30 de julio de 2008

Archivos de la categoría: Coyotes de Phoenix

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

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

In Phoenix, Wheel(er) of Misfortune

Remember the 2004 NHL Entry Draft and the heads that turned — swiveled fully a la Linda Blair in ‘The Exorcist,’ actually — when Phoenix selected Minnesota high school junior Blake Wheeler with the 5th overall pick? Wheeler that spring was a riser of a prospect, but Phoenix — to wide and loud ridicule from the TSN commentators at the time — slotted the big wing about 20 places higher than on any other NHL team’s draft board. At least. His development over the four hockey seasons since can be said to have been steady if unspectacular. Meaning: about 29 NHL clubs probably got a pretty good read on Wheeler while the ‘Yotes, drafting at 5th overall . . . not so much.

First-rounders Phoenix passed on back in ’04 include Rostislav Olesz; Drew Stafford; Alexander Radulov; Andrej Meszaros; and Mike Green. 

Well what seemed a bizarre pick four summers back turned, this past weekend, into a superbly lousy one for the Desert Dogs.

In a first instance of exercising a provision brought about by the new CBA, Wheeler informed Phoenix of his intention to become a free agent this June 1, spurning Phoenix’ recent contract offer. Wheeler was able to pull this off because rather than return to the Breck Academy for his senior year of high school (he led all Minnesota high schoolers in scoring his junior year), he bolted for the Green Bay Gamblers of the USHL. The new CBA allows NHL clubs the rights to picks who go on to college a total of four years to sign them. Not four years of college, four years of rights. Blake left Minnesota this spring after his junior season to turn pro.

Wheeler’s case represents something fundamentally different from say R.J. Umberger, drafted 16th overall  by Vancouver in 2001. Umberger, beholden to the old CBA, completed all four years at Ohio State before coming to a negotiations impasse with the Canucks. He was first dealt by Vancouver to the Rangers, who fared no better in their negotations, and eventually he signed as a free agent with the Flyers.

Capitals’ Director of Media Relations Nate Ewell informed me today that the Caps have a set of comparable challenges, potentially, with 2007 draft picks Brett Bruneteau and Andrew Glass. Bruneteau has two seasons in the USHL under his belt, and he’ll join the North Dakota Fighting Sioux this fall. Glass, like his draft classmate, won’t enter college as a freshman until this fall, joining the BU Terriers. For drafted players who go on to college, years spent in the USHL or simply as a year or two off to gain maturity and strength count in the four-year window of rights eligibility. Wheeler is the first player to exercise this out clause, if you will, within the new CBA.   

As compensation for Wheeler Phoenix will receive the fifth pick in this year’s second round. The Coyotes can only hope that Wheeler doesn’t turn out to be anywhere near the player that Umberger is.  

OFB Season Preview

What would a band of hockey bloggers be without predictions for the new NHL season?

We don’t claim to possess either a crystal ball or spy’s eyes inside the training camps of 29 other clubs, but we thought it might be helpful to our readers to compile a list of offseason (and late last season) player movement, in a concise file, and have a little fun offering up none-too-accountable “Thumbs Up” or “Thumbs Down” forecasts for all 30 teams.

Basically, a team earned a “Thumbs up” if we thought its manuevering and maturation suggested that it’d improved upon its 2006-07 points total. Clubs that “stayed pat” or engineered boneheaded signings and/or inexplicable, high-end free agent farewells were awarded “Thumbs down.”

So we’ve provided everything “primer” a puckhead could need here.

Except the beer.

Team Comings Goings Youth is Served Verdict
Mathieu Schneider Selanne and Neidermeyer (for now?), Dustin Penner Bobby Ryan Thumbs Down
Eric Perrin, Ken Klee, Todd White Scott Mellanby, Shane Hnidy,
Glen Metropolit, Keith Tkachuk,
Denis Hamel, Eric Belanger,
Bryan Little (?) Thumbs Down
Glen Metropolit, Aaron Ward,
Peter Schaefer
Shane Donovan Matt Lashoff (?) Thumbs Down
Jocelyn Thibault Almost everyone Dan Paille, Drew Stafford Thumbs Down
Adrian Aucoin, David Hale,
Cory Sarich, Owen Nolan
Tony Amonte, Jeff Friesen,
Roman Hamrlik, Brad Stuart,
Andrei Zyuzin
Eric Nystrom (?) Thumbs Down
Matt Cullen Jack Johnson, Anson Carter,
David Tanabe
None Hmm . . .
Brent Spoel, Robert Lang,
Sergei Samsanov, Andrei Zyuzin,
Yanic Perreault
Michal Handzus, Adrian Aucoin,
Peter Bondra, Jason Cullimore
Jonathon Toews, Patrick Kane,
Jack Skille
Thumbs Up
Scott Hannan, Ryan Smyth, Ken Klee, Pierre Turgeon,
Ossi Vaananen, Patrice Brisebois
None Thumbs Up
Michael Peca, Jiri Novotny Brian Boucher, Bryan Berard Gilbert Brule, Derick Brassard (?) Hmm . . .
Todd Fedoruk Matthew Barnaby, Jon Klemm,
Eric Lindros, Ladislav Nagy,
Patrik Stefan, Darryl Sydor
Niklas Grossman Thumbs Down
Brian Rafalski, Dallas Drake Robert Lang, Todd Bertuzzi,
Kyle Calder, Danny Markov,
Mathieu Schneider
Igor Grigorenko Thumbs Down
Sheldon Souray, Joni Pitkanen,
Dustin Penner, Denis Grebeshkov,
Dick Tarnstrom
Ryan Smyth, Joffrey Lupul,
Petr Sykora, Jason Smith
Sam Gagner, Ryan O’Marra (?) Hmm . . .
Richard Zednik, Radek Dvorak,
Tomas Vokoun
Ed Belfour, Alex Auld, Martin Gelinas, Chris Gratton, Todd Bertuzzi None Thumbs Up
Brad Stuart, Tom Preissing,
Kyle Calder, Michal Handzus,
Ladislav Nagy
Mathieu Garon, Jamie Heward,
Tom Kostopoulos, Jamie Lundmark,
Aaron Miller
Jonathon Bernier, Jack Johnson Thumbs Up
Eric Belanger, Sean Hill, Manny Fernandez, Todd White Benoit Pouliot (?) Hmm . . .
Roman Hamrlik, Bryan Smolinski,
Tom Kostopoulos
Sheldon Souray, Radek Bonk,
Sergei Samsanov, Mike Johnson
Carey Price, Kyle Chipchura,
Andrei Kostitsyn
Thumbs Down
Martin Gelinas, Radek Bonk Almost everyone Ville Koistinen, Kevin Klein (?) Thumbs Down
Dainius Zubrus, Vitali Vishnevski,
Kevin Weekes, Karel Rachunek
Scott Gomez, Brian Rafalski Nicklas Bergfors (?) Thumbs Down
Bill Guerin, Mike Comrie,
Ruslan Fedotenko
Almost everyone Sean Bergenheim (?) Thumbs Down
Scott Gomez, Chris Drury Michael Nylander, Karel Rachunek,
Matt Cullen, Kevin Weekes,
Brad Isbister
Marc Staal, Ryan Callahan (?) Thumbs Up
Shean Donovan, Luke Richardson,
Denis Hamel
Mike Comrie, Tom Preissing,
Peter Schaefer, Oleg Saprykin
Nick Foligno, Brian Lee Thumbs Down
Daniel Briere, Joffrey Lupul,
Jason Smith, Martin Biron,
Scott Upshall, Kimo Timonen
Peter Forsberg, Joni Pitkanen,
Kyle Calder, Robert Esche,
Todd Fedoruk, Mike York
Braydon Coburn, Ryan Parent Thumbs Up
Alex Auld, Radim Vrbata,
Niko Kapanen, Mike York
Owen Nolan, Jeremy Roenick,
Curtis Joseph, Mike Ricci
Peter Mueller Thumbs Down
Darryl Sydor, Gary Roberts,
Petr Sykora
Eric Cairns, Joel Kwiatkowski,
Jocelyn Thibault, Michel Ouellet,
Nils Ekman, Josef Melichar
Kristopher Letang Thumbs Up
Craig Rivet, Jeremy Roenick Scott Hannan, Bill Guerin,
Vesa Toskala
None Hmm . . .
Paul Kariya, Keith Tkachuk Radek Dvorek, Dallas Drake,
Glen Metropolit, Jamie Rivers
Erik Johnson Thumbs Up
Michel Ouellet, Chris Gratton,
Jan Hlavac
Cory Sarich, Ruslan Fedotenko,
Eric Perrin
Karri Ramo (?) Thumbs Down
Jason Blake, Mark Bell, Vesa Toskala Jeff O’Neill, Michael Peca,
Yanic Perreault, J.S. Aubin
Jiri Tlusty (?) Thumbs Down
Brad Isbister, Ryan Shannon Bryan Smolinski, Brent Sopel, Jan Bulis, Rory Fitzpatrick, Luc Bourdon (?) Thumbs Down
Michael Nylander, Viktor Kozlov,
Tom Poti
Dainius Zubrus, Kris Beech,
Bryan Muir, Jiri Novotny
Nicklas Backstrom, Mike Green,
Tomas Fleischmann
Thumbs Up

Ice Girls of the NHL

Japers’ Rink let the Capitals’ limited season ticket survey out of the bag that once again broached the subject of “Ice Girls”. Neither OrderedChaos nor I received the season ticket survey, so we don’t know if it included more than the five questions mentioned by Japers’.

Although we have pondered the idea of Washington Capitals’ Ice Girls, we don’t know if this is a done deal or not. Most of the other teams have already held their tryouts. Is Washington behind the curve, so to speak? Or have super secret auditions already been held and ice girls are ready to hit the ice on September 8th?

In any case, we were curious as to how many other teams have such squads. The answers may surprise you.

New York Islanders Ice Girls

[update: Dan Steinberg is at Kettler and has not seen any "ice-based cheer persons".]
[update 2: Dan Steinberg received confirmation from Nate Ewell, Director of Media Relations, that there will be no ice-based cheer persons roaming the Phone Booth this season.]

The Gazprom Cup - Hockey Legends Hit the Ice

In our continuing series of Moscow bonus coverage: photos from the 2007 Gazprom Cup, an old-timers’ benefit game that boasted an impressive roster for both teams.

The Gazprom team (in blue) was captained by Gazprom’s Alexander Medvedev, a die-hard hockey fan and good player in his own right. The Gazprom coach was the great former goaltender Vladislav Tretiak. The World Team saw Scotty Bowman’s return to coaching duties.

Gazprom Cup - Group Photo (550)
Click the group photo for a larger version

Pseudo-Yzerman So as you may have read, Steve Yzerman was slated to play in this game. He did not attend, however, though he was in Moscow and later appeared at the post-game press conference when Canada won the gold medal.Since the World Stars team already had an Yzerman jersey ready, a Greek player (whose name was unannounced) decided to take the ice in Yzerman’s place and in his jersey as well, since Yzerman was slated to wear #91 (the reverse of his traditional #19).

The Greek skater taped over Yzerman’s nameplate, and played the whole game in a black baseball cap and Stevie Y’s sweater. Clearly this event was more for fun than for intense competition.

In the photo on the right, Phoenix Coyotes’ pro scout Christian Ruuttu and his countryman Hannu Virta skate for the World team. Ruuttu was staying at the same hotel as we were; he shared some entertaining stories late-night in the hotel lobby, including the revelation of Joe Reekie’s nickname in his early Buffalo days: Pokecheck Joe

Ruuttu and Virta

Gazprom Cup - Doug Brown with the Puck
Former Detroit Red Wing Doug Brown (left, in orange) controls the puck

Gazprom Cup - Vogel Larionov Rucki
Mike Vogel, Igor Larionov, and Mike Rucki

Continue reading ›

Awash in Colors of Passion

cupajoe.jpegThe most vivid illustration that, to borrow a phrase from Mike Vogel, it’s hockey’s most wonderful time of the year, was on display last night in the Calgary Saddledome: a Stampede of Red, a Sea of Red-Out, the Calgary iteration of the novel fashion spirit begun more than 15 years ago in Winnipeg. Remember all those Jets’ fans and their white-out of their home arena? Why Winnipeg? My hunch: spring in Winnipeg generally starts in July, and so it wasn’t so much a concerted fashion effort on the part of Jets’ fans as their simply arriving at the rink in April and May blanketed in snow.

Whatever their origins, color-outs by the home crowd have retained their vitality through the years. They’ve avoided fading into fad or cliche. That’s because they’re only hauled out of closets in the postseason. It’s a special act reserved for a special time.

It occurs to me that they’re a novelty unique to the arena spectating experience. For one thing, it’s far easier organizing the fashion sense of 15,000 than for 75,000. But it’s also the arena fans’ proximity to the playing surface that delivers the color-outs their visual dynamism.

I’m not sure they have any appreciable impact on the games themselves. But I’m sure that doesn’t matter. They’re unifying, in perfect taste, and they’re indigenous to hockey.

But it also occurs to me that there’s a cultural component to their durability and devotion. Notice that they emerged and took a lasting legacy in two of the NHL’s smallest markets, Winnipeg and Calgary, while never gaining a chest-hold in the league’s grander markets. When the Jets moved to Phoenix, the desert citizenry commendably carried on the tradition. It’s a grassroots uprising, a passion of the Plains and the plain-speaking, the counterpoint to cosmopolita.

You know for a while the Caps and their fans copy-catted with their own postseason whiteout. When it runs again on ESPNClassic, Game 7 of the Caps’-Flyers heartstopper in ‘88, at venerable Capital Centre, carries a magnificent backdrop of the Big Pringle being awash in white. An OFB reader last week reminded us that amid the delerium of Dale Hunter’s overtime series winner the television broadcast pans in on a fist-pumping Warren Strelow seated in press row.

Can you tell yet where I’m going with this?

Phoenix Netminder

Since it’s a summer of change in hockey Washington, I thought I’d propose one of my own: a fresh fashion statement by Caps’ fans next season at Verizon Center, but beginning not with the postseason but rather with the first visit by the Penguins. Gracious but we need to do something dramatic to counteract all the ugliness  and here I’m not referring merely to the prevalence of visiting colors and their allegiance  clotting our rink by mullets and slugs.

We can have fun sorting out the specifics, but in general, I’d like to see Verizon Center enveloped in Red, White, and Blue. Maybe you have a half dozen rows in alternating bands of red and white, representing the bars of our flag. Maybe you have variance of the colors section by section. But you do it for Pittsburgh. Not Tampa, not Atlanta, not Carolina. Division alliances, middling as they are, be damned. Our rival today is clear. A fresh war was declared here on March 27. Management will do its part this summer to answer it. We as fans need to as well.

Lottery Footrace

Today, the NHL announced that its Draft Lottery will be held at high noon on April 10th at the league offices in New York. The results will be announced immediately afterward.

Teams that did not make the playoffs (or those that acquired the first-round picks of those non-playoff teams) will participate in the lottery. However, only the worst 5 teams in the league will be eligible for the top pick, as a team may not move up more than four positions in the draft order.

The current percentage chance of being selected in the Draft Drawing is as follows, based on team finish:

30th………..25.0%
29th………..18.8%
28th………..14.2%
27th………..10.7%
26th………….8.1%
25th………….6.2%
24th………….4.7%
23rd………….3.6%
22nd…………2.7%
21st………….2.1%
20th………….1.5%
19th………….1.1%
18th………….0.8%
17th………….0.5%

Currently it is a foot race for the second best chance at the top pick as Philly looks like a lock for the worst this year. Here’s the standings before tonight’s games.

League Standings
Rank Team GP W L OT PTS
24 EDMONTON 74 30 37 7 67
24 COLUMBUS 74 30 37 7 67
26 WASHINGTON 75 26 36 13 65
27 LOS ANGELES 74 25 35 14 64
28 CHICAGO 73 27 37 9 63
29 PHOENIX 74 29 41 4 62
30 PHILADELPHIA 74 20 43 11 51

Thanks to Paul Kukla for the primary assist.

The Hockey News Team Prospect Rankings

The latest issue of The Hockey News has ranked all 30 NHL team’s prospect systems. They have defined prospects as players under 22 years of age as of January 31, 2007. This ranking does not take into account any movement of players at the trade deadline. Note that three of the Caps’ Southeast Division rivals bring up the bottom-5 rear.

  1. Pittsburgh [Last Year's Ranking - 1]
  2. Washington [7]
  3. Nashville [6]
  4. Los Angeles [10]
  5. Chicago [8]
  6. Boston [12]
  7. Anaheim [2]
  8. St. Louis [28]
  9. Montreal [17]
  10. N.Y. Rangers [19]

Continue reading ›

Vegas Odds

Mrs. Gustafsson just returned from Las Vegas and brought me the Bellagio’s Odds to Win the 2007 Stanley Cup. I’ve combined that sheet with the one I picked up in November.

Odds to Win the 2007 Stanley Cup
Team Line as of
27 Feb 07
Line on
7 Nov 07
Opening Line
19 Jun 06
Anaheim Ducks 4/1 7/1 15/1
Buffalo Sabres 4/1 7/1 12/1
Nashville Predators 5/1 18/1 18/1
Ottawa Senators 7/1 8/1 5/1
Detroit Red Wings 8/1 8/1 6/1
San Jose Sharks 8/1 4/1 10/1
New Jersey Devils 9/1 10/1 8/1
Calgary Flames 10/1 18/1 12/1
Pittsburgh Penguins 10/1 12/1 75/1
Dallas Stars 12/1 6/1 10/1
Tampa Bay Lightning 15/1 30/1 20/1
Vancouver Canucks 15/1 20/1 20/1
Carolina Hurricanes 18/1 10/1 8/1
Atlanta Thrashers 20/1 18/1 30/1
New York Rangers 22/1 20/1 15/1
Toronto Maple Leafs 22/1 22/1 25/1
Minnesota Wild 25/1 8/1 50/1
Montreal Canadiens 28/1 15/1 20/1
Colorado Avalanche 35/1 22/1 18/1
Edmonton Oilers 40/1 18/1 15/1
New York Islanders 50/1 50/1 50/1
Boston Bruins 100/1 50/1 50/1
Phoenix Coyotes 100/1 80/1 40/1
Florida Panthers 125/1 50/1 40/1
St. Louis Blues 125/1 75/1 100/1
Chicago Blackhawks 150/1 75/1 75/1
Washington Capitals 150/1 75/1 75/1
Columbus Blue Jackets 200/1 75/1 50/1
Los Angeles Kings 500/1 50/1 25/1
Philadelphia Flyers 500/1 50/1 12/1

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