Thursday, April 27, 2006

Marty Bum

SI's Allan Muir yesterday opined that Marty Turco may be heading toward a career flameout in his appropriately titled article "Marty Turco may be heading toward a career flameout." Comparing Turk to regular-season-studs-turned-playoff-stiffs Roman Cechmanek and Patrick Lalime, Muir concludes that:
[R]eputations are made in the playoffs. And coming into this season, Turco was just 7-10 with one series victory, despite playing behind teams that were among the best in hockey.... Turco always seems to wind up on the losing end while some other, seemingly inferior netminder... finds a way to help his team get to four wins first.... His job's probably safe -- for now, anyway. But his reputation, and the Stars' season, may be sealed.
With a loss last night, Turco is now 7-13 in his playoff career with a Goals Against Average above 2.60 and a Save Percentage on the wrong side of .890. Perhaps, standing on the brink of elimination, coach Dave Tippett should give Johan Hedberg the nod in Game 4. Hedberg is the anti-Turco, playing to a GAA more than a half a point better in the playoffs versus his regular season numbers with a similarly-heightened save percentage (Caps fans will remember his impressive handling of Washington in the 2001 playoffs). But that's Tippett's call, and I certainly don't follow the Stars closely enough to make any judgment of Hedberg's play of late.

What I do follow closely, however, are numbers and sometimes the numbers tell an interesting story. Sometimes they can tell you who steps it up in the clutch and who is a real dog come playoff time. The following stats, then, may offer some insights. Caveat: with the unusually high number of goalies making their playoff debuts this year (denoted by an asterisk) and other relatively inexperienced goalies getting big playoff minutes (Martin Gerber had 20 minutes of playoff experience before this year, John Grahame had played in two playoff games, Manny Legace had played in five, Kevin Weekes in eight), these numbers should be taken with a shaker of salt. Nevertheless, here they are - the career regular season and playoff goals against averages and save percentages of the 2006 NHL Playoff netminders, ranked by the differences between regular- and post-season numbers (click on the tables to enlarge):

And...
So what do these numbers tell us that we didn't already know? Well, for one, Robert Esche has been a better playoff goalie than he's gotten credit for, despite the stinker he put up in Game 2 of the current series with Buffalo, and games 1 and 3 have certainly borne that out. Kevin Weekes' numbers also surprised me, though with his limited minutes, he's one bad game away from dropping significantly down both lists.

Otherwise, the stats are largely what you'd expect - a couple of goalies with limited experience and one great playoff run under their respective belts are towards the top of both lists and Martin Brodeur is Mr. Spring - which brings us full circle. Most of these stats are "what you'd expect" because, as Muir wrote, "reputations are made in the playoffs." For more than half of the goalies in this year's playoffs, there is still plenty of time to craft a reputation as a big-time playoff performer. For others, like Marty Turco, that window is about to slam shut.

Wednesday, April 26, 2006

Are You Not Entertained?

I didn't see it mentioned elsewhere so I thought I'd do so here - kudos to Zdeno Chara for not unleashing the haymaker he had loaded up in the picture above. Chara beat Vinny Lecavalier down handily, was in total control of the scrap and mercifully spared Lecavalier a potentially dangerous blow to the melon, a reminder that the game was being played at the St. Pete Times Forum and not the Coliseum.

Smarts and toughness (and a Gordie Howe Hat Trick) will always earn you praise at The Rink. Well done, Z.

Tuesday, April 25, 2006

Worthwhile Stat Of The Night

Paul Ranger has as many goals tonight as the New York Rangers have in the playoffs so far.

Worthless Stat Of The Night

Global Warming Deserves All The Credit, Martin Gerber All The Blame

According to CNN.com, experts think global warming is responsible for the 2005 hurricanes. It's unclear whether those same experts will cite crappy goaltending as the reason the 2006 'Canes have been so unimpressive since January and through two games of their first round series with Montreal.

The Least Hockey-Related Post You'll Ever Read On The Rink

In probably the least competitive playoff series so far, the Devils have taken a 2-0 series lead over the Rangers by a combined score of 10-1, taking both games at the Meadowlands.

Speaking of the Meadowlands, as reluctant as I am to do it, I've got to make a music recommendation: get a copy of The Wrens' 2003 album, "The Meadowlands." It is unbelieveably good. But don't take my word for it - here's what others have had to say about it.

And sure, you can go ahead and file this post under "What hockey bloggers do when their team's already on the golf course." Maybe some of those 'Canes bloggers can recommend their favorite Toby Keith records next week.

Caps 2005-06 Highlights

Thanks to Rink reader Ian for the pointer to the below Washington Capitals 2005-06 highlight reel, hosted by YouTube (with a rockin' orchestral version of The Final Countdown). This team may not have put together enough points to make the playoffs, but they certainly put together enough highlight reel goals, saves and hits to compete with anyone. Of course that and $3.00+ will get you a gallon of gas, but we've gotta take what we can get.

And speaking of YouTube, check out Ted's Take on the phenomena.

Tuesday Roundup: Mr. Clutch and WWBD (What Would Bucci Do)?

On the off chance that you're new to The Rink and/or you've lived in a cave since October, let me bring you up to speed: Capitals rookie Alexander Ovechkin had a really good season. How good? Well, he is USAToday's Clutch Scorer of the year based on a formula which:
[R]ewards points that occur when the game is tight as opposed to ones that run up the score. Bonuses are given for clutch points scored late in the game. Ovechkin had a hand in 66 goals that put his team ahead or tied the score. The Capitals had only 126 such goals this season.
According to WashingtonCaps.com, along with this accolade:
Ovechkin claimed two of the 17 awards presented Wednesday when Home Ice on XM Radio hosted its awards show, the “Espos,” named after “In the Slot” co-host Phil Esposito. Ovechkin won the Carl Voss Trophy as the NHL rookie of the year (Voss was the first recipient of the Calder Trophy, the NHL’s official award for rookie of the year) and the Gilbert Perreault Trophy for best goal of the year (Ovechkin’s goal in Phoenix scored while sliding on his back).
In non-Ovechkin news, John Buccigross tells us what the Caps should do this offseason:
With Ovechkin in the lineup, the Capitals gained six wins and 11 more points than the 2003-04 season. The fact that he was a plus player on such an awful defensive team is only more Rookie of the Year evidence for him. His line usually had the puck.

The Capitals could go a few ways. They need defensemen and they could use a young center. If you want to improve quickly, you are always better off getting veteran defensemen via free agency and drafting skill. When you have such an immediate star like Ovechkin, it can make an organization impatient.

Free agency: They need a couple of rear guards. I said rear guards. Hal Gill on line No. 2.

Draft: I like Peter Mueller and think he fits in with the Capitals' developing style of play. He would be here at this point and would be a high-value pick. The Caps do like to think outside the box. Last year, they took 6-5 defenseman Sasha Pokulok with the 14th pick in the first round. I wouldn't be surprised if they took Nigel Williams here, a big defenseman on his way to Wisconsin in the fall. The Capitals draft off of need, more than Central Scouting ranking.
As is usually the case, I couldn't disagree with Bucci more. Oh, the Gill free agent signing is fine. And even Mueller isn't too much of a stretch. But Williams? With the fourth pick overall? The 13th-rated North American skater in the draft (though he is a "huge and rapidly improving blue-line horse") will be around long after the number four pick, and if the Caps are interested in him they have plenty to offer in order to move up and get their man in later in the first round. But with the #4 pick, the Caps need to draft one of the stud centers available and I'd be surprised if they didn't do so.

Finally, though not Caps-related, by now I'm sure you've seen the monster hit Buffalo's Brian Campbell laid on Philly's R.J. Umberger in Game 1 of their series. If not, here it is:


I guess you could say that Umberger got owned (cap tip to Allsmokenopancake for the link).

Thursday, April 20, 2006

Romantic Dinner

Here's a classic from the Caps' old "Always Intense" ad campaign (thanks to rwaxman for the link). If anyone knows where to find the rest of the ads from that campaign (hey, Mr. Leonsis - how about putting them up at WashingtonCaps.com?), please let me know. Otherwise, simply enjoy.

Thursday Roundup

The Caps packed up and got out of town yesterday, and both the WaPo and the WTimes note a sense of optimism heading into next year. SI.com, however, doesn't necessarily share such optimism in its season-ending evaluation of the non-playoff teams:
Washington Capitals

Half full: When your lineup boasts Alexander Ovechkin, the most explosive and entertaining scorer the league has seen since Mario Lemieux, it's pretty easy to be giddy about the future. Alexander Semin, the highly skilled running mate Ovechkin lacked this season, recently signed a two-year deal. Shaone Morrisonn, stolen from the Bruins in the 2004 Sergei Gonchar deal, made huge strides late in the season and looks like a guy who'll be part of the Caps' top pairing for the next decade. A high pick this summer should land an impact player. And, hey, the chance to play with Ovechkin could make Washington an intriguing option for a free agent

Half empty: What you saw this season in Washington is pretty much what you get: Outside of Mike Green and Jakub Klepis, there's not much to get excited about down on the farm. And right now, Ovechkin is the team. The Caps are one prolonged rehab period away from competing for the Calder Cup.

The level-headed observer says: Caps fans may want to take solace in the fact that the team won four of its last five games while holding opponents to just one goal in three of those wins, but they shouldn't. Things won't improve much next season. Beyond Morrisonn, the team is in a shambles behind the blue line. Washington gave up the most shots and the second-most goals. Unless Zdeno Chara, Wade Redden and Nick Lidstrom sign up over the summer, there's likely to be a repeat in 2006-07. It's a slow process to rebuild after hitting rock bottom, and the Caps only now are taking the first tentative strides back to respectability. But as long as Ovechkin's on the ice, there will always be a reason to show up at the MCI Center.

One could quibble with that last assertion, given that the MCI Center no longer exists, but the underlying point - that teams do not rebuild in one year - is, of course, accurate. What is less accurate, perhaps, is the assessment that the Caps have nothing down on the farm (Eric Fehr's name comes to mind). But by and large I think that SI.com's evaluation is pretty solid.

Update: As Eric points out, the Caps do have the seventh-rated farm system in hockey, so things are certainly less dire than SI.com would have you believe.

In other news, TSN.ca hands out some of its post-season awards. Want to know who they picked for the Calder? It might surprise you.

Wednesday, April 19, 2006

Daily Awards Of The Year (Huh?)

At the request of one of our (three? four?) loyal readers, I've tallied the totals for the Daily Awards from throughout the year. As a disclaimer, I didn't hand out awards every day of the season and these awards just indicate who had the most "big nights" in the respective categories on the nights I did. That said, here are the top three (winner first) in each of the subjective categories:

Yearly Daily Awards
  • Hart: Jaromir Jagr and Alexander Ovechkin (tied with 4 times each), Eric Staal and Ilya Kovalchuk (tied with 3)
  • Norris: Nicklas Lidstrom and Lubomir Visnovsky (tied with 6), Sergei Zubov and Bryan McCabe (tied with 4)
  • Vezina: Miikka Kiprusoff (8), Henrik Lundqvist and Roberto Luongo (tied with 6)
  • Calder: Alexander Ovechkin (15), Sidney Crosby (7), Henrik Lundqvist (6)
  • Aiken: John Grahame (4), Sebastien Caron and Marty Turco (tied with 3)

Wednesday Roundup/Caps 4, Lightning 1

[Boxscore - Recap]

Before I get into the recap of last night's game, you may recall that yesterday I mentioned the Asian guy who rocked the arena with his smooth dance moves during The Hockey Song. Well, through the magic of the internets I can now show you the video (though it doesn't do the performance justice, since it was the surprise of the whole thing that made it so great). Still, here it is. Enjoy.

Now on to last night's action on the ice and what a way to end the season for the Caps. The closest the Caps could come to playing spoiler on Tuesday night was to beat the Lightning in their own building and force them to play first place Ottawa (against whom the Lightning were 0-4-0 during the regular season and were outscored 16-6) in the first round of the playoffs rather than the Candycanes (against whom Tampa ran up a very impressive 5-2-1 record).

Mission accomplished.

The Caps got great goaltending from Brent Johnson and a couple of goals from captain Jeff Halpern en route to a 4-1 win in Sunrise. Interestingly, according to the WaPo it may very well have been the last game in a Caps uniform for both of the unrestricted free agents. The win gave the Caps an even 70 points on the season and ends the year with three straight division wins, victories in four of the team's last five games overall and a 7-3-3 record in the team's final 13 games. I'll have a more complete season review in the days ahead, but certainly the way this team ended its season is encouraging. I, for one, can't wait for next year.

On a sad note, The Rink would like to pass along our condolences to Olie Kolzig and his family who lost Olie's father late Tuesday night. According to the WTimes,
Axel Kolzig, the 64-year-old father of Washington Capitals goaltender Olie Kolzig, died Monday night of an apparent massive heart attack in his Union Bay, British Columbia, home.

Axel Kolzig watched his son win his 20th game of the season earlier in the evening on television and turned on his computer to read about his son's victory on the Internet. His wife, Renata, discovered him shortly thereafter.
All of Caps Nation's thoughts and prayers are with you, 'Zilla, and I'm sure your father couldn't have been prouder of you as a hockey player or, more importantly, as a human being.

Thread of the Day: Official End Of The Season Thread

Elsewhere 'Round the Rinks:

  • WashingtonCaps.com has a nice thank you message for the team's fans on its front page.
  • Do you get the sense that no one - especially within the Southeast Division - likes Bob Hartley and his team of hot dogs and thugs the Atlanta Thrashers? According to the WaPo,
    After beating Atlanta on Monday, both [Capitals Head Coach Glen] Hanlon and [General Manager George] McPhee received phone calls from their Tampa Bay counterparts, John Tortorella and Jay Feaster, respectively, thanking them for defeating the Thrashers. The Capitals' victory clinched a playoff berth for the Lightning.
    For some reason, I don't think that call would have been made had the Caps locked up a playoff spot for Tampa by defeating, say, the Leafs.
  • In a successful attempt to draw attention to his column by writing something stupid, CBS Sportsline's Wes Goldstein thinks Dion Phaneuf should win the Calder Trophy, primarily because the two forwards most often mentioned for the award played for horrendous teams while Phaneuf's Flames are a contender built on defense and he's a defenseman. Huh? Don't get me wrong - Phaneuf is a great player who had a great year. But we're supposed to be more impressed by a blueliner that fit in on one of the best defensive teams in hockey (a Stanley Cup finalist, no less) than by the 3rd-best rookie point and goal totals ever or the youngest player to hit the century mark in points? I, for one, am not buying it.
  • If you like numbers, the NHL has some it's crowing about, namely those related to attendance and scoring.
  • Happy 19th Birthday Maria Sharapova. What, that's not hockey related?
Daily Awards

Tuesday, April 18, 2006

What Joe Thornton Is Doing At His Age And For That Team Is Simply Amazing

It was around December that it started to look as if New York's Jaromir Jagr would pull away from the Sharks' Joe Thornton and win the Hart Trophy.

Considering Thornton's late-season flourish, assuming that Jagr will win could be a mistake.

One difference that could affect the Hart Trophy vote is age. Jagr is 34, eight years older than Thornton.

It would be difficult to imagine a team asking more of an 26-year-old than the Sharks have gotten from Thornton.

The debate will be waged who deserves to win and the Supreme Court might have to decide the winner, but Thornton would get my vote.

Though Thornton trails Jagr by 25 goals, Jagr is one-dimensional. And the Rangers, while not the League's best team, are still better than San Jose.

The Hart Trophy, decided by a vote of hockey writers, will be announced at the league's annual awards night June 22 in Vancouver.

Then the argument over the top player can be settled.

Or not.
Sound stupid? Of course it does. And it's taken almost verbatim as a combination of two recent articles appearing in Pennsylvania papers with Thornton's name subbed in for Sidney Crosby's and Jagr's subbed for Alexander Ovechkin's. Those articles, Shelly Anderson's reasoning as to why Sidney Crosby should win the Calder and a similar article from the Beaver County Times (how the Times can even publish a day after being snubbed by the Pulitzer committee shows the paper's commitment to excellence), are hometown efforts to hype up the local hero and his great season and to that extent are well-deserved.

But this notion that Crosby should get added consideration because he's younger and therefore his achievements are more impressive than Ovechkin's are ridiculous and the assertion that The Kid somehow has been surrounded by less talent this season than AO is just insulting to the intelligence of any hockey fans who might stumble across this pap.

As mentioned in today's Roundup, Off Wing Opinion smacks down the Anderson article on its substance (comical in its own right), but I'm still left wondering one thing: will Anderson and her colleagues be as dismissive of the 2006-07 accomplishments of a 20-year-old Russian Elite League veteran Evgeni Malkin as they are of Alexander Ovechkin's achievements in 2005-06? Somehow I doubt it.

(Cap tip to fjc33 for some of the inspiration for this post)

Tuesday Roundup/Caps 6, Thrashers 4
Gamenight: Caps @ Lightning

[Boxscore - Recap - Postgame Coverage - AP Preview - WashingtonCaps.com Preview - Official Game Day Thread]

The above screen cap from NHL.com just about says it all... but that won't stop me from babbling on for a while. In an absolute must-win for the Thrashers - against a team they pounded by a combined score of 15-4 on back-to-back nights back in October who, on paper, had nothing to play for - Atlanta couldn't hold a third period lead and, as a result, will have to wait at least one more year to make the first playoff appearance in team history. The Thrashers got horrendous goaltending (and changed goalies not once but twice, hoping in vain that either Mike Dunham or Michael Garnett could make a big save), got no production whatsoever from its highly-ranked power-play (which was 0-for-8) or any of its trio of 90-point forwards and were doubled-up in hits (29-15). If that's how gutless Bob Hartley and his crew perform in a critical regular season game, the Thrashers should thank the Caps for saving them from the embarassment they would have surely suffered in the postseason.

The host Capitals, on the other hand, played like it was their collective life on the line (beginning at the twelve-second mark of the first period and ignoring the entire horrid second period). The Caps were everything the Thrashers were not last night, spurred on by an announced attendance of 16,891 that was reminiscent of some of the crowds of late-Aprils past. In their last home game of 2005-06, the Caps hit hard and played hard (again, ignoring the second period), got great penalty-killing, big saves from Olie Kolzig and clutch goals in the third period to rally from a 4-3 deficit to win 6-4. And, in perhaps the ultimate contrast to the way the Thrashers have played all season long, with a two-goal lead, Atlanta's goalie pulled and more than two minutes left in the game, Caps' coach Glen Hanlon kept his superstar on the bench, not needing to run up the score and embarass his opponent (though it is admittedly more likely that Hanlon was just protecting his most valuable asset, knowing how the Thrashers often don't deal with disappointment very well).

In all, it was a treat for the home crowd to witness a game that in many ways symbolic of the 2005-06 Caps' team: hard-working, exciting, well-coached and full of glimpses of a potentially spectacular future. Oh, and the Asian gentleman dancing during "The Hockey Song" absolutely ruled.

Now it's off to Tampa to put a wrap on the season. By knocking off Atlanta last night (thus clinching a playoff spot for the Lightning), the Caps have made tonight's game a little less meaningful for their hosts. In fact, the Lightning would likely be better off losing tonight and guaranteeing an eighth-place Conference finish and a date with Carolina (assuming a Carolina win at home tonight or an Ottawa loss on the road or an overtime loss for both teams) in the first round of the playoffs, a team they were 5-2-1 against in the regular season. So roll on over, Tampa. Rest your #1 goalie (nevermind - you let him go via free agency last summer). Let Alex Ovechkin pass Mike Bossy for second all-time on the rookie goal-scoring list and catch Peter Stastny for second all-time on the rookie point-scoring list. We scratched your back last night - scratch ours tonight.

Speaking of Ovechkin, in the interest of full ridicule, check out these pics, some of which appear to be from some AO modeling gigs. Yikes (and cap tip to CP for the link). In more hockey-related Ovechkin news, newsflash: he's really good.

Finally today, kudos to Mike Green for being named AHL Player of the Week. See you soon, Mikey.

Thread of the Day: The Beauty Of Crosby's Late Push...

Elsewhere 'Round the Rinks:
Daily Awards

Monday, April 17, 2006

Monday Roundup/Gamenight: Thrashers @ Caps

[AP Preview - WashingtonCaps.com Preview - Official Game Day Thread]

The Caps will play host for the last time in the 2005-06 season tonight when Atlanta comes calling. The Caps also have the chance to play spoiler and eliminate their Southeast Division rivals from playoff contention and lock up spots in the postseason for Tampa and Montreal with a win over the Thrash (though such a scenario would apparently not impact Lil' Jon's already-fulfilled Stanley Crunk dreams). And while the game has huge implications in the standings for Atlanta, it is utterly meaningless from that standpoint for the Caps, who are locked into 27th place in the League (meaning, per Mike Vogel, that they will have a "10.7% chance of winning the NHL's draft lottery, which will be held at noon on Thursday at the league offices in New York.").

So should we expect the home team to roll over and play dead? Does Ilya Kovalchuk own a legal stick (that is to say, I highly doubt it)? As has been the case for much of the season, what is at stake for the Caps (besides pride) is jobs and individual statistics. Regarding the latter, a handful of Caps have a chance to achieve significant milestones with just two games left. Matt Pettinger and Brian Willsie each has 18 goals on the season, and if they can each net a pair in the final two games, they'll give the team five 20-goal scorers - the same number the Ottawa Senators currently have. Other Caps (including Dainius Zubrus, Chris Clark and Ben Clymer) are looking to add to personal single-season bests in goals and/or points.

And then there's Alexander Ovechkin, who will be honored before tonight's game for his jaw-dropping achievements during this marvelous rookie campaign. Already only the second rookie ever to reach the 50-goal and 100-point plateaus in the same freshman season, Ovechkin stands just two goals behind Mike Bossy for the second-most goals ever scored by a rookie. With at least one goal in 28 of his last 48 games, four goals in seven games this season against Atlanta and five goals in seven games against Tuesday night's opponent, Tampa, AO certainly has a realistic shot at tying and perhaps passing Bossy. The 25 goals it would take to tie Teemu Selanne's rookie record of 76 is probably safely out of reach. Probably.

Elsewhere 'Round the Rinks:
  • Bob McKenzie has put together his 2005-06 Rookie Dream Team. With these guys alone (to say nothing of the other young guns in the NHL), the League's future is in good hands... on the ice, at least.
  • While more than half the NHL's teams head to the postseason, the Leafs will be hitting the links. Buffalo's Andrew Peters reminds them of that. Stupid? Of course. Unsportsmanlike? Of course. Funny? Of course.
  • I didn't see the game, but reading about it I wonder if the Flyers were wearing these jerseys yesterday in their huge loss to New Jersey yesterday (thanks to Kukla's for the link).
Daily Awards

Saturday, April 08, 2006

Japers' Rink Closed For Maintenance April 8-16

The Rink will be closed for maintenance from April 8-16.

Friday, April 07, 2006

Friday Roundup/Gamenight 'Canes @ Caps

[AP Preview - WashingtonCaps.com Preview - Official Game Day Thread]

The Caps and 'Canes finally wrap up the season series tonight with their fifth game in two weeks and third straight Southeast Division battle. The Caps are 3-2-2 against the 'Canes on the campaign while the 'Canes are 4-3-0 against the Caps. In other words, the 'Canes have won four of the seven matches but the Caps have taken away the same number of standings points (eight) as Carolina from those tilts. That makes a ton of sense, NHL. Nothing here needs tweaking. These aren't the droids we're looking for. You can go about your business. Move along.

After that brief detour into geekdom, we return to another form of sci-fi/fantasy: the Alexander Semin saga. In today's "I'll believe it when I see it" installment, the WaPo claims that:
The Washington Capitals are expecting highly touted prospect Alexander Semin to rejoin the team next season as negotiations to end his nearly two-year hiatus from the NHL enter their final stages. A deal is expected to be announced next week, according to a source.
If this does, indeed happen, it is, of course, great news as Semin is widely considered one of the very best hockey players not currently playing in the NHL and adding him to next year's team will be like adding another top-five pick in this year's draft to the one the Caps will almost certainly already have. But remember - this is Alex Semin. If Semin proves to be half as elusive on the ice as off it, Caps fans will be in for a treat for years to come. Oh, and he'll need a nickname too (especially with a name like that), so put your thinking caps on. Too bad "Alexander the Pretty Damn Good" doesn't roll of the tongue.

As for Alexander the Gr8, there are a couple of new AO love pieces floating around the internets, notably here and here. The former of the two includes a great quote from Caps' majority owner Ted Leonsis:
He's kind of out of central casting. If you're going to write: "We're going to rebuild our team post the lockout," then out of the computer would come a description of Alexander Ovechkin. And the key thing is we're not going to let him down and not build the team around him. We have a personality again, we're a tough team to play against. We have a great player, and we're going to keep adding to that.
The second of the two articles (from the always-astute Barry Melrose) makes a similar point to one we made here recently:
Ovechkin is closing in on the 50-goal, 100-point plateau (as of Thursday, he was two goals and two points away), and what impresses me is that he's doing it without a supporting cast. At least Sidney Crosby had talent around him in Pittsburgh (Mario Lemieux at the beginning, Zigmund Palffy, Sergei Gonchar and John LeClair). Who has Ovechkin had? Dainius Zubrus!
I'm not crazy about the dig on Zubie, but the point is obviously more than valid.

Finally, a number of Caps visited the Pentagon yesterday. I guess head coach Glen Hanlon will try anything to strengthen the team's defense.

Thread of the Day: This Time Next Year - What is Possible?

Elsewhere 'Round the Rinks:


Daily Awards
  • Hart: Sean Burke (29 saves on 31 shots against in shootout win over Atlanta that likely locked up a playoff spot for Tampa and eliminated Atlanta in this crucial Eastern Conference game)
  • Ross: Jonathan Cheechoo, Yanic Perreault, Alexei Kovalev, Stu Barnes (3 points each)
  • Norris: Kimmo Timonen (Game-winning goal, assist)
  • Vezina: Manny Fernandez (32 saves on 33 shots in shootout win)
  • Richard: Jonathan Cheechoo, Niko Kapanen, Martin Straka (2 goals each)
  • Calder: Christopher Higgins (Game-winning goal, assist, +1 at Ottawa for the recent Rink Calder regular)
  • Aiken: Los Angeles Kings (Four points out of a playoff spot, they muster all of 14 shots on goal for the game and just three in a third period they entered down only 2-0 en route to a 5-0 loss at home against San Jose)

Thursday, April 06, 2006

In Focus: CD's Night As A Guinea Pig

[The following was written by frequent Rink reader and commenter CD. His views do not necessarily express those held by The Rink or any of its contributors, with the exception of the Halliburton link. We're cool with that. It should also be noted that CD and JP are most definitely not what you would call "friends." - JP]

A couple of Mondays ago, I received the good news that I had been selected to participate in one of the Caps’ “immersion groups,” essentially a marketing effort wherein ticket purchasing fans were invited to attend a game in small groups to comment on the game and the fan experience. As I also received the news that I had won the first five Rolling Stones albums that same morning, I was feeling pretty good about things when I walked into Suite 342 last night.

If I understood correctly, my group of 15 was made up of a cross-section of season ticket holders, smaller package holders and individual gamers. The process itself was very informal. Essentially, following some brief small talk, smaller groups naturally formed and one of the marketing folks simply listened in and picked our brains on our thoughts regarding all things Capitals.

I ended up spending most of the game with a nice chap I later found out was an accountant with Halliburton. I’ve decided not to hold that against him, however, as he knew his hockey stuff and that’s good enough for me.

As I can’t imagine anyone really wants or needs to hear my re-cap of sitting in a box to watch a game, I’ll highlight some specifics.

Here follows the list of things I either brought up or heard from my fellow Caps fans.

  • My personal cause was suggesting more fanfare be added to the game, specifically to engage younger fans. For example, at Anaheim’s Arrowhead Pond, before the anthems even are sung, fireworks go off when the players hit the ice, the mascot descends from the ceiling via rip chord and music is blared from the speakers. Sure, it’s a bit hokey, but here’s my point. Particularly on weekend afternoon games, at least one third of the audience seems to be comprised of ankle biters, many of whom cannot fully appreciate the complexities of the game. However, if the Caps can create an exciting experience for the next generation of fans, the larger that fan base will grow.
  • Agreeing with the fine proprietor of The Rink, I pushed the “JP Initiative.” As JP put it, “The only people I know that don’t like hockey are people who haven’t seen the game live. Start giving away more tickets. Filled up your tank of gas three times? Free tickets. Started a new bank account? Free tickets.” You get the point.
  • Apparently, Kristen, the between-action host, is universally reviled by fans. (If you happen to be reading this, though, Kristen, I dig your style. We should go out and get a drink sometime to discuss this. Trust me, bald, lumpy guys are your demographic and you should exploit me, uh, us, for all we’re worth.)
  • It was agreed upon by the few folks I spoke with that fantasy hockey is responsible for creating a new level of rabidity among fans. How this information will be exploited is beyond me.
  • More than a couple people mentioned the high price of parking.
  • As my sister requested of me, I furthered the notion that Stompin’ Tom Connors’, “The Good, Ol’ Hockey Game,” needs to remain a part of every Caps game.
  • Capitals' majority owner Ted Leonsis made a brief appearance between the first and second periods. What struck me most about the man, besides the fact that his shoes cost more than my entire wardrobe, was his accessibility. He personally introduced himself to everyone in the room and shook hands. I realize this is part of his “job,” but I thought the guy was friendly.
  • I hate to gripe about anything free, but marketing guys, c’mon, you couldn’t hook us up with better grub than warm soda and hot dogs on stale buns? I’m not saying, I’m just saying. You know what I’m saying?

All in all, I had a rather enjoyable evening. What hockey fan wouldn’t? I mean, think about it—a free suite ticket and someone who’s been paid to listen to me ramble on about hockey? That’s a good time every time.

Number 22 In Your Programs, Number 64 In Your Hearts

Mike Commodore needs a hug. Two nights after being force-fed Nolan Yonkman's fist and less than a week after getting kicked out of a game with Atlanta for being the third man into a fight, the Carolina blueliner was tagged with an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty last night for slamming the boards with his stick in reaction to a holding call he was assessed as he tried to stop Alex Ovechkin from blowing by him like the traffic cone that he is (and before any of you 'Caniacs get all worked up, sure, the Caps would love to have a defenseman like Commodore in their top six right now).

But we at The Rink feel your pain, Mike, and we want to show you some love, first with the Mike Commodore Nickname Contest (submit your best in the comments to this post) and then with the Mike Commodore Photo Gallery (yes, I know they're old Flames pics, but love is timeless, no?):

We love you too, Mikey.

XOXO,

The Rink

Thursday Roundup/'Canes 4, Caps 3 (SO)

[Boxscore - Recap - WashingtonCaps.com Postgame Coverage]

For one reason or another NHL teams often have a difficult time getting going at the beginning of the first home game after a long road trip. Last night was no exception, as the Caps returned home after seven straight tilts away from the Verizon Center. In fact, down 2-0 to the Candycanes less than five-and-a-half minutes into the game, the Caps could have easily mailed it in last night, taken solace in the five points they'd taken from the 'Canes in the previous three games between the two teams spanning the last dozen days and prepared for the eighth and final meeting of the season with the Southeast Division champs on Friday. They could have mailed it in, but they didn't, just as they haven't on so many other nights this year.

The Caps fought back, tying the game in the second period and briefly taking a lead in the third on Dainius Zubrus's career-high twenty-first goal of the year and second of the game before Mark Recchi sent the game to overtime with a four-on-three powerplay goal. Tied through overtime, the game went to a shootout where the Caps' three shooters were all stuffed by Baby Food and where Matt Cullen was able to beat Brent Johnson to give the visitors the win.

With the tie shootout loss, the Caps have now picked up a point in seven straight games, the longest such streak in more than five years according to the WaPo (of course, teams have only been getting awarded standings points despite losing for a few years, but the veracity of the stat itself is inarguable). But the bottom line, as Alex Ovechkin noted in a postgame interview, is that the Caps "not win game." Hopefully on Friday they will.

Also noteworthy from last night's game: the paid attendance of 14,867 is more than 1,000 more tickets sold than the Caps have averaged on the year (and only 600 fewer than the first-place 'Canes are drawing). No word on whether or not Tony Kornheiser was one of the nearly 15k, but maybe hockey isn't quite "dead" in Washington after all... I thought Rico Fata (not to be confused with Rico Fatass), played his second-straight great game, bringing a ton of energy at a few key points in the game... Ovechkin was credited with a whopping nine hits to go alongside two helpers (extending his season-best point-scoring streak to ten games). The kid can do so much even when he's not scoring goals that it's simply incredible. Steve Eminger added eight hits himself... former Cap Calle Johansson was in attendance and got a loud and lengthy standing ovation when shown on the telescreen, likely an acknowledgement from the fans that he could still be a top-six defenseman on this year's team. Easily... For a 'Canes fan's perspective on last night's game (as well as advancing the ball on some new Rink nicknames) head over to Red and Black Hockey.

In other Caps news, Hockey's Future has the Caps ranked seventh in their Spring 2006 Organizational Rankings, down from second last year (due largely to the fact that the Caps' most talented youngsters are playing for the big club and thus are no longer prospects). Here's what HF had to say:
Strengths: The Capitals have several forwards who have great potential for the NHL. Alexander Semin is a very skilled offensive winger, although there are some questions about whether he will return to the NHL anytime soon. Eric Fehr has all the makings of a terrific sniper and Chris Bourque is adapting well to his first season in the AHL. Meanwhile, both Tomas Fleischmann and Jakub Klepis played well during their short debuts in the NHL and both have bright futures. On the blue line, Mike Green has also seen NHL time in his first professional season, while Jeff Schultz had a career year in the WHL.

Weaknesses
: The prospect pool took a big hit with the graduation of not only Alexander Ovechkin, but also Steve Eminger and Shaone Morrisonn out of the top five. Overall depth is a concern. Goaltending is the weakest area for the Capitals, with Maxime Daigneault heading the list of three unremarkable goalies. It's an area that will need to be addressed in the coming draft.

Top Five Prospects: Alexander Semin (LW), Eric Fehr (RW), Mike Green (D), Chris Bourque (C), Jakub Klepis (C)
HF also has a review of the Caps' prospects, including Schultz, who played in the Canadian Junior leagues this year.

Finally, the team announced yesterday that they signed defenseman Jamie Hunt and forward Matt Stefanishion to two-year entry-level contracts.

Thread of the Day: Will The Caps Be Feared Again Like They Were In the '80s?

Elsewhere 'Round the Rinks:
  • Check out yet another example of how a "with it" owner is in touch with the emerging media that is blogging as Paul Kukla interviews Ted Leonsis over at Kukla's Korner.
  • Kudos to Caps/Bears defenseman Mike Green on being named to the AHL All-Rookie Team.
  • A new hockey term has been born. The "Sidney Crosby Hat Trick" is a goal, an assist and an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty in the same game (coined by Decline the Penalty)
  • It's always nice to be linked to by Deadspin.
  • The CP has its picks in for the NHL awards and their Calder goes to... who else?
    "Ovechkin. In no uncertain terms the most sensational rookie season in a long, long time."
    Good to see that not even Canada's largest syndicated print news source can deny AO his due. And, for what it's worth (admittedly not much), two of the top four scorers in the League not named Ovechkin agree.
    "Right now I would go with Ovechkin," [CP runner-up for Most Valuable Player Jaromir] Jagr answered when asked to pick a winner... "He's by far, I think, the best rookie this season," Baby Face said.
Daily Awards

Wednesday, April 05, 2006

Wednesday Roundup/Gamenight: 'Canes @ Caps

[AP Preview - WashingtonCaps.com Preview - Official Game Day Thread]

Strap yourselves in for tonight's game four of the Caps five-game mini-series with the Whalers Candycanes. To recap, the Caps took the first two games in Hartford Raleigh, then dropped the third in OT. Now it's back to the Verizon for some home cookin'. One hopes that the intensity of Monday night carries over to tonight, but one also hopes that the rebounds and poor defensive coverage do not.

Speaking of poor coverage, how about this from the Raleigh News & Observer:
But [Mark Recchi, Ray Whitney and Doug Weight] were brought aboard to do more than score, something Weight showed during the second period. After Washington's Jeff Friesen fought Staal, Weight invited Friesen to fight when he returned from the penalty box, even though the two are friends.
...and even though Friesen was traded to Anaheim nearly a month ago? Don't newspapers have editors anymore, or is this just a Southern thing? [Thanks to Netsy for the RNO link, and if the rest of you aren't checking out his previews at the top of the Official Game Day Threads, you're really missing out on some great humor and information, as well as perhaps the best avatar you'll ever see.]

Back to the game at hand, twenty-five years ago tonight, Dennis Maruk potted a hat trick to become the first Capital to score 50 goals in a season. Could the Caps induct a new member into the 50-goal club tonight? Regardless of if/when Alex Ovechkin reaches that milestone, Martin Brodeur says the young Russian "will easily win the Calder." But I'm on to you, Marty. Your Jedi mind tricks won't work in these parts, and just for that, I am positive that you'll get a shutout tonight against Pittsburgh. You're impenetrable. Unbeatable. Shutout, shutout, shutout.

And while we're talking about the Calder Trophy and Penguins getting shutout (man, I'm on fire with the segues today), how does Sidney Crosby feel about winning the Rookie of the Year? Apparently he can do without it. Which is good. Because he'll have to. The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review's article all but conceding the rookie scoring race (newsflash!) intimates that Ovechkin is a selfish, shot-happy puck hog while Crosby is a selfless playmaker, and to back up that implication the article notes that Sid's shooting percentage is a whopping 1 percent higher (13.7% to 12.7%) and that Crosby has more assists (51 to 47 in one additional game played). Maybe Sid is the better distributor. Or maybe he's been playing with much better players all year. You can decide for yourself, but on your way to doing so, consider that Ziggy Palffy - who retired in mid-January - would still be third on the Caps in scoring this year.

Today's Roundup has been all over the road, so I'll tidily wrap it up with the local coverage, an article from the WTimes on AO's impending milestones (the WaPo doesn't have any new Caps coverage online, which is fine - just leave that Kornheiser article on the front page of the Caps coverage for another day. That'd be great. Thanks.) and leave you to ponder this quote from the WTimes' article:
When he's not causing headaches for opposing goalies, Alex Ovechkin always seems to be planning some sort of mischief. He often tips his hand with a not-to-subtle glance in the direction of a potential victim. He hides his moods with the finesse of a leprechaun.
What the hell does that mean?

Thread of the Day: 'Canes Living, Skating Proof That New NHL Works (not everyone is sold, however)

Elsewhere 'Round the Rinks:
  • Here's a great stat to get you in the mood for the playoffs: Martin Brodeur has 9,000 career minutes played in the playoffs while the rest of the starting goalies for the current Eastern Conference playoff teams have a combined total of 165 playoff minutes (145 minutes for John Grahame and 20 minutes for Baby Food from back in 2003, which means that five Eastern Conference goalies will likely be making their playoff debuts). So don't count the Devils out quite yet... (thanks to fjc33 for the stat)
  • Who was the NHL's most clutch skater in March? I'll give you a hint: his name is Alexander Ovechkin.
  • Ray Emery is your Rookie of the Month for March, beating out the forementioned AO. Why might this be a good thing for Ovechkin? Here's the theory: the better Emery does down the stretch, the more votes he splinters off from fellow goalie Henrik Lundqvist, who is AO's biggest competition for Rookie of the Year - if voters are thinking of casting their ballot for a netminder, their decision is made all the more difficult the more acclaim Emery gets, although Lundqvist's numbers on the season are much, much better. It may be a stretch, but losing the Rookie of the Month to Emery could actually help AO in the Calder race.
  • New to the blog roll is Mr. Irrelevant's Sports Blog. A highly complimentary link to The Rink while listening to The Flaming Lips will get you on the roll just about every time.
Daily Awards

Tuesday, April 04, 2006

Witt Suspended One Game For Hit On Yyborny Vborny Yvborny Vyborny

According to Tennessean.com, defenseman Brendan Witt has been suspended by the NHL one game for kneeing Columbus forward David Vyborny (cap tip to Kukla's).

Despite already topping his career high in points with 55, "David Vyborny" is still far from a household name, and nowhere is this more evident than in The Tennessean's article in which they spell Vyborny's name a mind-numbing four different ways in just five paragraphs (click to enlarge image):

Oh, and Mr. Kornheiser: it seems that a borderline-literate reporter for "Middle Tennessee's #1 Online News Source" knows the coach of the Columbus Blue Jackets' name. That's another five bucks you owe.

Tuesday Roundup/'Canes 6, Caps 5 (OT)

[Boxscore - Recap]

The Caps finished their seven-game road trip last night in Raleigh with a 6-5 overtime loss to the host Hurricanes. Despite finishing the trip with a 3-1-3 record, including 2-0-1 against the Southeast Division champ 'Canes, last night's game stung, as the Caps grabbed a pair of first period leads, then fell behind 4-2 during a horrid second period only to tie the game at four and then at five in the third period before losing on a powerplay goal in overtime after failing to score on a 5-on-3 advantage of their own in the closing moments of regulation (I can draw a diagram of that last sentence if it would help).

As in the previous three games against Carolina, the Caps did a great job of handling the duo of Baby Face (0 points in his last four games against the Caps) and Baby Food (.831 save percentage in the last four Carolina/Washington tilts), but got beaten by perennial thorn-in-the-side Butt Fugly (another three points last night) and the recently rehabilitated Josef Vasicek, who had a pair of goals to match his pair of assists. It certainly didn't help matters for the Caps that they played the whole night with only 10 forwards (Matt Pettinger was unable to play after warm-ups and the Caps have been skating 11 forwards and 7 defensemen lately to begin with) and played half the second period without another forward, captain Jeff Halpern, who was in the penalty box serving fighting majors for beating down a slash-happy Baby Face and later tussling with a creaky Doug Weight, but excuses are, as they say, like Tony Kornheisers (more on him later). The Caps simply didn't get it done last night, whether it was getting the big save, clearing a rebound, scoring on a gift-wrapped 5-on-3... Seventy-four games into the season and the fact remains: the effort and attitude are there but the talent and results simply are not.

The WTimes recaps the game here, the WaPo here. Speaking of the WaPo, I wonder how Caps beat writer Tarik El-Bashir feels when he busts his tail covering the team for a paper that prints an article entitled "He Shoots, He Scores, America Snores" (web-titled "NHL? Nobody Cares"). Yes, hockey fans, Tony Kornheiser has once again decided to trash our beloved sport for no apparent reason. Eric over at OWO takes him to task on it, but I wanted to make a couple of points myself.

Kornheiser begins beating his dead horse with the bold assertion that "Hockey is dead" (interesting, as attendance is way up league-wide over the 2003-04 season), then backtracks by qualifying his claim with "At least it's dead right here, right now." Looking merely at ticket sales, that would be hard to argue, as the Caps have lost the second-most ground at the box office over two years ago of any team in the League. But let's not forget that two years ago, the Caps had big expectations and big draws Jaromir Jagr, Peter Bondra, Robert Lang, and Sergei Gonchar for more than half the season, whereas this year the team was expected to be awful and, despite exceeding those expectations (and the record of the 2003-04 squad) and boasting arguably the League's most exciting player, the public perception of this team has been too much to overcome. Kornheiser continues:
The Caps have played 74 games. They only have eight left, and they've been playing since October. And when was the last time they came up at all in conversation? Not just the Caps, any NHL team? For five bucks, name the coach of the Columbus Blue Jackets, I dare you.
Obviously I'm not a good judge of this, since the Caps come up in nearly every conversation I have, but his "name the coach" example is ridiculous. How many people could name the head coach of the NBA's Atlanta Hawks? Or the manager of the Colorado Rockies (the baseball team)? Or the head coach of the New Orleans Saints of the mighty NFL? Are those sports dead too? For the record, Tony, Gerard Gallant is the head coach of the Blue Jackets. You owe me five bucks.
Hockey is so dead in America, the players may as well still be locked out.
See attendance figures, as there are millions of fans who will disagree with you. In fact, more people have already attended NHL games this year (18,954,089) than attended NFL games last season (17,200,324) and ten of the NHL's 30 teams are playing to capacity (or more) crowds, while 12 of the NFL's 32 franchise did the same in 2005. The article goes on with gratuitous shots at the local team, its star and the League on the whole, and maybe later I'll discuss it further. But for now there are two major points I'd like to make.

First, who is Kornheiser's audience here? Presumably hockey is so dead that the only people who will read this piece are the dozen or so hockey fans out there who read the WaPo. In that case, TK is telling his audience that they're a bunch of dolts who would be better off waiting for parachute pants to come back than for the NHL to be resurrected. On the other hand, if casual sports fans care enough about hockey to read this drivel, it seems proof positive that there is interest in the sport and that perhaps it simply needs a marketing makeover. So take your pick - either Kornheiser is condescending to and insulting his readers (and colleagues) or he's dead wrong on the central premise of his article. Journalism at its finest either way.

The second point is more narrowly focused on the Caps. With just eight games remaining in a season that has long been about goals other than those measured by wins and losses, what purpose is served by writing this article now? The Caps are rebuilding and Ted Leonsis, George McPhee et. al. are doing it the right way, and that takes time. Of course they're not winning right now, and attendance reflects that. But with the team's best player chasing 50 goals, 100 points and the Calder Trophy, why pen such a mean-spirited piece of garbage? Why not write an article about how this team is headed in the right direction and how people should take notice and get in on the ground floor? Then again, why would I expect Kornheiser to start being positive or constructive now after 20-plus years of pissing in people's Cheerios?

Thread of the Day: Uh Oh, Tony K. On The Caps And Hockey (Caps fans react to TK's latest)

Elsewhere 'Round the Rinks:
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