Deadline Day 2010

It’s Deadline Day. Thus far, a few deals but nothing earth shattering. We’ll just list them and do insight later.

WEDNESDAY 3/3/10 DEADLINE DAY

1.NJD acquire D Martin Skoula from Tor for 2010 5th Rd Pick
2.Phx acquires D Derek Morris from Bos for 2011 4th Rd Pick
3.Mtl trades F Matt D’Agostini to Stl for Aaron Palushaj
4.Bos acquires D Dennis Seidenberg & D Matthew Bartkowski from Fla for F’s Byron Bitz, Craig Weller + 2010 2nd Rd Pick
5.Ana acquires D Aaron Ward from Car for G Justin Pogge + 4th Rd Pick (’10 or ’11)
6.Car trades F Scott Walker to Wsh for 2010 7th Rd Pick
7.Van acquires F Yan Stastny from Stl for Pierre-Cedric Labrie
8.Phx acquires F Wojtek Wolski from Col for F’s Peter Mueller and Kevin Porter
9.NYR acquire F Kris Newbury from Det for F Jordan Owens
10.Phx acquires D Mathieu Schneider from Van for D Sean Zimmerman + Conditional 2010 6th Rd Pick
11.LA acquires F Jeff Halpern from TB for F Teddy Purcell and 2010 3rd Rd Pick

12.Wsh acquires F Eric Belanger from Min for 2010 2nd Rd Pick

13.Ana acquires G Curtis McElhinney from Cgy for Vesa Toskala

14.Buf acquires F Raffi Torres from CBJ for D Nathan Paetsch and 2010 2nd Rd Pick

15.Atl acquires F Clarke MacArthur from Buf for 2010 3rd + 4th Rd Picks

16.Wsh reacquires D Milan Jurcina from CBJ for 2010 6th Rd Pick

17.Tor trades F Lee Stempniak to Phx for D Matt Jones, 2010 4th + 7th Rd Picks

18.Wsh acquires D Joe Corvo from Car for D Brian Pothier, F Oskar Osala + 2011 2nd Rd Pick

19.LA deals for F Freddy Modin from CBJ for Condional Draft Pick

20.Ana acquires G Joey MacDonald from Tor for 2011 7th Rd Pick

21.Van acquires D Andrew Alberts from Car for 2010 3rd Rd Pick

22.Fla trades F Matt Rust to CBJ for D Mathieu Roy

23.Ana acquires D Lubomir Visnovsky from Edm for D Ryan Whitney + 2010 6th Rd Pick

24.Tor gets D Chris Peluso from Pit for 2010 6th Rd Pick

25.Nsh trades for F Dustin Boyd from Cgy for 2010 4th Rd Pick

26.Cgy acquires D Steve Staios from Edm for Aaron Johnson + 3rd Rd Pick in 2010 or 2011

27.Col gets F’s Stephane Yelle and Harrison Reed from Car for F Cedric Lalonde-McNicoll + 2010 6th Rd Pick

28.Phx acquires F Alexandre Picard from CBJ for F Chad Kolarik

29.NYR acquire D Anders Eriksson from Phx for G Miika Wiikman + 2011 7th Rd Pick

30.Phx gets F Petteri Nokelainen from Ana for 2011 6th Rd Pick

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Devils return from the Olympics is a successful roller-coaster

Well this morning I found one surefire way to keep the blood pressure down…don’t watch West Coast games. Sometimes I decide to just go to sleep when the game starts and tape the game so I can wake up early and watch it the next morning fresh before going to work. I didn’t have to check the score before popping in the tape but did anyway, when I saw a replay of Jacques Lemaire‘s press conference on MSG+. When he was asked about what happened when it got to 4-0 I was pleasantly surprised it’d even got to that point, but I got the impression ‘well we gave up a couple of late goals, big deal’. It wasn’t till I checked the box score that I found out it actually got to 4-3 with plenty of time left – yikes!

The thought of me being spared staying up till 1 AM and getting pissy about another goal bomb (an apt term I lifted from NJDevs) dropped on us was enough to make me laugh this one off…almost. You’re living in a cave if you think all of these multi-goal leads that are dissapearing aren’t a concern. Yes, the Devils are getting Paul Martin back – supposedly. And no I didn’t expect to shut down a team as explosive as the Sharks all night, especially when you’re talking about a defense where Andy Greene‘s basically our number one, and lately he’s been looking more like Brent Sutter‘s nervous, offensively challenged Greene than the 2009 version since early January.

Let’s be honest though there was more good than bad about last night’s game, at the top of the list being the chemistry shown by our alleged second line of Ilya Kovalchuk, Patrik Elias and Danius Zubrus. Is it crazy to say Zubrus is having his best season as a Devil, when he missed like thirty games? Of course it helps when you play with talented players but even then, not everyone can produce. That line buzzed all night and combined for a couple of goals, with Zubrus opening the scoring at 11:13 of the second after a sequence where Kovalchuk put one on net and after Elias (who did get an assist earlier in the play) was prevented from cashing in on the rebound by Kent Huskins, Zubrus swooped in and put the loose puck home. Kovalchuk also scored a big goal with just eighteen seconds remaining in the second period with a hard wrist shot from the point, giving him his second goal as a Devil and a power play tally to boot, after assists from Zach Parise and Travis Zajac.

Also our top line showed they weren’t allowing any post-Olympic hangover. After the two Z’s assisted on Kovalchuk’s goal, they scored one of their own at 5:44 of the third when Zajac beat Evgeni Nabokov with another hard shot on net, with the Olympians – Parise and Jamie Langenbrunner – getting the assists on Zajac’s 20th of the season that seemingly put the game away, giving the Devils a 4-0 lead. Our other goal-scorer was a bit of a surprise – Mark Fraser potted his third goal of the year just thirty-five seconds after Zubrus broke the ice with a slap shot from the point, after a nice feed from David Clarkson, making his long-awaited return to the lineup in style with that assist, a +2 and 2 SOG in 18:31. Anssi Salmela also got an assist on that goal.

So basically our top three lines were all involved and our shaky D actually did a good job shutting down the Sharks for much of the game, allowing twenty shots total and few quality chances other than Joe Thornton hitting a crossbar in the first couple minutes. When the floodgates finally opened though, it wasn’t pretty. Greene made a bizarre decision to vacate the front of the net, leaving Devin Setoguchi open in front for a one-timer that got the Sharks going at 8:46. After a bad penalty from Dean McAmmond (granted, the only one the Devils took last night), a Rob Blake slapshot rebounded right to Setoguchi for his second of the game at 10:35. Finally, Joe Pavelski scored in close just fifty-seven seconds later. So basically in the amount of time one needs to take a dump literally, the Devils took one figuratively. Within the span of 2:57, a 4-0 game turned into 4-3.

Lemaire saw enough and called timeout, fortunately whatever he said got the team back on point and they shut the door the rest of the night. Really Kovalchuk could have added to the lead twice, first on a breakaway when he got stopped by his countryman Nabokov and later on when he somehow failed to score in an empty net after retrieving the puck deep in the Sharks’ zone. Still, the Devils got a much-needed win, especially with the Penguins’ earlier win over a Ryan Miller-less Sabres team put them in the division lead for the first time in months. Winning in San Jose put the Devils right back in front. Of course that race is coming down to the wire no matter what, especially with the Pens’ acquisitions of Alexei Ponikarovsky and Jordan Leopold yesterday.

It’ll be interesting to see what other cards Lou Lamoriello, the Penguins’ Ray Shero and other GM’s play in the seven hours between now and the trade deadline.

BoNY Three Stars:

  1. Ilya Kovalchuk (goal, assist, +1 and 5 SOG in 20:39)
  2. Devin Setoguchi (two goals, 5 SOG)
  3. Travis Zajac (goal, assist)
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Some Crow Please?

Did we speak too soon? The Rangers sure shut me up in that second, scoring four unanswered. Ryan Callahan, we H-E-A-R-T you. Every fan loves how your represented us along with Dru for Team USA. How impressive was Cally in Vancouver? He even won some enemy fans.

How does he respond to a high Matt Carkner hit in flat first period? By getting the four-goal barrage started by inside outing Carkner and beating Brian Elliott (4 GA on 7 shots) with a forehand deke top shelf. The man is the heart and soul of this team, proving it once again by doing whatever it takes to put turn this game around- scoring twice, blocking shots and just making key defensive plays. His teammates responded after a Tort timeout following icing by lighting up Elliott for three in 2:02 breaking it open. At the time, that lone Cally shot which was hard to see go in because it stuck in net was the only one halfway through.


Brandon Dubinsky scored his 14th, using a sliding Anton Volchenkov as a screen whistling one upstairs. Then, a hustling Callahan who started the play with solid play in end, got to a Sean Avery rebound backhanding his second of the night home. He’s now up to 17 on the season. Five away from last year’s career high 22. Not bad for a guy who got out slowly. Avery then struck off a great Enver Lisin backhand set up finishing off a 2-on-1 on the doorstep, chasing Elliott. Much rumored Dan Girardi started the play with a great read in his end.

Near the period’s conclusion, birthday boy Henrik Lundqvist made a big save on Ryan Shannon before who else but Cally cleared the zone. One period to go.

The crow is warming up.

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Oh The Pain

Joe Benigno says it a lot when it comes to his teams (Mets, Jets, Knicks and Rangers) and it certainly applies to the Rangers. Not even halfway through the first trailing 1-zip at Ottawa and already I miss the Olympics badly. Well, they sure have influenced a lot of sarcastic doom and gloom over on Twitter. One period of Ranger hockey. What the Booshirts do to their own fans:

Please Sather trade Joey to WFAN where they know nothing RT @BattleOfNewYork: stfu Michelemouth yeah cause they actually care about WINNING
take me out to the ballgame, take me out with the crowd
@nicolewesttt yes everything we’re not RT @nicolewesttt the Sens are good passers. really good. SCARY good
Hey, Rangers, hit someone!
‘but he makes good trades’ .. ‘but look what he did with Edmonton’ .. ‘but ALMOST playoffs is better than nothing’ = #NYR decade of failure
If the gold medal game created any new hockey fans, this Ranger/Senator game is changing their minds back.
Wait…Redden and Gilroy on the PP…guess Torts didn’t get the “How to Score on us Shorthanded” memo…
this is perfect RT @eddiekane150 I really am not looking forward to tomorrow and whatever Sather does. Whatever it is it will be stupid.
iliveforsports Can we go back to the Olympics please? lmao 

@BattleOfNewYork for its one, two, three strikes, you’re out at the old ball game, baseball season cant get here soon enough

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Deadline Eve

For many, Christmas Eve takes on special meaning. The same can be said of Deadline Eve for puckers everywhere. With such a brief chaotic period for GMs to trade, expect the unexpected. Who knows what will happen between now and tomorrow’s 3 ET deadline. You know what’s great is that sometimes, a couple of late deals sneak through making it all the more exciting for everybody.

While talks will continue, 24 teams are in action on the first busy night back from the Olympics. Sure. Detroit defeated Colorado 3-2 on Nick Lidstrom’s winner. But there’s a cool baker’s dozen with all four Battle teams returning to the ice, including the Sabres taking on Crosby’s Pens. Think Ryan Miller must be sick of him already? Don’t forget the Winter Classic ending as well. The Islanders play host to the Blackhawks with Dwayne Roloson getting the start. The latest from CSN’s Tim Panaccio has Rolo not going to the goalie-desperate Flyers, who lost Ray Emery for the season. Michael Leighton has played well but figure them to chase after Tomas Vokoun, who perhaps the Blackhawks might be interested in.

For the Rangers who are in Ottawa tonight, they’ll be minus Mike Del Zotto and Marian Gaborik with Corey Potter in and Dan Girardi expected to play. As we noted in our updated post, our sincerest apologies on the Girardi oversight. He still could move following the game. We’ll just have to wait and see. Also of interest, both Aaron Voros and Enver Lisin have been put on waivers. Funny how the first guy worked his butt off even if overpaid while the other never really got a fair shake from John Tortorella after the club acquired him for Lauri Korpikoski…typical.

The Devils have the late game in San Jose against fraud Joe Thornton, who as Buffalo contributor Brian Sanborn noted to me last night, smiled during Canada’s celebration because he sure didn’t do much to help them win gold. Sad but true. Between his disappearing act and Evgeni Nabokov’s quarterfinal implosion along with Russian ‘mates, you think Shark fans might be a little concerned?!?!?!?!?! As for the Devs, figure Martin Brodeur to be angry after being benched for Roberto Luongo in similar fashion to how he replaced Cujo at Salt Lake eight years prior. Though it’s worth noting the year MB30 won gold in net, the Candy Canes eliminated them in the first round. Maybe sitting was a good omen. Zach Parise also wasn’t satisfied with silver and should come out on fire. The Devs get back feisty winger David Clarkson, who will be a huge key down the stretch. Paul Martin is still a giant question mark. Might Lou be interested in another D?

A few players to note who are healthy scratches tonight:

Sean Bergenheim-NYI
Alexei Ponikarovsky-Tor
Aaron Ward-Car

Sure there is more but we’re punching away quickly before the puck drops. What else? Well, 48 year-old Chris Chelios is back signing with Hotlanta. Sure is inspirational. The Thrash also added rugged Russian forward Evgeny Artyukhin last night from Anaheim for Nathan Oystrick and a conditional pick. The Ducks also swung a deal just before with Chitown sending Nick Boynton to the Windy City for future considerations. What might that be? An old Jim McMahon Super Bowl poster? … The Wild have re-signed Marek Zidlicky for three years, $12 million. So, he’s off the summer board.

Well, that’s it for now. We’ll have more later.

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Islanders deal Sutton to Ottawa, look towards future (Updated)

Andy Sutton has played his last game for the Islanders. Well, at least for the time being. He can always re-up this summer. The 34 year-old rugged defenseman was dealt by the club earlier today to Ottawa for a 2010 second round pick (SJ).

In three seasons off the Meadowbrook, the former Thrasher who GM Garth Snow signed in 2007 was a solid citizen who played his usual physical game. That gritty style saw him miss 59 games last season, including the final 50 due to a broken foot. He also missed 24 in Year One. In the final year of his contract, Sutton’s been relatively healthy getting into 54 of the Isles’ 62, producing a solid 2009-10 campaign that includes four goals, eight helpers, 73 penalty minutes, a club best 155 hits and just a minus-three rating. His 153 blocked shots rank second in the league, showing how dedicated the man is to helping a team be successful.

Now, Sutton moves to his fifth team (SJ, Min, Atl, NYI, Ott) where he’ll try to help the Senators make some noise in the playoffs. They currently lead Buffalo by a point in the Northeast holding down the No.3 seed. Adding him to a blueline that at the moment still includes Anton Volchenkov, Chris Phillips, Filip Kuba and Matt Carkner and Alexandre Picard should bolster them. Especially with familiar face Chris Campoli and rookie Erik Karlsson out with injuries. The Sens also recalled Brian Lee.

As for the Islanders, it’s a wise move because they got good value in return for an injury prone player whose contract expires. Snow did well here. Now, the question becomes does he move Martin Biron? The Flyers could come calling for Dwayne Roloson. Especially with Ray Emery done for the season. But Rolo has another year remaining and with Rick DiPietro back on the mend, it wouldn’t seem to make a whole lot of sense to move their most dependable goalie. UPDATE: According to Bob McKenzie, the Flyers are in talks looking to acquire Roloson, who’s expected to get the start tonight at home against the Blackhawks.

With Mark Streit, Bruno Gervais, Jack Hillen and close to being re-signed Andrew MacDonald comprising the club’s top four, the Isles are set up well moving forward. Freddy Meyer has been solid. Radek Martinek is back next year but start the over/under at 35 for the unlucky 33 year-old Czech. Due to the trade, Dustin Kohn was recalled from Bridgeport. Boasting a surplus of young D prospects in the system that includes Calvin de Haan, Matt Donovan and Travis Hamonic, the franchise will continue to get younger filled with promise.

Along with young trio John Tavares, Kyle Okposo and Josh Bailey up front and emerging second-year coach Scott Gordon behind the bench, referencing Biggie, the “Sky’s The Limit.”

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Girardi might be on move (UPDATED)

As of this morning, defenseman Dan Girardi remains a Ranger. Whether or not that changes remains to be seen. Yesterday, he was held out of practice and didn’t make the trip to Ottawa for tonight’s first game out of the Olympic Break. UPDATE: Girardi is in Ottawa and likely will play with both Del Zotto and Gaborik sitting out. He still could be traded with Florida a possible destination with the Rangers interested in David Booth. Our sincere apologies for any confusion!

Rumors first surfaced he could be on the move prior to the roster freeze with the Panthers a possible destination. Last night, there was talk that Glen Sather was in discussions with the Sharks. Girardi is in the final year of his contract earning $1.6 million this season (1.55 cap hit). He’ll become a Group II free agent on July 1 and will be due a significant raise which could be in the $3 million range. With other defensemen in play for the club’s future, that along with a list of possible replacements could be enough reason to consider trading him. In the event he doesn’t re-sign, the Blueshirts would lose him for nothing.

In his fourth season, the 25 year-old Welland, Ontario native who signed as a free agent with the club on July 1, 2006, has been a solid citizen working his way into the top four on the Ranger blueline. As a rookie, he effectively worked with Fedor Tyutin while Marek Malik teamed with lone holdover Michal Rozsival, supplying the club with enough balance to have Buffalo on the ropes before Chris Drury bailed them out.
Fast forward three years later and Girardi has evolved into a steady partner for Marc Staal, who when needed are utilized by John Tortorella as a shutdown tandem. Granted, he’s probably better suited as a four or five. But this is the Rangers, who are desperate to dump waste Wade Redden to Edmonton for injury risk Sheldon Souray. Then there’s Rozsival, who’s game has come together lately but the $5 million price tag will be a tough sell.

With the organization again recalling Corey Potter, it could mean either Mike Del Zotto isn’t ready or Girardi’s a goner. Factor in Matt Gilroy and Bobby Sanguinetti, who could make it possible for the club to revamp the back end. For a frustrated Ranger fan who’s seen Ilkka Heikkinen and Mike Sauer jerked around, the look could’ve been much different. But given the hefty salaries along with Slats’ huge ego, they didn’t have any maneuverability. Typical.

If Girardi goes, the question is what for? What exactly is Sather planning? Our D isn’t good to begin with. The big picture is moving forward instead of backwards, which is why I’m not crazy about acquiring Souray. Even if his $4.5 M comes off a couple of years from now. I could care less about making the playoffs. Trades like the deals for Nik Antropov and Derek Morris were useless because he wasted assets for rentals.

That can’t happen this time. If there’s a deal to be had, it has to be with the future in mind. Otherwise, we’re stuck in neutral. Don’t hold your breath.

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Devils’ stretch drive preview

So for a fan, while I’m glad to see the Devils back their return begins the worst way possible – with a 10:30 start. Well, maybe it’s actually the best time for the team to get a West Coast trip in with the Olympians not needing far to travel from Vancouver to join their rested teammates. Still, the Devils will go from February 12 to March 10 between home games – a total of four weeks, before they conclude the final month of the season with eleven games at the Rock. In total, the team will play twenty-one games in 41 days from Tuesday till the finale against the Sabres on April 11. Interestingly, the Devils have closed the season at home against their eventual playoff opponent the last two years, but it could be unlikely this year unless the Sabres and Devils both lose the division and wind up in the 4-5 series.

Earlier in the season I said this year would be judged in three parts: the first half of the season, the stretch drive from New Year’s to the Olympics and then the post-Olympic sprint headlined out of the box with the zaniness known as the NHL trade deadline. While the Devils passed the first part of the year with straight A’s, the second part was all but disastrous as New Jersey limped into the break 5-11-2 in their last eighteen games. By some divine intervention though they remained in first place a point in front of the Penguins with a game in hand, holding the second seed in the conference only behind the ridiculously hot Capitals, who’ve basically lapped the field (thirteen points in front) as far as getting the top seed in the East.

So now begins the third and final part of the regular season. Despite some fans’ idiocy on the internet, there is no danger of the Devils missing the playoffs. Not when the bubble teams are all around .500. Odds are it’ll only take around 86-88 points to get the last spot this year and the Devils already have 77 so making the tournament isn’t the issue. One could argue home ice isn’t an issue either, especially with the team having gone 2-5 at the Rock in playoff games but after the anomaly of being way below .500 at home and perfect on the road in October, things have become more normalized since then with the team compiling a 20-9-1 record at the Rock, going 19-5-1 since the start of November. After the Devils won their first nine games on the road however, they’ve gone 8-12-2 away from New Jersey since then.

Maybe the bigger issue with getting a higher seed is the quality of your first-round opponent. Should the Devils lose the division they’ll likely either face a brutal Sabres team or a surprisingly good Senators team in the first round, assuming they don’t drop further in the standings since there’s currently some separation between the top five and the bubble teams. Of course, you could get the wrong match-up against a bubble team like say, the Rangers and Henrik Lundqvist‘s seemingly .00001 GAA against the Devils – or even the Flyers who the Devils are 1-3-1 against this year and might also be in the market for a goalie (aren’t they always?).

Larger point here is it doesn’t really matter where the Devils finish, so long as they come out of the winter malaise before the playoffs and stop blowing two-goal leads every other night. Not to mention having a healthy roster would help. For the first time since October, the Devils almost have all hands on deck with only the record-slowly healing arm of Paul Martin remaining on IR and finally recent acquisition Ilya Kovalchuk can get some meaningful practice time in with the rest of the team. Especially with a reasonable schedule this week seeing games in San Jose, then two days off before the trip to Calgary to get a look at former coach Brent Sutter‘s Red Deer Flames, then concluding the road trip against hapless Edmonton on Sunday before the showdown with the Rangers next Wednesday.

Chief among my concerns is the workload of Martin Brodeur. While the Olympics were at least a temporary salve and gave him enough rest for the stretch drive, as I said in my prior blog I’m not sure it’ll really matter come April assuming he plays his usual 75+ games. Currently, backup Yann Danis has more relief appearances (five) than starts (four), despite a 1.85 GAA and .932 save percentage. Will Brodeur’s uneven performance the last two months including the Olympics convince Lou Lamoriello and Jacques Lemaire once and for all they have to manage their biggest asset? Probably not, but maybe the embarrassment he endured during the Olympics of being benched and watching Roberto Luongo lead Canada to a gold fuels him for hopefully the team’s longest playoff run since 2003 – which would only require going six games in the second round, unfortunately.

Defensively Martin’s seemingly never-ending injury remains a concern but the Olympic break should at least prove beneficial for Colin White, Bryce Salvador and especially Andy Greene, who’s already played much more during the first 3/4ths of the season than he ever has in two entire seasons with the team, as well as Mark Fraser who’d been playing everyday rather unexpectedly. Hopefully Anssi Salmela also looks like the player he was in his first couple of games after coming over from the Thrashers than he was during a final, hurried return against the Hurricanes in the last game before the break. At least he doesn’t have to adapt to the system like most of our deadline acquisitions since he came up through Lowell after all and played for the team last year.

Up front, Jamie Langenbrunner and Zach Parise showed off their chemistry to the world and shouldn’t miss a beat once reunited with Travis Zajac, sporting a fresh tan from Costa Rica. How quickly the second line jells – assuming Patrik Elias, Ilya Kovalchuk and Dainius Zubrus remain together for more than five minutes – will tell the story on how fast the Devils’ offense can pick it up. At least they did pick it up in spurts once we traded for Kovalchuk, from 21 goals in 13 games just before the trade to sixteen goals in six games after it. Not exactly great, but an improvement. And adding David Clarkson to the lineup also adds more depth to the top three lines and some grit to a power play that looked as dark in the last twenty games as the Prudential Center during that infamous January game against Tampa Bay, going from a top five power play at 21.9% efficiency during the first half of the season to an ungodly 8.9% that ranked last in the league during the most recent stretch, even with Kovalchuk.

Coaching-wise, my two big concerns with Jacques Lemaire before the Kovalchuk trade were Brodeur’s workload and the team’s reliance on a checking line. One of the happy byproducts of adding Kovalchuk has been the virtual ending of the checking line concept. While third-line center Rob Niedermayer still gets minutes, Jay Pandolfo hasn’t as much and the top two lines now get the majority of the minutes. Hopefully the third line, now that reinforcements have arrived, becomes viable enough to at least ensure we don’t run the top six forwards into the ground a la John Tortorella in Tampa Bay with Vinny Lecavalier, Brad Richards and Martin St. Louis. Still, you pretty much have to hope for a healthy lineup to ensure we don’t go back to the old, slow checking line come April once again. And the power play should be a concern but it isn’t for me, both given Kovalchuk now having more time to acclimate and the fact Lemaire’s usually been good at coaching special teams with average overall offensive talent in Minnesota.

As far as Lou, well if he does nothing else before the trade deadline you can’t accuse him of not trying to go for it this year after the shock blockbuster in getting both Kovalchuk and Salmela from Atlanta. While I would like to see them get another defenseman who can fit in the system and/or another centerman who can actually win some faceoffs and not be a total zero offensively, it is possible the team returns to its first-half form regardless and is only enhanced by Kovalchuk’s presence and the return of almost everyone to the lineup. Plus I’m not sure it’s likely Lou will want to dig into the farm system too much more after giving up three players and a first-rounder to Atlanta, unless he’s starting to think his own time to win is running out.
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Deadline heating up

One day later with the roster freeze lifted, teams are already quick to make moves. Especially with the chaotic 3 PM Wednesday deadline. There’s already been a couple of noteworthy deals.

1.The Pens  acquired D Jordan Leopold from the Panthers for a 2011 2nd Rd pick, bolstering their blueline.

2.The Predators picked up D Denis Grebeshkov from the Oilers for a 2010 2nd rounder. Most expect Nashville to unload future UFA Dan Hamhuis.As for Edmonton, they’re in discussions with the Rangers revolving around Sheldon Souray and Wade “Tinman” Redden. The 32 year-old Souray is still hurt and has two years left at $4.5 million per. Tho I’m no fan of his, if Slats can unload one cap headache, fine. But what else would be involved?

Also see the Isles and Jackets swung a “blockbuster” swapping Greg Moore for former Ranger draft pick Dylan Reese.

Other moves of interest included Calgary inexplicably re-signing Matt Stajan for four years at $3.5 per. Yikes. He’s a nice player but come on. Likewise, Dallas re-signed Avery clone Steve Ott for four years, $11.8 M. Uh. Almost three million for him? Woh.

A couple of days ago, Glen Sather predictably claimed vet backup Alex Auld from Dallas. So much for Chad Johnson getting to stay up. Typical. In other Battle news, the troubled career of Rick DiPietro is once again in limbo with the career Islander out indefinitely due to knee swelling…Just hot off the press…David Freeman steps down as Nashville Predators chairman. Why exactly remains a question.

And finally, today February 28, 2011 has already been declared National Hate Sidney Crosby Day. Over 27,000 34,000 are already confirmed. We might be the only non-Canadian/Pen fan not to.

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A Day Later (Updated)

It’s the day after the Olympics concluded with one of the greatest hockey games ever played. A shame that our heroes didn’t pull it out. But they sure left an impression.

The future of USA Hockey is in great shape thanks to emerging stars Ryan Miller, Zach Parise and Patrick Kane with Bobby Ryan, Erik Johnson and Ryan Kesler not far behind. Along with Paul Stastny, captain Jamie Langenbrunner, Ryan Suter and Brian Rafalski, all had outstanding tournaments. If only they’d gotten more from Phil Kessel, who just never got untracked. Both Kess and Joe Pavelski struggled while role players such as Ryan Malone, Dustin Brown, David Backes, Chris Drury and Ryan Callahan were effective.

Blueliners Jack Johnson and Tim Gleason also impressed with both playing steady. Gleason with his usual gritty self, sacrificing for the good of the team while Johnson showed off some of that speed and chippiness which makes him a staple on the Kings’ back end along with Norris hopeful Drew Doughty, who impressed for Canada. Brooks Orpik also had a good two weeks in Vancouver using his rugged physical style to make life difficult on opposing forwards. Former Pens’ teammate Ryan Whitney was serviceable.

Much credit must go to USA architecht Brian Burke, who had a heavy heart following the tragic loss of son Brendan. The proud man who’s very tough, did an excellent job putting together a roster that could best take advantage of the North American surface. Perhaps that more than anything explained European disappointments Russia and Sweden. Even bronze medallist Finland never seemed comfortable, lucking out against an undisciplined Slovakia, who blew a 3-1 lead falling 4-3. Olli Jokinen was the hero. Our guess is he won’t score for a while when the Rangers return.

Just how big was the gold medal game with the dramatic Sidney Crosby conclusion? Battle originator and close pal Steve Lepore reports that it drew an overnight rating of 17.6 million, which is 46 percent better than the USA/Canada Salt Lake match-up.

Sunday’s game is on pace to finish as the highest rated hockey telecast in the United States since 1980.

To put the numbers in perspective, Sunday’s game drew a higher overnight rating than every World Series game since 2004 (including every game of Yankees/Phillies last year), every NBA Finals telecast since 1998, and every NCAA Men’s Basketball Final Four game since at least ‘98.

More remarkable is that over 27 million tuned in, topping Salt Lake by 10.5 million. A script which probably couldn’t have been written any better unless Parise scored the winner left NBC’s Bob Costas and Al Michaels at a loss for words.

Bob Costas:

That’s one of the greatest sports events I have ever seen.

A script so classic that if it were a movie, they would send it back because it was unrealistic.

With all due respect, this can never be repeated. On home soil, for Canada, in the sport that matters most, against the Americans – this can never be repeated. This can never be approached, let alone equaled.

Al Michaels:

You could not have written a better script for this country. The goal that will resonate throughout history in Canada.

Non-hockey markets like Milwaukee, West Palm Beach, Kansas City, Seattle, Cleveland and Baltimore all made the top 25 yesterday. Not surprisingly, Buffalo led everyone with 32.6 with upcoming opponent Pittsburgh a close second at 31.9. New York finished 16th drawing 19.0 while Hartford was 17th at 18.5. Why don’t they have a team again? The Wolf Pack don’t count.

How newsworthy was it? Even hockey hater Mike Francesa discussed it just now with Zach Attack in an insightful interview in which he pushed the Crosby envelope. Parise’s answer was interesting, referencing how the two were close earlier in their careers. When the audio becomes available, we’ll add it to this post. So, how hard was it for Parise and heartbroken USA ‘mates to lose in that fashion?

This is a group of guys I’ll never forget. We battled right to the bitter end.“-Bobby Ryan

It’s devastating. It was the biggest game any of us have played in. … You win a gold. You win a bronze. You lose a silver.-Jack Johnson

It stings right now. … It feels like ***.“-Tournament MVP Ryan Miller

It sucks. It sucks being that close and then losing in overtime.”-Zach Parise

No one knew our names. People know our names now.”-Chris Drury

 Per Globe and Mail’s James Mirtle:

mirtle

From USA Hockey: “Miller ended the tournament with a U.S. Olympic Men’s Ice Hockey Team record for best goals-against average (1.35).

Good Tweep HockeyJoeGM contributes a solid piece in a letter to Gary Bettman about the opportunity he has.

The fans put up with a ton of garbage and while there’s been a host of new fans that have come to the game, it’s time to do something to pull it all together and become the overlord of the sportsman’s winter. Carpe diem Gary because this is your golden opportunity to pull it all together. Don’t sit around and wait and hope that the NFL and NBA all blow each other to hell with labor problems next year. Grab the reigns and ride this sucker for all it’s worth. By my count there were 40 superstars who put everything they had into this Olympic tournament fighting over what amounts to be a symbolic prize for a pack of millionaires. 

 Hey. He referenced one of our favorite movie quotes from Dead Poet’s Society and the memorable Robin Williams’ Mr. Keating character.

Carpe Diem. Seize the day!

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