Cullen to Sens, Olympic Roster Freeze at 3

There’s less than three hours until the Olympic Roster freeze. In other words, there should be some activity between now and then. Too bad I’ll be on my way to The Slope for some hoops. I’ll be able to check for updates on my phone but won’t be around to post till later.

Anyway, there was one deal made with the Canes sending Matt Cullen to Ottawa for Alexandre Picard and a second round pick. Wise move for both sides as Carolina continues to sell while remaining competitive (anyone catch their latest win over Buffalo last night???) and the Sens add a solid versatile pivot with Cup experience as they make their push for first in the Northeast. Saw this on Twitter from a great Sabre fan and can’t say I blame her:

ShanV11

Can someone go wake up Darcy pleeeeaaase? #Sabres #NHLTrade

If Ryan Miller’s tirade following the game can’t, they’re in trouble. As for what else is going on, Donald Brashear, who had the audacity to take a shot at Colton Orr, has cleared waivers. Huggy Bear. If this was 7-8 years ago when you could play, okay. Reality check. And what do you know? The guy he cheapshotted/replaced Blair Betts just re-upped with the Flyers. Irony much?!?!?!?!?!

The following players have been put on waivers:

Jonathan Cheechoo (Ott)
Jamie Lundmark (Cgy)
Brad May (Det)

Florida is still looking to pull something off before the deadline. Will they trade with the Rangers? Alright. I gotta run out. See ya later!

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Sound Familiar?!?!?!?!?!

So, I was Tweeting lots over on the Twitter and came across this interesting take from Hendricks Hockey on one Calgary Flames, whose struggles even after the Phaneuf/Jokinen deals continue. Tonight, they properly had a goal reversed, falling at home to Dallas 2-1. Maybe the ref who ruled it a goal should take a course or two in non-bias because Curtis Glencoss’ celebration duped him. Clearly, the puck never crossed the line even if Marty Turco had it dangerously close on the goal line behind his pads. The ref also could’ve had a better position but that’s a whole other matter.

Anyway, to Randy Workman’s accurate assessment of what’s wrong in Alberta, we think our Devil contingent will have particular interest. Guess you can’t teach an old dog new tricks. In this instance, Brent “Benedict” Sutter.

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Canadiens acquire Moore

In a move to bolster their playoff push, the Montreal Canadiens have acquired center Dominic Moore from the Panthers in exchange for a 2011 second round pick. Remember when he was good here centering the HMO line in ’05-06? Since then, he’s changed teams seven times if you include the trade to Nashville for Adam Hall. The 29 year-old Harvard product has played for the Rangers, Penguins, Wild, Maple Leafs, Sabres and Panthers. Montreal will be stop eight for the former Blueshirt, who could wind up on No.9 this summer.

Happy Trails Dom!

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Brashear on waivers

The news we’ve been waiting for is finally here. Earlier today, the Rangers put Donald Brashear on waivers. He of the one assist, minus-nine and 73 penalty minutes in 36 contests. Amazing to think Huggy Bear got two years averaging a ridiculous $1.4 million. Oh wait. The Savior did it!

Sadly, I used to be a fan of the big guy back in his heyday when he could actually hit the back of the net along with drop ’em. It was never going to work here. Especially after the Betts cheapshot. Aside from that, he’s just worn down. Enforcers get old too. It’s easy to rip on Brash because we hated him to begin with. But the real person we should push it on is the GM and even the coach, who didn’t want Colton back and brought in Huggy Bear, who likely won’t get picked up by anyone with a brain.

Even if this is it, let’s say this. Brash was dressed like a pimp at Ranger Casino Night. Adieu Donald. We hardly knew ya.

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Rangers can’t reward loyal fans on Thundersnow Day

Even the Thundersnow that blanketed the metro area with over a foot of the white stuff couldn’t prevent the Rangers from doing what they do best. Finding a way to annoy their loyal fans (13,128) who braved the crazy wintry weather to support this mismatched team. I wasn’t there to see it with good buddy The Mouth taking our place in Sec.411 with the crazies. Just wonder how many made it?

While the snow painted a wonderful Hallmark card here, our gang that can’t shoot straight fell to the overachieving Predators 2-1. Without Marian Gaborik who suffered a lacerated knee during a shootout drill at the expense of Henrik Lundqvist (ser—ious—ly), the Blueshirts turned Dan Ellis into a Vezina candidate. The veteran netminder who shares the job with Pekka Rinne made 37 saves, including all 18 in the third to give Barry Trotz what he was searching for following last night’s 4-3 shootout loss to the Islanders. A costly penalty contributed to blowing a one-goal lead with Mark Streit tying it with under 12 seconds left and John Tavares netting the winner. Here was the same team 24 hours later on short rest dealing with the blizzard better than our rested team that had three days off.

Why should that matter? Our team never is ready unless it’s the Devils, who they get up for. Naturally, we got lazy turnovers and little finish against a well coached team that plays defense. Even if Ellis faced 38 shots, he was never really tested thanks to air tight coverage that made life almost as difficult as Jazzy Jim’s treatment of the fans, throwing them a bone with a 25 percent food discount. Pa—the—tic!!!!! This man is a crook who deserves to be hung from the gallows Dark Shadows style. Alright. A tad overboard but at least there would be justice. Can March 7 just get here already?!?!?!?!?!

With Chris Drury moved up to the top line, the Rangers got a couple of early chances with the captain getting a couple of tricky shots on Ellis, which he got a piece of. For all the deserved criticism of Dru, he played a whale of a game tonight registering five shots in 22-plus. It was one of his best games this season even if he misfired on a breakaway off a Michal Rozsival pass, missing a backhand deke wide. The Preds used their cycle to generate offense with a couple of deflections from Patric Hornqvist and Joel Ward which Lundqvist shutdown. Speaking of Hornqvist whose 23 goals pace Nashville, how did they wind up with such a gem? He was taken dead last (2005-7th Rd. 230th overall). In the same draft best known for Crosby saving the Pens, the only player who’s made it for the Rangers is Marc Staal. Almost everyone else has tanked with even the final link to Brian Leetch Mike Sauer wasting away in Hartford. Unbelievable!

Late in the first, Nashville agitator Jordin Tootoo out of all people scored the game’s first goal when Kevin Klein’s point blast went off him past Lundqvist. David Legwand added a helper after winning a draw that set it up. The first part of the second was ugly with a capital ‘U.’ That used to be what you dreaded in grammar school. Sleepwalking on skates, the Rangers allowed not one, not two but three breakaways in the first six minutes. After getting a little help from the goalpost on Martin Erat’s chance following a dreadful Wade Redden turnover, the Ranger goalie stoned J.P. Dumont to keep the score 1-0. How brutal was it? Even Mr. Positivity Joe Micheletti ripped the team hinting that John Tortorella might’ve wanted to take a timeout.

Instead of being dead and buried, they got the game tied thanks to a loss of discipline from the Preds, who handed the Rangers a five-on-three. Well, the first call was bogus with Erat in the box for a trip Erik Christensen did on his own teammate. The second was a legit slash on favorite Steve Sullivan, whose hustle to negate an icing during the stanza saw the gritty right wing limp to the bench before returning. The guy’s been through so much but plays so determined. If only we had a vet like that. Anyway, the vaunted power play almost blew it with their overpassing. But finally, Vinny Prospal cashed in by freeing up a loose puck from Ellis into the net for his 12th after an Olli Jokinen wide shot caromed to the crease.

Just like that, the game was tied. The Rangers had a couple of opportunities to go ahead but Ellis turned away Artem Anisimov and Prospal, who had a game high nine shots along with his marker. Sadly, it got decided when rookie Mike Del Zotto lost his cool earning an extra unsportsmanlike following a hook he disagreed with. Earlier on, he was taken down on a similar play with no call made. Perhaps it was comprehendable why he was upset. Regardless, he put his team in trouble and it wound up proving costly. With the club close to killing the entire four minutes, a Rozsival mishap allowed rookie Colin Wilson to tally unassisted. Following a big save by Lundqvist on Shea Weber, Rozsival went to clear the puck but it went off Ryan Callahan right to Wilson, who whistled it upstairs. A little bad luck but only Rozsival could do that. What a klutz. As Del Zotto skated back with face down, a furious Tortorella let him have it sending the poor kid to the end of the bench for the rest of the period (3:50).

I just didn’t agree with the agree with the call,” the disappointed 19 year-old defenseman said. “It’s my own fault. I’ve got to control my own emotions there. I let them team down.

I don’t think I said anything too bad. Maybe I’ve got to learn how to keep my mouth shut. … It was a dumb penalty and it was one that could have been avoided, so he had every right giving it to me and putting me in my place.

He is one of our better players,” Tortorella said. “We are trying to win a hockey game. He is certainly going to go back out there.

Del Zotto was back out a minute into a third which saw the Rangers try everything to get it tied. An early power play failed. They still came hard at Ellis, who wasn’t cooperating denying Jokinen from in tight to preserve the lead. The final five minutes saw the hosts put together a few strong shifts but the Nashville backstop on this night wouldn’t give in. Of course, a Rozsival shot with Ellis scrambling to get back in position went off a diving Pred just wide earning jeers from an unforgiving crowd that hates him. There’s always a target. Even if he tries harder than Redden, who stunk, it doesn’t matter. You could say the same for the popgun offense which fired brick after brick.

They pulled Lundqvist for an extra with almost 120 seconds left but that didn’t mean much as our guys failed to come close with Nashville playing superb D. A late Ward slash on an on-rushing Brandon Dubinsky with 3.6 seconds left gave them one last prayer. But Legwand won the faceoff with a last ditch centering feed floating in the air way wide to groans while a flustered Lundqvist and ‘mates at the bench had their heads down.

Notes: Emergency Hartford recall Corey Potter was used sparingly by Tortorella as a seventh defenseman logging 8:28 (11 shifts) with one good chance that Ellis thwarted while taking a penalty. … Rangers (26-27-7, 59 Pts) slipped to 11th in the East due to Atlanta’s 4-3 overtime loss at Colorado. Niclas Bergfors had a goal and helper. With 22 games left, the Blueshirts trail eighth Tampa Bay by four points. The two clubs meet Sunday afternoon at 1. With eight losses in their last 10, the Rangers have to visit the Pens Friday.


BONY 3 Stars:

3rd Star-Vinny Prospal, NYR (PPG, game high 9 SOG in 21:23)
2nd Star-Colin Wilson, Nsh (PP GW, 4 SOG in 14:17)
1st Star-Dan Ellis, Nsh (37 saves incl. 18/18 in 3rd)

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Winter wonderland (for the Flyers anyway)

Can I just not talk about this game and yet another blown two-goal lead tonight? Personally I’d rather break down the particulars of the biggest snowstorm in the history of Western Civilization. Or at least the biggest in the state of New Jersey this winter. I knew the minute I got up I wasn’t going to this game tonight, the snow started in Morris County before I woke up and didn’t abate until about game time, and it still hasn’t ended in Newark. Even leaving out the weather, the uncertainty of when and if NJ Transit would be running postgame would have been enough to keep me away. Perhaps the bad weather is fitting for a team who’s surrounded by storm clouds right now.

Okay I suppose I have to talk about another on-ice debacle but before I get to that, at least off-ice the Devils did more than what I thought they had to for the fans by allowing people who couldn’t attend this game to trade in their tickets for half-price seats to one of three other games (3/15 or 3/30 against Boston as well as 3/23 against Columbus). For me it means I can get an extra pair for about what I pay for season tickets now, maybe upgrade my seat for a game. Maybe some sth’s wouldn’t consider that much since they already have tickets to those games but quite honestly I didn’t expect anything from this game. It’s not like the snowstorm was the Devils’ fault, unlike the power failure a while back.

As far as the amazing number of people who were there (announced attendance: 5,580) the Devils let everyone come down not only to the lower level early in the second period but also the Fire and Ice lounges as well with access to the free food and soft drink there. Personally I did think those people deserved something for basically risking life and limb to attend a hockey game. Granted, I’m really not sure whether to think of these people as the biggest fans out there or just plain nuts. Maybe the truth’s somewhere in between. As much as I wanted to go to this game, it wasn’t worth a ten-minute ride to the train station up and down a hill on bad roads, as well as dealing with NJ Transit delays and cancellations.

Now that I’ve gotten all that out there, let’s break down yet another meltdown by the Devils, who amazingly got out to a 2-0 lead with Zach Parise a sudden last-minute scratch and of course proceeded to blow that lead yet again, eventually losing in overtime. Unlike most of the other games since the New Year though I really can’t complain about lack of effort. Certainly the undermanned defense did their job for the most part, allowing only fifteen shots to the Flyers – this in spite of already being without Paul Martin and Anssi Salmela and then losing Bryce Salvador midgame to the contagious upper-body injury virus. It would be nice if Andy Greene stopped doing a Mike Mottau impression (on-ice for all three goals including Arron Asham‘s opener that deflected off his stick) but the only Devils who need the Olympic Break more than Greene are currently on the IR. His offense has died on the vine for a while and now his defense is following suit, but what can you really expect when he plays an insane 32:37?!

There was some good news in relation to the D though, besides the low overall shot total they had twenty-four productive minutes from Mark Fraser, who even added an assist and was a +1. Makes you wonder why he couldn’t play earlier in the season when we were running four and five D into the ground? Even the aforementioned Mottau managed to play nearly thirty minutes without incident, though he was a -1. All things considered, the performance from our top four D wasn’t bad (recent call-up Rob Davison only played 3:59, if he was going to get those minutes we might as well have called up Tyler Eckford who would at least have added mobility to the D).

I can’t say I was that encouraged by the offense’s showing though, even the early two goals were more a result of good fortune than anything else. Travis Zajac scored one of the weakest goals I’ve ever seen from inside the blueline when his floater of a wrist shot squirted through Michael Leighton‘s five-hole and in for Zajac’s eighteenth of the year just 45 seconds into the game. Fraser and Brian Rolston tacked on the assists to a goal that I would have been tempted to go Mike Keenan on and pull Leighton right then and there. Turns out Leighton wouldn’t have much to worry about the rest of the night although Rob Niedermayer managed to bank in another goal off a Flyer defenseman’s skate at 8:01 with Rod Pelley getting an assist on Niedermayer’s seventh goal of the season, which gave the Devils a dreaded two-goal lead.

Before I could even think that the Flyers had us right where they wanted us, boom Asham scored right off of Greene’s skate, which annoyed me twofold. Asham has what I call Brian Rolston syndrome, be a useful player for everyone else’s team except ours. Even more annoyingly Jeff Carter owned us again on the second goal, after a mostly quiet end of the first and most of the second period. Carter’s wrist shot at 13:47 of the second on a three-on-two was a masterpiece and proved once again that the Devils should have made him feel a bit more uncomfortable after his brutal takeout of Salmela Monday night. Repeatedly during the pregame and intermissions Ken Daneyko couldn’t hide his dismay at that fact.

For the rest of the night, the Devils basically sacrificed offense for defense and despite outshooting the Flyers 7-1 in the third period really never threatened the Flyer goal all that much themselves. This despite an extended third-period power play which saw Braydon Coburn and Matt Carle take back-to-back penalties and predictably Jacques Lemaire called timeout before the twenty-five second 5-on-3 and just as predictably it failed, despite Ilya Kovalchuk hogging icetime once again (26:27 in the game, including 3:04 consecutively on both power plays). Color me slightly concerned now about Kovalchuk, who it seems the Devils are going out of their way to have him play his style instead of trying to fit him in the team game. It would be one thing if it was working but after the two assist game in his first game he’s been pointless in his last three. If I didn’t know better I’d swear the Devils are trying to grease the skids to re-sign him after this season by letting him have free reign up to this point.

Unlike Parise, who never sacrifices defense for offense, it’s always been a problem for Kovalchuk. Particularly during the overtime when he again stayed on the ice too long during a shift and wound up sprawled on the ice trying in vein to keep Simon Gagne from getting off a wristshot that beat Brodeur at 3:27, giving the Flyers the sweep of a home-and-home and us a 1-4 record overall against one of our biggest rivals. Somewhat generously Lemaire said it wasn’t Kovalchuk’s best game and attributed it to him being tired (ya think?!).

To be honest we were fortunate to even get a point, for Scott Hartnell looked like he scored in the first period but the NHL ruled the replay was inconclusive, despite it looking obvious to me that the puck had fully crossed the line from FSNY’s various camera angles. Currently that point is the only thing keeping us in first place for despite losing two in a row over the weekend themselves, the Penguins pulled to within a single point after their win over the Islanders tonight, with each team having two more games left before the Olympic hiatus. This season feels like a combination of the 2007 and 2009 Mets, ’07 with the fact that despite playing poorly for a prolonged stretch we’ve somehow remained in the division lead (until the very end) and ’09 with the injury bug.

Will two games be enough to finally turn the tide before the break? Somehow I doubt it, I wasn’t even kidding when I said I hoped we’d forfeit the last four games to avoid more injuries and now it looks like that’s exactly what’s happening. We’re still losing and getting more injuries. No word on how serious Salvador’s upper body ailment is. Speculation is that Parise has a neck issue, either incurred late in Monday’s game or after a collision with Mottau in practice before tonight’s game. Hopefully it won’t keep him out too long but at this point with first place slipping away and the team’s malaise growing by the minute even two games seems like a lot.

BoNY Three Stars:
  1. Simon Gagne (game-winning goal)
  2. Jeff Carter (goal, +1)
  3. Travis Zajac (goal, +1 with 22:52 TOI)
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Attention Devil Fans

The New Jersey Devils are having a Snow Day Photo Contest. All you have to do is play in the snow and make a submission to be entered for a chance to win a free autographed puck signed by one of the team’s five Olympians (Martin Brodeur, Patrik Elias, Ilya Kovalchuk, Jamie Langenbrunner, Zach Parise) who are headed to Vancouver next week. Here’s your chance to win a great collectors’ item for nothing. And the best part. You get to have fun doing it!

The contest runs until February 17. So, get out there and take advantage. Maybe you’ll wind up a lucky winner.

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Blizzard could make for interesting day

 
The snow has already been falling here for a few hours. Today’s predicted blizzard could dump over a foot of the white stuff in the metro area. What that could mean for the Rangers and Devils, who each are scheduled to play at home later tonight may be a lot of empty seats with the games still going on. 
Considering that the Olympic Break is a few days away and a mad scramble that features a hectic remaining schedule when play resumes, the NHL has no alternative other than to play tonight. If they could force the Pens to fly into Newark and then bus to D.C. for what turned out to be the highest rated NBC game since this year’s Winter Classic, then they may as well give the go-ahead. The decision should be easier with both the Flyers and Predators already in town. Philly meets the Devils in the back end of a home-and-home while the Preds meet the Rangers a night after falling to the Islanders in a shootout.
Besides, there won’t be enough time to reschedule and in a crazy season where every point matters, these games must be played. What it means for fans is being inconvenienced. Unless you live closeby or have public transportation access, there’s no chance of getting to either arena. Good thing we sold the Nashville game a while back. Not that we could predict the weather which has made for an upside down winter. The kind we used to get.
As for the pic above, it was taken from a Ranger HF thread already 14 pages which was started a couple of days early in full anticipation. Coming off the “big storm” that only really hit South Jersey and gave us about five inches along the coast, today’s is expected to be much bigger. Having already been out with a few friends earlier, Staten Island has two inches. Well, at least the South Shore does. 😛
So, what is thundersnow exactly? This is the kind of storm that will start with light snow but eventually gain steam with whiteout conditions expected by noon. Basically it’s lake effect snow caused by thunder that intensifies the snowfall. Here’s a little more detailed explanation:

Thundersnow, while rare anywhere, is more common with lake effect snow in the Great Lakes area of the United States and Canada, the midwestern U.S., and the Great Salt Lake. Thundersnow also occurs in Halifax, Nova Scotia, sometimes several times per winter season. The British Isles and northwestern EuropeKanazawa and the Sea of Japan, and even around Mount Everest during expeditions. When such storms happen at ski areas, these mountains are often evacuated for safety. sometimes report thunder and lightning during sleet or ( usually wet) snow showers during winter and spring. It has also been reported around.

Over the years, we’ve had a few big storms with the most notable the Blizzard of ’96 which dumped 28 and a half inches here. I’m fairly certain one had the conditions described above. There also was that huge one a few years ago that was roughly the same. I remember it cause the Knicks still had Allan Houston and played the Kobe Lakers and Houston went for 50. We actually drove to the diner to pick up food. Crazy. Speaking of ’96, back then I delivered papers and the next day was the big Sunday morning and we had to put them together at my old public school before parking outside and carrying them in. Fun times.

With school already canceled for students, if you got nothing to do after shoveling, light the fire, have some hot cocoa and watch tonight’s games. It’ll be an interesting day.

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S.S. Sabres Sinking

A few weeks ago, the view from the top of the Northeast Division was clear. It was similar to being on a cruise ship for the Buffalo Sabres, wining and dining with the best foods, drinks, and dancing. It was a 5 star event, and the Sabres were starting to garner attention around the NHL.

After all, the Sabres boasted a Veniza trophy candidate in Ryan Miller, a top rookie defenseman named Tyler Myers, and one of the best coaches in the NHL, Lindy Ruff. Plus, the Sabres have a lot of young forwards on the roster, and in the system. In addition, you just had to think Thomas Vanek would break out and return to his 40 goal form. The lead in the division was 10+ points. The feeling of 2005-2006 was starting to creep back into the Sabres fans’ consciousness.

Could this be a magical year in the Queen City?

Fast forward to tonight, February 10th, 2010. The Sabres did not take well to California, perhaps the inclement weather disappointed them in losses to Anaheim, Los Angeles, and San Jose. Punxsutawney Phil saw his shadow last week in Pennsylvania, perhaps the Sabres did as well. Miller is showing wear. Thomas has become ‘Thomas Vanish’. Patrick Lalime is well….Lalime. Getting shutout at…the Blue Jackets?!! And couple that with the Ottawa Senators ripping off 12 wins in their last 13 games and just like magic, the Sabres and Senators are tied with 72 points to lead the ‘NorthLeast’ division.

What is a Sabres fan to make of this? Is the magic gone? Is this a slump? Is Ryan Miller worn out? Is the defense showing more holes then a pound of swiss cheese? Should the Sabres have stepped up to the plate for Ilya Kovalchuk? So many questions…so little answers…

As for now, the Olympic break cannot come here soon enough for the Sabres, and not just for the team, but for the fans as well. Will GM Darcy Regier ‘go for it’, or stick with the plan and let the young players like Tyler Ennis, Chris Butler, and Zach Kassian develop, just to name a few?

The right answer cannot be given, but a decision better be made soon, because the Sabres 2009-2010 ship has hit the iceberg.

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Stars acquire Lehtonen, Turco Era about to close

Earlier tonight, the rumors that Kari Lehtonen would be coming to Big D finally came to fruition. The Stars acquired the oft-injured Finnish goalie from Atlanta for D prospect Ivan Vishnevskiy and a 2010 fourth round pick. Full credit to Atlanta writer Chris Vivlamore on breaking the story over on Twitter.

As he also noted in a story for AJC, the 26 year-old Lehtonen who Atlanta tabbed with their ’02 No.1 pick (2nd overall) was the franchise’s all-time leader in wins (94), games played (204) and shutouts (14). In ’06-07, he won a career best 34 games in 68 appearances, posting a 2.79 GAA, .912 save percentage and four shutouts helping the Thrashers to their only postseason. However, it was brief as they were swept by the Rangers. Since the breakout season, he’s struggled with injuries including back surgery during preseason which sidelined him until a late January conditioning stint in the AHL. With Hotlanta having Johan Hedberg and Ondrej Pavelec, he became the odd man out.

As the season went on, we had two guys that proved they were capable of carrying the load,” GM Don Waddell explained while also adding,. “ … One hundred percent (Hedberg and Pavelec) are doing a good job for us.

Vivlamore also notes that combined with the blockbuster trade that sent Ilya Kovalchuk to the Devils, there are only four members left from that playoff team (Hedberg, Slava Kozlov, Jim Slater and Eric Boulton).
While the Thrashers revamp with Niclas Bergfors, Johnny Oduya, Patrice Cormier and Vishnevskiy, it looks like the end of the Marty Turco Era in Dallas.

For almost a decade, the unpredictable yet fun netminder has been with career Star Mike Modano the face of the franchise. The 34 year-old who Dallas selected in the fifth round back in 1994 out of the University of Michigan has had a stellar career establishing franchise marks for games (498), victories (257), shutouts (39), minutes played (28,456) and assists with all three coming this season, which speaks to his uncanny nature to keep play moving turning defense into offense.

Turco supplanted Cup-winning netminder Ed Belfour after sharing duties. In his rookie year of ’00-01, Marty posted a 13-6 record, three shutouts with a miniscule 1.90 GAA and .925 save percentage. Two years later in his first full season as starter, his 1.72 GAA became a modern NHL record which Calgary’s Miikka Kiprusoff broke the following season (’03-04) by posting a 1.69 GAA. That same year, Turco followed it up by getting into a career best 73 games winning over half (37) while posting a 1.98 GAA, .913 save percentage and recording a career high nine shutouts. However, he lost out on the Vezina to Devil great Martin Brodeur. Despite an impressive resume that also included a 41-win season (’05-06), Turco has never won the award. It could be argued that he could have but the same might be said for San Jose’s Evgeni Nabokov, who was edged by Brodeur two years ago.

If this is it for Turco who made 37 saves in a 4-3 shootout loss to the Blackhawks, he’s had a tremendous Dallas Star career guiding them to five postseasons including a Western Conference Final six-game defeat to Cup champ Detroit in ’07-08. It was that Spring and a gut wrenching seven-game first round loss to Vancouver the year before in which his series record three shutouts weren’t enough at least put a halt to the criticism that he couldn’t perform when it counted. With Lehtonen coming and Alex Auld also still around to backup, his likely destination is Philadelphia where the Flyers could be pinning their hopes on him with Ray Emery probably requiring hip surgery.

How did his opponent Kris Versteeg, who netted the shootout winner- characterize him?

Turco, he’s a heck of a goaltender. You don’t want to do too much in the shootout. Go down and keep it simple.

Including tonight, Turco’s appeared in 42 games posting a 17-15-10 mark with a 2.73 GAA, .911 save percentage and three shutouts. The Stars’ next game is Thursday in Calgary while the Flyers are scheduled to visit the Devils in the back half of a home-and-home if it’s not postponed due to the blizzard. Figure it to get played with not much chance of rescheduling due to the Olympic Break and the remaining hectic sched the rest of the way. If Marty does wind up in the City of Brotherly Love, Scott Hartnell has been mentioned as a possible return. We’ll just have to wait and see.

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