Posts Tagged ‘Stanley Cup

The Toronto Maple Leafs switched around their line-up quite a few times this past season, switching through different forwards until they figured out who deserves a spot on the team.

Well judging by last season, I narrowed my top 12 forwards if the Leafs season started right now.

Granted the fact that this list might change in a few weeks… *cough* top six forward *cough*

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My apologies for the technical difficulties that delayed the launch of this show, but hope you enjoy it!

Jessie and Julie discuss the Stanley Cup’s travels this summer with the Chicago Blackhawks, tattoos, Ilya Kovalchuck – his decision, the contract and the implications – and finally, NHL players on Twitter and what we’ve learned about them including a plea for PaulBizNasty to return to…

The Sabres lineup has not seen many moves since the beginning of the offseason. The loss of Henrik Tallinder and Toni Lydman didn’t surprise many fans. The addition of Jordan Leopold and the expected call up of Mike Weber will replace those openings.

The Sabres have depth at forward, but the fact of whether or not they have enough scoring power remains the question. The team is fairly intact from last season and last year it was good enough to win the division and come in third in the Eastern Conference, while totaling 235 goals. However, the 235 goals is the lowest Buffalo has seen in recent years.

At the moment, the Sabres top six forwards look are Thomas Vanek, Derek Roy, Jason Pominville, Tim Connolly, Drew Stafford, and Jochen Hecht. Lindy Ruff’s teams have always relied on a good two-way forwards, solid defense, and goaltending. The Sabres leader in points last season was Derek Roy who finished with 26 goals, 43 assists, and 69 points.

The leading goal scorer was Thomas Vanek who recorded 28 goals in 71 games, which was significantly lower than his average over the three seasons prior where he averaged over 39 goals a season. Buffalo saw three players record over 60 points and Vanek just outside the 60 mark.

Does this mean that the Sabres need to acquire a better goal scorer or someone who can help Vanek get the puck more?…YES. Connolly and Roy disappeared with most of the Sabres when goals were needed. Vanek, Mike Grier, and Tyler Ennis were the best players in the playoff series against the Bruins. The answer may very well rely in the spark that Tyler Ennis can bring to the lineup if he plays on a regular basis.

All Sabres fans ooh’ed and ahh’ed at the speed and talent that Ennis brought at the end of the regular season and during the playoffs. However, Ennis was not enough to help the slumping power play during the playoffs.

Clearly, the Sabres could use a top six forward to produce more goals or could use a power play quarterback on the point. This year the primary target of teams is defense. The best talent that was available on the market were solid defensemen. That leaves the Sabres to look to acquiring a top six forward or some type of spark in goal scoring through a trade.

Names like Marc Savard, Alex Semin, Patrick Sharp, Jamie Langenbrunner, Stephen Weiss, and Brad Richards have been thrown around with rumors, but with not much support to back them up. The Sabres can make a move if they wanted to with the $8 million in cap room still remaining and some tremendous young talent in the fold. The question is if the Sabres give up a guy like Nathan Gerbe and a first round pick, is it worth what your receiving in return?

Darcy Regier has always had the state of mind to build from within, better your team with trades, and has never made a huge splash in free agency. This is not the worst way to do business in the NHL even though teams like the Flyers and Rangers choose differently. The Sabres have been successful to make the playoffs somewhat consistently, but have not won a Stanley Cup now entering their 40th season in the league.

The city is becoming restless as they want to win now. Darcy may have to give up more than he wants, but to bring in a guy who can spark your first line and get Thomas Vanek going would be ideal. The team as it is now is a playoff team without a question, but it needs some work done to it in order to become a Stanley Cup contender.

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First off, I would like to welcome Dustin Leed, he is the Flyers correspondent for thehockeyguys.net and thefourthperiod.com.
Q: You were at the Flyers development camp, who stood out the most in your eyes?
A: There were a handful of players who stood out to me at Camp, for different reasons. I would say (G) Sergei Bobrovsky, (D) Erik Gustafsson and (F) Eric Wellwood stood out to me the most as far as being impressive players. Bobrovsky has NHL-caliber skill, but needs to mature and get accustomed to the North American game. Gustafsson is a kid who led the CCHA in scoring by defensemen last year and played five games with the Phantoms and recorded two goals and five assists. He can skate exceptionally well and has a lot of Kimmo Timonen in his game. And Eric Wellwood is the total opposite of his older brother, Kyle. He has great speed, plays a very complete two-way game and has some slick moves around the net. Zac Rinaldo stood out to me at Camp because he is a crazy person. The kid tried to destroy everything in his way and I saw a lot of Steve Downie in his game. I think one of the guys I wasn’t very impressed with was Marc-Andre Bourdon. He seemed to have a slow first step, and fumbled the puck around a bit in his defensive zone, along the all and things. All of those guys stood out to me, and like I said, all for different reasons.
Q: Who was the toughest guy at the camp?
A: Like I mentioned earlier, I have to go with Rinaldo. He is the new-school tough guy that can skate really well but plays quite an in-your-face style. I think hands down he stood out as the toughest kid at camp, and I think some of his opposition in the Ontario Hockey League can agree with me.
Q: What are your thoughts on the Flyers off-season moves so far?
A: My thoughts on the Flyers moves… unexpected, but necessary. I really am a fan of the Andrej Mezsaros acquisition, because of the player he can be on the right team with the correct defensive partners around him. Paul Holmgren’s plan was to get bigger and tougher defensively and the Flyers did that. Let’s face it, if they had a third defensive pairing that could play, they would have fared a lot better in the final. I’m also a fan of Nik Zherdev, the player – not so much for his immaturity. On the ice, he brings something the Flyers have lacked for a very long time, and that is flat-out offensive skill and game-break ability. He will help Philadelphia in the shootout (third worst shootout record, all-time) and I think on a defensive oriented team like Philadelphia and possibly playing next to one of the best defensive forwards in Mike Richards will help his game. We all know about his off-ice issues and lack of defensive effort, but these Flyers are not the Columbus Blue Jackets or New York Rangers squads he was a part of. As a whole a lot of fans have a problem with seeing a player like Simon Gagne leave, and lots of  questions about specific signings but bottom-line is, I think the Flyers are better than the team that lost the Stanley Cup Final to Chicago in six games.
Q: What is the Flyers biggest remaining need?
A: I think the Flyers are a bit better offensively, there defense is much improved, so one may argue that they need goaltending help. I am not sold on Michael Leighton, yet. But I am not as down on Leighton as some other people are. With the remaining free agent goaltenders, I think the Flyers would be smart to make some demotions (Riley Cote, Matt Walker/Oskars Bartulis), maybe find a team in need of a back-up (Brian Boucher) and then with the remaining money sign one of Marty Turco or Jose Theodore.
Q: What can we expect from the Flyers this season?
A: I think you can expect a hungry team that has learned a lot about themselves from the run they went on last season. Peter Laviolette’s intense offensive system is now in place and all of the team now knows what to expect from Laviolette, and Laviolette knows what to expect from his team. Like always, there will be high expectations in Philadelphia, but I think you can expect a physical, hungry intense hockey club.
Q: Can the Flyers win the Stanley Cup this year?
A: Of course, I think the Flyers can win the Cup. Even with Leighton in net, I think they have the pieces to make it happen. Will they win the Cup is a different story. The Penguins are much improved, and have been a thorn in the side of the Flyers for a long time, the Devils are always solid, lots of teams in the Eastern Conference are set to surprise. Flyers have the pieces to win – but it seems like they always have the pieces.

This concludes my interview with Dustin Leed, enjoy.

This article and more can be found at www.MTRMedia.com

For the latest news and rumors follow me on twitter @ToddNHL

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NY Islander GM Garth Snow and owner Charles Wang want to fill some more seats in 2010-11 by securing a playoff berth for the team. What will it take to achieve that goal?

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The Blackhawks are looking to return to the position to be back-to-back as champions next season, and to do this many believe they will need a goalie that has won the big prize before.

Though many want the goalie who was between the pipes for the magical run last season—Annti Niemi—that may not come to fruition.

Another Stanley Cup-winning goaltender may be starting for the Blackhawks when the season starts in a couple of months, and that may be none other than former Hawk Nikolai Khabibulin.

It is becoming more clear by the day that the chances of Niemi returning are going steadily down. The re-signing of defensive future All-Star Niklas Hjalmarsson was a clear indication that he was the more important of the two in the hockey club’s eyes for the future.

Niemi is going to get around $4 or $5 million from a new contract and after making the decision to keep Patrick Sharp for another season it looks as if his days in Chicago are numbered.

But what then for the goalie situation for the Blackhawks?

Christobal Huet seems to be on the back burner and will be placed in Rockford if he is not traded, which would be a miracle in terms of helping the Blackhawks’ cap situation. Also, regardless of what happens it appears Corey Crawford has the most job security of any Blackhawk being penciled in as the backup.

But, who will be the starter if Niemi does in fact move on to a different team?

I feel that Nikolai Khibibulin could be the player who will return, and be in net for the Blackhawks.

He is coming back after a difficult season which included a disappointing 7-9 record, and missed most of the second half of the season with a back injury for the miserable Oilers. He also had his suspected DUI incident in February to add to the bad year.

All of this occurred to Khabibulin one season after leading the Blackhawks to the Western Conference Finals. He had his best season as a Blackhawk in 2008-2009 with a 25-8 record, and posting a brilliant 2.33 goals against average; his best since his Stanley Cup year with Tampa Bay.

Khabibulin may be 37 years old, but he may be what the Hawks’ need if Niemi were to leave as much of the veterans will be gone, and his presence could be needed. Also, it cannot be counted out that Khabibulin has a very strong relationship with Blackhawks goalie coach Stephane Waite, which could be a factor in Stan Bowman’s decision-making process.

There are other options available in the event of a Niemi departure.

Jose Theodore

Marty Turco

Steve Mason

 

All of these players could be very good in the role of starting goaltender for the Hawks as no one expected at the beginning of last season that Niemi would lead the team to the top of the mountain.

Who’s to say that if the Blackhawks were to make a trade with the Oilers to acquire Khabibulin that he cannot give the team one or two more solid years before giving the reigns to Crawford or up-and-comers Hannu Toivonen or Joe Palmer.

The Oilers want to make a deal, and moving the three years remaining on Khabibulin’s contract would be a good move for them as they begin the Taylor Hall-Era.

Regardless of the speculation of these rumors most Blackhawks fans would like to see Antti Niemi in net next season simply because so many of the names and numbers from last season are gone, and they do not want to see the most integral piece gone as well.

But, if and probably when he is not apart of the organization anymore; wouldn’t Blackhawks fans want to see someone in net that they know can do the job.

Read more NHL news on BleacherReport.com

 

With the introduction of the salary cap, teams have been forced to ice young, cheap talent in order to squeeze higher-paid veterans onto rosters. In fact, 11 first round picks from the 2008 draft saw NHL ice time last season.

Often, youngsters find themselves as depth players barely able to skate with the veterans. Once in a while, though, a teenager jumps to the league and contributes right off the hop.

Colin Wilson of the Nashville Predators looks to be one of those players.

“I know that he is going to have a real long career,” said Predators coach Barry Trotz. “He’s really strong; he’ll put up good numbers.”

Wilson, the seventh overall pick in 2008, has already shown he is capable of doing just that, winning 2008 Hockey East rookie of the year honors after posting 35 points in 37 games with the Boston University Terriers. As a sophomore, he led the team with 55 points in 43 games and was named an NCAA East All-American en route to a national championship.

“He has great instincts for the game and is a big, powerful man,” Trotz said. “He can separate people and win battles in the corners. He has to improve his quickness, though. He is such a great thinker that I don’t think it will be a problem, but that’s the only weakness I see.”

At Boston University, Wilson learned from legendary coach Jack Parker, who has won 11 conference championships and three national titles.

“Coach Parker taught me to just battle through adversity,” Wilson said. “There are many things that come up; sometimes you’re not playing well, sometimes you have an injury and he just taught me how to deal with it and how to develop my all-around game.”

Playing for a successful program at BU also helped bolster Wilson’s confidence.

“You’re on a team that generally wins,” Wilson said. “When you’re on a team with players who generally win, it lets you know what it takes for you to win, what is put into it.”

Throughout his first NHL training camp, which included a groin injury that continues to sideline him, Wilson said he often received advice from his father, Carey Wilson, who played in 552 NHL games.

“I think with training camp, having a dad who played helped,” Wilson said, “Especially with my groin injury now, he talks to me about it. He’s had it before and he tells me just to not worry about it, work hard and get back to full health.”

Despite his injury, Trotz ultimately decided to keep Wilson on the roster for the regular season.

“Whenever there was a loose puck battle, he always won it,” Trotz explained. “He’s really competitive, he wins battles, and he can make something happen out of those battles. He has a big body and we’re really happy with him right now.”

Despite injury woes hampering Wilson’s attempt to kick off the season with a splash, both he and the organization are optimistic.

“I think he may be (a franchise cornerstone) eventually,” Trotz said. “I don’t know how dynamic he will be offensively, but I know that he is going to have a real long career, because he’s sort of a Rod Brind’Amour type…you can win with a Colin Wilson-type player on a regular basis.”

As far as Wilson is concerned, it is simply a matter of getting healthy and maintaining a great work ethic.

“You have to keep working hard and be smart at the same time,” Wilson concluded. “You just have to bear down and do what it takes to make it to the game roster.”

Alan Bass is a writer for The Hockey News and THN.com. In addition to writing for Inside Hockey and Pro Hockey News, he has also worked for the Philadelphia Flyers. He is the General Manager of the Muhlenberg College hockey team as well. You can contact him at BergHockey24@gmail.com.

This article was originally featured on TheHockeyNews.com. For the original article, click here.

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The year, in my eyes, did not start on Friday, Oct. 2 in that magical 2009-10 Stanley cup runner-up season.

In fact, the Flyers year kicked off on my birthday; it was as if Paul Holmgren rewarded my 12 years of loyal service to the team that is the Philadelphia Flyers by finally signing “that guy.”

The guy who was finally supposed to lead Philly to the promised land. The day was June 10, and “that guy” was Ray Emery.

Some fans will laugh at such a statement but as Paul Holmgren knew; this guy had already proven himself to be a legitimate No. 1, already equipped with Stanley Cup experience with an 06/07 Ottawa Senators team that looked unstoppable, that is, until they met Chris Pronger’s Ducks (or Neidermeyer’s ducks for all you graybeard fans out there).

Catch 101 however, was a series of antics and a rather flamboyant lifestyle which included tattoos, gambling, cockroaches, and late-for-practice excuses.

However, all of this seemed to be cured with Emery’s short time in Siberia (despite a friendly feud with a team trainer).

At Emery’s official press conference which announced the signing, Ray looked genuinely like a young man happy to have a second chance to prove himself (much like Zherdev this year) as an NHL-caliber athlete, at a fairly reasonable $1.5 million price tag, too. 

Then on June 26, the day I wished Philly had the rights to acquire the likes of a Victor Hedman to finally give the team that anchor on the blue line that they so desperately needed, but alas, again my prayers were heard by the mighty Holmgren when he pulled the trigger on one of the biggest deals in franchise history bringing in Ryan Dingle and another guy named Pronger.

All jokes aside, indeed, the Flyers back-end was finally revamped and good-to-go, and acted as a rather pleasant complement to the core of young forwards that were on the team.

At the time, Pronger/Carle and Timonen/Coburn were arguably the best two pairings in the league (although I’m sure a certain GM in Chicago would argue otherwise).

The season then started off with a boom, Emery got his shutout, and Pronger gave the fans a little taste of what kind of impact he was going to have, obtaining the third star in a 2-0 win over Carolina.

The team then rolled, Emery had his 10th win by Nov. 12 in a 5-1 win over his old team: The Ottawa Senators. 

It was also the teams fifth win in a row: their first five game winning streak since 2008; the team, the fans, and even the city were feeling it. But then the roller coaster ride began, and fans had to buckle up for this one.

Dec. 4, the day my girlfriend dumped me, also happened to be the day head coach John Stevens short leash was let go, as was he, and The Flyers organization was forced to move in a new direction with Peter Laviolette.

Luckily for me, I’d be watching the team very closely from here on out, wondering what had happened to the great start: both with my girlfriend and with the season.

Dec. 8 then saw Philly get trounced by Washington after Carcillo took a nine minute penalty to welcome the new bench boss.

Additionally, Emery, the guy who was supposed to be “that guy,” gets put on injured reserve to fix a torn abdomen muscle, which later turned into avascular necrosis and subsequently ends Emery’s time in Philly.

Desperate, Holmgren snatches Leighton off of waivers from the last-place Hurricanes only to see him come in on Dec. 23 and rip off four straight victories before he would lose to the Bruins in the Outdoor Classic in OT.

Leighton then ripped off four more wins to ring in the new year, and just like that, the Flyers were back in the thick of things down the stretch.

However, Leighton’s regular season ended early on March 16 when he left a game against Nashville with possibly the worst injury for a goalie: the dreaded high ankle sprain, and just like that, Philly’s post-season chances seemed to be all but a dream.

However, veteran back-up Brian Boucher came in to save the season, and although it came down to the last shot, in the last period, of the last game of the year, he did it. He stopped the puck.

Just like that, the Flyers leap-frogged the Canadiens and prepared for a date with the Devils, probably the best team Philly could have hoped for in the East, avoiding both Washington and Pittsburgh.

The Boucher-led Flyers made short work of the Devils too, making Brodeur pack up for the summer after only five games, but losing both Gagne and Carter to broken feet in the process.

The second round saw them match up against the big bad Bruins: my dad’s favorite team.

For those of you who don’t know my dad, you need only know this: he is the biggest Boston Bruins fan in Canada, and he let me know it through the first three games of the series too, pounding on walls, jumping up and down…all too happy for his pooh bears. 

However, as the story goes, Richards’ devastating hit on Krejci in game 3, followed by Gagne’s come-back to score the game winner in game 4, and a goalie change back to Leighton in game 5, quickly turned this show back into a series and The Flyers then accomplished a small piece of history on May 14.

Not only had Philly come back from a 3-0 deficit in the series, but game 7 saw The Bruins jump out to a 3-0 lead thanks in large part to Lucic and the power-play.

May 14 (as 2010 saw it anyway) was Philly’s day however, and saw them score three goals to tie it, and then a fourth on a too-many-men call, which seems to burn the Boston organization every 30 years or so, but also put Philly in the ranks of the 1942 Toronto Maple Leafs, 1975 New York Islanders, and 2004 Boston Red Sox as the only teams to rally back after losing the first three games in a series.

It was also the first time since the 1991 Flames that a team surrendered three goals in a winning game seven cause.

This of course was of no matter to the Flyers, as all of the wins counted the same and subsequently counted The Flyers as heavy favorites to beat up on the surprise Canadiens- who beat out both The Caps and the flightless birds.

This series was not one for the underdog either, as Philly showed no mercy at home out scoring Montreal 9-0 in the first two games and eventually 17-7 in a quick five game winner-take-the-Prince-of-Wales-to-the-cup sort of deal.

Then of course, as if by full circle, the season ended just as it begun…not by script but at least on cue, on June 9. One year fast-forwarded from its beginning.

But the 2010-2011 year seems to possess a certain magic, that won’t completely unfold until next June, but not to worry about that, because we have not left the park just yet, and the ride is not over.

Stay tuned to this club all you bandwagon frontiers, because they may just have another run in them just yet!

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The Stanly Cup: a trophy awarded annually to the NHL champion after a best of seven Stanley Cup Championship Series.

The Stanley Cup is known as the The Cup, Lord Stanley’s Cup, The Holy Grail, or as Lord Stanley’s Mug.

The Cup has been around for more than 100 years, and has been won by 26 different teams in the Cup’s 117 years of existence.

It the prize of all prizes. The dream that every player, coach, and even fan wish they could have lying in their living rooms on top of the mantle.

Well, for those who were lucky enough to hoist Lord Stanley’s Cup, and have it lying in their living rooms for a few days, there are some very interesting stories and places that the Cup has been through.

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Ken Holland comes from a world where the TV announcers say, “He’d probably like to have that one back.”

He comes from a world where, when you make a mistake, they turn a red light on and 15,000 zealots with leather lungs might try to boo you out of the building.

It’s a world where you’re assailed with dozens of vulcanized rubber discs every night as the last line of defense. And when Holland played goalie for the Red Wings, he was often the only line of defense.

It was 25 years ago this summer when the goaltender Holland became the scout Holland. The Red Wings assigned him to Western Canada, mainly because that’s where he was born and reared.

Then it was 12 more years of working his way up in the organization, this time wearing a suit instead of the tools of ignorance.

Holland bided his time, learning how to put a hockey team together, as the apprentice of Scotty Bowman, no less.

The Red Wings won the Stanley Cup in 1997 and it was determined that Bowman would no longer hold the dual titles of coach and general manager. Holland was promoted.

Almost immediately, the naysayers were out.

Keith Gave, more right than wrong as Red Wings beat writer in those days, pegged it badly.

No way, Gave wrote, could the Red Wings stay on top with a rookie GM.

Gave fretted over the return of Bowman to strictly coaching duties.

Holland then went out and made some astute trades—several at the March deadline—and the Red Wings repeated as Cup champs, despite the loss of Vladimir Konstantinov to a tragic car accident.

It was following that Cup when Holland returned to his goaltender days and made a move that I believe he wished he could have back.

He didn’t name it specifically, but I hit Holland with the question late in the 2005-06 season.

Go back into goaltender mode, I said into the phone, and tell me what trade or signing you’d like to have back, looking back on your almost nine years as Red Wings GM.

He acknowledged there was one, for sure, that made him wince.

He wouldn’t tell me what it was, for fear of embarrassing the individual involved.

I submit that the soft goal he let in was the signing of defenseman Uwe Krupp in the summer of 1998.

Krupp was a hulking man who, on skates, could almost have looked over the glass without even stretching. He wasn’t a hockey player, he was a building on blades.

The German-born Krupp was signed from the hated Colorado Avalanche, where he had scored the Cup-winning goal for them in overtime in 1996. He wasn’t known for being extraordinarily physical, given his size, but how physical does have a building have to be? You’re still going to bounce off it.

Krupp came to the Red Wings, his wallet stuffed, and before long, his back got creaky.

Krupp dressed for only 22 games during the 1998-99 season. He wasn’t heard from the next season, or the season after that, his back too painful.

Then it was discovered that Krupp, while he was supposedly too hurt to play hockey, was participating in dog sledding.

That made the Red Wings mad.

It got ugly and into the courts. In 2001, Krupp said he was healthy and wanted to come back to the Red Wings. The Red Wings told him to stick it in his five hole.

Showing more fight in the courtroom than he had shown on and off the ice for the Red Wings before and after his injury, Krupp finally won the right to play for the Red Wings after all.

He suited up for eight games in the 2001-02 season, Bowman not thrilled with him at all.

Bowman gave Krupp a shot in the playoffs, putting him into the lineup for Games One and Two of the first round against Vancouver in Detroit. The Red Wings lost both, and Krupp was minus five.

Bowman yanked Krupp and declared privately that the tall German building would never play another game for the Red Wings. And Krupp didn’t.

Holland threw a ton of money at Uwe Krupp, when the Red Wings really didn’t need another defenseman, despite Konstantinov’s loss the year prior. The ‘98 Red Wings won the Stanley Cup, but Holland, in the pre-salary cap world of the time, couldn’t keep from tweaking.

I believe it was the signing of Krupp to which Holland referred as being his “mulligan”—Holland’s word to me in 2006.

Holland hasn’t had too many mulligans in his 13 years of managing the hockey club in Detroit.

There are those who fear he might be on the verge of another one, if he’s able to entice 40-year-old Mike Modano to play this season, and do so as a Red Wing.

The signing of Modano doesn’t look as olly-olly-oxen free as it did a couple weeks ago. Where the Red Wings looked to be Modano’s only suitors then, other teams have been mentioned lately as sniffing around the Westland native; the Minnesota Wild and San Jose Sharks are the two late entries.

There might not be enough money, when all is said and done, at Holland’s avail to sign Modano, when put up against what the Wild and/or Sharks could possibly offer.

If that’s the case, then the hand-wringers who worry about adding a 40-year-old center to the Red Wings roster need not fret.

The worry warts would have more credibility, to me, if Holland’s track record with aging veterans was pocked with cautionary tales.

Instead, it’s the polar opposite.

“We feel Mike Modano can help us,” Holland told the papers. “We feel like he has some hockey left in him.”

Those might have been the exact words Holland spoke in the late summer of 2001, when the Red Wings brought Brett Hull in when the interest in the veteran sniper was less than overwhelming.

Hull wasn’t exactly fending off teams with a hockey stick when the Red Wings called. He was 37, and even though he had just scored 39 goals for the Dallas Stars, teams were put off by Hull’s run-ins with coaches and his loud mouth.

Holland took a swing with Hull, and that swing didn’t result in the need of a mulligan.

Hull scored 30 goals and the Red Wings won another Stanley Cup.

The worry warts think the Red Wings need to get younger, and the last thing they need now is a 40-year-old Mike Modano clogging the pipeline for players like Darren Helm and Val Filppula.

I’ve written it before: they do something funny with the water that flows from the Detroit River and into Joe Louis Arena. Somewhere in the bowels of JLA lies a fountain of youth.

Dominik Hasek. Luc Robitaille. Chris Chelios. Dallas Drake. Joey Kocur.

Shall I go on? I can, you know—for quite some time.

The Red Wings are more successful than other NHL teams with aging players because those players are brought in to play specific roles; they’re not asked to do what they did when they were 10 years younger.

Compare that to the Detroit Lions, who all but embarrassed DBs Todd Lyght and Eric Davis during the Matt Millen administration because the Lions wanted Lyght and Davis to be the players of their mid-to-late 20s, not their early-to-mid 30s.

There were times when I actually felt sorry for Lyght especially, who was asked to cover, with his 33-year-old legs, receivers nearly ten years his junior. The results weren’t pretty.

That kind of nonsense doesn’t go on with the Red Wings. With the exception of Hasek, who was brought in at age 36 to be the starting goalie, the Red Wings make sure the aging guys are signed only if there are enough other pieces surrounding them to camouflage their deficiencies.

Mike Modano might not be a Red Wing, after all. The longer he takes to decide might mean the decision doesn’t bode well for the Red Wings.

Doesn’t mean it wouldn’t have worked.

Kenny Holland feels Modano can help the Red Wings.

That’s good enough for me, and ought to be good enough for everyone else.

Holland is a man of few mulligans, after all.

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Drafting a high-ranked goalie early on draft day can be a high risk/high reward situation.

On the one hand, you could end up with the next Roberto Luongo or Marc-Andre Fleury. But you could also end up with the next Brian Finley—the sixth overall pick in the 1999 draft who has appeared in only four NHL games since being drafted.

Mikko Koskinen, the top-drafted goalie (31st overall) in the 2009 draft, is just as much a mystery as any other netminder vying for a spot in the NHL. Numerous questions surround Koskinen regarding his talent, potential, and chances to succeed in North America.

Playing for the Espoo Blues’ under-18 team in 2004-05 as a 16-year-old, the Finn put up meager stats, including an .867 save percentage. That number improved slightly to .883 in his second year with the team, yet his GAA inflated to a whopping 5.07—certainly not the kind of numbers that put pro scouts in the stands.

In 2006, though, Koskinen joined Espoo’s U-20 team, posting a respectable .907 save percentage and a 2.30 goals-against average.

But it was Koskinen’s 2008-09 campaign that caught scouts’ attention.

Koskinen had finally finished growing that year—and at 6′ 7”, 195 pounds, he is a monstrosity even by today’s goaltending standards.

“Being tall and young often means that you’re not that coordinated in certain areas,” said Detroit scout Hakan Andersson. “But he finally got to the point where it started helping him.”

The goaltender was promoted to the Finnish Elite League and was solid in his new role, posting a 17-9-7 record to go with his .912 save percentage and 1.91 GAA. He even participated in a shootout against Karpat that lasted 23 shooters and almost 10 minutes before a winner was finally crowned.

“Teams were interested in him, but he was too small of a promising goaltender playing in the junior league,” said European scouting director Goran Stubb. “He was not on any international team in any tournament, so very few scouts had seen him play.”

What made Koskinen so attractive to scouts this year went beyond his stats.

“The thing I liked was the improvement from the beginning of the season,” Andersson said of Koskinen’s play. “He was just another name at the beginning of the year, but then he started playing really well and the way he came out in the Finnish League…was really impressive.”

Islanders assistant GM Ryan Jankowski said he loved “(Koskinen’s) size, athleticism, his technical game, his potential and how much he was able to accomplish last year in the Elite League.”

Koskinen uses a unique style as well.

“He is playing a very modern style,” Stubb said.  “A combination of the butterfly and standup.”

Some people thought the Islanders went off the board by taking Koskinen with the 31st overall pick, but at least one Western Conference scout disagreed.

“You go back to Steve Mason, who might’ve played nine to 12 games in his draft year, and that (pick) was off the board,” the scout said. “But then he goes from being picked in the third round to being a Calder Trophy winner.”

Those who know him say Koskinen is a laid-back, quiet person who’s constantly relaxed, yet social with friends and teammates. He works hard, is calm under pressure, and will do whatever it takes in order to succeed in the net.

“The passion he has for the game and how much of a sponge he is for wanting to learn and improve is incredible,” Jankowski said. “He’s very observant, quiet, yet very focused, but can still have some laughs with his teammates. As a goaltender, that’s so important.”

Koskinen was not even supposed to start for the Blues last season, yet stole the No. 1 job from Bernd Bruckler, who went on to sign in the Kontinental League.

“Koskinen was probably supposed to play 10-15 games this season out of 58,” said Risto Pakarinen, THN’s Finnish correspondent, “but he ended up playing 35, plus 14 in the playoffs. He’s a really big goalie, but moves super well.”

The Islanders signed Koskinen to a three-year, entry-level contract July 13. Koskinen is expected to compete for the starting job with Bridgeport of the American League come training camp.

“Only Mikko can determine (when he is NHL ready),” Jankowski said. “He did mention that the small ice is different for him with the angles and that it was an eye-opener for him…but if he can understand what the differences are he can hopefully come back and make a splash in training camp.”

Based on the way Koskinen adjusted to higher levels of play in recent years, the Islanders should not be worried about his adjustment to the North American game.

 

Alan Bass is a writer for The Hockey News and THN.com. In addition to writing for Inside Hockey and Pro Hockey News, he has also worked for the Philadelphia Flyers. He is the General Manager of the Muhlenberg College hockey team as well. You can contact him at BergHockey24@gmail.com.

This article was originally featured on TheHockeyNews.com. For the original article, click here.

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Are the Los Angeles Kings bound for the Stanley Cup?

I can remember when Wayne Gretzky was a part of the Los Angeles Kings and demanded that the management pick up a 50 goal scorer, and a solid defenseman. When Gretzky’s request wasn’t made, the spiral downwards had begun.

Wayne Gretzky wanted no other ties with the Los Angeles Kings and was traded to St. Louis Blues on February 27, 1996. The Kings received Craig Johnson, Patrice Tardif, Roman Vorpat, and a first round draft choice in 1997.

None of these players resulted in any success with the Los Angeles Kings and the future of the franchise seemed extremely gloomy.

Fellow owners Phillip Anshutz and Edward P. Roski were stuck with a tough decision. The fact that they saved the team from bankruptcy was one thing. The next decision would be even tougher.

The decision that the owners had to make was to revamp the whole team. GM Sam McMaster was fired and former winger Dave Taylor was brought on board as the new general manager.

Dave Taylor announced at a press conference that it would take some time and patience before the Los Angeles area would see a successful team.

In 1999, a lot of things transpired in the Los Angeles Kings organization. The firing of head coach Larry Robinson and the hiring of Andy Murray occurred. A lot of criticism was made over the decision that Dave Taylor had made in regards to the firing of coach Robinson.

Nonetheless, Dave Taylor moved forward and started his carving and moulding of the new Los Angeles Kings.

Moreover, in moving towards the future, Dave Taylor acquired Zigmund Palffy and Brian  Smolinski in June 1999.

The team started to look a little more up to par with these new acquisitions but the biggest move and growth was yet to come!

In 1999, Anshutz and Roski moved the Los Angeles Kings from the Great Western Forum to the newly built Staples Center. A buzz started to vibrate through the city and new ideas of a hopeful and successful NHL team was coming together. 

Although the team saw new improvement in player trades and draft choices, the team still struggled right to the end of 2005. Andy Murray  and Dave Taylor were both relieved of their positions and Dean Lombardi was hired as the new General Manager of the Los Angeles Kings. 

New things started to shape up. Getting Lombardi was an extreme asset. Everybody knows the success that Lombardi had with San Jose.

Lombardi went ahead and hired Marc Crawford. Marc Crawford became the 21st coach of the Los Angeles franchise. Marc brought a little success to the team and in 2008 was dismissed as the head coach of the Los Angeles Kings.

Now, you might say, where’s the light? In 2008, the Los Angeles Kings hired Terry Murray. Murray and the front office wasted no time in the draft taking defenseman Drew Doughty second overall. Complimented by some nice acquisitions in Michael Handzus, Brad Stuart, and John Klemm the Kings looked like a contender.

In 2009, the Los Angeles Kings finished 6th in their conference with 101 points. They fell short again in the playoffs but looked extremely sharp.

The Los Angeles Kings for the first time look like a team of the future, with a lot of prosperity and hope. I predict the Los Angeles Kings will make a run for the cup in the near future. The city of Los Angeles has a lot to be proud of. They have seen their team through the ups and downs.

This time around it looks very promising. With strong ownership and great leadership, the Kings look like a team of the future. My bold prediction: the Los Angeles Kings will top the Western Conference in 2010-11 and create havoc in the Stanley Cup playoffs next year.

 

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The offseason for any sport is often a time filled with a mixture of emotions – exciting for the teams that performed well the previous season, and a mixture of hope and fear for a team that finished at the bottom of the standings the year before.

Excitement because of the possibility of making that one acquisition or hockey move that can bring the team a Stanley Cup. Hope because most fans have that little bit of optimism left after their team finished outside the playoffs for another season. And fear, because no one ever knows the next time they will see their team challenge for the coveted silver mug.

With the draft completed and the majority of big name free agents already off the table, it is time for the Philadelphia Flyers executives to get together and address any questions remaining before the 2010-11 season gets underway. That’s not to say that trades and signings won’t still occur – maybe even a waiver claim or a buyout. But if the team hopes to repeat their Eastern Conference Championship, or even win a Stanley Cup, they must ensure there are few questions surrounding the organization.

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Original posting at http://gmbass.wordpress.com.

The offseason for any sport is often a time filled with a mixture of emotions – exciting for the teams that performed well the previous season, and a mixture of hope and fear for a team that finished at the bottom of the standings the year before.

Excitement because of the possibility of making that one acquisition or hockey move that can bring the team a Stanley Cup. Hope because most fans have that little bit of optimism left after their team finished outside the playoffs for another season. And fear, because no one ever knows the next time they will see their team challenge for the coveted silver mug.

With the draft completed and the majority of big name free agents already off the table, it is time for the Philadelphia Flyers executives to get together and address any questions remaining before the 2010-11 season gets underway. That’s not to say that trades and signings won’t still occur – maybe even a waiver claim or a buyout. But if the team hopes to repeat their Eastern Conference Championship, or even win a Stanley Cup, they must ensure there are few questions surrounding the organization.

Begin Slideshow

Underrated Nation: Craig Mactavish

On the first day of summer, 1991 on the grounds of the Canadian National Exhibition in Toronto, two of hockey’s immortals took their place in the pantheon of the sport’s heroes.

Denis Potvin was probably the most complete defense man the sport has ever known. Mike Bossy was one of the game’s best snipers. Together they helped form the core of the last sports franchise to win four straight championships and the only one to ever win 19 straight playoff series.

On that summer day and seven months later when Potvin’s number was retired in Uniondale, however, the team’s outlook was already far removed from the glory days.

Bossy lamented the “sad” situation of the Isles who had just finished in last place, suffered from weak attendance, and were about to be sold. “Bowtie” Bill Torrey, chief architect of the dynasty Islanders, got only a mixed reception when he introduced Potvin at the latter event.

What no one knew at the time was that Torrey would soon be gone and that, after a brief flirtation with glory in 1993, the team would sink into a 15 year oblivion where disastrous personnel decisions never seemed to end, playoff appearances were rare, and playoff series wins were nonexistent.

In recent years, Garth Snow has begun leading the team out of the wilderness. Under his leadership, the Isles have acquired one blue chip prospect after another and are on the verge of a spectacular turnaround.

One consistent theme in this rebuilding has been character. Undoubtedly influenced by dynasty era veteran Ken Morrow, the team has stressed that quality in draft picks and free agent acquisitions. Like its dynasty era fore bearers, the developing young Islander squad will be loaded with character.

Another and related essential of the dynasty was the strong and intense leadership of Potvin. What was the substance of that leadership? And who, if anyone, among the current Islanders is suited to provide such leadership to a new generation of Islanders?

For Potvin, it involved a singular focus on doing what it took to win and a tremendous belief in himself. Bossy and Bryan Trottier stressed his strong contagious desire to be the best and to demand it of his teammates as well. Billy Smith praised his leadership on and off the ice and his ability as team spokesman.

Who will provide that kind of leadership for the current crop of Islanders? The names of John Tavares, Kyle Okposo, and Josh Bailey have all been advanced. Of course, these things take time. Potvin was an Islander for six seasons before being named captain.

Understanding that such a choice would be premature, I will, nonetheless, make a pick of my own: newly drafted forward Nino Niederreiter.

Niederreiter possesses that same great belief in himself and his abilities that drove Potvin. It was those beliefs that impelled him to cross an ocean, overcome a language barrier, a different ice surface and game, and succeed at the highest level. It is this that makes him always want the puck and want to make the big play–as he did against Russia in the World Junior Championship series.

Niederreiter also strives to help his teammates be the very best they can be. On the ice, he is a force of nature. His naturally gregariousness pushes him to be constantly chirping and cajoling to get the best out of his teammates.

In his first on ice session of his NHL career, he was working the ice like a politician schmoozing his constituents. Whether he was chatting up Matt Martin or putting his arm around Joey Diamond (gotta love that name), Niederreiter exuded leadership.

Niederreiter has surely been told that he will have to give up his cherished uniform number (22) and has probably already met Bossy, in whose honor that number is safely ensconced in the Coliseum rafters.

He may already have chosen a new number and perhaps at some point he glanced wistfully up at the other numbers in those rafters. Was he wondering if his number would be up there someday? Or was he already trying to decide where it would go?

 

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Nothing has made me more glad to be a hockey fan than today’s “Lebron James live show.”

Sure the NBA is big and Lebron is a big player in that but you would never see an NHL player call a news conference to talk about him, why he signed and why (*sniff*) it was so tough.

Sometimes NHL TEAMS will call press conferences to meet new signings but it’s never run by the players. Hockey fans are ju…

Ilya Kovalchuk is a rare talent. There have been only a handful of players in the history of the NHL who could be counted on to score 40 or more goals every season. He is one of those few.

But I do NOT want him on my team.

My team is the New York Islanders. As you should know by now, if you have not been stranded on Gilligan’s Island, the Islanders were confirmed as one of three teams aggressively pursuing Kovy. And you should also know that the Islanders have ended that pursuit.

Before going further, I should add that press reports of the Isles offering Kovy a 10-year deal worth $100 million were wild exaggerations. The offer, apparently, was for about half that length and amount. Kovy wanted more and apparently New Jersey Devils’ General Manager Lou Lamoriello was willing to give it to him. Now Lou is trying to figure out whose salaries he is going to have to dump to make room for Kovy.

Why don’t I want Kovy for my team? Well, there are his legendary defensive lapses.

The Isles have one of the best two-way defense men in the game in Mark Streit. They have an excellent goaltender in Dwayne Roloson and several blue chip prospects coming up in the system. They also have several excellent defensive forwards. But they gave up 264 goals last season and the last thing they need is a forward who doesn’t pay attention to his own end.

The Isles have developed an excellent “room.” There is a real “band of brothers” feel to the team. Bringing in one player making between two and 10 times as much as anybody else would probably upset that chemistry.

Beware the Blackhawk syndrome. The Isles have a lot of cap room now, but in a few years they will have to give players like John Tavares, Nino Niederreiter, Kyle Okposo, Josh Bailey, and others big paydays. Giving Kovy his money could have caused the departure of some stars.

The Isles don’t really need the additional offense he offers in the long term. Between Tavares, Niederreiter, Matt Moulson, Okposo, Bailey, Kirill Kabanov, Anders Lee, and Brock Nelson, among others, the Isles will get more than enough offense to carry the team to Stanley Cup glory.

Many have offered up critiques of Kovy as greedy, gutless, and lacking in heart. These criticisms may or may not be valid, but it doesn’t matter. The reasons I have cited above are more than sufficient for me not to want Kovy on the Islanders.

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For some terribly awful reason, Dallas general manager Joe Nieuwendyk announced earlier today that the team will not be resigning long-time Star Mike Modano should he choose not to retire.

Modano, now 40, has spent all 20 years of his career within the franchise, beginning in 1988 when he became the second American-born player to be drafted first overall.

After being drafted by the Minnesota North Stars, Modano followed the team on their move to Dallas, won a Stanley Cup in 1999, and was named captain in 2003.

Since then, there has been some turmoil within the franchise, despite huge fan support since he came to the Stars. He considered leaving for Boston following his contract ending in 2005, but ended up deciding to resign. That same year he lost the captaincy of the team to Brenden Morrow, becoming an alternate.

Last year he contemplated not returning to the National Hockey League at all, but ended up coming back to the Stars for another season.

Now, the Stars have decided to completely betray their greatest and most known player in franchise history.

While it may be true that Modano hasn’t been putting up the numbers that he once did, the Stars owe him loyalty and respect, the same way that he has shown it to them.

Nieuwendyk stated that the team needed to spend the cap space on younger players, to which Modano told the Associated Press he was, “disappointed and upset,” and that he is leaning towards going to a new team and returning to the league.

Stars fans, speak up please, and let Modano know that we the fans could not thank him more for all the work he did for the franchise. Maybe give Nieuwendyk some hell, too.

Some career stats and accomplishments for Modano include: eight-time all-star, NHL record holder for goals and points by an American born-player, and franchise records for games played, goals, assists, and points (for both the regular season and playoffs, in all categories).

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If you believe the NHL’s hype machine, Bobby Orr was the only hockey player who made history before 1984 and US Hockey has its roots in The (Gretzky) Trade.

The Islander Dynasty? Trivia! The Miracle on Ice of 1980 and the Forgotten Miracle of 1960? Who cares? Oh, you had a little anniversary? That’s nice. Now go away! You bother me.

Never mind all the Islander Hall of Famers or the fact that one US Hockey star after another has stated that the Miracle on Ice inspired them to become hockey players. Or that even many Canadian hockey prospects cite Miracle as their favorite movie. The NHL has a story line and they’re sticking to it!

Enter Brock Nelson. Like the popular folk hero Kilroy, his drafting by the Islanders inconveniently reminds the NHL establishment of the Islander dynasty as well as the 1960 and ‘80 legends.

Brock’s uncle Dave Christian starred on the 1980 Miracle team and went on to play in 1,000 NHL games and score nearly 800 points. Grandfather Billy Christian and great uncle Roger Christian played on the 1960 gold medal team. The latter two founded Christian Brothers Hockey Sticks Company. Virtual US Hockey royalty!

Bloodlines are fine, you say, but what has he done? He only scored 149 points in 56 games for Warroad High School in Minnesota. Oh, and he was also a finalist in the prestigious state Mr. Hockey award and is moving on to the well-known University of North Dakota program.

Listen to this Leafs blogger drool over him prior to the draft:

He’s an adept goal scorer and a truly gifted skater with legitimate end-to-end speed on the rush. Defensively, he’s not afraid to get his nose dirty along the boards and is among the best faceoff men in this entire draft class. Brock’s skill set is still raw, but the combination of size, high end skill and character is extremely rare and he could very well be a special NHL talent.

And if a Leafs blogger said it, you know it must be true!

Seriously though, both Brock and fellow Minnesotan, Islander power forward prospect Anders Lee, are 6′3″ and over 200 pounds. Both should fill out to 220 pounds-plus. Put them on a line with bruising Bobby Nystrom-like forward Matt Martin and Sather may need one or two more Dylan McIlraths to keep them from crashing Henrik the Ice Girl bully’s crease!

The Islanders and the heir of US Hockey’s miracle teams will soon be poised to dominate the NHL again. And as Kyle Okposo accepts the Stanley Cup from Commissioner Bettman, he should smirk and impishly ask, “Wayne who?”

 

 

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