Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Biron stars as Flyers extend lengthy streak in Vancouver

Martin Biron stopped 29 shots, 11 in the third period alone, as the Philadelphia Flyers extended their unbeaten streak in Vancouver to 14 games over nearly 20 years, edging the Canucks, 3-2, at GM Place.

The Flyers have not lost in British Columbia since a 5-3 setback at Pacific Coliseum on January 17, 1989, posting 10 wins and four ties over that span.

Jeff Carter, Scott Hartnell and Jonathon Kalinski hit the net for the Flyers, who overcame the early loss of forward Simon Gagne to snap a two-game losing streak.

Daniel Sedin and Ryan Kesler tallied for the Canucks, who have lost three of their last four games.

Starter Curtis Sanford allowed two goals on nine shots in 20 minutes of play, then Cory Schneider finished the game strongly, allowing one goal on 20 shots.

Facing a one-goal deficit, the Canucks dominated for stretches of the third period. Biron kept the home team at bay with a half-dozen quality saves in the first 10 minutes.

Hartnell had a clean breakaway with seven minutes remaining, but Schneider managed to get his pad extended to stop the shovel shot from the crease.

Biron then came up with a huge glove save on Steve Bernier with 6 1/2 minutes remaining, stoning the forward from the edge of the crease.

Schneider was pulled for an extra attacker with 1:20 remaining and Mike Knuble was penalized for slashing with 20 seconds left. Despite the 6-on-4 advantage, Philly won several key faceoffs and didn't allow any quality chances as time ran out.

Gagne departed only 15 seconds into the contest, the victim of a questionable hit from Canucks defenseman Kevin Bieksa and did not return.

Unbowed, the visitors took a 1-0 lead as Carter upped his league-leading goal total to 27, converting a pass from Matt Carle into a backhander past Sanford at 3:16.

Sedin countered with a power-play wrister with 3:06 left in the first, sneaking a shot off Biron's shoulder and under the crossbar.

Hartnell restored Philly's lead 45 seconds later, unloading a slapshot from the left circle high and inside the right post.

Schneider spelled Sanford to start the second but the move didn't pay off as Kalinski picked up his first career goal 2:36 into the second period, tapping home an errant Josh Gratton pass from the slot.

The Flyers kept up the offensive pressure but couldn't add to their cushion.

Kesler's redirection of an Alex Burrows dish from the left circle brought Vancouver within 3-2 with just over eight minutes left in the frame.

Game Notes

Philadelphia improved to 7-0-1 since GM Place opened prior to the 1995-96 season...Flyers defensemen Kimmo Timonen returned to the lineup after missing only one game due to a cracked bone in his ankle...During the contest, the Canucks announced the acquisition of goaltender Jason LaBarbera from the Los Angeles Kings in exchange for a seventh-round pick in the 2009 draft...Philadelphia continues its six-game road trip on Friday in Anaheim while Vancouver heads to Nashville on Thursday.

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Around The Rink

To end the calendar year 2008, this edition will solely feature what I imagine could be the New Year's Resolutions/New Year's Needs for all 30 NHL clubs.

Anaheim: Relocation to an area of North America whose fan base is a captive
audience during the Winter months; Look into getting a more representative
sample of celebrity fans other than Cuba Gooding, Jr. and Snoop Dogg.

Atlanta: To find about seven more talented forwards and defenseman to
complement Ilya Kovalchuk; short of that, lighter fluid and a book of matches
for a public bonfire for those hideous third jerseys.

Boston: Not to let the Curse of Gord Kluzak and Cam Neely hit the team when it
is finally giving long-suffering fans a real reason to give a damn again.

Buffalo: Hire a disgraced Sallie Mae executive to teach the franchise how to
creatively stash away enough money to get Chris Drury, Danny Briere, J.P.
Dumont, Dmitri Kalinin and Jay McKee back.

Calgary: Provide an all-expenses paid, one-way vacation to the South Seas for
Iron Mike Keenan after Game 82.

Carolina: Check waiver wire, minor leagues and Europe, then call Paul Holmgren
to see how many more former Philadelphia Flyers team can stock on roster.

Chicago: Bribe Mother Nature with bratwurst and Air Jordans to ensure it's not
50 degrees and drizzly on New Year's Day.

Colorado: Work up courage to quietly take Joe Sakic aside and strongly suggest
that he retire immediately; take Joe's measurements at said meeting for bronze
statue to be placed outside Pepsi Center.

Columbus: Relocation to Winnipeg.

Dallas: Hold a parade of shame for Sean Avery's departure with open
convertibles at Dealey Plaza; assassinate him, label it a "conspiracy" and
blame everyone from the Commies to the CIA.

Detroit: Do everything possible to keep Marian Hossa beyond this season; sign
Chris Chelios to 10-year, $50 million contract which legally binds him to play
until he's 56.

Edmonton: Shift expenditures away from goal-scoring forwards and into Rogaine
for Kevin Lowe.

Florida: In an effort to further draw in fans from all across the entire span
of South Florida, place new arena in middle of Everglades.

Minnesota: Repeat this mantra over and over until it sticks: We are ruining
the league with choking defense. We are ruining our players by teaching how to
play choking defense. We will never win unless we learn to score.

Montreal: Encourage fans to stuff the ballot boxes for the All-Star game
because it's the franchise's birthright to steal the spotlight for their 100th
season.

Los Angeles: Get Tom Cruise to find some "psychiatric help" for team. Players
will be so busy trying to figure out what the hell an operating thetan is that
it'll take the shame away from all the losing.

Nashville: Work on making all the financial shenanigans between the team, city and
league a lot less conspicuous and less able to be dug up by mid-level accidental
investigative reporting.

New Jersey: Corneal and retinal transplants for upper management so they can
see the true wages of winning three Stanley Cups with stifling defense and
goaltending in the masses of empty seats at each home game.

New York Islanders: Lather, rinse. Repeat about 400,000 times or more as
necessary. Use that soap that mechanics or people who stuff newspapers at the
Inquirer have, because the stains ain't coming off too easily.

New York Rangers: Check to make sure rest of 19-year-old prospects are not
doing pot/coke/steroids/other illegal drugs and not stash them on teams in
foreign countries that don't have enough money for medical equipment; remind
selves that they can't win by trying to score exactly two goals a game.

Ottawa: To remember you have to fill the other nine forward spots with people
other than Heatley, Spezza and Alfredsson; remember that they can win 20 games
this season but if six of them are against Toronto all is forgiven.

Philadelphia: To manufacture deals to return R.J. Umberger and Patrick Sharp;
Briere's departure by injury or trade; shiny new head coach; to make
sure the next time the kids get restless and ready to party, to let them know
they can afford to have the girls imported instead of going out and stealing
them from penniless frat guys trying to score with their girlfriends.

Phoenix: For Wayne Gretzky to man up, fall on his sword and admit that nothing
he will ever do can change what is essentially a perpetually just-below-.500
franchise.

Pittsburgh: To teach Sidney Crosby to act more like a man on the ice,
including but not limited to getting him to understand that punching a player
from behind in his groinal region is not a good idea; moreover that someone
will record it live, post it to any video-compatible web site and fan the
flames of hatred for you and the organization.

San Jose: Must beat Ducks. Must beat Red Wings. Must convince Joe Thornton to
shoot more.

St. Louis: Even if they go out and play a bad game, treat 'em all to a viewing
of Paul Blart: Mall Cop and a group hug. Looks like they really need it.

Tampa Bay: Contraction, then hit the beach and the strip clubs.

Toronto: Promise to muzzle and/or punish general manager Brian Burke for every
time after the eighth occasion his remarks get him in trouble with the
Canadian/American/international media/other 29 clubs/owners/NHL
management/commissioner.

Vancouver: Find out if Steve Moore's family put a hex on the team; find better
colors for jerseys; find better jerseys.

Washington: Make enough room on the bandwagon for all the fans who suddenly
want to Rock the Red; protect owner Ted Leonsis from Russian mafia shakedown;
tell fans not to wait until the series is over to hit Jeff Carter in the head
with bottles.

Saturday, December 27, 2008

Flyers begin road trip; get crushed by surging Chicago

courtesy of the Sports Network

Brian Campbell and Dave Bolland both registered a goal and an assist, as the scorching Chicago Blackhawks bested the Philadelphia Flyers, 5-1, at the United Center.

Andrew Ladd, Patrick Sharp and Kris Versteeg also scored for the Blackhawks, who equaled a franchise record with their eighth straight win. Patrick Kane and Martin Havlat collected two assists apiece, while Nikolai Khabibulin made 17 saves to improve his record to an incredible 11-1-4 this season.

The Blackhawks last won eight straight from January 4-21, 1981 and originally set the record from December 9-26, 1971.

Mike Richards had the lone goal for the Flyers, who are 2-2-1 over their last five games and suffered their first defeat to Chicago since November 6, 2001, snapping a six-game winning streak.

Martin Biron, who returned from a bout with the flu, made his first start since December 13 and was victimized for five goals on 38 shots.

Philadelphia opened its annual post-Christmas expedition, a season-high six- game trek.

The surging Blackhawks came out strong. Havlat fired a quick shot from the top of the right circle and Biron made the initial stop, but Ladd followed up the play and slammed the rebound into the empty net at the 1:13 mark of first period.

Sharp, a former Flyer who was dealt to Chicago along with Eric Meloche in exchange for disappointing Matt Ellison and a third-round draft choice on December 5, 2005 in one of the most lopsided trades in Philadelphia history, scored 1:22 later to give the Blackhawks an early two-goal edge.

The league's reigning rookie of the year, Patrick Kane, intercepted a clearing attempt in the Philadelphia zone and dished to the slot for an uncovered Sharp, who rifled a wrister over the glove hand of Biron.

Amid a goalmouth scramble, Arron Asham continued to dig away at the puck and Richards eventually was able to bang it home at 7:42.

Biron was the story in a scoreless middle stanza, one in which Philadelphia was thoroughly outplayed and outshot 14-1. Khabibulin did not have to make a save until the 18:12 mark as the Flyers matched the franchise record for fewest shots in a period.

Chicago began the third period on a two-man advantage, and a laser by Campbell from the right point beat Biron high to the glove side a mere 39 seconds into the frame.

Versteeg lit the lamp at 4:07 with a pair of Flyers in the penalty box to make it 4-1 and Bolland found the back of the net a minute later.

Game Notes

Biron appeared in his 400th career game and 100th as a Flyer...Chicago has outscored opponents, 36-11 during their eight-game winning streak...The Blackhawks improved to 9-0-1 in the month of December, while Philadelphia fell to 8-2-2...Prior to the contest, the Blackhawks activated defenseman Aaron Johnson from injured reserve...It was only Chicago's second win over Philadelphia since November, 1996.

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Jones heads to Phantoms; next stop Flyers

Courtesy of the Philadelphia Flyers

The Philadelphia Flyers announced today that they have assigned defenseman Randy Jones to their American Hockey League affiliate, the Philadelphia Phantoms, for conditioning purposes, according club General Manager Paul Holmgren.

Jones, 27, has missed the first 30 games of this season recovering from surgery performed on his right hip on October 15, 2008.

The 6’2”, 200-pound defenseman recorded five goals and 26 assists for 31 points and 58 penalty minutes in 71 regular season games for the Flyers last season. He finished third on the team in plus/minus (+8) and set new career highs for goals, assists, points and games played in a single season. He recorded two assists and four penalty minutes in 16 playoff games as the Flyers reached the Eastern Conference Finals.

In 170 career NHL regular season games over the last four seasons, Jones has registered nine goals and 52 assists for 61 points and 112 penalty minutes. He was originally signed as a free agent by the Flyers on July 24, 2003.

Flyers win fifth straight, bury Avalanche

Simon Gagne and Mike Richards recorded a goal and two assists each as Philadelphia topped Colorado, 5-2, at the Wachovia Center.

Mike Knuble, Jeff Carter and Joffrey Lupul also tallied for the Flyers, who have won five games in a row.

Antero Niittymaki, in place of the flu-ridden Martin Biron, made 29 saves for the win and improved to 6-1-2 on the season.

"We've had some good bounces lately," said Flyers head coach John Stevens. "If you go back a little bit to the beginning of the year, I thought the first six games we had some unfortunate bounces. It just seems like the harder you work the bounces turn in your direction."

Paul Stastny and David Jones scored for the Avalanche, who have dropped two of three. Peter Budaj allowed five goals on 24 shots in defeat.

Colorado got on the board 9:23 into the contest while on the power play. Stastny won a right-circle draw forward to the boards. Two players overskated the puck as it caromed back into the slot, and Stastny picked it up and tucked it home.

Knuble then tied the game on the man advantage with 8:23 to play in the first, redirecting a Richards feed from the top of the crease. Carter completed a 2- on-1 with Gagne for a short-handed goal with 1:48 remaining in the period.

Lupul's wrister from the right circle found its way through a screen for a 3-1 Flyers lead with 8:36 left in the second.

One minute, 18 seconds later, Richards was credited with his 13th goal of the season. He took a shot from 25 feet out that was deflected in front, bounced off the top of the boards, the top of the net and down Budaj's back before crossing the goal line.

"He does a lot of things right out there, so I guess you get those types of bounces when you have the puck all game and you're shooting," Lupul said of Richards' lucky bounces on the score.

Philly wasted a late 5-on-3 power play and saw Colorado climb within 4-2 on its following advantage as Jones redirected a T.J. Hensick shot out of midair with 1:21 left in the period.

Kimmo Timonen's power-play blast from the point was tipped home by Gagne 2:14 into the third and gave the Flyers a 5-2 edge, and the home team clamped down from there to post the victory.

"It wasn't really a 5-2 game," said Avs head coach Tony Granato. "I thought we did a lot of things we wanted to especially early in the game, but they found a way to hang on there. The goalie made some saves when he had to. We tried. We ran out of gas a little bit towards the end, but they've won a lot of games lately for a reason."

Game Notes

Philly had not beaten Colorado since a 2-1 overtime win in Denver on December 27, 2002, and had not bested the Avs at home since a 5-4 overtime decision on October 28, 1999...Knuble's tally was his 100th as a Flyer...Carter's tally was the club's 12th shorthanded goal...Lupul's score gave him 10 on the season, the sixth Flyer to do so this season...Timonen picked up two assists, giving him six in the last two games...Richards extended his point streak to eight games...Budaj has given up four or more goals in three of his last four starts. It was also the sixth time this year that he has surrendered five or more goals.

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Biron out with flu-like symptoms

Flyers starting goaltender Martin Biron is out for tonight's game against Colorado after the club said he came down with flu-like symptoms.

That was backed up by Tim Panaccio and Ed Moran on DNL.

The club called up Phantoms goaltender Scott Munroe as the backup, since Antero Niittymaki will get the start in Biron's place.

Sunday, December 14, 2008

Avery officially done in Dallas

According to TSN of Canada, the Dallas Stars have let Sean Avery go.

Avery has officially served his six-game league-imposed suspension for sexually-suggestive remarks two weeks ago in Calgary but the club will not have him back.

As far as the Stars are concerned, let the healing begin.

As for Avery, to paraphrase a line from Trainspotting, with counseling and God's help, he might conquer this terrible affliction...

The NHL has officially gone Dr. Phil/Oprah insane with the way they are treating this guy. More on this later in the week.

Friday, December 12, 2008

Flyers cap miracle comeback with SO win over Hurricanes

by Jeff Kruczynski
The Sports Network


Scott Hartnell notched his fourth career hat trick and Simon Gagne scored the deciding goal in the shootout, as the Philadelphia Flyers stormed back from a four-goal third period deficit to defeat the Carolina Hurricanes, 6-5, at the Wachovia Center.

In what has become a broken record, the Flyers faced off against Carolina for fourth time in the last 16 days, with Philadelphia winning the season series (3-0-1).

Gagne was the first shooter in the extra segment and he deked to his left before stuffing the puck on the forehand past Michael Leighton, who committed early on the poke check. After Tuomo Ruutu was denied by Philadelphia's Antero Niittymaki, Mike Richards went to the backhand and roofed the puck over Leighton. Niittymaki then made a glove save on Rod Brind'Amour to preserve the win.

The victory marked just the second time in franchise history the Flyers trailed by four goals in the third period and came back to win.

Gagne scored the tying goal with 1:44 remaining in regulation and Scottie Upshall also lit the lamp for the Flyers, who have rebounded from a horrific 0-3-3 start to the 2008-09 campaign, going 15-4-3 over their next 22 tilts. Jeff Carter and Andrew Alberts both collected two assists, while Niittymaki made 26 saves.

Eric Staal registered two goals and an assist for the Hurricanes, who have dropped four of their last five games. Ruutu finished with three helpers, while Leighton surrendered five goals on 37 shots.

"We played some fine hockey for 40 minutes and in the third we got a lesson in fore check pressure," said Carolina head coach Paul Maurice.

Trailing 5-1 at the beginning of the third period, Hartnell scored at the 1:42 mark, and the Flyers crawled back within two as the former first-round pick completed the hat trick at 7:12 on the power play.

Philadelphia continued to chip away. Leighton turned aside Lasse Kukkonen's drive from the top of the right circle, but Upshall was able to bury the rebound with 4:52 remaining.

Gagne then capped the remarkable comeback with 1:44 to play in regulation. Shortly after Carolina rookie defenseman Brett Carson vacated the penalty box, the Flyers worked the puck deep in the Hurricanes' territory. Mike Knuble sent a backhand pass to Gagne at the right side of the goal. His first try was stopped, but Gagne continued to whack away and eventually banged it home.

Philadelphia killed off a penalty in the extra session to send the game to a shootout.

"I was disappointed with the way we played the first two periods," said Flyers head coach John Stevens. "It seemed like our role players were really providing the energy and physical play, but we were allowing their skill people to hurt us. Staal looked like a man possessed tonight. We were having a tough time containing him. I just asked them to go out and play 20 minutes the right way. I never had any idea that we could come back from that kind of hole against a team that was playing so well."

Staal gave the Hurricanes a 1-0 lead 61 seconds into the game, beating Niittymaki on the backhand, for his 300th career point.

The Hurricanes struck again early in the second period. Justin Williams held the puck along the left boards near the offensive blueline and dished across to Matt Cullen, roaring down the right wing. Cullen continued to drive the net and managed to flip the puck past Niittymaki at the 2:10 mark.

Sergei Samsonov then banged in the rebound of a Staal shot at 9:28, 11 seconds after Hartnell's power-play marker put Philadelphia on the board.

Carolina used the power play to build a four-goal cushion.

From behind the cage, Ray Whitney fed an uncovered Joni Pitkanen, whose one- timer from inside the left circle found the back of the net with 7:52 remaining in the middle stanza.

A laser off the stick of Staal, his team-leading 11th tally of the season, eluded Niittymaki with 4:47 left in the frame, and Carolina carried a seemingly comfortable 5-1 advantage into the second intermission.

"He (Stevens) came in and basically said we were playing like a bunch of pansies," Hartnell stated when asked what Stevens said after the second period.

Game Notes

Knuble's assist gave him 400 career points...Philadelphia has had 14 of its 15 games at home this season decided by one goal (8-4-3)...Carolina defenseman Bryan Rodney made his NHL debut...Before the game, the Hurricanes placed defenseman Frantisek Kaberle on injured reserve...The Flyers are 8-0-3 in the last 11 meetings with Carolina.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Fun for the Feeble Minded

My co-workers and I usually go back and forth about the NHL and hockey in general.

Usually it starts with insults from non-hockey fans who get stuck writing stories about or who are assigned NHL games on any given night and always ends with me picking apart every argument they make about hockey sucking because, despite my love for the game, I agree with most of their logic that the league itself sucks.

Still, what came out of those always wearying quasi-complaints/discussions was a pretty golden idea: what if the next NHL expansion team employed nothing but former Flyers who are still active players?

The Winnipeg Blue Jackets
Head Coach: Kevin Dineen
Assistant Coaches: Keith Acton, Rick Tocchet

Goaltenders: Brian Boucher, Michael Leighton

Defensemen: Dennis Seidenberg, Kim Johnsson, Joni Pitkanen, Freddy Meyer, Denis Gauthier, Alexandre Picard, Jim Vandermeer.

Forwards:
First Line: Rod Brind'Amour, R.J. Umberger, Dainius Zubrus
Second Line: Justin Williams, Patrick Sharp, Ruslan Fedotenko
Third Line: Patrick Thoresen, Michal Handzus, Jon Sim
Fourth Line: Todd Fedoruk, Jim Dowd, Kyle Calder

Captain: Brind'Amour.

Tuesday, December 09, 2008

Gagne rescues Flyers with third-period power-play goal

Simon Gagne's power-play goal late in the third period lifted Philadelphia over the New York Islanders, 4-3, at the Wachovia Center.

Jeff Carter and Arron Asham also lit the lamp for the Flyers, who have won three of four. Darroll Powe registered his first NHL tally, and Mike Richards picked up two assists.

Martin Biron stopped 24 shots to record his ninth straight win over the Islanders.

Andy Hilbert, Doug Weight and Blake Comeau scored for the Islanders, who wasted a two-goal lead and suffered their fourth consecutive loss.

Yann Danis took the loss after allowing all four goals on 25 shots.

Gagne put the Flyers on top, 4-3, with 8:52 left in regulation, taking a backhand pass from Richards and one-timing the puck from the left circle into the net just inside the right post. The goal came just 11 seconds after Islanders defenseman Brendan Witt went off for interference.

Biron and the Flyers' defense clamped down from there, only allowing a handful of New York chances at even strength and with the extra skater for New York in the final minute.

The Islanders struck first, on a power play at 9:23, as Hilbert redirected Chris Campoli's pass from the left boards past Biron.

Weight followed 1:11 later by batting in a loose puck, but Asham scored his second of the season a little more than 90 seconds after for Philadelphia's opening tally of the contest.

Powe followed the rebound of a Richards shot for his first career tally 8:09 into the second period and a 2-2 tie, and Carter stashed home a loose puck for a one-goal lead with 3:58 left in the second.

Comeau's wrister changed direction off the stick of Flyers defenseman Lasse Kukkonen and dipped through Biron 2:17 into the third.

Game Notes

The Flyers have won seven in a row over the Islanders and 10 of the last 11 meetings, including all three this season, and each of the 11 have been decided by three goals or less...Carter tied Buffalo's Thomas Vanek for the league lead in goals with 20...Danis got the nod after Joey McDonald started the previous 17 games...Biron last lost to the Isles on March 24, 2007, a 4-3 setback in Philadelphia...The Flyers continue their four-game homestand Thursday against Carolina, and the Islanders continue their four-game road swing in Pittsburgh on Thursday.

Monday, December 08, 2008

Flyers bits...

...on the off day.

First, something that only seemed to escape notice until the Lightning came to town on Tuesday - the number of close games the Flyers have played in already this season.

More than once on the all-too-rare network TV broadcast Saturday night at Carolina, Jim Jackson and Keith Jones openly campaigned for some games with a little more breathing room.

As it stands now, the orange and black have played 26 games this season. An amazing 21 of those have seen a result within two goals, including each of the last eight. Last year, at this juncture, the club played 27 contests with a mere 16 of them within two goals. Even the misery of two seasons ago saw 18 of the first 25 games decided by one or two tallies.

Call it parity, call it coaching, whatever. It's going to catch up to clubs playing so close to the vest one way or another - and soon. If this is the way the NHL is going, it's not going to bode well.

It's not like there are a spate of back-and-forth 6-5 or 7-6 games. The majority have been low-scoring slugfests where each team gives their all for 65 minutes plus shootout. It will wear on them and the quality of play will be affected in March, April and beyond.

There is no shame in a blowout. More goal-scoring talent has to be revealed in these games or else the league is going to totally revert to what the Minnesota Wild have been doing since 2000.

There's still hope that once the mythical fully-healthy lineup does come to the Flyers, their collective talent can separate them from the pack on more than a few coming nights. Until then, it's going to be white-knuckle time at the Wach and other arenas.


Simon Gagne's departure from this past Thursday's game due to dehydration raises all sorts of suspicious questions, except this one seems to have gone unasked: How can a finely-honed athlete, with capable training staff which is supposed to monitor fluids, allow this to happen? Flu or not, if Gagne is ready to play, he's gotta be taken care of by staff well enough to be out there for the whole game.

I don't think there's any truth to conspiracy theories linking that to his prior concussions, but the times are long past over when a player says he can play and nobody bats an eye until something goes wrong.


The club is in the middle of a great stretch which should be the biggest boost yet in their quest to rise in the Atlantic Division and the Eastern Conference.

From November 28 through December 20, Philly will see eight of 11 games played on South Broad Street. Thus far, it's been a dicey 3-1-1, and in each game you could say there were turning points which could have turned the wins into losses, including Saturday's fluke OT winner by Jeff Carter.

Tomorrow begins a stretch of four in a row on home ice, facing the Islanders, Hurricanes, Penguins and Avalanche. Three wins would look awfully nice on the ledger, and points in all four are obviously acceptable.

At 13-7-6, the club is third in the Atlantic and sixth in the East. They are only six points behind the punchless (and largely goalless) Rangers with four games still in hand. It's possible that they could make it out of this month with 20 wins.

The scenario of having Randy Jones and Ryan Parent back on defense echoes on from the 1999-2000 season.

Keith Jones and Rod Brind'Amour missed the start of the season and the club foundered without much offense or toughness. Jones came back after 6 weeks, Brindy arrived in early December and the club began to roll from the holidays on. The 2008-09 team probably has more raw talent and definitely more youth than that one.


Finally, a personal recollection.

When I was in third grade, it was the second week in December when I caught a horrible case of the flu and missed school for an entire week. It was also the first time I ever failed to watch or listen to more than one Flyers game in my life (excluding late West Coast games).

Back then, from December 7-14, 1986, the Flyers sliced through Edmonton (5-2), Vancouver (6-3) and Calgary (5-3) at home, then lost to Minnesota (4-5) and beat Winnipeg (4-1) on the road. I have zero first-hand recollection of any of those. I have the Vancouver game on tape, thanks to my grandparents and it happened to be Bob Froese's last start in goal here.

Even when I got hit with the flu during my junior year of high school in 1995, I caught all four games during the illness, including the 7-0 rout in Montreal where John LeClair scored a hat trick in his first game against the Habs.

Lucky for me, the first post-codeine haze contest happened to be the night Dave Poulin and Tim Kerr rained destruction on the Islanders, 9-4, at the Spectrum. Plus, that Christmas, I got a TV in my bedroom so after that, sick, well or sleepless, I caught every game broadcast on Channel 57 until I went to college.

Thursday, December 04, 2008

Handling of Avery Incident gives NHL, others maximum exposure

OK, so Dallas Stars forward and renowned pest Sean Avery went on what amounts to Canadian national television prior to Tuesday's game between the Stars and Flames in Calgary.

He makes a snide remark about Flames defenseman Dion Phaneuf's girlfriend, the lovely Elisha Cuthbert, and the fact that fellow players have had a recent habit of picking up whoever he's dumped.

He uses the term "sloppy seconds" when you know it couldn't have been worse without crossing the line into having his words bleeped. Consult your urban dictionary for the full explanation.

Almost immediately, condemnation cascaded down quicker Niagara Falls all over the airwaves throughout North America. Avery was given an immediate indefinite suspension pending a hearing with Gary Bettman and was denounced publicly by Stars owner Tom Hicks and by co-general managers Les Jackson and Brett Hull.

That's what I know so far.

I've also been able to figure out a few more things because of the way the situation has played out over the last few days:

It exposed the NHL as excitement-killing frauds.

It exposed the Dallas Stars' ownership and management, along with the commissioners' office as a bunch of cocktail-swilling petty bourgeoisie hypocrites more intent on protecting their investment and good name than backing the ones who make them money.

It exposed the Stars players as nothing more than good company men, in lockstep with the company line to save their own asses.

It exposed all of English Canada as the bunch of prudes they've been rumored to be.

It also exposed both the American and Canadian sports media machine as a bunch of frauds.

First, the league itself. Through the efforts of Bettman, the distant owners and the influence of the competition committee, fighting in its truest spirit - that of settling scores between two players with beef and allowing teams to vent their collective frustration against each other - has been eradicated.

Even if Avery hadn't been removed from the lineup for his own "protection," it is unlikely Phaneuf would have gotten one chance on the ice to settle the score. That is, if he even payed the comment enough mind to warrant a showdown.

Time was, two players could paw at each other at least three times in one game before any instigator, misconduct or suspensions were discussed. But the days of Tie Domi, Bob Probert, Rob Ray and even Eric Lindros laying down the law and keeping things settled between players are long gone.

Without the impending threat (or inevitability if you like fighting) of two tough guys throwing hands, that Dallas-Calgary game was quickly boiled down to what Year Four of The New NHL has become: a boring chess match between coaches, where the only goals are derided as defensive mistakes instead of creative offense.

It ended 3-1 for the Stars. Yawn.

Next, I can't believe how quickly Stars owner Tom Hicks and Bettman swooped in to make the first sword cut and pour the vinegar in. A statement from the commish's office I could see, but for the club owner to throw one of his big free agent signings under the bus before consulting with Avery or team staff first? Ridiculous.

If I were Avery, I'd ask for a trade ASAP because it's obvious the man who pays your salary doesn't think your worth much. Which is odd, because in spite of all your bad press and circus act, Hicks brought you to Dallas from New York because the Stars were in dire need of an enforcer with scoring touch.

Funny how the worm has turned on that one.

Plus, how credible is it that Bettman suspended Avery indefinitely for what amounted to a 30 second sound bite, while ignoring exactly all of the far-more-harmful vicious hits to the head this season?

Again, time was that the rivalries between players, coaches and organizations permitted that kind of sparring and didn't make a spectacle.

Avery was wrong to air the dirty laundry usually reserved for the faceoff circle in a public forum, but it is hardly a shame or a scandal to anyone involved, least of all the venerable institution of hockey - which is still a fifth-tier sport in America even if it's first in the hearts of Canadians.

I'm even more incredulous that Hull - one of the biggest critics of the decline in the game when he played and the one who reportedly pressed for Avery's acquisition - all of a sudden decided to use his ample voice to turn against his former Red Wing roommate and side with the owner.

What should have happened was that Hicks, the club's two general managers, PR staff and Avery meet as soon as the comments were made to hash out a solution. The club should have issued a statement condemning the action but reminding folks that Avery, for better or worse, is one who stirs the pot in the name of competition and intrigue.

It shouldn't matter if the higher-ups in the organization have a distaste for Avery in spite of the signing - you at least have to protect your own in the opening salvo of a media firestorm. The Stars failed to do that in spades.

Avery's being shunned like Dan Quinn was back in November, 1992, when the veteran forward was allegedly involved in a rape while with the North Stars. Quinn found no support from the franchise, was immediately released, and his career never regained momentum though he played five more seasons.

I'm wondering at what point hockey players in general progressed from highly-paid automatons to black sheep children whose high-society parents have to publicly shun in order to save face at the country club.

Maybe we've reached that point now. If so, what garbage.

Regardless, what hypocrites the Stars are to invite the circus into the house but kick it out after the elephants soil the carpet.

Those close to the club when the Avery signing was complete in July knew that the players themselves were against it. They knew what they were getting from being the opposition for so many years.

Then, goaltender Marty Turco publicly lamented about Avery after he exchanged words with fans on November 1 in Boston after a testy, old-fashioned brawling game. Now this. It's appalling that there's not one man in the room who has jumped to Avery's defense.

That's shameful in and of itself, that his own teammates have spoken volumes with their silence on the matter. They should have done their part to let management know they could take care of the matter internally.

I presume that his teammates were not under any kind of threat if they felt otherwise. There was no danger of benching, demotion, or trade for even one player to come to Avery's aid, and when Avery tried to offer an apology on Wednesday before a public statement, his teammates rejected it.

What's come to light reminds me of a quote from a Billy Joel song: "Say a word out of line, you find out your friends you had are gone forever."

My job requires me to watch a ton of television and a ton of games each shift. This time of year when I work nights, I preview my NHL slate of the evening by watching TSN of Canada, the nation's answer to ESPN's SportsCenter.

The outrage from Avery's comments poured in from each of the four panelists on the NHL segment: host Brian Engblom, hockey insider Bob McKenzie, former NHL pest Keith Jones and former Tampa Bay head coach John Tortorella.

To a man, each expressed their displeasure with the incident. What's not shocking is that the first three men who objected are Canadian-born. What is surprising, is that notorious Boston-bred lout Tortorella, never one to hide his opinions, fell in lockstep with his colleagues.

Honestly, I don't get it. I thought Universal Rule Number One of sports media is to create conversation, drama and controversy with which to suck in the viewer.

All four panelists consciously did neither, unless you believe that all four were covering their rear ends since the TSN studios are located in Toronto, the de facto Canadian home of NHL operations.

It's not too hard to see how Bettman could have whispered down the lane that nobody, not even the media anywhere in the hockey sphere, were to challenge the official league stance.

All of them, Tortorella in particular, missed the chance to even create some inter-panel heated dialogue and failed.

I'm replaying what it would have been like in my head as I write this, and it's fantastic. A bonanza of buzz. It ends with Tortorella staring over at McKenzie, screaming "Shut Yer Yap!!"

Plus, what little coverage there was on the ESPN behemoth (Matthew Barnaby, I'm looking at you) was a hollow echo of the party line from the Great White North. And you know if ESPN can't make a big deal out of something, there are internal mechanisms at work to squash the effort.

Still, for all the furor, all that came out was something mildly derogatory about the dating habits of a rival player. It was a classic quote, an all-timer. A true non-sequitur except with (gulp) a PG-13 edge!

I can't take all this contrived and strangely robotic finger-pointing, hell-fire and damnation. It's too suspicious and fraudulent and looks too much like hockey's version of The Stepford Wives.

Sorry, naysayers in the U.S. and abroad, Avery's paragraph of glory was neither profane nor vulgar. It did not bring disrepute to the Dallas Stars, the Calgary Flames, Avery, Phaneuf, Cuthbert, or the National Hockey League.

I will stake whatever I'm worth in this life and say that the majority of hockey fans or sports fans in North America alike laughed heartily at the implication. I'm sure, like me, they found the intent appropriate but the venue not so much.

This proves the NHL is becoming the closest thing to Puritanism since John Calvin. First, they took away much of the blood and guts and honor and entertainment from fighting. Now, they're taking away a player's right to gamesmanship through the media by bringing ye olde hammer down on naughty, evil, suggestive innuendo.

Avery finally met with Goodman Gary on Friday, during which the erstwhile moral arbiter of the league imposed a six-game ban without pay. Included in that penalty is a stipulation that he receive anger-management training and other counseling.

What's next? A league-mandated appointment on Dr. Phil's couch some time after
that's all finished?

For the hairshirt he now wears, Avery's public apology released Wednesday afternoon should have been enough. After that? Maybe a team-imposed stint watching games from the press box. That's all.

It's a fact that Avery is known to be a total jackass. It still doesn't make what has transpired over the last few days right, or proper, or poetic justice.

It's not Sean Avery who is a fraud of a player with lack of "respect for the game." It's everyone else involved, with his individual overblown sense of outrage and false propriety who are the frauds this time.

What garbage.

Hockey East Tidbits

Courtesy of Hockeyeastonline.com

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – USA Hockey announced today that five Hockey East student-athletes were named to the 22-player roster for its 2009 U.S. National Junior Team. The squad will participate at the 2009 International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) World Under-20 Championship, commonly referred to as the World Junior Championship, in Ottawa, Ontario, Dec. 26, 2008- Jan. 5, 2009. Hockey East led the way among the six Division I NCAA conferences with five selections.

Boston College’s Jimmy Hayes (Dorchester, Mass.), New Hampshire’s James van Riemsdyk (Middletown, N.J.) Boston University’s Colin Wilson (Greenwich, Conn.) were among the 13 forwards selected to Team USA. On defense, UNH’s Blake Kessel (Verona, Wis.) and BU’s Kevin Shattenkirk (New Rochelle, N.Y.) were chosen as two of the seven defensemen on the U.S. squad.

van Riemsdyk, who was chosen second overall in the 2007 NHL Entry Draft by the Philadelphia Flyers and was a member of the 2007 U.S. National Junior Team that won a bronze medal at the 2007 IIHF World Junior Championship in Leksand and Mora, Sweden. He is currently tied for 11th nationally in points per game at 1.36 and leads the Wildcats’ roster in points with 19 points. His 14 points in league play this season ranks first among conference skaters.


WAKEFIELD, Mass. – The Hockey East Association is pleased to announce that Boston College’s Brian Gionta has been named Hockey East’s Best Goal Scorer as the league continues its 25th Anniversary celebration. Gionta was chosen in a vote comprised of Hockey East fans and members of the league’s 25th Anniversary Committee.

“Brian was a crowd favorite while he was here,” said commissioner Joe Bertagna. “He was skilled. He was tough. And it wouldn’t surprise me if his five-goal night might earn him another fan honor down the line."

As a senior in 2000-01, Gionta also earned a National Championship while a member of the BC Eagles when his team topped North Dakota 3-2 in overtime. Gionta finished his stellar career at the Heights as Hockey East’s All-Time leading goal scorer, posting 83 goals in 96 career league contests. Gionta was named Hockey East Player of the Year in his senior season (2000-01) and was Hockey East Rookie of the Year in 1997-98. Gionta is the only player in Hockey East history to be named to the All-Star team in all four seasons of play. He was also a four-time All-American with the Eagles.

On January 27, 2001, Gionta performed one of the most memorable feats in league history when he scored five goals on five shots in the first period of a 7-2 win against Maine at Conte Forum.

Gionta is in his seventh season in the NHL with the New Jersey Devils. He won a Stanley Cup with the Devils in the 2002-2003 season and in 2006 he set the franchise mark for goals in a single-season with 48.

“He’s the one guy here at Boston College who really turned BC back in the right direction. Of all my recruits that I’ve recruited here to Boston College, he was the catalyst that made the change to bring us back to become a national power. He was a phenomenal player and the best pure goal scorer that I’ve seen in college hockey. It was a real pleasure and honor to coach him for four years,” said Eagles Head Coach Jerry York.

The remaining players that finished in the Top Ten voting for Best Goal Scorer were (in alphabetical order): Chris Drury (BU), David Emma (BC), Rob Gaudreau (PC), Nathan Gerbe (BC), Scott Harlow (BC), Jim Montgomery (ME), Jon Morris (UML), Scott Pellerin (ME) and Jean-Yves Roy (ME).

Wednesday, December 03, 2008

Briere to Miss 4-to-5 weeks

Courtesy of the Sports Network

Flyers center Danny Briere will miss the next four to five weeks with a groin strain.

Briere left Tuesday's 4-3 overtime win over the Tampa Bay Lightning after taking a hit in the second period. Prior to that contest, he had missed 14 of the previous 16 games with a series of injuries.

In only nine games played this season, Briere has five goals and four assists with 10 penalty minutes.

Ed. note Briere was totally ineffective and invisible during his little ice time in the game. For anyone interested, look up the record without Briere this year as opposed to without. It's surprising.

Tuesday, December 02, 2008

Subplots Abound As Lightning Come to Philly

On the table are a couple intriguing questions and plots surrounding tonight's Flyers-Lightning contest:

After dropping two easily winnable games in a row over the weekend, can the Flyers prevent this from becoming yet another frustrating losing streak?

So far, it's been six down, four up, three down, one and one, six up, then two down.

How will Rick Tocchet's return to the Delaware Valley play out now that he's the opposing head coach?

Tocchet, who was the Phoenix Coyotes' assistant coach upon his exposure in a gambling scandal in early 2006, hasn't been back to Philly since the last time the Yotes played here in 2003. He now presides over a mess of a Tampa Bay club still searching for an identity.

Will the Flyers ever be able to solve their half-decade-long string of frustration at home against Tampa Bay?

The Bolts have won eight of nine matchups here since the 2003-04 season, plus two of three in that playoff series we all still see in our nightmares.

How effective can Danny Briere be if and when he returns to the lineup, presumably sufficiently rested?

That remains to be seen. Putting him on what is in effect a third line with Andreas Nodl and Joffrey Lupul just because you don't want to break up the Gagne-Richards-Knuble pairing is an interesting gamble. On one hand, it gives #48 less ice time which may be good to test the groin. On the other hand, you're burying him on what is in effect a third line with two guys he has barely played alongside.

Gratton clears waivers, sent to Phantoms; Room for Briere to return?

Flyers' hired goon Josh Gratton cleared waivers on Tuesday, and was subsequently shipped across the street and down one level to the Phantoms. He had been held without a point but racked up 31 penalty minutes in 11 games with the Flyers.

The move was not unexpected, as Danny Briere apparently pronounced himself fit to return to the lineup against Tampa Bay following the morning skate.

Briere has missed nine straight games and 14 of the last 16 contests trying to recover from a groin injury which everyone still maintains has nothing to do with his earlier stomach muscle pulls which required surgery.

In addition, it is still a question whether or not Jeff Carter will dress for tonight's game since he's battling shoulder problems. Carter leads the team and is second in the NHL with 16 goals entering play.