Langs’ first career hat trick wills Devils to 5-3 win in Minny

Much was made in the pregame of coach Jacques Lemaire‘s return to Minnesota after he coached the Wild for the previous nine seasons, the only coach in franchise history. Lemaire got a nice pregame tribute on the jumbotron from what I heard, unfortunately MSG didn’t show any of it. Also, Brian Rolston was playing his first game in Minnesota (where he enjoyed some of his best years, under Lemaire) since leaving the Wild as a free agent last offseason.
Yet it was Minnesota native Jamie Langenbrunner who stole the show with a first-ever hat trick, making the difference in an otherwise shaky 5-3 win for the Devils. Hard to believe that it was Langs’ first-ever hatty, considering all the goals he’s scored in a long NHL career (especially with his three straight games of two goals last season), but it was well-deserved tonight as the captain was one of the few who came mentally and physically prepared to play a fifth game in eight nights.
Granted, playing five in eight now might actually be a bit harder in a way than the seven in eleven stretch was earlier this year considering the travel to Washington, Chicago and Minnesota during this trip compared to that one which was mostly at home, other than one game in Buffalo. But still, the team looked as bad as I’ve seen them in weeks. I’m not even going to count the game two nights ago because the Hawks are capable of handing any team their lunch. Tonight however, there were so many forced passes, lazy backchecking and rushed shot attempts that it’s remarkable the team won by two instead of losing by the same margin.
So how did we win? Well start with Jamie’s hat trick and a very good showing from Martin Brodeur, despite allowing three goals they were pretty much all on shoddy backchecking and defensive coverage. And let’s be honest, playing a mediocre (at best) team like the Wild, you can get away with a clunker easier than say, against the Blackhawks as we found out two nights ago. There were a few other good performances tonight, but not that many.
One of them was Dean McAmmond, who looked like he had plenty of life in his skates getting a breakaway in the first period that was stopped by the Wild’s Nicklas Backstrom, and then 5:13 into the second period lucking into another partial breakaway when he had to take over for Rob Niedermayer in the middle of a shift after Nieds broke a stick. A pass from Patrik Elias sprung him and he beat Backstrom by roofing a backhander for his fourth goal of the year, giving the Devils a surprising lead considering how much the Wild were outplaying them up to that point.
After McAmmond’s goal, the Devils had their best stretch of hockey during the game, drawing a couple of quick penalties and taking advantage of the first one with Elias and Vladimir Zharkov doing nice board work to keep the puck, culminating with Elias making a sweet cross-ice pass to Langenbrunner, who one-timed a shot past Backstrom at 6:57 for his eleventh of the year and first of the night. Just seconds later, another penalty by Nick Schultz of the Wild could have ended the game, but on the ensuing power play Andy Greene had to interfere with Mikko Koivu to prevent him from getting a shorthanded breakwaway. That proved to be wise later on.
Even on the ensuing four-on-four the Devils could have ended the game when Travis Zajac and Zach Parise got sprung for a two-on-one but a slumping Zajac (no goals and four assists in twelve games now) tried to force a pass to Parise that got blocked off and led to a chance the other way, which Eric Belanger put in at 9:08. Instead of 3-0, it was 2-1 and the Wild had the momentum now. That began a terrible period for Zajac, who also couldn’t get his stick on an errant Parise pass and was slow getting back in the play which led to another scoring chance.
Brodeur held the rising tide back and late in the period the Devils got one more power play chance, but instead of padding their lead New Jersey wound up losing it when they gave up a three-on-two break shorthanded with Johnny Oduya and Zajac (both targets of my blog last night) looking discombobulated as Koivu eventually beat them with a rebound goal after Brodeur made a great first save on an shot from the point. With just 38 seconds left in the period that could have been a devastating goal, but fortunately the captain saved the day again by getting his second of the night with just four seconds remaining off a rebound in front, restoring the Devils’ undeserved lead.
In front again, the Devils momentarily regained their composure early in the third and it looked as if their 20-0 record when leading after two periods would be safe when Niedermayer’s excellent board work and pass in front found Jay Pandolfo, who was rewarded for crashing the net with his third of the season at 11:35. That goal gave the Devils a two-goal lead again, and Elias his third assist of the night. However the Wild kept coming, outshooting the Devils in every period and getting a deserved break at 16:09 when a puck bounced off of Eric Belanger‘s facecage and into the net. A rare (and unintentional) ‘header’ goal in hockey, as it’s far more commonplace in soccer.
Even with the Devils’ record when leading, things looked tenuous at best – especially given that without Bryce Salvador for the second straight game and an all-rookie third pairing, the top four got insane minutes again. In fact, Mark Fraser played even less than Matthew Corrente, but Corrente only played 6:16 compared to Fraser’s 4:28. I do wish the rookies could have gotten more time with the vets but I understand not wanting to play them with each other or screw around with the parings too much. Even if Oduya-Greene doesn’t look like a match made in heaven and White-Mottau is vulnerable to speed.
Not to mention shoddy backchecking by the fowards, which led to some anxious moments in the final seconds and the ever-present Koivu (deservedly a favorite of both of us here) lurking before a tired captain took advantage of a turnover and sprinted to an empty-net goal, giving Jamie his first career hat trick and the Devils a 5-3 win. If I seemed overly harsh in my recap, just read what Lemaire had to say about the team’s performance tonight:

“Was that terrible!” Lemaire said after the game. “Just a bad game. No puck
control. No good thinking. We turned the puck over many times. Many times,
many times and many times.”

Oh well, the good news is the Devils are five points ahead of the Sabres and Capitals for first in the conference. And hopefully Salvador and David Clarkson return soon. Though you can’t really tell with the Devils.

BoNY Three Stars:

  1. Jamie Langenbrunner (hat trick, -1, 7 SOG in 19:07)
  2. Patrik Elias (three assists, +2)
  3. Mikko Koivu (goal, assist, +1, 5 SOG in 20:48)
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Rangers lose to Candy Canes

In a game I didn’t care enough to bother with, the Rangers lost to the Canes 2-1 in overtime. The identical score they managed to win by on New Year’s Eve in Raleigh. What does it prove that our hapless team can’t muster anything against the worst team with a shaky D? That Paul Maurice was dead on about the other night in another game I didn’t watch, choosing the USA/Canada classic instead featuring kids who care rather than dead weight just cashing paychecks. Maurice’s team was outshot nearly double (63-37) in the home-and-home but still managed a split. This was what he said after Thursday’s game after being outshot 35-18:

I don’t think the Rangers played a real tough game. There wasn’t a lot of momentum to be had in the game either way. It was a slug from one end to the other.

I think anyone would agree there’s nothing tough about this Ranger version. They’re a flawed team that was poorly constructed by a GM who continues to keep his job due to some sort of crazy loyalty from Dolan. Or perhaps a wild love affair. Gaborik got the only goal tying it with his league-leading 27th. How must he feel? Erik Christensen is now on the first line. A waiver pickup who has three points in two playing alongside the Great Gabby and Brandon Dubinsky. What does that exactly say?

In other news, the Blues fired Andy Murray today. They had the worst home record and have been in the cellar of the Central, paired with underachievers Anaheim, Columbus and Edmonton. Don’t we have like the second worst home record? John Davidson has a pulse and is passionate about his team. He’s not resting on laurels. So, he runs St. Louis the right way. For years, many Ranger fans wondered if JD could be our GM and right the ship. Instead, we’re stuck with Slats and the garbage contracts that have ruined our cap and destroying the foundation that Tom Renney established. When does it ever end?

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Team USA Announced-Our Breakdown

As part of the Winter Classic, Team USA was also announced at Fenway with each kid wearing our colors along with the player’s number. Cool stuff. Here’s the official roster:

Goalies

Ryan Miller

Tim Thomas
Jonathan Quick

D

Brian Rafalski

Paul Martin

Brooks Orpik 
Ryan Suter

Erik Johnson
Jack Johnson
Mike Komisarek

 

Forwards


Patrick Kane

Zach Parise

Phil Kessel
Paul Stastny
Bobby Ryan
Ryan Malone
Ryan Kesler
Dustin Brown

Joe Pavelski

Chris Drury

Jamie Langenbrunner

Ryan Callahan

David Backes



The best part was when Thomas got announced, he came out from the Red Sox dugout donning his USA jersey. As for the 23-man roster, it’s solid. Only a couple of surprises with Drury still making it despite a poor season. Komisarek is Burke’s boy but is he really better than Tim Gleason? I know who I’d rather have. The Johnson & Johnson boys made it. But no Keith Ballard, Alex Goligoski, Keith Yandle or Andy Greene. Is Zach Bogosian eligible or considered too young? Also found out from Steve Lepore that Tyler Myers is ineligible due to playing for Canada in the WJCs. So much for that. Will Martin play? Hopefully. If not, at least there’s decent replacements to choose from.

On which forwards got passed up, the Isles’ Kyle Okposo and Sabres’ Jason Pominville were on the outside along with Dustin Byfuglien, R.J. Umberger, Scott Gomez, Brian Gionta, Brian Rolston and Bill Guerin, who I probably would’ve put on due to his grit and leadership. Guess Burke feels Drury will fare better in international play. I know Gomez fell off but wasn’t he pretty good along with Gionta in Torino? Kesler probably centers the second line with Pavelski and Drury anchoring checking ones. I’m left wondering if we got enough playmakers to get the puck to Kane, Kessel, Ryan and Zach Attack. A few on Twitter weren’t keen on Malone but I’m opposite cause I see this guy a lot and he’s real good in front of the net and plays with the required edge necessary if our boys are to have any chance versus high powered Canada, Sweden and Russia with Finland not too far behind.

I’m happy for Cally because he deserved the selection. His energy should be a real plus. He can play a checking/PK role along with Backes, who bangs everything. A crash line featuring both is ideal. I can’t disagree with good Islander friend Angie (islesrebelangel) on Okposo’s omission. I understand how she feels as KO is still doing alright with 21 helpers to go with the six goals, which probably is why he didn’t make the cut. Truthfully, he’s better than both Backes and Callahan. But you can’t have everyone. Many including us liked Byfuglien but he’s not on either. And Umberger would’ve been ideal for a checking line over Drury. Unfortunately, whenever these rosters come out, there are going to be snubs.

As for the goalies, it was a no-brainer taking both Miller and Thomas as the top two. Quick’s had a decent season helping LA into the playoff picture. Both Craig Anderson and Jimmy Howard were passed up. I would’ve liked to seen Anderson get rewarded for his stellar work in The Rocky Mountains. But get the logic of choosing a younger kid to ride shotgun behind our dynamic duo. Howard has been great for Detroit and is keeping them afloat even with all the injuries. If the NHL is still in for 2014 in Russia, he’ll be a lock.

Before we finish, a brief look at potential lines:

Kessel-Stastny-Parise
Malone-Kesler-Kane
Brown-Pavelski-Ryan
Backes/Callahan-Drury-Langenbrunner

Martin-Rafalski
Orpik-Komisarek
Suter-E. Johnson
J. Johnson

Miller
Thomas
Quick

Given that this is a very young roster with few returnees, this is how we see the captaincy and alternates:

‘C’-Drury
‘A’-Langenbrunner
‘A’-Rafalski

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Bruins edge Flyers in Winter Classic Finish

The 3rd Annual NHL Winter Classic did not disappoint at prestigious Fenway Park. In a battle of old rivals, the Boston Bruins rallied back to defeat the Philadelphia Flyers 2-1 before nearly 40,000 screaming fans at the great ballpark on Yawkey Way. History was made as the B’s became the first home team to win the signature even on New Year’s Day. In the inaugural played at Ralph Wilson Stadium in Buffalo, the Sabres fell to Sid The Kid and the Pens in a shootout. Last year in the Windy City, the Blackhawks came up short to the Red Wings at Wrigley Field.

It looked like the visitors would go three-for-three. Michael Leighton looked on his way to a second straight shutout. But a late power play goal from wily vet Mark Recchi and Marco Sturm’s overtime winner gave the home supporters plenty to cheer in what amounted to the best of the three Classics to date. With apologies to Sidney Crosby for that glorious skill comp winner in the snow, watching Sturm win it in more conventional fashion was better. There’s something about seeing a player score in OT as opposed to the more scripted gimmick where it’s decided by a one-on-one. In today’s game, we don’t get enough of those cool celebrations. Even with four-on-four, a majority have needed the gimmick. So, it was cool to see Patrice Bergeron thread the needled to an open Sturm for a nifty tip past Leighton for the decider 1:57 into the extra five. Plus the celebration with the proud German slamming the glass before being mobbed by teammates was great on what amounted to a perfect winter day in Beantown.

The weather held up with ideal conditions as temps ranged from 28-35, thankfully minus rain with plenty of cloud cover. It was classic pond hockey for a bunch of paid pros playing a game they remember as kids. That’s what makes this event so special. It’s hockey in its purest form. Outdoors in all the elements. A big thanks must go out to Larry Lucchino for agreeing to host such a game. Just seeing the background of the Green Monster along with the mini rink on the side where kids skated was pretty damn jaw dropping. They did a fantastic job putting this together. A huge thank you to all the maintenance who worked so hard to get this thing ready. Hockey ain’t done there either. There’s also a college double header featuring BU vs BC on the men’s side.

While it’s true the first couple of periods weren’t on the edge, it definitely picked up in the third, elevating for a memorable finish. Still, just getting to see two legends on each side greet their players as they were introduced was priceless. There was Bobby Clarke wearing the Flyer ‘C’ along with a few boos smirking as he skated up to meet old rival Bobby Orr for the ceremonial puck drop. One of the coolest aspects. Two of the greatest players who each led their team to a pair of Cups side by side, yucking it up. One arguably the best to ever play the sport. Ask my Dad or any of our older generation and the nod goes to Orr or Gordie Howe over Gretzky, Lemieux and Messier. Makes for a great bar debate.

Even if one of the most well known bloggers didn’t care for a vast majority of a hard fought game, how could you not love that scrap between Daniel Carcillo and Shawn Thornton? Another Classic first as the two combatants dropped the gloves 8:01 in with the mustached Carcillo (ode to 70’s Flyers) getting the decision by landing a clean right to drop Thornton. Class was shown as he immediately backed off and allowed the Bruins’ enforcer to get up with each sending New Year’s greetings. Good stuff.

Neither side scored in a tactical first which saw the clubs feel each other out. After the Bruins held a 9-6 SOG edge, the second was all Flyers. They entered riding a four-game win streak, aiming to go five-for-five on a six-game road trip. Like they had in the 6-0 Ranger trouncing, the Flyers played solid in front of Leighton not giving an anemic Boston offense much. If scoring was a strength last year, it’s certainly not this time around as they are feeling the effects of no more Phil Kessel and Milan Lucic remains out. So much for making it back for the big game at Fenway.

With the B’s unable to mount a consistent attack, the Flyers generated off their forecheck, forcing Team USA selection Tim Thomas to make some good saves. If not for the rating Vezina winner, it might’ve been ugly. Especially in a period where Philly doubled up Boston in shots (12-6). However, they were only able to beat Thomas once when Danny Syvret got his first NHL goal, giving the Flyers a 1-0 lead at 4:42. Off some nice work by Scott Hartnell and Jeff Carter, Syvret was able to beat the Boston netminder with a low shot through traffic. Leading by one, the Flyers also got the only power play in the first 40 but failed to cash in with Zdeno Chara in the box. There were some close calls but a scrambly Thomas kept them out. His play gave the B’s a chance.

Thru two, Claude Julien’s guys had totaled just 15 shots. The Flyers themselves had 18 but a cool dozen in the second and were far more aggressive. During intermission, he emphasized one missed chance in particular where Marc Savard passed to Thornton instead of shooting. Apparently, his team got the message quickly testing Leighton early, including a harmless shot from the outside that snuck through his legs and just off the right post. All day, players finished checks giving us the kind of hockey we see in the playoffs. In the third, the intensity picked up with alternate “Let’s Go Bruins,” and “Let’s Go Flyers” chants in the stands. Feeding off the energy, each side came even harder. It opened up as a more desperate home team searched for the equalizer. That led to a couple of odd-man rushes. One in which Carter was set up perfect by Briere but couldn’t finish it, narrowly missing wide with Thomas outstretched in the crease. The other was blocked.

With the B’s coming close to tying as the minutes got into single digits, it was only a matter of time before they found an opening. With Chara driving the net, they nearly tied it but wound up with a power play when Kimmo Timonen hauled him down. The Flyers killed a good chunk but couldn’t hold them off when some great passing allowed Recchi to tie it with 2:18 left. The play was started by Team Canada selection Patrice Bergeron, who dished across for Derek Morris. Morris then worked a textbook give-and-go with David Krejci, before firing a shot pass to Recchi in front for a neat redirect to a thunderous ovation. Tie game!

Urged on by the crowd, the Bruins drew another power play when Briere took down another player with 46 ticks left in regulation. To Philly’s credit, they killed it off including the remaining 1:14 when it became 4-on-3. Hell. The Bruins almost turned it over at the blueline for what would’ve been a clean shorthanded breakaway for Mike Richards. Instead, the teams skated four-on-four each going for broke. The Flyers again came close but Thomas said no.

The winner came when Bergeron spun around Richards and then skated down the left wall before firing in front for Sturm, who deflected it home for his club-leading 14th- touching off a nice celebration that included fireworks. Chara started it, also drawing an assist. Just an outstanding play by Bergeron, who’s bounced back in a big way with 11 goals and 20 helpers for a team best 31 points to make Canada. Last year, he returned from a concussion playing in 64 games with eight goals and 31 assists totaling 39 points.

Amazing to think that at only 24, he’s already in his sixth season. Bergeron was in the same great ’03 class as Team USA’s Zach Parise, Carter, Richards, Ryan Getzlaf, Corey Perry, MA Fleury, E. Staal, Thomas Vanek, Dion Phaneuf, Dustin Brown, Ryan Kesler, Nathan Horton, Milan Michalek, Brent Seabrook, Ryan Suter, Braydon Coburn and Brent Burns. If you’re a Ranger or Islander fan, duck and cover. Bergeron wasn’t taken till 45th overall with gems Loui Eriksson and Shea Weber also slipping while somehow Joe Pavelski fell to Round 7. Dustin Byfuglien and Tobias Enstrom went in the eighth round! Jaroslav Halak in Round 9. Rather than focus on the obvious, it’s nice to see Bergeron back healthy and returning to form.

Congrats to the B’s on a thrilling comeback that moves them temporarily within three of the Sabres, who also play tonight hosting the Thrashers at the bottom of the hour.

BONY 3 Stars:

3rd Star-Patrice Bergeron, Bos (assist, 3 SOG, hit, takeaway, 7-10 draws, +1 in 18:05)
2nd Star-Tim Thomas, Bos (24 saves incl.11/12 in 2nd)
1st Star-Marco Sturm, Bos (Winter Classic OT winner, 3 SOG in 17:29)

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Madden, Blackhawks give Devils a Windy City spanking

I’m not even going to attempt to recap this game, why bother. I didn’t see most of it as I was at a New Year’s Eve party with friends and would rather burn the tape than see lowlights of the Hawks’ convincing 5-1 win over the Devils last night. While I have said (and been wrong) before this season that I pointed to certain nights on the schedule and figured on a loss last night I was proven correct, unfortunately. It’s almost too much to ask the team to play a thousand miles away against a team that could well be the favorites out West less than twenty-four hours after an emotional, tight home win over the rival Penguins. Especially on a fourth game in six nights.

Heck, even in the best of circumstances it’d be tough to play this team, they look to have just about everything – offense, defense, special teams – except maybe goaltending in the clutch. Cristobal Huet is their only playoff question mark but has certainly been up to the challenge most of this season now that he’s the unquestioned number one after the departure of Nikolai Khabibulin. Not to mention Chicago had a little extra motivation in the form of ex-Devil John Madden, who wanted badly to show up an organization that thought he was finished and to also gain bragging rights over good buddy Martin Brodeur.

Even without last night’s goal – which basically was stat padding as the Hawks were already up 4-0 late in the third when Madden beat Brodeur with a wrist shot through traffic and gained his bragging rights – Madden’s already proven he has more left in the tank. Granted, his numbers aren’t great (8 G, 6 A and a -1 in 40 games) but he’s never been about that really. In his prime he’d put up the odd 20-goal season but has lasted this long because of defense, faceoff wins and tenacity.

And given he only signed a one-year contract with the Blackhawks anyway, money wasn’t a factor in Lou Lamoriello‘s decision to let him walk since the Devils are comfortably under the salary cap (for once). Expecting Rod Pelley to fill his shoes was like penciling in Pierre Dagenais to replace Alexander Mogilny. Oh well, even Lou can’t get them all right – and he acknowledged the need for a replacement with Rob Niedermayer, who’s been surprisingly effective to this point, even winning a majority of his faceoffs which was supposed to be his major drawback.

Granted, things have mostly been peaches and cream for the Devils this season but two players I’m not happy with right now are Travis Zajac and Johnny Oduya. Zajac’s numbers still look good – 29 points and a +14 in 39 games but lately he and Oduya have both regressed to what they were two years ago. Zajac’s only managed a meager four assists with a -1 in his last eleven games. Though linemate Zach Parise‘s goal drought was more talked about, Zajac’s point production is more of a concern. We’re going to need him to get going one of these days, especially since he’s our only offensive center now that Patrik Elias has been moved off the pivot (partly due to a scary bad faceoff percentage).

However, Oduya’s the bigger concern as far as production since he’s really struggled all season before and after his injury. Offensively he has a pathetic one point (a goal) in 24 games, despite healthy icetime in almost all of them. Although he managed a +2 against the Pens even with a hideous turnover that led to a great Evgeni Malkin chance shorthanded he still hasn’t looked right this year and last night was a -3. Maybe I was right after all about Oduya needing Paul Martin to succeed, he certainly hasn’t played all that well with anyone else. Too bad Martin’s still out almost a month with his arm issues.

Oduya wasn’t the only one to struggle last night, as Jacques Lemaire continued his matching lines strategy with no success in the Windy City as Jay Pandolfo and Dean McAmmond were both -3’s last night. This, despite Pando only getting 12:49 of icetime. He even took a penalty in the game which is about as much of a rarity as the full moon last night on New Year’s Eve. Granted Pando had a nice game last night against the Penguins, but this cannot go on. Not if we’re going to put three 33+ year olds on the checking line constantly. And why take McAmmond out of an offensive role when he was actually putting up points? Might as well ride the hot stick as long as you can.

Not much in particular incensed me last night, especially since I figured on a loss and probably a bad one anyway – but having Andrew Peters in lineup, with only a one-game benching for his idiocy against Eric Boulton and the Thrashers did make me roll my eyes. Amazingly Peters played almost ten minutes and wasn’t a – in the game…but god, we have to have another fighter in the organization, right? Or be able to get one without giving up much at least. Forget Pierre Luc-Letourneau Leblond, whose sole purpose seems to be coming up with convenient, mysterious injuries and going on IR right when we need roster space, I wouldn’t even mind playing Matt Corrente at forward for a game here and there at this point, he can fight too and wasn’t an embarassment the one game he played forward. Plus he’d be handy to have around in case of another inconvenient injury on defense.

At least the Devils did get good news on the injury front for a change. While David Clarkson did re-injure his leg, it wasn’t a fracture. More of a bruise and he’s being held out of the Chicago-Minnesota trip as a precaution. Now that sounds more like the Devils I know, if it was another organization I root for (hint: a baseball team in NY that isn’t the Yankees) he’d be put right back in the lineup and play until he really reinjured it, then he’d get misdiagnosed on top of it.

With another game tomorrow night in Minnesota, for a normal team you’d have to wonder if Yann Danis would get the start. But since it’s the Devils, we’ll likely see Brodeur again. By most accounts the five goals given up last night weren’t really on him. It would be nice to be able to trust your backup goalie to play one lousy game when we have five in eight nights though – or seven in eleven. I suspect this won’t be the last time I go down this road either before the playoffs. Sure, Brodeur’s playing at a Vezina level now, but what about March and April?

I am curious what kind of reception Lemaire gets, while the Wild got pillored for being a non-exciting team, they did enjoy a certain amount of success including their terrific playoff run in 2003 and a division title as recently as two years ago. Plus Lemaire didn’t really have a fair chance to win in Minnesota with the perrenial lack of talent there, especially since their only star (Marian Gaborik) spent more time in the press box than on the ice the last few years. Really, playing the trap was the only way the Wild were going to keep their heads above water. This year might bear that out as they’re sitting in eleventh place in the West as of this morning with their new up-tempo style.

During this afternoon’s Winter Classic between the Bruins and Flyers at Fenway, the US Olympic team will be announced. Zach Parise‘s a lock and Jamie Langenbrunner also a near-certainty but it’ll be interesting to see if anyone else goes. Has Andy Greene gotten enough publicity to get an invite? Will Paul Martin still be on the roster in spite of his injury questions?

Maybe I’m in the minority among fans but I don’t mind seeing my players go to the Olympics. First off it’s an honor and gives them (especially the younger guys) free experience in important games. Plus I’m not one of those that thinks oh, just stay home and avoid injury. That’s Indianapolis Colts thinking. Everyone else’s players have the same injury risk anyway, why should we be special and compel guys to sit home?

Granted it’s more wear and tear for whose who go and especially if they have a deep tournament run, but if the Devils keep going as well as they have Lemaire can make up for that down the stretch by scaling back minutes before the playoffs if he wants – though I’m not sure if the organization believes in that, especially with the general philosophy in the past of going all out for every last point in the regular season. Plus I’m not too keen about guys sitting out for three weeks and then jumping right back into it either, especially in the Devils’ case since they have a big road trip coming out of the break, going to San Jose, Calgary and Edmonton.

Anyway, here are the three stars last night though I’m pretty much going by a statsheet here:

BoNY Three Stars:
  1. Johnathan Toews (goal, assist, +1)
  2. Cristobal Huet (26/27 saves)
  3. John Madden (goal, 14:33 TOI)
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Quote Of Day: Jordan Schroeder

So, what did Jordan Schroeder think about how close USA came to pulling off the upset of Canada? He basically said what we thought:

I think we showed tonight we were the better team. We had a lot more chances and we were up 4-2. I think we should have won, but it’s part of hockey. Hats off to them. They won in a shootout.

Here’s hoping there’s a rematch with a lot more on the line.

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Canada beats US in classic


For at least one more night, Oh Canada was played as fans cheered their hockey heroes one more time for rallying back from two down to beat Team USA 5-4 in the skill competition. In front of over a record 15,000 jam packed at Saskatoon for what’s looking to be a traditional WJC New Year’s marquee attraction, the five-time defending champs overcame a 4-2 third period deficit to pull out the victory- winning Group A for an automatic bye into the semis.

Earlier in the day, Sweden earned the other free spot by routing US quarterfinal foe Finland 7-1, with Devil properties Jacob Josefson scoring twice and Mattias Tedenby tallying a goal and assist. Russia also defeated the Czech Republic 5-2 to setup the other quarter versus Swiss. Islander property Kiril Petrov scored a goal and assist while Blue Jacket product Nikita Filatov added two helpers. Vladimir Tarashenko had two goals and a helper.

As for the latest American-Canadian showdown, it lived up to its billing with both teams skating ferociously finishing every check in a barn burner. If last year’s Canada 7-4 comeback from an early 0-3 hole was great, then this was even better featuring more twists and turns than a roller coaster. Both came out ready for this crucial test after laughers. Early on, the USA established their forecheck. But it was the hosts who got on the board first when Stefan Della-Rovere slammed home a Jordan Caron shot that got redirected by Luke Adam, caroming off Jack Campbell to Rovere for the gimme just 2:03 in.

However, the lead lasted only 1:37 with the Americans getting it right back on a power play goal from Philip McRae. With Brayden Schenn in the box, McCrae started the play down low coming out for a stuff try which Jake Allen got a piece of. But it rebounded to Jerry D Amigo, who also was denied. The puck caromed back to McRae for an easy finish. Tied up, both clubs took turns attacking. But in a seesaw period that saw Canada hold a slight 10-9 shots edge, the USA did a good job shutting down their dangerous power play by killing off two penalties, including one taken by Ranger prospect Chris Kreider that negated a man-advantage. Our great attention to detail saw them not only disrupt Ryan Ellis but blanket Taylor Hall, who was closely shadowed by junior ‘mate Cam Fowler.

Sound backchecking, blocked shots and breaking up plays at last split seconds allowed the Americans to catch the Canadian points deep, generating plenty of shorthanded opportunities, including a near miss from Ryan Bourque off a nice Derek Stepan set up. A common theme throughout. Still deadlocked at one, Team USA finally made it work when Jordan Schroeder got behind for a breakaway and went five-hole on Allen for a 2-1 lead. The play was made possible by standout teammate Tyler Johnson, who after breaking up a chance, turned around in one motion and threaded the needle to the Vancouver No.22 overall ’09 pick. A great heads up play for the lead.

This game had everything, including nasty hits like the one Colten Teubert delivered on an American. Both teams didn’t give an inch. Trailing for the first time all tournament (they hadn’t been scored on till tonight), Canada struck back thanks to Jordan Eberle’s fancy backhand tuck job. Taking a Schenn pass, Eberle dashed around a D and then went to the backhand, deking Campbell for the equalizer 4:07 later. Amazingly, less than a minute later, a huge play took place when Teubert took down a cutting Kreider for a penalty shot. He had completed a hat trick versus Latvia with an off the grain forehand. He made the same move but Allen gave him nothing to Canadian fans’ delight.

Team USA then ran into penalty trouble handing Canada consecutive power plays. What probably was frustrating was that while A.J. Jenks got nabbed for interference, Nazem Kadri threw him down moments earlier with no call. It didn’t matter. They had to kill it. As time wound down in the second, our guys continued to attack exploiting Canada’s overpinching. They again connected shorthanded when this time Johnson was the beneficiary of an inspired D Amigo rush. He flew down the left wing forcing Allen to make a stop but the puck went up in the air right off Johnson’s stick and in for the shorty, coming with under 11 seconds left. Most amazing was D Amigo’s presence of mind to look up at the clock as the play developed, putting them back ahead. Great stuff.

It set up one heck of a third. With Canada still on the PP, Hall nearly tied it twice on the opening shift just missing wide after slipping behind and then also coming close on a wrap around. However, as the penalty expired, Stepan made a nice defensive play and then found Danny Kristo for a big goal 61 seconds in. One of the most dangerous finishers on our side, Kristo beat the D with a great one-on-one move inside and then went five-hole pumping his fists and cheering as he passed the bench.

The problem was there was still plenty of time left. Too much for Canada to give up. Stepan came close to making it 5-2 but Allen shut the door. That gave his teammates a chance to comeback. For a while, nothing was going on except sound defensive play from Team USA. But that all changed when with under 10 minutes left, Eberle got a stick on a Schenn shot for his second of the night, cutting to 4-3. Brandon McMillan started it with a good cycle, getting a key secondary helper. With the crowd suddenly alive, the US took a timeout. Unfortunately, they couldn’t stem momentum. Not even after denying Canada on another PP and getting their own with over five minutes to go.

Instead, they were way too tenative. Just as I was noting it to my Dad, here came Alex Pietrangelo taking full advantage of a sloppy turnover and then roofing a perfect laser to know it at four apiece with 4:05 remaining. The roof nearly came off the place. Amazingly, they almost won it in regulation but a goal was wiped out due to a player in the crease with like two minutes left. It would go to four-on-four overtime.

Unfortunately, nothing was decided, forcing a winner take all shootout for tops in the Group. Nothing separated the North American combatants thru two rounds with Eberle, Kristo, Kadri and Jeremy Morin all scoring. Brandon Kozun put Canada back ahead when he shot thru Campbell’s wickets, leaving it all up to Schroeder. He had a fantastic game but went to the same move that worked prior. This time, Allen closed it up, allowing his team to celebrate a great victory to improve to 4-0 and an automatic bid into the Final Four.

As the Canadian anthem played, the dejection on our kids’ faces said it all. They knew they had it but let Canada off the hook. Stepan still composed himself to do an interview on NHL Network. Didn’t catch it. They have nothing to be ashamed of but were oh so close. Now, they must go out and beat the Finns for another possible crack at their archrival. At least it was a classic.

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New Year’s Puck

Tonight, 2009 ends for good. For us East coasters, it’s less than seven hours till the ball drops. Apparently, that already has happened for one of our Battle teams.:P There actually is a game between the Habs and Cats now. And for any WJC followers, Tedenby and Josefson scored for Sweden against Finland. The big one takes place at 8 between USA and Canada in Saskatoon. I hope our boys pull it off silencing those nimrods who boo our team. But not holding out much hope there.

Three of four BONY teams do battle tonight. The Rangers visit the Candy Canes at 7:30 while the Islanders are in Ottawa at 7. And a possible Cup preview in the Windy City between the two best teams at present, the Devils and Blackhawks going off half an hour after the big game I’ll be locked into. What? You really thought I’d be glued to my pathetic team after last night.

I’d say more but am about to head out and finally sign up for Planet Fitness. Part of my 2010 New Year’s Resolutions. I want to thank Hasan, Brian and Underdog for their contributions and of course our fans. Without the readers, this blog would be useless. Thank you to all. Wishing a Happy and healthy New Year!

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Quote of the Day: New Year’s Eve edition

This comes via Tom Gulutti‘s Fire and Ice blog after last night’s Devils win against the Penguins where (shock of shocks) the Penguins only got one chance on the power play last night to the Devils’ four. Apparently some Penguins didn’t like being treated as a normal NHL team for a night:

During a stoppage in play 9:25 into the second period, referee Dan Marouelli had a long conversation at the Penguins’ bench with head coach Dan Bylsma and then another talk with Crosby. Then, he came over to the Devils’ and spoke briefly with Lemaire. After Marouelli left, Lemaire smiled.

According to one Devils’ player, Marouelli said the Penguins were complaining about the penalties.

“[Marouelli] said they were complaining that we didn’t have any penalties,” the player said. “[Marouelli] said we were behaving well and hadn’t done anything wrong.”

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Tonight Summed Up

This comes from the company man, John Giannone who covered that debacle.

jaygeemsg

No life. No heart. No offense. No focus. No defensive help. No chance. Thus sums up the Rangers’ night vs PHI. In short,worst loss of season.

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