Cincinnati Cyclones Squander Lead In 4-2 Loss To Unbeaten Elmira Jackals
Saturday, October 31, 2009 at 10:25AM MLN Newswire - www.mlntherawfeed.com -ELMIRA, New York – It was a good news/bad news story for the Cincinnati Cyclones at Elmira on Friday night. The good news was that Cincinnati found a way to score two goals in the first 3:20. The bad news was that was all the offense the club could muster in a 4-2 loss to the unbeaten Jackals (6-0). Matt Pierce and Dustin Sproat scored the goals for the Cyclones.
The Cyclones held a 2-1 edge after the first period. Cincinnati drew first blood just 1:17 into the period, as Matt Pierce stuffed his third score of the season past Elmira goaltender Chris Holt. Dustin Sproat had the assist on the score. Sproat would get a shorthanded goal of his own at 3:20—his first of the season from Reid Cashman. Matt Lowry’s second goal of the season off a heavy rebound off the end boards cut the deficit, as Travis Gawryletz and Brendan Connolly. The shots on goal favored Cincinnati, 13-11, in the opening 20 minutes.
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Elmira scored the only goal of the second period to level the scores at two apiece. Chanse Fitzpatrick netted his fifth goal of the year at 15:31. The four-on-four goal came as Fitzpatrick was on the right wing side and snapped a shot just inside the left post. The shots in the period favored Cincinnati, 12-5, as the Cyclones were unable to convert a five minute major penalty for boarding to Olivier Proulx on Cincinnati rookie defenseman Kevin Roeder.
Elmira scored the final two goals to close the scoring in the 4-2 verdict. Chris Korchinski scored the game winner—a shorthanded goal at 10:45 unassisted. An emptynet goal by Justin Donati at 18:48 closed out the scoring. The shots on goal in the third period were even at ten each and for the game the Cyclones outshot the Jackals, 35-26.
Chris Holt took the victory to run his record to 3-0, stopping 33 shots. Jeremy Smith suffered his first loss as a professional (3-1), stopping 22 shots in the effort. Elmira improves to 6-0 on the season—leaders of the East Division, while the Cyclones drop to 4-2 and are in second place in the North Division.
Commissioner Bud Selig shaved drug suspensions of players and broke the rules of MLB. Will Manny Ramirez and three others do a year? What will happen to dozens of minor league players whose records, teams, and leagues are affected? Read the whole story at SZ ( www.mlnsports.com).
Bob Matuszak | Comments Off | 





