The Calder Cup came to Cleveland in 2016. Can the Monsters do it again?
Time will tell, but it’s the best time of year – playoff hockey time – in the Forest City. The Monsters, the minor league affiliate of the Blue Jackets, are competing in the American Hockey League postseason for the first time since 2019.
The hope is to win it all, just like a young squad featuring a bunch of future NHLers did eight years ago. This year’s Cleveland squad has a good mix of prospects and veterans, and it features 11 players who suited up for the Blue Jackets this year and six others who have NHL experience with Columbus.
The champion of the AHL North Division, Cleveland began the playoffs with a best-of-five division semifinal series against Belleville, which it won 3-1. The Monsters now move on to the AHL North Division final to take on Syracuse.
The schedule for the series is below along with our previous coverage of the Monsters. This article will be updated with results throughout the series.
Read More
- What to know about the Monsters playoffs
- Cleveland enters the postseason on a roll
- Meet the Mon-stars
- Czech mates: Jiricek, Svozil thriving in postseason
Upcoming Games
AHL North Division Final
Thursday: Game 1 vs. Syracuse, 7 p.m.
Saturday: Game 2 vs. Syracuse, 1 p.m.
Wednesday, May 22: Game 3 at Syracuse, 7 p.m.
*Friday, May 24: Game 4 at Syracuse, 7 p.m.
*Sunday, May 26: Game 5 vs. Syracuse, 3 p.m.
*If necessary
Game Recaps
Game 4: Cleveland 3, Belleville 1
Friday night's clinching Game 4 win over Belleville was about tonight, but it was also a long time coming, too.
The close-knit Monsters have gone through plenty the past few years, building a brotherhood, and the franchise's first playoff series win since 2019 sure feels good with that in mind.
"It's great," third-year Cleveland defenseman Billy Sweezey said after the Monsters' 3-1 win to capture the series three games to one. "It's emotional on the ice, it's emotional in the room when the guys come back in after the games. We've been building a culture here. We've been building a team here. Everyone is just playing really good hockey right now and contributing, and that's what you need to keep playing games this time of year."
Marcus Bjork had a goal and an assist in the clinching win, while Owen Sillinger and Justin Pearson also scored. Jet Greaves turned in another beauty, stopping 32 shots.
It didn't take long for Cleveland to get on the board in the clinching win, as Bjork's shot deflected and looped over Belleville goalie Leevi Merilainen just 1:39 into the game to make it 1-0. Stephen Halliday's power-play goal tied things for the Senators later in the first, but Sillinger got his second straight game winner at 14:00 of the second when he crashed the net and deflected Mikael Pyyhtia's pass behind Merilainen.
Cleveland had to kill an extended 5-on-3 disadvantage to start the third, then held on from there until Pearson's empty-net goal with 2.2 seconds to go finished things off.
"Everybody played super hard," head coach Trent Vogelhuber said. "We didn't have any passengers, which you can't this time of year. That's what got it done. And the guy back in the goal helps, too."
Game 3: Cleveland 3, Belleville 2 (2OT)
In a game of wild momentum swings and ups and downs, the Monsters leaned into what's gotten them through a successful season.
Their close nature and willingness to battle for one another.
A team that has played in plenty of close games this year stuck to the plan and got the winner 4:41 into the second overtime off the stick of Owen Sillinger to take a 3-2 victory at Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse on Wednesday night -- and 2-1 lead in their best-of-five series with the B-Sens.
"That was the best part," head coach Trent Vogelhuber said of his team's ability to stick with it. "Just finding ways. I think that's what we've done all year. We've been in tight one-goal games all year and more often than not have found ways to win. They're comfortable in those situations. Now having a couple overtime winners just helps grow that confidence. I'm just happy for them."
Sillinger got the winner when he collected the rebound of a shot that went wide by David Jiricek and found goalie Mads Sogaard out of position, setting off a wild celebration in front of the 12,659 home fans that stuck around.
"It just happened to go in for me," Sillinger said. "Shot it in the open net and game over."
Cleveland built a 2-0 lead in the first 10 minutes on goals from Mikael Pyythia and Jiricek, but Belleville tied the score with a response goal late in the first and the equalizer early in the third. Donovan Sebrango's shot through a screen would be the last one to beat Jet Greaves, though, as the Monsters goalie stopped 39 shots.
Game 2: Cleveland 4, Belleville 3 (OT)
If you made a list of unlikely overtime heroes, Cole "Cowboy" Clayton would likely be near the bottom.
The physical defenseman had five goals in 59 games during the regular season, but he was at the right place at the right time Friday night, pinching down from the right point and putting Tyler Angle's shot into the net early in OT to give Cleveland its first playoff win of the season.
The teams now return to Cleveland tied 1-1 in their best-of-five series.
Angle and Jake Gaudet each scored in the first for Cleveland as the teams were knotted at 2 after 20 minutes, then Josh Dunne scored for the second time in as many games in the middle period before former Ohio State forward Stephen Halliday tied things in the third for Belleville to set up OT. Angle, Gaudet and Justin Pearson (two assists) each had two-point games, while Jet Greaves finished with the win and 36 saves.
Game 1: Belleville 2, Cleveland 1
Hitting the road to open the postseason, the Monsters dropped a tight one-goal decision to the B-Sens on Wednesday night to fall into a 1-0 hole in their best-of-five series.
Josh Dunne's power-play goal was the only tally for Cleveland, cutting Belleville’s lead to 2-1 in the second period, but the B-Sens made goals from Egor Sokolov and Angus Crookshank stand up. The Monsters had a 16-6 edge in third-period shots on goal and a 32-26 advantage overall, but they couldn’t find the tying marker in the third.
Trey Fix-Wolansky and Stanislav Svozil had assists on the Dunne goal, while netminder Jet Greaves made 24 saves.