Rochester’s slide continues as goals get tougher to come by.

By Kevin Oklobzija / Pickinsplinters.com

ROCHESTER, N.Y. — Remember how, early in the season, the Rochester Americans were able to play some on-ice razzle-dazzle all night long?

How they would go from defending to the attack in the blink of an eye and produce goal after goal on the rush?

How in the first 17 games they scored four or more goals nine times and reached their high-water mark of five games over .500 at 10-5-1-1 by Nov. 25?

Those are becoming distant memories, as a 4-0 home loss to the Springfield Falcons proved on Friday night.

The Amerks have won just two of their past 10 games (2-7-1-0) and have been outscored 41-24 over that span. They have nine regulation losses since Jan. 4, which is the same number they had from October through December.

Back in early January, they were talking about hunting down North Division-leading Toronto. Now they’re a lightyear behind, trailing by 18 points and in fifth place with 30 games to play.

So what happened? Actually, it’s what hasn’t happened. There aren’t enough players committed to getting to areas of the ice where it’s difficult to play, like the front of the net, coach Seth Appert said.

“We need more forwards that want to get to the inside. It gets harder to score in January, February, March, April if you want to keep playing in May,” Appert said.  “It’s hard to score this time of year. We need more forwards more consistently more willing to pay the price to get there.”

The problem isn’t stature, either. Big guys, little guys, it doesn’t matter; everyone can show desire, he said.

“Nobody cares about your size; nobody gives a crap,” he said. “The American League and the NHL doesn’t care about your genetics, they care about your will and your ability to do things.

“So you either find a way if you’re undersized, whether you’re an older player or a younger player, or we replace you with somebody that does.”

The Amerks did create scoring chances, especially in the second period. They just didn’t shoot nearly enough, and if there were rebounds, they didn’t get to them.

Appert said he liked everything about their play in the second period, except the execution when they created three-on-ones and four-on-twos.

“Most didn’t result in a shot on goal,” he lamented.

The first period was scoreless, largely because of Amerks goalie Malcolm Subban. He stopped all 11 shots, and then made three more terrific saves in the first three minutes of the second period to keep it 0-0.

Matthew Peca finally broke through with a goal at 10:30, then Brady Lyle scored on a wrap-around at 16:55 to give the Falcons a 2-0 lead.

The two third-period goals were scored into empty nets in the final 2:14.

“We played good enough team defense to win tonight,” Appert said. “We’re getting better defensively, that’s a good sign. We have to have more guys consistently willing to get to hard areas to score.”

While the slide has been frustrating, defenseman Ethan Prow said confidence is still strong.

“We’re still building,” Prow said. “We’re not going to hit the panic button. When we’re playing at our best, we’re a hard team to beat.”

Lasting tribute to Stevens

Broadcaster Don Stevens, who is in his 37th season calling Amerks games on the radio (and TV), was honored after the first period with the surprise unveiling of new signage at the arena proclaiming the media suite as the Don Stevens Press Box.

After crisscrossing the Midwest and West Coast for two decades, Stevens arrived in Rochester in the summer of 1986 to call Amerks games. He has been here ever since and called his 3,000th game for the organization in November.

Stevens, 74, began his broadcasting career in Grand Island, Neb., in 1969 and on the way to Rochester made stops in Denver; Sioux City, Iowa; Grand Forks, N.D.; San Diego; Seattle; Portland, Ore.; Phoenix and Salt Lake City.

“Don has been a staple of Amerks hockey for nearly four decades and this is a tremendous testament for everything he has done for not only the organization, but the entire Rochester community,” Rob Minter, vice president of business operations for the Amerks, said. “Don’s distinct and iconic call has been synonymous with some of the most memorable moments in team history and his impact on the organization is one that cannot be measured.”

Somehow the organization managed to keep the unveiling a secret to Stevens, and he was flabbergasted when a tribute played on the video board before the signage was revealed during the first intermission.

“Surprised would be an understatement,” he said.

Said Appert: “What a tremendous honor; over 3,000 games … just a true legend in the American Hockey League and in Rochester and just a great person who has given so much to this organization.”

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