Archived entries for nhl

Lord Stanley’s Cup

Tonight the quest for the Cup reaches it’s final stage.  Representing the East is the Philadelphia Flyers, a team few people ever considered to be a contender.  After coming back from a dramatic down 3 games to none to beat the Bruins in 7 games the Flyers have shown they have a team chemistry that makes them tough to handle.  When Boucher went down, so did the spirits of a lot of fans, but not of the team.  Leighton played brilliant, playing his first ever playoff games.  He was dominant against Montreal, earning two shutouts.  On the other end of the ice Niemi has been the story in net for the Blackhawks.  Replacing Huet as the go to guy in the playoffs he has been solid, rebounding from some soft goals to put on a stellar performance.  The Blackhawks dominating offense is filled with youthful energy.  That energy led to the 4 game sweep of the San Jose Sharks – a team with a high flying offense of their own.  They shut the big guns of the Sharks down and completely dominated them on ever inch of the ice.

The Flyers are going to look to keep their team system running, attempting to control the pace of the game.  They’ll have to set the pace in order to slow down the fast transitional play of the Blackhawks.  Chicago is going to need to be a little less fancy, and do a bit more dump and chase, using their advantage in speed to win the race to the puck.  The Flyers control is going to shut down center ice and make it hard to control the puck in to the zone.

I feel this series has the potential to be a very close one.  Neither team can afford to spend much time in the box, as both teams have been dominant on the power play.  In the end it’s likely to come down to which unlikely goaltender can keep up their momentum.

At the end of the day I give this series to Chicago – probably in six games.

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The Conference Finals – Predictable and not so

The NHL Conference finals begin a little later today with the Western Conference kicking things off at 3pm EST.  While I really thought this was Vancouver’s year to shine, I’m not entirely shocked that the Blackhawks were able to handle them, even after getting devastated in the opening game of the series.  It’s that predictable One seed versus the number Two seed matchup.  No odd defying here, the best two from the West’s regular season are going head to head to play for Lord Stanley’s cup.    What is crazy, however, is the East.  Almost every analyst had it either being Washington or Pittsburgh to represent the East when the playoffs started.  The upstart Montreal Canadians came along and destroyed everyones predictions.  Since the playoff format was change in 1994 no 8 seed in the East(and only one in the West) has ever made it to a conference final.  The only thing crazier is that the team with home ice advantage in the East is the 7th seed!  That’s right, two teams who made the playoffs in the very last couple of games of the season are now playing for the honor of representing the Eastern conference and a shot at winning it all.  The Flyers had an easier road of it, but getting this far is still pretty impressive, especially since Boston had them on the ropes and the clawed their way back to get the winning goal with under 8 minutes remaining in Game 7 of the series.  So here we are, the Conference picks.

Eastern Conference

Philadelphia Flyers vs. Montreal Canadians

Here is a matchup no one would have even dreamed up.  It’s like the East slipped in to some parallel universe.  The bottom seeds have defied all odds and are now lacing up to do battle tonight.  Throw all common hockey sense right out the window because the normal rules have ceased to apply.  Jaroslav Halak has kept Montreal in every game this playoff year.  He has risen to the occasion and really has become quite the Cinderella story in his own right.  Camalleri has also been big, becoming the most prolific scorer in these playoffs.  While its not surprising that he’s been a solid player, it is shocking that he’s the best of the best in scoring in the 2010 playoffs.  He has been huge for Montreal and has given them the spark that makes them believe night after night.  For the Flyers Boucher has been the story right up until getting hurt in game 6.  He had been playing larger than life, like Halak coming alive for the playoffs.  Now an injury has sidelined him for the remainder of Philly’s cup run.  Michael Leighton came in and played solid games 6 and 7, Philly never missed a beat.  Chris Pronger has continued his superb veteran play, leading this team by example, finishing every check and clearing everyone out of the crease.  Briere played a great series against the Bruins, having 10 points over the 7 games and is looking to keep his hot streak going against the Canadians.  This is one of the toughest contests to call as the two teams both finished with 88 points, and split their regular season series.  While the Canadians get the edge in goaltending, their defense is weakened by the loss of all-star Andrei Markov.  The Flyers certainly have the better veteran defensive core, but when it comes to offense the two teams are fairly evenly matched.  At the end of the day I say watch Halak to stand on his head, Cammaleri to get that big game winner in the closing moments, and Montreal moving on to have a chance to win their 25th Stanley Cup.

Western Conference

San Jose Sharks v. Chicago Blackhawks

Offense.  Offense.  And, well offense.  Speed kills and both of these teams are loaded with fast playing forwards who can turn a bad pass in to a 3 on 1 break in the blink of an eye.  Jonathan Toews almost single handedly dismantled the Vancouver blueliners.  With 12 points in that series he comes in to this series red hot.  Patrick Kane, still hasn’t had the big performance people have been waiting for, but if he is going to come out and show what he is capable of, this series is the time to do it.  The Sharks look to Joe Pavelski to light the lamp and make Huet’s job a tough one.  Add to that Joe Thorton finishing up the Vancouver series on a streak of his own and you have some dangerous players with wonderful scoring touches.  San Jose is going to look for Dan Boyle to pick up his defensive play, and also his special teams scoring ability.  He hasn’t been bad in the playoffs, but he hasn’t been himself.  They are certainly going to expect him to elevate his game if they want to continue their post season run.  Nabakov has shaken off the monkey that has continually plagued him in post-season play.  He’s been there when the Sharks needed him, and he’s made very few of the mistakes that led to some early exits in previous playoffs.  He has the experience in net and the Sharks will need him to be solid.  For the Blackhawks their goaltending situation isn’t as solid.  Niemi came in the playoffs as the guy in net, but after some rather sloppy play Huet found himself in the starting role  and he has run with it.  He was in net in all four meetings against the Sharks during the regular season, which the Blackhakws led 3-1.  He certainly feels comfortable facing them in this series.  Duncan Keith and Brent Seabrook are going to have to continue their dominating blueline play.  They did a good job keeping the Sedin twins quiet and now they are going to be tasked with shutting down the 3rd best regular season offense.  In an offensive showdown it generally comes down to which goaltender has the gusto.  I’ve, over the years, had little to no faith in Huet’s ability to carry a team, but after his performance against Vancouver its hard to say he doesn’t have the goods.  This is going to be a high scoring series that’s not going to look good on a goaltenders stat sheet, and considering Nabakov’s past of losing his cool when they go down quick I’m going to lean slightly in favor of the Hawks and say that they will do the Original Six proud by marching on to the Stanley Cup finals.

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NHL Playoffs, The Second Round

Well there were only minor hiccups in the West for me that didn’t stop me from getting 4 for 4 on my picks.  The East, however, is a different story.  Who would have thought that going in to round 2 the highest seed remaining would be the number 4 seed?  Who would have believed that all three division leaders were eliminated in the first round?  That’s right, all that’s left in the East is 4, 6, 7, and 8 seeds.  While Philadelphia winning their series didn’t shock me, I expected the other two division leaders to move on with flying colors.  My Sabres failed me, not coming together and getting beaten down by a tenacious Boston team.  Then, in an upset I am genuinely thrilled about, Team Ovechkin (the Washington Capitals) got taken down by the lowly Montreal Canadians, a team that wasn’t given a chance by anyone.

So here we go with my round 2 picks.

Continue reading…

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2010 NHL Playoffs – The First Round

It’s that time of year again (actually, games are going on as I type this because I’ve been thrown a little off my game with arrival of Gabriel and all), time to take a look at the NHL playoffs and see how things are going to shape up.  The regular season was a wild ride, especially the final weeks as several teams were battling for a few remaining playoff spots.  The final team in the East came down to a single game on the last day of the regular season in which the Flyers managed to win the 8th seed in a shootout (ugh, stupid shootouts, but hey, that’s not what we’re here about today).  So here we go, my picks for the 2010 race to the Stanley Cup.

Continue reading…

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Good year to be a Pittsburgh sports fan.

Was I ever wrong.  Quite frankly I was also quite excited to be wrong.  The Pittsburgh Penguins looked like they were going to follow the trend of last years Cup finals by doing their best to manage a single win in the best of 7 series.  However after a rough start the Pens kicked it in to high gear and are the 2009 Stanley Cup champions after an amazing 7th game in Detroit.  The series had everything a championship series should have.  All-stars, surprise heroes, momentum switching, come from behind drama, last second nail-bitters, and maybe a dash of controversy.

What I am upset about, however, is if you listen to the sports media you’d assume Sidney Crosby won the Stanley Cup all by himself, and those others guys were just fans with really good seats.  Seriously, he didn’t even score in the last 3 games of the Detroit series.  Max Talbott, the 4th line wonder scored both the Penguins goals in their 2-1 victory over Detroit in game 7.  Malkin won the MVP.  Fleury made a last second diving save to keep the Wings from facing overtime.  Sure, there’s no denying Crosby is a great player, but lets face it, he had a lot of help.  The entire team stepped up when they were needed and the team earned that cup.  Likely none of this media obsession is Crosby’s fault, nor do I think he buys in to the hype generated about him.  It just shows how team sports have eroded when the media places all their emphasis on a single player.  No team in the NHL wins Lord Stanley’s cup merely by having one stand out player on their team.  Without all the pieces there is no team.  Look at the LA Kings back in the day banking on Gretzky to bring them home the cup.  How many cups does LA have?  Sadly about as many as my Sabres: zero.  One incredibly player can be a game breaker – he can be that edge in a closely fought contest.  Everyone needs that go to guy.  But if your whole team is built around that one player, no matter what level you play at in hockey, you’re not going to win the big games.

Son congratulations to Evgeni Malkin, Marc-Andre Fleury, Max Talbott, Marian Hossa(oh right, he thought Detroit would win), and a whole host of other Pittsburgh Penguins who I don’t really know.  And yes, congratulations to Sidney as well – all of you earned it.

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