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Game #48 Preview: Right Back At It

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The Jackets delivered a statement win last night, but there's still work to be done. After flying up to Buffalo last night, they need to keep up the hard work to continue their winning streak.

Buffalo Sabres at Columbus Blue Jackets

January 18, 2014 - 7:00 pm EST
First Niagara Center - Buffalo, New York
Radio - WBNS 97.1 - TV - Fox Sports Ohio
Opponent's Blog: Die By The Blade
SBNation's Sabres vs. Jackets Coverage

Welcome to the trap game.

After the Jackets put the hammer down on Washington last night, it's so easy to say "Well, it's just Buffalo." They're still at the bottom of the Eastern Conference, with just 32 points, and are 4-3-3 over their last ten games.

But things are afoot in the land of the anchor bar. With new GM Tim Murray taking the reins, it's been made clear that no job is guaranteed. Every player on that Buffalo bench wants to make a good impression. They're motivated, they've had a few days to rest up and practice after falling to the Leafs in a shootout on Wednesday night, and they'd like nothing better than to bring the Jackets back down to earth.

As far as we know, Fedor Tyutin is still out with the flu, and unless I hear otherwise I'd assume the team will roll with the same lineup as last night.

Keys to the Game:

  • Keep Cool - There have been some pretty serious sparks between these teams over the past few years, and their first meeting this season was no exception. The Jackets have to make sure they play smart, and keep out of the box. The Sabres' PP isn't great, but they have guys like Steve Ott and John Scott who make their living by getting under your skin and provoking their opponents.
  • Eyes On The Prize - You can't assume this is a gimme game. The Sabres aren't great, but most of their wins have come at home. They're doing a good job of keeping pucks out of their own net - the problem is that they're not scoring. The Jackets have to come out swinging, get shots on net, and skate hard. Get a lead and drop the hammer.
  • Close Quarters - Guys like Matt Moulson, Cody Hodgson, and Tyler Ennis aren't household names, but they've got speed, hands, and more talent than this season's results reflect. Columbus has to keep tight on these guys and keep them from turning this into a track meet.

Two points tonight would be huge. This is an opportunity to pick up some points against a team that's still trying to find a way to turn themselves around. Get it done, get the points, and keep moving up the ladder.

Projected Lineups

Columbus Blue Jackets
(23-20-4, 50 Points; 6th division, 11th conference)

Matt CalvertBrandon DubinskyCam Atkinson
Boone JennerArtem AnisimovNathan Horton
Nick FolignoRyan JohansenR.J. Umberger
Derek MacKenzieMark LetestuCorey Tropp
Jack JohnsonDalton Prout
Ryan MurrayJames Wisniewski
Nikita NikitinDavid Savard
Sergei Bobrovsky
Curtis McElhinney

Buffalo Sabres
(13-27-6, 32 Points; 8th Division, 16th Conference)

Matt MoulsonTyler EnnisZemgus Girgensons
Steve OttCody HodgsonMatt D'Agostini
Drew StaffordVille LeinoBrian Flynn
John ScottZenon KonopkaMatt Ellis
Christian EhrhoffMark Pysyk
Mike WeberTyler Myers
Alexander SulzerJamie McBain
Ryan Miller
Jhonas Enroth

Season Series

10/10/2013 - Columbus 4 @ Buffalo 1
1/18/2014 - Columbus @ Buffalo
1/25/2014 - Buffalo @ Columbus

Head to Head Stats

BuffaloColumbus
1.67 (30)GPG2.79 (10)
2.74 (16)GAPG2.79 (19)
13.2% (28)PP%18.6 (17)
82.4% (13)PK%80.0 (20)
Tyler Ennis / Cody Hodgson, 10G leaderRyan Johansen, 18
Christian Ehrhoff, 16A leaderJames Wisniewski, 23
Cody Hodgson, 23Pts leaderRyan Johansen, 36
John Scott, 70PIM leaderBrandon Dubinsky, 78
9-13-3Road/Home11-11-2
1/15 v. Toronto L, 4-3 (SO)Last Game1/17 vs. Washington, W 5-1
4-3-3Last 107-3-0

Skip Tracer - Tracking the Sandman

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The future of Blues goal-tending that never was, whatever happened to Curtis Sandford?

Skip Tracer's goal is to hunt down former Blues whom have since fallen off the grid. The soon-to-be-breakout stars that never came to pass. The young prospects who got our hopes up with flashes of brilliance only to fizzle out before having an impact. They let us down and disappeared. Now it is time to search the dark alleys of could-have-beens, burnouts and one-hit-wonders and check in on our old disappointments. These are the great liars and deceivers in Blues history. Like 'Read my lips - no new taxes,' 'I did not have sex with that woman,' and 'If you like your healthcare plan you can keep it,' these guys got us excited only to let us down. Now it's time to bring them to justice.

This is the first of what will be a semi-regular feature.

Target: Curtis Sanford

Crimes: Illegally pedaling false hope, being incredibly delicate for a hockey player.

Evidence:

It was the 2002-03 hockey season. The Blues were coming off a 4-1 round two spanking at the hands of the hated Detroit Redwings. Brent Johnson had been the go-to guy in 2001-02 and wasn't able to backstop one of the more skilled Blues teams in history to a Stanley Cup.

Johnson went down with a high ankle sprain early in 2002 . The forgettable Fred Brathwaite stepped in, but only momentarily before he got injured. Then Reinhard Divis got his chance, and got injured. Then Cody Rudkowsky stepped in, and suffered a high ankle sprain. That was when we first met the Sandman. Sanford came in and earned 6 decisions, including 5 wins, and sported a .912 save percentage and even got a shutout. The future seemed bright for the kid.

Ironically, the goalie who seemed to be made of glass did not get injured that year. When Johnson came back Sanford was sent down to Worcester. We wouldn't see him again until after the lockout, during the beginning of the Dark Ages of Blues hockey.

The disaster that was Patrick Lalime was the starter at the beginning of the new season but didn't play well and Sanford got the starting job, performing well enough behind a terrible Blues team that was lead in goals by Mike Sillinger with 22. (And Sillinger was traded halfway through the season!) Things were just dandy for Sanford (all the losing aside) until March when he blew out his knee.

During the off-season Sanford was offered a 3-year deal by the Blues but declined, hoping he would have a chance to challenge the newly acquired Manny Legace for the starting role. Sanford's groin had other ideas, however, and after being sidelined with a porcelain groin on two occasions, and playing like a soup-sandwich the rest of the time, Sanford found himself an unrestricted free agent at the end of the 2006-07 season.

Witness Statements:

And as we all know now, Sanford isn't any savior in goal, but the Blues play a different brand of hockey in front of him then they do in front of Patrick 'where'd it go?" Lalime. The Blues have been in a tailspin since - losing 11 straight and burying themselves at the bottom of the stinky pile.

Sanford shot himself in the foot by turning down a three-year contract offer from the Blues last summer. He was gambling he could say healthy enough, long enough, to push Manny Legace into the veteran backup role and take over the number one job. Those things did not happen, and Sanford, God love him, just can not be trusted to stay off the IR long enough to go on a two-month run like Legace has done this year.

Curtis Sanford who has shown the ability to be good against bad teams.

Last seen:

Sanford was picked up by the Canucks and had an unimpressive stint with them before playing in the AHL for a couple of years where he put up pretty good numbers. He was last seen in 2011-12 playing for the Columbus Blue Jackets. His performance wasn't terrible but the team he was behind certainly was terrible and he only won 10 out of 36 games. He hasn't been in the NHL since.

Found:

Curtis Sanford is playing for Lokomotiv Yaroslavl in the KHL. You may have heard of them. He has respectable, but unimpressive stats for Lokomotiv, where he goes by СэнфордКёртис .

Debrief:

So, the goalie that got our hopes up a couple of times during a period when there was scant hope to be found is on the run from justice in Russia where he is working as a mediocre goalie for a team desperately in need of hope as they rebuild and recover from a dark page in their history.

I guess history does repeat itself.

1-18-2014_3-43-19_am_medium


On a related note, Chevy is a sponsor of http://hclokomotiv.ru/stats/lokomotiv/. Apparently they only sell really tiny crap in Russia.

Sabres vs. Blue Jackets preview: Corey Tropp returns to Buffalo, and he brought red-hot Columbus with him

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Columbus is fighting for a playoff spot in the East, while the Sabres are fighting to maintain the worst record in the league.

Corey Tropp once held in regard as one of the young players who would help the Sabres slowly rebuild over the next few seasons. He was fast, gritty, and had just enough skill to get folks excited about his future on Buffalo's third or fourth line.

Tonight, Tropp returns as an opponent, as he makes his first trip back to Buffalo since Columbus claimed him off waivers earlier his season.

The Blue Jackets come to town on a five game winning streak, and will face a Sabres squad coming off of an shootout loss to Toronto on Wednesday. Columbus recently welcomed Nathan Horton back to the lineup after having offseason shoulder surgery, and the Jackets are fighting for the #8 seed in the East, which they'll own if they win tonight.

The Sabres are welcoming back some reinforcements of their own, as Marcus Foligno returns to the lineup tonight just in time to face his older brother Nick. The return of Cody Hodgson to the lineup has spurred the Sabres offense into mega-overdrive, and has seen them score six goals (!) in their last two games.

Game #47

Buffalo Sabres (13-27-6) at Columbus Blue Jackets (23-20-4)

Puck Drop - 7:00pm EST - First Niagara Center - Buffalo, NY
TV
- MSG, FS-O | Radio - WGR 550-AM
SBNation Blue Jackets Blog
- The Cannon

Three Questions

1. Will the Sabres suddenly "explosive" offense keep producing?
Buffalo has scored eight goals in their past three games after four total tallies in heir previous four games, thanks in part tot the efforts from Cody Hodgson, Tyler Ennis, and Christian Ehrhoff.

2. Which Foligno brother will have the better night?
Marcus Foligno will return from injury tonight to face his older brother Nick Foligno, a winger for the Blue Jackets. Nick is certainly having the better year, with 12 goals and 14 assists, while younger brother Marcus has five goals and six assists.

3. Who will break their scoring slump?
While their offense has picked up recently, the Sabres have a number of forwards currently experiencing a point drought. Zemgus Girgensons hasn't registered a point in eight games, Brian Flynn has been dry for eleven contests, Ville Leino hasn't scored in his last seven, and the aforementioned Foligno has been held down for nine games.

Projected BUF Lines

Moulson - Ennis - Stafford
Ott - Hodgson - Leino
Flynn - Foligno - Girgensons
Scott - Konopka - Ellis

Ehrhoff Pysyk
WeberMyers
McNabb - McBain

Goal: Ryan Miller

Scratches/Injuries: Sulzer, Tallinder, Porter, McCormick, Omark, D'Agostini

Game Day 48 - Jackets @ Sabres

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The Jackets delivered a statement win last night, but there's still work to be done. After flying up to Buffalo last night, they need to keep up the hard work to continue their winning streak.

Buffalo Sabres at Columbus Blue Jackets

January 18, 2014 - 7:00 pm EST
First Niagara Center - Buffalo, New York
Radio - WBNS 97.1 - TV - Fox Sports Ohio
Opponent's Blog: Die By The Blade
SBNation's Sabres vs. Jackets Coverage

Welcome to the trap game.

After the Jackets put the hammer down on Washington last night, it's so easy to say "Well, it's just Buffalo." They're still at the bottom of the Eastern Conference, with just 32 points, and are 4-3-3 over their last ten games.

But things are afoot in the land of the anchor bar. With new GM Tim Murray taking the reins, it's been made clear that no job is guaranteed. Every player on that Buffalo bench wants to make a good impression. They're motivated, they've had a few days to rest up and practice after falling to the Leafs in a shootout on Wednesday night, and they'd like nothing better than to bring the Jackets back down to earth.

As far as we know, Fedor Tyutin is still out with the flu, and unless I hear otherwise I'd assume the team will roll with the same lineup as last night.

Keys to the Game:

  • Keep Cool - There have been some pretty serious sparks between these teams over the past few years, and their first meeting this season was no exception. The Jackets have to make sure they play smart, and keep out of the box. The Sabres' PP isn't great, but they have guys like Steve Ott and John Scott who make their living by getting under your skin and provoking their opponents.
  • Eyes On The Prize - You can't assume this is a gimme game. The Sabres aren't great, but most of their wins have come at home. They're doing a good job of keeping pucks out of their own net - the problem is that they're not scoring. The Jackets have to come out swinging, get shots on net, and skate hard. Get a lead and drop the hammer.
  • Close Quarters - Guys like Matt Moulson, Cody Hodgson, and Tyler Ennis aren't household names, but they've got speed, hands, and more talent than this season's results reflect. Columbus has to keep tight on these guys and keep them from turning this into a track meet.

Two points tonight would be huge. This is an opportunity to pick up some points against a team that's still trying to find a way to turn themselves around. Get it done, get the points, and keep moving up the ladder.

Projected Lineups

Columbus Blue Jackets
(23-20-4, 50 Points; 6th division, 11th conference)

Matt CalvertBrandon DubinskyCam Atkinson
Boone JennerArtem AnisimovNathan Horton
Nick FolignoRyan JohansenR.J. Umberger
Derek MacKenzieMark LetestuCorey Tropp
Jack JohnsonDalton Prout
Ryan MurrayJames Wisniewski
Nikita NikitinDavid Savard
Sergei Bobrovsky
Curtis McElhinney

Buffalo Sabres
(13-27-6, 32 Points; 8th Division, 16th Conference)

Matt MoulsonTyler EnnisZemgus Girgensons
Steve OttCody HodgsonMatt D'Agostini
Drew StaffordVille LeinoBrian Flynn
John ScottZenon KonopkaMatt Ellis
Christian EhrhoffMark Pysyk
Mike WeberTyler Myers
Alexander SulzerJamie McBain
Ryan Miller
Jhonas Enroth

Season Series

10/10/2013 - Columbus 4 @ Buffalo 1
1/18/2014 - Columbus @ Buffalo
1/25/2014 - Buffalo @ Columbus

Head to Head Stats

BuffaloColumbus
1.67 (30)GPG2.79 (10)
2.74 (16)GAPG2.79 (19)
13.2% (28)PP%18.6 (17)
82.4% (13)PK%80.0 (20)
Tyler Ennis / Cody Hodgson, 10G leaderRyan Johansen, 18
Christian Ehrhoff, 16A leaderJames Wisniewski, 23
Cody Hodgson, 23Pts leaderRyan Johansen, 36
John Scott, 70PIM leaderBrandon Dubinsky, 78
9-13-3Road/Home11-11-2
1/15 v. Toronto L, 4-3 (SO)Last Game1/17 vs. Washington, W 5-1
4-3-3Last 107-3-0

Ugly Is Beautiful: Blue Jackets Edge Sabres -- Climb Above the Line

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In a game that featured both the bizarre and the ugly, the Blue Jackets held on for a shootout win in Buffalo, moving their winning streak to six and heightening the intrigue in the Eastern Conference playoff race.

LIVE FROM NEW YORK, IT'S SATURDAY NIGHT!!!    ---   Well, OK, it's Buffalo, not New York City, but it's still New York and it is a frigid Saturday night.  The SNL analogy seems particularly appropriate tonight, as just over 19,000 souls, including several dozen Blue Jackets fans bussed in for the occasion, witnessed a hockey game that reached comic proportions in turnovers, miscues and trashed opportunities.  Think Abbott & Costello Meet Slap Shot, and you'll get the general idea.  Still, when the laughing stopped, the Blue Jackets had a shootout victory, a six-pack of consecutive wins (the longest current streak in the NHL) and fllew back to Columbus as the holders of the 2nd wild card slot in the Eastern Conference.  It wasn't easy.

Sleepwalking Start

Entering this contest, you could sense some trepidation among the fan base.  Things just seemed set up for a fall -- 5 consecutive wins, including the mauling of the Capitals last night -- a back-to-back game on the road against a club with a Herculean grasp on the cellar in the Eastern Conference . . . you get the idea.   At the beginning, the Blue Jackets did everything in their power to validate those fears.

Columbus won the opening face-off, promptly surrendered the puck in the offensive zone, and allowed Buffalo to set up camp in the Blue Jackets' zone,  Aided by several defensive turnovers and an overall preference for reaching, rather than skating.  While the Blue Jackets fumbled the puck along the boards, Tyler Myers glided down the right edge of the slot unmolested, received the puck on the tape, and beat Sergei Bobrovsky to the far side from point-blank range just 59 seconds into the game.  That energized an otherwise tepid home crowd, and raised more than a few eyebrows among the Jacket Backers faithful.

To avoid repetition, the Blue Jackets' play throughout the contest was characterized by a few consistent themes.  First, as noted above, they appeared to be wearing concrete skates in their own zone, providing alarming degrees of time and space to Buffalo.  When they did get their sticks on the puck, they made ill-conceived passes or simply turned the puck over.  Fortunately Buffalo was so intent on creating offensive pressure with speed and pinching defense, it created opportunities in the other direction.  While Columbus showed a greater ability to skate in the offensive zone, the passing was still ragged and some prime chances were wasted.

At the 6:19 mark of the first, the Blue Jackets were able to convert one of those granted opportunities.  Nikita Nikitin took the puck at his own blue line, and made a nice stretch pass to Mark Letestu on the left wing, enabling Letestu to enter the zone with speed.  Letestu dropped the puck to Derek MacKenzie, who fired a shot/pass wide of  Ryan Miller.  It caromed twice off the boards before finding the stick of David Savard, who fired the puck on net in one motion, beating Miller to the stick side.  Tie game, and some sighs of relief in the rafters.

It didn't last long.  After receiving a pass behind his own goal from Ryan Murray, James Wisniewski made an ill-conceived effort to find Brandon Dubinsky in the center of the ice, just in front of his own crease.  The pass misfired, finding Tyler Ennis instead.  Ennis shoveled the puck to Drew Stafford, who easily beat a helpless Bobrovsky.  See the theme here?

Fortunately, the Blue Jackets tightened up their defensive play as the period wore on, and actually created a number of odd man rushes.  However, these all were for naught, stymied by over passing, missed shots, posts and one terrific save by Miller on what seemed to be a sure goal by R.J. Umberger.  Finally, Columbus did convert one of those chances at the 12:44 mark, when Nikitin fired a shot from the point on net, which created havoc in the crease.  The puck bounced to Dubinsky, then to Matt Calvert, who roofed the puck over Miller to even the score once again.  This time the tie held until the end of the period.

On the one hand, the Blue Jackets were lucky to come out of the first with a tie, given the caliber of their play.  On the other hand, the game could easily have been 4-1 in their favor, but for some shoddy play with the puck and some glaringly missed chances,.  Columbus out-shot the Sabres 14-6 in the period, which shows just how much miscues dictated the results.

More of the Same

The second period was notable only for the fact that the Blue Jackets continued the same themes.  They again generated 14 shots in the offensive zone, but apparently felt that their first period generosity was insufficiently accommodating. Buffalo notched 13 shots in the second, and provided the hosts with three power plays, including back-to-back extra man opportunities courtesy of Nathan Horton, who appeared to be feeling the effects of the back-to-back demands.  Having missed half a season, at least Horton had an excuse.  Fortunately, the penalty kill was solid, and Bobrovsky was equal to the challenge, depriving the Sabres on several solid chances.

The Blue Jackets, for their part, cashed in on the one power play they were provided, when Zenon Konopka was called for goaltender interference.  The Blue Jackets did a nice job of keeping possession on the power play --  something that they did all night.  The puck was forced to the crease, and Columbus held a team meeting in the blue paint.   The puck was finally ejected to a waiting Dubinsky, who obligingly put it home to give the Blue Jackets the lead and restore order entering the final period.

If You Snooze . . .  You Don't Always Lose

After watching the Blue Jackets play effectively a half-court game most of the night, the Sabres decided to conserve their energy in the third as well.  The two teams combined for a total of 12 shots in the final period, resulting in a mass exodus of local fans with about 3 minutes left.  Buffalo pulled Ryan Miller, and as the clock ticked down, it seemed that the rest was mere formality.  Except that it wasn't.

With just 37 seconds left in the game, David Savard took an awful tripping penalty behind his own net, granting Buffalo a two man advantage.  It took the Sabres precisely 12 seconds to win the face-off, get the puck to an unmolested Tyler Myers, and register the tying goal.  Reaching instead of skating again haunted the Blue Jackets.

The overtime period was characterized by some stunning misplays on both sides, with open ice turnovers that literally had fans of both clubs gasping.  However, as the comedy extended to both clubs, neither side was able to take advantage of the gift-wrapped opportunities.  Hence, off to the shootout, where two Olympic goalies could show their stuff.

Lest you think that the foolishness was over, Matt Moulson started the shootout by placing a stunning move on Bobrovsky, putting him down . . . then missed the net.  Cam Atkinson obligingly let the puck fall off his stick to negate the Columbus first round chance.  Bob stuffed Tyler Ennis, and Miller stifled Letestu. Bobrovsky made another nice save on Cody Hodgson, which set the stage for Ryan Johansen.  Johansen crept in at a glacial pace, barely keeping with the forward movement rule, and then deftly beat Miller to the glove side.  Game over and two points in the books, sending the assembled Blue Jackets fans out into the cold night more relieved than ecstatic.

Final Notes

While the Blue Jackets were facing the second half of a back to back, they had two weeks with three days of rest each week.  They won't have that luxury for the rest of the season, so it was disappointing to see such a ragged effort against a team that they should dispatch.  Still, one of the hallmarks of a good club is the ability to win ugly, and the Blue Jackets did that in spades on this night.

The Blue Jackets fans who made the sojourn added a spice of local color to the proceedings, and were a noticeably vocal force, despite being banished to the third deck, where the banners honoring Tim Horton and Danny Gare were much closer to eye level than the ice.  The "Let's Go Jackets" chants actually droned out the "Let's Go Buf-fa-lo" voices on several occasions, which hopefully translated well on the broadcast.

Columbus now owns the longest current winning streak in the NHL, and also holds the final wild card playoff slot in the Eastern Conference, by virtue of holding the tie-breaker edge over both Detroit and Washington.   While this accomplishment can be minimized, due to the fact that it is only January, I would not discount it too much.  The Blue Jackets learned the painful tiebreaker lesson last year, and you can never hold a playoff slot early enough.  Better to be pursued than be chasing, particularly heading into the long Olympic break.

A couple of interesting side-lights to the proceedings.  It wasn't long ago that the Metro was being discounted, with the assumption being that the only playoff clubs from that division would be the three automatic qualifiers.  The Blue Jackets have changed that calculus, and the play of Columbus and Philadelphia has rapidly changed that dynamic.

Finally, Columbus now holds a goal differential of +3, the only club in the Metro other than Pittsburgh with that distinction.  Only Boston, Tampa Bay and Montreal can claim that stat in the Atlantic.  That's progress.

It was ugly, but a win is a win.  Let's take it and move on to the next one.

Blue Jackets vs. Sabres Recap: Myers Scores Pair In Shootout Loss

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Tyler Myers has an eventful 300th career game as the Sabres lose to the Blue Jackets on Saturday night.

The Buffalo Sabres scored early and scored more than once in the first period, but their usual game reared its ugly head again and they faltered down the stretch to another home regulation loss. The Sabres looked strong in the first minute of the game as the starting line of Matt Moulson, Tyler Ennis, and Drew Stafford kept the Jackets hemmed in their own zone and finally a streaking Tyler Myers converted a Matt Moulson pass to score. The Blue Jackets tied the game at the 6:19 mark of the first, but Drew Stafford scored just 33 seconds later to give the Sabres another lead.

The team's penalty kill almost turned into the defining aspect of how the Sabres lost this game. The Blue Jackets tied the game late in the first period on a Matt Calvert even strength goal that was scored just one second after Tyler Myers came out of the box and then Brandon Dubinsky would give Columbus the lead in the second on the power play.

The third period of the game played out like you would expect a team that has a one goal lead that played the night before would play out. For most of the period Columbus plays the trap and the Sabres were held to just seven shots on goal in the period. The final shot though was a bullet from Tyler Myers that tied the game up with just 25 seconds left in the game. After trading chances in the overtime period, Ryan Johansen was the only shooter of the six that attempted to find the back of the net and gave Columbus the extra point.

Tyler Myers Adventurous 300th Career Game

Tyler Myers played in his 300th career game on Saturday night and it might have been one of his more active games in his short career. He got on the score sheet just 59 seconds into the game following up on some nice offensive zone pressure and cashing in an impressive Matt Moulson pass. He also took a boarding penalty that the league will probably take a look at agin that led to the Blue Jackets second goal of the game. All of that came in just the first period alone.

The third period saw Myers come streaking in to almost the same spot, this time on the power play, to tie the game up for the Sabres. It's the first time that Myers has had a multi point game since November 27th against Toronto and his first multi goal game since November 16, 2011 against the New Jersey Devils. He is also the first Sabres player to score in the first and last minute of a game since Paul Cyr did it on February 9, 1985. The last NHL player to do this was Milan Lucic on February 22, 2011.

The Sabres Special Teams Does Interesting Things

The aforementioned special teams was much to be desired on both ends of the rink. The Sabres penalty kill, which was ranked 13th in the league before Saturday night's game, looked like it would have been the story of the night as they directly led to the final two goals the Blue Jackets scored. The penalty kill finished the night killing off four of the five penalties the

Belated Admirals Stat-urday: Still Hanging Around

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The wins haven't been pretty, the points haven't been easy, but the Admirals have managed to stay in the playoff ladder all season. It's not about coaching anymore, it's about taking ownership, and it's up to the leaders and veterans to make the push through to the playoffs.

[Ed. Note: Stats current as of Saturday morning. My fault, sorry guys. -CK]

1Luca Sbisa, playing in the first of an expected two game assignment and his third as as Admiral, contributed nothing to the shoot-out loss Friday night to the Worcester Sharks (San Jose Sharks). He was slow, apprehensive, and looked afraid to play the body. Here's hoping he feels better going in to Saturday night's game.

2David Steckel and Alex Grant picked up two points each in Friday's game against the Sharks. It was Steckel's fourth goal and tenth assist, and Grant's 11th and 12th assists.

3 Special teams have been a focus lately, and the results are showing. Norfolk has third best Penalty Kill in the AHL, killing off penalties at 88% efficiency. In the past three games, Norfolk allowed just two goals on 13 attempts (85%). The Power Play, despite being ranked towards the bottom of the league (16.2%), has found the back of the net in three straight games, going 3 for 15 (20%).

4 Jesse Blacker picked up his fourth goal with Norfolk for the game winner last Sunday vs the Springfield Falcons (Columbus Blue Jackets). In 20 games with Norfolk this season, he has four goals, 13 assists, and 17 points. He's also fifth among defensemen in shooting percentage (14.3), with five goals on 35 shots (one goal with Toronto)

5 The Admirals loss in the shootout last night was their fifth of the season. Norfolk has played 14 games requiring extra time, going 1-1 in OT and 7-5 in the shoot-out. 22 of Norfolk's 46 points have come outside of regulation play.

6 The Admirals picked up four of a possible six points on road trip last weekend beating the Portland Pirates (Phoenix Coyotes) on Friday, Springfield on Sunday, and losing to Worcester on Saturday.

7 Devante-Smith Pelly's seventh assist of the season came on a late, game tying goal against Worcester Friday night. Smith-Pelly is currently on a six game point streak with five goals and three assists after being kept off the score-sheet in five straight games.

8Frederik Andersen played in two games last weekend, taking a 5-1 loss to the Sharks and a 2-1 win over Springfield. In four games with the Admirals this season, Andersen is 3-1-0-1 with eight goals against, a 2.45 goals against average, and a .939 save percentage. Fans expect to see Andersen reassigned to Norfolk prior to the Olympic break to get a few more games and keep the rust off.

9 Rookie Steven Whitney scored his ninth goal of season against the Sharks Friday night. Whitney now has 18 points this season. (9G, 9A)

10 Rikard Rakell is ranked fifth among all rookies in points. In 32 games played, he has ten goals, 18 assists, and 28 points.

--So seriously Anaheim. You can have Luca Sbisa back. He's rehabilitated, or warmed up, or in game shape, or whatever you need to hear to take him back. In fact, the Admirals will trade you one veteran NHL defensemen for one (or even both) of your rookie defensemen. After watching last night's game, umm, yeah, um, he's ready to come back. Some fans even offered to drive him there to save the airfare.

--John Gibson, recently returned from a trip to Anaheim no doubt meant to tease fans there, has regained his form, absolutely stealing a point from the Sharks Friday night after most of the players in front of him looked like they thought is was an off-season summer pick-up game. It was an interesting dynamic to read almost identical fan reactions to the Ducks-Chicago Blackhawks game that were being expressed in Norfolk. Contrary to the coaches' wishes, the Admirals have seemed to adopt a strategy of "chasing the game," almost seeming to want to make it harder on themselves than need be.Miscommunication, sloppy execution, and a desire to make the perfect play instead of doing the dirty work is becoming dangerously close to becoming the norm vice the exception.

At this point in the season the players know the systems, they know their positions, they know what they are supposed to do. Whether liked or not, the system has shown it can work. It's up to the leaders on the team to get everyone on board. 14 of 39 games have gone to extra time and asking any one of the players or coaches, to a man they'll admit that in most of the games it wasn't because the other team was better, it was because they played worse.

Follow me on Twitter: @VAPuckhead

Week 16's Free Agents and Trade Targets

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Sunday Night Lookers to help you get ahead in your league.

Today is very, very Sunday, and sometimes it’s best to let alittle girl express what you can’t seem to find the way of expressing yourself.

PICKUP OF THE WEEK:

Ryane Clowe - NJ - LW,RW - 13% owned with 2+9=11
So I just happened to notice that Ryane’s name isn’t spelled "Ryan," but whatever, he can keep adding whichever letters he wants if he keeps on with the way he’s been playing. The big Newfoundlander has been moved around a lot in the last two seasons, and fantasy owners have been sneakily waiting to make bank on his points-PIMs combo potential after a disappointing first part of the season in San Jose last year. It turns out that the Eastern Seaboard is close enough to home that Clowe, after missing a concussed couple of months and 32 games, has found his groove and maybe even a few Jigg’s Dinners with resparked linemate Michael Ryder, too*. In his 3 games this week, Clowe has 1 goal and 4 points, 6 shots, and 12 hits. In Saturday’s loss in Phoenix, Clowe registered 1 power play goal, 1 assist, 3 shots, and a huge 6 hits. This week has been a continuation of a hot 7 games, in which Clowe found 2 goals and 9 points, 19 shots, and 16 hits. He’s only received 2 penalty minutes over that span, but he has had a couple fighting majors since returning, and those who know Clowe know that he stands up for his team, even if he’s a brand new addition to it. He’s a great guy to have on your side in PIMs- and hits-valuing leagues of various depths, and poolers are obviously taking notice as his ownership rate has spiked dramatically. Still, Clowe’s gone widely unnoticed this season so far because of that injury, but he’s been playing like golden horse these past two weeks and if he stays healthy and distances himself from the concussion, you can expect Clowe to become even more comfortable with the play he’s mostly been showing gritty glimpses of recently.

* I realize that probably none of you will get that reference, but I’m not sorry. And if you did, do a pal a favour and look at the sky with me at exactly midnight tonight. That’s when the salt beef jumps over the moon.



SHALLOW LEAGUE FREE AGENTS and TRADE TARGETS (owned in >50% in Yahoo! leagues)

Wayne Simmonds - Phi - RW - 73% owned with 16+20=36
If I were to not take into account the rate of ownership spikes and the availability of my Pickup of the Week, then Simmonds would have probably been the guy graced with his own section up there. In his three games this week, Simmonds has a scary 6 points (3PPP) to go along with a +3 rating and 7 shots. He has come out as one of Philly’s more consistent players (excusing the first part of the season as you’re going to have to do with anyone of the team), and when he’s on, he’s flying. After such a wonky start, Simmonds has gotten it together with 36 points in 49 games. He’s also put up 77 PIMs over that time already, and has gotten 117 shots on goal. Decent. If for some reason he’s still out there in your league and you value penalty minutes, give yourself a charlie horse. But only after you go and grab him, like, now.

Rick Nash - NYR - LW,RW - 95% owned with 12+9=21
Nash could prove to be a good trade target now that he’s tightening up the old bootstraps and becoming a producing player once again because he’s still stained with a brutal start to the season. Even recently, he hasn’t been quite the force he’s expected to be, but he has 5 goals for 5 points in 7 games. Even more promising, Nash has thrown 23 shots on net in his last 4 games. Those are only good for 2 goals, but the rising number of opportunities is a good sign for things to come, and sleepy owners might be looking at his overall rank/numbers and therefore willing to let him go at such a buy-low moment. Don’t rip anyone off, though, because that’s no fun and other people in the league will notice and you’ll acquire your own kind of stain, but this superfine Nash window is likely on its way to being shut.

Scott Hartnell - Phi - LW - 52% owned with 11+17=28
Hartnell looks like the kind of guy who would show up at your casual game of pond hockey, shotgun a six pack, and shove your head in a snowbank. In terms of hockey pools, that means that Hartnell could possibly be an asset in many PIMs and hits leagues. Even though he hasn’t been the absolute Grit Reaper that he used to be, Hartnell still has a respectable 35 penalty minutes and 84 hits so far this season, which is more than a lot of guys can say for themselves. On top of that, Hartnell owns 5 goals and 13 points in his last 12 games and has fit in well on Philly’s hot second line alongside Brayden Schenn and Wayne Simmonds. At only 53% ownership, people must have something against him personally. Maybe he reminds them of the rowdy uncle that used to put them in full nelsons.

Henrik Lundqvist - NYR - G - 99% owned with 16W, 2.58GAA, and .914SV%
Lundqvist’s ownership went from 98% to 99% in the last day, and that remaining gap will close, especially after a newsreel wonder of a 38-save shutout against Detroit on Thursday. If you can acquire him in a trade of some kind, then you probably should, even though his early struggles are probably already too distanced to work in your favour. He’s back.


MEDIUM-DEPTH FREE AGENTS and TRADE TARGETS (25-50% ownership in Yahoo! leagues)

Chris Kreider - NYR - C,LW - 43% owned with 12+15=27
Kreider doesn’t have a point in his last 3 games, and he’s the kind of guy who will do that. But he’s also the kind of guy who puts up healthy numbers of shots, hits, and penalty minutes along solid scoring potential. In 43 games, Kreider has posted 27 points, a sweet +13 rating, 58 PIMs, 10 PPP, 95 shots, and a gritty 108 hits. His ice time has been boosted over the last week, and if you watch a game, you can understand why. He plays hard with his 6’3", 226lb frame. Of all rookies, Kreider is 3rd in the scoring race and 5th for penalty minutes.

Tyler Ennis - Buf - C,LW - 32% owned with 10+11=21
Tyler Ennis is a short, thin dude who has lots of potential, and this week has been a great week for him. In 4 games, Ennis has built a fine nest of 2 goals and 5 points for Buffalo. Over that period, he also contributed 16 shots (easy math: average of 4 shots per game) and 9 hits (do it yourself). In a 4-3 shootout loss to the recently snazzy Blue Jackets, Ennis showed his potential worth with 2 assists, a +2 rating, 7 shots, and 3 hits. Cool.

(Note: by the laws of everything wholesome and good, I can only rep one Buffalo Sabre per week, but consider this a secret head nod toward Cody Hodgson (also 32% owned), who has collected a point each game since his return from injury on January 12. Worth looking at.)

Tim Thomas - Fla - G - 42% owned with 12W, 2.58GAA, and .917SV%
Just here to say that Tim Thomas is still putting up fine numbers even if his team isn’t winning many games. If you already have a goalie who slides around behind a good defensive core with a low GAA and an accompanying low number of SA/saves per game, Thomas could be your low-cost balancer. In his 8 games since returning from injury, Thomas has faced an average of 32 shots per game and has not once posted a SV% below .905%. You can’t always have it all.


THE MIDNIGHT SPECIALS (

Andrej Meszaros - Phi - D - 3% owned with 4+10=14
Nobody knows where it’s coming from, but Andrej Meszaros has found something recently, along with 3 goals and 11 points in his last 10 games. That gives him a healthy 14 points in 29 games. His shot totals are improving, too (10 in his last 3 games). It’s anyone’s guess whether this charge lasts in the revitalized Czech veteran, but if you have the room for him, Meszaros is worth a look right now.

Mark Letestu - Cls - C - 1% owned with 6+15 = 21
The Blue Jackets have been something else lately, which is to say something other than the 2013/14 Columbus Blue Jackets. Sergei Bobrovsky’s goaltending is improving toward more what it looked like in his Vezina-winning season last year, and all of the team’s lines are showing themselves capable of producing. A part of this recent surge is Mark Letestu, who has played recent games as a fourth line centre. The Elk Point, Alberta native (two hollers come soaring across the internet) owns 5 goals and 7 points in his last 7 games despite more or less middling ice time.

Pat Maroon - Anh - LW - 1% owned with 3+8=11
At this point, even the Ducks’ waterboy and road omelette chef is worth owning in many formats. Even moreso, however, it’s worth mentioning that in his last six games, Maroon has 4 assists, a +2 rating, and, most importantly, 27 penalty minutes. He might not keep it up, but Pat’s been dropping his gloves in most of  his recent games, as well as putting up the more than occasional helper on a team that’s looking less like the team from which their name comes and more like the black uniforms they were always knocking their knees about in the movies. And so despite his low ice time, even a high-performing deeper forward like Maroon is worth a look right now in those leagues where only him and those egg-scramblers are still available. You’ll just have to excuse his recent game of all zeroes. It happens.

Tom Sestito - Van -  LW - 2% owned with 4+1=5
Okay, listen, I’m not going to rep this guy very much or anything, but with 64 penalty minutes in his last 3 games, it seems as if Vancouver winger Tom Sestito has been eating steel wool and the worst moments of MTV’s Jersey Shore for breakfast. If he continues this, which who knows, then he alone could decide a week’s PIMs category for you, bro.


Could Ryan Johansen be the Blue Jackets next captain?

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An argument for #19.

Columbus is long overdue for a captain. Todd Richards, Jarmo Kekalainen, and John Davidson respond with various reasons as to why a captain has not yet been named; the chemistry in the room, no clear choice stepping forward, among others.

It may be questionable to challenge the coach's choices in the midst of a win streak, but I think this is a conversation that shouldn't be ignored. Every other team has a captain, and it's not a common occurrence that a team goes two full seasons without a named leader.

But the more I think about it, the more I may see what Richards is trying to do. This may be giving him too much credit, or it may be wishful thinking, but between Brandon Dubsinky and Jack Johnson, there are clear candidates to wear the C in Cbus. Yet, I'm starting to think that maybe they aren't the obvious choice long term.

Jack Johnson

Why: Johnson's pedigree is clear. You don't become captain of Team USA by accident. He's the backbone of this team. You could easily cite his trade to Columbus as the moment that this team started crawling back from rock bottom.

Why not: He's struggled this year, and although you want to reward loyalty and hard work, it's a business. The last thing the Blue Jackets need is to name another captain that is traded within a few seasons. With the way his play is tracking and the emergence of Ryan Murray, Johnson could end up the odd man out over the next couple seasons, if only because he has the most movable contract.

Brandon Dubinsky

Why: Dubinsky is the heart and soul of the club. He may put up better than 60 points for the first time in his pro career. He pushes everyone night in and night out. Speaking for myself, though I'm sure this goes for others, I've longed to see this kind of passion in Columbus for years. The days of seeing Rick Nash shrug off an awful game are gone.

Why not: He's a hothead. Teams often take on the personality of their leader. It may just be too risky to give his outbursts the backing of the C on his jersey. You can't have your captain leading from the locker room because he got a game misconduct.

Ryan Johansen

That brings me to the Blue Jackets emerging superstar. He's had his ups and downs. Just a year ago, he was benched in the American Hockey League, which is troubling. Richards has always been harder on Johansen than seemingly any other player, quick to criticize but slow to praise. He challenged him to work on the defensive end of his game before giving him the opportunities to find his offensive prowess. In that way, it reminds me of the early days of Ken Hitchcock coaching Nash, and we saw how that elevated his play.

Perhaps the tough love from Richards has been his plan all along. It's important to have a leadership group in place, and maybe Dubinsky, Johnson, Mark Letestu, et al., make better alternates than captains for where the Blue Jackets are heading. Johansen is a player that could have another 15 years in him. He's not a superstar on Nash's level, so the draw to jump ship may be lessened, at least in the near term. His age allows him to connect with the younger players on the team, both now and moving forward: Boone Jenner, Cam Atkinson, Matt Calvert, Alexander Wennberg, Kerby Rychel, and Marko Dano.

Johansen has a genuine joy and enthusiasm that he brings and just quietly gets the job done. He's just now growing into his man-sized frame both physically and mentally, and I think that is a huge factor to his breakout season. He's got the fundamentals down on the ice and has had the work ethic drilled into him by Richards & Co.

Unlike Nash, he doesn't seem to have the need to try to do everything himself. He'll happily dish it off and set others up in a good situation to score. That, to me, is a characteristic of a player that makes those around him better. That is an excellent trait to have in a leader.

The time may not be now, or this season at all. He will need to be tested in the grind of the next 30 games, and hopefully the playoffs. If he continues playing at this pace, with this passion, and this work ethic, I think next season will be the time. Come October, get the sewing machine ready for a fresh C on jersey #19.

X-Men: Tracking Active, Former St. Louis Blues Players

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A look at the ones who got away.
Episode 2, Bigger and Better.

Greetings friends and fellow countrymen.

Here is your X-Men update.

Highlights:

>Ben Bishop gave up 3 goals in a 5-3 victory over Carolina, which doesn't sound impressive at all until you see that he faced 51 friggin shots. He ended up the day with a .941 SV%, which usually doesn't accompany giving up 3 goals.  The 48 saves is a personal record for Bishop and probably in the top 100 or so performances in the NHL.

>Eric Brewer had an assist in the same 5-3 Tampa win over Carolina.  Not nearly as impressive, but the guy only has 8 points on the year so each one is a big deal.

> B.J. Crombeen is living in healthy scratch land.

> D' Agostini is out with ‘some injury’ and will miss ‘some time.’

> Dvorak had an assist in a 3-2 win over Florida.  Again, it was only his 4th, so, big deal...

>Lars Eller has been playing like some kid with the flu.

>Erik Johnson has been battling a back injury but still found the fortitude to battle Paul Gaustad in an on-ice pugilistic display.  Way to go guy who never displayed that much heart while you played here.

> Nikitin has assists in 2 straight games, both of which were won by the Blue Jackets.

> Perron scored the tying goal with 3 minutes left in regulation, allowing Edmonton to salvage a point in their loss against a team better than Edmonton.

> Russell has been out since December with a glass knee and should be returning to action this week for Calgary.

> Stempniak has has a 3 game point streak going...1G 2A in that span.

LastFirstTeamGPGAPTSPlus/MinusPIMSOG%PPGPPASHGSHAGWGTOI/Game
BoyesBradFLA4612102221010811.1%2000116:11
BrewerEricTB45088349430.0%0000017:12
CrombeenB.J.TB37167358342.9%0001010:07
D' AgostiniMattBUF2824604523.8%1000113:34
DrazenovicNicolasPIT00000000.0%000000:00
DvorakRadekCAR42347322368.3%0000211:48
EllerLarsMTL49101020-7289310.8%2111317:05
HandzusMichalCHI3446100102516.0%0010213:50
JanssenCamNJ243033221127.3%000004:55
JohnsonErikCOL46713201530818.6%2500022:42
McClementJayTOR49145-424442.3%0001016:30
NikitinNikitaCBJ41211131214603.3%0000117:06
PerronDavidEDM47181735-74813813.0%7200219:27
RussellKrisCGY364121616656.2%2300123:39
SalavadorBryceNJ20022-11790.0%0000020:15
StempniakLeeCGY4271017-20261245.6%0321019:20
StrachanTysonWSH00000000.0%000000:00
WeaverMikeFLA44022-1417330.0%0000018:41
WidemanDennisCGY3321315-1316812.5%1201024:59
WinchesterBradCHI00000000.0%000000:00
Totals66376132208-2440110377.3%17164513
Average334710-120527.3%11001
GPGSWLOTLGAGAASASVSV%SO
BishopBenTB36362464671.9310299620.9354

Games to watch this week:

Root for Brewer and Bishop this Saturday against Johnson and Colorado.

Root for Boyes and Weaver this Sunday against the Michigan Black Holes.

Root for Nikitin tomorrow against the L.A. Douchebags.

For background on the feature and the original post check this out.

For more walks down memory lane, check out this feature on Curtis Sanford.

Kings Gameday: Since You've Been Gone

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Taking stock of a past, failed relationship

The year was 2011 and the Philadelphia Flyers were one year removed from a Stanley Cup Finals appearance. The Flyers got swept in the second round during the past season's playoffs, but they also finished with 106 points, good for first in the Atlantic (which was once an impressive feat). Instead of trying to get a few more key players and keep the band together for another push, the Flyers opted to change the identity of their franchise and dump some of their core guys. i.e. Mike Richards and Jeff Carter. All in all, it seemed a bit like an overreaction.

Richards wound up in Los Angeles, Carter in Columbus. Carter definitely got the less desirable of the two locales as Columbus was (is still) an awful team and it's Ohio. Naturally, Jeff was not a happy guy. He had just signed a huge contract to play in Philadelphia, got dealt to a team that had no huge prospects of being a Cup contender, and was stuck in Columbus for eternity pretty much. Seeing how bad the situation was, Carter did the one thing he could do. What anyone would do. Our generation's greatest weapon. He whined. He complained. He moped.

And it worked. He got traded. To the Kings and Richards, no less. Yada yada yada, win a Cup. That's all common knowledge though at this point. What we didn't see was the real ugliness of Cartlumbous. Jeff Carter got the hot, supermodel team and got hitched. He moved to a nice, sunny neighborhood. He's important and respected at his job. Life is good. Columbus meanwhile has struggled. They say they have a younger, more talented goal scorer. That doesn't cover the fact that they moved conferences. Maybe distance helps? And they definitely haven't been staying up all night watching The Notebook over and over again while plowing through buckets of "Americone Dream", caressing their framed picture of Jeff, pleading for him to just give them another shot, one more chance Jeff, it will be different this time.

Well, if Columbus has been getting over their bad break up, they maybe shouldn't read this:

  • Columbus had only 16 wins last season. Jeff Carter had 8 game winning goals.
  • In the 2013 season, Jeff Carter led the Kings in goals with 26.
  • In the 2013 season, the Columbus Blue Jackets leading goal scorer was Mark Letestu with 13.
  • Jeff Carter with his 19 goals this season would be leading the Columbus Blue Jackets in goals.
  • Even with the Kings skull-fuckingly bad power play, Carter would be tied for the power play goal scoring lead in Columbus this season, and would have led the team in 2013.
  • Jeff Carter has 3 game winning goals in the playoffs for the Kings. Columbus, well...I guess that's not really fair.
  • Speaking of which, the Kings winning percentage since they added Jeff Carter is 60%.
  • Including a 66% winning percentage in the playoffs.
  • Columbus's winning percentage is an even 50%.
  • Jack Johnson.
  • Seriously, Jack Johnson and a first round pick for Jakub Voracek, Sean Courtier, and Nick Cousins is what that wound up as.
  • Thanks!




Jerk-Off 2014

Yesterday featured the Devils and Ryane Clowe, and despite getting less votes than Cam Janssen, is moving on regardless. Why? Cause I'm calling the shots here, and every election is rigged anyways. As for today, hey, a team that's actually playing against the Kings today! Yep, it's the Blue Jackets. They have some real notable butt-beads in Columbus, but you tend to forget about them. Mostly, well, because it's Columbus and they don't get a ton of exposure outside of the Columbus Necktie, or Columbus Sidecar, or Columbus pipe cleaner, or-never mind. Here we are:

James Wisniewski

Well, there was this, and then there was this. But there was also this, and that was pretty funny.

Brandon Dubinsky

Dubinsky has been a player that always plays pretty close to the edge. You know, the type of guy you fucking hate playing against because he runs you every chance he gets.

Jared Boll

"Me Boll. Boll punch! What hockey?" Boll is now the longest tenured member of the Blue Jackets. He's also been the team's assistant captain this year and dear god I can't even believe that. Get help, Columbus.

Jack Johnson

Hahahahahahaha, this fucking guy.

Prediction: Jeff Carter gets flattened by Jack Johnson as he tries to fight the tears. Johnson's dad remains unimpressed.




Poll
Who's the biggest jerk on the Blue Jackets?

  25 votes |Results

Smart Men Doing Stupid Things

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Richard Sherman, John Tortorella and Peter Gammons are not stupid guys . . . really, they aren't. However, over the past few days they proved what wives have known forever . . . guys can be really stupid when they put their minds to it.

Writing can be hard.  There are times when the brain struggles in vain to find a topic that people would find engaging.  Other time, the topic comes easily, but the words won't flow.  It's kind of like golf -- if the irons are good, the putting sucks.  If the putting works, the driver takes a vacation.  When all of the areas of the game click at the same time, the experience is sublime.

Just as rarely, the Writing Gods smile upon you and provide a veritable bounty of material, for which the challenge is not to create words, but to find some way to limit what makes its way to the page.  Over the past 72 hours, the Gods gave us John Tortorella, Peter Gammons and RIchard Sherman.  Let's begin the feast.

Sherman's March to Stupidity

In the interests of fair disclosure, I've been a life-long 49er fan, having spent countless Sundays on the hard benches of Kezar Stadium, then the nicer seats -- but worse weather -- at Candlestick Park.  I suffered for years until Bill Walsh, Joe Montana, Ronnie Lott & Co. arrived and brought Super Bowl goodness to Baghdad by the Bay.  So, Sunday's loss to the Seahawks was personally agonizing for me, particularly coming as it did.   However, I'm also a Stanford alum --  from whence Richard Sherman came to the NFL.  Indeed, several players and coaches on both sides have Stanford connections, so  there are conflicts of allegiance all over the place.  However, as I hope becomes apparent, my observations are not colored by the final score, but by a broader concern over the caliber of conduct that has crept into the NFL in recent years.

To start, Richard Sherman is not The Great Satan for his remarks.  Is he cocky?  Absolutely.  Brash?  No doubt.  Evil?  No.   Do some digging and you'll find that he can be thoughtful, reflective and a contributor to society, well beyond the bounds of the football field.  But his antics on Sunday went well beyond reason, and his apology  the next day, while articulately stated, simply isn't good enough.

I get adrenaline, and understand that the heat of battle can lead to some bizarre manifestations.  Been there, done that in my college sports days.  I also understand that the modern world of professional sports involves a certain sense of theater, such that the on-field personas today diverge more dramatically from the off-field characters of those involved than ever before.  Think the on-stage vision of Alice Cooper vs. the right-wing, golf playing reality when not on tour.  I'd love to think that Sherman was just putting on an act or -- even better -- just trying to totally befuddle ace reporter Erin Andrews.  (Which he did, by the way, despite her later protestations to the contrary).  Unfortunately, his remarks are just part of an increasingly boorish pattern of behavior that now permeates the league.

You see, I cling to the notion that the word "professional" means something more than simply receiving a paycheck for what others do for fun.  I like to thing that being a professional carries with it a set of responsibilities to the public at large and the sport itself.  Jim Brown, Walter Payton, Dick Butkus, Ray Nitschke, Roger Staubach, Joe Montana, Jerry Rice . . . they all managed to ply their trade at the very highest level of the game, while maintaining a professional demeanor.  It used to be that a guy scoring a touchdown simply handed the ball to the referee as he crossed the line.  "Act like you've been there before" was the mantra veterans passed down to the rookies.

I don't want to take the joy out of the game.  Far from it.  True elation and celebration is terrific.  But what we see week in and week out is not a spontaneous expression of joy -- it is an increasingly orchestrated tableau of egotism, displayed after every tackle, sack, tipped pass, catch or first down.  Maybe I'm the stupid one, but I was under the impression that these guys were paid to do those things.  The  "Superman" and bicep kissing antics of Cam Newton and Colin Kaepernick are , in a word, classless.

At the end, that's what Sherman's remarks signify --  the loss of any semblance of class.  Sherman justifies his remarks by claiming that Michael Crabtree made some disparaging private remarks to him.  OK, fine.  Private remarks, right?  So, basic decency would call for his response to similarly be private, not a lunatic tirade on national television.  Sherman is a great cornerback.  Crabtree is a terrific receiver.  Both made some great plays during what was a wonderful football game.  It does not elevate the game, the sport or Richard Sherman to belittle the opposition or use words to exalt his own standing.  Others will be the judge of that in time.  In the meantime, show some gratitude for having the chance to play the game and the fact that one of your teammates happened to be in the area to catch that ball.  In other words, act like you've been there before.

The Tortorella Treat

We all knew it was going to happen, didn't we.   Ever since John Tortorella inked his signature on the contract to coach the Vancouver Canucks, the Death Watch has been underway for the first emotional meltdown.  To his credit, it has come later than many expected, but it came -- with all of the certainty of the swallows returning to San Juan Capistrano (or the buzzards to Hinckley, Ohio).

For those who have been in a coma, or on the International Space Station, a brief review is in order.  In Saturday night's game between the host Vancouver Canucks and the Calgary Flames, Calgary coach Bob Hartley elected to start a questionable lineup of fourth line thugs.  Tortorella, as the home coach, had the last line change, so countered in kind.  The result was as predictable as joining two halves of a critical mass of plutonium.  BOOM!   The line brawl actually petered out fairly quickly.  However, Torts was at the peak of his New York form.  He screamed and yelled at the Calgary bench, though fell short of doing a Patrick Roy dismantling of the barrier between the two benches.  Instead -- in what must have seemed like a good idea at the time -- he chose to confront the Calgary staff and players in between periods outside the Calgary locker room --  traditionally a "No Fly Zone" under NHL rules.   Unfortunately for Torts, that part of the episode was captured by Hockey Night in Canada cameras, and his intent was laid bare by a Tom Sestito tweet that came thereafter.  Ruh, roh . . .

When all was said and done, the NHL gave Tortorella a 15-day (6 game) unpaid vacation, and fined Calgary's Bob Hartley $25,000 for what amounts to "conduct unbecoming to the game."  In reality, Hartley was fined for taking advantage of an easy mark -- getting the better of John Tortorella from an emotional standpoint is akin to shooting fish in a barrel.

Again, I get the emotion from coaches, and it has its place.  Baseball managers kicking dirt on umpires' shoes is a time-honored tradition.  The anguished and expressive tirades by 49er coach Jim Harbaugh are quickly becoming YouTube favorites, and I frankly would love to see more emotion out of Blue Jackets coach Todd Richards.  Passion is terrific, but we are again at a point where "passion" is too frequently used as an excuse for behavior that is unacceptable under any standard you choose to apply.

Torts is smart.  He knows hockey.  He has a terrific foundation that does great charitable work.  He also knows that the world is waiting for him to go batshit crazy.  And yet he allows himself to do just that.  With the last change, he had choices.  He could have put a fast scoring line out on the ice and refused to engage.  Best case is that the face-off is won and the line is fast enough to get the puck in the zone and score.  Worst case is that a couple of your guys take a couple of punches, and you end up with a power play, and the other team is hauled alone to the NHL offices.

Torts could have chosen the high road, but didn't.  He played Charlie Brown to the Flame's Lucy, and when the ball was pulled away at the last second, he had the chutzpah to act outraged. Magnifying the crime by assailing the opposition in the tunnel just added to the fiasco.  It was all needless.  Did he really think that his tirade was going to have some constructive impact?  No, despite being a smart guy, he did not think at all, and he'll now pay the price.  Deservedly so.

The Gammons Report

To top things off, we have the case of the venerable Peter Gammons, the Boston-bred, Groton-educated sage of all things baseball.   In the wake of the Tortorella story, Gammons stirred the pot by issuing the following tweet from his journalistic throne:

Calgary and Vancouver last night reiterated why the NHL is a minor sport.

First, someone of Gammons' journalistic standing should recognize that the NHL is a league, not a sport.  The sport is hockey -- apparently one with which he is unfamiliar, despite having had a cup of coffee covering the sport for Sports Illustrated.

To be sure, the Tortorella incident does not bathe the sport of hockey in glory -- hence the suspension and fines.  But seriously, Peter Gammons has about as much business commenting on hockey as I do discussing jai alai.  With a single pejorative sentence, he dismisses a large segment of North America -- namely Canada -- where baseball is a minor sport.  If he put his critical thinking to the topic, he would certainly realize that fighting and the "goon" aspect of hockey is significantly reduced from its former standing in the game, and that the growth of youth and college hockey in the United States is significant.

Perhaps more importantly, Gammons should take a harder look at his own game before casting aspersions elsewhere.  Two words for you Pete - - Alex Rodriguez.   Of course, the steroid/HGH topic in baseball is just the latest iteration of a long-standing phenomenon.  Players have been relying on chemicals to aid performance since the earliest days of the game, when amphetamines were routinely used to  counter hangovers and provide the needed energy to play. It's also a bit difficult to expound upon the sanctity and timeless nature of records in a sport that does not have defined dimensions for its playing areas (outside the base baths and mound) and allows clubs to raise and lower fences as they see fit.

Am I being a bit harsh?  Sure.  I love baseball as well, but the point is that it would be the height of arrogance to summarily dismiss baseball as a sport because of the foibles and idiosyncrasies that the game displays on occasion.  It would also probably be imprudent to point out that ice hockey, unlike baseball, is an Olympic sport, somehwat indicative of its worldwide standing.  Just sayin' . . .

Final Words

The commonality between Sherman, Tortorella and Gammons is that they engaged in boorish behavior when they are smart enough to know better.  This is not a shock to wives, who have been noting this tendency for centuries.  However, it's time that the rest of us start recognizing these incidents for what they are, and not attempt to justify them as "passion", "commitment" or "the competitive nature of the sport."  Its bad behavior.  Period.

As that other ace reporter, Ron Burgundy, would say:  "Stay classy."

Sergei Bobrovsky, Nathan Horton propelling red-hot Blue Jackets

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The Blue Jackets can set a franchise record for consecutive wins with a win Tuesday night, but whether they beat the Kings or not, they've put themselves in the thick of the Eastern Conference playoff race.

The Columbus Blue Jackets captured the attention of the hockey world last season by winning nine of their last 10 games down the stretch and missing the Western Conference playoff cut by just a single point in the truncated 48-game season.

This year's edition of the Jackets is putting the same kind of push together after the same number of games played, moving into the Eastern Conference's final wild card spot through 48 games thanks to their current six-game winning streak, which happens to tie the franchise record. Columbus has lost just once since New Year's Day, and they have  reached the 24-win mark to equal their total from 2013's lockout-shortened campaign.

Columbus' streak has been fueled by adding two injured players in Nathan Horton and Sergei Bobrovsky back to the lineup.

Horton, who signed a seven-year, $37.1 million deal with the club in July, played his first game for the franchise -- and his first since suiting up for Boston in the Stanley Cup Final -- on Jan. 2. Columbus won that game against Phoenix, and six of seven games since, with the winger notching five points over the course of those eight contests. In addition to playing well, Horton adds grit and playoff experience to the lineup, and leadership in the dressing.

Bobrovsky has been a boost to the Jackets since returning from a groin injury that sidelined him one month, going 5-0-0 with a 1.74 goals-against average and an impressive .945 save percentage. He has made some key stops, including one big one on Alex Ovechkin on Friday night, that have sparked comparisons to last year's Vezina Trophy performance. Bobrovsky was a major reason the Blue Jackets were on the cusp of the postseason, and after a slow start, he has been terrific in his return from injury.

One of the long-term benefits of last year's run may be that it helped teach a younger roster about pressure, and the confidence you gain when you play well. That confidence showed in the latest streak.

"Every game's a big game for us right now, every game's a playoff game," Jackets center Brandon Dubinsky said Saturday following the team's 4-3 shootout win over the Sabres. "That's the way we're approaching it. ... We're doing a hell of a job finding ways to get points, finding ways to control the play large portions of the game."

"I think we had trouble having complete 60 minute games [earlier in the season]," Ryan Johansen said. "We're still not perfect, or anything like that, we've been more solid in games. You have to give [Bobrovsky] a lot of credit. Since he has been back, he has been solid back in the net there, and guys have a lot of confidence in him. We're playing well in front of him."

For a team that got off to a 5-10-0 start, the Jackets have since gone 19-10-4 since to put themselves right back in contention with the record-tying run.

"It's always good to be good on a team that's making history in the organization," Marcus Foligno said with a smile. "It's awesome. You see where we are in the standings and we're fighting for a playoff spot along with a bunch of other great teams, it's right going to come right down to the wire."

Now, with a chance to show the depth of the roster over a full 82-game slate, Dubinsky feels the Blue Jackets are playing with more confidence as of late.

"We're getting some swagger in here and some confidence, and we continue to work hard day-in and day-out, and we're getting rewarded right now," he said.

"A confident team, a confident person, that stuff carries over onto the ice," he added. "We're confident in here we're going play better games. Every 60 minutes we're not going to be perfect, but the more we strive to it, the better we're going to be. Six in the row in the NHL isn't easy to do."

Tuesday night at home against the Kings, the Jackets will look to set a new franchise mark, and Johansen is looking forward to the opportunity.

"It's a great opportunity for our hockey club, he said. "We're playing a very good team in L.A., and it'd be a great one to win at home against a team like that."

More importantly for Columbus, though, is that after 48 games the team has again worked its way back into a playoff spot. This time around, the Jackets get another 34 games to go before they can return to the playoffs for the first time since 2009.

More from SB Nation NHL:

Canadiens struggles aren’t going away without change

Ryan Suter’s incredible, record-setting workload

Potty Mouths: The SB Nation hockey blog profanity rankings

Photo: Here’s Dodger Stadium with an ice rink

Olympics:Injuries might alter Canada’s roster | USA roster analysis

Olympic rosters shouldn’t be built with NHL restraints

Blue Jackets 5, Capitals 1 - Game Highlights

Blue Jackets 4, Sabres 3 (SO) - Game Highlights


LBC Game Day Preview: Florida Panthers at Buffalo Sabres

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A day after their unexpected trouncing of the red-hot Pittsburgh Penguins, the Panthers head to snowy Buffalo to try and continue their solid play against the Sabres.

It must be a pretty frustrating thing to be the head coach and/or general manager of the Florida Panthers. Night in and night out, you have almost no idea what team you're going to see. It might be the team that rolls four solid lines, forechecks like crazy and causes tons of turnovers, and plays solid defensive hockey with superb goaltending to back it up. The next game, it might be a team of 20-plus guys who have never seen each other before and not one of them speaks the same language. Oh, and they're all jet-lagged and have the flu, so they skate like both ankles are broken. It's mind-boggling and infuriating, but it can also be inspiring and fun... depending on the night, of course.

Last night we saw what the Panthers can be as they smashed the Pittsburgh Penguins 5-1 on the road. There was solid play for the majority of the game at both ends of the ice, and aside from a few bad turnovers in their own zone, the Cats managed to smack the Pens despite being outshot. Yes, the unbelievably bad power play still hasn't clicked, but the Cats scored another shorthanded goal and didn't allow a power-play goal to the league's best power play, so there's at least some special teams stuff that's positive. The Panthers turned in a pretty complete effort against what looked to be a mostly disinterested Pittsburgh team and the score reflected that.

Will the Panthers ever learn to keep their foot on the gas, and continue to press that pedal down further as they gain momentum? If this team could just play solid, 60-minute games every single night, throughout the whole lineup, they have enough talent now to overcome some mistakes. They'll have to do it again tonight against the Buffalo Sabres, losers of their last three and in the midst of a three-game homestand. Buffalo has beaten the Panthers once already this year and nearly did the last time the two teams met, with the Cats narrowly escaping with a 2-1 shootout victory. The Panthers can't let their eye-opening win against the Penguins go anywhere but into the past, as no one cares about what they did, but rather what they'll be doing next. Let's hope that next thing is continuing to play a full 60-minute effort, resulting in two more points in the standings.

It'll be warm and toasty in the LBC GameThread tonight, so no need for toques, eh? Die by the Blade has your Sabres coverage, as well as some glamour shots of John Scott in the penalty box, if you're into that kind of thing.

Players to Watch

Cody Hodgson - He returned to the Buffalo lineup on January 12, and has had a point in every game since (2G, 3A). Hodgson is the closest thing the Sabres have right now to a true top-line centerman, and he's been steadily producing regardless of the opponent. The Sabres have Hodgson locked up to a long-term deal through 2019, so the organization and fans want to see that kind of production out of the young center. The Cats will have to keep Hodgson out of the equation by keeping him out of high-traffic areas in front and pressuring him behind the net, where he's dangerous with time and space.

Jesse Winchester - Welcome back, Mr. Winchester. He returned to the lineup against the Penguins after missing almost a full month with a hand injury. The Panthers immediately benefitted from having him back in the lineup and playing that pesky, persistent forechecking role he's embraced this season, and as a result he posted three helpers en route to the win. He's a welcome addition back to the lineup and his work ethic and wrecking-ball style of play is something several other players on the roster could learn from.

Tyler Myers - The tall, lanky defenseman has regressed in recent seasons from his excellent rookie season, but he's still a force for the Sabres and has hit a bit of a scoring streak as of late, potting two goals in the Sabres last loss against Columbus, and scoring four points in his last four games. The Panthers will have to stay aware of Myers jumping up into the play and his booming shot from the point while on the man advantage, as he scored one of his two goals against the Blue Jackets in the same fashion.

Jimmy Hayes - Acquired from Chicago in the Kris Versteeg deal, Hayes hasn't shown up much lately and has made almost no impact while skating on the fourth line alongside Drew Shore and Shawn Matthias. He's only seeing a little over nine minutes of ice time a game, but a man with his size should be registering on the physical side of things. Hayes seems reticent to throw the body around and cause havoc, something the fourth line should be doing every shift. There's a reason Krys Barch keeps getting inserted in place of Hayes, and it's because he's at least lining the opposition up and finishing checks when he's out there. Hayes, however, has a bigger upside offensively and the Cats would like to see him doing both more regularly.

Game Preview #49 - Flush With 7's

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The Jackets go for win number seven in a row, as #7 Jack Johnson and #77 (formerly #7) Jeff Carter renew acquaintances with their former teams.

Los Angeles Kings at Columbus Blue Jackets

January 21, 2014 - 7:00 pm EST
Nationwide Arena - Columbus, Ohio
Radio - WBNS 97.1 - TV - Fox Sports Ohio
Opponent's Blog: Jewels From The Crown
SBN's Kings vs Blue Jackets Coverage

And, here we are. After Saturday's trip to Buffalo, the Jackets now come back to Nationwide where they will play six of their next seven games. They are now winners of six in a row (three of those at home), and seven of eight, and have managed to propel themselves into the playoff race. Whereas last season after 48 games, they were on the outside looking in, this season after 48 games they're in a wild card spot.

The difference? This season has 34 more games to go. Oh, right.

The Kings come in on the second night of a back-to-back, having played (and lost) in Boston last night, and then head west afterward with two against red-hot Anaheim coming up this weekend. With all that in mind, the Kings are presumably a tired team, and having played against Boston last night and with the Ducks looming, there's a chance for let-down (the Jackets, for as well as they've been playing, still ain't the Broons or the Ducks). That said, this Kings team is still very good, and still very tough to score on. The Jackets need to bring the same kind of game they did Friday against Washington, and ride a (hopefully strong) home crowd to send the Kings on their way.

Given the Kings' schedule, it seems *likely* that Martin Jones will get the start in goal. These two teams present interesting challenges to one another, in that the Jackets' strength has been their scoring, whereas the Kings are the best defensive team in the league in terms of goals-against-per. Conversely, the Jackets' gapg number has hovered around 2.8 all season, but the Kings can't really consistently generate goals. Look at the head-to-head below; they complement each other quite nicely, in fact.

On Special Teams, the Kings get a bit of the edge, as their PK is very, very good, and the Jackets' PK has been inconsistent-to-bad for quite a while; they're killing off 83.9% of them in the new year (during their 7-1-0 stretch), but that number is only slightly better than their season average. The rub? Of late, the Jackets' PP has been improving steadily. Since Nathan Horton's first game, the Jackets are converting at a rate of 30.8% (eight goals, 26 PPs), and that doesn't even cover the goals they've scored lately just after a Power Play has expired (Friday against the Caps, Saturday against the Sabes, for example). I can't put my finger on what Horton is bringing, and some credit goes to Jack Johnson and his improvement, but whatever it is... man. A fella could get used to a team converting at 30% on the man advantage, for sure. They've actually climbed up into the top half of the league, when just two weeks ago the PP seemed completely devoid of hope.

The Jackets get Fedor Tyutin back from injury, and otherwise will ice the same lineup they've been riding with during the winning streak.

Also, Jeff Carter can still eat it.

Projected Lineups

Columbus Blue Jackets
(24-20-4, 52 Points; 4th division, 8th conference)

Matt CalvertBrandon DubinskyCam Atkinson
Boone JennerArtem AnisimovNathan Horton
Nick FolignoRyan JohansenR.J. Umberger
Derek MacKenzieMark LetestuCorey Tropp
Jack JohnsonFedor Tyutin
Ryan MurrayJames Wisniewski
Nikita NikitinDavid Savard
Sergei Bobrovsky
Curtis McElhinney

Los Angeles Kings
(29-15-6, 64 Points; 3rd Division, 6th Conference)

Dustin BrownAnze KopitarJeff Carter
Matt FrattinMike RichardsJustin Williams
Dwight KingJarret StollTrevor Lewis
Kyle CliffordColin FraserJordan Nolan
Jake MuzzinDrew Doughty
Slava VoynovRobyn Regehr
Willie MitchellAlec Martinez
Martin Jones
Jonathan Quick

Season Series

01/21/14 - Los Angeles at Columbus
02/06/14 - Columbus at Los Angeles

Head to Head Stats

Los AngelesColumbus
2.44 (23)GPG2.79 (11)
1.98 (1)GAPG2.79 (19)
15.2% (23)PP%19.0% (13)
84.5% (6)PK%79.9% (21)
Jeff Carter, 19G leaderRyan Johansen, 18
Anze Kopitar, 27A leaderJames Wisniewski, 24
Anze Kopitar, 40Pts leaderRyan Johansen, 36
Kyle Clifford, 58PIM leaderBrandon Dubinsky, 78
13-9-3Road/Home12-9-2
1/20 @ Boston, L 3-2Last Game1/18 @ Buffalo, W 4-3 (SO)
4-4-2Last 107-3-0

Game Day #49 - CBJ vs. Kings

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The Jackets go for win number seven in a row, as #7 Jack Johnson and #77 (formerly #7) Jeff Carter renew acquaintances with their former teams.

Los Angeles Kings at Columbus Blue Jackets

January 21, 2014 - 7:00 pm EST
Nationwide Arena - Columbus, Ohio
Radio - WBNS 97.1 - TV - Fox Sports Ohio
Opponent's Blog: Jewels From The Crown
SBN's Kings vs Blue Jackets Coverage

And, here we are. After Saturday's trip to Buffalo, the Jackets now come back to Nationwide where they will play six of their next seven games. They are now winners of six in a row (three of those at home), and seven of eight, and have managed to propel themselves into the playoff race. Whereas last season after 48 games, they were on the outside looking in, this season after 48 games they're in a wild card spot.

The difference? This season has 34 more games to go. Oh, right.

The Kings come in on the second night of a back-to-back, having played (and lost) in Boston last night. With that in mind, it seems *likely* that Martin Jones will get the start in goal. These two teams present interesting challenges to one another, in that the Jackets' strength has been their scoring, whereas the Kings are the best defensive team in the league in terms of goals-against-per. Conversely, the Jackets' gapg number has hovered around 2.8 all season, but the Kings can't really consistently generate goals. Look at the head-to-head below; they complement each other quite nicely, in fact.

On Special Teams, the Kings get a bit of the edge, as their PK is very, very good, and the Jackets' PK has been inconsistent-to-bad for quite a while; they're killing off 83.9% of them in the new year (during their 7-1-0 stretch), but that number is only slightly better than their season average. The rub? Of late, the Jackets' PP has been improving steadily. Since Nathan Horton's first game, the Jackets are converting at a rate of 30.8% (eight goals, 26 PPs), and that doesn't even cover the goals they've scored lately just after a Power Play has expired (Friday against the Caps, Saturday against the Sabes, for example). I can't put my finger on what Horton is bringing, and some credit goes to Jack Johnson and his improvement, but whatever it is... man. A fella could get used to a team converting at 30% on the man advantage, for sure. They've actually climbed up into the top half of the league, when just two weeks ago the PP seemed completely devoid of hope.

The Kings are presumably a tired team, and having played against Boston last night there's a chance for let-down (the Jackets, for as well as they've been playing, still ain't the Broons). That said, this Kings team is still very good, and still very tough to score on. The Jackets need to bring the same kind of game they did Friday against Washington, and ride a (hopefully strong) home crowd to send the Kings on their way.

Oh, and Jeff Carter can still eat it.

Projected Lineups

Columbus Blue Jackets
(24-20-4, 52 Points; 4th division, 8th conference)

Matt CalvertBrandon DubinskyCam Atkinson
Boone JennerArtem AnisimovNathan Horton
Nick FolignoRyan JohansenR.J. Umberger
Derek MacKenzieMark LetestuCorey Tropp
Jack JohnsonFedor Tyutin
Ryan MurrayJames Wisniewski
Nikita NikitinDavid Savard
Sergei Bobrovsky
Curtis McElhinney

Los Angeles Kings
(29-15-6, 64 Points; 3rd Division, 6th Conference)

Dustin BrownAnze KopitarJeff Carter
Matt FrattinMike RichardsJustin Williams
Dwight KingJarret StollTrevor Lewis
Kyle CliffordColin FraserJordan Nolan
Jake MuzzinDrew Doughty
Slava VoynovRobyn Regehr
Willie MitchellAlec Martinez
Martin Jones
Jonathan Quick

Season Series

01/21/14 - Los Angeles at Columbus
02/06/14 - Columbus at Los Angeles

Head to Head Stats

Los AngelesColumbus
2.44 (23)GPG2.79 (11)
1.98 (1)GAPG2.79 (19)
15.2% (23)PP%19.0% (13)
84.5% (6)PK%79.9% (21)
Jeff Carter, 19G leaderRyan Johansen, 18
Anze Kopitar, 27A leaderJames Wisniewski, 24
Anze Kopitar, 40Pts leaderRyan Johansen, 36
Kyle Clifford, 58PIM leaderBrandon Dubinsky, 78
13-9-3Road/Home12-9-2
1/20 @ Boston, L 3-2Last Game1/18 @ Buffalo, W 4-3 (SO)
4-4-2Last 107-3-0

Game Day #51: Kings @ Blue Jackets Preview

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in which I analyze Tanner Pearson's Tinder profile

Los Angeles Kings v Columbus Blue Jackets (Nationwide Arena)

Time: 4.00 PM

TV: Fox Sports West

Enemy reading: The Cannon

Blue Jackets (projected) lineup:

Calvert-Dubinsky-Atkinson
Jenner-Anisimov-Horton
Foligno-Johansen-Umberger
MacKenzie-Letestu-Tropp

Tyutin-Johnson
Murray-Wisniewski
Nikitin-Savard

Bobrovsky

Injured: Jared Boll, Blake Comeau, Marian Gaborik, Jack Skille; Scratched: Dalton Prout

Kings (projected) lineup:

Brown-Kopitar-Carter
Frattin-Richards-Williams
King-Stoll-Lewis
Clifford-Fraser-Nolan

Muzzin-Doughty
Regehr-Voynov
Mitchell-Martinez

Jones

Injured: Matt Greene; Scratched: Linden Vey, Tanner Pearson

Game Notes:

  • The Blue Jackets lineup is straight from the team website, but the Kings lineup is a guess, after an optional morning skate. The only real things of note are that Fedor Tyutin returns to the Blue Jackets' top defensive pairing after a brief illness, and holy crap, who even remembered that Blake Comeau got traded to Columbus?
  • After sneaking by the Sabres in a 4-3 SO win, the Blue Jackets are currently in the midst of a six-game winning streak, which is...the longest streak in Columbus Blue Jackets franchise history. We're all very excited for them. But it ends tonight, in the first meeting of these two teams since last April. (Kyle Clifford scored a goal in that game! Remember what that feels like? Me neither.)
  • Thanks to their current win streak, the Blue Jackets now hold (precariously) the final wild card playoff spot in the East. After starting off the season miserably, and dealing with extensive injuries to their two marquee forwards (Nathan Horton, who missed the first 40 games of the season, and Marian Gaborik, who's only played 18 games this season), young guys like Cam Atkinson and now-leading-scorer Ryan Johansen have stepped up, veteran defenceman James Wisniewski has been producing, Sergei Bobrovsky has started making saves, and old friend Jack Johnson has been...not horrible? It's a brave new world in Columbus.
  • The Kings, by contrast, are mired in some sort of inexplicable slump. It was a rather uneven effort from the Kings in Boston yesterday afternoon, and a pretty disappointing loss, but some positives: a) Willie Mitchell goal! b)power play goal!!, c)no funny business with netting, and d)the sort of extreme carelessness which led to both of Brad Marchand's goals rarely happens with this team. They'll get over it. Everything will be fine. Deep breaths.
  • As has been glaringly obvious to anyone who's watched a Kings game in the past month or two, the Kings remain a great possession team, but seem to have a disproportionate number of their shots miss the net or get blocked. The goaltending, which was superb after Jonathan Quick went down, has been quite good since he came back (the Kings still have the highest team save percentage in the league) - that's not the problem. Whither the shots actually on goal??
  • Anyway, now that I've talked about actual hockey things, it's time to make fun of Tanner Pearson's Tinder profile!! Via the delightful Hockey Players on Tinder tumblr, here it is in all its glory.
  • First, I'd like to note that I never realised Tanner Pearson had such a weird jawline. Maybe cool it with the profile shots, kid.
  • Second, Tanner Pearson needs to join Jake Muzzin in upping his eyebrow game. Maybe it was difficult in Manchester, but you can't tell me there aren't eighteen waxing joints within a block of their hotel in LA.
  • Third, there are so few pictures of Tanner Pearson actually playing in a game in a Kings uniform that he has resorted to using pictures from warm-up. How sad.
  • Fourth, and most importantly, we now know that Tanner Pearson uses Tyler Toffoli as the "ugly friend" to make himself look better in Facebook profile pictures. POOR TYTY.
  • Between this and his Top 25 Under 25 profile, I think I've now written more words about Tanner Pearson than literally anybody else in the world. I'm going to go re-think my life choices now.
  • Prediction: 3-1 Kings, Jeff Carter hat trick, nobody matches Tanner Pearson on Tinder :(((

Duck Tales: The Ducks Lead TSN's Power Rankings

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The Canadian media finally approve of hockey in SoCal!

DUCKS NEWS

  • If you're driving to Dodger Stadium on Saturday, you'll want to buy parking now. [Pro Hockey Talk]
  • The Ducks have taken over the top spot in the NHL Power Rankings. [TSN]
  • A preview of tonight's Ducks-Winnipeg Jets game. [ESPN]
  • NHL.com's Sunday Long Read discusses the evolution of hockey in Southern California. [NHL.com]
  • An insider's look at the Dodger Stadium preparations. [Yahoo! Sports]

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