Jim Alexander |
[email protected] | The Press-Enterprise wrote;
Plenty of goaltending depth for Reign
ONTARIO — It’s no small irony. Last spring the Ontario Reign ran out of goaltenders in what turned out to be the final game of a playoff run.
Heading into this season’s opener, Saturday night in San Antonio, Ontario has a surplus.
Jack Campbell, 25, is the incumbent, after 52 starts with 31 victories and a 2.52 goals-against average in 2016-17. Cal Petersen, 22, is the rookie, with 23 wins and a 2.22 goals-against in 40 games at Notre Dame last season. Both are highly regarded prospects by the Kings, and both will need to play.
Jeff Zatkoff, 30, is the third guy, a veteran who has played 48 NHL games and has a Stanley Cup ring (from 2015-16 in Pittsburgh), but was sent down by the Kings last season and played just eight games in the AHL. It is a development league, and Zatkoff, a member of the original ECHL Reign in 2008-09, probably doesn’t have much more developing to do. Thus, the odds are that barring emergency he won’t play much.
So how exactly does Reign coach Mike Stothers play this?
“It’s hard to say how it’s going to play out, but both guys (Campbell and Petersen) are going to play,” he said. “Both guys are worthy of playing. They both had outstanding training camps. They both played exceptionally well in exhibitions.
“We’re not going to have a situation (like last season) where Soupy (Campbell) played 30-plus games in a row. The year before, Boods (Peter Budaj) played 30 plus games in a row. We’ve got some depth in the organization now. There’s a lot of games and the opportunity will be there for both of them.”
He indicated he probably will not have a strict rotation. Maybe a loose one, contingent on past performance, or if a game is in or near a player’s hometown. (In other words, when the Reign plays the Iowa Wild next week in Des Moines, expect Petersen, the pride of Waterloo, Iowa, to play.)
Then again, the unforeseen has become commonplace with goaltending and the Kings organization.
In 2014-15, when the Kings’ AHL affiliate was in Manchester and won the Calder Cup, J.F. Berube and Patrik Bartosak were the goalies. Berube, another former ECHL Reign player, handled most of the work, but Bartosak stepped in when Berube was hurt in the playoffs.
The next fall, Berube was gone to the Islanders on waivers, and the Czech-born Bartosak was expected to start in Ontario but was suspended following a domestic violence charge that led to his departure from the country. Budaj — a veteran signed to a professional tryout agreement — stepped in, winning 42 games and the Baz Bastien Award as the AHL’s best goalie and getting the Reign to the conference finals.
Last year, you may recall, Jonathan Quick suffered a groin injury in the Kings’ opener in San Jose. Budaj was recalled to L.A. Campbell, obtained from the Dallas organization that summer, shut out San Diego on opening night and quickly became The Man.
So now you have two guys accustomed to playing regularly. How do they handle sharing?
“All I can control is playing good when I get called to go play,” said Campbell, diplomatically (and smartly, since Stothers was still within earshot). “That’s all Cal and I are focused on. It should work out fine.”
Petersen was in net for all of Notre Dame’s games last season, but the Irish only played 40. The Reign will play 68 in the regular season.
“In a pro season there’s plenty of games to go around for everybody,” Petersen said. “As long as we can elevate our game and both play as well as we can any time we’re in the net and give our team a chance to win, that’s a good thing.”
Petersen was originally a fifth-round pick by Buffalo in 2013, but spurned the Sabres and became a free agent by not signing within the four years after his draft. The Kings appealed to him, he said, largely because of goaltending coaches Bill Ranford with the Kings and Dusty Imoo with the Reign. “That was the tipping point for me, their history of developing NHL goalies,” he said last week.
By signing Petersen and using a third-round pick on 18-year-old junior goalie Matthew Villalta, the Kings replenished their goalie depth this summer at the younger end.
Where this leaves Zatkoff, who is on the back end of a two-year, $1.8 million contract he signed with the Kings in 2016, remains to be seen. For now, he is with the team.
He played in 13 games in L.A. last season and eight in Ontario. And he was supposed to start that Game 5 of the best-of-five first round series with San Diego last May, after Campbell hurt his knee the night before in Game 4, but Zatkoff injured his right knee sliding across the crease in warmups and had to be helped off the ice.
Campbell eventually played after the team doctor arrived “to help me out with something,” he said. But he could barely move to his right, he said. And by the time he was able to get into the game, little-used rookie Jack Flinn had given up three goals in the first 11:40 in what turned out to be a 4-1 Gulls victory that ended the Reign’s season.
In other words, emergencies happen. And depth is good.
PUBLISHED: October 5, 2017