Tuesday, October 31, 2006

Wednesday Roundup: Canadian Ovechkenvy

Caps Quick Hits

As noted yesteday, the Caps waived Rico Fata... According to Mike Vogel, Tomas Flesichmann will be called up in the near future and the trade winds may be blowing through Capland soon as well (though Vogel professes no insider knowledge on this front)... The WaPo recaps the road trip and shows that Chris Clark has his captainly duties of regurgitating tired sports clichés down to a tee: ""You can't make the playoffs in the first 10 games," he said. "But you can definitely miss the playoffs in the first 10 games."... The WTimes must be working everyone on GOP GOTV, as they've got no new Caps coverage... There was been plenty of Ovechkenvy (or Lovechkin) in the air during the the Caps recently-concluded Canadian swing and On Frozen Blog has compiled the links...Speaking of AO, isn't this like saying "Take your pick: Megan Fox or Scarlett Johansson"?

Thread of the Day:
Old School Caps Moments:

If you love Dale Hunter (and who other than Caps fans and Don Cherry does?), you'll love this. My personal favorite is the hit at 0:43 on Joe Nieuwendyk. Ouch.
Hat tip to miller10 for the link.

Daily Awards

  • Hart: Christian Ehrhoff (GWG with 0:36 left in the third, A, 5 SOG in 2-1 win)
  • Ross: Mike Sillinger (3 points)
  • Norris: Christian Ehrhoff (GWG, A, 5 SOG in 2-1 win)
  • Vezina: Vesa Toskala (W, 24 saves on 25 shots against)
  • Richard: 21 players tied with 1G each
  • Calder: Alexander Radulov (G, +1)
  • Aiken: Daniel Alfredsson (-4 in 4-1 loss)

Rico Not-So-Suave

Per TSN.ca, Rico Fata has been waived. He is survived by Bryan Muir and Jakub Klepis.

Ask AO

Courtesy of Kukla's NHL.com blog comes this opportunity:

Recently I approached the Washington Capitals with a propostion -- Would [Alexander Ovechkin] be able to answer some questions from the hockey fans worldwide? Their response was "certainly", with one stipulation. The questions must be unique, not the "typical" questions we have heard over and over.

So here is your chance to be like a hockey writer. Put on your press credential badge or hat and ask away, but keep the word "unique" in mind when submitting your question.

You can submit your question by following the link above, but let us know in the comments here what you're asking or what you would ask.

(Cross-posted at Southeast Shootout)

Tuesday Roundup/Caps 4, Flames 2

[NHL.com Recap - Official Scoresheet - Official Super Stats]

It's hard to put your finger on precisely what led to a Capitals performance in Calgary last night that was 180 degrees from Saturday night's effort in Edmonton. It could have been that they battled for every puck like it was the seventh game of the Stanley Cup Finals. It could have been that I was wearing my Kris Beech Calgary Hitmen jersey (yes, really). It could have been the Willie Nelson, it could have been the wine. Whatever it was, it worked and produced the Caps' most complete 60-minute effort of the season and a very satisfying win.

Olie Kolzig was sharp, Richard Zednik had his best game of the season (even before his two goals), and Alex Ovechkin hit everything that moved (including Dion Phaneuf twice on one shift early). With the exception of the worst Shaone Morrisonn decision/pass of all-time (and that's saying something) and a breakdown in coverage as Kristian Huselius danced around the top of the Washington zone, the Caps played a nearly picture-perfect road game and now get to come home having earned five points in four games including bookend wins in Colorado and Calgary on this season-long road trip.

The WaPo's recap is here, and the WTimes... well, the game ended past Dave Fay's bed time, I guess.

Great road trip, and we're left with a couple questions: Was this the beginning of one of Zednik's famed hot streaks? And did anyone miss Steve "healthy scratch" Eminger?

Daily Awards
  • Hart: Richard Zednik (2G, including GWG, A, +2, 8 SOG)
  • Ross: Mats Sundin, Keith Tkachuk, Richard Zednik (3 points each)
  • Norris: Brent Sopel (2G, +2, 4 SOG)
  • Vezina: Robert Esche (26-save shutout win)
  • Richard: Peter Forsberg, Darcy Tucker, Brent Sopel (2G each)
  • Calder: Dustin Penner (G, A, +1)
  • Aiken: J.-S. Giguere (W, 5 goals allowed on 24 shots against)

Monday, October 30, 2006

Z, Z Top Flames

Things are bad enough in FlamesLand that at least two people on the radio today were worried that the Flames would be in trouble with the Capitals -- the Washington Freaking Capitals -- if they didn't play their game to a Tee. Nonsense. The Flames can beat the Caps playing absolutely any style of game, and unless Kipper gets outplayed, they will.
Heh.

Monday Roundup/Gamenight: Caps @ Flames

[NHL.com Preview - WashingtonCaps.com Preview - Official Gameday Thread]

Caps Quick Hits:

The WaPo discusses the Caps slooooow starts of late and Hockey's Future ranks the Caps as the fourth best organization in the League from a prospects standpoint.

Daily Awards
  • Hart: Milan Hejduk (2G, +1, 5 SOG)
  • Ross: J.-M. Liles (3 points)
  • Norris: J.-M. Liles (3A, +1, 1 hit, 3 takeaways, 0 giveaways, 1 blocked shot)
  • Vezina: Jose Theodore (W, 20 saves on 21 shots against)
  • Richard: Milan Hejduk (2G)
  • Calder: Paul Stastny (A, +1)
  • Aiken: Marc Denis (L, 3 goals allowed on 28 shots against)

Sunday, October 29, 2006

Green Goal

The other day I mentioned Mike Green's beauty of a goal against Colorado. Well, here it is in all its Bobby Orr-gasmic splendor:

It Was My Understanding That There Would Be No Math

Ten games into the Caps' season seems like a good point at which to do some evaluatin', or at least some lookin' at numbers. This is a broad look at team stats taken from a small sample, and it's worth noting that much of the below is a comparison of this year's team so far to last year's squad rather than a comparison of this year's team to the rest of the NHL, so take it all with a shaker of salt.

The numbers, then, after ten games:
So what's the bottom line? Well, the Caps are scoring more, allowing fewer goals against, scoring more regularly on the power play and killing off penalties at a greater rate than last year. To me, those are all positive indicators and if the team can cut down on the penalties and shots on goal against, progress should continue.

Sunday Roundup/Oilers 4, Caps 0

[NHL.com Recap - Official Scoresheet - Official Super Stats]

Jack Daniel's and Coca-Cola conspired to make me miss most of the latter two periods of the Caps/Oilers game last night, so I'll let you get your recaps from the professionals (the WaPo here, while the WTimes has a great article on Canada's love of AO).

Some quick thoughts from what I can remember of last night's game and what I can surmise from reading about it this morning:
  • The Caps were absolutely abused in the faceoff circle, winning only 19 of 50 draws (a woeful 38%). Dainius Zubrus and Boyd Gordon were at 50% and Brian Sutherby had a bad night winning only 43% of his faceoffs, but Brooks Laich - back in the lineup in place of Kris Beech - was the real stinker, winning only 2 of 10 draws and losing every single neutral or offensive zone faceoff he too. Beech, who is fifth in the League in faceoff win percentage, will almost certainly be back in the lineup Monday night and if Laich gets a sweater in Calgary, I'd expect him to be shifted to the wing.
  • Alex Ovechkin had a whopping seven hits last night, which perhaps can finally put to rest the "What's wrong with Alex?" questions. Matt Bradley had five hits last night, bringing his total for the year up to nine. Nice effort last night, and if Bradley is going to stick, he needs to be hitting everything that moves, as he apparently did last night.
  • How 'bout them sluggin' Caps? After not having a fighting major before Friday, the team has now had a fight in back-to-back games as Shaone Morrisonn dropped the gloves last night. But I'm still waiting on The Donald's first fight in a Caps uniform before I dub this squad the F Street Fighters.
  • Remember when Richard Zednik was good? Yeah, me neither.
Daily Awards
  • Hart: Sidney Crosby (3G, +3, 4 SOG)
  • Ross: Jaromir Jagr, Tomas Kaberle (4 points each)
  • Norris: Tomas Kaberle (3G, +2, 5 SOG, 1 hit, 4 takeaways, 2 giveaways)
  • Vezina: Martin Brodeur (22-save shutout win)
  • Richard: Sidney Crosby, Tomas Kaberle (3G each)
  • Calder: Evgeni Malkin (G, 2A, +3)
  • Aiken: Antero Niittymaki (L, 4 goals allowed on 9 shots against in just 22:41 of work)

Saturday, October 28, 2006

Saturday Roundup/Canucks 3, Caps 2 (SO)
Gamenight: Caps @ Oilers

[NHL.com Recap - Official Scoresheet - Official Superstats]
[NHL.com Preview - WashingtonCaps.com Preview - Official Gameday Thread]

Follow all that up there? It can get confusing on these back-to-backs. I thought I'd go with a bulleted list of my thoughts on last night's game so as not to have to come up with creative transitions (it's a lazy, rainy Saturday in the nation's capital - sorry). If you want a more coherent recap of the game, read the NHL.com Recap above (the game ended too late for the WaPo's or the WTimes to give a crap about it, though they do have an article on the new Ballston practice facility). Anyway, away we go:
  • Olie Kolzig stole a point for the Caps last night. I know that after the Avs game I said that the Caps needed to keep the shots under 48 per game - good job "limiting" Vancouver to 44.
  • The Caps were outshot 16-1 in the first period and 15-2 in the third. Maybe they were afraid of Roberto Luongo after all.
  • Congrats to Alexander Ovechkin on the first Sidney Crosby Hat Trick of his career. Please let it also be the last. To both our Alexes - when you take a diving penalty you embarass yourself, your team and the game. Last night's dives were freebies - one more and it's a reputation. Cut it out.
  • The Jakub Klepis experiment is over. Just over five minutes of ice time and another bad obstruction penalty (this time holding, which at leasts shows that he's not one-dimensional in his penalty-committing) later, it's clear that he's overmatched in the NHL right now.
  • On the "good penalty" side of things, Chris Clark got the Caps' first fighting major of the season when he danced with Kevin Bieksa. Maybe it's a coincidence that after the bout, a Caps team that was being just about as thoroughly dominated as a team imagineable turned the tables and scored twice in the next four minutes to even the score. More likely, the captain provided the spark the team needed (of course, the two Vancouver penalties that followed helped quite a bit as well).
  • It's odd that the Caps' two best players both seem to struggle in the shootout. On a night when Olie's 42 saves and Ovechkin's goal and an assist got the Caps to overtime, they both failed the team in the shootout, with Olie allowing two shots by and Ovie failing to score.
  • Three points in two tough road games is fantastic. If they can get a point out of Edmonton tonight, this road trip is bordering on unbelievable before they even get to Calgary.
Daily Awards
  • Hart: Pascal Leclaire (38-save shutout win)
  • Ross: Pavel Datsyuk, Nicklas Lidstrom, Tomas Holstrom, Sergei Zubov, Mike Modano, Alexander Ovechkin (2 points each)
  • Norris: Nicklas Lidstrom (2G, including game-winner, +3)
  • Vezina: Pascal Leclaire (38-save shutout win)
  • Richard: Nicklas Lidstrom, Mike Modano (2G each)
  • Calder: Jiri Hudler (G, +1)
  • Aiken: Marty Turco (L, 4 goals allowed on 33 shots against, "throwing the stick" penalty that led to Detroit's winning goal)

Friday, October 27, 2006

Bulletin Board Material

Good news, Caps fans - you can go to bed early tonight without wasting your time staying up for west coast hockey, as Canucks.com's "The Insider" column implies that the Caps shouldn't even bother showing up for tonight's game. In an article entitled "Luongo's Capitalizing History," the author opens with this salvo:

You could excuse the Washington Capitals if they loaded up their gear after the game in Denver and headed straight for Saturday’s game in Edmonton without ever entering Vancouver air space.

They won’t, of course, because the National Hockey League schedule says they’ll be here to face the Canucks on Friday. But given the way Roberto Luongo absolutely owned the Caps last season, you couldn’t blame them, if they had no interest whatsoever in being in the same province, let alone the same rink, as the new Canucks netminder later this week.

Now, it's beyond dispute that Luongo had a great year against the Caps in 2005-06, going 7-0 with a 1.96 goals against average and a .947 save percentage. But for his career - his "capitalizing history" - he is 13-9-3 against Washington, or, put another way, he is 6-9-3 against the Caps outside of last year's anomolous record against a team early in it's rebuilding.

Roberto Luongo is a great goalie, but he can be beaten. Heck, it's happened four times already this year, including once against the team the Caps beat just two nights ago (and one more time than his opposite number, Olie Kolzig, has been beaten so far this season). Further, this isn't last year's Caps team heading into GM Place - last year's Caps were 23rd in the NHL in goals per game; this year's version enters tonight 2nd in the League in that category.

In the past three weeks, the Caps have shown that they aren't scared of anyone and I couldn't be more sure that they're not afraid of Luongo, the Olsen Twins or the rest of the Canuckleheads. As any statistician will readily tell you, numbers can be twisted to say a lot of things, but the only number that really matters is Luongo's 0-0 record against the Caps in 2006-07. In all likelihood, that number will change tonight, and it won't be because the Caps failed to show for the game.

(Hat tip to antix for the article)

Friday Roundup/Gamenight: Caps @ Canucks

[NHL.com Preview - WashingtonCaps.com Preview - Official Gameday Thread]

Caps Quick Hits

From the WaPo, Alex Ovechkin is 100%. That's pretty much it. The WTimes has more, but likely only because they had nothing yesterday.

Via D.C. Sports Bog, this article which says the Caps could win the Cup by the end of the decade, but not this year. Let's see, with playoffs in the Spring and 2007 out and the decade over after 2009, that leaves next season or 2008-09. Sweet.

Terry Frei has Ovechkenvy and writes a love letter to him disguised as a non-rant on the NHL's silly scheduling. Oh, and there's no way "Ted Leonsis tires of trying to make a go of it in downtown Washington and moves the franchise to the other Washington." That was thoroughly covered here.

Thread of the Day:
Elsewhere 'Round the Rinks:
  • Everybody knows that the Buffalo Sabres are now 10-0-0. Not everyone knows that their AHL affiliate in Rochester is 7-0-0. Damn.
  • I'm not generally in the business of giving out fantasy hockey advice, but here's a tip for you: by November 8, the Boston Bruins and Columbus Blue Jackets will have only played 12 games each. By contrast, the Florida Panthers played their 12th game last night and by the 8th of November will be 17 games into their 2006-07 season. Same with the L.A. Kings and other teams, I'm sure. So next week, approach that unsuspecting Patrice Bergeron or Nikolai Zherdev owner and ask him if he's grown tired of his guy's lack of production. Maybe you'll catch him asleep and get a steal.
  • Umm... we needed a "high-tech study" to tell us this?
  • Is it just me or is this promotion a little bit minor league? Follow-up: What's Mike Commodore doing promoting the Flyers? (Hat tip to Kukla on the link)
Daily Awards
  • Hart: Dany Heatley (3G, including GWG, +3, 5 SOG)
  • Ross: Joe Corvo, Jason Spezza (5 points each)
  • Norris: Joe Corvo (G, 4A, +3, 8 SOG)
  • Vezina: Martin Brodeur (29-save shutout)
  • Richard: Martin St. Louis, Dany Heatley (3G each)
  • Calder: David LeNeveu (W, 32 saves on 34 shows against)
  • Aiken: Andrew Raycroft (L, 7 goals allowed on 37 shots against)

Thursday, October 26, 2006

Thursday Roundup/Caps 5, 'Lanche 3

[NHL.com Recap - Official Scoresheet - Official Super Stats]

Pens fans had a glimpse into their team's future on Tuesday night. On Wednesday night Caps fans got a similar sneak peek as Mike Green's rush and subsequent finish may have officially announced the young blueliner's arrival to the rest of the NHL.

But it wasn't all lollipops and puppy dogs for the Caps last night. Yesterday I said "when these Caps are challenged and excited, it usually means you can expect lots of penalties." Well, to no one's surprise, that's exactly how last night's game in Colorado started, as the Caps committed five first-period penalties including an offensive zone trip, a delay of game, a couple of hooks and a hold (the latter of the hooks and the hold resulting in a two-minute long five-on-three). Yikes. But great penalty-killing, blocked shots and solid goaltending helped the visitors to a 1-1 tie after one period (I hesitate to say "great" goaltending, despite Olie Kolzig's 17 saves in the opening stanza, because the goal on which the Avs scored was the result of a real juicy rebound - maybe Olie just wanted to get Joe Sakic's 1,500th point out of the way early).

The Caps owned the second period, tallying twice - Green at even strength and Alex Ovechkin on the power play - and outshooting their hosts 13-8 (not coincidentally, the Caps stayed out of the box for the entire twenty minutes) to take a 3-1 lead into the locker room.

The third period opened with a glass-shattering Ovechkin hit on Karlis Skrastins ("Wow, I'm stronger," Ovechkin said) and an early Sakic goal, followed by a great power move and finish by Dainius Zubrus to restore the Caps' two-goal lead. Incidentally, last night was Donald Brashear's best game as a Capital, and he was rewarded with his first point of the season on the Zubrus goal.

Anyway, with just over eight minutes left, Ovechkin was awarded a penalty shot after being hacked down on a breakaway and, well, he didn't score on it. Let's just leave it at that. A questionable tripping call (that the refs allowed the crowd to make) on Kris Beech later led to a third Avs goal, setting up a tension-filled final two-plus minutes... until Matt Bradley found the empty net to seal the deal. Exhale... until the camera zooms in on AO lying in a heap at the Avs' blueline with 2 seconds left (why was he even on the ice at that point anyway?). I won't speculate, but he could barely make it off the ice and was putting no pressure at all on that right leg. Very, very not good. Or it's a charley horse. I was prepared to say "what a great way to start a tough trip," but that will have to wait, as this could potentially be a horrible way to start a tough trip - we should know more today.

Back in 2004, on their march through the Stanley Cup Finals, the Tampa Bay Lightning had a team mantra - "safe is death." This year's Caps, if they're to have any success, must live by a similar mantra - "stupid is death." If this team can limit the turnovers and bad penalties (and for the love of Peeeete, keep the shots against way below 48), there's no reason they can't contend for a playoff spot. Well, there was no reason before AO went down.

UPDATE: According to ESPN.com, "no need to worry. Ovechkin was walking around just fine after the game." Exhale again. Big time.

Daily Awards
  • Hart: Todd White (G, 2A, +2, 4 SOG)
  • Ross: Todd White, P.-M. Bouchard, Mary-Kate Sedin, Ashley Sedin, Andrew Brunette, Chris Pronger, Marek Svatos (3 points each)
  • Norris: Chris Pronger (3A, +3 in win over former team)
  • Vezina: Roberto Luongo (32-save shutout win)
  • Richard: Brian Rolston, Jozef Stumpel, Mary-Kate Sedin, Ryan Getzlaf, Travis Moen, Jarret Stoll (2G each)
  • Calder: Anze Kopitar (A, +1, 4 SOG, 2 takeaways, 0 giveaways, 1 blocked shot, 56% faceoffs won in 3-1 loss)
  • Aiken: Marcel Hossa (-3 in 10:59 of ice time, on ice for all three even strength Florida goals in 4-2 home loss)

Wednesday, October 25, 2006

Dale Hunter Is The Best Player In NHL History...

... to ever wear the number 32. So says SportsIllustrated.com. They've also got Capslove for Olie Kolzig's #37, Mel Angelstad's #69 and Joé Juneau's #90. Sweet.

Oh, and Cam Neely - you and your #8 are officially on notice.

Hat tip to PK for the tip. Cross-posted at Southeast Shootout.

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Wednesday Roundup/Gamenight: Caps @ 'Lanche

[NHL.com Preview - WashingtonCaps.com Preview - Official Gameday Thread]

The Caps are off on their annual Western swing, this time with four stops in the Northwest Division (Colorado, Edmonton, Vancouver and Calgary). In case you're wondering, that's four teams with a combined record of 17-13-3. And as the team heads out, they're at least talking a good game:
"Guys are looking at it as a challenge," [Olie] Kolzig added. "We're going to hockey cities. We have to embrace the environment rather than be intimidated by it."
Uh huh.
"Even though we have three games in four nights, [motivation] won't be a problem because a lot of guys will be playing in front of friends and family," [Matt] Pettinger said. "Guys are going to be excited."
Now, to me when these Caps are challenged and excited, it usually means you can expect lots of penalties. But we'll see. Hopefully Pettinger's return provides a spark, the team plays disciplined hockey and the goalies stand on their heads. If not, the Caps may come back to D.C. in bad shape.

First stop, Colorado (and old friends Ken Klee and Andrew Brunette), where the 4-3-2 Avs no longer sell out all of their home games, but still have two lines that can put up goals in bunches (the team is 8th in the NHL in goals per game). And while Colorado has some ancient players (Joe Sakic and Pierre Turgeon each celebrated his 83rd birthday Monday), youth is being served there as well by the likes of Marek Svatos, Wojtek Wolski and Paul Stastny. The Avs goaltending is suspect (Jose Theodore's GAA is nearly four and his save percentage is on the wrong side of .880 - ouch), and Caps fans can expect to perhaps see Peter Budaj (he of the 2.75 career GAA) between the pipes Wednesday night.

Like I said, the key word for this road trip is discipline. If they play smart and under control, the Caps will be in every game. If not, a team like the Avs can hang a touchdown on them in no time.

Elsewhere 'Round the Rinks:
  • Let me preface this by saying that Evgeni Malkin's goal last night was a thing of beauty, displaying the kid's speed, size, strength and skill wonderfully. That said, if John Vanbiesbrouck (I believe he was doing the color for Versus last night) uttered the phrase "shades of Mario Lemiuex" one more time, I would have thrown a hammer through my TV screen. We get it - Malkin and Sidney Crosby are like Gretzky and Messier, except good. Enough.
  • Speaking of the Pens game, Eric has to be ecstatic that he's no longer the goofiest-looking Staal in the NHL (sadly, that picture doesn't do Jordy's goofiness justice).
  • I've been told that the only way to get a bad song out of your head is to pass it on to someone else. So here's hoping that one of you can rid me of the god-awful "That's All" by Phil Collins. You know it. You hate it. And now it's yours.
Daily Awards
  • Hart: Evgeni Malkin (G, A, +2, 5 SOG, cured cancer, solved world hunger, brought peace to the Middle East)
  • Ross: 14 players tied with 2 points each
  • Norris: Andrej Meszaros (G, A, +3, 6 hits, 2 blocked shots)
  • Vezina: Miikka Kiprusoff (W, 26 saves on 27 shots against)
  • Richard: 21 players tied with 1G each
  • Calder: Evgeni Malkin (phenomenal G, A, +2, 5 SOG)
  • Aiken: Andrew Raycroft (L, 5 goals allowed on 21 shots against in 40 minutes of work)

Can I Get An Amen?

Caps owner Ted Leonsis is asking fans to have faith and patience. Specifically, he posts a spiritied defense of the team's decisions not to sign stop-gap over-the-hill free agents to plug holes that may or may not be there:
Making wholesale free agent signings and expecting good team chemistry and success is naive and fiscally irresponsible. And under a cap system, this can cause long term damage to the development of your team.
I couldn't agree more, and can suggest a couple of teams up I-95 for fans whose loyalty is based upon free-spending ownership.

Oh, and whoever suggested that the Caps sign Alexander Mogilny and/or Petr Nedved should be punched in the mouth.

(Cross-posted at Southeast Shootout)

Tuesday Roundup: Any Excuse To Use An Umlaut

Caps Quick Hits

As I told you the other day, Nicklas Bäckström is kicking ass and taking initials over in Sweden (he's so slick he doesn't even take full names). Now Tarik tells you the same and comments on the line juggling (which I noted that he noted yesterday) and an improved power play. The WTimes discusses the Klepis/Beech line swap as well.

Thread of the Day:
Elsewhere 'Round the Rinks:
  • So last week I said that I had "a couple of exciting ideas that I've been working on putting together (and one great idea that probably won't come to fruition - but I'll throw it out there at a later date in case someone wants to pick it up and run with it)." One of the exciting ideas is now Southeast Shootout. And the great idea that I'm not pursuing right now? It's another rivalry site, but a player rivalry site: The Battle of Crosbechkin. It would be awesome - just covering AO and Sid the Kid, talking trash back and forth. I can even envision a banner that has "Crosb" in Pens font, "echkin" in Caps font and then "87" underneath with a Caps 8 and Pens 7. It would be dope. Just imagine if someone had blogged Magic vs. Bird throughout their careers. Yeah. Like that.
  • Joel Kwiatkowski scored a goal (in the NHL) last night and Mathieu Biron is leading the AHL in assists. Undoubtedly, Jason Doig is leading a Safeway somewhere in groceries bagged.
  • When Alexandre Picard was called up from Syracuse to Columbus, he probably had an idea that he'd be spending some time at the end of the bench. But being on the receiving end of a viscious Christian Ehrhoff hipcheck is probably not what he had in mind (I'll post the video once I find it).
Daily Awards
  • Hart: Ilya Kovalchuk (3G, A, 7 SOG)
  • Ross: Slava Kozlov, Ilya Kovalchuk, Petr Sykora (4 points each)
  • Norris: J.M. Liles (G, A)
  • Vezina: Marty Turco (W, 33 saves on 34 shots against)
  • Richard: Ilya Kovalchuk (3G)
  • Calder: Paul Stastny (G, 2A, +2, 3 SOG, 2 hits, 2 takeaways, 1 blocked shot)
  • Aiken: Dan Cloutier (L, 6 goals allowed on 32 shots against in 40:41 of action)

Monday, October 23, 2006

Up Down The Beech

According to Tarik El Bashir, with Matt Pettinger coming off the IR for Wednesday night's game in Colorado, Glen Hanlon plans to shake up his lines a little, swapping Jakub Klepis and Kris Beech and sitting Rico Fata or Brooks Laich to leave four lines that look like this:

Ovechkin-Zubrus-Clark
Semin-Klepis-Zednik
Laich/Fata-Sutherby-Bradley
Brashear-Beech-Pettinger

The hope is that an all-Euro line and a reunion of Pettinger with his center from juniors will provide both chemistry and balance (though Alex Semin sure hasn't needed any help so far and, in fact, every point Beech has is either an assist on a Semin goal or the result of a Semin assist). As Klepis noted:
Zednik "is European like I am, and same with Semin, so maybe there is more chemistry than when I'm playing with the guys from the U.S. or Canada."
In addition, this is probably an audition to see if Klepis, with more ice time, can stick with the big club, as there's no point in him playing in the fourth line at the NHL level right now.

The fear is that dropping the NHL's fourth best faceoff man to the fourth line in favor of a guy who has lost 60% of the draws he's taken will hinder the second line's (read: Semin's) productivity. The other fear is that Beech will miss Semin's sweet, silky hands.

If I were behind the bench, I'd throw Princess on Brian Sutherby's left and bump Laich/Fata down, but that leaves a pretty grisly fourth line. In any event, it's good to see Petty back and it's good to see Klepis get a chance to prove himself - worst case, Klepis gets sent to the minors once Boyd Gordon can play; best case, the Caps have found a decent playmaker to center their second line. My bet, however, is that Klepis is in Hershey when we turn the calendar to November.
(Cross-posted at Southeast Shootout)

D.C. United... But Not Necessarily In Support Of Soccer

Apparently the Caps aren't the only local squad that could use a few more fannies in the seats, and D.C. Sports Bog's Dan Steinberg is "calling out all Caps fans to show up for [D.C.] United's home half of the opening round of the playoffs this Sunday evening." Steinberg's plea to the local hockey faithful continues:
The Skins have a bye and the Caps are off. No excuses. I'll even invite you to the Barra and the Eagles' tailgates. You United and Caps people seem to have a lot in common: you think the Washington Post undercovers your team, you occasionally read my blog, you like alcohol, you don't like teams from New York. This is a natural love connection. This especially means you, Goat and Sam Horn Guy.
Now, sitting outside watching soccer on a Sunday night in late October doesn't really appeal to me (though bitching about the WaPo's coverage of the Caps, reading Steinberg's blog, drinking and hating on New York sports teams are some of my favorite pastimes), but if you're interested, go out there and represent the fraternity of under-appreciated D.C. sports teams' fans. Personally, if I wanted to go to RFK to watch a team struggle mightily to score, I'd have taken in more Nats games this past summer.

UPDATE: Steinberg continues his plea to CapsNation to help out their futbol-lovin' brethren.

Red Fisher: Genius

In today's Montreal Gazette, Red Fisher has a column extolling the on-ice virtues of Alexander Ovechkin (why, I'm not exactly sure, but we'll take what we can get) and ranking him number one on Red's "Top 10 List."

Hat tip to TANK1 for the link.

Sunday, October 22, 2006

Monday Roundup: Shhh... Don't Wake The Local Scribes

Caps Quick Hits

Neither of the local papers has an article on the Caps today, so I'll try to dig something up later.

Thread of the Day:
Elsewhere 'Round the Rinks:
Daily Awards
  • Hart: Ryan Shannon (G, A, +2 in 3-2 shootout win)
  • Ross: Anze Kopitar, Ryan Shannon, Todd Marchant (2 points each)
  • Norris: Lubomir Visnovsky (G, +2)
  • Vezina: J.S. Giguere (Shootout W, 29 saves on 31 shots through OT)
  • Richard: Lubomir Visnovsky, Mike Cammalleri, Ryan Shannon, Dustin Penner (G each)
  • Calder: Ryan Shannon (1st NHL G, 1st NHL A, +2)
  • Aiken: Aaron Miller (-2, 0 SOG, 1 giveaway, 0 takeaways, 1 hit in 3-2 shootout loss)

Sunday Roundup/Lightning 6, Caps 4

[NHL.com Recap - WashingtonCaps.com Postgame Coverage - SeSo Open Thread]

The Caps looked like a team playing it's 11th game in 12 days last night, which is bad since it was only their third game in four nights. Aren't these kids supposed to be full of energy? Isn't their veteran goalie supposed to be able to maintain focus for sixty minutes every night? And Ben Clymer on the shift in which his turnover led to the Brad Richards goal was playing like he is still on the Lightning payroll. Now it's off to face the Westerns where things can go from not-so-bad to worse before the team finally returns home in November.

Read all about last night's game in the WaPo and WTimes and look for more postgame coverage over at SeSo.

Elsewhere 'Round the Rinks:
Daily Awards
  • Hart: Alexei Yashin (4A in 4-3 win over the Champs)
  • Ross: Alexei Yashin, Sheldon Souray (4 points each)
  • Norris: Sheldon Souray (2G, 2A)
  • Vezina: Mike Smith (22-save shutout win in NHL debut)
  • Richard: Nikita Alexeev, Andrew Brunette, Drury, Marian Hossa, Dean McAmmond, Sheldon Souray, Lee Stempniak, Darcy Tucker, Antoine Vermette (2G each)
  • Calder: Mike Smith (22-save shutout win in NHL debut)
  • Aiken: Martin Brodeur (L, 6 goals allowed on 26 shots face in just 33:57).

Friday, October 20, 2006

Saturday Roundup/Gamenight: Lightning @ Caps

[NHL.com Preview - WashingtonCaps.com Preview - Southeast Shootout Open Thread - Official Gameday Thread]

Caps Quick Hits

The WaPo tries to get to the bottom of why "Automatic Alex" ain't so automatic these days and the WTimes takes yet another well-deserved day off (two articles a week can really tucker a paper out).

Elsewhere 'Round the Rinks (and Beyond):
  • I'd like to thank everyone who went over and checked out Southeast Shootout yesterday. We had a much bigger-than-expected opening day and have set the bar pretty high. Keep checking it out pre-game, post-game and during the game every time the Caps are taking on one of their Southeast Division foes.
  • Welcome Caps Prospects to the blogosphere.
Daily Awards
  • Hart: Tomas Vanek (G, A, +2, 3 SOG)
  • Ross: Radim Vrbata, Maxim Afinogenov (3 points each)
  • Norris: Sami Salo (GWG with :00 left in OT, A, +1)
  • Vezina: J.S. Giguere (W, 27 saves on 28 shots against)
  • Richard: Simon Gagne (2G)
  • Calder: Lasse Kukkonen (G, A, +1)
  • Aiken: Kevyn Adams (-3, 3 giveaways in only 7:27 of ice time)

Doug Risebrough Drunk-Dials Preds' Prospect

I hope at least he called collect. (TSN.ca)

The "Other" Alex

NHL.com has an article up about Alex Semin's quick start (and spreads the love to linemate Kris Beech).
"His hands are like silk, they're unbelievable," linemate Kris Beech said of Semin. "He's really something to see. He's got some sweet hands."
It would be really juvenile to post an awkward picture directly after that quote, so I won't.


Sorry. It's Friday.

Speaking of Semin, however, make sure to check out On Frozen Blog's excellent post on him.

***Special Announcement***

As I alluded to the other day in my Jerry-Maguire-without-the-cute-kid-dropping-the-F-bomb rant the other day, there's something new in the blogosphere from Japers' Rink. And from CasonBlog. And from Do Thrashers Have Large Talons? And from Embrace the Dull. And from some dude named Rick. What is it, you ask?

It's SoutheastShootout.com, and to find out what it's all about, go here. CasonBlog also has a good synopsis/intro here. As he puts it:
Our sole goal - to build a big tent and generate buzz amongst the rabid and swelling ranks of fans in hockey's final frontier - The American Southeast.
The site is in its infancy and will certainly be evolving, and all comments and criticisms of the site, the concept and anything else to do with it are encouraged (via comments there or here or directly in an email to me if you prefer).

As Caps fans, your participation will be critical in making "SeSo" work but more importantly in showing the rest of the hockey blogosphere how strong the Caps' fan base truly is. So check it out early and often, especially during intra-divisional games (where open threads will become smack-filled forums for real fans), and don't forget about The Rink - I'll still be here, and with this shot in the arm, I'm diggin' it all even more.

Friday Roundup/Thrashers 4, Caps 3 (OT)

[NHL.com Recap - Official Scoresheet - Official Super Stats]

A second period that was a mirror image of Wednesday night's miserable middle frame and Brent Johnson's stellar goaltending earned the Caps a point in a fifth straight game, but in the end there was just too much Kari Lehtonen and the Caps fell to Atlanta 4-3 for the second time in six days. Read all about the game here.

Even though it's disappointing to lose a lead in the last minute of regulation and then the game minutes later, I'll take three points out of every back-to-back set of games, especially with the second game coming against a division leader who's been resting for nearly a week. Losses like this hurt, but hopefully they motivate even more.

A couple of notes from the game:
  • Brian Pothier had more ice time (30:39) than Bryan Muir, Jakub Klepis, Rico Fata and Donald Brashear combined. Why is Klepis - 3:48 of ice time - even in the NHL right now?
  • Brooks Laich was 1-for-8 on faceoffs and finished -2 for the game (and when the other team only scores two even strength goals, that's something). Steve Eminger was also a very stinky -2 and was Ilya Kovalchuk's slalom gate on multiple occasions.
  • On the flip side of that coin, the entire first line and Pothier were on the ice for both Caps even strength goals and all four skaters ended up +2 for the night.
  • The penalty-kill was strong again, successfully killing 6 of 7 penalties including a long 5-on-3.
Thread of the Day:
Elsewhere 'Round the Rinks:
Daily Awards
  • Hart: Marian Hossa (2G, including GTG with :33 left, A, shootout game-clincher, +2, 7 SOG, 3 takeaways, 0 giveaways, 1 blocked shot, J.P.'s jealous hatred)
  • Ross: Sidney Crosby, Alexei Yashin, Brian Gionta, Patrik Elias, Patrick Marleau, Milan Michalek, Marian Hossa (3 points each)
  • Norris: Sergei Gonchar (GWG in OT, A)
  • Vezina: Mathieu Garon (40-save shutout win)
  • Richard: Glen Murray, Patrick Marleau, Marian Hossa (2G each)
  • Calder: Evgeni Malkin (GTG, A, +1)
  • Aiken: Derian Hatcher (-3, 2 giveaways - though he did take the penalty on which the Flyers scored their only goal, shorthanded; Hatcher is now dead last in the NHL in +/- by a mile)

Thursday, October 19, 2006

Thursday Roundup/Caps 5, Panthers 2/
Gamenight: Caps @ Thrashers

[NHL.com Recap - Official Scoresheet - Official Super Stats - WashingtonCaps.com Postgame / NHL.com Preview - WashingtonCaps.com Preview - Official Gameday Thread]

Roberto Luongo and Jon Sim are no longer in Florida, so you knew the Caps had a chance last night against a team against whom they were 0-7-1 last year. And any time your team plays against Todd Bertuzzi's and no one needs to be stretchered off the ice, it's already a good game. Anything after that is really just icing on the cake, and last night the Caps had plenty of icing courtesy of Semin (wow, that didn't sound good). The Caps scored early and often, tallying five times before the game was fifteen minutes old, and sending Alex Auldful to the showers after just 12:36 of action en route to an easy victory.

I must say, however, that other than those first fifteen minutes, the game kinda sucked. I realize that that's like saying, "Other than John Lennon, the Beatles kinda blew." But my problem with the way the rest of the game played out (and it is very much worth noting that Olie Kolzig was in Vezina-form for all 60 minutes) is that the Caps don't have that killer instinct yet. In fairness, the team has rarely been in position to put opponents away, but a night after watching the Sabres' unrelenting attack against the Flyers, I was hoping to see the Caps do similarly. Instead, they only mustered up 12 shots in the game's final two periods. Maybe they were just saving themselves for tonight's game in Atlanta.

But enough with my inherent negativity. This was a big win in an intra-division game to put the Caps above .500 for the first time since... well, I don't know when, but I'm sure someone will tell me. The team is also 2-0-1 at home, Richard Zednik showed signs of life (in fact the second line continues to score, racking up a pair of goals and three assists), and Kris Beech won 57% of his faceoffs, a category in which he's now 3rd in the League - who knew?

The WaPo covers the game here and Dave Fay makes a Beech/coast pun here.

Finally, I would never claim credit for anything the Caps do production-wise, but it was nice to hear Muse's "Hysteria" as the warm-up music for the second period. Now if we can just bring the rest of the in-game music into the late 20th/early 21st century, we'd really be cookin' with gas. Step one: throw the organ/keyboard/synthesizer in the Potomac. Step two: do some file-swapping with the dude who does the music in Minnesota. Step three: rock.

Pictures (click to enlarge):

A pint of Smithwicks at Fado and Capital Q's brisket and sausage plate before the game. Honestly, there's nothing better, so a little free advertising for Da Q. I love you guys. Seriously.


The view from Section 433. It was my first time in the section (usually I don't sit up there among the unwashed masses, but tonight I was a man of the people - all 8,000 or so).

Daily Awards
  • Hart: Tomas Vokoun (38-save shutout win at Madison Square Garden)
  • Ross: Corey Perry (3 points)
  • Norris: J.-M. Liles (2G, +3)
  • Vezina: Tomas Vokoun (38-save shutout win)
  • Richard: J.-M. Liles (2G)
  • Calder: Shane O'Brien (G, A, fight... Gordie Howe Hat Trick, baby!)
  • Aiken: Alex Auld (L, 4 goals allowed on 12 shots against in 12:36 of work)

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

Wednesday Roundup/Gamenight: Panthers @ Caps

[NHL.com Preview - WashingtonCaps.com Preview - Official Gameday Thread]

The Panthers come to town for a Southeast Shootout with the Caps and the Caps will somehow have to get through the game without the services of blueliner John Erskine, who was placed on waivers yesterday after failing to break the lineup in the first four games of the season. John, we hardly knew ye.

In the papers today, Dave Fay wonders why the increased allowable curve in skaters' sticks has actually decreased scoring, while Tarik El-Bashir previews tonight's intra-division tilt and also has a touching moment between a pair of brothers in the goaltender fraternity:
Winger Matt Bradley hit [goaltender Olie] Kolzig on the mask with a shot, prompting Hanlon to halt practice and issue a warning to the team about shooting high. "It wasn't a coaching moment, it was an ex-goalie moment," said [head coach Glen] Hanlon, a former NHL goaltender.
Elsewhere 'Round the Rinks:
  • Caps' prospect Nicklas Bäckström is currently leading the Elitserien in scoring with 5 goals and 17 points in 11 games. By way of an apples-to-oranges comparison, Peter Forsberg had 23 goals and 47 points in 39 Elitserien games when he was Nick's age.
  • The "New NHL" © Gary Bettman Enterprises, where it may be that no lead is safe, but scoring first sure does help your chances of moving up in the standings. After last night's games, the team that has scored the first goal has ended up with at least one point in 69 of 83 games - 83% - played so far this season. Interestingly, the Isles' two wins have come after giving up the first goal and the three times they scored first, they lost. Leave it to the Charlie Wang's crew to have everything back-assward.
  • More stats for you - wonder why Calgary can't score (well, ok, prior to last night)? Maybe it has something to do with the fact that heading into last night, they were dead last in the League in faceoff percentage. In fact, three of the five lowest-scoring (goals/game) teams (Boston, Ottawa and Calgary) were in the bottom five in faceoff percentage as well. Coincidence? Probably not.
  • Last Thursday I asked the rhetorical question, "Is it just me or is Radek Bonk just about the worst hockey player you've ever seen?" Last night, Bonk answered with a couple of goals. Radek - "rhetorical" means you don't answer the question. Duh.
  • There's a new Rink Poll at right about which Eastern Conference coach will be the first to get a pink slip. Go vote - it's your duty as a citizen.
Daily Awards
  • Hart: Maxim Afinogenov (G, 4A, +4 in 9-1 rout of Philly)
  • Ross: Maxim Afinogenov (5 points)
  • Norris: Sheldon Souray (2G, A, including points on game-tying and -winning goals, 5 SOG)
  • Vezina: Evgeni Nabokov (32-save shutout win)
  • Richard: Derek Roy, Tomas Vanek, Sheldon Souray, Radek Bonk (2G each)
  • Calder: Matt Carle (2A, +2 in 2-0 win)
  • Aiken: Robert Esche (L, 9 goals allowed on 30 shots against - maybe that'll teach him not to mouth off about the coach)

An Open Letter To Rink Readers

Let me preface this by saying that The Rink isn't going anywhere. I started writing this blog as a release and it has, quite frankly, far exceeded my hopes and expectations. I couldn't be more appreciative of the positive feedback I've gotten from my readers, and hope to have a lot more fun in the days, months and years (years?) ahead. But as you may have noticed, posting has been a little light on The Rink recently. Part of that has to do with commitments I've had that have prevented me from seeing some of the Caps games, so I've felt ill-qualified to make generalizations about how the team is doing in the early goings (though it's not as if that has ever stopped me before). But more of it has to do with what is going on in the hockey blogosphere, especially here in Washington.

It sounds odd to say that Washington is leading the NHL in something, but when it comes to diversity of online coverage, there's no doubt in my mind that the Caps are way out in front of the rest of the League. There are plenty of fan blogs, the mainstream media (in this case the WaPo) has not one but two bloggers that cover the team, the team has it's own blogger, the owner blogs, and there's at least one site that is somewhere in between the first and second of these overly-broad categories. Without question, the team's progressive embracing of alternative media coupled with a charismatic young superstar has created an environment in which the Caps' online presence could explode (if the team can improve in the standings, look out!).

But with the blurring of boundaries between mainstream and alternative media and the sheer volume of online coverage come casualties. When the team itself has a paid employee dedicated to inside coverage and newspaper beat reporters are filing reports that hit the 'net in real-time, it creates a difficult environment for the blogger who tries to cover the kind of things the newspapers wouldn't bother with or whose primary advantage over mainstream media coverage is the ability to break news to a community that would otherwise have to wait until the next morning's hard copy hit their driveway.

As I see it, there are two ways a blogger can go when confronted with this mini "crisis of faith" (well, three if you include quitting, which I don't). The first is to try to compete in terms of access to the team (and I'm loathe to use the word "compete" because I know that this isn't a competition, but in a very real sense it seems that there is an increasingly sharp divide between the "insiders" and the "outsiders" and bloggers are choosing - or having chosen for them - on which side of that chasm they want to end up). There is probably no better organization in all of sports than the Washington Capitals when it comes to granting access to members of the alternative media. I know that several bloggers were invited to the team's media day (I couldn't make it), and as far as I know, every blogger who has applied for media credentials to cover the team has had their request granted. This is, of course, great - if you have the time and desire to approach blogging from a more mainstream media angle.

The second option is to get more focused. It's no secret that one of the keys to success on the internet (or just about anywhere, for that matter) is to provide something that no one else is providing. As a friend of mine told me, "the more niche your blog is the more you own the discussion," and the more people will seek it out. On second thought, maybe he said, "the more Nietzsche your blog is..." Whatever. I think what he was saying is that if you don't have the time or the access that the bigger blogs or the mainstream media has, go for an angle no one else is approaching the topic from. Perhaps your schtick is the witty-but-foul-mouthed pessimist. I'd read that. Or a site dedicated to haikus about how bad Richard Zednik is ("Oh so much promise/That's never to be fulfilled/Won't get fooled again"). I'd definitely read that.

Point being, you (and by "you" I mean "I") need to go somewhere the team-oriented payroll guys and the borderline-mainstream alternative media won't go. So I've got a couple of exciting ideas that I've been working on putting together (and one great idea that probably won't come to fruition - but I'll throw it out there at a later date in case someone wants to pick it up and run with it), and you'll see the results soon enough.

As for The Rink, I'm going to keep at it just like before, but will do my best not to simply regurgitate the other stuff that's out there on the Caps. If you want a recap of the previous night's game, you're better off reading it from any of the sites that I'll link to in my posts. But if you want strong opinions, analyses of faceoff percentages, ice time, prospects, etc., that's what I'm here for. And I'll keep doing the Daily Awards because, really, that's the only unique - for the moment - feature that people seem to enjoy.

So thanks for indulging that cathartic rant. And keep your eyes peeled for what's next from J.P. and The Rink - you won't be disappointed.

- J.P.

The Maven: Ass Clown

According to the best blog on earth (a.k.a. Kukla's Korner), yesterday Stan Fischler (a.k.a. "The Maven" or "Mark Messier's Fluffer") served up this piece of sourceless garbage:
An investor checking out potential NHL team purchases tells us that there have been subtle overtures made regarding the possible sale of the Capitals.
Caps' owner Ted Leonsis (it must be Leonsis day at The Rink) got wind of the rumor and fired off this response:
I want to be perfectly clear --- there has been no discussion -- ever -- about my selling the Caps--there has been no outreach--there would be no interest. I intend to own the team for a long long time -- perhaps til I die. The rumor that you report--is third hand from an unnamed source that made it up.
This should come as no surprise to Caps fans, of course, as Leonsis has never been in ownership for the money and isn't the type to quit anything before succeeding at it. But my question is this - how can a journalist print baseless rumors like this and still be respected? Is The Maven heading down the Larry Brooks road to ridiculousness? Is he already there?

And I know what you're thinking - "But, J.P., how do you know Fischler is full of it?" I don't. But a responsible journalist would have reached out to the League's most accessible owner and asked for a comment on the rumor before printing it. A simple "For the record, Caps' owner Ted Leonsis vehemently denied the existence of any such overtures" would have brought Fischler's scoop out of what is basically Eklund territory and into quasi-legitimate journalism.

UPDATE: Shaggy provides us with the The Maven's source. Brilliant.

Tuesday Roundup: You Can't Spell "Da Caps" Without D.C.

Caps Quick Hits

The WaPo laments the Caps' power-play woes (hey, it could be worse - see Flames, Calgary) and reports on visits to Caps' practice from outer space and to Rico Fata's face from Ben Clymer's fists (sadly, the scrap was stopped before Clymer could inflict much damage). The WTimes takes time to proclaim that Alex Ovechkin is not hurt. Really. He's not. There must be some other reason he's not hitting anyone and isn't playing with the explosive first step to which we've all become accustomed.

Elsewhere 'Round the Rinks:

  • Puckhead's Thoughts discusses an open letter from Ted Leonsis to Caps' fans on how to get more D.C. fannies in the seats at the Verizon Center. The only thing I'd add to his suggestions (win more games, get an African-American star on the team, etc.) is to give away more tickets. Fill-up your tank at an Exxon in D.C.? Get a ticket. Spend $500 at a downtown Safeway? Take your family to a game. Buy a 40 oz. at Capitol Hill Liquor? Ok, maybe not. Point being, I've hardly ever met anyone who's ever been to a hockey game that doesn't love it. The trick, of course, is getting them there in the first place. The larger point, though, is that the disposable income of people living within the city limits is obviously much less than that of their suburban counterparts. I wonder what the season-ticketholder breakdown for the Wizards looks like. In a sport that's far more popular in the inner city than hockey, I'd bet the STH breakdown looks alot more like that of the Caps than you'd think.

Daily Awards

  • Hart: Justin Williams (3G, including game-winner, A, +2, 2 hits)
  • Ross: Justin Williams (4 points)
  • Norris: Sami Salo (GWG, +1, 4 SOG, led team in shifts in 2-1 win)
  • Vezina: Cam Ward (W, 34 saves on 35 shots against)
  • Richard: Justin Williams (3 G)
  • Calder: Travis Zajac (G, +1)
  • Aiken: Marc Denis (L, 4 goals allowed on 19 shots against in just 2 periods of action)

Monday, October 16, 2006

Monday Roundup: The Best Defense Is Surrounding Yourself With Worse Defenses

Caps Quick Hits

Despite the title of this article, it's not about the Caps. In fact, with the 'Skins in the bottom third of nearly every defensive category, the Wiz giving up the second most points in the NBA a season ago, the Nationals committing the most errors in the Majors and Donald Rumsfeld being a complete debacle (rim shot), is it possible that the Caps actually have the best defense in town? Scary (and yes, I do realize that DC United has given up the fewest goals in the MLS, but I choose not to care about futbol).

Daily Awards

  • Hart: Jussi Jokinen (A, SO winner - really, is there anyone you'd rather have on your side in a shootout than "The Pussi"?)
  • Ross: Scott Niedermayer (2 points)
  • Norris: Scott Niedermayer (G, A, +2, 4 hits)
  • Vezina: J.S. Giguere (1 goal allowed on 21 shots against through OT in 35:23 of relief)
  • Richard: six players tied with 1 goal each
  • Calder: Ryan Shannon (because he tried a Spin-O-Rama in the shootout - hat tip to Kukla's on the link, and look for the move at around 3:10)
  • Aiken: Ilya Bryzgalov (2 goals allowed on 14 shots against in just 28:40 of work)