Phantoms Lose Heartbreaker In A Shootout Loss
The Youngstown Phantoms came into Thursday’s game against Sioux Falls winners of their last four games. For about 80% of this game, a 2-1 shootout loss, the Phantoms looked like the dominant team. A late goal and getting beat in a shootout, the Phantoms fell to 12-5-1. Sioux Falls pulled through in a nailbiter to end the Phantoms recent dominance and nab a big road win.
The Phantoms got their only goal in the first period despite being outshot 10-7. Stephen Collins found the back of the net with 2:26 to go in the first third of the game. The goal by Collins was his first of the season. Richard Zehnal and Pat Conte picked up assists on the goal.
In the second, both teams had powerplay chances. In Fact, Sioux Falls had three of them compared to the Phantoms one. Give credit to the defense of the Phantoms and Matt O’Connor to keep the Stampede off of the scoreboard through two periods. After 40 minutes of play, the Phantoms clung to a 1-0 lead. The Stampede had 23 shots compared to Youngstown’s 19.
In the third period, the Phantoms played more physical but Sioux Falls was able to tie the game with 4:22 remaining in regulation. Ed McGovern scooped up the puck just to the right of O’Connor’s stick side of the crease and pushed it past before O’Connor could turn to make a play on it. The shots on goal still favored the Stampede after three at 29-22.
In the overtime, O’Connor made a couple of sensational glove saves to keep the Phantoms afloat. Stampede goaltender Stephon Williams made some pretty saves in the extra session as well. In the end, nobody scored and this game went to a shootout.
In the shootout, Austin Cangelosi scored as Coach Noreen’s first shooter, but that was it. For Sioux Falls, Justin Selman and Kyle Rankin scored. Mike Ambrosia tried to tie it, but his shot sailed the crossbar and hit the glass securing the win for the Stampede.
“The negative was that we set a bar as to what our potential was,”, said Coach Anthony Noreen afterwards. “We played ok and I even thought we played good at times, but we definitely did not to play to our potential. The positive is that we got a point out of it and head out to our rival, Muskegon, to compete for four huge points.”
The Phantoms hit the road for games at Muskegon on Friday and Saturday.
Being Donald Jones: Ankle Problems And Must-Win Situations
Donald Jones missed four weeks earlier this season with an ankle injury. being a proud player and hard worker, he beat the projected deadline to return a couple of weeks ago. However, Jones has again hurt the same ankle and this time there is damage to new ligaments.
“I was placed on injured reserve last week and that means I am done for the year”, said Jones Thursday night. “It was the same ankle and i injured everything that was healing plus one more ligament. It would be another three to four games before I could realistically get back, so I am done for the season.”
The Buffalo Bills lost, 28-24, to the Jets last weekend. The loss drops the Bills to 5-6 for the season and put a serious gash in their playoff chances. Being 1-5 on the road is something this young team can concentrate on getting better at next season.
“The mindset of the team right now is just focusing on trying to get a win. Everybody is banged up. We signed talented guys to replace injured players, but when you bring in guys from somewhere else, it effects the whole system, it’s real hard to get used to a new system for them.”
Jones said that he still goes to practice and is doing all he can to get better, but that he will not approach it [injury] the way he did the first time.
“I want to get back to 100%”, said Jones. “Last time, I came back not at 100%, so right now, I am focused on letting the ankle heal the right way.”
The Bills face the Titans this Sunday at 1. The good news is that it is a home game, and the Bills do well at home [5-1]. The bad news that if the Bills lose, the playoffs will be almost impossible to get to. Fear not Bills fans, when healthy, this team can play with anyone. Once Chan Gailey piles up some depth and these young Bills age a year, they could mover forward, real fast.
” I do not travel with the team to road games, but I went to the Jets game because I went home for Thanksgiving.”
Lady Penguins Post Solid Wire-To-Wire Win Over Western Michigan
Coming off of a Thanksgiving weekend road trip, Youngstown State returned to the Beeghly Center and showed no sign of any road fatigue. The Penguins seized an early lead and coasted to a 80-55 victory over MAC-opponent, Western Michigan to go to 4-3 on the season. Last season, the Penguins put up a total of six wins. To have four in seven games says a lot about just how far the program has moved forward in such a short time.
The win was the first for YSU at home this season. It was also the first time a Lady Penguins team has won by more than 20 points since 2006, when they defeated Buffalo by 34.
Youngstown State never trailed in the game. In the first half, they had a lead as big as 13 points with 7:52 until the break. The most impressive part about the first half was that the Penguins scored 30 points and Brandi Brown only had two of them. The knock against the Penguins going into this season (picked to finish 10th out of 10 teams), was that there was no balance around Brown. Those same voters then turned around and elected Brown as the Horizon League Preseason Player of The Year. The fact that the Lady Penguins could account for 28 points in a half without Brown disqualifies all of the preseason inaccuracies and negative speculation of the league voters.
In the first half, Monica Touvelle and Liz Hornberger had six points each. Tieara Jones and Devan Matkin had four each, and Macey Nortey and Heidi Schlegel had three each – pretty balanced scoring. Brown did make her presence known with eight rebounds.
Brown (above), who played most of the game with her left nostril stuffed full of gauze, was used sparingly in the second half. She scored six points in the first five minutes of the second half and finished the game with 12 points and 14 rebounds in just 30 minutes. It didn’t seem like a double-double, but the numbers don’t lie.
“Last year, it was pretty much as Brandi goes, this team goes”, remarked Coach Bob Boldon. “We play better when we play more balanced. With all of the attention on Brandi, it is nice to see the other players step up. We have played good offensive games, and we have played good defensive games. This was the first time this year we had both.”
With 9:10 left in the game, Youngstown State increased their lead to 61-34 on a couple of threes by Schlegel. The Penguins finished with 80 balanced points.
“I was really happy that we played so well as a team”, said Schlegel. “We had four players in double figures and we are playing as a team rather than individuals. Off the floor, we are really gelling as a team and that is helping us on the court.”
The Penguins got 15 points out of Schlegel. It is nice to see her playing instead of sitting, she adds another dimension and plays bigger than her size. Nortey had a very solid night finishing the game with 11 points and 6 assists, was 7-9 from the free throw line, 2-3 from the floor, had three steals, and even gathered a rebound.
Brown and Nortey, native Californians, recently traveled home to play a couple of games over the holiday weekend. Sports information director for basketball, John Vogel, talked about the trip and spending time with both families.
“It was a very rewarding Thanksgiving weekend on the road”, commented Vogel. We spent tome with both Macey and Brandi’s families and some of the other parents made the trip. It was nice to see that kind of support that far away from home and the players enjoyed it as much as the parents who made the trip.”
The Penguins welcome Bowling Green as part of a doubleheader on December 6 at Beeghly Center. Tipoff for that game is at 5:15.
Phantoms Earn Hard-Fought Victory Over Sioux City
The Youngstown Phantoms seem to have more gusto in their step than in years past. JT Stenglein and Ryan Belonger both scored twice to vault the Phantoms to a very physical 5-4 win over Sioux City. Despite being outshot 26-19, the Phantoms were able to push the puck when it counted. The win was the fourth in a row for the Phantoms (12-5-0).
Ryan Belonger got the Phantoms on the board first. Belonger, crashing in from his right wing position, beat Matt Skoff (above) from just outside the goal crease. The action started when Mike Ambrosia put a shot on net that deflected out to Austin Cangelosi who fired back in toward the goal. Cangelosi was credited with an assist on Belonger’s seventh goal of the season coming with 5:48 left in the opening frame.
Sioux City responded with 2:46 left in the first to tie the game at a goal apiece. Kyle Criscuolo netted his fourth goal of the season beating Matt O’Connor. The goal was scored at even-strength and Cliff Watson earned an assist for the Musketeers. The first period ended without further scoring and the Phantoms outshot Sioux City, 8-5.
The Phantoms did well killing off a two-man penalty about halfway through the second. Dan Molenaar picked up a slashing penalty putting the Phantoms in a powerplay opportunity. JT Stenglein made the Musketeers pay at the 13:11 mark as he found the net for the eighth time. Jordan Young gathered an assist on the go-ahead goal.
“I told our guys that if we could kill that 5-on-3 penalty that we were going to win. We went out there and drew up in practice how we were going to kill a 5-on-3, and to our guys credit, they executed it. I don’t even think that they [Sioux Falls] had a great shot at scoring during the penalty“, said Coach Anthony Noreen. “From a pure effort standpoint, that was the best effort we had all season.”
The opportunistic Phantoms went up 3-1 when they got an extra attacker on the ice awaiting a delayed penalty call. The strategy worked to perfection as Richard Zehnal became the third different Phantom to put one between the pipes on the evening. Zehnal’s goal was his third and came with 2:50 left in the second. Young was credited with his second assist of the game. Sioux City cut the lead to 3-2 when Brad Robbins went top shelf on O’Connors glove side with just 15.3 seconds remaining in the period.
With 16:37 remaining in the third period, David Henry gathered a rebound off of a Jackson Leef shot that O’connor blocked. Call it a bad luck goal that tied the game, 3-3.
Stenglein gave the Phantoms the lead at 4-3 with 6:49 left in the game on an unassisted goal, his second. Stenglein wound up from the top of the right face off circle and his shot tapped the post and went in. The Phantoms added an empty-netter with 51 seconds left in the game. Belonger got the freebee to push the lead to 5-3. The Musketeers wouldn’t go away without a fight. With 34.5 seconds left, the Musketeers scored to make it 5-4. O’Connor and the defense survived the onslaught of offense in the final half minute to secure the win.
“It was definitely two of the bigger goals in my career”, said Stenglein. “The coaches are putting us in position where we can make a lot of plays and my line has been playing really good.”
“Everything has been going my way lately. You kind of are getting to a point in the season where you know that your line mates are going to be in certain spots. We aren’t invincible, but we do expect to win, and we have a will to win. It doesn’t matter whether we are down by five or up by five, we are going to stay even keel“, added Stenglein.
DuShawn Brooks Block At Buzzer Seals 60-59 YSU Win
Senior DuShawn Brooks hit the game-deciding 3-pointer and blocked two Red Flash shots, including an attempt at the buzzer, as the Youngstown State men’s basketball team squeaked past Saint Francis (Pa.), 60-59, on Saturday afternoon at the DeGol Center. The Penguins improve to 4-1 for the second straight season while the Red Flash fall to 0-5 overall.
Sophomore Kendrick Perry was the lone Penguin scoring in double figures with 12 points while Brooks, junior Blake Allen, senior Ashen Ward and freshman Cale Zuiker each had nine points.
Brooks nailed his first 3-pointer of the season with 2:15 left in the game to give Youngstown State a four-point edge, 60-56. However, Saint Francis’ Stephon Whyatt answered with a 3-pointer of his own to cut the deficit to one, 60-59, with 1:59 to go.
Tied 33-33 at the half, the Guins used a 12-2 run to start the second half to take a 45-35 lead with 17:13 left in the game. Ward scored five of his nine points during the run and Damian Eargle‘s layup put the Guins up by 10.
The Red Flash rallied to cut the Penguins lead down to one, 53-52, on a Scott Eatherton layup with 4:22 to go.
Allen hit a jumper at the 3:16 mark to give the Penguins a 57-54 edge and SFU’s John Taylor hit a jumper to slice the lead back down to one, 57-56, before Brooks’ game-deciding 3-pointer.
YSU trailed by as many as 11 points, 17-6, in the first half, but quickly found their rhythm offensively. Allen hit a 3-pointer and jumpers by Kendrick Perry, Shawn Amiker and another by Perry brought the within three, 19-16, at the 10:10 mark.
The Guins tied the game at 25-25 on a 3-pointer by Zuiker with 4:42 to go and two more 3-pointers by Zuiker gave the Guins a 33-30 lead before SFU’s Scott Eatherton made a free throw to knot the game at 33-33 at the half.
Youngstown State shot 45.8 percent in the first half, including 40 percent from 3-point range. The Penguins open Horizon League play against Detroit, Thursday, Dec. 1, at 7 p.m. at Calihan Hall.
YSU Football Wrap-Up: Christian Bryan Player Profile
Christian Bryan finished 2012, not only establishing himself as the future of Youngstown State football, but also by rewriting anything in the record books that had the word freshman next to it. Bryan, an undersized receiver, was passed over by larger schools. The records he broke in 2012 include most yards by a freshman in a game and in a season, most receptions by a freshman in a game and in a season, and the most impressive part about all of these broken records is that his totals are nearly double of what the old marks were. He seems like a possession-type receiver with good hands, runs good routes, and isn’t afraid to go across the middle.
Paneech: How did you get to Youngstown State?
Bryan: During the recruiting process, I picked out a few schools and Youngstown State was one of them I liked. Really, they [YSU] were the only ones who made an impression with me and they punched that ticket for me. Some schools wrote me off because of my size and measurements, but Youngstown State extended themselves, so I committed early. I had a good host on my recruiting visit, Kurt Hess.
Paneech: Tell me how Kurt [Hess] has helped you this season.
Bryan: I was one of the people that voted for Kurt to be a captain. When I came in for my visit, I could just tell what kind of a person he was and what kind of teammate he would be. When I got onto a field with him, his leadership and ability really stood out. He deserves everything he gets and is on track to lead this program to great things.
Paneech: Are you surprised that you were able to make a quick impact as a freshman?
Bryan: Actually, I was very surprised. I came in and wanted to prove that I had the right mindset and the right attitude. Coach Coleman and the other coaches all seem to believe in me. I feel like I fell into a good role as a possession receiver. People will look at me and maybe think that I am just small and quick, but I like the role that I have now, I think I fit it perfectly.
Paneech: There were no seniors starting on offense a majority of the year. What does that say about the great finish you guys put together and the future? Do the seniors hold their lack of playing time against you?
Bryan: I think it is a sign of great things to come. We had a great team this year and had a shot to get into the playoffs. The seniors have been cool about the situation. Ely [Ducatel] was one of the guys when I got here this Summer that pulled me aside and helped me out with the playbook and in the weight room. He has a great attitude and doesn’t dislike any of the freshmen. All of the older guys have been supportive, there is no hatred amongst any of us.
Paneech: How different is the speed of the game at this level compared to high school?
Bryan: There is a big difference, I was really shocked at how much the difference is. When we lost my final high school game last season, I really started to doubt myself. I regrouped and pulled everything together, worked really hard to get better, and so far it has been amazing – a dream come true for me. I was a military kid, so I got used to moving. Being this far away from Irwin, PA isn’t getting me homesick. I miss my girlfriend, but I am only an hour and twenty minutes away.
Paneech: How has it been working for receivers coach, Andre Coleman?
Bryan: Awesome, but not easy. He is very critical sometimes. When I got here, I thought I ran good routes. I thought I was pretty good when I got here, but I was nothing compared to where he has got me now. Little things like rounding out of our breaks, if it is off a hair, he lets you know. Little things like pressing up and exploding out of your breaks, he sees it all.
Paneech: What is the thing you like most about Youngstown so far?
Bryan: I feel real comfortable here in this environment. I am around the right people, from my friends, to my teachers, to my coaches. My coaches are good people in the sense that they really want to make me a better person for my future. They are always tough on me whether I am doing good or bad. I try to stay at the same level knowing they are going to push me to do more, to be more.
Paneech: What do you do with your free time?
Bryan: I am around my friends as much as possible, or I am just relaxing in my room. We have study tables figured into our schedules, so I go there and do my homework.
Paneech: Who was your biggest influence to get into football?
Bryan: My father. Aside from myself, he is my number one critic. When I was in first grade, I wanted to be like a GI Joe type of kid. He threw me into football and has pushed me to be the best that I can ever since. He was my coach for a couple of years, and we would go at it. I respect him so much though, and if it wasn’t for him, there is no doubt I would not be here today.
Paneech: If there were three people on the game show Jeopardy – Marc Kanetsky, Coach Wolford, and Coach Montgomery, who would win and why?
Bryan: (laughs) Coach Montgomery would win. He is a genius. That guy’s brain is always working on something. He sees everything all of the time and his mind just never stops working.
One Word Answers
Typical Fast Food Order: Three Junior Bacon Cheeseburgers and Fries from Wendy’s.
Favorite TV Show: Sponge Bob.
Favorite NFL Team: Philadelphia Eagles.
Favorite Player: Desean Jackson.
Dream Place To Play: Penn State.
Favorite Fruit: Pineapple.
Song No One Would Expect On Your ipod? Bagpipe Music.
Biggest Phobia: Spiders.
Worst Habit: Always Playing with My Fingers.
High School Employment: Landscaping and Washing Cars.
YSU Football Wrap-Up: Quotable Coach
In Eric Wolford‘s second season as football coach at Youngstown State, he gave some great quotes, things that will be repeated and remembered throughout his tenure as the head Penguin. Respectfully, this guy is a quote machine when asked a question that triggers a unique response more times than not. These were the three best from this season. Enjoy!
When Wolford was asked if the season was over following a loss to South Dakota State to put the Penguins at 2-3:
“The season is not over. I’ll tell you when it’s over. If we can get on a roll, we can get right back into the playoff picture and I am not ruling any of that out yet.”
The week spent preparing for Valparaiso, a mismatch on paper, I asked Wolford if he was planning to do anything special or experiment with personnel:
“Well, our plan is to shine the car up, make it shine real nice, and then Saturday take it for a ride and see how it runs.”
At the Northern Iowa week press conference, Wolford was reminded that his team had not kicked a field goal yet and if he would try one if the opportunity presented itself:
“Our red zone offense has been outstanding and we have been getting in for seven. Here is a math lesson for you guys, I learned in kindergarten that seven is greater than three.”
Wolford is a sharp-minded and glib quote machine. His most repeated quote this season is one that I hope we continue to hear for a very long time:
“Our guys know that there is a standard around here, to win championships and get to the playoffs. Anything less than that is unacceptable.”
Thanks for the accessibility Coach Wolford, I look forward to next season and a whole new batch of cleverly-worded poetry.
YSU Football Wrap-Up: Senior Day
The time has again come to say goodbye to a number of Youngstown State University football players, a couple of cheerleaders, and a few band members. Marc Kanetsky (above) was part of a class that got caught in a transition from the Jon Heacock Era to the present day Eric Wolford regime. These guys were recruited by Heacock, learned a new system under Wolford, and despite not racking up a whole bunch of playing time as a collective unit, stayed true to a program on the rise.
Joining Kanetsky on the field for one last game were Ely Ducatel, Pat White, Andre Barboza, David Rogers, Obinna Ekweremuba, Daniel Stewart, Andrew Johnson, Josh Lee, John Sasson, and Nate Schkurko. Sasson and Johnson were captains, joining underclassmen Kurt Hess and Jamaine Cook.
Each of these players left a legacy of some kind with their teammates to remember them by. Some were defensive leaders this season, some could not overcome injury to get untracked, and some did little things on special teams that will be hard to replace. Nonetheless, they are done eating and lifting weights and striving to become bigger, faster, and stronger.
Kanetsky is an interesting loss. His primary role on the team was to signal in plays using a variety of different arm motions and hand signals to Hess on the field. Coach Shane Montgomery would relay a play call from the coaches box through headphones to the backup quarterback. He was also a holder for the field goal unit. The other loss on a guy like Kanetsky would be the team GPA taking a hit, as a 3.9 student goes to the real world.
Turnover on the sidelines is also a part of a process that is often overlooked. Cheerleaders and band members work very hard all Summer to make sure their act is tight. This year’s band was incredible, they always sounded good and they can march with any band in the nation. The cheerleaders are a happy bunch as a whole group. To see some of their gymnastic ability, pyramid building skills, and overall spirit, is a credit to the university.
Good luck to all seniors in the future!
Phantoms Roll Right Along, 3-1, Over Fargo
The Youngstown Phantoms were nothing if not opportunistic Friday night, pouncing on turnovers and poorly placed rebounds to beat the Fargo Force 3-1. The game was Youngstown’s third win in a row and league-high seventh win on home ice.
JT Stenglein (above) extended his goal-scoring streak to five games while Alexander Dahl and Sam Anas also found the back of the net for the Phantoms (11-5-0). In goal, Matthew O’Connor was the confident, economic netminder that fans and coaches are coming to expect, turning away 19 of 20 for his league-leading ninth win of the season.
“He [O’Connor] was really calm in there – didn’t give up a lot of rebounds,” Head Anthony Noreen said. “Even after he let in the one, and they came at him with a little flurry, he was just what he’s been lately: the backbone for our team.”
Stenglein put the Phantoms ahead of the Force (5-10-3) in the first-period on the power play. Mike Gunn sent a feed for him across ice that was tipped by Fargo’s Austin Farley and into open ice in the high slot. Stenglein grabbed it and whipped a snap shot on net, beating goaltender Zane Gothberg on the glove-side for his seventh goal of the season.
Just 42 seconds later, Dahl notched the first goal of his United States Hockey League career to put the Phantoms up two. Defenseman Kevin Liss led a rush the other way and took a shot on net from the right half-wall. The rebound caromed into the high slot and Dahl, whose father made the trip from his hometown of Eau Claire, Wis., to watch the game, fired it straight past Gothberg.
“It felt so good to get it out of the way,” Dahl said. “It’s been a big chunk of the season with no goals and I was kind of frustrated, but it was nice to finally get going. I’m excited to show dad the puck. Really excited.”
Anas extended the lead to three goals with a little more than two minutes remaining in the second period. Fargo defenseman Justin Wade coughed up the puck below the left circle and the Potomac, Md. native gobbled it up and then fired it five-hole for his sixth of the season.
“There aren’t many people on our team or in hockey in general that can score that goal from that angle,” Noreen said. “And don’t think for a second that Sam wasn’t aiming for exactly that, because we see him do that all the time in practice.”
YSU Women Victorious, 64-50, Brandi Brown Gets 1,000th Point
Youngstown State junior forward Brandi Brown cemented herself among the best players to ever wear YSU red and white and led the Penguins to a 64-50 win over LMU in front of an enthusiastic group of supporters on Friday. Brown’s 1,000th career point gave the Penguins a 7-6 lead, and they never trailed again. Brown, who grew up about an hour from Los Angeles, finished with a game-high 19 points and 14 rebounds.
YSU sophomore Heidi Schlegel joined Brown in a double-double, posting 17 points and a career-high 10 rebounds.
The Penguins will play the winner between Northern Iowa and Wyoming on Saturday at approximately 6:15 p.m. Eastern.
YSU led by double digits for most of the second half, but LMU cut the deficit to 43-36 with 12:23 left. Brown’s layup on a pass from Los Angeles native Macey Nortey put YSU up nine on the next possession, and the Penguins went on to score seven straight points.
YSU’s biggest lead came on Brown’s final bucket of the game. Her layup at the 3:44 mark on a pass from Schlegel capped another seven-point run that put the Penguins up 62-44. Schlegel had 13 points and five rebounds in the second half, and Brown matched her with 13 points in the final 20 minutes. Schlegel also had a game-high five assists. Kenya Middlebrooks had 14 points and hit four of YSU”s eight 3-pointers.
YSU outshot LMU 40.4 percent to 31.7 percent and outscored the Lions 20-8 off turnovers.
Brown’s 1,000th point came from the free-throw line with 15:06 left in the first half, and it gave the Penguins their first lead at 7-6. YSU didn’t trail again, and a Kelsea Fickieson lay-up gave the Penguins a 16-10 advantage with 12:33 remaining.
A Middlebrooks triple gave the Penguins their first double-digit lead with 7:06 left, and her third 3-pointer of the period put YSU up 33-20 at the 3:41 mark. That completed a 12-4 run for the Penguins during which they held LMU without a field goal for five minutes. Middlebrooks led all scorers with 11 points in the first half, and the senior had three of the Penguins’ five 3-pointers in the period. Brown had six points and nine rebounds. YSU shot 37 percent as a team to offset 11 turnovers.

























