Mika Day At Garden! Eighth career hat trick for Zibanejad and huge first period from Shesterkin carries Rangers to statement win over Lightning

For a while, you wondered if we’d ever see the same Mika Zibanejad from ’19-20 when he caught fire prior to the long pause. In fact, we attended his remarkable five-goal game which was Capped off by a highlight reel overtime winner to win it 6-5. That was Mika Night. Sunday afternoon was Mika Day.

In a much earlier start without Artemi Panarin (protocol), Zibanejad had the magic back. He again stepped up big time by recording his eighth career hat trick to highlight a statement 4-0 win over the Lightning at MSG. He wasn’t the only star. Igor Shesterkin shined brightly with an unbelievable first period. He stopped all 18 Tampa shots (38 overall in his 2nd career shutout) while Zibanejad scored twice on the power play followed by an important Ryan Strome goal at even strength to build a 3-0 lead.

This was a terrific game by the Blueshirts. Without their top scorer and minus both Ryan Lindgren and veteran defenseman Patrik Nemeth (who played well in the New Year’s Eve win at Tampa), they sure delivered a message to the rest of the league. In sweeping a two-game home-and-home series with the champs, who were healthier in the rematch, these were the biggest two wins of the season.

Many naysayers pointed to a 3-8-2 record versus playoff opponents prior to the pair of games. Now, they can eat crow or cry about charts and foolish ‘Expected Statistical’ crap in their basements. Games aren’t decided by that. Rather by the way the team plays. And while they were out-attempted by a wide margin in a very wide open first period that probably favored the Bolts, it was the brilliance of the goalie along with the star of Zibanejad that stood out the most.

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Zibanejad got the party started early on. With the Rangers on the power play, he waited for Chris Kreider to move just out of the way of Andrei Vasilevskiy, whose vision was interrupted enough for Mika to get that patented wrist shot through low stick side for the game’s first goal. Of note, Zibanejad was back in his office in the left circle. A place he did most of his damage in his career season two years ago. It’s where he should be even when Panarin returns.

Despite falling behind, the Lightning certainly got their scoring chances on Shesterkin. What they discovered was that the recently turned 25-year old Russian was a brick wall. He celebrated his birthday on Dec. 30. It’s hard to believe he was a fourth round pick in 2014 who went number 118. If there’s one thing the organization can do, it’s find goalies late in drafts. When healthy, it’s my belief that Igor is every bit as good as Henrik Lundqvist. The proof is in the chants from the crowd. It’s gone from, “Hen-rik, Hen-rik,” to “Ig-or, Ig-or!”

Indeed, Czar Igor as friend Sean McCaffrey of bluecollarblueshirts.com likes to call him, is the heir apparent to Number 30. When his jersey goes up to the rafters later this month despite the ridiculous whiny crap from Larry Brooks, it’ll be a very special night at the World’s Most Vaccinated. The torch will officially be passed to Igor Shesterkin, who when healthy is a big difference maker for this team.

He showed it in the first period. In between a pair of Zibanejad power play goals including a pass for Kaapo Kakko that banked right off former Rangers’ captain Ryan McDonagh, there was Shesterkin denying the dangerous Lightning time and time again. Two of his best stops were stoning Brayden Point in the slot off a good Anthony Cirelli feed, and then stretching out to rob Mikhail Sergachev with a great glove save. That one may as well have been from the old Lundqvist highlight reel. There was a time when his glove was pretty good. Just ask Alex Ovechkin. He’d be a lot closer to Gretzky if not for the work Henrik did over their careers.

If there was a momentum shift that told you it wasn’t Tampa’s day, it wasn’t the Zibanejad bank shot off McDonagh that made it 2-0. We’re talking about the Lightning here. They were turned away by Shesterkin, who must’ve had at least seven great saves. It was the Strome goal at five-on-five that really was meaningful. Taking advantage of a Cirelli turnover in the neutral zone, Barclay Goodrow gained the Tampa zone and found Strome open in the slot for the third goal. One that snuck underneath Vasilevskiy, who wasn’t at his best. It was his first game back.

Even up three, the Rangers were hanging on defensively. They let Shesterkin do most of the work in the first. By the second, it wasn’t only the performance of the brilliant Vezina candidate that kept the Bolts in check. After being on their heels the first seven minutes, the home team picked it up. They blocked several shots with Alexis Lafreniere making a good play to take away a chance and Chris Kreider diving in front of a shot to lead by example. There was also a big hit from Jacob Trouba on Mathieu Joseph that resulted in, “Trouuu” chants from the crowd. It reminded me of the classic “Beuuuukk” chants. He’s gaining a reputation as one of the game’s best open ice hitters.

The best part of the win was how the defense improved over the contest. Even without Ryan Lindgren and Patrik Nemeth, the kids stepped up. K’Andre Miller had a second straight strong game. He played a few more minutes with Trouba as they were relied upon more by coach Gerard Gallant. It’s all about improvement. Speaking of stepping up, Libor Hajek was back with Adam Fox. He was solid in extended time. Rookie third pair Zac Jones and Nils Lundkvist were okay. With the exception of Jones getting turned around by the very tricky Point on a chance, they were fine.

Still leading by three, there was some anticipation for Zibanejad to get the hat trick. We’ve seen it before. It was a subtle play that lead to his eighth game of three goals or more. In a strange play, he knocked down a clearing attempt to keep the puck alive. This would be challenged by Lightning bench boss Jon Cooper. Then Kreider swatted the puck before making a good pass over for an easy Zibanejad tap in for the hat trick.

As hats flew down with fans celebrating, Cooper made the coach’s challenge. After a lengthy review, it was determined that Zibanejad’s stick wasn’t high. To the naked eye based on the replays, it looked okay. He was crouched down and looked like his stick was low enough. That’s exactly what the refs determined on video review. It was the right call. There wasn’t enough conclusive evidence to overturn it. Even as Steven Stamkos pouted, he was brushed aside by an emphatic ref who if you read lips gave him an expletive. Cooper just shook his head. It wasn’t his team’s day.

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After Shesterkin made 11 more saves for 29 through two periods, all that was left was whether he’d get that category where there’s a zero next to his name on the game sheet. To my observation, it looked like the Zibanejad third goal which made it 4-zip really took the wind out of the Lightning’ sails. Psychologically, it’s a huge difference being down three compared to four.

We saw that in how the Bolts played the third. It wasn’t so much that they gave up. They didn’t. They’re repeat Stanley Cup champs for a reason. But none of the nine shots they got ever felt like they were destined to get by the razor sharp Shesterkin. Or Shestyorkin. If you prefer Russian like me since I took it in high school and mastered the language (94 on the Regents), that’s Игор Шестёркйн! Очень хорошо Хоккей.

Part of the third was also how the Blueshirts defended. They didn’t give up too much. You didn’t see Shesterkin having to stand on his head in the first. That was even true for the second where they blocked at least nine shots. The Lightning also had some attempts go wide. You also noticed some over passing. Something you see when a hot goalie is in a zone.

It was a much better game from Shesty, who wasn’t at his best Friday or in the Panthers’ loss. Maybe the way he denied the three big Lightning shooters in the skill competition got him going. It was his third game back. It takes time for a goalie to get sharp. That was evidenced by Vasilevskiy giving up a couple of goals he normally has.

One of the real takeaways from this victory is they beat a healthier Lightning. They had Vasilevskiy, Cirelli and Erik Cernak back. But none of it mattered. That is what was most impressive about the win. Not only did it back up their hard fought fugaze shootout win in what can best be described as a strange and sloppy game.

They did it by out-Lightning the Bolts. Especially in that fast paced race track that was a very entertaining first period. It really was great action by both teams. The score could’ve been very different if not for Igor. The play of the goalie matters. Ask some of my Bolts friends about how much Vasy means to their team. I’ve watched a lot of their games. More often than not, Vasilevskiy is their best player. I put him in the MVP conversation with the Oilers’ twins and Ovechkin.

If Shesterkin could stay on the ice, perhaps you could make a case for him as well. But that’s more of a long-shot. Overall, it was a great win. The best of the season. Especially with the Oilers coming in tomorrow night for the second of a back-to-back.

I’m going to say this right now. If our team doesn’t get sucked into another run and gun with the flawed Edmonton team despite McDavid and Draisaitl, they’ll win. Forecheck them to death. We know what happened at Edmonton. They don’t want a repeat. Especially if it’s Alex Georgiev in net like last time. This is a different team now. I expect them to win tomorrow and move Dave Tippett one step closer to the unemployment line. We’ll find out soon enough.

One other point of emphasis from today’s game. I thought Lafreniere played well. He was very active throughout. His defensive awareness is improving. He is coming back defensively and making good reads. He also looked more noticeable with a real center as opposed to the incomplete and puzzling Fil Chytil. I don’t see it at all with him. Even Julien Gauthier got a clean breakaway in the final period where Vasilevskiy easily turned him down. Imagine if Gauthier had hands.

I also want to give credit to Greg McKegg. The Keg Man played a solid game on the fourth line. He’s a gamer. There’s nothing wrong with having him fill in for Kevin Rooney until he’s medically cleared. McKegg works hard and hustles. That plays in this league. Dryden Hunt fits much better on the checking line too. Keep him there.

There’s nothing else left to add. It was a very good day for the Blueshirts. Let’s keep it going.

BATTLE OF HUDSON 3 STARS

3rd 🌟 Chris Kreider, NYR (3 assists including perfect set up for Zibanejad hat trick, diving block, a real leader)

2nd 🌟 Igor Shestyorkin, NYR (38 saves including 18 for 18 in first period for 2nd career shutout)

1st 🌟 Mika Zibanejad, NYR (3 goals for his 8th career hat trick, dominant throughout)

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Panarin in protocol, Jones in for Nemeth, Lafreniere on second line for big test in rematch versus Lightning

Normally, I don’t post blogs leading up to a game. However, with it being a good measuring stick to see where the team is, the rematch versus the champion Lightning starts soon in a Sunday afternoon matinee at MSG.

News broke that leading scorer Artemi Panarin won’t be available for the game. He’s in the dreaded protocol. With the Bread Man out, Gerard Gallant has had to tweak his lines for a big match-up.

Alexis Lafreniere will get a chance in the top six. He’s in Panarin’s spot on the second line with Ryan Strome and Barclay Goodrow. It’ll be interesting to see how he does. Coming off a win where he notched his seventh goal thanks to a Brian Elliott gaffe, he’ll have a bigger role. It’s a good test for him.

Also of note, the Rangers list defenseman Patrik Nemeth out due to “illness.” Whatever that means. Top secret. Witness protection! Without him, K’Andre Miller gets a shot on the top pair with Adam Fox. We’ll see if he can build on a good game in Friday’s shootout win in Tampa.

Obviously, that also means different pairings for the other two. Libor Hajek gets to play with Jacob Trouba. His job is to keep it simple and make a good first pass. Cancel that! Hajek back with Fox while Miller stays with Trouba. My mistake due to little sleep. Tough night.

With the D a bit shorthanded, rookie Zac Jones plays his first NHL game of ’21-22. He showed some potential last year. Now, he will have a small role on an all rookie third pair with Nils Lundkvist. How much they play depends on how the game goes.

Don’t forget the Rangers host Edmonton tomorrow night. So, a back-to-back which could signal Alex Georgiev. That could be a factor in how much ice time Gallant gives to his supporting cast.

Mika Zibanejad will need to step up with Chris Kreider and Kaapo Kakko. He did when Panarin was out prior to the long Christmas break. But the second line will be a key.

There is also the marquee all Russian goalie match-up between Igor Shesterkin and the returning all world Andrei Vasilevskiy. That makes it an intriguing game. If you don’t care about the NFL like me due to the pathetic Giants, then this is the kind of game to look forward to.

Even with the lineups probably favoring the Bolts, it’s an opportunity for the Rangers to get a sweep versus the champs. It’ll be interesting. I’ll have more later.

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Canadiens pause through Jan. 6 including AHL affiliate Laval while show goes on in Minnesota for frigid Winter Classic

In the most unsurprising news ever to start 2020 +2 a New Year, the Montreal Canadiens announced that they’re pausing activity through January 6. That also goes for the Laval Rocket of the AHL.

Considering that they basically played with mostly an AHL roster in a 5-2 loss at Florida on New Year’s Day, I get it. No NHL team should ever be forced to ice a roster that only features a few regulars.

For the Habs, only Jonathan Drouin, Nick Suzuki, David Savard, Cole Caufield, Brett Kulak, Cedric Paquette, Michael Pezzetta, Ryan Poehling and Kale Clague can be considered regulars that dress daily. Of the nine, three are rookies including Caufield, Clague and Pezzetta. Jesse Ylonen, Rafael Harvey-Pinard, Cameron Hillis and Lukas Vejdemo all are first-year players too.

Without Jake Allen, third string veteran Sam Montembeault made his eighth start and allowed five goals on 48 shots. Undoubtedly, the 25-year old goalie faced a Cats’ onslaught.

It hasn’t been fun for Montreal following their stunning Stanley Cup Finals appearance last year. They have only seven victories in 34 games (7-23-4) for only 18 points. The fewest in the NHL aside from the Coyotes’ 15.

Most surprising is that this is the first real stoppage for the Canadiens. They are tied with Vegas and Anaheim for the most games played. This while teams such as Boston, Ottawa, Colorado, Dallas, Calgary and the Islanders have played less than 30. In fact, following their second consecutive win at home earlier this afternoon, the Isles’ next three games have all been postponed due to the pandemic. Absurd for a team that was forced to use most of Bridgeport in a loss to the Rangers at their new arena.

The Habs will not play another home game at Bell Centre until Jan. 15 against the Devils. They aren’t scheduled to return to action until 11 days from now when they visit the Bruins 1/12 and the Blackhawks 1/13. Part of the design is due to the attendance issue plaguing Canadian teams up north. By adhering to very restricted protocols in Canada, there will be little to no fans at Montreal, Ottawa and Toronto.

With an increase in games being canceled, it only causes more heartache for the league. Even by opting out of the Olympics in Beijing, that’s a three week window to try to reschedule all these games. Right now, it seems unrealistic that the NHL can do it without extending the regular season past April. Something they weren’t anticipating.

While questions remain for some markets including Seattle, the Wild are hosting the Blues in below frigid conditions at Target Field for the Winter Classic. So far, so good. At last check, the game was tied after a period with the temperature eight below zero. That makes it the coldest ever outdoor hockey game.

Photos taken by Derek Felix courtesy the NHL on TNT.

It definitely looks cool to see the game played in its natural element outdoors in hockey state Minnesota. They even had former Twins great Tony Oliva out at center ice with Kent Hrbek, Joe Mauer and Justin Morneau.

While it will be a successful marquee event with over 38,000 freezing fans cheering on the Wild and Blues, hopefully there won’t be any issues afterwards.

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Cooper heaps praise on Goodrow, who has a special night against former team

If there was a memorable night for a player from last night’s 4-3 win over the Lightning, it came from Barclay Goodrow. The interchangeable Rangers’ forward who was moved up by Gerard Gallant rewarded him by scoring a pair of goals.

That included a shorthanded goal during the second period. A play where Tampa backup Brian Elliott made his second mistake of the game. His turnover allowed Greg McKegg to help set up Goodrow in front for the shorthanded tally that gave the Rangers their first lead.

On an emotional night where the Lightning presented him with his championship ring and then showed a nice video tribute during a stoppage in the first period, Goodrow showed why the Rangers went out and got him. He would also score his second of the game to give his new team a 3-2 lead on a nice deflection with under seven minutes remaining in the third period.

Although they weren’t able to hold the one-goal lead due to Corey Perry putting in a rebound of a Steven Stamkos shot with just under two minutes left, it was Goodrow’s strong play that impressed former coach Jon Cooper. The Lightning bench boss paid him a nice compliment following a shootout loss at Amalie Arena.

“He meant so much to us on and off the ice,” Cooper said of Goodrow when speaking to Arthur Staple of The Athletic. “Did we want the two points? Of course. But if they were going to get them and Goody was going to score two, I can live with that.”

Even Goodrow felt pretty shocked by his good luck facing the team he helped win consecutive Stanley Cups with.

“It’s one of those moments where you’re thinking, ‘What is this life?’” the veteran forward said. “It’s something beyond my wildest dreams. Being able to score a couple goals to top it all off — there was a lot of good things that happened today.”

For Goodrow, he continues to fill whatever role Gallant asks of him. Whether it be moving up to the second line with Artemi Panarin and Ryan Strome or sliding down to play on the fourth line while providing good penalty killing and energy, Goodrow does it without a fuss.

The 28-year old Toronto native is up to six goals and seven assists for 13 points in 32 games thus far. Even if he does get paid a lot ($3.64 million AAV) per year, Goodrow is a high character player who brings intangibles. Never a big scorer, his tenacity and grit are what make him successful.

In 55 games last year, he tallied six goals and 14 assists for 20 points. The key secondary scorer added six points (2-4-6) in the playoffs while playing on the third line with former Bolts Yanni Gourde and Blake Coleman. All three now play for different teams with both Coleman and Goodrow cashing in via unrestricted free agency. Gourde was taken by Seattle in the Expansion Draft.

With still over half a season left to be played in the 2022 calendar year, Goodrow is two goals away from matching his career high in ’19-20. The 26 points (8-18-26) he put up with both San Jose and Tampa are a career best. He hit 20 points for the second time last season. He could be on his way to a third straight year of 20 points or more.

Goodrow also doesn’t shy away from hits. He has 61 so far while also blocking 23 shots. He also has taken his share of face-offs. In fact, he’s already took more this season than last year. Goodrow has won 49.0 percent of draws by going 173-and-180.

That’s the kind of hard-working player he is. It’s exactly why Team President and GM Chris Drury sent a ’22 seventh round pick to the Lightning last off-season to negotiate a new contract to get Goodrow signed. His addition along with Ryan Reaves and Dryden Hunt helped the Rangers establish more grit on their secondary lines. A healthy balance to go with their skill.

He won’t have to wait long to see his former teammates again. The Lightning visit The Garden tomorrow afternoon on January 2 in the first game of 2022 for both teams. If it’s anything like Friday night, it should be interesting.

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A New Year’s Eve Bash! Goodrow celebrates return in style, Zibanejad beats champion Lightning in shootout, Rangers overcome sluggish start to end 2021 with a good win

This was an irate Gerard Gallant getting his money’s worth before a critical face-off with over two minutes left. He sure had his say at refs Corey Syvret and Graham Skilliter, who let him sound off. Maybe he knew the delay in which Chris Kreider was sent back to the bench for Ryan Strome was a key moment.

At the time, Barclay Goodrow had put the Rangers ahead 3-2 on an unbelievable deflection of a K’Andre Miller shot with 6:25 remaining in a strange third period against the defending champion Lightning. Despite at times looking disjointed including a total no show in a bad first period, here they were with a chance to beat the Lightning in regulation.

Somehow, they led by a goal thanks to Goodrow, who sure had a memorable day getting his Stanley Cup ring while catching up with a classy bunch of former teammates. He then got a nice ovation from the appreciate crowd who understood what he meant to those back-to-back Stanley Cups. Now, he looked like the hero for the Rangers, who were on the verge of a statement win even if the Lightning didn’t have ace goalie Andrei Vasilevskiy.

But there was still that defensive face-off. One that highlighted Gallant all fired up over how long they took to review who was on the ice. Of course, they were right. When the Lightning won the key draw, chaos ensued. Off a feed from Ondrej Palat, Lightning captain Steven Stamkos’ heavy one-timer from the left circle rebounded off Igor Shesterkin and took a favorable home hop right to Corey Perry, who buried his eighth to tie the score with 1:57 remaining.

Predictably, Gallant was fuming on the Rangers bench. His face was beet red. The perfect color for New Year’s Eve. It’s those face-offs that matter. Instead of escaping trouble and possibly winning in regulation, his team had to work a lot harder. Following a strange overtime that included a failed Rangers’ four-on-three power play along with some rare four-on-four and finally three-on-three, nothing was decided.

It was Mika Zibanejad who scored in the third round of the skill competition to give the Rangers a 4-3 road win over the Lightning in Tampa. After Shesterkin made a great point blank pad stop to deny the very tough Brayden Point on a series of dekes in the top of the third, here came Zibanejad with his more simple one fake and forehand high glove past Tampa backup goalie Brian Elliott to give the Rangers a good win.

Even if it was at times ugly and choppy hockey, they got the job done. It would be easy to point directly at the role Elliott had in helping our team mount a rally in a bizarre second period. Without two awful mistakes from the veteran netminder, the Blueshirts probably don’t come back to win. But Elliott was the Best Ranger of The Game in the first two periods. He sure helped the cause with not one, but two primary assists on goals.

After mailing in the first period where they only could muster three shots on goal, the Rangers predictably fell behind when Stamkos let go of a rocket for a power play goal at 18:21 of the first to put the Bolts ahead. Ryan Reaves got sent off for roughing Perry. He protested, but it didn’t matter. Chris Kreider was unable to clear the zone. Palat then passed over for Victor Hedman, who found Stamkos in his office for the hammer past Shesterkin.

Playing for a second consecutive night after getting blown out by the Panthers 9-3 when they had more of an AHL roster, the Lightning got back Elliott along with defensemen Mikhail Sergachev and Andrej Sustr. Not exactly significant except for Sergachev, who is the third big defenseman they have behind behemoth Hedman (game high 33:27) and Ryan McDonagh (25:02). Sergachev logged 27:09. The irony being Darren Raddysh got 7:55 as the sixth D. He was with the Wolf Pack the previous three years.

Let’s just say Tampa had its top four which includes Jan Ruutta. Zach Bogosian was out with an injury. The Lightning have been winning a lot of games without Nikita Kucherov and other top players including Point, who missed significant time before recently returning. They skated without Anthony Cirelli.

The less said about it, the better. I’m fed up with the situation. What Hasan said about the NHL caving into the old mighty buck due to Canada is the absolute 💯 truth. It’s an absolute joke what’s going on. How many more games do they plan to cancel? One look at what was on the schedule the past three days and it defies logic. That’ll be my only commentary going forward.

If the first period wasn’t much to talk about, the second provided some much more interesting stuff. Even if most of it was ugly hockey, the Rangers took advantage of two dreadful Elliott misplays to get into the game. Prior to that, it could’ve been worse.

A very undisciplined hi-sticking minor on Zibanejad where he caught Point off the opening draw wasn’t exactly the start to the period they had in mind. However, a good penalty kill of the dangerous Lightning power play helped. They contributed by continuing to over pass to Stamkos, who only managed one low shot that Shesterkin kicked out.

It was a dump in behind the Tampa net that changed things. With an aggressive Julien Gauthier in on the forecheck, Elliott panicked and threw the puck away right to Alexis Lafreniere, who took the early New Year’s Eve gift and deposited it home for his seventh unassisted at 5:30. Every time he’s called it by fans including in this space, the 20-year old former top pick does something to silence the doubters. If only he could get a real center. More on that later.

If the opening period wasn’t much, the middle stanza had its moments. Gallant began tweaking the lines. In search of a spark with Dryden Hunt having a bad first period that included an offensive zone penalty, he decided upon Goodrow to play with Ryan Strome and Artemi Panarin. The very curious thing is Goodrow got double shifted. After previously taking a shift with Lafreniere and Kaapo Kakko, he moved up to the second line. They looked better.

So did the fourth line which spent some time in the Lightning zone. Hunt was moved down to that line alongside Reaves and Gauthier, who was sparingly used. He got less than seven minutes. But did more than Filip Chytil, who really seems to be losing Gallant. He hasn’t done enough to merit consistent ice time. At this point, I’ve seen enough. There’s a good chance he could be gone by March.

Gallant also made one other notable change. Unlike Wednesday, he decided to move Libor Hajek off the top pair and down with Nils Lundkvist. You hardly noticed them. That’s a good way of saying they didn’t play a lot. In Hajek’s place was everyone’s favorite Patrik Nemeth. You know my thoughts on him. However, he gave a good account in over 22 minutes while paired with Adam Fox. Like Hedman, Fox also saw plenty of shifts and logged 30:51 including over 10 minutes of special teams. For all that time, he can do better than just two shots.

Speaking of Nemeth, he drew an undisciplined holding minor on Alex Killorn. It was a bad penalty by a gritty and skilled player who is that guy you hate if he’s your opponent. But love if he’s on your side. He once broke Ranger hearts a while back. The guy seems to get better with age. A good asshole.

While on the five-on-four, Kakko got nabbed for running into Boris Katchouk at the Tampa blue line. He was attempting to set a pick play. If you’re not subtle, they’ll get you every time. Kakko’s interference minor put each side on some four-on-four.

When it became a Tampa man-advantage, another ridiculous Elliott misplay allowed Goodrow to score shorthanded. He simply intercepted the dying quail and went backhand five-hole for an emotional goal at 14:30. Greg McKegg got credit for an assist on the play. No complaints about the honest effort from the Keg Man.

Suddenly up a goal without really having done anything except receive generosity from Elliott, the Rangers gave it right back. Late in the period, a turnover resulted in a quick Lightning transition up ice. Killorn made the play to Point, who then gained entry and found an open Ross Colton for a one-timer that went past the glove of Shesterkin to tie the score with 2:29 left. It was another stoppable shot.

Before the second was out, some sloppy play in their end nearly put them behind. A bad turnover allowed Perry to drive a one-timer off the crossbar. The puck then caromed out to Gauthier. Out of frustration, Perry tripped him up to put the Rangers on a power play with 46 seconds left in the period. A key Hedman clear sent the game to the third still tied.

Despite having over a minute left on the power play, they weren’t able to capitalize. After the Bolts got their kill, things slowed down. The teams played more defensive minded. Very expected in a tie game between two playoff caliber teams.

On a Rangers’ scoring chance, Hunt got into a wrestling match with Katchouk in front of the benches. After Katchouk gave Hunt a shove, he retaliated with two punches. It wasn’t much between the two other two minutes of roughing apiece.

There wasn’t much in the way of shots. The Rangers had six on Elliott, who managed to settle down when the crowd wasn’t getting on him whenever he had to play the puck. It was funny. The Lightning got eight shots on Shesterkin, who was sharper. He had to make a couple on Stamkos and also turned away Hedman on a great use during a four-on-four.

It was Goodrow who looked like he would play the hero. On a offensive draw won by Strome to Panarin, the puck was moved up to Miller. Having played one of his better games, he fired a low shot that somehow Goodrow was able to redirect past Elliott for a 3-2 lead with 6:25 left in the third. It was splendid work by the gritty former Bolt.

Unfortunately, the Rangers again couldn’t hold a lead. They simply haven’t handled prosperity well in third periods lately. With the Lightning pressing for the equalizer, Shesterkin made a couple of good stops in tight. But he had to face more.

Finally came the hotly debated face-off that drove Gallant nuts. When Palat set up Stamkos for that heavy one-timer past a diving Jacob Trouba who went for the block, it screened Shesterkin just enough to leak out a juicy rebound that Perry finished at 18:03. Tie hockey game.

Honestly, I wasnt shocked. The game had overtime written all over it. It was eerie and unpredictable. There was a twist before they got there. A Sergachev misplay over the glass while under pressure had Jon Cooper hot under the collar. He incorrectly felt that it was deflected. There also was an questionable icing that helped lead to the fourth Rangers power play with 1:14 remaining in regulation.

I thought at that point, they’d win it. But Elliott suddenly made a couple of big saves including one on a tough Zibanejad shot that Kreider deflected. He isn’t exactly a lights out goalie anymore. But his two clutch stops forced it to extras.

Still on a four-on-three to start, the Blueshirts simply weren’t able to cash in. In fact, the overtime was played very cautiously. The only two shots were from Rangers. Elliott stopped both. They had most of the puck possession.

The best chance came when Filip Chytil had Lafreniere wide open for what looked like a gimme. Instead, his pass was 12 feet behind Lafreniere. It was hideous. The reactions from irate fans told the story. Many are fed up with Chytil, who looks like another overhyped prospect. Lias Andersson plays harder in a fourth line role for the Kings. I’m not kidding.

Finally in the non-hockey portion, it was shootout time. In Round One, Shesterkin stopped Hedman followed by Elliott stuffing Kakko on the backhand. Then, Stamkos went for high glove but missed the net. But Panarin was turned away by Elliott.

It came down to Round Three. Point, who’s usually money in these big spots, came in with a lot of speed. But Shesterkin stayed right with him to get his left pad on the forehand deke to keep it out. Then out came Zibanejad. Everyone knew what he’d do including Elliott. He still couldn’t prevent Zibanejad from winning it with his trademark forehand deke top shelf.

The Rangers earned two points against the champs. It wasn’t pretty. It wasn’t a masterpiece. It didn’t have to be. Just a good character building win with the rematch Sunday afternoon on January 2nd at MSG. That should be interesting.

https://twitter.com/BattleOfHudson/status/1477131900657577990?t=R7Z71vom81ZnbDG6_xkQPQ&s=19

Happy New Year 🎇 ✨ 🎆⭐🎉

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Wild OT win over Oilers sends New Jersey into the New Year on a high

I don’t normally double up on blogs with two in the same day, but this game deserved it – and in a good way for once. Plus I don’t really have much else to do on New Year’s Eve anyway, with most of the people I know laying low because of the COVID variant spreading through NJ (and most other places) like wildfire. Other than the three home games I went to in December, this was the most I’d watched any Devils game the rest of the month. Not that I was really watching it all the time but I had it on and didn’t flip channels other than getting the occasional update from Rutgers’ ill-fated (and gifted) bowl loss to Wake Forest.

From the start you knew this game was going to be entertaining if nothing else, with three goals in the first 3:05 of the game, four goals in the first six minutes and five goals in the first 11:10 with the action going back and forth all afternoon long. In a wild coincidence all five goals in the first period were scored by former first-round draft picks, with the first three goals all coming from former #1 overalls. Jack Hughes’ power play (!!!) goal was quickly followed by Connor McDavid taking advantage of some…interesting coverage by the Devils (re: zero) to score a wide-open goal. Just seventeen seconds after McDavid’s first goal, Nico Hischier scored off a rebound, caroming the puck off of goaltender Mike Smith’s skate and into the goal. Our second lead didn’t last much longer than the first one as Kailer Yamamoto’s deflection went past Mackenzie Blackwood to tie the game again at the six-minute mark. A nice give-and-go play by Andreas Johnsson and Dawson Mercer gave the rookie his ninth goal of the season and the Devils their third lead of the period.

Shockingly after that barrage of goals, there would only be one more until the third period. Not so shockingly, it was McDavid who scored again in the second period after he split defensemen Ty Smith and Ryan Graves on a breakaway and put home his 19th of the season. Still, in a wide-open game like this one you knew more goals were coming. And come they did in the third period, with Janne Kuokkanen’s slapshot beating Smith to give the Devils their fourth lead of the night at 5:14 of the third. Less than two minutes later, Devin Shore tied the game again when a Ryan McLeod feed went through Ty Smith and right to Shore in front.

As if the game wasn’t wild enough after four blown leads, the most inexplicable sequence of the game occured barely a minute later and gave the Oilers their first lead of the night when Yamamoto scored his second of the night after a delayed penalty. Things got dicey was after it was obvious Dougie Hamilton clearly swatted the puck as the ref was calling the penalty and Hughes arguably touched it later on in the sequence as well, before Leon Draisaitl’s cross-ice pass found Yamamoto for the goal. Interim coach Alain Nasreddine challenged the play but after a nine-minute review (!!!) the officials did an about-face and said the call wasn’t challengeable in a garbled attempt at an explanation. Clearly they thought it was, or we would have been tagged with a delay of game on it as well.

It was right about then I was glad I wasn’t at this game, I might have gone hoarse shouting ‘REF YOU SUCK’ after that sequence. As annoyed as I was at the refs, I also knew to a degree we deserved our own bad luck on that when Hughes stopped playing, appealing for the call off the second touch and allowed the cross-ice pass through. Even more laughably, the refs tagged Yegor Sharangovich for a delay of game on a faceoff a couple minutes later, claiming he played the puck with a hand pass when he arguably was just making a motion getting up after falling down. That was less possession of the puck than Hamilton had on the non-whistle on our delayed penalty.

As if the hockey gods were looking to make things right, both Sharangovich and Hughes would gain redemption soon after. First, there was the matter of tying the game again. Still trailing 5-4 with the net empty, Sharangovich’s top-drawer deflection beat Smith to tie the score at 5-all with just thirty-two seconds remaining in regulation. Then came overtime, with both Jesper Bratt and Hughes getting stopped on breakaways early, but a Hughes slapshot on his next shift of OT hit the beleaguered Oilers goalie, bounced off him and into the net for the winner – Hughes’ second OT winner of the year, and second souvenir stick tossed into the crowd. So at least we’ve gone from six losses in a row to two wins in a row. As they say in the movie Major League, you win one more…that’s called a winning streak! I don’t really want to think about who we have to play to earn that winning streak (the Caps at Washington – shudder), for one night I’d rather just enjoy the Devils pulling out an entertaining win with Hughes having his second dominant game in a row, showing signs he may well be taking that next step.

Notes: So in the first post-break game with the new arena protocols the Devils’ announced attendance was 13,044…oof. I didn’t think it’d be that bad, even with noticing how much ticket prices dropped for this game. I’m not too unhappy about missing this game, even with a lesser than expected crowd. Clearly I’m not the only one who’s got some ambivalence about going to games with a mask in the midst of another pandemic surge either.

BoNY Three Stars:

  1. Jack Hughes (two goals including the game-winner, one assist in 19:40)
  2. Dawson Mercer (goal, assist, +2 in 15:54)
  3. Yegor Sharangovich (game-tying goal)
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Devils, all of hockey still in a COVID cloud on New Year’s Eve

Not exactly the news I wanted to see getting home from a half-day of work before watching the Devils take on the Oilers in their second post-break game. It’s one thing when players get put on the COVID list, but when it’s your 60+ year old coach that’s a little different in terms of concern level. Even if Lindy Ruff is presumably vaccinated and boosted a la almost the entire NHL. While this season’s wave of COVID hasn’t even been as bad (so far) as last season’s was for the Devils on the whole with only three players currently on it, the sheer amount of people testing positive around the league just casts a pall on this part of the hockey season at least.

Especially after the WJC had games forfeited and eventually the whole tournament canceled. I can’t say I get into watching the prospect All-Star games in general, but I was even less inclined to pay attention this year given the COVID recess that both sidelined the NHL through the holiday and canceled the women’s version of the WJC. People in charge of running the tournament starting with the IIHF need to answer for why they thought they could pull off the men’s tournament without a true bubble in place and a far more contagious variant running rampant. Not to mention if only one or two positive tests per team were going to be enough to constitute a forfeit, how did anyone think it would be possible to have a legitimate tournament play out? Either have a real bubble with draconian forfeit rules, or no bubble with large taxi squads and a willingness to play on.

All of these leagues and sports seem to be making it up as they go along without much regard for consistency, and in the NHL’s case they have the added complication of multiple Canadian teams and that country’s different rules and standards compared to our own. In the case of our sport, we’re going to have to find a happy medium between trying to curb the spread and just continually sidelining asymptomatic players in a league where supposedly 99% of players and staff are at least vaccinated, thereby reducing the symptoms for the vast majority of symptomatic players to cold/flu territory. You can’t have it both ways and exercise extreme caution while still trying to make decisions based on financial considerations. Canadian teams having games postponed because they can’t have fans in the building is just the latest example of the NHL wanting its cake and eating it too. So if teams are healthy enough to play now then get ten guys on the COVID list when it’s rescheduled they have to play with a bunch of AHL fill-ins because the NHL and teams wanted more fans in the building?

By the same token, it isn’t ideal to have home-ice advantage in some arenas and not in others based on different rules in each city and province. Unfortunately, this is the world we still live in at the moment. First priority in every decision whether to postpone or play should always about be health and safety but second priority shouldn’t be financial, rather it should just be finding a way to play 82 games with as close to optimum rosters as is possible given realistic safety protocols and the normal wear and tear of an NHL season. If a team like say, the Islanders misses the postseason by a couple of points they’ll have a justifiable beef given the NHL made them play a few games early in the season with far from an optimum roster simply because they didn’t want to compromise home dates when tickets for the new Belmont arena were in higher demand.

It’s not an ideal world for anyone including the fans. After nearly a half season of shall we say loose requirements for fans to attend the Prudential Center, the protocols are getting beefed up at the arena with a mask mandate in effect immediately post-holiday pause and a vaccine mandate to go into effect on January 10, per the city of Newark. I’ve already made my complicated feelings known about the mask mandate, I actually do welcome the vaccine mandate though. That won’t affect me in the least since I’ve already got my green card for the Prudential Center indicating my vaccination status, nor will it make me look any more forward to the next time going to the arena wearing a mask. I’ll probably have to go to at least a couple games this month given the market for tickets at this point – everything considered – is practically nil.

I won’t be going this afternoon but that was mostly due to the fact I didn’t know how late I would have to work today so a 1 PM start probably wasn’t going to be ideal. It turned out I wound up leaving at 11:30 so I could have easily made the game, but to be honest I’m just as ambivalent watching a game in a near-sellout crowd at the moment as I am doing it in a mask. While I’m not especially afraid of getting this variant – particularly soon after getting my booster – it’s still at best an annoyance I don’t want to deal with. Plus you factor in this is also cold and flu season, and with cases spiking it’s hard to get instantaneous results on a COVID test, so you basically are forced to quarantine even with the flu or a cold.

While ticket prices have plummeted since I sold my pair of seats (one of the rare times where I made out by selling early), I’m still expecting today to be a near sellout given the fact most people have – or can get – this afternoon off. Unless there are a lot of no-shows given fear over the spread of the variant, there’s no way I really want to be in a crowd with bumper to bumper traffic in the hallways and people behind me all game long. Games like next Thursday against Columbus or the following Monday against Tampa where there’ll be maybe 10000 people in the building? I don’t feel as crowded upon then, especially with an aisle seat and the ability to move around the arena to an even more open area if need be.

This is more than I wanted to go on about the variant, but hopefully the last time I’ll need to drone on it, though I’m sure I’ll comment on my first post-new year game assuming I do go to the Rock next month in a mask. I’ll have to go to at least one of the next two games to pick up my long-sleeve t-shirt holiday gift from the Devils and probably wouldn’t be able to sell all my tickets next month regardless. There still isn’t really enough team-related news to discuss, although they did manage to break a six-game losing streak by wining their first post-break game against the Sabres 4-3 the other night with Jack Hughes and Jesper Bratt leading the way with respective three-point nights (each with a goal and two assists). For Bratt, he’s continuing his star turn and contract drive while hopefully Hughes can use Thursday as a springboard to achieve more consistent production of his own.

That’s about as high a note as I can end this blog on, hopefully everyone has a happy and safe New Year!

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Duclair, Cats’ big third period spoils Shesterkin’s return in tough one-goal loss

Finally, there was hockey played. For the Rangers, the early Christmas break allowed Igor Shesterkin and Artemi Panarin to return. But also meant no Ryan Lindgren and Kevin Rooney due to COVID Protocol. Both regulars were missed.

However, the Rangers were in good position to improve to two-for-two against the Panthers. But they blew a one-goal lead after two periods by allowing three Florida third period goals in a tough 4-3 loss on the road. A one-goal defeat that was winnable.

It happens. You’re not always going to be able to protect leads in the third period. Even in a home loss to Vegas where they got beat in a shootout, the Rangers didn’t handle prosperity well. Coincidentally, that was the last game they played before games were postponed.

Even with a 12-day layoff, they played well enough to win against one of the league’s elite teams. Let’s put it this way. The effort in the second meeting against the Cats was much more consistent than the one where they relied on Shesterkin to steal a 4-3 home decision on Nov. 8.

Unlike that game, the teams were on even terms. The Rangers didn’t get outplayed or outshot in the rematch. It was a simple case of Shesterkin having a rare off night while counterpart Sergei Bobrovsky stole the show. This time, it was the former two-time Vezina winner who came up with the difference making gems that allowed his team to post a sixth third period come from behind win.

Goals from MacKenzie Weegar, Carter Verhaeghe and Anthony Duclair reversed a 2-1 Ranger lead into a 4-2 deficit with 5:20 remaining in the third. Despite not playing their best, the Rangers didn’t give up. With Shesterkin on the bench for an extra attacker, Chris Kreider was able to find a loose puck for his team-leading 19th of the season with over 44 seconds left in regulation.

Unfortunately, there wasn’t enough time for a comeback. To their credit, the Panthers defended well and protected the one-goal lead to pull out the hard earned victory on home ice. A place they’ve only lost three times. They improved to 15-3-0 at FLA Live Arena (seriously?). If there is a consolation, the Rangers are the better road team. Even though they lost, they fell to 11-5-2 away from MSG. The Cats are only 4-4-4 on the road.

Normally, I don’t look at such things following tough losses. But if we aren’t honest about how this team handles business on the road, then we would be ignoring a positive fact. The truth is in Year One under coach Gerard Gallant, this team knows how to play away from The World’s Most Vaccinated. Even if they had about 40 percent of the crowd due to all the Ranger fans who live down South, more often than not they’re in these games. It was no different Wednesday night.

The difference between winning and losing can be very minute. The little details matter. Unlike most games we’ve seen, there was no edge in special teams. They were crap throughout. Both sides took the collar in two power play opportunities. This came down to even strength play and the two Russian netminders.

Considering they hadn’t played since Dec. 17, the Rangers looked okay early. In fact, after wasting an early power play, they got a few key saves from Shesterkin, who made his first start since Dec. 3 against San Jose. It was in that one that he was forced out due to a groin injury. Alex Georgiev relieved him and split a shutout. Shesterkin believes he needs to do more stretches. This isn’t the first time he’s had issues with his groin. The same thing happened last season.

One thing about the Panthers. They have a relentless attack. They’re extremely good in transition due to their skating ability combined with the skill they possess. They had Aleksander Barkov back for this match. In fact, all four centers played. That hasn’t happened often. One through four, the quartet of Barkov, Sam Bennett, Anton Lundell and Eetu Luostarinen is as tough as any in hockey. Don’t forget Sam Reinhart can play center too. They’re a handful.

While Shesterkin took care of a dozen shots sent his way including a tough one from Duclair up high, Bobrovsky also was busy. He faced 15 shots in a wide open first that probably more favored the Cats. Despite that style, it was Artemi Panarin who made a brilliant play to score a highlight reel goal at 11:08.

Following a Jacob Trouba outlet to Ryan Strome, he made a nice lead pass for Panarin who did the rest. Able to make a great move to the outside on Aaron Ekblad to get in, he then went to the backhand and slid the puck between Bobrovsky’s pads for his 10th. It was an unbelievable play by a great player. Panarin had it working throughout.

https://twitter.com/AlexJCasares/status/1476352367973085185?t=wcGfgeGd3cqfponriUaSZg&s=19

Leading by one, the Rangers had a chance to go up more. Libor Hajek was able to stay on his feet and escape with the puck in his end. Verhaeghe reached in and tripped him to send them on their second power play. Unlike the first, this time they got good setup time. The top unit did everything but score. Bobrovsky made critical stops on Panarin, Zibanejad and Kreider to keep Florida within one.

That was a turning point. Against a great offensive countering team like the Panthers, who are never out of a game, I really felt the Rangers needle to score in that spot. They came close, but ultimately didn’t due to Bobrovsky (14 first period saves including 5 for 5 on PK).

After the teams combined for 27 shots and a lot more attempts, the second was more under control. The tempo was more deliberate. Each side settled in and played more cautiously. Unlike the first, defense wasn’t optional. Shots and scoring chances were harder to come by.

Even after Strome slashed Bennett in the defensive zone, the Rangers did a good job on the penalty kill. Shesterkin was never threatened. Credit the penalty killers for being aggressive and getting key clears to change on the fly. The Panthers did nothing with their first five-on-four.

Despite the successful kill, the Rangers allowed the Cats to regain momentum quickly. On a good offensive shift from the third line, Ryan Lomberg set up a quick Gustav Forsling low shot that Shesterkin couldn’t control. With Hajek in front and Strome too late, a wide open Lundell put home the rebound for his sixth at 5:09 to tie the score.

The very next shift, the Panthers got a great point blank opportunity to take the lead. Off the face-off at center ice, Mason Marchment stole the puck from K’Andre Miller and broke in on Shesterkin, who stopped his initial shot and then stuffed the rebound chance. On the play, only Trouba was back scrambling to try to get to the other side. It was all about Shesterkin there. He also was contacted from an attacking Marchment, who braced himself. Nothing malicious there.

Following that sequence, a Kreider shot was denied by a sharp Bobrovsky. Things settled down. The Rangers tightened up after a stoppage. The Cats found it tough to get shots through on Shesterkin. The defense did a much better job containing the neutral zone and limiting the Florida counter attack.

With not much happening, Panarin made another terrific play that led directly to Zibanejad scoring for a third consecutive game. After a smart play by Hajek to keep the play alive in the offensive zone, a slick Panarin lifted the stick of Radko Gudas and stole the puck. Coming in with lots of speed two-on-one, he then threaded the needle across for a Zibanejad one-timer past a helpless Bobrovsky for his eighth at 12:43. That gave the Rangers a 2-1 lead.

These are the kind of superstar plays Panarin made in his first two seasons on Broadway. Like I said, the jump was back. He really looked like the elite player he is. Worth the price of admission. It’s also nice to see Zibanejad finishing again. It was the third straight game he had a goal and assist giving him six points (3-3-6) over three. That’s what they need from the number one center.

Things got a bit testy late in the second. Throughout, Cats’ pest Patric Hornqvist was running around hitting Rangers while mucking it up during a few heated scrums. That’s who he is. Whether it was with Pittsburgh or Nashville, he’s always right in the middle of the action. He even exchanged pleasantries with Ryan Reaves during a stoppage as both went back to their benches. He is a chip off the old block.

Finally, it boiled over. After Hornqvist delivered a clean check on Adam Fox that was a little high, Hajek went right after him in defense of his teammate. During a scrum behind the Ranger net, Hornqvist remarked, “What. I’m not allowed to hit [Fox].” He had a point. We see clean hits all the time answered quickly. It’s nothing new. I have no problem with the hit or Hajek defending Fox. That’s hockey now.

Of course, Hornqvist got no penalty afterwards. Instead, both Hajek and Lomberg each received two minutes each for roughing with 48 seconds left in the period. The teams skated four aside for the remainder of the period and first 1:12 of the third. However, nobody knew how important those penalties would wind up.

Still playing while both players were serving their penalties, they finally were able to return to action. The trouble was Hajek came back out and wasn’t able to change. That meant he was the third defenseman on for an extended shift with Trouba and Miller. Playing as a forward high, Hajek was on when the Panthers had one of their counters that resulted in Weegar tying the game at 5:56.

On the play, both Marchment and Luostarinen combined to find Weegar open for a good shot that might’ve tipped off Dryden Hunt by Shesterkin. Either way, it’s normally a shot he has. Unfortunately, he wasn’t able to stop it. Weegar’s first of the season gave Florida new life with 14:04 left in the third.

Despite that tying goal, it was the Blueshirts who would get a couple of great chances to reclaim the lead. First, Strome took off and let go of a wrist shot that rang off the goalpost. That close. Then, a good keep in from Alexis Lafreniere created a two-on-one down low. Filip Chytil passed for Julien Gauthier on the doorstep. But a hustling Bennett broke it up.

Afterwards, with plenty of players back for a Florida transition, Verhaeghe let go of a wrist shot in the circle that snuck right between the pads of Shesterkin for the go-ahead goal with 9:29 left. This was a horrible goal to allow. It was a low shot that didn’t have a lot on it. But he let it go through him. Making matters worse, Gudas picked up an assist as did Forsling.

With over five minutes to go, it was another Florida quick hitter that helped put it away. With the Strome line again out, they got lost in coverage. A Bennett perfect feed for an open Duclair saw him go top shelf for his 10th to make it 4-2 in favor of the Panthers with 5:20 remaining. He also made the defensive play to start it before doing in his former team.

The thing about the Panthers is they have a strong supporting cast. In a game where Barkov and Jonathan Huberdeau were held in check along with Ekblad and Reinhart, it was the depth players who got it done. Lundell, Weegar, Verhaeghe and Duclair scored the goals while Forsling (2 assists), Gudas, Marchment, Lomberg and Luostarinen hit the score sheet along with Bennett. That depth is what will present a problem for whoever they draw in the playoffs.

The Rangers got nothing from their supporting cast. Only the main characters. While the fourth line created a few opportunities including one for Reaves and another for Barclay Goodrow, the third line didn’t get enough done. As much as I like them, two shots (both from Chytil) isn’t scaring anyone. There were positives from Lafreniere, who is willing to go to the hard areas. But he needs to show more.

Even though he wound up with an assist when a Zibanejad shot accidentally tipped off him for a late Kreider goal that made it interesting, I didn’t like Kakko’s game. He didn’t do enough to impress. The statistics say three shots and a plus-two with an assist. But he wasn’t that noticeable. It’s up to Kakko, Lafreniere, Chytil and Miller to improve their production. Gauthier can be included because he creates enough chances.

That’s really what the season is going to be about. We know what the stars can do. It’s the young core that will have to step it up. The games only get harder. They got the defending champion Lightning on New Year’s Eve. That’ll be a big one for Goodrow, who’ll get his Stanley Cup ring and a video tribute from the first class Bolts. He was part of back-to-back championships. It’ll be special.

In terms of where we are with games returning, there’s still way too many cancellations due in large part to Canada. There’s 80 games at last count to make up. They can’t keep postponing games. That won’t work. Let’s hope things turnaround.

I also have close friends who have COVID-19. Most are vaccinated including close friend Brian, who’s triple vaxxed. It really is scary. Sending my best to all of our friends. Take care. For anyone out there, be careful.

THREE STARS 🌟 🤩 ✨

3rd 🌟 Anthony Duclair, Panthers (game-winner at 14:40 of 3rd, 10th of season)

2nd 🌟 Artemi Panarin, NYR (goal and helper in a virtuoso performance)

1st 🌟 Sergei Bobrovsky, Panthers (30 saves on 33 shots including some clutch stops in the 3rd)

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Truthful commentary from frustrated players on Canada’s strict rules hurting NHL, questions persist on adjusting COVID Protocol

With another game postponed as NHL play resumed tonight, there’s no end in sight to the COVID issues hurting the league. While other major sports such as the NFL and NBA revise their rules to make recovery quicker for asymptomatic players in protocol, the NHL is finding it more difficult.

That’s due to having seven Canadian teams. With the enforcement tougher north of the border, many games have been postponed. With the NHL in a bind having to make up in surplus of 50 games now that the Olympics are out, February will be a busier month. Many games will be rescheduled for the period the league originally put aside for Beijing.

Some players are starting to show frustration with the slow process at dealing with new CDC recommendations for reducing the number of days a player can miss. In the NFL, it’s now five days if a player is asymptomatic and tests negative. That means Carson Wentz could still play for the Colts versus the Raiders despite being unvaccinated. A fair way to go about it.

Lightning NHLPA player representative Alex Killorn spoke out about the serious issues the NHL is facing. He was very honest and specific about the way the Covid Omicron variant is being handled in Canada, where Team USA was forced to forfeit their Group B game against Switzerland earlier this afternoon due to a mandatory self quarantine after three players tested positive at the U20 World Junior Championships in Edmonton.

The Tampa Bay Lightning’s NHLPA representative Alex Killorn had this to say about his thoughts and where he placed the blame.

“Either something’s got to change or we’re just going to have to deal with it and just know that the product’s going to be inferior that we’re putting on the ice…

It seems like it’s always Canada that’s the reason that a lot of things don’t happen, so I don’t know if we’re going to be able to do that. But it seems reasonable that we would do that and implement it as soon as possible.”

https://twitter.com/FriedgeHNIC/status/1475936000971005964?s=20

It’s painfully obvious that the way Canada is being governed isn’t helping the cause. I’ve communicated with plenty of acquaintances who live in Ontario. They’re extremely upset with how little they can do. For one friend, she couldn’t even see her family for Christmas. Definitely a hard time for people who live up North.

When it comes to canceling games due to locking down the border which means no American teams can travel, it only makes one wonder how they’re ever going to be able to pull off a full 82-game schedule. What if things don’t change? There are plenty of NHL players in COVID Protocol. It is complicated. There doesn’t seem to be a solution to fix the problem.

If Hockey Canada and the IIHF can force USA to forfeit a game when every other available player was negative, why can’t the NHL force Canadian teams that can’t play to forfeit home games? I know it will never come to that as it would put into question the integrity of the league. But what happened with our young players at that tournament is an absolute joke.

Furthermore, the same IIHF decided to cancel the U18 women’s tournament. How is that exactly fair? So, it’s okay to allow men’s hockey players to compete in a pandemic, but not women? Where’s the logic? There is none. I could care less what they told Ray Ferraro, who obviously has to toe the company line during the TSN broadcast with Gord Miller. But it’s sad that they pushed back the 18 and Under women’s tournament.

https://twitter.com/scottmayfield2/status/1475921891911245828?t=uhwLi7P_a6YpKL9ZiC9LVA&s=19

None of these developments are good for hockey. We all love the sport and want what’s best. Instead, we’re seeing the worst due to utter confusion at every level over how to handle a pandemic that’s almost two years in. At some point, they have to make it easier for the players.

The bottom line is they can’t keep postponing games. That won’t work. Even without the ridiculous Olympic interruption that no other major sport has to worry about, many arenas have other events booked that they’re committed to. They have to play the games and make up every single one missed.

In regards to realignment, that’s a resounding no. Stop catering to Canada. They got their way last year. We all now know how tainted the Canadiens’ run was. Carey Price covered up a lot of mistakes. But they only reached the Stanley Cup Final due to playing in the North Division.

If you already are in the middle of a season, you can’t change the divisions. This isn’t musical chairs. It’s a real sport with established divisions and two conferences. Let’s keep it that way.

I’m not going to bother with Brad Marchand’s criticism of the NHL not being able to allow the players to compete in the Olympics. I was against it due to China and their ridiculous three week quarantine for any player who tests positive. Imagine the amount of pressure an Olympian will experience. It’s absurd.

Ryan Strome also had some interesting commentary on the league issues. Here’s what he thought about things.

Undoubtedly, players are concerned about what will happen. There’s still over half the season to play. That is if they do play the full amount. What we are left with are only more questions. At some critical point soon, the NHL must provide the answers.

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A Christmas Wish

Merry Christmas 🎅 🎄 ☃️🎁❄✨⭐ everybody!!!!! We all need a little Christmas spirit in our lives. So, you better not be naughty. Not now anyway.

I could go off on the NHL right now due to my thoughts on how the league is handling the COVID Protocol. But why bother? If they want to continue to push games back until at least next Tuesday, December 27th as of this writing, then go right ahead.

While somehow the NBA plays with much fewer rotation players in light of the mild Omicron variant along with the NFL still going about business, hockey is being extremely cautious due to the overly strict rules in Canada. That could become a serious issue that damages the regular season due to the traditional divisions.

But let’s leave all of that for another day. Later today is Christmas. For all my Canadian friends struggling to even see family, my heart goes out to you. Best wishes. Make the best of it. To anyone here who have had their plans ruined, don’t let it tarnish this day.

‘Tis the season

For Believing

And daydreaming

Let it be the reason

We spread holiday cheer

As Santa’s reindeer are near

Full of gifts for all

As the pretty lights shine above

Inspiring us to have a ball

Shining stars always spread love

I have a Christmas wish

That made my list

For hockey to return

And bring dangles, dekes, goals and saves

As the crowd rises up

Singing holiday cheers with a shot cup

Oh Santa comes down our chimney

And leaves our stockings full

Like the Christmas cookies we left

Saint Nick will laugh and bellow ho, ho, ho

To his reindeer and little helpers

As they take off in the gray skies

Suddenly snowflakes will magically appear

To be seen this morning

Bringing smiles and laughter everywhere

That indeed it is a white Christmas

For all who believe in the magic

And one day the puck will drop

Once again on the ice very soon

We’ll get through it I promise

And feel as high as the moon

Wishing you all a Merry Christmas

May God bless us all on this day

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