From my "NHL Fact-A-Day" calendar:
Chris Valentine, an Ontario native, played three seasons for the Washington Capitals from 1981-82 to 1983-84, scoring 43 goals. He then played 12 years in Europe.
I hope this little fact warms your hearts.
Happy Valentine's Day!
Monday, February 14, 2011
Sunday, February 13, 2011
Playoff Projections in the WC: Wild West Edition
Just how tough is it going to be to make the playoffs in the West this year, especially if you are on the cusp? If this month is any indication, the race for 8th is tighter than Bryzgalov’s five hole.
LA Kings have at least a point in the last 8 games. In other words, no regulations losses, and yet the Kings have spent most of February being bumped around from 8th to 10th, fighting for their 63 points.
Until last night, Calgary (9th, 64 pts) had won 9 straight games- 18 points straight (NB: NHL on the Fly is reporting it as 11 straight wins, but nhl.com says otherwise. If anyone actually knows, please drop a comment).
8 straight games of points, 9-11 straight wins, and yet who emerged this morning in 8th?
The Minnesota Wild.
Arguably as crucial as the two points from their win over the Blues, the Wild (8th, 65 pts) benefited from Vancouver’s 2 points over the Flames. (Vancouver (1st, 81 pts) didn’t need ‘em anyway.) A practical gain of 4 points in one night.
H-E-D-H-S, as it stands, 4 points in any given night has the potential to utterly disrupt the western conference standings and the playoff picture.
Just 3 points separate Chicago (11th, 62 pts) from Minnesota today, and only three points separate the Wild from Dallas (3rd, 68 pts). Only Vancouver and Detroit seem relatively safe with respective 10 and 19 point cushions separating the top two from Chicago.Then again, a couple regulation losses by the Wings and a couple of regulation wins by the Wild on the same nights, with positive movement from Dallas or Nashvillle? Well you do the math, but I tell you it gets too close for comfort.
With only 6 points covering the spread, playoff seeds 3 through 8 are still up in the air in the West, and even the Wings are not out of firing range.
Bottom Line? From now until April it will not be enough to just win in regulation for many teams.
Bottom Line? From now until April it will not be enough to just win in regulation for many teams.
It’s only Mid-February, and as it stands on every given night, no fewer than 10 teams have to fight not just for the win, but hope the right team loses.
Sure within a week or two some of these teams will stop believing they can make it, stop fighting- but at this point there is no telling who. And in all honesty, I still expect Colorado (14th 56 pts) or St. Louis (13th 57pts.) to flip a switch and return to early season glory, making a run at it. Making it that much harder for every other team fighting for its playoff life.
Never have I before given such credence to the cliché “every point counts”.
That said, I am not a huge advocate of winning your conference, and even less a fan of winning the President’s Cup. It stems from my firm conviction that the road to the Stanley Cup is a marathon not a mile. When I see teams like Vancouver and San Jose burn it out with 112 points in a year, I remember 1995.
That said, if you let yourself get to far behind, like Chicago, Calgary and even Anaheim- all who are nursing some injuries in key players, I can tell you that fighting for your playoff life at Valentine's Day will cost you after the 1st round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs.
If February is any indication, this year’s race will put the “W” in Minnesota.
Thursday, February 3, 2011
NHL on the Fly: Head Up His Arse Edition
Did you know that the NHL Network's NHL on the Fly does not have its own website? And did you know that the NHL Network doesn't have its own website? As the flagship program for the only sports network reporting on the NHL, it is utterly amazing to me that these two media outlets do not have their own websites. Upon realizing this, my first reaction was to categorize this fail as just another example of how archaic, poorly prioritized and woefully inept the League seems handle its media.
Adding this complaint observation to an already long list that includes the fact that neither its local contracts with all Fox Sports channels, nor Center Ice have "HD" broadcasting requirements, it becomes easy to believe the rumor that Doc Emrick is still broadcasting the play by play with a transistor radio plug in his ear.
And if that is the case, perhaps we've all been too hard on Pierre McGuire... You make the call.
more after the break...
more after the break...
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