Jonathan Matsumoto
bgsufalcons.collegesports.com

Jonathan Matsumoto

Hometown:

Orleans Ontario

Currently Playing In:

Pro

Birthday:

1986-10-13

Position:

C

Eligible for draft:

2005

Shoots:

Left

Drafted:

Height:

6-0

Acquired:

Trade with Carolina, 2012

Weight:

185 lbs.

Probability of Success
  • C

History

2004-05: Jonathan Matsumoto enjoyed a superb rookie campaign at Bowling Green and was named Honorable Mention to the CCHA All-Rookie Team. He led the Falcons in scoring with 18 goals and 14 assists while playing in all 36 games. Matsumoto led Bowling Green in power play goals (10), game-winning goals (5), and shooting percentage (.189) and was twice named CCHA Rookie of the Week. Matsumoto received Bowling Green’s Sam Cooper Trophy as the team’s top scorer.

2005-06: Matsumoto combined with Alex Foster (TOR) to give the Falcons one of the nation’s most potent offensive duos. Matsumoto finished second on the Falcons team in scoring with 20 goals and 28 assists in 36 games and led the team in goals (20) and power play goals (12). Matsumoto’s posted his first career hat-trick in BGSU’s 9-6 loss to Boston College in October. His -10 plus/minus was as much a reflection on the struggles of Bowling Green (13-23-2) as it was an indictment of his play. Matsumoto was selected by the Philadelphia Flyers in the 3rd Round (79th overall) of the 2006 NHL draft.

2006-07: Matsumoto was one of the few bright spots in an otherwise dismal season for the Falcons, who finished 7-29-2. . Matsumoto led Bowling Green in points, scoring 11 goals with 22 assists in 38 games and finished -13. He chose to forego his senior year of college hockey and signed a contract with Philadelphia following Bowling Green’s season. In 16 games with the Flyers’ AHL affiliate Phantoms, Matsumoto tallied 2 goals with 2 assists; and had 4 PIM and was -3.

2007-08: Matsumoto burst out of the gates offensively in his first full season with the Phantoms before cooling off down the stretch. He scored a power-play goal and received second star honors in a 4-1 Phantoms (AHL) victory vs. Wilkes-Barre/Scranton and was named Toyota Phantoms Player of the Month for October after scoring 5 goals with 6 assists in nine games. Matsumoto tied for the team lead in power-play goals during the regular season with 11. He finished the regular season with 20 goals and 24 assists and was +4 with 52 PIM in 77 games. In the AHL playoff, he scored his first playoff goal in Game 4 vs. Albany and finished with 2 goals and 3 assists with 10 PIM and a -5 plus/minus rating.

2008-09: Matsumoto returned to the Phantoms after attending Flyers camp and was the Phantoms’ second leading scorer behind Jared Ross. Matsumoto scored 29 goals with 34 assists to lead a furious Phantoms late-season turnaround that earned the team a playoff spot. Matsumoto’s two-way play was a bit of a concern, as his -12 plus/minus rating indicated, but he was a dangerous player on the power play and in penalty killing situations – when he scored 10 and 4 goals respectively. In the Phantoms’ four-game, first round playoff loss to Hershey, he scored 1 goal with 2 assist and 4 PIM, finishing +1 for the series.

2008-09: Matsumoto’s third season in the Flyers organization was again spent at the AHL level, with Philadelphia having re-located the team to Glens Falls, NY. Matsumoto led the Adirondack Phantoms in scoring with 30 goals with 32 assists while accumulating 50 PIM. He was again dangerous in special teams play, scoring 10 times on the power play and 3 shorthanded goals. Matsumoto’s plus/minus rating (-19) was tied for second worst on the team as the Phantoms struggled and failed to make the AHL playoffs. Matsumoto was traded by the Flyers to Carolina in June for a seventh round pick (206th overall) in the 2010 draft.
 

Talent Analysis

Matsumoto is a brilliant playmaking center who brings an infectious enthusiasm to his game. He possesses superb passing skills and knows how to find his linemates. He controls and protects the puck well. Matsumoto is a strong skater who moves well through traffic. He has excellent hockey sense and his play around the net is very good. Despite his less than ideal size, he will drive to the net hard and often. He has a quick, accurate shot. Matsumoto’s foot speed is a concern as he doesn’t quite have that burst of speed of some of the better smaller forwards at the NHL level. A consistent scorer at the AHL level, Matsumoto does not always bring that same determination to his own end of the ice – something that kept him from getting an NHL opportunity with the Flyers.
 

Future

Matsumoto will get a fresh start with Carolina but with several bigger and stronger forward prospects in training camp he must prove that he is willing to play both ends of the ice if he is to stick with the Hurricanes. He enters his fourth full season of pro hockey so the clock is ticking on his NHL aspirations. Matsumoto has NHL-calibre offensive skills while being an established scorer at the AHL level. Whether he gets the opportunity to prove he can be more than that, and capitalizes on that opportunity, remains to be seen.

Manny Malhotra: Rangers Catch a Steal

by pbadmin
on

After spending $44 million last year and failing to make the playoffs, things could not be looking worse for the Rangers. When the media is talking draft in March, something went wrong. What went wrong was the Rangers were just too darn old. Although possessing a few solid prospects, most were from resent drafts and thus were only 18 and 19 years old and most were not under contract. As the draft grew closer the Rangers had their sights set on a center, a big center with allot of upside. Unfortunately their top choices David Legwand and Manny Malhotra were ranked second and sixth respectively. Most experts actually expected them to go second and third. The Rangers chance to draft a big time center was slim. But something happened on that hot June day, somehow to the Rangers surprise Malhotra fell into their laps.

Read more»

Montreal Canadiens Prospect Report

by pbadmin
on

POS HT WT AGE DRAFTED
Jose Theodore G 5-10 180 22 D-Mtl94(2/44)

GP W L T AVG Sav%
98-99 Stats 19 9 9 1 2.44 .927 (AHL)
98-99 Stats 13 3 10 0 3.35 .887 (NHL)

#1 Strength- Winner’s attitude.
#1 Weakness- Inconsistency.
With the trade of Thibeault and the arrival of Hackett, Theodore was surprised and angered by his demotion to Fredericton. The main reason for his demotion was his inconsistent play. He has recently come to accept his demotion and is playing exceptionally well. He was just named the AHL’s player of the week and is proving himself too good for the AHL. Fredericton will go as far in the playoffs as Theodore (and his reputation as a good pressure goaltender) takes them.

Theodore finished the week a dismal 0-3, with a GAA of 3.66. he stopped 25 shots in a 3-1 loss to Rochester, stopped 31 shots in a 3-1 loss to Springfield, did not play in a 3-3 tie with Philadelphia, and stopped 23 shots in a 5-4 loss to Providence.(Week ending 3/7/99)

Projection for NHL Level- Star.
Current stock status- Stagnant.

POS HT WT AGE DRAFTED
Mathieu Garon G 6-1 175 21 D-Mtl96(2/44)

GP W L T AVG Sav%
98-99 Stats 34 10 21 1 3.21 .897 (AHL)

#1 Strength- Lateral Movement.
#1 Weakness- Goes down too early. Read more»

AJHL Quarter Finals (March 6th)

by pbadmin
on

[ Exclusive 2000 Draft Eligible Player Profiles and brief Scouting Reports. Click Here!!! ]

[ 1998-99 AJHL Playoff Preview ]

[ 1998-99 AJHL Playoff Quarterfinal Day 1 ]
Calgary Royals 7 at Olds 8 (OT)
The Olds Grizzlys pulled off a big upset for the second night in a row as they increased their lead in the best-of-seven quarterfinal to two games in yet another high scoring match-up.
Oddly enough, in this game where fifteen goals were ultimately scored, there was no scoring in the first period. It didn’t take Moose Jaw prospect and 2000 draft eligible Ben Knopp long to score in the second, however, as he scored a powerplay goal 21 seconds into the period. The Grizzlys’ David Erickson then scored his first goal of the postseason on the powerplay to tie the game up. The Royals then added to quick tallys – from Ryan Joseph and David Evans – to take a 3-1 lead. Olds would tie it up before the end of the period, however, as Greg Davis and Matt Brunner scored. The goal by Davis was two minutes after the Royals moved in front by two and the goal by Brunner was two minutes later.
Read more»

AJHL Quarter Finals (March 5th)

by Marc Ciampa
on

[ Exclusive 2000 Draft Eligible Player Profiles and brief Scouting Reports. Click Here!!! ]

[ 1998-99 AJHL Playoff Preview ]


Olds 7 at Calgary Royals 6

The Olds Grizzlys surprised the Calgary Royals 7-6 at Father David Bauer Arena in Calgary Friday. Centre Colen Pappas drew first blood in the series scoring four and a half minutes into the period on a goal assisted by Ryan Melbourne and John Wegenast. Calgary’s David Evans then coverted a Cam Laing feed on the powerplay five minutes later to even it up. Read more»

AJHL Quarter-Final Preview

by Marc Ciampa
on

[ Exclusive 2000 Draft Eligible Player Profiles and brief Scouting Reports. Click Here!!! ]

AJHL Quarter-Final Preview

The AJHL Playoffs are set to kick off on Friday with the quarterfinals.
The Grande Prairie Storm and the Camrose Kodiaks swept their
best-of-three mini-series respectively to earn the right to face the
division leader in the next round. The Bonnyville Pontiacs were the
first team to get eliminated. It took them until the last five minutes
of the last game in the regular season to score the goal that put them
into the playoffs but once they got their it seemed they had very little
spark left. Having to travel all the way to Grande Prairie from St.
Albert – the site of their last game – was a big factor in them losing
to the Storm 6-3 in Game One.

The Storm jumped on Bonnyville late in the first but poured it on from
there. 19-year-old Lane Letendre scored with 42 seconds left in the
first period. The Storm then broke out to a 3-0 lead. Bonnyville made it
3-2 before the Storm scored a few more times to put it away.

In Game Two, Grande Prairie broke out to a 3-0 lead again by the first
minute of the second period. Bonnyville again scored two quick goals to
close the gap, but the Storm scored again in the third period and never
looked back. It was the second game in a row that all-star Tyson Read more»