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Metro Update - 3/13/14

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No change in the standings, as only one game involving the East--and no Metro teams--took place. Montreal's loss does close the gap on them for the Jackets should it get to that point with a Wild Card spot. A Jackets win plus a Rangers loss = 2nd place in the Metro!

Metropolitan Division Standings - Thursday, March 13

TeamGPPTSWLOTLROWGDL10Streak
Pittsburgh65924417439+476-2-2W3
NY Rangers66743527431+75-4-1L1
Columbus65733426530+116-3-1W2
Philadelphia65733325730-67-2-1L1
New Jersey667129241329-56-3-1W2
Washington677030271022-95-4-1L2
Carolina65652828927-223-7-0W1
NY Islanders67592533919-404-5-1W1

Eastern Conference Wild Card Standings - Thursday, March 13

TeamGPPTSWLOTLROWGDL10Streak
Tampa Bay65753424728+152-6-2OT2
Philadelphia65733325730-67-2-1L1
Detroit657129231325-115-4-1L2
New Jersey667129241329-56-3-1W2
Washington677030271022-95-4-1L2
Ottawa656728251225-284-4-2OT1
Carolina65652828927-223-7-0W1

Division Playoff Odds

Courtesy of Sports Club Stats:

Pittsburgh - 100.0% (even)
NY Rangers - 78.6% (up)
Columbus - 78.6% (up)
New Jersey - 58.8% (up)
Philadelphia - 58.7% (up)
Washington - 6.7% (up)
Carolina - 3.1% (up)
NY Islanders - 0.0% (even)

If The Season Ended Today...

Round 1 Matchups

RoadHome
Philadelphia (WC2)Pittsburgh (M1)
Columbus (M3)NY Rangers (M2)
Tampa Bay (WC1)Boston (A1)
Montreal (A3)Toronto (A2)

Who Helps Us Tonight

Columbus vs San Jose (+6.4)
Minnesota vs NY Rangers (+0.8)
Los Angeles vs Toronto (+0.6)
Tampa Bay vs Florida (+0.4)
Carolina vs Buffalo (+0.3)


Game Preview #67 - Fishing For Second Place

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The Jackets--with some help--could play their way into second place tonight. But, it will be a tall order against the Sharks.

San Jose Sharks at Columbus Blue Jackets

March 13, 2014 - 7:00 pm EDT
Nationwide Arena - Columbus, Ohio
Radio - WBNS 97.1 - TV - Fox Sports Ohio
Opponent's Blog: Fear The Fin
SBN's Sharks vs Blue Jackets Coverage

Well, here we are. Tuesday night was a huge shift in the standings, with a big win for Columbus coupled with a TON of help around the league. Tonight could be another one of those nights: if the Jackets can earn a win--of any kind--against San Jose, and Minnesota can provide some help in the form of beating the Rangers, well, second place would belong to the Jackets by virtue of the games-played tie-breaker.

That's a lot of if's, I know. But, it's a real possibility.

The Jackets have weathered a huge storm, with the West Coast trip into the Olympic break coupled with injuries a-plenty on the blue line having sapped some of their January momentum. But, since the break, they're sitting at 5-2-0 (and were holding a lead and outplaying Dallas early in the postponed game on Monday). They seem to be getting their groove back. Sergei Bobrovsky looks like the Vezina version of himself again, with a .946 save percentage and 1.76 gaa in his last five games... and that included a clunker in Chicago last week. Even larger, since returning from his groin injury, he's sporting a .929 save percentage and 2.25 gaa in 21 games. Over the entirety of his Vezina season, his save percentage was only a smidge higher at .932, and while his gaa is up this year, a lot of that rests on the defense.

In short, maybe it wasn't a fluke, people.

Some more good news: Fedor Tyutin and Jared Boll both participated in the morning skate this morning, which means they're both that much closer to coming back. Obviously, Tyutin is the far, FAR more important cog there.

Tonight's lineup will not be without its changes from the team's recently successful lines: Blake Comeau is back out, having been given a ridiculous two-game suspension for boarding Brendan Smith Tuesday night. Cam Atkinson takes his spot in the lineup, playing on the third line. And, also on that line, Mark Letestu moves up to center, as Artem Anisimov and his wife are expecting a baby and Arty looks to be out for tonight's game. Godspeed to the Anisimovs, as hockey is just hockey, but speaking from experience there just isn't anything quite like seeing your first child come into the world. The rest of the team will certainly hold down the fort for you, Arty!

The Sharks are hot. What else is new? Winners of three in a row and eight of 11 (8-2-1), the Sharks are now actually closing in on the once-invincible-looking Ducks for first place in their division. That said, they've had to travel across the country after playing at home on Tuesday, and face a back-to-back tonight and tomorrow on Long Island.

Strangely enough, they've elected to go with backup Alex Stalock in net tonight while saving Antti Niemi for the Isles tomorrow night. OK, then. That said, Stalock is no push-over. He's played in 19 games this season (14 starts), and sports a 1.85 gaa and .932 save percentage. THAT said, in his last six games (five starts), he's been pretty average, with a 2.43 gaa and .908 save percentage. The Jackets need to punish him with shots and make him work.

That's a tall order, as the Sharks' defense has been much, much better this season than in years-past. Columbus will need to bring the effort that they had for most of the second period and ALL of the third period on Tuesday.

Projected Lineups

Columbus Blue Jackets
(34-26-5, 73 Points; 3rd division, 7th conference)

Boone JennerRyan JohansenNick Foligno
Matt CalvertBrandon DubinskyNathan Horton
R.J. UmbergerMark LetestuCam Atkinson
Corey TroppDerek MacKenzieMatt Frattin
Jack JohnsonDavid Savard
Nikita NikitinJames Wisniewski
Nick SchultzDalton Prout
Sergei Bobrovsky
Curtis McElhinney

San Jose Sharks
(42-17-7, 91 Points; 2nd Division, 4th Conference)

Joe PavelskiJoe ThorntonBrent Burns
Patrick MarleauLogan CoutureMatt Nieto
Marty HavlatJames SheppardTommy Wingels
Mike BrownAndrew DesjardinsAdam Burish
Marc-Edouard VlasicJason Demers
Scott HannanJustin Braun
Matt IrwinDan Boyle
Alex Stalock
Antti Niemi

Season Series

02/07/14 - Columbus 2 at San Jose 3
03/13/14 - San Jose at Columbus

Head to Head Stats

San JoseColumbus
2.97 (7)GPG2.86 (8)
2.33 (4)GAPG2.74 (17)
16.0% (23)PP%18.6% (16)
84.2% (6)PK%82.1% (14)
Joe Pavelski, 34G leaderRyan Johansen, 25
Joe Thornton, 55A leaderJames Wisniewski, 33
Joe Pavelski, 65Pts leaderRyan Johansen, 49
Andrew Desjardins, 84PIM leaderBrandon Dubinsky, 90
17-13-3Road/Home19-11-2
3/11 vs. Toronto, W 6-2Last Game3/11 vs. Detroit, W 4-1
7-2-1Last 106-3-1

Game Day #67 - CBJ vs. Sharks

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The Jackets--with some help--could play their way into second place tonight. But, it will be a tall order against the Sharks.

San Jose Sharks at Columbus Blue Jackets

March 13, 2014 - 7:00 pm EDT
Nationwide Arena - Columbus, Ohio
Radio - WBNS 97.1 - TV - Fox Sports Ohio
Opponent's Blog: Fear The Fin
SBN's Sharks vs Blue Jackets Coverage

Well, here we are. Tuesday night was a huge shift in the standings, with a big win for Columbus coupled with a TON of help around the league. Tonight could be another one of those nights: if the Jackets can earn a win--of any kind--against San Jose, and Minnesota can provide some help in the form of beating the Rangers, well, second place would belong to the Jackets by virtue of the games-played tie-breaker.

That's a lot of if's, I know. But, it's a real possibility.

The Jackets have weathered a huge storm, with the West Coast trip into the Olympic break coupled with injuries a-plenty on the blue line having sapped some of their January momentum. But, since the break, they're sitting at 5-2-0 (and were holding a lead and outplaying Dallas early in the postponed game on Monday). They seem to be getting their groove back. Sergei Bobrovsky looks like the Vezina version of himself again, with a .946 save percentage and 1.76 gaa in his last five games... and that included a clunker in Chicago last week. Even larger, since returning from his groin injury, he's sporting a .929 save percentage and 2.25 gaa in 21 games. Over the entirety of his Vezina season, his save percentage was only a smidge higher at .932, and while his gaa is up this year, a lot of that rests on the defense.

In short, maybe it wasn't a fluke, people.

Some more good news: Fedor Tyutin and Jared Boll both participated in the morning skate this morning, which means they're both that much closer to coming back. Obviously, Tyutin is the far, FAR more important cog there.

Tonight's lineup will not be without its changes from the team's recently successful lines: Blake Comeau is back out, having been given a ridiculous two-game suspension for boarding Brendan Smith Tuesday night. Cam Atkinson takes his spot in the lineup, playing on the third line. And, also on that line, Mark Letestu moves up to center, as Artem Anisimov and his wife are expecting a baby and Arty looks to be out for tonight's game. Godspeed to the Anisimovs, as hockey is just hockey, but speaking from experience there just isn't anything quite like seeing your first child come into the world. The rest of the team will certainly hold down the fort for you, Arty!

The Sharks are hot. What else is new? Winners of three in a row and eight of 11 (8-2-1), the Sharks are now actually closing in on the once-invincible-looking Ducks for first place in their division. That said, they've had to travel across the country after playing at home on Tuesday, and face a back-to-back tonight and tomorrow on Long Island.

Strangely enough, they've elected to go with backup Alex Stalock in net tonight while saving Antti Niemi for the Isles tomorrow night. OK, then. That said, Stalock is no push-over. He's played in 19 games this season (14 starts), and sports a 1.85 gaa and .932 save percentage. THAT said, in his last six games (five starts), he's been pretty average, with a 2.43 gaa and .908 save percentage. The Jackets need to punish him with shots and make him work.

That's a tall order, as the Sharks' defense has been much, much better this season than in years-past. Columbus will need to bring the effort that they had for most of the second period and ALL of the third period on Tuesday.

Projected Lineups

Columbus Blue Jackets
(34-26-5, 73 Points; 3rd division, 7th conference)

Boone JennerRyan JohansenNick Foligno
Matt CalvertBrandon DubinskyNathan Horton
R.J. UmbergerMark LetestuCam Atkinson
Corey TroppDerek MacKenzieMatt Frattin
Jack JohnsonDavid Savard
Nikita NikitinJames Wisniewski
Nick SchultzDalton Prout
Sergei Bobrovsky
Curtis McElhinney

San Jose Sharks
(42-17-7, 91 Points; 2nd Division, 4th Conference)

Joe PavelskiJoe ThorntonBrent Burns
Patrick MarleauLogan CoutureMatt Nieto
Marty HavlatJames SheppardTommy Wingels
Mike BrownAndrew DesjardinsAdam Burish
Marc-Edouard VlasicJason Demers
Scott HannanJustin Braun
Matt IrwinDan Boyle
Alex Stalock
Antti Niemi

Season Series

02/07/14 - Columbus 2 at San Jose 3
03/13/14 - San Jose at Columbus

Head to Head Stats

San JoseColumbus
2.97 (7)GPG2.86 (8)
2.33 (4)GAPG2.74 (17)
16.0% (23)PP%18.6% (16)
84.2% (6)PK%82.1% (14)
Joe Pavelski, 34G leaderRyan Johansen, 25
Joe Thornton, 55A leaderJames Wisniewski, 33
Joe Pavelski, 65Pts leaderRyan Johansen, 49
Andrew Desjardins, 84PIM leaderBrandon Dubinsky, 90
17-13-3Road/Home19-11-2
3/11 vs. Toronto, W 6-2Last Game3/11 vs. Detroit, W 4-1
7-2-1Last 106-3-1

Nathan Horton buys 1,000 tickets for police officers, firefighters and EMTs

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Nathan Horton decided to give back to the Columbus community on Thursday night.

Nathan Horton has been a welcome addition to the Columbus Blue Jackets on the ice this season, and on Thursday night, he was a welcome addition to the community off the ice.

Horton, whose father is a police officer, purchased 1,000 tickets to the Blue Jackets' game against the San Jose Sharks and gave them to local police officers, firefighters and EMTs.

The Blue Jackets signed Horton to a seven-year, $37.7 million contract as a free agent this past summer.

He missed the first three months of the season while recovering from offseason shoulder surgery and has four goals to go with 11 assists in 25 games since making his debut. With him in the lineup Columbus has won 17 of 25 games and has climbed to one of the top-three spots in the Metropolitan Division as the team tries to make the playoffs for the first time since 2008-09 and just the second time in franchise history.

Cam Atkinson's shootout attempt did not go as planned

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This is a rough way to lose a game.

The NHL may want to cut down on the number of games decided in the shootout going forward, but unfortunately for the Columbus Blue Jackets' Cam Atkinson, his team couldn't avoid that in its game against the San Jose Sharks on Thursday night.

That's where Atkinson, needing a goal to extend the shootout to another round, had this happen as he attempted to beat San Jose goalie Alex Stalock.

Derpshot_medium

That's ... unfortunate. Before that shot, Atkinson was a solid 4-for-9 in his career on the shootout, but sometimes you never really know what's going to happen when it comes to these things. And hey, it could have been worse. At least he didn't pull a Dennis Wideman.

Nipped By The Sharks

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The Blue Jackets and San Jose Sharks played a game with playoff-level intensity, predictably going all the way to a shootout, where the Silicon Valley squad prevailed. It was fitting that both teams came away with points in a well-played contest.

Columbus played host to the Sharks on Thursday evening -- the back half of a Tuesday(Detroit)/Thursday double that likely had the coaches shuddering when they first saw the schedule.  San Jose is a big, fast club that can beat you in many different ways, and entered the contest with 91 points --  just two shy of Pacific-leading Anaheim, and four off the President's Trophy leader -- St. Louis.   The Sharks edged the Blue Jackets 3-2 at home, in the final game before the Olympic break, barraging Sergei Bobrovsky with 47 shots.  What would this one bring?

Punch and Counterpunch

Heading into this one, some argued that Columbus needed to jump on San Jose early, as they had played a late contest on Tuesday night, followed by a long flight and three hours of time change.  Nice theory, but the Sharks had something to say about how this one started.  San Jose came out flying, putting pressure on early, forechecking hard below the goal line, and building an early 7 - 1 lead in shots.  Then, as has happened so often this season, the Blue Jackets sharpened their edges and started skating forward.  Possession time grew, the ice slanted in the opposite direction, and opportunities arose.

The Blue Jackets cashed in on opportunity at the 5:28 mark of the first.  In a face-off on the left dot, just outside the San Jose zone, Ryan Johansen just managed to nudge the puck forward into the offensive zone.  Nick Foligno -- who is apparently more comfortable playing offense from positions other than standing -- stretched for the puck, lost his balance, fell to his knees and managed to scoop the puck backward.  Boone Jenner -- in what was likely the easiest assist of his young career -- gave the puck just the slightest of nudges, as if adjusting a golf ball on a tee.  That was all the trailing Johansen needed.  He fired a one-timer from between the circles that cleanly beat Alex Stalock to the glove side, and the Blue Jackets had the important early lead.

The Sharks have not earned their lofty point total by succumbing to early deficits, and tonight was no exception.  San Jose went back to the pressure game, and slowly grabbed the momentum back.  It paid off with 10:53 gone in the first.  Faced with a strong San Jose forecheck, Brandon Dubinsky backhanded the puck around the boards toward his own net from the right half wall. Jack Johnson -- also challenged by the San Jose forecheck -- tapped the puck along to David Savard behind the net.   Savard had plenty of room to skate the puck out in the opposite direction, but instead reflexively backhanded the puck back around the boards toward Johnson and the Sharks' Logan Couture.  Couture got the puck on his stick, and lasered a pass into the crease, where a charging Patrick Marleau had little difficulty tapping it in past a helpless Sergei Bobrovsky.   Marleau had been left uncovered by Dubinksy, who had moved toward the wall to help with the puck, and Matt Calvert was slow getting over.

The remainder of the first was a virtual stand-off, with each team having some chances, some in transition, some from a set offense.  The Blue Jackets resumed their aggressive forecheck, which helped stem San Jose's transition game, and the Sharks continued to cause problems for Columbus with their own forechecking game.  At the end of the period, the Sharks held an 11-9 lead in shots, and all of the 13,851 in the house knew it was going to be a tense, long night.

Roller Coaster Ride

The Blue Jackets came out for the second with ample energy, and seemed prepared to grab hold of the game. That prospect was dimmed just 57 seconds in, when R.J. Umberger was called for a questionable tripping penalty.  While San Jose has struggled on the power play of late, when you're facing guys like Thornton, Pavelski, Marleau and Couture, you really don't want to provide extra man opportunities.  The Blue Jackets penalty kill has been strong of late, particularly at home, and the unit was performing admirably until Savard was called for high sticking 1:25 into the extra man situation.  That gave San Jose a 5-on-3 advantage for 35 seconds, and the prevailing mood changed from anxiety to impending doom.

The penalty kill unit managed to gain possession deep in the zone and cleared the puck to the neutral zone, using up valuable seconds.  The Sharks brought it back in, but Dubinsky was able to trap the puck against the half wall to Bobrovsky's right.  As time expired on Umberger's penalty Dubinsky backhanded the puck to his forehand, and hit R.J. in stride down the center of the ice.  A quick five hole flick beat Stalock, and despair transformed to elation in Nationwide Arena.  (After the game, Umberger said that he was thinking about the chance for a breakaway, and thought about a high backhand as the way to beat Stalock. However, when the chance came, he saw a big five hole and went with instinct rather than calculation.  Good choice.)

The Blue Jackets fed off the momentum gained from the timely shorthanded tally to quickly kill the rest of Savard's penalty and resume the offensive.  They outshot the Sharks 16-7 in the second stanza, won the battles along the boards, and more than once had multi-shift possessions in the San Jose end.  Only some nifty work by Stalock, and an agonizing backhand off the right post kept Columbus from extending the lead.  Still, any kind of lead against one of the best teams in the league is welcome, particularly heading into the third, the frame in which the Blue Jackets have score the most goals (69) -- sixth in the NHL.

Statistics Lie -- But Effort Doesn't

OK, maybe forget about that third period domination thing . . .  San Jose was singularly unimpressed by that statistic, and seemed more interested in the 72 goals the Blue Jackets have surrendered in the third.  In this case, it took all of 15 seconds to even the match.

After gaining entry into the zone, the puck worked to Marc-Edouard Vlasic at the left point.  He fired a bomb at Bobrovsky, who made the save, but gave up a lengthy rebound along the same line the shot came in.  It looked like Logan Couture -- being double-teamed by Jack Johnson and Dalton Prout -- had the best shot at the rebound, and in fact got a stick on it. However, while Bobrovsky was focused on Couture, Matt Nieto swept in and wristed a forehand past Bobrovsky on the short side, and the lead was gone before half the crowd had returned to their seats.

The Blue Jackets looked leg weary at the beginning of the third, and San Jose was quick to exploit it.  Brandon Dubinsky was called for slashing at 5:39 of the third, which gave the Sharks another extra man opportunity.  (Although Dubinsky protested, it was a clear slash, particularly in a year where the officials have been told to focus on the slashing of sticks.)

Actually, it appeared that lighting might strike twice when R.J. Umberger got possession of the puck high in his zone, and started an odd man rush with Mark Letestu to his right, and only Marleau to contend with.  Umberger appeared focused on the shot, and tried to beat Stalock through the five hole again.  Stalock was having none of it, however, and the rebound caromed to Dan Boyle.  With Umberger and Letestu caught deep, Boyle led a 4-on-2 rush, with only Prout and Johnson available to provide resistance.  A quick pass from Boyle to Pavelski on the right wing moved the defense, and Pavelski's equally quick pass to Marleau coming late down the middle set the table for a quick wrister that gave the Sharks the lead.  Live by the short-handed opportunity, die by the short-handed opportunity.

This turn of events seemed to awaken the Blue Jackets from their slumber, and as San Jose appeared to be more content with simply getting the puck deep, the Blue Jackets went on the offense.  There was a sense of desperation in the building, and the Blue Jackets seemed to feed off of the anxiety and turn it into energy.  An apparent Nick Foligno goal had the crowd on its feet, but it was quickly waved off as having been kicked in -- a call that was confirmed by Toronto with equal dispatch.  Try that again next season, and it will likely count, but for now it was the dreaded "distinct kicking motion."

Undaunted, the Blue Jackets kept the pressure on, and put the rubber on net.  Just as the game clock ticked under the five minute mark, Dubinsky backhanded a beautiful pass to James Wisniewski near the top of the right circle.  Stalock came way out of the net to cut down the angle, while Wisniewski was unmolested.  As he wound up, the scene was more reminiscent of a western movie gunfight than anything else.  Stick hit puck, and the puck zipped over Stalock's right shoulder, off the crossbar and into the net.  Tie game, and the reaction by the club and the fans was more befitting a playoff win than a regular season tie.  Still, it was a satisfying goal for Wisniewski, as well as a bit of redemption, as he had another night with some absolutely breathtaking turnovers in the defensive zone.

Columbus -- who outshot the Sharks 11-8 in the third -- was not satisfied with the tie, and put more pressure on as the period wound down.  When Brent Burns went to the box for tripping with 1:29 left in regulation, the stage seemed to be set for one of those storybook endings.  In fact, only a couple of magnificent saves by Stalock in a late flurry prevented just such an ending.  So, with a point in hand, it was off to extra time.

Columbus had the upper hand through most of the overtime period, but neither team seemed intent on pressing too much, for fear of getting trapped deep and surrendering a potentially lethal extra man situation.  San Jose relied on a nice save by Stalock to kill off the remainder of the Burns penalty, and the remainder of the frame was spent in the middle of the ice.  So, it would have to be settled in a skills competition.

If it seemed like the Sharks were trying to get the game to the shootout, it is with good reason.  Including this one, San Jose has had 15 shootout games, and has won 10 of them.  In contrast, Columbus has had only six shootout contests, winning four.

Letestu led off for Columbus, looking to go high on Stalock, who was up to the challenge and made the save.  Couture  -- the resident shootout specialist -- led off for the Sharks, but Bobrovsky swatted it away with the blocker.  Johansen was next, and tried a variation of the multiple backhand-to-forehand moves, followed by a high forehand attempt that Stalock just tipped away.  Up came Pavelski, who meandered in leisurely on Bobrovsky, then quickly faked the forehand and moved to the backhand for a roofer.  It was an absolutely filthy move.  That left things up to Cam Atkinson, who was playing his first game after being a healthy scratch.  However, Atkinson lost possession of the puck as he went to make his final move, bringing an end to the evening's festivities.

The Final Word

It was a disappointing result for the Blue Jackets, but it's tough to get too worked up over this one.  Yep, there were a couple of bad plays that led to San Jose goals, and some other turnovers that caused some consternation, but overall it was a really well played game.  Stalock was not named one of the three stars, but he was as responsible for the win as anyone in a Sharks sweater.  The Blue Jackets outshot San Jose 38 - 27, and his heroics at the end of regulation saved the day for San Jose.

For the Blue Jackets, the game was a solid effort.  Nick Schultz looked solid on the depleted blue line, but David Savard did not have an auspicious evening.  Wisniewski was like the little girl with the curl -- he was either terrific or just horrible -- but that is what you get with Wiz, which is why you need a Ryan Murray to balance him out.  Nikitin was sound, and Johnson played better, though had some trouble keeping the puck on his stick.

On offense, Dubinsky looked like he has officially shifted the transmission into Playoff gear.  He was fast, relentless and focused.  Ditto for Johansen, Foligno and Jenner.  Horton did not appear on the scoresheet, but did some nice things away from the puck, despite having a minus-2 for the night.  Calvert looked like his is really finding his game.  Atkinson showed energy in all three zones, but was really not a factor.  The energy line of MacKenzie, Tropp and Frattin fulfilled their role admirably.

While it wasn't a win, it was a point, and every one of those you can get at this time of year is worth its weight in gold. That single point moved the Blue Jackets into 2nd place in the Metro, thanks to the Rangers loss in Minnesota.  That in turn ratchets up the pressure on the teams pursuing those playoff slots.  Of equal importance is the fact that the team earning two points is in the other conference.  Playing without Anisimov (congrats, new daddy!), Tyutin, Murray and Comeau, they went toe to toe with a formidable opponent, and matched them blow for blow.

With 74 points in 66 games, the Blue Jackets reach a threshold of sorts, in that just playing .500 hockey from here in gets them to 90 points. While that isn't necessarily a playoff slot by itself, it's simply an indication that they don't need an other-worldly record to stay in the race.  After all, they already have a 1 - 0 lead in one of those 16 remaining contests.

Tonight showed that the Blue Jackets can put the pedal down and produce the playoff-level intensity that is going to be necessary over the next three weeks.  That's a nice takeaway from the game, and a good thought to carry into Minnesota on Saturday.  Stay tuned.

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

Metro Update - 3/14/14

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Yea, tie breakers! Last night wasn't the best outcome for the Jackets at home, but they rallied to earn a point that, coupled with the Rangers' loss, puts Columbus in second place!

First and foremost, a quick link over to NHL.com's Super 16, in which Cory Masisak was nice enough to give me a shout-out.

Metropolitan Division Standings - Friday, March 14

TeamGPPTSWLOTLROWGDL10Streak
Pittsburgh65924417439+476-2-2W3
Columbus66743426630+105-3-2OT1
NY Rangers67743528431+64-5-1L2
Philadelphia65733325730-67-2-1L1
New Jersey667129241329-56-3-1W2
Washington677030271022-95-4-1L2
Carolina66672928928-203-7-0W2
NY Islanders67592533919-404-5-1W1

Eastern Conference Wild Card Standings - Friday, March 14

TeamGPPTSWLOTLROWGDL10Streak
Montreal67773525730-35-4-1L3
Philadelphia65733325730-67-2-1L1
Detroit657129231325-115-4-1L2
New Jersey667129241329-56-3-1W2
Washington677030271022-95-4-1L2
Ottawa656828251225-284-4-2OT1
Carolina66672928928-203-7-0W2

Division Playoff Odds

Courtesy of Sports Club Stats:

Pittsburgh - 100.0% (even)
Columbus - 78.0% (down)
NY Rangers - 69.9% (down)
New Jersey - 58.8% (even)
Philadelphia - 58.5% (down)
Washington - 6.6% (down)
Carolina - 4.4% (up)
NY Islanders - 0.0% (even)

If The Season Ended Today...

Round 1 Matchups

RoadHome
Philadelphia (WC2)Boston (A1)
NY Rangers (M3)Columbus (M2)
Montreal (WC1)Pittsburgh (M1)
Tampa Bay (A3)Toronto (A2)

Who Helps Us Tonight

Florida vs New Jersey (+1.6)
Detroit vs Edmonton (+1.5)
Winnipeg vs NY Rangers (+1.1)
Washington vs Vancouver (+0.5)


Hockey Moses: The Patrick Effect

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For as much credit as Scott Howson is getting for the current Blue Jackets and their performance, let's not forget about the other guy who might have had just as much to do with it as anyone else.

It was December 7, 2011. The Blue Jackets, having attempted to load up the previous summer by acquiring Jeff Carter, James Wisniewski, Vinny Prospal, and Radek Martinek, were sitting at 8-16-3, and were literally last in the entire league. Things looked grim. Scott Howson's tenure as GM appeared to be nearing its end. Scott Arniel was a dead man walking behind the bench.

And then, seemingly out of nowhere, the Jackets announced a front-office hire. Enter Craig Patrick, the Hall of Fame former GM of the Penguins brought in as a senior advisor. Patrick was also known for his role as an assistant on the 1980 US Hockey Team that stole the hearts of the nation, and really, the world en route to a gold medal.

For all of the credit being given to Howson now for the turn-around of the Blue Jackets (brought on largely by players he acquired before losing his job last year), one must really look at the roster and take note of how many of those moves happened after Patrick's hiring.

So, let's do that, shall we?

Patrick left the front office on January 10 of this year to move over to Buffalo in what can only seem to be a similar role as what he had here: an advisor to a complete turnaround and rebuild. So, first and foremost, let's look at all of the transactions (as they affected the current NHL roster) that occurred during Patrick's tenure:

1) Head Coach Scott Arniel Fired on January 10, 2012

How much effect Patrick had on this decision is unknown, but it seems to me that if one follows the logical trend, one might see that after a month's observation with no real improvement, Patrick's input probably weighed heavily on Howson pulling the trigger on Arniel. And, in what would be a theme, we'd see the promotion of Todd Richards, an American-born coach whose system relied on grit and effort.

2) Jeff Carter traded to Los Angeles for Jack Johnson and a 1st round pick.

It was clear that Carter had to go almost from the beginning, and Johnson is a bit of a lightning rod for his defensive play. That said, it was clear from the moment he arrived that Johnson brought leadership, toughness, and a willingness to lay it all on the line. He's also an American-born player. This will be a theme, folks.

3) Traded Marc Methot to Ottawa for Nick Foligno.

Methot was solid if unspectacular in Columbus, but Foligno has not only been great in the dressing room, but is having a career year this year on the scoresheet. He's also another American-born, gritty, two-way player.

4) Added Craig Hartsburg and Brad Larsen to the coaching ranks.

Hartsburg took over the defense, which almost instantly became a team strength. Larsen took over Springfield and has helped to turn the Falcons into a very, very good AHL club that preaches the same philosophy of the NHL club. The amount of call-ups from Springfield that have contributed without looking out of place speaks to this transition.

5) Traded draft picks for Sergei Bobrovsky.

Possibly the biggest move to turn around the Jackets last season, this was a move that was widely panned when it happened. Bob was coming off a less than stellar season in Philly, though there were clearly extenuating circumstance regarding his playing time. To say he's been a big hit in Columbus would be an understatement. They don't just hand out those Vezina Trophies to anyone, you know.

6) Drafted Ryan Murray in the first round of 2012.

This one was almost a no-brainer based on how the lottery played out, but with some of the other, flashier offensive options, Murray was not a sexy pick. Safe to say, however, that he might end up being the best player to come out of that draft if he can stay healthy.

7) Rick Nash traded to New York for Brandon Dubinsky, Artem Anisimov, Tim Erixon, and a 1st round pick.

Nash asked to be traded at the deadline, but to their credit Howson and company stood pat and got as much as they could in the summer. No one can really say whether or not a better offer might have existed either at the deadline or during the summer, but with the benefit of hindsight, the trade seems to have worked out decently for both teams. Nash got what he wanted in a chance to play in the playoffs, and the Jackets got a few bricks to add to their stable and help to change their culture. Dubinsky has stepped up as a big-time leader in the dressing room, and he's (wait for it) an American-born, gritty, two-way player.

8) Hired John Davidson as President of Hockey Operations

This is the big one. We'll never know who advocated for this move the most, but consider the following connections: Craig Patrick was GM and head coach of the Rangers in the early 1980s, and John Davidson played for the Rangers during that same time span. Davidson brought instant credibility to the Jackets upon his hire, and his savvy with the fanbase as well as with putting together an organization has certainly helped change the culture surrounding the club.

It is at this point that I feel like the timeline shifts, as Davidson quickly put his stamp on the team, both in the culture change as well as with removing Howson and bringing in Jarmo Kekalainen on February 13 of 2013. Patrick remained with the organization for almost a year after that, but was clearly ready to move on as his input was sought less frequently once Davidson and Kekalainen got things moving their way.

Moses was the Biblical figure who led his people out of slavery and through the wilderness. He was, for several reasons, not permitted to travel with his people into The Promised Land, however. And, to me, that's Craig Patrick for this team. Look at the list of moves made while he had Scott Howson's ear (and this list is by no means comprehensive; I left it to the major moves from which the components still have a role on today's roster).

And now, Patrick moves on to Buffalo, another team in need of a culture shift and a path out of the wilderness.

We may never know how much of a role Patrick truly had here in Columbus in terms of getting us from the abyss of 2011-2012 to a turnaround season in 2013, to now, on the precipice of a playoff berth. But, when one considers his history, and the moves made while he worked for the club and had strong influence on Scott Howson, I think he might just deserve as much credit as anyone for where the Blue Jackets currently sit in the standings.

Week 22: NHL Power Rankings Recap

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I officially no longer understand power rankings.

After a brief hiatus, we're back with the Power Rankings Recap.

Maybe I should have waited another week.

The Blue Jackets are being punished (?) by the power ranking makers after going 5-3-2 in their last ten games and moving into second place in the Metropolitan division. I'll let the rankings speak for themselves and feel free to click through to read their justifications, because for the life of me, I don't get it.

For example, TSN's asinine reasoning for dropping the Blue Jackets five spots:

Four wins in the past five games, but the bigger issue is missing half of their starting defence corps so, for the time being at least, the rankings reflect a short-staffed Blue Jackets blueline.

There's certainly no way Columbus could have more good players in the pipeline. We're not Detroit for crying out loud.

NHL.com: 12th (Last week: 15)

TSN: 16th (Last week: 11)

ESPN: 17th (Last week: 19)

CBS Sports: 15th (Last week: 19)

Fox Sports: 16th (Last week: 12)

Average ranking: 15th (Last week: 15)

In more encouraging news, John Buccigross of ESPN listed his Stanley Cup contenders on Wednesday. In the East, he saw fit to name Pittsburgh, Boston, New York Rangers, Tampa Bay, and Columbus as Eastern Conference favorites.

Previously: Week 18Week 17Week 16

Poll
Are the Blue Jackets Stanley Cup contenders?

  133 votes |Results

Fedor Tyutin Activated Off IR; Should Play Saturday

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The Jackets announced that the defenseman is coming off IR; Cody Goloubef goes back to Springfield.

The Blue Jackets announced earlier today that defenseman Fedor Tyutinhas been activated off of the IR list on Friday. Cody Goloubef was sent back to Springfield after Thursday night's game to make room on the roster.

This presumes that Tyutin will be on the ice Saturday against Minnesota, though where in the lineup he'll slot in remains to be seen. Having hurt his ankle, one assumes his conditioning will need a boost, and that might preclude him from top-pairing minutes right away. That said, I wouldn't be surprised to see him back with Jack Johnson on the top pairing.

Dallas Stars Winger Alex Chiason Deals With Anxiety Attack

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Alex Chiasson dealt with a panic episode in the wake of the Rich Peverley incident, and it's none of our business.

The cardiac event suffered by Rich Peverley during the Columbus Blue Jackets game has had a significant impact on it seems everyone involved in one way or the other. One of the people visibly shaken by the even was Stars forward Alex Chiasson. He was hospitalized after the incident due to an anxiety attack. The reaction has been mostly supportive, but not unanimously.

Some have suggested that Chiasson is hurting his team by removing himself at this juncture. Others have said that he needs to "man up", deal with it, or some other throw away phrase that minimizes the severity of anxiety-related attacks. These people have likely never dealt with a severe anxiety episode personally or through association.

Ignorance is driving those comments. Most people don't understand what it means to really have a panic attack. For Chiasson to need to be hospitalized the attack had to be significant on some level.

I have personally never had a panic attack, and I don't have anxiety. Someone very close to me does though. They once described their most severe panic attacks in a good bit of detail to me.

Basically, imagine losing control of your mind. You feel like you are dying, but you know in your mind you really aren't. Your heart is beating very fast which makes your breathing escalate. The muscles in your chest get very tight and sore from the stress of the attack. Your body cycles through highs and lows rapidly as endorphins are released which adds to the feelings of being out on control. It's also incredibly exhausting.

Imagine all of this happening repeatedly, unchecked, with limited ability to make it stop. Admittedly it is very hard to relate to if you have never had one, but try to add another layer to the visual. Imagine needing to perform the next night as an athlete in peak physical condition after being mentally and emotionally drained from a panic attack which likely kept you awake for most of the night until medicine in the hospital helped settle your mind.

If Alex Chiasson needed to take a week off he would have been well within his rights, and Lindy Ruff knows that for better or worse he'll continue to wear his emotions on his sleeve throughout.

"I think you saw the other night with the way he handled an emotional event, that's his personality," Ruff told the Dallas Morning News. "He's a kid who has a lot of passion. It's probably something he'll deal with his entire career.''

The reality though is that it is none of our business, and most importantly it isn't his fault. Anxiety and panic-related issues are embarrassing for those who suffer from them, but suffering from either is a fact of life for many people you wouldn't expect. The minority reaction Chiasson has received is one of the reasons people feel embarrassed about having anxiety. They know how ridiculous it looks to people who don't understand what they have gone though.

Chiasson knows how it looks for him to need to miss a game while his teammates played on with Peverley in the hospital. He doesn't need others to continuously point it out. It doesn't make him weak. It doesn't make him less of a person. Whether he deals with anxiety or he had an isolated incident is irrelevant to the story. The point is that this event happened, and it is just as serious as a physical injury.

Chiasson needs to take whatever time he needs to heal properly regardless of how it looks to the outside public.

Good for the Stars and good on Lindy Ruff for allowing that to happen.

If you would like more info about anxiety or depression please do follow this link.


Rangers Vs. Jets: That Was Ugly, But Two Points Are Two Points

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Notes from the Rangers win over the Jets.

- I don't know who had a bigger impact in this game between Carl Hagelin and Henrik Lundqvist, but I know which player the Rangers wouldn't have won without, and that's Lundqvist. He made some spectacular saves, including what might be the save of the year when the Rangers were clinging to that one-goal lead midway through the third and Hank came across his crease to rob a wide open Michael Frolik. Serious "holy crap" stuff from him.

- Of course you can't discount Hagelin's impact in the game. There just wouldn't have been such a close contest without Lundqvist. But good for Hagelin -- who has certianly struggled the past two games -- to break out and score three immense goals. The Rangers need more scoring from across their lineup, I don't think anyone is questioning that, and some of the burden (read: some) does fall on Hagelin.

- And give Martin St. Louis a lot of credit, too. He's struggled quite a bit in these five games in terms of goal scoring, and some of that has to do with luck while some does have to do with him pressing. Another Grade-A scoring chance last night when he broke in alone but was stopped at the last minute. However, that pass to Hagelin for the Rangers third goal with eight seconds left in the second? Brilliant. That's why he's here. What a game.

- Chris Kreider scored a huge goal, too, and he's another player that's starting to find his pre-Olympic rhythm. His goal (off a perfect feed from Derek Stepan, may I add) was a great example of the type of player he's going to be. Used his speed to break around the defender and just released a lethal shot that knotted the game.

- Haven't seen many people talking about Stepan recently. Nine points his last seven games, 46 points on the season, and a chance to break 60 points after his early season struggles.

- Same thing about Lundqvist. Where are all the people panicking over that deal now?

- This is one of those games where you walk away knowing you don't deserve the two points. The Rangers got manhandled in the third period, and if it wasn't for Henrik Lunqvist, they would have lose 10-2. Seriously. The Jets were getting prime chances all over the ice, and Lundqvist just threw on his Superman Cape and shut them down.

- But, two points are two points. And the Rangers' offense did find a way to finish the game off and get them. Now the Rangers have a two point lead over Columbus for second with two more ROWs, but the Blue Jackets have two games in hand. That's why you can't lose to Carolina three games ago, but again, it's in the past.

- By the way, last night was a little more emotional for me than I thought, and it was kind of out of left field. I told you guys before I was a huge Mike Richter fan as a kid. He was my favorite player when I was growing up. Last night Lundqvist earned win number 301, tying his record. It kind of made me think about how long ago Richter was, how good he would have been if the Rangers weren't so terrible throughout his career and if he didn't get hurt. But then I realized something else. Lundqvist was the pillar behind the Rangers becoming relevant again (well, with Jaromir Jagr, too), helped me stop getting made fun of for being a Rangers fan as a kid, and gave me more memories than I can count with my Dad, friends, family and all of you psychos. He's ben my favorite player for so long I actually started to take him for granted. If anyone was going to break the record, I'm glad it will be him.

Thoughts?

Game Preview #68 - Mr. Todd's Wild Ride

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Yes, that's a lame title. That said, it's going to be a wild run to the finish, and given how things ended up with the Wild last year and Todd Richards' history in Minnesota, I figured: why not? Bonus points: look who's behind him in that picture...

Columbus Blue Jackets at Minnesota Wild

March 15, 2014 - 8:00pm EDT
Xcel Energy Center - St. Paul, Minnesota
Radio - WBNS 97.1 - TV - Fox Sports Ohio
Opponents Blog: Hockey Wilderness
SBN's Wild vs. Blue Jackets coverage

So, as much as we were fans of the Wild the other night when they dispatched the Rangers, tonight we must turn the tables. New York won last night, and the Jackets need to win to keep pace and move back into that tie-breaker second place spot. It doesn't matter how they get there; they just need the two points.

The good news is that, while still technically a "game-time decision" per coach Richards, it is looking an awful lot like Fedor Tyutin is going to play tonight. As of now, the pairings below are how they rolled in the morning skate, but TR changed the pairings up on Thursday night mid-stream, so nothing is written in stone.

The Wild have loaded up trying to generate more offense, adding Matt Moulson and moving Mikka Koivu to the second line with him in an attempt to balance out their offensive attack. The top line is still very good with Zach Parise and Jason Pominville, and yet the Wild just cannot consistently generate offense this season. Let's hope that trend can continue tonight.

Artem Anisimov is back for Columbus tonight, and Matt Frattin is out of the lineup because of that. It looks like former Wild Nick Schultz is the odd defenseman out as well.

Projected Lineups

Columbus Blue Jackets
(34-26-6, 74 Points; 3rd division, 7th conference)

Boone JennerRyan JohansenNick Foligno
Matt CalvertBrandon DubinskyNathan Horton
R.J. UmbergerArtem AnisimovCam Atkinson
Derek MacKenzieMark LetestuCorey Tropp
Jack JohnsonDalton Prout
Fedor TyutinJames Wisniewski
Nikita NikitinDavid Savard
Sergei Bobrovsky
Curtis McElhinney

Minnesota Wild
(35-22-9, 79 Points; 4th Division, 7th Conference)

Zach PariseMikael GranlundJason Pominville
Matt MoulsonMikko KoivuNino Niederreiter
Matt CookeKyle BrodziakCharlie Coyle
Dany HeatleyErik HaulaCody McCormick
Ryan SuterJared Spurgeon
Marco ScandellaJonas Brodin
Clayton StonerNate Prosser
Darcy Kuemper
Ilya Bryzgalov

Season Series

12/06/13 - Minnesota 0 at Columbus 4
03/15/14 - Columbus at Minnesota

Head to Head Stats

Minnesota
Columbus
2.36 (26)GPG2.86 (8)
2.36 (5)GAPG2.74 (17)
18.4% (15)PP%18.3% (16)
80.6% (22)PK%81.9% (17)
Jason Pominville, 24G leaderRyan Johansen, 26
three tied, 29A leaderJames Wisniewski, 33
Jason Pominville, 46Pts leaderRyan Johansen, 50
Clayton Stoner, 78PIM leaderBrandon Dubinsky, 92
23-7-4Home/Road15-15-3
3/3 vs. NY RangersW 2-1Last Game3/13 vs. San Jose, L 4-3 (SO)
6-1-3Last 105-3-2

Game Day #68 - CBJ vs. Wild

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Columbus Blue Jackets at Minnesota Wild

March 15, 2014 - 8:00pm EDT
Xcel Energy Center - St. Paul, Minnesota
Radio - WBNS 97.1 - TV - Fox Sports Ohio
Opponents Blog: Hockey Wilderness
SBN's Wild vs. Blue Jackets coverage

So, as much as we were fans of the Wild the other night when they dispatched the Rangers, tonight we must turn the tables. New York won last night, and the Jackets need to win to keep pace and move back into that tie-breaker second place spot. It doesn't matter how they get there; they just need the two points.

The good news is that, while still technically a "game-time decision" per coach Richards, it is looking an awful lot like Fedor Tyutin is going to play tonight. As of now, the pairings below are how they rolled in the morning skate, but TR changed the pairings up on Thursday night mid-stream, so nothing is written in stone.

The Wild have loaded up trying to generate more offense, adding Matt Moulson and moving Mikka Koivu to the second line with him in an attempt to balance out their offensive attack. The top line is still very good with Zach Parise and Jason Pominville, and yet the Wild just cannot consistently generate offense this season. Let's hope that trend can continue tonight.

Artem Anisimov is back for Columbus tonight, and Matt Frattin is out of the lineup because of that. It looks like former Wild Nick Schultz is the odd defenseman out as well.

Projected Lineups

Columbus Blue Jackets
(34-26-6, 74 Points; 3rd division, 7th conference)

Boone JennerRyan JohansenNick Foligno
Matt CalvertBrandon DubinskyNathan Horton
R.J. UmbergerArtem AnisimovCam Atkinson
Derek MacKenzieMark LetestuCorey Tropp
Jack JohnsonDalton Prout
Fedor TyutinJames Wisniewski
Nikita NikitinDavid Savard
Sergei Bobrovsky
Curtis McElhinney

Minnesota Wild
(35-22-9, 79 Points; 4th Division, 7th Conference)

Zach PariseMikael GranlundJason Pominville
Matt MoulsonMikko KoivuNino Niederreiter
Matt CookeKyle BrodziakCharlie Coyle
Dany HeatleyErik HaulaCody McCormick
Ryan SuterJared Spurgeon
Marco ScandellaJonas Brodin
Clayton StonerNate Prosser
Darcy Kuemper
Ilya Bryzgalov

Season Series

12/06/13 - Minnesota 0 at Columbus 4
03/15/14 - Columbus at Minnesota

Head to Head Stats

Minnesota
Columbus
2.36 (26)GPG2.86 (8)
2.36 (5)GAPG2.74 (17)
18.4% (15)PP%18.3% (16)
80.6% (22)PK%81.9% (17)
Jason Pominville, 24G leaderRyan Johansen, 26
three tied, 29A leaderJames Wisniewski, 33
Jason Pominville, 46Pts leaderRyan Johansen, 50
Clayton Stoner, 78PIM leaderBrandon Dubinsky, 92
23-7-4Home/Road15-15-3
3/3 vs. NY Rangers, W 2-1Last Game3/13 vs. San Jose, L 4-3 (SO)
6-1-3Last 105-3-2

The Outsiders: Blues At Nashville Predators Preview

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Blues visit Smashville For The Last Time This Season

The Blues played the Preds just 9 days ago, back on 03/06. That 2-1 victory was Pekka Rinne's second game back from a lengthy injury, and was also the Predators' first-ever game without David Legwand, who was traded at the deadline to the Wings. At that time, there was still enough hockey left to play to make a run for the last playoff spot. They were only 6 points out, and had about 20 games remaining. The Blues won that game, but since then, the Predators have gone 3-1-0, including a tough win last night against the Blackhawks in Chicago. Despite a reasonably good record, they are now 7 points out from that last playoff spot, and time's running out. They're just not getting any help from the rest of the league. Imagine that.

The Predators have done everything that they could to turn their season around (and possibly save the jobs of GM David Poile and coach Barry Trotz). After our last meeting, the Preds dropped a 1-0 game to the Blue Jackets, then went on to win 3 in a row on the road - in Ottawa, Buffalo, and last night in Chicago. The typically low-scoring Predators have a combined 11 goals in that span, and after tonight's game will go on the road again for another 4-game stretch. That'll be a Western Canada trip, with a bonus stop in Chicago. With that in their future, the playoffs are looking more and more distant. Now, it's about playing for pride, for next year's roster, and for the fans.

The scoring for the Preds is led by defenseman Shea Weber, with 43 points on 16 goals and 27 assists. The departed Legwand would be 2nd, still, on the team. Now, that position is held by goals leader Craig Smith with 40 points (20g, 20a). Mike Fisher (17g, 19a) is next with 36 points, and then Patric Hornqvist (13g, 21a) with 34 points. The top 5 is rounded out with another defenseman, Roman Josi . His 30 points (9g, 21a) includes 4 in this last 2 games, and 3 in the win against Chicago yesterday. The defense has been a real bright spot for the Perds (a shocker, I know). Two of their top five scorers are from a defense that is awfully young. From the Yahoo preview comes this money quote from Barry Trotz:

''That's the strength really of our group, our D-men,'' coach Barry Trotz said. ''They're all young and talented. We're the youngest team in the league by three years on the blue line. The future is really bright for us there."

Now, that win last night was built on those 3 assists from Josi, another from Weber, and the game-winning goal by Ryan Ellis . Add to that mix Seth Jones, and this could be a defensive corps that we'll learn to loathe in the upcoming years. That'll the the chief reason they'll be tough to play against for years to come.

As for goaltending, the Preds have Pekka Rinne back from injury, and playing very well. Since coming back, Rinne has a .925 Sv%. As long as the team in front of him keeps burying pucks, he gives them a chance to win against any team. Having secured the win against the Hawks, the Preds may play him again tonight - this would be the first time that they've played him in both games in back-to-back nights. Otherwise, the alternative is Carter Hutton (.904 Sv% and 2.79 GAA). It will be a tough choice for Trotz - play Rinne on short rest, or play the guy that has given up 12 goals in 4 games (3 starts) to the Blues? Hutton has a career .891 Sv% against St Louis. Neither option is very attractive. Thankfully, that call isn't up to guys like me.

In the preview for the 03/06 match, I looked at the #FancyStats charts for Nashville. The Rolling 10-game Fenwick (5v5, when the score is close) Percentage was spiking to just above 55% ... since then, they've maintained that through last night (now 55.8%). Compare last preview's chart with now:

Nashville_predators_2013-2014_rolling_10-game_5v5_close_ff__1__medium

Another comparison can be made with their Rolling 10-Game PDO numbers. Last time, though they were doing well possession-wise, they weren't getting much in the way of puck luck. Either a lack of goal-scoring (measured in shot-percentage) or goaltending (measured in Save Percentage) prior to Rinne's return was pulling the combined measurement PDO down away from the "norm" or "average" 100-mark. Now, however, that measurement is starting to bounce back:

Nashville_predators_2013-2014_rolling_10-game_5v5_pdo_1__medium

Note that the "bottom out" moment was the loss to us on 03/06. Since then, that winning streak and scoring outburst has lifted the Preds back towards the mean. All info/visuals courtesy of the Predator page on ExtraSkater.

What does that mean? Well, the Preds were due for some success, and it has come around. Whether that continues tonight in their game against The Best Damn Team In The League (tm) remains to be seen. They've been getting their chances, and those will eventually start going in. A lot depends on which Blues team shows up tonight (or when they show up). Suffice it to say, the Preds won't go down easily. This game could be hell on the heart. Of course, with the history between these two teams, that shouldn't be a surprise. I'll be watching with a drink in my hand.

Further Reading:

On The Forecheck

The Predatorial

Section 303

Final Verse: We're starting at 7:00 STL time tonight, although I know we have some GameTimers in Nashville that probably "started" at breakfast. You can't drink "all day" if you don't start in the morning. The puck drops at 7:00, but the GDT should drop shortly beforehand. The TV broadcast is on FoxSports MW, and the radio call will be on KMOX 1120 AM. Until that time, consider this your pregame skate. Gather here, talk about your preferred playoff matchups, the ButtGoal lead in the gif tournament (vote!), and enjoy a little light entertainment...


LGB!!!

-CrossCheckRaise

Wild Falls to the Blue Jackets in Shootout Thriller

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The Wild and Blue Jackets were locked in a goaltenders' duel as Bobrovsky out-lasts Kuemper in a 4 round shootout.

Minnesota finished the four-game home stand 1-0-3 after falling to the Columbus Blue Jackets 2-1 in the shootout. Both teams traded chances all game long, but Sergei Bobrovsky and Darcy Kuemper stole the show in this one. In a fast-paced, low-scoring affair it proved tough to break through in an action packed game. Goals from Jason Pominville and Dalton Prout held up through 65 minutes.

It was evident in the first period that Sergei "Bob" Bobrovsky came to play tonight. The Wild finished the period with 12 shots, many of which were Grade A opportunities. Pominville put a great set-up from Mikael Granlund off the post and Parise had a number of point-blank chances. But Kuemper was not to be out-done in his own building. He made great saves in his own end as well. Mark Letestu, who finished with four shots on goal, found out how difficult Keumper was going to be tonight with his three 1st period shots getting stopped by Kuemper.

The second period pace was just as fast and furious as the first period. The Wild got the game's only power play. Minnesota was unable to capitalize on the man advantage, finishing 0-1 tonight, but had good chances from Jonas Brodin and Charlie Coyle. Columbus was finally able to break the ice when Dalton Prout tipped home a Jack Johnson point shot in behind Kuemper with 26 seconds remaining in the period.

Minnesota opened the 3rd period with a lot of shots, getting out to a 8-4 shot lead in the period. Then after a defensive zone faceoff with the top unit on the ice, Granlund would win a faceoff back to Ryan Suter. Suter then tried a Hail Mary pass to Parise but failed to connect. Parise's hustle on the play would negate the icing that would have ensued and he dished a pass to a streaking Pominville for the game-tying goal. With some great opportunities going back and forth between the teams, the game would eventually go to overtime and to the dreaded shootout.

Both Parise and Koivu would score to give the Wild a 2-0 lead in the skills competition, but Artem Anisimov and Mark Letestu would even it up. Matt Moulson would get stopped by Bobrovsky and Ryan Johansen would get the last goal to cinch the win the Blue Jackets.

The Wild have set a franchise record for reaching 80 points through 67 games.

Mike Yeo Post-Game Press Conference:

"Darn Shootout. It's tough. It kind of paints a bad picture for a good game."

"I'm glad we don't have to play that goalie again this year...seems to really like playing against us," Yeo said about Bobrovsky.

"I'm not gonna say that I'm disappointed with them, but I know there's more there too." Yeo said about the performance of the 2nd line.

It's fun hockey right now, these have been playoff-type hockey games."

"I don't want Kuemps to start thinking it's a negative. I thought he played well too."

"We can't sit here and let a shootout affect how we feel the way that we're playing the game."

Stats

Shots

MIN - 33            CBJ - 29

Hits

MIN - 17           CBJ - 23

Faceoffs

MIN - 26/51     CBJ - 25/51

Power Play

MIN 0-1           CBJ - 0-0

TOI Leaders

MIN - Suter, 28:55     CBJ - Johnson, 26:10

Game 68 Recap: Backs To The Wall

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It took Overtime, a shootout, extra shooters, and a video review of the game winning goal, but thanks to Ryan Johansen's silky smooth hands, the Jackets walked away with a 2-1 victory over the Minnesota Wild,

After taking over 2nd place in the Metro on Thursday, the Blue Jackets slid back into the wild card spot thanks to Philadelphia's victory over Pittsburgh earlier today.

With the Minnesota Wild locked in a playoff chase of their own, both teams were looking for points at any cost, and they played like it.

Both Sergei Bobrovsky and Darcy Kuemper were lights out in the first period, with Bob getting one stunning moment of luck when Jason Pominville had a wide open net on the doorstep, but rang the shot off the post.

Each goaltender would make solid saves in the first period, including Minnesota's first power play of the night, but ended the first period in a 0-0 tie, and that scoreless tie would last through almost the entire second period...when things changed.

As the final minute of play ticked down, Jack Johnson dug the puck out of the end boards in the Minnesota zone before swinging up towards the blue line. Feeding the puck over to Dalton Prout, his new D partner cranked a one timer that found a way through traffic (including a couple of Minnesota sticks) to slip past Kuemper for the opening goal.

Unfortunately, the recent theme of leads slipping away in the early third period reared it's ugly head again - this time thanks to a miscommunication between Prout and Johnson that saw Zach Parise slip behind the Columbus net and feed the puck to a wide open Pominville, who didn't miss his second chance.

With the game tied once again, both teams went into "Prevent" mode - neither squad registered double digits on the third period shot clock - and tie ticked agonizingly away towards the end of regulation.

Columbus had one real scare late in the period when Nathan Horton flipped a puck back towards an unprepared Bobrovsky, but the Vezina winner managed to freeze it before it slipped through or a Minnesota skater could capitalize on it.

Once in OT, each team had a couple of rushes, but nothing really concrete came of it. Columbus' best chance came when Jack Johnson lead a coast-to-coast rush that took the Wild by surprise, but after finally getting the puck to Matt Calvert down low he couldn't pull the trigger.

Five minutes passed all too quickly, and Columbus would face their second shootout in a row.

It didn't look like they'd be able to change the ending to this deja vu moment, as Parise and Mikko Koivu scored back to back, while Cam Atkinson couldn't bury his attempt.

That meant that Artem Anisimov went over the boards with Columbus' hopes on his stick, and Mr. New Dad took care of business, keeping the shootout going, and the Jackets alive.

Pominville attempted to finish the game, but Bob found a key save, which meant that Mark Letestu could force extra shooters. Going wide, he slid down through the right side of the ice before cutting across and finding a gap.

Rallying from the 2-0 deficit, the Columbus bench was energized, and that clearly resonated with their goaltender, who made a toe save on Matt Moulson in the first round of extra shooters, and that meant that Ryan Johansen had the game on his stick.

Changing up his speed as he attacked the net, he stickhandled in a beautiful arc around Kuemper's attempted poke check, then tucked it home past the sprawling goaltender.

Even as he turned with a wide smile to meet his celebrating teammates, though, things changed to confusion as one of the referees skated over to argue that Johan had "double touched" the puck after the pokecheck attempt. The goal would be sent to the War Room in Toronto, where they determined that Johansen never lost control of the puck, calling it a good goal.

The celebrations resumed on the Columbus bench, and both Johan and Bob got their share of hugs and manly back slaps for their efforts to secure two huge points.

Final Score: Jackets 2 - Wild 1 (SO)

Standard Bearers:

  • Sergei Bobrovsky - No Bob, no win. More than a few people have been saying it on Twitter already, but it's still true.
  • The Energy Line - Letestu, Tropp, and Mackenzie were out at key points in the game. They never stopped pushing the Wild, and met the challenge of Minnesota's top line head on.
  • The Shootout - The last time a team came back from a 2-0 deficit and won the shootout was Buffalo over Montreal back in 2011. Over three years ago. It's pretty much a given in the NHL that if you go down 2-0, you're screwed. Yet the Jackets defied that. Incredible.

Bottom of the Barrel:

  • Prevent Defense - Don't get me wrong, both goalies were amazing in this game, but it feels like way too much of this game was played not to lose, rather than looking to win.
  • Third Period Slips - Second game in a row this team has let a third period lead go. That's a habit that can't continue.
  • Pittsburgh Penguins - Really, guys? Really? 4-0 loss to Steve Mason? Thanks for the help, schmucks.

The good news is that right now, the Jackets are back into the 2nd place slot in the Metro. The bad news is that Philly, Pittsburgh, Jersey, and New York will all play before Columbus takes on the Hurricanes Tuesday.

14 games to the finish line. Every one matters. Every point is important.

The playoffs have already started - and the Jackets are rising to the challenge.

Wilderness Walk: 1-0-3 Edition

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The Minnesota Wild played well through their 4-game homestand but only managed to acquire 1 win and 5 points in those 4 games.

The Wild let another extra point slip away in a shootout last night. This is not a trend they should get used to. Every extra point will be crucial down the stretch.

Wild News

Minnesota Wild fall 2-1 to Blue Jackets in shootout - TwinCities.com
Three fast-paced periods, overtime and 62 combined shots before a shootout decided by video review.

Like kissing your sister, Wild loses in a shootout for third time in four home games | Russo's Rants | StarTribune.com
Wild are dropping 2-0 leads in games, and now shootouts. Ah, the life of a Minnesota sports fan.

Bobrovsky wins the goaltending duel and the Blue Jackets survive a strong effort from the Wild in 2-1 shootout victory | March | 2014 Articles
The State of Hockey News breaks down last nights action.

Wild picks up another point, but loses again in shootout | Star Tribune
The Wild played some strong games on the most recent home stand, but were only able to come away with 1 win and 3 overtime losses.

Minnesota Wild: Will Erik Haula move up even further? - TwinCities.com
Haula has been proving he belongs in the NHL, and is being rewarded for his efforts.

Sunday Q&A: Wild forward Dany Heatley | Star Tribune
Sitting down with the guy everybody loves to hate.

Minnesota Wild: Justin Fontaine caught in numbers crunch - TwinCities.com
I'm going to echo what Brandon Mileski of KFAN said last night after the game, "I'd take him over either of the 4th line wingers right now."

Tending the Fields

Mallards blow late lead in Denver | Quad-City Times
The Mallards give up a late goal and drop one in a shootout.

Off the Trail

US downs Russia, wins sled hockey gold at Paralympics - CBSSports.com
Wounded veteran Josh Sweeney scored the only goal as Team USA earned a 1-0 win over Russia in sled hockey at the 2014 Paralympics.

Wild notes: GMs want to expand video review, but the devil's in the details | Star Tribune
NHL GM's are sitting down to decide the future of the game. They're reading this Wilderness, any suggestions?

NHL Capsules - The Hockey News
RECAPS!!!!

Canadiens complete comeback so breathtaking officials can’t even blow whistles (Video) | Puck Daddy - Yahoo Sports
An amazing comeback, mix in a little controversy, and you have a game between two Canadian teams.

Stars’ Lehtonen aiming to return Sunday vs. Winnipeg | ProHockeyTalk
Good news for the Stars and Lehtonen.

Metro Update - 3/17/14

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What a crazy weekend in the Metro, as the Flyers make a statement and the Rangers' struggles continue.

Metropolitan Division Standings - Monday, March 17

TeamGPPTSWLOTLROWGDL10Streak
Pittsburgh67924419439+424-4-2L2
Philadelphia67773525732-17-2-1W2
Columbus67763526630+116-3-1W1
NY Rangers69763629432+74-5-1L1
Washington697432271024-65-4-1W2
New Jersey687129261329-105-5-0L2
Carolina68672930928-253-7-0L2
NY Islanders69612634920-384-5-1W1

Eastern Conference Wild Card Standings - Monday, March 17

TeamGPPTSWLOTLROWGDL10Streak
Tampa Bay67793624730+194-4-2W2
NY Rangers69763629432+74-5-1L1
Washington697432271024-65-4-1W2
Detroit677330241325-134-5-1L1
New Jersey687129261329-105-5-0L2
Ottawa676928261325-313-5-2L1
Carolina68672930928-253-7-0L2

Division Playoff Odds

Courtesy of Sports Club Stats:

Pittsburgh - 100.0% (even)
Columbus - 85.0% (up)
Philadelphia - 83.2% (up)
NY Rangers - 71.2% (down)
New Jersey - 28.6% (up)
Washington - 12.6% (up)
Carolina - 0.8% (down)
NY Islanders - 0.0% (even)

If The Season Ended Today...

Round 1 Matchups

RoadHome
NY Rangers (WC2)Boston (A1)
Columbus (M3)Philadelphia (M2)
Tampa Bay (WC1)Pittsburgh (M1)
Toronto (A3)Montreal (A2)

Who Helps Us Tonight

Tampa Bay vs Vancouver (+0.1)

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