Monday, October 31, 2005

Calder Watch: October Recap

In a season that some are speculating may have the most talented crop of rookies the League has ever seen, and with a big dog in the fight for the Calder Trophy, The Rink will keep monthly tabs on the front runners for the coveted award. For now, though, this post is just a front for the "Ovechkin is better than Crosby" argument.

Sure Henrik Lunqvist, Jason LaBarbera and Ryan Miller are off to great starts. Ditto Dion Phaneuf and Fedor Tyutin. But maybe we'll take a look at goaltenders and d-men next month, when hot streaks have ended and the grind of the season has worn players down a bit. For now, though, let's look at the last two #1 overall picks and what they've been able to accomplish through 11 games (and nearly identical ice time per game):
Are there any important stats that we're missing on either side of the argument? Or, put another way, is there any way to look at the Calder race thus far and not see El Ocho ahead of Sid the Kid? And yet at least one (not surprisingly Canadian) news outlet still has Crosby leading the pack. It seems that if AO outscores Crosby, that won't be enough. If he plays better defense and leads his team to more wins, that won't be enough. One wonders what Sasha is going to have to do to win the hearts and minds of Canadian journalists.

* If you subtract from each player's total the number of secondary assists, Crosby has 9 assists and Ovechkin has 3, evening the players' point totals at 11. Why do this? Because rarely is a secondary assist as directly critical to a goal as the primary assist or the goal itself and thus, should be counted separately. But that's another post altogether.

Monday Roundup: Welcome To Woe-shington

Apparently it's all hands on deck at the two major local papers as everyone tries to figure out just how the Redskins got pasted so badly yesterday and, more importantly, what that loss tells us about the rest of the year for the burgandy and gold. In other words no hockey coverage, and with only two NHL games last night, that means today's is a quick roundup.

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Saturday, October 29, 2005

Saturday Roundup/Lightning 4, Caps 2

[Boxscore - Recap]

I didn't see last night's game (I was busy being bored by "Good Night, And Good Luck"), but plan on watching it on TiVo after I post this. By all accounts, the Caps played a very good road game, similar to Wednesday night's game in Rochester. However, the result wasn't the same. Another two goal night for Alex Ovechkin (in case you needed another opinion on the matter, Vinny Lecavalier agrees that "He's the real deal.") and another solid night for Olie Kolzig wasted by a couple of game-changing lapses, according to today's WaPo, which also notes injuries to forwards Matt Bradley and Dainius Zubrus. Next up for the Caps is Philadelphia on Thursday.

Oh, and Ovechkin is "making a run" at the Calder Trophy. FYI.

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Friday, October 28, 2005

Friday Roundup/Gamenight: Caps @ Lightning

[Gameday Preview]

The Caps head to Tampa for what was supposed to be the first of two games in two nights in the Sunshine State, but Hurricane Wilma had other plans, leaving the Caps with no plans for Saturday night (I hear A History of Violence is very good, if they're looking for suggestions). So it's a quick one-and-done down in F.L.A. after a visit to the St. Pete Times Forum to take on the defending Cup Champs, who you'll recall the Caps beat in a shootout nearly two weeks ago.

The Caps welcome Brendan Witt back to the lineup tonight after his excused absence to tend to family affairs in South Florida in the wake of Wilma. Witt missed the team's best game of the year against Buffalo on Wednesday and I'm sure it's just a coincidence. The WTimes covers the same ground, but adds that the Caps have mercifully demoted Nolan Yonkman to Hershey and that Bryan Muir missed practice with an undisclosed injury yesterday. Gee, do you think it might be the groin that's kept him out much of the year so far?

The DCist has an interview with Alex Ovechkin up that's worth a quick glance.

Gametime tonight is 7:30. And don't forget to check out Boltsmag.com for the other side's pre- and post-game analysis.

In other news around the League:
  • It took facing a team's 6th string goalie and the help of 11 power plays, but the Pittsburgh Penguins are finally in the win column with a win over the Thrashers. Atlanta blew a 4-0 lead en route to its most embarassing loss of a season already chock-full of embarassing losses. It looks like this headline was a little off.
  • Last night's Habs/Sens game featured two of the best plays of this young season and both happened in the last few minutes of the match. First, Jose Theodore's desperation stop on Chris Neil late in regulation and then Jason Spezza's overtime goal on as pretty a rush and deke as you'll ever see. Make sure you go here and watch the highlights.
  • Congrats to Curtis Joseph on his 400th career win.
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Thursday, October 27, 2005

Since He Hasn't Beaten A Goalie in Three Weeks...

According to TSN.ca:
The Toronto Star reports that Montreal police were called to Sheldon Souray's apartment Sunday after receiving a 911 call for an altercation between the Canadiens defenceman and wife Angelica Bridges.
The Rink, of course, would never make light of domestic violence and hesitates to report speculation about a player's potential marital issues, but Souray's wife is so attractive the story warrants attention. Please forgive our reversion to adolescence.

Thursday Roundup/Caps 3, Sabres 2

[Boxscore - Recap - Postgame Notebook - Buffalo News Recap]

The Caps entered Wednesday night's game with Buffalo (in Rochester) allowing the most shots on goal per game (40.6) in the NHL. They'd been outshot in each of the team's nine games so far this season and were only taking 23.6 shots per game themselves, also worst in the League. In addition, the Caps were the NHL's most penalized team and its second worst penalty killers and had yet to win a road game this year. Add to those bleak statistics the facts that on Wednesday morning Buffalo was leading the League in shots per game at better than 35 and was the least penalized team in the League and it certainly looked like a recipe for disaster for D.C.

But on any given Wednesday in the NHL any team can beat any team. That's why they play the games. Even a blind squirrel finds a nut every once in a while. Pick your cliche - the bottom line is that the Caps left Rochester with their first road win of the year, outshooting the Sabres 28-17 and, more importantly, outscoring them 3-2. For perhaps the first time this year, the Caps put together 60 solid minutes in which they out-worked, out-hustled and out-skated an opponent that from all appearances thought that all it had to do for two standings points against Washington was to show up.

The game wasn't even really as close as the score, as the Caps failed to convert several scoring opportunities on odd-man rushes and Buffalo's second goal was the result of a lucky bounce that set up a pretty shot. Next up for the Caps is a trip to Tampa for a Friday night engagement with the defending Cup champs, who will be looking to avenge an earlier loss at MCI Center.

In other Caps news, the team has filed a complaint in District Court against Alexander Semin and others, presumably alleging breach of contract and seeking damages. I would love to see the complaint, so if anyone has a link to it, please share.

Elsewhere around the NHL:
  • Devils' Franchise Martin Brodeur left last night's loss with an apparent knee injury. Obviously, if the injury is anything serious, the already-struggling Devs will be in a world of trouble. Update: Brodeur is now listed as day-to-day.
  • The Canucks signed former Caps blueliner Jason Doig, who had been with them through training camp. I can't imagine that Doig will have any value to an NHL team with referees enforcing the rules as rigidly as they have been thus far this season, but perhaps we'll see.
  • Todd Bertuzzi and the Canucks visits Colorado Thursday night for the first time since "the incident." Don't expect much to happen outside of a hard-fought hockey game.
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Wednesday, October 26, 2005

Eric Lindros: Hall of Famer

With the 2005 NHL Hall of Fame induction ceremony right around the corner, it got me to thinking about current players whose names might one day grace those hallowed walls (yes, I know the HoF is in a shopping mall, but I'm trying to set the scene here). One current player in particular might be "on the bubble," so to speak, but I'm here to end the suspense: when his playing career comes to an end, Eric Lindros's next stop will be enshrinement in the Hockey Hall of Fame. This may come as a surprise to many people who consider the E-Train's professional hockey life to have been a major disappointment. "So much potential wasted," they say. "Too bad he couldn't stay healthy." While Lindros, apparently so overwhelmed by the news of this yet-to-be-bestowed honor that he had to take a nap (pictured), could have accomplished more if he'd just skated with his head up, he undoubtedly has HoF credentials, especially when compared to a certain member of the HoF class of 2005, one Cameron Michael Neely. A quick look at some of the numbers makes this clear:
  • Games played: Neely (726 in 13 seasons), Lindros (687 in 11 seasons)
  • Goals-Assists-Points: Lindros (363-464-827), Neely (395-299-694)
  • Awards: Lindros (Hart Trophy, Pearson Award), Neely (Masterson Trophy)
  • NHL All-Star Teams: Neely (4 second team), Lindros (1 first team, 1 second team)
  • All-Star games: Lindros (7), Neely (5)
  • Stanley Cup Finals appearances/wins: Neely (2/0), Lindros (1/0)
  • Playoff appearances: Neely (9 in 13 seasons), Lindros (5 in 11 seasons)
  • International play: Lindros (Olympic gold, silver), Neely (nothing)
Of course, Lindros is still playing and adding to these totals on a knightley, err, nightly basis. And don't forget to factor in that scoring during Neely's career was significantly higher (7.48 goals per game in 1988-89, for example) than during Lindros's (only 5.27 goals per game in 1997-98). So Lindros scored much more in a lower-scoring era, has taken home more hardware and actually has been more durable than Sea Bass. Neely's a Hall of Famer. Is there any reason Lindros won't be?

Wednesday Roundup/Gamenight: Caps @ Sabres

[Gameday Preview]

The Caps travel to Rochester for tonight's tilt against über-rookies Tomas Vanek, Ryan Miller and the Buffalo Sabres. Things have gotten so bad on the Washington blueline that Caps forward Ben Clymer is now Caps defenseman Ben Clymer, Bryan Muir is returning to the lineup and will see time on the top power play unit, and Nolan Yonkman is back from Hershey. As bleak as all that sounds, I have a feeling we haven't even come close to hitting rock bottom yet.

In other Caps news, in an effort to jump start a tepid offense, the team recalled forward Brooks Laich, who had been lighting up the AHL (6 goals, 10 points in 7 games), and sent down wing Boyd Gordon (0 points, -3 in 9 games), who hasn't lit up anything since juniors. Laich could see time on the top line with Alex Ovechkin and Dainius Zubrus. Also, the team's Saturday game at Florida has been postponed due to damage to the arena caused by Hurricane Wilma (either that or the Panthers are scared of Hurricane Alex).

Elsewhere around the League:
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Tuesday, October 25, 2005

Tuesday Roundup: Losing? Blame The Refs

Another slow day in Capville. The WaPo has an article on how bad the special teams have been, and includes an observation from Glen Hanlon that "our guys don't get the same respect [from referees] as a 15-year veteran." Not that I disagree, but it's never a good thing when the coach starts blaming the refs.

The WTimes has a piece on how the Caps' next destination, Rochester, holds a special place in Olie Kolzig's heart. Awww. Perhaps most noteworthy is a throw-away note at the end of the article that Dainius Zubrus missed practice yesterday with a "lower body injury." Uh oh.

In other NHL news:
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Monday, October 24, 2005

Monday Roundup: The Greg Louganis Award?

Another long lay-off between games for the Caps means vacation time for our two primary local scribes, neither of whom has anything new to say about the team today. I can't say that I blame them, as this team is becoming a broken record of too many shots allowed, too many penalties and too little offense. More than the measurable stats, though, the Caps seem to be a fundamentally unsound team. Their passing is not crisp. Their skating, with few exceptions, is below average. Their clears and dump-ins are terrible. I'm not sure what excuse I can offer for these shortcomings (a lack of talent comes to mind), but it certainly needs to change.

The Caps next travel to Rochester (yes, Ra-cha-cha) to take on the Sabres Wednesday night, where they will try yet again to get that elusive first road victory of the season.

In other NHL news:
  • TSN.ca has a new feature, their 2005-06 Rookie Watch, in which they track the League's best freshmen. Not surprisingly considering the source, the guy with one-third of the goals, a much worse plus-minus rating and three fewer team wins (i.e. zero) than Alex Ovechkin is currently in first place. Haters.
  • TSN.ca also has an article on NHLers "mastering the art of inducing fouls." I agree with the gist of the article and feel that the League should crack down on diving as much as they do any other penalty. The last thing the NHL needs is more players combining soccer's histrionic acting with Duke basketball's goofy-white-guy-flop (though last time I checked, soccer and Duke hoops were both wildly successful and popular).
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Sunday, October 23, 2005

Sunday Roundup/Tequila 1, JP 0

Extra! Extra! Read all about it (here and here)! Caps get badly outshot, generate no offense and lose.

Daily Awards
  • Hart: Some guy (handful of points, helped his team win)
  • Ross: That same guy (handful of points)
  • Norris: A different guy (some points, good +/-)
  • Vezina: Some Czech guy (W, bunch of saves on a bunch of shots against)
  • Richard: Some dude (hat trick)
  • Calder: Some younger guy

Saturday, October 22, 2005

Saturday Roundup/Gamenight: 'Canes (3-2-1) @ Caps (3-5-0)

[WashingtonCaps.com Preview - NHL.com Preview]

The Caps play host to the Carolina Hurricanes tonight (7:00, MCI Center), a team that pounded them 7-2 down in Raleigh last week. In that game, Eric Staal had a goal and three assists. Staal's 11 points have him tied for second in the League in scoring, so it should be no great mystery who the Caps have to shutdown, and playing at home they should have every opportunity to do just that.

This morning's WaPo has a good read on Alex Ovechkin's quick start, including this quote that should send chills down the spines of NHL goaltenders:
Asked about his recent scoring tear, Ovechkin said: "I can score more."

So what's holding him back?

He pointed at his temple: "I don't know. It's me, the reason."

This kid's attitude is simply amazing, especially in light of some of the other would-be saviors this organization has banked on before. At the risk of stating the obvious, as long as the losing doesn't wear on him too much, the sky's the limit.

Today's WTimes reflects further on Thursday night's middle-period debacle.

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Friday, October 21, 2005

Friday Roundup/Panthers 3, Capitals 2

[Boxscore - Recap]

Stop me if you've heard this one before - the Caps got badly outshot, but Olie Kolzig kept them in the game. Unfortunately they didn't get any offense from anyone other than Alex Ovechkin and, as a result, they lost. The Caps are making life too easy for recap writers. In Miami last night, Kolzig faced a season-high 49 shots against, including a whopping 28 in the second period (which is more shots than five different NHL goalies faced in 60 or more minutes Thursday night), and allowed only two power play goals and a shortie (on an absolutely miserable play by Jamie Heward). Olie even added a helper on Ovechkin's second goal, but yet again one bad period doomed the Caps (this time it was a second period that looked like one long Florida power play, despite the Panthers only being a man to the good for 25 seconds) and the team fell, 3-2.

In case you're keeping track, the Caps have yet to win a road game (0-3-0). Heward's play ("I just didn't make a good play." Understatement of the season so far.) and Nolan Yonkman's pathetic excuse for defense (hey, Tiny - hold on to your stick, not the opponent) were noticably awful, and I am of the mind that Kolzig should have stopped goal #3, but am willing to cut him a little slack since it came during the second period onslaught. As for positives, Ovechkin's two goals on 10 shots and plus-1 rating, Brian Willsie's plus-2, Steve Eminger's assist and plus-1 rating and Yonkman only skating four shifts (though he committed a penalty that led to a goal on half of those). Next up for the Caps, home to Carolina on Saturday night.

The WaPo recaps the game here, the WTimes here (memo to editors: it's "Olie," not "Ollie" - probably Rink pet peeve #1). On another media note, have you ever noticed how often Craig Laughlin calls Joe Beninati "Partner" during a broadcast? Pay attention to it next time. It's quite aggravating.

In other NHL news:
  • The Thrashers got killed again, gooned it up again, and have now been outscored 24-2 in their five games against teams that don't make their home in our nation's capital. While it boggles the mind how this team can have so much trouble generating any offense, more troubling to the hockey world is Bob Hartley's stunning lack of sportsmanship, tonight manifesting itself in the form of an Eric Boulton cheap shot on Tampa blueliner Paul Ranger. NHL disciplinarian Colin Campbell ought to sit Hartley down and put an end to it now before someone gets seriously hurt. By the way, Hartley is awfully tough for a guy who never played a minute in the NHL.
  • Speaking of ugly, the Pens lost for a change, running their start-of-season winless streak to seven games. I'm beginning to fear that they're going to be bad enough to get in and rig another lottery. So at some point I'm going to have to start rooting for them to win games, but that is still a ways off. For now, let's savor each embarassing defeat, shall we?
  • Brian Leetch has now been on the ice for the Bruins' last six goals against. He's still getting it done offensively (4 points in 8 games), but if this continues, the Bruins may have some tough decisions to make.
  • The classic line of the night belongs to Jaromir Jagr: 3 goals, minus-1, team loss. At least he's not ashamed to admit that he's not a leader and cares only about individual statistics.
  • Question: why is it that every NHL arena has "Thank You Fans" stenciled on the ice, but at the Air Canada Center they have "Thank You Leafs Fans"? Maybe they should have that at one end of the rink and "Screw The Rest Of You" at the other end.
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Thursday, October 20, 2005

Thursday Roundup/Gamenight: Caps @ Panthers

[Gameday Preview]

Finally, after three days rest, the Caps get to play again, heading down to Sunrise for a pre-Wilma date with the Cats. Three days may not seem like a lot, but after that great win against Tampa, I'm sure Glen Hanlon and the boys wouldn't have minded going right back out there and playing a doubleheader. Instead they got half a week off. At this point I expect the Caps to be only slightly less rusty than the White Sox bullpen. Goodbye momentum, hello Roberto Luongo.

Today's WaPo has a piece on "whole package" Dainius Zubrus, part slick offensive force, part shut-down defender, part mentor, part injury-prone disappointment (ok, the article doesn't mention that last one). The WTimes states that Alexander Semin is now once again likely to stay in Russia. Keep reading the Times next week: Dave Fay will have articles claiming Semin to be en route to D.C., in a gulag in Siberia, spotted at MCCXXIII, and finally enshrined in Lenin's tomb.

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Wednesday, October 19, 2005

Tkachuk's Secret Injury?

Hockey teams are notorious for being less than forthcoming with details of player injuries. The media is lucky if they get something as specific as "upper body injury," especially come playoff time. Now the St. Louis Blues are being only slightly less cryptic with one of their latest player injuries.

According to The Sports Network, "The Blues will likely be without ... Keith Tkachuk (ribs) tonight." The team claims that Tkachuk is recovering from catching the butt-end of his stick in his midsection Saturday night, but when I read "Keith Tkachuk" and "ribs," one thought comes to mind.

We may never know the truth behind KT's latest pains, but if he misses any time with "baby back spasms," we'll have to launch a full investigation.

Wednesday Roundup: Turn Your Head And Coffey

For the fifth consecutive day, I have no Caps loss to recap and no impending doom to preview. Look for both to return later in the week.

Today's WaPo discusses the Caps' desire to cut down on the number of shots they're allowing. Partner that with allowing fewer goals and scoring more and the team may be on to something. The WTimes notes that shootouts are fan-friendly. Tomorrow, look for Dave Fay's article on how ice is cold.

Elswehere around the League:
  • Jeremy Roenick's mouth is running again, and this time he's calling out Caps fans. Quoth JR, ""When we watch hockey games and see 8,000 fans in [Washington] D.C., you cringe as a player. Those cities that aren't pulling their weight in terms of drawing fans and revenue are hurting everybody as a whole, not just that city." Roenick is referring to the escrow provision of the CBA and makes a couple of valid points, but, if I recall correctly, his side lost in the labor dispute, hence this unfavorable provision. And what did he expect after a prolonged work stoppage? An immediate increase in ticket sales? Major League Baseball saw attendance drop by around 25% after its last work stoppage. By contrast, the Caps, who were drawing nearly 15,000 fans per game before the lockout, are actually averaging 12,100 fans per game so far this season (not the 8,000 Roenick cites, but what's 50% between friends?). In other words, the Caps are drawing at better than 80% of their pre-lockout attendance. That is more than pulling our weight, JR, in covering for your union's disregard for and abandonment of the fans.
  • On to more pleasant news, the Edmonton Oilers' retiring of Paul Coffey's jersey last night in a pre-game ceremony. Take a look at Coffey's career numbers. Absolutely staggering. In 1985-86 he had 48 goals and 138 points. By contrast, the entire 2003-04 Oiler defense had 44 goals and 149 points. There's plenty of good Coffey coverage out there, most of it reachable through The Battle of Alberta, so head over there for more.
  • Speaking of Hall of Fame defensemen, Brian Leetch picked up his 1,000th career point on an assist last night. Congrats to him.
  • The Coyotes have traded Jeff Taffe to the Rangers for Jamie Lundmark. After acquiring the lesser Hossas and Fedorovs, I'm wondering if Taffe has an older, more talented brother of whom I'm not aware.
  • Finally, the Habs paid tribute to some baseball team that I'd never heard of last night.
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Tuesday, October 18, 2005

Sidney Who?













Their headline, not mine.

NHL.com also has a nice profile on El Ocho, currently running on its front page.

Better late than never, eh mainstream hockey media?

Update: It must be Caps day in the MHM as TSN.ca highlights Olie Kolzig's often-heroic early season efforts.

Tuesday Roundup: LalalalalalalalalalalaFontaine

No game to recap or preview and a light schedule in the League means an easy morning at the Rink. The WaPo has a nice piece on Steve "Slim Shady" Emineminger, the WTimes has an article on Olie Kolzig's ridiculously heavy workload. That's about it locally.

In other news around the League:
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Monday, October 17, 2005

Cap Killers: The Enemies Within

I didn't want to write a negative column after such an uplifting win last night, but a couple of things were on my mind (and now on your screen), so here's a quick look at some guys who aren't pulling their weight in the early goings for the Caps:
  • Brian Sutherby. Suts is billed as a solid two-way center and future leader, but through seven games he has a minus-4 rating, no points, has taken only three shots on goal and has been in the penalty box for three of the 14 power play goals the Caps have allowed. By comparison, four teams have allowed three or fewer power play goals so far this year.
  • Mathieu Biron. It didn't take long for this guy to make the s**tlist, did it? Biron has a minus-5 rating, has taken two penalties that have lead to opposition power play goals, and has already been healthy-scratched once. Unacceptably bad.
  • Jeff Friesen and Andrew Cassels. These two supposedly skilled veteran leaders, have combined for one goal and four assists in 14 man-games. I'll cut the two (and linemate Petr Sykora) a little slack as they've been skating together for all of two weeks, but they need to step it up, especially on the power play.
  • Ben Clymer, Matt Pettinger, Boyd Gordon. Obviously this trio is not looked to to score often, but in 17 man-games none of them has registered a point and the three are a combined minus-10. Come on, boys. We need something, anything out of you.
Now, to end with the positive: even with a brutal blueline, horrid penalty killing (24th in the League), ill-timed and all-too-frequent penalties (most PIMs in the League), shaky-at-times goaltending and an ice-cold power play (scoreless in the past three games), the Caps are just one game under .500, Steve Eminger is starting to emerge and Alex Ovechkin is undeniably the real deal. Oh, and the Caps' three wins are three more than a certain western Pennsylvania team has. Which is nice.

Monday Roundup/Caps 3, Lightning 2 (SO)

[Boxscore - Recap - Postgame Notebook]

I don't know how many of the paid attendance of 10,002 were still there to see the shooutout last night (or how many even showed up, for that matter), but I do know that all but a very few were on their feet cheering from the moment the ice was cleared after overtime until well after Olie Kolzig stuffed Brad Richards to seal the Caps' third win (all by that same 3-2 score) of the year. Traditionalists be damned, that was exciting and, more importantly, the crowd loved it. From Alexander Ovechkin's wizardy with the puck (thanks, Alexander Ovechkin Videos Site) to Petr Sykora's shot accuracy to Kolzig's two huge stops on the League's reigning scoring champ and playoff MVP, the half-full building was truly electric for five minutes. Call it gimmicky, call it unfair, one thing you cannot call a shootout is dull. Would anyone not wearing blue, black and white really have rather gone home after a 2-2 tie last night?

As for the first 65 minutes of the game, the penalty killing was very good (7-for-8), the power play was again very bad (0-for-3 and 0-for-14 over the team's last three games), and Kolzig (38 saves, including a great save on a 2-on-1 in OT), Dainius Zubrus (G, A) and Steve Eminger (2A, +2) had standout games.

The WaPo recaps the game here ("I feel a little pressure," Ovechkin said. "I must score this penalty shot. And I score."), the WTimes here. Next up for the Caps, Thursday night at Florida.

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Sunday, October 16, 2005

Sunday Roundup/Gamenight: Lightning @ Caps

[Gameday Preview]

Welcome to an abbreviated "Sunday Morning Coming Down" edition of the Roundup (last call at the Rink was a bit late last night).

The local beat writers are back to work covering the Caps today. The WaPo has an article about the Caps' third period meltdowns (the same topic, coincidentally, that I touched on Saturday). The WTimes discusses the Caps veteran leaders and their, um, leadership.

Tonight the Caps welcome the defending Cup champs to the MCI Center (gametime 6:00). Andrew Cassels (ankle) is expected to play, Bryan Muir (groin/lack of talent) is not.

Elsewhere around the League:
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Saturday, October 15, 2005

Breaking News: Hull To Announce Retirement Tonight

According to the Arizona Republic, Brett Hull will announce his retirement tonight, effective immediately.

Saturday Roundup: We've Seen Atlanta Dish It Out, But Can They Take It?

No local coverage of the Caps today. A week-and-a-half in and our locals scribes are already out of things to say about this team? Not good. I don't have much to offer either, but did dig out the following note:

Alexander Ovechkin may be on the verge of history. If he registers a point against Tampa Sunday night, he'll tie Alexandre Daigle at seven for the most consecutive games with a point by a No. 1 overall pick to start a career. Of course, there's one thing Daigle has done that El Ocho likely never will.

Can't get enough AO? Head over to this new site chock full o' great video clips of #8.

In other news around the League:
  • Kudos to the Thrashers for scoring a goal against a team other than the Caps and for handling themselves with such class in their losing effort. Caps fans can take pride in the fact that even in a blowout loss, Glen Hanlon and his team are above the gutless garbage that Bob Hartley's squad displayed Friday night.
  • With his goal against Atlanta, Eric Lindros moved into 100th place all-time in goals scored. Who did he bump from the top 100? None other than Bobby Clarke. Sweet, sweet irony.
  • Richard Park skated on the Naslund-Morrison line in Vancouver's win over Minny and racked up three points. Quick! To your hockey pool's free agent list!
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Friday, October 14, 2005

Rink Trivia

It's trivia time at the Rink. We'll start with an easy one:

1) Q: How many wins do the Pittsburgh Penguins have through five games?

Hint

Answer

2) Q: What $3.5 million Pens defenseman entered Friday tied for 597th in the NHL in plus/minus and was a minus-1 and in the penalty box when the Flyers scored the game winning goal on Friday night?

Hint

Answer

Friday Roundup/Islanders 5, Capitals 3

[Boxscore - Recap]

Am I supposed to be happy that the Caps "only" lost 5-3 (they probably covered the spread)? Should I feel good that they held a decent team under six goals? Is it encouraging that they scored three times without the help of the other team putting one in their own net? Well, I'm not, I don't and who cares?

There are a few positives to take away from last night's tilt with the Isles: the penalty kill was 7-for-7, Matt Bradley scored twice, Steve Eminger had his first career multiple-point game, Brendan Witt was +3 and Brent Johnson made 44 saves in his Caps debut. But a slow start again doomed the Caps - how can you expect to win a game when you're down a field goal less than eight-and-a-half minutes in?

The slow start was coupled with a slow finish as once again the Caps found themselves in a close game headed into the third period, only to crumble in the game's final stanza. So far this season, the Caps have been outscored 14-3 in the third period in six games. That's not supposed to happen to a young team. The third period should be the time when their young legs really take it to the opposition. Instead, they've allowed twice as many third period goals as any other team in the League and scored fewer than any other team that has played as many games. For whatever reason, the Caps have had trouble early and late in games and often early in periods. "It's concentrating for the full 60 minutes. We aren't doing that," said Eminger. I hate to say it because I like Glen Hanlon, but that's coaching, pure and simple. Do you think Scotty Bowman's teams ever lacked focus in the third period of games? Do you think Mike Keenan's teams have ever been quintupled up at crunch time?

Now I think Hanlon brings a lot to the table that a guy like Keenan does not (and I'm certainly not saying that Keenan would be a better coach for this team). But having your team prepared mentally is as much a coach's duty as having the team prepared physically is, and the numbers would seem to indicate that Hanlon's lacking in this facet of the game so far. The team can hold all the players-only meetings it wants to, but change has to come from behind the bench first and foremost. Crack the whip, Carrot - it's your job at stake.

The WaPo's coverage is here, the WTimes' is here. On to the positive...

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Thursday, October 13, 2005

If It's Contempt You Want, You've Got It

One of the "new" NHL's major initiatives is the League's scheduling emphasis on intra-divisional rivalries. Teams now play each of the teams within their division eight times per season, each out-of-division/in-conference team four times and each of the teams in two of the other conference's three divisions once. Familiarity breeds contempt, the saying goes, but in this case, the contempt bred may very well be that of the fans towards the NHL scheduling powers that be.

Sure, there will be plenty of great Edmonton/Calgary battles. But while Oilers fans are sitting through eight meetings with the Minnesota Wild, they'll have to wait until next year to see Capitals rookie Alexander Ovechkin and even then it may only be on television. The Senators and Leafs have thrilled fans twice already this year, but by the seventh or eighth time Ottawa is facing off against Buffalo, won't the fans be wishing they had a chance to see if their team could handle Rick Nash (don't despair, Sens fans - you'll get a visit from Tyson Nash in January). Sorry San Jose, Anaheim, Phoenix, Dallas and L.A. - no Sidney Crosby for you this year.

The real reason for the new schedule is, of course, money. The owners want to pay as little in travel expenses as possible. The Rangers have fairly intense rivalries going with the Devils, Islanders and Flyers, but it doesn't hurt that all three arenas are located within 100 miles of Madison Square Garden. Thirty-percent of Rangers road games, then, are a bus trip away and the team only leaves the eastern time zone twice - not a bad way to cut costs.

As the League contorts itself in an effort to make it all work, scheduling anomalies abound. For example, in one stretch from March 25 through April 7, the Capitals will play Carolina five times over the course of seven games, including back-to-back road games with three off-days in between. Maybe by then the 'Canes will be fighting for home-ice advantage in the playoffs and the Caps will be jockeying for position in the Phil Kessel sweepstakes, but regardless of what's on the line, it will be an awfully hard ticket to sell.

Aside from the scheduling glitches, the new format will have a real impact in the standings as well (we can call this the 2005 Houston Astros/NL East Effect). While Buffalo fights for a playoff spot playing the likes of Ottawa, Boston, Toronto and Montreal, Florida (a team of arguably similar overall talent) will be playing Tampa, Atlanta, Carolina and Washington. Who has the easier road to the postseason? Teams in better divisions will be beating each other up while teams with weaker division foes will pick up easy standings points, all while fighting for the same playoff spots.

The NHL knows better. They know that great rivalries are not born of teams playing each other over and over again during the regular season. Great rivalries are the product of (usually multiple) playoff battles. Bruins-Habs, Wings-Avs, Sens-Leafs and on down the line are great rivalries because of playoff histories, not because of Tuesday night games in February.

The new format is particularly difficult for the Capitals, who were already disadvantaged when they were re-aligned out of a division with their traditional Patrick Division rivals and into NHL's NASCAR division. Years of built-up hatred for the Rangers (remember John Druce's run in 1990?), Islanders (Pat LaFontaine's goal at 8:47 of the fourth overtime in Game 7 of the 1987 Patrick Division Finals), Flyers (Dale Hunter's OT goal in Game 7 of the 1988 Patrick Division Semis) and Penguins (I refuse to recount this one) have been replaced by eight games a year with a team from Miami. It's no wonder the team has trouble selling tickets.

If the NHL was serious about building rivalries, it would go back to something similar to the old playoff format. The League should drop two divisions to look something like this:
  • Eastern Conference, Northern Division: BOS, BUF, CLM, MTL, OTT, PHI, PIT, TOR
  • Eastern Conference, Atlantic Division: ATL, CAR, FLA, NJD, NYI, NYR, TBL, WSH
  • Western Conference, Central Division: CHI, COL, DAL, DET, MIN, NSH, STL
  • Western Conference, Pacific Division: ANA, CGY, EDM, LAK, PHX, SJS, VAN
Note that Columbus switches conferences - they have no playoff history anyway, so it's an easy move. Eastern Conference teams would play their division rivals six times each, other intra-conference teams three times each and each team from the other conference once (total 80 games). Western Conference teams would play their division rivals six times each, other intra-conference teams four times each and each team from the other conference once (total 80 games). The important element of this format, however, is a return to divisional matchups in the playoffs, having the top four teams in each division make the playoffs and then battle it out within the division until the division winners matched up in the Conference Finals, and then, of course, on to the Finals.

How would this have played out in 2003-04? Based on the standings (a very rough approximation given that the teams didn't play this proposed schedule), the Eastern Conference first round series would have been Boston-Philly, Toronto-Ottawa, Tampa-Atlanta and New Jersey-New York Islanders. In the Western Conference it would have been Detroit-St. Louis, Colorado-Dallas, San Jose-Edmonton and Vancouver-Calgary. Sorry Montreal and Nashville - you don't get to cruise into the playoffs solely because other divisions may be weak (which, of course, has the added bonus of making the more prevalent intra-divisional regular season games more important. See how it all comes together?).

The beauty of this is that teams will be playing each other in meaningful playoff series over the year, just like in the good ol' Norris/Adams/Smythe/Patrick division days. That's how rivalries are formed. As it stands now, the likelihood of actually playing a rival in the playoffs is greatly reduced. The Lightning and Flames - 2003-04's finalists - played four playoff series each, but only one of those was against a division rival (Calgary's first round matchup with Vancouver). Tampa, for example, played the Islanders in the first round and may very well never play them again in the playoffs under the current format.

The point is that adding a couple of regular season games per year will not create or further rivalries because frankly there isn't enough on the line during the regular season. Ottawa can beat Toronto in all eight regular season games this year, but fans of both teams know that the only bragging rights in this rivalry for the time being belong to the Leafs who have bounced the Sens from the playoffs in four of the past five years. Add in the fact that the current format denies hockey fans in each city the chance to see a full 1/6 of the League's players, and the new division-heavy schedule looks more and more unattractive by the day, all to save a few shekels.
Familiarity breeds contempt alright - just the kind of contempt the "new" NHL doesn't need.