Reese kalleitner made 3 giant shootout saves tonight and the Blue Tongues special teams excelled to secure the Blue Tongues 3-2 shootout victory against the visiting Sydney Bears. Mike McRae netted a fantastic shorthanded goal and Alex Boyd put in a 1st period goal in a game that was fast-paced and full of intensity.
The key standout feature in todays game was the Blue Tongues presence in front off the Bears goalie, Nick Boucher. The boys in blue crashed the net and screened the goalie perfectly, and it was on one such occasion that Alex Boyd put the Tongues ahead.
The last line of defense, Reese Kalleitner was once again, outstanding between the pipes making this fan swallow his words posted in an earlier blog. I admit it, i was wrong about Reese.
I want to give a very special shout-out to Ben Spillane and the other injured players. It’s not easy being injured and having to watch the game instead of play in it, and these guys are professional in both victory and defeat. I know that Ben is itching to get out there and will see action when the team travels to Canberra in 2 weeks time.
The Blue Tongues are looking strong and all the boys are ready to make a strong run for their spot in Melbourne at the end of August!
Go Tongues!
We’ve reached that part of the season we love to hate. The skates are put away, the schedule is complete and the champion has been crowned; the 2009 AIHL season is over.
Congratulations to the Adelaide Adrenaline who played some of the best hockey this fan has seen in recent times, dominating the Melbourne Ice 6-1 in their semi-final and defeating the defending champions, Newcastle North Stars in a 3-2 overtime victory on Sunday to secure the championship.
With IHA declaring the revered Goodall Cup was going back to a state competition, the AIHL introduced a new trophy which AIHL teams will now play for. The trophy was on display during the finals and handed to Adrenaline Greg Oddy as the captain of the victorious Adelaide Adrenaline.
The Gold Coast Blue Tongues made their first ever finals appearance to the roar of a dedicated Tongues fan base. Players later expressed that the Blue Tongues fans, who numbered less than 20 out-screamed the packed North Stars crowd. Keeping even through 2 periods, the Blue Tongues lost to the Newcastle North Stars 5-3 in their semi-final matchup.
The Melbourne Ice team, who were defeated 6-1 by the Adrenaline in semi-final #1 should take away many positive things from this season, one in which saw them rebuilding with youth and inexperience. Greg Oddy and the boys did fantastic to get them to the playoffs.
Brad Smuldes was awarded the AIHL regular season MVP award. He broke the AIHL scoring record, putting up 33 goals, 43 assists for 76 points, beating the old record by 7 points.
Cass Delsar of the Adelaide Adrenaline was awarded the playoff MVP, for what we can tell, deflecting a puck and scoring the overtime game winner agains the North Stars. This has sparked a discussion as to whether scoring “that” goal is deserving of the playoff MVP. We feel Greg Oddy or Thilthorpe would have been more deserving personally.
Mike Crowhurst of Slapshot.com.au has posted that DVDs of the finals games (all 3 of them) are available for purchase via their website: http://www.slapshot.com.au. According to Mike, they had 300 people tuning in to watch the games! A huge thanks to Mike, Mischa and the rest of the Slapshot boys for making the games available to the world.
The AIHL off-season is a long one, stretching through til April/May next year. Over the next 7 months teams will work on securing new imports, work on training the local guys and prepare for another AIHL season. The AIHL is notorious for it’s rumour mill, so here are few to whet your appetite.
According to people in the know, the talk around the league is that there could be new teams in the AIHL next season. Nobody has been able to confirm anything as yet, however 3 names keep popping up; Melbourne, Central Coast and Brisbane. Melbourne have their new ice arena next season, making room for another team down there. The Central Coast has the Rhinos, although I find it hard to believe they would be back if the same owner is involved. Brisbane used to have the Blue Tongues, so has the ability and fan base to hold a team.
According to sources who we believe had one too many, Matt Ezzy’s days in Newcastle are over, and he could be on the move to a new team. This rumour was also popular this time last year, so take it as you will. I sincerely hope he does not move to the Gold Coast unless he welcomes the taste of humble pie, as there is zero chance fans up there will worship him as the Newcastle crowd do.
Loads of rumours of returning import players, including 1 from the Blue Tongues, 1 from Newcastle and 1 from the Adrenaline.
Seems a harsh subject, but if you were at the game, a fairly accurate description. The ice was reminiscent of a scene from Youngblood, an 80s hockey movie staring Rob Lowe and Patrick Swayze – fog all over the ice, and visibility for the crowd was extremely limited. After the game, I spoke to a couple of players who assured me that the visibility on the ice wasn’t that bad for them, and either way it was as bad for the Bears as it was for the Blue Tongues.
Fog and pelting rain on the tin roof of the rink aside, the start of the game didn’t bode well, with import Andre Selander sent to the penalty box for boarding 14 seconds into the game. However, the Blue Tongues strong penalty kill (PK) team showed up to play, killing off not just Selander’s penalty but Ivarsson’s tripping penalty 4 minutes later. Dave Upton opened the scoring for the BTs, with Trevor Walsh and Jon Bale also adding to the tally in the first.
Before I go onto to Trevor Walsh and how he was truly the hero of the game, I want to spend a moment on Jon Bale’s goal. The play was just beautiful. Don Burke passed to Dave Upton who sent a sweet pass, and I mean a sweet pass to Jon Bale, who connected perfectly, lifting the wrister shot into the top left shelf, where it missed the post, hit the net and the arms went up in the air. It was just such a pretty, pretty goal. The crowd screamed and cheered and clapped and everyone was elated. And it sent the Blue Tongues to the first intermission with a 3-0 lead.
In the second period, I’m not sure what happened to our boys but they either went to sleep or left the building because they weren’t the same team in the second period that they were in the first. Let’s face it, if it had been the North Stars out there yesterday instead of the Bears, that would have been the ballgame. The North Stars would have shredded us to pieces, spanked their butts and sent them home to their mothers. The defense was lackluster – no energy, no one looked to see where their teammates were – there were more turnovers than a Brumby’s bakery! The amount of times a BT passed the puck to a Bear was astronomical. And while the fog didn’t help the team, the Bears had to play in the same conditions, to they can’t use that excuse. The Bears put three goals on the BTs in that period. THREE! They shouldn’t have gotten anywhere near Fiveash to score on him – especially when we outshot them in every period.
Meanwhile… Walshie. Walshie was the hero of yesterday’s game. He lead the way on the ice the entire game, and was a standout player for the whole three periods. He was strong on offense, he was quick to get into position, he was helping out on defense when – in the second period – the defense for the Tongues took a nap or went on vacation. He was just one the entire game. Two goals were scored in the second period for the BTs – both by Walshie. And he scored his fourth goal in the third period. Brad Smulders and Andre Selander also scored in the third, while the Bears managed 1 more – the game ending at 8-4, but the scoreline just does not represent how the teams played.
In tonight’s game, the Blue Tongues once again face the Bears again in the second of the double header. The Blue Tongues need to tighten up the defense and watch their teammates. There is no point passing the puck if there’s no one there to receive it. And while we can score goals and put plenty of shots on goal, the defense needed a little improvement – or at least a little more physicality. The intensity that was there against the North Stars was not there against the Bears. Hopefully it will return tonight.


































