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The top 10 NHL shootout goals of the last decade

Sean Leahy | December 22, 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.)

Unless you’re new around here, you already know we’re not big fans of the shootout. (OK, I’m running thin about it and Wysh, well, let’s just use the word "dislike" when it comes to his opinion.) The one good thing about the shootout is that it got rid of the dreaded tie. Nothing’s worse than investing three hours of your life into a sporting event and leaving your couch or arena without a victor.

According to NHLShootouts.com, there have been 714 shootouts since the NHL decided to implement the game-decider the season after the lockout in 2005; that’s 13.1 percent of the 5,450 post-lockout games. While the shootout remains a debatable issue among hockey fans, we’ve seen the creativity of NHL players come out and unleash their top notch skill in a 1-on-1 battle.

With that, here are the top 10 NHL shootouts of the past decade ….

10. Alex Ovechkin(notes) brings some fun to All-Star Weekend (Jan. 24, 2009)

While other NHL’ers participating in the "trick shot" shootout attempted their best moves that they’d only dream of trying during practice, Ovechkin lightened the mood at Bell Centre before his final attempt (0:40 mark of the clip) by skating over to Evgeni Malkin(notes), who handed him a fishing hat which included a Canadian flag, along with sunglasses.

Before he attempted his last try, Malkin gave Ovechkin the complimentary Gatorade spritz. It wasn’t the prettiest of shootout attempts, but who can blame Ovechkin for trying to bring a little humor to All-Star Weekend?

9. Henrik Zetterberg(notes) channels his inner Forsberg  (Jan. 10, 2007)

As Doc Emrick referenced in the clip, Zetterberg pulls the Peter Forsberg(notes) move here, but unfortunately for Hank, Swedish government officials aren’t about to make it into a stamp.

8. Sam Gagner’s(notes) hands exhaust Giguere  (Oct. 28, 2007)

The running theme with most of these goals is how silly some of the goaltenders are made to look. Gagner made enough dekes in this move against the Anaheim Ducks that Jean-Sebastien Giguere(notes) gives up mid-save attempt, when he starts to move one way and the Edmonton Oilers forward is about to score in the opposite direction. What a deflating feeling.

7. Jussi Jokinen(notes) on his way to owning the shootout  (Jan. 14, 2006)

The king of the shootout (26-for-47 lifetime), Jokinen’s main move is what has given him much success, not his take on Forsberg’s above. Jokinen’s domination has relied on that one move and it’s amazing to think that NHL goaltenders haven’t smartened up and just decided to bum-rush him once he skated between the circles.

6. Jason Blake(notes) spins like Denis Savard (Dec. 16, 2008)

Blake’s spin move against an unsuspecting Scott Clemmensen(notes) started a bit of controversy about whether or not it’s a legal move in the shootout. Smaller players like Blake, Pierre-Marc Bouchard(notes) and Martin St. Louis(notes) have all used the spin-o-rama to success and despite it violating the letter of the law, they’re still legal today (and rightly so).

5. Rick Nash’s(notes) version of the "stanky leg" (Nov. 13, 2009)

Nash said afterwards that he accidentally lost his balance before putting the winner past J.S. Giguere. We don’t believe him and encourage other NHL’ers to throw goaltenders off their game by coming in on goal skate-first and then shooting. Giguere was likely wondering if he was about to become this decade’s Clint Malarchuk than worrying about stopping Nash’s shot.

4. Ryan Getzlaf(notes) stops and starts (Oct. 22, 2006)

It must have been a helpless feeling for Mathieu Garon(notes) who was all set to deny Getzlaf a goal only to watch the Anaheim forward pull the puck back and roof the winner. Getzlaf is only 13-for-44 in shootout attempts, but this one was a beauty.

3. Pavel Datsyuk(notes) pulls the string on Vokoun (March 21, 2006)

When he’s not rocking out to his James Brown ringtone, Detroit Red Wings star Pavel Datsyuk is busy using his hands to make wonderful hockey plays. Believe it or not, there was a second or two during Datsyuk’s attempt here that Nashville Predators goaltender Tomas Vokoun(notes) actually thought he had a chance to stop him.

2. Mike Ribeiro(notes) makes it count (April 9, 2009)

"The flavorless winner" has to be one of Dallas Stars announcer Daryl Reaugh’s great calls. Ribeiro’s known to be somewhat of a fancy boy in the shootout and like Reaugh said, if you’re going to do that kind of a move with an extra point on the line, you better make sure the puck goes in. Poor Petr Budaj is probably still looking for the puck almost nine months later.

1. Marek Malik(notes) goes to the trick bag (Nov. 26, 2005)

The utter disbelief in Mike Crispino of the MSG Network’s voice was the universal feeling for the entire Madison Square Garden crowd and, most likely, Olaf Kolzig(notes) as well.

It’s not often we see such moves from a 6-6, 240-pound defenseman, but his circus act ended a lengthy, 15-round shootout between the New York Rangers and Washington Capitals and gave Blueshirt fans their only favorable memory of Malik.

Flyers, Blue Jackets rapidly approaching rock bottom

Greg Wyshynski | December 22, 2009

There’s really only one term for the 2009-2010 campaigns for the Philadelphia Flyers and Columbus Blue Jackets as Christmas approaches: Catastrophic.

It’s not just that they’re losing — but, man-oh-Manischewitz, are they losing — it’s the manners in which they’re losing. They’re both in 14th place in their respective conferences and the traits that characterized their success last season, while promising greater achievements entering this season, are invisible.

It all speaks to fundamental cracks in the foundations built by general managers Paul Holmgren and Scott Howson, and legitimate concerns that the players and coaches can’t patch them.

With their hapless 5-2 loss at the Phoenix Coyotes last night, the Blue Jackets are now 1-7-3 in December and remain one point out of the conference cellar.

Again, it’s the way these teams are losing that’s so baffling. Ken Hitchcock’s team yielded 230 goals last season, ninth-best in the NHL and a number that probably would have been even lower if rookie of the year goalie Steve Mason(notes) had earned the starting job earlier. This season? They’ve given up 131 goals, tied for worst in the NHL with the Hurricanes, and Mason’s numbers (3.41 GAA, .890 save percentage) are downright embarrassing.

Which is why the Jackets have pulled his starting card, via Puck-Rakers:

In the middle of the Blue Jackets dressing room this morning, before the team took to the ice for practice. Hitchcock told the players that Steve Mason and Mathieu Garon(notes) are now seen as equals on the goaltending depth chart. Mason is no longer the No. 1. Garon is no longer the back-up. They will alternate based on who is winning and who is playing well.

Cue the Andrew Raycroft(notes) comparisons …

Light The Lamp is attempting to assess blame (some PG-13 language):

A lot of fingers have been pointed in Hitch’s direction but for the first time I’m starting to question Scott Howson’s "vision".  Not so much his moves but his non-moves.  Something has got to give here… this team is has lost any and all confidence it’s had.  If he’s stickin’ with Hitch then there absolutely MUST be a roster move to shake things up or this year is over for us.  Runs like the Blues had last year in the 2nd half are few and far between and cannot be counted on.

Like a previous poster named Wally alluded too in another post… the Jackets are 8 mil under the cap and have no one to blame but themselves if a move can’t be made… if ownership doesn’t want to ante up and spend more now to try to save the season then I don’t want to hear any complaining from that direction when season ticket holders jump off this Titanic at season’s end.

That’s a real concern for the Jackets: attendance. Winning was vital to the team ticking upward in attendance last season in a crap economy. Losing can have the opposite effect, and quickly.

The Flyers don’t have to worry about attendance. Just everything else.

(Kudos to columnist Sam Carchidi for coining "Legion of Gloom," by the way.)

With their heartless 4-1 defeat on home ice to the Florida Panthers last night, the Flyers are now 2-8-1 in December; and the only thing keeping them from hitting 15th place in the East are the Carolina Hurricanes, who own the basement like a blogger that just cracked open the new "Call of Duty" game and a 12-pack of Mountain Dew.

Last season, the Flyers scored 264 goals, tied for fourth-best in the NHL. This season, they’ve scored 95 goals, 22nd in the NHL. They’re on pace for about 218 goals on the season, which is putrid for this lineup.

It’s not just guys like Jeff Carter(notes), whose 12 goals in 35 games are way off his 46-goal pace from last season and likely have him off the Team Canada roster. It’s bigger, overall problems for the team, as Matt Reitz wrote on View From My Seats:

We have to dig a little deeper to find the Flyers problems. Are they just losing the close games? Their 5-5 record in one-goal games says NO. Are they a victim of the "loser point" in shootouts? Their 2-1 record says NO to that as well.

To find the problems with the Flyers, we have to compare this year’s version to last year’s. Even with the addition of Chris Pronger(notes), Philadelphia is 26th in the league in penalty kill (77.5%). But that’s not the only time the opposition can score. After giving up only one shorthanded goal all of last season, the Flyers have already surrendered 6 shorties this season.

The shorthanded goals give us a glimpse into the major problem for the Flyers this season. When the opposition scores a shorthanded goal, it takes momentum away more than anything else in hockey. Emotion might be the biggest problem for the Broad Street Bullies this season.

Is it emotion? Holmgren was asked about the problems for the Flyers, via CSN Philly: 

"I look at our team and we’re having a hard time scoring goals right now," Holmgren replied. "I look at our roster and wonder, ‘why?’ Guys are fighting right now. Even our good players, who were fighting things tonight, guys that can make plays and score goals, were throwing the puck away a lot of times with five foot passes right there and we’re not making it. … When it gets like that, it’s difficult. You got to take a step back and look at things and then go back to work."

His faith in the roster is unwavering, but you have to figure moves will be made, because the coach isn’t going anywhere.

Of the two teams, we still believe the Flyers are the better bet to play out of this. Not only because Holmgren will be more aggressive than Howson, but because they’ll eventually get Emery back, they’re a better team overall than Columbus and the Eastern Conference is more manageable than the West. That isn’t to say the Jackets can’t make the playoffs, just six points out of the eight seed. But they might need Phoenix or Nashville to come back down to Earth to do so.

As for Philly, this passage from Flyers Goal Scored By … sums it up:

The Flyers need to prove something to even their most diehard fans. The ones that actually do bleed orange because of serious iron deficiencies in their blood. They get a small window during the day to speak with their actions and they’ve been consistently blowing it and then we get another 48 hours of "we gotta work harder" quotes. We’re hanging on hoping for something no matter how bad it gets but just stop already.

You didn’t always lose, you won’t always lose again. Start winning now.

Time’s a’wasting.

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.

Hockey News now finds us less influential than only 98 others

Greg Wyshynski | December 21, 2009

From the Dept. of Self-Congratulatory Nonsense: For the second straight year, we’re honored to have a place on The Hockey News’s annual "100 People of Power and Influence" list.

In 2008, we were given the Mr. Irrelevant-esque No. 100, finishing behind such luminaries as a dude donating his brain to science and Maple Leafs free-agent coup Jeff Finger(notes). In 2009 … well, just look at’er: They gave us the Gretzky! Which, in Canadian media terms, is better than being No. 1 overall, right?

So No. 99, with a bullet.* At this rate, we should become the most powerful entity in hockey right around the time when the Fisher/Underwood baby’s grandchild is inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame … which will have been relocated to a glass dome on the surface of Mars. Assuming, of course, that medical science can keep our brains alive in some sort of android body, preferably with kung-fu grip and lasers for eyes.

This blog doesn’t suck (or sucks less) thanks to the efforts of Sean Leahy, Dmitry Chesnokov, Ryan Lambert, Ross McKeon, Matt Romig, Scott Pianowski, Dobber on the fantasy column, Pagnotta and Spector on the chat and everyone else who has contributed, read, commented or communicated with us in the last year. Special thanks to Yahoo! Sports blog guru Mark Pesavento and Yahoo! Sports overlords Dave Morgan and Jamie Mottram for making this all happen.

Now, as has become tradition, we proceed to tear down and disparage the people ranked in front of us on the list …**

The field …

No. 98: Peter Moore, EA Sports Worldwide. First of all, your covers curse more than a voodoo priestess stuck in rush hour traffic. Pity poor Patty Kane! Second, your refusal to add "skinny, medium, fat, fat" as an option on NHL 10 and previous releases shows a complete lack of respect for old school gaming and the only combination of players than can win Poland the gold. Most of all, we can only assume your company’s success has contributed to the delinquency of a philandering golfer. For shame, sir!

No. 97: Larry Landon, PHPA director. A labor leader for minor league hockey players who is so effective that most of them earn at least three or four dollars an hour more than the drive-thru guy at Burger King (though significantly less than the one at Wendy’s; hey, when it’s real, you know that it’s real). Job consists mostly of keeping young prospects from openly weeping upon hearing they’re going to live in Wheeling, West Virginia for the foreseeable future. Is seemingly powerless to prevent his clients from being forced to wear this.

No. 96: Craig Simpson, HNIC analyst. Not for nothing, but are you [Gretzky] kidding us?

No. 95: Nick Kypreos, Sportsnet. OK, so he’s an insider that occasionally misses the mark and some people don’t dig him and he once appeared on "Arli$$". But honestly, we’re just bitter he was allowed to pose with a prop in his photograph, because we didn’t even know that was allowed. That’s it: Next year, we’re working an Imperial Walker from "Empire Strikes Back" and the Eric Staal(notes) porno bobblehead into the frame.

Ah, who are we kidding: Next year, we’re going from Gretzky’s number to Wellwood’s caloric intake …

Condolences to John Bitove of XM Canada, who will have to explain to loved ones that he finished behind the mastermind of this nonsense.

** Obviously all in good fun. Thanks again the THN for their continued support of this silly blog and to all of those who made the cut for the list this year.

Stats show OT charity point is affecting late-game scoring

Greg Wyshynski | December 21, 2009

As of earlier this month, the NHL was on a record pace for games ending in a shootout, potentially breaking 200 for the 2009-10 season. As Gus Katsaros pointed out on Fadoo, the compressed schedule for the Olympics could be a factor; but whatever it is, the increase in shootouts has led to an alarming decrease in quality offensive hockey late in games, according to the numbers.

Stats wiz Gabriel Desjardins of Behind The Net had a piece for the Wall Street Journal that showed a startling drop in scoring for the last three minutes of regulation and all of the 5-minute OT:

Initially, NHL teams didn’t take advantage of this extra point: in 2005-06, the first year of the shootout, the percentage of tie games after overtime hit a 12-year low. But 40% of the way through this season, the rate is at an all-time high, along with the percentage of games going into overtime.

This year, teams have stopped taking chances late in tie games so they can guarantee themselves the point in extra time. Even though league-wide scoring is essentially unchanged relative to the previous four seasons, the scoring rate has dropped 17% in overtime and-indicative of team strategies-44% in the last three minutes of regulation in tied games.

If that isn’t an indictment of the NHL’s current points and overtime formats, we’re not sure what is.

According to Desjardins, 27.9 percent of games are going to overtime this season, way up from 22.9 percent last season. Scoring in the last three minutes of regulation stands at 2.05 goals per 60 minutes, down big from 3.43 last season. Overtime scoring is also down well over a goal per 60 minutes, with an average of 5.44 this season to 6.59 in 2008-09.

And you thought "playing for the tie" ended when the shootout was adopted …

If you read this blog, you know our feelings on both the shootout (yuck) and the current points format (double yuck). The stats are fodder for the critics, even if taken in context they’re a bit of anomaly historically.

Everyone and their mother has a way to "fix" these systems, but lately the focus has been on motivation. Gus Katsaros on Fadoo explains in a number-crunching piece on tie games:

Aside from minor differences, the point system doesn’t really matter. It’s not about points and systems.

It’s about motivation.

Detroit Red Wings general manager, Ken Holland, proposed a change to the end-of-season tie-breaking measure from wins to regulation wins. It targeted motivation to win, not point systems.

Motivation is something Desjardins mentioned in passing on the WSJ site, because the gamble on the shootout is a safer bet than a gamble at the end of regulation or during overtime:

Teams seem to have figured out that dragging 10 games to the shootout is as good as winning five more games in regulation and can vault a team into the playoffs. Therefore, the weaker team on any given night has an incentive to first get the game to overtime, where it is guaranteed at least a point.

With the begrudging realization that the skills competition isn’t going anywhere soon, the only way to reverse these unfortunate trends is by placing more value on regulation hockey and OT. We’ve often talked about the "three-point win" for a team ahead after 60 minutes; perhaps that needs to be extended to the 4-on-4 OT as well?

It’ll be interesting to see where the trends go after the Olympic year. If we’re still talking about downgraded offensive numbers for Minutes 57-60 and the overtime next season, then the NHL needs to seriously look at revising its standings format.

One more bit of ties vs. shootouts reading. MacLean’s had a piece back in April that dealt with the psychological benefits of tie games, and it’s worth a read; as Professor Daniel Weinstock and essayist Adam Gopnik have argued that forcing winners and losers is a bad life lesson:

If you agree with the Weinstock-Gopnik thesis, as I do, it raises two concerns about the demise of the tie game in hockey. First, there is the problem of the reduced moral ontology of the sport itself. When there is always a winner, we lose the possibility of a "moral victory", where a team that should have lost rises above its natural talent, and ekes out a tie. As anyone who has every played soccer or hockey knows, the idea of a tie that is as good as a win, or even a tie that feels as good as a loss, is an essential part of the sport’s character-building dynamic.

A second, more speculative question: If these musings are accurate, what does it say about the moral standing of the playoffs, where every game has to have a winner, right up until the last game of the last series, where there remains a single team standing, the sole victor?

Who knew kissing your sister could be so academic?

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.

Mike Fisher confirms he’s hitchin’ Carrie Underwood

Greg Wyshynski | December 21, 2009

For the sake of argument, let’s say Mike Fisher(notes) of the Ottawa Senators and "American Idol" winner Carrie Underwood started dating at the beginning of January, when Fisher was mired in a career-worst slump. Since then, he’s scored 25 goals and 23 assists in roughly 80 games.

To paraphrase Ms. Knowles: If you like it then you better put a ring on it, Mr. Fisher.

So he did: Fisher confirmed that he asked for the country songstress’s hand in marriage on Sunday, and she put down her Taylor Swift voodoo doll long enough to say "yes." From Canada’s leading gossip columnist, Bruce Garrioch of the Ottawa Sun:

"It’s true," said Fisher. "We’re both obviously excited and very happy."

The blogosphere had been alive and buzzing since Sunday with rumours the celebrity couple had become engaged. The rumours began spreading after a friend of Underwood’s family congratulated the former American Idol and the Senators centre on their upcoming marriage on his Twitter page last night. This morning, a source close to the couple confirmed to the Ottawa Sun that Fisher popped the question and Underwood had accepted the proposal.

Huzzah! Hopefully Hilary Duff didn’t drive off the road in her Mercedes-Benz G-class SUV upon hearing that an American singer is engaged to an average NHL center and it’s another hockey super-couple …

The Ottawa Citizen also confirmed the Fisherwood engagement through a family friend, who said Fisher text-messaged confidants last night with the good news. The source was asked why he used text messages; the source responded, "He’s a simple guy."

The 6th Sens tracks the engagement story from rumor to Twitter news to confirmation, lamenting that Fisher’s relationship with Underwood could lead to a Tony Romo/Jessica Simpson-esque undermining of the Senators’ season. This is preposterous, of course, because Fisher is nowhere near as good as Romo and the Senators’ luck has traditionally been like breaking a mirror on a black cat under a ladder.

Congrats to the happy couple. We’re rooting for either an Ottawa wedding performed by the Right Reverend Jarkko Ruutu(notes) (c’mon, you know he’s ordained over the Internet) or a Nashville-based wedding in which the "I do’s" consist of hocking a loogie in the same spittoon. Then, when she’s officially Carrie Fisher: Gold bikini time.

Oh, and wouldn’t you love to see the pre-nup for a couple whose bride-to-be had a hit song called "Before He Cheats"?

Podcast: Introducing Puck Tracks, featuring Belak on Metallica

Greg Wyshynski | December 21, 2009

One of the primary missions of Puck Daddy is the extraction of humanity and personality from NHL players; bringing to light facets of their lives that fans actually care about, instead of the usual fluff we see in video packages between periods on television.

To that end, we’re proud to finally introduce Puck Tracks, our first podcast, created and facilitated by audio producer Michael Raphael. It features players discussing the music that helps shape their lives and careers. It’s their soundtrack on the road or on the ice. It’s the music that fuels their competitive passion, or evokes bittersweet memories of childhood and family.

As usual, we’re aiming for a wide variety of players to feature. So the debut episode of Puck Tracks focuses on one of the true characters of the last 14 years: Tough guy and metal-head Wade Belak(notes), currently a winger for the Nashville Predators and formerly of the Colorado Avalanche, Calgary Flames, Toronto Maple Leafs and Florida Panthers.

Here’s Episode One of Puck Tracks. Follow @pucktracks on Twitter for news and updates on subsequent episodes of Season 1, which will continue in 2010.

Puck Tracks is the creation of audio producer Michael Raphael. He spends his days working in public radio, which has taken him to such illustrious hockey cities as Los Angeles, Minneapolis, and now back to his home base of NYC. Michael grew up a New Jersey Devils fan and still cherishes his early childhood photos with John MacLean, Joe Cirella, Jan Ludvig and Doug Sulliman.

This podcast, and other Puck Daddy audio projects, will eventually be available for download on iTunes and other locations. Thanks for listening; any suggestions for future subjects or podcasts, hit us at puckdaddyblog@yahoo.com.

What We Learned: Headshot debate reaches hysterical levels

Ryan Lambert | December 21, 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.

Oh boy, Christmas has come early for me again this year.

On Saturday night, Johnny Boychuk(notes) knocked the ever-living crap out of Matt Stajan(notes), on his 26th birthday no less and soooooo: It’s another hit legality debate! Yayyyyyy!

Stajan was obviously cut open, but he was stitched up and returned to the game within a few minutes. No harm, no foul … except on Alexei Ponikarovsky(notes), who picked up a penalty for roughing on the ensuing dust-up.

Obviously this play was like the Batsignal for all the clowns who (a) don’t understand hockey and (b) want this to become a gallant and honorable sport in which no one is ever put in a position where they could be injured.

So here comes the hilarious part, in which, thanks to of the amount of coverage this "headshots" debate has gotten this year, those that would have these hits outlawed and the offending players pilloried have now taken a new approach: Act like you don’t know what you think.

(Coming Up: Detroit’s done with the Hossa stuff; Tomas Fleischmann(notes) is as good as Alex Semin, while Ryan Kesler(notes) is no Geno Malkin; the Habs meet the Basterds; the Wild go shopping; and Alex Ovechkin(notes) adds another beauty to the highlight reel.)

"Is This the Type of Hit the NHL Should Be Eliminating?" screams the headline on Adam Gretz’s FanHouse post from Sunday morning. "Boychuk check on Stajan expected to be reviewed," says Mike Zeiserberg’s article for Sun Media.

The problem is, of course, that the League is unlikely to review the hit since no one was hurt, no penalties were assessed and there’s absolutely nothing to review. Both of these articles — which go so far out of their way to say that they of course do not advocate that hitting be taken out of the game so as to convince you that the idiotic things they say next aren’t that idiotic — would have you believe differently.

Zeiserberg’s article ever so generously concedes that Stajan had his head down and the hit wasn’t late. "After that, well, the jury is out."

Out on what, exactly? Boychuk’s elbow was down and only hit Stajan’s head because Stajan’s head, again, was down at elbow level. So what’s the problem? Was Boychuk supposed to let Stajan fly past him to create a 2-on-none situation for Tuukka Rask(notes)?

Well, Wilson and Stajan thought Boychuk might have left his feet (they’re wrong, of course), so there’s all the evidence you need that the League should investigate Boychuk for his obviously premeditated attack on poor, defenseless little Matty Stajan, who probably saw the hit coming but took it anyway to spring Phil Kessel(notes) in alone on Rask. Any contact Boychuk made with Stajan’s head is entirely Stajan’s fault.

The best part, though, is that because Gretz needed to reinforce an asinine point, he did what everyone who has an indefensible stance eventually does: Resort to alarmism and the use of worst-case scenarios to illustrate his weak point. To wit: "…And this past week’s bombshell that former player Reggie Fleming had suffered significant brain damage at the time of his death … is only going to keep that debate going full steam ahead."

See guys, we can’t let these hits be legal because Matt Stajan is going to DIE some day!

Kudos. That’s audacity.

But Gretz asks, "At the risk being called a ‘granola cruncher’ by Mike Milbury for ‘wussifying the game,’ is this the type of hit the NHL should be working to avoid?"

Yes, of course it is Adam. Clean, open-ice hits need to result in penalties, suspensions and hearings before an international tribunal. That makes sense.

Claude Julien had the best take on the matter in his postgame presser:

"We are going to have to be careful about making accusations to guys who make open ice hits. We are going to have to be careful how we look at those. If every open ice hit is going to (ignite controversy), we might as well play no contact hockey."

I get the feeling some people would be cool with that.

What We Learned

Anaheim Ducks: Jonas Hiller(notes) probably wishes the League would go back to making division opponents eight times a year since his numbers against Phoenix are, well, ridiculous. He’s 8-0-2 in his career against the Coyotes with a 1.67/.953 line in their last three games.

Atlanta Thrashers: Kari Lehtonen(notes) is actually skating again. This weekend was the first time he’d done so since having two back surgeries in the offseason.

Boston Bruins: Apart from the one big hit, Boston was just awful on Saturday in Toronto. Part of that was injuries (Andrew Ference(notes) played over 28 minutes!) but most of it was a regular garden-variety crap game.

Buffalo Sabres: Ryan Miller(notes) on Olympic expectations, Vezina nominations and generally being the best goalie on the planet right now: "C’mon," he said, last week, rolling his eyes. "It’s like, 25 games into the season."

Calgary Flames: Know who had a great game for the first time this month on Saturday? Jarome Iginla(notes). Know who didn’t have a great game? Everyone else.

Carolina Hurricanes: While Bryan Rodney getting re-assigned to Albany is pretty much only news by the strictest of definitions; that at least means it’s likely either Tim Gleason(notes) or Niclas Wallin(notes) are good to go against the Rangers tonight. It’s more likely to be Gleason, though, so that’s something.

Chicago Blackhawks: Patrick Kane(notes) was left to pick up equipment after practice on Saturday because he lost in the team’s practice shootout. If I were Danny Bylsma, I’d be drafting a lawsuit against the Blackhawks as we speak.

Colorado Avalanche: No one sentence I read this week has made me laugh more than Jibblescribbits saying, "The Avs recently took their yearly trip to the Children’s Hospital in order to torment some sick little kids."

Columbus Blue Jackets: The Blue Jackets’ new plan for who pulls goaltending duty on a given night? "You win and you’re in." No joke. So what happens if they keep losing? (By the way, good job Puck Rakers for dumping the "you have to register to read" policy from last week.)

Dallas Stars: Play of the game on Saturday wasn’t one of Karlis Skrastins’(notes) two goals, or some kind of big stop by Marty Turco(notes). It was, instead, a blocked shot by Brenden Morrow(notes) on the PK inside of a minute to go. What you choose to believe about a team whose best play was a blocked shot… On a lazy slashing penalty… That happened on the opposite end of the ice from its own goal… By your star player… While up a goal on Detroit… Inside of two minutes left… That’s up to you.

Detroit Red Wings: Sorry, everyone in Chicago, the Red Wings won’t indulge your "You guys hate Hossa, right?" questions.

Edmonton Oilers: The Oilers have, not surprisingly, been the Grinch to all Edmonton fans’ Christmas season. "Speaking of Deslauriers, he’s gone from sitting for months between starts last season to making 111 straight appearances with Nikolai Khabibulin(notes) waiting for Santa to deliver a new spine. Anybody have a plan?" Outstanding.

Florida Panthers: Well Detroit fans, looks like I almost owe you an apology: it’s actually Florida that has the worst fans in the league.

Los Angeles Kings: The Kings are about to sign Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds overage defenseman Jacob Muzzin, who had NHL scouts lined up around the block earlier this season. Great get for the Kings here.

Minnesota Wild: The best thing about all the Wild’s equipment burning up was that Nick Schultz(notes) went into a Play it Again Sports in Ottawa and bought a new set of shoulder pads. That rules.

Montreal Canadiens: Snow on the East Coast kept the Habs in Long Island a bit longer than they wanted. But they got to watch "Inglourious Basterds," which is my favorite movie of the year so far, so it wasn’t all bad.

Nashville Predators: After missing Saturday’s game against the Flames, Jason Arnott(notes) is still questionable for tomorrow’s game in Vancouver. If he doesn’t go then, he’s going to play on Boxing Day for sure.

New Jersey Devils: Rod Pelley(notes) scored Saturday. Kind of a big deal. It was his first NHL goal since Nov. 23, 2007. Another guy that scored in that game: Dean McAmmond(notes). Twice.

New York Islanders: Official attendance on the Island because of the snow: Just 6,000. And, as Chris Botta points out, more than half of them were supporting Les Habitants.

New York Rangers: Hey, Matt Gilroy(notes) got recalled in a hurry. I wonder who the slowest guy on the Hurricanes is, and if he’s going to blow Gilroy’s doors off en route to an overtime winner tonight. Oh, here’s some bad news: Wade Redden(notes) is probably going to play tonight. 

Ottawa Senators: Big 22-save performance by Brodeur in a 4-1 win by the.. Senators? Oh, Mike Brodeur(notes). Okay I get it now.

Philadelphia Flyers: "This is about making the playoffs. This is about the Philadelphia Flyers playing a brand of hockey that you can be proud of. And I don’t know how anyone could possibly be proud after the first, two periods. It’s completely unacceptable." Fun quiz: Which game is Peter Laviolette talking about?

Phoenix Coyotes: Watch out for Phoenix in the next few weeks. Three points out of a tie for first in the Pacific, which crazily puts it just seventh in the West, but has the benefit of playing six of its next seven games in Glendale. The Coyotes are 12-5-0 there this year.

Pittsburgh Penguins: Brooks Orpik(notes) is not cool with the NHL changing the names of its various trophies (nor should he be). Sid Crosby on the other hand? "I don’t think you can go wrong either way, to be honest with you. If they are to rename them, you’re talking about trophies being named after Mario and Gretzky. How can you argue with that? They are, arguably, the best players ever to play." Weak, Sid. Weak. He’d change his tune if his landlord wasn’t one of the guys that’d be on the new trophies.

San Jose Sharks: How many times has Jamie McGinn(notes) been recalled this season? A hundred? Isn’t THIS circumventing the salary cap (or at least operating in violation of its spirit) just as much as some stupidly long-term contract?

St. Louis Blues: Larry Pleau’s working the phones like an operator on the Jerry Lewis Labor Day Telethon, but the Blues are probably not going to make a trade any time soon.

Tampa Bay Lightning: Lukas Krajicek(notes) is done with the Lightning for sure. Says GM Brian Lawton: He "won’t be on re-entry (waivers) under any circumstances." Cold-blooded.

Toronto Maple Leafs: Jonas Gustavsson(notes) wasn’t tested much by a punchless Bruins side, but a first NHL shutout is a first NHL shutout, isn’t it? Good work by the kid.

Vancouver Canucks: Know who the Vancouver media loves is Ryan Kesler. You can tell because they write sentences like this in reference to Kesler potentially being one of the best second-line centers in the league: "After Friday’s game, Sidney Crosby(notes) and Evgeni Malkin(notes) — easily hockey’s best one-two punch at centre — had combined for 77 points. Henrik Sedin(notes) and Kesler had 75." Of course Malkin missed six games and Crosby one. And Ryan Kesler also is not anywhere in the same stratosphere as either Crosby or Malkin. That too.

Washington Capitals: Would you believe Tomas Fleischmann has as many goals as Alex Semin? Because it’s true. And, unlike Ryan "Malkin" Kesler, he’s actually played fewer games than Semin.

Play of the Weekend

This is why Alex Ovechkin is Alex Ovechkin.

Great use of speed and ability to recognize opportunities, and then he buries a rebound that’s still sizzling from some ridiculous angle on his off wing. This kid’s okay.

Gold Star Award

Andrei Markov(notes) played his first game since Oct. 1 on Saturday. And scored twice. That’s pretty awesome. So awesome, in fact, that I will ignore that the goals came against the Islanders.

Minus of the Weekend

Brent Sutter, what are you doin’ to me, dogsie?

The Flames have lost three of their last four and have just three wins in December. Teams they’ve beaten: San Jose, Atlanta and Los Angeles. Teams to which they’ve lost: Phoenix, L.A., Minnesota (in OT), Colorado, St. Louis, Nashville. Showing up to play well even against the crap teams? That’d be nice.

Perfect HFBoards trade proposal of the week

There are a lot of ways you can win PHFBTPOTW (I gotta get a better acronym), and calling Lubomir Visnovsky(notes) a "world-class defender" sure is one of them. Well done to you, user "Smooth Skating!"

To EDM:

Andy Sutton(notes)

Brendan Witt(notes)

To NYI:

Shawn Horcoff(notes)

Lubomir Visnovsky

New york gets a world class defender in Visnovsky and a veteran center that can take take some of the pressure off the kids.

Signoff

Don’t call it that.

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.

Five reasons why Nashville announcer Paul McCann loves hockey

Greg Wyshynski | December 20, 2009

(Ed. Note: Our series "5 Reasons I Love Hockey" features puckheads from all walks of life revealing five things that either made them a fan or that keep them watching hockey. It will run every weekend. Have a suggestion for a "5 Reasons" guest blogger? Hit us on email. Enjoy!)

Talk about dedication to the team: Paul McCann is the PA announcer for the Nashville Predators, as well as a blogger on HockeyBuzz and the co-owner/co-host of HockeyBuzz Radio, a great hockey talk show heard on SportsRadio 560 in Nashville.

McCann’s a die-hard hockey fan in an "non-traditional" hockey market, so we wanted to find out more about the man behind the mic. Here are Five Reasons Paul McCann Loves Hockey:

1.  Passion

As a small boy, the first thing about this great sport that grabbed me was the passion of the game, he passion of the players, players who show that they just don’t seem to have the capacity to play at half speed, be it pre-season, regular season, or playoffs. The passion of the fans that find a way to be there, supporting the boys, letting anyone know who they root for with a full-throated fury. The passion of the professionals in the broadcast booth and the front office who are constantly sharing their love for a game that not everyone understands.

2. Broad Street Bullies

Growing up in Philly, my first memories of the game was listening to Philadelphia Flyers games on my small clock radio, listening to the voice of Gene Hart teaching me (and the rest of the Delaware Valley) the game, gently and with great enthusiasm. I can never hear a goal call without thinking of Hart’s "Clarke scooooores for a case of Tastykake!!!" 

I watched an expansion team grow from doormat to Stanley Cup Champion, watching players with grit and toughness, players that took no grief from anyone on the ice and sometimes off. Going to games at the Spectrum, and especially, cutting school to hop the Hi-Speed Line to Philly for the second cup parade, watching a team bring victory to a city that was starved for a champion. 

3. Family

Hockey is a family where character counts. A family where families are important, where your background can really show if you will be successful playing a game that values team work over all else. I have had many conversations with scouts and coaches at all levels and when talking about a prospect, their family always comes up. How they are, how the prospect interacts with them, let’s face it… anyone who has dragged out of bed to take their kid to a 5 a.m. practice is part of this.

Along with this, one of the joys of this game for me has been how my entire family has taken hockey to their hearts. My eldest, one of the loudest and most passionate fans I have seen, watches the game with his heart, lives and dies with every shift. My middle guy, who has played the game since he was eight and was lucky enough to help propel a team to a state championship last season, I wish that all hockey parents could have that feeling of watching that. My daughter, who knows the game better than a lot of adults, who tagged along to countless travel weekends, cheering on the teams and is one of the biggest fans of the game I know. My wife and partner, how she has supported my dreams in being involved in this great game, how she has driven great ideas in HockeyBuzz Radio and driven me to be better in everything I do.

No other sport seems to have the family connection that hockey does.  Hockey is family.

4. The Miracle on Ice

The 1980 Olympic Team was a revelation.  After years of futility in international competition, the US team finally broke through, beating teams of professionals in one of the most unlikely runs in sports history. It was an odd combination of sport, politics and patriotism. My memories of the day that the miracle team beat the Soviets are still crystal clear, I was a freshman at Catholic University in Washington, DC. The memory of flags flying on hockey sticks hanging from all of the dorms on campus are very vivid, the party on campus that night was amazing…  unfortunately my memories of that party are a little clouded ;)

5. Not being part of hoard

I love that hockey is an underdog where I live. I love that a lot of fans can’t see hockey succeeding in a market like Nashville.  In a football market, it’s tough to be a hockey fan, the main stream media doesn’t understand the game, and worse yet, refuses to learn it. The coverage (when you get any) is slanted, full of half-truths and lacks insight.  In traditional markets it’s easy to be a hockey fan, in a non-traditional market you are looked on as a little off, watching that odd game on the ice. Add to that the attacks you constantly receive from other areas about how hockey doesn’t belong. 

It makes you stronger, it makes you defend more, hold tighter and defiantly show your colors.

Happy Holidays!