1-0-1-0
Melbourne Ice 18 10 5 2 1 0 35 90 5.00 52 2.90 0.648 4-4-0-0-0
Adelaide Adrenaline 20 6 5 5 4 0 32 86 4.30 75 3.80 0.533 3-2-0-2-0
Gold Coast Blue Tongues 18 9 7 1 1 0 30 69 3.80 66 3.70 0.556 4-4-0-1-0
Sydney Bears 19 9 7 0 3 0 30 55 2.90 77 4.10 0.526 5-4-0-1-0
Canberra Knights 18 5 11 0 2 0 17 68 3.80 83 4.60 0.315 2-6-0-2-0
Sydney Ice Dogs 19 3 13 0 3 0 12 55 2.90 93 4.90 0.211 2-7-0-1-0

Mike McRae’s hatrick and Reese Kalleitner’s solid netminding ensured the Blue Tongues a 4-2 victory in todays match between the Gold Coast Blue Tongues and visiting Sydney Bears.  Dallas Costanzo also had a goal.

The Blue Tongues, missing Ben Spillane and Adam Gebara to injury, relied on fantastic teamwork and discipline to outplay the Bears.  The patience in making plays created many opportunities for counter-attacks and the Blue Tongues did not hesitate in making use of them.

The Blue Tongues discipline allowed the Bears only 3 powerplay opportunities, and the team defense killed off all of them.  At the other end of the ice, the Bears struggled, going to the penalty box 5 times.  The Tongues special teams jumped on the opportunities with 2 powerplay goals.

The fast paced game provided for exciting end-to-end hockey, and the real battle of the game was between the guys between the Pipes; Reese Kalleitner and Nick Boucher.  Both goalies made incredible saves and did their teams proud, but it was Kalleitner who won the day, and the game.

Special mentions to Don Burke who played a solid game as a forward today, and Jon Bale, who has stepped up his game this season and pulled off some spectacular plays in todays match.

Let’s do it again tomorrow boys!