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NHL Tuesday: Blue Jackets go for 7 straight vs. Kings

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The Blue Jackets look for their seventh straight win on Tuesday night when they host the Kings, one of nine games on the Tuesday NHL schedule.

1. How will the Canucks do without John Tortorella behind the bench?

John Tortorella begins serving his 15-day suspension on Tuesday night when the Canucks host the Edmonton Oilers. How will his team do in his absence? The Canucks have been slumping recently, with just one regulation win in their past 10 games and only two wins overall. They're coming off a shootout win over the Calgary Flames on Saturday, the game that resulted in Tortorella's suspension for trying to barge into Calgary's locker room following the first period.

2. Will Alex Ovechkin play for Washington?

The NHL's leading goal-scorer is a game-time decision for the Capitals when they play the Ottawa Senators. Will Ovechkin be in the lineup, and if so, what sort of impact will he make?

3. Will there be any carryover from Jamie Benn's hit on Matt Cooke?

Dallas and Minnesota just played on Saturday, and in that game Stars forward Jamie Benn delivered a questionable hit on Matt Cooke. The NHL did not see any reason to suspend Benn for the hit. Will that be the end of the incident, or will anything happen in Tuesday's game between the two teams?

4. Will Cam Talbot allow more than two goals?

Henrik Lundqvist is under the weather and will not be in the lineup for the New York Rangers on Tuesday. That means Cam Talbot gets another start, and he has been outstanding for the blue shirts this season. In his 15 appearances, he has allowed more than two goals just two times. Will he hold the New York Islanders to two goals or less?

5. Will the Columbus Blue Jackets extend their winning streak to seven games?

The Blue Jackets currently own the final wild card spot in the Eastern Conference, and have a chance to extend their current winning streak to seven games when they host the Los Angeles Kings. Will the streak keep going?

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


Game 49 Recap: Lucky Number Seven

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Things started rough for the Blue Jackets, but a two goal outburst late in the second period gave them the boost they needed to beat the LA Kings for their record setting 7th consecutive win.

I'm not even sure how to process this one, honestly.

Things certainly didn't start well. The Jackets were in the box for a penalty less than ten seconds into the game after Matt Calvert was called for cross checking after he got into a pushing match with Trevor Lewis at the faceoff dot. The Jackets managed to kill that penalty, but Dwight King would open the scoring on the following shift when he picked up the rebound from Lewis' shot on Sergei Bobrovsky and deposited it into the net.

Insult was added to injury when Ryan Johansen was sent to the box on a crosschecking minor a minute later, but this time Bob and the PK stood to the challenge, and the entire team seemed to draw some energy from the kill. After spending far too much time reacting to the Kings and chasing the puck, the Jackets started to put a bit of offensive pressure on Martin Jones, finally drawing a power play of their own when Boone Jenner drove to the net and was knocked over by Jake Muzzin to prevent what likely would have been a tap-in goal off of Nathan Horton's pass.

The suddenly clicking power play went to work, and didn't need much time to make the Kings pay. The Controlled Chaos factored in once again, paying forward on Craig Hartsburg's faith once again. R.J. Umberger cycled the puck up to Jack Johnson after a near miss on the net, and #7 would control the puck on the blue line and set up James Wisniewski for a point shot, where Umberger was waiting to redirect it into the net.

The Kings looked for an opportunity to break through again, particularly when Artem Anisimov was boxed for delay of game after putting the puck over the glass, but the Jackets kept to their game plan, pushing the Kings out of their shooting lanes and working hard to pursue to the puck.

That effort paid off late in the period, and the fans got a nice glimpse of the future for this team when James Wisniewski took the puck behind his own net and sent it to Ryan Murray at the top of the zone. The 2012 #2 overall pick sent a picture perfect breakout pass to Ryan Johansen, who slid into the offensive zone like a knife between the ribs, popping the water bottle with a nasty wrist shot to give the Jackets a 2-1 lead with less than a minute to play in the period.

That 2-1 lead held into the first intermission, and the Jackets drew another power play, but couldn't find a way through Jones.

The momentum seemed to be building for Columbus, but things took a sudden swing when a Matt Calvert turnover in the neutral zone lead to Jeff Carter, Mike Richards, and Matt Frattin dashing back up ice on a three on one.

RIchards and Carter played a little catch, and Carter was able to cut across the crease and pop it through Bobrovsky for the tying goal, because the hockey gods are nothing if not sadistic.

That streak cuts both ways, though, because the Jackets would get a bit of divine providence late in the period, when R. J. Umberger fired a shot from the far wall that seemed like it was going wide, but Jones' attempt to glove it away backfired when the puck went off of his glove and into the net to give Columbus back their lead with 1:45 left in the frame.

The Jackets, however, weren't done.

As the period ticked away, Boone Jenner got things started by sending a nice pass up to Artem Anisimov at the top of the zone, who headed up ice with Nathan Horton. Arty waited for the right moment, then sent a pass to Horton as they crossed through the slot, and #8 snapped the puck home with fifteen seconds left for his third goal of the season.

The Kings were unsurprisingly a bit shell shocked, and more than a few fans wondered if Darryl Sutter might put Jonathan Quick out for the third period, but Jones lead his team back out onto the ice once more, and repaid his coach's faith with some fairly impressive stops, including holding his net against six shots by the Columbus power play after Brandon Dubinsky drew a cross checking call on Drew Doughty.

As the final period ticked down, there were several moments where the Jackets seemed content to let the Kings control the pace, but some excellent shifts from the fourth line provided a much needed spark, including a beautiful near-goal-experience when Mark Letestu got a feed from Corey Tropp with a wide open net, but couldn't quite settle the puck down for a shot.

There were a few more gut clenching moments, but fans in Nationwide and around the interwebs were able to breathe a huge sigh of relief when AA made something beautiful happen.

Stealing the puck away from Richards, Anisimov chipped the puck in deep to Nick Foligno, then turned himself back around and drove through the collapsing Kings, taking the puck back with a nice return pass from Foligno and tucking the puck in at the far corner for the 5-2 lead.

Robin Regehr would score one last goal for the Kings on a delayed penalty, but the Jackets still had a comfortable cushion to ride out the last few minutes of regulation, though they did make a heroic effort to set Umby up for a hat trick. Unfortunately, a combination of shot blocking, near misses, and one bad bounce kept him from being able to cash in, but I think he consoled himself fairly well with two more points and what has become a franchise record winning streak.

Final Score: Jackets 5 - Kings 3

Standard Bearers:

  • Nathan Horton - It sure doesn't feel like he's only scored three goals since his return. Once again he delivered a big goal, which would stand up as the eventual GWG.
  • R.J. Umberger - After a season that had fans calling for a trade - if not a buyout - Umby's rejuvenated himself with Foligno and Johansen. His second goal was a pretty ludicrous event, but the first one was a direct result of doing the work and putting himself where he needed to be. (Oh, and did we mention he's leading the team in power play goals?)
  • Ryan Murray - Dat Pass.
  • Artem Anisimov - AA seemed to find an extra gear after being named to Team Russia, and tonight was no exception. He delivered the insurance goal, but he was also winning faceoffs, playing strong on the puck, and continuing to click with Jenner and Horton.
Bottom of the Barrel:
  • Slow Feet - Far too much of the third period was spent with the Jackets looking around rather than pushing the play. Honestly, our friend @RedditCBJ nailed it when he said that if there had been two bad bounces, the game easily could have been tied. Can't get lazy with a lead.
  • Injuries - Matt Calvert took a shot off the leg in the third period and looked like he was still feeling the pain on his next few shifts. Hopefully it's just a stinger and he'll be fine for Thursday.
  • The Mighty Metro - Oh, now all you guys are winning, huh? The Jackets are still 'above the bar', but if the other teams in the division not named after arctic fowl keep winning as well, this is going to be a dog fight all the way to the finish.
On the eve of their 1000th franchise game, the Blue Jackets are in a playoff position and setting franchise records with stellar play both at the team and individual levels, but perhaps the best thing about tonight's victory is the attitude coming from the locker room. When guys like Richards, Horton, and Umberger talk in post-game interviews / pressers about not being satisfied, that's exciting. They know that there's more to do, and that they can be better.

That attitude, and the efforts that come with it, are going to pay off. Not just this season, but in the years to come. We kept asking when this team was going to turn the corner. Finally, we have an answer.

49 games down. 33 to go.

Here's to taking the next step.

The Curious Case of Marian Gaborik

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What is Blue Jackets' general manager Jarmo Kekalainen to do?

There was a lot of excitement when Marian Gaborik was traded to Columbus nearly a year ago. Gaborik waiving his no-trade clause brought a much needed boost of credibility to a city and fans of a team on a surprise playoff push.

But, as it goes with Gaborik throughout his entire career, injuries have been a problem. After a valiant push with the Jackets last spring and falling just a tie-breaker short of making the playoffs, Gaborik's 2013-14 season has been spotty at best. He's played in less than half of the team's games, and while 12 points in 18 games isn't too far off his typical pace, just 5 goals is not acceptable from someone making $7.5 million per year. That's nearly $2 million more than the next closest Jacket (Vezina-winning goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky).

As the trade deadline approaches, officially set for March 5th at 3 pm, the ongoing conversation in Jarmo Kekalainen's office becomes: What do we do with Marian Gaborik?

It's hard to see them trading him if the team is within earshot of a playoff position. It would be eerily similar to Adam Foote's trade and Rick Nash's trade request. It would be a blow to a team and a fanbase that can only suffer through so much mediocrity. But that doesn't change the fact that, even if he will be let go, traded, or re-signed after the season, it will affect what the Blue Jackets can and may do during the trade deadline.

His talent is obvious. The Blue Jackets need a player like Gaborik to compliment a top six including Ryan Johansen and Nathan Horton. You don't want teams to be able to stack up against a top line, essentially egging on the other 9 forwards to try to score, which has been the case in Columbus for as long as I can remember. This team is a legitimate playoff threat when they have at least two lines that scare the opposition every night. Gaborik, even when he's not scoring a lot of goals, demands a certain amount of attention. But is that attention worth north of $7 million?

It comes down to money for me. If he's willing to take a pay cut, I have no issue keeping him. But the combination of age and injury is lethal. I don't think he'll attract huge money in free agency.

– Jeff Little

It's simply not an easy question with an easy answer, but it needs to be decided. If Gaborik is willing to take, say $5.5 million, putting him in line with Horton and Bobrovsky, I could see him being a valuable asset on the team. If he wants over $6 million, would that money be better spent chasing after someone younger, healthier, and on a longer term deal?

While Gaborik's collarbone injury was a case of bad luck, the groin issues, even after having a surgical repair in the offseason, is concerning.

He has the talent to be a game breaker, but I am concerned about offering him more than a one or two year deal at this point.

– Matt Wagner

I don't see how Gaborik could be re-signed for more than one or two years given his current output. Even for a team that likely won't bump up against the salary cap, something like 3 years and $6.5 million just seems like too much to put on a question mark. Is there a team out there that would offer that to Gaborik, hoping he regains his form as a 40-goal scorer? I think at least one team would. Ottawa or New Jersey, maybe? Edmonton, if they unload some forward talent for defensive upgrades? Or, if he is willing to take a paycut, couldn't you see him going to Pittsburgh, or Detroit, or back to New York? Wouldn't that suck? Yet that's the risk of taking this into free agency.

Unfortunately, that seems to be the risk this team will have to take. Wait until the off-season, see if he'll take a discount, and if not, part ways. The Blue Jackets appear to be headed in the right direction with or without Gaborik, but this team needs a player like #10, and they don't come along very often.

Poll
What would you do with Marian Gaborik?

  265 votes |Results

Blue Jackets 5, Kings 3 - Game Highlights

Metro Update - Thursday, January 23rd

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In a new quick-hitter series, we begin to look at the Metro Division more closely to see how the playoff positions are shaking out. Let us know in the comments what other information you'd like to see in these pieces each day.

Metropolitan Division Standings - Thursday, January 23rd

TeamGPPTSWLOTLROWGDL10
Pittsburgh50723513231+417-2-1
NY Rangers52572722324-27-2-1
Philadelphia51562520622-85-3-2
Columbus*49542520421+58-2-0
New Jersey515321191121-24-3-3
Washington50522220814-102-5-3
Carolina49512119920-197-3-0
NY Islanders52492124715-227-3-0

*denotes 2nd Wild Card spot

Last Night's Results

Carolina 3 @ Philadelphia 2
Montreal 1 @ Pittsburgh 5

Division Playoff Odds

Courtesy of Sports Club Stats:

Pittsburgh - 100.0%
Columbus - 70.2%
New Jersey - 62.6%
NY Rangers - 61.3%
Philadelphia - 45.4%
Carolina - 23.3%
Washington - 15.8%
NY Islanders - 3.7%

Who Helps Us Tonight

Philadelphia at Columbus (+5.3)
St. Louis at NY Rangers (+0.7)
Carolina at Buffalo (+0.7)
Pittsburgh at NY Islanders (+0.1)

Game Preview #50: Paint By Numbers - 1,000. 50. 8. 3rd. 2.

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It's a total confluence of events at Nationwide tonight, as Game #50 for the season is also Game #1000 for the franchise, the Jackets go for eight wins in a row, and two points separates these teams from the 3rd Metro playoff spot.

Philadelphia Flyers at Columbus Blue Jackets

January 23, 2014 - 7:00 pm EST
Nationwide Arena - Columbus, Ohio
Radio - WBNS 97.1 - TV - Fox Sports Ohio
Opponent's Blog: Broad Street Hockey
SBN's Flyers vs Blue Jackets coverage

The Blue Jackets take the ice for the one thousandth time tonight. I will be there. I hope many of you are there as well. It should be pretty cool.

Likewise, they take the ice for the fiftieth time this season. And, as we get to the point in the season where watching the standings becomes a daily occurance, as fate would have it tonight's game has huge implications in the standings. The Flyers come in just two points ahead of Columbus, hanging on to the third Metro playoff spot. Given games played, a regulation win for the Jackets would put them ahead of Philly based on the tie-breaker.

It would also be the Jackets' eighth win in a row, which would continue their franchise record.

I remember after the first game between these two that many of us speculated about how that game might loom large in the spring. Those were two points that the Jackets might need at the end of the season. Granted, there are still a lot of games to go, but we may instead look back on that game as the turning point of the season. To wit, here's some more numbers-fun: since that implosion in Philly, the Jackets have gone 11-3-0. So, yeah, there's that, too.

The Jackets caught a mini-break in that the Flyers' game against Carolina got pushed to last night because of snow, which means now that tonight's game is a back-to-back for them. Also, they lost last night on a late goal. They didn't play well (and at least two of the goals scored against them involved Steve Mason's tricky missing high-glove coverage) throughout, and are scuffling a bit of late, with just two wins in their last seven games.

What have the Jackets done in their last seven games, I wonder? Oh, yeah. That's right.

One thing presumably missing--AGAIN--from tonight's game will be Steve Mason's "official" return to Nationwide, as (surprise surprise) Ray Emery gets the start. And, just because I feel like pointing it out, since December 7th, Mason has compiled a .891 save percentage on 470 shots. Have fun with that contract, Philly!

In the other crease, it's Sergei Bobrovsky's first game against his former club since being traded in the summer of 2012. Conversely to Mason, Bob has a save percentage of .938 in the six games he's played since coming back from his groin injury. Not coincidentally, the Jackets are 6-0-0 in those six games.

At any rate, enjoy the atmosphere tonight, as the puck drops for the 1,000th time in Blue Jackets' history!

Projected Lineups

Columbus Blue Jackets
(25-20-4, 54 Points; 4th division, 8th conference)

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

Philadelphia Flyers
(25-20-6, 56 Points; 3rd division, 7th conference)

Michael RafflClaude GirouxJakub Voracek
Scott HartnellBrayden SchennWayne Simmonds
Matt ReadSean CouturierVincent Lecavalier
Steve DownieAdam HallChris VandeVelde
Kimmo TimonenBraydon Coburn
Mark StreitNicklas Grossmann
Luke SchennAndrej Meszaros
Ray Emery
Steve Mason

Season Series

12/19/13 - Columbus 4 at Philadelphia 5
12/21/13 - Philadelphia 3 at Columbus 6
01/23/14 - Philadelphia at Columbus
04/03/14 - Columbus at Philadelphia

Head to Head Stats

PhiladelphiaColumbus
2.67 (17)GPG2.84 (8)
2.78 (18)GAPG2.80 (19)
18.5% (18)PP%19.2% (13)
84.2% (6)PK%80.2% (19)
Wayne Simmonds, 17G leaderRyan Johansen, 19
Claude Giroux, 32A leaderJames Wisniewski, 26
Claude Giroux, 46Pts leaderRyan Johansen, 37
Zac Rinaldo, 101PIM leaderBrandon Dubinsky, 78
12-11-5Road/Home13-9-2
1/22 vs. Carolina, L 3-2Last Game1/21 vs. Los Angeles, W 5-3
5-3-2Last 108-2-0

Game Day #50: CBJ vs. Flyers

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It's a total confluence of events at Nationwide tonight, as Game #50 for the season is also Game #1000 for the franchise, the Jackets go for eight wins in a row, and two points separates these teams from the 3rd Metro playoff spot.

Philadelphia Flyers at Columbus Blue Jackets

January 23, 2014 - 7:00 pm EST
Nationwide Arena - Columbus, Ohio
Radio - WBNS 97.1 - TV - Fox Sports Ohio
Opponent's Blog: Broad Street Hockey
SBN's Flyers vs Blue Jackets coverage

The Blue Jackets take the ice for the one thousandth time tonight. I will be there. I hope many of you are there as well. It should be pretty cool.

Likewise, they take the ice for the fiftieth time this season. And, as we get to the point in the season where watching the standings becomes a daily occurance, as fate would have it tonight's game has huge implications in the standings. The Flyers come in just two points ahead of Columbus, hanging on to the third Metro playoff spot. Given games played, a regulation win for the Jackets would put them ahead of Philly based on the tie-breaker.

It would also be the Jackets' eighth win in a row, which would continue their franchise record.

I remember after the first game between these two that many of us speculated about how that game might loom large in the spring. Those were two points that the Jackets might need at the end of the season. Granted, there are still a lot of games to go, but we may instead look back on that game as the turning point of the season. To wit, here's some more numbers-fun: since that implosion in Philly, the Jackets have gone 11-3-0. So, yeah, there's that, too.

The Jackets caught a mini-break in that the Flyers' game against Carolina got pushed to last night because of snow, which means now that tonight's game is a back-to-back for them. Also, they lost last night on a late goal. They didn't play well (and at least two of the goals scored against them involved Steve Mason's tricky missing high-glove coverage) throughout, and are scuffling a bit of late, with just two wins in their last seven games.

What have the Jackets done in their last seven games, I wonder? Oh, yeah. That's right.

One thing presumably missing--AGAIN--from tonight's game will be Steve Mason's "official" return to Nationwide, as (surprise surprise) Ray Emery gets the start. And, just because I feel like pointing it out, since December 7th, Mason has compiled a .891 save percentage on 470 shots. Have fun with that contract, Philly!

In the other crease, it's Sergei Bobrovsky's first game against his former club since being traded in the summer of 2012. Conversely to Mason, Bob has a save percentage of .938 in the six games he's played since coming back from his groin injury. Not coincidentally, the Jackets are 6-0-0 in those six games.

At any rate, enjoy the atmosphere tonight, as the puck drops for the 1,000th time in Blue Jackets' history!

Projected Lineups

Columbus Blue Jackets
(25-20-4, 54 Points; 4th division, 8th conference)

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

Philadelphia Flyers
(25-20-6, 56 Points; 3rd division, 7th conference)

Michael RafflClaude GirouxJakub Voracek
Scott HartnellBrayden SchennWayne Simmonds
Matt ReadSean CouturierVincent Lecavalier
Steve DownieAdam HallChris VandeVelde
Kimmo TimonenBraydon Coburn
Mark StreitNicklas Grossmann
Luke SchennAndrej Meszaros
Ray Emery
Steve Mason

Season Series

12/19/13 - Columbus 4 at Philadelphia 5
12/21/13 - Philadelphia 3 at Columbus 6
01/23/14 - Philadelphia at Columbus
04/03/14 - Columbus at Philadelphia

Head to Head Stats

PhiladelphiaColumbus
2.67 (17)GPG2.84 (8)
2.78 (18)GAPG2.80 (19)
18.5% (18)PP%19.2% (13)
84.2% (6)PK%80.2% (19)
Wayne Simmonds, 17G leaderRyan Johansen, 19
Claude Giroux, 32A leaderJames Wisniewski, 26
Claude Giroux, 46Pts leaderRyan Johansen, 37
Zac Rinaldo, 101PIM leaderBrandon Dubinsky, 78
12-11-5Road/Home13-9-2
1/22 vs. Carolina, L 3-2Last Game1/21 vs. Los Angeles, W 5-3
5-3-2Last 108-2-0

Flyers vs. Blue Jackets: Game 52 of 82, Complete coverage

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The Flyers take on the Blue Jackets, who have been reaaaaaally good lately.

Remember when things were falling in the Flyers favor, despite the fact that it didn't feel like they should be falling in their favor?

No worries about that anymore. In their last seven, the Flyers have gone 2-3-2. Ew.

Yeah, the Flyers have fallen back down to Earth and it's been significantly less fun. Turns out, watching them steal wins is way more enjoyable than watching them rack up losses that they deserve. Who would have thought?

By contrast, the Blue Jackets have won seven straight, are only two points behind the third place Flyers, have two games in hand, and are hosting the Flyers in their thousandth regular season game today. Things seem to be stacked against the Flyers, with Columbus holding all of the momentum.

After a game where energy seemed to be the issue, it should be easy to get excited about tonight's matchup. There's a lot on the line: January is winding down and playoffs are on the not-so-distant horizon. The Flyers are obviously aware of this, so you have to assume they come out a bit stronger than they have lately. Of course, that's a big assumption.

Sergei Bobrovsky is expected to start in goal tonight, as is Ray Emery, so no Bob/Mase matchup if that's what you were hoping for. In his last start, Emery played really well for sixty minutes and sort of forgot what was going on in the shootout, so pray for a regulation win.

All games are big games nowadays, and the Flyers need to start playing that way. With a win, Flyers jump to second place. With a loss, they drop to fourth. It's bound to be a desperate game for both clubs, as Columbus is looking to jump into contention and the Flyers are looking to stay there.

There's only so much that a team can do in short segments of above-average play, so the Flyers need to start stitching together sixty-minute performances. Otherwise, it seems like our schedules will be pretty empty come April.

At the very least, the Wells Fargo doesn't have a giant cannon that they try to deafen people with. We win because cannons are dumb. Go Flyers.


Game 50 Recap: Streaking Up the Metro Standings

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In their 1000th game in franchise history, the Jackets won their eight straight game, overtaking the Flyers for a divisional playoff spot.

This was a true statement game.

It was a statement in that the team was playing its 1000th game in franchise history, against a divisional opponent, with a seven-game winning streak on the line.

How did they respond?

They responded by soundly defeating the Flyers 5-2 in front of an amped-up crowd, in the process leap-frogging Philadelphia in the standings for their eighth consecutive win.

Thanks to the Flyers having to play last night in the rescheduled storm game, Steve Mason was again spared the task of tending goal against his former team. On this night it was Ray Emery dueling Columbus starter Sergei Bobrovsky.

The ice was tilted in the Jackets favor for most of the opening period, with the Flyers' best chance coming midway through the period. It was a scramble in front of the net, with the puck flipped up in the air behind Bobrovsky. It appeared that the puck was never across the goal line, but nonetheless it was reviewed at the next whistle. As expected, no goal.

On the ensuing faceoff, Jack Johnson Man on Fire blasted a shot from the point, redirecting off of Luke Schenn to open the scoring.

1-0 Jackets: Johnson - Unassisted

The highlights of the remaining minutes of the opening period were limited to a squandered four minute powerplay by the Jackets, a man advantage where they looked flat. The Jackets earned another powerplay late in the first after the Flyers were whistled for way, way, way too much man. Nothing doing though.

The Flyers started the second period like a team that was on a mission. At the end of a shift, Ryan Murray committed a turnover at the allied blueline, allowing Brayden Schenn to skate in on Bobrovsky. Schenn fired a shot, saved by Bob, but he never gave up, depositing his own rebound into the net to tie the game.

1-1: Schenn - Unassisted.

Unfazed, the Jackets deployed their fourth line of Corey Tropp, Derek MacKenzie and Mark Letestu. This trio was making a huge impact all night, forcing turnovers, sparking their teammates, and generally creating havoc. The Jackets will have a very difficult decision on who to sit when Marian Gaborik returns.

The Flyers pressed on, and earned themselves a powerplay when R.J. Umberger was sent to the box for high-sticking. The Flyers were hungry, and took the lead off the stick of Vincent Lecavalier, who one-timed a shot from near the left dot

2-1 Flyers: Lecavalier - Streit, Meszaros

The aforementioned fourth line was at it again after going down a goal, this time contributing to the offense. In the midst of a change, Tropp got the puck in deep, with Artem Anisimov gathering the puck near the goal line. MacKenzie hustled in, calling for the puck, and making no mistake when it was placed on his stick.

2-2: MacKenzie - Anisimov, Tropp

A few minutes later I, along with anybody else watching the FSOhio broadcast, were treated to an extended look at a powerplay with the behind-the-net camera. With a team on the powerplay, it's (in my opinion) the most exciting camera angle, especially when a team is firing shot, after shot, after shot...

...which was exactly what the Jackets were doing. They were peppering Emery, and it was so exciting to see the team so clearly dominating and pushing for the lead. Fans weren't let down, with James Wisniewski eventually sending a shot off the skate of Matt Calvert, behind Emery.

3-2 Jackets: Calvert - Wisniewski, Dubinsky

The Jackets were forced to kill a two-man advantage late in the period, but otherwise they had taken control of the game going into the second intermission.

With all four lines clicking, and the Jackets keeping the Flyers firmly on the ropes, the home team scored to go up by two off the stick of Brandon Dubinsky.

4-2 Jackets: Dubinsky - Calvert, Tyutin

The Jackets went back to the powerplay in the first half of the period after Scott Hartnell was called for boarding, and despite many chances they were unable to pot another powerplay marker. Just one second after the penalty expired though, Nathan Horton, the apparent magic elixir for the Jackets, fired home the dagger with a beauty of a goal, going inside-out on Andrei Meszaros.

5-2 Jackets: Horton - Murray

The Jackets held on for the rest of regulation. A huge win, on a huge night.

FINAL SCORE: 5-2 Jackets

STANDARD BEARERS

1) On the night of the franchise's 1000th game, first standard bearer goes to Mr. Mac

2) The fourth line not only did its job tonight, the trio was a complete difference maker.

3) Horton. Dubi. Bob. Who else you want?

BOTTOM OF THE BARREL

1) It's too bad we couldn't see Mason in the Philly net. Maybe in the playoffs?

ADVANCED STATS FOR THE GAME: EXTRA SKATER


The Jackets are back in action on Saturday, where they'll face the Sabres.

Blue Jackets 5, Flyers 2 - Game Highlights

Metro Update - Friday, January 24th

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In a new quick-hitter series, we begin to look at the Metro Division more closely to see how the playoff positions are shaking out. Let us know in the comments what other information you'd like to see in these pieces each day.

Metropolitan Division Standings - Friday, January 24th

TeamGPPTSWLOTLROWGDL10Streak
Pittsburgh51743613232+437-2-1W2
NY Rangers53572723324-36-3-1L2
Columbus50562620422+89-1-0W8
Philadelphia52562521622-114-4-2L2
Carolina50532219921-177-3-0W2
New Jersey515321191121-24-3-3W1
Washington50522220814-102-5-3L4
NY Islanders53492125715-247-3-0L1

Eastern Conference Wild Card Standings - Friday, January 24th

TeamGPPTSWLOTLROWGDL10Streak
Toronto53592721518-126-4-0L1
Philadelphia52562521624-26-3-1L2
Detroit505422181019-114-5-1W1
Ottawa515422191020-156-1-3OT1
Carolina50532119920-197-3-0W2
New Jersey515321191121-24-3-3W1
Washington50522220814-102-5-3L4

Last Night's Results (Jackets Playoff Odds Change)

Philadelphia 2 @ Columbus 5 (+5.3)
St. Louis 2 @ NY Rangers 1 (+0.6)
Carolina 5 @ Buffalo 3 (-0.5)
Toronto 1 @ Dallas 7 (+0.6)
Pittsburgh 6 @ NY Islanders 4 (+0.1)

Division Playoff Odds
Courtesy of Sports Club Stats:

Pittsburgh - 100.0%
Columbus - 79.2% (+9.0%)
New Jersey - 64.6% (+2.0%)
NY Rangers - 55.3% (-6.1%)
Philadelphia - 36.5% (-8.9%)
Carolina - 31.9% (+8.6%)
Washington - 17.2% (+1.4%)
NY Islanders - 2.4% (-1.3%)

Who Helps Us Tonight

Montreal @ Detroit (+0.4)
Washington @ New Jersey (+0.3)
Ottawa @ Carolina (+0.2)
Colorado @ Florida (+0.0)

Rangers Vs. Blues: Who Didn't See That Coming?

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Notes from the Rangers' loss to the Blues.

- Want to know why Tuesday's loss to the New York Islanders was so frustrating? Because the minute the New York Rangers dropped those two points everyone made the realization that the St. Louis Blues were coming to town on Thursday. And everyone knew how tough of a matchup it was going to be. And how tough they ended up being. And the Rangers lost, again. And the Columbus Blue Jackets won. So the Rangers very slim hold of their playoff spot gets smaller, and with so many games in hand it's not going to last much longer.

- The sad thing is the Rangers didn't play bad at all for the most part. But my God the Blues are a damn good team and shut everything down. Bryan used the term "suffocated" in his recap last night. That's a great word to use. The Rangers really were suffocated. No space, few chances and very, very little time.

- I'm not going to spend too much time on it, but the NHL really needs to figure out what is a kicking motion and what isn't. If J.T. Miller's goal didn't count against the Flyers (way, way, way back) there's no way in hell that goal should have been counted. However, the NHL seems to think this is a good goal, so obviously they have no idea what they're doing in this department. You can also probably tell the Rangers have gotten the really short end of the stick in goal reviews this year. Let's not even go back into the Toronto incident. Yuck.

- That's 10 goals now in 10 games for Rick Nash who is currently on a 31 goal pace (with just a 65-game pace). If you take away the injuries and put this goal scoring pace onto a full season Nash would be on pace for 39 goals. Just saying.

- Kevin Klein was a really nice bright spot. Those aren't scrubs on the other side of the ice (as we talked about above) and he really didn't miss a beat despite not being with the team for more than 24 hours. It's really nice to have an option like Klein on the bench, though. He can easily eat 20 minutes a game and you don't have to worry about the defensive aspect of things. And with the way Ryan McDonagh has looked on offense, and with the hope that John Moore improves now that he's moved back to his natural side, it doesn't make me miss Michael Del Zotto's potential offense at all.

- Henrik Lundqvist played really well. If nothing else losing a game and only giving up two goals proves he's back, right? That's been going on for years.

- Carl Hagelin had a horrific game. I sort of hate calling some players out individually after a loss (I am a big supporter of the win as a team lose as a team thing) but he wasn't good. How many good scoring chances was he going to pass up to pass the puck? Shoot. The. Puck. Every one of those passes were turnovers, too. Not a good game from him.

- Same goes for Mats Zuccarello and Derick Brassard. You're down by one, stop being so fancy. Shoot the puck. Same to you, Brad Richards.

- This, however, doesn't give you the right to scream "shoot" every chance you can. Please don't be one of those people.

- Next on the docket the Rangers play the Devils and the Islanders in their Stadium Series games, before taking on the Islanders again next Friday at home. Those are a huge six points. And with the two losses the Rangers just suffered they can't afford to lose them.

Week 16: NHL Power Rankings Recap

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Let's take a look at where the Blue Jackets fall in the eyes of fans and analysts around the league.

SB Nation: 10th place (Last week: 15)

NHL.com: 15th (Last week: Not ranked out of 16)

TSN: 15th (Last week: 17)

ESPN: 16th (Last week: 18)

CBS Sports: 13th (Last week: 22)

Fox Sports: 19th (Last week: 23)

Average ranking: 15th

Takeaway: It's impossible for everyone to watch every game, and to be fair, some of these were filed before the solid wins against Los Angeles and Philadelphia. Bottom line, as great as the win streak feels, there's still a lot for the Blue Jackets to prove around the league. And that's ok. If the Jackets start clearing space for a "Metropolitan Division 2nd Place" banner, we've got a problem. Every indication from Todd Richards, Brandon Dubinsky, and Nathan Horton is that they're not settling. They'll fight to the finish, just like they have in each of the the last eight games.

When you look at the Jackets performance since December 3rd, it gets even more impressive: The team has posted a 16-6-1 record. Take away the stinker against St. Louis and every remaining loss has been close on the score sheet. This is more than Horton or Sergei Bobrovsky. Though if Bob keeps playing at the level he has since returning from injury, he could play his way right back into Vezina consideration for a second year in a row.

Poll
Your turn: Rank the Blue Jackets (Parameters based on high and low power rankings from around the league)

  166 votes |Results

Game Preview #51 - Revolution 9

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The Blue Jackets go for win number nine in a row as they host the pesky Buffalo Sabres.

Buffalo Sabres at Columbus Blue Jackets

January 25, 2014 - 7:00 pm EST
Nationwide Arena - Columbus, Ohio
Radio - WBNS 97.1 - TV - Fox Sports Ohio
Opponent's Blog: Die By The Blade
SBN's Sabres vs Blue Jackets coverage

Number nine... number nine... number nine... number nine... number nine... (Hopefully you're all Beatles fans...)

Ironically enough, throughout the Jackets' winning streak, the team that gave them the most trouble was the Buffalo Sabres, currently last in the league in points. The Jackets were on the second night of a back-to-back, but played listless hockey and allowed the Sabres to hang around, ultimately allowing them to tie the game in the final 30 seconds. Columbus held on in a shoot-out, but suffice it to say that game was the closest one during "the streak" to being a loss.

One week later, the Jackets are at home, resting comfortably after two more wins against LA and Philly. Buffalo are losers of five straight (0-3-2) and eight of 10 (2-5-3). I'm not going to belabor the point; this is a game, frankly, the Jackets should win comfortably and push their winning streak to nine games.

But, these things never seem to go the way you plan, do they?

At any rate, expect the same lineup from the past few games, with one possible exception: David Savard is ill and did not skate this morning, and Cody Goloubef has been brought up from Springfield on emergency recall if Savvy can't go tonight. No offense to Savard, but that wouldn't be the hugest blow in the world against the worst scoring team in the league. That said, hopefully Savard is doing OK.

Hope you're all enjoying the snow today, and ready for some hockey tonight! Let's make it nine!!

Projected Lineups

Columbus Blue Jackets
(26-20-4, 54 Points; 3rd division, 7th conference)

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

Buffalo Sabres
(13-29-7, 33 Points; 8th division, 16th conference)

Matt MoulsonTyler EnnisDrew Stafford
Steve OttCody HodgsonZemgus Girgensons
Marcus FolignoBrian FlynnPhilip Varone
Ville LeinoZenon KonopkaMatt Ellis
Henrik TallinderTyler Myers
Christian EhrhoffChad Ruhwedel
Jamie McBainMike Weber
Ryan Miller
Jhonas Enroth

Season Series

10/10/2013 - Columbus 4 at Buffalo 1
1/18/2014 - Columbus 4 at Buffalo 3 (SO)
1/25/2014 - Buffalo at Columbus

Head to Head Stats

BuffaloColumbus
1.76 (30)GPG2.88 (7)
2.82 (18)GAPG2.78 (17)
14.0% (29)PP%19.0% (15)
82.5% (13)PK%80.3% (19)
Cody Hodgson / Tyler Ennis, 11G leaderRyan Johansen, 19
Christian Ehrhoff, 17A leaderJames Wisniewski, 27
Cody Hodgson, 25Pts leaderRyan Johansen, 37
John Scott, 70PIM leaderBrandon Dubinsky, 78
4-14-3Road/Home14-9-2
1/23 vs. Carolina, L 5-3Last Game1/23 vs. Philadelphia, W 5-2
2-5-3Last 109-1-0

Game Day #51 - CBJ vs. Sabres

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The Blue Jackets go for win number nine in a row as they host the pesky Buffalo Sabres.

Buffalo Sabres at Columbus Blue Jackets

January 25, 2014 - 7:00 pm EST
Nationwide Arena - Columbus, Ohio
Radio - WBNS 97.1 - TV - Fox Sports Ohio
Opponent's Blog: Die By The Blade
SBN's Sabres vs Blue Jackets coverage

Number nine... number nine... number nine... number nine... number nine... (Hopefully you're all Beatles fans...)

Ironically enough, throughout the Jackets' winning streak, the team that gave them the most trouble was the Buffalo Sabres, currently last in the league in points. The Jackets were on the second night of a back-to-back, but played listless hockey and allowed the Sabres to hang around, ultimately allowing them to tie the game in the final 30 seconds. Columbus held on in a shoot-out, but suffice it to say that game was the closest one during "the streak" to being a loss.

One week later, the Jackets are at home, resting comfortably after two more wins against LA and Philly. Buffalo are losers of five straight (0-3-2) and eight of 10 (2-5-3). I'm not going to belabor the point; this is a game, frankly, the Jackets should win comfortably and push their winning streak to nine games.

But, these things never seem to go the way you plan, do they?

At any rate, expect the same lineup from the past few games, with one possible exception: David Savard is ill and did not skate this morning, and Cody Goloubef has been brought up from Springfield on emergency recall if Savvy can't go tonight. No offense to Savard, but that wouldn't be the hugest blow in the world against the worst scoring team in the league. That said, hopefully Savard is doing OK.

Hope you're all enjoying the snow today, and ready for some hockey tonight! Let's make it nine!!

Projected Lineups

Columbus Blue Jackets
(26-20-4, 54 Points; 3rd division, 7th conference)

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

Buffalo Sabres
(13-29-7, 33 Points; 8th division, 16th conference)

Matt MoulsonTyler EnnisDrew Stafford
Steve OttCody HodgsonZemgus Girgensons
Marcus FolignoBrian FlynnPhilip Varone
Ville LeinoZenon KonopkaMatt Ellis
Henrik TallinderTyler Myers
Christian EhrhoffChad Ruhwedel
Jamie McBainMike Weber
Ryan Miller
Jhonas Enroth

Season Series

10/10/2013 - Columbus 4 at Buffalo 1
1/18/2014 - Columbus 4 at Buffalo 3 (SO)
1/25/2014 - Buffalo at Columbus

Head to Head Stats

BuffaloColumbus
1.76 (30)GPG2.88 (7)
2.82 (18)GAPG2.78 (17)
14.0% (29)PP%19.0% (15)
82.5% (13)PK%80.3% (19)
Cody Hodgson / Tyler Ennis, 11G leaderRyan Johansen, 19
Christian Ehrhoff, 17A leaderJames Wisniewski, 27
Cody Hodgson, 25Pts leaderRyan Johansen, 37
John Scott, 70PIM leaderBrandon Dubinsky, 78
4-14-3Road/Home14-9-2
1/23 vs. Carolina, L 5-3Last Game1/23 vs. Philadelphia, W 5-2
2-5-3Last 109-1-0

Sabres at Blue Jackets Preview: Buffalo takes on the NHL's hottest team in Columbus

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Chad Ruhwedel will make his season debut as the Sabres try to put a halt to both Columbus' eight game winning streak and their own five game losing streak.

Tonight in Columbus, two teams meet moving in opposite directions. The Buffalo Sabres, still owners of the NHL's worst record, have lost five games in a row (one in a shootout) despite their offense finally finding its rhythm. They'll attempt to snap that streak against the NHL's hottest team, the Columbus Blue Jackets, owners of an eight game winning streak and the seventh seed in the East.

To make the Sabres task even more challenging, they'll be without the talents of Mark Pysyk for the foreseeable future, as he was assigned to Rochester in order to keep playing during the upcoming Olympic break. In his place steps former UMass Lowell standout Chad Ruhwedel, a slightly smaller, less talented version of the man he replaced. Ted Nolan has confidence in the kid, however, saying this morning, "Today’s his day. One thing about him, he can skate and we need good puck-moving defensemen. Everybody looks for them. He’ll have his opportunity tonight."

One of the primary reasons for the Jackets' winning streak has been their play between the pipes, as Sergei Bobrovsky has been excellent since returning from injury, winning six straight starts. However, Columbus' offense is nothing to sneeze at either, and their 148 goals rank them fifth in the East; in fact, they have nine players with 20 or more points, as opposed to the Sabres three.

Tonight will also mark the second meeting of the season between the Foligno brothers, with Nick leading the season series 1-0 after Columbus beat Buffalo 4-3 in the shootout earlier this month at the First Niagara Center.

Game #50

Buffalo Sabres (13-29-7) at Columbus Blue Jackets (26-20-4)

Puck Drop - 7:00pm EST - Nationwide Arena - Columbus, OH
TV
- MSG, FS-O | Radio - WGR 550-AM
SBNation Blue Jackets Blog
- The Cannon

Three Questions

1. Will the Sabres put anything past one of the NHL's hottest goaltenders?
Helping to fuel Columbus' win streak has been the stellar play of Sergei Bobrovsky, who is 6-0-0 with just 11 goals against since returning from a groin injury.
The Sabres have scored three goals in five straight games, though, so their "powerhouse" offense just might have the answer.

2. Can Tyler Ennis keep his six-game point streak alive?
Or did we just jinx it by mentioning it here?

3. How will the defensive pairings respond to replacing Mark Pysyk with Chad Ruhwedel?
Pysyk, McNabb, and Porter were sent to Rochester earlier this week so they could play for the Amerks during the Olympic break. In Pysyk's place steps Chad Ruhwedel, and while the Sabres are 5-2 all-time when Ruhwedel plays, it will be a tall order to replace Pysyk's contributions on the top pairing.

Projected BUF Lines

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

EhrhoffMcBain
Myers - Tallinder
Weber - Ruhwedel

Goal: Ryan Miller

Scratches/Injuries: Sulzer, Omark, McCormick, D'Agostini, Scott

Sabres at Blue Jackets Complete Coverage

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The Sabres and Blue Jackets face each other for the second time this season, with each team bringing a streak to the party.

Tonight in Columbus, two teams meet moving in opposite directions. The Buffalo Sabres, still owners of the NHL's worst record, have lost five games in a row (one in a shootout) despite their offense finally finding its rhythm. They'll attempt to snap that streak against the NHL's hottest team, the Columbus Blue Jackets, owners of an eight game winning streak and the seventh seed in the East.

To make the Sabres task even more challenging, they'll be without the talents of Mark Pysyk for the foreseeable future, as he was assigned to Rochester in order to keep playing during the upcoming Olympic break. In his place steps former UMass Lowell standout Chad Ruhwedel, a slightly smaller, less talented version of the man he replaced. Ted Nolan has confidence in the kid, however, saying this morning, "Today’s his day. One thing about him, he can skate and we need good puck-moving defensemen. Everybody looks for them. He’ll have his opportunity tonight."

One of the primary reasons for the Jackets' winning streak has been their play between the pipes, as Sergei Bobrovsky has been excellent since returning from injury, winning six straight starts. However, Columbus' offense is nothing to sneeze at either, and their 148 goals rank them fifth in the East; in fact, they have nine players with 20 or more points, as opposed to the Sabres three.

Tonight will also mark the second meeting of the season between the Foligno brothers, with Nick leading the season series 1-0 after Columbus beat Buffalo 4-3 in the shootout earlier this month at the First Niagara Center.

Game #50

Buffalo Sabres (13-29-7) at Columbus Blue Jackets (26-20-4)

Puck Drop - 7:00pm EST - Nationwide Arena - Columbus, OH
TV
- MSG, FS-O | Radio - WGR 550-AM
SBNation Blue Jackets Blog
- The Cannon

Three Questions

1. Will the Sabres put anything past one of the NHL's hottest goaltenders?
Helping to fuel Columbus' win streak has been the stellar play of Sergei Bobrovsky, who is 6-0-0 with just 11 goals against since returning from a groin injury.
The Sabres have scored three goals in five straight games, though, so their "powerhouse" offense just might have the answer.

2. Can Tyler Ennis keep his six-game point streak alive?
Or did we just jinx it by mentioning it here?

3. How will the defensive pairings respond to replacing Mark Pysyk with Chad Ruhwedel?
Pysyk, McNabb, and Porter were sent to Rochester earlier this week so they could play for the Amerks during the Olympic break. In Pysyk's place steps Chad Ruhwedel, and while the Sabres are 5-2 all-time when Ruhwedel plays, it will be a tall order to replace Pysyk's contributions on the top pairing.

Projected BUF Lines

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

EhrhoffMcBain
Myers - Tallinder
Weber - Ruhwedel

Goal: Ryan Miller

Scratches/Injuries: Sulzer, Omark, McCormick, D'Agostini, Scott

Jackets' Streak Blocked At Eight

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The Buffalo Sabres put an end to the Columbus winning streak, taking advantage of a couple of miscues, some suspect play in goal and more than a bit of puck luck. These things happen, and the good news for Blue Jackets fans is that this is a case of minor adjustments, not major failings.

All good things must come to an end, including NHL winning streaks, and the Blue Jackets' eight game run ended at the hands of the Buffalo Sabres, 5-2.  We all knew the Blue Jackets were not going to win the remaining 32 games of the season, but the end of a streak is nonetheless a melancholy event.   It is made more so by the fact that Columbus truly dominated this one.

Chances Surrendered, Opportunities Missed

There is a single overriding theme for this one -- the inability of the Blue Jackets to convert numerous chances, and Buffalo's opportunistic conversion of the few chances Columbus surrendered.  Consider the numbers: Columbus put 38 shots on goal, surrendering only 22 to the Sabres.  That's fine, but the context only comes after you consider the next number -- blocked shots.  The Sabres blocked 30 Columbus shots, while the Blue Jackets put their bodies in front of just 6.   Buffalo missed the net 4 times, while the Blue Jackets missed 24 shots.  So, all told, Columbus fired the puck in anger a whopping 92 times, compared to 32 for the Sabres.  It takes a lot of time in the opposing zone to fire that many shots, and the Blue Jackets frequently camped out in the offensive zone for extended periods, maintaining pressure while executing line changes on the fly.

The level of domination was all the more surprising, given that Columbus played the game with only five defensemen.  David Savard was a late scratch, and Dalton Prout could not be called up in time.   Cody Bass filled out the last spot on the roster, but spent more time in the penalty box (5:00) than on the ice (2:43).  Johnson and Wisniewski each logged in excess of 27 minutes, and all of the defensemen were over 20.

So, how did this one get away?

Small Mistakes, Big Consequences

Maybe Savard's late scratch was an omen of things to come.  Despite Columbus spending the bulk of the first few minutes in the Buffalo zone (as they did all night), Buffalo tallied first.  Mark Letestu lost the puck along the right wall coming out of the zone, and Matt Ellis grabbed it near the blue line.  He launched a seemingly harmless backhand in the direction of the net, and it somehow eluded Bobrovsky and found the back of the net.  While Bob may have been screened by Nikita Nikitin, subsequent events suggest that he may just have lost focus and had difficulty picking up the puck.

As has been their tendency, the Blue Jackets shrugged off the early deficit, and continued to pound away in the offensive zone.  If there was criticism to be found, it was that a little too much East-West play crept into the game, together with just enough hesitation to alter the equation.  To be honest, the Blue Jackets were able to establish such time and space, that they fell victim to the "fancy"play, rather than the direct play.  Several odd man rushes were defeated by simply making one too many passes, or hesitating just long enough to allow a Sabres defender to block the resulting shot.

No matter, Columbus pulled even at the 12:53 mark, when Ryan Murray made another one of his glorious passes to a streaking Derek MacKenzie, who semi-whiffed on the shot, but managed to bank the puck off the skate of Zenon Konopka to beat Ryan Miller for the equalizer.  Make no mistake, Miller was in top form all night, and was a key reason his club prevailed.

The back-breaker came with just 30 seconds left in the first, and the Blue Jackets on the power play.  A missed shot came out to center ice, and the Blue Jackets retreated to their own zone to regroup.  James Wisniewski made a lazy drop pass in front of the net, assuming that Ryan Johansen would be there.  Johansen had moved on, however, and Buffalo gained possession.  The Puck went to Ehrhoff at the left point, who fired a big slap shot at the net -- more in the ït's almost the end of the period so what the hell" manner than anything else.  As we have pointed out numerous times, however -- good things happen when you put the puck on net.  In this case, Bobrovsky made a wave at the puck with his glove, missed it, and watched in horror as the puck caromed off the right post and into the goal.  An end-of-period, short handed goal that deflated the 16,272 in attendance.

The second period was a reprise of the first -- only without any Blue Jackets scoring.  Just over three minutes in, the Blue Jackets were on another power play, and surrendered possession to Buffalo.  Marcus Foligno brought the puck down the right wing -- again with the apparent primary intent to eat up time, rather than present any offensive threat.  However, the Blue Jackets retreated as he entered the zone, allowing him to cut to the middle.  He fired the shot on goal, and it again eluded Bobrovsky, who seemed genuinely perplexed by this phenomenon.  Exit Bob, enter McElhinney.

The third was more of the same.  Buffalo extended the lead to 4-1 just three minutes in, when Steve Ott was able to jam one past McElhinney on a fortuitous bounce.  Letestu responded just two minutes later, converting a rebound opportunity from Derek MacKenzie.  That appeared to give the squad some life, but a series of missed opportunities took the wind of out of the sails, and the ship ultimately sank after a Cody Hodgson empty netter.

Lessons Learned

The Blue Jackets can be criticized in this one for a slight lack of focus, which neutralized some prime opportunities and created openings for the opposition.  The goal-tending was not good, but that's going to happen from time to time.  From a systemic point of view, the Blue Jackets dominated virtually every aspect of the game, except the scoreboard.  Two shorties is ugly, but truly is  not an independent area of concern.  Rather they were a combination of the lack of focus and some shoddy play in net.

The puck conspired against the Blue Jackets on this night, eluding their sticks in the crease, and finding glass and iron, rather than twine.  In contrast, everything Buffalo shot in the general vicinity of the goal appeared to go in.  Such is life in the NHL, and the important thing is not to over-react, start changing what has worked and put undue pressure on all concerned.  They have a big back-to-back with Carolina and Ottawa on Monday and Tuesday, and need to restore their focus by then.

In his post-game remarks, coach Todd Richards seemed to be keeping things in perspective, expressing pleasure with the level of domination, frustration at the lack of conversion, but no glaring concern.  That's as it should be.

One curious observation on the game:  Boone Jenner was a skating wrecking ball on the ice all night long -- creating disruption and opportunity whenever he was on the ice.  Yet, he had less than 11 minutes of ice time, exceeding only Cory Tropp and Cody Bass.  Not sure what that signifies, but it was a curious statistic.

This one is best put out of mind, and the focus honed for the final eight games before the Olympic break.  Carolina is playing some good hockey, and will remember the 3-0 pasting they took at Nationwide last time the two clubs met.  The Blue Jackets need to be ready to convert their chances on Monday.

Sabres Links: Sabres end Jackets streak, possible Sochi violence, Stadium Series hits LA

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The Sabres had an impressive win against a surging team last night, not something you normally say about the Columbus Blue Jackets. The NHL also wentoutside in the heat out in LA last night, which was quite the spectacle.

Sabres Links

Around The League

  • The NHL has a plan if violence strikes at Sochi, as all players will not attend if a strike happens before and the Canadians will leave if any violence happens during the game [The Globe and Mail]
  • Ducks shutout Kings 3-0 in the first Stadium Series game [NHL.com]
  • TradeCentre: Raphael Diaz could be play, Jackets could make moves, Bruins could be shipping out a defenseman [TradeCentre]
  • Watch Alex Ovechkin's crazy goal from last night [SB Nation]
  • Mikael Samuelsson and Shane O'Brien were waived yesterday [SB Nation]

Sabres at Blue Jackets Recap: To heck with your advanced stats, Buffalo beats Columbus 5-2

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Despite being horribly outshot, the Sabres used two shorthanded goals and a heaping helping of luck to defeat the Blue Jackets.

Sergei Bobrovsky came in to the game tonight as one of the NHL's hottest goaltenders, the winner of six straight. He left tonight midway through the second period looking like one of the league's doormats after giving up three goals - two shorthanded - on just ten shots, and the Buffalo Sabres went on to end the Blue Jackets' eight game winning streak with a 5-2 victory.

Aside from the two shorties, the big story of the game was the fancystats. The Sabres were massively outshot by the Jackets, 38-22, and the possession stats were even worse, as the team's Corsi number was an unbelievable -60. Check out their Fenwick chart below and tell me which team won by three goals again?

Fenwick_chart_for_2014-01-25_sabres_5_at_blue_jackets_2_medium

A big art of the team's game plan tonight apparently was relying on Lady Luck. A few posts helped Miller and the defense stymie the Columbus attack, but a few of the Sabres goals occurred thanks to either lucky bounces or the incompetence last night of Bobrovsky. The scoring opened with what Matt Ellis called his "Power Backhand", which was essentially the same move you used to pull in NHL06 when you'd accidentally hit the shoot button while facing the wrong way from 30 feet out. It evidently fooled Bobrovsky, as did Christian Ehrhoff's 180-degree slapper from the blueline, a shorthanded goal, which gave the Sabres the lead again after Derek MacKenzie tied it up.

The shorthanded fun would continue in the second period, as Marcus Foligno put another soft goal past Bobrovsky on the rush thanks to some distraction from Zemgus Girgensons, and the Columbus goaltender's night came to an end. When Steve Ott put home a rebound goal in the third, you felt like the game was all but over despite the massive shot differential, and Cody Hodgson put home the unassisted empty netter to seal the deal at 5-2.

The crazy part of the evening was just how dominant Columbus was in possession numbers, but before you go saying that this game disproves fancystats, we'd like to remind you of the words "sample size", "outlier", and "statistical anomaly". The Sabres had a heaping helping of luck, and scored two shorthanded goals in a game for the first time since 1997. If they played ten games with these kinds of possession stats and shot differentials, this was the only one they'd win.

On the positive side of things, the Sabres saw a nice performance tonight from some of their defensemen - Christian Ehrhoff's rounding back in to form with a three point night, and Chad Ruhwedel was solid in his season debut, acting as a very necessary blocked shots machine. Ryan Miller was once again excellent this evening, making some monster saves among his more pedestrian efforts to finish with 36 saves.

The Sabres did suffer some injury woes, as both Ville Leino and Drew Stafford left with upper body injuries. They'll try to luck their way into another win like this on Monday night in Pittsburgh (LOL).

Three Questions

1. Will the Sabres put anything past one of the NHL's hottest goaltenders?
Oh, did they ever. Bobrovsky gave up three goals on just ten shots
before being chased midway through the second period after giving up his second shorthanded goal. He looked horrible, but the damage had already been done by the time he left.

2. Can Tyler Ennis keep his six-game point streak alive?
Yeah, we jinxed it. Ennis was held point-less tonight.

3. How will the defensive pairings respond to replacing Mark Pysyk with Chad Ruhwedel?
Well, they won on the scoreboard, but the Sabres were outshot tonight by infinity, some of which has to go on the defense's hands. Ehrhoff scored and added two assists, and Ruhwedel played well and blocked a ton of shots in his debut, but Mike Weber took two more dumb penalties, so in the end things seemed to balance out.

Three Stars

1. Ryan Miller - 38 saves and back in form for Sochi
2. Christian Ehrhoff - a goal and two assists
3. Derek MacKenzie - one goal, one assist

Comment of the Game

It was too hard to choose, so here's the entire exchange about one of the Sabres best players this year.

Great save, post!

The post has been huge for us this season.

He’s a UFA, need to trade him while his value is high.

A real stand up man.

Enjoys long walks on the beach, Molson Canadian, and making the playoffs.

Post has always had trouble in the locker room… Best to trade him

hatzappar

I don’t know. He’s a good character guy. We need that kind veteran presence to provide leadership for the kids.

There are rumors that his poor skating has rubbed off on other guys though

The good thing about Post is that you always knows where he stands.

And he’s never out of position.

Enjoys long walks on the beach, Molson Canadian, and making the playoffs.

You could say he's got nerves of steel.

Enjoys long walks on the beach, Molson Canadian, and making the playoffs.

He's a bit statuesque on the ice, though.

Good point. They skate around him like a pylon.

Post may be responsible for Grigorenko

I’m just saying. I’m looking at Hodgson too. Post can be a bad example

ajred12

I heard he doesn't really resonate in the locker room

I believe he's always ready to stand up for his team.

Enjoys long walks on the beach, Molson Canadian, and making the playoffs.

He stabbed Enroth in the back in the shoot out

hatzappar

Yeah but at least he shows up every game. Never takes a night off. You can’t question his effort.

he’s not as good without his linemate

They make a rather solid pairing though.

Enjoys long walks on the beach, Molson Canadian, and making the playoffs.

Reporters love him. Magnetic personality in his post game interviews.

Plus he’s got an iron constitution.

he's also a real two way player.

One period you’ll see him at one end, and the next at the other

Enjoys long walks on the beach, Molson Canadian, and making the playoffs.

Well, Post DID have that excellent tip-in on the Ehrhoff blast earlier...

But he's very humble

Never takes any of the credit for saves or goals.

Great posts, everyone.

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