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Game Preview #1 - Close Your Eyes And Jump

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The regular season is finally upon us, even if many question marks still abound for the Blue Jackets.

Columbus Blue Jackets at Buffalo Sabres

October 9, 2014 - 7:00 pm EDT
First Niagara Center - Buffalo, New York
Radio - WBNS 97.1 - TV - Fox Sports Ohio
Opponent's Blog: Die By The Blade

We've done all of the gnashing of teeth that we can do about the injuries, the missed camp of Ryan Johansen, and all of the other factors. All that's left to do is to close our eyes and jump. For good or ill, the season starts tonight, whether the team is ready and in top form or not. You wanna fly? Close your eyes and jump!

The Jackets have their question marks, as we know, but the schedule makers gave them a bit of a favor in sending them to Buffalo for their first game. This Sabres team should be better than last year's raging tire fire, but by how much? They managed to re-sign Matt Moulson, they added Brian Gionta for the dressing room, and also brought in guys like Andrej Meszaros and Andre Benoit to try to shore up their defense.

That said, defensively, they lost Christian Ehrhoff and of course Ryan Miller. You don't replace those guys right away.

When you look at the top six for the Sabres, it's not terrible... on paper. That said, there's no getting around that this team was a terrible, terrible offensive team, with many of those same guys in the lineup. #2 overall pick Sam Reinhart will get his first taste of the NHL, and will play alongside new Captain Gionta.

Here's the thing: this Sabres team--or, at least a reasonable comparison of it--beat Columbus last season (IN COLUMBUS) when the Jackets were playing arguably their best hockey of the season: the Sabres ended the Jackets' eight-game winning streak back in January.

For the Jackets, the lineup below is a representation of how they looked in practice on Wednesday, and as we know with Todd Richards all things are subject to change at any time without notice. We'll update after the morning skate, which is around 11:30 today.

I know Columbus doesn't roll their four line traditionally (anything in the top-nine can go out in any situation), but it's interesting to note that Marko Dano slots in on the "top" line. Remember that Boone Jenner did the same last year, and despite playing well in the pre-season Jenner struggled out of the gate last season. We may need to expect the same from Dano as well as Alexander Wennberg.

All of this having been said, it's the first game of the season. I'll be eating my customary Chipotle burrito for lunch, and I'll see you all in the Game Thread (though I may be late because I'll be putting my son to bed). Can't wait!!

Projected Lineups

Columbus Blue Jackets
(Last Season: 43-32-7, 93 Points; 4th division, 7th conference)

Scott HartnellArtem AnisimovMarko Dano
Nick FolignoRyan JohansenCam Atkinson
Matt CalvertMark LetestuAlexander Wennberg
Jack SkilleMichael ChaputCorey Tropp / Jared Boll
Jack JohnsonDavid Savard
Tim ErixonJames Wisniewski
Fedor TyutinDalton Prout
Sergei Bobrovsky
Curtis McElhinney

Buffalo Sabres
(Last Season: 21-51-10, 52 Points; 8th Division, 16th Conference)

Matt MoulsonTyler EnnisDrew Stafford
Cody HodgsonSam ReinhartBrian Gionta
Marcus FolignoZemgus GirgensonsChris Stewart
Nicolas DeslauriersCody McCormickBrian Flynn
Josh GorgesTyler Myers
Andre BenoitAndrej Meszaros
Rasmus RistolainenMike Weber
Jhonas Enroth
Michal Neuvirth

Season Series

10/09/14 - Columbus at Buffalo
02/24/15 - Buffalo at Columbus
04/10/15 - Buffalo at Columbus

'13-'14 Head to Head Stats

BuffaloColumbus
1.83 (30)GPG2.76 (12)
2.96 (25)GAPG2.61 (13)
14.1% (29)PP%19.3% (11)
81.4% (20)PK%82.1% (14)
Tyler Ennis, 21G leaderRyan Johansen, 33
Christian Ehrhoff, 27A leaderJames Wisniewski, 44
Cody Hodgson, 44Pts leaderRyan Johansen, 63
John Scott, 125PIM leaderBrandon Dubinsky, 98
13-21-7Home/Road21-17-3

Game Day #1 - Blue Jackets at Sabres

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The regular season is finally upon us, even if many question marks still abound for the Blue Jackets.

Columbus Blue Jackets at Buffalo Sabres

October 9, 2014 - 7:00 pm EDT
First Niagara Center - Buffalo, New York
Radio - WBNS 97.1 - TV - Fox Sports Ohio
Opponent's Blog: Die By The Blade

We've done all of the gnashing of teeth that we can do about the injuries, the missed camp of Ryan Johansen, and all of the other factors. All that's left to do is to close our eyes and jump. For good or ill, the season starts tonight, whether the team is ready and in top form or not. You wanna fly? Close your eyes and jump!

The Jackets have their question marks, as we know, but the schedule makers gave them a bit of a favor in sending them to Buffalo for their first game. This Sabres team should be better than last year's raging tire fire, but by how much? They managed to re-sign Matt Moulson, they added Brian Gionta for the dressing room, and also brought in guys like Andrej Meszaros and Andre Benoit to try to shore up their defense.

That said, defensively, they lost Christian Ehrhoff and of course Ryan Miller. You don't replace those guys right away.

When you look at the top six for the Sabres, it's not terrible... on paper. That said, there's no getting around that this team was a terrible, terrible offensive team, with many of those same guys in the lineup. #2 overall pick Sam Reinhart will get his first taste of the NHL, and will play alongside new Captain Gionta.

Here's the thing: this Sabres team--or, at least a reasonable comparison of it--beat Columbus last season (IN COLUMBUS) when the Jackets were playing arguably their best hockey of the season: the Sabres ended the Jackets' eight-game winning streak back in January.

For the Jackets, the lineup below is a representation of how they looked in practice on Wednesday, and as we know with Todd Richards all things are subject to change at any time without notice. We'll update after the morning skate, which is around 11:30 today.

I know Columbus doesn't roll their four line traditionally (anything in the top-nine can go out in any situation), but it's interesting to note that Marko Dano slots in on the "top" line. Remember that Boone Jenner did the same last year, and despite playing well in the pre-season Jenner struggled out of the gate last season. We may need to expect the same from Dano as well as Alexander Wennberg.

All of this having been said, it's the first game of the season. I'll be eating my customary Chipotle burrito for lunch, and I'll see you all in the Game Thread (though I may be late because I'll be putting my son to bed). Can't wait!!

Projected Lineups

Columbus Blue Jackets
(Last Season: 43-32-7, 93 Points; 4th division, 7th conference)

Scott HartnellArtem AnisimovMarko Dano
Nick FolignoRyan JohansenCam Atkinson
Matt CalvertMark LetestuAlexander Wennberg
Jack SkilleMichael ChaputCorey Tropp / Jared Boll
Jack JohnsonDavid Savard
Tim ErixonJames Wisniewski
Fedor TyutinDalton Prout
Sergei Bobrovsky
Curtis McElhinney

Buffalo Sabres
(Last Season: 21-51-10, 52 Points; 8th Division, 16th Conference)

Matt MoulsonTyler EnnisDrew Stafford
Cody HodgsonSam ReinhartBrian Gionta
Marcus FolignoZemgus GirgensonsChris Stewart
Nicolas DeslauriersCody McCormickBrian Flynn
Josh GorgesTyler Myers
Andre BenoitAndrej Meszaros
Rasmus RistolainenMike Weber
Jhonas Enroth
Michal Neuvirth

Season Series

10/09/14 - Columbus at Buffalo
02/24/15 - Buffalo at Columbus
04/10/15 - Buffalo at Columbus

'13-'14 Head to Head Stats

BuffaloColumbus
1.83 (30)GPG2.76 (12)
2.96 (25)GAPG2.61 (13)
14.1% (29)PP%19.3% (11)
81.4% (20)PK%82.1% (14)
Tyler Ennis, 21G leaderRyan Johansen, 33
Christian Ehrhoff, 27A leaderJames Wisniewski, 44
Cody Hodgson, 44Pts leaderRyan Johansen, 63
John Scott, 125PIM leaderBrandon Dubinsky, 98
13-21-7Home/Road21-17-3

Thursday's Coyotes Tracks - The big night

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The Arizona Coyotes are gearing up for their home opener while the Los Angeles Kings were shutout for the banner raising

Coyotes News

Season preview: 2014-15 Arizona Coyotes - Arizona Sports
Hockey the hard way is back on Thursday and the Coyotes are perfectly fine with it.

Shane Doan: Arizona Coyotes looking to re-gain old identity -- AZ Sports
After a relatively quiet offseason, the Arizona Coyotes enter the 2014-15 with little fanfare and modest expectations.

Arizona Coyotes gear up behind Mike Smith -- AZCentral
The Coyotes open their season tonight and are hoping to see the beginning of a huge season from goalie Mike Smith, in his fourth season with the team and second while carrying an elite contract as a cornerstone of the franchise.

Top 10 questions as Coyotes open new season | FOX Sports
Can goalie Mike Smith regain his elite form? Who will score the goals? Is Oliver Ekman-Larsson ready to join the Norris conversation? We look at the top questions facing the Arizona Coyotes this season.

Pirates News

Pirates' 20-year-old prospect has a name to remember - The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram
Henrik Samuelsson, ready for his first AHL season, has talent and fire – like his dad, the former NHL player, Ulf Samuelsson.

News From Around the Hockey World

Sharks beat Kings despite taking a 3-0 lead - Fear The Fin
Put that on a banner and raise it.

Canucks snap 5-game opening night losing streak in 4-2 win over Flames - Nucks Misconduct
The Canucks are undefeated. Sure, it's only one game. But it's a promising start to the 2014/15 season.

Leafs Fall to Montreal in Season Opener, 4-3 - Pension Plan Puppets
In their first game of the season, Percy looked great, the depth looked good, but the team fell short.

RECAP: Two Swedes and a Kelly lead Bruins over Philly - Stanley Cup of Chowder
A solid night all around from the Eriksson-Soderberg-Kelly trio was just what the doctor ordered on Opening Night.

Why Can't We Have Nice Things?!? Dubinsky Out For Six Weeks - The Cannon
In yet another stinging blow, the Blue Jackets have placed center Brandon Dubinsky on IR with a lower body injury.

Todays SlapShot | Top 10 Defensemen in the Pacific: 5-1 - Today's Slapshot
Oliver Ekman-Larsson is in the top-5.

Mike Milbury says it’s time to ‘grow up’ and ban fighting (Video) | Puck Daddy - Yahoo Sports
"I think it’s telling me that it’s time to get rid of fighting. It’s telling me that it’s over. As much as I like a good scrap in my day, too many issues here involving concussions. Too many problems. The teams are going away from it. Let’s grow up and get rid of it."

Are NHL enforcers becoming endangered? - NHL on CBC Sports - Hockey news, opinion, scores, stats, standings
The day has come when fewer than half the NHL's 30 teams will start a season without a heavyweight fighter, or one-dimensional forward. It seems the term "team toughness" is being redefined.

Report: Chris Pronger in mix for NHL player safety job - CBSSports.com
According to a report, Chris Pronger may be in line for a job with the NHL's Department of Player Safety. The catch is that Pronger is still under contract with the Philadelphia Flyers.

Martin Brodeur doesn’t want to steal anyone’s job | Puck Daddy - Yahoo Sports
Brodeur, 42, is 12 wins away from 700 for his career, a mark no one in NHL history has hit.

The Final Howl

What’s your European hockey player name? - Punchline on CBC

Buffalo Sabres vs. Columbus Blue Jackets: Previews and notes for the season opener

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The next Buffalo Sabres season gets underway tonight, as the Sabres host the Blue Jackets. Here's all the news and notes you need to get ready for tonight's game.

Game #1!

Buffalo Sabres (0-0-0) vs. 
Columbus Blue Jackets(0-0-0)

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

Three Questions

1. Hockey!
That's not a question.

Hockey?
Yes, it's back! But let's go with a real question here.

How will #2 pick Sam Reinhart look in his NHL debut?
Reinhart had a fairly quiet preseason, but now things will ramp up another notch, both for the young center and his opponents. Reinhart's getting the free nine-game tryout, but can he do enough to convince the coaching staff he deserves to stay for the other 73? To do so, he'll have to make an impact early and often, and it all starts tonight. He's on a line with talented players in Cody Hodgson and Brian Gionta, and should get to play against choice competition on the third line. Let's see what the kid can do.

2. Whose youngsters will perform better?
The Sabres and Jackets are the two youngest teams in the league, with Columbus being slightly younger. Both teams have very young players in key roles, and whichever team's youth movement can rise to the occasion will likely have a big outcome on this game.

For the Sabres, that means Sam Reinhart, Zemgus Girgensons, and Rasmus Ristolainen. For the Blue Jackets, it's Marco Dano, and Alexander Wennberg. Let the battle of the babies begin.

3. Can the Sabres do anything tonight to convince us they'll be a different team in 2014 than they were in 2013?
Last year was awful for the Sabres team and their fans, but starting tonight, that's all in the past. This year will be different, but how different? Tonight might not be a preview of how the rest of the season will shake out, but it's a chance for the Sabres to raise a few eyebrows and get things started on the right foot. Of course, if they lay an egg, it's also an opportunity to prove all the naysayers right.

Win or lose, the 2014-15 Buffalo Sabres season starts tonight. Welcome back, hockey.

Projected BUF lines*

Moulson - Ennis - Stafford
Foligno - Girgensons - Stewart
Hodgson - Reinhart - Gionta
Deslauriers - McCormick - Flynn

Gorges - Myers
Benoit - Meszaros
Weber - Ristolainen

Goal:Jhonas Enroth

Scratches/Injuries: Mitchell, Kaleta, Pysyk, McCabe, Zadorov, Strachan
* These were just the lines in practice yesterday. We'll have to wait until tonight for confirmation on the playing roster.

Projected CBJ lines

Hartnell - Anisimov - Dano
Foligno - Johansen - Atkinson
Calvert - Letetsu - Wennberg
Skille - Chaput - Boll/Tropp

Johnson - Savard
Erixon - Wisniewski
Tyutin - Prout

Goal:Bobrovsky

Sabres vs. Blue Jackets recap: Meet the new Sabres, same as the old Sabres

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Do you remember last year? Because this game was very similar to that.

Stop me if you've heard this one before.

The Buffalo Sabres opened their season tonight against Columbus with an eye on improvement after an awful campaign in 2013-14. However, they were outgunned, outshot, and outscored 3-1 by the Columbus Blue Jackets tonight, and the only thing keeping it that close were the mostly stellar play of their goaltender, who made a few fantastic saves that stymied the opponent's numerious odd-man rushes.

Sound familiar? It should, because that was the storyline for the Sabres last season, and if tonight is any indication, we'll be seeing much more of the same from the blue and gold this year.

But before we dive too far in to melancholy, let's give them credit, as the Sabres came out of the gate with a bang - their botched pre-game ceremony notwithstanding. The top line of Matt Moulson, Tyler Ennis, and Drew Stafford dominated the first minute, the home crowd was fired up, and the Sabres controlled play for the first six minutes of the game. It was then that they took their first penalty (Josh Gorges) and while the team - including newly minted PK-er Tyler Ennis - successfully killed it off, the Sabres never quite regained that momentum they had at the start. Ted Nolan's squad would go on to lose the Corsi battle in the first by an incredible -21, surely a tribute to last year's team.

The second period started like so many do in Buffalo, with both teams looking like they were wearing cement skates. It took more than six minutes for the Sabres to record a shot, and over thirteen minutes until Columbus would finally break the scoring drought when Jack Skille rocketed a shot past Jhonas Enroth. And by rocket, I mean rocket - the shot was hard enough to literally disintegrate Enroth's water bottle, pieces of which went flying all over the ice. "It was a pretty good shot," said an apparently unimpressed Enroth.

The Sabres would strike back later in the second on a beauty of a goal from Zemgus Girgensons. The Latvian Locomotive took a pass from Marcus Foligno and steamrolled past Jack Johnson, held on to the puck for that crucial extra second, and flipped a shot over Sergei Bobrovsky's shoulder to tie the game. It was the second time in as many season that Girgensons, who later said he didn't remember much about the goal, scored the first tally of the year for Buffalo.

The third period saw some good chances, including Sam Reinhart's only noticeable play of the game on a rush with Cody Hodgson, but the Sabres continued to shoot themselves in the foot, as 2-on-1's were broken up, and power plays were nullified by Brian Gionta penalties. Their lack of possession would come back to haunt them in the third period, as Cam Atkinson snuck a soft shot underneath Enroth's left arm to give Columbus the 2-1 lead. Artem Anisimov would add another in the third to seal the deal.

In the end, the Sabres were outshot 40-22, a similar number from many of last year's losses. Some of that is the talent divide, but some was a nervousness that seemed to knock pucks off sticks, force a moment of hesitation, or some bad choices on the rush. Ted Nolan mentioned needing more North-South passes rather than East-West passes as one example, but the Sabres will need to look sharper on Saturday to avoid a blowout in Chicago.

The man everyone was watching tonight - Sam Reinhart - did not have a great game in his NHL debut. He didn't make any glaring mistakes, but he also didn't really make any plays that stood out, and was very tentative on the ice in most situations. Playing these games is good for him, because he needs to realize the level of power and skating ability needed to excel at the NHL level, and when not to make cross-ice passes (hint: never). Reinhart was only 4-15 on faceoffs, and recorded no shots in 13:37 of ice time.

"He was okay for an 18-year-old," said Ted Nolan, adding, "He'll get the chance to do it again against Chicago, then there's Anaheim, Los Angeles, San Jose. He's got to understudy and understudy quick." San Jose would be the ninth game on the Sabres schedule, so it appears Reinhart will get at least the full nine-game tryout to make a bigger impression than he made tonight.

Thanks to all of you who joined us in the game thread tonight - which was a blast - and let's hear your thoughts on the first of 82 games for the Sabres this season.

Game 1 Recap: IT BEGINS

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Thanks to a pair of third period goals, the Jackets kicked off their season with a victory in Buffalo.

This is a story about a team from Ohio with big plans.

It all started on Thursday evening in Buffalo, against the Sabres. We don`t think they`ll have a superb season, but man, for the past few years they`ve been molding the template on how to properly rebuild. Here`s what we know- they are loaded with young talent, have a goalie who`s been aching for a shot to be a number one, and they`ll work their asses off because they are coached by Ted Nolan.

The Blue Jackets traveled to Buffalo looking to begin the season on the right foot. You see, they`ve got a few reasons to not do well. Going back to earlier in the offseason, the team`s young superstar-in-the-making Ryan Johansen balked at an initial offer of continued employment. It took until just a few days ago for this matter to get put to bed, with the forward accepting a three year deal. He`s the star of the team, but there would be no way in hell he`d be ready for full minutes in Buffalo.

Then you have the injuries to key members of the team. The heart and soul of the squad, not to mention second line center, Brandon Dubinsky, is out for a while after having abdominal surgery. Fan favorite and top-six forward Boone Jenner is also out. Ditto for Nathan Horton, the prized acquisition from last year, who may never play hockey again.Super Soph Ryan Murray is also dealing with an ailment.

The injuries and the Johansen saga had many fans of the Jackets thinking that a slow start was inevitble. However, the team, as mentioned, was out to prove that they are more than capable of avoiding such a thing. The first thing to do was defeat Buffalo, in their house, on the night they invited their fans out to celebrate the kickoff of a new season.

In a sign of things to come, new(old)comer Jack Skille had the Jackets` first prime scoring chance. The save was made by Buffalo starter Jhonas Enroth, who absolutely stood on his head, slamming the door shut time and time again as the Jackets peppered the net with puck after puck, after puck.

The Sabres, buoyed by the excitement of the crowd, showed a lot of jump early. A Columbus powerplay a few minutes into the game turned the tide, however. The Jackets showed terrific movement on the man advantage, with Artem Anisimov beating Enroth, but not to the post.

The aforementioned Skille hit a Buffalo player with a clean but hard check moments later, with Buffalo rearguard Mike Weber taking exeption. Weber tried to get at Skille, but Jared Boll, sensing an opportunity to harden up the knuckle skin, spun Weber around and dropped the gloves. Weber had one of those `oh, shit...` moments, clearly forgetting that Boll was on the ice. The fight was quickly stopped by the officials, sensing impending manslaughter at the hands of Boll.

A few minutes later, Nick Foligno intercepted a cross-ice pass in the neutral zone, chipping the puck forward, sending himself on a partial break. He was tripped up by Tyler Myers en route to the net, but was only assessed a tripping call. Many, including myself, were waiting for the referee to signal penalty shot.

On the ensuing powerplay, the Jackets again came close to opening the scoring, when Jack Johnson fired the puck toward the net, where it was redirected by Scott Hartnell, who just missed. With ninety seconds left in the opening frame, Matty Calvert, who was otherwise quiet on the night, drew a penalty on Rasmus Ristolainen. The Jackets were unable to score as the period came to a close.

Like him or not, Jared Boll has a jpb to do, and he nailed it on his first shift of the second period. He crashed and banged, throwing the Buffalo defenders off their game and generally wreaked havoc in the offensive zone. He is a good forechecker. He`s backed off from trying to explode into people when he hits them, with positive results- he still hits hard, but doesn`t take himself wildly out of position in doing so. He brought the kind of energy and grit that can`t be measured with analytics. Fourth line players are exempt from such analysis, as their job is primarily to ensure the opposition`s analytics paint a shitty picture.

Let`s talk about the rookies. Michael Chaput centered the fourth line and performed as we all expected. I even found him to be surprisingly physical. Alexander Wennberg and Marko Dano though?

Wow.

These kids weren't overwhelmed at all. Not only were they making plays with the puck, they were being responsible defensively. Outside of an attempt at a cute move which got him rocked, Dano was dangerous with the puck and to use a Rimer-ism, he was a total bulldog out there. Wennberg looked like a veteran at times out there, including a neutral zone steal, where he gathered the puck and held off defenders as he crashed the net with the puck. Though he couldn't bury it, it was that kind of play that has everybody associated with the CBJ giddy with thoughts of where this kid will be by seasons' end.

Skille squeezed every ounce out of his playing time. He also scored the first goal of the season for the CBJ. Last week this guy was a New York Islander. In a move that both the Jackets and Skille assuredly find serendipitous, he was claimed on waivers and it's like he was never gone. He picked up the puck and in classic Skille form, he kicked on the jets and soared up the right wing, unleashing a laser of a shot, which blew the top off of Enroth's water bottle.

1-0 Jackets: Jack Skille - Jared Boll, Michael Chaput

Who had money on the fourth line would come together for the team's first goal of the year? Yeah, me either.

Just over a minute later the Sabres were able to tie the game, thanks to a bit of a whiff at the defensive blueline by Scott Hartnell. His swing-and-a-miss allowed Zemgus Girgensons to skate in alone on Bobrovsky, putting the puck past him.

1-1: Zemgus Girgensons - Marcus Foligno

The Sabres stepped it up a notch with the fans back in the game after the goal. They more or less carried the momentum until the end of the period.

Let's give credit where it's due- Enroth was amazing for the Sabres in this game. He stoned Cam Atkinson early in the third, one of his 37 saves. The Jackets threw everything but the kitchen sink at him, and he found ways to keep his team in it, even with them only delivering 22 shots against his opponent Bobrovsky.

I'm not discrediting Bob whatsoever, he was terrific when required. On a Buffalo powerplay midway through the third period, he came up huge, with a pair of lightning quick reaction saves to keep the game tied.

The teams traded penalties later in the period, and with the Jackets on an abbreviated powerplay, Atkinson broke the deadlock. He had the puck in the corner, and made his way patiently to the slot, firing the puck past Enroth. After a terrific preseason and a stellar showing tonight, Cam has Jackets fans seeing visions of a 30 goal year.

2-1 Jackets: Cam Atkinson - Ryan Johansen, Nick Foligno

The Jackets held off the Sabres for the rest of the game, and were able to pad their lead with an Artem Anisimov goal from just inside the blueline. Scott Hartnell was on the half-wall, and fed the puck to Anisimov, who wired it past Enroth.

3-1 Jackets: Artem Anisimov - Scott Hartnell, Alexander Wennberg.

For Wennberg, the assist was his first NHL point.

FINAL SCORE: 3-1 Jackets

Here's the advanced stats and game chart, courtesy of hockeystats.ca:

cbj at buf

Standard Bearers:

  • Jhonas Enroth was amazing for the Sabres, despite giving up three goals.
  • Jack Skille man. Things have a way of working themselves out, and after a tough start to his pro career he has found a home with the Jackets. In addition to his goal, he led the team in hits. This was all in only 9:58 of icetime, second fewest on the team. Only Boll had fewer minutes.
  • The kids are all right. Wennberg, Dano and Chaput were terrific. The future is blindingly bright.
  • CamJam continued to show that he's primed for a jump to being a 30 goal man.
  • Jody Shelley was great as the new color man in the broadcast booth.

Bottom of the Barrel:

  • Matty Calvert wasn't very noticeable, but this me being nitpicky.

The story concludes with the Jackets, despite having many reason to fail, overcoming it all to start the season off on the right foot. It was a total team effort. Just imagine how this team will look when all of the injured players are healthy, and Johansen is at game speed?

See you on Saturday for the home opener.

Friday Habs Links: A new season of 24 CH is on its way

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Here are your daily links, including news of a 3rd season of 24 CH, Tomas Plekanec's strong start, Dustin Tokarski getting his shot two games into the season, Eric Engels' first impression of the Habs, and more.

Montreal Canadiens Links

  • The Habs announced on Thursday that the hit documentary series 24 CH will return for a third season. If you have never seen this show you need to start watching. From PK Subban's nonstop pranks to Michel Therrien's outbursts, you will not get a better inside look at the day-to-day lives of your favorite Canadiens anywhere else. [Canadiens]
  • If you need to get caught up, you can watch all of the second season of 24CH right here! [EOTP]
  • The Habs ruined another home opener, this time the victims were the Washington Capitals. Read up on everything you need to know about last night's game right here [EOTP]
  • For the opponent's perspective, check out the Caps recap. [Japer's Rink]
  • Newly anointed backup, Dustin Tokarski, got the chance to start his first game of the season against the Washington Capitals on Thursday.  [TSN]
  • Eric Engels gives us his first impression of the Habs after a comeback win against the Leafs to start the season off on Wednesday. [Hockey Buzz]
  • The Habs finally ended their opening night losing streak against the Maple Leafs on Wednesday night. The Canadiens had lost four straight season openers to the Leafs and scored late to make sure it didn't stretch to five. [Montreal Gazette]
  • Tomas Plekanec delivered huge on Wednesday night against the Leafs, scoring two goals, including the game winner. [La Presse] (French)

Outside of the CH World

  • It's that time of year again. First week into the season and the Leafs are "Panik-ing" by grabbing players off waivers in hopes that they turn into superstars for them. [Sportsnet]
  • After a very long contract negotiation between Ryan Johansen and the Columbus Blue Jackets finally came to an end last week, the Jackets don't seem to be happy with what they got for $4M a season so far. [NBC Sports]
  • If you looked at NHL starting rosters throughout the league you probably noticed something you're not used to seeing, there are no more "goons". With the adoption of advanced stats throughout the hockey world, teams are beginning to believe that having 18 skaters who can move the puck is better than having 17 skaters who can move the puck and 1 hobbler that tries to protect the other 17. Either way, it looks like fighting could become a rarity in the NHL. [Boston Globe]
  • For all of you Fantasy Hockey players out there, check out NHL.com's fantasy update. Thursday's fantasy update will tell you who to grab and start in the month of October, as these players usually get off to really hot starts. [NHL]
  • On Saturday night, the Habs will take on the Philadelphia Flyers. Read up on everything you need to know about the Flyers ahead of the game in this season preview of the Broad Street Bullies. [Broad Street Hockey]

Blue Jackets 3, Sabres 1 - Game Highlights


Game Preview #2 - Jackets Host the Rangers

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Rick Nash and the New York Rangers are in town for the Jackets' home opener.

Columbus Blue Jackets vs. New York Rangers

October 11, 2014 - 7:00 pm EDT
Nationwide Arena - Columbus, Ohio
Radio - WBNS 97.1 - TV - Fox Sports Ohio
Opponent's Blog: Blueshirt Banter

After opening the season on the road Thursday with a win in Buffalo, the Jackets open up the home portion of their schedule tonight against Rick Nash and the visiting Rangers.

At writing time the Jackets were going with the same lineup they iced on Thursday, with Sergei Bobrovsky likely getting the start in net. In the opposite cage will be Rangers' backup Cam Talbot. Jackets still getting the backup treatment eh?

The one major line tinker during last game was moving Alex Wennberg to a line with Scott Hartnell and Artem Anismov, switching places with Marko Dano, who was moved to a line with Mark Letestu and Matt Calvert. Both rookies impressed after settling in on their new lines, and will look to build on their impressive debuts in front of the home fans.

Ryan Johansen will continue to get his legs and lungs up to game pace. Centering a line with Nick Foligno and Cam Atkinson, the trio has potential to score a boatload of goals, and until the likes of Brandon Dubinsky, Boone Jenner and perhaps Nathan Horton return they'll be looked at to do just that. Cam has been terrific in preseason and looked good again in the season opener-if he can really start to click with Johansen that combo can be absolutely lethal this season.

The fans will be charged up, not only because it's the first home game of the season, but there's also the matter of Rick Nash returning to Columbus. He was given his small tribute last season but he's the enemy and the fans will no doubt be extra vocal when he's got the puck.

The Rangers are dealing with injuries to Derek Stepan and Dan Boyle, while the Jackets are missing the aforementioned Dubinsky, Jenner and Horton.

The building will be electric, and the Jackets will need to feed off that energy and have contributions from the whole lineup tonight. The Rangers have a potent attack, but they are depleted on defense. The team can't rely on Bob to steal the game.

If you're going to the rink, enjoy and make sure you're LOUD. For those watching at home or at an establishment, enjoy!

Projected Lineups

Columbus Blue Jackets
(Season Standings: 1-0-0, 2 Points; T-1st Metro, T-2nd Eastern Conference)

Scott HartnellArtem AnisimovAlexander Wennberg
Nick FolignoRyan JohansenCam Atkinson
Matt CalvertMark LetestuMarko Dano
Jack SkilleMichael ChaputJared Boll
Jack JohnsonDavid Savard
Tim ErixonJames Wisniewski
Fedor TyutinDalton Prout
Sergei Bobrovsky
Curtis McElhinney

New York Rangers
(Season Standings: 1-0-0, 2 Points; T-1st Metro, T-2nd Eastern Conference)

Chris Kreider
Martin St. Louis
Rick Nash
Carl Hagelin
Derick Brassard
Mats Zuccarello
Anthony Duclair
Kevin Hayes
Lee Stempniak
J.T. Miller
Dominic Moore
Jesper Fast
Ryan McDonagh
Dan Girardi
Marc Staal
Kevin Klein
John Moore
Matt Hunwick
Cameron Talbot
Henrik Lundqvist

Season Series

10/11/14 - Rangers at Columbus
01/16/15 - Rangers at Columbus
02/22/15 - Columbus at New York
04/06/15 - Columbus at New York

'14-'15 Head to Head Stats

Rangers
Columbus
3.00 (T-10)GPG3.00 (T-10)
2.00 (T-7)GAPG1.00 (T-3)
0.0% (T-19)PP%25.0% (T-9)
100.0% (T-1)PK%100.0% (T-1)
Nash, 2
G leaderThree at 1
St. Louis, 2
A leaderSix at 1
Nash, 3
Pts leaderNine at 1
Zuccarello,9PIM leaderBoll, Tyutin, 2
1-0-0Road/Home0-0-0

Rangers vs. Blue Jackets preview: Even without Boyle, the power play is still in better shape

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Many assume when the Rangers lost Dan Boyle the team took the biggest hit on the power play, but that's not the case.

Dan Boyle was, among other things, signed this offseason to help correct the Rangers power play issues. With a lack of puck movement, a lack of a big shot from the point, and a total lack of ability to carry the puck into the offensive zone to begin orchestrating the action, Boyle could check 'yes' in all of those regards with respect to his skill set.

But only 42:50 into Boyle's New York Rangers debut, the defenseman went down to block a shot, breaking his hand, and putting him on the shelf for the next 4-6 weeks.

The Rangers will unequivocally be hurt on the power play, but that won't be where this Boyle injury will hit the team the hardest, and in reality, the Rangers power play is still in a better position than it was last season.

The levels of anemia the Blueshirts power play reached last season were historic. After looking steadier coming out of the gate in the regular season sans former assistant and special teams maestro Mike Sullivan, the team regressed, or perhaps showed the early effectiveness it enjoyed was an aberration, falling out of the league's top 10, and finishing in 15th overall.

Those struggles not only carried into but completely bottomed-out in the postseason, where that aforementioned history was made, and the team went 36 straight power play without converting, setting an NHL record.

So how in the hell is the power play in an area one could consider "better shape" after losing its new, shiny man-advantage toy?

Personnel was what doomed the Rangers last season. Systemically, Scott Arniel, who replaced Sullivan, also replaced his static power play (really, New York's power play under Sullivan didn't stress player movement, bafflingly) with an actual, functioning scheme. Yet without the players to execute, the situation caught up to the Rangers, and the power play unit went into a big-time slide.

Gone is Brad Richards, who occupied one of the point spot opposite Ryan McDonagh on the top unit. Richards actually would have been much better suited playing off one of the half-walls, but, again, without a group with the diverse talents to fill each space, Richards and his not-strong-enough shot were pigeonholed onto the blue line.

When Boyle went down, and the Rangers went on a power play midway through the third period of the opener, Vigneault went with these five players: McDonagh, Lee Stempniak, Martin St. Louis, Chris Kreider, and Anthony Duclair.

Stempniak represented Boyle (and Richard's replacement), and is a player who actually has some experience playing the point on the power play. Duclair, however, represented a replacement for Derek Stepan, a player who many probably disregarded in losses on the power play because of how ineffective he was in these situations. Stepan, a willing-passer in 5v5 situations, made it no mystery he had no intentions of ever shooting the puck on the power play. His ability to setup his teammates was negated because he never looked to goal, and thus never forced penalty killers to get in his shooting lanes.

Duclair, however, showed in a very small sample size what he's capable of doing on the power play. On one play, he corralled the puck along the boards, stick handled to evade an oncoming penalty killer, and wired a pass to the point onto the tape of McDonagh.

Simply from a personnel standpoint, Stempnaik is an upgrade over Richards, and Duclair may be, at worst, a lateral replacement for Stepan. While a healthy Boyle may represent the best situation for the Rangers power play, losing their new signing doesn't represent the worst (that was last season, or really, the Sullivan-era Rangers power play).

What's amazing is, the Rangers ineptitude in that area of the game didn't hold them back last season. Amid that 0-for-36 streak in the playoffs, the Rangers defeated the Flyers, and began their comeback against the Penguins.

Defensively, while it more or less goes without saying, is where the Rangers will face their biggest challenge. For the time being, it appears Alain Vigneault has elected to bump up Kevin Klein into the second pairing along Marc Staal, and inserted Matt Hunwick on pairing three.

For all the praise that's been heaped on Klein, the catalyst of it all began with the initial realization that "he's not as bad as Michael Del Zotto." Heck, it wouldn't have been difficult for Klein to reach those heights, but here are some other facts about the 29-year-old defenseman: He's never been capable of driving possession, and even when joining a strong possession team in the Rangers last season, posted poor numbers. With a career CF% of 46.2, and a career CorsiRel of -3.6%, Klein is best-served playing sheltered minutes against weaker competition. Klein didn't post sparkling numbers in the Rangers opener against the Blues, but that may have been a factor of John Moore's really unsteady play.

In a span of one game, Staal has gone from playing alongside fancy stats darling Anton Stralman, to the very solid Boyle, to now Klein. Staal is used to having to carry his partner on his back, having played next to Dan Girardi for quite some time, but this move undoubtedly makes the Rangers a weaker defensive team. A pairing of Moore and Hunwick will really be tested, while Vigneault has consistently complimented Hunwick for his pace and how he can fit into the Rangers system.

For the Rangers, power play success, along with being an anomaly, has been something of a bonus. The team has managed pretty good success without it, while when it's been there, it's been a pleasant surprise. Losing Boyle on special teams creates no doomsday in that regard, while New York's next task will be navigating the next 4-6 without the defensive services of Boyle.

Cam Atkinson scores an impressive backhand goal while falling down

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Luck or excellent timing? You be the judge!

atkinsonian

We're pretty sure Blue Jackets forward Cam Atkinson just created his own signature move: the falling sideways backhand shovel. It took a tremendous amount of hand-eye coordination and timeliness to get a stick on that puck and shove it into the net. It will never happen again.

It also gave the Blue Jackets a 3-1 lead over the New York Rangers in Rick Nash's return to Columbus.

Sergei Bobrovsky robs Martin St. Louis with a great pad save

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Bobrovsky erased a wonderful opportunity for New York.

867774845.0.gif

The Columbus Blue Jackets' season couldn't have started any better. Ryan Johansen is signed, the Jackets are on the verge of winning their first two games and goalie Sergei Bobrovsky is already casually robbing future Hall of Fame members like New York Rangers forward Martin St. Louis.

Bobrovsky shut down a terrific scoring chance with that beautiful pad save. It was his 17th save as Columbus leads 3-1 after two periods.

(H/T @MyRegularFace)

Rangers vs. Blue Jackets recap: Defensive lapses doom Blueshirts in 5-2 loss to Blue Jackets

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Despite a big night from Anthony Duclair, and another goal from Rick Nash, the Rangers fell to the Blue Jackets.

With Dan Boyle on the shelf, Alain Vigneault is in the process of figuring out who will slot in where on his defense with a hole to fill. If Saturday night served as the beginning of Kevin Klein's tryout, the results were not glowing, as Klein got beat badly twice and the Rangers dropped a Metro Division showdown against the Blue Jackets 5-2.

While New York got off to a strong start in its season opener in St. Louis, the Blue Jackets flipped the script Saturday night, eating up offensive zone time and dominating the puck from the onset, peppering Cam Talbot, who got the start in net for the Rangers.

A few minutes in, Carl Hagelin was whistled for elbowing after a collision at center ice, and while Columbus couldn't convert on the power play, the former Ranger Artem Anisimov potted one soon after, as he found a soft spot in the zone, and banged home a one-time feed from Scott Hartnell.

Columbus would double its lead late in the period as Klein made the first of his glaring mistakes. With Nick Foligno holding the puck on the wall, he managed to dart toward the middle, completely leaving Klein behind. Foligno fired an initial shot that was blocked by J.T. Miller, but managed to play the loose puck as he was falling down and chip it past Talbot to give the Jackets a 2-0 lead heading into the second.

The Rangers began the middle period with more jump, and soon were able to cut Columbus' deficit in half. Anthony Duclair drifted toward the corner to take a pass from Lee Stempniak, and then hit his line mate with a return pass in the slot. Stempniak walked in on Sergeri Bobrovsky, and beat him with a quick snap shot to make it a 2-1 game. The assist was Duclair's first career point.

Columbus pushed its lead back to two with Klein again factoring in on the play. As the Blue Jackets worked the puck around the zone, Ryan Johansen threw it toward the goal. Foligno, with Staal draped all over of him, chipped the puck across the crease, where a wide-open Cam Atkinson—who was able to shake Klein—tapped it past Talbot making it 3-1.

It looked as if the Rangers would for sure get that goal back soon after when they entered the zone on a 2-on-1 with just under four minutes to play in the second. With the puck on Rick Nash's stick, he sent a perfect cross-ice feed to Martin St. Louis, who got off a good shot, but was absolutely robbed by a sprawling Bobrovsky to preserve Columbus' two goal edge.

With the Rangers still chasing a two-goal deficit, the comeback got steeper a few minutes after that Bobrovsky save, when Chris Kreider took exception to a collision at center ice between Mats Zuccarello and Jack Skille. Kreider and Skille engaged in a brief fight, and then Kreider was given 17 penalty minutes: two for instigating, five for fighting, and a 10-minute misconduct, meaning he couldn't return until the 16 minute mark in the third period.

Through the game's final 20 minutes, much like Vigneault had to do in the opener, without the services of Kreider, Vigneault was forced to juggle his lines, splitting time between his wingers. With the Rangers trying to cut into Columbus' lead, they were able to muster some chances, but it was Columbus who struck first. With just over six minutes remaining in regulation, the Blue Jackets worked the puck out of the corner and to the point. Daltoun Prout put a shot on goal that Talbot stopped, but Marko Dano pumped home the rebound to make it 4-1.

The Rangers quickly netted a response, as Duclair forced a turnover in the offensive zone, and worked a 3-on-1 down low, looking off the defense, and sending a pass to Nash who fired it into the back of the net to make it 4-2. The goal was Nash's third in two games, and Duclair recorded his first career multi-point night with his second assist.

Atkinson would add his second on an empty-netter to cap the scoring on the game with 1:21 remaining.

The Rangers struggled at times with defensive zone spacing, and Vigneault even juggled his pairings at times. The Rangers will play their home-opener Sunday night against the Maple Leafs.

Game #2 Recap: Sometimes You Get Those Bounces

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It was the home opener for Columbus, and in an ugly slugfest the Jackets got enough bounces to bring home a home opener win.

There was fanfare. There was a packed barn. The video introduction for the club was all about hard work. There was Rick Nash, and plenty of booing to go with it. There was no Dan Boyle nor Henrik Lundqvist. And there was lots of hitting. I mean, LOTS of hitting. Umm, these two teams do not like each other. Rivalry, anyone?

In the end, the Jackets were able to make their own luck, if you will, and capitalize on their chances when they got them. And, in the end, they brought home their second win in as many games and sent the fans home happy on opening night. Here's how it all went down.

1st Period

The Jackets were clearly the better team early, as the Rangers couldn't keep the puck out of their zone, and then Carl Hagelin delivered a high elbow to Marko Dano at the 3:39 mark to give the Jackets an early Power Play. The Jackets couldn't get much set up throughout the first half of the PP time, but with about 35 seconds left they set up a nice chance with Foligno sending it through the crease to a pinching James Wisniewski who saw the pass bounce off his skate.

The Power Play would end with no damage, but the Rangers' inability to clear the zone would put them behind early. After a Dalton Prout glove save to keep the puck in high on the right point, Prout sent it hard around where Dano was able to chip it forward for Scott Hartnell. Harsty corralled the puck and fired it high to Artem Anisimov who had just come off the bench. Arty would unleash a one-timer that would get past Talbot to put the Jackets on the board first.

1-0 Jackets - Artem Anisimov (2nd) at 6:23, from Scott Hartnell and Marko Dano - EV

The goal seemed to energize the Rangers, and their compete level jumped up a bunch over the next few minutes. They were able to hem the Jackets in for a bit, but luckily no damage was done. Then, things got a bit ugly when, after dumping the puck to get a line change, Ansimov would take a high elbow to the mouth from Lee Stempniak. Stempniak went off for charging, and Anisimov went to the dressing room for a look. Because, that's what this team needs, is another injured player. Thankfully, he would be back on the bench before the end of the Power Play, which went by uneventfully.

Things got worse, as Stempniak came out of the box and his fresh legs ate up Jack Johnson, who was forced to haul Stempniak down as he cut to the net. And, true to form, Hartnell came in late with a thunderous check on Stempniak after the whistle, which set things in motion all over again. Johnson got a deserved penalty, and somehow Hartnell got no discipline. The Jackets killed off this Power Play more efficiently than the first, and then answered with an even louder hit.

Columbus worked it into the zone, and Johansen and Foligno played a little two-man game on the right half-wall. Foligno came out of it with the puck, curled to the middle, and fired a shot on Talbot which was saved. The rebound, however, set the tone for the bounces going the Jackets' way, as it came right back to Foligno--who was falling, but still able to chip the puck over the pad of Talbot before crashing into the goal.

2-0 Jackets - Nick Foligno (1st) at 17:33, from Ryan Johansen and David Savard - EV

That's how the first would end.

End of 1st Period - 2-0 Blue Jackets

2nd Period

Does anyone like Lee Stempniak? I don't. After the hit he dropped on Anisimov in the first (and the other shot he tried to take at Anisimov later as they both crossed going to their benches), he was on my shit list. Then, the Jackets got flat-footed and let him get on the score sheet, as well. After some sloppy play, the Jackets allowed the Rangers to keep the puck in the zone, and after Marc Staal fired a point shot wide, Stempniak was allowed to gather it behind the net, cycle out, and as Ryan Johansen kind of stood and watched, skate into the slot where he received the return feed of a give and go with Anthony Duclair and wired a shot past Bobrovsky unmolested.

2-1 Jackets - Lee Stempniak (1st) at 5:43, from Anthony Duclair and Marc Staal - EV

To say the Rangers were the better team for the next five minutes or so would be an understatement. The Jackets looked sloppy, unorganized in their own zone, and generally unable to keep the ice from being tilted their way. And then, as it often does, The Flukey Bounce became their savior. Not long after a Duclair shot beat Bobrovsky but was denied by the pipe, the Jackets got yet another bounce to put their lead back to two. Johansen managed to hold the puck in high on the right point after a clearing attempt, and in one motion he fired it toward the net. It went off Foligno right in front, and that Flukey Bounce caused it to sneak by Talbot, right onto the doorstep for Cam Atkinson, who was uncovered and able to tap it home.

3-1 Jackets - Cam Atkinson (2nd) at 9:49, from Nick Foligno and Ryan Johansen - EV

Again, those bounces. The teams would trade chances throughout, and then late in the period Bobrovsky made what may have been the save of the game. After a turnover during a defensive line change saw all three Jackets forwards caught deep, Nash and Martin St. Louis had what amounted to a two-on-one. Jack Johnson closed, and forced Nash to pass to St. Louis, who had beaten Dalton Prout back (again, line changing). St. Louis redirected it on net, and Bobrovsky sprawled across to get his leg on it to keep it out. On the replay, St. Louis certainly helped Bob out by putting it more to the center of the net, but credit to Bobrovsky who was moving with the pass and still got his leg on it.

After what looked like an unfortunate and unintentional collision between Jack Skille and Zuccarello, Chris Kreider took exception and came off the bench and took an immediate run at Skille, who threw his hands up to signal that the hit was unintentional. Kreider got the instigator, plus five for fighting, plus a 10 minute misconduct. Skille got five for fighting, though it was clear he had no intention of doing so. A high stick from Alexander Wennberg evened things up 30 seconds in. The teams finished up four on four, with 1:00 to go on that as the third began.

End of 2nd Period - 3-1 Jackets

3rd Period

To call this game anything but "ugly" would be untrue. These two teams hit the snot out of each other, and the fact that both teams have some new faces and some injuries, and the chemistry just isn't there across the board. The game would end with just 50 total shots (26-24 Rangers) getting on net, though seven of those found their way to the back of the net.

Another lineup mish-mash would get another one of those bounces to push the lead to three. After some good work to keep the puck deep, it would come out to the left point where Chaput was covering. He gathered it, fed it across to Prout, and Prouter loaded up the cannon for a blast. The shot was saved, but the rebound bounced right onto Dano's stick and he slapped it into the wide open net for his first ever NHL goal.

4-1 Jackets - Marko Dano (1st) at 13:47, from Dalton Prout and Michael Chaput - EV

Game over? Welp.

The Jackets got caught a bit flat-footed right after the goal, and the Rangers came right back. A bad turnover on the right side gave the puck to Duclair, who skated in and tried to pass to Nash on the right side. Savard blocked the pass, but the puck went back to Duclair who took a nice shot that was saved. The rebound, however, kicked right over to Nash, who buried it from the sharp angle despite Hartnell's best attempt to dislodge the net.

4-2 Jackets - Rick Nash (3rd) at 14:19, from Anthony Duclair - EV

The Jackets refocused their energy, and then did their best to make the Rangers go 200 feet the rest of the way, and forced Talbot to the bench with 3:00 to go. After a couple of near misses, Aktinson would finally ice it with 1:21 left to send everyone home happy.

5-2 Jackets - Cam Atkinson (3rd, 2nd of game) at 18:39, from Scott Hartnell - EV/EN

Final Score - 5-2 Blue Jackets

Standard Bearers

  • Nick Foligno - the dude was a beast tonight. He was all over the place, had one goal, and his chemistry with Johansen is evident at all times. Add in the growing chemistry with Cam Atkinson, and it has the makings of a good, good line if all three can stay healthy.
  • Marko Dano - Stick taps for the first goal and assist in the NHL. I know this recap drips with sarcasm about getting the bounces, but his goal was a result of being in the right place at the right time and having the reflexes and stick control to score it. A much better showing overall tonight than even the first game, in which he didn't look totally overwhelmed.
  • Cam Atkinson - He looked primed to score 30 goals.
  • Ryan Johansen - He's quietly put up three assists in these first two games. The skills are still there. Once he gets in sync with Foligno and Atkinson, watch out.
  • PK - For both teams. Neither squad's Power Play could do much tonight, and the PKers were called upon a lot given the chippiness.

Honorable Mention

  • Jared Boll - One of the things I pride myself on is being able to admit when I'm wrong about something, and I have to at least mention Boll's game tonight. For what he's asked to do, he's doing it well so far. He's actually showing some offensive skill on top of it. Good Lord, Boller, don't make me eat that ghost pepper.

Bottom of the Barrel

  • Ryan Johansen - for holding out. The wheels are just not there, yet. You can see him labor late in shifts, and the Rangers first goal was a direct result of him just watching Stempniak skate away from him. He'll get there, but man, oh man... if he'd been here from the outset, how dangerous would that 71--19--13 line be right now?
  • Chris Kreider - Come on, man. Do you seriously think Skille was trying to run Zucs? Just a ridiculous play to come right off the bench and charge at a guy and try to fight him.
  • Cam Talbot - Got some unlucky bounces, but an .826 save percentage ain't gonna cut it.

The Jackets are 2-0-0, folks, and well on their way to that "good start" we've all always wanted for them. Here's hoping it can continue when the improved Dallas Stars come to town on Tuesday.

Blue Jackets 5, Rangers 2 - Game Highlights


Rangers Vs. Blue Jackets: Not Good Enough

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Notes from the Rangers loss to the Blue Jackets

- Before we go any further I would like to remind all of you: The Rangers are missing their number one center, a top four defenseman and they played their backup goaltender Saturday night. That's not exactly the group Alain Vigneault is going to be using in the playoffs, now is it?

- There's so much bad we may as well focus on some good at the top. Anthony Duclair had two assists, sported a 58 CF% and had a really strong game all around -- including a drawn penalty and a brilliant steal and shoot that hit the crossbar. Lee Stempniak might be the Rangers best player the past two games. Ryan McDonagh was Ryan McDonagh, that's about where the positives end.

- The penalty kill continues to be a bright spot for the Rangers, and the power play looked good without converting.

- Rick Nash had a pretty good game and scored a goal. He made a perfect pass to Martin St. Louis that got denied on a brilliant save. Chris Kreider looked good all night, but took a 2/5/10 for his instigator penalty (which was the right thing to do at the time). That line got eaten alive at times, though. Keep in mind Kreider was only able to play nine minutes.

- Mats Zuccarello and Derick Brassard? Well, Brassard was far better than Zuccarello but that's not really saying much. Zuccarello got smacked around like a pinball all night and -- in a scary moment -- hurt his shoulder that forced him to go to the locker room. Brassard looked good on the power play and had a few chances. In the defensive end both Zuccarello and Brassard puck watched on two goals. I know it's a horrible stat, but Zuccarello was a -4 and Brassard was a -3 in the game.

- I like Kevin Klein as a third pairing defenseman. Last night should be all the proof you need, however, that he is absolutely not a second pairing defenseman. My word did that pairing (Marc Staal on the other side) look bad. I'm not sure how much blame I'm able to assess to Staal, since on at least two of the Blue Jackets goals it was Klein who was out of position and unable to contain the forward.

- I think Hagelin will work with Zuccarello and Brassard eventually, but it might make some sense to move Duclair there. He's just as fast as Hagelin is, has much better offensive instincts and should love being paired with two pass-first teammates. Just a thought.

- Cam Talbot didn't have a great game but the defense in front of him most of the night was horrid.

- Jesper Fast might actually be better than Brian Boyle defensively on the fourth line. His speed is a massive factor here, coming back to break up plays from the neutral zone. I've liked what I've seen from him.

- St. Louis won 40% of his faceoffs. Pretty nice jump from the 36% he won in the first game.

- Not much sure how much more detail I can go in. The Rangers got outplayed and outworked. That can't happen. Bounce back tonight.

Thoughts?

Rangers drop back-to-backs; Nash continues to impress; Defensive problems sans Boyle

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Today's New York Rangers notes.

Hey, do you remember the cool Monday morning notes we did late last season? They're back!

Three Stars of the Weekend

Number three: Anthony DuclairNot many Rangers forwards consistently were as active in the offensive zone as Duclair, and the 19-year-old rookie got on the NHL scoresheet for the first time with a two point night in Columbus. Duclair has been a strong possession player, and effective with whomever he's been paired with. He's not going anywhere.

Number two: Rick NashThis one really could have gone either way (with respect to the top star), but Nash scored two goals in five periods, all while thinking about his soon-to-be going into labor wife. Simply put, Nash has looked healthier and more confident this season.

Number one: Lee Stempniak Raise your hand if you had Stempniak as the Rangers best forward through three games of the season. Over the weekend, Stempniak scored two goals, while adding an assist, and playing in all three phases of the game rather effectively. He's been good playing with Dcualir, and really wherever Alain Vigneault has placed him.

What You Missed

Got a two-parter for you, as Duclair picks up his first career NHL point(s) with a pair of helpers.

Now, onto the notes.

The Rangers struggled in many areas Sunday night in their home opener, and got shellacked by Toronto 6-3. [Blueshirt Banter] [NY Post] [The Record] [Daily News] [Newsday] [Blueshirts United]

Special teams were certainly an area of weakness against the Maple Leafs, as the Rangers conceded two power play goals, while getting score on shorthanded. [Daily News]

But how about some happier moments from the home opener, like Nash continuing his goal scoring streak. [Blueshirt Banter]

Some more on Nash, who has really been one of the bigger and brighter storylines, and appears to be in top form as the Rangers season has begun. [Blueshirt Banter]

Defensively, and not on the power play, is where the Rangers will miss Dan Boyle most. [Blueshirt Banter] [NY Post]

Want to know more about Duclair? Here's a Q&A with the kid. [NY Post]

From Friday: Some key defensive lapses and glaring errors doomed the Rangers in a loss to the Blue Jackets. [Blueshirt Banter] [NY Post] [The Record] [Daily News] [Newsday]

Matthew Lombardi rejected his AHL assignment, and is likely headed toward a mutual buyout, and a return to Europe, while Michael Kostka was recalled from Hartford. [Blueshirt Banter]

Dan Boyle Injury: What Are The Rangers' Defensive Options?

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The Rangers do have some options with Boyle's injury. Are they good options? No, no they are not.

The only positive outlook for the New York Rangers current injury woes is it's happening earlier rather than later. The Rangers are still without their first line center Derek Stepan for at least seven more games. To compound that, the Rangers defense hasn't looked even close to comfortable since Dan Boyle broke his hand in the first game of the season.

It's not as though the Rangers don't have options to replacing Boyle (more at even strength than on the power play); it's that none of those options are appealing. Let's look at even strength first, since that's the most immediate concern.

The Rangers have already tried to move Kevin Klein up to the second pairing -- directly replacing Boyle next to Marc Staal. The result? That pairing got their shoes blown off against the Columbus Blue Jackets, and Klein himself was directly responsible for at least two of the Blue Jacket's four goals (not including the empty netter). They got better against the Maple Leafs on Sunday, but that's not saying much at all.

Here's the issue: What else can Alain Vigneault do internally? John Moore looked very uncomfortable against the St. Louis Blues on Thursday. He looked better against the Blue Jackets and then better again against the Maple Leafs, yes. Did he look good enough to soak up second pairing minutes and competition? Not really.

The Rangers can't even call someone up, since the issue isn't the third pairing right now. Matt Hunwick has looked OK on the third pairing, but he's obviously nowhere near ready to step up to the second.

So what can the team do? According to Larry Brooks the Rangers are in the market for a defenseman to help mitigate the loss of Boyle. There aren't many players floating around; and unless Glen Sather wants to dip even further into the team's depleted draft pick stockpile there's not many names the Rangers are going to want to part with. Danny Kristo is probably a pretty legitimate trade piece, along with names like Marek Hrivik and Michael St. Croix -- but the honest bet is none of them have much trade value at all. Would the Rangers think about moving Oscar Lindberg, Conor Allen or Dylan McIlrath? My money is on no but you never know.

The power play is a little better than the even strength situation. Martin St. Louis and Lee Stempniak have helped man the point at different times, and neither have looked totally out of place. Ryan McDonagh can be a mainstay there, and Dan Girardi has been used as well -- probably more because he's a right handed shot than anything else.

The Rangers can get away with using a forward on the point and rotating defenseman on the other side until Boyle gets back. It's not a great option -- since Boyle's skill-set is exactly what the Rangers need on the power play -- but it's better than the even strength options.

Here's the real problem: The Rangers best option might be to just weather the storm. The prospects other teams are going to want in exchange for a top-four defenseman aren't being moved -- think Brady Skjei or Pavel Buhcnevich -- and there isn't anyone on the current lineup I can see the Rangers parting with. Plus, the Rangers don't exactly have oodles of cap space to throw around.

I talked about this in the game notes against both the Leafs and Blue Jackets, but the Rangers might just need to tread water until they start getting everyone back. If the Rangers go 5-5 in the 10 games (at least) they're without Derek Stepan and Boyle it's probably a win. Those are two very important players sidelined with injuries.

Is it a great option? No.

But it might be the only option the Rangers have.

Ryan Murray Getting Closer

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Don't expect him this week, per se, but it's getting better every day.

For Ryan Murray, it was a long summer. Two knee surgeries--one during the season, and one after the season--left his right knee weakened. He worked to get stronger, but in the end the knee just wasn't responding like he and his trainers hoped. It got to a point where he had to simply stop working out. "The knee wasn't really responding to the treatment," Murray said, "and I lost so much muscle with the back-to-back surgeries that the joint was taking the pounding of what I was doing. It was kind of a balancing game: we were trying to build muscle without aggravating it, and we couldn't quite get it right."

It wasn't until August that they found a balance, he said, after a three week shutdown.

Fast forward to now, the second full week of October. When you watch the Blue Jackets practice, however, it's encouraging. Murray is out there, and there doesn't seem to be anything he can't do. He's not wearing a no-contact jersey, and he does all the drills. He says he has no limitations, and that, for the most part, he feels good. But, the decision isn't ultimately up to him as to when he'll return, and there's no desire to rush back too quickly before he's back at 100%.

"It's very easy [to take the long view]," Murray said, "especially with the summer I had, and the trouble I had rehabbing and getting it back to where it is now. It would really be a shame to rush it and have set backs or have problems with it, especially in the middle of the season when the grind starts going. So, I'm going to make sure I'm 100%. I'm just glad that it is where it is now."

It certainly helps that the team is winning in his absence, too. "It's great to see [the team play well]," Murray said. "We're all working together here toward the same goal. Whoever's out there, as long as we're winning, I think everybody's happy. Obviously, you want to play, and you want to be a part of everything, but at the same we're winning and that's always a good thing."

Coach Todd Richards feels the same way, though he did admit that as of now it will be a tough decision he'll have if and when Murray is ready to play and no one else is injured.

"We've been fine [defensively]," Richards said. "All six guys have done a good job, and there's a reason we're 2-0 and have only given up three goals. [When Murray is healthy], we'll have to see how everything's going, how we're unfolding as a team, and how we're playing as a group before we make that decision."

For Murray, it truly is the definition of "day to day" with this injury, as it's a matter of getting confident with his knee while also getting as much practice in as possible, since he missed all of the pre-season games due to the injury. But, as Richards noted, it gets better almost every day, and it won't be too long.

"He's getting closer," Richards said. "I know you guys (the media) are looking for a date, but I can't give that to you, because we're unsure. We'll take it day-by-day and see how he feels. If he continues to progress, great, we'll push him a little bit harder. But he's had a day here or there where he's taken a step back. Overall, he's getting closer. The positive thing for me is that he's able to compete and do a lot of these things in practice. It's going to come down to his timing, our medical staff feeling confident in it, and Ryan feeling confident in it."

As non-committal as that sounds, Richards was quick to add right after: "But, it's all positive steps."

No matter when he's ready to come back, it will certainly make the Jackets' defense that much stronger. Here's hoping it's sooner rather than later.

Gameday Preview: Dallas Stars @ Columbus Blue Jackets (6:00pm CDT)

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The Stars are in a tough spot tonight against a 2-0 team, still searching for their first win.

The Dallas Stars struggled against the Central Division last season and find themselves 0-1-1 on that count already in 2014-2015. The Eastern conference was an even sorer spot for Jamie Benn's crew - a conference worst 13-17-2. They'll start trying to improve upon that tonight as they open inter-conference play against the Columbus Blue Jackets at Nationwide Arena.

While the Stars are searching for their first win, the Jackets already have a pair, and head coach Lindy Ruff was appropriately complimentary of them ahead of this one.

"They've got some real good skill up front," he told media Monday. "That top line with Johansen, Atkinson and Nick Foligno, they've got real good numbers- Like numbers when it comes to even strength play. They've carried most of the play. They've had the puck a lot, but they're deep. They've got some good size. They've got some good speed and I think they've got a back end that has played very well for them."

As for Dallas' top skill, Benn and Seguin are a collective -6 on the season and have no points between them. Alex Goligoski, so good down the stretch last season, is already saddled with a -5 number in two games.

Is this the night they get going? A little confidence heading into Pittsburgh on Thursday for a daunting contest would be beneficial, to say the least. Dallas dropped both contests against the Jackets last season (3-1 loss at home, 4-2 loss in Ohio).

The puck will drop at about 6:07 p.m. CT on FOX SPORTS SOUTHWEST and SPORTS RADIO 1310/96.7 FM The Ticket.

The Stars:

The Stars changed the lines considerably in Monday's practice after generating just a single goal against the Predators Saturday, but Ruff's been known to search for chemistry in practice and then not use those configurations in games, and he admitted as much yesterday.

"I think with matchups sometimes on the road it might give me some different options," he said. "I told those guys it's something I want to look at in practice and we'll see where we're at when we hit the road."

So it could just be an option for when the chips are down. From practice yesterday:

Benn-Seguin-Eakin
Eaves-Spezza-Hemsky
Roussel-Fiddler-Garbutt
Cole-Horcoff-Sceviour

Goligoski-Daley
Benn-Dillon
Nemeth-Oleksiak/Connauton

Roussel and Garbutt lead forwards with two points a piece, but reacted poorly to the pressure of the Nashville game as both took penalties and put the Stars shorthanded when they needed to be attacking in a comeback effort.

There's a sense from the media that Cody Eakin really could see some time with Seguin and Benn to try and get them going a bit. Val Nichushkin is dealing with a lower body injury that's been bothering him throughout training camp and the opening week of the season. Add that to his illness and the sophomore is having a hard time making the strides so many supposed he would, but it's early.

At any rate, it would seem that there's opportunity there for Sceviour, Cole, and now Eakin to fly with the premier pair up front.

Kari Lehtonen should be back in net for Dallas.

From Stars PR:

Dallas newcomer JASON SPEZZA posted four points (1-3=4) in three games against Columbus last season, and comes into Tuesday's matchup having recorded points in four of his last five tilts against the Blue Jackets (3-5=8). The Stars center has tallied 10 points (3-7=10) in 10 career games against Columbus, including five points (1-4=5) at Nationwide Arena. SPEZZA has one assist and has a 64.0% faceoff-win percentage (16-of-25) in two games so far this season.

The Blue Jackets:

While the Stars try to move on after getting beat 4-1 by a plethora of former Stars in Nashville Saturday night, everything's going pretty swell for Columbus.

Eight goals for. Three against. Perfect on the penalty kill so far. They've only given their opponents four total chances in two games so far, so add good discipline to the list. They're only allowing 24 shots per game.

Consider also that Foligno, Hartnell, Atkinson, Johansen, and Anisimov (all top-six skill) have tallied 14 points between them in just a pair of contests. That's a good start. The kind Stars fans were looking for out of their shiny new top-six, we dare say.

Furthermore, consider that Columbus has out-attempted their competition in their first two games by a staggering margin of 126-83. Over 60% of the time the puck belongs to them.

They'll have last change at home and this is what they'll use to match up:

Foligno-Johansen-Atkinson
Hartnell-Anisimov-Wennberg
Calvert-Letestu-Dano
Skille-Chaput-Boll

Johnson-Savard
Erixon-Wisniewski
Tyutin-Prout

Bobrovsky
Not Bobrovsky

Here's how the local paper is telling it in Columbus, and how the Jackets' coaching staff is spinning it:

Expect a hungry performance from the Stars, who are seen as an up-and-coming team in the Western Conference but are off to a 0-1-1 start.

After Saturday's 4-1 loss in Nashville, Stars coach Lindy Ruff called out his club's top players. Top forwards Jamie Benn and Tyler Seguin are each pointless with minus-3 ratings. Defensemen Alex Goligoski has a minus-5 rating.

"I think our top guys have struggled, and it's probably hurt us more than anything," Ruff told the Dallas Morning News "If they're going well, we're going to win. They've had a little bit of a tough preseason, and I think we're seeing a little bit of that still now."

Richards said he clued his players in on this after practice today.

"We're going to get a hungry team," Richards said. [Columbus Post Dispatch]

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