Wolf Pack goaltender Magnus Hellberg made 31 saves against one of the AHL's most dangerous offenses.
"If we played the game we played [at Lehigh Valley], I'd be really happy," Wolf Pack coach Ken Gernander said of his goal for the rest of the season. "Certainly if you look at where we were two or three weeks ago, we've made some pretty good strides."
Meanwhile, the Wolf Pack were fresh off a painful home loss to the Albany Devils one night earlier. Hartford led 3-1 with 10 minutes remaining before Albany scored twice to set up a 4-3 overtime win. The Wolf Pack have four wins in their first 12 home games (4-6-2-0).
"It was a really good bounce-back and much needed because I know it's early in the year, but we've got to start to get some traction here and be able to string together some wins," Gernander said.
"We kind of had a realistic meeting [after the Albany loss]: 'This is what transpired [against Albany].'
"Then pregame was a little more optimistic: 'Here's where we were two or three weeks ago. Here is where we are today. We're trending upward. Let's keep pushing.'"
Statistics reflect Hartford's early struggles. They have scored 2.68 goals per game. Their 4.00 goals allowed per game is last in the AHL. Their power play ranks 22nd (15.6 percent) and the penalty kill is 27th (74. 3 percent).
Hartford had counted on a veteran like the 25-year-old Hellberg to ease some of the growing pains of a young lineup. But he's 5-4-3 in 14 games with a 3.17 goals-against average and .892 save percentage.
It has added up to a 6-10-3-0 record that the Wolf Pack will carry with them on the road for a two-game series against the Toronto Marlies this weekend.
Captain Mat Bodie is optimistic as well.
"It's just a matter of sticking with it and buying into the system," Bodie said. "With the way teams play, if you take a backcheck off, it can cost you. I think we've learned that lesson, and hopefully we can build on it."