Friday, March 27, 2009

FTS - 3/27/09


TOP STORY

FIREFIGHTER

Steve Mason Pitches a Shutout To Take Down Calgary In A Potential Playoff Preview

(Photo Credit: AP)

Columbus Blue Jackets (39-28-7) over the Calgary Flames (42-26-6) 5-0

Columbus G Steve Mason stopped 33 shots for his franchise-record 10th shutout of the season, Jason Williams had two power-play goals, Rick Nash had a career-high four assists and former Flames forward Kristian Huselius also had four assists in the Blue Jackets' penalty-filled 5-0 win over Calgary on Thursday night. "We have a pretty good idea that if we're in the playoffs this is a team we could be playing, so we wanted to have a good effort. We definitely came forward with it, that's for sure," Mason said. Mason, who broke the team record set last season by Pascal Leclaire, leads the NHL in shutouts and has the most for a rookie since Tony Esposito had 15 for the Chicago Blackhawks in 1969-70. Calgary, the third-place team in the Western Conference, has dropped two straight. Manny Malhotra and Williams had goals in the first period and Raffi Torres and R.J. Umberger gave Columbus a 4-0 lead in the second. The sixth-place Blue Jackets are 7-1-1 in their past nine as they try to qualify for their first playoff appearance. "It shows what we have to do to beat a team like that," Nash said. "They're obviously a great team. We know they didn't play their best, but I thought we had a great game and we played our best."


The Blue Jackets are a great story this year and if this happened in any other sport, ESPN would be all over them like white on rice.

ACTION FROM AROUND THE LEAGUE...

Florida Panthers (36-28-11) over the Philadelphia Flyers (40-23-10) 4-2
Brett McLean scored the go-ahead goal early in the third period, Craig Anderson made 40 saves, and the Panthers snapped a three-game losing streak against Philly. Cory Stillman, Radek Dvorak and David Booth also scored for the Panthers, who started the night below the postseason cutoff in the Eastern Conference. Florida hasn't advanced to the playoffs since 2000.

Atlanta Thrashers (39-27-9) over the New York Rangers (31-38-6) 5-4 (SO)
The Rangers played well for two periods, but forgot that there are 3 periods in a hockey game. Ilya Kovalchuk made it 4-2 with :21 remaining in the 2nd period, Colby Armstrong and Todd White would score in the 3rd, and White also had the shootout winner. Chris Drury's 1 goal, 2 assist performance went to waste for the Blueshirts. Johan Hedburg came in to relieve Thrashers G Kari Lehtonen after he had his bell rung late in the 1st period.
Rangers Head Coach John Tortorella's thoughts on last night's game:
"Yeah, I thought we sucked, right on through the game. I think we're fortunate enough to get a point. We're very fortunate to get that," Tortorella told reporters just outside the visitors' locker room. "I don't give a [expletive] what the guys talked about. I really don't care what the guys talked about, we sucked."

Montreal Canadiens (38-27-9) over the Tampa Bay Lightning (24-33-17) 3-2 (OT)
Canadiens Captain Saky Koivu scored past Tampa Bay's All-Star forward on a goal-mouth scramble 3:15 into the extra period and the Montreal Canadiens recovered from blowing a two-goal lead in the third for the win. The Canadiens won their second in a row following a five-game losing streak to strengthen their hold on the eighth and final playoff spot in the Eastern Conference. They have 85 points.

Nashville Predators (36-30-8) over the San Jose Sharks (48-15-11) 3-2
The Predators got points from six players and came back from a 2-0 deficit to beat the Pacific Division leaders. The Predators rallied with three goals in a span of 2:38 in the 2nd period. San Jose played the second of back-to-back games.

St. Louis Blues (35-30-9) over the Vancouver Canucks (39-25-9) 4-2
David Perron scored a power-play goal early in the third period and the Blues beat the Vancouver Canucks 4-2 on Thursday night. Perron and TJ Oshie each had a goal and an assist for the Blues, who are 8-2-1 in their last 11 games as they try to get into the Western Conference playoffs. Oshie missed the morning skate but fought off the effects of the flu hours later to turn in one of his strongest performances of the season. His goal early in the second period ignited the Blues, and then he set up David Backes with a perfect pass for a short-handed goal that put them ahead 2-1. Blues G Chris Mason stopped 21 shots for his first career victory over the Canucks in eight appearances. He played his 25th straight game and improved to 21-20-6 after a 3-13 start. St. Louis, which moved to five games over .500 for the first time this season, has 79 points -- one behind Anaheim and Nashville in the playoff race.

Los Angeles Kings (31-33-10) over the Dallas Stars (33-32-0) 1-0 (SO)
Justin Williams scored the lone shootout goal and the only puck to hit the twine last night as the Kings kept their meager playoff hipes alive. The Stars, 0-4-1 in their past five and 2-7-1 in their past 10 at home, are 12th in the Western Conference with 75 points. That's three points better than the Kings, 1-5-2 in their past eight. Dallas and Los Angeles both have eight games left, five each on the road.

Phoenix Coyotes (31-36-7) over the Edmonton Oilers (35-30-9) 3-2
The Coyotes continued to play their role of spoiler thanks to goals from Matthew Lombardi, Ken Klee and Martin Hanzal. Edmonton rallied with two goals in the 3rd period (Ales Kotalik - PPG, Ales Hemsky), but would fall short of gaining at least a point. Oilers G Dwayne Roloson started his 30th straight game, extending his team record.

OTHER HEADLINES

-NHL commissioner Gary Bettman says the financially struggling Phoenix Coyotes are actively seeking investors or possibly new ownership, but reiterated that the team won't be relocated. "Our goal is to bring in new capital and make this franchise solvent," Bettman said Thursday night while attending the Coyotes game against the Edmonton Oilers. "That's our direction, and at this point moving the franchise elsewhere is not on the table." The Coyotes have reportedly lost US$200 million since current owner Jerry Moyes brought the team in 2001, and are projected to lose another $30 million this season. Bettman said the Coyotes are actively engaging with potential investors, whom he would not identify. The Coyotes will miss the playoffs for the sixth consecutive season and have had only two sellouts in 37 home games. In a recent survey, Glendale residents rejected the notion of taxpayer money to help provide financial assistance to the team. "We're looking for an infusion of capital and thinking about nothing else," Bettman said. "We're talking to a number of people, but there's no sense of urgency." - COURTESY OF THE CANADIAN PRESS

-Montreal Canadiens owner George Gillett dismissed reports he is looking to sell some of his major sports assets. "What was told to the media was that we are doing some estate planning and looking at various assets to see whether we should refinance them, sell them, buy them, nothing urgent, we were just starting the process," said Gillett to reporters at the SportAccord convention in Denver, CO. The reports earlier in the week stemmed from statements made by Canadiens president Pierre Boivin, who told La Presse the American businessman had hired financial advisers to evaluate certain properties. "We had engaged six investment advisers around the world and it got reported as four and that we were selling assets as opposed to estate planning," Gillett said on Wednesday. "Even when you think you're doing it right it gets distorted. There is no story yet, we'll find out what it is when we get the reports." Gillett is adamant he is not looking to sell off his sports assets in spite of the global economic crisis. "There some serious financial implications to what is going on in the world and the world economy but frankly we are fortunate to be involved in sports and sports entertainment," said Gillett. "I can tell you the last place to lose support is entertainment and within the entertainment core the last place to lose support is sports." The Canadiens currently sit eighth in the Eastern Conference two points up on the Florida Panthers.

-The Philadelphia Flyers agreed to terms with Swedish free-agent goaltender Johan Backlund on a one-year contract on Thursday. In 49 games with Timra of the Swedish Elite League this season, the 27-year-old Backlund has a 2.56 goals against average. He also had a .907 save percentage and four shutouts.

-Great article courtesy of The Canadian Press on Jamie Heward's comeback efforts:
http://www.tsn.ca/nhl/story/?id=272749


TONIGHTS ACTION:
Tampa Bay @ Washington - 7PM
Toronto @ Buffalo - 7:30PM
NY Islanders @ Detroit - 7:30PM
New Jersey @ Chicago - 8:30PM
Vancouver @ Colorado - 9PM
%Edmonton @ Anaheim - 10PM

% = Game of the Night
^All Times are Eastern


THE NCAA ICE HOCKEY CHAMPIONSHIPS, AKA THE FROZEN FOUR, KICKS OFF TODAY
Air Force @ Michigan - 3PM
Miami (OH) @ Denver - 5:30PM
Vermont @ Yale - 6:30PM
Princeton @ Minnesota-Duluth - 9PM

TOMORROW'S GAMES

Ohio State @ Boston
New Hampshire @ North Dakota St
Cornell @ Northeastern
Bemidji St. @ Notre Dame

For the record, my Frozen Four are BU, Michigan, Minnesota-Duluth and Cornell, with BU beating Cornell for the title.


~Dropping the Gloves with Andrew Bogusch comes out on Thursdays

TO EMAIL FTS, write fromtheslot@gmail.com

Thursday, March 26, 2009

DROPPING THE GLOVES w/ ANDREW BOGUSCH & FTS - 3/26/09

DEVILISH

Coach Brent Sutter has New Jersey Peaking At The Right Time

(Photo Credit: Newark Star-Ledger)

Here’s my morning routine: turn on computer, splash some milk on my Raisin Bran Crunch, pour myself some coffee, and then sit down to check the new NHL standings. They rearrange every night with 20 teams (sorry, not counting Ottawa) still alive for the 16 slots in the Second Season. Some teams are in one day, out the next. Others have home ice in round one, then don’t.

It is one of the best times of the NHL year…unless you are a head coach or GM that needs to make the playoffs to keep your job. Yes, we mean you, Bob Gainey, Jacques Lemaire and Doug Risebrough1. But our current standings do not accurately reflect where teams stand around the League, in particular how capable they are of winning the Stanley Cup.

With that in mind, we give you our “true” NHL standings, using the eight qualifying teams as of Tuesday afternoon. The Eastern Conference is first:

1. Devils – Martin Brodeur has clearly recovered from the torn elbow tendon that knocked him out of the middle portion of the season. Monday night’s loss in Philadelphia was just Brodeur’s third defeat since returning to the ice. When you add in Zach Parise and Patrick Elias’ offense and the unsung Paul Martin & Co. on the blueline, the Devils may be the best team in either bracket.

2. Flyers – Martin Biron has only a few more skeptics to quiet as he keeps Philadelphia in the East’s top four. Biron is 10-4 over his last 15 starts, beating the Penguins and Devils in his last two.
3. Bruins – We’re thinking about breaking up with the Bruins, whom we promised would win the conference a few weeks ago. And while they still might, a 7-9-4 run has us worried. Claude Julien coerced a solid effort from his charges Sunday against the Devils; he needs a few more to show us he still cares.

4. Penguins – Chris Kunitz and Bill Guerin have been better than expected alongside Sidney Crosby. Evgeni Malkin leads the League in scoring. And we cannot forget that Marc-Andre Fleury took this team to the Finals last season.

5. Capitals – Jose Theodore’s shakiness still supersedes Alex Ovechkin’s majesty.

6. Rangers – This is a different team with John Tortorella behind the bench. Henrik Lundqvist is the same elite goalie between the pipes, which gives the Blueshirts the edge over Carolina.

7. Hurricanes – Carolina is arguably the hottest team on ice right now. The Erik Cole acquisition looks genius so far. And Cam Ward can win a series by himself.

8. Canadiens – There is nothing about Montreal’s play that would lead you to believe it could win four times in a seven-game series.

WEST

1. Red Wings – The defending champions deserve the benefit of the doubt over the Sharks for the moment, especially since Chris Osgood has to remember how to play goal eventually, right?

2. Sharks – San Jose seems to be back on track after their own prolonged slumped, but the calendar still doesn’t read April, May or June. Until it does, and the Sharks are still winning, we can be non-believers.

3. Calgary – There’s a fairly significant drop off from Detroit/San Jose to Calgary and friends. The Flames are still a one-line team, despite the deadline acquisition of Olli Jokinen

4. Canucks – Roberto Luongo

5. Blue Jackets – My head, fingers and keyboard can’t believe I just typed this.

6. Blackhawks – Patrick Sharp is back and Chicago’s five-game winless streak is over, but these late-season stumbles are a cause for concern. We once thought the Hawks were capable of winning multiple series this spring, but that may be too young for that this year.

7. Oilers – Their only chance at seeing round two is an unbelievable round one from Dwayne Roloson.

8. Predators – Just insert “Pekka Rinne” for “Dwayne Roloson” from the previous entry.

* * *

1 Yes, this is the first footnote in “Dropping the Gloves” history. As first suggested by our good buddy E.J. Hradek this week on NHL Live (on Sirius XM, the NHL Network and NHL.com), the Wild need a complete organizational makeover, probably even if they make the postseason. This franchise has clearly peaked and Lemaire’s defense-first style has reached its limit. This isn’t a knock on the Hall of Fame player and coach, his time is just up in Minnesota. As for Risebrough, too much talent has left town in free agency without reinforcements coming through the Draft and trades. The Wild need a new person building their team and a new one coaching it.

Finally, can everyone please relax about Alex Ovechkin’s celebration of his 50th goal. If you want the game to regain its significance alongside the NFL, NBA, MLB and NASCAR, these things need to happen. It was entertaining and creative, and Ovechkin was not trying to be disrespectful. Plus, he’s more than willing to stand up to whomever wants to express their distaste for the act on the ice.

As always, thoughts, comments, critiques go to boguschhockey@gmail.com


ACTION FROM AROUND THE LEAGUE...

Buffalo Sabres (35-30-8) over the Florida Panthers (35-28-11) 5-3
The Sabres rallied from a 3-1 deficit in the 3rd period with four goals and Mikael Tellqvist made 30 saves to keep the slumping Sabres bleak playoff hopes alive. Jason Pominville had a goal and two assists in the win while the Panthers are winless in eight of their last 10 games (2-5-3).

Carolina Hurricanes (41-28-7) over the Ottawa Senators (32-31-10) 2-1
Hurricanes D Anton Babchuk scored a power-play goal with 6:01 remaining and the Hurricanes won their season-high fifth straight game in a matchup of two of the NHL's hottest teams. Rod Brind'Amour tied it for Carolina at 3:15 of the third and assisted on Babchuk's winner to help the Hurricanes match a club record with their ninth straight victory at home, a mark set during their run to the Stanley Cup in 2005-06. The Hurricanes also moved a point behind fourth-place Philadelphia in the Eastern Conference playoff chase. The Senators, who were denied their season-high sixth straight win. They had won nine of 10 to move within nine points of the East's eighth playoff spot, but fell to 12-19-4 on the road.

Minnesota Wild (35-31-8) over the New York Islanders (24-41-8) 6-2
Wild winger Marian Gaborik, playing just his third game after missing three months following hip surgery, had two goals and two assists, Andrew Brunette and Owen Nolan each scored once and set up two others to snap a five-game road losing streak. Outside of the key win that kept Minnesota in the thick of the Western Conference playoff race, much of the talk was about the Islanders, who featured a lineup of guys trying to make it in the NHL that took every chance to hit and rough up the Wild. "They tried to run us out of the building, but our guys kept coming," Wild coach Jacques Lemaire said of the Islanders, who took 13 of the 23 penalties. "It'll be interesting next year when we play them." Things got so out of hand in the third period that the teams played 3-on-3 for a stretch. "I think it goes back 40 years ago when I was playing," said Lemaire, a 10-time Stanley Cup winner with the Montreal Canadiens. "I was like numb. I didn't know what to tell them because we never play 3-on-3."

Pittsburgh Penguins (40-27-8) over the Calgary Flames (42-25-6) 2-0
Penguins G Marc-Andre Fleury made 31 saves for his fourth shutout of the season as the Pens retained sole possession of 6th place in the East in the 2-0 win. Defensemen Kris Letang and Hal Gill each scored to improve to 4-1-1 on their franchise-record eight-game homestand. Evgeni Malkin had two assists, giving him a career-high 107 points and extending his NHL scoring lead to 11 points.

Chicago Blackhawks (39-22-11) over the San Jose Sharks (48-14-11) 6-5 (SO)
The Blackhawks escaped the United Center with two points over one of the best teams in the league despite blowing a 4-1 lead. Andrew Ladd scored twice for the 'Hawks while Patrick Kane and Jonathan Toews both scored in the shootout to give Chicago just their 2nd win in their last 15 meetings with San Jose (2-10-3). The Sharks had their three-game win streak snapped and remain tied with idle Detroit atop the West with 107 points. Sharks captain Patrick Marleau missed the game to be with his wife, who gave birth to their second son Wednesday. Rob Blake and Ryane Clowe were among Sharks who missed the game with injuries.

Anaheim Ducks (37-31-6) over the Colorado Avalanche (31-41-2) 7-2
Corey Perry scored twice and Andrew Ebbett had a goal and two assists as the Ducks tightened their hold on a playoff spot. Anaheim took care of business early. Coming off a 2-1 shootout win in Nashville on Tuesday night, they scored 2:11 into the game and led 3-0 after the first period. James Wisniewski tied a career high with three assists to help the Ducks move into seventh place in the Western Conference playoff race, a point ahead of idle Edmonton.

OTHER HEADLINES

-Paul Stastny's nightmare season continues as the Colorado Avalanche announced Wednesday that their young All-Star will miss the next 2-4 weeks due to a broken foot. "A CT scan taken yesterday (March 24) revealed the fracture in his foot," said Avalanche team physician Dr. Andrew Parker in a statement. The 23-year old Statsny suffered the injury blocking a shot during a loss to the Minnesota Wild on March 17th. Stastny also missed 26 games earlier in the season with a broken arm. In 45 games this season, the son of Hall of Famer Peter has 11 goals and 25 assists. The Avalanche recalled forward Matt Hendricks from Lake Erie of the AHL to take his spot on the roster.

-Buffalo Sabres goalie Ryan Miller is scheduled to play against the Toronto Maple Leafs on Friday, marking his first start after missing a month with a sprained left ankle. Coach Lindy Ruff provided the news before the team's home game against Florida on Wednesday. The game will be the 13th Miller has missed since being hurt in the third period of a 4-2 win over the New York Rangers on Feb. 21. The Sabres have gone 3-7-2 without Miller and have fallen out of playoff contention. They were tied for sixth in the Eastern Conference after beating New York and now sit in 10th place.

-Toronto Maple Leafs goaltender Martin Gerber has been suspended for three games without pay for an abuse of officials incident during Tuesday's Leafs victory over the Capitals. It was an automatic suspension for the Swiss-born netminder according to Rule 41.4 – Category III. The rule states: “Any player or goalkeeper who, by his actions, physically threatens an official by shooting the puck at or in the general direction of an official shall be suspended for not less than three (3) games.” The incident occurred with just over one minute remaining in the third period as Gerber made contact with referee Mike Leggo then firing a puck at the official following Brooks Laich's disputed tying goal. Gerber will now miss the Leafs game Friday against the Buffalo Sabres, as well as March 28th game against the Boston Burins and April 1st contest against the Philadelphia Flyers. Gerber will be eligible to return April 3rd when the Leafs play the Flyers in Philadelphia.


TONIGHTS ACTION:
Florida @ Philadelphia - 7PM
NY Rangers @ Atlanta - 7PM
%Calgary @ Columbus - 7PM
Tampa Bay @ Montreal - 7:30PM
San Jose @ Nashville - 8PM
Los Angeles @ Dallas - 8:30PM
Vancouver @ St. Louis - 8:30PM
Edmonton @ Phoenix - 10PM

% = Game of the Night
^All Times are Eastern

~Dropping the Gloves with Andrew Bogusch comes out on Thursdays

TO EMAIL FTS, write fromtheslot@gmail.com

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

FTS - 3/25/09

TOP STORY

ANAHEIM'S GETTING DUCKY

Drew Miller puts one past Pekka Rinne to help Anaheim to its Fourth Straight Win

(Photo Credit: AP)

Anaheim Ducks (36-31-6) over the Nashville Predators (35-30-8) 2-1 (SO)

Teemu Selanne lifted the Anaheim Ducks to a crucial win over the Nashville Predators for the second time in a week. Selanne scored the only shootout goal and the Ducks beat the Predators 2-1 on Tuesday night to move into a position for a postseason berth. Selanne also helped Anaheim grab a 1-0 lead at 17:38 of the second period. He carried the puck into the Nashville zone along the right side before faking a shot to freeze Rinne. He then passed to Drew Miller, who moved to the low slot before beating Rinne with a wrister to the stick side. Shea Weber tied it at 1 with a power-play goal at 4:12 of the third. Weber became the first Nashville defenseman to score 20 goals in a season. His nine power-play goals lead the team. Giguere finished with 31 saves. Rinne had 18 stops. Anaheim climbed over Nashville into eighth place in the Western Conference with its fourth consecutive victory. Both teams have 78 points with nine games left but the Ducks are now above the postseason cutoff because they have one more victory than the Predators, who have lost three straight.

ACTION FROM AROUND THE LEAGUE...

New York Rangers (39-27-8) over the Minnesota Wild (34-31-8) 2-1
Nikolai Zherdev scored his 22nd of the season and assisted on Scott Gomez's game winner in the 2nd period to help the Rangers move in to a 6th place tie in the East with Pittsburgh. Marian Gaborik scored the lone Wild goal, his first goal since returning Sunday from a 38-game absence following hip surgery. The Rangers have won for the 8th time in their last 11.

Washington Capitals (45-23-7) over the Toronto Maple Leafs (31-30-13) 3-2 (SO)
Alex Ovechkin scored his league-leading 51st goal, but it wouldn't be enough as Curtis Joseph stoned Ovie on Washington's final shootout attempt to get the win. Phil Oreskovic and Pavel Kubina scored for Toronto. Kubina gave the Maple Leafs the lead with a power-play goal at 17:52 of the third, but D Brooks Laich beat Martin Gerber (see other headlines) to tie it with just under a minute remaining. Jeff Hamilton scored on Toronto's first shootout attempt to help the Maple Leafs get the win.

Montreal Canadiens (37-27-9) over the Atlanta Thrashers (30-38-6) 6-3
Bob Gainey's decision to combine the offensive talents of Alex Tanguay, Alexei Kovalev and Saku Koivu added up to a huge win for the Montreal Canadiens. Tanguay had two goals and three assists and Montreal snapped a five-game losing streak. Kovalev had two goals and an assist and Koivu had a goal and two assists as they teamed up with Tanguay (who enjoyed the third five-point game of his career) on a newly formed line that produced 11 points. The Canadiens ended a four-game home winless streak and regained sole possession of eighth place in the Eastern Conference with 83 points, two more than Florida. Both teams have nine games remaining.

Tampa Bay Lightning (24-33-16) over the Columbus Blue Jackets (38-28-7) 2-1 (OT)
Jan Hjeda scored in the 3rd period and Ryan Malone answered back for Tampa with his 25th goal of the season (PPG). In OT, Martin St. Louis scored with 1:56 remaining on a beautiful feed from Steve Stamkos. The Blue Jackets, who have the worst power play in the NHL, went 0-for-3.

Vancouver Canucks (39-24-9) over the Dallas Stars (33-32-8) 5-2
Ryan Kesler and Henrik Sedin each scored twice (each had a PPG) and Daniel Sedin added a power play goal to move in to a 4th place tie with Chicago in the West. Roberto Luongo stopped 35 shots to help the Canucks snap a four-game road losing streak. Vancouver is 17-4-1 over its past 22 games while Dallas lost its fourth straight and has slipped four points behind Nashville and Anaheim for the final playoff spot in the West.

St. Louis Blues (34-30-9) over the Los Angeles (30-33-10) 2-0
Rookie Patrik Berglund scored twice in the third period to end a 10-game goal drought and G Chris Mason made 22 saves for his fifth shutout of the season to move four games above .500 for the first time this season. David Perron assisted on both goals as the Blues are looking to end their three year playoff drought. St. Louis has 77 points, one point behind Nashville and Anaheim for the final spot in the Western Conference, with nine games to go. The Blues improved to 18-7-6 in their last 31 games. The fading Kings are in a 1-5-1 slump and are 2-9-1 in their past dozen games on the road.

Detroit Red Wings (49-16-9) over the Edmonton Oilers (35-29-9) 3-2
Marian Hossa and Valtteri Filppula scored 32 seconds apart late in the third period 3-2 to move back into first place overall in the NHL. Jonathan Ericsson also scored for the Red Wings (all three goals in the 3rd period), who won for the fifth time in six games and moved a point ahead of idle San Jose for top spot in the Western Conference. Denis Grebeshkov and Ales Kotalik scored for the Oilers, who lost their second in a row but remained in seventh in the tight Western race, one point ahead of Nashville and Anaheim. Winger Tomas Holmstrom returned to the lineup from a knee injury.

OTHER HEADLINES

-The Toronto Maple Leafs will have to lean on Curtis Joseph between the pipes for the next three games after Martin Gerber was tossed for pushing referee Mike Leggo and shooting a puck in his direction following Washington's controversial tying goal Tuesday night. For his act, Gerber faces a minimum three-game suspension for category three abuse of the officials - a violation of rule 41. Capitals forward Brooks Laich stuffed the puck under Gerber with 56 seconds to play in regulation, prompting the angry Toronto goalie to protest the goal by skating towards Leggo, at which point he bumped the referee and shot the puck in his direction. ''I'm sorry for me, for losing my cool there,'' said Gerber. ''I got shoved in the net. That's why (the puck) went in. I was upset, shot the puck against the boards and after that he tossed me out for I don't know what. ''I shouldn't have done it. That's obvious. But there's not much you can do now.'' Joseph was brought in cold off the Leafs' bench late in the game and shut down the Capitals to help his team to a 3-2 shootout victory.

-Provdience Bruin's goalie (AHL) Tuuka Rask needs his blankie:
http://sports.espn.go.com/nhl/news/story?id=4013134

-Washington Capitals sniper Alex Ovechkin is making no apologies for the celebration that followed his 50th goal last week. The Russian star followed through with a plan to put his stick on the ice and pretend to warm his hands over it. It sparked a debate on how far celebrations should go in the sport. "If you win the lottery -- a million dollars -- you go to the bar and drink a lot," Ovechkin said Tuesday before the Capitals' 3-2 shootout loss to the Maple Leafs. "I scored 50 goals and I just celebrated." Ovechkin scored the opening goal in a 5-2 victory over the Lightning last Thursday. His celebration was front-page material in sports sections and on websites, a top item on sportscasts and a hot subject on radio phone-in shows. Some hockey observers think Ovechkin is a breath of fresh air in a sport that could use a little pizzazz. Others think he went too far. Ovechkin said he didn't mean to disrespect his opponents -- he just loves to score and have fun on the ice. "It's good for our league, it's good for our fans," Ovechkin said. "Some players are just like robots. They score goals and it's like OK, no emotion, nothing, they basically go OK. You have to show emotion if you're an emotional guy -- show it. "You don't have to think about if somebody doesn't like it. I don't care about it if somebody (doesn't) like it. I play myself, I enjoy my life, I've enjoyed my whole career. If somebody (doesn't) like it, don't watch my game, don't watch what I'm doing on the ice."


TONIGHTS ACTION:
%Florida @ Buffalo - 7PM
Ottawa @ Carolina - 7PM
Minnesota @ NY Islanders - 7PM
Calgary @ Pittsburgh - 7:30PM
San Jose @ Chicago - 8:30PM
Anaheim @ Colorado - 9PM

% = Game of the Night
^All Times are Eastern

~Dropping the Gloves with Andrew Bogusch comes out on Thursdays

TO EMAIL FTS, write fromtheslot@gmail.com

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

FTS -- Monday from the NHL


photo credit: Leah Hennel, Calgary Herald


CALGARY BLITZES OSGOOD, WINGS

3-POINT FOR CAMMALLERI

The Flames ended Chris Osgood’s four-game winning streak quickly Monday night at Saddledome with three goals between 10:57 of the first period and 5:38 of the second. Osgood was pulled at that point, and the Flames then held on for a 5-3 victory. Mike Cammalleri scored once and assisted on two other goals for Calgary (42-24-6). Johan Franzen and Jiri Hudler scored midway through the final stanza to get Detroit (48-16-9) within 4-3, but Miika Kiprusoff made some of his 14 third-period saves to stop the comeback. The Flames’ lead in the Northwest Division over Vancouver grows to five points, while Detroit stays second in the Western Conference, one point behind San Jose.

Hurricanes 3 – Panthers 2 OT

Hurricane Carolina blew through Sunrise, Florida Monday night and left a 3-2 overtime decision in its wake. Ray Whitney scored 1:37 into extra time to improve the Canes to 8-1-2 over their last 11 games. It also pushed them past idle Pittsburgh into fifth place in the Eastern Conference (87 points, 40-28-7). Tuomo Ruutu and Patrick Eaves scored in regulation for Carolina and Cam Ward, the First Star of last week, made 37 saves in his 22nd consecutive start. The Panthers (35-27-11) have now dropped six of seven and remain tied with idle Montreal for eighth in the conference.

Flyers 4 – Devils 2

Jeff Carter and Simon Gagne scored over the first 3:01 of the third period to push the Flyers past New Jersey (47-23-3) Monday night inside Wachovia Center. Philly’s winning streak extends to three games, all with Martin Biron in net. He made 32 saves in this one. Danny Briere added a goal and an assist for the Flyers (40-22-10), who remain fourth in the East, three points better than Carolina. This was just the third loss for Martin Brodeur in 12 games since returning from his elbow injury. The Devils are only 1-4 in their last five road games.


IN OTHER NEWS…

According to the Canadiens (with an assists from ESPN.com), the Gillett family has retained “the services of financial advisors in order to assess strategic alternatives to optimize the value of its corporate assets.” These financial advisors could suggest selling Gillett’s 80% share of the Habs.

Carolina goaltender Cam Ward is the First Star of last week after going 3-0-0 and stopping 100 of 107 shots. Pittsburgh center Evgeni Malkin is your Second Star after an eight-point week that included a two-goal, three-assits performance against Atlanta last Tuesday. Finally, the Third Star of last week is Coyotes winger Shane Doan. The Phoenix captain scored three times and set up four goals.

The Wild will spend the next week, and maybe longer, without center Mikko Koivu. The team’s leading scorer (with a career-high 62 points) twisted a knee Sunday night against Edmonton. Team doctors will not decide on a timetable for Koivu’s return until the swelling in the joint goes down.

Sabres goaltender Ryan Miller went through his first full practice in one month Monday. Miller, though, did not tell reporters when he might return from his high right ankle sprain.

Rangers defenseman Michal Roszival will miss seven to 10 days with a lower-body injury suffered Sunday night against the Senators. Michael Sauer has been recalled from AHL affiliate Hartford.

The Oilers and 2008 first round pick Jordan Eberle have agreed on a three-year entry level contract. The 18-year-old forward just completed his third season of junior hockey with Regina of the WHL. Eberle compiled 105 goals and 99 assists over 197 junior games. Edmonton selected Eberle 22nd overall last summer.


TUESDAY’S SCHEDULE

Wild @ Rangers 7:00pm ET
Capitals @ Maple Leafs 7:00
Blue Jackets @ Lightning 7:30
Thrashers @ Canadiens 7:30
Ducks @ Predators 8:00 (Game of the Night)
Kings @ Blues 8:30
Canucks @ Stars 8:30
Red Wings @ Oilers 9:30

Monday, March 23, 2009

FTS -3/23/09

TOP STORY

BOSTON WRAPS UP THE NORTHEAST

Tim Thomas makes 41 saves to beat the Devils and clinch the Northwest Title


(Photo Credit: Reuters)

Boston Bruins (46-17-10) over the New Jersey Devils (47-22-3) 4-1

The Bruins got goals from Michael Ryder (PPG), Chuck Kobasew, Marc Savard (PPG) and Milan Lucic to help them to there first division title since the 2003-04 season. "Lately we've been wasting a lot of energy just thinking about getting the win and forgetting how to get the win," Claude Julien (Bruins head coach) said after Boston's 4-1 victory. "If you play well enough, the outcome would take care of itself." The Bruins are 22-0-0 when they lead by three goals. The Devils lost for just the third time in their last 11 games.

ACTION FROM AROUND THE LEAGUE...

Philadelphia Flyers (39-22-10) over the Pittsburgh Panthers (39-27-8) 3-1
Philly picked up just its second win in its last twelve trips to the Steel City thanks to power play goals from Simon Gagne and Scott Hartnell. Despite the loss, the Pens are now 12-2-3 under new head coach Dan Bylsma. Philadelphia won its second in a row to open a two-point lead over Pittsburgh in the race for the No. 4 seed in the Eastern Conference and home-ice advantage in the first round.

Chicago Blackhawks (38-22-11) over the Los Angeles Kings (30-20-10) 4-1
Patrick Sharp made his presence felt in his first game back in the lineup by scoring two goals and an assist to help the Blackhawks snap a five game winless streak. Sharp had been out since 2/13 with a knee injury. Winger Martin Havlat also had two goals. Chicago D Cam Barker sat out with an undisclosed injury.

Minnesota Wild (34-30-8) over the Edmonton Oilers (35-28-9) 3-0
Wild G Nicklas Backstrom made 31 saves for his 7th shutout of the season and Owen Nolan scored two goals to move Minnesota within a point of 8th place Nashville. The Oilers are 0-8-2 in their past 10 visits to St. Paul and are two points ahead of the Predators for 7th place in the West. Marian Gaborik returned to the Minnesota lineup but Mikko Koivu was pulled down by Edmonton's Ales Kotalik in the first period and suffered a knee injury. He left the team bench in the second period and did not return. Wild coach Jacques Leamire did not sound optimistic after the game. "Losing him, it's a huge loss for our team. I'm waiting for more news. More good news."

Ottawa Senators (32-30-10) over the New York Rangers (38-27-8) 2-1
Mike Comrie and Ryan Shannon scored for Ottawa to continue the Senators late season playoff surge. "You lose one game here and there, and mathematically you could be out of it," captain Daniel Alfredsson said. "Our approach is to just win every game and keep this positive thing going." G Alex Auld made 28 saves for the Sens. Rangers D Michal Rozsival appeared to injure his left leg when hit by Ottawa's Shean Donovan early in the second period and didn't return.

San Jose Sharks (48-14-10) over the Colorado Avalanche (31-40-2) 3-1
Sharks winger Michalek converted a slick setup pass from defenseman Alexei Semenov, and Evgeni Nabokov made 31 saves while the Sharks moved past Detroit again atop the league standings with their third home victory in four days.

Anaheim Ducks (35-31-6) over the Phoenix Coyotes (30-36-7) 6-2
Ryan Getzlaf scored twice with the man advantage in the third period, Scott Niedermayer and rookie Andrew Ebbett also had power-play goals, and the Ducks beat the Phoenix Coyotes 6-2 on Sunday night for their fourth victory in five games.The four power-play goals tied a franchise record for the Ducks, who climbed within a point of Nashville for the eighth and final Western Conference playoff spot and remained tied with Minnesota.

OTHER HEADLINES

-Stars center Brad Richards returned to the Dallas lineup Saturday after missing 15 games because of a wrist injury, but the former playoff MVP then broke his other hand in the third period of a 5-2 loss to San Jose. He's out indefinitely with a spiral fracture in his left hand, dealing another heavy blow to the Stars' fading playoff hopes. The eighth-year pro is the team's third-leading scorer with 48 points despite his five-week absence. "That's not good news," Dallas coach Dave Tippett said. "You just have to get back at it and find a way to get points." Richards had a minus-2 rating in just over 15 minutes against the Sharks while playing on a line with Loui Eriksson and Brendan Morrison. The Stars didn't say when or how the latest injury occurred, but Richards skated across the Shark Tank ice to the visitors' dressing room midway through the third period. Richards had 16 goals and 32 assists in 55 games this season before breaking his wrist during a game at Columbus on Feb. 16. Richards didn't undergo surgery, allowing the bone to heal on its own, and pushed to return to the lineup about one week before the training staff's projection. The Stars probably will have to make their playoff push with no offensive help from Richards, who still leads the team with 179 shots.

-Tomas Kaberle will have to wait a little longer to get back into the Toronto Maple Leafs lineup. Coach Ron Wilson said Saturday his top defenceman will need another week to heal his injured right hand. Kaberle, who had the hand x-rayed on Friday, had hoped to play Saturday night against the Montreal Canadiens. "It's not caution, he's not ready to play, so he'll be out probably until next Saturday," Wilson said. The veteran defenceman said he hopes to return sooner than that, and is already looking at a home game Tuesday night against Washington. "Obviously, we still have a little issue there and the doctor said it's not worth it to take the chance," Kaberle said. "The Tuesday game is three or four days away, so that's when we can look at it and hopefully play. "I'm just hoping it's Tuesday. As long as I play before the end of the season, I'll feel good about it." Kaberle has missed eight games since he injured the hand March 3 in a game against New Jersey.

-The NHL has suspended Chicago Blackhawks forward Ben Eager three games for a hit to the head of Edmonton's Liam Reddox in Friday night's game. The incident occurred in the third period of the Oilers' 5-4 win over the Blackhawks. Reddox had to be helped from the ice after the play, but no penalty was assessed by the officials. This is Eager's second suspension of the season. Back on Oct. 8, he was given another three-game ban for swinging his stick from the bench at then-Dallas Star player Sean Avery. Eager will be eligible to return to Chicago's lineup next Sunday against Vancouver.

-Former NHL forward Walt Poddubny died suddenly on Saturday. Poddubny had been living in Thunder Bay, Ontario, and a source close to the family told the Thunder Bay Chronicle-Journal the 49-year-old collapsed on Saturday morning. The cause of death is unknown. Poddubny had stints with the Edmonton Oilers, Toronto Maple Leafs, New York Rangers, Quebec Nordiques and New Jersey Devils over his 11 NHL seasons. He had 422 points (184 goals, 238 assists) in 468 career NHL games.



TONIGHTS ACTION:

New Jersey @ Philadelphia - 7PM (Versus)
%Carolina @ Floria - 7:30PM
Detroit @ Calgary - 9:30PM

% = Game of the Night
^All Times are Eastern

~Dropping the Gloves with Andrew Bogusch comes out on Thursdays

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