1 de agosto de 2008

Archivos de la categoría: Guardabosques de Nueva York

Se solicita su presencia - el horario 2008-09 de los capitales de Washington

El NHL lanzó el horario regular de la estación para los 30 equipos hoy. El NHL abrirá su 91.a estación en Estocolmo, Suecia y Praga, república checa con un par de juegos entre los guardabosques y el relámpago en Praga y los senadores y los pingüinos en Estocolmo los días 4 y 5 de octubre.

Washington Captials - insignia secundariaLos capitales comienzan la estación en el camino en Atlanta el viernes 10 de octubre con el primer juego casero el día siguiente contra Cristobal Huet y la Chicago Blackhawks.   Olaf Kolig visita la cabina de teléfono por primera vez el 10 de noviembre.

El horario de esta estación está bajo una nueva matriz que tenga cada equipo a jugar seis juegos contra cada equipo en su división (24 juegos), cuatro juegos contra los equipos de la no-división dentro de su conferencia (40 juegos), y 18 juegos de la no-Conferencia - por lo menos un juego contra cada club en la otra conferencia (15 juegos) y tres series del hogar-y-hogar contra los equipos de la no-Conferencia.

Algunas notas del horario:

Los treinta equipos estarán en la acción encendido el mismo día el sábado,   25 de octubre.

Obra clásica de 2009 inviernos ocurrirá el 1 de enero en el campo de Wrigley de Chicago con el Blackhawks hacer frente al campeón Detroit Redwings de la taza de Stanley.

El juego de la Todo-Estrella de NHL será llevado a cabo en el tth del centro de Bell de Montreal el 2 de enero.   Montreal también recibirá el bosquejo 2009 de la entrada los días 26 y 27 de junio.

El día del hockey en Canadá vuelve a su formación todo-Canadiense en Februay 21ro con Ottawa en Montreal, Vancouver en Toronto, y Calgary en Edmonton.

[Horario completo de los capitales después de la rotura.]

Continúe el› de la lectura

Jaromir, We Hardly Knew Ya, and I’m Not Sure We’ll Miss You

There was, seemingly, a continent-wide silence over the weekend associated with Jaromir Jagr’s departure from the NHL. Indeed, the latest flareup between Oilers GM Kevin Lowe and Ducks’ GM Brian Burke seems to have made a larger impression on the hockey world this weekend than has Jagr’s departure.

It seems oddly fitting that on Independence weekend the Capitals and the NHL would finally be liberated from the seemingly interminable and onerous payoffs to Jaromir Jagr, one of the sport’s ultimate mercenaries.

Back in January 2004, the Caps dealt the underachieving, isolated, and insufferable Jagr to the New York Rangers for Anson Carter and a promise to pay off $20 million of the $44 million remaining on his godawful contract. The deal of course occurred pre-lockout, and at the time Jagr was earning $11 million annually; meaning, that Ted Leonsis was on the hook for a tidy $5 million each season in payments to the Rangers for the duration of the deal. The new CBA that ended the lockout in 2005 included a 24-percent rollback in player salaries, so that payoff sum got sheared off a bit, but both practically speaking and especially symbolically, the Capitals were still tethered to the misanthropic mercenary, through the 2007-08 season, and that association stung.

Word arrived this weekend that Jagr had in essence ended his NHL career, in signing with Avangard Omsk of the new Russian elite pro hockey league. The terms — apparently two years and $7 million per season, tax free — mean that Jagr is back up to the equivalent of $11 million in annual salary. He spent this decade as a temperamental gun for hire, so this new agreement is fitting. Puck daddy’s overview on Jagr’s career, in which daddy terms #68’s tenure in D.C. “the near career suicide,” includes a generous helping of reader comments that seem to capture all of the at-arm’s-length regard Jagr engendered in his NHL career. Including, especially, this sentiment: “Good riddance.”

It’s remarkable that the NHL’s ninth all-time scorer could amass as massive a movement of malignant sentiments as he did, but he did.

Jagr’s was an NHL career of two careers: his years in Pittsburgh, where he brilliantly partnered with Mario Lemieux, catapulting the Penguins to two Stanley Cups, and where he won four consecutive Art Ross trophies; and those that followed, in Washington and New York, where he showed flashes of his dominant past but most often earned reviews that he was slowing down and grossly overpaid. This was especially true of his aborted stay in D.C.

Even in Pittsburgh Jagr has no shortage of detractors. Near the end of his run there he made no secret of his wish to play in the NHL’s largest market. Pittsburghers become particularly parochial over such sentiments. Jagr never seemed vested in the Penguins, emotionally or otherwise — certainly not like Mario Lemieux always has been. It’s distinctly possible that in about 7 or 8 years’ time Jagr will be regarded there as merely the fourth best forward to play in Pittsburgh — a stunning possibility, when you consider his scoring standing in the league’s history. Jagr is one of only 16 players to score 600 goals; only the 12th player to surpass 1,500 points; and only Mike Gartner is a rival to Jagr’s tally of 15 consecutive seasons with 30 or more goals. He is the only player to score goals in 53 different NHL arenas.

But for all of his red lamp lighting, he possessed an uncanny ability to leave you cold. Hockey is in many respects the ultimate team sport, in which a goal scorer typically celebrates lavishly in the arms of his teammates. Jagr seemed to celebrate many of the goals he scored with the detachment of a hitman.

It is true that the Washington Capitals today would not have Alexander Ovechkin were it not for the ruinous run of Jagr in D.C. It is therefore fitting that hockey fans here have in Ovechkin the outsized personality, a total team-first dynamo, one who is also disarmingly modest and an irrationally exuberant scoring celebrator. He is the antidote to Jaromir Jagr, our tonic from those two-and-a-half seasons of tumult.

In so many ways Jagr was an extraordinary paradox. He accumulated 1,599 points in his NHL career; that he is a mortal lock for the Hall of Fame is beyond dispute. And yet, he departs the NHL and it’s news on hockey pages for all of 12 hours, before the next free agent signing bumps it. He had fans by the thousands who wore sweaters bearing his name, but he seldom had spirited defenders. Serious hockey fans never ragged on his skill set, but even at the height of his brilliance he seemed to engender a detachment from fans. Most often you got the sense that if there was such a thing as hockey player really in it mostly for the money, Jaromir Jagr was that hockey player.

Now near 37, he’s crossing an ocean, and turning his back on the planet’s best league, for more of it.

First-Round Flops Over the Years

No team can get it right in round one every year, even drafting very high. And at times all teams get it really wrong then. A survey such as this is a powerful reminder of the crapshoot that is selecting 18-year-old hockey players. However, it is also an invitation for fans to react with, “What the *@^* were you thinking?”

I’ve included picks made by the Whale with those of the Hurricanes, and of those made by the Nordiques in association with Colorado, to even out the survey period. No need however to add Winnipeg to Phoenix’s draft woes — the Desert Dogs know how to screw the draft pooch up high all on their own. Take a look:

Team Player Picked Comment Studs Selected After
Anaheim Stanislav Chistov (5th, 2001) The ‘07 Cup win offers serious salve for the Stanislav screwup Mike Komisarek, Pascal Leclaire, R.J. Umberger, Ales Hemsky, Mike Cammalleri
Atlanta Patrick Stefan (no.1, 1999) The ‘99 harvest wasn’t swell to be sure, but this still is a serious stinker The Sedin twins, Martin Havlat
Boston Lars Jonsson (7th, 2000) A good recipe for Swedish meatballs would have delivered more Brooks Orpik, Alexander Frolov, Anton Volchenkov, Niklas Kronvall
Buffalo Shawn Anderson, (5th, 1986) This was a Shawn of the Dead selection Vincent Damphousse, Brian Leetch, Craig Janney, Teppo Numminen
Calgary Bryan Deasley (19th, 1987) The Flames’ no. 1 from ‘86, George Pelawa, died in a motorcycle crash that summer, making this a two-year strikeout stretch John LaClair, Eric Desjardins, Mathieu Schneider, Stephane Matteau
Carolina/Hartford Fred Arthur (8th, 1980) No relation to Bea Arthur, except in NHL impact Paul Coffey, Brent Sutter, Craig Ludwig, Steve Larmer, Andy Moog, Jari Kurri
Chicago Tony Tanti (12th, 1981) Wirtz maybe thought he’d sign cheap? Al MacInnis, Chris Chelios, Mike Vernon, John Vanbiesbrouck
Colorado/Quebec Aniel Dore (5th, 1988) Who doesn’t own an Aniel Dore Nordiques’ sweater? Jeremy Roenick, Teemu Selanne, Rob Blake, Rod Brind’Amour, Martin Gelinas
Columbus Alexander Picard (8th, 2004) Inspector Clousseau isn’t going to look into this pick — he made it Alexander Radulov, Drew Stafford, Andrej Meszaros, Wojtek Wolski
Dallas Jason Bacashihua (26th, 2001) Played with the ECHL’s Johnston Chiefs in ‘07-08, which for a first-rounder seven years after being drafted is a fairly moderate pace of development Derek Roy, Fedor Tyutin, Mike Cammalleri, Jason Pominville, Dave Steckel
Detroit Shawn Burr (7th, 1984) I thought briefly of exluding the Wings from this exercise, they draft so well, and you have to go back a bit to find a serious screwup Shane Corson, Sylvain Cote, Gary Roberts, Kevin Hatcher, Scott Mellanby
Edmonton Marc-Antoine Pouliot (22nd, 2003) Overlooked this scouting report by the rest of the league: “Thin, weak, won’t hit or backcheck or play in traffic. Other than that, he’s dandy.” Mike Richards, Corey Perry, Patrice Bergeron, Matt Carle
Florida Petr Taticek (9th, 2002) Why no postseasons in Sunrise, Cats’ fans ask? Look at this pick Alexander Semin, Chris Higgins, Alexander Steen, Cam Ward
Los Angeles Wally McBean (4th, 1987) Not a new lunch item at MickeyD’s Joe Sakic, Andrew Cassels, Mathieu Schneider, Luke Richardson
Minnesota (Wild/Stars) Brian Lawton (no. 1, 1983) The bridesmaid to Daigle Pat LaFontaine, Steve Yzerman, Tom Barrasso, Cam Neely
Montreal Terry Ryan (8th, 1995) Terry Hatcher would have looked better here Jarome Iginla, J.S. Giguere, Petr Sykora, Martin Biron
Nashville Brian Finley (6th, 1999) The day the music stopped in Honkeytonkville Barret Jackman, Martin Havlat, Mike Commodore, David Tanabe
New Jersey Adrian Foster (28th, 2001) Yo, Adrian! Legend has it that Foster wasn’t even on other teams’ lists — anywhere! Fedor Tyutin, Mike Cammalleri, Peter Budaj, Ray Emery, Patrick Sharp
NY Islanders Dave Chyzowski (2nd, 1989) Can’t blame Mad Mike for this one — he didn’t arrive until ‘95 Bill Guerin, Pavel Bure, Olaf Kolzig, Stu Barnes
NY Rangers Hugh Jessiman (12th, 2003) Hughe mistake! Brent Seabrook, Steve Bernier, Zach Parise, Ryan Getzlaf
Ottawa Alexander Daigle (no. 1, 1993) The Mother of all Misses; to “Daigle” in round one is every GM’s nightmare Chris Pronger, Paul Kariya, Todd Bertuzzi, Brendan Witt, Adam Deadmarsh
Philadelphia Claude Boivin (14th, 1988) Philly does real well in the first round; this year, not so much Rob Blake, Alexander Mogilny, Tony Amonte, Bret Hedican, Tie Domi
Phoenix Blake Wheeler ( 5th, 2004) Wheeler of misfortune; think Gretz & co. reached here? Rostislav Olesz, Alexander Radulov, Drew Stafford, Wojtek Wolski
Pittsburgh Zarley Zalapski (4th, 1980) ZZ FlopTop and agonizing alliteration Paul Coffey, Jari Kurri, Steve Larmer, Craig Ludwig, Brent Sutter
San Jose Pat Falloon (2nd, 1991) Plus, Pat had to don that original San Jose teal sweater on the ‘91 draft stage Scott Niedermayer, Peter Forsberg, Martin Lapointe, Brian Rolston, Alexei Kovalev
St. Louis Perry Turnbull (2nd, 1979) 188 goals in an NHL career is nothing to snicker at, but methinks Ray Bourque would have helped out more Ray Bourque, Mike Gartner, Brian Propp, Kevin Lowe
Tampa Alexander Svitov (3rd, 2001) Tampa (Nikita Alexeev) hasn’t exactly struck Lightning with first-round Russians Pascal Leclaire, Alex Hemsky, R.J. Umberger, Shaone Morrisonn
Toronto Gary Nylund (3rd, 1982) This is the stuff of Cup droughts Scott Stevens, Phil Housley, Dave Andreychuk, Doug Gilmour
Vancouver Jere Gillis (4th, 1978) The Canucks have no home-grown Hall of Famers, including Gillis Mark Napier, Don Maloney, Doug Wilson, Bengt Gustafsson
Washington Greg Joly ( no.1, 1974) Good Golly what a stinker! “The next Bobby Orr” it was said of Joly in ‘74. Umm, not so much. Clark Gillies, Pierre Larouche, Bryan Trottier, Doug Riesbrough

Versus’ Overtime Plan

Tonight’s slate of playoff games are exclusive to the Versus network with the Rangers / Penguins starting at 7 pm ET followed by Detroit / Colorado at 10 pm ET. So what happens if the first game goes to overtime and extends past the start of the second game?

Versus has announced how the possible scenario will be handled in advance.

  • Cable viewers in the Detroit and Colorado markets will be switched automatically to the beginning of Detroit Red Wings vs. Colorado Avalanche semifinal Game 4.
  • Cable viewers in the rest of the country will join the Detroit vs. Colorado game in progress at the conclusion of the New York vs. Pittsburgh game.
  • Satellite viewers on DirecTV and Dish Network will be able to watch the Detroit vs. Colorado game in its entirety on an auxiliary channel.
    • DirecTV - Channel 659
    • Dish Network - Channel 452

Watching Other Teams Flirt With the Stanley Cup

Watching the Washington Capitals get bounced from the playoffs was a bit like getting dumped, hard. The team and its fans may have recovered from the initial stomach-punched feeling, but it’s still hard to watch all those other teams flirting with the Stanley Cup.

Nonetheless, we can all look back fondly on the good times the Capitals had during the season and in the 2008 Playoffs, and then move on. After all, the Capitals are young, confident, and funâ€â€I’m sure they’ll meet someone even better next year . . . er, will have an even better playoff run next year.

That said, is another team in this year’s playoffs catching your eye? As we mentioned a few weeks back, Toronto Maple Leafs fans seemed to be rooting for the Capitals (for who can resist watching Ovechkin play?), and after the sweep some Senators fans jumped on board as well.

So have you been able to watch the Playoffs dance with other teams? If so, for whom are you rooting to “go all the way” this year?

Which team are you supporting for the rest of the playoffs?
View Results

NBC Sports: Paragon of Accuracy

NBC Sports continued its tradition of thoroughly vetting and verifying information during the Rangers-Penguins game today with the scroll on the bottom of the screen showing the top ten playoff points leaders. I must have missed the news that Ovechkin went to Montreal (somehow, I think they’d like that right now).

NBC Sports- wrong again

But Whom Have You Beaten That Still Matters?

Great find by James Mirtle (via The Falconer) about playoff teams’ records against other playoff-bound teams this year:

The six “over .500″ teams are Detroit, Washington, Anaheim, the Rangers, Montreal and Dallas.

Washington Capitals’ Playoff Math Redux

The Washington Capitals’ season is down to the proverbial wire: one or two games remain for each of the teams in the Eastern Conference race, and that race is tighter than fitting these guys into adjacent Metro Rail seats.

The Capitals received some help last night from New Jersey, who kept Boston to just one point with a late goal, a two-point night from former Capital Dainius Zubrus, and a shootout victory.

Pittsburgh chipped in by defeating the Flyers, in regulation. It certainly helps matters that the Penguins and Canadiens are battling for the first seed. Caps fans can only hope that Pittsburgh (on 4 days’ rest) plays Philly hard in their last gameâ€â€Montreal must go at least 1-0-1 to ensure the Pens’ final game matters.
Yet Carolina won handily, led by Corey LaRose’s hat trick, putting the Southeast Division title firmly within their reach.

Read on for analysis, tiebreakers, and likely finishes . . . your own predictions and comments are welcome as always.

The Playoff Picture: Eastern Bubble Teams’ Remaining Games
Team Date H/A Vs. OFB Res Analysis Playoff Chances
Washington
.
90 points
3/25
3/27
3/29
4/1
4/3
4/5
Away
Away
Away
Home
Home
Home
Carolina
Tampa
Florida
Carolina
Tampa Bay
Florida
TU
LW
TU
TU
LW
TU
W
W
W
W
.
.
The Cardiac Caps won their first two games in heart-rending fashion; they won their next two with dominant performances, capped by last night’s victory in a sea of red. The Caps still need help from one or more of the teams they’re chasing, and more importantly they must look at Tampa and Florida as criticalâ€â€both winnable games, but Coach Boudreau is certainly driving home that a winnable game is by no means already won.
7th Seed?
Carolina
.
92 points
3/25
3/28
3/29
4/1
4/2
4/4
Home
Home
Away
Away
Home
Home
Washington
Atlanta
Tampa Bay
Washington
Tampa Bay
Florida
TU
LW
LW
TU
TU
LW
OTL
W
L
L
W
.
Last week, “Suddenly the SE Division Title is no longer a foregone conclusion for Carolina.” Neither, it seems, is the making playoffs at all. But their win against Tampa puts them in good shape, and if they beat Florida the division crown is theirs.
.
T
iebreaker Scenario: The Caps would lose the first tiebreaker (wins), so they must exceed Carolina’s point total to win the Southeast.

SE Div Champs?
Ottawa
.
92 Points
4/3
4/4
Away
Home
Toronto
Boston
TU
TU
.
.
Given the oh-so-different ways the Sens and Caps started the season, it’s stunning to think that the Caps have a chance to bump the Senators out of the post season. The Sens head to Toronto Thursday nightâ€â€and you know the Leafs are looking to play spoiler. Then Ottawa finishes its season hosting Boston a mere 24 hours later.
.
T
iebreaker Scenario: If the Caps and Sens end with the same number of points and wins, the Caps have the tiebreaker courtesy of their season sweep of the Senators. If the Sens go 1-1 and the Caps win out (or the Sens go 0-2 and the Caps 1-1), then the Caps are in. Unlikely but possible: the Sens could lose both games and the Caps could get two OTLs, thus giving the Sens the tiebreaker.

Golf in early April?
Boston
.
92 points
3/25
3/27
3/29
3/30
4/2
4/4
4/5
Away
Home
Home
Away
Away
Away
Home
Toronto
Toronto
Ottawa
Buffalo
NJD
Ottawa
Buffalo
TU
LW
TU
TU
LL
TU
LW
W
W
W
OTL
OTL
.
.
The Devils helped the Caps a bit Wednesday night, though the Bruins came away with a point. What the Caps need most from Friday’s Boston-Ottawa tilt is a regulation win for either teamâ€â€and whom Caps fans root for will depend on the outcome of Ottawa’s Thursday game. A three-point Bruins-Senators bout would be terrible.
.
T
iebreaker Scenario: Equaling the Bruins’ point total will get the Caps into the playoffs. But with three games remaining, the Bruins must go 1-1-0 or worse for the Caps to catch them.

6th Seed?
Buffalo
.
88 points
3/25
3/27
3/28
3/30
4/1
4/3
4/5
Home
Away
Home
Home
Away
Away
Away
Ottawa
Ottawa
Montreal
Boston
Toronto
Montreal
Boston
TU
LL
LL
TU
TU
LL
LL
L
W
OTL
W
W
.
.
Last week: “4 of 5 against Montreal and Boston likely spells the end of their run unless Ryan Miller notches a couple shutouts.” An impressive 3-1-1 effort in the past five games has kept Buffalo alive, but with the number of teams ahead of them the Sabres will fall short of the playoffs this year.
Done
Philadelphia
.
91 points
3/25
3/28
3/29
4/2
4/4
4/6
Away
Away
Away
Away
Home
Home
NYR
NJD
NYI
Pittsburgh
NJD
Pittsburgh
LL
TU
LW
LL
TU
TU
W
OTL
W
L
.
.
Painful, but true: Capitals fans must root for Pittsburgh on the last day of the season. Though Philly finishes at home, the Devils are trying to stave off the Rangers to keep 4th and Pittsburgh is chasing the conference title.

T
iebreaker Scenario: Like the Bruins, equaling Philly’s point total will get the Caps into the playoffs. The Flyers must go 1-0-1 or worse to stay within the Caps’ reach.

8th Seed?

Caps 3 / Puffnuts & Co. 2 - in OT - GWG by Green

Profile in Linesman Courage

One noteworthy aspect of today’s Flyers-Rangers’ matinee in Philly was the shutout pitched by Blueshirt backup netminder Steve Valiquette. The Caps will most assuredly see Henrik Lundqvist tomorrow afternoon at Verizon Center.

But in today’s second period in Philly linesman Pat Dapuzzo suffered a brutal skate-to-face injury that opened him up in slasher-film fashion. Congruent to the incident was a spontaneous outburst of fisticuffs between the clubs — no fewer than three slow dances (Steve Downie using Fedor Tyutin like a punching bag most notable among them). Somehow, Dapuzzo got to his feet and skated through two zones, a robust trail of his blood following (and leading) him, in a remarkable attempt to assist his officiating colleagues in stemming the melee. Arrived at the brawling, he was almost instantly ushered to medical assistance from both teams’ trainers.

Hockey players are often — and rightly — lauded for their courage in competing through pain and savage injury. Dapuzzo today reminded us that the entire ice sheet is staffed with profiles in courage.

Fashion Week Comes Early

Sleeveless Hockey Jersey- photo from HockeyOverstock.comI’ve been looking for a little black Caps jersey for DC Sports Chicklet. (I want hers to match mine; I’m a cheeseball.) Gustafsson sent me a link to a website offering exactly what I wanted, and as I was browsing around, I came across this gem: a sleeveless hockey jersey. I wasn’t surprised to find it in Rangers form, seeing as how we recently visited their checkered fashion history. Fans of Montreal, Boston, and Toronto needn’t fear, as the sleeveless jersey is present on the site for them as well. Surprisingly, there were no such jerseys available for Penguins, Sabres, or Islander fans.

I looked at this jersey and wondered who exactly was the target audience for this style. It’s the kind of thing I could see someone wearing as they work on their car. Perhaps it’s intended for summer wear, seeing as how regular jerseys get a little warm in July. During the season, it might be ideal for someone who wants to show off their guns. Just guessing here, because I have no clue who would want to wear this.

However, if women have to be subjected to pink jerseys, there’s no reason why bad fashion should be limited to one sex, or even one sport: it’s an equal opportunity crime. I can only surmise that someone checked out the sleeveless jerseys that some MLB teams wear and thought, “What a great idea! The NHL needs this!” Never mind that no fan in his/her right mind would need or want one of these to wear to a hockey game, since it doesn’t get hot enough in the arena to warrant one. Not to mention that the team doesn’t wear these jerseys either, but let’s not focus on the details. If anyone can shed some light on this fashion faux pas, please let me know; I’m genuinely intrigued by this item.

Knee-jerks & Notes: Caps-Rags, 12/12

Caps Celebrate - 12Dec07 - Photo by Kate McGovern / OffWing.comOut at Kettler Capitals this past July during Rookie Camp, Tim Leone of the Patriot News pressed the case for Nicklas Backstrom spending his first year getting acclimated in North America under Bruce Boudreau. Wednesday’s Washington Post Express profiled Backstrom and his flourishing under Boudreau — 10 points in 10 games. Turns out, Tim was right.

I thought it was important to be at Verizon Center for all of this week’s games in order to gain a clear portrait of what a Bruce Boudreau Caps’ team looked like, their having been properly introduced to one another for more than half a month. I wanted to see them live in action and listen to them talk afterwards. Now I’m of the belief that I’m witnessing a notable turnaround in what was initially a terrible season, as well as Boudreau making an indelible impression toward transitioning from interim to unqualified Head Coach of the Washington Capitals.

Yes, that sentiment, that aura, was palpable in Verizon Center late last night. It was there because the Caps have strung together three straight wins over quality opponents; scored 14 goals in the process; done so without their captain, one of the game’s premiere playmaking centers, and one of the game’s best defensive forwards; and authored comebacks in two of the three victories.

Motzko Goal - 12Dec07 - Photo by Kate McGovern / OffWing.comHere is a theme quickly taking hold with the Bruce Boudreau Caps: secondary — and tertiary — scoring. Joe Motzko flirting with a hat trick? After the game Boudreau said all the right and polite things about Motzko having “good hands” and contributing to a Stanley Cup winner last season, but in the end, he’s a journeyman forward. But playing for Boudreau, in Boudreau’s system, motivated by Bruce Boudreau, Joe Motzko can hurt you. Tonight, he hurt the Rangers. As did Donald Brashear. And if you take a look back at Bruce Boudreau’s Hershey Bears, and Bruce Boudreau’s Manchester Monarchs, you won’t find rosters laden with top-heavy scoring. I’m not smart enough to be able to tell you why, basically, only Alexander Ovechkin could score under Glen Hanlon this season and why, three weeks later, everybody is scoring under Bruce Boudreau. But it’s happening.

Five goals against Henrik Lunqvist! And Steckel hit a pipe shorthanded, and Ovechkin missed on a breakaway. More musings:

  • Mike Green: think Sergei Gonchar but with inordinate defensive ability. In the coach’s post-game presser, Tarik El Bashir asked Bruce Boudreau, “Just how good is this kid gonna be?” For me, the coach’s immediate expression said everything: he got wide-eyed, he smiled broadly, he looked like a child beholding the base of a Christmas tree crammed full of wrapped goodies on Christmas morning.
  • Snow held up what would have been the Caps’ second goal of the first period. It was excruciatingly close to clearly passing over Henrik Lunqvist’s goal line. With the poor Verizon Center ice of a week ago, no snow could have accumulated in the crease, and the game would have been knotted at 2 at the first intermission. How could I tell? Hanging over us up in the press box, quite near, are a half dozen sizable high-def TVs.
  • Donald Brashear’s assist in the first period was secondary in name only. He threw a terrific check to win the puck along the end boards, then dished a beautiful, hard and flat centering pass in the slot to Brooks Laich, whose hard shot was swatted home by Motzko.
  • It’s difficult to overstate how much more dynamic the Bruce Boudreau power play looks compared to its predecessor. No matter what unit of five is out there, they comport themselves with poise and the appearance of cohesion. This, too, I am noticing: a lot more “Ooooohs” accompanying a lot more near tallies from the home crowd during the man advantages.
  • Brashear/Orr - 12Dec07 - Photo by Kate McGovern / OffWing.comThe Brashear-Orr slow-dance: watching it made me think that the opponents of fighting have an uphill battle insofar as arguing against its entertainment value. Orr unleashed a flurry of fury early on, most of which didn’t land, then Brashear went bombs away in blowback.
  • The Caps’ first minor penalty occurred after nearly 33 minutes of playing time. More discipline taking hold.
  • Mike Green’s confidence and virtuosity rushing the puck created lanes for Joe Motzko’s second goal. He could have head-manned the puck to either of his wings on the play, but instead rushed up through the open center of the ice, backing up two Blueshirt defenders. This in turn opened lanes high in the Rangers’ end, within which Green deftly QB’d and Motzko showcased his “soft hands.”
  • Paul Coffey Jeff Schultz has got some serious point shot MoJo going on. Raise your hand if you thought he’d approach Christmas with more goals than Jordan Staal.
  • The snowballing effect of winning: Olie Kolzig spoke after the game about there being some “fragile moments” in the third period of Monday night’s tight 3-2 triumph over the Devils. But he said the Caps applied confidence gained from that experience against the Rangers Wednesday night, when it skated a tight third period conspicuously confidently. Boudreau added that on the bench he could tell the guys weren’t content with securing merely one point, even after falling behind 2-0. This is a different hockey team, folks, badly injured as it is.
  • This mini winning streak has vaulted Olie Kolzig’s career record back above .500: 286-285-63-18. Have this feeling it’s gonna stay that way.
  • Early in the third period last night Brendan Shanahan pulled up shy of plastering a vulnerable Alexander Ovechkin in the far corner boards when AO had his back turned to play the puck. I had two reactions. One, Shanny knew it was AO. Two, this is precisely the type of respect every player ought to show every other player in this league in such situations. Get word to Sean Avery and the Philadelphia Flyers.
  • Alexander Ovechkin was sober and measured in responding to press questions about the significance of last night’s victory. But when alluding to the team’s fans, whom he called “great,” he added, “We need support.” The brand of hockey this team is playing now and the effort it is putting forth merit many more fannies being in the stands Friday night.

Fear the Mullet! 80s Night at the Phone Booth

Here’s a sampling of photos from the Washington Capitals’ 80s Night on December 12, 2007. I didn’t bother correcting the redeye because, well, it looks pretty cool with the red mullets. Good tunes tonight, though they slipped up a couple times (AC/DC’s Highway to Hell is 1979; Andrew W.K. is 2002).

Mouse over each photo for the caption, and post links to your own as comments if you’d like. Enjoy!

But I don't WANNA look like Jagr!

Jay and Silent Bob? Love the Iron Maiden shirt.

Mulleted Fans at the Green Turtle

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Caps 5 / Rags 4 - OT

2 Point Toast

Night of the Living Mullet

Mullet Promo image courtesy of washingtoncaps.comTonight’s tilt between the Capitals and the New York Rangers will feature 5,000 splendid coiffures courtesy of the team’s 80s Night promotional giveaway: bright red mullet wigs. It’s no accident that this promo coincides with Jaromir Jagr’s return to DC (I love the Barbara Walters-esque soft focus on this Jagr photo… so fetching!).

I’ll be wandering the concourse with my camera in hand, snapping pics of the flowing red locks and rocking out to the 80s tunes (keeping fingers crossed for some Cure, Clash, Police, etc.). I sit in Section 426, Row A, if you’d like to stop by for a visit. I’ll be wearing an old-school Capitals hat and either a black-and-silver 80s Gretzky L.A. Kings jersey or a red Dale Hunter Capitals jersey. And feel free to submit your own photos to us via comments to this post.

For fond Memories of Mullets Past, check out this OFB post with links to some stellar mullet-related photos.

Rocket Richard In the House

Roy Dupuis- photo courtesy of NowToronto.comTomorrow, the dreams of Roy Dupuis fans will come true: “The Rocket” is being released on DVD. (The trailer is here for your viewing pleasure.) I was able to see this introspective of Maurice Richard’s life again, and the movie holds up well over multiple viewings. The movie depicted the struggle in Canada between Anglophones and Francophones, as well as the various social classes, especially well. This aspect of the plot helped to further develop my understanding of the issues. As an American with a French-Canadian husband, I was already aware of the tensions, but this movie further defined the fine points of the problems.

However, my favorite part of the movie was when Sean Avery “Bob Dill” got the stuffing knocked out of him by Richard. Avery will never win any awards for acting, but even he seemed convincing, probably because he was doing what he always does: mouthing off, pushing guys around, and generally acting like a jerk. Other players were involved in the film– Vincent Lecavalier and Mike Ricci, to name a couple– so there was a degree of authenticity when it came to the hockey scenes. (It didn’t hurt that Dupuis has been skating since he was three.)

Personally, I preferred watching the film in French with English subtitles; it added to the experience. I’d rank this movie up there in the hockey movie genre, somewhere between “Mystery, Alaska” and “Miracle” (and definitely higher than “Most Valuable Primate.”) If you’re in the mood for a hockey movie and want to see something other than “Slapshot,” check out “The Rocket.”

Ooh la la!

This video’s been making the blog rounds lately, but I figured it was an ideal reminder of why hockey jerseys should never, EVER be tucked in.

Why could I easily see Jagr, Avery, Shanahan, and Drury in the modern-day version of this commercial?

(Be sure to check out the second commercial featuring the same guys over at YouTube.)

Thanks to Capsaholic for the heads-up.

Knee-Jerks & Notes: @ New York Rangers, 11/1/07

With a few days of rest and a few rookies with lighter wallets, the Caps take the ice for the first time since the 7-1 raking of the Leafs.Knee-Jerk Reactions

  • The Rags are a low-scoring, scare-free squad, and far from the shoe-in for the Stanley Cup finals many in the MSM forecasted in the preseason. Heard that in-season diagnosis before? Us too. Nonetheless, Henrik Lundquist is a game-changing, game-stealing talent. He loves playing against the Caps. And these Rangers love playing the Caps on Broadway.
  • Scary moment in the first with the Rags crashing the net. The immediate worry was that Kolzig tweaked the knee again. That kind of knee-jerk we don’t need. But the big guy seems none the worse for wear.
  • Jurcina can be counted upon to deliver a flattening check along the boards virtually every night. The Caps need more of those.
  • Interesting: Brashear with some PP time. Who wouldn’t love to see him with an extra-man tally?
  • Broken record dept.: AO with a bruising shoulder check knocking an opponent on his keister.
  • You can’t go two men down while trailing 0-1 in the third on the road and expect to win many games.
  • The Caps were handed a 4-minute PP with still plenty of time left to rally in the third, down 2-0, and while they generated eight shots on it, none really qualified as a superb quality opportunity. And that was the story of the Caps’ night.
  • It certainly wasn’t a bad effort, but it also wasn’t the inspired effort we saw Monday in Toronto.

In the pipeline, October roundup: 2004 draftee Travis Morin is second in scoring in the East Coast Hockey League with 6 goals and 5 assists in eight games for South Carolina. He had a hat trick Halloween night in the Stingrays’ 6-5 loss to Columbia. Patrick McNeill is also skating in South Carolina, and he’s got 3 goals and 5 assists in eight games. Five Stingrays rank in the E’s top 10 scorers. Josh Godfrey ranks in the top 10 of defensemen scorers in the OHL ofr Sault St. Marie: he has 15 points in 16 games (8 and 7). Mathieu Perreault is again lodged in the QMJHL’s top 5 scorers, with 9 goals and 16 assists in 15 Titan games. He’s also a +11 for Acadie Bathurst. The Caps’ other Q dynamo, Francois Bouchard, too is garnering heavy opponent checking; his numbers are down slightly from a year ago: 7 goals and 14 assists for 21 pts. in 16 Drakkar games.

Five Caps’ prospects will take part in the ADT Canada-Russia Challenge Series this month. Simeon Varlamov will start in net for Russia. Perreault and Bouchard will represent Team Quebec. Josh Godfrey will patrol the blueline for the OHL entry in the Challenge. And Karl Alner will skate for one of two WHL squads.

Versus Goes Viral

Perhaps Versus is feeling the heat from recent rumours that the NHL wants to return to ESPN. Perhaps they’ve had some hockey specials planned since the lockout. In any case, Versus has a special airing tonight and they’re worried about their ratings.

In an effort to boost ratings, they’ve turned to Sinuate Media and a dose of viral marketing. Viral marketing is a “phenomenon that facilitates and encourages people to pass along a marketing message.” Sinuate Media contacted us, and a number of other blogs, to help hype tonight’s special.

“We’ve just received word from Versus about some exclusive video content for the … special which is airing this Tuesday at 6:30 PM ET. The special is followed by the Rangers VS Penguins game at 7PM ET. Versus planned on holding this content for themselves, but has now decided to distribute this exclusive content to a selected few sites [and] feel as though it would be a great fit for your site.”

This special focuses on one current NHL player whose name I won’t even have to utter, you already know who it is. I understand the desire to market him as the face of the NHL. But why does it have to be ONE face. There are other bright young stars such as Phaneuf, Kessel, Toews, and Ovechkin. Would not marketing all five interest more people and be more effective than going to the well one to many times with one? The marketing gains the league and the network sees off the ice can quickly diminish by his conduct on the ice.

I wonder if the distribution of this “exclusive content” that I’ve already seen on numerous sites will have an appreciable effect. If you haven’t seen it, it’s right here:

Hopefully, this will be the first of a series where they focus on other players, too.

Knee-jerks: @ New York Rangers, 10/12/07