Bobcats Defeat River Dragons in OT, 5-4

Columbus, GA – The Blue Ridge Bobcats defeated the Columbus River Dragons in overtime, 5-4.

The first period began with Trevor Babin in net for the Columbus River Dragons and Anthony Shrum between the pipes for Blue Ridge.

The Blue Ridge Bobcats busted the scoring seal in tonight’s matchup. Michael Mercurio found the back of the net on assists by Nikita Kozyrev and Seth Bacon.

Columbus fired back to tie it up when Tyler Barrow caught a rebound off of a shot made by Alex Storjohann.

Before the frame came to a close, Nicholas Stuckless pulled Blue Ridge ahead again.

The first period concluded with the Blue Ridge Bobcats in the lead, 2-1.

The second frame came with two goals by the River Dragons and one from the Bobcats.

Chiwetin Blacksmith scored a PPG at 4:35, a result of the high sticking call against Bobcats’ Carson Gallagher at 3:09.

At 14:30, Dustin Jesseau intercepted a pass in the River Dragons’ center slot and took advantage of the empty ice to throw Trevor Babin off balance and score an easy goal.

Tyler Barrow answered back for Columbus though, scoring in a close range scramble in front of the Blue Ridge net at 16:34.

After 40 minutes, the game paused with a tie score, 3-3.

In the final period of regulation, the River Dragons took their first lead of the night at 8:03 with a Hat Trick goal by Tyler Barrow, assisted by Alex Storjohann and Cody Wickline.

At 11:09, Dustin Jesseau tied the game, leading to overtime.

At 1:57 during the 3-on-3, sudden death overtime period, Dustin Jesseau scored an unassisted hat trick goal to win the game for the Blue Ridge Bobcats.

The Three Stars of the Game were Dustin Jesseau of Blue Ridge, and Tyler Barrow and Cody Wickline of the River Dragons.

Barrow and Jesseau each produced hat trick goals for their teams, and Wickline produced four assists.

Alex Storjohann achieved a multi-point performance as well, assisting three times during tonight’s contest.

The Columbus River Dragons, now on a 4-game losing streak, look to stop the sweep on Saturday night against the Blue Ridge Bobcats at the Columbus Civic Center. Puck drop is scheduled for 7:05 pm.

Photos by Toni Rae Hill

Dragons Burn Biloxi, 5-2

Columbus, GA – The Columbus River Dragons increased their win streak to 3 games Friday night after their 5-2 regulation victory at home versus the Biloxi Breakers.

Tyler Roy started in the net for the River Dragons, while Josh Rosenzweig tended for the Breakers.

Columbus took an early lead in the first frame, scoring on two power play opportunities. Kyle Moore struck first at 3:06, followed by Ryan Hunter at 7:33.

Cole Crowder countered for Biloxi, cutting the Dragons’ lead in half at 9:49, and closing the first frame at 2-1.

The second period turned out to be fruitless for both squads, despite the many penalties served by Columbus.

In the third period, Tyler Barrow snuck one past Josh Rosenzweig, followed with goals by Ryan Galvin and Brodie Thornton.

Biloxi’s goaltender Rosenzweig earned an 84.8 SV%, saving 28 of 33 shots, while Tyler Roy achieved 93.75 SV% on 32 shots.

The contest concluded in favor of Columbus, 5-2.

The River Dragons will stay at home to finish their weekend series against Biloxi on Saturday night. Puck drop is scheduled for 7:05 pm.

Photos by Toni Rae Hill


Dragons Break Biloxi in Overtime

Columbus, GA – The Columbus River Dragons finished their weekend with a win versus the Biloxi Breakers in OT, 7-6.

Chiwetin Blacksmith fired first for the River Dragons, squeezing a shot past Biloxi goaltender Josh Rosenzweig at 8:15 in the first period.

The Breakers struck back quickly. At 12:53, Khaden Henry rushed the puck up ice and managed to even the score at 1-1.

Benjamin Pizzimenti put Columbus back on top at 15:11, closing the first period at 2-1.

The second period was an outright explosion by Biloxi. Khaden Henry scored his second goal of the night just 23 seconds in, followed by Yaroslav Yevdokimov at 3:43 on the power play, and Declan Conway at 18:30.

The second frame closed with the Breakers ahead of the River Dragons, 4-3.

The final frame was won by Columbus through absolute fortitude and a refusal to stand down.

Although Aldiyar Nurlan and Khaden Henry produced goals for Biloxi, Alex Storjohann, Cody Wickline, and Benjamin Pizzimenti scored goals for the River Dragons, tying the game at 6-6 and forcing overtime.

Just 102 seconds into overtime, Ryan Hunter buried the game-winning goal behind Breakers goaltender Josh Rosenzweig, closing a heated contest in favor of the Columbus River Dragons, 7-6.

The River Dragons will defend against the Biloxi Breakers again this upcoming weekend on Friday and Saturday.

Photos by Toni Rae Hill

River Dragons Cook In Home Opener

Columbus, GA – The Columbus River Dragons started their weekend series at home versus the Pee Dee Ice Cats with a furious hunger to give the fans a win during their 2025-26 home opener.

The first period was pretty even, each team serving more than ten penalty minutes, allowing Ryan Hunter (River Dragons) and Patriks Marcinkevics (Ice Cats) opportunities to score power play goals. At the close of the first frame, the game remained even, 1-1.

Columbus remained on the attack in the second period, serving three two-minute penalties for roughing, but also producing two goals. Colin Ratt and Joel Texmo built a two-point lead for the River Dragons, closing 40 minutes of hockey ahead of Pee Dee, 3-1.

Columbus exploded in the final twenty minutes of regulation. Ryan Hunter and Tyler Barrow each buried one, diminishing any comeback opportunities the Ice Cats may have hoped for. The game ended in regulation in favor of the River Dragons, 5-3.

All of Pee Dee’s goals tonight were scored on the power play –  Patriks Marcinkevics at 4:10 in the first and 19:59 in the third, and Trevor Lord at 1:06 in the third.

Tyler Roy produced an 87.5 SV%, saving 21 out of 24 SOG for Columbus.

Ryan Hunter earned the game’s first star of the game, producing two goals.

Tyler Barrow earned the game’s second star, with two assists and one goal.

Broadie Thornton claimed the night’s third star after producing two assists in tonight’s matchup.

The River Dragons remain at home Sunday to finish their weekend versus the Biloxi Breakers. Puck drop is scheduled for 7:05 pm.

Photos by Toni Rae Hill


That thud you heard was the fall of the New York Rangers

For 62 years, I have been a fan of the New York Rangers. For most of those decades there has been nothing but disappointment and heartache. My father took me to my first hockey games, including the Rangers in 1963. I fell in love with the game; it seemed easy to understand. I don’t know who the Rangers played against that first night. There were only five possibilities, but I have no memory of that.

There were certainly bad years, thin line of talent across all the specialties. A few years it seemed the team was mailing it in, waiting for the end of the season to go play golf.

Other years were crushing in their end of season collapse, or early exit from the playoffs.

There was, and will always be, 1994. I trust that will not be the last Stanley Cup before I pass from the mortal coil.

For the lost seasons, losing seasons, early ending seasons, nothing can compare to the abject apathy of the 2024-25 New York Rangers. In those 62 years, this is the worst season of the lot. It has been embarrassing and humiliating to be a Rangers fan.

The stars aligned in the 2023-24 campaign, leading to the President’s Trophy, but the promise of a long run to the Stanley Cup Final was cut short at the Eastern Conference Final.

That was difficult, but this time around has been worse. And there is little competition for the spot.

This is not just a skaters’ issue. Though there is plenty of blame to go around on the ice.

This is an issue from ownership to general manager to head coach. Each need to accept their role in this season and do something about it.

Tepid trades, with empty returns are a place to start. The trade of Jacob Trouba to the Anaheim Ducks for who? The impact on the ice from that trade has all been in Anaheim.

The NHL trade deadline in March brought so little it was hardly worth the print or typing effort to make an assessment. It was empty.

The return of J.T. Miller to the Garden was sort of welcome, but on a listless Rangers bench he was ruined.

The most stupefying decision made by general manager Chris Drury was the signing of  goalie Igor Shesterkin to a $12 million annual salary for seven years.

Shesterkin has 2.91 goals against average. If that’s worth $12 million then there is a major problem in this organization and the league as a whole. Add to it that his save percentage is an unacceptable 0.903. Again, this is worthy of $12 million?

The forwards have been lost most of the season. There were brief flashes of the previous season’s brilliance, but it was always fleeting. Just enough to tease you back to following the club, but never enough to keep you there.

Artemi Panarin has played as well as could be expected on this club. Lines have been shuffled so many times you would have less vertigo staring at a roulette wheel in Vegas.

All that shuffling for what? Mika Zibanejad, Chris Kreider, Vincent Trocheck, Alexi Lafreniere, and others have been hamstrung by coaching decisions, injuries, or apathy the entire season.

At times, the defense has looked less coordinated that a new born foal in a field.

The most galling aspect of this season has been the absolute loss of heart on this roster. True there are exceptions. Will Cuylle, Braden Schneider, and Brett Berard have been bright spots on an otherwise dismal roster.

Sport is a business. It is designed to provide entertainment to be sold to fan bases. This campaign evidenced no such entertainment, except for the opposition’s fans.  The ridicule heaped on the organization and its fan base has been endless and justified.

If the organization is not going to be run as a business than the languid efforts of this roster are going to take hold and create problems for those who want more. And right now, there are far too many skaters on this roster with less interest in helping the Rangers win than their opponents.

Eight times this season the Rangers have been shut out. They lost as many as six games in a row in the back end of the season when they lost sight of the wild card spots in the East.

February 22nd was the lowest point of the season, others may argue. The Buffalo Sabres whacked the Rangers, 8-2 in update New York. There were others, of course, including two losses to the Calgary Flames by 2-1 counts, a 2-1 loss to the Chicago Blackhawks, at the Garden, and a series of shutout losses to the New Jersey Devils.

I am not fond of seeing people lose their jobs. In this case, because hockey and sport are businesses, the Rangers need to be treated as a business. Cold, impersonal, reasoned, intelligent, and purposeful decisions need to be made. NOW. So not wait for the off season.

Use CodePHN15

New ownership with a passion for the game is needed.

A general manager with a better eye for talent and the ability to build through trades, a new coach who knows how to handle adversity, and make adjustments mid game, mid period, mid line change.

Players who were stars, will never be stars, will never carry this team need to be jettisoned.

That includes Shesterkin and others on the forward and defensive lines. It cannot be personal, it is about the business, the entertainment, and retention of long time fans.

Otherwise we are looking at another rebuild, and I am too old for that.

Dragons Dominate on Pietrantonio Night

Columbus, GA – Josh Pietrantonio, long-time captain of the River Dragons, was honored by the city of Columbus and his former teammates. With over 4,000 fans in attendance, the River Dragons retired his #9 jersey in a pregame ceremony in honor of his dedication and commitment to the organization, and for helping the city of Columbus to grow the game.

Pietrantonio has been a staple of hockey in Columbus, having offered a helping hand to high school, collegiate, and recreational players for several years. In this writer’s personal opinion, his leadership and class improved the sport for hundreds, maybe thousands of people, players and fans alike. He will always have a place in the hearts of those who witnessed his drive. It was a blessing to experience River Dragons hockey in the years he donned the uniform, and witness the example he set for himself, his teammates, and his fans.

Almost poetically, nine goals were scored in the night’s contest between the Columbus River Dragons and the Monroe Moccasins.

The Moccasins took a 1-0 lead over Columbus in the first period.

With just 17 seconds played in the second frame, Corey Cunningham put Monroe ahead 2-0. Only 33 seconds later, Ryan Hunter scored his first of three goals for Columbus. He followed with two more goals in the second period, once at 9:35 and again at 12:56.

With two seconds remaining in the frame, Monroe scored their third and final goal of the night, tying the game 3-3.

The River Dragons dominated in the third period, with Alex Storjohann, Scott Docherty, and Alexander Jmaeff scoring three unanswered goals.

The game concluded in regulation with Columbus ahead, 6-3.

Both teams will remain in Columbus Saturday night to conclude the weekend series.

Photos by Toni Rae Hill