Royal Pains to Play Against

Reilly stickhandles in the backyard.

Reilly wants to know where the vaunted Hawks offense has disappeared to.

San Jose, CA

Here in the land of Los Tiburones, Sharks fans watch the Hawks/Kings Series with growing unease.  Is it because the Kings suddenly look like the team to beat in the West?  Rolling four lines, throwing young bucks into the fray like Tyler Toffoli and Tanner Pearson, Jeff Carter and Anze Kopitar on fire, and Jonathan Quick back on his game has Sharks fans thinking….maybe the Kings could win another Cup before we win our first?

Aside from obvious things like being outscored 10-5 in the last two games including six unanswered goals in game 2 and 3 straight in game three, quite frankly the Hawks are reeling and the Kings are well, they are using the same formula that saw them win two seven game series in a row.  The formula is, dare the their opponent to beat them on the power play, while playing their gritty Dour Darryl Sutter style of defense and ride Quick’s big game mentality to the Stanley Cup Finals.

One thing not mentioned often is the offensive power house LA has become.  The first three scoring leaders in the playoffs are Kings, the top two in plus/minus are Kings, and while Quick’s save percentage is way down the list, the stats are skewed by giving up 12 goals in two games to San Jose early in the first round.  If you take those two games out of the equation, he is 10-5 and has given up 32 goals in 15 games.  He has won two game sevens, completely shutting down the Sharks and Ducks in those contests.

He is just a big game goalie, no getting around it.  He has faced almost 500 shots in those seventeen games, second only to Lundquist.  But when you watch him play, especially late in the series, he is money with a lead and the other team knows they’re going to lose.  Bold statement?  I don’t think so, ask Joe Pavelski of the Sharks or Corey Perry of the Ducks.  They have lots of time to answer questions right now.  Grrrrrrrrrr, I hate him.

LA defense has been very good and they have been scoring key goals throughout the playoffs, especially in the Hawks series.  Drew Doughty has 12 points and is a +6, Jake Muzzin 9 points and a +4, and Alex Martinez 7 points and a +3.  You get the picture?  Teams with D scoring are hard to beat, case closed.

Faceoff win % is yet another aspect of the Kings winning formula.  Jarret Stool Sample and Anze Kopitar had FOWP of 63 and 71% respectively in game 2 and 57 and 58% in game three.  Even their loss in the 1st game Stool (not a typo) had a 76.9% and Richards was 52%.

Hawks are in big trouble if they don’t win tonight.  Michal Handzus is looking a day late and a dollar short against Stool in the faceoff circle.  Toews is holding his own, but under 50% for the series.  Team speed was supposed to be Chicago’s forte but the Kings Toffoli, Pearson and Jeff Carter are giving the Hawks D fits.  Chicago has to find a way to carry the puck in against LA’s suffocating defense.  Two teams are sitting at home that thought they could play dump and chase against the Kings D.

Of course, all this goes out the window if Captain Serious can pull off a victory in LA.  If not the Hawks will be Stapled at Staples Center and wondering what happened.

 

Jeff Carter and Tyler Toffoli celebrate in Game Three of the Western Conference Finals Saturday night.

Jeff Carter and Tyler Toffoli celebrate in Game Three of the Western Conference Finals Saturday night.

Sharks Play Like Chumps Against Ex-Champs

Clackamas County, OR

 

One for the Ages!  Kings are Amazing! Skill off the charts! Jonathan Quick is God!

San Jose was playing in a seventh game for the second time in two years versus the hated LA Kings, only this time it was at home.  They were outplayed, didn’t hit, choked again, losing embarrassingly on home ice 5-1.  Dustin Brown returned to his 2012 form, at least for one game, delivering punishing, dirty AKA playoff hits on the Sharks skill players, rendering them useless.  Kyle Clifford was the same, delivering dirty checks to the head, tackling players and although the refs called several penalties, the Sharks were impotent on the power play, going 0 fer 6.

Not even going to go where all the stupid people are going, up 3-0 blah blah blah.  This was a tale of two series, games 1-3, and then games 4-7.  LA adjusted their play in game 3 but lost on a flukey goal in OT.  San Jose was outscored 18-5 in the last four pivotal contests, only needing to win one game to advance, yet were unable to solve Quick after lighting him up for 12 goals in the first two games.

The Kings deserve the credit for coming back, yes.  All this shit about heart and competitive nature that LA talked about after the series win is just so much air.  The Sharks could not match the desperation of the Kings defensive play.  The style was to systematically target and take out San Jose’s skill players with headshots and punishing hits and then dare the Sharks to beat them on their anemic power play.

The strategy worked, Marc-Eduard Vlasic was taken out by the best of the worst for the Kings, Jarret Stool.  Elbow to the head from Stool in game five removed the Sharks best defenseman from the lineup with a concussion.  I’m certain that in the next few days the news will come out that San Jose’s players were playing with a variety of injuries.  Logan Couture was repeatedly crushed.  Joe Pavelski was the only one brave enough to go to the dirty areas in front of Quick, repeatedly getting slammed to the ice and finishing with 11 shots on goal. many of them great chances.  He finished a -3 along with his buddies, Patrick Marleau and Logan Couture.

Todd McClellan was outcoached by Dour Darryl Sutter, not changing the style of the Sharks attack to deal with the defensive stance of LA. His strategy was to play dump and chase right up to the end, playing into Sutter;s hands.  He may be on his way out because of the lack of playoff success.

Where was the dreaded Raffi Torres after game two?  Two goals in two games, numerous intimidating hits and then?  Crickets……  Mike Brown and Andrew Desjardin, Raffi’s linemates could not duplicate the fervor and menacing hits that destroyed the Kings in the first two games.

Anti Niemi played well enough to win the first three games and stunk up the joint thereafter.  The Kings aggressive forecheck and the skill of Drew Doughty and Anze Kopitar made mincemeat of the Sharks fragile defensive core.  Old and slow, otherwise known as Scott Hannan and Brad Stuart were overmatched by the younger Kings forwards.  Dan Boyle is looking his age also and although he was only a -1 for the series, repeatedly was rejected on offensive rushes and could not quarterback the power play like he used to.

Bottom line, tough to be a Sharks fan right now.  Downright embarrassing.  As I put this tripe to bed, I will say one thing.  San Jose has a culture problem with its players, its coaching and with its front office.  All those regular season wins in the last five or six years has translated into 0 Cups and not even an appearance in the Stanley Cup Final.  They are so close, yet as the famous singer Carole King put it so many years ago, “You’re So Far Away.”

Sharks Turn Kings into Chum, Flyers End MSG Nightmare With Win

The prevailing opinion in San Jose.

The prevailing opinion in San Jose.

San Jose, CA

Wow, whoa, WTF?  Sharks and Kings faced off in Game 2 of their divisional series last night in San Jose and things started off badly for the home team as the Kings scored twice in the first despite being outshot by the Sharks.  J. Quick had to come up with ten very difficult saves as LA took a 2-0 lead into the second.

Sharks energy line scored early in the second as Mike Brown and Raffi Torres tallied for the home team.  These would be the first two of SEVEN unanswered goals for  San Jose as they pounded LA to take a 2-0 series lead, and won going away 7-2.

Sharks coach Todd McClellan showed his coaching prowess and took advantage of San Jose’s depth on the forward lines by dropping the Big Pavelski from his usual spot on the 1st line wing to 3rd line center and the Kings had no answer for the offensive onslaught.

Tomas Hertl, the rookie sensation was inserted onto the top line and presented matchup difficulties for the Kings defense, although he didn’t end up on the score sheet.  The rest of the lines did though, as seven different Sharks scored on this year’s Jennings Trophy winner.  I wondered why Dour Darryl Sutter left Quick in when the game got out of reach for Los Angeles.

Another intriguing fact is that six of the seven goals were at even strength as the Sharks went 1-6 on the power play.  San Jose pummeled Quick with forty shots and the hitting trend in the series continued with both teams combining for almost 100 hits for the second straight game.

Kings get their hopes up with an early lead at the Shark Tank.

Kings get their hopes up with an early lead at the Shark Tank.

Then, the roof fell in on LA as J. Quick was lit up for seven, making it 12 goals in 2 games.  They only got 10 goals in last year’s fiercely competitive series, losing in 7 games to LA.  The Kings had no answer for Los Tiburones speed, as they gave up odd man rushes consistently, hanging Quickie out to dry.

The Big Pavelski roofs one against  J. Quick.  He would not display much quickness on Sunday night, allowing 7 goals on 40 shots.

The Big Pavelski roofs one against J. Quick. He would not display much quickness on Sunday night, allowing 7 goals on 40 shots.

The series moves to LA on Tuesday night, for many more intriguing plot lines which I will be sure to point out.

Moving Back Out East way, Philly came into the series with a three YEAR losing streak at Madison Square Garden.  After 9 straight losses to the Rangers in New York, things began badly for the Flyboys as they went down 2-0 to start the game.  Martin St. Louis and Benoit Pouliot scored and the Flyers looked to headed for yet another loss.

Jake Voracek started the Flyers comeback with a great individual effort off of a pass from Scott Hartnell, beating Lundquist stick side with a beauty of backhand.  Jason Akeson would gain redemption by scoring the Flyers second goal, after taking the 4 minute minor in Game 1 that led to two goals for the Rangers.

D Luke Schenn would score the game winner as Philly brought there big bodied defensemen into the play in the second and continued the trend in the third.  Braden Coburn, Schenn and Andrew MacDonald jumped up into the play often to provide more of an offensive spark for the Flyers, who were seriously lacking in O chances in Game 1.  Ray Emery was stellar, garnering the #1 Star. Back to Philly for Game 3 on Tuesday.

Luke Schenn scores the game winning goal on Sunday in New York.

Luke Schenn scores the game winning goal on Sunday in New York.

 

Playoff Bracket Previews-Eastern Conference

The prevailing opinion in San Jose.

The prevailing opinion in San Jose.

 

Hey now, yes I’m late for the preview party but I had too much schoolwork and needed to finish.  First up, I’ll preview and predict the Eastern Conference playoffs.

Boston vs.Detroit

 Boston vs.Detroit, not as much of a mismatch as one might assume.  Detroit has re-tooled with some good young talent, see Gustav Nyquist and Tomas Tatar.  Two incredibly talented euros with dangling talent worthy of  Datsyukian comparisons.  Goaltending is not real solid with Jimmy Howard IMHO and look for Jonas the ‘Monster’ Gustaffson to get a start or two and maybe even in relief.  Boston is well balanced, nasty, skilled up front and on the blueline, and has quite possibly the best goalie in the world in Tuuka Rask.  Boston in six.

Pittsburgh vs. Columbus

This one has already started with the Pens rallying for a one goal victory on Wednesday night.  Columbus has great goaltending with Sergei Bobrovsky and is rolling, going 6-3-1 to end the season and vault past the DeadThings to get the Pens instead of Boston.  Pittsburgh has most of their stars returning from injury and this presents a formidable task for a Blue Jacket franchise that has NEVER won a playoff game.  C Ryan Johansen needs to explode and D Jack Johnson needs to step up to realize the huge potential he has displayed for the last couple of years.  Wouldn’t hurt for James Wisniewski to have breakout post season and the rest of the ex Rangers like Artem Anisimov and Brandon Dubinsky to fulfill their considerable promise.  Pens in 5.

Rangers vs. Flyers

Hard to pick this one because I don’t know which Flyers team will show up.  Plus, Philly goalie Steve Mason was injured in the last game of the season is scratched for the 1st game, Ray Emery in net.  The Flyers have a formidable group of forwards led by Claude Giroux, Jakob Voracek and The Vinster, Vinny Lecavalier.  Very solid blueliners in Braden Coburn, the vet Kimmo Timmonen and new addition Andrew MacDonald.  The ?s appear to be in goal and whether the Flyers can penetrate King Henrik’s armor.  Lundquist has been outstanding in the last half of the season (he was pretty bad in the beginning) and New York is 3rd on the PK and fourth in GAA.  They have trouble scoring but are fairly well balanced in their attack, led by Rick Nash’s 26 goals.  Going with my heart: Flyers in seven.

Tampa Bay vs. Les Habitantes de Montreal

This series also began yesterday with the Canadiens winning a barn burner in OT 5-4.  There was and will continue to be much smacking around of each other and look for this to take its toll on players throughout the series.  Steven Stamkos was skating with purpose last night, especially on a coast to coast scoring play where he unleashed a laser bolt of a shot that Price may have heard but did not see.  Tampa has many players that most casual fans wouldn’t know but had a 100 point season, much of which was spent without their star winger Stamkos.  Montreal finished one point behind the Lightning and has Danny Briere, Andre Markov, Brian Gionta and P.K. Subban, all players well known and accomplished.  Only Gionta has won a Cup, with New Jersey and all the Habs are under the microscope in the hockey crazy town of Montreal.  Habs in seven.

From Outta Left Field, Why Good Teams Lose

Reilly stickhandles in the backyard.

Reilly stickhandles in the backyard.

San Jose, CA

OK, this idea for a column developed from my frustration with a good team that was finding new ways to lose, the Sharks.  I decided to fund a research study to figure out why the Blues, the Hawks, the Sharks and even the Mighty Anahymen have had protracted losing streaks.  Back Out East, even the Bruins have lost more than a couple of games where they looked like they had it all locked up then wilted.

Let me set the scene for you in my mind: its the last 15 games of the season and the above mentioned teams have held a playoff position high in the standings, either leading the division or second.  The vaunted Western conference has had its way with the East this year, winning around 63% of the games played, perhaps not germane to the discussion but a factor in the gaudy records.

My theory is related to the WAY or MANNER in which these teams win close games, often tied at the end or one goal affairs.  Take San Jose for instance, they have 10 shootout wins and seven OT or shootout losses, and have played in a total of 43 one goal games.  Stay with me, I know your eyes are glazing over.   Over half of their games are decided by one goal.  Their record in one goal games, including shootout wins is  25-18.

To have a great record you have to win close games in addition to winning games by 2 or more.  Then, I noticed who they lost to and believe me I am a little blown away by the teams on the list.  Buffalo twice, Carolina two times, and in sucksession Calgary, Washington, Florida, Winnipeg!  They hit the rough patch in March, but they hit one earlier in the year where they lost 5 of seven.  All teams not in the playoffs.

What does it say about your team if it can’t or doesn’t beat the “bad teams” consistently? Well, there are a couple ways of looking at it.  If you play a lot of close games, chances are you have good goaltending and good defense.  Check.   As a fan, I want my team to be “in the game.”  You want your team to score clutch goals, you want them to beat good teams.  All of that is good,  so by extension, your team is good right?

Not so fast.  We all know that the NHL season is long, and focus can be disrupted and the players aren’t robots.  How do these bad teams beat the Blues, Sharks, Hawks, Ducks and Avs?  Perhaps the definition of bad needs to re-examined, perhaps the bad guys get up to play the “elite” teams, but I don’t think so.

I think the W/L records can be deceiving and just because a team is 43-25, while their opponent is 30-38  doesn’t mean the sub .500 is going to be a pushover.  The media makes it out to be a surprise when the “inferior” team wins, yet guys on the “good team” are consistently beaten to loose pucks or can’t score enough to win.

The Blues have lost 5 straight, the Sharks lost 6 outta 8 recently, the Hawks just WON their first OT game this YEAR.  Do you see my point?  I’m gettin there..  Here’s another one to ponder: San Jose loses to Florida, giving up 3 in the second and can’t recover losing 3-2.  The Panthers next game, they play LA and get smoked 4-0. Is LA that much better than San Jose?  Nope, its one game, small sample size.

As the season winds down, the media says each game is so big, but I think the players don’t see it that way.  I think that down the stretch, teams assured of a playoff spot aren’t willing to give up as much of their bodies to win, preferring instead to not get injured going in to the playoffs.  If you watch as much hockey as I do, you can see it and not just one team either.

To sum up what I think I’m sayin, the W/L of a given team is not indicative of who is going to win on a nightly basis and media and fan expectations can be unrealistic.  Each game is its own little holy war and each one stands on its own.  Record is not predictive of future success.  Ask the Kings, they won the Cup from the 8 seed.

Heavy Game Out West East Coast Proleteriat

 

Patrick Marleau and Jake Muzzin battle in a Heavy Game Out West.

King Killa Patrick Marleau and Jake Muzzin battle in a Heavy Game Out West.

SAN JOSE,CA

What is a heavy game?  Many announcers are using the phrase when talking about the St. Louis Blues, and the LA Kings because both teams employ a punishing, forechecking style that wears teams down.  Coaches Ken Hitchcock and Dour Darryl Sutter of the Blues and Kings respectively are proponents of the style and it has vaulted both teams into the upper echelon of the Out West teams.

The Blues played a heavy game Tuesday against the Flyers and the result was no goals… for either team, the Blues eventually winning in the shootout.  The Kings played their version of a heavy game Wednesday against a Coyotes team that looked outmatched, LA winning 4-0.

The Kings and Sharks hooked up last night in a playoff preview in San Jose and, there it was again the “Heavy Game Out West.”  Cracks me up that the eggheads in Toronto call every game in the Western conference Out West, but I digress.  Both teams came to play, smacking each other around pretty good and the Kings drew first blood scoring early in the first on a nice tip play off of a point shot.

The goal seemed to galvanize the Sharks to match the Kings punishing style and the hitting ramped up to the point where everyone on the Sharks was buying in and kicking a little LA ass.  LA was playing the second game of a back to back when D Jason Demers threw a hip check that got more leg than hip and the Kings took exception, but couldn’t score on the power play….  all night going 0-5.

That check was indicative of the play all night as the Sharks laid a franchise record 52 hits on the Kings, who also lost their franchise defenseman Drew Doughty to an apparent shoulder injury while checking Tyler Kennedy. Big blow for Kings.

In the second period the Sharks broke through and scored on the infamous Marvin Jones on a great tip on a Brent Burns snapper to tie the score.  Five minutes later Jones was victimized by Logan Couture on a wrap around to take the lead 2-1.

That was the final score but by no means was the hitting and ferocity toned down.  The Sharks actually morphed into the Heavy Game mode and kept the forecheck up for the rest of the game instead of trying to protect a one goal lead.  Refreshing to say the least.  I for one want to see San Jose play a more physical style for a couple of reasons.

First of all, they have the potential to play that way because of they have the big bodies. Those big bodies need to play bigger and nastier.  The second reason is there is no way they are going far in the playoffs without escalating their forecheck because Anahymen, LA and St. Looie play that game and the Cup goes through those teams in my opinion.

The skill and the hitting Out West is making for some great viewing, come on Out West and check us out!

Justin Williams and Brad Stuart battle in front of the net in San Jose at the Shark Tank.

Justin Williams and Brad Stuart battle in front of the net in San Jose at the Shark Tank.

 

 

Bruins/Flyers Duke It Out, Hawks Lose Toews

Bruins play defense on Zach Rinaldo.

Bruins play defense on Zach Rinaldo.

In a matinee affair, the Bruins beat the Flyers 4-3 in a shootout that had all the elements of a great game: superior goaltending at both ends, world class skill on display, nastiness and hitting and best of all, drama at the end.  Vinny Le Cavalier tied the game at 19:35 on a great feed from Jake Voracek as time was winding down.  He also notched his 400th and 401st goals for his career.

OT was scoreless and the shootout went to the fifth round before Reilly the “Hockey Dog” Smith scored to win it for the Bruins.  Bruins extended their road winning streak to nine and added to their Presidents Trophy race lead.

The Flyers played an excellent game themselves but couldn’t get past the Boston D to play their game closer to the net.  Bruins are one of the nastiest teams in either conference, they are second in the league in major penalties.  They also have the 4th ranked PK at 84%.  Must be all the practice..  Looking at the stats, Boston has taken 60 major penalties along with 268 minors.  Did I neglect to mention they are #1 in goals against?

Point is they cheat a lot, make the refs call it, then dare you to beat em on your pathetically weak power play.  They remind me of how the Detroit DeadThings played in their heyday, always grabbing, sticks between the legs and subtle interference and pick plays.

Whatever, it works and they are so highly skilled it doesn’t seem fair.  Patrice Bergeron, Chara, Lucic, Kreci, Marchand.  I haven’t even gotten to Jarome Iginla or Louis Erikson.  Additionally, they have a young defensive core that is unbelievable in their poise, skill and their role in the offense in general and the PP in particular.

Torey Krug, the “Krug Missle” has 6 power play goals in his second year, he and  Dougie Hamilton played regular shifts as a rookies and still do.  Matt Barkowski came in with Hamilton and Krug and is a +23.  LOADED, this team is LOADED.  Well coached, relentless, fast and great in the clutch, the Boston Bruins are playing with a vengeance and will probably be there in the Stanley Cup Finals.

Although I’d rather see the Flyers..

Captain Serious heads for the locker room after a brutal hit by Penguins D man Brooks Orpick in the second period.

Captain Serious heads for the locker room after a brutal hit by Penguins D man Brooks Orpick in the second period.

The Crosby’s played the Toew’s tonight and the Pens dominated most of the game.  Especially after Brooks “I Don’t Fight” Orpick LEVELED Chicago’s Captain Serious with a vicious hit along the boards as Toews searched for the puck between his feet.  The Captain crumpled, was in obvious pain and left the ice muttering endearments to the Penguins D man.  He did not return.

In the post game analysis, Mike Milbury was frothing at the mouth about Orpick’s uh propensity for hitting a defenseless player, then turtling when the injured player’s teammate came to the rescue.  It fits in with the times we live in as the NHL is trying to legislate fighting out of the game.

This is definitely an occasion where a fight would be warranted between a Hawks player and say, Captain Sidney Crosby as a makeup for losing their captain.  Sadly, Chicago tried in vain to get back in the game without avenging their captain.  That’s bullshit,

Speaking of bullshit, the San Jose Sharks lost again, making that five out of the last seven.  Losing on home ice to the Winnipeg Jets and then putting 50 shots on Colorado goalie Semyon Varlamov and scoring 2 goals, 2 GOALS!

Notable stat, Joe Pavelski gets his 38th and is a minus two for the game.  Since the Sharks lost 3-2, my math says he was on the ice for all three goals.  This team is maddening to follow, as they slip back into second place behind the Anahymen Ducklings, who have 2 games in hand and the division lead.

Reilly Sleeping off a Big Day Watching Hockey,,zzz

Reilly the Hockey Dog, Sleeping off a Big Day of Watching Flyers Hockey!

There Are No Dog Days in the NHL

Travis Moen fights Kevin Millar in an intense game in Boston.  The Bruins 12 game winning streak was snapped as the Habs win 2-1

Travis Moen fights Kevin Millar in an intense game in Boston. The Bruins 12 game winning streak was snapped as the Habs win 2-1

Good morning sports fans, those of you who are baseball fans know what I’m talking about.  That time around August where teams are hot, tired, have already played 120 games and they just seem to lose interest and intensity.

Well, there are ten games left in the regular season and every game is critical for about 24 of the 30 teams that are in the hunt for a playoff spot.  For those on the bubble or on the outside looking in, (see Detroit, Washington, Dallas, Columbus,Toronto, etc.) every game has value and darned if those boys are playing harder than ten games ago.

Even teams outside the chase (see Calgary, Buffalo, Vancouver, the Islanders) are giving certain playoff teams fits because….. why?  Well, is it because their players are playing for a roster spot next year?  Is it because the shoo in teams aren’t playing with the intensity required to beat cellar dwelling teams?  Are the bottom feeders playing fast and loose because they have nothing left to lose?

These questions are hard to answer, but one team in particular jumps out at me as one that has trouble with bad teams.  That’s right, the San Jose Sharks have a lot of trouble beating lower echelon teams.  Los Tiburones have a gaudy regular season record, third in the entire league with 101 points.  They have overtaken the hated Anahymen and lead their division.  Yet they have lost three out of the last four games, one to the Panthers in regular time and two games in the shootout to Washvechkin, and to the lowly Flamers last night.

Their only victory was a thriller against the Ducks at home 3-2.  It isn’t goaltending, the chances are there consistently night in and night out to score 4 or 5 goals a night, and they lead the league in shots per game at 35.  Their goalies save percentage is second in the league .917.

This is why most analysts are not bullish on the Sharks chances to win the Cup this year.  Do they play a schizophrenic style, do other teams get revved up to play the Sharks or is it the bounces don’t go their way?  Coaching?  Don’t know…

I cannot reach a conclusion until I see more games, like will San Jose even get past the first round?  They have clinched a spot for the 10th straight year, second only to the DeadThings record of 22 straight years.  Here’s hoping Detroit’s streak is broken this year and we see some new blood in the best tournament on the planet.

One day after tax day it all begins, 4/16/14, until then watch every game you can because they are very intense and entertaining tilts almost without exception.  The playoff seeding isn’t settled and won’t be til the last day of the regular season.

Sunday Morning Moanin

Lots going on in the NHL in the past few days, lets start in the East.  Flyers are playing well, winning yesterday on home ice with a 4-0 shutout.  Penguins are banged up, and have been all season but still lead the Eastern Conference.  Penguins lose to the Flyers in heartbreaking fashion, the tying goal going off the goal post with no time left, 4-3.  Personally, I was NOT heartbroken, go Flyers!

Montreal was in Ottawa last night and played a disinterested style after coming out of the gate hard.  The Sens were leading 4-1 and were 3:42 from a decisive home win when the roof fell in on them.

It began with an even strength Lars Eller goal, yet it seemed at the time like it might be a garbage goal.  Eller didn’t even smile or react when he scored, breaking a 22 game scoreless streak for him.  Brian Gionta scored a minute later, the Habs pulled Scarey Price and scored with .4 seconds left on a power play goal by David Desharnais to tie the game at four.

The OT goal was anticlimactic, the Sens were apoplectic and the puck was in the nectic.  The fans went crazy and most went home happy.  Very entertaining Hockey Night in Canada game.

Boston Bruins continue to roll, looking like the class of the East with a decisive win over the Hurricanes.  They are so deep, their D is amazing, they have a world class goalie and they have such balanced scoring that they look like Finalists.

Out West, the Blues continue to roll, beating Smashville 4-1, Patrick Berglund netting two goals. Ryan Miller has played great since coming over from the Sabres at the trade deadline, going 6-0-1.  They are loaded, ripe for an upset, lol.

The Wild lose in a shootout to Columbus in a tough, playoff intensity atmosphere.  The BJs are very difficult to play against and their young star Ryan Johansen netted the winner on a disputed goal that was reviewed by Toronto and called good.

The battle for LA supremacy went to the Ducks in a hard fought close, checking game that was notable for a goal waved off.  With the Kings down 2-1, Anze Kopitar streaked down the right wing, putting a shot on net that would find its way into the net.

However, recent addition Marion Gaborik was deemed to be in the crease interfering with G Frederick Anderson.  As is the case so often on this type of uh, infraction, Gaborik was crosschecked into the Ducks goalie, making it a very controversial call.

Kings fans showed their appreciation by littering the ice with debris, and Dour Darryl Sutter was freakin incensed.  Understandably so.

Which leads me to ask the question, has anyone else noticed that the officiating has been laissez faire, inconsistent, let em play or just plain incompetent lately?  Yes its that time of year when the rule book is thrown out the ventana (window in Cali), leading up to the playoffs.   Any comments from my vast audience?  Love to hear from ya.

Sharks beat the Ranguhs 1-0 on a splendid performance from the Anti Niemi, on whom I had given up about three weeks ago.  Since the Sharks backup goalie Alex Stalock has been playing and winning,  Niemi appears inspired to remember how good he is.  41 saves today and Logan Couture with the only goal of the game.

I’ll wrap up the wrap up by saying what the hell is wrong with the Hawks?  Fallen to third place in the Central,  playing their hated rival the Detroit Dead Things…

Fins Find First Finally, Beat the Islanders

Reilly T. the Hockey Dog

Reilly T. the Hockey Dog

 

Reilly the Hockey Dog and I were walking out to the back stoop to chew on a stick, mine from Nicaragua and Reilly’s from the redwood tree in the back yard.  He looked at me and said, “How do you feel about the Sharks bein in first place”? Well, I said “I wounldna thunk they could pull it off.  Ducks were ten points up on the Sharks about three weeks ago”..

San Jose is on a bit of a tear right now, going 7-1-1 against the Eastern Conference, vaulting them past the Hated Ducks of Anahymen for first place in the Pacific Division.  Trying to keep it light tonight.  Furthermore, the resurgence in the play of the captain,  C Joe Thornton and  Patrick Marleau has this observer amazed.

In an earlier post I mentioned that Marleau’s biological Stanley Cup clock was ticking, and I have to think that so is Thornton’s.  Both of them aren’t going to get many more chances, so why not win one this year?  They are both doing the little things, yes I know it sounds cliche, that win games.

There is a nice blend of skill, youth, speed, experience and goaltending on this team that gives them a real shot this year.

Rolling four lines as Todd McClellan has done can be a big help come playoff time and guys like Marty Havlat and James Sheppard are clicking on the third line.  Logan Couture is back along with the fearsome Raffi Torres for added scoring punch.

St. Louis is the favorite in my book, but in spite of their gaudy point total they have a couple of issues, like San Jose swept em this season! Perhaps the Sharks are playing more relaxed because they weren’t anointed the Cup winners in the preseason polls, as they have often been in the past.

Don’t know why, just keep it up.