Welcome back to the weekly Colorado Avalanche poll. Last week, Matt Duchene won the “Which player are you most excited to see” poll in a landslide victory. This week, the weekly poll asks who are you most nervous about for next season?
There are always players that breakout in each season and there are a number of players who regress from their previous season.
Here are the choices:
Craig…
Looking back on the ‘09-10 season, the Colorado Avalanche had no right to be so competitive. They were coming off a disastrous campaign.
They had lost veteran leadership in Joe Sakic and Ryan Smyth. There were no new proven hands coming aboard.
They were going cheap and young. They were saddled with an old and slow defense. Worst of all, they had an unproven goaltender.
Yet, the Avs got out of the gate fast, held on, and never looked back. They even threw a scare into the mighty San Jose Sharks, leading their playoff series 2-1.
Do the Avs have the horses to expect a return to the playoffs? The Avs are young and many of these rookies played impressively at times.
Led by Matt Duchene, this cast also includes David Jones, Brandon Yip, T.J. Galiardi, Ryan Wilson, Kyle Quincey, Kyle Cumiskey, Chris Durno, Peter Mueller, Chris Stewart, and Ryan O’Reilly.
In fact, the Avs are so young, they manage to make Paul Stastny look like a grizzled veteran, but he’s a kid too. This year, the Avs could add in promising youngsters Ryan Stoa or Kevin Shattenkirk.
This offseason, it has been difficult for fans to sit idly by, while Avalanche management exercises sound judgment and fiscal restraint. There is no free agent magic pill for this young squad.
The growth potential for this team lies in each of these player’s games. There is certainly no reason to embark on salary cap suicide until we know the answer to the question: how much can these kids improve?
We know this much. The coaching staff appears to be ideal for this group of kids. The upside in some of these kids is tremendous. If they continue to grow as hockey players, the Avs could be contenders for years.
Despite the depth and youthful energy at forward, however, the answer to whether the Avs can return to the playoffs lies with the defense. The Avs haven’t improved there, but they shed some veteran payroll in Bret Clark and Ruslan Salei.
The Avs’ problem last year was that they surrendered far too many shots. Anderson was pelted on a nightly basis and it took a toll. The defense has to improve puck possession and positional play.
But its not obvious the Avs have the horses on D to improve. The Avs’ defensemen range from old and slow Hannon and Foote to small and speedy Cumiskey and Liles. And they rely on Mueller, a forward, to man the power play point.
While they could use some upgrading on the blueline, the Avs seem content to wait on the system to fill this need from the likes of Shattenkirk, Cameron Guance, Colby Cohen, Tyson Barrie, and Stefan Elliot.
The problem is that defensemen need time in the minors to develop. They take much more time than forwards.
Drew Daugherty aside, rookies can’t be slotted in to fill major roles. It might be that the Avs’ plan is out of sync, with a bevy of young studs at forward ready to achieve, but saddled with a weak defense.
The final piece is always the goaltending. Can the Avs expect Craig Anderson to match last year’s performance? Surprisingly, I think the answer is yes.
Anderson has seen a lot of rubber for years and has had a consistently high save percentage. He is a gamer. I expect Anderson will be fine. If Andy struggles or gets hurt, look out: the Avs inexplicably stayed with Budaj as a back-up, despite there being tons of experienced goaltending available on the cheap this year.
Who wouldn’t feel better with, say, Marty Biron or Dan Ellis backing up Anderson? This is where the Avs’ miserly ways could really bite them.
Budaj has been given enough chances and, despite decent stats, it was clear that Coach Joe Sacco had no faith in him.
What the Avs can’t rely on is the blistering start the team got off to last year. They will have to play better defense, hope the kids can improve, and cross their fingers on Anderson to make it back to the playoffs.
Read more NHL news on BleacherReport.com
Homophobia And Discrimination In Hockey
Derek discusses reactions to his father’s day column.
Q&A Session with Adrian Dater of The Denver Post.
Welcome to the first annual Avalanche award blog. Since the NHL handed out their awards last night, it is time to hand out mine to the Avalanche players who earned them. All the awards are still the same awards, just renamed after Avalanche players.
Next year, I’ll let you the fans decide in a poll. However, this year I’ll have to decide, feel free to disagree in the comments section.
Stepha…
The Avalanche player review continues with a look at Brandon Yip.
season stats: 32 games played, eleven goals, eight assists
Postseason stats: six GP, two goals, two assists
Nicknames: Die Hard, yipper
Contract stats: RFA
If the Avalanche had a breath of fresh air, it was either Craig Anderson or Brandon Yip.
While Anderson kept the puck out of the net, Yip kept putting it on net a…
A day after Captain Adam Foote signed a one-year deal, the Avalanche player review moves on to a guy who played more games than Foote: Goaltender Craig Anderson.
Season stats: 71 games played, 38-25-7 record, .917 SV% 2.64 GAA, 7 shutouts
Postseason stats: Six GP, 2-4 record, .933 SV% 2.62 GAA
Nicknames: Craig-Jesus-Christ-God-Savior-Zeus-The One-Messiah Anderson, Andy, Frank
Contract st…
The playoffs are an exciting time of year, and become even more exciting when certain players truly step up and stand out. That is what the Conn Smythe is all about.
The Stanley Cup Playoffs have always been an intense event and this year has been no exception to that. In the first-round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs we have seen so many close games, close series, and upsets throughout. There has been many players that have stepped up and contributed so much to their teams success. Now, The Sports Dish will recognize the players who we felt helped their teams the most in the first-round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs.
Goalie- Craig Anderson, Colorado Avalanche (2.62 GAA, 223 SV, .933 % SV%, 1SO)
The feel good story of the playoffs, Craig Anderson, played fantastic throughout the playoffs despite the Avalanche losing in six games. Anderson, had arguably the best game in the playoffs with a 51-save shutout against the San Jose Sharks. Although he did seem to give up a lot of goals in the playoffs, his defense wasn’t really playing their best either because he was shot on at an average of 40 times per game, and he still had a .933% save percentage.
Defenseman- Chris Pronger, Philadelphia Flyers (2 G, 3 AST, 5 PTS)
Known as the main man who shut down the outstanding New Jersey offense this season, Chris Pronger, played great defense in about every game in the series. Pronger, was one of the reasons why Brian Boucher played so well during the Stanley Cup Playoffs. In addition, he also did have two goals and three assist in the playoffs and helped the Flyers slide past the Devils.
Defenseman- Andrei Markov, Montreal Canadiens (0 G, 4 AST, 4 PTS)
“Defense wins games,” is a statement that many people probably doubted, until they saw how great the defense was for the Montreal Canadiens against the No. 1 seeded Washington Capitals. Down 3-1 in the series, the Canadiens really were not expected to win more than two more games of the series, but with great defense, especially Defenseman Andrei Markov’s the Canadiens shut down the strong Washing offense. Markov played great against Washington stars Nicklas Backstrom and Alexander Ovechkin in the final three games and in the final three games Markov and the defense held the Capitals to three goals in those three games. Markov also did finish off the series with four assist including an important one in Game Seven.
To see the rest of the team and article, visit The Sports Dish (http://www.thesportsdish.com)
Read more NHL news on BleacherReport.com
For about three minutes, the Avs had it. They had forced a game 7.
Then their Achilles heel bit them in the rear- no finish. Time and time again, especially down the stretch, the Avs gave up lead after lead.
For the entire series, the Avs did not have an answer for the San Jose line of Joe Pavelski, Devin Setoguchi and Ryan Clowe. They were the ones who wheeled and dealed and scored the goal…
Anthony Curatolo takes a look at the better free agent signings from the off-season and who he feels tops the list.
Tonight’s game six matchup between the Colorado Avalanche and the San Jose Sharks is the first opportunity the young Avs have at a do-or-die matchup.
After the Avs laid an egg game five, they put themselves into a situation where they either play well or they go home for the season.
The Avs will have to follow a checklist for the first period if they want to compete in this game:
-No pena…
And the Sharks will come.
That line uttered in Iron Man 2 trailers by Mickey Rourke held true for tonight’s Colorado Avalanche- San Jose Sharks game.
Avs were outshot 37-28 and had zero presence the Game 5, losing 5-0.
After Kyle Quincey took a penalty in the first five minutes, the Avs never recovered. The avs have got to lose the idea of the “perfect goal” and throw pucks on net.
Ma…
Tonight’s Game 5 game against the San Jose Sharks is a huge gut check moment for the Colorado Avalanche.
For a team that was not supposed to be in the playoffs, let alone tied with the Western Conference-leading San Jose Sharks, the Avs are now sitting with at 2-2 tie in the series.
However, in a series that has all been decided by one-goal games- three of them in overtime, the Avs will have…
A history lesson from what has been witnessed thus far in the playoffs.
In a must-win game, Joe Pavelski stepped up big time and gets to take the series back to HP Pavilion with the series tied 2-2.
With David Jones, Milan Hejduk and Peter Mueller heading the Avs elongated injury list, the Avs came out and fought hard but inevitably fell in the OT period.
One of the guys who stepped in, Marek Svatos looked good. He had four shots on net and was going hard to the…
Courtney Beckham looks at Craig Anderson and the Colorado Avalanche’s playoff series with the San Jose Sharks.
Five days in, seven overtime games and ten road wins later, the playoffs have been all that we could expect and more.
In what has been discussed time and time again, the National Hockey Leagues second season, also known as the Stanley Cup Playoffs, is all about goaltending.
Jonathan Quick of the Los Angeles Kings, Brian Boucher [...]
One hundred twenty-nine is the number of shots the San Jose Sharks have through three games. The Avalanche have 69.
Somehow, they lead the series two games to one.
On a night where the Avalanche lost forwards Milan Hejduk and Ryan Stoa to injury, Craig Anderson put on one of the best goaltender performances in modern NHL history. In the 61 minutes Anderson guarded Colorado’s net, he was pelted with 51 shots while the team in front of him could only manufacture 17 on Nabokov.
Eventually, the Sharks would score, but to the dismay of San Jose faithful would be into their own goal courtesy of Dan Boyle.
Tonight, Craig Anderson’s career accumulated in one moment. Four years ago a lowly back-up who was claimed on waivers three times in a single month; tonight an elite NHL goaltender, stealing a game his broken down team had no business being in.
“Andy, Andy” the crowd cheered as the Avalanche MVP did celebration laps to salute the Pepsi Center crowd.
For Dan Boyle and the Sharks, the crowd may as well have been chanting “choke, choke” as for the second straight year, the Sharks top guns have been neutralized by stellar play by the opposing team’s goaltending.
Thornton, Marleau, and (the now injured) Heatley—the consensus best line in the NHL—have combined for zero goals, four assists, and a minus-seven rating.
A maximum four games remain in the best of seven series. Only time will tell if they will be the final four games of Joe Thornton, Patrick Marleau, and GM Doug Wilson’s tenure with the San Jose Sharks.
Read more NHL news on BleacherReport.com
Thanks to the incredible, incredulous, unbelievable, impossible 51-save effort of Anderson, the Colorado Avalanche take a 2-1 series lead into game four.
The play of Anderson can only be described with the chorus of the Buffalo Springfield song “For what it’s worth”
I think it’s time we stop, children,
what’s that sound
Everybody look what’s going down
With Dany Heatley a scratch, Ande…