Posts Tagged ‘Scott Gomez

With the new addition of Nikolai Zherdev and the need for a starting goaltender, the money-tight Philadelphia Flyers have decided the Simon Gagne is their most expendable piece and have been exploring trades for the injury-plagued winger.

The reasoning here appears to be to clear $5 million off the Flyers’ cap giving them the opportunity to re-open talks with goalie Marty Turco and have enough cap space left to re-sign one, if not both Dan Carcillo and Darroll Powe.

Although over the past few seasons he’s had considerable injury trouble, Gagne still has the ability to be a perennial 30-goal scorer. And with this year’s free agent class as weak as it is, we’d expect there to be considerable interest in the his services.

With one year left on his current contract with a $5.25 million cap hit this season, the options may be slightly limited due to many teams being tight up against the cap for the upcoming year. However, if he can stay healthy, he has the skill to be a game-changer—just ask my Bruin’s how much of a difference he can make.

So without further ado, here are the top five most likely teams that could land Gagne this season—in no particular order.

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Bargaining For Dummies

28, Jun 2010

Glen Sather’s yearly backwards approach towards contract talks is simply baffling.

It’s a familiar situation for the Montreal Canadiens who enter tonight’s must win to stave off elimination game five from the Wachovia Center in Philadelphia, PA.

They’ve been down but not out two times already in these 2010 Stanley Cup Playoffs.
It all starts win one man.
For as good as Jaroslav Halak was during [...]

With their backs against the wall one more time, the Philadelphia Flyers shut out the Montreal Canadiens 3-0 in game four of the Eastern Conference Finals and now lead the series 3-1. The Flyers are one game away from punching their ticket to the Stanley Cup Final.

It is the third time in the playoffs the Canadiens are on the edge of elimination. In round one against the Washington Capitals the Habs came back from a 3-1 deficit to win the series. In the second round, they won two games in a row to defeat the Pittsburgh Penguins after being down 3-2.

Claude Giroux scored the first goal for the visiting team 5:04 into the second period after a great individual play. Ville Leino stretched the lead almost ten minutes later in a breakaway after a perfect feed from Chris Pronger.

Giroux got his second of the game in the final minute of regulation with an empty net.

Game five of the series will be played Monday night at the Wachovia Center, in Philadelphia.

Now, here is the game’s script:

 

The Main Characters:

 

The Hero: Claude Giroux

He was there in the perfect moment, always in position to create a scoring chance, always pushing the Flyers offense toward Jaroslav Halak’s net.

He finished the night with two goals, including an empty netter, and a faceoff win percentage of 69.

Almost six minutes into the second period Giroux sped up toward Halak and beat him top shelf after a great deke. Later, with almost a minute left in regulation, the Quebec native outskated Jaroslav Spacek to score into an open net. The coup de grace by the Flyers.

 

The Villain: The Montreal Canadiens

You could look through the stats sheet or watch the game again searching for a moment or a player to point out for the loss, and probably won’t find it. Truth is the Canadiens lost as a team.

Subban had a rough night, Halak wasn’t superhuman, Cammalleri only had one shot on goal and Plekanec, Kostitsyn, and Gomez are still missing in action. Nobody stepped up to the challenge and suddenly the frustration flooded the Bell Centre.

The Habs were outshot 25-17, not that there’s anything wrong with that. In the past they have managed to pull a win by attacking less than their opponent—but to shoot only once in the second period, that’s a whole different story.

 

The Sidekick: Kimmo Timonen

The defenseman had a great game on both sides of the rink. He blocked four shots and dismantled numerous attacks by the Canadiens.

Timonen played smart, taking the first step in many occasions to break Montreal’s game and showing physical presence in front of his own net. He also collected an assist in Philly’s first goal by quickly setting Giroux’s play for the 1-0.

 

The Extra: Tomas Plekanec

Montreal’s best player in the regular season hasn’t scored since game six of the first round against the Capitals. That’s 12 games shooting blanks.

Plekanec needs to step up in order for the Canadiens to fight back in the series. He doesn’t take advantage of having Michael Cammalleri on his side. Everybody seems to be working on their own in the first line and that is having and impact in Andrei Kostitsyn, who is also in a slump.

 

Key moment in the plot: Giroux’s first goal

It has been the story so far in the series. The team that scores first wins the game.

In game four it was Philadelphia who hit first. Claude Giroux flew toward the net and fooled Halak with a perfect deke. The winger took advantage of a problem Josh Gorges had with his skates.

The Flyers broke the zero in the scoreboard and the spirit of the Canadiens for the rest of the game.

 

Game Notes:

 

As reported on Twitter by Dave Stubbs of the Montreal Gazette , the Canadiens had never been shut out three times in a playoffs series.

Montreal’s powerplay is 1-16 so far in this series.

The Canadiens played their 100th game of the season.

Michael Leighton is the first goalie to earn three shutouts in a playoffs series for the Flyers.

 

The Quotes:

 

Peter Laviolette: “We didn’t allow a lot of opportunities. The neutral zone was really tight, which eliminates rush opportunities.”

Jacques Martin: “I think we’ll have to regroup. We know how we have to play and I think we have certain areas of our game that needs to be better.”

Ville Leino: “We were making smart plays and it gave us some good chances.”

Brian Gionta: “We just got impatient. Since the second period, we were trying to make too many plays at the blue line and against this team, they are going to step up.”

All quotations from NHL.com game recap.

 

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Making it Interesting

21, May 2010

The Montreal Canadiens have made this series interesting with a crucial game three victory in the Eastern Conference Finals.

Two games are on the books and one finger on the panic button.

The Philadelphia Flyers beat the Montreal Canadiens 3-0 in game two of the Eastern Conference final and now travel to Montreal with a 2-0 lead to face the Habs Thursday night at the Bell Centre.

The Habs looked better than they did in game one, putting more pressure on Michael Leighton’s net, but still haven’t scored their first goal of the series. On the other hand, Philly has put in nine unanswered goals.

Leighton earned his second consecutive shutout.

Danny Briere opened the score almost five minutes into the game with a laser from the slot after a Scott Gomez penalty.

In the second period, Simon Gagne, another Quebec native, profited from a goalmouth rebound from Jaroslav Halak to put the second goal on the board for the home team, which was also scored with the man-advantage.

Midway through the third period, Ville Leino stretched the lead for the Flyers with a shot from the circle which trickled past Halak. An ugly goal allowed by the best goaltender so far in the playoffs.

Now, here is the game’s script:

 

The main characters: 

The Hero: Michael Leighton

Sure he looked better than he really is, but the guy put the pads where he needed to, caught the puck when it threatened to beat him, and managed to keep his crease rebound-free.

Leighton seemed calmed in front of the net and received the support from his defense. Not that the Habs tried too hard, though.

The goalie now has back-to-back shutouts and a grand total of 165:50 minutes without letting the puck in. Many have already dared to draw a parallelism between Leighton and Halak, two underdogs that have become the story of the playoffs.

 

The Villain: Jaroslav Halak

He gets the credit for being one of the main reasons the Habs have made it so far, but right now he’s out of his zone. Jaro has made 30 saves in 37 shots so far in this series for a save percentage of .810.

He wasn’t comfortable in the crease, and the lack of support in front of him made things even more difficult. He didn’t bounce back after a bad game like he has before. On the contrary, he ended up allowing an ugly goal, his weakest so far in the postseason.

That third goal completely deflated the Canadiens.

Philly’s forwards seem to have found a way to beat the best goalie of the 2010 playoffs. They’re crashing the net and shooting high, creating traffic and playing smart on the powerplay.

 

The Sidekick: Danny Briere

Briere only needed one shot on goal to stretch his point streak to six games. Last night, he scored his ninth of the playoffs with a perfect snapshot from the slot after decking Hal Gill.

The Gatineau native has been a constant threat, attacking the net from all sides. He’s the type of players that can have a great game without flooding the score sheet with numbers.

His speed brings balance to the Flyers’ offensive corps. Briere has done a great job in the absence of guys like Jeff Carter.

 

The Extra: Marc-André Bergeron

When asked, coach Jacques Martin always says that Bergeron’s offensive abilities are the main reason why he sees so much time on ice. Fact is, the defender spent most of the time setting the play, passing around the puck around, and not shooting, especially on the powerplay.

His puck handling is far from great and his constants giveaways have led to many scoring chances for the Flyers.

In terms of defense, he’s been constantly outmuscled and had trouble carrying the puck out of the Habs’ zone. He’s skating on thin ice and is one of the candidates to spend one game in the press box.

 

Key moment in the plot: Scott Gomez’s penalty

Gomez took an unnecessary hooking penalty only two minutes into the game, just like he did in game one. Danny Briere would turn the man-advantage into Philly’s first goal and set the pace for the rest of the game.

The early goal drained all the momentum out of Montreal and changed their gameplan. The Habs never found a way to respond and ended up choking with frustration.

 

Game notes:

- Montreal is now 0-5 in the playoffs when outshooting their rival.

- Jaroslav Halak’s career record against the Flyers is 3-5, three of those losses have been in playoffs games.

- The last time Tomas Plekanec, Montreal’s best player in the regular season, scored was in game six of the first round against the Capitals.

 

The quotes:

“It was an even game. Take away those (power-play goals), do a little better job on the PK and we’re right in it.” – Hal Gill.

“Special teams (were) the difference tonight” – Jacques Martin.

“They were down 3-1, 3-2 against very good teams before. So we’re not going to sit back. We saw what we were able to do to Boston. So the worst thing we could do right now is sit back” – Danny Briere.

“He was very calm in there, very relaxed, and in complete control of that net and everything that went on around it.” – Peter Laviolette, on Michael Leighton’s performance.

All quotations from NHL.com game recap.

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With home ice already playing a role in this series, will the shift help Montreal?

Habs Bullied to Defeat

17, May 2010

The Montreal Canadiens will need to rebound from a dismal game one performance.

Our newest feature, Pros and Cons, holds a debate between two of our featured writers as they make an argument for each team in the series.  We will continue this series throughout the playoffs as we delve deeper into how these two teams will fare against each other.

Montreal Canadiens by Anthony Curatolo
What can be said [...]

While the Western Conference Finals sees the top two seeds square off to determine a Stanley Cup Finalist, the Eastern Conference has provided quite a twist this postseason.

The seventh-seeded Philadelphia Flyers and the eighth-seeded Montreal Canadiens. two very unlikely picks to get this far, are set to do battle for the right to represent the East in the Cup Final.

The Montreal Canadiens have turned their city upside down, as the club tries to get back to the Finals since winning it all in 1993. After coming back from a 3-1- deficit against the President Trophy-winning Washington Capitals, the Canadiens also came back from a 3-2 deficit to oust the defending Stanley Cup champion Pittsburgh Penguins as well.

In the process of getting to the Eastern Conference Finals, the Habs have taken down the game’s best superstars in Alexander Ovechkin of the Capitals, and Sidney Crosby of the Penguins.

Meanwhile, the Flyers surprisingly disposed of the second-seeded New Jersey Devils with ease in the first round, and then pulled off one of the greatest comebacks in professional sports history, defeating the Boston Bruins in 7 games after being down 3-0 in the series.

Even more amazing: Philly came back after being down 3-0 in Game 7 as well, on the road.

Get set to watch the two Cinderella teams take each other, and unfortunately, the clock will eventually strike midnight for one of these squads.

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Six million reasons to smile…

The first round of the NHL playoffs brought many surprises and a few upsets. Boston ousted Ryan Miller & the Buffalo Sabres, the Broad Street Bullies defeated the Devils in five games, & of-course, The Montreal Canadiens defeating the best team in the NHL in seven games.

With the second round starting Thursday night, there are four match-ups that are set to make for an exciting second round.

Montreal Canadiens (8) (39-33-10) @ Pittsburgh Penguins (4) (47-28-7)

Season Series: Pittsburgh: 3-1-0 / Montreal: 1-3-0                                              

Goal-Scoring: Pittsburgh:15 Goals / Montreal: 9 Goals                                                 

Games In Pittsburgh: Pittsburgh: 2-0-0 / Montreal: 0-2-0                                           

Games In Montreal: Pittsburgh: 1-1-0 / Montreal: 1-1-0

Under-Dog: Montreal

Analysis: Montreal Canadiens have the advantage in goal with Jaroslav Halak being the hero for the Habs in the first round. Big confidence gained in the Montreal Canadiens line-up. Pittsburgh has the winning experience and know what it takes, a well balanced team that will need to find the holes through the Montreal well structured defense. Montreal offense must step up and get to Marc Andre Fleury quick & often.

Keys to winning for the Montreal Canadiens:

—Montreal will benefit if they take as many shots as possible from all possible angles. Marc-Andre Fleury has not been great in the post-season and Montreal should use that to their advantage. Getting off to a good start early and quick in each games will be critical for Montreal.

—Jaroslav Halak had an out-standing first round however, he must keep up his play and the team all around needs to be more confident in carrying the puck into the opposing zone to help Halak out, keeping him from getting fatigued over a long series.

—Montreal needs to contain Sidney Crosby & Evgeni Malkin. When on the penalty kill, Montreal must be real careful keeping an eye on Crosby down by the net and avoid him from keeping control near & behind the net.

Keys to winning for the Pittsburgh Penguins:

—Marc-Andre Fleury must step up. If Pittsburgh has trouble beating Jaroslav Halak, Fleury must step up to steal one or two games for his team. He often looked shaky in the first round and has to keep his composure and focus.

—Pittsburgh must do their best job at being disciplined. If they tend to take to many bad penalties, it might very well haunt them especially for Fleury.

—Sidney Crosby & Evgeni Malkin need to continue their dominance and if they can find a way to beat Jaroslav Halak early and quick, they might throw Halak off his game for the entire game.

Prediction: Montreal in seven.

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Habs Hit Hard at Home

21, Apr 2010

NHLHS writer Christopher Nardi takes a look at the happenings from game three between the Montreal Canadiens and Washington Capitals. Game four happens tonight.

It was the first home game of the fairy tale Canadiens, returning to Montreal with a very unexpected win in game one of the series against the wrecking [...]

Four days, thirteen games, ten one goal games (add in two more if you exclude empty net goals). Not much more you can ask for.

A few years ago, this would almost be unheard of. Especially in the first round

Most of the series have been nodded up one to one, but I think it’s clear the salary cap is doing it’s job.

Before the salary cap came into effect, you could pick three to four teams to win the cup. If you picked the Avalanche or Redwings to win the cup, you couldn’t go wrong.

Aside from Montreal vs. Washington, Los Angeles vs. Vancouver (who all play tonight) and Nashville and Chicago, every series is tied up at one, and the potential that 7/8 series’ will be tied after tonight is great.

When Captain Rob Blake was addressing his Sharks, he told them to take advantage of this, because you never know when you’re going to be on a team this good again. How right he is.

Re-signing players and utilizing the free agent market is much harder now. Back in the day, the teams that had the money, won. The teams that won, attracted all the good players. This hasn’t completely changed—obviously players will be more inclined to sign for a winning team, but due to the salary cap these winning teams can’t sign players at will.

Sometimes you have to resist the temptation the free agent market brings. Ask the New York Rangers. Chris Drury and Wade Redden are pretty good players—but at a cap hit of 7 and 6.5 respectively they are not great assets. Building a team has become much harder.

A big emphasis has been put on the draft and the developing of young players. Watching games, you can tell that speed is now a much more valued asset. At the Olympics you could see younger players like Kane blowing by older guys like Pronger. That’s why Team Canada relied so much on guys like Duncan Keith and Drew Doughty down the stretch.

That’s why the Avalanche along with other teams are finding success.

March Madness is one of the most exciting sports events all year. The reason being, people love underdogs, they love games that go down to the wire. And that is exactly what we’ve gotten so far from these NHL Playoffs.

So sit back and enjoy these playoffs. It’s early, but it’s looking like this could be one of the best fights for the Stanley Cup in recent history. Who needs to go outside and have a life anyway when you could sit inside and watch eight teams battle for Lord Stanley’s Cup every night?

Read more NHL news on BleacherReport.com

The first chapter went to David. The Montreal Canadiens stunned Goliath, none other than the league’s best team overall: the Washington Capitals. A laser shot by Tomas Plekanec in the overtime gave the Habs a surprising 1-0 lead in the Eastern Conference Playoffs series.

Michael Cammalleri put Montreal ahead in the first with a snapshot, his first goal since returning from an injury, March 24. Joe Corvo evened things up with a wrister from the point, which Habs goalie, Jaroslav Halak, never saw. Washington took no advantage of his puck control and physical superiority in the first 20 minutes.

The Habs shook off the pressure and changed the formula for the second period, but the score didn’t change after 40. It was in the beginning of the third when Washington capitalized a Montreal turnover deep in their zone. Nicklas Backstrom took the gift and put it past Halak with a perfect wrist shot.

But seven minutes later, Scott Gomez broke the momentum of the host team with an amazing play he created behind his own net and finished in the other end after a great pass from Brian Gionta.

The overtime was up and down from one net to the other, but it was Plekanec who had the final word. Montreal took a huge step in the series by winning the first game on the road.

Now, here’s the Game’s Script:

 

The main characters:

The Hero: Tomas Plekanec

No. 14 stood in the perfect moment to silence the 18377 persons gathering at the Verizon Center. Plekanec collected 5 SOG, including a bullet past José Théodore for the win, a slapshot from the slot to the goalie’s stick side. The Czech won the first battle against the former Habs’ goalie after a week filled with crossing statements. The first round went to “Tomas Jagr.”

 

The Villain: Alexander Ovechkin

The 50-goals-a-season superstar, the one who led the league with 368 SOG in the regular season, couldn’t even put the puck between the pipes once. It was the second time in this season that he finished a game with a 0 in the SOG column. The Russian never found a shooting lane and he wasn’t a main actor in any of the four Caps power plays.

 

The Sidekid: Jaroslav Spacek

The 36-year-old defenseman played his best game with the Habs jersey since arriving to Montreal last summer. He accomplished his assignment by leaving no space for Ovechkin; he also put the cherry on top by assisting the winning goal. Spacek showed everyone he has the experience to be in the big dance.

 

The Extra: Mike Green

The young defenseman carried too much pressure on his shoulders, especially in terms of offense. He got caught backing up and failed to catch Gomez in the Canadiens’ second goal that killed the Caps momentum. He also made a mental mistake with 30 seconds left in regulation by taking a delay of game penalty that toughened Montreal offense into the overtime.

 

Key Moment in the plot: Scott Gomez goal

A beautiful run that started behind Montreal’s net. Gomez zigzagged between red jerseys, and after a triangulation which included Beniot Pouliot and Brian Gionta, the center pushed in the tying goal, a relatively quick response to Backstrom’s goal, killing the growing momentum for the Caps. The Habs gained a confidence they would use later in OT.

 

The quotes:

“I am happy to score that goal, but it doesn’t matter who scores the goal in the playoffs. Stats don’t matter.” – Tomas Plekanec

 “He (Plekanec) did a good job of shooting against the grain. I was moving one way and he shot the other way. He’s a skilled player, and it was a good shot.” – José Théodore

“I’m 7-11, I’m always open” – Michael Cammalleri, on Plekanec not passing him the puck in the winning goal play.

“Right now we’re mad and right now we’re disappointed, but tomorrow is going to be a new day and it’ll be a new game.” – Alexander Ovechkin.

All quotations from NHL.com game recap http://www.nhl.com/ice/recap.htm?id=2009030111

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The 2010 Stanley Cup playoffs are upon us, and the hockey world waits in angst to see which team will hoist Lord Stanley’s hardware come springtime.

In a thrilling finale to the Olympic games, hockey fans were spoiled with perhaps one of the greatest contests in the history of the game, not to mention many more thrillers in the tournament, such as Slovakia’s upset of the once-mighty Russians.

However, the average fan would say that they’d rather watch the playoffs than the Olympics. The unpredictability and excitement of the springtime tournament are its greatest calling cards, with at least one upset guaranteed almost every year.

For the Montreal Canadiens, a first-round matchup against the NHL’s greatest offensive force, and on the road for the first two games, is far from tantalizing.

The Habs limped into the playoffs after coming off a six-game winning streak following the Olympics with a 3-4-3 record, hardly something to write home about. 

Yet the Canadiens possess some intangibles that could lead to a more interesting series than most have predicted.

The greatest of these intangibles can be described in two words: Jaroslav Halak.

Halak has one game of playoff experience, which came two years ago in a hellish second-round defeat against the Philadelphia Flyers.

And for those who have noted that Halak has sort of come out of the blue this season, that couldn’t be farther from the truth. 

The Slovak netminder almost single-handedly pushed the CH into the playoffs in the 2006-07 campaign as a rookie, as well as being named the AHL goaltender of the year that same season.

Unfortunately for Halak, the quick ascendancy to fame of Carey Price sent him spiraling down the depth chart, and he spent the majority of that season in Hamilton, where he again posted solid numbers.

This year, everyone knows about “Jaro”, especially after a Herculean effort on a dark horse Slovakian team, and of course, with his shining 26-13-5 record, as well as a 92.4 percent SP to boot.

Halak’s ability to put an average team on his back could very well make the difference in this series.

Past the Habs’ goaltending, it is almost guaranteed that Washington will outscore the Habs in a seven-game series, with the likes of Alex Ovechkin, Alexander Semin, Nicklas Backstrom, and Mike Green. 

However, it will be interesting to see how the Capitals’ goaltender, José Théodore, handles a hostile Bell Centre crowd that knows him all to well. Théodore can certainly expect chants of “Theooo, Theooo…” as soon as he steps on the ice.

It is also interesting to note that the Canadiens have not fared too badly against the Caps this season, splitting the season series 2-2. Roman Hamrlik and Jaroslav Spacek usually had the task of shutting down 50-goal man Ovechkin, and they didn’t do a bad job, limiting Ovie’s effectiveness in all four games.

The Canadiens’ offense, which has been dormant for the past month, has the potential to break out, especially with Mike Cammalleri, who has had time now to find his groove, and speedy top line of Scott Gomez, Brian Gionta, and Benoit Pouliot, which is sure to cause some problems for the Caps’ defense.

Although the Capitals are the overwhelming favorites to steamroll through this series, the Habs possess the sort of elements that could lead to quite a surprise.

Read more NHL news on BleacherReport.com

NHLHS writer Anthony Curatolo presents his “Dark Horse Theory” series that will take a look at the underdogs heading into the Stanley Cup Playoffs within the NHL.
Every year it becomes a major topic of discussion around the NHL as we approach the second season.

Though the previous two playoff years saw the obvious favorites play for [...]


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