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Puck Previews: Leafs try to solve Miller; Sharks’ holiday dummy

Greg Wyshynski | December 21, 2009

Here are your Puck Previews: Spotlighting the key games in NHL action, news and views as well as general frivolity. Make sure to stop back here for the nightly Three Stars when the games are finished.

Preview: San Jose Sharks at Dallas Stars, 8:30 p.m. EST. Look, we’re sure this game will be the bee’s knees and all, but we must use this space to talk about a must-see video sent over by Puck Buddy Ivan: The holiday greeting from Silicon Valley Sports and Entertainment, featuring the San Jose Sharks’ Dany Heatley(notes), Rob Blake(notes) and Patrick Marleau(notes) conversing with "Slappy," whom you may remember from an earlier ad with Joe Thornton. (Alas, no fart jokes this time.) Comedy. Gold. Seriously, if Heatley’s "Slappy … he’s got it figured out" isn’t one of the funniest line readings in the history of holiday hockey commercials featuring ventriloquist dummies, we don’t know what is. Click the image for the video, or head over via this link.

Preview: Buffalo Sabres at Toronto Maple Leafs, 7 p.m. EST. Story of the day in Toronto: Can the Leafs solve Ryan Miller(notes), who is 3-0-0 this season and has been the team’s personal tormentor for his career? Miller, by the way, told reporters in Toronto regarding his weight loss during the season: "That’s why I cut my hair – I looked like a heroin addict [at the end of the season]. I looked like I belonged in a grunge band like Alice in Chains." Yeah, but the guy from Alice in Chains … oh well, whatever, never mind.

Preview: New Jersey Devils at Pittsburgh Penguins, 7 p.m. EST. No Mark Eaton(notes) in this showdown for the Pens. Marty Brodeur is ready to face another potential Olympic teammate in Marc-Andre Fleury(notes) after crapping the bed against Roberto Luongo(notes) when the Canucks came to town.

Check out previews and updated scores for all of today’s games (like the ones in progress) on the Y! Sports NHL scores and scheds page.

Evening Reading

• From the NHL: "Boston Bruins center Marc Savard(notes) and Philadelphia Flyers left wing Scott Hartnell(notes) are guests on the Wednesday, Dec. 23 edition of the Emmy Award-winning ‘The Price Is Right’ (11 a.m.-12 p.m. ET; 10 a.m.-11 a.m. PT) on the CBS Television Network." They’ll be presenting a Winter Classic-themed Showcase Showdown that includes "air travel and hotel accommodations, two tickets to the outdoor game" and other prizes that may or may not include Zdeno Chara(notes) personally lifting them to their seats on the Green Monster. [NHL]

• Check out what The Chief and the A2Y crowd are trying to do for a "Christmas miracle," one that’s now taken on even more charitable aspects. [A2Y]

• Mike Brophy places Sidney Crosby(notes) and Alex Ovechkin(notes) ahead of Marty Brodeur for players of the decade. Be there when Brophy celebrates the end of the next decade in 2014. [Sportsnet]

• Joe Sacco comes to the defense of David Koci(notes) after his career was disparaged by Washington Capitals Coach Bruce Boudreau: "Bruce should just worry about his own players. That’s what I try to do – worry about my own guys. David goes out there and plays hard, and David’s never been suspended. For the role he plays, he’s a clean player and I don’t think he went in there intending to hurt anybody." [Denver Post]

• The Los Angeles Kings have been doing a whole lot of winning without Ryan Smyth(notes). Well, he’s back. You’re on notice, Western Conference. [LA Kings Insider]

• The beer in St. Louis is of an admittedly high quality, to the point where consumption of it is an actual pleasure to experience, no matter the quantity. In a related story, Jeff Gordon writes about the St. Louis Blues trading for Eric Staal(notes). [Dispatch]

Puck Buddy Comment of the Day: Ben D. is the voice of dissent on the blissful Carrie Underwood/Mike Fisher(notes) engagement story:

Nice to see Puck Daddy evolving (devolving?) into People magazine.

Carol Alt laughs at the idea of a hockey ’super-couple.’

Look, we’ll settle for nothing less than Soap Opera Digest.

Bold Prediction: Simon Gagne(notes) scores a goal for the Philadelphia Flyers for the first time since Oct. 24.

Puck Headlines: Measuring true MVPs; Ovechkin beefcake

Greg Wyshynski | December 21, 2009

Here are your Puck Headlines: A glorious collection of news and views collected from the greatest blogosphere in sports and the few, the proud, the mainstream hockey media.

• For the readers who complain that our female-eye-candy-to-male-beefcake ratio is unbalanced, we give you Alex Ovechkin(notes) from the Russian publication "Tatler." The back tattoos … sheesh. More modeling on the AO blog. [Alex Ovetjkin via JP

• In case you were wondering: Normal week through Christmas Eve here at Puck Daddy, including Three Stars every night and our All-Decade packages on Tuesday and Thursday. There may be some sort of chat on Wednesday, but not our usual rumors one because of the roster freezes. Winter Classic float gallery on Tuesday; Christmas features our annual Puck Daddy tradition.

• Why the New York Rangers are a one-man team named "Marian Gaborik." Good stuff here, as Jeff Klein breaks down the percentage of team goals scored by an individual player. The Sidney Crosby(notes) numbers are eye-opening, both for his output and for the Pittsburgh Penguins‘ scoring depth. [Slap Shot]

• Previewing the New Jersey Devils/Pittsburgh Penguins showdown at Mellon tonight. [Fire & Ice]

• Now that a coach has been sacrificed and the Philadelphia Flyers are still playing awful hockey, GM Paul Holmgren’s lack of aggressive roster moves is criticized by one Philly columnist: "This team needs a shakeup. The players are waiting for it. With that vote of confidence, the Flyers had as much jump on Saturday – against a team with an almost identical record in the Rangers – as a car battery left in the snow." [Philly.com]

• The Florida Panthers remember what Mike Richards(notes) did to David Booth(notes) earlier this season. They’re in Philly tonight; Steve MacIntyre(notes) and Mike Duco(notes) are in the lineup. Old. Time. Hockey. [NBC Sports]

• The NHL continues its cutting edge upgrades of NHL.com with NHL VideoCenter, the League’s new streaming video player. Among the features: "Three new channels of content  NHL Shootout Channel featuring all NHL game shootouts in their entirety; NHL Press Room featuring live coverage of press conferences and other breaking news; and NHL Library, which gives fans a selection of classic and archived videos." Wait, a channel dedicated to shootout highlights? We thought that was ESPN …[NHL]

• The Dallas Stars place defenseman Mark Fistric(notes) on injured reserve with a head injury and recall defenseman Ivan Vishnevskiy(notes). [Stars]

• Pension Plan Puppets reveals Brian Burke’s diabolic plan to swipe the division from the Buffalo Sabres through Olympic fatigue. Insert evil cackling here. [PPP]

• Lambert covered the Matt Stajan(notes) "headshot" thing in What We Learned this morning, but the Toronto Maple Leafs forward had more to say about it after practice: "I think it should be the ref’s discretion whether it is intent for the head. I think that one could be argued both ways. Yes, he hit my head, but I am not going to sit here and say that was his intent. … But I know he was trying to hit me hard. I am kind of in the middle. You see hits like that all the time. At the end of the day I turned into him with my head down." [National Post and Globe & Mail]

• Your Three Stars for the last week (ending Dec. 20) in the NHL: Goaltender Cristobal Huet(notes) of the Chicago Blackhawks, goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury(notes) of the Pittsburgh Penguins and right wing Patric Hornqvist(notes) of the Nashville Predators. [NHL]

• How Dave Scatchard(notes) of the Nashville Predators has "been to hell and back," which is a really mean thing to say about Glendale. [NHL.com]

• Joerg Koch of AFP snaps this image: "Hundreds of people play ice hockey, ice skate or just walk on the frozen Nymphenburg canal in front of the Nymphenberg castle in the southern German city of Munich on December 20, 2009." Killer.

• The Falconer offers the latest in the Ilya Kovalchuk(notes) contract talks with the Atlanta Thrashers and discussed his value to the franchise. Is it down to Atlanta or the KHL? No entirely convinced of that. [Bird Watchers Anonymous]

• Great stuff from B.D. Gallof on the rumor that Charles Wang wants to sell the New York Islanders, in which he argues why the Isles won’t move and takes local media to task for eating up bad information. [Hockey Independent]

Jon Sim(notes) can draw a penalty. [Lighthouse Hockey]

• Malkin To The Kings reports the Edmonton Oilers are looking to move some pretty significant names, and David Staples believes him. [Cult of Hockey]

• Yeah, so the Barrie Colts are pretty sick: "The Colts, who haven’t lost in two months, are four games removed from matching a Canadian Hockey League record of 25 straight wins previously set by the Kitchener Rangers in 1983-84 and the Quebec league’s 1973-74 Sorel Eperviers, a now-defunct franchise." [Slam! Sports]

• George Malik on the quietly solid season for Todd Bertuzzi(notes) of the Detroit Red Wings. [Snapshots]

• Our pal Dany Heatley(notes) Speedwagon appeared on The 6th Sens podcast. [6th Sens]

• Finally, this team-up between Bloge Salming and Down Goes Brown is pretty much the greatest mega-powers moment since Hogan and Macho Man or, for argument’s sake, Godzilla and Jet Jaguar. Here’s the Toronto Maple Leafs’ Christmas party at Chuck-E-Cheese, filled with gun violence and hockey insight and a killer Phil Kessel(notes) joke.

More, please.

What We Learned: Suspension debates; wrong coach for Flyers?

Ryan Lambert | December 7, 2009

Hello, this is a feature that will run through the entire season and aims to recap the weekend’s events and boils those events down to one admittedly superficial fact or stupid opinion about each team. Feel free to complain about it.

Some things I understand to be true about the Philadelphia Flyers:

1. They were playing pretty poorly prior to John Stevens getting the axe on Friday afternoon.

2. This is partly because Stevens had "lost the room."

3. Because of those first two things, a change had to be made.

4. Peter Laviolette was the best coach available, with a proven track record of making an underachieving team start winning.

Those are the reasons Laviolette got hired. But I wonder how long this is going to last.

I don’t say that because they got their brains beat in by the Capitals on Saturday night (and did they ever!). I say that because there is, or at least was, a key philosophical difference between the way Laviolette likes his teams to play, and the way the Flyers are built to play.

(Coming Up: How, exactly, did Tomas Plekanec(notes) escape suspension for this blatant butt-end cheapshot on David Krejci(notes)?; Brendan Shanahan’s(notes) greatest hockey story ever told; Marian Hossa(notes) is booed; Vokoun gets goofed on; Tkachuk joins a men’s league game; and an Ottawa goalie adds his contribution to the worst goals allowed highlight reel.)

Here are is a key quote from Laviolette in the past (from The Hockey News in 2007) dug up by a user on phillysportsforums.com, whose post I cannot link to because he calls the Flyers brass who made the decision to hire the new coach "[expletive] losers." Emphasis here will be mine.

"I have a very strict no-fighting policy for our team," Laviolette says. "Last year in the playoffs (defenseman) Mike Commodore(notes) got into a fight and I said, ‘OK, that’s it. No more fighting.’ I simply cannot afford to lose a player like Mike Commodore to an injury he may sustain in a fight.

"Take a guy like Erik Cole(notes). If we allowed him to fight, I know he would do it. Now if he gets hurt in a fight, our team has lost a very valuable asset. How do I justify that? I can’t. It just doesn’t make sense to me to allow our guys to fight."

Boy, doesn’t that attitude just scream Broad Street Bullies?

I’m sure Paul Holmgren brought up Laviolette’s frankly odd stance on fisticuffs in the interview process and made it clear that obviously a team with Dan Carcillo, Ian Laperriere(notes), Riley Cote(notes) and Arron Asham(notes) would be fighting at every available opportunity.

To illustrate this point, Laviolette was probably strapped to a chair with his eyes held open by wires while old clips of Mr. Rogers were interspersed with children laughing, adorable baby animals, and skillsy hockey plays.

To test the theory, of course, Laviolette was thrown right into the fire in his first game when Carcillo did the rather Carcillo-y thing of picking up 29 penalty minutes (and then getting suspended four games) because of his cold-cocking of Matt Bradley(notes), and he had to back his guy. Like some sort of test.

But the ludovico treatment must’ve worked, because after the game, Laviolette was all aboard, spinning it thusly, "…The make up of Carolina is completely different from the makeup of Philadelphia. I’m OK with Danny’s fight."

You sure are, Lavvy, me droog. Who doesn’t love a bit of the old ultraviolence? Can’t have ‘em thinking you’re a devotchka.

What We Learned

Anaheim Ducks: Here is a stat I was very surprised to find — the Ducks are tied for most third-period goals conceded in the League this season. With 42 (the article is from before they allowed one to Ottawa yesterday)! That’s almost 1.5 per third period. For reference, they’ve allowed 48 in the first two periods combined. Huge reason they’re a lottery team right now, probably the reason.

Atlanta Thrashers: Count John Anderson as a big fan of Evander Kane(notes). "He doesn’t seem like a rookie to me. He makes a few young mistakes, but for the most part he’s gung-ho all the time. He’s chasing pucks, he’s strong on the wall and he has eight goals already — not playing the power play. I’m going to have to find him some more ice time." All that praise for a kid who doesn’t have a point in his last four games, which tells you how much he’s getting after it without the puck.

Boston Bruins: I don’t know what delighted Bruins fans more about their team’s 7-2 stomping of Toronto — That Marc Savard(notes) continues his stellar post-contract play (four goals in three games) with a hat trick, or that Tuukka Rask(notes) finished the night with more points than Phil Kessel(notes). Oh and speaking of Savard’s new deal, it’s under league investigation for being "fishy."

Buffalo Sabres: At the beginning of November, the Sabres were 20th in the league on the PK. Now they’re third (that article says they’re second but didn’t include the weekend’s games). Killing 41 of 44 in the past month will do that. I bet having Ryan Miller(notes) and his sub-2.00 GAA helps a lot too.

Calgary Flames: If you missed the Flames/Sharks tilt on Saturday, you missed maybe the most entertaining game this season. Up-and-down action; shots were 36 apiece. Physical, too; hits were 35-all. This is a game that won’t be leaving my DVR for a good long while.

Carolina Hurricanes: Erik Cole’s sixth career hat trick sure wasn’t pretty…

That doesn’t mean it wasn’t effective.

Chicago Blackhawks: The headline says, "Penguins fans’ jeers don’t faze Blackhawks’ Hossa." Well no kidding; he gets the hell booed out of him in like half the buildings in the league these days.

Colorado Avalanche: Craig Anderson(notes) hasn’t played since Wednesday due to his sore neck from Keith Ballard’s(notes) Goalie Injury 2009 tour. Doesn’t much matter though, because Petr Budaj has stopped 58 of the 62 shots he’s faced in the two games since. Petr Budaj!

Columbus Blue Jackets: Yeah, Columbus is 1-5-3 in its last nine, but Ken Hitchcock is in no danger of getting fired. Says Scott Howson, "Hitch is safe, to suggest otherwise is just ludicrous. It has not even entered anybody’s mind. It’s not something we’d even consider." They know they have a lot to work out and a coaching change at this point helps no one.

Dallas Stars: Mike Heika wonders just how much the Stars are going to have to give James Neal(notes) when his contract comes up at the end of the season. Considering he’s on pace to score 43 goals, I’d say it’s time to start shoveling the money into the back of the dump truck in preparation for backing it up to his front door.

Detroit Red Wings: Bad news for the Central Division, the Western Conference and the National Hockey League — The Red Wings are starting to get pretty good again. Sure, they lost to Edmonton on Thursday, but with Saturday night’s comeback win shootout loss against New Jersey, one of the best teams in the East, and then the late win over the Rangers yesterday they have 7 points in their last 5 games. (Edit: Fixed that Jersey game.)

Edmonton Oilers: Congrats, I guess, to Ladislav Smid(notes), who scored his first goal in 151 games Saturday. His last goal was on April 7, 2007, the last day of the 2006-07 season.

Florida Panthers: Tragedy + Time= Comedy. That’s verifiable fact. And that’s why Tomas Vokoun(notes) is now getting crap from his teammates about Ballard’s heel turn a week ago.

Los Angeles Kings: Anze Kopitar(notes) hasn’t scored in 12 games, and as a consequence he got a good ol’ fashioned talkin’ to from Terry Murray about it.

Minnesota Wild: Did you have any idea that the Wild have won five straight? More than that, they’ve gotten points in seven in a row! Problem, though, is that the article mentions Andrew Brunette’s(notes) "team-leading 10th goal." Cause for concern there, I’d think.

Montreal Canadiens: As of this writing, still no suspension for Tomas Plekanec for this blatant butt-end cheapshot on David Krejci Friday night.

I’m not really sure how that goes unpunished in this new climate of "suspend everyone for everything unless they score a point a game." Is it because Krejci got right back up and then got in a shoving match over it? True story: This is actually worse for the league to ignore than the Carcillo thing because a guy like Plekanec won’t fight anyone to answer for crap like this. Guys like that are going to keep playing this way until the league steps in and starts suspending them. Obviously. Why wouldn’t they?

Nashville Predators: Barry Trotz really really really misses Greg Zanon(notes), who’s quietly having a heck of a season in Minnesota.

New Jersey Devils: Here is probably the greatest hockey story of all time. Rick Vaive once turned down a 14-year-old Brendan Shanahan for an autograph. So when Shanny was 18 and playing for the Devils, he beat the hell out of Vaive right when the puck dropped on their first shift against each other.

New York Islanders: Going back to that great Nikita Filatov(notes) interview by Dmitry on Friday, in which Filatov said most NHL teams won’t release their Russian players to World Juniors, the Islanders are now refusing to allow the release of not only their NHL players, but also one of their AHL players (19-year-old defenseman Anton Klementyev(notes)) and a player in the KHL whose rights they hold (forward Kiril Petrov).

New York Rangers: Ryan Callahan’s(notes) penalty shot last night made me realize something else that illustrates how stupid the shootout is. Remember when a penalty shot was the hugest deal ever? Remember when you’d be all excited to see something like that? Remember when Jimmy Howard’s(notes) awesome save would have made every highlight reel for a year? I watched that play out with no emotion whatsoever because now it’s all commonplace and run-of-the-mill. I don’t have a link or anything, it’s just sad.

Ottawa Senators: Hahahaha. Brian Elliot. Oh man.

Welcome to a decade’s worth of blooper reels.

Philadelphia Flyers: Speaking of Danny Carcillo, here is a lengthy ode to just how much of a thug he is in the league, in which he is compared to Farva from Super Troopers.

Phoenix Coyotes: Ilya Bryzgalov(notes) on taking hockey too seriously: "You lose the game, so what? Nobody dies." Really, this interview alongside his family by Sarah McLellan is quite interesting and you should read it.

Pittsburgh Penguins: For all you Pens fans wondering, the reason Duncan Keith(notes) won’t get suspended for ugly headshot on Matt Cooke(notes) is because it was on Matt Cooke.

Not that I think that’s fair, but that’s why, is all.

San Jose Sharks: Perhaps one reason for the Heatley-Thornton-Marleau line being held scoreless for just the third time this season on Saturday night was that Dany Heatley(notes) was battling the flu.

St. Louis Blues: Great, hilarious blog post by Jeremy Rutherford Saturday featuring Keith Tkachuk(notes) jumping into a men’s league pickup game and Cam Janssen(notes), Esq. Seems like the Blues are in a hell of a good mood overall.

Tampa Bay Lightning: Congratulations are in order for Viktor Hedman, who scored his first NHL goal on Saturday.

Pretty feed from Vinny Lecavalier too.

Toronto Maple Leafs: Because the events of Saturday night in Boston are better left forgotten, he’s a very nice goal from Nazem Kadri(notes) instead. The future is bright, Leafs fans, especially when you think of getting Taylor Ha… ohhhhhh sorry.

Vancouver Canucks: You know Carolina is not a well-regarded franchise around the League when losing to them, even with Andrew Raycroft(notes) in net, is considered hitting "rock bottom." And just for fun, count the number of allusions to disappointment and frustration are in that article.

Washington Capitals: Interesting that the Caps and Alex Semin have not had any contract discussions of any kind. Gotta think the kid is seeing ruble signs considering the run of new contracts in the league lately.

Play of the Weekend

Oftentimes, I am accused of being a Flames homer and as such I try to go out of my way not to be one. On the other hand, how am I gonna ignore this save by Miikka Kiprusoff(notes), who made 127 saves exactly like this (conservative estimate) as the Flames handed the Sharks just their second home regulation loss this season?

That’s just absurd.

Gold Star Award

Because he kinda got lost in the shuffle of two hat tricks and a ridiculous goaltending performance (see above), I gotta give this one to Nicklas Backstrom(notes). Five points is really impressive any time, but even more so with Alex Ovechkin(notes) in absentia.

Speaking of, the Caps outscored their opponents 14-4 in the two games for which Ovie was suspended. Float his name out there for some trade offers. See what you can get. Just sayin’.

Minus of the Weekend

It goes to the National Football League this week because they decided to order that some funny-sounding commercials featuring the Bears and Blackhawks trading tips shall never air, probably because the NFL’s logos and things of this nature are used in the spots.

The horror of anyone promoting NFL without their getting a cut!

Perfect HFBoards trade proposal of the week

It is my personal belief that user "Keenan87" is actually Mike Keenan out for revenge against the league that scorned him.

To Flames:

Eric Staal(notes)

To Canes:

Daymond Langkow(notes)

Mark Giordano(notes)

1st Round Next Season

Dustin Boyd(notes)

It’s very rare you see an HFBoards proposal that helps neither team, but yikes. The last thing the Flames need is another contract over $5 million (let alone $3.5 million over that), and the last thing Carolina needs is a bunch of players that aren’t especially good.

Signoff

Family love Michael!

Ryan Lambert publishes hockey awesomeness pretty much every day over at The Two-Line Pass. Check it out, why don’t you? Or you can e-mail him here and follow him on Twitter if you so desire.

Puck Headlines: Sympathy for Ballard; help hockey rule decade

Greg Wyshynski | December 2, 2009

Here are your Puck Headlines: A glorious collection of news and views collected from the greatest blogosphere in sports and the few, the proud, the mainstream hockey media.

Attention Puck Buddies: Yahoo! Sports has its All-Decade package live, and it’s a really impressive collection of stories (back-pat). But there’s work to be done, so let’s roll: Hockey fans need to stuff the ballot box like Kyle Wellwood(notes) into a pair of hipster jeans for Team of the Decade, Athlete of the Decade, Story of the Decade (yeah, even if it’s the lockout) and Game of the Decade. We demand an NHL sweep of these polls, or at the very least something to prevent an NBA sweep. If it’s important enough to cause a ceasefire in the epic Puck Daddy/Abel To Yzerman quarrel, then it’s important enough to get that mouse a’clickin’. Do it.

Florida Panthers goalie Tomas Vokoun(notes) speaks about Keith Ballard’s(notes) baseball swing to his ear: "I actually feel sorry for him (Ballard). All I have is a cut ear and he has to see that highlight for the rest of his career." [Panthers Facebook]

• Keith Ballard on Keith Ballard’s baseball swing to Vokoun’s ear: "I saw it on tape, and it looks awful. The sad part is people see this, little kids see it, and they think maybe that’s the way professional guys act. It’s not something I’ve ever done, and it’s not something I’ll do again. I’m terribly sorry." [Sun Sentinel]

• Meanwhile, Craig Anderson(notes) makes his return to ogle the Florida Panthers ice girls tonight. [Litter Box Cats]

• Mirtle fires up the Rod Langway Award derby for best defensive defenseman and … wait, what the hell is Jay Bouwmeester(notes) doing up there? And is anyone else getting the feeling that the Norris Trophy is slowly becoming Chris Pronger’s(notes) to lose? [From The Rink]

• NHL.com has unveiled a Tweetmixx application that displays the tweets from hockey "insiders" on Twitter, including yours truly. It’s an interesting concept that will no doubt become more interesting when we manage to sneak images of animal genitalia onto NHL.com through Twitter. [NHL]

• Ted Leonsis confronts his franchise player, Alex Ovechkin(notes), after the star’s suspension for a knee-on-knee hit: "I believe if he changes and becomes a player that is managed by the media or fans or anyone else, he will put himself at risk." [Ted's Take]

• Forget the hat: This conspiracy theory by OFB that Ovechkin’s suspension and subsequent defiance is a PR scheme from IMG agents deserves some sort of magnificent tinfoil crown. [On Frozen Blog]

• Ovechkin wears the orange non-contact jersey while skating with the Washington Capitals at practice. [Capitals Insider]

• Elliotte Friedman on the whole "should Ovechkin change his style of play?" debate, bringing up an interesting point: Would Ovi’s current predicament be any different if his agent wasn’t also the woman who birthed him? [CBC Sports]

• Chipchura sighting in Anaheim. [Habs]

• Good stuff from Ryan Kennedy on the New York Rangers‘ reliance on young defenseman this season, which really is a risk when you’re playing John Tortorella "damn the torpedoes" style of hockey. [THN]

• The way things are going for the Rangers lately, Scotty Hockey probably captured Marian Gaborik’s(notes) play perfectly for Blueshirt fans. [Scotty Hockey]

• Jonathan Willis with an interesting look at last summer’s goaltending decisions, including this conclusion: "There were three established starters in the market this summer (Roloson, Biron and Khabibulin), and the difference between them over an entire season works out to 15 goals …" [Hockey or Die!]

• Now, the headline at the top of this Canucks/Devils preview Web page is "Cdn. Olympic Goaltenders square off in The Swamp." Because the middle of Newark is evidently akin to the everglades. [Sportsnet]

• Speaking of epic fails, we’re pretty sure Dany Heatley(notes) demanded a trade from this Center Ice description last summer. [Thanks to Puck Buddy Nick]

• Ryan "Guarantees a U.S. Olympic medal" Kesler talks about the Vancouver Canucks‘ Cup chances, his development as a player and the inspiration of Mike Modano(notes). [NHL.com]

New Jersey Devils goalie Martin Brodeur(notes) becomes a sleeper agent programmed to undermine Canadian Olympic efforts a U.S. citizen. [Bergen Record]

• The Devils are celebrating their 1995 Cup win against the Detroit Red Wings this week. ATT: Jersey readers – There’s still time to win a limo ride to the game. [Devils]

• Looking at the cool, calm and collected Ryan Miller(notes) of the Buffalo Sabres. [Buffalo News]

• World juniors are fast approaching, and there are some familiar names on the U.S. roster. I was told that Yahoo! Canada is planning some special coverage of the event, which is cool news. Details to follow. [WCHB]

Toronto Maple Leafs fans take a well-deserved victory lap around the bloodied carcass of the Montreal Canadiens. [Pension Plan Puppets]

• Finally, geek-gasm: Rivers Cuomo rocking a Blackhawks jersey at the Weezer show in Chicago last night. As if you needed further proof that he is the greatest man that ever lived.

Puck Previews: Heatley vs. Sens; Sharp’s Mr. Sexy controversy

Greg Wyshynski | December 2, 2009

Here are your Puck Previews: Spotlighting the key games in NHL action, news and views as well as general frivolity. Make sure to stop back here for the nightly Three Stars when the games are finished.

Preview: Los Angeles Kings at Anaheim Ducks, 10:30 p.m. EST. Wait, the hell? There’s a Western Conference? Based on today’s coverage, who’da thought? Anyway, the Kings and Ducks exchange pleasantries this evening, with the Ducks working on a 7-2-1 roll as a home team. Interesting blog from Rich Hammond today about whether Kings defenseman Drew Doughty(notes) is the next Scott Niedermayer(notes). Check his beard in 15 years to find out. Watch The Game Live Via Hockey Night on Y!

Preview: Ottawa Senators at San Jose Sharks, 10:30 p.m. EST. Before he faces his old teammates for the first time since the Big Trade, Dany Heatley(notes) had to meet with some other old faces: The Ottawa traveling media, who peppered him with questions that he ducked like Patches O’Houlihan dodging wrenches. Meanwhile, Jason Spezza(notes) probably wants to steal a teal jersey and line up next to Heater for a game at this point in his underwhelming season.

Preview: Toronto Maple Leafs at Montreal Canadiens, 7:30 p.m. EST. Mike Ulmer, on the Leafs’ official site, hates on Habs fans: "It’s just a little unseemly to be constantly patting yourself on the back when your team’s hasn’t won since the final days of the Brian Mulroney era."

Preview: Columbus Blue Jackets at Chicago Blackhawks, 8 p.m. EST. The Hawks debut their new third jerseys tonight. Speaking of which, the NHL sent this over: "The rock band Weezer will sport Kane, Toews, Hossa, Keith and Sharp jerseys during their show Tuesday night at the Aragon Ballroom in Chicago. After tonight’s show, the jerseys, signed by both the band members and Blackhawks players, will be up for auction." A Rivers Cuomo autographed ‘Hawks sweater almost makes up for "Beverly Hills." Almost.

Check out previews and updated scores for all of today’s games on the Y! Sports NHL scores and scheds page.

Evening Reading

• Nice reporting on Chris Pronger(notes) walking a "tightrope" over his leadership role in the Philadelphia Flyers‘ locker room, as captain Mike Richards(notes) and the Flyers have lost 5 of 6 games. [CSN]

• Also nice: Pierre LeBrun speaks with David Booth(notes) about his concussion recovery. [ESPN]

• As we passed along this morning, the Boston Bruins have officially inked Marc Savard(notes) to a seven-year deal. TSN’s still going with that amazing $4.2 million cap hit. [Bruins Blog]

• Analyzing the Atlanta Thrashers‘ fast start. Puck Buddy Stefan mentioned an interesting scenario over email: Chicago wants to dump salary; the Thrashers are contending; former Chicago assistant GM Rick Dudley is now in Atlanta. Hmmmm …. [Sports Climax]

• Sarah Spain cracks the case of the Patrick Sharp/Victoria’s Secret/Chicago’s Sexiest Athlete voting controversy, as a voting glitch propels Derrick Rose of the Bulls to the title of "Mr. Sexy" over the Blackhawks winger. Said Sharp: "The loss is heartbreaking. As a hockey player from Canada, it has always been a lifelong goal of mine to be called Mr. Sexy by my teammates." [No Spain, No Gain]

• Looking at the Nashville Predators attendance declines and their impact on revenue sharing. [On The Forecheck]

• The Molsons take over the Habs and talk about the direction of the team. [Habs Inside/Out]

• Finally, the sound you just heard was champagne popped at Versus: The Comcast takeover of NBC is in the final stages of approval. They will show us their ‘V’ … and then NFL, Olympic and Notre Dame football programming, too. [CNBC]

Puck Buddy Comment of the Day: It was a pretty intense day in the comments, what with the suspension chatter and all that. Something unexpected happened as well: The maker of those ’tobacco’ pipes with trademarked logos on them got upset with us for pointing out the obvious, which is that their store doesn’t specifically reference team names in order to make it harder for the pages to be found through a search.

For this, we were called "square."

For that, Puck Buddy commenting legend Bubba Banjo unleashed this:

Wyshynski yer a gas man, you need a new bag brother, I mean writin a far-out groovey article like this and then goin all nark on somebody is just not copasetic. I mean lighten up daddy-O its just a drag man. Year articles normally are far out ….the ginchiest……………so I dont get the heavy freak out man. Somebody give you a melvin?? Or call the pigs on ya fer havin a pipe man? Shag yer old lady baby?

Hockey is outta sight man, righteous…..never stinks! Right on!! Be cool man. 

Bubba Banjo. Never stinks.

Bold Prediction: Heatley is shut down by the Senators, but the Sharks win the game.

The 10 biggest NHL stories of the last decade

Greg Wyshynski | November 28, 2009

 

(No, the first decade of the 21st century doesn’t technically end until 2011. Save your bellyaching. But we’ve had nine NHL seasons and one stolen from us since 1999-2000, and Yahoo! Sports has decided it’s time to rank the best and worst of the last "decade." Enjoy, and snark freely in the comments.)

Moments of unjustifiable criminal behavior. Economic despair. Debilitating physical ailments that irrevocably changed the lives of many.

Man, was this a great decade for the NHL or what?

It wasn’t all doom, gloom, frustration and desperation. The lowest points for the NHL sometimes led to new heights for the game. But in thinking about the stories that received the most scrutiny, coverage and attention from fans and media over the last decade, there’s no question that bad news made the headlines more often than the positive vibes.

Here’s a look back at the 10 biggest stories in the NHL over the last decade …

10. Birth of the KHL

In 2008, the Kontinental Hockey League was born out of the Russian Superleague and sent shockwaves over the oceans to NHL shores. Debuting with 24 teams and impressive financial backing, its intentions to rival the NHL weren’t exactly a KGB-protected state secret.

It sought to keep young Russian players from fleeing to North America, while becoming an outpost for former NHL players that sought the large contracts and ice time they were no longer being offered. (In the cases of Ray Emery(notes) and Chris Simon(notes), it offered a professional option for NHL pariahs.) The KHL’s profile received an instant boost when Jaromir Jagr(notes) bolted for its riches, although rumors continued to swirl that he wanted to return to the NHL.

A bitter dispute over Alexander Radulov’s "defection" from the Nashville Predators to the KHL typified the tense relationship between the two leagues from the start. In its second season, the KHL began announcing European expansion plans that could dramatically change the hockey map heading into the next decade.

9. Bankruptcy protection

We’ll remember 2003 as the Year of the Bust, and not just because Nikolai Zherdev(notes) was drafted fourth overall. Both the Buffalo Sabres and Ottawa Senators filed for bankruptcy protection in Jan. 2003, with the Sabres owing $206 million (US) and the Senators owing $160 million (CDN).

In both cases, the decision was made to keep the teams operating and to eventually sell them: The Senators to billionaire Eugene Melnyk and the Sabres to a group headed by New York billionaire Tom Golisano. Yet those filings, and the Pittsburgh Penguins‘ bankruptcy in 1998, contributed to a movement within the NHL that eventually led to some major economic changes. From the Hockey Digest’s coverage of the bankruptcies:

The current CBA expires in September 2004. Bettman has yet to utter the words "salary cap" but he has made it clear that ownership wants to put a lid on salaries. The operative term is "cost containment."

The NHL is the only one of the four major pro sports without some kind of drag on salaries (salary cap or luxury tax)–yet it’s by far the lowest revenue-generator among them. "We must have a system that enables all of our clubs to be economically stable and competitive," Bettman says. "Do I believe that other franchises are imminent candidates for Chapter 11 [bankruptcy]? The answer is no. However, franchises will continue to struggle until we get a system that works."

And we all know where that eventually led. Or, at least we will when we get lower in the countdown.

8. Concussions

What began as "serious concern" in the late 1990s became a movement throughout the hockey world in the 2000s to curb the violent hits to the head that resulted in an increase of documented concussions and, tragically, careers and lives forever altered.

By 2003, the concussion rate in the NHL had tripled, as players began reporting them rather than "playing through the pain" as had been the tradition. Players like Eric Lindros(notes) became poster boys for their career-altering effects, while retired players like Pat LaFontaine and Mark Messier championed awareness of head injuries and prevention of them. By the end of the decade, the NHL was considering rules that banned hits to the head in an effort to decrease the number of concussions in the League; following the lead of the OHL, which banned heat shots in 2005.

7. Marty McSorley assaults Donald Brashear(notes)

Years before Chris Simon used Ryan Hollweg’s head as a piñata, Boston Bruins enforcer Marty McSorley became the symbol of NHL violent irresponsibility when he swung his stick at the head of Donald Brashear of the Vancouver Canucks on Feb. 21, 2000. Brashear was knocked out when his head hit the ice. McSorely was suspended by the NHL for the rest of the season, but that was the least of his worries.

McSorely was charged with assault, a rare intrusion by law enforcement into the rink with which the NHL understandably disagreed. McSorley was found guilty of assault with a weapon and served 18 months of probation. His NHL career was over; Brashear ended the decade playing for the New York Rangers.

The incident was a significant moment for the NHL, which had escaped the legal ramifications of its players’ actions since Dino Ciccarelli’s stick incident in 1988. But it would find one of his players back in court a few years later, as you’ll see in a few spots down the ranking.

 

6. Jim Balsillie vs. the NHL

Three times, the billionaire behind the BlackBerry attempted to become an NHL owner. Three times, he was thwarted for various reasons, though in the end his battles with Commissioner Gary Bettman dramatically altered the League’s reputation in Canada and the reputations of some of its franchises in warm-weather climates.

In 2006, Balsillie was set to purchase the Pittsburgh Penguins amid questions about whether he’d keep the team in the Steel City or relocate it if a favorable arena deal couldn’t be struck. But he pulled the bid, his decision coming when the NHL placed nearly two dozen conditions on his potential ownership late in the process. The Penguins remained in Pittsburgh as a thriving franchise, and will move into a new building next season.

In 2007, it was announced that Balsillie had a tentative agreement to purchase the Nashville Predators from owner Craig Leipold, with the intention of moving the team to Hamilton, Ontario. And by "intention," we mean he was selling season tickets to the "Hamilton Predators" that summer before actually owning the team. The NHL and Leipold eventually balked at his ownership bid, and Leipold turned to an ownership group that included now-convicted fraud William (Boots) Del Biaggio instead.

Balsillie completed the hat trick in Spring 2009, working with Phoenix Coyotes owner Jerry Moyes to purchase the bankrupt franchise and use the courts to circumvent NHL bylaws in an effort to relocate it to Hamilton. A bitter, revealing court battle between the League and Balsillie occurred throughout the year, as the NHL ended up bidding for its own franchise, the other pro sports leagues waited to see if this hostile takeover was legal and the depths of the Coyotes’ financial woes were exposed. It continued until Judge Redfield T. Baum rejected both of their bids for the franchise, ending the process for Balsillie.

Balsillie didn’t exactly have majority support from fans in his first two bids, but that changed by the third one. His "Make It Seven" campaign rallied angry Canadian fans who felt the NHL was biased towards American markets and foolish for not allowing a franchise in Southern Ontario. The League’s fight to keep a financially devastated team in a struggling U.S. market didn’t help that. Balsillie lost three battles; might the war continue next decade?

5. Death of Dan Snyder

Snyder was a 25-year-old center for the Atlanta Thrashers who was just starting his NHL career when his life tragically ended in a sad, horrific moment for hockey. From Sports Illustrated in 2003:

Dany Heatley(notes), 22, the star right winger, was driving from an evening meet-and-greet with season ticket holders in his black Ferrari 360 Modena with Dan Snyder, the Thrashers’ 25-year-old fourth-line center who was staying at his house. Suddenly, on a curvy road in Atlanta’s Buckhead neighborhood, Heatley lost control and the car, going 80 mph, skidded into a brick pillar and iron fence. Snyder was thrown from the vehicle and fractured his skull. After six days in a coma he died on Sunday night.

Heatley, at the time one of the League’s brightest young stars, was also injured in the crash but was charged with a felony count of vehicular homicide, which carried a maximum sentence of 15 years. Snyder’s family offered forgiveness and didn’t want Heatley to go to jail; the judge took that into account when Heatley pled guilty to four of six charges and received three years probation — with the felony charge dropped.

The incident has remained a permanent part of Heatley’s career and subsequent stardom, including a move by EA Sports to drop him from a video game cover after the incident. Snyder’s memory has been honored through awards and an arena name in his hometown.

4. Crosby vs. Ovechkin

The emergence of Sidney Crosby(notes) and Alex Ovechkin(notes), both as rivals and as the two biggest stars in the NHL, propelled the League out of lockout hell and into a new era of global popularity. They posted stellar numbers, collected significant hardware and demanded those previously apathetic to the sport take notice again.

The rivalry worked instantly because of their divergent biographies: Crosby as the smooth-skating Canadian "next one" and Ovechkin as the shaggy, flashy Russian who played the game with an edge. It was a "Bird vs. Magic" for NHL 2.0, and the fans embraced both stars as heroes, anti-heroes or villains (depending on the city, of course).

The NHL wouldn’t nearly be as healthy as it is at the end of decade had it not been for these two young stars helping to transform it. They’ve made hockey cool again for the ESPN crowd, and they’re just getting started.

3. Television Hallelujahs and Headaches in the U.S.

The NHL began the decade in the midst of a five-year deal with ABC/ESPN worth $120 million per season. But its promotion and prominence on ESPN was waning, thanks to the acquisition of other properties (poker, anyone?) and the NHL’s declining ratings.

After that deal ended in 2004, ESPN wanted to slice the rights fees in half annually and ABC wasn’t going to place the Stanley Cup finals in prime time. The NHL secured its broadcast coverage via a deal with NBC that offered no rights fees up front and a "revenue sharing" deal. After the lockout, the NHL struck a deal with Comcast’s Outdoor Life Network to become the cable home of the League, securing more guaranteed money than if it had re-signed with ESPN.

Problem, of course, being that ESPN was found everywhere at that time, and there were Korean-language stations available in more sports bars than OLN …

Rebranded as Versus, its distribution grew as its roster of properties did, although it never landed Major League Baseball or the NFL as was planned when the NHL signed on. Its coverage of the League has been politely applauded by some and ravaged by others. It remains, for better or worse, one of the defining decisions of Gary Bettman’s tenure as commissioner.

But sometimes, the television gambles worked: The Winter Classic, first played on Jan. 1, 2008 between the Buffalos Sabres and Pittsburgh Penguins at Ralph Wilson Stadium, was an instant ratings hit on NBC. Other than the Stanley Cup finals, it’s arguably the most viable television property the NHL has.

The NHL continues to make ratings gains in the U.S, especially locally. But the fact remains that the League’s television contract doesn’t provide the sort of revenue stream other pro sports leagues thrive on.

2. The Todd Bertuzzi(notes) Incident

How infamous was Todd Bertuzzi’s blindside punch that ended the career of Colorado Avalanche winger Steve Moore? NBC’s "The Today Show" had a segment about it after the March 8, 2004 legendary moment of brutality, and they cover hockey about as often as Haley’s Comet does a flyby.

So that’s what mainstream America knew about the NHL in 2004. Tragic.

It began a few weeks earlier in Feb. 2004, when Moore gave Vancouver Canucks star Markus Naslund(notes) a hit to the head that drew the ire of the Canucks. From CBC Sports:

The Canucks were unsympathetic, and their threats of retribution came to a head during the third period of a game later that season in Vancouver. Unsuccessful in his attempts to goad Moore into a fight, the six-foot-three, 242-pound Bertuzzi skated up behind his smaller adversary, grabbed a handful of jersey and used his free hand to knock Moore unconscious before piling atop the fallen player.

When the ensuing melee finally ceased, Moore was being carted off on a stretcher and Bertuzzi was on his way to receiving a lengthy suspension from the NHL.

Lengthy as in 17 months, which carried through the lockout and kept Bertuzzi ineligible to play in international events. Moore was hospitalized with three broken vertebrae and a concussion that ended his hockey career.

Bertuzzi pled guilty to criminal charges filed in Vancouver, getting probation. Moore has had multiple lawsuits against Bertuzzi and Canucks coaches and management, some of which are still pending. Bertuzzi himself brought former Coach Marc Crawford, now with the Dallas Stars, into the legal entanglement by allegedly claiming that Moore "pay the price" for his actions.

Simply put: One of the blackest of black eyes for hockey, both in the severity of the injury and the damage the time-honored "Code" suffered as a hockey institution.

 

1. Lockout

Yeah, we know: Shocking choice for No. 1, right?

As was mentioned in our Best/Worst Decisions of the Last Decade, the labor dispute between the NHL and the NHLPA that forced the cancellation of the 2004-05 season had its determents and its benefits.

The lockout was a point of ridicule for non-hockey fans and writers, a crushing blow to the game’s standing and a moment of bitter division between everyone involved in the sport. People lost millions, lost jobs and lost their faith in the men charged with the game’s integrity. One look at the timeline of the lockout is a reminder of how awful things had gotten before a new CBA was agreed upon; dear god, replacement players?

Yet there were undeniable achievements from that darkest hour. The new rules opened up the game for a new generation of stars and ended years of defensive-minded hockey that the League couldn’t figure out how to market. There was parity found in every division, with playoff races coming down to the wire. The NHL and its franchises were forced to work harder and smarter to win fans back.

NHL 2.0 isn’t perfect. The trapezoid stinks, the shootout is inequitable and the salary cap has more loopholes than a crocheted sweater. The climb back up from the depths of a cancelled season was a thorny one, especially at the gate and on television. The beating the NHLPA took — or was perceived to have taken, as the hockey living wage remains quite comfortable — left it fractured to the point where the next CBA negotiation could be a chaotic one.

But the NHL is better off in 2009 than it was in 2000. Which is why the lockout is the biggest story of the decade.

Friday’s Three Stars: Zeroes for Giggy, Kipper; Marleau trick

Greg Wyshynski | November 28, 2009

No. 1 Star: J.S. Giguere, Anaheim Ducks

The Chicago Blackhawks rolled into Anaheim with an eight-game winning streak, but Jean-Sebastien Giguere(notes) put an end to that with his first shutout of the season. The Ducks won, 3-0, as Teemu Selanne(notes) had two power-play goals and Nick Boynton(notes) added another. Giggy had 28 stops against the fifth-best offensive team in the NHL, and the Ducks have won four of their last five games.

No. 2 Star: Patrick Marleau(notes), San Jose Sharks

There was a lot of fun hockey played in the NHL on Friday night, but few games matched the high drama of Dany Heatley’s(notes) visit to the city he refused to be traded to last summer. Yet it was Patrick Marleau who stole the show. Heatley was a plus-2 and had an assist on Marleau’s first goal, who later completed his hat trick in the third period with a shorthanded goal from Joe Thornton(notes) at 18:34 to tie the game. Joe Pavelski(notes) had the shootout game-winner for a 5-4 San Jose victory.

No. 3 Star: Miikka Kiprusoff(notes), Calgary Flames

The Flames goalie made 40 saves in shutting out the Detroit Red Wings, as Calgary skated out of the Joe with a 3-0 victory. He made 32 saves in the first two periods. Of course, this being the Red Wings playing in a game officiated by NHL referees, controversy reigns: Dan Cleary had two near-goals waved off on the night, first on a goalie obstruction call and the second when Brad Meier lost sight of the puck. Here’s the first call: Does Cleary appear to make contact with Kiprusoff while in the crease? Because Mike Babcock believes he did not. If not, does simply being in the crease interfere with the goalie attempting to make the save?

Honorable mention: We don’t often do this, but Chuck Kobasew(notes) is your No. 4 Star tonight. Chucky pulled the hat trick in the Minnesota Wild’s 5-3 victory over the Colorado Avalanche, clinching it with an empty netter. … Comeback of the Night, Vol. 1: The Atlanta Thrashers rallied with five third-period goals to defeat the Carolina Hurricanes, 6-4. Maxim Afinogenov(notes) (10) had the tying goal and Rich Peverley(notes) (9) had the game-winner. As incredible a win for Atlanta as it was a loss for the Hurricanes. … Absolutely brutal game between the Buffalo Sabres and Philadelphia Flyers, with big fights and key injuries. Tim Connolly’s(notes) two third-period goals helped the Sabres to a 4-2 win at Philly. … John Tavares(notes) scored the game-winner in an 18-shot third period, as the New York Islanders rallied to defeat the visiting Pittsburgh Penguins, 3-2. The Islanders hadn’t won a game when trailing after two. … Martin St. Louis(notes) welcomed back John Tororella back to Tampa Bay with three assists, as the Tampa Bay Lightning scored five straight goals in a 5-1 win over the New York Rangers. … Tremendous goaltending effort from Chris Mason(notes) (37 saves) in the St. Louis Blues3-1 victory over the red-hot Nashville Predators, who were wearing spiffy new third jerseys. … Lauri Korpikoski(notes) scored his first two goals of the season and Ilya Bryzgalov(notes) made 30 saves in the Phoenix Coyotes5-2 victory over the Dallas Stars. … Finally, Comeback of the Night, Vol. 2: The Toronto Maple Leafs overcame three Florida Panthers‘ leads and scored three goals in the third period for a 6-4 win on the road. Phil Kessel(notes) had a goal in that third-period rally, but this earlier goal from the first period was the best of the night:

Did you know?: New Jersey Devils goalie Martin Brodeur(notes) passed Patrick Roy (60,235) to become the all-time leader in minutes played. The Devils defeated the Boston Bruins in a shootout, 2-1. Brodeur had 32 saves on the day.

Dishonorable mention: Henrik Lundqvist(notes) was chased by the Lightning after giving up four goals on 22 shots. … Marty Turco(notes) was pulled by Dallas after giving up four goals on 19 shots. … Karlis Skrastins(notes) was a minus-4 for Dallas; Sheldon Souray(notes) and Steve Staios(notes) were both minus-4 for Edmonton. … Patrick Kaleta is going to be hearing from the NHL’s disciplinarians. … Finally, just to restate the obvious: Epic Fail in Carolina.

Puck Previews: Sharks load up vs. Flyers; Sabres seek rebound

Greg Wyshynski | November 21, 2009

Here are your Puck Previews: Spotlighting the key games in NHL action, news and views as well as general frivolity. Make sure to stop back here for the nightly Three Stars when the games are finished.

Preview: Philadelphia Flyers at San Jose Sharks, 10 p.m. EST. The big news here, according to the Sharks, is Coach Todd McLellan putting together the mega-line of  Patrick Marleau(notes), Joe Thornton(notes) and Dany Heatley(notes). McLellan told Working The Corners: "Things may be going great for (the Thornton line), but if it’s not going good for the other three lines, we can’t leave them out in the dark and have a one line game." Aw, who cares about those other nine guys; play these dudes for 60.

Preview: Boston Bruins at Buffalo Sabres, 7:30 p.m. EST. No Marc Savard(notes) for the B’s tonight, as it appears Monday against the St. Louis Blues is the target date for his return. The Sabres are coming off a humbling 6-2 loss to the Panthers that left them frustrated, although it produced Ryan Miller(notes) quote gold: "They just played boring until they got a lead and then they played more boring." There’s a live blog of this on NESN, if that’s what you’re into. Watch The Game Via Hockey Night on Y! 

Preview: Colorado Avalanche at Vancouver Canucks, 10 p.m. EST. The Avs are ending a three-game road trip, the Canucks are starting a five-game homestand. Vancouver curb-stomped them the last time they played to the tune of 8-2. Watch The Game Live Via Hockey Night on Y! 

Check out previews and updated scores for all of today’s games on the Y! Sports NHL scores and scheds page.

Evening Reading

Sean Avery(notes) molds and shapes young minds. [Rangers]

Florida Panthers third-jersey cuteness via Litter Box Cats, and George Richards has an artists rendering of what we might expect from the new duds. You know, they’re not bad, but we need to see the real McCoy. Not making the same mistake we did with those Thrashers thirds. [On Frozen Pond]

• The New Jersey Devils lose Dainius Zubrus(notes) for about a month with a leg injury.  [In Lou We Trust]

• Uh, it doesn’t sound like Derek Dorsett(notes) is willing to let bygones by bygones with James Neal(notes). [@aportzline]

• In case you haven’t heard, Adrian Dater of the Denver Post has resigned … from Twitter. [All Things Avs, and an interesting take from Hockey Wilderness]

Puck Buddy Comment of the Day: On our Harry Truman jersey story, we have a tie between …

Fur: "I think that jersey is going to ‘bomb.’"

… and …

James S: "Totally Enola Gay!!"

Puck Daddy: Hockey blog and history blog! The more you know …

Bold Prediction: St. Paul native Kyle Okposo(notes) scores for the Islanders at the Wild.

Fantasy: Kostitsyn finally worth a look; making Ducks calls

Dobber | November 19, 2009

("Sleepers, Keepers , Bench’em or Drop’em" is a weekly fantasy hockey column written by Darryl "Dobber" Dobbs, an honest-to-goodness expert on such matters and founder of DobberHockey.com. His column will run on Puck Daddy every Thursday.)

That’s the beauty of fantasy hockey —  throwing darts can often bring you better results than hours of studying statistics and depth charts.

Of course, I speak to last week’s recommendation of considering Andrew Ebbett(notes) (since scratched) and dropping Matt Stajan(notes) (now back on Phil Kessel’s(notes) line and doing just fine, thank you) and Radim Vrbata(notes) (let’s not go there either). It’s enough to drive a man to drink.  As Homer found out (to his dismay) in an early Simpsons episode spoofing fantasy sports — "when you’re right 52 percent of the time, you’re wrong 48 percent of the time."

I strive for that 52 percent. With everything in life.

Injury replacement of the week: Andrei Kostitsyn(notes), Montreal Canadiens

Brian Gionta(notes) has a fractured bone in his left foot and the slumping A.K. has already scored a goal in his absence. Kostitsyn has had a hell of a time with things since early spring and fantasy owners have been jumping ship faster than figureheads at the NHLPA.

Are you drunk?

It’s Thursday. You know the answer to that already. If there is ever a moment that you should show interest this season in the elder Kostitsyn, it is right now. Granted, six points in 21 games is as impressive as a Gary Bettman press conference, but he’s a talented kid who will now get another chance to be a go-to guy.

The Keepers who are on fire…

Niklas Kronwall(notes), Detroit Red Wings: Kronwall’s been improving his statistics every year and he has also proven (last season) that he can stay healthy for the full slate of games. He has seven points in his last four contests and has shown in the past that his hot streaks can go for as long as 25 games.

Brad Boyes(notes), St. Louis Blues: He’d been about as effective in the first six weeks as the Coyotes’ PR department was back in July. Nothing gets fantasy owners back on a player’s bandwagon faster than a four-point game, which Boyes had on the 10th. Sure, he may take a step back this year, but that step won’t take him below the 60-point mark. The Blues’ offense won’t remain this horrible forever.

Steve Sullivan(notes), Nashville Predators:  Something clicks with Sully. You don’t know when it will happen, but when it does it’s pretty sweet. He has scored three goals in his last two games, which tops his total from the first 17 games. That sound you heard was "click". Now watch him go.

Bobby Ryan(notes), Anaheim Ducks:  There were a lot of poolies panicking over this guy. They couldn’t understand how he could post nearly a point-per-game as a rookie and then stumble out of the gates with two points in nine games. Relax. He’s not going to finish with a point-per-game as a sophomore and that thought should never have teased you in the first place. He’s also not going to get 20 points – no "jinx" is that bad (unless he gets hurt, but I won’t go there — it may curse him). He’ll finish in that 62-67 range. His 11 points in the last 10 games are just one of several hot runs he will have in 2009-10.

The Sleepers who are on the wire…

Frans Nielsen(notes), New York Islanders: The 25-year-old Dane has given the Isles some more secondary scoring. You’ll never mistake him for Bryan Trottier, but Nielsen does have a bit of upside. He should set a career high of 40 or 45 points come April. Seeing as he has eight of his points (and plus-6) in the last 10 games, he’s a good short-term option in a lot of fantasy formats

Anton Stralman(notes), Columbus Blue Jackets: Tons of potential, he just needs to be used properly.  And Ken Hitchcock is world renowned for using his young players properly, right Nikita? Actually, in Stralman’s case, Hitch is doing a good job. He has 11 points in his last 15 games and eight of those points have come on the power play. Unless Stralman shows up at the rink wearing a Filatov mask, he’ll continue to get the ice time and as such should be a lock for 42-plus points.

Brian Pothier(notes), Washington Capitals:  This is just a short-term suggestion, as Pothier has teased us before. Following up a 35-point season in Ottawa to go to a budding offensive powerhouse in Washington back when they didn’t have another option for a quarterback … and then stumbling to 28 points was as big a letdown as "Transformers 2." But he does have six points in his last six games and they came on the heels of a healthy scratch – which sometimes gives a player the kick in the ass they need.

Jimmy Howard(notes), Detroit Red Wings: Chris Osgood(notes) is hurt and Howard is getting all of the starts. More importantly – he’s winning them. He is 3-1 in his last four and sports a 0.903 SP in that span. Not the greatest, but good enough to earn Mike Babcock’s confidence. Goalies are always hard to get via the wire in roto leagues, so from that standpoint Howard is a great short-term option.

In a slump, these boys are mired…

Jason Spezza(notes), Ottawa Senators:  It’s amazing how many clowns there are out there. The dummies who will jump on anyone for still having faith that Spezza can be a 100-point player, and they believe that without Dany Heatley(notes) he’ll be lucky to get even 80 again. Both the peanut butter and the jam can be very good on their own, folks. He’s only 26 and we haven’t seen anywhere near the season that will be his career best yet. It won’t be this year, obviously, but just remember that Vincent Lecavalier(notes) had a disappointing 75 points at the age of 26 – before exploding for 108 the next year. Ride it out.

Mikhail Grabovski(notes), Toronto Maple Leafs: It’s another one of Grabby’s cold streaks and when the Phil Kessel line is the only line scoring, it will probably be a couple of weeks before he gets back into the swing of things. Frustrating to own. Bench him.

Sergei Samsonov(notes), Carolina Hurricanes: The talent is there – just watch him with the puck. But for whatever reason (perhaps his wrist never fully healed from back in 2003), he’s not beating the goaltender and neither are the players that he dishes to. His ice time is dropping faster than your jaw did when I said Spezza will be a 100-point player. Drop him.

Joffrey Lupul(notes), Anaheim Ducks: One point in eight games makes a great-looking season look very bad in an awful hurry. Teemu Selanne(notes) gets in his last gasp of mediocre-to-decent numbers while Lupul, the understudy, waits in the wings. The two are often linemates, but they don’t mesh at all – six of his nine points have come while playing on the top line with Corey Perry(notes) and Ryan Getzlaf(notes) even though he played twice as many shifts on the Selanne line. Next year he’ll hit his prime and I still think he’ll be a 70-point player.  Bench him.

Darryl Dobbs is the founder of dobberhockey.com, a fantasy hockey community with over a dozen columnists, a daily blog and in-depth fantasy player rankings. His always accurate opinions can also be found over at The Hockey News in their fantasy section.

The 10 worst teams of the last decade

Sean Leahy | November 17, 2009

(No, the first decade of the 21st century doesn’t technically end until 2011. Save your bellyaching. But we’ve had nine NHL seasons and one stolen from us since 1999-2000, and Yahoo! Sports has decided it’s time to rank the best and worst of the last "decade." Enjoy, and snark freely in the comments.)

As we continue our rankings of the best and worst in the last decade, it’s time to look back at the worst teams that the 2000s have produced.

Sixteen teams make the National Hockey League playoffs every spring. Fourteen start their summer vacation early. And of those 14, a handful place their hopes in a ping-pong ball, thinking that if it lands just right, their future fortunes may change. It’s an annual rite and for some franchises, the pain of losing and putting a bad hockey product on the ice takes much longer than anticipated.

Some teams have excuses for poor seasons: injuries, declining production in players, and bad luck all play a part in making a bad hockey team.

While there have been a lot of good hockey teams this decade, there have also been a lot of bad ones.

With that, the 10 worst teams of the past decade are …

10. 2000-01 Tampa Bay Lightning 24-47-6-5 (59 points, 29th in the NHL)

Three years before they won the Stanley Cup, the Tampa core of Vincent Lecavalier(notes), Brad Richards(notes) and Martin St. Louis(notes) began their first season together. It was a third-straight season of progress and the beginnings of a championship team. Midway through the season, head coach Steve Ludzik was fired and John Tortorella was brought in along with a new attitude to the team. Torts didn’t bring about immediate change in the standings, but the seeds were planted, even after a stretch midseason where the Lightning managed just three wins in 21 games.

9. 2003-04 Chicago Blackhawks 20-43-11-8 (59 points, tied for 29th in NHL)

With the recent success of the Blackhawks, it seems so long since they were irrelevant and buried under the tight-fist of former owner Bill Wirtz. Highly touted rookie Tuomo Ruutu(notes) made his debut in Chicago in ‘03 and brought hope that the youth movement on GM Mike Smith’s(notes) watch would eventually pay dividends. Ruutu had a successful rookie campaign with 44 points, but the lack of a consistent presence in net saw six goaltenders between the pipes during the season.

8. 2002-03 Carolina Hurricanes 22-43-11-6 (61 points, 30th in the NHL)

Things should have been rosy for the ‘Canes in coming off a Stanley Cup appearance and losing only Martin Gelinas(notes) as a regular from the lineup in the off-season. However, Arturs Irbe took a step back, winning just seven games after a 20-win season in ‘02 and there was a regular rotation of Carolina players coming in and out of the trainers’ room. At one point, the Hurricanes went 1-12-0-3 in a 16 game stretch and lost both Rod Brind’Amour(notes) and Erik Cole(notes) to injury, derailing any hopes of a turnaround.

7. 2003-04 Washington Capitals 23-46-10-3 (59 points, tied for 29th in the NHL)

Deciding to go with youth was the goal for the Caps in ‘03-04. Jaromir Jagr(notes), Sergei Gonchar(notes), Robert Lang(notes) and Peter Bondra(notes) were some of the big money makers on the roster who were dealt away in order to let the kids play. At the end of the rainbow would eventually be Alexander Ovechkin and Mike Green(notes) as two of their three first-round picks in the 2004 NHL Draft. In goal, after three 30-win seasons, Olaf Kolzig(notes) won just 19 games as the talent that was once in front of him slowly disappeared.

6. 2005-06 St. Louis Blues 21-46-15 (57 points, 30th in NHL)

The year after the lockout was a funny one. Teams were dealing the effects of the salary cap floor and ceiling for the first team, and trying to mold their rosters around how the "new" NHL was going to be played. The new style of hockey that was brought on by the lockout was meant for younger, faster players, but the ‘05-06 Blues went veteran heavy. Eight of their ten leading scorers were over the age of 30, including 38-year old Scott Young and 35-year old Doug Weight(notes) who would be dealt later in the season to the eventually Stanley Cup champion Carolina Hurricanes.

St. Louis’ 25-year long playoff streak came to an end as a new era was ushered in as Dave Checketts bought the team from the Laurie family. Erik Johnson(notes) was the reward for the Blues’ third-worst season in franchise history.

5. 2001-02 Columbus Blue Jackets 22-47-8-5 (57 points, 29th in the NHL)

Progress was hoped for in Columbus’ second season in the NHL, but their poor showing was rewarded with selecting Rick Nash(notes) No. 1 overall the following June, so it wasn’t all bad in the end. Ron Tugnutt and Marc Denis(notes) kept the net warm while ‘01 first-round pick Pascal Leclaire(notes) finished out his junior career. Led by younger versions of Ray Whitney(notes) and Mike Sillinger(notes) (only on his eighth team back then), the Blue Jackets started out of the gate very slow, winning just one game in their opening 13.

 

4. 2006-07 Philadelphia Flyers 22-48-12 (56 points, 30th in the NHL)

The summer of 2006 saw plenty of turnover for the Flyers, as they lost Keith Primeau, Kim Johnsson(notes), Michal Handzus(notes) and Eric Desjardins. New team captain Peter Forsberg(notes) was limited by that pesky foot and played just 40 games. Eight games into the season saw turnover in the management sector as GM Bobby Clarke resigned and head coach Ken Hitchcock was fired. The current head coach/GM battery of John Stevens and Paul Holmgren took over, but it wasn’t enough to save the Flyers from their worst season in franchise history where they declined 45 points from the 2005-06 season.

3. 2003-04 Pittsburgh Penguins 23-47-8-4 (58 points, 30th in NHL)

Three key stats to point out: Rico Fata(notes) minus-46. Dick Tarnstrom(notes) minus-37. Mario Lemieux coming off a 91-point season: 10 games played. This Penguins team was dubbed the "X-Generation", but the Ramzi Abids, Matt Bradleys and Fatas would not see a long future in Pittsburgh and weren’t the seeds that helped grow the franchise into a Stanley Cup winner. Before there was success, there were a bevy of bumps.

Most memorable about the ‘03-04 season, besides 2003 No. 1 overall pick Marc-Andre Fleury’s(notes) NHL debut, was the 18-game losing streak the Penguins went on from Jan. 13 to Feb. 25. Half of those games saw Pittsburgh allow five goals or more.

Yeah, the defense was pretty bad. 

2. 2000-01 New York Islanders 21-51-7-3 (52 points, 30th in the NHL)

A busy summer in 2000 still haunts the Islanders to this day. First, the previous spring saw new owners Sanjay Kumar and Charles Wang of Computer Associates fame take over the team. Next, at the NHL Entry Draft, with the Islanders brass in love with Rick DiPietro(notes), general manager Mike Milbury decided to trade Roberto Luongo(notes) to the Florida Panthers and thus Mad Mike’s legend grew. This season would also be young Zdeno Chara’s(notes) last in an Islanders uniform, as he was shipped to Ottawa in a deal for Alexei Yashin(notes) at the 2001 Draft.

Islander fans saw eight losing streaks of three games or more, including separate eight and seven game streaks. They finished out of the playoffs for the seventh straight season and had twelve players finish in double digits as a minus.

1. 2001-02 Atlanta Thrashers 19-47-11-5 (54 points, 30th in the NHL)

There was a lot of promise on this Thrashers squad. Dany Heatley(notes) and Ilya Kovalchuk(notes) led the team in scoring as rookies, but the supporting cast couldn’t find the back of the net often when the duo weren’t on the ice. Like with all bad teams, goaltending was the key issue. Milan Hnilicka(notes) was "the man," but only could win 13 games in 60 appearances. He’d played in just 23 more games in the NHL. Of the 44 skaters who wore a Thrashers uniform, only two, Yuri Butsayev and Ben Simon(notes), recorded plus ratings. The power play was especially brutal finishing 29th in the NHL with a 12 percent success rate.

Falling behind was also a knock against Atlanta who was 1-26-5-1 when trailing after the first period and 0-38-5-2 when having to come from behind after two periods.

Heatley and Kovalchuk combined for 55 of the Thrashers’ 187 goals. If either of those two were having an off night, might as well close the curtain.