Wild open weekend with win over Reign

DES MOINES, Iowa – The Iowa Wild kicked off a three-in-three weekend with a 4-1 victory over the Ontario Reign at Casey’s Center on Friday night.  IOWA STARTS WEEKEND WITH 4-1 VICTORY OVER ONTARIO

Iowa outshot Ontario 6-5 in a scoreless opening period.

The Wild opened the scoring 3:07 into the middle frame. Will Zmolek and Jean-Luc Foudy combined to set up Nicolas Aubé-Kubel above the circles, where he wired a shot over the blocker of Erik Portillo (22 saves).

Iowa doubled the advantage on the power play 4:16 later when Gerry Mayhew set up Dylan Gambrell with a cross-ice pass for a one-timer inside the left post.

Matt Kiersted hammed a slap shot under the crossbar with assists from Mayhew and Tyler Pitlick at 9:35 to give the Wild a 3-0 advantage.

The Wild outshot the Reign 20-13 through 40 minutes.

Francesco Pinelli found the back of the net at 15:45, but Pitlick scored on the empty net with assists from David Spacek and Gambrell to seal the victory.

Cal Petersen stopped 20-of-21 shots in net to earn the win for Iowa. The Wild finished 1-for-3 with the man advantage and killed off all three Reign power plays.

Iowa hosts Ontario again on Saturday, Mar. 21 at 5 p.m.

Crunch clinch berth in Calder Cup Playoffs

The Syracuse Crunch clinched a berth in the 2026 Calder Cup Playoffs on Friday evening.

The Crunch’s 5-3 win at Rochester, combined with Utica’s loss to Providence and Belleville’s shootout setback to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, sends Syracuse to the postseason for the eighth consecutive time, and the 10th time in 12 tries since beginning their affiliation with the Tampa Bay Lightning.

The Crunch are one of five teams who will qualify for the Calder Cup Playoffs out of the North; the top three clubs will get byes into the division semifinals, while the fourth- and fifth-place finishers will meet in a best-of-three first-round series.

The AHL’s 2025-26 regular season ends April 19; for more information and daily updates on the Calder Cup Playoff races, check out the official AHL Playoff Primer.

Penguins wrap up playoff spot

The Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins clinched a berth in the 2026 Calder Cup Playoffs on Friday evening thanks to a 2-1 shootout victory in Belleville.

The Penguins will be making their 21st trip to the postseason in 25 tries since joining the AHL in 1999.

Currently second in the Atlantic Division, Wilkes-Barre/Scranton is one of six Atlantic teams who will qualify for the Calder Cup Playoffs; the top two clubs will get byes into the division semifinals, while the third- through sixth-place finishers will meet in best-of-three first-round series.

The AHL’s 2025-26 regular season ends April 19; for more information and daily updates on the Calder Cup Playoff races, check out the official AHL Playoff Primer.

IceHogs Comeback Falls Just Short to Griffins 4-2

Rockford, IL – The Rockford IceHogs couldn’t match the Grand Rapids Griffins down the stretch, losing inside the BMO Center 4-2.55159347054 704b37a866 k

The Griffins jumped out to an early 1-0 lead while shorthanded. John Leonard earned a breakaway and slid the puck to his backhand and through Drew Commesso’s legs.

Rockford countered right back at 15:49 of the 1st to the game 1-1. Jamie Engelbert fed Rem Pitlick in the slot and the Hogs veteran found daylight after stick handling in the crease.

Halfway through the 2nd period, Carter Mazur ripped the go-ahead goal into the top right corner with a wrist shot from the near dot. The IceHogs pulled even 2-2 with three minutes to go in the middle period when Joey Anderson beat Michal Postava five-hole.

In the final frame, Ondrej Becher burst into the zone with a partial break and went to his backhand for the 3-2 Griffins’ lead. With less than a minute remaining, Jakub Rychlovsky put the final touches on a 4-2 Grand Rapids’ win with an empty-net goal.

Up next, the IceHogs hit the road to face the Chicago Wolves on Saturday, March 21 at 7:00 p.m. inside Allstate Arena.

Crunch Clinch Playoff Berth With 5-3 Win Over Americans

SYRACUSE, N.Y. – The Syracuse Crunch clinched a Calder Cup Playoffs berth as they defeated the Rochester Americans, 5-3, tonight at Blue Cross Arena.  03-20 Recap

Rochester jumped out to a 1-0 lead in the opening frame, but Syracuse rattled off three consecutive goals in the second period to take a 3-1 lead heading into the second intermission. The Crunch then added two more goals to begin the final frame. The Americans attempted a late comeback effort with two goals in the final seven minutes but the comeback ultimately fell short, giving the Crunch a 5-3 victory.

Nick Abruzzese and Conor Geekie led the Crunch in scoring with two goals each, while Jakob Pelletier, Dylan Duke and Matthew Peca each added two assists. Mitchell Chaffee also tallied a goal and four other Crunch skaters found themselves on the scoresheet.

The Crunch improve to 36-19-3-2 on the season and 5-4-0-0 in the 12-game seasons series with the Amerks.

Crunch goaltender Brandon Halverson earned the win turning aside 29-of-32 shots. Scott Ratzlaff put a stop to 16-of-21 shots in net for the Americans. Syracuse converted on 2-of-3 power-play opportunities while Rochester scored on 1-of-3 man advantages.

The Americans were on the board first at the 15:45 mark of the first period as Zac Jones skated through the slot and snuck the puck into the net.

Comets Drop Close One in Front of Sellout Crowd, Fall to Bruins 4-3

Utica, NY – The Comets hosted the Providence Bruins on Friday night for the first time this season and fell 4-3.

Former Comets’ netminder, Michael DiPietro, took to the ice against his former team and was busy right from the opening faceoff. The Comets’ hard work paid off as they were awarded the first power play of the game when Providence forward John Farinacci was called for tripping 6:05 into the period. On the ensuing power play, Angus Crookshank received a pass from Kyle Criscuolo in the left circle and wired it home low glove side past DiPietro to put the Comets up 1-0 on his 18th of the season at 6:29. After killing two penalties, the Comets would add to the lead later in the first period when Xavier Parent dumped a puck into the Bruins’ zone from center, Mike Hardman won a footrace in the left corner, played the puck off a glass support right to Xavier Parent at the side of the net who snapped it home for his 19th of the year at 16:09 to make it 2-0 in favor of the Comets. Nico Daws stopped all seven of the shots he faced in the opening frame.

The Comets entered the second period with a 2-0 lead and continued their strong play in the offensive zone. The Bruins, however, would get on the board at the 8:47 mark when Providence defenseman Max Wanner’s point shot was stopped by Daws, but Joey Abate pounced on the rebound and tucked it around the right pad of the Comets’ netminder to make it 2-1 for his sixth goal of the year. Abate would strike again a few minutes later when Bruins’ forward Matt Poitras made a nice move in the high slot, walked to the right circle, and slid a backdoor pass to Abate who shoveled it past Daws to make it 2-2 at 12:57 for his second of the period and seventh of the year. The Comets went to the penalty kill towards the end of the period when Dmitry Osipov was called for slashing, and the Bruins were able to capitalize with just 3.5 seconds left in the frame when Nico Daws made a save on a Riley Tufte shot, but Providence forward Alexis Gendron batted it out of midair at the side of the net to make it 3-2 on his 11th of the year and first as a Bruin.

It was a fast-paced and defensive-minded third period from both teams. The Comets’ best chance came when Calen Addison set up Matyas Melovsky on a cross-ice pass in the left circle, but DiPietro made a great pad save to keep it 3-2. The Comets pulled Nico Daws late in the third to try and tie the game, but Providence defenseman Victor Soderstrom scored an empty-netter to make it 4-2 at 19:21 on his eighth of the year. The Comets made it 4-3 when Angus Crookshank tipped home a shot from Austin Strand with just seven seconds left for his second of the game and 19th of the year, but the Comets ran out of time and fell to the Bruins 4-3.

The Comets were outshot by the Bruins 25-22, while going 1-for-1 on the power play and 2-for-3 on the penalty kill.