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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.

Kings are contending, but can they command attention in LA?

Greg Wyshynski | December 18, 2009

Every airport has its Hudson News-esque shop filled with local keepsakes, overpriced beverages and the latest issue of every magazine except the one you’re looking to read.

The one I ducked into at Los Angeles International Airport this week was no different, prominently featuring swag from the local college and pro sports team … and yet nothing from the Los Angeles Kings.

Seriously, there were more "Star Trek" T-shirts than anything Kings-related in the store.

This isn’t to say that the Kings are invisible in that part of town. A giant billboard with the team logo, the word "PASSION" and ticket information casts a shadow over the freeway. Then again, it sort of looks like an ad for a designer men’s fragrance, and the slogan sort of misses the mark in the eyes of LA-based hockey blogger Dave Bartkowiak:

Here in LA, I see Kings billboards with one-word phrases like "Passion," "Pride" and "Believe". My first question is, what have the Kings done since the Gretzky era? I don’t think there has been much "passion."

There is now, of course, with this collection of hungry young talents meshing with cagey vets for what’s been a thrilling journey to the top of the Pacific Division, with 47 points in 37 games. (The San Jose Sharks also have 47 points, and are technically the top team in the division because they have two games in-hand.) They’ve got the passion, the fan base believes … so now the question is whether the rest of Los Angeles will once again take pride in its NHL franchise.

In our conversations with LA fans, it may not be anytime soon, for a variety of factors.

In the flawed and unreliable public attendance numbers for the NHL, the Kings are listed as averaging 16,325 fans per home game, good for 88.2-percent capacity. They’ve had a loyal following, a thriving blogosphere and the promise that years of building under GM Dean Lombardi were eventually going to lead to success.

What they haven’t had is buzz in a city were it’s mandatory for any media or cultural traction. You know the drill: Lack of chatter in local media; televisions tuned to hoops in most bars; and, as mentioned above, a lack of gear in airport newsstands (which is, of course, the ultimate barometer of a team’s success, right?).

In reading Stephen Brunt’s book "Gretzky’s Tears" about The Great One’s trade from the Edmonton Oilers to the Kings (hopefully reviewed here next week), it’s incredible to think how instantaneous the transformation of Los Angeles into a "hockey town" was upon his arrival. Brunt, on the massive interest and ticket sales after the trade:

"They were responding to Gretzky’s star power. They had bought into the idea of Gretzky — faster than anyone could have imagined. No one dismissed the phenomenon by suggesting it was just the Kings, it was just hockey, so it couldn’t possibly matter."

Right there is the issue for the 2009-10 Kings, from the conversations I had with Los Angelenos of all types: No matter their success in the standings, they are just the Kings. It is just hockey. And Anze Kopitar’s(notes) 38 points in 37 games does not a star make, let alone one that would bring Neil Diamond to hockey like The Great One did.

Bartkowiak, from his blog in October:

Although the California hockey market has continued to flourish thanks to Anaheim and San Jose, the Kings are all but forgotten. It’s a dead franchise lurching in the shadows of it’s two younger brothers – the Ducks and Sharks. LA is experiencing its own curse of The Great One.

In fact, the team has made the playoffs just four times since ‘93. They haven’t played a series since 2002, and they haven’t won one since 2000 – against Detroit. That is the one highlight of the last 15 seasons. The Kings have had seven coaches in the past 15 seasons. They’ve had a rotating roster of rejects and has-beens.

The best that could happen to the Kings would be another Gretzky figure. Someone like Alexander Ovechkin could save this team and this market. But what if there isn’t anyone to do that? This is where the Kings stand – without a savior and with little faith.

Here’s what I see now: A team with a bunch of young guys who have something to prove. This may be the first year since the ’90s the Kings have even the slightest chance at making the post season.

But that doesn’t translate to buzz. LA fans aren’t opening the paper, looking at the standings, seeing the Kings atop the division and calling their ticket broker.

It doesn’t work that way. The fans I spoke to said it would take a run — potentially as deep as the Stanley Cup finals — to turn the Kings into a must-see-and-be-seen event in town. That’s a hell of a marketing challenge.

Then again, so is a lack of media visibility. When the locals do open their paper, they might find NHL standings; they might not find any Kings coverage worth a damn, especially when the team travels. That’s why the Kings hired Rich Hammond as their own beat guy from the LA Daily News; he’s been dynamic for fans that follow the team, but the casual fan isn’t being exposed to the Kings through dwindling mainstream media.

Television is a problem, too. Mike Dark, a Kings fan in Long Beach, contacted us about a lack of TV coverage for the team, noting that at least 11 games won’t be televised from Dec. through April and that his cable system, Charter, doesn’t offer Center Ice. (DirecTV does … but then he loses Versus, of course.)

We asked Michael for his lay of the La-La land for hockey, and he passed along some eye-opening observations for fans outside of the Golden State:

The Kings haven’t made the playoffs in six years so the buzz is LOW. Really what buzz?  Locally, the media focuses on the Lakers, Dodgers, Angels and USC football. The Los Angeles Times doesn’t even have a beat writer that covers the Kings (or Ducks). The reality is that hockey is an after thought in LA. Since Gretz left things have gone down hill for the Kings and the media. It seems hard to sell a team that hasn’t won for several years, without a marquee player who has an American/Canadian surname. I don’t ever remember seeing Dustin Brown(notes) being thrust out in front of the media.

While the marketing of the Kings is a problem, I think that the greater problem is with the NHL. The NHL isn’t trying to market their product to LA. While we get the NBC game of the week, the hype isn’t there locally. Can I really get excited about another game that features Crosby? 

It seems to me that hockey players in general are very laid-back, cool guys from the farms of Canada. The interviews are honest, insightful and lack a lot of the ego that the NBA players carry. Can’t the NHL through the NHLPA make the players do more media junkets?

The national Fox radio drive time show features two LA guys, Petros and Money, who will talk hockey, but it seems that it is rare. Actually, tomorrow at 1830 EST, they will be talking some hockey but it seems rare. Jim Rome used to have great interviews with Ray Ferraro and other NHL guys but it seems that those are getting fewer and father between.

I really think that the NHL needs to sure up their TV contracts to resemble what the NFL has. All games need to be televised in all markets. All games have to be in HD. The local teams need to parade out the local talent as much as possible (think Reggie Dunlop). If the Kings could get people talking about hockey, good bad or otherwise, then more people would want to be a part of the buzz.

Can winning accomplish that? Perhaps, but it’s still a tough task in a town when it’s all about names above the title, and for a franchise that needed the best player in the history of pucks and skates (pipe down, Gordie and Orr loyalists) to enchant the locals.

Can marketing accomplish that? The Kings are trying to prove it can. They’ve served hockey fans well, from the hiring of Hammond to ticket deals to — let’s face it — one of the greatest team-produced commercials of all-time. Now, with the team contending, the focus expands; for example, the Kings’ new initiative to share advertising space with sponsors. From All Business:

One co-branded billboard with sponsor San Manuel Indian Bingo & Casino has the tag line "Great Games," with logos for both. Kings executives said that the double meaning emphasizes the partnership.

"This is a great example of how we can go that extra step with one of our partners and go beyond just the elements of a contractual agreement," said Luc Robitaille, Kings president of business operations. "We like this strategy going forward and believe it benefits all parties involved."

It’ll take innovation to create buzz; sustaining it will be contingent on what the Kings do on the ice. The fans we’ve talked to said that there are scores of hockey fans who’d come out to support a winning product in LA; imagine who else would hit the rink if, say, the Cup was on the line?

And by "who" we mean "actresses who play indestructible cheerleaders on shows that set the bar way too high in Season 1":

Puck Headlines: Selanne out; preparing for Blackhawks, Pens

Greg Wyshynski | December 4, 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.

• It’s a known fact that the Carolina Hurricanes made same truly awful bobblehead dolls, like the Eric Staal porno face. Here’s their Erik Cole bobblehead; Puck Buddy Paul I proclaimed over email: "The Canes are so desperate they have signed George W Bush."

Teemu Selanne(notes) could have stayed in bed watching "The Office" and "30 Rock" last night with flu-like symptoms. Instead, he played against the Dallas Stars, and suffered a broken hand that the Dallas Morning News said will shelve him for at least a month. [TSN]

• Great look from The 700 Level on the Philadelphia Flyers‘ struggles, and a reminder that for all the crowing about Ray Emery’s(notes) impressive return to form in October, the Flyers are basically facing a burgeoning goalie controversy like that have for, oh, the last 15 years. It must be comfort food by now. [The 700 Level]

• Look, no one wants to disrespect the Nashville Predators by overlooking their game against Chicago on Friday night. That being said (tm Curb), it’s Blackhawks vs. Penguins on Saturday night and that’s pretty damn cool right there. [Between The Circles]

• And not just because of Hossa. [Sun Times]

• Kevin Allen makes the case that the East is better than the West. Then he makes the case that the West is better than the East. Then he throws his hands in the air and says "parity!" [USA Today]

• The Pittsburgh Penguins place Chris Bourque(notes) on waivers. We’re going to take a positive view of the guy’s career and just say that the AHL needs players, too. [McKenzie]

• Ted Leonsis doesn’t lash out Sports Illustrated’s Jim Kelley for his piece that criticized Leonsis and the Washington Capitals for supporting Alex Ovechkin’s(notes) style of play. Instead, he pens a passively damning blog that’s an "invitation" for Kelley to "get out of the office" and actually speak to someone before forming his opinions. Ouch. [Ted's Take]

• Down Goes Brown presents a series of little-known teammate-on-teammate injuries. The Brendan Witt(notes) one is a coffee-spitter. [DGB]

• We didn’t necessarily read too much into the Carolina Hurricanes trading for Jiri Tlusty(notes), but Canes Country finds more than a bit of intrigue in the deal. [Canes Country]

Cam Ward(notes) sees rubber. This is a good thing. [News & Observer]

• Hockey News editor Jason Kay asks for a wait-and-see approach on the shootout’s validity, before offering some alternatives: "My leading candidate, if we get to that point, is 4-on-4 for five minutes, followed by 3-on-3 for another five. Or if 10 OT minutes is too much for logistical purposes, make each situation three or four minutes. I’m also a proponent of the soccer points system – three for a regulation win, one for an OT or shootout win, none for a loss. The two schemes could work together." [THN]

• BREAKING: Nicklas Lidstrom(notes) is a great player, strong leader. [Snapshots]

• Trying to make sense of the Mike Duco(notes) penalty madness in the Panthers/Caps game. [OFB]

• Thanks to The 6th Sens boys for having me on their podcast. [6th Sens

• 2012 had the Mayans. 2112 has the Calgary Flames. Eerie. [Getty]

• The Montreal Canadiens‘ centennial is mocked because of recent follies: "This once magical franchise has lost its lustre. The likes of Howie Morenz, Rocket Richard, Jean Beliveau, Doug Harvey and Guy Lafleur have been replaced by Glen Metropolit(notes), Hal Gill(notes), Tomas Plekanec(notes), Sergei Kostitsyn(notes) and Josh Gorges(notes). Yikes!" Well, it may have something to do with the establishment of the draft and an inability to trick the California Golden Seals to hand over Lafleur, but the points is taken. [Sportsnet]

• Stanley Cup of Chowder presents 85 reasons to hate the Habs. [SCOC]

• In the spirit of equal time, Eyes on the Prize has a much more worshipful look at the birth of the Canadiens franchise. [EOTP]

• We were just talking to someone about this the other day: The Boston Bruins have a lot of contract tied up in the middle of their lineup after the Savard signing. [Puck Update]

• The St. Louis Blues‘ victory over the San Jose Sharks last night have made the Game Time crew a little giddy. [St. Louis Game Time]

• It’s official: The 2010 Draft is going to Los Angeles. [NHL]

Puck Daddy reader Jack asks for your support in getting Winter Classic tickets for a youth team. [Vote]

• Finally, this hockey fight is bound to go viral because it involves a girl battling a few guys. Puck Buddy Kelly explains:

So, there’s a few things to comment on in this video.  First, good for #07, the girl, to fight back.  Secondly, Brian Burke needs to sign some of these pugilists up.  Thirdly, I love the use of the horn to try to get the kids to stop, kind of like how my best friend’s mom used to flick the lights on and off when we got too loud when we were young.  Finally, all the classy comments from the cameraman and surrounding folks (NSFW).  Fun to watch.

Well, fun email, to say the least. The fight? It’s obviously a kick to see the girl stand up for herself, and then it just sort of becomes depressing when the festivities drag on and it appears there are injuries. Again, beware NSFW audio.

Fantasy: Southeast keepers, time to bench Anze?

Dobber | December 3, 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 in a non-holiday week.)

Running a fantasy squad can give you more headaches than tending goal for the Panthers. Not to worry – Dobber’s here to help you navigate through the twists and turns of the player trends.

Injury replacement of the weekBryan Rodney, Carolina Hurricanes

The rookie has already had a couple of cups of coffee with the ‘Canes, but now that Joe Corvo(notes) is out for an extended period, Rodney should be called back up and he’ll enjoy an extended stay. He’s a worth a flyer if you’re a rotisserie owner in desperate need of defensive depth.

Are you drunk?

I think so. Earlier, at the bar, I was heading to the can and someone was walking towards me. We did the ‘go left’, ‘go right’ dance for a couple of minutes before I realized it was a mirror. At that point I decided enough was enough — time to write the Puck Daddy article. Anyway, both of Rodney’s points this season have come on the power play. That’s where he’ll get his minutes, which is just fine for poolies.

The Keepers who are on fire…

Michael Frolik(notes), Florida Panthers:  It’s déjà vu all over again for Frolik. After starting last season with two points in 19 games, he finished with 43 in 60. This time around, he had nine in his first 21. Now he has five in his last six. I think he’ll finish in that 55 to 60 range, so good things are ahead.

Tobias Enstrom(notes), Atlanta Thrashers: Lost in how fantastic the likes of Rich Peverley(notes), Max Afinogenov and Zach Bogosian(notes) are playing is the fact that Enstrom is kicking ass. After Mat Schneider was dealt away last season, Enstrom finished with 21 points in the last 26 games. That gives him 40 points in his last 50 overall.

Duncan Keith(notes), Chicago Blackhawks: The plus/minus king has 12 points in his last nine contests and is currently on pace to exceed 70. That won’t happen, but 60 is reachable.

Ryan Miller(notes), Buffalo Sabres: The Sabres are leading their division despite having just one player on pace to top 70 points. That’s due to goaltending. And given that Patrick Lalime(notes) sees about as much ice time as a teenager on a Ken Hitchcock team, you can give Miller 100 percent of the credit. He’s the NHL leader in goals against average and save percentage and is second in wins. He’ll beat his career high of 40 wins easily this season.

The Sleepers who are on the wire…

Randy Jones(notes), Los Angeles Kings: With eight points in 10 games for Los Angeles, this certified Band-Aid Boy is off to a great start with his new team. As long as he stays healthy, he should be good for a point every two games. In each of his last eight contests his ice time as been at least 19:30.

Eric Fehr(notes), Washington Capitals: Right now his numbers are as easy to miss as a fire hydrant on Tiger Woods’s front lawn, but 10 of his 11 points have come in the last 11 games since returning from a rib injury. The power forward’s development was slowed by several injuries, but if he’s back on track he’ll surprise you with his stats come April.

Ryan Potulny(notes), Edmonton Oilers: This is Potulny’s best chance yet to stick in the NHL. The team is in desperate need of offense with Mike Comrie(notes) and Ales Hemsky(notes) out. He has five goals in 11 games and has seen at least 15:30 of ice time in each of the last four.

Robert Lang(notes), Phoenix Coyotes: NHL teams gave up on him and poolies followed suit, dumping him like a whiny girlfriend. Lang has the last laugh though, after signing with Phoenix late in camp. He’s found his timing now and has four points in his last three games and should get to the 55-point mark.

In a slump, these boys are mired…

Andrew Cogliano(notes), Edmonton Oilers: Cogs is trying to beat Peter Mueller(notes) in the "crappiest third year" contest. With three points in the last 21 games, the smallish forward had better step it up if he wants to catch Brooks Orpik(notes) in the scoring race. Don’t look for much this season, but have hope that Year 4 brings better results. Bench him.

Matt Hunwick(notes), Boston Bruins: Hunwick surprised us with a big hot streak last campaign and some fantasy owners harbored secret "what a great dark horse" thoughts at the draft table this past September. With just two points in his last 17 games, Hunwick is down to about 15 minutes of ice time. Last year’s horseshoe has been removed from his sphincter. Drop him.

Anze Kopitar(notes), Los Angeles Kings: Ryan Smyth’s(notes) arrival was clearly a driving force behind Kopitar’s monster 30 points in 19 games. It’s hard to imagine though, that Smyth’s absence has hit Kopitar so hard. With just three in his last 11, Kopitar is struggling. One would think that former linemate and Ryan Smyth impersonator Dustin Brown(notes) would be the perfect replacement on that line, but coach Terry Murray has yet to buy into that theory. Regardless of his linemates, Kopitar should still be a point-per-game player so think of this as just a cold streak. Too good to bench, ride it out.

Dan Girardi, New York Rangers: Last year, Girardi had 14 points in his first 19 games and then eight in his last 63. This year he started with seven in nine before earning just two in his next 18. The potential for a major letdown definitely exists, so if you have unlimited moves it’s best to let someone else take the risk. Drop 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.

Wednesday’s Three Stars: Frolik keeps Panthers rolling

Ross McKeon | November 19, 2009

No. 1 star, Michael Frolik(notes), Florida Panthers:
The 21-year-old center, who burst on the scene with 21 goals and 45 points as a rookie last season, kept Florida’s recent hot streak intact by contributing his first multi-goal effort of the season. Frolik scored the first of his two goals at 18:21 of the first period to tie host Buffalo. His power-play goal, and sixth marker of the season, at 17:58 of the third period gave the Panthers a 4-2 lead and was one of four visitors’ goals scored in the final period. After a slow start, Florida has now won six of nine games.

No. 2 star, Alex Auld(notes), Dallas Stars:
The backup goalie strolled into Detroit and stopped 31 of 32 shots to enable the Stars to halt the Red Wings’ three-game winning streak. Auld spearheaded a perfect night on the penalty kill as Dallas snuffed out all four of Detroit’s power plays.

No. 3 star, Brian Boucher(notes), Philadelphia Flyers:
The Flyers’ backup gave Ray Emery(notes) a rare night off and rewarded the coach’s decision by winning on the road. Boucher was up to the task, especially in the third period when Los Angeles managed to slip only one of 21 shots past the goalie. Boucher stopped 37 shots in all.

Honorable mention: Panthers defenseman Keith Ballard(notes) hit the score sheet with three assists, three blocked shots and three hits during 25:08 of ice time. … Brad Richards(notes) and James Neal(notes) had two assists apiece while Stephane Robidas(notes) contributed seven hits and an assist during 23:49 of ice time for the Stars. … Coyotes forward Scottie Upshall(notes) scored the game-winning goal late in the third period just 19 seconds after the host Wild tied the game. Radim Vrbata(notes) scored a goal, added an assist, had seven shots on goal and six others wide for Phoenix. … Patrick O’Sullivan(notes) earned the game-winning goal for Edmonton, which rallied impressively. … Rookie Chris Durno(notes) picked up his first NHL point on the second of Milan Hejduk’s(notes) two goals.

Did you know?: The six goals allowed to Florida were the most Buffalo has surrendered in a game this season.

Dishonorable mention: Tough night for Derek Roy(notes) as the Sabres’ center was scoreless, a minus-2 and lost nine of 11 draws. … Even tougher night for referees Stephane Auger and Dennis LaRue in Detroit, both bungling Brad May’s(notes) apparent game-tying goal early in the third period. … It wasn’t much better in St. Paul where Owen Nolan(notes) was whistled for a phantom high stick late.

Fantasy: Time to push for stars; the end near for Kariya?

Dobber | November 12, 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.)

There’s never been a better time to make a pitch for one of the Big 3 in your keeper league. Alex Ovechkin(notes) and Evgeni Malkin(notes) are on the shelf for the first lengthy time of their careers and Sidney Crosby(notes) has gone five games without a point — also a first. The last time their value was this low, Puck Daddy was just a twinkle in Greg Wyshynski’s eye.

Injury replacement of the week: Andrew Ebbett(notes), Chicago

It’s extremely hard to get into the top six in Chicago if you’re a bubble player. Even getting onto the third line, which is fairly productive for this team compared to other teams, is no easy task. With Dave Bolland(notes) now on the shelf for what should be months, the Blackhawks are doing some shuffling around. Right now, this includes putting Kris Versteeg(notes) at center and moving Ebbett up to Patrick Kane’s(notes) line. Cha-ching!

Are you drunk?

Nope, I’m serious. Well, 10 beers. But I’m still serious. Last season when Teemu Selanne(notes) went down, Ebbett came in and posted nearly a point per game for several weeks. Here is a second "Selanne" opportunity.

The Keepers

Paul Stastny(notes), Colorado Avalanche: Although it seems as though he is on every Colorado goal these days, statistically it is only about one in three. It’s hard to believe that Stastny is still only 23, given the fact that his last two seasons have been virtual write-offs due to injury. Let’s hope that the bad luck is behind him and he tops 80 points for the first time.

Loui Eriksson(notes), Dallas Stars: He’ll be a regular in the 70-point club. It may not happen this year, (although it certainly looks promising at the moment), but the 24-year-old Swede will get there. He’s making Stars fans forget all about that other 24-year-old Swede on the team who received a hell of a lot more hype 18 months ago.

Ryan Miller(notes), Buffalo Sabres:  Coming off of what was his best season statistically, Miller is topping those numbers. Health permitting, he’ll get in 70 games and with Buffalo actually winning some now, he’ll garner 42 Ws. Looking at the numbers of Buffalo’s No.2 and No.3 guys, you can bet they pulled all the strings they could to ensure that Miller got his H1N1 shot.

Drew Doughty(notes), Los Angeles Kings: He’s arrived early. Doughty didn’t take his time getting to be a solid point producer, like Chris Pronger(notes) did. No, at 20 he’ll get at least 49 points, like Dion Phaneuf(notes) did. The key lies in the team around him. Los Angeles, as a club, has come into their own and Doughty is picking up an assist on everything they do. In fact, NHL statisticians just awarded him with an assist because "Los Angeles" was mentioned three times in a Doughty-related paragraph.

The Sleepers

David Clarkson(notes), New Jersey Devils: It was an interesting offseason for David. The trade from St. Louis to New Jersey was underreported, as was his name change from "Backes" to "Clarkson". In all seriousness, Clarkson’s 65-point, 150-PIM pace is where we all expected Backes, who is just 31 days younger, to be at. He’s being used on the power play and, while he should slow down a bit, his production is for real – think 50 points for this season.

Tomas Fleischmann(notes), Washington Capitals: My favorite dark horse from the summer is back in the lineup and is lighting it up to the tune of more than a point per game. If he can steer clear of the weird injuries/ailments (blood clot?), we’re golden.

Alex Tanguay(notes), Tampa Bay Lightning: Poolies have stopped bailing on this guy, although they may still have a low opinion of him. After he posted just two points in nine games, most of which were played on a line with Vincent Lecavalier(notes), fantasy owners were giving up on him faster than Ken Hitchcock can sit Nikita Filatov(notes). With seven points in his last six, Tanguay is back on track and is now rewarding the fantasy owners who were patient. Both of them.

Jarret Stoll(notes), Los Angeles Kings: Stoll has eight points in his last eight contests and is on pace for 63, the second highest of his career. Looking at this kind of production, I think he should have sent Rachel Hunter that email sooner…

Bench ‘em or Drop ‘em

Paul Kariya(notes), St. Louis Blues: I have a lot of difficulty wrapping my head around Paul Kariya being washed up at 35. Especially when he had 15 points in 11 games a year ago and kicked off this campaign with seven in his first eight. But Coach Andy Murray is struggling to generate offense and taking a two-time 100-point player off the power play is the obvious way to go. Wouldn’t you do the same? It is what it is, though — Kariya is not on the PP and he is pointless in eight. Bench him.

Michael Ryder(notes), Boston Bruins: Montreal’s favorite son proved to Habs fans last year that he’s not done. This year, it’s another story and it’s clear that he struggles without an elite set-up man as his centerman. With Marc Savard(notes) on the shelf for a couple of weeks yet, don’t expect any hat tricks from Mr. Ryder. Bench him.

Radim Vrbata(notes), Phoenix Coyotes: After he tallied four points in his first two games I was thrilled. It’s one of those situations where you have a hunch on a player and you steal him late in a draft and he pays off big. I was so proud that you could have mistaken me for the Staal parents. After all – I took him in not one, but two drafts very late. With his three points in 15 games since… I feel as deflated as Pavel Brendl’s parents. Needless to say, he’s off my team now. Drop him.

Matt Stajan(notes), Toronto Maple Leafs: Stajan followed up a breakout season with a strong exhibition run and then seven points in eight games to start 2009-10. Now he’s playing with Wayne Primeau(notes) and Colton Orr(notes) and has just one point in eight. If he were any more physical, he’d be playing with Phil Kessel(notes). But he plays about as tough as Sean Avery(notes) does when Phaneuf is around. A change of scenery would be best. Drop 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.

Ads inside nets: Giving new meaning to ‘biscuit in the basket’

Sean Leahy | November 10, 2009

Minor League Malarkey focuses on the goofy world of minor-league hockey; from the characters to the fights to the promotions to the die-hard fans that half-fill the stands. Know of a quirky upcoming hockey promotion? Drop us a line at puckdaddyblog@yahoo.com

It’s a joy to watch replays of games from yesteryear on NHL Network and see zero advertising on the ice and along the boards. These days, ads are beginning to move into nearly every location, whether it’s a sponsored television highlight, power play or electronically finding their way behind the goal along the glass.

In keeping with that trend, the Quad City Mallards of the IHL introduced something last month that hadn’t been seen in any form of professional hockey: advertising inside the net.

Teaming up with restaurant chain Hardee’s, the Mallards are giving fans the opportunity to get an added benefit each time their team scores:

The Hardee’s "Biscuit in the Basket" promotion will deliver coupons good for free Hardee’s biscuits to a different row of a section randomly selected at each home game for each goal scored by the Mallards at the i wireless Center this season. If the Mallards score at least four goals in a home game, the entire designated section wins free biscuits. The Hardee’s logo has been painted on the ice inside the nets at the i wireless Center to serve as a most appropriate target for Mallards marksmen this season.

We’ve seen fans get rewarded for goals around the NHL for the past few years. The New York Islanders reward fans with free Wendy’s chili if the team scores three goals, which always leads to the fun "We want chili!" chants after the second goal is scored.

Mallards owner Chris Lencheski comes from NASCAR where anything and everything has been sold for ad space. Bringing that approach to minor league hockey, Lencheski has even sold as much ice space as possible at the iWireless Center. The result? Quad City was close to reaching its goals in sales of tickets and sponsorships early into their season.

Could we see ads like this at NHL arenas? It’s possible. Advertising on goalies has been discussed. Plenty of teams could use the extra sponsorship revenue. Businesses would really enjoy seeing their company logo on television when the replay camera inside the goal is used.

It’s only inevitable. Free Tim Horton’s in Toronto! Free Geno’s in Philly! Free Jack in the Box in Los Angeles! As long as free food is on the line, fans won’t mind.

The 10 biggest hockey upsets of the last decade

Greg Wyshynski | November 10, 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.)

These "end of decade" rankings aren’t all necessarily going to be confined to the National Hockey League. In some cases, other levels of competitive hockey are going to creep into the countdowns; and there’s simply no way to recall the most significant upsets of the last 10 years without discussing at least three that occurred outside of NHL rinks.

That isn’t to say that some miraculous (or heartbreaking, depending on which side of history your team was on) upsets didn’t also occur in the Stanley Cup playoffs, because they certainly did. In fact, Detroit Red Wings fans might want to skip this list, unless the championships have balanced out the embarrassing defeats at the hands of underdogs.

Here are the Top 10 biggest upsets in the last decade

10. Calgary Flames (No. 6 seed) upset Detroit Red Wings (1), 2004 Western Conference semifinals

The Red Wings were a President’s Trophy-winning 109-point team that had overcome the pesky Nashville Predators in the first round. The Flames had outlasted the Vancouver Canucks in an exhausting seven-game upset. Detroit was, to put it mildly, a heavy favorite here.

That was before Miikka Kiprusoff(notes) outplayed Curtis Joseph(notes), the Flames won back-to-back 1-0 games and bookended their 4-2 Western Conference semifinal win with overtime victories — the second clinching the upset via a Martin Gelinas(notes) goal. From blogger Jamie Fitzpatrick:

An upset? To be sure. But the Flames had the NHL’s 3rd-best defensive team this season, and are now reaping the rewards. In terms of sticking to your game plan, Calgary is this year’s most consistent playoff team. Iginla and Kiprusoff get the headlines, but you could argue that this series was won by Calgary’s young defense, painstakingly assembled through years of drafting and trading.

This was also the series where Steve Yzerman took a puck to the eye in Game 5, which you may recall as No. 9 on our Most Brutal Injuries of the Last Decade list. The Flames went on to lose to the Tampa Bay Lightning in the Stanley Cup finals, in a series vaguely remembered for Ruslan Fedotenko’s(notes) heroics and the Vinny/Iggy fight.

9. Bemidji State upsets Notre Dame, 2009 NCAA men’s hockey tournament

In 2009, we finally were given the answer to an annual scholastic hockey mystery: The hell’s a Bemidji State anyway?

Turns out it’s a small liberal arts college in Minnesota that was ready to shock the NCAA.

The Beavers were technically a No. 4 seed in the Div. I tournament, but were actually the lowest seed in the 16-team field. Which made their emphatic 5-1 stunner against No. 2 Notre Dame all the more unbelievably — along with the facts that it was Bemidji State’s first D-I tournament win in school history and just the second tourney victory in CHA conference history.

Because of the university’s size and budget, the Wall Street Journal ranked the upset as the third most-shocking in recent NCAA sports history.

The Beavers would qualify for the Frozen Four, losing to Miami (Ohio) in the semifinals. But the win over the Irish sparked a Cinderella run that, for a moment, captivated the hockey world.

8. Montreal Canadiens (8) upset Boston Bruins (1), 2002 Eastern Conference quarterfinals

The emotions in this series were off the charts. Saku Koivu(notes) had returned from Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma with a few games left in the regular season, helping the Habs to the eighth seed. Anthems where disrespected, to the point where Bill Guerin(notes) and Doug Gilmour had to cut promos urging fans not to boo. It was as vicious a rivalry series as you’d expect from these old adversaries, crystallized by this Kyle McLaren(notes) hit on Richard Zednik(notes) that earned him a two-game suspension:

In the end, the Canadiens (87 points) stunned the first-place Bruins (101 points) in six games, backstopped by superb goaltending by Jose Theodore(notes). They lost to eventual conference champ Carolina in Round 2.

7. Minnesota Wild (6) upsets Colorado Avalanche (3), 2003 Western Conference quarterfinals

Sometimes, pictures are worth 1,000 words. The one above is worth five: Wild stun Avalanche in seven.

It was Minnesota’s first playoff berth, and they were a defense-first team with Cliff Ronning as their third-leading scorer. Colorado? Uh, yeah, it had a little talent on the roster.

Things started out well for the Wild, with a 4-2 road win. Then came three straight Avalanche victories, and Coach Jacques Lemaire actually said his team had no shot to win the series after going down 3-1. But the Avs took their foot off of Minnesota’s neck in Game 5, and the Wild rallied with back-to-back overtime wins to take the series in seven – becoming, at the time, only the eighth team in NHL history to rally from a 3-1 hole with two road wins.

The Wild would eventually lose to the Ducks in the conference finals. Marian Gaborik(notes) would finish with 17 points in 18 playoff games.

6. Los Angeles Kings (7) upset Detroit Red Wings (2), 2001 Western Conference quarterfinals

The Wings were a 111-point team taking on a 92-point Kings squad, and the difference in the standings was evident in the first two Detroit victories in the series. But Los Angeles won Game 3 before the series was turned on its head in Game 4: The Kings rallied for three goals in the final 6:07 to send the game to overtime, where rookie Eric Belanger(notes) scored to knot it at two games apiece. LA would win four consecutive games to eliminate the Wings, including Adam Deadmarsh’s series-clinching tally in overtime of Game 6.

Here’s a look back at Game 6, and what playoff hockey sounds like in Hollywood (it’s been a while).

The Kings would push the eventual Stanley Cup champion Colorado Avalanche to seven games in the following round.

5. Denmark upsets U.S., 2003 Ice Hockey World Championships

Trust us: If you lived in Denmark, you’d know this game like gospel.

The IIHF world championship tournament was held in Tampere, Finland in 2003. The U.S. had a roster of 12 NHL players, including Buffalo Sabres goalie Ryan Miller(notes). Denmark, meanwhile, was making its first appearance in the tournament’s elite pool since 1949; yes, their time between tournament appearances was the same duration as the Rangers’ Stanley Cups between 1940 and Mark Messier.

In the opening game for both nations, Denmark chased Miller and shocked the U.S. with a 5-2 victory, considered one of the biggest upsets in the tourney’s history. The loss sent the Americans to a 0-3 death spiral that had them last in their pool, and propelled Demark to another classic hockey moment: a 2-2 tie against eventual champ Canada.

4. San Jose Sharks (8) upset St. Louis Blues (1), 2000 Western Conference quarterfinals

Then-Blues Coach Joel Quenneville said it best: "I’ve never seen as many crazy goals as I have in this series … That’s not an excuse, it’s a fact."

We’ll, it’s sort of an excuse, too. The Blues were a 113-point juggernaut in the regular season, finishing first overall in the NHL; all it got them was the ignominious honor of being just the second President’s Trophy winner (at the time) to get bounced in the opening round.

They looked flat and played underwhelming hockey against a dangerous Sharks team, losing three games in a row for the first time all season in the middle of the series. The Blues attempted a comeback, pushed it to a Game 7, but were eliminated in a 3-1 San Jose victory. It was a game that featured this Owen Nolan(notes) goal/Roman Turek whiff that personified Coach Q’s weird-crap-o-meter reading on this series:

The difference between the teams was 27 points; yet doesn’t the Sharks’ upset in 1994 against the Red Wings (a difference of 18 points) still loom larger?

3. Mighty Ducks of Anaheim (7) over Detroit Red Wings (2), 2003 Western Conference quarterfinals

Had this been an 8-vs.-1 series, it may have hopped into the No. 2 slot on the countdown. Instead, it was a 110-point division champion getting absolutely stunned in a sweep by the No. 7 seeded Mighty Ducks and their untested goalie Jean-Sebastien Giguere(notes), who quickly became "tested" in stopping 165 of 171 shots he faced in the four games.

Giggy faced 64 of those shots in a classic triple-OT Game 1 that was ended with a Paul Kariya(notes) goal. The Ducks would win each game by a 1-goal margin, including Game 4’s overtime victory to eliminate the defending Stanley Cup champions and a squad that still had many of the names from its "team of the decade" run in 2002. Well, outside of Scotty Bowman and Dominik Hasek(notes), that is.

The Ducks would lose to the Devils in a seven-game Stanley Cup final that saw Giguere win Marty Brodeur’s Conn Smythe.

2. Edmonton Oilers (8) upset Detroit Red Wings (1), 2006 Western Conference quarterfinals

The Oilers snuck into the playoffs, for the first time since 2003, in the final week of the season, with 95 points. The Red Wings were the Red Wings: 124 points and the President’s Trophy in a dominating season.

It looked like business as usual for the Winged Wheel when they won Game 1 in double OT. But the Oilers and goalie Dwayne Roloson(notes) won Game 2, and Edmonton would win three one-goal games to stun the Wings and Manny Legace(notes) in six. Here’s how the clinching game went down in what was an unbelievably atmosphere in Alberta:

The Oil would advance all the way to Game 7 of the Stanley Cup finals before losing to the Carolina Hurricanes. These would be Steve Yzerman’s last games in the NHL. As Mike Babcock said: "I am shocked we’re in this situation."

It’s something this next juggernaut can relate to …

1. Belarus upsets Sweden, 2002 Winter Olympic quarterfinals in Salt Lake City

"For sure, it is a miracle for us … But sometimes a gun without bullets can shoot, and that was us. We’ve made our place in history."

That was Belarus goalie Andrei Mezin, and we’re still not entirely sure what that metaphor meant, although it’s vaguely sexual. Here’s what we did know: Belarus had been outscored 16-2 in its earlier two games. It was a 10 million-to-1 shot to win the gold. A guy named Andrei Mezin was their goalie. Ruslan Salei(notes) was their only NHL player.

Despite all of this, Belarus found a way to slow down the Swedes’ attack and play even with the international powerhouse until one of the single most stunning moments in recent Olympic history, courtesy of Vladimir Kopat and soon-to-be-hockey-punchline Tommy Salo:

Belarus won, 4-3, advancing to the semifinals where they lost to Canada, 7-1. In the immortal words of former Toronto Maple Leafs star Mats Sundin(notes): "I don’t understand how we could lose against this team."

Puck Daddy’s Best & Worst of the Decade lists will run on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday through the end of 2009. (Yes, that includes holidays; cynical appraisal never sleeps.)

Puck Previews: Avery, Phaneuf meet; defending the barber pole

Sean Leahy | November 7, 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: Detroit Red Wings at Toronto Maple Leafs, 7 p.m. EST. Looking for their fourth straight win, the Red Wings head into tonight’s Hall of Fame Game. Three former Red Wings, Steve Yzerman, Brett Hull and Luc Robitaille will be in attendance along with Brian Leetch and Lou Lamoriello for the pre-game ceremony. It’ll be game No. 3 in the Phil Kessel(notes)-era for the Leafs who may see Jonas Gustavsson(notes) in goal for a third straight game.

Preview: New York Rangers at Calgary Flames, 10 p.m. EST. No Henrik Lundqvist tonight for the Rangers as Sean Avery(notes) and Dion Phaneuf(notes) meet on the ice for the first time since "those" comments. Avery even admitted that he called Elisha Cuthbert after the comments to apologize for them. Calgary looks for their first home win in three games before an east coast trip next week.

Preview: Pittsburgh Penguins at San Jose Sharks, 10:30 p.m. EST. Despite losing their undefeated road record after falling to Los Angeles on Thursday night, the Penguins enter HP Pavilion tonight wanting to end their west coast trip by taking four out of six points. Joe Pavelski(notes) is expected to return for the Sharks tonigh, who are undefeated against the defending Stanley Cup champions at home over their past eight match-ups.

Check out the Y! Sports scores and schedule page for previews of the other three games tonight.

Evening Reading

-Scotty Wazz on defending those Montreal Canadiens barber pole jerseys: "If you want to talk about the whole retro movement when it comes to the culture of sports– fact of the matter is that nothing says more retro
than the barber-pole jersey when it comes to hockey." [Wazz]

-Islanders defenseman Radek Martinek(notes) is done for the year after tearing an ACL. [Point Blank]

-Peter Forsberg(notes) is expected to make a decision on his future next week. [Globe & Mail]

-Good news: Kitchener Rangers defenseman Ben Fanelli has been released from hospital and is now home in Oakville, Ontario. [Canwest]

-A good profile on Parminder Singh, the Hockey Night in Canada play-by-play man of Punjabi broadcasts for the Maple Leafs. [National Post]

Puck Buddy Comment of the Day: The half dozen commenters who were unaware that the Clint Malarchuk injury didn’t take place in the years between 2000 and 2009.

Bold Prediction: Nothing happens between Sean Avery and Dion Phaneuf. Also, Detroit slays the "Monster" in a rout.