Showing posts with label Blackhawks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blackhawks. Show all posts

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Byfuglien, Sopel "Surprise Scratches"

Gettin' closer...

"[Dustin] Byfuglien and veteran defenseman Brent Sopel were surprise scratches for the [Dallas] game. Both have been mentioned in trade speculation, most prominently in the last few days, when Byfuglien reportedly was headed to the Capitals for Nylander. The Hawks nixed that deal, apparently because they couldn't stay under the salary cap if they acquired Nylander.

"Adding Sopel to the deal would allow them to do that[.]"

Where There's Smoke...

When Bob McKenzie reports that "The Chicago Blackhawks, according to multiple NHL sources, have a standing deal ready to go at a moment's notice to acquire veteran center Michael Nylander from the Washington Capitals," and word is that the 'Hawks might go as far as to put Cristobal Huet on waivers to make it happen, it's really time to put aside any notion that there's nothing at all to these rumors (or, for that matter, that Nylander's no movement clause will likely be exercised).

Recent developments (the cap situation and Mike Green's injury, Nylander's entrenchment in Bruce Boudreau's Chez Bow-Wow, the re-emergence of Nicklas Backstrom, the revelation (to me, at least) that Nyls stills owns a home in Chicago, etc.) would seem to make a Nylander move make even more sense. Might the team be better off in the long-run freeing up the cap space to, for example, give Chris Bourque and Karl Alzner roster spots now or to provide needed flexibility down the road? There's only one way to find out, and one gets the feeling that we might be a step closer to that answer sooner rather than later.

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Sunday Roundup/Caps 4, 'Hawks 2

[AP Recap - Game Summary - Event Summary - WashingtonCaps.com Recap]

Twenty-six seconds into last night's 4-2 win over the Blackhawks, I doubt there was a single person associated with the Caps - from ownership and management to the fans, from the media to the peanut vendors - who didn't ask her or himself, "What the hell have we gotten ourselves into?"

Luckily, however, Jose Theodore rebounded from an awful early goal (or two) and shut down the 'Hawks over the game's final 48 minutes, making a couple of big saves (and getting a helper) along the way. A 2.00 GAA and .904 save percentage? Good enough, Jose.

Some thoughts on the game:
  • 1-1 is a whole hell of a lot better than 0-2, especially with Roberto Luongo up next.
  • The Caps fired 34 shots on goal (John Erskine was the only player not to register a single one) and another 25 that missed or were blocked. The sites still need a little fine tuning.
  • The power-play was 0-for-4 and only had eight shots on in eight minutes with the extra man. That's will not do.
  • The Caps were better in the dot than on Friday night, winning half of the game's draws, but David Steckel (37.9% through two games) and Nicklas Backstrom (28.6%) continue to struggle there (is there such thing as a sophomore face off slump?). On the plus side, the Caps won 63% of the faceoffs when on the power play and 64% on the penalty kill.
  • The 'Hawks showed no killer instinct, which isn't surprising from a young team (and was in many ways somewhat reminiscent of the Caps until not long ago).
  • Are the Caps cheerleaders really called The Red Rockers? Maybe (maybe?) I'm juvenile, but this is what comes to mind.
  • Alex Ovechkin is still good at hockey (and is on an 82-goal/50-in-50 pace), and lead all forwards in SH ice time.
  • A day after noting that "I'd like to see more of The Captain," Chris Clark played just 10:40, second-lowest total to Donald Brashear. Easing him back in? Is he not 100%?
  • My eyes told me that Tomas Fleischmann was doing some good things, but his Corsi Rating (CR) says otherwise - for the second consecutive night, his CR was the worst among the forwards and is now a team-worst -18. In fact, his entire line has been in the red for both games. I don't see how the trio can stick together if this trend continues.
Perhaps the best thing to come from last night is that the Southeast Division Champs banner has been raised, Cristobal Huet has come and gone, and now everyone can forget about last year and focus on 2008-09. As Bruce Boudreau said last night, "The more we start thinking about last year, then you have results like you have [Friday] night. It is time to put that behind us. It is a great honor and they deserve it, but once that is done let's focus on what is at hand."

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Saturday Roundup/Thrash 7, Caps 4
Gamenight: Hawks @ Caps

[AP Recap - Game Summary - Event Summary - AP Preview - WashingtonCaps.com Preview]

What, did the Thrashers not get the memo? How dare they show up on Friday night and try to stand in the way of the Mighty Capitals of Washington?

Some thoughts on the game:
  • Alex Semin was the best player on the ice all night, but did misplay a puck in the neutral zone that led to Atlanta's sixth goal (the Armstrong blast over Brent Johnson's left shoulder). His dangles around Garnet Exelby and Eric Boulton (a pair of traffic cones, to be sure), were among his more dazzling highlights, and while it's easy to say now, I thought at the time that he should have taken that penalty shot.
  • The power play looked good (and finished 2-for-7 thanks to Mike Green's penchant for pinching) and fired 12 shots on in 8:45 of extra man time. But wouldn't you expect the $4 million second-line center/seventh defenseman to be higher than ninth on the team in PP time?
  • The penalty kill, on the other hand, was atrocious (6-for-9). Tomas Fleischmann (who had a good game in the offensive zone, but finished a team-worst minus-two) had more PK time than Matt Bradley and Chris Clark combined. Brooks Laich led the entire team (including defensemen) in shorthanded ice time. Think Boyd Gordon might dress tonight?
  • The Swedes got slaughtered in the faceoff circle, combining to go 10-for-29 (34%). In fact, the entire team was bad, winning only 40% of their draws on the night (the exception to the poor performance was Brooks Laich's 7-for-10). Even Sergei Fedorov (6-for-17) and David Steckel (6-for-15) failed to take command of the dot, and the Caps were 8-for-21 (38%) in faceoffs when shorthanded and 7-for-23 (30%) in the defensive zone. Not good.
  • Where was Nicklas Backstrom?
  • Forty-three shots on goal for is a crapload. Thirty-one against is a few too many, especially given the location of most of those shots:That's 19 shots - and all seven goals - against from between and below (give or take a foot or two) the faceoff dots. The Caps blueliners have to do a better job of keeping that real estate clear.
  • Jose Theodore can "only" be blamed for two, maybe three of the goals he allowed (the first wasn't his fault and the third deflected off the defenseman's stick), but he looked shaky (is "reboundy" a word?) all night. Well, until he was yanked, that is - he looked calm and under control on the bench.
  • What was Donald Brashear doing throwing with a kid who only had four fights in his entire junior career (I didn't see how that one started)?
  • GMGM must be counting down the minutes (and dollars) until he can replace either Milan Jurcina or John Erskine with Karl Alzner. It's probably time to go back to pairing the two of them together and try to sneak them out for some shifts while riding a good top-four.
  • I'd like to see more of The Captain.
So there goes 82-0. Next up, Chicago, and perhaps our old buddy Cristobal Huet (who got beaten down by the Rangers last night).

There are plenty of subplots here - recall the last time Huet tried to stop Alex Ovechkin and the last time the Caps faced the 'Hawks (a.k.a. Olie Kolzig's last game as a Cap); tonight's game will also showcase all three of 2007-08's Calder Trophy finalists as well as the summer's top two free agent defensemen (Green and Brian Campbell) - but the big story is two teams trying to avoid falling to 0-2 on the season.

A loss like last night's definitely takes away from tonight's banner raising a bit, but hopefully the ceremony will serve as a reminder of what this team needs to - and can - do to be successful in this League, because last night's effort was light years away from that standard.

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Goodbye Khabi, Hello Nyls?

You had to know this was coming:

"If Chicago Blackhawks GM Dale Tallon thought he was fooling anybody this summer when he said Nikolai Khabibulin had a future in Chicago after signing Cristobal Huet, that sham came to an end Monday when the Hawks put Khabibulin on waivers.

"The Blackhawks are trying to clear salary cap space by getting rid of Khabibulin and insiders say the player they’re targeting now is Washington Capitals center Michael Nylander, who has three years left on his contract with a salary cap hit of $4.875 million.

"Sources say the Blackhawks have already made two serious offers to the Capitals for Nylander and believe he would be a good candidate to replace Robert Lang and play with oft-injured Martin Havlat."

Monday, August 04, 2008

A Different Breed?

"While it’s rare for a team that already has a No. 1 goalie under contract to make such a bold offer to another clear-cut No. 1 goalie on the free-agent market, it’s also rare for the free agent to sign knowing playing time was not part of the guarantee.

"Huet is apparently a different breed." - Dan Rosen, NHL.com

Not all that different, really - the money is still part of the guarantee, oui?

H/t HCTH

Thursday, March 20, 2008

Thursday Roundup/'Hawks 5, Caps 0

[AP Recap - Game Summary - Super Stats]

Oy. The Caps picked a helluva time to lay an egg, eh?

I don't know where to start with last night's team effort loss, so I won't. The bottom line is simply that an already small margin for error is now tiny and approaching Martin St. Louis-sized - if you buy into this statistical model, the Caps now have a 17.7% chance to make the playoffs, with a 5-1-1 finish giving them only a 61.7% shot at the post-season.

Tomorrow night in Atlanta the Caps will try to get things back on track. Every game from here on out is more or less an elimination game - let's see how they respond.

Elsewhere 'Round the Rinks:

You know who hates Bill McCreary? I mean, besides everyone? The Sens and their fans.... I'd love to know which coach is the jackass who dropped the second quote in this article, especially in light of the fact that 14 goals in 21 games is a 55+ goal pace.... Everyone knows that Josh Godfrey has a bomb of a shot.... Finally, one year ago today we took Dave Fay to task for a questionably titled article that only got worse from there, smacked around the Dallas Stars' owner for an aggressive display of mock outrage and took a peak at the Vezina race, and two years ago today we previewed that night's Caps/Habs game and threw some nice little nuggets your way.

Daily Awards
  • Hart: Jason Pominville (2G, 2A, +4)
  • Ross: Jason Pominville (4 points)
  • Norris: Mike Weber (+5, 5 hits, and in answer to your next question... Buffalo)
  • Vezina: Nikolai Khabibulin (25-save shutout win)
  • Richard: Henrik Zetterberg, Thomas Vanek (3G each)
  • Calder: Jonathan Toews (G, 4 SOG)
  • Aiken: Karri Ramo (L, 6 goals allowed on 31 shots against, 3 goal third period lead blown... thanks)

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Wednesday Roundup/Caps 3, Preds 2
Gamenight: Caps @ 'Hawks

[AP Recap - Game Summary - Super Stats - WashingtonCaps.com Recap - AP Preview - WashingtonCaps.com Preview]

Play twenty minutes and head to Chicago.

Not the gameplan that Bruce Boudreau drew up, to be sure, but the Caps will take those two points and skip town in a hurry. Some quick thoughts on the game:
  • You know that in-game "entertainment" at Verizon Center where two fans compete for cheers to determine who butchers a 15-second clip of play-by-play work less? I'm not sure Al Koken would win that promotion more than maybe half the time.
  • Alex Ovechkin showing wrap around and passing back short-side to Nicklas Backstrom = money.
  • Alex Ovechkin's geometry (and selflessness) = money.
  • Alex Ovechkin's shot blocking = nervous.
  • I have never in my entire life seen a completely unimpeded player shoot further wide than Donald Brashear did on one first period attempt.
  • Alex Semin got the "just shoot the damn puck" memo.
  • Jordin Tootoo's dive into the boards after a Tom Poti love tap was Avery-esque, and the late tripping call on Matt Cooke was junk.
  • Sami Lepisto is over-matched right now.
  • Cristobal Huet is not.
  • The turquoise tank top on the blonde behind the Caps' bench nearly was.
  • Can Sergei Fedorov play 20 minutes in the first of back-to-backs in March and have anything left for the second game? We'll find out.
  • Speaking of older Russians, Viktor Kozlov was a dog out there last night. Hopefully he was saving himself for the 'Hawks.
  • The Caps missed David Steckel, as they were dominated in the faceoff circle (though Boyd Gordon did win 64% of his draws).
  • The ice at the Sommet Center appeared to be a bit choppy. Unrelated - Sommet is pronounced So-may? Really?
So it's off to Chicago, where the Blackhawks have to win out to make the playoffs (good luck with that), the Caps will look for another two points, Nicklas Backstrom will look to prove himself against two of his top Calder competitors, and Alex Ovechkin will look to score his 59th goal of the season - which would (completing the loop on Chicago) be more goals than Bobby Hull ever scored in a campaign.

Marek Zidlicky tries to hide from his fan club, not realizing that they can see through the netting.

Elsewhere 'Round the Rinks:

In light of Vesa Toskala's one goal allowed last night, there's a great "Best of the Worst" compilation over at PPP... Finally, one year ago today we recapped a huge Caps win that featured a four-point game by Tomas Fleischmann (which is as many points as he has in 11 games since February 15).

Daily Awards
  • Hart: Alexander Ovechkin (G, 2A, +2, 4 SOG, 2 Hits, 3 BkS
  • Ross: Alexander Ovechkin, Shane Doan, Rick Nash, Sam Gagner, Derek Morris, Ales Hemsky, Tom Gilbert (3 points each)
  • Norris: Derek Morris (G, 2A)
  • Vezina: Brian Boucher (W, 29 saves on 30 shots against)
  • Richard: Sean Avery, Curtis Glencross, Manny Malhotra (2G each)
  • Calder: Sam Gagner (G, 2A, 4 SOG)
  • Aiken: Ilya Bryzgalov (3 goals allowed on 11 shots against in just one period of work)

Thursday, May 31, 2007

'Hawks Narrow It Down To Three Players

According to the CP, the Chicago Blackhawks, owners of the first pick in next month's draft, have narrowed the potential candidates for that pick to three: Kyle Turris, Patrick Kane and James van Riemsdyk.

"Those are the three guys we're looking at," confirmed GM Dale Tallon.

I'm a bit surprised to see JVR on their radar, but add Jakub Voracek and Alexei Cherepanov (and top-rated blueliner Karl Alzner) to that trio and it's pretty clear that if the Caps do use their first pick (fifth overall), they're going to get a very talented and highly respected player.

UPDATE: The Philly Inquirer says the 'Hawks are "leaning toward" Kane and the Flyers are most interested in Turris, as they want a center.

Monday, January 29, 2007

Chicago And Indianapolis: A Tale Of Two Hockey Cities

Bobby Hull. Stan Mikita. Glenn Hall. Denis Savard. Tony Esposito. Mike Peluso. Three Stanley Cup championships, ten Vezina Trophies, eight Ross Trophies, a half dozen Calder Trophies and the best uniforms in all of sports. Looking over the history of the Chicago Blackhawks gives one a good insight into the history of hockey itself.

But there are lesser-known hockey traditions in the American Midwest as well. For no particular reason whatsoever, let's juxtapose Chicago's rich hockey tradition with, say, that of Indianapolis... Chicago versus Indianapolis, if you will.

Besides being the birthplace of NHL-great Ken Klee, India-no-place was one of the "Original Five" teams of the Central Hockey League, where the Indianapolis Capitols (no relation) played all of nine games back in 1963 before they were forced to move to Cincinnati due to an explosion at the Indianapolis Fairgrounds Coliseum. Want more details? Of course you do:

On October 31, 1963, during an Ice Follies show, a propane tank tipped over in the commissary under the bleachers on the southeast corner of the Coliseum. When the gas came in contact with a spark it caused a large explosion. A couple sections of stands were obliterated. 73 people were killed and nearly 400 were injured. Following the explosion, the ice rink was used as a morgue.
"The ice rink was used as a morgue." That may be the single most "hockey" quote you'll ever read.

Prior to those Capitols and their lengthy stay in Indiana, Indianapolis had an American Hockey League team called the Capitals (again no relation, though at least they had the spelling right), and a mere sixteen years after the Capitols left Indy, the city got another CHL team, this time the Indianapolis Checkers, err, Checkers, who apparently only had two players in franchise history.

The city has had plenty of other professional hockey teams over the years - the Chiefs (1955-62), the Racers (1974-78), the Ice (1988-2002, 2004-), another incarnation of the Checkers (1984-87), and perhaps other franchises that I'm too lazy to dig up - but the evolution of hockey in "The Circle City" unquestionably reached its zenith with the arrival of one player who would forever change the face of the game itself. I'm talking, of course, about Manute Bol, who laced up the skates for the Ice back in 2002. Bol never actually got on the ice for the Ice, but it's safe to say that he paved the way for such future ridiculously tall NHL stars as Zdeno Chara and Gheorghe Muresan.

Finally, the Indianapolis Racers of the WHA also left their mark on hockey history by being the first professional team to employee a kid named Wayne Gretzky. I'll admit that I have no idea what became of Gretzky after the Racers folded in 1978, but I'm told that he went on to bigger and better - some would say great - things.

So there you have it. No, it may not be Chicago and it certainly isn't Detroit. But they've paraded the Stanley Cup through the streets of Indianapolis as many times as they have in St. Louis, and with a storied history that includes storing dead bodies at the rink and a 7-foot-7 defenseman, I'm comfortable calling Indianapolis the Midwest's other other Hockeytown.

Saturday, December 23, 2006

Congratulations Peter Bondra

Congratulations to the Caps all-time leader in points and goals (of all kinds - even-strength, power-play, shorthanded and game-winning goals) on his 500th NHL goal.