Picking The Playoffs

It’s that fun time of year again. For 16 teams, they dare to dream of hoisting Lord Stanley in the warm month of June filled with champagne and Cup parades. Last year, it was finally Chicago’s moment to celebrate their first Cup win since the days of Bobby Hull in 1961 with Patrick Kane playing the hero, stunning the Flyers in sudden death. This year, the defending champs didn’t know they were in until the Stars lost to the Wild on the final day of the regular season. Now, they play the role of underdog against the odds on favorite President’s Trophy winner Canucks, who are having a special season but have gone out two straight years to those Blackhawks. Will it be a third for Roberto Luongo or is the year the Cup finally returns to Canada for the Canucks first championship?

That and a whole lot more, we’ll try to answer in this exciting playoff preview filled with predictions and who will be left standing at the end.

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Round One

(1) Capitals over (8) Rangers in 6
(7) Sabres over (2) Flyers in 7
(3) Bruins over (6) Canadiens in 6
(5) Lightning over (4) Penguins in 6

Analysis: Too much pressure on Caps to bow out early to Rangers minus Ryan Callahan. The Flyers were our preseason Cup pick but question marks in goal and with Chris Pronger are bad timing for hot Sabres who can expose weakness and boast better netminding. Bruins-Habs is as good as it gets but Boston’s too big and strong for Habs. Unless Carey Price steals it, we can’t see a deep Boston club losing. The Bolts are hot and Vinny Lecavalier’s back. Pens will have problems scoring unless Sid The Kid returns. Marc-Andre Fleury is their best bet.

Conference Semis

(1) Caps over (7) Sabres in 6
(3) Bruins over (5) Lightning in 5

Analysis: Ryan Miller could make things interesting but a more talented and healthier Cap roster prevails thanks to Ovechkin. Boston’s size will create problems for high-tempo Bolts. Physicality will prove too much.

Conference Final

(3) Bruins over (1) Caps in 6

Analysis: Unless Tim Thomas folds, this should be the year Boston returns to the Final for the first time since the days of Adam Oates, Cam Neely and Ray Bourque. Zdeno Chara and Milan Lucic lead a strong Bruins club in search of first Cup since ’72 (Orr, Espo).

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Round One

(1) Canucks over (8) Blackhawks in 6
(2) Sharks over (7) Kings in 6
(6) Coyotes over (3) Red Wings in 7
(4) Ducks over (5) Predators in 6

Analysis: Canucks are deeper and better. Ryan Kesler should have a big series and Christian Ehrhoff’s emerged into a tower on the blueline. Luongo’s experience over Corey Crawford. It’ll be heated but Vancouver can’t lose this time. If the Kings had Anze Kopitar, I’d take them over Sharks. Sharks boast too many weapons including Calder hopeful Logan Couture. The ‘Yotes came close last year. Unless Henrik Zetterberg plays, they should finally win franchise’s first series since the ’87 Jets. Ilya Bryzgalov and Keith Yandle are difference. Pekka Rinne and Shea Weber give Nashville a chance but too much Corey Perry, Teemu Selanne and Norris pick Lubomir Visnovsky.

Conference Semis

(1) Canucks over (6) Coyotes in 5
(4) Ducks over (2) Sharks in 7

Analysis: Canucks have too much firepower for Coyotes. Big series for The Sedins and Alex Burrows. The Sharks are deeper but would you go against Perry, Bobby Ryan and Ryan Getzlaf? Ducks blueline also is underrated with Francois Beauchemin and Toni Lydman plus rook Cam Barker. If they lose, it’ll be because of goaltending where Ray Emery’s the guy with Jonas Hiller (vertigo) sidelined.

Conference Final

(1) Canucks over (4) Ducks in 7

Analysis: A rematch of ’07 this time goes to ‘Nucks, who are more balanced up front and on back end with Kevin Bieksa, Alex Edler and Keith Ballard big minute loggers. The goaltending also favors them. Look for scrappy additions Max Lapierre, Raffi Torres, Chris Higgins and Jeff Tambellini (yes that guy) to contribute at key moments. It should be enough to get them to their first Final appearance since ’94.

STANLEY CUP

(1) Canucks over (3) Bruins in 6

Analysis: The battle between Neely’s former team that gave him away and the one he emerged into one of the game’s premier power forwards much like protoge Lucic, should be intense. A sexy goalie match-up featuring Vezina frontrunner Thomas versus Luongo, who has never performed well on the big stage. A contrast in styles between the magician-esque Sedins and the in your face B’s led by Lucic, overlooked duo David Krejci and Patrice Bergeron, along with Nathan Horton and warrior Mark Recchi. A battle on the blueline featuring Ehrhoff and Zdeno Chara. The Canucks’ talent should win out along with better depth on the back end. If it comes down, it should be a fantastic series. If they’re ever gonna do it, now’s the time.

Stanley Cup Champs-Vancouver Canucks
Conn Smythe-Ryan Kesler

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Series Preview (8) NYR vs (1) Caps: Exciting finish sets up rematch

Finally, after a couple of days, I can try to make sense of what happened this weekend. I’m not going to lie. I never thought the Hurricanes were losing at home in front of some of the best fans with their season on the line. Full credit to Jack Adams candidate Guy Boucher and his overlooked Lightning who could surprise a few this Spring. Big kudos to the Rangers, who wouldn’t go down without a fight in front of the Garden Faithful- coming back to earn an emotional 5-2 win over the enemy Devils.

Of course, the Devils wanted to end our season. Wouldn’t you if it was the first time in 15 years you weren’t in the playoffs and had a chance to beat your closest rival? So, it wasn’t too surprising that the Devs came out strong thanks to a brilliant first period from Ilya Kovalchuk, who scored and set up both his team’s goals, giving them a 2-1 lead with a rocket in the final 30 seconds. It’s funny but as much as it was supposed to hurt that the Devils’ best player scored a potential crushing goal late in the first, I just didn’t feel that alarmed. Perhaps it was because I knew our team wouldn’t give up when they haven’t all season. As brutal as the loss to kryptonite Atlanta was, this was still do or die with the chance to put it all on Carolina. My feeling was, ‘Let’s beat the Devils and end on a high note. Whatever happens happens.’

That realistic approach made it easier to focus on the remaining two periods. Even the funny scalpers outside were discussing our fragile plight. None of it meant anything if the Blueshirts didn’t respond one final time against a Hudson rival that beat us the last two times, intent on playing spoiler. What we got was the heart and passion that exemplifies what this team has been all about. It already was fun seeing much maligned captain Chris Drury, making like Willis Reed (sarcasm folks) to score his first of the season in quick reply to Kyle Palmieri’s redirect. Ironically, when I learned he was returning, I tweeted that it wouldn’t surprise me if he scored a big goal, which has defined his career. Sometimes, you just get a sixth sense. I was really happy for him. That it was also set up by Mats Zuccarello, who replaced Sean Avery, was even better. John Tortorella didn’t stand pat, reinserting Drury, Zuccarello and opting for more mobile Matt Gilroy over gritty Steve Eminger.

The thing I admire about Tort the most is his willingness to change things up and make guys accountable. Even Marian Gaborik, who sat a long time in that humiliation in Game 81. The former Lightning coach who’s won a Cup doing it his way, does it more by feel instead of by the book. That approach allowed us to come back against Boston just to reach Saturday. By not being afraid to mix and match, it’s allowed our roster to get comfortable with each other. So, if he does it in the first round rematch versus Washington, they should be more familiar, making for an easier transformation.

Most encouraging were the five different goalscorers, including emerging freshman Ryan McDonagh, who picked a great time for his first career NHL goal- becoming the 19th different Ranger to score a deciding goal, epitomizing the kinda T-E-A-M they’ve been. Something that wasn’t lost on Tortorella prior to getting help from his ex-team, who held off a late Carolina rally for a 6-2 win.

We are doing things the right way, the way we are building this team. I think it is very important for this team to get in (to the playoffs) because that is part of growing as a team, getting that experience in the playoffs.

Now, that growth can continue for the sixth youngest team as they prepare for a Caps’ team that’s adjusted their style for the postseason. No longer is Alex Ovechkin just a one-way player but good in all three zones along with an improved D that features gifted rookie John Carlson along with Dennis Wideman, Scott Hannan and Jeff Schultz but could be without Mike Green, who’s still recovering from a concussion due to a Derek Stepan elbow during the Rangers’ 6-0 rout a couple of months ago. According to reports, Green has taken part in team workouts and is available for Wednesday. However, it’s uncertain if he’ll play.

The Blueshirts can’t concern themselves with that. Instead, they’ll march on minus emotional leader Ryan Callahan, who despite missing 20 games, tied with Gaborik for second in team scoring with a career high 48 points, including personal bests in goals (23), assists (25), power play goals (10) and game-winners (5). The latter two which he paced the club. No question they could use his physical presence in all facets, including the front of the net where goals could be at a premium. Washington rookie Michal Neuvirth had a superb year winning 27 games in 45 starts while posting a 2.45 GAA, .910 save percentage and four shutouts. If the Rangers get to him, ’09 hero Semyon Varlamov is capable. So, while Henrik Lundqvist should give them an edge, it might not be as definitive considering the Caps’ more defensive style.

Against the Devils, Drury, Wojtek Wolski, McDonagh, Extra Effort winner Brandon Prust and Vinny Prospal tallied. That kinda balance is exactly what the Rangers need to have a shot versus a talented top seeded Cap squad led by Ovechkin, Nicklas Backstrom, Alexander Semin, that also boasts a strong supporting cast featuring Mike Knuble, Brooks Laich, Jason Arnott, Jason Chimera, Matt Hendricks, Eric Fehr, Matt Bradley and dangerous rookie Marcus Johansson. Indeed, the Caps are formidable and will want to prove the two humiliations (7-0 and 6-0) are a thing of the past. The Rangers took the season series 3-1, also edging Washington in a shootout 2-1 thanks to budding soph Artem Anisimov.

This is a team we match-up well against. Perhaps because they play similarly despite more talent, the Rangers think they can win. Having Lundqvist on our side helps but it cannot turn into two years ago where Washington controlled throughout, wearing out our goalie who didn’t benefit from Tortorella’s blow up or the Sean Avery controversy. I still doubt we win anyway. This year’s club is deeper and more together. Better equipped to go toe to toe with Washington, who actually scored five fewer goals (219) than us (224). Subtracting the do everything Callahan will be tough to replace. That’s why it’s imperative for Gaborik to forget his awful regular season and just focus on the playoffs. The Rangers need him to be a game breaker. I have faith in everyone else, figuring Dubinsky, Anisimov, Stepan, Prospal, Brian Boyle and Prust will lead the way. Speaking of Boyle, his scoring slowed down but his importance is huge because his line injects energy and plays defensively responsible against top scoring lines. Can they slow down Ovechkin, who found his groove late? Being able to forecheck will be key.

It remains to be seen who Tortorella will start in Game One. Wolski certainly earned it along with Drury. So, we’re guessing Avery’s out while a more skilled guy like Zuccarello gets his first crack at the playoffs. I could see him going back to Eminger over Gilroy but that would hurt our team speed. We’ll see. Does enigma Erik Christensen have any goals in him? He’s the unknown. The talent’s there. In a series like this, he could make a difference. Does Tort dare reunite Christy with Gabby and Prospal, trying to catch Lightning in a bottle?

I think the best aspect of this team is our D which won’t have to rely as much on Marc Staal and Dan Girardi thanks to the stellar play of rookie tandem McDonagh and Mike Sauer. I know Tort will lean heavily on our top pair but he must not shy away from sticking with what’s worked. It’s the unflappable play of McDonagh and Sauer, our toughest D since Beuke- who are just as responsible for where we are. If there are no jitters, that top four should be a strength. We have better quickness than Washington. Particularly if Tortorella goes with Gilroy to play with Bryan McCabe, who needs to be a factor on the power play.

What I’d Like To See:

Dubinsky-Anisimov-Zuccarello
Prospal-Stepan-Gaborik
Prust-Boyle-Fedotenko
Christensen-Drury-Wolski

Staal-Girardi
McDonagh-Sauer
McCabe-Gilroy

Lundqvist

Who Concerns Me: Johansson cause he’s a different player who has sick moves and is extremely dangerous. Our team is familiar with how to defend the Caps’ Big Three. Johansson could be an X-factor along with gritty types Laich, Knuble, Arnott, etc. The Caps’ depth hurt us last time.

What Must Happen: Big series for Gaborik, Dubinsky, Prospal, Anisimov, Staal, Girardi and Lundqvist.

Under Radar: The Boyle line has been a constant throughout. Their play will play a huge role in this series. Keep an eye on Stepan, who finished strong and looks poised for a good first round.

Special Teams: Power play and penalty kill are always important. Staying disciplined against the Caps is a must, even if we don’t know how effective Green is if he goes. Let Lundqvist see the shots.

Intangibles: The Caps have something to prove, intent on finally reaching the Cup. The Rangers lost to them two years ago with at least seven players experiencing an excruciating loss. The longer the series goes, the better our chances.

Prediction: Minus Callahan, it’ll be difficult to replace what he brings. This is the type of series he’d be huge in. I really believe we win if No.24 plays. I just feel too many things have to break right for us to prevail.

Caps in 6

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Lemaire retires after Devils’ final game

Thankfully there was no more pain or drama than neccesary involved with Jacques Lemaire stepping away from the Devils’ bench this time. There was no hour-long show to announce his decision, no three-month wait while ESPN reporters camp out on his lawn (well for hockey, maybe it would be CBC) and no waffling. Before the game he announced his decision in the locker room to retire after today’s contest and the Devils sent him out as he deserved to be sent out – as a winner. While their 3-2 win over Boston this afternoon meant nothing in the standings, it was meaningful to a coach who’s all class and got a team who’d lost all pride to play with passion, even with no tangible reward for it other than the respect of its fans.

On Fan Appreciation Day, the Devils put on a good show with some unexpected goalscoring. After Patrik Elias got the team’s first early on in the game, Boston later tied it just after a power play and the game stayed at 1-1 until the third period when of all people Vladimir Zharkov got a breakaway and put the puck past Tukka Rask to give the Devils a lead they wouldn’t relinquish. For Zharkov, it was just his second goal in 78 NHL games between last year and this year. Rookie defenseman Alexander Urbom added another later in the period – his first NHL goal. Urbom rejoined the team just this afternoon, after playing seven games very early in the season but spending most of the year in Albany.

Perhaps fittingly in a bizarre end to a bizarre season, as the Devil fans stood and cheered the end of the game, the lower bowl became packed with visiting Nordiques fans, who were concentrated in the balcony much of the day but were allowed to crowd the steps of the lower bowl as the final buzzer approached. And just as the crowd – Devils and Nords fans alike – was ready to explode, Boston scored with less than four seconds left, delaying the inevitable for a minute or so before finally the Devils sealed their win. Though I didn’t notice this at the time, Lemaire gave hint of his intentions by shaking the officials’ hands after the game.

While I wouldn’t have minded a return by the 66-year old Lemaire, I’m happy that he now gets to enjoy life with his family. Something he was doing before an old friend (Devils GM Lou Lamoriello) asked him for a favor in late December, to see what he could do with a team that was 9-22-2. He didn’t have to come back, but he did – showing the regard he has not only for Lou but for the organization as a whole. Ultimately the Devils’ run for .500 came up one game short, but it’s remarkable that a team which was nineteen under at one point wound up just a single game under by year’s end. Having done all of us proud, he gets to exit in a much better fashion than after last year’s drab second half and playoff exit, with a fanbase’s restored respect and admiration.

Lemaire’s legacy with the Devils is that he gave this franchise credibility and respect twice – the first time in 1994 when they had never really had either to begin with, apart from one Cinderella playoff run in 1988. The second time came this year, when a team who had won for years suddenly became a laughingstock who lost its way, on its way to a historically bad season for a non-expansion team. Once again, Lemaire brought respectability back to the Devils with a 29-17-3 record (which included a league-best 28-10-3 in the second half of the season) and players who had lost their confidence regained their form. His return and experience also proved invaluable to the ten rookies that suited up for at least one game this season. Even if Lemaire will be gone next year, his impact will still be felt.

Upon leaving, he said his only regret on coming back was not making the playoffs. Among anyone associated with the team this year, he’s perhaps the only one who’s blameless in that. My only regret on him leaving is that I don’t get to hear his entertaining press conferences anymore. Usually personable, sometimes funny but always knowledgeable. Perhaps that describes the man as well as his press conferences, along with a word I used in the first paragraph – class.

Thank you once again, Jacques. Enjoy your retirement now.

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Devils’ lost season nears end in Newark tomorrow

Through the last couple of weeks I’ve let Derek and Brian have the stage as far as blogging, since after all their teams had playoffs to chase and ultimately attain and ours was just playing out the string for the most part, other than today where they had their one chance to do something to leave a good taste in what’s been a poor season for the most part. With a chance to knock their bitter rival out of the playoffs, all the Devils sans Ilya Kovalchuk came up small in a 5-2 defeat, including Martin Brodeur, whose overall record against the Rangers I don’t want to see ever again. It’s too much of a reminder of what used to be. Before the lockout, Marty was every bit as good against the Rangers as he was against his hometown Canadiens, at least in the regular season. Now, not so much.

Granted, you have to say the Rangers were the healthier, grittier team and there’s a reason they (and the Sabres) are going to the playoffs and we aren’t. In a way it almost makes me feel better that the final playoff number in the East wound up being 93 points. That means the Devils would literally have had to earn 73 of a possible 82 points in the second half to make it. Wouldn’t have mattered how many games we lost to Ottawa, that hole was just too deep to make up. To their credit, the Devils tried and made it fun for two months but ultimately this season will be remembered as one fiasco on top of another, from the Kovalchuk cap saga this offseason to the John MacLean thirty-three game nightmare and now one final letdown in Game #81, where if the Devils had won they would have guaranteed themselves a standing ovation on Fan Appreciation Day tomorrow, as well as a chance to finish over NHL .500.

Unfortunately the possible final game in the great coaching career of Jacques Lemaire will probably see the team get booed, although one has to say at least he’s going out on a better note than last year’s playoff loss would have been. He breathed life back into a corpse and not only gave us two good months of hockey (two more than we had any right to hope for after the first half) but also helped rookies like Nick Palmeri, Mattias Tedenby, Jacob Josefson and Mark Fayne develop as well as brought out the best in $100 million man Kovalchuk, whose 21-goal second half and overall improved play at both ends of the ice proves he can indeed acclimate to the Devils’ system, at least under the right coach.

Really though, I’ve had enough not only with speculating on the Devils’ future, but also with this hockey season in general. Carolina going flat in a must-win game at home against a Tampa team with absolutely nothing to play for is the final insult. You wish they could have thrown up a clunker in the clutch like that against us at least once considering we’ve lost three crushing playoff series to them since 2002. And now the Rangers luck into the one team they have the best shot against – the Caps, who they beat by a touchdown just about every game they’ve played this year and should have beaten them in the playoffs two years ago if not for a couple of unfortunate incidents involving Sean Avery and John Tortorella.

A while back when the Devils were still going well, I thought I’d wind up ending the season with my final blog before Fan Appreciation Night on a happier note. Right now though, there are things in life to be happy about – but my sports teams aren’t among them. Wake me when the NHL playoffs are over, but with our luck this year the Finals will probably be Rangers-Canucks.

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Thrashing takes destiny out of Rangers hands

Brian used to refer to Atlanta as an automatic loss for Buffalo because everytime they played, the Thrashers took it to his Sabres. I guess the same applies to my team, who last night couldn’t get out of their own way- suffering a humiliating 3-0 shutout to a team that’s made the playoffs once in their existence. None of that mattered. Not even on an emotional night where former officer Steven McDonald presented Brandon Prust with the Extra Effort Award with two-time recipient Ryan Callahan on crutches showing support to thunderous cheers.

Despite another riveting speech from McDonald that included, “We win. You lose,” the Rangers just couldn’t. It didn’t start out badly by any stretch with their first few shifts pinning the Thrashers deep, generating chances on Ondrej Pavelec. The problem was the young netminder didn’t cooperate, stopping all 29 shots en route to his fourth shutout of the season. The Rangers took the first four shots but couldn’t get the all important first goal, which may have sent Atlanta in retreat. Instead, they came on following a couple of strong shifts from Prust’s line with Brian Boyle and Ruslan Fedotenko. Once the Thrashers began taking the play to us, it was evident that we were in for a long night. A couple of very tough saves from Henrik Lundqvist foreshadowed a heartbreaking script. When he squeezed the pads together to rob Dustin Byfuglien in the second, the look on his face was one of, ‘Uh oh. If I give up one, we’re going to lose.’

That’s how superior the Thrashers were. A team with skill and speed who just aren’t a good match-up for our team. No surprise that they felt quite comfortable on the Garden ice, where they’ve now won five straight. Sadly, the Rangers are 3-13-3 over the last 19 versus Atlanta. Honestly, I think all three wins came via the shootout. I was concerned going in because of this danger. Plus the loss of Callahan was felt with our attack not as strong. Marian Gaborik isn’t even an ounce of what Callahan brings, which explained why it didn’t take long for John Tortorella to break up Brandon Dubinsky, Artem Anisimov and the listless Gaborik, who failed miserably in a big game. If our fate is sealed by two Carolina wins and I see no reason why they’ll suffer the same end result in Atlanta tonight, you really have to wonder what’s going on inside Gaborik’s head. Is it the injuries he had? Is it just mental? Can anyone explain the lack of burst coming from his skates with opponents easily able to recover when he has a step? Between the mind numbing inability to score when our team needs it and the lazy play away from the puck like allowing mere mortal Eric Boulton to escape for the crusher a few minutes into the third, you have to ask if he’ll be back. Will anyone take that salary? For some reason, Gabby just doesn’t fit the system.

Everyone else gives maximum effort. Even on a night they didn’t have it, the try was there. The execution wasn’t. Anyone could see how lucky they were not to be down after one. So, when Islander stiff Rob Schremp took full advantage of a dreadful Sean Avery turnover for the game’s first goal, it wasn’t a surprise. However, seeing Atlanta captain Andrew Ladd split our top pair badly, dusting Dan Girardi before going backhand deke on Lundqvist, was stunning. Both Girardi and Marc Staal had games to forget with each on for two of three goals against. Tortorella’s not wrong when he states that nobody played well. Even if Boyle came close, drawing iron before the roof collapsed, our team looked disjointed. You can’t tempt fate twice. Against Boston, they got a mulligan. I knew after the second goal, there would be no comeback. Considering that I already wasn’t feeling well, I headed for the car and listened to the third where Dave Maloney was beside himself after Gaborik’s error.

Maloney questioned Tortorella sitting our most skilled forward out the remaining 15:41 in Game 81 trailing by three. Yes. He made a brutal mistake. But at that point with the team needing him and more shifts for Anisimov, who also found himself on the bench much of the third, they had to play their best. Conversely, Avery wasn’t punished for his lazy clear that’s been a trait ever since he returned to Broadway. You figure it out. Erik Christensen, who didn’t look half bad between Avery and converted right wing Matt Gilroy, received increased minutes. The same player whose role had reduced to almost zilch aside from shootout specialist. Sometimes, the coach’s decisions baffle. Especially with one more game to play tomorrow afternoon (12:30 ET) against the Devils.

It might not even matter. If the Canes win out, even if we beat the Devils and finish tied in the standings with 93 points, Carolina gets in by virtue of one more regulation/overtime win (35-34). The only prayer is that the Thrashers somehow summon up the same energy against a rested opponent tonight in a more than half empty building and do us a huge favor. I just can’t see that happening. Not the way the battle tested Hurricanes are playing. Cam Ward’s on a role and Eric Staal, Erik Cole and Jeff Skinner are carrying them. Their best players are playing like it and that spells doom unfortunately for us.

I can honestly say if they win tonight, I’m not going to bother going tomorrow. For what point? Even if we win, I just can’t see the Canes losing at home to Tampa Bay with their season on the line. It’s like Hasan says. When they do make it, watch out. Every indication is that Carolina will win out and then eliminate whoever they face. I’d love to be wrong because I could easily that being us. It’s too bad they didn’t meet the challenge yesterday. Now, it’s our of their control.

Hope for a miracle.

BONY 3 Stars:

3rd Star-Henrik Lundqvist, NYR (23 saves)
2nd Star-Eric Boulton, Atl (6th of season)
1st Star-Rob Schremp, Atl (GW goal, assist)

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Tracking The Race: Perry explosion ousts Iginla’s Flames

The playoff races continue to be eye popping, especially in the West. While out East, it’s still three teams for two spots with the Canes winning last night over the Red Wings, the West picture got a bit clearer thanks to wins from the Kings, Blackhawks and Ducks last night. LA’s 3-2 shootout win over Phoenix clinched a playoff berth- vaulting them to fourth over the Predators with 98 points. The Coyotes need one point or any loss from the Stars or those behind them to wrap up a second straight postseason.

In the game of the night, the Hawks posted a wild 4-3 overtime win over old Norris rival St. Louis, increasing their chances of defending the Cup. Chris Stewart forced OT by powering past Duncan Keith and rifling one upstairs on Calder candidate Corey Crawford. In danger a second consecutive night of losing out on a valuable point, Crawford delivered a couple of money stops and captain Jonathan Toews beat Ty Conklin on a breakaway, lifting his team to the huge triumph. Toews’ 32nd goal gave Chicago 95 points, who need just two more to qualify.

The Flames knew they needed help from San Jose even if they won. In the Battle Of Alberta, Calgary took care of business on the strength of captain Jarome Iginla’s hat trick in a 6-1 rout of Edmonton. He once again scored 40 in a season, doing so for the fourth time in a brilliant career that’s also included a 50 goal campaign in ’07-08. Down the stretch the classy superstar was brilliant, putting up 14 points (9-5-14) over the last six games, featuring his second hat trick of the season. Since March 1, Iginla’s scored a ridiculous 17 goals along with 10 assists, totaling 27 points- erasing doubts that the 33 year-old was on the downside. It’s a shame that we won’t get to see one of the game’s brightest stars in the playoffs. If only they’d brought in Jay Feaster earlier to replace Daryl Sutter. During the run, Iginla’s moved up to third in goals behind Rocket Richard leader Corey Perry (50) and Steven Stamkos (44) while tying Alex Ovechkin for sixth in scoring with 85 points (42-43-85). If not for a torrid pace from Perry, who now is front and center in the Hart discussion with The Sedins, Martin St. Louis, Tim Thomas, Carey Price and Pekka Rinne, Iginla would probably be at the top of the list for rescuing his team. Instead, he won’t be part of the playoffs.

Meanwhile at The Pond Honda Center, the Sharks were no match for Perry, who continued his scoring assault by notching his third hat trick of ’10-11 along with a helper in a 6-2 demolishing of their close California rival. So spectacular were the first two goals that they’ll be replayed for quite a while with one an amazing forehand, triple deke to the backhand, roof job on a helpless Antero Niittymaki, who made his first start in 35 games, finally giving Finnish countryman Antti Niemi a night off. The poor ex-Flyer had no chance.

Fifty is a huge number,” beamed Perry after increasing the NHL’s streak of 50 goal scorers to six post-lockout.  “Everybody talks about it, (but) not a whole lot of people get to do it and be in that category. It hasn’t really sunk in.”

It’s a tip to all of us when he can get 50, but it still takes a special player to get there,” proud linemate Ryan Getzlaf praised of Perry’s work that’s seen him rip up NHL goalies for 19 goals over the last 14 games. “He’s one of those guys who rise to the occasion. He plays playoff hockey any time you need him. He has proven time and time again he can play in those big games and have results.”

Perry’s recent dominance that features a current 10-game point streak (14-8-22) has elevated the Duck to second in scoring with his 97 points (50-47-97) only trailing Daniel Sedin (41-59-100)
Ironically, the tear has him a point (28-27) better than Iginla since March. Going a step further, Perry is 25-20-45 since the All-Star break. No wonder he’s at the top of many MVP lists. The Ducks aren’t in yet with Dallas holding an extra game that includes a pivotal home-and-home versus the Avalanche tonight and tomorrow. With a home-and-home against the rival Kings tomorrow and Saturday, the Ducks can punch their playoff ticket by winning. They sit seventh in the West due to more regulation/OT wins than the Hawks, who also have two remaining in a home-and-home traditional theme versus chief rival Detroit Friday and Sunday. If Dallas wins its final three including a visit to Minnesota on the final day of the season, that would put them at 97 points. However, they’d come up short if tied due to the new tiebreaker. So, the Stars still need help. Quite fascinating stuff.

The East race is well documented with the Sabres (92 Pts), Rangers (91) and Hurricanes (89) all battling for the final two spots. For Buffalo, one point will ensure them a second straight postseason. They face the Flyers at home tomorrow and travel to Columbus Saturday. The Rangers need three points. A win tonight versus Atlanta would put them in good shape, forcing the Canes to stave off elimination tomorrow against those same Thrashers in Georgia. They could need to beat the Hudson rival Devils Saturday to wrap up the playoffs for a fifth time in six years. Meanwhile, Carolina will watch the action later and then battle Atlanta and finish with Tampa at home Saturday.

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Atl/NYR Preview: Canes put pressure back on Rangers

It’s a race to the finish line for both the Rangers and Hurricanes with each doing their part to achieve meaningful hockey this Spring. It’s already been interesting with the Rangers rallying from three down to stun the Bruins with five unanswered the other night. The Hurricanes responded with a convincing 3-0 shutout of West powerhouse Detroit in Raleigh on the strength of 42 saves from former Conn Smythe winner Cam Ward, who was at his best in the first period, stopping all 19 shots.

The Canes finally solved Jimmy Howard with a pair in the second off the sticks of Derek Joslin and Calder frontrunner Jeff Skinner, whose wraparound with 1:11 left all but ensured the big win. Detroit generated quality chances but even when Ward wasn’t stopping them in their tracks, he had some help from a goalpost, which denied Pavel Datsyuk’s tying bid. Datsyuk certainly was dangerous but no Red Wing could solve Ward, who turned it up and looks like he’ll be awfully tough to beat in Carolina’s final two regular season games at Atlanta tomorrow and home for Tampa Bay Saturday. Ward and a strong Canes’ PK held off a Detroit two-man advantage before Eric Staal cruised down the other way and promptly set up sizzling linemate Erik Cole for the final tally. Staal set up all three goals while Ward recorded his fourth shutout (16th career) as Carolina pulled within two of the Blueshirts, who host those Thrashers tonight.

One team can play a huge role in who makes it. Over the next 24 hours (30 for those keeping track), the Thrashers will try to spoil it for either the Rangers or Canes. Both teams must remember to show up to the rink on time because Atlanta is very formidable- boasting dangerous Dustin Byfuglien and Tobias Enstrom on the back end while captain Andrew Ladd leads the offense up front that includes budding sophomore Evander Kane, ex-Bruin Blake Wheeler, Bryan Little, Nik Antropov and grinders Anthony Stewart and Chris Thorburn. Ondrej Pavelec can also be a pain if he gets hot. The Thrashers don’t play much D, which explains Pavelec’s solid .910 save percentage. By no means will Atlanta roll over for either club. Especially the Rangers, who have to do it without emotional leader Ryan Callahan against a team that owns them. Entering tonight, they have yet to take a game in the season series, dropping two in regulation and one in overtime. In fact, the last four times Atlanta’s visited MSG, they’ve sent the Garden Faithful home unsatisfied. If that happens tonight, it could be fatal. The Rangers are looking to reverse a trend that’s seen their opponent go 12-3-3 against them over the last 18 meetings.

Getting off quickly would definitely be a good idea. The Thrashers have nothing to play for outside of pride. Score early and perhaps they’ll go away. Minus Callahan, the Rangers will need everyone to step up including MIA Act Marian Gaborik, who should see important minutes possibly with Artem Anisimov and Brandon Dubinsky. Gaborik hasn’t scored in seven straight and likely won’t play with Vinny Prospal, who should start with Derek Stepan and Wojtek Wolski. It’ll be interesting to see what John Tortorella does as far as Gaborik who was shifted to the checking line with Brian Boyle and Brandon Prust, helping set up Mike Sauer’s exciting game-winner. Does he keep him on the energy line, hoping it rubs off or will we see Gabby reunited with Erik Christensen? Speaking of vanishing acts, Christy has again disappeared after a great stretch in March before a futile finish. Matt Gilroy is expected to dress as a forward, something the former Hobey Baker winner did in college before making the switch. How much will Tort use a talented player with offensive insincts?

Assuming Gabby starts with Boyle, here’s what we see:

Avery-Dubinsky-Anisimov
Prospal-Stepan-Wolski
Prust-Boyle-Gaborik
Fedotenko-Christensen-Gilroy

Staal-Girardi
McDonagh-Sauer
McCabe-Eminger

Lundqvist

You know with Tortorella, nothing’s etched in stone. He’ll do whatever he can to get the most of a team that’s been resilient all year. Now, they face even more adversity with the enemy Devils licking their chops at the prospect of ruining what’s been a feel good story. The task is simple. Like Adrienne said to Rocky after giving birth in Rocky II:

Win! WIN!!!!!

From #NYR Tweep @BigGun_s: #Rally4Cally

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Habs clinch, Sabres inch closer, Canes take on Wings, Wild Wild West Preview

This wild race is winding down. Last night, one of the four teams wrapped up a playoff spot with the Canadiens posting a 2-1 overtime win over the defending champs at The Bell Centre. Controversial rookie defenseman P.K. Subban’s power play goal won it for the Habs, allowing them to make the playoffs a second straight season. The lowscoring Original Six club can thank Carey Price, who was outstanding finishing with 42 saves, including a few close calls late in regulation on tricky deflections. It was his goaltending that saved Montreal’s bacon and certainly is worthy of a Vezina and Hart candidacy. Though he’ll probably get left out of the MVP discussion with frontrunner Daniel Sedin, Corey Perry and Henrik Sedin all in the mix along with darkhorse Jarome Iginla if the Flames somehow sneak in.

While the Habs took care of business to clinch, the Sabres inched closer to a second straight postseason of their own, doubling up the Lightning at home 4-2 on the strength of Thomas Vanek’s sixth career hat trick. Following Ryan Malone’s early goal for the Bolts, Buffalo responded with three straight including a pair from Vanek that allowed him to reach 30 for the fourth time in his career. Tim Connolly followed with his 13th, which stood up as the winner thanks to Swede rookie Jhonas Enroth, who again was sharp minus Ryan Miller– finishing with 23 saves. Enroth’s strong play has allowed the Sabres to win three of four (3-0-1). Who would’ve thought that a once perceived weakness could be the ticket to meaningful Spring hockey? Credit Lindy Ruff and the organization for entrusting the ’06 second round pick with the backup job over vet Patrick Lalime, who drove our Buffalo resident batty. The Lightning didn’t even get a look late thanks to stellar D from Ruff’s club, who were so good that Guy Boucher’s team couldn’t even get Dwayne Roloson to the bench. With less than 15 seconds left, Vanek picked Martin St. Louis’ pocket and fired into a vacated net as Roloson watched hopelessly, completing the trick. Buffalo is one point away from the playoffs. A Carolina OT or shootout loss would allow them to clinch tonight.

Speaking of the Hurricanes, they face a must win tonight at home versus the Red Wings. So much for the schedule makers doing them any favors. On that note, can anyone explain why such a crucial contest involves the other conference. Echoing Brian’s sentiments with his team finishing in Columbus, what the heck? The final week, you should play only your conference. Preferably rivalry games like the Devils visiting the Rangers Saturday. In any event, the Canes trail the Rangers by four with three left. Their extra game is tonight at 7 ET in Raleigh. The tiebreak has the Blueshirts leading Carolina 34-33 in regulation/OT wins. A win puts the pressure back on the Blueshirts, who learned Team MVP Ryan Callahan broke his leg after blocking a Zdeno Chara shot the other night. If the Canes pick up only a point, a Ranger victory tomorrow versus the Thrashers would allow them to wrap it up. Carolina’s gotten great play from Erik Cole, Eric Staal, Calder hopeful Jeff Skinner and Cam Ward. The game is meaningful for Detroit only if they want to pass San Jose for the West’s second seed. They’ve already won the Central over Nashville.

As a hockey purist, it’d be more interesting if the Canes won, putting the pressure back on us. As a Ranger fan, I’d certainly welcome a Red Wing win but am not expecting it. If we’re going to make it minus our emotional leader, I’d rather earn it. As I’ve said before, let’s win out.

The Western race is much more exciting with only the three division winners in while the Preds, Coyotes, Kings, Ducks, Hawks, Stars and even the Flames scramble for the remaining five spots. In order to have any shot, Calgary must win their remaining two against Alberta rival Edmonton later and at arch enemy Vancouver on Hockey Night In Canada. Assuming the Flames do what must be done, that game should have meaning. But the Flames need plenty of help with Anaheim, Chicago and Dallas all having three left. The Flames cannot catch Nashville (97), Phoenix (96) or LA (96). There are four games of interest for West observers. Chicago hosts the Blues looking to bounce back from a tough OT loss in Montreal, which had Joel Queeneville fuming about the 10 minors his team received. Facing an old Norris rival who’d like nothing better than to play spoiler, is no picnic. Then there’s the aforementioned Alberta clash between the Flames and Oilers at The Saddledome. This rivalry is one of the best and is worth watching after Detroit-Carolina. Then you have another intense rivalry California style between the Ducks and Sharks at The Pond. San Jose is still fuming from their first round ouster two years ago as the top seed. Need I say more? And finally, the Yotes and Kings break the tie in the standings at Staples Center. The best aspect is it’s all rivalry games. Here’s when each plays:

Stl @ Chi 8 ET
Edm @ Cgy 9:30 ET
SJ @ Ana 10 ET
Phx @ LA 10:30 ET

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Callahan leadership one to behold

There he was setting up his Draftmate Brandon Dubinsky for a thrilling tying goal that brought the Garden out of their seats after the Rangers had fought valiantly from a three-goal deficit to tie the Bruins. And when rookie Mike Sauer, who always seems in the right place, snuck a seeing eye shot through Tim Thomas, there was No.24 again in True Blue sacrificing for the good of the team, even if it came at a costly price.

It takes an awful lot of guts and determination to get in front of a Zdeno Chara shot. The league’s most feared man who when he’s winding up, you fear the worst like a goal being scored. So, Ryan Callahan laid out the body one more time, making a full out dive to block the league’s hardest shot that was clocked at nearly 106 MPH at the All-Star Skills Competition in Raleigh back in late January. This is the kind of heart and soul player Callahan has become for the Rangers. Not only does he do all the dirty work, but also is second in team scoring with a career high 23 goals and 25 assists for 48 points. There isn’t anything the former fourth rounder won’t do. Whether it’s throwing a crunching hit- a category he still ranks 12th in with 224 despite missing 19 games, or getting in the path of a shot, Cally does whatever it takes for his team to be successful.

When he returned from a busted hand from what else but blocking a shot, Callahan elevated his play to the best level it’s ever been. Since Feb.1, he leads the Blueshirts with 13 goals and 24 points over 27 games while playing the same gritty style that’s admired not only by teammates but opponents as well. Even Chara was upset when he learned that Callahan is expected to miss between six to eight weeks for a broken ankle that won’t require surgery.

You watch teams that end up going far in the playoffs, shot-blocking is a must,” prideful coach John Tortorella said on the injury to the Rangers’ MVP. “That’s just a given for us in what we have to do.”

Callahan also ranks fifth among all forwards with 77 blocks. Despite playing only 60 games with his regular season done, the recently turned 26 year-old Rochester native achieved new highs not only in goals, assists and points but also in power play goals (10) and game-winners (5), which both pace the club. What else would you expect from a man who gets the most out of his 5-11, 185 pound frame?

You can’t really say enough good things about him as a player and as a person and as a leader in this organization,” praised captain Chris Drury, who’s begun skating and taking part in team practices despite not being ready. “We’re going to miss him, and miss him a lot. He plays in every situation and does all the little things, does all the big things. He’s just been great. He’s going to be a big loss for us.

As he would want us to do, want the guys to do, is play hard without him, kind of move on, win some games, and put a smile on his face that way.”

Now, the Rangers must go on without him. They have two games left with the Thrashers in town Thursday and the Hudson rival Devils crossing the river Saturday. This team has been resilient all year. It will be up to other players to step up. On a team that boasts five 20-goal scorers with Draft Mate Artem Anisimov one shy of making it six, it’s back to work for Tortorella’s guys who’ll summon whatever energy they have left to play the way their next captain does daily. Now, it’s up to Dubinsky, Anisimov, Stepan, Boyle, Prust, Prospal, Gaborik, Staal, Girardi, Sauer, McDonagh, Avery, Fedotenko, Eminger, McCabe, Christensen, Wolski, Gilroy and Lundqvist to do what needs to be done. The situation remains the same. Win and they’re in. Don’t rely on help.

Something tells us inspiration won’t be a problem. Do it for Cally.

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Historic comeback rescues Rangers

At 3-0 down, it looked over. In a game they needed, the Rangers were all out of sorts looking up at a huge three-goal hole to a tough Bruins club set on adding another crushing chapter to a classic Original Six rivalry. When Chris Kelly skated untouched and beat Henrik Lundqvist shortside, it seemed insurmountable with less than half of regulation left. At that point, Boston won every battle, earning their big lead by going to the dirty areas to score the first two before Kelly surged past Ruslan Fedotenko and stunned an already antsy Garden crowd, who rained down the home team with more boos.

It would’ve been easy to say, ‘It’s just not our night.’ On the Bruins’ first pair, they scored right after the Rangers blew chances. All season long, that’s not what this team is about. There have been few nights where our guys didn’t compete with one coming at the hands of the Islanders a few days ago. If it’s true they were sluggish in the second of another challenging back-to-back against a top three seed, you wouldn’t have known it the way the Blueshirts responded to adversity. Led by Vinny Prospal’s two goals, John Tortorella’s scrappy bunch put together a historic comeback to stun the B’s 5-3 before a raucous atmosphere at MSG. Never before in the unique 85 year history of one of the oldest rivalries, had the Rangers climbed back from a three-goal deficit to defeat the Bruins.

It’s a feeling that you can’t describe when you hear that many people going crazy,” tying hero Brandon Dubinsky said after scoring the third unanswered goal with 3:48 remaining off a brilliant feed by Ryan Callahan to send the Garden into bedlum. “We fought so hard for so many months and we needed these two points. That part of it makes it even that much more emotional.”

Dubinsky’s biggest goal of the season wouldn’t have been possible without the heroics of Vinny Prospal. A prideful man who fought tooth and nail to get back in the lineup after so many setbacks with his knee. At one point, there were even rumors that his career might be over. For myself, I never expected him to return because it sounded bad and I wanted to be realistic about the chances. I disagreed with my Dad whenever the topic came up. He maintained that the team would be better off with a more long-term view while I insisted that Prosp was an underrated cog who brings skill along with leadership. Never has that been more evident than in his play down the stretch. The 36 year-old Czech, who Mike Milbury mistakenly thought was part of Tort’s ’03-04 Bolts’ Cup, plays with such enthusiasm that it rubs off on his younger teammates. After he scored off a goalmouth scramble 62 seconds later, steering home Wolski’s rebound, he pumped his fists and was telling the guys they’re back in it on the bench.

The joy Prospal has when he scores is so positive that it has to inspire the rest of the roster. It doesn’t take much to inject life into a team that was skating in quicksand prior. Tortorella tried everything, altering every line in a desperate attempt to awaken his club, who knew full well that a loss would mean scoreboard praying. It would’ve allowed the Hurricanes to control their destiny.  

We didn’t want to have to watch and see what Carolina did (Wednesday) night,” Dubinsky said. “We want to keep ourselves in the driver’s seat.”

Instead, Tort found magic in a bottle with reemerging rookie Derek Stepan between Prospal and Wolski. The trio suddenly took over, scoring a huge second goal before the middle stanza ended. The play was made possible by a hustling Stepan, who beat a Boston defenseman to a loose puck, pushing it to Wolski behind the net, who then turned and set up Prospal in front for his second straight in 6:52. Suddenly, the Rangers were very much alive, trailing by only a goal entering the third.

Boston had only lost once in regulation when leading after two periods, bringing a 20-1-2 mark into the fateful final period. None of that meant anything. Even though the Bruins sat back, which drew the ire of coach Claude Julien afterwards, they reestablished their tight defense, keeping the Rangers on the perimeter while also putting together a couple of strong shifts with less than 10 minutes left. As the seconds ticked down, it looked like it would be another heartbreaking defeat on home ice where a poor start cost us. The Bruins even came close to scoring with Michael Ryder driving a long slapper off the crossbar.

Even more daunting was the inept play of Marian Gaborik, who went through the motions on more than one shift. Other than a couple of quality shots that Tim Thomas snuffed out in the first, he was invisible. Something Milbury alluded to on the Versus postgame. He was moved to Brian Boyle’s line. Boyle also was having a tough night with his line caught on for Nathan Horton’s 25th that saw all five Rangers standing around when the Bruins went in front by two. As fate would have it, the unlikely duo combined for the biggest goal later. Before they could, the Blueshirts still had to get it tied. With seemingly nothing working, Tortorella finally went back to the Draft Line, reuniting Callahan, Dubinsky and Artem Anisimov for a key shift. On a determined shift, they wouldn’t be denied with Callahan sending a backhand feed in front for Dubinsky, who outwaited Thomas before tucking home a backhand to miraculously tie it before being mobbed. On the play, Marc Staal kept the play alive with a good pinch. Ironically, it was his great keep and pass that started the comeback. Without those two plays, they’re cooked.

With the crowd now in a frenzy, Tortorella cameback with Boyle, Gaborik and Brandon Prust. On what appeared to be a broken play, Boyle took a whale of a hit to get the puck to Gaborik, who finally did something by sending seeing eye backhand pass that somehow went through to a pinching Mike Sauer, whose soft shot went thru Thomas’ wickets just enough before Johnny Boychuk could keep the puck out. If they weren’t crazy before, you should’ve heard them now. My Dad who was fortunate enough to go, said it was unbelievable. One can only imagine. Just seeing it on TV was enough to send me into a state of shock. My brother, who I watched a majority of it with had left to see our friend one last time before she flew back to Atlanta. Of course when it ended, I wound up there too. But I just wasn’t leaving until I saw the end. Good thing too because I texted him twice and his response was, “Yes!”

“That was unbelievable,” a pumped Sauer expressed. “I never scored a goal and it got that loud, that is for sure. The boys were excited and the fans went nuts.”

Sometimes, it’s moments like that that make you a fan for life. This is why we live and die with this T-E-A-M. Once up, they weren’t going to allow the Bruins to tie it. Ryan Callahan sacrificed again by making a ridiculous diving block of a dangerous Zdeno Chara shot that unfortunately broke his ankle. Of course, everyone’s favorite Ranger earned huge pops. Such a shame that a day later, we find out he’s out between six to eight weeks but won’t need surgery. If this team gets in and pulls a first round upset, who wants to bet Cally somehow returns if there’s a Game Six or Seven in the Eastern Conference Semis? Don’t put it past the heart and soul of these Blueshirts.

When Stepan hit the empty net, one of the most memorable regular season comebacks in club history was complete. It came at a price but this team’s proven before that they can overcome obstacles. The latest challenge for the Rangers, who’ll have to do it without Callahan with Atlanta Thursday and New Jersey Saturday both at home. Forget about what Buffalo does tonight against Tampa or what happens tomorrow between Carolina and Detroit. This win was our 34th in regulation/overtime, giving the Rangers a four point lead over the Hurricanes, who now have immense pressure. In fact, a Sabre win tonight and a Cane loss would clinch for Buffalo, who now trails us by a point for seventh. The Rangers are tied at 91 points with the Canadiens, who hold the tiebreaker and play their extra game tonight against a desperate Chicago team. The only way we finish ahead of them is by winning our last two or a complete collapse by Les Habitants. I’m not counting on anything. Let’s just win out and silence the detractors.

Take care of business. It’s all in front of them.

BONY 3 Stars:

3rd Star-Brandon Dubinsky, NYR (tying goal-24th w/3:48 left)
2nd Star-Derek Stepan, NYR (ENG, assist, outstanding hustle)
1st Star-Vinny Prospal, NYR (2 goals-7th, 8th and tremendous energy)

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