Ghosts of seasons past loom over Devils’ 2-0 loss to Kings

What was ironic about the Devils’ loss to the Kings in the teams’ first game since the 2012 Stanley Cup Finals is that for the first period and the early part of the second it didn’t feel like a revenge game at all.  Partly because of the dissapointing (barely above 12,000) attendance and partly because half our team from that series is no longer here.  Plus the stakes are clearly lower in November, especially for the Kings right now.  All of the dissapointment and frustration from playing that team in 2012 came back in one big flash when Peter Harrold got called for a phantom double-minor high-sticking call (replays showed it was actually a Kings stick that drew blood on the play) early in the second period, which brought back memories of the Steve Bernier major penalty/expulsion in Game 6 and thus the bitterness from that series.  From then on I wanted to stick it to the Kings, Johnathan Quick or no Quick.  Unfortunately the immortal Ben Scrivens did his best Quick impression and shut us out 2-0 in yet another disheartening defeat.

Other than the Edmonton fiasco early in the season, I haven’t been this mad about a game all year.  Yes, the Devils played well for forty minutes despite not scoring (how familiar does that sound?!), but I’m sorry…I know this offense doesn’t have Ilya Kovalchuk, Zach Parise or David Clarkson anymore.  But any team with Jaromir Jagr, Patrik Elias, Travis Zajac, Adam Henrique and company should not be getting shut out five times in nineteen games.  Especially against journeyman/backup netminders like Scrivens, Al Montoya and Ray Emery.  Our pathetic attempt to even set up a power play late in the third period was indiciative of our offense last night and really the last two seasons.  Boos rained down from the heavens late in the game and I joined in, beyond frustrated with this team.  Especially since last night was yet another failed attempt at winning three in a row, which this team still has not done since February.  Not to mention another lost two points at a juncture in the schedule where it can be ill-afforded, particularly with almost everyone else in the division on a hot streak right now.

Our lack of offense was one thing, it could have been predicted by anyone with half a brain who wasn’t high on Kool-Aid before the season (although the Devils manage to find new ways to lower the bar daily) but the effort level in the third period was beyond pathetic.  It was as if they gave up once Scrivens started stonewalling them and they knew it was going to be another one of those games.  People used to harp on Kovalchuk’s lack of backchecking (and Elias for one still takes his shots publicly) but at least the Russian merc tried to backcheck unlike the invisible Damien Brunner, who spends more time complaining to papers in Switzerland about how we’re stifling his creativity than actually attempting to do anything without the puck.  Brunner lah-de-daaed his way to a puck late in the third period during our ill-fated power play and wound up taking a tripping penalty that effectively sealed the game up for the Kings.  For a guy who was begging for a contract in Switzerland before the season, he sure hasn’t done much aside from a couple of early-season goals in losing efforts.

Even guys like Andy Greene had their head up their you-know-what during the third period, when he first deflected a harmless floating shot right back at Cory Schnieder, who had to make a spectacular reflex save to keep the game scoreless. Schnieder however, cannot score for the team – nor could he make up for Greene’s next faux pas which was drifting over to the right boards way out of position and letting Dwight King have free reign in front for an easy tip-in goal, the Kings’ only score of the game against the ill-fated Schnieder with just under eight minutes left in the third period.  Schnieder must be wondering what he’s gotten into here…with a GAA under two and a save percentage almost .920 he still has just one lousy win (and a shutout at that).  ONE LOUSY WIN with a GAA under two, what a disgrace.  Scoring by committee my tit, what scoring…you can’t exactly count on Cam Janssen goals every game, or Ryan Carter two-goal games – except maybe against the Rangers.

As usual our coaching left a lot to be desired last night too.  Pete DeBoer‘s fascination with surrogate children Stephen Gionta and Harrold is by now well-documented, to the point where I don’t even bat an eye anymore when Gionta gets played (and overplayed) while Jacob Josefson sits in the press box time and again, or when Harrold gets played (and overplayed) with Mark Fayne getting ruined by the constant yo-yoing in and out of the lineup.  I’ve almost come to accept that as fact at this point.  Janssen’s two goals unfortunately I knew in the back of my mind was going to buy him another 10-15 games at least in spite of his utter lack of talent – or fighting these days.  I’m a believer in chemistry but sometimes that goes off the rails and it’s doing that with Janssen now.  When you play Janssen you willingly handicap yourself, especially not being able to play him in a scoreless third period and running eleven forwards out there including Carter-Gionta-Bernier as a de facto third line yet again despite all of our supposed forward depth.

What ticked me off more than any of that was seeing literally all of the above players on the ice late in the second period when Kings’ offensive aces Anze Kopitar and Justin Williams were out on the ice.  Coaches look to match up your fourth line against their first line on the road, it’s flat inexcusable just handing them that matchup at home!  And if you’re not going to play Josefson or Mattias Tedenby over Gionta or Janssen, could you play them over Brunner?  At least they’ll freaking try!  It’s just amazing the amount of self-inflicted wounds this team gives itself on a nightly basis.  Especially when it relates to Josefson, a former first-round pick who was trusted by former coach Jacques Lemaire in all situations but wound up permanently in Pete’s doghouse after some bad games early last season.

Speaking of Lemaire (above), he’s been observed with GM Lou Lamoriello taking in practice and games the last few days.  Presumably Lemaire went with Lamoriello to Toronto on Tuesday to take in the Hall of Fame festivities with former Devil Scott Niedermayer among others being inducted and the Devils were playing the Leafs soon after that but the fact that Lemaire’s been around for much of the last week is eyebrow-raising in itself.  Of course all the speculation is whether he’ll return yet again to coach with a testy and scared Pete on increasingly shaky ground.  Or what kind of coaching/player evaluations he’s concurring with Lou on.  As much as I don’t want us to keep going to that well forever, there really aren’t all that many candidates out there if you’re talking about an in-season coaching change and with this nightmare of a schedule coming up I could see a season-crushing five or six-game losing streak on the horizon.  Although the Devils’ results were better the last couple of weeks before last night’s two steps backward, Lou’s been known to make changes even when the team’s winning if he sees something he doesn’t like.  He can’t like the way DeBoer’s managing his lineup at the moment, or the largely underwhelming results.

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Ott gets Nolan Era off to good start

Welcome Back! Like old times, Ted Nolan was back behind the Sabre bench and got a win.  AP Photo/Gary Wiepert

Welcome Back! Like old times, Ted Nolan was back behind the Sabre bench and got a win.
AP Photo/Gary Wiepert

For the first time since 1997, Ted Nolan was behind the Buffalo bench. Fittingly, his team got a win with the Sabres prevailing over the Maple Leafs 3-1 at First Niagara Center.

Steve Ott was the catalyst scoring the tying goal and setting up Marcus Foligno’s game-winner. The Sabre captain had a strong game driving David Clarkson nuts. He was at his best mixing it up frustrating the Leafs. With Ryan Miller putting on a Hasek-esque performance in net making 32 saves, the Nolan Era got off to a good start. The kind Sabre fans have been hoping for. It was only their second regulation/overtime win. That was secondary to the big storyline.

”It was one of those games where you didn’t ever know that this type of day would ever happen again,” an emotional Nolan expressed of a triumphant return. ”It was very emotional, so I’ll have a good cry after everybody leaves.”

”Guys have been playing heavy for a long time. I think this was a full rejuvenation of guys’ careers,” Ott added of the big change. ”It’s game on. It’s time to start fresh. It’s like you’re a rookie again.”

That’s exactly the kind of attitude the Sabres will have. It’s a new start for a franchise that needed it including defenseman Tyler Myers. He set up Ott’s goal in the second with a booming shot from the point that caromed off Jonathan Bernier right to the pesky Sabre who led by example. Considering the kind of game he played, it was fitting that Ott had a hand in the winner. Taking a Drew Stafford outlet, he broke in on Bernier and backhanded a perfect pass to Foligno, who backhanded his second home.

It was enough to hold off the Leafs, who were without Nazem Kadri– serving the first of a three-game suspension for a dangerous hit against Minnesota. Miller made some acrobatic stops to keep Toronto at bay. He also got a big assist from defenseman Christian Ehrhoff. With the Leafs searching for the equalizer, Miller was down and out with a gaping net facing James van Riemsdyk. But a sliding Ehrhoff blocked his attempt which was ticketed.

”It’s a new start,” Ehrhoff said following the game saver. Ironically, he scored into an open net sealing it. ”A lot of guys have been down, and confidence hasn’t been high. When there’s a big change like that, it’s a fresh start for everybody.”

”That was a heck of a play by him,” van Riemsdyk added. ”We’re not getting those bounces right now, but we’ve got to keep pushing forward.”

Toronto’s lone goal scorer was Trevor Smith, who beat Miller in the first from Clarkson and Mason Raymond. Bernier finished with 24 saves.

”It was really fun for me to look up once in a while and see how much fans enjoyed this game,” Nolan said. ”Hopefully, it’s a sign of good things to come.”

BONY 3 Stars:

3rd Star-Christian Ehrhoff, Buf (empty net goal at 19:32 3rd, game saving block on JVR, +1 in 24:05)

2nd Star-Ryan Miller, Buf (32 saves incl. 13/13 in 3rd)

1st Star-Steve Ott, Buf (goal, assist, 3 for 5 on faceoffs, +2 in 19:37)

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Kings’ big third costs slumping Islanders

For two periods, the Islanders seemed on their way to a second straight win on home ice. Goals from Casey Cizikas and Aaron Ness had them leading 2-0 over the Kings with one stanza left. However, Los Angeles rallied from a two-goal deficit by scoring three unanswered in the third to stun the Islanders 3-2 at Nassau Coliseum last night. Slava Voynov, Tanner Pearson and Tyler Toffoli scored for LA, who’s doing a mini-tour of the metropolitan area. They play the Devils tonight and the Rangers Sunday.

It was a disappointing result for the slumping Islanders, who lost for the fifth time in six. After a disastrous 0-4 road trip, they were hoping to build on a 3-1 win over Nashville. But couldn’t just hold on coughing up a two-goal lead.

”That was a big physical team,” Islander coach Jack Capuano said. ”I thought we played decently and well enough to win.

”You’re always frustrated when two points slip away. The big thing is how we respond. We have to find a way.”

At 7-10-3 tied with the Devils in points (17) despite playing two more games, they need to put together a good stretch. Thomas Vanek missed his third consecutive game with an “upper body injury.” Since acquiring him from Buffalo for Matt Moulson and two draft picks, things haven’t gone well. They’re 2-4-0 when he plays and 1-2-0 without him. That’s six losses in their last nine. It’s no wonder they’re looking up in the suddenly tightening Metro. The Pens have dropped three straight and still lead the division but only by a point over Washington. The Rangers and Hurricanes are tied with 18 points four back. Then come the Isles and Devils, who are both five out. The surging Flyers have won three straight suddenly up to 15 points including a 2-1 win Wednesday at Pittsburgh. With an overtime loss yesterday, Columbus sits last with 14. Eight points separates the entire division.

“It wasn’t turnovers, it wasn’t puck management, it was just the situation,” Capuano assessed after seeing his team allow a Toffoli tip to squeak past Kevin Poulin with 1:27 left. “They got some shots to the net. We knew they’d shoot the puck and crash and that’s how they got the game-winning goal.”

They’ve led in seven of their 13 defeats. That also included 2-0 leads to Columbus and Vancouver. Being able to protect leads is a necessity in the NHL. The Isles learned how to do it late last year making the playoffs. It hasn’t helped that scoring has dried up. After top three scorers John Tavares, Frans Nielsen and Kyle Okposo, there’s a big drop off. Moulson is still listed as the fourth scorer. Josh Bailey is stuck on eight points since Oct. 25. Michael Grabner doesn’t have a point since Oct. 17. The lack of depth is hurting them on the blueline too with Lubomir Visnovsky still out with a concussion. They’ve missed him.

With Evgeni Nabokov struggling in net, Poulin has gotten the last two starts. For the season, he’s 2-5-0 with a 2.45 GAA and .914 save percentage. Nabokov is 5-5-3 with a 3.24 GAA and .894 save percentage having allowed 10 goals in his last two starts. He’s allowed four or more five times including the last three. 

It’s a combination of things for a team that needs to right the ship. Detroit visits tomorrow. Then the Isles go on the road for three with stops in Toronto, Pittsburgh and Philly before returning home Nov. 27 against Winnipeg for a four-game home stand. It won’t get any easier.

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Devils prepare for crucial back-to-back at the Rock

Devils celebrate beating the Kings 2-1 in Game 5 of the 2012 Finals (FoxSports)

With a second West Coast trip on the docket next week, the Devils’ games tomorrow and Saturday at the Rock loom large toward keeping up the momentum they’ve built in taking seven out of a possible eight points in their last four games, culminating in a huge 3-2 win at Madison Square Garden on Tuesday.  This weekend’s games are also emotionally charged, for different reasons.  Tomorrow night the Devils host the Kings in the teams’ first matchup since Game 6 of the 2012 Stanley Cup Finals (though their last meeting at the Rock was a bit more successful for the Devils – see above picture), albeit without goaltenders Martin Brodeur or Jonathan Quick – on the shelf for the next few weeks due to injury.  Ironically far more players remain from the Kings’ 2012 team than ours, so getting a pound of flesh will probably be more on the mind of the fans than anything else.  Still, it’s a huge game that could get the Devils back to NHL .500, which would be a bit of an accomplishment after their 0-4-3 start.  Not to mention the Devils would have their first three-game winning streak since early last season.

Our early-season injury merry-go-round is continuing with Patrik Elias (back spasms) and Stephen Gionta (sprained ankle) both seemingly on their way back into the lineup this weekend, while Anton Volchenkov will miss the next few games due to a lower-body injury (pulled leg muscle) sustained early in Tuesday’s victory over the Rangers.  Most likely Mattias Tedenby and Jacob Josefson will be the scratches if both forwards return, while Mark Fayne will take the place of the injured Volchenkov.  Even with Elias and Gionta back though, the Devils will ice just eleven of the eighteen skaters that took the ice in Game 6 a year and a half ago, with some key pieces missing.  Ironically center Andrei Loiktionov was on the Kings that year, but contreversially didn’t get a Stanley Cup ring despite a fair number of games played during the season and was traded out of LA last season.  He’ll have something to prove against his former team obviously.

Our lineup will probably look something like this for the weekend:

F: Zubrus-Zajac-Jagr, Brunner-Elias-Ryder, Henrique-Loiktionov-Bernier, Carter-Gionta-Janssen

D: Greene-Zidlicky, Harrold-Fayne, Gelinas-Larsson

Saturday’s game against the Penguins is bigger in terms of them being a division rival so it’s a four-point game in the standings, which a suddenly hot Brodeur will be in the net for.  After appearing to grease the skids for Cory Schnieder to take over the #1 role in net, Marty’s done everything he can to delay the transition longer by going 5-1 in his last six games with just seven goals allowed during that stretch, which included back-to-back shutouts against the Flyers and Predators.  Pittsburgh’s three-game losing streak has suddenly put the Metro lead back up for grabs, as the Pens maintain just a one-point lead over the rival Caps with everyone else closing in as the Devils, Rangers and Flyers among others have all picked it up after slow starts.

While we haven’t played the Kings since the spring of 2012, we did play the Penguins in our season opener this year and got blanked 3-0 with Schnieder in net.  Amazingly our season series ends on New Year’s Eve as we play Pittsburgh two more times in December (thank the new NHL ‘balanced’ schedule for that).  I’m not really wrapped up in the division standings at this point though, even though we’ll likely have to finish in the top three to make the postseason with the way the divisions are shaping up now.  It’s still early though, right now I just want to see the Devils stay afloat until November and hopefully carry the momentum of this most recent 6-3-2 stretch through the last brutal part of their early-season schedule.

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A New Era for Sabres starts Friday

Reunited, Ted Nolan and Pat LaFontaine pose for a photo op following the Sabres' shake up.  latimes.com

Reunited, Ted Nolan and Pat LaFontaine pose for a photo op following the Sabres’ shake up.
latimes.com

Unless you were living in a cave, Terry Pegula finally took action firing GM Darcy Regier and coach Ron Rolston following the Sabres’ 3-2 shootout win over the Kings Tuesday. Pat LaFontaine was promoted to Team President and former coach Ted Nolan was hired.

The shake up still has the hockey world buzzing. An amazing 24-hour rollercoaster of emotions for Buffalo fans who rejoiced like our very own Brian Sanborn. Like many, he’d been waiting for this day. That it’s two familiar faces who are extremely popular makes it a great PR move.

How it will work out remains to be seen. LaFontaine was offered the GM position but wisely turned it down- citing lack of experience. Who they select will play a huge role in how long interim coach Nolan stays. The last time he was in this position, he and LaFontaine were with the Islanders. He lasted two years guiding them to a postseason appearance in ’06-07. He gets one more crack with the place it started. Nolan won a Jack Adams in ’96-97 after winning the Northeast Division and leading them to the second round. Then came his dismissal that remains a mystery to this day. All we know is it had something to do with Dominik Hasek. It’s great that he’ll get one more chance in Western New York.

Currently, the Sabres are 4-15-1 ranking last in the East. In 20 games, they only had one regulation/overtime win under Rolston. He was overmatched. They should’ve made it earlier following the John Scott nightmare. At least Pegula grew tired of the shenanigans. Buffalo is in a rebuild and Regier should be credited with getting great returns for Jason Pominville and Thomas Vanek. But his firing was a long time coming. At the very least, he retrieved some good pieces in trades which will benefit Buffalo long-term.

So, what does it all mean? That the Sabres will become a harder team for opponents. Nolan’s teams always outworked the opposition. Something that happened with the Islanders whenever they faced the Rangers. It’s been a while since he ran an NHL bench. That will be interesting to follow. I don’t think you forget how to coach. In some aspects, it reminds me of what the Devils did bringing back Jacques Lemaire. He proved he still had it making something out of a lost ’10-11 in Jersey. Something Hasan can allude to.

Will it work? It can’t be any worse. Worst case scenario is they continue to struggle and move Matt Moulson at the deadline and probably Ryan Miller. It’s about the future. However, there will be a work ethic instilled which is necessary for young players’ development. Tomorrow, the Maple Leafs visit First Niagara Center. A fitting first opponent considering the rivalry. It should be interesting.

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“He’s playing …

Our Quote of the Day comes from Martin Brodeur on Jaromir Jagr.

Derek's avatarDatsyukian

“He’s playing well here,” said Brodeur of Jagr. “I relate a lot to him. I can have conversations with him that I can’t have with some of the younger players on this team.

“After losing Kovalchuk, we picked the right guy to help out the chemistry of the team. He’s going to be even better as the year goes on.”

Following the Devils’ 3-2 victory over the Rangers at MSG Tuesday night, 41-year old legend Martin Brodeur had nothing but praise for another 41-year old teammate. Future Hall Of Famer Jaromir Jagr, who was instrumental in setting up Dainius Zubrus’ game-winner. Both quotes are an example of what Jagr brings to a team. He’s a leader. His 14 points pace the Devils so far. It’s the intangibles that still make No. 68 one of the best teammates. A quality Brodeur has instilled throughout his career.

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Devils defeat Rangers 3-2: Outplayed by a pair of 41-year olds

Fear Zuke: Mats Zuccarello is mugged by Marek Zidlicky following a shift he spent against nemesis Martin Brodeur.  AP Photo/Frank Franklin II

Fear Zuke: Mats Zuccarello is mugged by Marek Zidlicky following a shift he spent against nemesis Martin Brodeur.
AP Photo/Frank Franklin II

So much for taking the bull by its horns. The Rangers have no one to blame but themselves for tonight’s humiliation against a hungrier bitter Hudson rival. They didn’t match the Devils’ intensity and lost 3-2 at a quiet Madison Square Garden. Keep pushing those Lounge Seats Dolan. No wonder they can’t sell out and now have to hear “Let’s Go Devil” chants.

It wasn’t so much that the effort wasn’t there. It’s that they weren’t smart. When you play the Devils, undisciplined play hurts. There were too many costly mistakes resulting in a crushing loss. Anyway you slice it, any defeat to the Devils is an embarrassment. Not just because it’s our number one rival. They won without Patrik Elias and down a defenseman with an injury to Anton Volchenkov in the first period forcing them to go with five the rest of the way.

It didn’t matter because they had a pair of 41-year olds who outplayed our team. Plain and simple. Martin Brodeur was the best player on the ice. A month ago, he thought he was done. Not anymore. He was outstanding making 33 saves. Many spectacular in a busy second which the Rangers threw the kitchen sink at him. Say this for the future Hall Of Famer. Nobody lives for these games more. Maybe if Henrik Lundqvist put all his time into what really mattered, he’d be in the same category. I will never put him there again until he takes us to the Stanley Cup Final. Admittedly, the 2012 Conference Final loss still stings. It hurts to lose to that team.

Brodeur wasn’t the only 41-year old who had a good game. Jaromir Jagr reminded us again why he’s still a dynamic player defying father time. Aside from a second minor penalty he took, his imprints were all over the ice. Jagr only finished with an assist but easily could’ve had more if not for some splendid netminding from Lundqvist. With the game hanging in the balance late, Number 68 made the key play that broke MSG hearts. He chipped a puck in the neutral zone past two Rangers allowing Travis Zajac and Dainius Zubrus to break in two on two. Dan Girardi and Ryan McDonagh played it so poorly, it was humiliating. They totally got crossed up with Girardi foolishly going down taking himself out of the play. A block of a Zajac shot caromed to Zubrus, who buried the winner with 2:55 left.

Brutal. There’s no other way to slice it. I could care less about some of the excuses other bloggers are coming up with. ‘You can’t win every game. You will lose to bad teams.’ Sure. That’s true. But come on. Against a bitter rival, there was no reason for them not to be as determined as the Devils. Not after last month’s 4-0 garbage performance. It’s inexcusable. There are no shortcuts. I don’t spin things like MSG or pro-Rangers bloggers. This was a big game. Especially with what’s coming up. It doesn’t get any easier with Montreal and Los Angeles this weekend and then Boston next Tuesday followed by a five-game road swing.

Give the Devils credit. They were peskier. They wanted it more. Particularly Brodeur, who turned back the clock once more. He didn’t let in any softies like Lundqvist, who somehow allowed fourth line scrub Ryan Carter to score twice. That included a mind numbing backhand with under 50 seconds remaining in the second. A period they controlled. Hank’s one of the best goalies around. I don’t take it for granted. However, that doesn’t excuse him from letting a 2012 ghost sneak two in. Brodeur doesn’t give up such goals when it counts.

The first period sucked. The Rangers came out flat turning over pucks. They played right into the Devils hands. They were quicker outhustling our guys. Somehow, the Rangers still managed to outshoot them 9-7. There were battles like the one Mats Zuccarello had throughout with Brodeur because he has more guts than anyone I’ve ever seen. Zuccarello was in Marty’s face the entire night and had an impact. Eventually in the second, Marek Zidlicky took exception leading to matching roughs.

Despite coming out more aggressively, the Rangers didn’t get the first one. Instead, Brodeur continued to make acrobatic stops that even featured one with his head off a Chris Kreider lacrosse try. Kreider btw had another strong game going after Steve Bernier following a hi-sticking call on Adam Larsson. Kreider had a pair of helpers giving him nine points over the last eight. Out of a timeout, the Devils drew first blood thanks to some hustle from their fourth line. Cam Janssen forced a turnover leading to Andy Greene skating in on Lundqvist. On a delayed call, he let go of one that took a weird bounce right to Carter, who stuffed it in.

To the Rangers’ credit, they answered the bell with Marc Staal one-timing a perfect Zuccarello backhand feed from behind the net stick side on Brodeur. It was his first point since Oct. 26 versus Detroit. The point was a milestone giving him 100 for his NHL career. He was much more noticeable throughout. Kreider, who chipped the puck behind the net to Zuke got the other assist. After the goal, they peppered Marty from everywhere. But he was equal to the task robbing Kreider and making a few other big stops. The Devils aren’t used to giving up so many shots. The defense helped out blocking 18 shots and forcing another 10 misses. Despite not giving their best, the Rangers easily could’ve had 60 shots. That’s probably the only positive I can think of.

Carter’s second of the period came following more Ranger pressure. Larsson made a good defensive getting the puck out allowing Carter to go one on one with a defenseman. I forget who. It might’ve been Girardi. Simply put, he flung a backhand from a bad angle that went through Lundqvist. An awful goal to allow. It left a bitter taste because it reminded me of some of the cruddy ones he gave up two Springs ago. He more than made up for it robbing Jagr on a breakaway out of the box. Staal got enough back pressure on him to force Jagr to try a backhand deke, which Hank ate up. Considering how dismal the power play was going 0 for 5 against a stingy Devils penalty killing unit, it was a momentum turner.

Moments earlier on the same shift, Girardi thought he had his first in front but missed. But Kreider got the puck back to him at the point and he let go of a wrist shot, which deflected off Larsson’s skate off Brodeur’s glove with Zuccarello in front. Sometimes, it’s that simple. Zuke was our best player by far. He was everywhere. Why he didn’t get even more than the 18:32 Alain Vigneault is as much of a head scratcher as taking Kreider off the first power play unit. He obviously doesn’t trust J.T. Miller enough to play him consistently. For a second straight game, he didn’t break nine minutes receiving only 5:04 in 10 shifts. He’s been on for a few goals against the last two. Maybe they should send him down. With three days off, it’s coming.

The problem is Brandon Mashinter only took five shifts and Benoit Pouliot is in the doghouse. That means Vigneault is starting to resemble John Tortorella. He’s leaning too heavily on Ryan Callahan and Brad Richards, who was invisible. Callahan struggled to get shots through despite 23:01. Carl Hagelin also had a quite game not registering a shot and a minus-one. With Brian Boyle having an uneven night taking another penalty despite going 9 for 15 on faceoffs, it put too much pressure on the top two lines. On nights like this when you face an opportunistic opponent who capitalizes on every mistake, you can’t get cute. They were and ultimately paid the price.

Zubrus’ goal was not even shocking. Once Jagr made the pass catching our forwards, you could kind of see it coming. Lundqvist had no chance thanks to Girardi going down screening him out. They pulled him late but it didn’t matter because the Devils can protect leads. They earned it.

BONY Three Stars:

3rd Star-Jaromir Jagr, NJD (assist, 4 shots, 4 PIM, +1 in 18:04-dangerous every shift)

2nd Star-Ryan Carter, NJD (2 goals on 3 shots, plus-2 in 14:22)

1st Star-Martin Brodeur, NJD (33 saves incl. 15/16 in busy 2nd-NHL record 674th win)

Game Notes: Zajac had an impact setting up the game-winner while going 16 for 25 on faceoffs. He took a lot of criticism from Devil fans. But they’re a much better team with him healthy. Overall, the Devils held the faceoff edge 37-31 meaning the rest of the club won 21 without Zajac. On the Ranger side, Stepan was 13 for 28. Richards was 5 for 14 despite Joe Micheletti not paying attention. … The game wasn’t overly physical which probably worked to our disadvantage. Callahan had seven of the Rangers’ 27 while no Devil had more than two of their 17. …

Stat Of The Game: Giveaways NJD 4 NYR 11

Posted in Battle Of Hudson, Devils, NY Rangers | 2 Comments

Nash to practice with team Wednesday

Rick Nash (seen above) will return to practice with the Rangers tomorrow. He shouldn't be rushed under any circumstances.

Rick Nash (seen above) will return to practice with the Rangers tomorrow. He shouldn’t be rushed under any circumstances.

The Rangers just got some good news. Alain Vigneault just announced that Rick Nash will return to practice with the team tomorrow. Out with a concussion sustained in the third game of the season Oct. 8 at San Jose, he’s missed 14 games since. Nash has skated three straight days and reported no signs of PCS.

It’s great that he’ll return to team practice Wednesday. But they should still be guarded. Just because he’s feeling better doesn’t mean he’s ready. The Rangers cannot rush him back under any circumstance. Concussions are the unknown. One day, a player can feel good. The next, they can report headaches. You never know. Nash still has to be cleared for contact. Not until he is can we even get excited about a possible return. This is merely the next step in the process.

Having won six of seven entering tonight’s match against the Devils, the Rangers have to feel good with where they are. At 9-8-0 with 18 points, they trail second place Washington by a point and first place Pittsburgh by four. If they take care of business, that’s four in a row. Beating the teams behind you is a necessity. The schedule picks up this weekend with a visit to the house of horrors Montreal and then returning to Manhattan for Los Angeles. No disrespect. But they should win tonight. It’s an important game with tougher opponents ahead including the Bruins visiting next Tuesday. They then embark on a five-game road trip with stops in Dallas, Nashville, Tampa, Florida and Boston before returning for the Canucks Nov. 30. John Tortorella’s return.

We’ll examine with caution where Nash is. I don’t expect him back anytime soon. They should wait until next month. Rushing him back would be a huge mistake. There’s the future to worry about with him signed through 2017-18. They better be careful.

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Battle Of Hudson Preview: Devils and Rangers renew rivalry

Cam Janssen and Brandon Mashinter exchange punches. AP/Bill Kostroun

Cam Janssen and Brandon Mashinter exchange punches.
AP/Bill Kostroun

The last time the Rangers faced the Devils, both teams were struggling mightily. For our side of a classic Hudson rivalry, a 4-0 shutout loss on Oct. 19 in Newark was a low point. They were so uncompetitive that Cory Schneider could’ve had a lounge chair. It was their first game without Ryan Callahan. A 2-1 humiliation to the Flyers had them off to a 2-6-0 start.

An emotional 3-2 overtime win in Detroit helped right the ship. Carl Hagelin returned two games later and they’ve been a different team since winning six of seven entering tonight’s Garden rematch. Having both Hagelin and Callahan back have helped immensely. With Chris Kreider’s improvement and Mats Zuccarello playing his best hockey, the Rangers are scoring more. In four of their last six, they’ve reached four or more. Until allowing three to the Panthers Sunday, they’d given up two or fewer in nine straight. A stretch that followed the Devil embarrassment.

Henrik Lundqvist is back to his old self bringing a 6-6-0 record with a 2.47 GAA and .916 save percentage with two shutouts into tonight. Unlike last month, he’ll see Martin Brodeur in the opposite end. The 41-year old legend isn’t done yet. After admitting that he lost the competition with Schneider, all he’s done is return to form posting back-to-back shutouts. Many Devil fans wrote Marty off prematurely. Once more, he’s silenced his critics entering with a 4-3-2 mark including a 2.09 GAA, .908 save percentage and two shutouts. Never count a legend out.

Speaking of which, the Devils are coming off their best win of the season. A 5-0 trouncing of the Predators. They’ve won two of three and got five of six points including a shootout defeat to the Maple Leafs. Up to 5-7-5, they’re only a few points out of the playoffs. Jaromir Jagr is a big reason why. Another legend that was counted out following last year’s playoffs when he didn’t score a goal during Boston’s run to the Stanley Cup Final. People forget that he had plenty of chances. Jagr scored his fifth of the season Sunday to set the tone. It also was a milestone with the goal his 1,700th NHL point- becoming only the eighth player to accomplish it. He joined an exclusive list that features Wayne Gretzky, Mark Messier, Gordie Howe, Ron Francis, Marcel Dionne, Steve Yzerman and former Pen teammate Mario Lemieux.

Had he not missed a few seasons due to returning to the KHL, Jagr probably is second behind Gretzky. Despite his enormous talent, Number 68’s been taken for granted. His 13 points (5-8-13) which lead the Devils are proof he’s still got it. If you’ve seen the Devils, you already know. He’s been their best forward. They don’t score much. Especially without Patrik Elias. However, Jagr has been at the forefront. Aside from a highlight reel goal, he had a great set up for Travis Zajac that was a thing of beauty. Aside from his 686 career goals, Jagr is a sensational playmaker. He’s totaled 1,015 assists ranking 12th all-time. Two more would pass Hall Of Famer Joe Sakic for 11th. As I’ve echoed many times, “Legends Never Die.”

There are other interesting storylines. Perhaps none better than Cam Janssen. Since his recall from Albany, the popular Devil enforcer has scored twice in three games. Both came in wins. Brodeur shutouts over the Flyers and Preds. Janssen has nearly doubled his career output going from three goals to five. Who ever would’ve thought he could inject life with his stick instead of his fists?

On the Ranger side, Ryan McDonagh has turned into an offensive source from the back end. With four points over his last three, he’s up to 10 (4-6-10) for the season which leads Rangers defensemen. That’s good enough to place him third in team scoring trailing Brad Richards and Derek Stepan. For the Devils, Marek Zidlicky continues to produce posting two goals and nine assists for 11 points. The Czech vet blueliner ranks second behind Jagr and is particularly dangerous on the power play possessing a heavy one-timer.

If you’re looking at rookies, Kreider has eight points (2-6-8) in 10 games. That included a great pass off a tic-tac-toe set up for J.T. Miller. His backcheck forced a turnover leading directly to the goal. He also showed a mean streak going after Scottie Upshall with a nasty cross check. He wasn’t disciplined. Such a retaliation could’ve hurt the team. He has to be smarter. For the Devils, defenseman Eric Gelinas has been a steady influence on Adam Larsson. Gelinas has proven he should stay up posting five points (1-4-5) in eight games. A solid skater with a good shot, he’s given Pete DeBoer another option on the power play. He has a lot of poise.

On the injury front, Rick Nash skated again. He’s getting closer. The reviews have been positive, which is encouraging. Taylor Pyatt remains out with a concussion. That means big bruiser Brandon Mashinter plays again which could mean a rematch from preseason if Janssen isn’t focused on goal scoring.

Unlike last time, both teams are playing well. So, it should make for an early Thanksgiving treat for locals. The Battle Of Hudson is one of the best rivalries. This is Game 2 of 5. The next meeting is Dec. 7 at MSG a day before my birthday. I’m not going tonight. It’s a safe bet I’ll be at that one with the Caps visiting Dec. 8. My next game is this Sunday with the Kings visiting. That should be good. Hopefully, we can say the same for tonight.

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Steven Stamkos injury

In today’s Lightning-Bruins game at TD Garden, Tampa star center Steven Stamkos suffered a broken tibia. The injury occurred at 7:11 of the second period when he lost his edge accidentally colliding into the Boston net. He was in pain lying on the ice until being stretchered off.

It’s an unfortunate injury for the NHL to one of the game’s brightest superstars. Only 23, Stamkos was tied with Sidney Crosby for the league lead in scoring with 23 points (14-9-23). He entered the Veteran’s Day matinee on fire with 13 points in his last eight games including eight goals. That featured a six-game goal streak with seven during that span.

The Lightning have vaulted to the top of the Atlantic leading the division with a 12-5-0 record for 24 points. Following today’s crushing loss, that’s one ahead of the Bruins and tops in the Eastern Conference. The Bolts will now be forced to play without their best player. Stamkos was emerging as an early Hart contender. It’s a shame he’ll miss significant time. A big disappointment for the NHL and hockey fans.

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