Ontario

Team Scoring Insights
Ontario’s offensive profile leaned heavily toward playmaking and balanced puck movement, with several forwards clustering far to the right of the chart due to high assist totals. The Reign generated offense through distribution and transition rather than pure finishing ability.
Martin Chromiak stood out as the club’s most complete offensive producer, combining elite assist production with strong goal scoring almost directly on the balance line. Andre Lee also posted an impressive scoring profile, generating goals at a rate that exceeded his assist totals.
Cole Guttman and Glenn Gawdin served as key setup-oriented offensive drivers. Both players accumulated very high assist totals while remaining productive finishers, reflecting strong offensive zone creation and puck distribution roles.
Kenny Connors and Nikita Alexandrov provided additional middle-six support, though their production profiles leaned more toward playmaking than high-end finishing.
Ontario received surprisingly strong offensive contribution from several forwards outside the traditional top line group. Jared Wright, Aatu Jämsen, and Taylor Ward all finished above the diagonal line, indicating efficient goal scoring relative to assist totals.
The defensive corps contributed less offensively overall. Samuel Bolduc led the defensemen group in total production, while Angus Booth and Joe Hicketts remained primarily defensive-minded contributors with limited scoring output.
The lower-left cluster reflects developmental depth pieces still growing offensively, including Logan Brown and Akil Thomas, whose assist-heavy or low-volume production profiles suggest more specialized usage.
Overall, Ontario’s chart suggests a team built around puck movement, balanced offensive creation, and multiple capable distributors rather than one dominant pure scorer. The structure points toward a system-oriented attack with offensive depth spread across several lines.
Team Dashboard

Team Dashboard Insights
Ontario finished as one of the stronger overall teams in the AHL, pairing elite offensive output with above-average defensive performance. The Team Identity Map places the Reign firmly in the upper-right quadrant, reflecting a true contender profile driven by strong goal differential and balanced two-way play.
Offensive depth was the defining characteristic of the roster. Martin Chromiak led the team with 56 points, while Cole Guttman, Glenn Gawdin, Andre Lee, Nikita Alexandrov, and Kenny Connors all surpassed the 40-point mark. Few AHL teams matched Ontario’s ability to generate scoring throughout multiple forward lines.
The Skater Production chart highlights the team’s strong overall goal-share profile. Most top contributors posted positive plus/minus ratings, suggesting Ontario consistently controlled play at even strength rather than relying solely on special teams.
Andre Lee stood out as one of the most impactful two-way forwards on the roster, combining high-end production with one of the strongest plus/minus ratings among core contributors. Kenny Connors and Francesco Pinelli also showed strong balance between scoring output and territorial impact.
Ontario’s defensemen contributed less offensively than the forward group, but Samuel Bolduc provided useful secondary scoring while maintaining a positive differential impact. The blue line overall appeared more structurally focused than offensively aggressive.
Special teams remained a major advantage. The penalty kill at 84.2% ranked as a stabilizing force, while the power play exceeded 21%, giving Ontario reliable performance in both manpower situations.
Goaltending was steady across multiple options. Erik Portillo handled significant workload with solid efficiency, while Isaiah Saville posted the strongest save percentage in lighter usage. Phoenix Copley added veteran depth and stability.
Overall, Ontario profiled as a complete, playoff-caliber team with strong offensive depth, positive puck-possession indicators, reliable special teams, and stable goaltending — the type of balanced structure typically associated with deep postseason runs.