
Harvest Action Photoby Jesse Eisenberg || AHL On The Beat Archive
A spate of injuries to three of the Carolina Hurricanes’ top five goaltenders have recently thrust veteran Mike Morrison into the starting role with the Albany River Rats, and the eighth-year backstop couldn’t be happier.
“It’s great to finally get into a rhythm and to play a lot of games,” said the 30-year-old Morrison. “It feels like this team has looked high and low throughout Albany and the Capital Region, but it looks like I’m the last guy in this state that can play net. I’ll take it and I’m just glad I was ready.”
AHL All-Star goalie Justin Peters is on an extended recall to Carolina as one of two replacements for the Hurricanes’ injured starter Cam Ward, and injuries to rookie Mike Murphy and recent acquisition Justin Pogge in Albany have handed Morrison the starting job.
He’s quickly taken advantage of the opportunity, backstopping the River Rats to four straight wins in the opening weeks of March.
“It’s tough for a goalie,” said Albany head coach Jeff Daniels. “You have to have a special mindset to be able to prepare yourself and keep pushing yourself in practice in order to be ready for that opportunity, not knowing when it’s going to come. That’s where being older has helped him. He’s a veteran guy and he knows how to prepare and get himself ready so that when he’s called upon, he can do the job.”
While his experience may have prepared him for the long wait on the sidelines, Morrison is the first to admit that his patience had been wearing thin earlier in the campaign.
“I won’t sugar coat it: it felt terrible,” said the Medford, Mass., native. “There’s only one spot per game to play and this is Petey’s (Justin Peters’) team. I’m really glad that I’ve been given some sort of chance here. Whether it is to show this organization, or the teams that I’m playing against that I can keep playing. I want to show people I can still do it.”
Edomonton’s seventh-round selection in the 1998 NHL Entry Draft has appeared in 29 NHL games with Edmonton, Ottawa and Phoenix. His most successful season came in 2005-06 with the Oilers, when he posted a 2.81 GAA and an .884 save percentage with a 10-4-2 record in 21 NHL games.
He’d also played in 86 AHL games before this season, with his most recent campaign coming in 2007-08 with Bridgeport, where he posted a 2.80 GAA and .911 save percentage with a 23-17-1 record in 43 games.
After splitting the 2008-09 season between the Austrian Hockey League’s Ljubljana Olimpija HK and the Swedish Elite League’s Modo Hockey Ornskoldvik, Morrison signed an AHL contract with Albany to become the club’s third goaltender behind Peters and Murphy, who were both under Carolina contracts.
The journeyman opened the season with Albany’s ECHL affiliate in Florida, then served as a backup for the River Rats during 11 games before finally seeing his first AHL action of the season with some relief work on Jan. 30. Morrison made his first AHL start of the season on Feb. 12.
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