Showing posts with label Gonchar S.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gonchar S.. Show all posts

Monday, March 03, 2008

Monday Roundup/Gamenight: B's @ Caps

[AP Preview - WashingtonCaps.com Preview]

It certainly wasn't the primary motivation for acquiring goaltender Cristobal Huet at the trade deadline last week, but with three of the Caps' last 16 games against the Boston Bruins, it doesn't hurt that Cristo has dominated the B's throughout his career. In three games against the Bruins so far this season, Huet is 3-0-0 with a 1.67 goals against average and .943 save percentage, and for his career he is 8-2-0/1.93/.940 with three shutouts (the most wins and shutouts he has against any opponent).

In fact, Huet has great career numbers against a handful of the Caps' remaining opponents: his best career GAA (1.08) and save percentage (.964) are against Florida, who Washington will face twice more; he's 2-0-1/1.73/.947 against Nashville (who the Caps play on March 18); he's 4-2-2/2.05/.932 against Atlanta, 6-3-0/2.24/.931 against Tampa and 3-2-1-0/2.37/.931 against the 'Canes (each of whom Washington will play two more times before the regular season wraps up); and he's 3-2-0/2.13/.915 against Pitt, who the Caps face at home next Sunday.

Sure, Huet is no longer playing behind Mike Komisarek, Andrei Markov et. al., but the fact that he has a career 29-13-1-4 record with a 1.97 GAA, .937 SV% and nine shutouts against the teams the Caps will play in 13 of their last 16 games has to count for something. Oh, and against those other three teams - Buffalo, Calgary and Chicago - Huet is 8-9-1-3/2.73/.909... maybe Olie Kolzig can get some work in in those games - he's 26-19-6-1/2.42/.914 against that trio of teams.

The flip side of the "Huet vs. the Bruins" coin is "Tim Thomas vs. the Caps." The B's netminder is 8-0-1 with a 1.82 GAA and .940 SV% in his career against Washington, thanks in large part to Zdeno Chara's ability to shut down Alex Ovechkin. For his career, the Great Eight has only five points - and only two goals - in nine games against Big Z's teams (Boston for this year and last, Ottawa in '05-'06) and three goals and four helpers in nine tilts against Boston.

So even though the Bruins come into tonight's game 7-0-1 in their last eight and the Caps have been playing around .500 hockey for the past month-and-a-half (8-6-3 since January 22), expect another tight game - since the lockout, only one of the nine games between these two teams (of which the Caps have won only one, by the way) was decided by more than one goal (this season's only meeting, January 3rd's 2-0 Boston win). Oh, and for those of you revenge seekers, a reminder that this will be the first time the Caps have seen Milan Lucic since he quite possibly ended Brian Pothier's career.

The Caps should have no trouble getting up for this game. Maintaining that intensity will be the challenge.

Why The Bruins Will Win:
"The Bruins will beat the Caps tonight because Tim Thomas does yoga. All bets on the Bs are off if Huet wears his old Canadiens helmet, though." - The Hockey (and Donut) Blog

"Right now, the Bruins are flat out clicking. Everything that can go right is going right, and Boston has six straight wins. Between the pipes, Tim Thomas has allowed just one goal in his last two outings. This alone is not a good sign for Washington, as Thomas is 8-0-1 in his career against the Capitals. A solid performance from Thomas and the rest of the B's could lead to seven wins in a row." - The Bear Cave

"The Bruins will win because they're on a 6-game win streak. Besides, the only quality players on the Caps' roster are Ovechkin and ...uh....that other....hmm. Well, at least they have Ovechkin." - The Spoked B

"The Bruins will win because they have won their last six games, and are planning to make it seven tonight to keep the streak alive." - WickedBruinsFan
Elsewhere 'Round the Rinks:

Happy 24th Birthday to Alex Semin and Happy 45th to Kelly Miller... H/t to Ted Leonsis for digging out this GMGM gem.... On this date in 1996, Jim Carey set the franchise mark with his sixth shutout of the season (and second in two days). He'd add another three before his Vezina-winning campaign was over, and the nine shutouts remain a Caps single season record.... On this date in 2004, the Caps sent Sergei Gonchar to Boston for Shaone Morrisonn and the picks that were used to draft Jeff Schultz and Mikhail Yunkov.... On this date in 1895, according to the HHOF, "The earliest recorded ice hockey game was played, with McGill University going against the Victoria skating club, at the Victoria Rink in Montreal. The two teams played with nine men on a side, and used a flat disk as a puck." Chris Chelios finished the game with a plus-two rating.... Finally, one year ago today, we wished Semin a Happy Birthday with some of his personal highlights and started our offseason free agent wish list by looking at the available centers.

Daily Awards
  • Hart: Craig Anderson (53-save shutout win)
  • Ross: Patrick Kane (3 points)
  • Norris: Niklas Kronvall (2A, +3)
  • Vezina: Craig Anderson (53-save shutout win)
  • Richard: Patrick Kane, Jeff Carter (2G each)
  • Calder: Patrick Kane (2G, including the game-winner, A, +2)
  • Aiken: Henrik Lundqvist (3 goals allowed on 8 shots against in just 19:40 (!) of work)

Thursday, January 31, 2008

What, Is Sid Not Old Enough To Drive Yet?

In case you haven't seen it already, I thought I'd post a local Pittsburgh car ad featuring Colby Armstrong, noted card sharp Maxime Talbot, Sergei Gonchar and Evgeni Malkin (who has so little personality and/or command of the English language that he can't even get a speaking part) for its sheer unintentional comedic brilliance. Enjoy.

Saturday, February 24, 2007

Thursday, December 07, 2006

Scott Stevens: The Most Effective Draft Choice In Caps History?

Eric Duhatschek has a great post up over at the Globe and Mail posing the question "What was the single most effective draft choice in NHL history?" He asserts that "it was the Atlanta Flames’ decision to select Kent Nilsson in the fourth round, 64th overall, in the 1976 entry draft." Why? Basically because Nilsson was a highly-effective player (in the regular season) who was eventually traded for the picks that became Joe Nieuwendyk and Stephane Matteau! Matteau! Matteau!. Nieuwendyk, in turn, was later traded for a young Jarome Iginla. Now that's getting some mileage out of a single pick.

The question got me to thinking about who was the single most effective pick in Capitals history. Off the top of my head, I'd have to say it was Scott Stevens, selected in the first round, fifth overall in 1982. Stevens' arrival in D.C. helped to usher in the greatest era of Capitals hockey to date (zip it), as the Caps didn't miss the playoffs once in Stevens' time in D.C. and three times topped 100 points in the standings. Stevens averaged .71 points per game for the Caps and is still second on the team in career points by a defenseman (Calle Johansson is first).

Whether or not St. Louis's offer to then-restricted free agent Stevens should have been matched is open to debate, but it was not matched and the Caps received five picks as compensation in return. Two of those picks - Sergei Gonchar and Brendan Witt - became mainstays on the Caps' blueline for nearly a decade, and were instrumental in the team's Stanley Cup Finals appearance in 1998. Another - Miika Elomo - was traded along with a fourth round pick to Calgary for the second round pick that became 20-goal-scoring winger Matt Pettinger.

Gonchar was traded to Boston in the great player dump of '03 and in return the Caps received Shaone Morrisonn (who is arguably their steadiest defenseman right now) and first and second round picks in 2004 that have turned into prospects Jeff Schultz and Michael Yunkov.

Witt was traded to Nashville at last year's trade deadline for the Caps' current second-line center, Kris Beech, and the first round pick last summer that became top goaltending prospect Semen Varlamov.

There's still a lot of upside to be had from that initial pick, and there is no doubt that Scott Stevens is the gift that keeps on giving for the Caps.

Friday, October 20, 2006

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)

Monday, September 18, 2006

Our GM Can Beat Up Your GM

Check out this video package of some of GMGM's finer non-Gonchar-for-Morrisonn-a-first-and-a-second moments:

Thanks to LilWitterFan19 for the link.

Monday, July 10, 2006

Caps Re-Sign Morrisonn

The Caps announced today that they have avoided arbitration and re-signed restricted free agent defenseman Shaone Morrisonn to a two-year deal. Per team policy, terms were not disclosed.

Morrisonn, who projects to be a top-four defenseman, was one of the Caps' more pleasant surprises in 2005-06, finishing a remarkable +7 on a team that gave up 69 more goals than it scored. Acquiring the Vancouver native and former Bruins first-round pick is also one of General Manager George McPhee's biggest coups to date, as GMGM dumped soon-to-be-free-agent Sergei Gonchar on the Bruins for "Mo," a first- and a second-round pick in March of 2004.

For the latest on how the Caps' 2006-07 is shaping up, go here (also pinned at right).

UPDATE: The WTimes is reporting that Morrisonn will make $900,000 in each of the two years of his new contract.

Thursday, April 20, 2006

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.

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)

Tuesday, April 04, 2006

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:
Daily Awards

Sunday, February 05, 2006

Thinking Inside The Box

Just before the midway point of the third period Ben Clymer, straddling the goal line to Ed Belfour's immediate right, waited for a puck that Brian Sutherby had sent behind the net. Clymer's patience paid off, as he quickly took the puck, brought it out front and deposited it in the goal behind the Maple Leaf's netminder. The goal gave the home team Capitals a 3-1 lead in a game that was tight and hard-hitting throughout, but a two-goal lead felt worlds better than the margin the team had held just moments earlier.

As soon as the goal light went on and the crowd of more than 15,000 erupted, everyone in the owners' box was on their feet. Lincoln Holdings partners were shaking hands as if they had just consummated a multi-billion dollar merger deal, and Caps' majority owner Ted Leonsis high-fived me. Let me repeat that last part: Ted Leonsis high-fived me. And for some reason, it wasn't weird. At all. In fact, it was perfectly natural. We were two hockey fans celebrating our favorite team scoring a big goal. That, in and of itself, tells you a lot of what you need to know about Leonsis as the Caps' owner - he is, first and foremost, a fan. But what happened next tells you a lot of what you need to know about Leonsis as a man.

Before the crowd had settled back into their seats, Leonsis had headed, with purpose, towards the suite door. Did he suddenly get an invite to play St. Andrews? Was the AOL Running Man in trouble? Luckily for me and my somewhat infamous impatience, I wouldn't have to wait long to learn the answer. Leonsis had left the suite empty-handed, but reappeared moments later with a white replica Caps jersey that he handed to the 10-year-old son of one of his guests for the evening. In the middle of the game, Leonsis left the owners' box, walked across the concourse to a concession stand and bought a brand new jersey for a kid he'd probably never met before, all to make that kid's night and to add to what was undoubtedly already an unforgettable evening for the youngster.

Making people happy and comfortable seems to come effortlessly to Leonsis. This was apparent as soon as he greeted my wife, Meg, and me outside the suite a few minutes before game time (for background on how this invitation came about for us, click here). "I love to watch the fans funneling in," he said. "Are there a lot of Toronto jerseys?"

"Too many for my taste. But then again, one is too many," I responded. We briefly chatted about what I do in my non-hockey-blogging life and about the team's injured players and Olympic participants as he gave us the grand tour of the suite, from the light buffet, to the bar to the hot buffet. "Make yourselves at home," our host implored us. And he meant it. Luckily for everyone in the suite, I only partially took him up on his offer and kept my shoes on.

***

Once the game started, I was in modified fan mode (watching as intently as I usually would, but mindful not to curse... too loudly). Leonsis was tending to other guests and Meg was tending to the shrimp cocktail. A chippy first period during which the teams each scored once passed fairly quickly, and a handful of celery sticks later the second period was set to start. Before it did, however, Leonsis sat down next to me and we spent the entire period talking hockey much like my friends and I do on a Saturday night in front of the television.

"How about that Mike Green goal? Nice to see him get that first one of his career out of the way."

"Our defense is going to be really good in a couple of years with him, [Steve] Eminger, [Shaone] Morrisonn and [Jeff] Schultz. Can you believe Boston gave us Morrisonn and [the pick that became] Schultz for [Sergei] Gonchar?"

For the record, the first voice was mine, the second Leonsis's. But it was just two fans talking hockey.

"I really like [Brooks] Laich. He's going to be another [Steve] Konowalchuk-type guy."

That was him again.

"Look at this Toronto team. Do you think they are really $15 million a year better than us?"

Him again.

"Meg, can you get me a couple more shrimp?"

Me, though she'd gladly have snagged a couple for our host.

At one point, a melee of sorts broke out after Bryan McCabe continued in his futile attempts to intimidate Alex Ovechkin [for the record, this is probably the longest I've ever gone in a post before mentioning Alex]. With the fans on their feet straining to see Clymer and Andy Wozniewski (who?) fighting, a fan sporting a white Caps jersey in the section below the owners' box turned in our direction and yelled to get Leonsis's attention. "Hey!" he cleverly shouted, and after catching the owner's eye, turned and pointed at the name and number on his back, those of a former pseudo-tough guy the Caps had employed until fairly recently, ostensibly implying that the Caps needed him as an enforcer to protect Ovechkin. Leonsis playfully answered, "Him? I'm tougher than he is." Just a fan talking a little trash.

As a testament to how comfortable Leonsis makes everyone around him feel, Meg had no problem at all talking to him. This may not sound like much confirmation until you consider that Meg is prone to being quite star struck. Considering that meeting D-listers like Real World alums Norman and Coral causes her to randomly wander off starry-eyed, the fact that she was able to sit in her seat much less carry on a conversation with Leonsis was a minor miracle. The two beers must have settled her down.

I want to stress that this time was very much not an interview. Given my lack of journalistic background and my legal education, I'm sure any attempted interview would have come off as an awkward combination of a deposition and The Chris Farley Show ("Do you or do you not recall drafting Alex Ovechkin first overall in 2004? That was awesome. [Smacks self] Idiot! That sounds so stupid!").

The second period ended and we all got up to stretch our legs, only to be confronted near the suite entrance by the most amazing dessert cart the world has ever seen. Seven-layer carrot cake. Triple chocolate cheesecake. Why did I fill up on shrimp? Meg excused herself to use the facilities and I went back to my seat empty-handed. As I sat waiting for her to return and for the third period to start, I felt my cell phone vibrate. I took it out and didn't recognize the number, so I didn't answer it, but did check it once I noticed that a message had been left. "Hey. It's me." It was Meg. "I'm calling from the phone in the owners' box bathroom!" Of course she was.

The third period saw the Caps extend their lead and hammer a nail into the Leafs' coffin with a Chris Clark goal with less than two minutes left. As the final horn went off, everyone in the suite was back on their feet, shaking hands and gathering up coats. As Meg and I prepared to thank our host for a most incredible night, Leonsis pre-empted me. "Want to go downstairs and meet the guys?" he asked. By "the guys" he could have meant the janitors and I would have gladly accepted - anything to extend the evening. But he didn't mean the janitors (though I'm sure they do incredible work and are well-worth meeting). He meant the team. So we got on the suite's elevator along with the 10-year-old and his parents, and went down to the locker room.

***

Actually, not all of us went down to the locker room. Two of the group - the ladies - went down to the hallway just outside the locker room where they would have to wait, lest they be exposed to things they'd surely never seen before (though Meg later excitedly reported seeing from afar Matt Pettinger wearing nothing but a towel). For the rest of us - the owner, the father, the kid and me (sounds like a Dylan song) - the first stop was the coach's office, where we found the coaching staff mauling a pizza. Leonsis introduced us to assistant coach Dean Evason and then to head coach Glen Hanlon. "What a game. That was like old time hockey out there. How about that Mike Green?" asked Leonsis.

"I'm trying not to get too excited," replied a broadly-smiling Hanlon.

"That's ok. You stay calm, I'll get excited," said Leonsis, as Hanlon left to face the media and our little gang of four headed to the locker room.

I'd read an account that sometimes the locker room sounds like a "Moscow night club," and while I've never been to a Moscow night club (nor Moscow or even really a night club for that matter), I'm certain that description was accurate for the room we walked into next, full of extremely sweaty and extremely large men in various stages of undress. There was Olie Kolzig throwing his pads in a duffle bag (which probably smells worse than just about anything you could imagine). There was Mike Green, looking every bit as young as his twenty years. There was Chris Clark, grinning ear-to-ear undoubtedly the result of a big win and a big new deal. Everyone was there, really, with one notable exception. And as I made my way around, shaking hands and doling out congratulations, our ten-year-old companion was getting his brand new jersey filled up with autographs and Leonsis was being the attentive host, making introductions and taking in a scene that probably never gets old to him.

We left the locker room after a little while and went to the player's lounge where Pettinger was watching highlights (though he could have fired up the Xbox and played some Halo). Across the hall were the weight room and trainer's room. "Wait here. I want you to meet Alex," said Leonsis as he disappeared behind the door. A few minutes later he re-emerged with the first moderately bad news of the night. "Unfortunately, Alex is on the trainer's table right now, so we can't go in." I can't recall whether I was more disappointed not to be able to meet the young phenom or more concerned for the health of the team's most valuable skater (probably the former), but we were quickly assured that it was nothing serious so I could briefly indulge my minor disappointment, which was almost immediately forgotten.

***

Leonsis escorted us down a long hall where we picked up the rest of our original party and headed for the elevator back to the concourse level and the exit. As the elevator made its way up, I couldn't help but thinking how kind it was for Leonsis to invite Meg and me to the game and how much he went "above and beyond" once we were there. He didn't know me. I could have looked like Travis Barker. I could have looked like Bob Barker. But I have a feeling it wouldn't have mattered.

I often hear about ex-convicts who have trouble re-entering society after serving their sentences, and before Friday night's game I feared I might have similar problems sitting with the unwashed masses of Section 111 after spending a night in the owners' box. But truth be told, there won't be much of an adjustment at all. I mean, sure, there won't be leather seats. Or a wait staff. Or shrimp. But there will be hockey fans, and, at the end of the day, that's the same thing I found in the owners' box.

As we shook hands and tried to thank Leonsis for everything, knowing full well that our words could never convey the depth of our gratitude, Meg leaned in and gave him a kiss on the cheek goodbye. And for some reason, it wasn't weird. At all. In fact, it was perfectly natural.

Thursday, December 01, 2005

Team-by-Team Most and Least Favorite Players

I'm up for the challenge. The following is a team-by-team listing of my favorite and least favorite players on each team (favorite/least favorite):

Anaheim: Scott Niedermayer/Sandis Ozolinsh
Atlanta: Peter Bondra/Bobby Holik (the poster boy for the "old NHL" salary madness)
Boston: Patrice Bergeron/Alexei Zhamnov
Buffalo: Ryan Miller (the future savior of USA Hockey)/Dmitri Kalinin (Cap killer)
Calgary: Dion Phaneuf/Chris Simon
Carolina: Eric Staal (what's not to like?)/Rod Brind'Amour (flat-out painful to look at)
Chicago: Tyler Arnason/Matt Barnabum
Colorado: Steve Konowalchuk/Brad May
Columbus: Jody Shelley/Adam Foote
Dallas: Mike Modano/Marty Turco (why, oh why did I trade you for Radek Bonk all those years ago in my pool?)
Detroit: Henrik Zetterberg/Chris Chelios
Edmonton: Ethan Moreau/Michael Peca
Florida: Cornell Joe Nieuwendyk/Joel Kwiatkowski
Los Angeles: Sean Avery/Sean Avery
Minnesota: Derek Boogaard/Alexandre Daigle
Montreal: Richard Zednick/Alexei Kovalev
Nashville: Steve Sullivan/Paul Kariya
New Jersey: Martin Brodeur/Alexander Mogilny
New York Isles: Rick DiPietro/Alexei Yashin
New York Rangers: Michael Nylander/Hmmm...
Ottawa: Jason Spezza/Dominik Hasek
Philadelphia: Joni Pitkanen/Derian Hatcher
Pittsburgh: Ryan Malone/Mario Lemieux, Sidney Crosby, Sergei Gonchar (tie)
Phoenix: Ladislav Nagy/Petr Nedved
San Jose: Jonathan Cheechoo/Joe Thornton
St. Louis: Doug Weight/Keith Tkachuk
Tampa Bay: Vincent Lecavalier/Pavel Kubina
Toronto: Alexander Steen/Darcy Tucker
Vancouver: Ed Jovanovski/Todd Bertuzzi
Washington: Olie Kolzig, Alex Ovechkin (tie)/Mathieu Biron

How about yours?

Friday, October 28, 2005

Friday Roundup/Gamenight: Caps @ Lightning

[Gameday Preview]

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

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

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

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

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

Sunday, October 16, 2005

Sunday Roundup/Gamenight: Lightning @ Caps

[Gameday Preview]

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

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

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

Elsewhere around the League:
Daily Awards

Tuesday, October 04, 2005

Team Preview: Washington Capitals

Key additions: Jeff Friesen, LW/RW (T - NJ); Andrew Cassels, C (FA - CBJ); Petr Sykora, RW (T - NSH); Chris Clark, RW (T - CGY); Ben Clymer, RW (FA - TB); Ivan Majesky, D (FA - ATL); Brent Johnson, G (Waivers - VAN); Mathieu Biron, D (FA - FLA); Jamie Heward, FA - Europe); Miroslav Zalesak, RW (FA - SJ); Matt Bradley, RW (FA - PIT); Lawrence Nycholat, D (FA - NYR); Bryan Muir, D (FA - LA); Boyd Kane, LW (FA - PHI); David Steckel, LW/C (FA - LA); Alexander Ovechkin, LW (D - 2004, 1/1); Mike Green, D (D - 2004, 1/29); Eric Fehr, RW (D - 2003, 1/18); Chris Bourque, LW (D - 2004, 2/33)

Key losses: Josef Boumedienne, D (FA - Europe); Jason Doig, D (FA - VAN); Trent Whitfield, C (FA - STL); Craig Johnson, LW/C (FA); Sebastien Charpentier, G (FA - Europe); Jean-Luc Grand-Pierre, D/RW (FA - Europe); Chris Hajt, D (FA - CRL); Bates Battaglia, LW (FA); Brad Norton, D/LW (FA); Garret Stroshein, RW (FA - BOS); Darcy Verot, LW/C (FA); Joel Kwiatkowski, D (FA - FLA); Bill Lindsay, LW (FA); Rick Berry, D (FA - PHX); Ivan Ciernik, LW (FA); John Gruden, D (FA); Colin Forbes, F (FA - CRL); Kip Miller, F (FA)

Key player signed but being a whiny baby and playing in Russia: Alexander Semin, LW

Forwards: The Caps offense struggled to start the preseason, but picked up a bit towards the end, highlighted by a 6-goal explosion against the Flyers after a 4-goal game the night before versus Pitt. The Caps will be able to ice two lines of legitimate NHL scoring talent, with prized rookie Alexander Ovechkin starting out the season on the left wing of the top line with thus-far disappointing Dainius Zubrus and captain Jeff Halpern. What can we say about Ovechkin that hasn't been said already? The kid is electric and will only get better. Every time he touches the puck, people move to the edges of their seats because there's a decent chance they'll see something they've never seen before. But the most impressive thing about the rookie is that he wants to learn the game the right way. If only his fellow countryman Alex Semin had a tenth of Ovechkin's passion and drive, the Caps would have a truly dynamic duo. "This is Zubrus's breakout year" is a running joke amongst Caps fans, most of whom rue the day management sent Richard Zednik and Jan Bulis and a first-round pick (which turned out to be the highly-touted Alexander Perezhogin) to Montreal for Zubrus and Trevor Linden. Well, if Zubie can't break out with Ovechkin's talent and Halpern's hard work, he never will. As for Halpern, another 20-goal season (the second of his career and first since 2000-01) seems likely if he can ride shotgun on the top line. The second line has two proven commodities in Jeff Friesen and Andrew Cassels, and the big wild card - Petr Sykora. Friesen is a five-time 20-goal guy (albeit on much better teams), Cassels has surpassed 40 assists seven times, and Sykora... who the hell knows? Last year, Sykora tied for his Czech team's (a team loaded with NHLers) lead in goals scored, but will his game translate in North America? The "other" Petr Sykora could either be a huge surprise or, given what the Caps have gone through to finally get this guy over here, a huge disappointment. Stay tuned. The rest of the Caps forwards will be comprised of some combination of Chris Clark (once he's healthy), Boyd Gordon, Ben Clymer, Brian Sutherby, Brian Willsie, Matt Pettinger and Matt Bradley. Of this group, Willsie is the most likely to sneak up to one of the top two lines, should coach Glen Hanlon need to shake things up. There will be plenty of nights in 2005-06 when the Caps can't buy a goal, but with two good lines and a bunch of hard-working grinders, scoring won't be the Caps' biggest problem. What will be? Here's a hint:

Defensemen: Let's see if we can get through this paragraph without a gag reflex. Here goes. Brendan Witt is still here (who knows for how long, though), anchoring the Caps blueline. Unfortunately for Witt, he's a text book clutcher/grabber who will be absolutely killed if the referees are serious about enforcing obstruction penalties. How many minor penalties does it take to the lead the League in penalty minutes? Watch Witt try to find out. He has no offensive upside of which to speak, though he'll likely see some power-play time due to the inexperience around him, so maybe he'll improve on his career high in points for the fourth straight year - he'll only need 13 points to do it. Expect Witt to mail it in until he gets his wish and is traded for a roll of hockey tape (a steal for the Caps if George McPhee can pull the trigger on such a deal). Steve Eminger is a good puck mover, but looks like he will never live up to the high expectations the franchise had for him (he has just 24 points in 103 games in his AHL career). Shaone Morrisonn, acquired in the Sergei Gonchar deal, has been slightly less-disappointing through his AHL career (how's that for damning by feigned praise?), but, like Eminger, projects to be a serviceable NHL blueliner. Ivan Majesky failed his team physical, but if he can get healthy he'll provide the team with a physical presence. Journeyman Jamie Heward has found a temporary home and was probably the Caps' most impressive defenseman through the preseason, playing in all situations. Nolan Yonkman and Mathieu Biron have also made the team... out of camp (sorry - gag reflex). Somewhat suprisingly, the team sent down Mike Green, though he'll be back and has a bright future with the team. With some of the young guys getting valuable experience at the NHL level, this year's blueline will be tough to watch, but hopefully in the long-term this difficult season will serve them - and the team - well.

Goaltenders: Poor Olie Kolzig. Kolzig has looked very sharp in the preseason (up until the third period of Saturday's Flyers game, at least), and he'll need to be in order to keep the Caps in games and keep his own numbers respectable. Will Kolzig be traded during the year to a team looking for a veteran goalie? His contract will make him difficult to move until later on in the year, so expect Olie to be with the team, at least through the New Year. The backup job is somewhat in the air at the moment, as the Caps claimed Brent Johnson off waivers from Vancouver this afternoon. The move shows a lack of confidence in presumptive backup Maxime Ouellet, who has been horrid through the preseason and would have to clear waivers in order to be sent down to the AHL. Is Max still #2? Is a trade already in the works? The situation, as they say, bears watching.

Bottom line: If the Caps can score, they'll be entertaining. If not, they'll be painful. Either way they will lose early and often and will have a great shot at the #1 pick in the 2006 entry draft. But don't judge this team by its wins and losses. Instead, watch players develop and watch Alexander Ovechkin dazzle. With so many questions, one thing is certain - we'll be here through thick and thin, equal parts aggregator, scout and support group. Hopefully you'll be here with us and somewhere down the road we can all look back on this season and laugh as the Caps reach hockey's promised land and finally hoist the Cup.

Thursday, September 22, 2005

Thursday Roundup: Debuts And Injuries

Wednesday's Scoreboard:
Elsewhere around the League:

Thursday, September 15, 2005

Thursday Roundup: Nash Sprains An Ankle

From Caps camp, the WaPo has an article euphemistically referring to the team's defense as being in "flux." We can think of a word that rhymes with "flux" that more accurately describes the Caps' D.

The WTimes profiles Andrew Cassels and notes that the Caps two problem children - Alex Semin and Petr Sykora - are still "stranded in Europe." Regarding Cassels, he actually broke his cheek last week in a pre-camp skate courtesy of a Sergei Gonchar slapper "during a rest period when ... Gonchar decided to see if he could hit an empty net 100 feet away." How is it that the Caps trade this guy away and yet his stupidity is still hurting them?

Finally, in what should score high on the unintentional comedy scale, the WaPo will be hosting a chat with Alex Ovechkin this afternoon at 2:30.

Other news and notes from around the League:
  • Columbus phenom Rick Nash apparently smashed up his ankle pretty good in a scrimmage after hitting the boards feet first. Caps fans will remember Pat Peake suffering a similar injury that more or less ended his career. Nash luckily didn't break any bones, but the team awaits word on how long he'll be out.
  • The Bruins signed goaltender Tim Thomas, sending a clear signal to the Andrew Raycroft camp that they're fine moving forward without him. It's over, Andy. They called your bluff. You lost. Time to sign and get on with your career.
Updates:
  • We've been referred! But I'd think a blog "long on depth and sass" deserves a permanent link off Off Wing Opinion's main page, don't you?
  • And though we may be "short on design," here's a link to one of the great hockey pictures I'd never seen before today, featuring recent retiree Mark Messier.
  • Nash's ankle sprain will keep him out 2-3 weeks. Let's see, three weeks from last night, Columbus opens the season at the MCI Center. It would be a real pity if Nash couldn't be in the lineup on opening night.
  • Ovechkin will not travel with the Caps for exhibition games at Carolina and Buffalo this weekend, instead making his NHL debut at home next Wednesday against the Sabres. The Caps also returned defenseman Clayton Barthel and goaltender Daren Machesney to their junior teams.
  • The Flyers have signed winger Brian Savage. Sidenote: Savage, in an example of shrewd GM'ing, was claimed off waivers by the Coyotes in June of 2004 and bought out by the 'Yotes for just under $2m back in July of this year without having played a game for Phoenix. Brilliant!
  • More news from Flyers camp as Sami Kapanen needs surgery on his shoulder and will be out for 10 weeks. Expect Savage to take his place and it should work out well for the Flyers, as Savage will either be ice cold or injured by the time Kapanen is ready to return.