Zuccarello-Aasen to sign with Rangers

It looks like Norway’s invading Broadway this Fall. While it may not be a great Spring for the Rangers, they seem to have landed Mats Zuccarello-Aasen. The 22 year-old diminutive winger who’s listed at 5-7, 161 pounds was a standout for Modo of the Swedish Elite League the past two seasons. He followed up a 40-point (12-28-40 in 35 GP) debut with 23 goals and 41 assists totaling 64 points over 55 games in 2009-10. 

Not only did Zuccarello-Aasen lead the SEL in scoring, but he also represented his country at the Vancouver Winter Games- tallying a goal and two helpers in four contests. His incredible wheels and skills were on display against the world’s best, impressing scouts along with veteran Tore Vikingstad. Vikingstad is a former Blues property who’s starred in the DEL over the past decade (Deutsche Eishockey Liga) in Germany. Both certainly did their best in representing Norway, proving that they could compete.

For Zuccarello-Aasen, that meant drawing interest from as many as five NHL teams including the Rangers, Red Wings, Maple Leafs, Blackhawks and Oilers. Per Toronto Stars’ Damien Cox, he chose the Rangers, who certainly could use a little more skill and scoring to aid Marian Gaborik. The deal won’t get announced until the World Championships conclude, due to the International transfer agreement.

The biggest obstacle for the Nord will be how quickly he adjusts to a more physical style in smaller North American rinks. By no means does his smallish frame mean he’ll fail. Martin St. Louis and Brian Gionta are primary examples of small players who’ve succeeded in the NHL by using their speed and wits. Neither is afraid to mix it up. Zuccarello-Aasen might have to beef up to take the pounding. We’ll get a better idea when he’s in Ranger colors in camp. He’ll turn 23 on September 1.

Video: Mats Zuccarello-Aasen practices with Forsberg and Dan Hinote

This seems like a solid move. Especially for an offensively challenged club that could use a spark. How much did they give him? Toronto offered a two-way deal. I’m guessing Glen Sather gave him a one-way contract, meaning they expect Zuccarello-Aasen to be on the roster. While Larry Brooks alluded to Euro failures Andreas Jamtin and Ilkka Heikkinen, who got screwed a la Jarkko Immonen, MZA sounds like the kinda player John Tortorella uses and comes on Markus Naslund’s recommendation. It was under Tort’s leadership that St. Louis flourished. I’m not expecting a Hart or Art Ross. Based on what I’ve seen, he’s got some skillz.

Why not? It never hurts to try.

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Dan Boyle beats own team

There are playoff moments and then there are bizarre ones such as last night’s Game 3 WC quarterfinal between the Sharks and Avalanche. A game that saw the West’s top seed dominate Colorado to the tune of 51-17 in shots, including a ridiculous 43-8 discrepancy from the second period on. Yet they weren’t able to solve netminder Craig Anderson, who was clearly in another dimension. It was his goaltending that gave the eighth seeded Avs a chance to steal a game they had no business being in.

How incredible was it? Devin Setoguchi and Ryane Clowe combined for the same amount of shots (16) that the Avs fired on Evgeni Nabokov. Manny Malhotra attempted seven. Rob Blake, Patrick Marleau and Scott Nichol each took five. Even Jumbo Joe had three, matching Paul Stastny’s team best on the home side. There were lengthy stretches where San Jose minus Dany Heatley (undisclosed injury) had Colorado pinned in but they couldn’t get one past Anderson who saw everything.

When the game went to sudden death, anything was possible. It’s just that no one could’ve predicted what happened next. On the period’s first shift, Ryan O’Reilly pressured Dan Boyle, whose backhand pass attempt to partner Marc-Edouard Vlasic behind the net instead managed to sneak through a stunned Nabokov- giving Colorado the unlikeliest of victories. The 17th shot was Boyle’s costly mistake that put him in the same company as Steve Smith and more recently Marek Malik, whose team at least won. A day later, it’s still hard to fathom. Did it really happen?!?!?!?!?! Are the Sharks hexed? They went belly up in Round One last year to hated Anaheim. Can history repeat itself? Or are Todd McLellan’s Sharks resilient enough to bounce back and get the required three victories in the last four needed to advance and temporarily get the monkey off their backs?

We didn’t beat their goalie,” McLellan said. “We found a way to beat
ours.
” Replays seemed to indicate that Boyle’s gaffe might’ve went off
O’Reilly’s stick changing paths for the stunner of stunners.

I think so,” the unlikely hero said. “Some days you get breaks like
that.

When you work hard and you stay positive, good results happen and you get
the lucky bounces,
” Anderson pointed out after saving his team’s bacon and
getting loud chants of “Andy, Andy” from a pumped up crowd. “It’s
remarkable
.”

Whatever the reason, 51 turned out to be the Avs’ winning number. The 51 saves from Anderson, who easily could’ve been up for the Vezina despite his higher GAA. And the wild sequence in which Boyle managed to do something Colorado couldn’t. Beat his own team, with O’Reilly credited with the winner at 51 seconds of overtime. To the poor guy’s credit, he faced the music afterwards at his locker and basically indicated it is what it is. They have to try to treat it as a loss and move on. Can a team whose fragile history has burned past Springs rise up? They’ll have to.

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Devils’ embarassing effort leads to OT loss

Just asking, but how in a playoff game between two evenly matched teams (and that’s what they are, you can forget the seeding) do you let the Flyers outshoot you by a whopping 18-4 in the third period and OT?! Especially after a relatively even first two periods, this team once again showed its glass jaw when it mattered most and only great play by Martin Brodeur even got them to overtime before Daniel Carcillo of all people scored the winner at 3:35 on an easy tap-in just after a power play had expired.

It’s not even worth going over the details of this game, I mean really it feels like the same nonsense – another great regular season that is becoming a gigantic waste. It’s one thing not to win the Cup but to lose in the first round again (against yet another rival to boot) would be the final nail in the coffin of the Devils as a upper-echelon team thought of as a Cup contender every year. I’ll say this right now, Game 4 is an absolute must-win. Deja vu doesn’t happen twice, especially a decade apart. Brian Boucher and the Flyers will not blow a 3-1 lead this time around, especially against a disjointed team that doesn’t know which end is up.

A big chunk of that you have to put on the coaching. Just as I feared might happen, Jacques Lemaire‘s overcoaching himself out of the series. I realize Martin Skoula hasn’t been as good in the first two playoff games as he was during the regular season but some of that was taking him off of Paul Martin‘s pairing and putting him with another slow d-man in Bryce Salvador that doesn’t have the footspeed to complement Skoula’s own stay-at home style. There was no reason to put in the shaky rookie Mark Fraser for Game 3 and sure enough that came back to bite us on the Flyers’ lead goal in the second when Fraser got plowed over by Simon Gagne of all people, forcing a turnover that led to a Mike Richards goal 75 seconds into the second period and the rookie was promptly benched after that, playing barely five minutes in the game.

Of course Lemaire’s incessant tinkering with the forward lines are always a source of debate but one thing strikes me the most – with all the line changes during this series so far and all the different looks Lemaire wants to show – he hasn’t once reunited the PZL line that was so dominant last year. When, exactly does that line come up in the Lemaire bingo-ball machine that decides what players to put on what lines? His obsession with outsmarting the other team was so obvious in Game 2 when he listed rookie Matthew Corrente as being on a scoring line which he isn’t, although oddly enough Corrente’s actually gotten a few good chances in his limited minutes the last two games. Still, when you attempt to outsmart the other team you better make sure you don’t outsmart yours first.

Not that Lemaire’s mad scientist alter ego is responsible for this team again not manning up when it matters most. When Brian Rolston of all people contributes two power play goals, someone else has to step up as well. Clearly it isn’t going to be Jamie Langenbrunner, who’s too busy sulking over god knows what to actually live up to the C on his shirt. Sure, Brodeur stepped up big-time but again you have to score eventually to actually you know, win a game. Even guys who are still hungry like Zach Parise and Travis Zajac, were invisible in two of the three games. Sure, some of it you have to give credit to Chris Pronger and the other Flyer defensemen as well as Mike Richards but hey, if you want to be considered one of the best players in the league you have to hold your own in these matchups. Zajac got beaten head-up by Richards, in fact, on a big defensive-zone faceoff in overtime that led to the goal.

And what of Ilya Kovalchuk, who’s turning into Scott Gomez – assist and wrist-shot happy, and also dumb as bricks? Effort’s no longer enough this time of year, sure Kovalchuk has five points in two games but when you aren’t scoring goals (or even taking shots on net) eventually that well’s going to dry up and he’s such a liability everywhere else it seems likely we’re witnessing the final games of the brief Kovalchuk era in New Jersey. Which is too bad since Lemaire may well have hastened Nicklas Bergfors‘s departure out of town as part of that deal as well. I also have to give my boy a little grief, for the second straight playoffs Patrik Elias has been invisible too and you don’t like hearing this from the honest Czech:

“We’ve got to work harder, that’s the bottom line, including me,”
center Patrik Elias said. “That excitement, that drive we had in the
last game, maybe we didn’t have it tonight. We’ve got to have it every game. I
felt like we didn’t push ourselves enough. We didn’t have enough offense going.”

Although the refs were awful today I can’t complain too much since they were at least consistent in calling every little thing. In fact early on it appeared some of the calls we got rooked out of in Game 2 we were getting back in makeup fashion during Game 3. Of course you would like to not see an iffy call in overtime on David Clarkson essentially decide the game but our power play had its own chances, and wonder of wonders actually converted two of eight, both on Rolston slapshots but overall the power play was just as disjointed as ever.

Even before that point though I knew where this game was headed when the Flyers dominated the Devils in the third period, it seemed only a matter of time before some fluke goal got by Brodeur and we were in the hole again. And sure last year we lost to a team that was down 1-0, 2-1 and 3-2 in the series so it is possible to come back from 2-1 the way we did 1-0…but I don’t think it likely. Not only are we 0-4 in Philly this year and have been a terrible road team since mid-November, but worse, with Games 5 and 7 at home we can’t exactly count on home-ice when it matters either with our 3-6 home playoff record the last three years.

Plus let’s be honest, the Flyers are not fifteen points worse than us even though the standings say they are. They would have been right with us for the division lead if they didn’t have the frightening number of goalie injuries they had this season. Of course we had our own share of injuries and then some in the first half, but you could argue our three best players – Brodeur, Parise and Zajac – weren’t among the walking wounded. Philly still has star center Jeff Carter on the mend (but playing through it) after a late-season knee injury.

This is just too depressing, it’s getting to the point where I wish we had dumped the last game of the year. Maybe Buffalo will be wishing that too by the end of their series. Let’s be honest though, this is the kind of hockey we saw from this team the whole second half…I don’t want to hear about the 10-4-4 finish, that got padded by four of five down the stretch after some dreadful lost points and we were terrible for almost half the season. Especially with how this team continues to believe (at least publicly) that nothing’s wrong here.

BoNY Three Stars:
  1. Mike Richards (goal, assist, +1)
  2. Daniel Carcillo (goal, assist, +2)
  3. Martin Brodeur (34/37 saves)
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Backstrom ends it

The Cap comeback should be renamed Nicklas Backstrom Day because he absolutely saved his team from a dire situation. It only took 29 seconds for the wonderful franchise center to end it by using a Hab defenseman as a screen and then wiring a perfect laser upstairs past Jaroslav Halak. It was his third of the day, becoming the seventh Washington Capital to record a playoff hat trick. The Swede is genius. It maybe nuts to say but the best two centers may represent Sweden. Though Sid The Kid makes a great argument. He absolutely saved his Pens last night from similar circumstances.

Never has the first week of the playoffs ever been so fun. Every game is unpredictable. Canucks and Kings facing off in Vancity now.

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Caps-Habs II going to sudden death

If you haven’t seen this Caps-Habs II, boy have you missed a lot. What a game they’re seeing on Versus at nervous Verizon where Alex Ovechkin finally awoke netting a goal and three helpers just to get his team into sudden death. Yes. The Scott GomezBrian Gionta Habs once led 4-1 before the Caps furiously rallied in a chaotic third that featured a bit of everything. Hell. Tom Poti even beat up Gomez in a fight that only fired up the desperate home club and its Rock The Red supporters some more. Despite blowing a three-goal lead with Nicklas Backstrom tying it, the Habs went ahead once more off a dreadful Mike Green turnover that led to a pretty two-on-one give-and-go with Tomas “Jagr” Plekanec finishing off Mike Cammalleri’s backdoor set up. It would’ve made Gene Hackman proud from Hoosiers.

It looked like Montreal would hang on but unflappable WJC hero John Carlson surprised Jaroslav Halak with a brilliant rush and wrist shot low glove miraculously tying it 5-5 at 18:39. The poise this kid’s shown teaming with Poti to be by far the Caps’ best on an otherwise dreadful blueline is to die for. He also faked shot and then Halak let up a rebound for Ovie’s first of the postseason that made it 4-3. Amazing stuff that’s impressed strong Versus NYI/NYR duo Sam Rosen and Billy Jaffe. While Green has been a goat proving that he shouldn’t win the Norris, it’s been the 20 year-old Carlson- a 2008 first round pick selected 27th overall that’s stepped up.

Sudden death will be starting shortly. Will the Caps have a hero or will the league’s best regular season team be in a huge hole to eighth Montreal with it shifting to the Bell Centre? Fire up OT!

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Playoffs Day Four

Day Four already! While it still feels a little odd minus my team, these playoffs have lived up its billing. To quote my favorite Bruce Willis The Last Boy Scout character Joe Hallenback, “And then some.”

What great action we’re seeing. Every underdog has demonstrated they belong. What. With even Les Habitants stunning the Caps on Tomas “Jagr” Plekanec’s OT winner in a Game One upset where most notably, they silenced Alex Ovechkin, who had no shots. Shocking. He attempted some but they just never reached its destination. Jaroslav Spacek was responsible along with Andrei Markov for this. Imagine what our Buffalo contingent thinks. It’ll be interesting to see how Ovie and Co. respond in essentially a must win tonight. … Mean time, LOTCB’s Sabres look to go two-for-two against the Bruins this afternoon with Game Two set for 1 ET on NBC. Or if you live in Long Beach, Cali like him, 10 in the morning. Fire up the eggs and coffee! We always kid or at least he does that times are always catered towards the West Coast, referencing late October baseball, March Madness, etc. Hopefully, they’ll win. … The late game features the Kings and Canucks at 10 here on Versus. If it’s anything like Game One, wow. In what looks like the best series, it didn’t disappoint. Great back and forth puck between two teams that don’t care for each other. Jon Quick had himself a nice playoff debut even if it was a losing effort. Roberto Luongo though shaky saved his team’s bacon in sudden death sweeping the puck off the goal line. Eventually, some Sedin magic led to Mikael Samuelsson’s winner. Sick is how we’d describe it. Henrik Sedin showed why he won the Art Ross and probably should get MVP. Eerily reminiscent of that long classic over Dallas three Springs ago almost to the day. Will this be another classic?

Haircut for me and the bro.We’ll review last night’s wild action in a bit.

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Zubrus’s late goal leads Devils to a crucial Game 2 win

If Game 2 at the Rock wasn’t quite a must-win for the Devils it certainly had a (cough) Red Alert-type urgency attached to it, especially after New Jersey lost the lead twice in the first two periods last night. With the game heading towards overtime still tied and the Devils just missing chance after chance, someone had to step up late in the game. Eventually someone did, though even now it remains unclear who.
Danius Zubrus was credited with the game-winning goal at 15:56 of the third period, but from my vantage point it looked like Zach Parise had it, as both took a whack at a loose puck in front of Brian Boucher. Either way it was a dominant shift from those two and Patrik Elias that led to a breakthrough goal, giving the Devils just enough firepower to get back in the series after Ilya Kovalchuk‘s empty-netter sealed a wild win with 33 seconds left.
At times, both teams appeared cautious in Game 1 but that wouldn’t be the case in Game 2. Early and often both teams showed the emotion you would expect from a playoff game between two rivals, and this was evident early when Kovalchuk took a penalty for elbowing just 87 seconds in. Yet, the Devils turned a negative into a positive when Elias sprung Parise for a shorthanded breakaway and the team’s leading goalscorer beat Boucher with a nice move at 2:45 to get the towels waving at the Rock.
Unfortunately that momentum wouldn’t last too long. Despite an edge in shots on goal during the first period, the Devils would find themselves trailing heading into the locker room. Of all people, Aaron Asham got the Flyers on the board at 9:33 when he beat Rob Niedermayer to the net and scored an easy tap-in goal after a feed from Claude Giroux. Figures that the guy does nothing for us but he turns back into the pain in the butt he was with the Isles once he put on a Flyers uniform.
To complicate matters, the refs started to get in the way as well. When Clarkson made a brilliant play to foil a breakaway from behind he got whistled for tripping despite making contact with the puck first and Giroux would take advantage at 15:30, deflecting a Matt Carle shot past Martin Brodeur for a power-play goal. All too often last night I was bemoaning phantom calls against us and non-calls against the team in white and orange, two of which would lead directly to goals (more on the second later).
Be that as it may, the Devils would rebound in the second period with an unlikely offensive weapon scoring at 3:44 to tie the game again. His name? Colin White – and it wasn’t even one of Whitey’s slapshots that happened to get on net, it was a wrist shot that somehow trickled through Boucher. Just shows what can happen when you actually put the puck on net. Kovalchuk and Mike Mottau got the assists on Whitey’s first playoff goal in a decade, which inspired the Devils. Despite having to deal with four seperate Flyer power plays in the second period the Devils outshot Philly 16-12 and dominated play at even-strength.
Fortunately we would take advantage of our lone power play in the period when Andy Greene followed up a dominating shift on the penalty kill by going to the net and tipping an Elias shot home with the man advantage at 13:25, giving the Devils a 3-2 lead. Though Kovalchuk got another secondary assist on the goal, he looked too anxious throughout – taking no fewer than three minor penalties including allowing Darroll Powe to goad him into a matching minor late in the period.
Yet, it was another nonexistent penalty call on Greene (away from the puck to boot) that really got my ire and that of coach Jacques Lemaire, who joked after the game that ‘he’d like to talk about the officials but can’t’. Sure enough, Chris Pronger scored at 18:48 to tie the game again on another deflection goal in front, after we’d missed several chances over the prior few minutes to extend our lead. Early in the third period the Flyers looked like they would take that momentum and ride it to a devastating 0-2 start at the Rock as they got the majority of chances including their seventh power play – to just three for us – and in particular, Brodeur had to be sharp on a two-on-one by making the initial save and stoning Ian Laperriere on a rebound.
Finally the momentum started to shift back again once play returned to even strength but even then I was getting worried as we were missing chance after chance, including one where Brian Rolston had a wide-open Rob Niedermayer in front of the net but didn’t see him and passed too late, where the play died. Kovalchuk and Jamie Langenbrunner had a two-on-one but either Kovalchuk shot it woefully high or Boucher managed to tip it with his glove. Plus (as has been the usual lately) Kovalchuk passed up several opportunities to fire his howitzer of a slap shot, leading me to believe he’s hiding an injury. Really he hasn’t used the slapshot much at all since early March when he got whacked on the hand twice, it seems like he’s playing with half an arsenal only looking for wrist shots.
With all this tension I was getting worried about overtime, but Lemaire finally managed to get Parise on the ice at a time where Pronger was not and his line took advantage with a terrific shift, getting several chances before finally Zubrus scored off of assists from his other linemates, to give the Devils the lead. Even that made me nervous though, with our penchant for blowing late playoff leads and the Flyers immediately got a couple of good chances off the faceoff so I couldn’t exactly enjoy the goal too long before reality set in. Finally, with Boucher pulled we managed to clear the zone a couple of times and Kovalchuk’s wrister found the back of the net, ending it for all intents and purposes despite Peter Laviolette‘s odd timeout down two with half a minute left that nearly made me miss my 10:32 train back to Madison.
Much to my relief there would be no dramatic flops last night and the Devils sewed up a 5-3 win that evened the series. You could look at Game 2 one of two ways, either that our late win gives us momentum and we’ve played a bit better than the Flyers overall in the first two games or that despite throwing everything at them in a must-win at home, we barely managed to survive the second game. It would be nice to see what happens if the calls even out in Game 3, but hey we won in spite of the inconsistent refs and got some unexpected contributions as well as our star players getting on the board, both of which you need at this time of year.
BoNY Three Stars:
  1. Zach Parise (goal, assist, +2 and 6 SOG in 20:06)
  2. Andy Greene (goal and 3 SOG in 20:40)
  3. Claude Giroux (goal, assist)
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Little Things Matter


You watch the promos for the 2010 Stanley Cup Playoffs. You hear about the great Alexander Ovechkin, the great Sidney Crosby, which based on their incredible skill sets, is well deserved. You see the highlights that show dazzling goals, scintillating saves and think to yourself ‘these are THE keys to winning in the NHL Playoffs’ It’s that simple!

Not so fast…

But then over time you realize something else that is not shown on Versus (millions are STILL trying to figure out what network that is), ESPN, NHL Network, and so forth, and these things were evident in the Buffalo Sabres 2-1 victory over the rival Boston Bruins to take a 1-0 lead in the first round series in the Eastern Conference.

Sure, Craig Rivet will get the glory for his shot that beat the Bruins rookie sensation goaltender Tuukka Rask to give the Sabres the 2-1 lead for good. But watching the play closely, the unsung heroes that are so needed in the NHL Playoffs clearly were the biggest key to the goal. First, it was Tim Kennedy’s effort to keep the puck in the zone and feed the puck to Rivet who was streaking down the right wing area. And lastly, the screen by the pesky forward Patrick Kaleta was a thing if beauty, impeding Rask’s vision and allowing the shot by Rivet to go into the net.

The bottom line? Watching the matchups now in the Stanley Cup playoffs, almost every team has their share of strengths and weaknesses, skill players and grinders, and good coaching. Plays like Kennedy and Kaleta make aren’t made for highlight reels, but for the ones who really take notice, can be the real key to advancing or hitting the links a little earlier then expected.

What can be said about Ryan Miller that hasn’t yet? 38 saves tonight, including 23 in the 2nd period, when it appeared the Bruins were taking the game away from the Sabres, Miller stood tall and kept the score tied towards the end of the 2nd before Rivet’s eventual GWG. Given the premium that will be placed on scoring goals in this series, Miller will need to be razor sharp for the Sabres to advance.

Game 2 is set for Saturday at 1pm EST (10am PT for West Coast folks like me). Pass the bacon and eggs for breakfast, and the remote for Sabres playoff hockey!

NOTES:

For those Sabres fans who are so quick to dismiss Thomas Vanek, watch the game tonight again and reflect on how high his skill set really is. Regardless of what you say about Vanek (I refuse to question a player’s heart) when he APPEARS to be motivated, few players have the hands and nose for scoring like he does, as evidenced by his 1st goal setup beautifully by Derek Roy to give the Sabres a 1 goal lead in the 1st. Vanek also had a dazzling move to undress Bruins defenseman Johnny Boychuk in the 3rd. If Vanek keeps playing like this, the Sabres will be even more dangerous.

What was former Sabre Miroslav Satan thinking when he took that inexplicable puck over the glass penalty at the 15:40 mark in the 3rd? Miro needs to be smarter then that…

It seems Mark Recchi has been playing for over 30 years, but the guy can still bring it. He had my nerves going several times tonight, and he is still a threat to make an impact in this series, as evidenced by his PPG to tie the game 1-1.

Tyler Myers: Not a major impact tonight, but the thing that continuously impresses me is his poise in crucial situations. Having said this, the defensemen and the rest of the Sabres need to work on getting the puck out of their zone more effectively. Miller cannot be depended on to make 23 saves in a period too often.

Hits: The Sabres were really hitting well tonight, finishing checks and as a result, dictating the flow of the game to the Bruins. This trend will need to continue for the Sabres to advance.

Any other Sabres fan cringe when they flashed up the stat that the Sabres were 30-0-0 when having a lead after 2 periods? I just hope jinxes are a farce…

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Playoffs?!?!?! Day Two

It’s Day Two of the playoffs. Playoffs??? We’ll be lucky to win a God **** game! Had to get that in there sans Jim Mora. Especially with the Rangers on the golf course which is driving Jazzy Jim batty. Heard he showed at Wachovia for the coup de gras and was fuming. Ahhhh. That made it all better. Nothing like a money hungry, greedy owner who just desired the playoff revenue for a mediocre team so he could justify the ridiculous cost and then raise again at the expense of a too loyal fanbase that bleeds True Blue.

Speaking of which, if you missed New York Times’ Ken Belson’s piece on what those extra gates meant to Camp Dolanvi$ion, we suggest you check it out and try not to laugh too hard. Our favorite part:

But because all N.B.A. and N.H.L. teams must keep dates open at their arenas in case they make the playoffs, the elimination of the Knicks and the Rangers from the postseason means the Garden would remain empty for many more nights in April and May.



“You can’t fill them with two weeks’ notice,” Scott O’Neil, the president of MSG Sports, the division that runs the Rangers and other sports properties, said at a recent news event. “There are more dates in the building if we’re in the playoffs.”

The loss of playoff revenue would also come as Madison Square Garden spends about $800 million to renovate the 42-year-old arena. Home playoff games would not only generate a few more million dollars to help pay for the work, but would also give the Garden’s salesmen more ammunition to sell season tickets, suites and advertising for next season.

It might not cure your playoff appetite but hey. If Dolan’s mad, some salvation. Now, if only some crazed person would slip a little poison in his scotch. 😉 Couldn’t resist. While we are on the sidelines finding other things to do (I missed most of last night except for 1 period of Wings/Yotes and highlights of all 4), sixteen teams’ fans are dealing with anxiety right now. We can just sit back and relax. Don’t ponder our team’s future too much. It’s not advisable. Let’s enjoy the great weather and take it all in. Dream of a much different world minus Jazzy Jim and Glen Savior. Find the dimension over the haze between the sun and moon. Birds are chirping. Life is full of possibilities. Live it.

If Day One was any indication, then we’re in for an interesting playoffs. Especially with all four underdogs winning. Phoenix included with a great come from behind 3-2 triumph over Detroit before the traditional White Out paying homage to Winnipeg. I’ve always loved that about the Yotes. It shows class and tradition. Good on Derek Morris scoring the winner on a bomb off a faceoff. He was huge netting the deciding power play goal and two helpers last night. Also noticed Korp got more ice than Pruuuu. And Bryzgalov stood up making 38 saves. Nice to see Gretzky recognize his former goalie via Puck Daddy pertaining to the Hart. Didn’t we say that a while ago? Though it’s awfully hard to ignore Henrik Sedin, who also was instrumental in aiding us to a second fantasy hockey championship. Safe to say I’ll be protecting one-half of Swede genes.

As for the three road teams that prevailed yesterday, they all have something to prove. Brian Boucher (23 saves) has a shot at redemption and seems to recognize the situation. His Flyer ‘mates don’t want to be known as the team that slipped in due to a skill comp. Yes, Mike Richards’ decider came with one extra out but the puck was all the way on the other side and the change wasn’t blatant. Probably why it wasn’t called. Agreed with Hasan on the Devils, who need to turn up the heat. Offense is their big chance this time. Someone better cue in Lemaire before Friday. … Ever get the feeling it’s just not a player’s year? That’s what it seems with MA Fleury (5 GA on 26), who again wasn’t sharp in the Pens’ 5-4 loss to a shorthanded Sens team minus Kovalev and now without Milan Michalek, who’s done. Poor kid. I noted in my preview that Colin Wilson was a rookie to watch. Well, the Sens boast two in Erik Karlsson (remember that name) and Peter Regin, who both scored in the upset. The kids are hot and the Sens got contributions from pests Neil and Ruutu while Spezza and Alfie were quiet along with Mr. Carrie Underwood. Brian Elliott (17 saves) was good enough despite 2-1-3 from Geno and 3 helpers from Sid to best Flower, who doesn’t inspire much confidence. Would it be nuts to consider Brent Johnson if they somehow fall behind 0-2? We think not. … Now for the best of the bunch. The upstart Avs upset the Sharks in grand fashion, sending San Jose into full panic mode thanks to Chris Stewart’s bankshot off Rob Blake with 50 ticks left. How is he their captain again? It didn’t sound like it was Nabby, who made 28 saves and kept his flat team in it. As Scotty Hockey noted in this tweet, why wasn’t Jed Ortmeyer dressed? Instead, Todd McLellan went with seven D only giving Jason Demers 6:53. Huh? Why go against logic? Ort’s a heart and soul guy that’s been part of the Sharks’ season. Curious to say the least. It’d also help if Marleau-Thornton-Heatley remembered to show when it counts. No points. Eight shots with five from pass-happy Jumbo Joe and a minus-three won’t cut it. Neither will another first round ouster.

So what to expect with three more opening tonight on Day Two? Figure the home teams to take care of business. They’ll be more on their toes. Buffalo will be minus Jochen Hecht for a bit due to a bad finger. How’d he do that? Our favorite Tyler Ennis is in. The big goalie match-up in Rask-Miller is on. The Sabres should still have more offense. Especially if Vanek continues his tear. How Connolly performs will be key. For the B’s, Miro Satan tries to haunt his ex-teammates. Chara, Bergeron, Krejci and Lucic are Boston keys. If they get anything from Michael Ryder, that’s huge. Buffalo has Tyler Myers on D with Rivet and Pominville and Roy along with grit master Patrick Kaleta. Figure it to be tight. … Les Habitants and Ovie Caps get underway on Versus. Can Halak stone AO, Backstrom, Semin, Green and the rest of the league’s most potent offense? It’s advisable for the Habs to counter slowing down their high flying opponent that’s prone to mistakes. Air tight D led by the series’ top defenseman Andrei Markov is pivotal. So too will be old Devil duo Gomer and Gio, who finished well. Cammalleri needs to find the magic touch. Tomas Plekanec has been their MVP. The play of the Kostitsyns and ice cold Benoit Pouliot are crucial. Can Max Lapierre get underneath the skin of Ovechkin? The Caps boast great depth in battle tested Knuble along with Fleischmann, Laich and Eric Fehr. Steckel, Bradley and Chimera are high energy. Jeff Schultz is intrumental defensively and Poti has been a good Cap. So, it should be easy, right? As long as Theodore shuts the door on his former team, for sure. If he’s pulled, all bets are off. … The final match pits the Kings vs Canucks. Hollywood against British Columbia. You have Sedin genius along with key cogs Ryan Kesler, Burrows and Mason Raymond plus Cup savvy Sammy making these Nucks legit. Especially with Demitra, Wellwood and Bernier in reserve. The key will be Louie. Can he get it back? If guys like Ehrhoff and Salo stay healthy, then a blueline that features Edler and Bieksa becomes a real strength with Shane O’Brien providing depth. What if Willie Mitchell (concussion) was available in mid-May/June? First, they have to get there which means winning two rounds. LA isn’t a good match-up because they boast the kind of forwards that could give them fits. Kopitar, Smyth and Justin Williams are very potent. Especially with the Cup winner finding his form. Dustin Brown is a human freight train. He’ll need support from Frolov and Jarret Stoll. We love Wayne Simmonds and Zeus has bounced back with a big season. Even Modin has fit in. The Kings boast the best defender in the series in Norris candidate Drew Doughty, who’s a beast. Offense. Defense. You name it. He does it. Jack Johnson has quietly had a good year. Both along with vets Sean O’Donnell and Rob Scuderi will see a lot of big minutes. Matt Greene provides beef and Randy Jones has been steady. If Jon Quick regains confidence, the Canucks are in trouble. Even if we took them to Lord Stanley, this is a dangerous match-up that promises to be entertaining. Fasten your seatbelts.

Day Two Schedule

Boston @ Buffalo 7 ET
Montreal @ Washington 7 ET Versus
Los Angeles @ Vancouver 10 ET Versus

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Rationalization central

Even though I picked against the Devils in this playoff series and the team’s played like mostly crap since early January, I was still foolish enough to think that winning four of our last five showed we were at least ready to fight the good fight and getting prepared for the challenges ahead. Especially playing against a rival that’s beaten you like a drum this season, there should have been no lack of motivation last night.

Silly me.

If the Devils want to rationalize their 2-1 Game 1 loss last night away and say they played well and got no breaks, well that’s their problem – they’re the ones in denial. Did we play well defensively, sure…we held them to fifteen shots and two goals, whoopdie freaking doo. Doesn’t mean much when you completely sacrifice offense in the process, only scoring one with less than a handful of quality chances throughout the entire game. And it especially doesn’t mean much when you play with zero passion or urgency except for the last three minutes of the first period and the last three of the game.

My first inclination that we were going to be in for a long night came early, when Ilya Kovalchuk had a glorious chance in the slot a few minutes in but Brian Boucher robbed him with a glove save, and that set a tone for the night. Not that Boucher was all that great, in fact that wound up being his best save of the night by far but it gave his team confidence in him and got us thinking ‘oh my god, here we go again’…and when I say us I don’t just mean fans like myself, I mean the players themselves. We outshot them 9-4 in the first period okay, but it was a tentative, nervous start for both teams until the Devils got some offensive pressure in the final minutes and earned a power play chance that spread out into the second period.

Whatever happened in the locker room between periods certainly didn’t help since even with fresh ice the power play stunk (what else is new?), then again having fresh ice didn’t mean all that much considering the puck was bouncing all over the place all night and as one anonymous Devil put it – the ice is always crap here. Just wait till the Nets move in full-time the next couple years. Still, it felt like the team was too accepting of their fate and eventually the Flyers took control.

When the Flyers finally did score it was – imagine this – a power play goal by Chris Pronger at 9:25 which I still can’t figure out how he scored since I haven’t seen a replay, he was crashing the net and either deflected the puck or had the puck deflect off him and past Martin Brodeur for a goal. Then several minutes later came a bit of contreversy when Mike Richards scored the Flyers’ second at 16:27 off a rifle of a shot. Turns out the Flyers had a too many men on the ice that they got away with…considering all of the times we got thumbed for this early in the season I might have been more mad about this, if I wasn’t already convinced we deserved to be screwed anyway.

It was about this point that the ‘sellout’ crowd (if last night was a true sellout then the Devils’ power play is a well-oiled machine) finally started to turn on the Devils and gave them well-deserved boos off the ice at the end of the second period. They’d already lost me way before and the booing continued early in the third period when the Devils got a four-minute power play after a high stick from Oskars Bartulis drew blood and managed to get maybe one or two ineffective shots on the net.

As much as I don’t want to admit it because I like him and he actually tries, Kovalchuk was a big part of the problem last night. Frequently he couldn’t keep the puck in the zone and made bad decisions – passing when he should shoot, shooting when he should pass and both he and Danius Zubrus screwed up a two-on-one earlier in the game when they both skated too wide and were practically on the boards, giving Boucher an a easy save on a one-timer by Zubrus that barely hit the net.

Still, a lot of my ire last night was reserved for the so-called captain, Jamie Langenbrunner. I’ve mostly clammed up as the 35-year old’s gone back to being ten and whined about being benched for two weeks, I vowed not to say anything until the playoffs started since there was always the possibilty he would answer the bell once playoff time came. Well the bell rang last night and Captain America was nowhere to be found. Oh I saw him on the ice enough but let’s just say he did nothing to help the cause last night and has been mostly awful for weeks. Maybe he should put on a USA jersey, then he might actually come alive.

There have been rumors of an off-ice issue that might well have contributed to the captain’s recent PMS displays. I’m not going to repeat what I heard here though it’s been around the Internet enough (especially in TG’s column), the only reason I’m even alluding to it is because I heard it from the friend of a friend and the captain’s behavior has been frighteningly odd lately. Suffice it to say it’s nothing that would even be his fault per se or involve anyone’s health, but if the rumor was true let’s just say I’d understand why he would be a moody ****.

Despite that, dude you’re 35 and the captain of the team, you need to be the leader…if your head’s really that far up you know where then take a leave of absence. When the entire team has to walk on eggshells around you because you’re ***** about being benched and treated like an actual member of the team instead of someone above everyone else, that’s beneath what a captain should be. Or Jacques Lemaire should scratch Langenbrunner and Brian ‘Roger Dorn’ Rolston again while he’s at it. As clueless as Jay Pandolfo and Vladimir Zharkov are offensively they at least try. Can they even be any worse than either of these two have been lately?

Not that Lemaire didn’t make his own bizarre decisions last night…to start with the d-pairings were rather Sutter-ish, sticking Paul Martin with Andy Greene and leaving not just one but two d-pairings slow as molasses without a puck mover to help the offensive transition. Again, this is a case where Lemaire threw out the baby with the bathwater. Maybe reuniting Martin with Greene helped the defense last night but it sure didn’t help the offense any, not when you have Colin White failing to keep the puck in the offensive zone multiple times and other defensemen staying back in the prevent, not even helping to create offense.

Lemaire also threw the fourth line on the ice each time after the Flyers scored once he saw the Flyers’ fourth line. With the last line change you should at least attempt to switch momentum a little, and on the second one of those shifts the fourth line got hemmed in its zone and almost gave up another goal that would have been a back-breaker. Not to mention I saw the captain, Rolston and Rob Niedermayer a little too much for my liking at even strength. It’s a good thing all those late power plays ran up the icetime of Zach Parise and Travis Zajac because otherwise I hardly noticed them on the ice at all. It seemed to me as if Lemaire was line-matching again, though the end-game TOI’s don’t support that.

Anyway, back to the recap – after our failed double-minor came another hideous power play later in the period after a delay of game was called once Braydon Coburn put the net off its moorings. Isn’t that supposed to be a penalty shot? Not that we would have converted on that, it probably would have been another way for us to screw up last night the way we did on special teams and just about everywhere else. Although we outshot the Flyers 9-2 in the third period, having a ton of power plays and the Flyers stand around and wait for us to self-destruct contributed to that. Finally came a breakthrough of sorts with 2:43 left when Zajac scored on a slapshot off of assists from Greene and Parise and then the usual endgame futile run that came up short.

From what little I’ve heard and read of the postgame up to this point, it sounds like the whole team’s in denial – claiming they played well but got bad breaks, well if the object of the game was to keep the shot total down then yeah you played real well but this isn’t a one-dimensional game people, you actually have to score at some point to win! Maybe you guys believe the bad press on Boucher, that he’ll give up a goal on just about anything you throw on net but that isn’t the case, you guys actually have to – you know, work – to get goals!

If the mentality around here doesn’t change and in a hurry, well maybe then I was being too generous to the Devils picking the Flyers in 6.

BoNY Three Stars:

  1. Chris Pronger (goal, -1 in 30:01 TOI)
  2. Mike Richards (goal, assist in 22:53)
  3. Brian Boucher (23/24 saves)
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