Devils’ golden oldies lead the way past Tampa

When games like last night come along, you cherish them.  You don’t know how long you’re going to get to watch greatness in action, especially since fellow 41-year olds Martin Brodeur and Jaromir Jagr aren’t always going to be as healthy and productive as they used to be.  Last night however, they both turned back the clock a bit in a 2-1 Devils win over the Lightning, where Jagr scored the game-winning goal on a gorgeous breakaway http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8ZWIbHYa-Zk, and Brodeur turned aside sixteen shots – only allowing a Steven Stamkos power play goal late in the second period.  Jagr and Brodeur got the first and second stars respectively last night, which is a remarkable confluence given that both are 41years old and future HOF’ers.  Not to mention fellow aging icon Patrik Elias also figured in the first goal, with a sweet shorthanded give-and-go with Adam Henrique that Henrique eventually one-timed past Ben Bishop for the game’s opening goal early in the second period.

I wouldn’t call last night a banner team performance neccesarily, although the Devils did more or less bottle up Tampa’s high-powered offense and controlled the action for 50+ minutes.  Certainly defensively, the Devils’ starting six had another strong game collectively and it’ll be very interesting to see what happens when Bryce Salvador comes back from his foot injury (coming off the heels of the captain missing a couple of games due to a death in the family).  With coach favorite Peter Harrold still around, the Devils now have eight defensemen capable of playing in the NHL assuming you believe Eric Gelinas is here to stay.  Having fourteen forwards on the roster though – not even including Ryane Clowe who it’s probably safe to say has concussion issues yet again though the Devils won’t admit it – means the Devils can only afford to keep seven defensemen this year.  Unless the captain is getting Matvichuked until GM Lou Lamoriello can find a trade he wants, there’s going to be a hard decision made sooner rather than later and even Lou can’t keep kicking that can down the curb forever.

Offensively the Devils have had their issues to be sure, but the 41-year old Jagr has been a godsend with ten points in twelve games.  Signed only after the Devils lost Ilya Kovalchuk to home and rubles galore, Jagr’s consistently been among the team’s best players even when he doesn’t score.  For his part, Jagr a couple of days ago attributed his lack of goalscoring (for him) to his new sticks, given that his old stick company went bankrupt during the offseason.  As he joked above while holding court in the locker room after the game:

‘I’m 41 years old.  I’m not going to blame myself.  I’ve got to blame something else….I can’t blame the hands because they were pretty good to me all my life.  So I blame the sticks’.

While Jagr was in a mostly jovial mood after passing Phil Esposito for career game-winning goals (most of the media mistakenly thought Esposito held the record last night, apparently forgetting about some guy named Gordie Howe who’s still a couple ahead of both of them), he did show a hint of fire when he admitted he just wanted to be part of a team the last couple of years, but now he wants to be great again.

Now I can see why Derek still roots for Jagr…this season’s really my first up-close look at the guy after he’s been a hockey gypsy the last several years bouncing between New York, Russia, Philly, Dallas and Boston.  He’s always been a great talent but you see the off-ice things like his self-awareness, sense of humor and work ethic more day-to-day.  Jagr also cracked that he was better last night because ‘I scored a lot of goals on him (Marty) this morning.  He knows’.  Perhaps their personal duel helped Marty too, and he got better as the game wore on making a couple of key saves in the third although the Devils did keep the Lightning shot total down to a meager four in both the first and third periods.  While Jagr’s bounced around the league, Marty’s still on the same team he was drafted by in 1990 (Jagr’s the only other active NHL’er from that draft).  Fellow goaltender Cory Schnieder‘s lower body injury has given Marty another crack at the starting role a few days after the HOF goalie himself admitted it was Cory’s team.  Assuming Schnieder’s back on the weekend, you figure each goalie will get one game in and then we’ll see what happens after that depending on how both play.  At least Marty’s played better over the last couple of games than he did earlier in the season, and hopefully Cory can kick it back into first gear once he gets over whatever his ailment is.

Ironically everything else went wrong for me yesterday afternoon and last night except for the game itself, and being around my former seatmate and his girlfriend as the seats next to me were vacated again so I moved over and off the aisle.  One of the things that went wrong was trying in vein to post a blog here…apparently if I use the dropdown menu at the top of the screen it says the article posts but it goes into outer space and stupid me didn’t copy it before trying to post last night.  I generally have to click on ‘New Post’ on the upper right hand part of the screen to post an article that’ll actually show up on the front page but last night I tried the other way so I was doing a slow burn at midnight when I saw the article dissapeared.  After a night of short sleep I didn’t feel like doing it over in the morning so here it is now.  Or something slightly different than what I was going to post, which was more of a nuts-and-bolts recap.

And since I was at the game, here’s my daily update on the arena atmosphere…predictably the third and final goal song candidate (‘Whip’) sucked, ergo the mood after we scored our two goals was like it was a preseason game.  Of course, just using the word sucked will burn the ears of upper management who were apparently irate that the crowd decided to incorporate you suck into the Seven Nation Army goal song that’s probably going to win the final vote this week.  Especially since Whip and Righteous Smoke both stunk and got booed out of the building.  I didn’t really hear the boos last night, or much of any reaction to the goal song quite honestly but maybe I’ve gotten to the point where I’ve stopped caring enough to even listen for the crowd reaction.  What has become obvious over the last few days is the new ownership isn’t stopping at the goal song in terms of changing the atmosphere.

Also gone is Blur (Song 2), which was typically played after a Devils win for at least the last decade plus.  I didn’t notice last Saturday because I wasn’t at the game but I missed the ‘Woo-hoo!’ song after the final horn last night.  Not to mention the whole Devils Army theme of the last few seasons is also a thing of the past, which yeah was kind of corny but not nearly as much as many of the current forced chants from the Diablos in section 122 (‘Go Red Go’…really?).  It’s almost as if now that they own the team, ownership’s doing all they can to put their own stamp on it as fast as possible, irrespective to what the fans want or care about.  You wonder just how far they’re willing to go to tick off the current sth base.  There isn’t another sth base waiting to walk through the door.  Common sense states that you would want to observe your fans for a while before making what (to them) seems like sweeping changes to long-standing traditions.

In the humorous and annoying (at the same time) category, my seatmate was complaining that they no longer sold hot chocolate at the Mrs. Fields stand or the City Grill.  I like hot chocolate too so during the first intermission I looked around a little cause I vaguely remembered there being hot chocolate at the new Tim Horton’s stand outside of 225 (worth it to go there just for the Timbits – tiny Dunkin Donut-like munchkins).  Which there is…but you couldn’t get the hot chocolate there.  You had to get it at the City Grill outside of 230, even though it wasn’t on the menu there which confused me.  I went back and forth a couple of times before I realized you had to ask for it specifically at the City Grill outside 230.  Talk about customer service and advertising issues!  I did finally get some myself and it was quite good – 14 ounces for $2.50 isn’t a bad buy.  Especially considering I can just put it on my food and beverage card and not actually pay for it.   I also tried one of the dollar hot dogs for amusement, not expecting anything gourmet…but it wasn’t as terrible as it was a few years ago when they first started with the dollar dog promotion during certain games.  At least the magnetic schedule giveaway was nice, though the actual calendar giveaway won’t take place until late next month.  Just barely in time for 2014 I suppose.

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There’s No Place Like Home

There's No Place Like Home or so we thought.

There’s No Place Like Home or so we thought.

“There’s no place like home.”

Those were the infamous words of Dorothy played by Judy Garland from The Wizard Of Oz. Or at least so we thought. The Rangers returned to their brand new renovated Madison Square Garden chalk full of former players and celebrities geared towards Page Six. The only thing that matters to Dolan. I’m guessing getting shutout by a backup goalie wasn’t what they had in mind. Indeed, they managed to lose 2-0 to Montreal, who got away with starting Peter Budaj. He stopped all 27 shots making it the third time in 10 games our team has been shutout.

That isn’t supposed to happen in a home opener. Especially one as highly anticipated as tonight. Our heroes were supposed to come out and put in three or four and chase Budaj. Instead, he was strong early stoning Brad Richards and getting some help from the post on Chris Kreider. Instead of getting to him, they managed to let Budaj settle in. I still can’t believe they got shutout. Granted, I missed the game for a glorious work shift. I kept waiting to see some excited tweets from the Garden Faithful. Instead, there was plenty of disappointment by the end of the second period, which sounded like a real gem.

By then, refs Gord Dwyer and Dave Jackson erred by calling Brian Boyle for a dubious rough. Unfortunately, it led to the only goal the Habs needed. A power play tally from Tomas Plekanec. He took full advantage of a coverage miscue between Marc Staal and Taylor Pyatt, who for unknown reasons is still killing penalties. He’s not good at it nor good at much else. But Alain Vigneault keeps sending him out. He basically collided with Staal. They fell on Michael Bournival’s pass to Plekanec, who cut in and deked Henrik Lundqvist going to the backhand for his sixth at 16:34. Brian Gionta added an assist. Despite outshooting Montreal 21-18 through two, they trailed on the scoreboard.

I was still thinking they’d comeback. After all, it was at the Garden. A home opener to boot in front of former legends Rod Gilbert, Ed Giacomin along side ’94 Cup members Adam Graves, Sergei Nemchinov and cult hero Stefan Matteau. Even if I am pessimistic by nature, I had hope they would win. Get things started the right way. It never happened. Instead, I got to my car and heard radio team Kenny Albert and Dave Maloney lamenting the officiating with seven minutes left. Apparently, they whistled Kreider for another softy. He sounded like he was our best player. He hit the post and was flying. In fact, he nearly set up Derek Stepan but our struggling top center shot it into Budaj. From catching the replay now, I can tell it wasn’t a good night for the refs. I’m not going to blame them. Boyle didn’t despite a call that sounded like it was influenced by a whiny Montreal bench. Surprise surprise.

If you’re going to win in this league, it’s still your job to score goals. We know they haven’t provided much offense so far. It doesn’t help that Ryan Callahan remains out and Rick Nash was a no show for intros. I guess we won’t see the latter until God only knows. Carl Hagelin sounds like he’s ready for tonight’s visit to the Islanders. They sent down Jesper Fast. Something quite a few fans aren’t happy with. Especially with AV pet Pyatt staying. Fast does need to play more. But come on. It’s the same story with this franchise. Vets over kids.

As fate would have it, I got to hear Albert call Alex Galchenyuk’s controversial goal off a Lars Eller feed. On a two-on-one, Eller had the presence of mind to backhand a pass across for a cutting Galchenyuk, who had the puck go off his skate. It was ruled a goal on the ice. Both Albert and Maloney felt after watching replays it might be overturned. It went to Toronto. We all know how reliable they are. The same crack committee who waived off a J.T. Miller apparent tying goal at Phildelphia didn’t reverse the call. Either because they couldn’t or wouldn’t. That didn’t sit well with Lundqvist, who basically called the league out- indicating that if it wasn’t a kick, he didn’t know what was. Good for Hank. He deserved a better fate stopping 25 of 27 in his return. The lack of support continues to haunt them.

It doesn’t matter who’s in and out of the lineup. As Boyle said during a good postgame interview, it’s their job to create more offensive pressure and score. By the sound and looks of it, they didn’t do a good job generating enough chances on Budaj. That’s unacceptable. It doesn’t look like they’re getting Nash back anytime soon. Our worst fears could be realized. Callahan probably will be back in a couple of weeks. Hagelin probably is a go later tonight which should give them a boost.

The Islanders will have brand new acquisition Thomas Vanek in their arsenal. He’s playing on the top line with John Tavares and Kyle Okposo. Unlike us, they can score. That doesn’t matter. It’s time for our team to Step up. No pun intended. No goals in 10 for Stepan. He has to pick it up. Everyone does. Isn’t that why Vigneault was hired? No more excuses.

BONY 3 Stars:

3rd Star-Henrik Lundqvist, NYR (25 saves)

2nd Star-Peter Budaj, MTL (27 saves for shutout)

1st Star-Tomas Plekanec, MTL (6th of season-game winner)

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‘General’ Motives

Vanek On The Draft Floor

It was a typical Sunday afternoon in the Fall these days. Fresh off another Buffalo Bills loss, I was getting ready to sit down for a dinner with family early Sunday Night here on the West Coast, when a text message came in that I expected, but the timing still surprised me:

Thomas Vanek has been traded.

When reading this, this was not a shocker, in fact it was somewhat of a relief. Vanek has been the talk of trade rumors for months now and his day has finally arrived: Fleeing Terry Pegula’s so called ‘Hockey Heaven’ (which is now a complete and utter “Hockey Hell” On Ice) and onward to a much better situation.

The team he went to with the much better situation speaks volumes to how far the Buffalo Sabres have fallen. The New York Islanders?

Yes folks, the New York Islanders.

A team that was the poster child for jokes from hockey fans from Draft Day follies to Mike Milbury to Gordon’s Fisherman jerseys, and based off of years of ineptitude just became a player in the Eastern Conference. They have made a statement by trading for Vanek. Does this trade indicate that the Islanders are serious contenders in the Eastern Conference? Probably not, but it shows the fan base that they are serious about trying to keep budding superstar John Tavares happy and provide him with the best talent around him to succeed.

But at what cost?

Let’s assess the trade from the Buffalo Sabres side:

Buffalo Sabres:

Positive Side: The Sabres get a nice return for a player that was not going to re-sign with the Buffalo Sabres. Say what you want about GM Darcy Regier (and we have said plenty here), he has made some very good trades in the past: Regier got a nice haul for former captain Jason Pominville last season, and by trading Vanek early it ensued the best return for a player who could very well be a rental player for the New York Islanders. Assessing the Sabres next 2 seasons in the 2014 and 2015 NHL Draft, the Sabres now have three 1st round picks (2 in 2014 and 1 in 2015) and six, count them, SIX, 2nd round draft picks (3 in 2014 and 2015).  The Sabres also get Matt Moulson, who is also a UFA in 2014 and can be traded at the deadline for more draft picks, a probable scenario that will most likely play out. Highly doubt that Moulson as a 29 year old will want to sign with the Sabres who are now a team clearly 2-3 years away from even contending for a playoff spot.

Negative Side: Already mired in a horrendous 2-10-1 start to the season, the fan base has to be getting weary. What is the motivation to pay for tickets, parking, food, and sit and watch a Sabres franchise that is clearly telling you: ‘It is time to suffer’  Sabres fans patience will be tested unlike anytime in the franchise’s history. As for the 1st round pick in 2014: It is a nice haul, but consider who is making the picks (Regier) and the fact that the 2014 NHL Draft appears to be a little light on depth, considering the Islanders will at least be contending for a playoff spot so the pick is likely to be around 16-24.  Sabres fans also need to understand NHL Draft choices typically are unlike the NBA and NFL: It can take years to see the benefits. Another possible negative: If Moulson finishes the season and walks and no compensation is received.

Let’s assess the trade from the New York Islanders side:

New York Islanders:

Positive Side: Thomas Vanek, a proven 35-40 goal scorer in the NHL, a player who at times, can take a team on his back. Scores goals in bunches, and shows flashes of being a World Class player. Name recognition: For a fan base starving for an identity, this gives the franchise another jolt heading in the right direction. Islanders GM Garth Snow sends a message that the time is now for the young Islanders to make that next leap.

Negative Side: Vanek has been criticized at times for his forecheck, working the corners, and slumps in his career. And is Vanek THAT much of an upgrade in the context of how well Moulson plays with Tavares? Was giving up a 1st in 2014 and a 2nd in 2015 worth that price? Will Vanek stay in NY? The worst kept NHL secret is that Vanek supposedly has a desire to play in Minnesota. If Vanek bolts, and the Islanders miss the playoffs, and get nothing back, this can turn out to be a disaster for Garth Snow, and might ultimately lead to his dismissal.

PROJECTED WINNER: Buffalo Sabres

Now that we assessed this trade, what was the REAL motivation? What prompted these two franchises to get together and make this trade at this time?

How about General Manager employment?

Darcy Regier has rightfully been under fire in Western New York, as Facebook groups like ‘Fire Darcy Regier’ and others have been gaining members at a frenetic pace. This trade ensures his employment to continue with the Buffalo Sabres. Why would Pegula fire the GM who is making these deals for him? It does not make sense.

As for Garth Snow, the time is now. He needed to give up the future to take a shot at the present, his job is on the line and the Islanders want to make that leap. if Snow does not improve, he will be out of a job come next summer.

As for Thomas Vanek, it was a pleasure to watch you play for Buffalo Sabres since you were picked 5th overall in the 2003 NHL Draft. we wish you well on Long Island. And we welcome Matt Moulson to Western New York, hope you stay for awhile. But I am sure Moulson will realize this ‘Hockey Hell’ will be too much to take, so we await the latest wave of draft picks with no names yet.

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Set for Sabre debut, Moulson thanks Islander fans

New Jersey Devils v New York Islanders

For Matt Moulson, it’s time to move on. A popular part of the Islanders rebuild, the three-time 30-plus goal scorer was traded to the Sabres last night along with a 2014 first round pick and 2015 second round pick in exchange for Thomas Vanek.

It was a stunning deal that had Islander fans divided. While many wonder about losing an integral part of their team who was close with John Tavares on and off the ice, others see it as a step in the right direction for a franchise that hasn’t advanced past the first round since their miracle ’93 run to the Conference Finals. It’s still a big risk by GM Garth Snow, who mortgaged part of the future to try to compete now. There’s no guarantee Vanek will re-sign. Especially with the Minnesota rumors persisting where he starred in college with former teammate Jason Pominville locked up long-term.

For the 29-year old Moulson, it was an emotional goodbye to an organization that gave him a chance. He made the most out of it totaling 118 goals and 105 assists for 223 points in 304 games for the Islanders. Tonight, he’ll make his Sabre debut when they host the Stars and former coach Lindy Ruff. Another subplot. It will be odd seeing Ruff on the opposite side coaching the team they lost to in a controversial Stanley Cup. But then again, that seems to be the norm these days for GM Darcy Regier.

When news of the trade hit Twitter, Moulson tweeted a thank you to Islander fans.

Of course, there’s no guarantee Moulson will stay in Western New York past next year’s trade deadline. The Sabres are rebuilding. Regier continues to collect draft picks like a Monopoly player collects $200. The much maligned GM at least is getting good value in the fire sale that likely will include Ryan Miller. Like Vanek, the Sabres’ franchise netminder also can hit the free agent market next summer. Ironically, reports surfaced that the franchise might’ve been willing to make Vanek the highest paid player. But not wanting to be part of a rebuild didn’t appeal to a player who wants to play on a contender. He also sent out a tweet thanking the organization.

“You train all summer long, practice every day and you want to be on a competitive team that has a chance and right now we struggled there,” Vanek said. “It’s hard to leave when you do struggle. I was one of the leaders, but at the same time the reality it’s business and I’m happy to be an Islander.”

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Rangers finally return to MSG for home opener

It’s been a long road with a lot of travel. Finally, the Rangers return to fully renovated MSG for the home opener when they host the Canadiens in a classic Original 6 match-up. It’ll be exciting for the players and fans to get reacquainted. Alain Vigneault will also finally get a taste of what it’s like to be behind the home bench at The Garden.

In what’s the 20th Anniversary since they won the Stanley Cup, the Rangers will roll out the red carpet for their brand new updated arena that features the Chase Bridge along with a new scoreboard. What should be an exciting night hopefully can result in a second straight win. It’s no secret that they have struggled out of the gate losing six of nine games (3-6-0). They’re hoping to build upon a 3-2 overtime victory over the Red Wings at Joe Louis Arena. The franchise’s first road win in Detroit since ’99. They earned it climbing out of two one-goal deficits with Benoit Pouliot setting up Derick Brassard’s OT winner. Three different Blueshirts scored their first goals including Pouliot, who had his best game. Mats Zuccarello also notched his first forcing extras.

If they can come out with another ‘W,’ it could be the springboard to a turnaround. Playing in the league’s worst division helps. Even though they only have six points, other teams’ struggles have allowed them to stay close. Including tomorrow’s visit to Nassau Coliseum for Thomas Vanek’s Islanders debut, the Rangers don’t leave the metro area again until a Nov. 7 road match at Columbus. They conclude October hosting the Sabres on Halloween with Carolina, Anaheim and Pittsburgh visiting MSG in November.

They’ll be minus captain Ryan Callahan, who resumed skating but is still a ways away. Carl Hagelin could be activated for tomorrow’s match at the Islanders. The speedy third-year Swede should inject needed energy. He plays a similar hard nosed style getting in on the fore-check. He also kills penalties, which might spell the end of the Taylor Pyatt experiment. One can only hope.

The Rangers are hoping some home cooking can provide a spark. They haven’t scored much with 15 goals in the first nine. The D hasn’t been any better allowing 33. However, new rookie backup Cam Talbot played well in his first two starts permitting two goals in each game. Defensively, they were steadier. With Henrik Lundqvist returning for the home opener, Garden Faithful are looking to see the kind of caliber goaltending he’s spoiled us with. Maybe the secret injury explains the rough start. They need him to be at his best. With no timetable for Rick Nash, the Rangers have scaled back.

All that matters is they start winning consistently. Home is where the heart is.

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Islanders Land Vanek from Sabres for Moulson, 2 picks

Vanek's Final Hurrah: As it turned out, Thomas Vanek has played his last game for the Sabres. He was dealt to the Islanders Sunday. dirtydanglehockey.com

Vanek’s Final Hurrah: As it turned out, Thomas Vanek has played his last game for the Sabres. He was dealt to the Islanders Sunday.
dirtydanglehockey.com

In a stunning move, the Islanders have acquired Thomas Vanek from the Sabres in exchange for Matt Moulson, a 2014 first round pick and 2015 second round pick. Newsday’s Arthur Staple broke the trade in a tweet 31 minutes ago.

Playing in the final year of his contract, the 29-year old Vanek was tied for the team lead in points with nine (4-5-9). Rumored to be on the block since season’s start, he lasted just 13 games. With Buffalo continuing to rebuild, all signs pointed to their best player getting moved. Sitting dead last in the Eastern Conference with five points (2-10-1), the Sabres had the opportunity to get a good return from the Islanders. GM Darcy Regier moved him for a proven finisher in Moulson. In 11 games this season, he has six goals and three assists. Five of his six markers have come on the power play.

Moulson is also in the final year of his deal earning $3.9 million. His cap hit is $3.133 million. A stark contrast to Vanek, whose cap hit is $7.143 million thanks to Edmonton’s lunacy that forced Buffalo to match. He’s due $6.4 million this season.

For the Islanders, it’s a chance to upgrade a roster that features captain John Tavares. With the continued emergence of Frans Nielsen, Kyle Okposo and Josh Bailey, it allowed GM Garth Snow to swing a trade for a talented player. In a weak division, they’re banking on Vanek to make a difference. Currently, the Islanders are tied for second in the Metro with the Hurricanes at 4-4-3 for 11 points.

“We had opportunity to acquire an elite player and given where we are right now (.500), you go for it,” Snow told TSN’s Bob McKenzie.

“If we hadn’t drafted so well, if we didn’t have good prospects, we couldn’t afford to take the risk,” Snow told McKenzie on the steep price the Islanders paid to acquire Vanek.

I don’t necessarily agree. They didn’t lose anything off the roster. Vanek replaces Moulson. The only concern would be how fast he clicks with Tavares. Moulson had great chemistry with the Islander captain posting three consecutive 30-plus goal seasons. There’s no doubt he would’ve been a lock again in a full season. Now, he goes to the Sabres, who don’t score much. It’s unfortunate for him because he turned himself into a poor man’s Adam Graves. Who knows? Maybe he gets moved again at the deadline. There’s no guarantee he’s staying in Western New York.

As for Vanek, he gets basically a free trial with the Islanders. He can still turn unrestricted unless his new team can reach an agreement that keeps him with them when they relocate to Brooklyn. The best way for that to happen is for the Islanders to make a run in a second consecutive postseason. First, they must get there.

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Rangers win one for Cam

An excited Rangers bench celebrates Derick Brassard's overtime winner marking the first time they beat the Red Wings in Detroit since last century. Tim Fuller/USA Today

An excited Rangers bench celebrates Derick Brassard’s overtime winner marking the first time they beat the Red Wings in Detroit since last century.
Tim Fuller/USA Today

If ever there was a character building win, it was this one. Against a team they never beat, the Rangers earned a hard fought 3-2 overtime win over the Red Wings at Joe Louis Arena. Derick Brassard’s breakaway goal with 12.9 seconds left gave them their first victory in Detroit since Jan. 30, 1999. Bill Clinton was still President and the new millennium hadn’t begun. Neither had Facebook or Twitter. Gas was cheaper. And there was no such thing as IPhones or Androids.

Indeed, a lot has changed since. Not always for the better. At least for one night, the Rangers resembled a determined hockey team whose lunch pail work ethic paid dividends. They concluded a long nine-game road trip by winning for only the third time. And not a moment too soon. It feels a lot better bringing a 3-6-0 record into the first home game Monday against the Canadiens. Hopefully, they’ll be able to build off an emotional win.

It was the first of rookie goalie Cam Talbot’s NHL career. In his second consecutive start, he gave the Rangers solid goaltending allowing two goals again. Against the Flyers, he took the loss. This time, his teammates came to the rescue making a 32-save effort stand up. They did it by rallying from two one-goal deficits. That included Mats Zuccarello’s first of the season that forced overtime. He was one of three Ranger forwards to finally light the lamp for the first time. That included Benoit Pouliot, who set up Brassard’s winner with some extra hustle. He dove to poke the puck ahead to spring Brassard, who beat Jimmy Howard five-hole.

”I only had to scoop up the puck. It was kind of bouncing, so I just closed my eyes and shot,” Brassard said.

It was that kind of effort that put a smile on their faces. They ended a challenging road trip on a positive note. It wouldn’t be a Ranger victory without some nervous tension. They played a good first only to trail thanks to a mistake. Zuccarello turned the puck over leading to Drew Miller beating Talbot short side. It wasn’t a good goal. But Talbot redeemed himself with steadier play.

Pouliot scored his first on the power play late in the second. Off a wild scramble in front, he got to a loose puck and snuck a backhand into an open side with Brian Boyle screening Howard. It wasn’t the prettiest but didn’t have to be. A gritty goal which is what sometimes works. However, an undisciplined Taylor Pyatt penalty led to the Red Wings going back in front before the period ended. Pavel Datsyuk set up Daniel Alfredsson with 11 seconds left. A back breaking goal that should’ve resulted in Pyatt being benched. He wasn’t.

Despite the setback, the Rangers persevered. Zuccarello got the game tied once more when he got to a Dominic Moore rebound in front and buried his first. A nice reward for the Norwegian who was reinserted by Alain Vigneault for Brandon Mashinter. It was good to see Zuccarello redeem himself. He went to the net and got rewarded. For the most part, the team fore-checked effectively forcing Howard to come up with some tough saves. He finished with 37. That included a leaping glove on a Boyle try. He also got a piece of an earlier Brassard breakaway. The American hopeful is a strong goalie who should represent Team USA.

Now, they finally return home for the home opener at the fully renovated MSG Monday.

”As a player, it (home crowd) gives you so much energy on the ice. You play with more emotion,” Brassard said. ”We want to get back and see our fans.”

”It’s going to be good for us. It’s been a challenge,” Vigneault added. ”We don’t have the record we want but we made some strides in the right direction.”

HARD HITS

Chris Kreider had a second straight strong game finishing with three shots and three hits in 26 active shifts (18:23). What’s most different about him is he’s using his size and speed to get in on the cycle. One of his shots was a quality chance that Howard stopped. Kreider is coming back defensively and finishing checks. So far, he looks more confident. Hopefully, he’ll get one soon.

J.T. Miller also had a solid night. Though he didn’t register a shot, he was noticeable on both ends. For a 20-year old, he has a lot of poise and is responsible defensively. Miller also takes the body.

-The other kid Jesper Fast received 14 shifts (9:38) on the fourth line. He had a shot, hit, takeaway and blocked shot. He doesn’t shy away from physicality and has stayed aggressive despite a smaller role.

-Against a strong face-off team, the Rangers did okay. They won 32 of 66. Boyle led them going 13-and-7 while Brassard went 9-and-6. They held Datsyuk to .500 (7-and-7) and Henrik Zetterberg to 9-and-10.

-Overall, I liked Boyle’s game. He was good on the fore-check and helped set up Pouliot’s power play goal. He also nearly had his first if not for an acrobatic save from Howard. The thing with Boyle is while he may not be the most gifted, fastest or smartest, the effort is always there. That’s why he stays in.

Anton Stralman paced Ranger skaters with six shots while continuing to play steady D. While some of our better guys are still rounding into shape, Stralsy has been a rock. Probably one of Slats’ most overlooked moves a couple of years ago.

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Power play gives Devils a defibrillator in wild comeback

Jagr, Gelinas, Greene, Zidlicky and Henrique celebrate the Devils’ unlikely comeback (TSN.ca)

 

Between most of last season, a drama-filled offseason and the beginning of this season there’s been a lot of misery for Devil fans as the team’s continually found ways to lose.  Going into tonight the Devils had one win in their first ten games overall this season, and only one win in our last twelve games against Boston over the last few seasons (and that win was a completely meaningless game for both teams on the last day of the ’10-11 season).  Our last win in Boston was nearly four years ago, in a game more memorable for Bruins captain Zdeno Chara breaking David Clarkson‘s leg with one of his patented 100-MPH slapshots than it was for our actual win.  The Bruins came into tonight’s game on a five-game winning streak and stood at 7-3 overall with a talented group looking to make a third run to the Finals in the last four seasons.  If the task of beating the Bruins tonight wasn’t daunting enough on paper, the outlook got even bleaker as the Devils gave up two goals in the first 9:19 followed by what could have been a backbreaking goal with just fifty-six seconds remaining in the first period, putting New Jersey down two again. Down two goals against the Eastern Conference champions and early Vezina favorite Tuukka Rask, this one was all but over.

Or was it?  As beloved ESPN college football analyst Lee Corso would say…’Not so fast, my friend!’

An inspired effort over the last thirty-three minutes got the Devils back in the game, but they still trailed by one with just under two minutes remaining when a double-minor high sticking penalty on Torrey Krug and a delay-of-game penalty on Patrice Bergeron set up a rare five-on-three for Devils in the final 1:49 of regulation.  Not long after the 5-on-3 started, coach Pete DeBoer pulled Martin Brodeur for a sixth attacker, setting up an even rarer 6-on-3 situation.  After the Bruins made one clear we continued to pass the puck around for several anxious seconds – minutes it seemed to me – before finally Marek Zidlicky used sheer power to score the tying goal at 18:52.  Even with the game tied, there was more excitement to come as the Devils still had a 5-on-4 power play.  Amazingly, the embattled Devils scored the lead goal twenty-three seconds later when Damien Brunner fanned on a one-timer of a deflection and it bounced right onto Andy Greene‘s stick, and he put it in an open net to give New Jersey a stunning 4-3 lead.  Even more astonishingly, it was our fourth power play goal of the game.  Last year it would have taken us weeks, if not months to get that many.  With momentum on their side, the Devils held on through those last anxious forty-five seconds for what could well be a season-changing win.  As former broadcaster Doc Emrick would say – ‘Had ’em…all the way’.

I don’t want to put the cart before the horse here…we do still have two wins in eleven games, and this game will mean very little if we don’t follow it up with a solid performance and another two points at home against the Lightning on Tuesday.  However, winning tonight the way we did against who we did – well let’s just say if this doesn’t get the Devils going in the right direction, nothing will.  Not only could it have been a season-saving win, it could well have been a job-saving win for coach Pete DeBoer, who was certainly feeling the pressure over the team’s horrendous record since late February last year.  After an uninspired, sloppy start where the Devils gave up a power play goal to Krug and a deflection goal by Jarome Iginla, DeBoer used his timeout.  For a time, the team’s play improved and Adam Henrique scored the team’s first goal of the game at 11:24 on a rebound from an Eric Gelinas shot.  Once again big Gelinas made an impact tonight with nearly twenty minutes played (19:58), including almost four on a power play that suddenly looks dynamic.  Even before Gelinas got here, I thought the power play was improving under coach Dave Barr with quick, decisive passing that was reminscent of former assistant Adam Oates‘ power play here.  However, Gelinas has taken it to another level in his two games with his skating ability and powerful shot, something which the Devils haven’t had from the point since forever (don’t give me Ilya Kovalchuk, he rarely if ever used his booming slapshot on the point).

That first period goal did not lift the team up for very long however, and yet another breakdown cost us in the final minute of the period when Milan Lucic used the turbo button on NHL14 to zoom past Zidlicky, and beat Brodeur with a weak shot through the legs to put Boston up 3-1.  That goal may have been the final straw for an increasingly on-edge DeBoer, seeing as Henrique was supposed to be the MSG2 post-period interview but it was abruptly canceled…presumably because the coach was about to lay into his team. I can’t even attribute the Devils’ revival to what was said since the first several minutes of the period it looked as if the ship was about ready to keel over and sink.  Only a horrendous three-on-one where the Bruins didn’t even put a shot on net kept us in the game.  However, the Devils did right the ship over the final thirteen minutes of the period outshooting the Bruins 13-3 (after being outshot 8-2 in the first seven).  Still, it looked like as has been the case through much of these last few months the Devils would have nothing to show for their hard work.  Until the last half-minute of the period when on another power play, they finally caught a break at 19:32 when a Steve Bernier shot rebounded to Brunner, and his shot was stopped by Rask but the goaltender’s momentum carried his arm and the puck over the goalline.  After review, Brunner’s fourth goal of the season stood, pulling the Devils within one.

Having gone to sleep during the second and let us back in the game, the Bruins were determined to clamp down during the third – and for the first fifteen minutes or so they did, giving us few real chances.  Until the Devils caught another break (in a manner of speaking) when Krug high-sticked Brunner, causing a lost tooth and blood which put us on the power play for the rest of regulation.  Though Boston killed off the front end of that penalty, Bergeron’s delay of game and the resulting six-on-three was enough to finally turn the tide, with Greene’s shock winner saving us from the always problematic OT/shootout specter.  Even Chico Resch was making jokes about our shootout prowess, remarking at one point when Rask wound up losing his goalie stick and having to use a defenseman’s stick (unfortunately we couldn’t get the puck to the net during that sequence), that maybe Rask should have to play with that stick during the shootout should we get there to give us a chance.

Fortunately, no such handicap was required to finally get two points out of a game.  The fact that it came against this team made it all the sweeter.  Usually, the Devils are the ones who have found ways to lose against the Bruins over these last few years when they’d beaten us eleven out of twelve.  Most of the games were actually close, but something would always happen where we’d be tied or have the lead late and then bite the dust, or get behind and fall short in a futile comeback.  That wasn’t the case tonight though.

Tonight for the first time in a long while, Devil fans were reminded anew why they love hockey and sports in general.  After all the negativity of the last several months, it feels good to have hope again for the next couple of days at least.

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Bailey’s late goal stuns Pens

Josh Bailey celebrates his winning goal against the Pens. AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar

Josh Bailey celebrates his winning goal against the Pens.
AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar

There are shifts you remember. For Islanders forward Josh Bailey, that shift came late in regulation in Pittsburgh. Facing the team that eliminated them from the playoffs, the Islanders showed the same resiliency that pushed the Pens to the limit. A huge third period resulted in their best win of the season. A come from behind 4-3 win in regulation that stunned the Pens.

Out for a long shift after Pierre-Marc Bouchard tied it, a sliding Bailey broke his stick after trying to block a shot. With the short change, he sprinted towards the bench and got new lumber sneaking back into play. As the Islanders were clearing the zone, Bailey started a rush the other way. With Kris Letang scrambling around, Frans Nielsen retrieved a loose puck and chipped it to Bailey, who got just enough of it to tuck it past Pens backup Jeff Zatkoff. The conclusion of a wild sequence put the Isles ahead with 1:40 left. Kyle Okposo added the other helper.

Much as they had last Spring, the Isles exposed the Pens. If last year it was Marc-Andre Fleury’s inability to stop the puck, this time it was the Pens’ defense which imploded. They blew two one-goal leads in the third. After the old Patrick rivals exchanged goals 3:11 apart in the first, league leading scorer Sidney Crosby scored the lone goal in a dominant second that saw the hosts outshoot the Isles 20-10. Evgeni Nabokov stopped 19 of 20 to give his team a chance. He finished with 39 saves.

In a striking similarity to last May, an unpredictable third saw a pesky Islander effort get rewarded. Nielsen has been the best Islander so far. His consistency has given the club a second scoring line that’s taken pressure off new captain John Tavares. Nielsen and Tavares combined to set up Matt Moulson on the power play for the game’s first goal in the first. But Jussi Jokinen tied it. The Pens brought a 2-1 lead into the final stanza thanks to Crosby beating Nabokov on a mini-break for his eighth.

Nielsen wasn’t done. On a good fore-check, he neatly redirected a Thomas Hickey shot pass just out of Zatkoff’s reach. Radek Martinek picked up a secondary assist. But on the next shift, an unlikely source put the Pens back ahead. Off a nice rush by Joe Vitale, he centered for a cutting Deryk Engelland, who buried his first past Nabokov. Pretty cool when a noted tough guy scores. Engelland was playing forward due to injuries. The goal came 16 seconds later giving Pittsburgh a 3-2 lead. Before you could blink, the Islanders came right back. With the Pens leaving the zone early, a great keep by Martinek allowed Bouchard to pick up his first as an Islander. He took a Martinek feed and slipped a backhand past Zatkoff once again tying it 53 seconds later.

As time wound down, a strong shift by the Pens had the Isles pinned in their zone. That’s when Bailey broke his stick leaving the Isles a man short to defend. Able to keep their dangerous opponent to the outside, they got out of it unscathed. A scrambling Bailey got back in time to start the winning rush. It was kind of an innocent play with him getting the puck to Okposo at the side of the net. With no angle, he centered for Nielsen who was in great shooting position. Instead of taking the shot with Zatkoff down, he passed for Bailey, who was isolated. He was able to tuck one in for the game-winner. His fourth from Nielsen and Okposo.

It didn’t take long for some Pen fans to hit the exits. I’ll never understand why fans do that. You’re only down a goal with two of the game’s best. Crosby has been remarkable while Evgeni Malkin has yet to get going. He still has nine points. Even with them pulling Zatkoff for the extra, the Islanders did an excellent job in front of Nabokov not allowing anything to get through. One final clear allowed them to celebrate a well earned win.

Notes: With an assist on Bailey’s winner, Nielsen led all skaters with three points (1-2-3). His second straight three-point effort raised his season total to six goals and eight assists for a team-leading 14 points. Two better than Tavares (assist) who is second with 12. With a helper, Okposo is up to 11 points (3-8-11). … Pens outshot the Isles 42-25. However, shots were 8-7 Pittsburgh in the third. … Isles converted on their only power play (Moulson) while holding the Pens powerless in five chances. … Pens killed the Isles in face-offs winning 48 of 75. Crosby went 18-for-26 and Malking was 12-for-18. Casey Cizikas was the Isles’ best winning 8-of-18. Tavares went 10-of-23. Bailey lost 12 of 15. Peter Regin lost 13 of 18. Okposo won his only draw. … The win improved NYI to 4-3-3 with their 11 points tied with Carolina for second. At last check, the Canes trailed the Avs 4-2 late in the third.

METRO DIVISION

GP   Record  Pts

1.Penguins   10   7-3-0     14

2.Islanders   10   4-3-3     11

3.Canes        10   4-3-3      11

4.Jackets       10   5-5-0      10

5.Capitals      10  5-5-0       10

6.Devils          10  1-5-4       6

7.Rangers       8    2-6-0      4

8.Flyers           9    2-7-0      4

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Kreider takes positive steps in loss

2406c-chriskreider

Chris Kreider

While the end result wasn’t what they wanted, the Rangers got an inspired effort out of Chris Kreider. Recalled from Hartford after posting two goals and two assists, he had an active game last night against the Flyers.

Given an opportunity to play on the top line with Brad Richards and Derek Stepan, Kreider was involved offensively. In 27 shifts, he took two shots and missed another couple of chances. Most importantly, he used his 6-3, 230 frame to keep plays alive in the offensive zone. He was particularly effective on the fore-check getting to loose pucks and winning board battles. Kreider also threw his weight around registering a game high six hits. Coincidentally, one of those included taking out his own teammate when he slammed into Ryan McDonagh. The frightening sequence occurred in the second period, forcing McDonagh to the bench. Luckily, he was okay and returned.

Kreider had an active stick credited with three takeaways. Also the most of any skater. His combination of size, strength and speed should be an asset for the Rangers. Even though he got credited with a dubious assist on Richards’ fifth of the season, the hard work paid off. When a player plays well, they earn breaks. I wonder if they’ll eventually change the scoring to Stepan, who chipped the pass to Richards. What matters most is Kreider competed and was rewarded by Alain Vigneault with over 19 minutes of ice-time. That’s what we want to see. He’ll still have to bury a few to stay on the top unit. Maybe the next project will be returning him to the front of the net on the power play.

It’s all a matter of being consistent. With the Rangers finally ending the merciless nine-game road trip tomorrow with a visit at Detroit, let’s see if he can follow up with another strong performance.

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