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Monday’s Three Stars: Brodeur sets record; Bergeron saves Habs

Greg Wyshynski | December 22, 2009

No. 1 Star: Martin Brodeur(notes), New Jersey Devils

Brodeur set a new NHL record for career shutouts with 104, making 35 saves to blank the Pittsburgh Penguins, 4-0. We covered the specifics of the record on Monday night; here’s Brodeur on his shutout chase: "Usually, in the middle of the pack of my shutouts, I didn’t really care about it too much … I just played the game and tried to win the game. But, definitely when there’s a lot at stake like that and you’re going to come close to a record or surpassing a record, it definitely becomes a little more nerve-racking. I don’t get nervous, but today I was a little nervous."

No. 2 Star: Marc-Andre Bergeron(notes), Montreal Canadiens

it’s hard not to give the nod here to Jaroslav Halak(notes) for his incredible 47-save performance on 50 shots, a franchise-record for the Thrash. But the nod goes to Marc-Andre Bergeron, the Montreal defenseman who tied the Atlanta Thrashers late in the third and then won the game in overtime on a play that saw him suffer an injury by plowing into the goal post. Canadiens win, 4-3.

No. 3 Star: Scottie Upshall(notes), Phoenix Coyotes

Big night for the Coyotes forward, as he had a point on Phoenix’s first three goals (1 goal, 2 assists) and then capped the scoring for his team in the third with a power-play goal. Phoenix defeated the Columbus Blue Jackets, 5-2, as Upshall has 12 goals on the season and five in December alone.

Honorable mention: Handy tip for the Toronto Maple Leafs, going forward — try not to leave Derek Roy(notes) wide open in front of Jonas Gustavsson(notes) (27 saves) in overtime. Roy had the game-winner and Ryan Miller(notes) had 34 saves in the Buffalo Sabres3-2 win over the Leafs. … Steven Stamkos(notes) scored his 21st while Ryan Malone(notes) had two power-play goals in the third period to lift the Tampa Bay Lightning over the New York Islanders, 4-2. Mike Smith(notes) had 36 saves; Dwayne Roloson(notes) had 24 but two absolute beauties. …  Goals by Stephen Weiss(notes), Michael Frolik(notes) and Nathan Horton(notes) (2 goals) avenged fallen teammate David Booth(notes) by defeating Mike Richards(notes) and the spiraling Philadelphia Flyers, 4-1.Marian Gaborik(notes) scored his 25th goal and added an assist as the New York Rangers defeated the Carolina Hurricanes, 3-1.Tim Thomas(notes) made 29 saves for his fourth shutout of the season and 10th straight win against the Ottawa Senators, 2-0. … Matt Hendricks’s(notes) shorthanded goal ended up being the game-winner, as the Colorado Avalanche and Craig Anderson(notes) (28 saves) survived a Minnesota Wild rally in the third for a 4-3 win.Patrick Marleau(notes) scored two goals and Evgeni Nabokov(notes) made 36 saves in the San Jose Sharks4-2 win at the Dallas Stars. … Jordan Staal(notes) took a puck to the face, was bloodied but returned for the Penguins. … Alex Steen had a four-point night (1 goal, 3 assists) and Andy McDonald(notes) had two goals as the St. Louis Blues routed the Edmonton Oilers, 7-2. Yikes. Also, the Blues’ power play (4-for-5) is no longer set to "suck."

Did you know?: Ric Flair sounded the siren in Carolina before the Rangers game. Woooo!

Dishonorable mention: Perhaps you don’t fault rookie goalie Devan Dubnyk(notes) (19 saves) for the blowout loss to the Blues; Oilers Coach Pat Quinn sure doesn’t: "He was kind of left out to hang by his teammates. We’ve been doing that all season." … Marc-Andre Fleury(notes) was pulled after giving up four goals on 16 shots. … The Flyers called a players-only meeting after their loss to the Panthers. A 2-8-1 record in December will do that. … Brian Boucher(notes) injured his finger and was replaced by Michael Leighton(notes) (15 saves). … Finally, this fight from the Blue Jackets/Coyotes game was all sorts of wrong: Jared Boll(notes) going after Radim Vrbata(notes) of all people after a goal, Martin Hanzal(notes) trying to answer the bell, and then Boll splitting him open with a few shots.

Video: Dwayne Roloson’s astonishing save sequence for Isles

Greg Wyshynski | December 22, 2009

There’s a still image that stays with you during the various slo-mo replays of New York Islanders goalie Dwayne Roloson’s(notes) two remarkable saves against the Tampa Bay Lightning on Monday night: The 40-year-old netminder clutching the top of the cage with his glove hand to swing his body across the crease and rob Todd Fedoruk(notes) of a goal.

It would be an incredible save on its own; combined with his goal-line stick save on Steve Downie(notes) a split second earlier, it becomes one of the best goaltending moments of the year:

Kudos to the on-ice officials and Toronto’s video officials for getting the call correct.  

The second save is the more compelling highlight, but that stick save was of a Matrix/Neo quality of savvy confidence.

Roloson would make 24 saves in what turned out to be a 4-2 loss by the Islanders to the visiting Tampa Bay Lightning; none better than the two he made in the clip above. Miikka Kiprusoff(notes) has company in the "save of the year" competition.

Thanks to DayWalk3r for the usual outstanding YouTubage.

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.

The 10 most embarrassing hockey moments of the last decade

Greg Wyshynski | December 19, 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.)

There are different levels of embarrassment. We’re sure Todd Bertuzzi(notes) was embarrassed when he was suspended for, like, half the decade. We’re sure the NHL’s marketing department was embarrassed when the "My NHL" campaign after the lockout went over about as well as Crystal Pepsi; for some reason, fans didn’t rally behind NHL-hockey-as-a-metrosexual-samurai. We’re sure Gary Bettman was embarrassed when … oh, who are we kidding? Like that shame could ever penetrate that suit.

What we’re dealing with here, for the most part, are reputation-changing events that don’t rise to the levels of extreme violence or overwhelming despair. It’s less "Faces of Death" or the stuff of news documentaries than it is tabloid fodder and blooper reel mainstays.

Sure, there are some serious topics: criminal behavior, reckless indiscretions and decisions that put an individual above the wellbeing of his profession. But there’s also a few goalies letting pucks trickle by them through ineptitude or, in one case, complete egomania.

Here are the 10 most embarrassing on-ice or off-ice moments for hockey in the last decade; please use the comments for what we imagine are about 100 honorable mentions that didn’t make the cut.

10. Vesa Toskala’s(notes) rink-length goal-allowed (2008)

From an optimist’s perspective, New York Islanders defenseman Rob Davison(notes) scored the longest shorthanded goal in NHL history. From a pessimist’s perspective, Toronto Maple Leafs goalie Vesa Toskala let in a 197-foot goal in March 2008 for one of the decade’s most beloved bloopers:

There would be some debate the following season whether a similar goal let in by Ondrej Pavelec(notes) of the Atlanta Thrashers was the bigger goalie goof; but it’s hard to argue against the slow, painful reality of Toskala’s Folly.

9. Being too sexy for the Internet (2007-08)

The social media boom has changed life for both fans and athletes. There were a couple of reminders for NHL players that the Internet is never a safe place for provocative photography.

Granted, the retina-searing image of Columbus Blue Jackets defenseman Mike Commodore(notes) wearing nothing but black boxer briefs and covering himself in $100 bills — bounty from a Super Bowl pool win — was more comical than harmful. But it did spell out the dangers of Facebook, as the photo was posted on a friend of Commodore’s profile; and Commodore did have to respond to the Internet meme because some assumed the photo was mocking the millions he had collected as a free agent with Columbus.

Much more embarrassing was the case of Jiri Tlusty(notes) of the Toronto Maple Leafs. At first, candid photos showing him in suggestive poses with male friends had him fending off rumors about his sexuality.

Then came a cell phone self-photograph on Facebook that Tlusty had sent to a female friend, showing him fully nude in front of a mirror. Lawyers tracked down the images and the Leafs supported the young player, but his name is now synonymous with the "scandalous" images.

Overall, Tlusty’s mistakes were seen as youth indiscretions by an inexperienced professional. Although (the ironically named, in this instance) Damien Cox of the Toronto Star claimed Tlusty soiled "the team’s famous emblem" and "disgraced what was once a Canadian institution."

We assume his editors deleted his lines about locking the impure in the gallows and stoning him to death.

8. Patrick Kane(notes) is arrested and 20-Cent is born (2009)

In Aug. 2009, Patrick Kane of the Chicago Blackhawks and his cousin James were arrested and charged with second-degree robbery, fourth-degree criminal mischief and theft of services after allegedly punching a Buffalo cab driver after he didn’t have 20 cents to give them change on their $15 for a $13.80 fare.

The felony robbery charge was dropped, and Kane eventually pled guilty to disorderly conduct on Aug. 27, which is a non-criminal violation.

The fallout, however, was significant for Kane, the Calder Trophy winner for 2007-08. His image was tarnished at the same time it had first graced the cover of a video game (EA Sports’ "NHL 10") and when the Blackhawks were a rising Cup contender. In Buffalo, the locals scorned him by littering his family’s front lawn with dimes. Kane was forced to apologize for the incident at the start of US Olympic orientation camp.

Overall, hockey fans mocked him for an indiscretion, but some felt he had contributed to a "young athletes out of control" trend in pro sports. But mostly, it saddled him eternally with the nickname "20-Cent" and created cottage industry of hilarious T-shirts.

Special consideration for the Canadiens’ rookie purse stealing. Someone else’s purse; not, like, his.

7. The Worst Hockey Fight of All-Time (2006)

With all due respect to Washington Capitals forward Alex Semin and his Marc Staal-shaped bongos, we’re here to celebrate an even more epically awful moment of puck pugilism.

On April 6, 2006, Aaron Downey(notes) of the Montreal Canadiens and Brad Norton(notes) of the Ottawa Senators dropped the gloves. No, seriously, that’s all they did:

Downey and Norton both received 10-minute misconducts for wasting everyone’s time. The punch snobs at HockeyFights.com don’t even list this incident on Downey’s page, insult to fighting that it was.

6. Tie Domi vs. the Philadelphia Flyers fan (2001)

Tie Domi once fought a mascot in the penalty box. So it must have been a bit of a comedown for the Toronto Maple Leafs tough guy when he pummeled a taunting Flyers fan during a March 19, 2001 game in Philly:

From the AP:

Domi, who had just been penalized early in the third period, twice poured water over taunting fans in the front row before the attacking fan, Chris Falcone, jumped from the second row and landed on the glass. Falcone leaned into it while throwing a punch at Domi that didn’t connect. He then fell into the box as Domi grabbed him.

"They threw stuff at me. Once was enough. After the second one, I told the guy in the penalty box that after one more I was going to squirt water. So I squirted water," Domi said. "I mean, I didn’t plan on fighting anybody."

Domi was fined but not suspended by the NHL. It was named one of the greatest athlete/fan interactions of all-time by Maxim.

The incident belongs on this list because it’s embarrassing for any sport to see an athlete attack a paying customer. It’s not higher on this list because — let’s face it — Domi took this sucker old-time hockey style; and because he didn’t go out like a punk like the Rangers and John Tortorella did during their water-bottle incident in the 2009 playoffs.

5. When party photos are taken out of context (various)

As we said earlier: The Internet is a dangerous place for candid photography. Especially when those photos can be used to forward an agenda.

In 2008, members of the Philadelphia Flyers were photographed "crashing" a Temple University frat mixer; later, other candid photos of the Flyers hanging with porn star Gina Lynn surfaced. They combined to reinforce a "party boys" label placed on the locker room for its underwhelming play; a reputation GM Paul Holmgren had to address in the 2009 offseason and one that remained in place during the Flyers 2009-10 season struggles.

Also in 2008, the Montreal Canadiens were hit with similar charges when photos of players drinking and (in goalie Carey Price’s case) smoking were passed around the Web. Fans online suspected the context of most of these images placed them in the offseason; traditional media used them as fodder for why the Habs’ centennial season had gone up in smoke.

Finally, Alex Ovechkin’s(notes) pre-stardom photographs that show him carousing with other Russian players like Andrei Markov(notes) are amusing; less amusing is when they were used as "evidence" in some strange email scam that tried to link the two with the receipt for an expensive night at a strip club. It’s complete bunk … but we still get an email about it every few weeks.

4. Tommy Salo becomes a hero to Belarus (2002)

In the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, Swedish goalie Tommy Salo’s head helped Belarus eventually earn a spot in the bronze medal game. One of the all-time Olympic bloopers:

From the AP:

The shot couldn’t possibly go in, but it did. Sweden couldn’t possibly lose, but it did. And the kind of upset that couldn’t possibly happen with NHL players now dominating the Olympics is a reality.

Vladimir Kopat scored on a 70-foot shot that bounced wildly off goalie Tommy Salo’s head with only 2:24 remaining and Belarus scored one of the greatest upsets in Olympic history Wednesday, beating Sweden 4-3 in the hockey quarterfinals.

Ty Conklin’s 2006 goof in Game 1 of the Stanley Cup finals deserves a dishonorable mention. But it doesn’t top this.

3. Patrick Roy’s Statue of Liberty fail (2002)

THE GOAL COUNTS! THE GOAL COUNTS! THE GOAL COUNTS!

In May 2002, during the Western Conference finals, Patrick Roy of the Colorado Avalanche felt he had stoned Steve Yzerman on a close shot. To taunt the Wings about his utter invincibility, he raised his glove in what’s been called a "Statue of Liberty" pose … only to have the puck drop out and Brendan Shanahan(notes) poke it home.

If St. Patrick’s ego was bruised, he wasn’t about to show it after the game. From Jim Kelley of Sportsnet:

He was "putting a little mustard" on a good save, but it was a devastating miscue, one that gave the Detroit Red Wings new life and, eventually, the Stanley Cup.

The night of that Game 6 loss in Colorado, no one in media expected to see Patrick Roy. Yet he came to his locker, answered most every question with a steely gaze at the questioner and a rock-solid belief that he had done no wrong.

He talked about how he played to win and dismissed criticism of his miscue as if it didn’t even happen. "What goal," he asked when a questioner asked him to recount the circumstances. "Which one do you mean?"

The Wings would go on to hoist something of their own later that postseason.

2. NHLers who gamble with their reputations

What were the odds that Operation: Slap Shot was going to make this list?

The sting operation led by New Jersey State Police exposed a nationwide gambling ring and led to charges against then-Phoenix Coyotes assistant coach Rick Tocchet (who later became head coach of the Tampa Bay Lightning). He eventually made a plea deal that led to two years of probation; his leave of absence and a three-month suspension from the NHL kept Tocchet out of hockey for nearly two years as well.

Also sullied in the investigation: Janet Jones, the wife of Tocchet’s friend and then-Coyotes coach Wayne Gretzky, although she was never charged with any crime. She was, however, alleged to have bet $75,000 on the Super Bowl and $5,000 on the coin toss alone, which was enough for the public to ridicule her and for Gretzky to deny any role in the gambling ring himself.

But Gretzky wasn’t the only big name to deal with a gambling scandal; Jaromir Jagr(notes) faced scrutiny from the IRS for tax debts that may have been fueled by huge losses via Internet betting. Sports Illustrated reported that Jagr cut a deal with the CaribSports site in 2000 that had him repay a $450,000 debt for wagers.

In both cases, no one was accused of betting on hockey. Take that, NBA.

1. Patrick Stefan whiffs at the empty net (2007)

As you can see from the list, there have been plenty of memorable miscues in hockey over the last decade. But few have both influenced a game and defined a career like Patrick Stefan’s botched empty net goal for the Dallas Stars against the Edmonton Oilers on Jan. 4, 2007:

The Stars would win the game in a shootout, 6-5; Stefan’s blooper gifted a point to the Oilers. From the AP:

Dallas rallied from 4-1 down with four unanswered goals, but needed the shootout heroics after Ales Hemsky(notes) tied the game for Edmonton with two seconds left in regulation. Hemsky’s dramatic goal came just moments after Stars forward Patrik Stefan(notes) lost control of the puck in the Edmonton crease, with the Oilers net empty in favour of an extra attacker.

"They may show it a million times for years to come," joked Stefan. "I mean, we came out with the two points so it’s easy to laugh about it right now.

"It’s not like I missed the net, I saw it was bad ice and I had so much time so I just tried to carry it all the way to the net. As soon as I put it on my back hand it jumped over my stick. Not much I can do about that."

A victim of circumstance? Maybe. The bottom line is that there wasn’t a more feeble moment in hockey in the 2000s than Stefan failing to pot a goal into an unguarded net and then tumbling to the ice afterwards. It’s the defining moment for the career of, perhaps, the biggest No. 1 overall NHL Draft bust of all-time. And it’s the most embarrassing moment, on or off the ice, of the last decade.

Puck Previews: Can Chicago’s streak continue vs. Bruins?

Greg Wyshynski | December 19, 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: Boston Bruins at Chicago Blackhawks, 8:30 p.m. EST. Antti Niemi(notes) gets the call for Chicago as the Blackhawks seek their third consecutive shutout as the Bruins come to town. Tomas Kopecky(notes), a healthy scratch earlier this week, returns to the lineup; congrats to everyone who predicted he’d be a free-agent stiff. Meanwhile, Milan Lucic(notes) faces injury rehab as the clock ticks towards the Winter Classic at Fenway.

Preview: Tampa Bay Lightning at St. Louis Blues, 8 p.m. EST.  Should Andy Murray take a page from Rick Tocchet’s book and bench some of this veteran players to send a message? On second thought, better to stay away from Tocchet and book-making.

Preview: Washington Capitals at Vancouver Canucks, 10 p.m. EST. It’s always fun when Alex Ovechkn visits NHL cities that the Capitals rarely visit, because the coverage is so over the top. For example: "Russia’s Messier," by Mark Spector: "In fact, today’s 16-year-old likely finds Ovechkin more ‘awesome’ or ‘gnarly’ than Sidney Crosby(notes), who you would never see entering a visiting arena in ripped jeans and a Cookie Monster T-shirt, as Ovechkin did here Thursday." What about "rad" or "tubular," sir?

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

• Check out Puck Daddy on Monday for a really cool new feature.

• Huge news for the Montreal Canadiens, as defenseman Andrei Markov(notes) will return against the New York Islanders on Saturday night. Their power play thanks him. [Faceoff]

• The Nashville Predators are challenging for the top of their division, but can the goal-scoring continue? [On The Forecheck]

• Nice work by Derek Zona, snagging an interview with Oklahoma City’s mayor about an AHL franchise coming to town, one that could be an Edmonton Oilers affiliate. From the interview: "One of the things to remember in Oklahoma City, when you’ve got hockey, you own the sport.  In basketball, we’ve got high school basketball, college basketball, all sorts of basketball going on.  If you’re doing this with hockey, it’s pretty much yours.  I think that helps the business model." [Copper & Blue]

• Allan Muir on whether we’ll see a team relocate or fold in the next five seasons: "I think you’d get better odds betting on Gary Bettman making an unannounced appearance during the pre-game ceremonies at the Winter Classic to sing ‘All The Single Ladies.’" [SI]

• More tough talk from John Tortorella. [NY Daily News]

• Finally, it’s yours truly vs. Steve Kouleas in our weekly segment on The Score, talking about whether the Toronto Maple Leafs are going to make the playoffs and other topics:

Puck Buddy Comment of the Day: We give it to Jon W for his comments on the Wild equipment fire:

Good thing no one was hurt. Unfortunately, I imagine the smell of burning hockey gear would be one of the worst smells imaginable.

Yucky.

Bold Prediction: Ovechkin scores two against the Canucks, but Vancouver wins the game.  

The most lopsided NHL trades of the last decade

Greg Wyshynski | December 17, 2009

 

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

We know what you’re thinking: Will there be a separate list for the trades Mike Milbury wasn’t involved in?

Sure, the former New York Islanders GM appears multiple times on the following countdown of the most lopsided trades of the last decade. It’s also not exactly a spoiler alert to say that Joe Thornton(notes) appears on the list, too. But in looking back at the biggest fleecings of the 2000s, there were some epically wrongheaded moves that don’t ensure either Mad Mike or Jumbo Joe end up at the top spot.

In assessing these deals, we were looking at what was known about the players involved at the time; the motivations behind the trade; the impact on the respective teams and, in hindsight, the level of talent that actually changed hands.

For example, we were tempted to put the trade of Robert Lang(notes) to the Detroit Red Wings on this list because it resulted in the Washington Capitals getting Tomas Fleischmann(notes) and eventually drafting Mike Green(notes). But Lang had a couple of Lang-like years for Detroit while the Capitals found an all-star at the bottom of the first round. So it’s not the complete whiff some that some of these other gems are.

Here are the 10 most lopsided trades of the last decade …

10. Atlanta Thrashers trade Marian Hossa(notes) and Pascal Dupuis(notes) to the Pittsburgh Penguins for Angelo Esposito(notes), Colby Armstrong(notes), Erik Christensen(notes) and a first-round draft pick (Daulton Leveille). (Feb. 26, 2008)

There were plenty of questions about the Penguins giving too much here for a rental. Kevin Dupont, writing on NBC Sports, was weary of the deal:

They gave up a lot of equity, in terms of player talent, for what could be a very short-term rental. That’s right, all of 127 days from acquiring Hossa, and giving up the likes of Angelo Esposito, Colby Armstrong, Erik Christensen and a first-round draft pick, the Pens could see him walk out of town for good, and for little more than a handshake as he gets into the cab to take him to the airport.

Well, Hossa ended up doing just that … but he also had 26 points in 20 playoff games to help the Penguins to the conference title. Dupuis is still thriving for Pittsburgh.

As for the Thrashers, they’ve seen Esposito bust with injuries, they traded Christensen and watched Armstrong become an offensive enigma. The pick, Daultan Leveille, is still playing for Michigan State.

9. Atlanta Thrashers trade Braydon Coburn(notes) to the Philadelphia Flyers for Alexei Zhitnik(notes). (Feb. 24, 2007)

Another masterpiece from Don Waddell, GM of the Thrashers. Coburn was a 21-year-old rugged defenseman who wasn’t getting solid ice time. Zhitnik, 34, started the season on the Islanders, was traded to the Flyers and shipped to the Thrashers.

Coburn would soon develop into one of the league’s best two-way defensemen, especially after being teamed with Kimmo Timonen(notes). Zhitnik was a mega-bust for Atlanta, tallying eight points in 65 games the following season before getting his contract bought out. He’s now the captain for Dynamo Moscow in the KHL.

8. Buffalo Sabres trade Chris Gratton(notes) and a 2004 fourth-round pick (traded to Edmonton, who drafted Liam Reddox(notes)) to the Phoenix Coyotes for Danny Briere(notes) and a 2004 third-round pick (Andrej Sekera(notes)). (March 10, 2003)

Gratton’s been passed around so much in his NHL career that he’s eligible to be the punch line of a Sean Avery(notes) locker room joke.

In 2002-03, he had 44 points in 66 games for the Sabres before the Coyotes came calling; he had one point in 16 games for Phoenix after the trade, followed up 29 in 68 games the next season. He was eventually traded to the Colorado Avalanche in a deal for Keith Ballard(notes) and Derek Morris(notes); Colorado also acquired a pick that would become Paul Stastny(notes). Ouch.

Briere went on to become a 90-point player for the Sabres, albeit briefly.

7. Philadelphia Flyers traded Patrick Sharp(notes) and Eric Meloche(notes) to the Chicago Blackhawks for Matt Ellison(notes) and a 3rd round selection in 2006. (Dec. 5, 2006)

Now, this could have easily been the Blackhawks stealing Kris Versteeg(notes) from the Boston Bruins in exchange for Brandon Bochenski(notes) in 2007. But Flyers Goal Scored By … offers compelling evidence that this is the bigger fleecing:

After two good seasons playing in Hockey East, Sharp turned pro and joined the Phantoms for what would have been his junior year in college. The next season he split time between the Flyers and Phantoms pretty evenly, and the during the lockout he helped the Phantoms win the Calder Cup with 21 points in 21 playoff games after a 53 point regular season. And then when Sharp finally looked ready for the big leagues Bobby Clarke made one of the bigger mistakes of his tenure and traded him away for a guy that is now in the KHL and a third round pick that we then traded to Montreal for two other picks, who turned out to be current Phantom Jonathan Matsumoto(notes) and busted goalie Jakub Kovar.

[...]

He’s exactly the kind of guy you want sitting next to you on the bench, which is the type of guy the Flyers have traditionally tried to acquire, not tried to deal away for a Guns ‘n Roses poster and half used phone card.

Especially when it’s a poster for "Chinese Democracy."

6. New York Islanders trade Roberto Luongo(notes) and Olli Jokinen(notes) to the Florida Panthers for Mark Parrish(notes) and Oleg Kvasha. (June 24, 2000)

There are going to be people who believe this trade should be much, much lower on the list, and we get that. But bear with us.

Luongo was 20 years old and had played 24 games for the Islanders at the time of the trade, which is to say he wasn’t ROBERTO LUONGO yet. Jokinen was 21, on this second NHL franchise and hadn’t cracked 30 points yet. Trading both players were egregious errors in judgment that will haunt Mike Milbury’s career as an NHL executive. But the real mistake was committing to Rick DiPietro in the draft when there was already a goalie many felt was a future star in the system.

But the reason this isn’t closer to Numero Uno is that Parrish and Kvasha weren’t exactly Matt Ellison-level busts for New York. Parrish became a 30-goal scorer during five productive seasons on the Island. Kvasha was a serviceable player for five seasons, too. In hindsight, it’s ridiculously lopsided. But in context, it’s not as bad as any of the top five.

5. Boston Bruins trade Joe Thornton to the San Jose Sharks for Marco Sturm(notes), Wayne Primeau(notes) and Brad Stuart(notes). (Dec. 1, 2005)

Like this trade, for example. Thornton was bitter after becoming a scapegoat for the team’s disappointing play in 2005, traded to the Sharks after signing a contract extension with the Bruins. Nothing like anger as a motivator: He had 92 points in 58 games for the Sharks that season, winning the Hart Trophy and establishing himself as an elite center during his time in teal.

There’s no question Sturm (27) and Stuart (26) were important pieces for the Sharks. But Bruins GM Mike O’Connell failed to get an impact player on the level of Thornton or a blue-chip prospect; settling for a bunch of complementary pieces at a lower cost.

In the interest of equal time, Eric McErlain’s post on the post-Thronton Bruins; resurgence puts the real impact of this trade in a different light:

Consider for a moment that Thornton hadn’t been traded. Without the deal, there’s no free agent cash for Savard and Chara, and in the case of the latter, perhaps we should ask Boston goalie Thomas what sort of contribution the 6′9" Slovak defenseman makes to keeping the team’s goals against per game the best in all of hockey (2.00).

Normally, I’m not a fan of trading a quarter for two dimes and a nickel, but you have to be impressed with how the franchise parlayed the return from the Thornton trade into a number of serviceable players. For starters, ex-Shark Marco Sturm is the same player he’s always been, a steady two-way forward good for nearly 30 goals per season.

Fair points. But still a bum deal.

4. Pittsburgh Penguins trade Jaromir Jagr(notes) and Frantisek Kucera to the Washington Capitals for Kris Beech(notes), Michal Sivek, Ross Lupaschuk(notes) and future considerations. (July 11, 2001)

The hindsight on this one is interesting, as Jagr requested a trade from then-General Manager Craig Patrick for the betterment of the franchise, as he felt the team could use the salary they spared to sign other vital players like Alex Kovalev(notes). He also thought he was bluffing.

Patrick didn’t, evidently.

But no matter how Jagr was traded, the return for arguably the biggest star in the League at that point was nothing short of putrid. Beech became a journeyman. Sivek played 38 games in the NHL; Lupaschuk played three.

Still, Craig Patrick remained high on these bums even after Jagr moved on to the Rangers. From the Post Gazette:

Beech — "He’ll have a good career ahead of him. … He understands the game defensively a lot better than he did when he first turned pro."

Lupaschuk — "I think he’s doing fine. … I like the way he’s coming along. He’s got a great skill level."

Sivek — "His progress has been stunted a little bit, but we definitely see him as a prospect to play in the National Hockey League."

Not everyone who has followed the pro careers of Beech, Lupaschuk and Sivek shares Patrick’s upbeat perspective. In Wilkes-Barre, the talk is of Beech’s inconsistency, of the way Lupaschuk’s offensive game has deteriorated while his defensive work remains suspect, of Sivek’s lackluster work ethic.

Score one for the downbeat. Now, there will be some who believe the 2004 trade of Jagr for Anson Carter(notes) belongs here, too. But that was a cash dump that freed the Washington Capitals from Jagr’s sullen mood and contract while helping the Rangers. From CBC Sports:

Speculation had New York and Washington close to completing a trade last July, then resuming talks in November. At the time, however, Jagr reportedly was reluctant to waive the $11 million US option year on his current contract.

Under the terms of this deal, the Capitals will pay $20 million of the $44 million remaining on Jagr’s seven-year, $77-million contact. The Rangers will pay the rest.

Not nearly as lopsided a deal that the initial trade was, no matter Jagr’s output in D.C.

3. New York Islanders trade Zdeno Chara(notes), Bill Muckalt and first-round pick in 2001 Draft (Jason Spezza(notes)) to the Ottawa Senators for Alexei Yashin(notes). (Nov. 9, 2001)

From CBC Sports:

Islanders GM Mike Milbury, meanwhile, has made a deal that could salvage his managerial reputation, which has been damaged by a series of ill-advised trades, in landing an elite impact player entering the prime of his career – or he could have saddled himself with a big headache while passing up on one of the best prospects to come out of Canada in some time.

If you guessed ‘B’, congratulations.

Senators fans had turned on Yashin after he demanded a trade and sought to renegotiate his contract after seemingly every season. The franchise no longer considered him a cornerstone. Chara was a hulking defenseman with raw talent. Spezza was as blue-chip a prospect as they come.

The Islanders? They decided to build around a player with undeniable offensive flourish (40 goals, 88 points in the season before the trade) but one whose attitude could rightfully be questioned. Then they gave him a contract that still counts against their cap while he toils in the KHL.

Forget the transfer of talent between the teams; the Islanders’ misguided commitment to Yashin earns this a lofty place on the list.

2.  Calgary Flames trade Marc Savard(notes) to the Atlanta Thrashers for Ruslan Zainullin. (Nov. 15, 2002)

The placement of this trade on the list can be summed up in two words: "Ruslan Zainullin."

Forget that Savard became one of the best pivots in the NHL, collecting assists like frequent flier miles for the Thrashers and the Bruins. The fact is that the Flames moved a promising, NHL-level asset for a player originally drafted by the Tampa Bay Lightning who never left Russia for the NHL. 

Granted, the Flames were in a tough spot because Savard had been feuding with Coach Greg Gilbert. Then again, Gilbert was fired two weeks after the trigger was pulled on this deal. Whoops.

1. Florida Panthers trade Roberto Luongo, Lukas Krajicek(notes) and a sixth-round pick (Sergei Shirokov(notes)) to the Vancouver Canucks for Alex Auld(notes), Bryan Allen(notes) and Todd Bertuzzi(notes). (June 24, 2006)

A trade made on the eve of the NHL Draft, it’s the worst deal in the history of hockey.

That’s not our assessment. That’s what then-Florida Panthers GM Jacques Martin said about the trade in a 2007 radio interview, a claim he refused to back down from. Who are we to argue with that expertise?

Again, there were no illusions about the goaltender Roberto Luongo was at that time or the one that he would become. Just like there were none about the miles on Bertuzzi’s body as a 30-year-old power forward, who ended up playing an astoundingly bad seven games for the Panthers as the centerpiece of this trade.

No contest: It’s the most lopsided trade of the decade.

Puck Previews: Tocchet sends message; Theo back in Denver

Sean Leahy | December 15, 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: Tampa Bay Lightning at Nashville Predators, 8 p.m. EST. With one win their last nine games, Lightning coach Rick Tocchet is shaking things up by benching Alex Tanguay(notes) and Jeff Halpern(notes) and dressing eight defensemen. The time is now for Tocchet: "It’s a situation where it’s a shock thing for everybody or . . . I really don’t care what the message is other than the fact that we need results. We need to be able to play 60 minutes, not 30 minutes and because we are down a goal everybody does their own program. Ultimately, that falls on me so we are going to find guys who can stick with the plan.’"

Preview: Washington Capitals at Colorado Avalanche, 9:30 p.m. EST. Jose Theodore(notes) returns to Colorado to face his old team as two of the NHL’s top scoring teams face off. Milan Hejduk(notes) is out with a knee injury. The Caps haven’t played in Denver since 2006 and Bruce Boudreau plans on giving his lines short shifts to keep their endurance in the thin mountain air.

Preview: Los Angeles Kings at Edmonton Oilers, 10:30 p.m. EST. Oilers goaltender Nikolai Khabibulin(notes) will undergo a spinal procedure and his return is unknown. Jeff Deslauriers will make his 12th consecutive start as Edmonton look to win their sixth in a row. Watch this game live on Y! Sports.

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

Evening Reading

-Puckheads with NHL Network US, rejoice! They’ll be airing all of Team USA and Team Canada’s games at the upcoming World Junior Championships along with the entire medal round. If you’ve missed Gary Thorne yelling "SCORE!", then you’ll be happy to hear that he’ll be the lead play-by-play man for all the of Team USA broadcasts. For all other games on NHL Network, the TSN feed will be used. Enjoy spending the holidays with Pierre McGuire. [NHL]

-B.D. Gallof continues his excellent work covering the Lighthouse Project saga. [Hockey Independent]

-Two Flyers fans are hoping to raise $5000 to help Blessed Sarnelli Community in Philadelphia and plan to ride a tandem bike to Fenway Park for the Winter Classic. [Broadstreet Bikers]

-Before their game against the Caps, Colorado will honor Mike Keane as part of their "Alumni Night" promotion. Keane is still playing for the Manitoba Moose of the AHL at age 42 still has plenty of hockey in him. [Denver Post]

-It looks like Oklahoma City will be getting an AHL franchise next season. Thanks to PD reader Scott for sending that in [NewsOK]

-Anaheim’s offense might be taking a hit as Joffrey Lupul(notes) might need back surgery. [OC Register]

Puck Buddy Comment of the Day: On our "Top 10 Fights" post from this morning, The Unholy Goat rightly defines Derek Boogaard’s(notes) puglistic abilities:

I guess they left Boogaard off because what he does isn’t so much fighting, it’s more like demolition work.

Bold Prediction: Jose Theodore shuts out the Avalanche and Nicklas Backstrom(notes) has a hand in all of Washington’s goals in a 3-0 win.

What We Learned: 10 worst ideas to make Coyotes successful

Ryan Lambert | December 14, 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.

News came late Friday that the Ice Edge investment group had agreed to buy the Phoenix Coyotes from the league for $140 million dollars, and that said sale will be voted on by the Board of Governors either today or tomorrow.

Some governors have said they’re skeptical that the group has the financial juice to put this purchase together. Others don’t care as long as they don’t have to continue to prop up a franchise that isn’t their own. All we know is Gary Bettman is cartoonishly wiping the sweat from his brow and breathing a big sigh of relief that there’s now only a 40-percent chance he will be pelted with garbage next time he meets with an owner.

And that’s a big, big step in the right direction.

But as we at Puck Daddy are sure you’re aware, we have spies all over the hockey world, and one of them has leaked to us a list of Ice Edge’s ideas to make the Coyotes into a moneymaker.

They are, of course, uniformly terrible.

(Coming Up: Calgary tries to rob the Craftmatic Adjustable Bed; Mike Fisher(notes) deludes himself; John Tortorella shows why he got fired by the Lightning; why you shouldn’t stand too close to Jonathan Toews(notes); the Devs get good news, maybe; Matt Stajan(notes) gets a nickname; the Blues Fan Blues; Detroit finally cracks; and a number of mustache references you’ll just love.)

 

1. Make Ed Jovanovski(notes) live on the roof of Jobing.com Arena until 15,000 fans actually pay full price for tickets. (Addendum: Remember to bring up some food and water at the end of the season. Glendale gets hot in the summer.)

2. Take a cue from the Canadian media and constantly bring up to local hockey moms and dads that Adrian Aucoin(notes) uses a wood stick. Then invest in a wood stick company

3. Sign the best Canadian household name available at this point in the season: Steve Nash.

4. Use Zamboni waste to open three downtown locations of Shane Doan’s(notes) Sno-Cone Palace.

5. Sit on the franchise a few years before flipping it for double what they paid to a mysterious, mustachioed buyer who goes by Tim Talsillie.

6. Putting a brick wall in front of the net serves two purposes: lower GAAs and the ability to rent out the rink as a standup comedy venue. Ilya Bryzgalov(notes) can both start and be the middle act.

7. Taylor Pyatt’s(notes) boyish good looks and beautiful eyes make him the perfect pitchman for both the team and the various shoddy products left in the lurch by the death of Billy Mays.

8. Make Vernon Fiddler(notes) finally live up to his name and tour the country with a bluegrass band.

9. If the Phoenix market really is done, explore several of the next-best markets on Gary Bettman’s list of acceptable relocation cities: San Juan, Puerto Rico, Mexico City and Recife, Brazil (the hockey hotbed hometown of Robyn Regehr(notes)).

10. Let Wayne Gretzky be involved. (Oh they’re actually doing that one.)

What We Learned

Anaheim Ducks: Dan Sexton(notes) has found instant chemistry with linemates Bobby Ryan(notes) and Saku Koivu(notes) since being called up from the AHL. The trio has combined for seven goals and eight assists in the last three games. Quite a season, too, for Sexton, who has played in the ECHL (13-13-26 in 18 games for Bakersfield), AHL (1-2-3 in five for Manitoba) and now NHL (4-1-5 in five).

Atlanta Thrashers: A bit of cognitive dissonance in this post at Birdwatchers Anonymous. "Thrashers Benefiting from Elite Goaltending Performance," says the headline. But the Thrashers had conceded 17 goals in their last five games prior to the post and lost all but one of them (which they won in a shootout); so while Johan Hedberg’s(notes) stats (2.22/.929) look real good, the Thrashers are 20th in the league in goals allowed per game through Saturday. Not exactly elite, especially when factoring in that Hedberg gave up three on 19 to Montreal Saturday.

Boston Bruins: The NHL announced that James Taylor and Daniel Powter (I’ve never heard of him which means he must be a huge act) would sing "The Star Spangled Banner" and "O Canada," respectively, at the Winter Classic. Good news for me as a James Taylor fan, I guess, but this is Bruins/Flyers — shouldn’t, like, Motörhead be performing just to properly set the tone? That’d be good news for me as both a fan of Motörhead and excessive violence.

Buffalo Sabres: Wow, Bucky Gleason actually turned in a positive story about the Sabres. Everybody loves Tyler Myers(notes).

Calgary Flames: Scuttlebutt is it that the Flames offered Chris Chelios(notes) a contract, but that he turned it down. Jean Lefebvre puts it in perspective: "Dan Quinn, the Flames’ leading scorer 24 seasons ago, is also three years younger than Chelios."

Carolina Hurricanes: Who had Dec. 11 in the "Erik Cole is out two to three weeks" pool?

Chicago Blackhawks: Bad news everyone, the Toewsface is contagious.

This epidemic could consume us all.

Colorado Avalanche: Yes, the Avs are still contenders, but when your barometer for relative success in November is the Carolina Hurricanes, you’re really trying to make chicken salad out of … well, a really bad month.

Columbus Blue Jackets: So Derek Dorsett(notes) broke his left hand in the first period on Saturday night. He’ll have surgery and be back in a month or so. I would link this on Puck-rakers, but as of this week you have to sign up to read it; which is stupid, and I refuse to subject you to that.

Dallas Stars: The Stars lost in a shootout on what they think was a dubious save.  "Officials said that the puck must be kept moving forward by the skater, and as soon as Quick poke-checked it back, that ended Ribeiro’s attempt. Officially, Quick poked the puck back and it hit almost immediately into the goal off of Ribeiro’s skate. The Stars thought they had a legit goal. … Afterward, Stars said that was the right interpretation." I’m not sure, given the wording, what they say is the "right interpretation," but if they’re sticking to their guns that Ribeiro scored, then they’re clearly wrong.

Detroit Red Wings: Nashville’s Ryan Jones(notes) scored a power-play goal in the second period on Saturday night. That’s notable because it was the first the Wings had given up in nine games. They were 23 for their previous 23 PKs before that.

Edmonton Oilers: They went from winning just three of 13 to going five-for-five on their most recent road trip, and as of Sunday afternoon the Oil were just three points out of a playoff spot in the West. Great news! (Just ignore that the 15th-place and far more talented Ducks are three points back of them.)

Florida Panthers: While some Panthers forwards, like Stephen Weiss(notes) and Nathan Horton(notes), have been outstanding for last 20 games or so, pretty much everyone else has been wholly disappointing. And there’s really no end in sight.

Los Angeles Kings: Unfortunately for the Kings, Wayne Simmonds(notes) (9-11-20 in 33 games) is going to be out quite a while with some sort of knee injury. He’s having surgery today and will be out at least several weeks, if not "a couple months."

Minnesota Wild: Sheriff Shane Hnidy(notes) scored Saturday. That’s his first goal in 44 games. I’m shocked it was that recent.

Montreal Canadiens: Get ready to have your freaking mind blown by an assault of goaltending statistics. This post was ultra-fascinating.

Nashville Predators: Wow, half of the Predators’ lineup is in a contract year. Obviously they can afford to let guys like Dave Scatchard(notes) and Wade Belak(notes) go, but Nashville’s going to have to pony up some serious cash for guys they should keep Dan Hamhuis(notes), Dan Ellis(notes), Jordin Tootoo(notes), Kevin Klein(notes), Pekka Rinne(notes), Patric Hornqvist(notes). Well maybe not so much Tootoo.

New Jersey Devils: Paul Martin(notes) could be back by Christmas. Not that the Devs, who have lost just six games in regulation since he picked up an injury on Oct. 24, really need that much help.

New York Islanders: Rob Schremp(notes) scored his first NHL goal. It was "hilarious."

I like that video because it shows how ugly the goal was. Bet most kids don’t think they’ll score their first NHL goal from behind the goal line.

New York Rangers: For some awful reason, John Tortorella put Chris Drury(notes) on the Rangers’s power play unit with five minutes to go. That’d be Chris "I have two goals this year and the last one was on Oct. 19" Drury. Why? "I thought Dru was around the puck, I thought we were having problems retrieving pucks on a couple of (PPs). And to be honest with you, I was going with my gut in Dru. Hoping for a big play from a big guy." A big contract doesn’t equal a big guy, just so ya know, Torts.

Ottawa Senators: The fact that Mike Fisher got to carry the Olympic torch and will play at GM Place on March 23 is as close as he’ll get to Team Canada. "I’m probably a longshot, but who knows?" I do, Mike. Don’t wait by the phone.

Philadelphia Flyers: Boy this post at Broad Street Hockey really puts it in perspective huh? "The Flyers are now tied at 29 points with the Toronto Maple Leafs, a team who won three of their first twenty games." Yikes.

Phoenix Coyotes: Dave Tippet’s not wrong when he jokes that he can walk into every press conference and say, "’Bryzie was good, and we got a couple of goals. Thanks." Bryzgalov hasn’t allowed more than two goals since Nov. 23 and the Coyotes are 6-1-1 in that stretch.

Pittsburgh Penguins: Dan Bylsma knows how to make shootout practice fun. "Juice Boy" has been widely reported. But "Mustache Boy?" Now that’s something everyone can get behind.

The league should institute at least one of these contests as an actual rule next year.

San Jose Sharks: Dan Boyle(notes) got hurt at the end of the game on Saturday and if he’s out a while the Sharks could be in serious trouble. And latest word on his status is that it may not be serious.

St. Louis Blues: I truly feel bad for Blues fans having to sit through this season. Andy Murray ran his team into the ground. Then he blamed David Perron(notes).

Tampa Bay Lightning: However you feel about Todd Fedoruk(notes) (that is, if you for some reason have any opinion of him at all), you gotta respect what this guy has given up for hockey. Look at this actual x-ray of his face. Holy hell.

Toronto Maple Leafs: In light of his sterling two-goal, one-assist effort against the Caps, one blogger suggests Matt Stajan’s nickname be "Big Stage." I thought perhaps he was kidding, but then he said, "…the business of sports nicknames is no place for irony." That’s definitely true, and why no one has ever nicknamed Ron Wilson "Good Coach." Stajan is so nicknamed at least until I forget, which I assume will be by the time you’ve read this.

Vancouver Canucks: Oh hey, Henrik Sedin(notes) is tied for second in league scoring. He did most of it without Daniel. No big deal.

Washington Capitals: Bruce Boudreau on the Caps’ problems in the game’s second half: "I think outside of Shaone Morrisonn(notes) and Tom Poti(notes) all of our defense struggled tonight…" That’s not two names you want at the top of your Didn’t Struggle list.

Play of the Weekend

Can you believe Bobby Ryan has FIFTY career goals already?

Gold Star Award

Congratulations to Alex Kovalev(notes) for completing his one contractually-obligated game where he has to play like he cares per month. Three goals. Alright!

Minus of the Weekend

Yes, Ryan Callahan(notes) scored on the power play for the Rangers and was on the ice for Marian Gaborik’s(notes) power play goal. Problem is, he and Henrik Lundqvist(notes) were the only two on the ice for all three Buffalo goals as well, and let’s just say the fine stat guys at Madison Square Garden were extra-nice to not mark him down for any giveaways.

Perfect HFBoards trade proposal of the week

User "djroche," who actually lists his location as Florida, proposes this winner:

tomas vokoun for daniel briere

So Florida takes on terrible money, loses its only good goalie and gets another forward that can’t score. Well done.

P.S. The comments are gold.

Signoff

Franklin said some things Whitey wasn’t ready to hear.

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.

Sunday’s Three Stars: Hossa’s awesome drop shot; Avs take 1st

Greg Wyshynski | December 14, 2009

No. 1 Star: Marian Hossa(notes), Chicago Blackhawks

It was all Blackhawks in their 4-0 victory over the Tampa Bay Lightning, as Patrick Kane(notes), Ben Eager(notes), Hossa and Jonathan Toews(notes) scored goals. But this Hossa goal was the best of the night — and perhaps the year — as he snagged a high pass from Patrick Sharp(notes), put the puck down and slapped it out of the air past Antero Niittymaki(notes) (25 saves). Drop it like it’s hot, Marian:

No. 2 Star: Darcy Tucker(notes), Colorado Avalanche

The Avalanche aggressor scored his first goal since Oct. 21 as Colorado took over sole possession of first place in the Northwest Division with a 3-2 win over the Calgary Flames. In the second period, the puck deflected in air as Tucker was camped near the crease; he managed to get enough on it to knock it past Miikka Kiprusoff(notes) (32 saves) for the eventual game-winner.

No. 3 Star: Antti Niemi(notes), Chicago Blackhawks

The Chicago backup made 18 saves for this third shutout in seven starts, as the Blackhawks played solid ‘D’ in front of their keeper.

Honorable mention: Niittymaki had one of the best saves of the year against the ‘Hawks. … Brent Seabrook(notes) had two assists for the Blackhawks. … Wojtek Wolski(notes) scored his 13th goal and had an assist for the Avs. … Rene Bourque(notes) had a goal and an assist for the Flames. … Craig Anderson(notes) made 19 saves for his 16th win, a new career best. … The Avs had 20 shots in the first period.

Did you know?: Jim Belushi, a "celebrity captain" during the team’s 75th anniversary season, dropped the ceremonial first puck before the Blackhawks game.

Dishonorable mention: The Lightning are in a tailspin, going 0-3-1 and 1-6-2 in their last 10. Said Coach Rick Tocchet: "When there’s pressure, it just seem like we cave in certain situations." … Andrej Meszaros(notes), Vincent Lecavalier(notes) and Alex Tanguay(notes) were all minus-3. … Finally, this is either a jeer for Matt Smaby(notes) for bloodying Patrick Kane on a trip near the boards or a cheer for continuing to build Kaner’s street cred with some fresh stitches. Chick dig scars:

Video: Niittymaki’s save of the season candidate vs. Chicago

Greg Wyshynski | December 14, 2009

To really appreciate Antero Niittymaki’s(notes) ridiculous stick save against the Chicago Blackhawks on Sunday night, you have to check out the camera angle from behind the net near the end of this clip:

The Tampa Bay Lightning goalie may have been helped by the spinning puck’s momentum slowing just a bit as it reached the goal line, but that paddle swat by Niittymaki is still one of the best stops of the season.

Pity it came at the end of a 4-0 curb-stomping by the Blackhawks. It’s like the goalie save equivalent of Raul Julia in Van Damme’s "Street Fighter": an inspired performance in an otherwise regrettable few hours.

Thanks to Puck Buddy FlyerGuy18 for the video tip.