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Blue Jackets somehow sew up another win against flummoxed Panthers

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Cats strafe "Bob" with 55 shots, but come up short in the skills competition.

The Florida Panthers got off to a real rocky start, then rebounded to put on a show-stopping performance before ultimately dropping their tenth-straight (WTF?) against the visiting Columbus Blue Jackets 4-3 in a shootout.

Sergei Bobrovsky turned in a franchise-record, 52-save performance to enable Columbus to steal two points.

After Tomas Fleischmann botched a quick 2-on-1 chance, Nick Foligno opened the scoring with a wraparound goal at the 1:07 mark. Scott Hartnell and Dalton Prout picked up the helpers on Foligno's eleventh of the season.

The Blue Jackets struck again midway through the first period on Cam Atkinson's breakaway tally. Atkinson easily beat a disinterested-looking Roberto Luongo with Kerby Rychel and Prout drawing the assists. Fleischmann wiped out deep in the Columbus zone and Erik Gudbranson failed to hold the puck in the zone to help send the Blue Jackets the other way.

Things didn't get any better to start the second as Boone Jenner put the Blue Jackets up by three with a rebound goal just 31 seconds into the frame. Rychel and Atkinson each picked up their second point of the night with assists. Jenner also scored against the Cats in Monday night's tilt.

And then all of the sudden, the Panthers woke up. Nick Bjugstad provided the needed spark, The big center used his long reach to shovel a loose puck in the neutral zone to Jonathan Huberdeau. Huberdeau promptly found an open Fleischmann, who roofed a shot over Bobrovsky. That's right people... Flash found the back of the net.

Bjugstad got a goal of his own 2:06 later, depositing the puck past Bobrovsky on the backhand with the assists going to Fleischmann and rookie sensation Aaron "Eggs" Ekblad.

The determined Cats kept coming and forged a tie a couple minutes later,  thanks in part to Jordan Leopold's hooking minor. Bjugstad did the honors again, whipping the puck into the net from tough angle with Huberdeau and Gudbranson collecting the assists. The goal, Bjugstad's tenth of the campaign, went to review, but was quickly confirmed by replay.

Florida dominated the rest of the period, but could not take the lead despite outshooting the visitors 19-3. The Cats failed to convert on three additional power-play chances after Bjugstad's second goal.

The Panthers continued to bombard Bobrovsky in third period, again finishing with 19 shots on goal (to Columbus' 4), but couldn't solve the wall-like Russian.

After a scoreless overtime, the game went to the shootout where Ryan Johansen won it in the fourth round. Huberdeau, Jussi Jokinen, Brad Boyes and Bjugstad failed to dent "Bob", while Luongo stoned Atkinson, Matt Calvert and Foligno before finally yielding Johansen's winner.

Sorry folks, I'm going to take the glass half empty approach to this game. Yes, the Panthers came back from a 3-0 deficit and got a point, but they just should have won it outright, plain and simple. While most of the team was awful for most of the first period (how do you come out that flat against a team that just beat you?), Luongo didn't look sharp at all on the Blue Jackets two goals in the frame, especially Atkinson's breakaway, and Flash greatly helped the Columbus cause with two needless mistakes in the offensive zone. The Cats' attack on the heroic Bobrovsky over the final two periods was a sight to behold. Unfortunately, only the Bjugstad line was able to find the back of the net. The other three lines came up empty, despite all the shots on goal, something Jan has been pointing out in the comments section as a bugaboo for weeks now. The Panthers have shown us lately they can put together forty or so minutes of great hockey (they did it last night and in the game before in Detroit); it's time to start doing it for the full sixty. If the Panthers are on the wrong side of the playoff equation come spring, it's games like this one that are going to stick out as the reason. You can't keep letting points slip away when you are the better team. On a positive note, the Cats did gain a point on both the Bruins and Maple Leafs!

Odds & Sods

  • Nick Bjugstad's tour de force in the second frame tied the franchise record for points in a period and vaulted him to the top of the team scoring race with 15. It was the second time Big Nick has accomplished the feat so far this season.
  • Ryan Johansen's game-winner was Columbus' first goal in the shootout in 2014-15. Figures...
  • The Panthers bagged their three goals in an astonishing 4:37 span. The three-goal rally to tie was the first since a March 16, 2013 tilt against the New York Islanders that the Cats also ended up losing 4-3.
  • Tomas Kopecky and Aaron Ekblad led the Panthers with 6 shots on goal apiece. Matt Calvert led the Blue Jackets with 3.
  • Shawn Thornton and Dalton Prout had a nice little tussle late in the first period.
  • Jonathan Huberdau has 4 assists in his last 5 games and has been a much more effective player since being placed on a line with Bjugstad. It would be nice for Hubs to find the back of the net more often though, just saying...
  • Sergei Bobrovsky raised his lifetime record against the Panthers to a sparkling 8-1, including six wins in a row. Can we get the backup next time out, please.
  • Go back to Ohio and check out The Cannon for more on the Panthers latest loss to the Blue Jackets.

Now it's your turn: What's a successful season to you?

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Up and down and up and down and...

What's a successful season to you?

We've gone back and forth--much like this team--from talking about the draft, to talking about a modest 2-game winning streak. We've talked about how we got here. Where we're going.

We've talked about Todd Richards puzzling decisions (while being handcuffed by injuries and the roster he was given by management). From last night's recap:

In his post-game comments, Todd Richards appeared to suggest that the Blue Jackets did not take their foot off the gas, but that the issues started by trying to get the fourth goal. First, that was directly contrary to assistant coach Brad Larsen's characterization of the situation from behind the bench during the second period, and really defies the patent logic that the television screen and the statistics showed. Richards admits he doesn't see much of the game on the ice, because he is paying attention to "other things". Perhaps that needs to change, as he is apparently allocating ice time and making key decisions based upon impressions gleaned from incomplete information. The Blue Jackets were a loose, confident bunch in the first, and during the first minute of the second. Then it changed, and the makeshift adjustments appeared to only make the situation worse.

So I'd like to hear from you. What is success? No one wants to talk about being dead last a year after being in the playoffs. But this team has been behind Buffalo--BUFFALO--for way too long now. Letestu's still out. Anisimov's out again. Dubinsky's 6 weeks have become 8. Horton.

Do you want to see this team get healthy in January, pull off an 8 game winning streak and end up with the 9th overall pick?

Is another change necessary? Roster? Coaching?

Or does the wait and see approach still sound like a good idea? How long do you wait?

There may not be any "right" answers at the current moment. But I'm interested to hear what you think. What does success mean to you from here on out?

12.06.2014 Tampa Bay Lightning versus Columbus Blue Jackets game day coverage

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The Union Army marches on Fort Brook on the Tampa waterfront this evening. Will the hindered regiment known as the Columbus Blue Jackets ( 8-15-2) overtake the fort controlled by the Tampa Bay Lightning (18-6-3)?



Game Preview #26 - Will Lightning Strike Twice?

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The Lightning came into Nationwide and embarrassed the Blue Jackets last month. Will history repeat itself in the Bay Area tonight?

Columbus Blue Jackets at Tampa Bay Lightning

December 6, 2014 - 7:00 PM EST
Amalie Arena - Tampa, Florida Carolina
Radio - WWCD 102.5 - TV - Fox Sports Ohio
Opponent's Blog: Raw Charge

First and foremost, I have to ask the rhetorical question: if the Jackets play a game on the road, and nobody in Columbus watches it, does it actually happen? I suspect most of you will be watching a certain football game this evening, so perhaps it's not a bad thing that the Jackets are playing the best team in the league at the same time. I mean, if it's like that last game with Tampa, will you be sad to have missed it? I'm not even an OSU fan, and I'm pretty sure I'll be watching more of their football game than this hockey game.

As bad as Columbus has been, in the last 11 games since playing the Lightning, they are a modest 4-6-1, which, compared to the rest of the season, isn't half bad. That said, that last game... oh man, that first period still gives me nightmares. I mean, damn, man. Damn. That said, Bobrovsky, man. Bobrovsky. He was nowhere to be found that last time, and in his last two games he's stopped 76 of 80 shots (.950 sv%). So, there's that.

The flip side of that stat, however, is that the Jackets gave up 80 frickin' shots to Florida in two games, including 55 on Thursday. !!!!! The Lightning are a completely different offensive animal, so if that level of shots happened again, safe to say Columbus is giving up more than three goals and not walking away with a win in the skills competition.

To that end, Todd Richards has made some changes, most notably the return of Tim Erixon. That, however, is the one move that makes sense. These lines... I really don't even know what to say. Boone Jenner and Kerby Rychel played very, very well together. So, it only makes sense to break them up. Nick Foligno is your best goal scorer. So, it only makes sense to move him to center and neuter some of his offensive game. I've no idea what Ryan Johansen has done to earn a spot in the doghouse, but he's clearly there.

I've been not so much an HCTR defender or apologist, but more just a "live and let live" kind of attitude. That said, some of these changes, to me, are bordering on indefensible. They make almost no sense. Granted, I don't see what they see, but at first glance I'm left with a hearty WTF feeling.

So, there's that. Here comes the train...

Projected Lineups

Columbus Blue Jackets
(8-15-2, 18 Points; 8th division, 16th conference)

Scott HartnellNick FolignoBrian Gibbons
Kerby RychelRyan JohansenJack Skille
Matt CalvertBoone JennerCam Atkinson
Corey TroppMichael ChaputJared Boll
Jordan LeopoldDalton Prout
Jack JohnsonDavid Savard
Tim ErixonJames Wisniewski
Sergei Bobrovsky
Curtis McElhinney

Tampa Bay Lightning
(18-6-3, 39 Points; 1st Division, 1st Conference)

Alex KillornSteven StamkosRyan Callahan
Ondrej PalatTyler JohnsonNikita Kucherov
Cedric PaquetteValtteri FilppulaBrett Connolly
Jonathan DrouinBrian BoyleBrenden Morrow
Victor HedmanAnton Stralman
Jason GarrisonAndrej Sustr
Matthew CarleRadko Gudas
Ben Bishop
Evgeni Nabokov

Season Series

11/08/14 - Tampa Bay 7 at Columbus 4
12/06/14 - Columbus at Tampa Bay
01/31/15 - Columbus at Tampa Bay

Head to Head Stats

Tampa BayColumbus
3.56 (1)GPG2.28 (26)
2.44 (9)GAPG3.44 (29)
23.2% (5)PP%21.7% (8)
80.7% (15)PK%75.8% (25)
Steven Stamkos, 16G leaderNick Foligno, 11
Tyler Johnson, 20A leaderRyan Johansen, 16
Steven Stamkos, 32Pts leaderRyan Johansen, 25
Radko Gudas, 32PIM leaderJared Boll, 42
11-2-1Home/Road4-7-1
7-2-1Last 104-5-1
12/04 vs. Buffalo, W 5-0Last Game12/04 @ Florida, W 4-3 (SO)

Game Day #26 - Blue Jackets at Lightning

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The Lightning came into Nationwide and embarrassed the Blue Jackets last month. Will history repeat itself in the Bay Area tonight?

Columbus Blue Jackets at Tampa Bay Lightning

December 6, 2014 - 7:00 PM EST
Amalie Arena - Tampa, Florida Carolina
Radio - WWCD 102.5 - TV - Fox Sports Ohio
Opponent's Blog: Raw Charge

First and foremost, I have to ask the rhetorical question: if the Jackets play a game on the road, and nobody in Columbus watches it, does it actually happen? I suspect most of you will be watching a certain football game this evening, so perhaps it's not a bad thing that the Jackets are playing the best team in the league at the same time. I mean, if it's like that last game with Tampa, will you be sad to have missed it? I'm not even an OSU fan, and I'm pretty sure I'll be watching more of their football game than this hockey game.

As bad as Columbus has been, in the last 11 games since playing the Lightning, they are a modest 4-6-1, which, compared to the rest of the season, isn't half bad. That said, that last game... oh man, that first period still gives me nightmares. I mean, damn, man. Damn. That said, Bobrovsky, man. Bobrovsky. He was nowhere to be found that last time, and in his last two games he's stopped 76 of 80 shots (.950 sv%). So, there's that.

The flip side of that stat, however, is that the Jackets gave up 80 frickin' shots to Florida in two games, including 55 on Thursday. !!!!! The Lightning are a completely different offensive animal, so if that level of shots happened again, safe to say Columbus is giving up more than three goals and not walking away with a win in the skills competition.

To that end, Todd Richards has made some changes, most notably the return of Tim Erixon. That, however, is the one move that makes sense. These lines... I really don't even know what to say. Boone Jenner and Kerby Rychel played very, very well together. So, it only makes sense to break them up. Nick Foligno is your best goal scorer. So, it only makes sense to move him to center and neuter some of his offensive game. I've no idea what Ryan Johansen has done to earn a spot in the doghouse, but he's clearly there.

I've been not so much an HCTR defender or apologist, but more just a "live and let live" kind of attitude. That said, some of these changes, to me, are bordering on indefensible. They make almost no sense. Granted, I don't see what they see, but at first glance I'm left with a hearty WTF feeling.

So, there's that. Here comes the train...

Projected Lineups

Columbus Blue Jackets
(8-15-2, 18 Points; 8th division, 16th conference)

Scott HartnellNick FolignoBrian Gibbons
Kerby RychelRyan JohansenJack Skille
Matt CalvertBoone JennerCam Atkinson
Corey TroppMichael ChaputJared Boll
Jordan LeopoldDalton Prout
Jack JohnsonDavid Savard
Tim ErixonJames Wisniewski
Sergei Bobrovsky
Curtis McElhinney

Tampa Bay Lightning
(18-6-3, 39 Points; 1st Division, 1st Conference)

Alex KillornSteven StamkosRyan Callahan
Ondrej PalatTyler JohnsonNikita Kucherov
Cedric PaquetteValtteri FilppulaBrett Connolly
Jonathan DrouinBrian BoyleBrenden Morrow
Victor HedmanAnton Stralman
Jason GarrisonAndrej Sustr
Matthew CarleRadko Gudas
Ben Bishop
Evgeni Nabokov

Season Series

11/08/14 - Tampa Bay 7 at Columbus 4
12/06/14 - Columbus at Tampa Bay
01/31/15 - Columbus at Tampa Bay

Head to Head Stats

Tampa BayColumbus
3.56 (1)GPG2.28 (26)
2.44 (9)GAPG3.44 (29)
23.2% (5)PP%21.7% (8)
80.7% (15)PK%75.8% (25)
Steven Stamkos, 16G leaderNick Foligno, 11
Tyler Johnson, 20A leaderRyan Johansen, 16
Steven Stamkos, 32Pts leaderRyan Johansen, 25
Radko Gudas, 32PIM leaderJared Boll, 42
11-2-1Home/Road4-7-1
7-2-1Last 104-5-1
12/04 vs. Buffalo, W 5-0Last Game12/04 @ Florida, W 4-3 (SO)

Hold down the fort; Tampa Bay Lightning versus Columbus Blue Jackets preview

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Where:  Amalie Arena, Tampa, Florida
When:  | Tickets: Check availability
Media: Sun Sports, Fox Sports Ohio (cable) | 970 AM WFLA (radio) | Twitter Live Stream
Opponent Coverage:The Cannon, The Dark Blue Jacket

For the third straight game, the Tampa Bay Lightning will be squaring off against one of the bottom dwellers of the NHL standings, this time it's the Columbus Blue Jackets. Things haven't exactly improved for Union Army HC since the Lightning last faced them a month ago in Columbus. Sergei Bobrosvsky is back in the lineup but the team still is sunken by way of injuries.

This is another contest that has "trap" written all over it; Tuesday's game in Buffalo was a great example of being a trap as the Bolts had spent themselves pushing around the New York Rangers the night before. They came to play at the Amalie on Thursday, though (and got into their pushing-around act on the scoreboard and in fisticuffs). The Bolts have a more formidable opponent upcoming in the Washington Capitals to focus on in the days ahead. This Columbus team was inundated with shots-against the other night in Sunrise and jumping to the conclusion that this game will be a cakewalk is the wrong mentality to take. The game at First Niagara Center on Tuesday should have taught us that.

This morning's skate for the Lightning was optional and the majority of the roster decided not to take the option. Both goalies were accompanied by only five skaters.  Resting up is fine and good, as tough games lie in the immediate future as well as later in the season...

Other Game Coverage:

Game 28 recap: Blue Jackets knock off Lightning 3-1

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The last-place and beat-up Columbus Blue Jackets sure didn't get much of a test from the NHL-leading Tampa Bay Lightning Saturday night, easily beating them 3-1 at the Amalie Arena Saturday night.

The Columbus Blue Jackets beat the Tampa Bay Lightning 3-1 at the Amalie Arena in Tampa Saturday night.

Well, there's not much to say about this one, a disappointing effort from the Lightning as they narrowly avoid getting shut out and see their five-game home winning streak come to an end at the hands of a last place Columbus Blue Jackets team that has been utterly devastated by injuries. With six players currently on injured reserve and 168 man games lost to injury, a patchwork Columbus lineup took advantage of a sloppy Tampa Bay team, outplaying them in almost all aspects to earn the win.

"We didn't play our best. A couple of unlucky bounces on the first couple goals, but we didn't really have a response. We didn't necessarily get to the areas we needed to get to score on a team that has a very good goalie and does a good job of clearing the net." - Steven Stamkos

The Lightning did hold the advantage in shots throughout the contest, finishing with a 34-20 edge. Blue Jackets netminder Sergei Bobrovsky was solid throughout, with the toughest saves coming on multi-player scrums in the crease. On the other end, the first two goals allowed by the Lightning's Ben Bishop were fairly soft ones and the third goal was actually deflected into the net by teammate Nikita Kucherov.

"Over a long season it is going to happen. It was almost bound to; it's been a while since we've had some bad bounces against us." - Bishop

The Blue Jackets started things off at 2:37 of the first on their third shot of the game on a goal by Boone Jenner on an assist from Matt Calvert.

At 12:48, they doubled the lead and notched the game winner on a power play goal by David Savard with help from Jack Johnson and Cam Atkinson. Bishop made the initial stop but the puck somehow dribbled into the net.

That was the score until the 4:51 mark of the third until Kucherov's own-goal which was credited to Jack Skille. Michael Chaput and Scott Hartnell picked up the assists.

Lightning head coach Jon Cooper pulled Bishop for the extra skater with 3:30 remaining and the Lightning ended Bobrovsky's shutout bid at 18:47 when Ondrej Palat scored on assists from Kucherov and Jonathan Drouin.

"I thought we worked hard. I thought for sure the first two periods we carried the play. We probably had more than double the scoring chances. Maybe give their goalie a little credit. That's how I saw the first two periods anyway. They got a couple of breaks that they probably earned. Were we off a little bit in our execution? There's no question, but it wasn't because of lack of effort." - Cooper

The Lightning will hope to rebound with a better showing on Tuesday when they host the Washington Capitals.

Game notes:

  • The Lightning used the same lineup tonight as they used in Thursday's 5-0 win over Buffalo, with the same assistant captains (Ryan Callahan and Victor Hedman) and same healthy scratches (Mark Barberio and J.T. Brown).
  • The Blue Jackets have now won three straight, their longest winning streak so far this season.
  • Tyler Johnson's five-game scoring streak ended.
  • Brett Connolly skated in his 100th NHL game. .
  • Steven Stamkos remains one goal shy of the 250 mark.
  • The Lightning honored Sara Robinson as the 15th Lightning Community Hero of the year during the first period of tonight's game. Robinson, who received a $50,000 donation from the Lightning Foundation and the Lightning Community Heroes program, will donate the money to Junior Achievement, Central Florida Autism Institute Inc., and the Falls Adventure. To date, the Lightning Foundation has donated a total of $7 million to support non-profit charities through the Lightning Community Heroes program since it began at the beginning of the 2011-12 season. Tonight's Lightning Community Hero has used her life's test as a testimony to give hope and affect positive change in the lives of those affected with mental disabilities. As an adopted child from Romania, Robinson was diagnosed as Mentally Retarded and suffered from a fatal disease. She eventually participated in a medical research study that helped save her life and others from this disease. After years of perseverance, a positive attitude, and the support of her adoptive family, Robinson was able to overcome her learning disability and graduate high school with honors, and then continue on to college. Today she has become a staunch advocate for those with mental disabilities and a strong supporter for international adoption. Robinson co-wrote and successfully lobbied for the Florida Disability History and Awareness Act. After it passed, she used her own resources to produce videos on disability awareness which were shown in Florida schools. She is the youngest member to serve on the Florida Developmental Disability Council. Robinson also represents Florida youth with disabilities on the Florida Youth Council. In addition to serving the needs of the local community, Robinson has taken her advocacy internationally. She was invited to the European Union and testified in support of international adoption for neglected and abandoned children in Romania.

Quick Strikes for Sunday, December 7

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The Florida Panthers' big gaffe, notes from the 3-1 loss to the Blue Jackets, Richard Panik thriving in Toronto, and more in your Sunday morning linkset.

  • A look from the other side -- The Cannon's write up of Saturday night's 3-1 defeat at the hands of theColumbus Blue Jackets. [The Cannon]
  • Aaron Portzline has a gamer from the Columbus point of view. [Puck Rakers]
  • Mike Stuart blames the loss to the Jackets on failed execution by the Lightning. [Hockey Buzz]
  • Tampa Bay Lightning goaltending prospect Andrei Vasilevskiy made 34 saves and recorded his first shutout in North America in a 2-0 win for the Syracuse Crunch over the Rochester Americans. [Bolt Prospects]
  • The Toronto Maple Leafs claimed forward Richard Panik on waivers from the Tampa Bay Lightning on October 9 and, since then, Panik has carved out a role as a secondary scorer and valuable depth forward, with 5 goals to his credit. [Sportsnet]
  • This goal was pretty nice:
  • The Florida Panthers aired what was intended as a playful jibe towards the Buffalo Sabres comparing their cold winter weather to the fun-in-the-sun of south Florida; but making light of a deadly storm has brought some deserved backlash. Hit the first link for a fan recording of the video. [FacebookOn Frozen Pond]


Aaron Ekblad's big week garners third-star honors from NHL

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Rookie blue-liner puts up six points in four games to gain league-wide notice.

Florida Panthers rookie defenseman Aaron Ekblad was named as one of the NHL's three stars of the week, along with Detroit's Pavel Datsyuk, who took top honors, and second star, Columbus goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky, who beat the Cats twice in a short span.

Ekblad amassed six points (2G/4A) and finished +6  in four games to not only pull third-star honors from the league; he also tied red-hot Nick Bjugstad for the team lead in scoring.

The rookie defender started the week with the Panthers' lone goal in a 2-1 loss to the Blue Jackets in Columbus. Ekblad followed that performance up with another goal in Florida's exciting 4-3 win over the Red Wings at Joe Louis Arena. The Panthers returned home for a rematch against Columbus and the young blue-liner picked up an assist in the 4-3 shootout defeat that saw the aforementioned Bobrovsky come up with 52 saves. Ekblad saved his best for last, setting up all three Florida goals in a 3-2 home ice win over the Buffalo Sabres.

The rest of the league is starting to take serious notice of the Panthers mature-beyond-his-years defenseman. Look for "Eggs" to be in the Calder conversation the rest of the season.

Game Preview #27 - DUUUUUUUUUUBE!!

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Winners of three in a row, the Blue Jackets return home and get a much-needed extra boost with the return of Brandon Dubinsky.

Philadelphia Flyers at Columbus Blue Jackets

December 9, 2014 - 7:00 pm EST
Nationwide Arena - Columbus, Ohio
Radio - WBNS 97.1 - TV - Fox Sports Ohio
Opponent's Blog: Broad Street Hockey

OK, so this game is just loaded with intrigue and story lines. It is NOT to be missed. Brandon Dubinsky is back! Steve Mason is finally going to start a game in Columbus for the Flyers! R.J. Umberger! Scott Hartnell! These two teams both have very similar God-awful records!

While that last one is ultimately the most important part of this game, to not acknowledge those other story lines is to do this game a bit of disservice. Never before has a December game in which both teams are far, far out of a playoff spot held so much interest.

Record-wise, these two teams are very, very similar. Columbus is actually playing .500 hockey in their last 11 games (5-5-1), which includes an 0-5-1 stretch. If you subtract the 0-8-1 stretch when the injuries all happened at once and Columbus just kept getting kicked in the nuts, this team is actually 9-7-1. Think about that. Obviously, you can't just take that out, but it tells me that this team is a little better than their record shows right now. Add Dubinsky back into that mix, and a suddenly nuclear-hot Sergei Bobrovsky, and I think it would be pre-mature to continue talking about The Tank. At least until the All Star Break.

To that larger point, standings-wise, the Jackets are now just two points behind Philly, who has seen their record drop from 7-5-2 to 9-13-4 in their last 12 games. Before winning their last game on Saturday, they were riding a 1-8-2 stretch. If Columbus were to win this game in regulation the two teams would be so, so tied that it would go to the FOURTH tie-breaker, which would keep Philly in front. That's to say, at this point in the season, they'd be tied for sixth. Considering where Columbus was just a short week ago, that would be pretty huge, and would continue to illustrate that the 3rd Metro playoff spot is still within hailing distance: Columbus is only eight points out. On December 1, they were 12 points out. It just goes to show that a modest winning streak actually makes hay in this crap-fest that is the Metro. If Columbus can keep winning a few more than they lose, they're actually not out of this thing just yet.

As for this game, I'm excited to see what Dubinsky can do. He brings so much to the table in the faceoff circle, on defense, on the PK, and even on the PP if he gets any time there. He allows the Jackets to better find offensive starts and minutes for their "scoring" lines. I'm still not sure about this whole Foligno-at-center thing, but having Dubinsky with Calvert and Atkinson should help spread out the defensive responsibility and scoring responsibility.

And finally, for Columbus fans, they get the chance to let Steve Mason know how they feel. Not sure what kind of reception Umberger is going to get, but I think we should remember that he gave his all for A LOT of shitty teams while he was here, and even though his exit was less than glorious, he was one of the guys that actually cared for a long time when it seemed like no one else did.

Enjoy this one, gang. It should be a great night!

Projected Lineups

Columbus Blue Jackets
(9-15-2, 20 Points; 7th division, 14th conference)

Scott HartnellNick FolignoBrian Gibbons
Boone JennerRyan JohansenJack Skille
Matt CalvertBrandon DubinskyCam Atkinson
Corey TroppMichael ChaputJared Boll
Jordan LeopoldDalton Prout
Jack JohnsonDavid Savard
Kevin ConnautonJames Wisniewski
Sergei Bobrovsky
Curtis McElhinney

Philadelphia Flyers
(9-13-4, 22 Points; 6th division, 13th conference)

Michael RafflClaude GirouxJakub Voracek
Brayden SchennScott LaughtonWayne Simmonds
R.J. UmbergerSean CouturierMatt Read
Zac RinaldoChris VandeVeldePierre-Edouard Bellemare
Nicklas GrossmannMark Streit
Nick SchultzBraydon Coburn
Michael Del ZottoAndrew MacDonald
Steve Mason
Ray Emery

Season Series

11/14/14 - Columbus 4 at Philadelphia 3
11/22/14 - Columbus 2 at Philadelphia 4
12/09/14 - Philadelphia at Columbus
02/13/15 - Philadelphia at Columbus
02/17/15 - Columbus at Philadelphia

Head to Head Stats

PhiladelphiaColumbus
2.62 (17)GPG2.31 (24)
3.00 (23)GAPG3.35 (29)
23.3% (4)PP%21.9% (6)
75.8% (27)PK%76.3% (26)
Wayne Simmonds, 11G leaderNick Foligno, 11
Jakub Voracek, 24A leaderRyan Johansen, 16
Jakub Voracek, 33Pts leaderRyan Johansen, 25
Zac Rinaldo, 33PIM leaderJared Boll, 42
3-9-2Road/Home4-8-1
2-6-2Last 104-5-1
12/6 @ Los Angeles, W 2-1Last Game12/6 @ Tampa Bay, W 3-1

Game Day #27 - Blue Jackets vs. Flyers

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Winners of three in a row, the Blue Jackets return home and get a much-needed extra boost with the return of Brandon Dubinsky.

Philadelphia Flyers at Columbus Blue Jackets

December 9, 2014 - 7:00 pm EST
Nationwide Arena - Columbus, Ohio
Radio - WBNS 97.1 - TV - Fox Sports Ohio
Opponent's Blog: Broad Street Hockey

OK, so this game is just loaded with intrigue and story lines. It is NOT to be missed. Brandon Dubinsky is back! Steve Mason is finally going to start a game in Columbus for the Flyers! R.J. Umberger! Scott Hartnell! These two teams both have very similar God-awful records!

While that last one is ultimately the most important part of this game, to not acknowledge those other story lines is to do this game a bit of disservice. Never before has a December game in which both teams are far, far out of a playoff spot held so much interest.

Record-wise, these two teams are very, very similar. Columbus is actually playing .500 hockey in their last 11 games (5-5-1), which includes an 0-5-1 stretch. If you subtract the 0-8-1 stretch when the injuries all happened at once and Columbus just kept getting kicked in the nuts, this team is actually 9-7-1. Think about that. Obviously, you can't just take that out, but it tells me that this team is a little better than their record shows right now. Add Dubinsky back into that mix, and a suddenly nuclear-hot Sergei Bobrovsky, and I think it would pre-mature to continue talking about The Tank. At least until the All Star Break.

To that larger point, standings-wise, the Jackets are now just two points behind Philly, who has seen their record drop from 7-5-2 to 9-13-4 in their last 12 games. Before winning their last game on Saturday, they were riding a 1-8-2 stretch. If Columbus were to win this game in regulation the two teams would be so, so tied that it would go to the FOURTH tie-breaker, which would keep Philly in front. That's to say, at this point in the season, they'd be tied for sixth. Considering where Columbus was just a short week ago, that would be pretty huge, and would continue to illustrate that the 3rd Metro playoff spot is still within hailing distance: Columbus is only eight points out. On December 1, they were 12 points out. It just goes to show that a modest winning streak actually makes hay in this crap-fest that is the Metro. If Columbus can keep winning a few more than they lose, they're actually not out of this thing just yet.

As for this game, I'm excited to see what Dubinsky can do. He brings so much to the table both in the faceoff circle, on defense, on the PK, and even on the PP if he gets any time there. He allows the Jackets to better find offensive starts and minutes for their "scoring" lines. I'm still not sure about this whole Foligno-at-center thing, but having Dubinsky with Calvert and Atkinson should help spread out the defensive responsibility and scoring responsibility.

And finally, for Columbus fans, they get the chance to let Steve Mason know how they feel. Not sure what kind of reception Umberger is going to get, but I think we should remember that he gave his all for A LOT of shitty teams while he was here, and even though his exit was less than glorious, he was one of the guys that actually cared for a long time when it seemed like no one else did.

Enjoy this one, gang. It should be a great night!

Projected Lineups

Columbus Blue Jackets
(9-15-2, 20 Points; 7th division, 14th conference)

Scott HartnellNick FolignoBrian Gibbons
Boone JennerRyan JohansenJack Skille
Matt CalvertBrandon DubinskyCam Atkinson
Corey TroppMichael ChaputJared Boll
Jordan LeopoldDalton Prout
Jack JohnsonDavid Savard
Kevin ConnautonJames Wisniewski
Sergei Bobrovsky
Curtis McElhinney

Philadelphia Flyers
(9-13-4, 22 Points; 6th division, 13th conference)

Michael RafflClaude GirouxJakub Voracek
Brayden SchennScott LaughtonWayne Simmonds
R.J. UmbergerSean CouturierMatt Read
Zac RinaldoChris VandeVeldePierre-Edouard Bellemare
Nicklas GrossmannMark Streit
Nick SchultzBraydon Coburn
Michael Del ZottoAndrew MacDonald
Steve Mason
Ray Emery

Season Series

11/14/14 - Columbus 4 at Philadelphia 3
11/22/14 - Columbus 2 at Philadelphia 4
12/09/14 - Philadelphia at Columbus
02/13/15 - Philadelphia at Columbus
02/17/15 - Columbus at Philadelphia

Head to Head Stats

PhiladelphiaColumbus
2.62 (17)GPG2.31 (24)
3.00 (23)GAPG3.35 (29)
23.3% (4)PP%21.9% (6)
75.8% (27)PK%76.3% (26)
Wayne Simmonds, 11G leaderNick Foligno, 11
Jakub Voracek, 24A leaderRyan Johansen, 16
Jakub Voracek, 33Pts leaderRyan Johansen, 25
Zac Rinaldo, 33PIM leaderJared Boll, 42
3-9-2Road/Home4-8-1
2-6-2Last 104-5-1
12/6 @ Los Angeles, W 2-1Last Game12/6 @ Tampa Bay, W 3-1

The long road for Drouin; Tampa Bay Lightning versus Washington Capitals preview

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The process of becoming a more complete player is a tough task for a 19 year old.

Where:  Amalie Arena, Tampa, Florida
When: 7:30 PM EST | Tickets: Check availability
Media:  (cable) | 970 AM WFLA (radio) | Twitter Live Stream
Opponent Coverage:Japers' Rink, Russian Machine Never Breaks

There was talk before the season, riding on the 2013 NHL draft hype, of Jonathan Drouin being a Calder Award candidate as NHL rookie of the year. There was nothing left for him to gain in the junior ranks and his ascent to the NHL was guaranteed unless one road bump or another came up. That road bump could be seen as his thumb-fracture during prospect camp, but it hasn't stopped him from contributing to the Lightning.

The diligence of slow going by team management, however, has slowed him down. Drouin's NHL debut had him planted on the top line with Steven Stamkos (with thanks to injuries having banged up other contributing wings on the Lightning roster). His position on the roster has been a descent since that time, from the top line, to the third line, to the fourth, and to the press box at time now - he'll be a healthy scratch tonight against the Washington Capitals.

Why, though? What's the point in having such a high caliber offensive talent playing a role that limits his contributions and doesn't play up to his abilities? Why box him in with the blue-collar role players and not the other offensive forces of the roster? The answer is pretty simple and pretty clear, but it's not a sexy thing for fans who just care about the lamp being lit: It's to complete his game, to make him a better hockey player and build up his on-ice versatility. He's full of skill and that much is a fact... What skill has been pushed on everyone is his offensive prowess... It's been stressed in his career so far.

There are still things to learn in the game, and it's not like Lightning fans haven't seen this before - high profile players put into what looks like a rough situation. Vincent Lecavalier was at war with John Tortorella in part because Torts wanted more out of Vinny, while Vinny wanted to play his way, which he had been encouraged to from juniors through his early pro years.

The Lightning's desire, under GM Steve Yzerman, to hone top prospect talent has been on display since 2010 with Brett Connolly, who went through the same process with the club in 2011-12. 2011 1st round draft pick Vladislav Namestnikov has also seen his slow and deliberate rise to the NHL (finishing his junior career and then playing a majority of a season in Syracuse of the AHL before being called up late last season). Slate Koekkoek and Andrei Vasilevskiy are the next pair of 1st round picks on the slow, deliberate rise; playing for the Crunch this season (though expectations suggest Vasilevskiy may see time in the NHL if he proves ready for it).

Maybe this is why Jonathan Drouin will seriously be an option for Team Canada at the 2015 World Junior Tournament in the coming weeks: It'll guarantee him playing time and also boost his confidence to dominate those games. What it doesn't mean is that the diligence from management will wane upon his return. The objective for Drouin is to be the most complete player possible, and pushing for him to learn now when there's less pressure is a lot better than years in the future after having goal-scoring alone made out to be his objective during games.

J.T. Brown will replace Drouin in the lineup tonight. He's another cog of the Bolts organizational depth that's been forced to watch games from the press box instead of contribute. His style of play has been more suitable for the bottom-6.

The one side effect of Tampa Bay's loss to the Columbus Blue Jackets on Saturday was it allowed the Detroit Red Wings to catch up with the Bolts in the standings. Tampa Bay and Detroit are now tied with 39 points each. Detroit is 8-2-0 in their past 10 games in fact...

The Lightning aren't playing Detroit tonight, though, they're playing their old adversary, the Washington Capitals.  The Caps and New York Rangers are battling it out for the third spot in the Metro Division standings.  While Alex Ovechkin is playing a much more complete game this season (12 goals, 9 assists, only a minus-1 as compared to years past) the Caps 28 points and 12-10-4 record pales in comparison to what we usually expect from DC.

But, as Jon Cooper said Saturday, standings don't mean s-with-a-t... The games have to be played and you can't expect the opponent to play at a level their place in the standing reflects.

Other Game Coverage:

Game 29 recap: Bolts outplayed by Caps, drop 2nd straight home loss

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A poor start and lack of production from special teams are key factors in sending the Lightning to their second consecutive home loss, as they fall 5-3 to the Washington Capitals.

The Washington Capitals beat the Tampa Bay Lightning 5-3 at the Amalie Arena in Tampa Tuesday night.

Are the Lightning experiencing a slump? Maybe that isn't answerable until at least another game or two but some disturbing signs are out there. This last five game stretch has been the one of the least productive so far this season with a 2-2-1 record, Only the five games between November 13 - 20 were worse with a 2-3-0 mark but three of those five were played on the road. Special teams play is becoming a serious concern, as Kyle Alexander noted previously. The Lightning provided evidence tonight, going one for three on the penalty kill and failing to convert on all four power plays. Granted, this is only the second thime this season they've lost two games in a row but it's the first time they've lost consecutive home games. They were 11-2-1 at Amalie Arena prior to Saturday's loss to Columbus. It may not be officially a slump yet, but Thursday's game against Carolina is now a must-win if Tampa Bay is to salvage a .500 homestand.

"Obviously, it's a long season and you're going to have ups and downs and now we have two games that we've lost against good teams. I feel like we haven't played horribly. I feel like we fix a few things and hopefully get our power play working as well." - Lightning forward Valtteri Filppula

Tonight's game was a better all-around effort than Saturday's game against the Blue Jackets, although Washington dominated play for most of the opening period. They got on the board at the :40 mark, with Alex Ovechkin scoring on assists from Tom Wilson and John Carlson.

The Lightning managed to tie things up at 13:49 when Brian Boyle redirected Victor Hedman's shot. J.T. Brown contributed the secondary helper.

Less than a minute later, the Capitals re-took the lead on a power play goal from Matt Niskanen at 14:23. Nicklas Backstrom and Marcus Johansson chipped in with assistance.

Throughout the period, at least until the last two or three minutes, Washington had little trouble entering the Lightning zone and even less difficulty keeping the puck there once they got in. It ended with Washington up 2-1.

The second period saw Tampa Bay scoring with in the first moinute when Steven Stamkos scored his 17th of the season and 250th of his career at  the :47 mark. Ryan Callahan and Hedman had the assists.

Washington took the lead for the third and final time at 4:30 on a goal by Brooks Laich, who was assited by Joel Ward.

It appeared the Bolts may have tied the game at 17:17 on a goal by Valtteri Filppula but it was waved off immediately, a call that was upheld on further video review from the Situation Room in Toronto.

At the end of two, Washington led 3-2

At 10:52 of the third, Troy Brouwer potted what would be the eventual game winner, getting help from Johansson and Evgeny Kuznetsov.

The Lightning managed to trim the deficit back to one at 19:56 when, with goalie Ben Bishop pulled for the extra skater, Filppula scored on assists from Tyler Johnson and Hedman.

Off the ensuing face-off three seconds later, Ovechkin somehow capped things off on with an empty netter from Backstrom.

"I guess that goal at the end counted, but it's a one-goal game. You know, we get a power play goal there... but they had their chances, it just didn't go in the net. Sometimes they're going in for you and sometimes they are not and it's too bad because it cost us tonight." - Lightning head coach Jon Cooper

The Lightning wrap up the current homestand Thursday against Carolina, then will head out on the road for five games before returning home on December 23rd to host the Pittsburgh Penguins.

Game notes:

  • Stamkos became the 10th youngest player to reach the 250 goal milestone in the NHL, three days older than Michel Goulet was when he reached the mark and seven days younger than Jaromir Jagr.
  • The rest of the ten are Wayne Gretzky, Mario Lemieux, Dale Hawerchuk, Alex Ovechkin, Pierre Turgeon, Steve Yzerman, Jimmy Carson and Mike Bossy.
  • Late comebacks, for either side, are not really a factor in Lightning games so far this season; they're now 0-8-0 when trailing after two periods and 13-0-1 when leading after two.
  • The Lightning honored Ann Comeau as the 16th Lightning Community Hero of the year during the first period of tonight's game. Comeau, who received a $50,000 donation from the Lightning Foundation and the Lightning Community Heroes program, will donate the money to Zoe's Journey. Comeau's rocky life circumstances met with resilience has led to her development as a positive leader to women who are struggling with addiction and have lost the ability to be an effective parent. Tragedy occurred early in Comeau's life when her father was murdered. She simultaneously battled cancer while becoming a mother at the age of 15. After beating cancer, she lost a significant other to a malignant brain tumor. This sent her into a downward spiral of drug addiction which caused Comeau to lose her children to the justice system. Losing custody of her children motivated Comeau to rebuild her life and seek help from a recovery agency. Since then, Comeau has rebuilt her life and become a positive supporter to women facing similar circumstances by sharing her story, teaching classes toward recovery at Zoe's Journey's in-patient facility, and currently developing a hands-on parenting class for mothers who have just regained custody of their children. Comeau volunteers approximately 60 hours a month at Zoe's Journey and impacts over 30 women and families each month. Zoe's Journey, a faith based non-profit organization, provides support for women and children who have been affected by life altering situations (i.e. incarceration, addiction, homelessness) and helps rebuild their individual lives and family lives with a spiritual and ethical foundation.

Gopher Hockey Notebook: Brady Skjei injured, out for Mariucci Classic; WJC thoughts

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Minnesota is off until January 2nd, but 3 players will be participating next week in their respective countries' World Junior Championships preliminary camps.

Michigan State's Munn Arena has not been kind to Minnesota defensemen in Big Ten play.

The arena, with its boards and crazy bounces, has been the site of the Gophers' first half finale each of the last two years. Twice Minnesota (9-4-1, 1-0-1-0 Big Ten) has left with a win and a tie. Twice Minnesota has left East Lansing with an injured defenseman.

Brady Skjei (New York Rangers) once again is on the injury shelf, suffering an upper body injury going into the boards late in Saturday's 3-3 tie. (Michigan State went on to win a shootout for the extra Big Ten conference point.) Gophers head coach Don Lucia referenced Skjei's status Monday during his radio show and further clarified Wednesday.

"Brady's going to be out a while. He was injured late in the game Saturday so he definitely won't be playing in the Mariucci (Classic)," Lucia said.

Minnesota is off until January 2nd when the Gophers host Merrimack, UMass-Lowell and RIT in the Mariucci Classic. If Skjei, who has 4 points (1G-3A) in 10 games, is already ruled out, that means he is missing a minimum of three weeks. Although there isn't a further timeline at this time, the Gophers don't have another weekend off from then until the end of the season

This is the second separate injury for the junior in just over a month. Skjei, New York's first round draft pick (28th overall) in 2012, missed four games in November with an injured right leg.

"I feel bad for Brady because he just came back from another injury. Now he's got to go through it again," said Lucia. "The only good thing is at least 3 of the weeks we won't be playing so he won't miss as many games."

Minnesota's blue line depth at the top has been tested during the team's 2-3-1 stretch. There have only been two times where both Skjei and fellow junior blue liner Mike Reilly (Columbus Blue Jackets) have finished the same game. The Gophers won both.

A season ago, defenseman Jake Parenteau broke his leg and had to be helped off the Munn Arena ice. He missed six weeks after undergoing surgery, returning in time to play in the North Star College Cup.

3 Gophers turn to World Juniors

With so much time off, today was spent talking with the three Minnesota players who will be participating in the upcoming U-20 World Junior Championships. Freshman defenseman Ryan Collins (Columbus Blue Jackets) and sophomore forward Hudson Fasching (Buffalo Sabres) both made the USA preliminary camp roster coached by former Ohio State head coach Mark Osiecki. The 30 man roster has to be cut down to 23 before Christmas.

Fasching is a lock to return for his second consecutive WJC and give Minnesota a representative for the 23rd consecutive year (and 38th out of 39 since the tournament began in 1977). Collins is closer to the bubble. Team USA has 10 defensemen in camp and the freshman is competing with a few others for the same spot. (The good news for Collins is that he has another year of eligibility.)

Meanwhile, freshman forward Leon Bristedt is on Sweden's preliminary WJC roster. While not a lock and not exactly on the bubble, Bristedt, who has 2 goals in 12 games, thinks he has a good chance.

Those three will head to Canada next week for the various preliminary camps. For the rest of the Gopher players, the upcoming week focuses almost exclusively on the student part of "student-athlete." In other words: finals time.

The 2015 World Junior Championships run from December 26-January 5th in Toronto and Montreal. Besides being a national holiday in Canada (and, according to Bristedt, bigger in Sweden than the World Championships), the WJC features the best under-20 players in the world. It hasn't been as popular in the United States though that is changing in recent years.

If you've never watched the WJC, this is a good year to begin.

There are no early morning starting times with the tournament in North America. As mentioned, Canada goes all out for the WJC. It's an experience to be seen. This edition features several top 2015 draft picks - including the famed "Canada's Connor McDavid v. USA's Jack Eichel" battle between the projected top 2 picks and franchise cornerstones - and those already drafted by NHL teams. Plus if you're American, the US has a good roster. (And if you're not American you can likely cheer on your country.)

I hope to have a couple stories up late this week/early next week as part of our WJC coverage here at SB Nation College Hockey.

You'll have to wait until then, but there are several good gems. Fasching admits he has a chip on his shoulder this time around with Team USA's fifth-place finish. It's a good time for him to get going before the second half. The sophomore forward has 5 goals in 14 games, but is pointless in his last six games.

My favorite, however, has to be the fact Bristedt taught Collins, his roommate, several Swedish chirps in case the two meet one another. Sweden and the US are in different Groups. While the only way both would meet in the regular tournament is in the knockout phase, it could happen before. Both play one another December 23rd in an exhibition game.

Lucia's Team USA Thoughts

Lucia, who served as the head coach of the 2014 USA WJC team and participated in the selection process in 2013, is happy to not be away from his family at Christmas this time around. Still, he has a unique perspective knowing the infrastructure and having coached some of this year's Team USA players. Here's what he said:

"They're going to have some real young, high end skill. I don't know how the team will ultimately play itself out, but certainly Jack Eichel as a 17 year-old (ed. note the returning Eichel turned 18 in October) will be their number one center. He's just a generational type player.

"Now the direction they go with will (Auston) Matthews make the team as another 17 year old this year. Certainly I would think would think that (Dylan) Larkin and (J.T.) Compher from Michigan have a good chance to make it.

"I think they have a chance to have a real good team, but what ultimately is going to happen with their defensive core - they're going to have to make some real decisions on guys. I know (Zach) Werenski's in the mix and (Noah) Hanifin too. Two 17 year-old kids. It's a little bit unusual this year because there are such elite players at such young ages in our country and that will be a decision that USA Hockey and Mark Osiecki will have to make. Do they include those kids or add some older guys?"

--
Lastly, a trio of Minnesota-related articles that are worth reading in my opinion:

-------------------

Nathan Wells is a college hockey columnist for SB Nation. You can also follow him on Twitter --

Game Preview #28 - Has A Corner Been Turned?

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The Blue Jackets look to push their win streak to five in a row in another important Metro tilt.

Columbus Blue Jackets at Washington Capitals

December 11, 2014 - 7:00 PM EST
Verizon Center - Washington, DC
Radio - WBNS 97.1 - TV - Fox Sports Ohio
Opponent's Blog: Japers' Rink

It's been literally one month (30 days) since we last played the Caps, in DC. On that night, the Jackets fell 4-2, and in the process put the capstone on their franchise worst nine-game winless (0-8-1) stretch. Since that point, Columbus has actually gone 6-5-1, so that was definitely the low point of the season in many ways. To wit, take a look at the lineup they iced that night, as copied from the preview of that game:

Brian GibbonsRyan JohansenNick Foligno
Scott HartnellBoone JennerCam Atkinson
Dana TyrellAlexander WennbergCorey Tropp
Adam CracknellMichael ChaputJared Boll
Fedor TyutinDavid Savard
Tim ErixonJames Wisniewski
Frederic St. DenisDalton Prout
Curtis McElhinney
Anton Forsberg

Wow. Just, wow. That's not the best lineup, and in that hindsight it's easier to see why the team at that point had lost eight in a row and was on their way to nine. Speaking of 6-5-1, that's the same record the Caps have over that same time span, and they sit at third in the division. So, the Jackets technically haven't made up any ground, but just the same they're playing as well as the last playoff team in the division. Hashtag progress?

Both teams are streaking right now, with Columbus winning four in a row and the Caps three in a row. In fact, they just swept a three-game road trip, and they literally never trailed, including capping off the trip much like Columbus did by winning convincingly in Tampa. The Jackets have actually been *OK* on the road overall, winning five of their 10 wins on the road. Likewise, the Caps have actually been a *worse* team at home. To me, though, this game really hinges on one thing, much like I felt Tuesday's game did: penalties. This game features two teams that have top-five Power Play units, and also that have bottom-six Penalty Kill units. Taking penalties in this game is going to equal death in a lot of cases. The Jackets, with some help from the Philly Divers, took far too many penalties the other night, especially when protecting a lead. Conversely, their Power Play was good in three of their four chances, and they notched both goals on the PP.

The Caps have scored 78 goals in 27 games, and 21 of those (26.9%) have come on the Power Play. For the Jackets, it's a similar tale: 23 of their 63 goals (36.5%!) have come on the Power Play. In other words, these teams feast on the Power Play. So, it stands to reason that the team that has the most discipline limits the other team's chances to get their best unit on the ice over and over. It's simple, really. That said, the Caps have won three in a row, and haven't allowed a PPG in that span. Columbus, also, has been better of late on the PK, having killed off 17 of their last 20 over the last six games, including five of six against Tampa Bay and Philly, two of the league's best PP units. They need to keep that up tonight.

The thing I noticed most about the Jackets on Tuesday was that they limited Philly in scoring chances. The shot attempts chart over at war-on-ice.com shows the Jackets were comfortably leading in EV attempted shots for most of the game, until they turtled up and let Philly push back in at the end of regulation. More importantly, they held Philly in the low 30s in attempted shots at EV, further hammering home the point about how silly taking penalties against a good PP/mediocre EV team is. My heart tells me that was in part because of Dubinsky coming back, but who can say? His EV Corsi For was pretty bad that night.

All things being equal, I can't imagine Todd Richards is going to do much tinkering with the lines tonight. We shall see after morning skate.

Projected Lineups

Columbus Blue Jackets
(10-15-2, 22 Points; 7th division, 14th conference)

Scott HartnellNick FolignoBrian Gibbons
Boone JennerRyan JohansenJack Skille
Matt CalvertBrandon DubinskyCam Atkinson
Corey TroppMichael ChaputJared Boll
Jordan LeopoldDalton Prout
Jack JohnsonDavid Savard
Kevin ConnautonJames Wisniewski
Sergei Bobrovsky
Curtis McElhinney

Washington Capitals
(13-10-4, 30 Points; 3rd Division, 8th Conference)

Alex OvechkinNicklas BackstromTom Wilson
Marcus JohanssonEvgeny KuznetsovTroy Brouwer
Brooks LaichEric FehrJoel Ward
Jason ChimeraMichael LattaJay Beagle
Brooks OrpikJohn Carlson
Karl AlznerMatt Niskanen
Jack HillenNate Schmidt
Braden Holtby
Justin Peters

Season Series

11/11/14 - Columbus 2 at Washington 4
12/11/14 - Columbus at Washington
12/18/14 - Washington at Columbus
01/27/15 - Washington at Columbus
03/03/15 - Washington at Columbus

Head to Head Stats

WashingtonColumbus
2.89 (10)GPG2.33 (23)
2.67 (17)GAPG3.30 (28)
28.8% (2)PP%23.0% (5)
76.2% (26)PK%76.3% (25)
Alexander Ovechkin, 14G leaderNick Foligno, 11
Nicklas Backstrom, 22A leaderRyan Johansen, 17
Nicklas Backstrom, 27Pts leaderRyan Johansen, 26
Tom Wilson, 55PIM leaderJared Boll, 42
5-5-3Home/Road5-7-1
6-3-1Last 104-5-1
12/09 @ Tampa Bay, W 5-3Last Game12/09 vs. Philadelphia, W 3-2 (SO)

Game Day #28 - Blue Jackets at Capitals

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The Blue Jackets look to push their win streak to five in a row in another important Metro tilt.

Columbus Blue Jackets at Washington Capitals

December 11, 2014 - 7:00 PM EST
Verizon Center - Washington, DC
Radio - WBNS 97.1 - TV - Fox Sports Ohio
Opponent's Blog: Japers' Rink

It's been literally one month (30 days) since we last played the Caps, in DC. On that night, the Jackets fell 4-2, and in the process put the capstone on their franchise worst nine-game winless (0-8-1) stretch. Since that point, Columbus has actually gone 6-5-1, so that was definitely the low point of the season in many ways. To wit, take a look at the lineup they iced that night, as copied from the preview of that game:

Brian GibbonsRyan JohansenNick Foligno
Scott HartnellBoone JennerCam Atkinson
Dana TyrellAlexander WennbergCorey Tropp
Adam CracknellMichael ChaputJared Boll
Fedor TyutinDavid Savard
Tim ErixonJames Wisniewski
Frederic St. DenisDalton Prout
Curtis McElhinney
Anton Forsberg

Wow. Just, wow. That's not the best lineup, and in that hindsight it's easier to see why the team at that point had lost eight in a row and was on their way to nine. Speaking of 6-5-1, that's the same record the Caps have over that same time span, and they sit at third in the division. So, the Jackets technically haven't made up any ground, but just the same they're playing as well as the last playoff team in the division. Hashtag progress?

Both teams are streaking right now, with Columbus winning four in a row and the Caps three in a row. In fact, they just swept a three-game road trip, and they literally never trailed, including capping off the trip much like Columbus did by winning convincingly in Tampa. The Jackets have actually been *OK* on the road overall, winning five of their 10 wins on the road. Likewise, the Caps have actually been a *worse* team at home. To me, though, this game really hinges on one thing, much like I felt Tuesday's game did: penalties. This game features two teams that have top-five Power Play units, and also that have bottom-six Penalty Kill units. Taking penalties in this game is going to equal death in a lot of cases. The Jackets, with some help from the Philly Divers, took far too many penalties the other night, especially when protecting a lead. Conversely, their Power Play was good in three of their four chances, and they notched both goals on the PP.

The Caps have scored 78 goals in 27 games, and 21 of those (26.9%) have come on the Power Play. For the Jackets, it's a similar tale: 23 of their 63 goals (36.5%!) have come on the Power Play. In other words, these teams feast on the Power Play. So, it stands to reason that the team that has the most discipline limits the other team's chances to get their best unit on the ice over and over. It's simple, really. That said, the Caps have won three in a row, and haven't allowed a PPG in that span. Columbus, also, has been better of late on the PK, having killed off 17 of their last 20 over the last six games, including five of six against Tampa Bay and Philly, two of the league's best PP units. They need to keep that up tonight.

The thing I noticed most about the Jackets on Tuesday was that they limited Philly in scoring chances. The shot attempts chart over at war-on-ice.com shows the Jackets were comfortably leading in EV attempted shots for most of the game, until they turtled up and let Philly push back in at the end of regulation. More importantly, they held Philly in the low 30s in attempted shots at EV, further hammering home the point about how silly taking penalties against a good PP/mediocre EV team is. My heart tells me that was in part because of Dubinsky coming back, but who can say? His EV Corsi For was pretty bad that night.

All things being equal, I can't imagine Todd Richards is going to do much tinkering with the lines tonight. We shall see after morning skate.

Projected Lineups

Columbus Blue Jackets
(10-15-2, 22 Points; 7th division, 14th conference)

Scott HartnellNick FolignoBrian Gibbons
Boone JennerRyan JohansenJack Skille
Matt CalvertBrandon DubinskyCam Atkinson
Corey TroppMichael ChaputJared Boll
Jordan LeopoldDalton Prout
Jack JohnsonDavid Savard
Kevin ConnautonJames Wisniewski
Sergei Bobrovsky
Curtis McElhinney

Washington Capitals
(13-10-4, 30 Points; 3rd Division, 8th Conference)

Alex OvechkinNicklas BackstromTom Wilson
Marcus JohanssonEvgeny KuznetsovTroy Brouwer
Brooks LaichEric FehrJoel Ward
Jason ChimeraMichael LattaJay Beagle
Brooks OrpikJohn Carlson
Karl AlznerMatt Niskanen
Jack HillenNate Schmidt
Braden Holtby
Justin Peters

Season Series

11/11/14 - Columbus 2 at Washington 4
12/11/14 - Columbus at Washington
12/18/14 - Washington at Columbus
01/27/15 - Washington at Columbus
03/03/15 - Washington at Columbus

Head to Head Stats

WashingtonColumbus
2.89 (10)GPG2.33 (23)
2.67 (17)GAPG3.30 (28)
28.8% (2)PP%23.0% (5)
76.2% (26)PK%76.3% (25)
Alexander Ovechkin, 14G leaderNick Foligno, 11
Nicklas Backstrom, 22A leaderRyan Johansen, 17
Nicklas Backstrom, 27Pts leaderRyan Johansen, 26
Tom Wilson, 55PIM leaderJared Boll, 42
5-5-3Home/Road5-7-1
6-3-1Last 104-5-1
12/09 @ Tampa Bay, W 5-3Last Game12/09 vs. Philadelphia, W 3-2 (SO)

Capitals vs. Blue Jackets: Game 28 of 82

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Washington's winning streak is snapped in overtime by Columbus

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Keep up with the latest Caps-related Tweets right here:

Look for updates in this story stream throughout the evening, including tonight's lines, new open threads for each period, and more.

And of course... have at it, people.

Capitals vs. Blue Jackets QuickCap: Caps Can't Capitalize, Beaten by Bobrovsky

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Washington's winning streak is snapped in overtime by Columbus

[GameCenter - Ice Tracker - Game Summary - Event Summary - Shot Report - Faceoff Summary - Play-by-Play - Home TOI - Visitor TOI - Advanced Stats at: war-on-ice, hockeystats, Natural Stat Trick and more via Nice Time On Ice

Coming off a perfect three-game road trip that concluded with arguably their best win of the season Tuesday night in Tampa, the Washington Capitals faced a test of a different sort on Thursday night - demonstrating to themselves and their fans that they can carry over that high level of play to a home game against a team below them in the standings.

Sure enough, the Caps got off to a good start (thanks to a few Columbus penalties), but had trouble generating much quality offensive opportunities (and most of what they could generate was eaten up by Sergei Bobrovsky) or converting on subsequent power plays and ultimately would succumb to the Blue Jackets 3-2 on an overtime power-play goal by Nick Foligno. Here's Thursday night's Plus/Minus:

Plus/Minus:

  • Plus: Shot suppression. The Caps allowed eight even-strength shots on goal and ten total through two periods and only allowed 18 five-on-five shot attempts through 40 minutes. They'd yield another 10 shots in the third and three more in the overtime period, but Columbus's offense was well under control... for the most part.
  • Minus: Play with the lead. Was this our minus two nights ago? Yep. Still an issue? Yep. For the second-straight game, the Caps gained and lost two one-goal leads. The first blown lead in this one came on a defensive breakdown for which there were no shortage of culpable Caps, and the second... let's put that one on Braden HoltbyGotta have that one. And this team's gotta be better with a lead if they want to climb up the standings ladder. (Honorable mention minus? The 1-for-6 power play that fired 18 shots on net, but only converted once.)

And now, this (Caps' power-play shot attempts, via war-on-ice.com)...

Game highlights:

Game Recap #28: Lucky Thirteens

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In a game that was hard on the eyes much of the time, the Blue Jackets found a way and extended their winning streak to five.

The Blue Jackets brought their four game winning streak and the #5 power play in the NHL to Washington, where the Capitals were prepared to defend their own three-game streak and #2 power play rank.  Something had to give.  Who would it be?

Period One:  Contrarian Play

You don't have to be a hockey genius to understand what needs to be done against the Washington Capitals:  stay out of the box, skate hard and score early.  That's the easy way to beat Washington.  The hard way is to do what Columbus did on this night -- ignore conventional wisdom, take three penalties in the first 4:27 of the game, deplete your energy on the PK and mount no sustained offensive pressure.  That this frame ended in a tie was nothing less than a miracle.

Final shots were 13 - 6 for the period, but it wasn't that close.  After a couple of indifferent shifts to open the game, Brandon Dubinsky took a silly holding penalty at the 1:13 mark.  Just 54 seconds later, the Blue Jackets were whistled for too many men on the ice, as the puck was played to their bench as a change was in process.  Washington had 1:06 of two-man advantage, and I'm surprised they didn't have to clean the drool off the ice.  Columbus, however, put up a solid PK effort  -- led by Sergei Bobrovsky -- and killed off the full 5-on-3.  However, just before Dubinsky could get his stick into the play, John Carlson teed up a shot from the point, with heavy traffic in front of Bobrovsky.  Eric Fehr tipped the puck, which caromed off Bobrovsky's stick and into the upper corner.  Evgeny Kuznetsov garnered the second assist, and the three keys to the game were torn up and trashed.

The Blue Jackets are no real enigma these days, either.  Teams know that the likes of Prout, Wisniewski and Savard are not dynamite puck handlers, so the key is to maximize pressure in the defensive zone, creating turnovers and opportunities.  Such was the case for the majority of the period, with the Blue Jackets apparently having no plan to beat the pressure.  The fourth line was . . .forgettable.  Fortunately, Bobrovsky was up to the task every time.  (Stop me if you've heard this one before).  Why not get guys like Skille and Gibbons involved in the middle of the ice to skate the puck out?

Finally, with 4:24 left in the period, the Jackets won a face-off at center ice. Brian Gibbons grabbed the puck, and worked it to Nick Foligno, with Scott Hartnell causing havoc in front of Braden Holtby.  Foligno drifted to his left, toward the center of the ice, and let loose with a nasty wrister from the top of the circles.  It beat Holtby, and the game was tied.  Gibbons and James Wisniewski earned the assists, and gained some momentum, which they carried to the end of the period.  As an added bonus, Alexander Ovechkin took an inexplicable goaltender interference call with just a few ticks left in the period.  Columbus would start with the power play in the 2nd.  Could they capitalize on the momentum and restore order?

Period Two: Tempting Fate

The Blue Jackets played role reversal for the better part of the first half of the period.  Starting on the power play, Columbus had some chances, but could not convert.  However, just 90 seconds later, Nate Schmidt was called for holding, and it was back to the power play.  Again, some good chances, but no conversion.  However, the Capitals were held without a shot on goal for almost half the period.  As Jeff Rimer reminded everyone, the vast majority of the Capitals' shot attempts came off the power play, and the second would prove to be no different.

After mutual cross-checking penalties to Jason Chimera and Jared Boll took place with nobody noticing, Washington began to ratchet up the pressure a bit.  The second had already become more than usually chippy, with the number of physical confrontations escalating.  So, when Tom Wilson started serially cross-checking James Wisniewski in front of Bobrovsky, one could sense that a short fuse was simmering.  Sure enough, Wiz let loose with a slash, then cross-check of his own which put Wilson down, with significant enhancement on Wilson's part.  Instead of a cross-checking/slashing trade-off and 4-on-4 hockey, the refs saw only Wisniewski's transgressions.  Messrs. Ovechkin & Company had a four minute power play.

Again, the Blue Jackets power play -- including Mr. Bobrovsky -- rose to the occasion.  They played tight down low, were acutely aware of the passing lanes, and forced the puck into the predictable areas.  If a cross-ice pass was attempted directly, it was more often than not deflected by a Columbus stick.  Though the Capitals managed a number of shots during the power play (shots ended at 15 - 4 for the period), Bobrovsky was anticipating the play well, and negated every chance.

The final three minutes of the period passed uneventfully, with the Blue Jackets looking to rest the legs and establish some rhythm to their game in the final period.  Interesting subtext:  through two periods, Ovechkin had 16:20 of ice time, with eight shots on goal, and another five missed or blocked.  From another perspective, he had just two fewer shots than the Blue Jackets did as a team through two.  Ouch.  Yet, somehow, this was anybody's game. Who would grab it?

Period 3 & OT:  The Agony & The Ecstasy

After two periods where the scoreboard did not reflect the true on-ice situation, the two clubs hunkered down and played something approximating solid hockey.  Shots were dead even for the final stanza and the OT, and the on-ice pace was similarly a back and forth affair.  Early in the period, Brandon Dubinsky found himself with two defenders high in the offensive zone.  Properly reasoning somebody must be open, he spotted Cam Atkinson drifting unmolested down toward the right post. He had the high glove corner pegged, but Holtby made the best save of the night by snaring the puck and denying one of the best single opportunities of the evening.  The Capitals had similar opportunities, but Bobrovsky was his customary brick wall.

At the 9:20 mark, what seemed inevitable -- given the shot differential -- finally came to pass.  Matt Niskanen took the puck at the right point for Washington, while Kevin Connauton battled Troy Brouwer at Bobrovsky's right post.  Connauton succeeded in plowing Brouwer away from the crease, but Brouwer craftily circled the net to Bobrovsky's left, with Connauton trailing.  Niskanen saw this and fired a shot/pass off-net at Brouwer, who got his stick on it and deflected it diagonally into the net.  With just over ten minutes remaining on the road, against one of the offensive powerhouses in the league, and trailing by one, things did not look rosy.  But these are the Blue Jackets, and despite their travails, they retain that attitude of tenacity and resiliency.  Tonight was no different.

Just 1:30 after Washington took the lead, Columbus fought back for the tie.  This time, it was Connauton, fresh off his game-winning goal over the Flyers, who fired a shot from the right point at a crowd gathered in front of Holtby.  It appeared to most observers that Matt Calvert caught the puck on his stick, but the official scorers disagreed.  No matter, the puck resided firmly in the back of the net, and Connauton had his second as a Blue Jacket.  The assists went to Wisniewski and Atkinson, and it was, as they say, a whole new ball game.

Some nervous moments came at the 14:23 mark, when Hartnell was whistled for a marginal high sticking call.  Hartnell was tied up in front of Braden Holtby, and had his stick lifted over his head.  When his stick came down, the shaft hit Holtby on the top of the left shoulder.  There was a brief dramatic pause before Holtby was able to channel his inner World Cup Soccer Star, and collapse to the ice. The arm went up for yet another Capitals power play.  However, the kill was simple and efficient, and the threat was tidily dispatched.

With just a few minutes left, Hartnell was featured in another prime opportunity.  Cam Atkinson brought the puck into the offensive zone on the left, with Matt Calvert driving hard down the middle.  Hartnell filled the empty space as the trailer, and Atkinson found him wide open.  A nice wrister was saved by Holtby, but the rebound caromed directly to Hartnell.  His comeback attempt was again denied by Holtby, and the remainder of the period passed without incident.

The overtime was both bizarre and sublime.  The Capitals took early control, and put a couple of shots on Bobrovsky, one requiring a nice pad save.  Columbus then took control of the puck, and put a couple of their own shots on goal.  More importantly, they had Washington trailing the play.  The predictable happened with 1:57 left in OT, when Jason Chimera was forced into a bad interference penalty against Jack Johnson.  A coveted 4-on-3 power play, with almost the full two minutes at their disposal.

What seemed like paradise almost turned to disaster early in the extra man situation.  A bad entry created a turnover high in the zone, and Washington had the highly unlikely odd man rush, featuring Brooks Opik and Jay Beagle.  Orpik brought the puck down the left, and fired from point black range.  Bobrovsky was square to the shooter and denied the effort. However, the rebound came directly out to Beagle, who turned and fired.  Bobrovsky, however, saw what was coming and sprawled to his left, stacking the pads and denying the chance.  A good omen?

Finally, order was restored, Jack Johnson gained entry into the offensive zone and worked the puck between the right wing and the point, with Foligno, Johnson and Johansen playing catch.  Finally, Johnson zipped it to Foligno just above the right dot, and his one timer was hard and true, beating Holtby high for the game winner.  It was Foligno's 13th goal of the season, to match his 13 assists.

Takeaways

This one is difficult to rationally summarize.  On the one hand, the optics of this game were awful most of the way. Columbus made stupid mistakes, had no chemistry, and once again relied upon a superlative effort in goal to save the day.  They surrendered 41 shots on goal, and 13 of the Blue Jackets' 23 shots came in the final 24 minutes of play.  On the other hand, there were a number of really nice individual efforts.  Foligno and Bobrovsky, obviously, but many others as well.  Ryan Johansen played his tail off, playing over twenty minutes of ice time in all situations, making lots of subtle little plays away from the puck, and even with the puck, across all three zones.  He's in one of those funks right now where the puck is not finding the net.  His empty netter hit the post against Philadelphia, and a late chance tonight went just wide. Still, he has 27 points in 28 games, and the goals will come.

Cam Atkinson was more visible, despite having only a single shot of any kind.  He is slowly becoming more of a complete player, but needs to show that he can do it without losing his scoring touch.  Boone Jenner, Brian Gibbons and Jack Skille all had important minutes, and James Wisniewski and Jack Johnson had better games than they have had in a long time. There were mistakes, but they were a real presence in the offensive zone, facilitated the high-low puck movement, and generally had solid efforts. Connauton also merits attention, but still panics with the puck in his own zone far too easily.

The lack of shooting remains a concern, as does the propensity to take stupid penalties.  The reticence to shoot has been around since training camp, and has not gotten better.  Sure, injuries have played a part, and the constant shifting of lines doesn't do anything for chemistry, but the club just needed to look at the guys in the red sweaters for guidance. Niskanen & Ovechkin  -- by themselves -- accounted for 14 shots on goal and 23 shots attempted.  Ahem . . .  Listening to Todd Richards after the game, I was wondering if he watched the same game I did.

Still, there's no arguing about five consecutive wins.  The high wire act, however, has to change, particularly with Pittsburgh coming into the house on Saturday night. The club has  Johansen & Foligno going at just about a point-per-game clip, Bobrovsky playing with Vezina form, and both Goloubef and Tyutin on the verge of returning.  For a change, good news is outpacing bad.

More importantly, discussion of the standings is now appropriate again.  The team is at almost precisely the same record as this time last year, and now sits just seven points out of a playoff spot -- both the Capitals (3rd in Metro) and Boston (2nd Wild Card) have 31 points in 28 games.  Columbus trails the Flyers by a single point, and New Jersey by three points, with two games in hand on the Devils.  The Rangers are just four points distant, although they have two games in hand on the Blue Jackets.  And you all thought I was crazy . . .   Stay tuned.

Blue Jackets 3, Lightning 1 - Game Highlights

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