30 Juli, 2008

Månadstidningen arkiverar: Februari 2008

Washington 4/New Jersey 0/Wilson $$

Några mördarefoto

Vi visste att Kevin ”mördare” Kaminski var allvarlig om portion oss ut med ikväll fundraiser för den Wilson kicken på Clydes, när dessa stora färgar fotoskönhetar var FedEx-ed till oss i morse, tillsammans med några andra godbitar. Du ska märker att mördare inte undertecknade precis dem men etsat i mördarebekännelsen på varje som väl. De ska är bland den objekt auktionerade bort ikväll början på 7:00 på Clydes i Chinatown.

Front Page Fedorov

Förstasidan av dagens SovetskySport.

OFB-röstning: Handel får effekt

Trioen av handla-för från denna förflutnatisdag - ett nytt all stjärna, nr. 1 netminder, en tidigare världsstjärna och vet 3-Cup i skymningen av hans karriär och göra perfektplågan - ska hjälppush locken in i eftersäsongen detta April.

Beskåda resultat

It’s Help Out Local Hockey Night at Clyde’s

Wilson High School BannerBring your checkbooks. Bring cash. Bring really big hearts. Actually, if you’re a reader of this and or any of the other blogs who’ve gotten behind the cause to help raise funds for Wilson High’s hockey program, you don’t need to be reminded to be big-hearted: you’ve a hockey heart — more than big enough for the task.

We have a big and important game in New Jersey to follow together as well tonight, on Clyde’s high-def screens. We’ve heard from so many supportive folks around town who, of their own accord, have promoted this event via their own networks and mailing lists. We’ll also have a few Wilson players in attendance, wearing their sweaters.

It’s going to be a blast in Chinatown tonight, and your donations will help keep the lone public high school in the District skating. It’s just $10 to get in, though additional donations are more than welcome to support the team.

So tonight beginning at 7:00 we’ll hold a silent auction of hockey goodies and some gifts from local businesses, throw back a few puck sodas, meet a lot of special people, and cheer on the Caps. Remember to bring cash and/or your checkbook (no credit cards for the auctions).

If you are unable to attend, please remember that you can support this terrific cause by donating on line, using the PayPal link for Wilson on the right side of our page.

About a minute before the puck drops in Jersey tonight we’ll raise a toast to all the hockey hearts in the room — and those with us in spirit.

Clyde’s of Gallery Place
707 7th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20001
Phone: 202.349.3700

Huet and the 2008 Hart Winner

Official OFB husband Chanuck visited Kettler today to see the new guys. He wasn’t the only one; apparently the joint was jumping with fans. He noted that Huet signed some autographs after practice, and managed to get a shot of his mask. Check out the strategic placement of the Caps sticker on the chin.

Cristobal Huet at Caps' Practice, 2/28/08
Here’s what the mask used to look like:

Cristobal Huet- photo from CHC Images

Well, it’s a start. After all, the guy’s only been here a day.

The eagle-eyed Chanuck also noted that TSN has already figured out who this year’s Hart Trophy winner is, so the rest of us can stop guessing. Foppa is truly amazing; he doesn’t even have to play a single game in order to win another award. Now that’s talent!

Peter Forsberg on TSN via NHL Network, 2-28-08

Goalie Talk out at Practice

Out at Kettler earlier today, I had a chance to eavesdrop a bit on Gabby talking about the goalie situation right before the team headed to the airport. That “plan” that the head coach alluded to yesterday became clearer today. Brent Johnson is the odd man out — he’s the clear no. 3. There will be competition among all three, but beginning this weekend, Cristobal Huet (now no. 38 in your program) and Olie Kolzig will begin a competitive rotation in game assignments. 

The practice situation is where it gets weird. The third goalie will join the team “late” in practice skates and try and get some work in.     

What Are You Doing?

Twitter: What are you doing?Twitter is a free blogging/social networking site giving users the ability to share updates through a number of different ways. Twitter users can “follow” other Twitter users and receive the updates through the website, IM, SMS, RSS, or email.

Kukla’s Korner recently started “twittering” all of their headlines to provide another way to keep up with hockey news. We thought that was such a good idea so we followed suit.

You can now follow OFB via Twitter here, http://twitter.com/OnFrozenBlog. All of our updates on Twitter will include a TinyURL link back to our blog so you won’t miss a thing.

Summer Training Partners, Now Winter Teammates

Sovetsky Sport today provided OFB with photos of Alexander Ovechkin and Sergei Fedorov training together in Russia last summer. Unlike many UFA transactions, it seems the league’s leading scorer already has some chemistry with the new Capitals centerman. Welcome to the neighborhood, Sergei!

Photos courtesy of Sovetsky Sport; more after the break.

Ovechkin and Fedorov, Summer 2007 (5)

Continue reading ›

Buzz Trades, a Big Game, a Big-Buzz Atmosphere Stream of Consciousness

Was in the then MCI Center the night of March 13, 2001 — also deadline day — when earlier in the day GMGM dealt Zednik and Bulis and a pick to Montreal for Zubrus and Linden, and the mood in last night’s rink felt larger and more significant . . . that dealmaking carried a component of risk; this was pure aggression with minimal assets heading out . . . the better comparison may be with March 1997, carried out not in a single day but over the course of a couple of weeks, when McPhee, in his first season on the job, added Brian Belllows and Esa Tikkanen . . . Enjoyed most of all throughout the late Tuesday afternoon and evening messages from friends and strangers who were busy with business throughout the day and wholly unaware of the deadline day madness that enveloped the Caps, who arrived at the news late and lavished it (in my email inbox) with happy obscenities and exclamation points . . . Mike Vogel, looking terrifically telegenic, rinkside on Comcast in the 5:00 hour to help analyze the breaking big news, me comparing his polished appearance before TV DC with his pre-sunrise, blogging-through-the-Moscow-night, comrade shagginess with me during last year’s Worlds . . . big bonus: dinner with Ron Weber in the press room on such a big day . . . look at all the media big wigs who show up when hockey creates the day’s sports buzz: George Solomon of the Post, three Times’ reporters, the one-time Queen of OFB even, I think I may have even seen Arch Campbell in Bruce Boudreau’s post-game presser . . . Ted’s box is filled as I hadn’t seen it since perhaps opening night . . . Commissioner Bettman, in his pre-game presser: “This is a team that has been built on prospects and for the future” . . . He’s in town for some chit-chat on the Hill about drugs and athletes, and he mentions “players as role models” and a clear concern that his sport not be painted with a broad brush of they-all-do-it cynicism: “What goes on in one sport doesn’t [necessarily] go on in others” . . . “We’ve had one player in two-and-a-half years caught [for performance enhancing drugs],” and he references the tough remedies that face the offenders — a quarter-of-a-season suspension, three-quarter-of-a-season, three strikes and you’re out . . . and I think, Bud Selig he ain’t, but it’s also true that this sport has a much different relationship with its players union than all the rest . . . He is also asked about the prevalence of players exercising the “No” in their no-trade clauses: “Nobody makes a club give a player a no-trade clause” . . . I ask the commissioner about Ted’s expressed wish to take the team on a goodwill tour of Russia, “sooner rather than later,” and he expresses cautious support. When he references what a “big deal” it’s going to be for Jagr to return to Prague next season, I think I have my answer about the likelihood of Ovechkin’s returning to Moscow . . . He also acknowledges that the league today doesn’t have the relationship with the Russian Hockey Federation it once did . . . Even the arena’s game night personnel working in catering and as ushers seem buoyed by the day’s big news — they are all chipper and wide smiling in every encounter. . . On a day like today I appreciate the professionalism and the quasi-renaissance of renewed hockey coverage by our town’s two print beat reporters, both of whom blogged and filed on Tuesday until their fingers were sore, giving Washington hockey fans timely and superb breaking news; following Corey’s blog a bit during the game, I chuckled at his reflection “at some point I’ll eat” . . . Midway through the game I have a minimial amount of notes and reactions recorded, as friendly folks keep bending my ear for reaction and basic “Can you believe all this?” empathy, vanquishing my between-periods composition, and I relish it . . . Peter Bondra is back in the press box tonight, and on the ice sheet below the young prospect he was traded for, Brooks Laich, is having a career night, and I just sorta like the symmetry of that . . . in the second row of the press box, where the Caps’ communications staff works each game, I see each and every one of them, no one missing, and I think there’s so much work for them to do on a day like this they all have to be here, but it’s probably also the case that such a day makes a Caps’ staffer proud to have the careers they do, and they want to be in the rink, well dressed, helpful, and full of good cheer . . . very loud rock music typically greets bloggers and press in the post-game locker room after victories, but tonight it’s quiet, and I infer that the day’s drama has drained the entire team, that they want as efficient an encounter with media as possible, hot showers, and a race home to crash in bed . . . the circle of cameras and microphones and scribes around Kolzig is unlike anything I have seen in two years — it’s five-deep at turns, and Tarik has to make like a gymnast to get his recorder squeezed into some open space around Kolzig’s locker . . . no one much asks Olie the Goalie about the game, instead, The Trade . . . question after question on the trade: was he shocked? was he upset? how can it possibly work with three netminders? did the team approach him about a trade? . . . he says, among other things, “The thing that surprises me is that there’s three goalies here” . . . Coach Boudreau acknowledges the challenge of managing three netminders, but he dismisses a contention that the day’s developments insult the greatest goalie in Caps’ history; he maintains that the consumate professional will rise to meet the new challenge . . . Here’s hoping Fedorov this spring is Bellows of ‘98, Matt Cooke that year’s Esa Tikkanen, Olie Kolzig . . . Olie Kolzig.

Woodrow Wilson High School Hockey - Online Donations

Wilson High School BannerFor those of you who cannot join us at Clyde’s of Gallery Place on Friday night, the link to donate via Paypal to the Wilson High Hockey Team can be found below in this post as well as at the right hand navigation bar.

We’ll post more information regarding the February 29 event soon. We hope to see you there at 7:00 PM, but if you can’t make it then please consider chipping in via the link below.

Backstrom’s Team 4 / Backstrom’s Team 1 - Wild Night for Laich

McPhee and Boudreau Speak

Both George McPhee and Bruce Boudreau met the Washington media prior to the Caps/Wild game. The Capitals have since released the audio from the press conferences.

George McPhee:

Bruce Boudreau:

First Impressions: Huet and Cooke

The Capitals hosted a conference call this afternoon with Cristobal Huet and Matt Cooke. First things first: when are the new additions arriving in Washington? Huet comes in tonight during the game, Sergei Federov arrives tomorrow morning and will be at practice, and Cooke is having visa complications (which will hopefully be resolved quickly).

Cristobal Huet- photo from The Sporting NewsHuet was asked if he thought he’d be dealt today: “The only info I had last night was that I wasn’t playing with Montreal tonight. I was a little surprised.”

How does he feel about playing for Boudreau again? “Looking forward to being reunited with Bruce. We had a lot of success, he’s a very smart coach and from what I’ve seen this year, he’s done a great job.”

Other thoughts: “The [Caps] are excited to have me; I hope I can help them make a push for the playoffs.”

“I didn’t really have the chance to play after my game in Ottawa where I was pulled, so I didn’t really have a chance to redeem myself. I’ve been working hard; I’m not too worried about my game. I’m very confident that I can help the Capitals. The Capitals are very demanding; it doesn’t change much from that point of view and for me that’s the most important point.”

Huet’s impression of Washington: “It’s a really different place for players. [They're] definitely tough opponents to play when we played them- young guys, tough to play against.”

Is Huet open to an extension at the end of the season? “I’m really open, I would definitely think about it, but right now it’s not really up to me. Definitely up to my play but that’s all I can really focus on right now, help the team get some wins and get closer to a playoff spot.”

Next up was Matt Cooke. His impression of the Caps? “[They're] six points back right now…it can change in a hurry, we just need to win some games. For me in the past, the biggest way to do this is to focus on each game and make it the biggest win of the year.”

Matt Cooke- photo from cbc.caA Vancouver muckraker tried three times to get Cooke to bash coach Alain Vigneault and talk about why things didn’t work out in Vancouver, fishing for controversy. Cooke didn’t take the bait, with a tersely-worded “No Comment” followed by his intent to focus on his future here in Washington.

Cooke, on his style of play: “I pride myself on being on the forecheck and creating turnovers. I make people hear footsteps. I’ve had success scoring ‘dirty goals’ in the past. I don’t mind going to those places if that’s what it takes.”

What does he think about the Caps’ system? “We played there before Christmas or just after, definitely a dangerous hockey club to play against. Obviously Alex brings a lot of speed and passion to the game- that’s something you’d want through your whole lineup.”

Final thoughts: “I look forward to coming somewhere where you’re used in the proper way and you feel like you’re wanted; you’re supporting the rest of the cast as well. I look forward to the change and the opportunity with the Washington Capitals.”

Motzko Moved

TSN is now reporting that RW Joe Motzko has been traded by the Capitals.

Details to follow.

[Update] TSN reports Joe Motzko was traded to Atlanta for Alexandre Giroux.

[4:33pm Update] From the Washington Capitals press release:

ARLINGTON, Va. - The Washington Capitals have acquired left wing Alexandre Giroux from the Atlanta Thrashers in exchange for right wing Joe Motzko, vice president and general manager George McPhee announced today. Giroux, who was a member of the Capitals’ organization last season, will report to the Hershey Bears of the American Hockey League.

Giroux, 26, has played 10 NHL games in his career, including nine with Washington last season, scoring two goals and adding two assists. He is a three-time 30-goal scorer at the AHL level, including his best season of his career last year, when he recorded 42 goals and 28 assists (70 points) in 67 games for the Bears.

Giroux has 19 goals and 22 assists (41 points) in 44 games this year for the Chicago Wolves.

Pettinger Pitched, Matt Cooke Coming to D.C.

Matt Cooke

So much for standing pat.

[2:00pm Update] From the Washington Capitals press release:

ARLINGTON, Va. –The Washington Capitals have acquired left wing Matt Cooke from the Vancouver Canucks in exchange for left wing Matt Pettinger, vice president and general manager George McPhee announced today.

Cooke, 29, has spent all nine of his NHL seasons in Vancouver. He heads to Washington with seven goals and nine assists in 61 games this year.

The Belleville, Ontario, native has played in 566 career games and has scored 83 goals and dished out 120 career assists. He has also appeared in 32 career playoff games, scoring eight goals and recording 12 points.

Cooke was a sixth-round choice of the Canucks, 144th overall, in the 1997 NHL Entry Draft. He made his NHL debut on Oct. 14, 1998, against Edmonton and played in 30 games during the 1998-99 season. Cooke spent parts of the 1998-99 and 1999-00 seasons with the Syracuse Crunch in the American Hockey League before joining Vancouver full time.

TSN: More Russians to Washington

Sergei FedorovTSN is reporting on air that the Capitals have acquired C Sergei Fedorov. Early reports are for draft picks.

Details to follow.

[1:20 p.m. Update] TSN: Blue Jackets trade Fedorov to Capitals

[1:30 p.m. Update] TSN: The Caps have parted with 2007 second-round pick defenseman Ted Ruth to acquire Fedorov.

[1:41pm Update] Per the Washington Capitals press release:

ARLINGTON, Va. – The Washington Capitals have acquired center Sergei Fedorov from the Columbus Blue Jackets in exchange for Washington draft pick Theo Ruth, vice president and general manager George McPhee announced today.

Fedorov (SAIR-gay FEH-duh-rahf), 38, is in his 17th NHL season. The six-time NHL All-Star won three Stanley Cups as a member of the Detroit Red Wings (1997, ’98 and 2002), won the Hart Trophy as the league MVP in 1994 and won the Selke Trophy as the league’s top defensive forward in 1994 and ’96. A 6’2�, 207-pound native of Pskov, Russia, Fedorov has nine goals and 28 points in 50 games this season for the Blue Jackets.

Fedorov has averaged nearly a point per game in his career, with 1,133 points (470 goals, 663 assists) in 1,178 games with Detroit, Anaheim and Columbus. One of the most decorated Russian-born players in history, he has played in two Olympics, two World Cups, a Canada Cup and three World Junior Championships. He was the first Russian born and trained player to play 1,000 NHL games.

Detroit’s fourth choice, 74th overall, in the 1989 NHL Entry Draft, Fedorov played 13 seasons with Detroit before signing with Anaheim as a free agent in 2003. Columbus acquired him via trade on Nov. 15, 2005. In NHL history he ranks 47th in career points (10th among active players), 50th in career goals (12th among active players) and 54th in career assists (13th among active players). Fedorov’s career plus/minus rating of +259 ranks second among all active forwards, trailing only Jaromir Jagr (+272).

Ruth was a second-round selection of the Capitals, 46th overall, in the 2007 NHL Entry Draft. The defenseman is currently a freshman at Notre Dame in the Central Collegiate Hockey Association.

TSN: Habs Netminder Huet is a Cap

Cristobal HuetFor a second-round pick.

Details to follow.

[12:12pm Update] TSN: Habs trade goaltender Huet to Capitals

[12:22pm Update] Here is the official press release from the Washington Capitals:

ARLINGTON – The Washington Capitals have acquired goaltender Cristobal Huet from the Montreal Canadiens in exchange for a second-round pick in the 2009 NHL Entry Draft, vice president and general manager George McPhee announced today.

Huet (KRIHZ-tuh-buhl YOO-iht), who will turn 33 on March 9, is in his fifth season in the NHL and played in the 2007 NHL All-Star Game. The 6’1�, 204-pound native of Saint-Martin-D’Heres, France, is 21-12-6 this season with a 2.55 goals-against average and a .916 save percentage. He ranks 11th in the NHL in save percentage, 19th in GAA and 19th in victories. Huet has a pair of shutouts this season, most recently a 35-save effort against the Capitals on Jan. 29.

Huet has a 72-59-11-13 record in 170 career NHL games, with a 2.49 GAA and a .917 save percentage. He has 15 career shutouts and led the league in save percentage in 2005-06 with a .929 mark. Huet was the second French-born player to play in the NHL and has represented France in two Olympics.

Huet was a seventh-round choice of the Los Angeles Kings in 2001 and made his North American debut in 2002-03 as a member of the Manchester Monarchs, where he played for Washington head coach Bruce Boudreau. Huet made his NHL debut for the Kings that season, posting a 4-4-1 record in 12 games, and played 41 games in Los Angeles in 2003-04. Montreal acquired him on June 26, 2004, with Radek Bonk in exchange for Mathieu Garon and a third-round draft choice.

The draft choice Washington sends to Montreal is Anaheim’s second-round pick in 2009, previously acquired in exchange for center Brian Sutherby.

The Case for Standing Pat

Do the Caps really need to acquire “a top six forward” — i.e., a center (to replace Michael Nylander) — and “a physical, top 4 defenseman” before today’s 3:00 trade deadline? Such acquisitions indisputably would help the team in the short term. But there are two compelling reasons arguing against their being buyers today.

Let’s first be clear about market conditions. It is a buyer’s market this February by virtue of the unprecedented competitive balance across the league. The Los Angeles Kings this morning are dead last in the league’s standings, with a 26-34-4 record. As worst-team records go, that’s really not all that lousy. They have, perhaps, Rob Blake to deal, but like Mats Sundin in Toronto, Blake isn’t interested in waiving his no-trade clause.

Tampa Bay is in 29th place. The Bolts dealt Vaclav Prospal back to Philly yesterday, and they are apparently interested in dealing Brad Richards and his budget-busting contract. They might have to deal Dan Boyle as well. If the Caps wanted to replace Nylander they’d need to acquire a pending UFA pivot — Nylander is signed for the next three years, through 2010-11, and obviously Nicklas Backstrom is a fixture in the middle in the team’s top six. Boyle is a terrific puck-moving defenseman, but he doesn’t fill that perceived need on the Caps’ blueline.

You might throw in the towel, too, if you’re Kevin Lowe in Edmonton, with 61 points and now captain Ethan Moreau on the shelf for the remainder of the season.

Other than these three teams, who’s truly out of it for the postseason this morning? You have perhaps 27 buyers and three sellers. And this well explains the inertia in player movement in the hours leading up to today’s deadline.

How did the league arrive at such extraordinary competitive balance? Better scouting across the board, more refined and thorough player development, and a broadened talent pool that includes not just outstanding European professional leagues but a well-oiled development program in place at USA Hockey and a vastly improved NCAA. North American kids — and some Europeans as well — are looking at U.S. college hockey as a route to the NHL in a way they didn’t just 10 years ago.

When Caps’ management authorized the tearing down and rebuilding of the team roster early in 2004 it’s highly likely they imagined the team being post-season competitive in 2007-08 — with good reason.

And unlike previous offseasons, the Caps won’t have a great deal of roster “off-loading” to perform this summer. There were a number of vital questions confronting team entering 2007-08, and one of the most important — where is the no. 1 blueliner? — has been answered. And that needed big-bodied rearguard may already be in the organization (playing for the Calgary Hitmen), and he may be ready to join the club this autumn. It’s understandable that Caps’ fans would clamor for an improvement with the team so close to making the league’s top 16. But this trade deadline, with 27 poker faces at the table, is unlike any we’ve ever seen. And most likely, wheeling and dealing for two key parts is not the right thing to do.

This team doesn’t need new faces — it needs more scars and creases on those stubble-challenged visages.

Late last week General Manager George McPhee told the Washington Post, “We like the players we have and the people they are. To start trading things out that could be a part of the future makes no sense.”

Then came the money quote, the quote of the year from GMGM: “We had a power play late in [Wednesday's 3-2 shootout loss to the new York Islanders] and five kids jumped over the boards, with an average age of 21 or 22. We’ve got to keep playing them if we’re going to be going for a Cup.”

“Cold-Cocked” Is a Hot Read

When I first saw Lorna Jackson’s book, “Cold-Cocked: On Hockey,” I knew it was going to be an interesting read, judging by the use of the F-bomb on the back cover. And I was not disappointed by the actual content of the book. “Cold-Cocked” is one writer’s point of view about hockey, specifically about how women watch and relate to the game. Jackson uses her personal relationships with her daughter, husband, and friends to show what hockey means to different people and different genders. She’s a Canucks fan, and takes the reader through her experience as a fan and as a professional in the time before the lockout. For example, at one game when a young boy gets a puck in the face, she sees Todd Bertuzzi in a different light than a group of men behind her:

Bert has his face pressed against the glass, watching Every stop in play - the nurse comes down, the Host is back giving out gifts and writing down info - Bert’s watching…Bert checks on the injured boy. But the guys behind us are interested in hookers and fat salaries and brutal hits. The obvious and overwhelming heart of a guy like Bert doesn’t interest them. If it does, they don’t talk it up. We see who we are in players - self-identification, the sociologists call it- who we want to be, that’s why we make them heroes.

I agree with her. If I had been at that game, I likely would have had a similar reaction. Does that lessen the impact of the game or make me a wuss? I certainly don’t think so. But that group of guys would disagree, or chalk it up to being a woman. Why can’t there be room for both sides or even a hybrid- one that sees the players as warriors, or the other side that sees the players’ humanity?

Continue reading ›

NBC Selects Caps/Pens as Game of the Week

Check your calendar and your watches! Implementing their “flexible scheduling policy”, NBC has selected the March 9th visit by the Penguins to Verizon Center as it’s Game of the Week — in HD no less. Because of the broadcast change, the puck will drop several hours earlier at 12:30 pm instead of the original 3 pm. Make sure you write yourself a note, show up at 3 and you may miss the whole game.

From the Washington Capitals press release:

Sunday’s broadcast will be Washington’s fifth nationally televised game of the season. NBC also has the option to add another Capitals game (March 16 vs. Boston) to its lineup. In its third season as the network broadcast partner of the NHL, NBC has the option to choose from up to four games for its nine regular-season Sunday afternoon broadcasts. This is the first Capitals game to be broadcast on NBC this season.