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Preview: Dallas Stars Look to Bounce Back Against Columbus Blue Jackets (7:30pm CST)

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The Stars look to resume their climb up the standings tonight against the visiting Blue Jackets.

The Dallas Stars saw their four-game winning streak snapped on the second night of a back-to-back in Chicago Saturday night, but still own an 8-1-1 record in their last ten as they look to get back on the horse tonight against the visiting Columbus Blue Jackets.

"It was a good effort," said Stars head coach Lindy Ruff. "I thought back-to-back, especially at even strength, we did a really good job. You look at the end of the night it is a hard fought point in a back-to-back game that might have been our best back-to-back so far."

The best back-to-back so far that brings that record to 0-4-1, but an encouraging enough of an effort that their momentum could hardly be said to be halted. They were, as Ruff commented, best 5-on-5, but the Blackhawks were awarded power plays where the Stars were not, and that tipped possession and the score, ultimately.

Kari Lehtonen played both nights of the back-to-back, and well, until perhaps the sharp-angle goal at United Center that sent the game to OT. Will he continue to play every night? The Stars have 8 games in 15 nights before the All-Star break and no real appreciable periods of downtime until then.

The Stars were off on Monday and there's no news to report on lineup changes. Travis Morin has been reassigned to the AHL.

Meanwhile, you think the Stars are hot? Check out the Blue Jackets.

11-2-1 in their last 14 games. Wins over Detroit. Pittsburgh. Chicago. Minnesota. Boston. Tampa Bay. You name it. Either conference, home or away, they are absolute monsters right now. The mirror image, really, of Dallas.

They started 6-15-2 after injury problems and were counted out. They have experienced a month of extreme success, like the Stars, and yet still sit on the cusp of the playoff picture. Kindred Eastern Conference spirits if ever there were some, wouldn't you say?

Except there's just one thing- in that incredible 14 game span they've been enjoying they've been out-shot, and sometimes pretty severely, in 12 of them. Out-shot 41-23 by Washington? It's a win. Out-shot 41-19 by Chicago? It's...somehow a win. Out shot 55-20 (seriously?) by Florida and it's a win.

So there's a little luck there, and a whole lot of goaltending. Sergei Bobrovsky ripped off seven straight W's for them recently, and even Curtis McElhinney has a few wins in relief.

Like the Stars they played on January 3rd and the 4th (a loss in Arizona and a win in Colorado, respectively), and now face their third game in four days at American Airlines Center.

They've won in each of their last three trips to Dallas, the latest of which was the completion of the one that was halted on Rich Peverley's behalf.

Nick Foligno (35 points) and Ryan Johansen (34) lead the way for them in scoring. Scott Hartnell's 21 points make him a distant third, with defensemen Jack Johnson and James Wisniewski just behind. David Savard also has a bit of a hot hand with three game winners in their last nine victories.

Possible lineup:

Hartnell-Johansen-Foligno
Calvert-Dubinsky-Morin
Collins-Wennberg-Skille
Tropp-Chaput-Boll

Johnson-Savard
Connauton-Wisniewski
Tyutin-Goloubef

Sergei Bobrovsky
Curtis McElhinney

It took me three tries to type "Goloubef," and yes, that's former Dallas Star Kevin Connauton, who has five goals and four assists in his last 11 games in a Blue Jackets uniform, including two game winners. He's minus one in that span.

From Stars PR:

CANNON FODDER
The Stars square off against the Columbus Blue Jackets at American Airlines Center on Tuesday in the second and final matchup between the two clubs this season. Dallas bested the Blue Jackets, 4-2, at Nationwide Arena in the first meeting on Oct. 14. Forward Tyler Seguin scored three goals against the Blue Jackets for his first hat trick of the season in the contest. Stars captain Jamie Benn led the team with four points (1-3=4) and registered a +4 rating in the first game against Columbus. Benn also recorded a fighting major in the tilt, earning his third career Gordie Howe hat trick.

7:30pm CST on Fox Sports Southwest and Sports Radio 1310 The Ticket.


2015 World Junior Championships - Canada Wins Gold

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Two absolutely terrific hockey games were played yesterday to determine the medal winners at the 2015 World Juniors.

Fans of the game were treated to two exciting hockey games yesterday, with Gold, Silver and Bronze medals on the line. The Jackets had one prospect remaining- Dillon Heatherington for Canada.

Bronze Medal Game - Sweden vs. Slovakia

This one was a mismatch on paper, but Slovakia didn't get the memo. By the 3:22 mark of the first period, they had already potted a pair of quick goals to take a 2-0 lead. William Nylander would score midway through the period, and Jens Looke tied the game later in the first period. The second period was scoreless, despite three powerplay opportunities for Slovakia. The tide turned when at the end of the second period, Swedish defenseman Julius Bergman crosschecked Patrik Koys in the jaw- Bergman was handed a five minute major to start the third period.

It took a few minutes to get set up, but eventually the Slovaks broke through on the major, with Pavol Skalicky giving his team the lead. Slovakia would pot an empty-netter in the final minute, fittingly off the stick of Koys, to ice the game and win the Bronze medal.

It was just the second medal ever for Slovakia at this tournament. Denis Godla was later named top goaltender in the tournament.

Gold Medal Game - Canada vs. Russia

Boy, did this game live up to the hype. At first it seemed this game would be a laugher, with Canada scoring just 23 seconds into the game. The AIr Canada Centre was booming, and the Canadians were clearly boosted by the crowd. The energy was palpable. Just two minutes later, Canada scored again off the stick of Nick Paul. Russia cut the lead in half midway through the period. The second period started off a bit slower, with the players relaxing a bit after such an exciting start to the game. Canada scored three goals in the first half of the second period to go up 5-1.

Canadian fans were not comfortable despite the four-goal lead. There were memories of 2011, when in the Gold medal game Canada was leading 3-0, before Russia stormed back late to win 5-3 and steal the Gold.

Sure enough, Russia mounted a comeback. Starting with Ivan Barbashev's goal at 10:30 of the second, Russia potted three quick ones to cut the lead to 5-4.

The third period was some of the best hockey I've ever seen. The whistles were hidden, the pace was frenetic, and the hockey was pure. The teams traded chances, but the goaltenders were terrific. Russia pulled their goalie with 90s left, but Canada held on to win the Gold, their first since 2009.

The Columbus Blue Jackets prospects showed well in this tournament, especially Oliver Bjorkstrand of Denmark. He was an offensive force for the upstart Danes, the tournament sweetheart. He finished the tournament with 4-1-5 in five games and was named one of Denmark's top three players in the tournament.

Sonny Milano finished with 2-2-4 in five games, and was a constant offensive threat for the disappointing American squad. Milano showed that he needs to round out his game, but his abilities with the puck are astounding.

Ryan Collins was the seventh defenseman for the US, and though at times he looked a bit shaky, his defense-first play was solid. He'll never be a highlight-reel player, but he's reliable.

Dillon Heatherington now has a shiny Gold Medal to hang on his mantle. He was rock-solid in a shutdown role, also covering for his offensive-minded partner Joe Hicketts on Canada'a third pairing.

Net year's tournament will be hosted by Finland.

Game Preview #38 - The Stars At Night / Are Big And Bright

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clap clap clap clap

Columbus Blue Jackets at Dallas Stars

January 6, 2015 - 8:30 pm EST
American Airlines Center - Dallas, Texas
Radio - WBNS 97.1 - TV - Fox Sports Ohio
Opponent's Blog: Defending Big D

Well, this road trip didn't start out as planned, with Columbus getting smoked out in the desert like a bag of cheap herb. They bounced back--sorta--in Colorado, and escaped with a nice regulation win and pushed their recent run to 11-2-1 (23 points) in their last 14 games. Think about that for a second, if you can. Remember all the guys in and out of the lineup, and remember how we felt at 6-15-2. That this team is .500 is amazing in and of itself.

And now, they finish the southwester portion of their schedule by paying a visit to red-hot Dallas. As good as Columbus has been lately, Dallas has been as good, and in some ways better. Despite an OT loss on Sunday at Chicago, the Stars are riding a 9-2-1 streak of their own, and have been scoring like mad men, notching 43 non-shootout goals in those 12 games (3.58 gpg). And that includes getting shutout once along the way. So, in the games they scored goals, they scored almost four of them per game. This includes beating Arizona 6-0 and Minnesota 7-1 right before losing to Chicago 5-4 in OT. In other words, in their last three games, goals. Lots and lots of goals.

The last time these two teams played seems so long ago. The Jackets were healthy for the most part, and were coming off of wins in their first two games. The Stars were desperate, and came out on fire en route to a Tyler Seguin hat trick and a 4-2 win. Seguin has been amazing this year, and the Jackets would do well to learn from that last experience where Benn and Seguin ate them up and shat them out.

It's early, so no official lineup news, but there are mumblings that both Cam Atkinson and Mark Letestu could be back for tonight's game. The Jackets already put Adam Cracknell on waivers, so expect at least one of them to be back (both are on IR, so both would need roster spots to be created; the Cracknell move creates one). I expect Bob will get the start in net, and my guess is that Cody Goloubef remains in the lineup in lieu of Dalton Prout after having a solid, two-point night the other night. We'll update this as roster news becomes available.

[EDIT] It appears the Jackets get a double-dose of good news, as it's being reported that BOTH Cam Atkinson and Mark Letestu will be back, with Michael Chaput being sent to Springfield. Letestu has missed 28 games this season with a groin strain that became a tear and required surgery. His versatility will be a valuable addition to the Jackets in all three phases. Atkinson coming back adds another little scoring punch, which if you remember some of the lineups the Jackets have iced this season, is ALWAYS welcome. Poor Jeremy Morin. From the penthouse to the outhouse. C'est la vie, non?

It also appears that the Jackets will see backup goaltender Anders Lindback tonight in net for the Stars, and that Sergei Bobrovsky will indeed start for Columbus, looking to bounce back after a lackluster performance in Arizona the other night (with not much help in front of him, either).

Projected Lineups

Columbus Blue Jackets
(17-17-3, 37 Points; 5th division, 12th conference)

Scott HartnellRyan JohansenNick Foligno
Matt CalvertBrandon DubinskyCam Atkinson
Sean CollinsAlexander WennbergJack Skille
Jeremy MorinMark LetestuJared Boll
Jack JohnsonDavid Savard
Kevin ConnautonJames Wisniewski
Fedor TyutinCody Goloubef
Sergei Bobrovsky
Curtis McElhinney

Dallas Stars
(18-14-6, 42 Points; 5th Division, 10th Conference)

Jamie BennTyler SeguinColton Sceviour
Erik ColeJason SpezzaAles Hemsky
Antoine RousselCody EakinRyan Garbutt
Travis MoenVernon FiddlerBrett Ritchie
Alex GoligoskiJohn Klingberg
Jamie OleksiakTrevor Daley
Jordie BennJason Demers
Anders Lindback
Kari Lehtonen

Season Series

10/14/14 - Dallas 4 at Columbus 2
01/06/15 - Columbus at Dallas

Head to Head Stats

DallasColumbus
3.08 (4)GPG2.49 (23)
3.24 (28)GAPG3.19 (26)
16.9% (21)PP%24.0% (2)
78.8% (24)PK%79.1% (22)
Tyler Seguin, 26G leaderNick Foligno, 17
Jamie Benn, 22A leaderRyan Johansen, 22
Tyler Seguin, 47Pts leaderNick Foligno, 35
Antoine Roussel, 80PIM leaderDalton Prout, 53
9-7-5Home/Road8-8-1
8-1-1Last 107-2-1
1/4 @ Chicago, L 5-4 (OT)Last Game1/4 @ Colorado, W 4-3

Game Day #38 - Blue Jackets at Stars

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Columbus Blue Jackets at Dallas Stars

January 6, 2015 - 8:30 pm EST
American Airlines Center - Dallas, Texas
Radio - WBNS 97.1 - TV - Fox Sports Ohio
Opponent's Blog: Defending Big D

Well, this road trip didn't start out as planned, with Columbus getting smoked out in the desert like a bag of cheap herb. They bounced back--sorta--in Colorado, and escaped with a nice regulation win and pushed their recent run to 11-2-1 (23 points) in their last 14 games. Think about that for a second, if you can. Remember all the guys in and out of the lineup, and remember how we felt at 6-15-2. That this team is .500 is amazing in and of itself.

And now, they finish the southwester portion of their schedule by paying a visit to red-hot Dallas. As good as Columbus has been lately, Dallas has been as good, and in some ways better. Despite an OT loss on Sunday at Chicago, the Stars are riding a 9-2-1 streak of their own, and have been scoring like mad men, notching 43 non-shootout goals in those 12 games (3.58 gpg). And that includes getting shutout once along the way. So, in the games they scored goals, they scored almost four of them per game. This includes beating Arizona 6-0 and Minnesota 7-1 right before losing to Chicago 5-4 in OT. In other words, in their last three games, goals. Lots and lots of goals.

The last time these two teams played seems so long ago. The Jackets were healthy for the most part, and were coming off of wins in their first two games. The Stars were desperate, and came out on fire en route to a Tyler Seguin hat trick and a 4-2 win. Seguin has been amazing this year, and the Jackets would do well to learn from that last experience where Benn and Seguin ate them up and shat them out.

It's early, so no official lineup news, but there are mumblings that both Cam Atkinson and Mark Letestu could be back for tonight's game. The Jackets already put Adam Cracknell on waivers, so expect at least one of them to be back (both are on IR, so both would need roster spots to be created; the Cracknell move creates one). I expect Bob will get the start in net, and my guess is that Cody Goloubef remains in the lineup in lieu of Dalton Prout after having a solid, two-point night the other night. We'll update this as roster news becomes available.

Projected Lineups

Columbus Blue Jackets
(17-17-3, 37 Points; 5th division, 12th conference)

Scott HartnellRyan JohansenJeremy Morin
Matt CalvertBrandon DubinskyNick Foligno
Sean CollinsAlexander WennbergJack Skille
Corey TroppMichael ChaputJared Boll
Jack JohnsonDavid Savard
Kevin ConnautonJames Wisniewski
Fedor TyutinCody Goloubef
Sergei Bobrovsky
Curtis McElhinney

Dallas Stars
(18-14-6, 42 Points; 5th Division, 10th Conference)

Jamie BennTyler SeguinColton Sceviour
Erik ColeJason SpezzaAles Hemsky
Antoine RousselCody EakinRyan Garbutt
Travis MoenVernon FiddlerBrett Ritchie
Alex GoligoskiJohn Klingberg
Jamie OleksiakTrevor Daley
Jordie BennJason Demers
Kari Lehtonen
Anders Lindback

Season Series

10/14/14 - Dallas 4 at Columbus 2
01/06/15 - Columbus at Dallas

Head to Head Stats

DallasColumbus
3.08 (4)GPG2.49 (23)
3.24 (28)GAPG3.19 (26)
16.9% (21)PP%24.0% (2)
78.8% (24)PK%79.1% (22)
Tyler Seguin, 26G leaderNick Foligno, 17
Jamie Benn, 22A leaderRyan Johansen, 22
Tyler Seguin, 47Pts leaderNick Foligno, 35
Antoine Roussel, 80PIM leaderDalton Prout, 53
9-7-5Home/Road8-8-1
8-1-1Last 107-2-1
1/4 @ Chicago, L 5-4 (OT)Last Game1/4 @ Colorado, W 4-3

Dallas Stars v Columbus Blue Jackets: Q&A with the Cannon

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Eric St. John of Blue Jacket's SB Nation blog The Cannon joins us to talk about when the Columbus Blue Jackets suddenly stopped being awful, how Sergei Bobrovsky is back on the Force, and the amazing revelation that Dallas press-box fixture Kevin Connauton can actually play hockey...

For those of you unfamiliar with tonight's opponent, the Columbus Blue Jackets have actually been in the NHL since 2000. Hard to credit I know. According to their Wikipedia page, the Blue Jackets replaced the Columbus Chill of the ECHL as a result of NHL expansion, although you would be forgiven for having assumed that they continued to operate as an ECHL franchise.

Given the mysterious quality of this unknown Eastern Conference team, we've invited Eric St. John of Blue Jacket's SB Nation blog The Cannon to fill us in on a few of the important things. Is Sergei Bobrovsky currently on or off the force? Is Jack Johnson borrowing money from Ryan Johansen? Is Jack Johnson's mother borrowing money from Ryan Johansen? Are the Blue Jackets as satisfied by their new mascot as they were by the old one?

Read on and find out everything you ever wanted to know about the Columbus Blue Jackets (except the answers to the above questions)...

Defending Big D: About a month ago when I last checked in on the Blue Jackets, they were propping up the basement of the Eastern Conference, making even teams like the Sabres and Hurricanes look good. Since then though they've gone 10-1-1. So much for getting to talk about how terrible your team is this season... What changed?

Cannon: The injuries *sort of* stopped in December. Two forwards who really drive the team - Boone Jenner (since gone back to IR) and Brandon Dubinsky - returned to the lineup. There still isn't a ton of scoring up front outside of Johansen and Foligno, but the blue line has picked up some of that slack, including newcomer, cough, Kevin Connauton [Ed. note: Who?]. The biggest difference has been a healthy, Vezina-worthy goaltender in Sergei Bobrovsky. Bob finally got his finger fully healed (catching hand) and went nuts in December, good enough for the NHL's 3rd star of the month going 9-1-1 with a 2.14 GAA and .937 save percentage. He's carried the team the last month.

DBD: Ok. Just kidding. Let's talk about how terrible your team is this season. Positive numbers in the fancy stats department seem to be an issue for you guys, even during the recent winning streak. No seriously, look at that link. One game in that whole streak! So what's really holding the Jackets together? Officer Bobrovsky? Ryan Johansen out to prove something?

Cannon: When Bob is healthy and on (like he was in December), he is the great equalizer on the back end, especially for a lineup that seems to change weekly with all the injuries. The play has been...largely ugly otherwise. The team is #1 on the power play at 24+%. 5 on 5 scoring though...ouch. [Ed. note: Ouch indeed. Hello again Buffalo and Carolina!]

Johansen was on a tear early in the season, but in December he netted just one empty net goal. He has provided some key assists and shootout goals, but he isn't necessarily taking games over. Some fans think he may be injured and therefore "coasting." But he's been playing 20-21 minutes a night (on the PK, PP, and carrying the top line without his usual wingers).

So the easy answer is Bob playing like his Vezina-self. A couple guys stand out to me in turning this thing around - Dubinsky and Foligno. These guys are vocal and providing leadership in a young dressing room. They both do a little bit of everything as well and they've been leading by example recently.

DBD: Before this season the Dallas Stars unveiled their new mascot, Victor E. Green. The unveiling of a new NHL mascot must always provoke sweet nostalgic thoughts of your own one-time mascot, Boomer the Cannon. Any favorite stories or photos of Boomer?

[Ed. note: This response has been flagged for sensitive content.]

DBD: Dallas and Columbus both sit low in the league in goals against average. Very low. Should we expect the Stars to score another 6 or 7 goals in the game like they did this week against Arizona and Minnesota? What are you expecting to see in this game, and fill us in on the typical style of play of the Blue Jackets.

Cannon: Ha, the high GAA is definitely not the style Todd Richards wants to play. It depends on who is net - Bob was chased from the game in his most recent start at Arizona, but Curtis McElhinney is very shaky as his backup. It will likely be Bobrovsky, and if he returns to his December self, it will tough for Dallas to get to 3+ goals. I don't expect the Jackets to light it up offensively. Probably a 3-2 type game, if we even get to that many goals. (Of course, the Jackets just scored 4 in Colorado and lit up Boston for 6 goals before the calendar flipped) [Ed. note: Every blogger ever always predicts a 3-2 game, thus I'm going to pretend you predicted a 7-5 Stars win. In which case I'll say, good call! Can't wait!]

The last month or so, as I mentioned earlier, the Jackets haven't played all that pretty. They will likely give up more shots than they generate. Bob will come up with some big saves. They will likely generate a goal off a PP. Nearly every game in December you could look at the shot chart, Fenwick, Corsi, etc. and say, "Columbus probably didn't win this one," yet they took 21 of 24 points [Ed. note: I blame Gary Bettman.]. They want to roll four lines and forecheck hard, but the bottom six is a bit in shambles right now. Todd Richards is relying heavily on his top 6 in all situations, and the bottom six tend to just take up some ice time with not much of an impact on the game. Richards would like to balance out the ice time more, but he plays who he trusts. Expect to see a lot of Johansen, Dubinsky, Foligno, Hartnell, and Calvert.

Obscene Alex and DBD: What have you been feeding Kevin Connauton? And you're welcome by the way. Got any thoughts to make us really rue the loss of our favorite press box defenseman?

Cannon: Kevin has been given a steady diet of ice time (16:26 a game) and beets. And yeah, thanks for waiving him. He's stepped in really nicely. In fact, I think he could be a Norris Trophy candidate next season.

Kidding aside [Ed. note: Sorry guys. Eric's obviously new here. We don't ever put kidding aside.], he's stepped up with some huge goals (game-winners, in some cases) and assists. The staff really likes him and he's getting some bottom pair ice time and will fill in on the power play when needed. It remains to be seen if this is the typical "change of scenery" bump or if the front office really found a diamond in the waiver wire rough. He has 5-4-9 in 17 games with the Jackets. Not bad, eh? [Ed. note: *grumble grumble*]

DBD: Injuries. Ya'll have had a fair few. Talk to me about how that's shaped the season.

Cannon: It's been THE story in Columbus. Both goalies have missed time. Every forward has been injured, save for two (Johansen and Boll). Only David Savard has played every game on the blue line. The team and fans have accepted Nathan Horton will likely never play competitive hockey again. Ryan Murray is supposed to be a young, top 4 defenseman but there are few updates on his situation with his knee. It's not just that there have been 230 some odd man games lost, it's that nearly every key contributor has missed time. The center depth was so bad for a couple weeks that Nick Folingo pinched in at the pivot, a position he hasn't played since his junior season.

Just as a couple guys come back, someone else goes down. The tide seems to have stopped for now, with *just* seven regulars out. Cam Atkinson and Mark Letestu are due back this week and Brian Gibbons isn't too far behind. But with so many injuries, it has a trickle down effect. Projected fourth liners are forced to fill in a line or two up. Anisimov and Letestu (and Dubinsky when he was out) are big contributors on the PK. Richards has had to look to Johansen and Foligno in that role, and they rarely played on the kill the last couple years. December showed the fight the team has, and they're pushing through it. It's been pretty remarkable, especially since there were nights when 10 or 11 regulars were out with injuries for a stretch. But this team at 100% likely will never be witnessed on the ice this year.

OA: And lastly, my great great great grandfather fought in an Ohio Union regiment in the Civil War. What street cred does this get me in Nationwide Arena?

Cannon: We can probably get you on the wait list to fire off the cannon in the Arena.

(There is no wait list. Nationwide Arena Marketing Department: call me.)

Definitely Maybe: Blues At Arizona Coyotes Preview

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Blues may have finally busted their slump; the proof lies in Glendale

The Blues have every right to feel pretty damn good about themselves for the San Jose game. Now it's time to focus   and get back to work, though. With a mighty satisfying win fresh in their minds, and a relatively soft home stretch ahead of them, it'd be easy to lose track of the task at hand. Having lost 6 of the previous 7 games going into San Jose, you knew something had to give, and soon. And boy howdy, the floodgates popped open, and Our Blues pumped the Sharks for 7 goals in their home arena.

Now, it'd be real easy to pat them on the back, declare the losing streak dead, and expect everything to be peachy keen now. Everyone (save Chris Porter, of course) is healthy, the lines can settle into place again, the Blues were able to hold a lead, and even kept the shots-against down. Cherry on top - we won in California! How cool is that?

All that is very true, and should certainly be celebrated, BUT - this is the Blues we're talking about. We never, ever do nothing nice, and easy.

This is the second of three meetings against the Coyotes. We'll be hosting them again in February, and we played them once before, early in the season. Jaden Schwartz got his first career hat trick, part of a 6-1 win against Mike Smith and the desert dogs. The Blues were 4-for-4 on the power play, and Jake Allen got his first win of season, stopping 24 of 25 shots. If the Coyotes don't look back in anger at that game, then I'd be shocked. That has to fuel them tonight.

With that first game in mind, and coming off the big win in San Jose, this is the perfect scenario of a "trap" game. We cannot afford to take anything for granted. Feeling like you'll live forever is dangerous in this league.

The Coyotes are coming off a 6-3 win over the Blue Jackets on Saturday, including going 3-for-4 on the power play. In fact, they are 3rd in the Western Conference on the man-advantage, scoring 21.3% of the time. They've won 4 of their last 5 games. Despite their rotten record (15-19-4 overall, and 8-8-3 at home) and -32 goal differential, it would be a mistake to think these guys are toothless. They are certainly beatable, but they also pack a bite. They will not acquiesce and simply hand us the win.

The other half of that special teams battle may be important as well; the Yotes are the worst in the West on the PK, only stopping the other team from scoring 75.2% of the time. If the Blues power play unit takes the ice, don't go away: something good is probably about to happen.

Elliott's in goal for the Blues, and presumably Smith for the Coyotes (although not confirmed).

Further Reading:

Five For Howling

Blues vs Coyotes coverage

GameDay Twitter Feed:

Final Verse: Not quite as late a start tonight; the puck drops at 8:00 PM St Louis time, and the GDT should drop shortly beforehand. The TV broadcast will be on Fox Sports MW, and the radio call will be on KMOX 1120 AM. Tune in and join us, won't you? Here's a classic video, the reason why I'm using it today should be apparent in the first minute:

LGB!!!

Dallas Stars Morning Skate: Shawn Horcoff Returns to Ice, Anders Lindback to Start

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The Stars backup goalie will start against the Columbus Blue Jackets as the Stars try to stretch their points streak once again.

With the Dallas Stars getting ready to head into the heart of the season, they are once again trying to get a backup goaltender going.

As the first goalie off the ice for Tuesday's morning skate, Anders Lindback looks like the starter for the game against the Columbus Blue Jackets at the American Airlines Center.

Lindback is coming off the first win by a Stars backup since March of 2014, which he picked up in relief as the Stars stormed back against the Edmonton Oilers for the shootout win in late December. He played well in that game and, by all reports, very well in his brief stint in the AHL.

"He had a real good stint down there and played well, then stepped in and played well in Edmonton for us," Stars coach Lindy Ruff said after morning skate. "At practice, he's a workaholic. Day in and day out, he's a guy who does probably more than enough work."

But with Kari Lehtonen getting his game back on track, Lindback hasn't had the chance to get in an NHL rhythm since his return. Tonight will be the first chance for him to prove he can put forward a good enough 60 minutes to get a victory.

On the forward side of things, Shawn Horcoff returned to the ice for the first time in about a week after going on injured reserve with an unnamed illness that was presumably not mumps (one day I will stop being amused that mumps is a thing in the NHL this season, but today is not that day). He split time on the fourth line in the skate with Vernon Fiddler, Travis Moen and newest wunderkind Brett Ritchie, but as he stayed out late at the morning skate, it appears Horcoff will be the scratch tonight.

"He was trying to convince me that he was ready, and I was trying to convince him that maybe a couple practice days would be good," Ruff joked. "I think the great thing about Shawn is he wants to play, and he's doing good again."

Travis Morin, who had been filling in the 13th forward spot, was sent back to the AHL's Texas Stars on Monday afternoon. With a 2-2-4 line in his first three NHL games, Ritchie will be hard to take out of the lineup. Then again, so will any forward at this point with the team scoring an average of 5.67 goals per game over the last three.

There was also a new face among the defensemen as David Schlemko made his debut in a Stars uniform at morning skate after being picked up off waivers from the Coyotes late last week. He split time with Jamie Oleksiak in the slot alongside Trevor Daley. Schlemko joined Horcoff and Lehtonen in staying late at the practice, so there will likely be no changes on the blueline either.

In all, the lines and pairings looked like this:

Jamie Benn-Tyler Seguin-Colton Sceviour

Erik Cole-Jason Spezza-Ales Hemsky

Antoine Roussel-Cody Eakin-Ryan Garbutt

Travis Moen-Vernon Fiddler-Brett Ritchie/Shawn Horcoff

Alex Goligoski-John Klingberg

Jamie Oleksiak/David Schlemko-Trevor Daley

Jordie Benn-Jason Demers

For the Jackets, it looks like Sergei Bobrovsky will be in net behind the following lineup.

Dallas Stars Daily Links: Special Teams and Goaltending Not Good Enough Against Columbus

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After Stars' backups went 7-11-1 last season, they're still looking for their first win as the starting goaltender of record halfway in to 2014-2015.

Special teams and goaltending- A common refrain.

The Dallas Stars possessed the puck at length Tuesday night, out-chancing the competition significantly in what would turn into a 4-2 loss. The reason? They lost the special teams battle and their backup netminders moved to 0-7 in starts this season.

Lindback has a win, but it was in relief in Edmonton. Lindy Ruff did not mince words Tuesday night, speaking of the power play, and Lindback again.

"It's tough," said Ruff. "We probably needed another save out of him. He committed a little too early on a couple, and it's not easy. He hasn't started in a long stretch, and it's tough. But we probably needed him to be a little bit better if we're going to win that game." [Dallas Morning News]

Meanwhile, former Star Kevin Connauton potted the game winner, and had this to say afterward...

"I went in tonight with the mentality that it's just another game. But I think anyone could agree that when you kind of get pushed aside by someone and come in and have some success against them, it's a good feeling. It was nice and weird at the same time, but like I said, the fact we walked out of here with a win is a good feeling." [Blue Jackets Extra]

***

  • There were a number of earth quakes in the DFW area yesterday, and a certain Stars captain says they disturbed his afternoon nap [UPI.com]
  • Here is a ridiculous Pekka Rinne save, in which he purposefully thrusts the unprotected back of his leg at the puck in a feat of tracking few could manage. But really, it's just hilarious because Mike Ribeiro started an absolute dumpster fire with a lazy turnover. Predictably, the Preds won, because this just seems to be their year. [Puck Daddy]
  • Also in the category of displeasing Western Conference results- The Minnesota Wild and San Jose Sharks both got points last night, as that game was always going to overtime. [Yahoo - AP]
  • The Stars, before last night, anyway, are starting to pop up a bit in the national conversation as an emerging team that's finally performing to their potential. [Katie Strang- ESPN]
  • Fun with NBC's subpar broadcasting Sunday night continues, and Defending Big D gets a shout-out on the Dallas Morning News' discussion [DMN]
  • The Toronto media faces off with Phil Kessel- And this is hilarious, asking him directly, to his face, if he is difficult to coach and part of the reason for the change the Maple Leafs made this week. Kessel tells him that he is "such an idiot." [Puck Daddy]
  • Steve Hunt writes a good recap here, but his headline writer decides that "Listless Stars Flattened by Smoldering Blue Jackets" somehow describes a game in which Dallas dominated possession. [Fox Sports Southwest]
  • See those numbers here at war-on-ice. Dallas dominated overall scoring chances and possession at even-strength. [war-on-ice.com]
  • Tom Gaglardi will bring one of his restaurant chains, "Moxies," to Uptown later this year. [Dallas Business Journal]
  • The Texas Stars had a big win in Oklahoma City last night [Hundred Degree Hockey]
  • Meanwhile:

Blue Jackets 4, Stars 2 - Game Highlights

What's Killing the Capitals' Penalty Kill?

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The new look penalty kill instituted by Barry Trotz looks like a shot-prevention success, but came with a fair degree of risk. That risk may have been too much for Trotz to swallow.

For virtually the entirety of Alex Ovechkin's career the Washington Capitals have struggled on the penalty kill. While the kill was never a strength of the team, last season took the penalty killing struggles to the extreme, posting historically bad numbers in terms of Corsi- , Fenwick- and Shots-Against per sixty minutes (CA/60, FA/60, and SA/60, respectively). Only a strong performance in net saved the Caps from a worse penalty killing efficiency rate than the 82% the team posted last year.

Everybody knew the Caps would need to improve on the penalty kill (though it was conveniently ignored by some when discussing a particular lightning rod contract signed this summer). Now, nearly halfway into the season, we can take a look at the Barry Trotz penalty kill and start to determine whether or not the Caps have, in fact, improved the longstanding team weakness.

At first glance, the 78.9% penalty kill efficiency looks like the Caps have actually taken a step back in terms of their penalty kill. Looking at the underlying numbers, however, the Caps seem to have made a substantial improvement on the PK. Last year their CA/60 was 116.1, worst in the league. This year it's a middle-of-the-pack 99.1. Last year the FA/60 was also a league-worst, 89.6. This year it's 73.3. Finally, last year the SA/60 was 64, also worst in the league. This year they are at 50, which puts them (barely) in the top half of the league. Aside from the general across-the-board improvement, the Caps are blocking more shot attempts, and opponents are getting fewer unblocked shot attempts on net than they did last year. All of these things seem like they should contribute to a successful penalty kill.

So how are the Caps less successful on the penalty kill despite what appears to be a substantial improvement? For starters, the difference between last year's efficiency and this year's efficiency is almost entirely due to the goaltending they received last year compared to this year. This year the team has gotten 85.99% save percentage while shorthanded, ranking 23rd in the league. Last year it was 90.42%, good for third in the league. (It's a little scary to think that the 2013-14 Capitals' penalty kill could have been much, much worse if not for outstanding goaltending, and it wasn't just Braden Holtby - the Caps got great goaltending from their backups last year as well.)

But it's not be entirely fair to put everything on the goalies. For one, penalty kill save percentage is notoriously volatile (which is why even-strength save percentage is generally accepted to be the best measure of a goalie's talent). It may not truly be a matter of the goalies playing "outstanding" last year while playing poorly this year (although there has surely been some bad goaltending on the penalty kill this year, especially during the losing streak). Sometimes that's just how random fluctuations work, and we interpret the results as talent-based when that may not be the case.

Further, in reviewing the goals against the Caps have allowed on the penalty kill there are some observations that may help explain the penalty killing woes. The Caps have employed a more aggressive penalty kill this year and it appears to be a part of the reason for the decreased CA/60, FA/60, and SA/60. The Caps are giving teams less time and space with the puck and are more aggressively pressuring loose pucks, ultimately resulting in less controlled zone time for the opposition.

With that aggressive posture, though, comes a certain degree of risk. When penalty killers are aggressively chasing the power play opponents, that increases the chances of a breakdown and a great scoring chance. We've seen situations throughout the season in which the Caps penalty killers have lost a battle or been beaten by a pass and then lost the race back to the front of the net, giving up easy Grade-A scoring chances. Take a look at a couple glaring examples.

Against Toronto:

Brooks Orpik chased the puck to the corner but a quick reverse put the puck in the other corner, so John Carlson chased and there was nobody covering the front of the net. Tyler Bozak drove the slot and beat Orpik back to the net for an easy goal.

And against Vancouver:

This time Carlson was the first defender to chase the puck to the corner, and a quick reverse left the Caps in brutal defensive posture as Orpik chased the pass (no, the defensive posture wouldn't have been much better even had Orpik not taken a horrific angle to chase that pass). The Caps never caught up with the puck and it left a Sedin wide open in front of the net for another easy goal.

And against Columbus:

After Jack Johnson dove down the wing he passed the puck back to the point and another quick pass to the low corner reversed the ice (sensing a theme?). The Caps all turned to pressure the puck after the cross-ice pass, but they forget to account for Johnson, who never returned to his position at the point and picked up an easy goal in front.

In all three of these examples, the Caps defenders got caught out of position near the crease because they were out pressuring the power-play unit.  The goals against and defensive coverage are certainly ugly, but the problems should be correctable.

Further contributing to some of the penalty killing woes, the Caps have made a concerted decision not to engage power play forwards setting up shop in front of Holtby. You won't find a better example than in the last game against the New Jersey Devils:

Orpik and Carlson were content to let Adam Henrique stand right in front of Holtby. It didn't cost the Caps in this game, and it doesn't usually cost the Caps, but it does put pressure on Holtby to make the first save and control the rebounds. It also puts pressure on the defenders to react quickly to the shot and pivot to cover the opposing forward in front of the net. When the defensemen can't make the play, ugly goals against happen. Like against Columbus:

Carlson wasn't really close to Nick Foligno, despite no other net-front threat, and Karl Alzner was unable to slide down to provide assistance on the rebound. Foligno had all day to bang home a rebound for an easy goal.

Or against Florida:

Orpik immediately reacted to the rebound and tried to engage Sean Bergenheim after the rebound, but he missed the initial stick check and then had his stick at waist height when he finally initiated contact with Bergenheim. An easy pass across the crease left Brad Boyes a wide open net for an easy goal.

Or you could look at the goal they allowed against San Jose or against Calgary or against Toronto. You get the point.

Now, most of these goals-against are pretty ugly and seem like pretty easy opportunities for the opposition. That's the nature of the NHL - highly skilled players with an extra guy can make most teams look bad. The concern is to not let those goals against unduly taint the overall picture of the penalty kill. As noted above, the underlying measures indicate a stronger penalty kill than the Caps have seen in the past. We've talked about the need to persevere and not overreact to The Big Mistake, and perhaps the penalty kill could be added to that discussion. The unit is performing better than it has in the past, but the results aren't there. Yet.

Unfortunately, recent results indicate that either a) the Caps have stopped playing very well on the penalty kill, and/or b) the coaching staff has changed up the penalty killing approach in the face of The Big Mistakes, moving to a more conservative approach, undercutting the foundations for the penalty kill's success so far this year. Take a look at the last several games:

The Caps have given up higher CA/60 and FA/60 over the last couple weeks, sometimes substantially so. There are a couple of solid performances in there (generally against teams with no offensive threat to speak of), and the nature of individual games is such that we'll often see outcomes that diverge from the expected, sometimes wildly so. Still, without overreacting to the recent stretch there is room for some concern. Three-straight games, and five-out-of-six overall, have seen CA/60 higher than the season average, usually by a significant margin. The change appears to come on the heels of the two games against the Columbus Blue Jackets, during which the Caps gave up three power play goals (two of which are highlighted above).

More starkly, we can look at the changes in rates from the start of the season. From the start of the season until December 12 (following the first of the two games against the Blue Jackets), the Caps had a CA/60 of 95.2 and a FA/60 of 69.4. Since December 12, the Caps have a CA/60 of 117.2 and a FA/60 of 89.7. Those are 23% and 29% increases, respectively, and given that the FA/60 has grown more than the CA/60 it appears the team isn't blocking shots at the same rate that it was earlier in the season, meaning that more shot attempts are getting through the penalty killers. Those post-December-12 numbers look an awful lot like last year's numbers (emphasis on awful), which is not promising.

It may not be time to panic, but this bears watching. Whether the Caps are intentionally playing less aggressively, thus ceding more shot attempts against in an attempt to better protect the crease, remains to be seen. This could be a short term blip on a long term penalty killing improvement project. Or it could be another Big Mistake that caused the coaching staff to switch things up, possibly to the detriment of the team.

(H/t to war-on-ice.com for much of the data in this post)

Derick Brassard Is Finally Living Up To Expectations

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Drafted sixth overall in 2006, Derick Brassard looked like yet another poor selection by the Columbus Blue Jackets. However, Brassard has significantly improved his play since and is starting to validate the hype.

Drafting was the number one reason for the Columbus Blue Jackets being a terrible hockey team for most of the 15 years that it has been in existence. A number of high picks were used on players who, for whatever reason, did not live up to expectations in the slightest. Alexandre Picard, Gilbert Brule, and Nikita Filatov failed to make a tangible impact at the NHL level, while Nik Zherdev had a bit more success but ultimately failed to live up to expectations. Jakub Voracek was traded too soon to have a meaningful impact on the Blue Jackets.

For a long time, Derick Brassard, drafted sixth overall in the 2006 draft, was in that same class. The Blue Jackets had tremendously high expectations for the Quebec forward who amassed an astonishing 44 goals and 116 points in just 55 games with the Drummondville Voltigeurs of the QMJHL going into his draft year. For some time, though, it was all downhill from there. Injuries dramatically shortened his next QMJHL season, and that would foreshadow much of his early NHL career.

Brassard actually had a good start with the Blue Jackets. In his first season as a regular in the lineup, he produced 25 points in the first 31 games at just 20 years old during the 2008-2009 season. However, a fight with James Neal shelved him for the rest of the year with a shoulder injury.

Brassard would return to the Blue Jackets healthy next season, but the production remained missing. An underwhelming nine goals and 36 total points in 79 games.. During the entirety of the season, Ken Hitchcock, fired late in the season, kept Brassard's minutes limited and was often critical of his decision making.

And that's kind of how things went for Brassard in Columbus despite a number of coaches, systems, and deployments. Through the 2011-2012 season, Brassard's best season statistically would be 17 goals and 47 total points in 2010-2011. Not awful numbers if it's coming from a two-way, depth center. But Brassard was not a two-way center, and he was certainly not drafted to become a depth player. Things hit rock bottom for Brassard when his agent, Allan Walsh, resorted to sending a passive-aggressive letter to the Columbus Dispatch blaming then-Head Coach Scott Arniel, who was constantly scratching Brassard, for his struggles.

Arniel would be fired, and Brassard still didn't noticeably improve under new Head Coach Todd Richards. Columbus had decided that, now 25 years old, Brassard just was not going to develop into the player they hoped he would be. He was traded to the New York Rangers in a package for Marian Gaborik at the 2013 trading deadline.

Brassard quickly made an impact for the Rangers, producing 11 points in 13 games as well as 12 points in 12 playoff games. During his first full season with the Rangers, last season, Brassard struggled early, producing only 12 points in the first 27 games. It appeared to be more of the same from a chronic underachiever. Then, he was put on a line with Benoit Pouliot and Mats Zuccarello, and instant chemistry was discovered. Brassard contributed 33 points over the final 54 games and was a quality possession player. It appeared that his game had reached a new level.

Still, Glen Sather made a very bold call that this past offseason; a decision that was really put on the back burner as everyone instead discussed the departures of other players in what was a busy offseason. Derick Brassard was given a five-year, $25 million contract extension; a lofty price for a player who had been as inconsistent as he was most of his career. With the Rangers having salary cap issues as is, committing that kind of money long-term to an underperforming player would be a massive obstacle to building a winning team. Furthermore, there was significant skepticism that Brassard, with Brad Richards gone, could step up in a new role and be a legitimate second-line center.

The early results appear to justify the contract, though. Through 35 games, Brassard's possession numbers are perfectly acceptable. A 50.7 Corsi Percentage and a positive Relative Corsi. Those are solid numbers for a player going up against heavy competition, and particularly considering how injured and dysfunctional the Rangers were for much of the season; he's a 53.1% Corsi and a +2.4% Corsi Rel over the last 12 games.

The point totals are what really jump out, though. After consistently being a 40-45 point producer most of his career, Brassard has amounted 31 points through those 35 games, including 11 goals. That's a pace for 25.8 goals and 72.6 points over a full 82-game season. Currently, Brassard sits tied for 38th overall in the NHL in points. That despite the Rangers playing fewer games than most teams. In fact, Brassard is 29th overall in the entire NHL in points-per-game (mininum 15 games) and is ahead of the likes of Corey Perry, Henrik Sedin, Jamie Benn, and Jonathan Toews in that regard. Furthermore, Brassard is 21st overall among forwards (minimum 300 minutes) in points-per-60 minutes. Among centers, he's ninth overall. Brassard has not only lived up to the standard of an acceptable second-line center, but has produced like a typical first-line center.

And the irony of this all is that he's finally discovering himself with that same Scott Arniel running the offense for the Rangers. As bad as things were for both Brassard and Arniel in Columbus, mutually and exclusively, it's all clicking in a different setting. The Rangers are third overall in the NHL in scoring right now and have the 11th-ranked power play. Brassard is obviously a big part of that, with his 31 points in total and his 12 power play points leading the team. Brassard has been good since coming to the Rangers, but this year particularly feels different, just as the production indicates. He's really come into his own and makes plays on a nightly basis. There's no longer a sense of hesitance or insecurity in his play.

The move from Columbus to New York has, unconventionally, taken a lot of pressure off of Brassard, I think. In Columbus he was faced with the weight of expectations. He was drafted highly, and the team badly needed him to become a high-end center and face of the franchise. In New York? There's so much focus on other players - Lundqvist, Nash, Stepan, St. Louis, McDonagh, Girardi - that Brassard has been able to find his role on the team and let the production just happen. Stepan takes on the burden of playing the opposition's top line, while Dominic Moore takes the brunt of the defensive work. That makes the task for Brassard a lot less daunting; be a creative offensive force. He's making it happen.

And the best part for the Rangers is that Brassard is theoretically only just entering his prime; He turned 27 last September. Will Brassard continue to be a 70-point player in the long-run? It's possible, but not likely. Nonetheless, the reality of the modern NHL is that 20-23 goals and 50-55 points is what constitutes a good second-line center. His production the last couple of seasons as well as his underlying possession statistics makes him a safe bet to repeatedly hit those numbers the next five years at a minimum, and I don't think 60-65 points consistently is out of the question either. That will quite easily make Brassard worth the extension Sather signed him to last summer.

It required an injury-filled, burdensome nine years with six different NHL coaches and a trade mixed in. But Derick Brassard, at 27 years old, is finally living up to expectations.

2015 NHL All Star Game Coverage

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The 60th NHL All Star Game will take place in Columbus on January 24-25, 2015

Welcome to Columbus (other names include "The 614," Cbus, or Lumbus).  Whether a long-time resident of Ohio's capital city or a first-time visitor, hopefully this guide will be able to help you make the most of your time in the nation's 15th largest city.

First things first - I will try to refrain from giving a history on the city or propping up things that aren't in season (e.g. Jack Nicklaus / The Memorial Tournament, The Arnold Classic, etc.) that you may see in official press releases from the city.  It is the hope that this guide will be updated as necessary as more details around the All-Star Weekend are released and that comments will be added by fans below.

If you want to see what the city has to offer from a very broad perspective, here are some recommended links and references:

Experience Columbus

Columbus Underground

Trip Advisor

Yahoo Travel

Getting to Columbus

Columbus is a fairly easy drive from most directions within 5-6 hours (or more if you don't have little ones in the back seat).I-70 offers easy access into the city from the east and west while I-71, running north and south, intersects with I-70 in Columbus.If you are driving, take note of the I-270 outerbelt that circles the city.I-670 is the city’s "inner belt" and is the main path to the arena from the airport.  State Routes 23 and 33 also run into the city - mostly coming in from the northwest and southeast.  Google Maps / GPS should service you just fine if you are not familiar with driving into Columbus.

Port Columbus International Airport (CMH) is located just six miles from downtown.  There are six major airlines which provide 140 non-stop passenger flights to 31 airports daily, according to their website.  The airport is currently undergoing $80 million in renovations, so please pardon our dust if you are traveling to Columbus by air.  There is free wifi at CMH though - and plenty of outlets compared to almost every other airport, so charging your phone or tablet as you are waiting to depart should be no problem.  We're just sorry our dissolved low-budget airline is no longer around for you to enjoy (RIP SKYBUS!).

Staying in Columbus

So you've made it to Columbus for ASG weekend, but you don't have relatives or friends in the area.  Where are you going to stay?  Don't fret - you have options.  There are more than 25,000 hotel rooms in the metropolitan area, from the new Hilton downtown (just a couple blocks from the arena) to your low-budget Motel 6-types outside of the downtown area.  If you are trying to avoid driving to your hotel in the evenings, there are plenty of hotels near Nationwide Arena that are walkable.  Check now, if you haven't already, for availability as these rooms fill up quickly when events are going on.  The downtown Hyatt (attached to the Columbus Convention Center, which is where the NHL will hold its Fan Fair that weekend) is just across the street from the HIlton.  East Nationwide Blvd also offers several other options within walking distance.

If you'd like to try something besides a hotel stay, Airbnb is a possibility.  I have never used it but have heard from others that it works pretty well.

Getting Around Columbus

If you want to explore Columbus outside of the Arena District, you may need a way to get to your destination.  Of course, walking is an option in and around the Arena District, the Short North, and other parts of downtown.  But maybe you don't want to deal with parking, or perhaps you're coming from the airport.  COTA is the major means of public transit in the city - including a free "CBUS" that runs from the Short North, past the Arena, through downtown and down to German Village south of the CBD.  They are currently tweaking their lines, but they do have a map option on their website where you can enter your starting and ending points and it will give you which line(s) to take.

If a public bus isn't your style, both Uber and Lyft are available as alternatives to taxis.  That weekend in January in Columbus it could be 65 and sunny or we could see a blizzard in sub-zero temperatures.  There is a bike share program you could take (depending on the road conditions and how adventurous you're feeling) - CoGo is expanding and you can get a 24 hour pass for just $6.  The car-sharing program car2go is also available - I believe membership in another city would carry over.

Of course you may have your own car or a rental - there are plenty of parking garages near the arena and downtown.  Prices will vary based on location, but the ones immediately near NWA will likely be $15-$20 for a night.

"Other" Entertainment

If you are looking for other things to do besides watch hockey during ASG Weekend, you have options here as well.  The "premier" district in Columbus right now is probably the Short North.  The Short North prides itself on being open to everybody, buying local (no chains!), and its art.  You will find plenty of great options for food as well as drinks late into the night.  The Short North is immediately north (and slightly east) of Nationwide Arena, with High Street serving as the main corridor.

The Arena District houses (surprise!) Nationwide Arena in addition to entertainment in the surrounding area.  Lifestyles Communities has a complex of concert venues just to the west of the arena.  There are plenty of bars and restaurants here as well.  R Bar is the official "hockey bar" in Columbus, located just steps from the NWA entrance.  I personally wouldn't venture to the corridor of bars on Park Street (just north of the arena) if I was over ehhh, I'll say 35, or with children (you've been warned).

Speaking of children, there are plenty of family options as well.  COSI is a fun and interactive science center downtown with activities for all ages.  The Columbus Zoo will have plenty of exhibits open despite the anticipated cold weather.  Easton Town Center (to the northeast of downtown) is a massive indoor/outdoor shopping center featuring hundreds of dining, shopping, and entertainment options.

You may or may not have heard that Columbus is an emerging "foodie" market.  If you talk to ten people about their favorite restaurant/food in the city you might get ten different answers.  Hopefully we will see some recommendations in the comments.  At the very least, check out the North Market which is located just a block north of the arena.

If you decide to venture out beyond the hockey festivities of the weekend, where you go and what you might do will definitely depend on the make-up of the group you are worth - families with kids are not going to want to check out Ohio State's campus, for example.  Again, hopefully the comments will help you decide if you need recommendations.  I use Experience Columbus' Event Calendar (linked previously) frequently to see what is going on in the city so keep an eye on that as January approaches.

As linked above, NHL's "Fan Fair" will be held in the Convention Center.  It is the hope that we can update you here as more events are announced for the weekend.  Feel free to ask questions below or post your own thoughts.  It should really be a great weekend and again, welcome to Columbus, NHL fans!

Game Preview #39 - Finish The Trip Strong

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The Jackets finish their four-game road trip in Toronto, hoping to make up ground on a team in front of them in the Wild Card race. Four pointer!

Columbus Blue Jackets at Toronto Maple Leafs

January 9, 2015 - 7:30 pm EST
Air Canada Centre - Toronto, Ontario
Radio - WBNS 97.1 - TV - Fox Sports Ohio
Opponent's Blog: Pension Plan Puppets

Man, has it been a long time since we've seen Toronto. That night--Halloween, incidentally--the Jackets turned Nationwide Arena into a house of horrors by icing a lineup that was at least HALF AHL-level players, IMHO. The results were as you'd expect.

What a difference two-plus months make. The Jackets have gone through The Dark Times, and have climbed back above the .500 mark. This is right around the time last season that they went on their run, but here they are having already gone on a pretty crazy 12-2-1 run to get to this point.

Which is good enough for 12th in the conference. Oy.

The Leafs are sinking like a stone, having lost eight of 10 after reaching their high water mark of 19-9-3 in mid-December. The good news for Columbus is that that means Toronto is just six points ahead, and the Jackets have three games in hand. At this point, I try not to look at the standings overall (i.e., how many points out of a playoff spot are we?) and instead look at the teams right in front of us. Ottawa is one point in front, and the Jackets have games in hand. Toronto is next, as we noted. And they just fired their coach and got blitzed 14-4 in three straight losses. They're also missing some bodies up front, most notably Joffrey Lupul.

In other words, We Fight, We March. One team at a time. Ottawa is off tonight, and so a win would put Columbus in 11th place, and just four points back of Toronto in 10th with games in hand. Just gotta keep winning.

Apologies for the lateness of this preview. Work. Can't be helped sometimes.

Projected Lineups

Columbus Blue Jackets
(18-17-3, 39 Points; 5th division, 12th conference)

Scott HartnellRyan JohansenNick Foligno
Matt CalvertBrandon DubinskyCam Atkinson
Sean CollinsAlexander WennbergJack Skille
Jeremy MorinMark LetestuJared Boll
Jack JohnsonDavid Savard
Kevin ConnautonJames Wisniewski
Fedor TyutinCody Goloubef
Sergei Bobrovsky
Curtis McElhinney

Toronto Maple Leafs
(21-17-3, 45 Points; 6th Division, 10th Conference)

Daniel WinnikTyler BozakPhil Kessel
James van RiemsdykNazem KadriRichard Panik
Leo KomarovMike SantorelliDavid Clarkson
David BoothSam CarrickTrevor Smith
Dion PhaneufCody Franson
Morgan RiellyRoman Polak
Jake GardinerStephane Robidas
Jonathan Bernier
James Reimer

Season Series

10/31/14 - Toronto 4 at Columbus 1
01/09/15 - Columbus at Toronto
04/08/15 - Toronto at Columbus

Head to Head Stats

TorontoColumbus
3.15 (2)GPG2.53 (22)
3.10 (25)GAPG3.16 (26)
19.9% (11)PP%23.9% (3)
82.5% (11)PK%79.9% (19)
Phil Kessel, 18G leaderNick Foligno, 17
Phil Kessel, 23A leaderRyan Johansen, 23
Phil Kessel, 41Pts leaderNick Foligno, 38
Dion Phaneuf, 69PIM leaderJared Boll, 54
14-9-0Home/Road9-8-1
2-8-0Last 107-2-1
1/7 vs. Washington, L 6-2Last Game1/6 @ Dallas, W 4-2

Game Day #39 - Blue Jackets at Maple Leafs

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The Jackets finish their four-game road trip in Toronto, hoping to make up ground on a team in front of them in the Wild Card race. Four pointer!

Columbus Blue Jackets at Toronto Maple Leafs

January 9, 2015 - 7:30 pm EST
Air Canada Centre - Toronto, Ontario
Radio - WBNS 97.1 - TV - Fox Sports Ohio
Opponent's Blog: Pension Plan Puppets

Man, has it been a long time since we've seen Toronto. That night--Halloween, incidentally--the Jackets turned Nationwide Arena into a house of horrors by icing a lineup that was at least HALF AHL-level players, IMHO. The results were as you'd expect.

What a difference two-plus months make. The Jackets have gone through The Dark Times, and have climbed back above the .500 mark. This is right around the time last season that they went on their run, but here they are having already gone on a pretty crazy 12-2-1 run to get to this point.

Which is good enough for 12th in the conference. Oy.

The Leafs are sinking like a stone, having lost eight of 10 after reaching their high water mark of 19-9-3 in mid-December. The good news for Columbus is that that means Toronto is just six points ahead, and the Jackets have three games in hand. At this point, I try not to look at the standings overall (i.e., how many points out of a playoff spot are we?) and instead look at the teams right in front of us. Ottawa is one point in front, and the Jackets have games in hand. Toronto is next, as we noted. And they just fired their coach and got blitzed 14-4 in three straight losses. They're also missing some bodies up front, most notably Joffrey Lupul.

In other words, We Fight, We March. One team at a time. Ottawa is off tonight, and so a win would put Columbus in 11th place, and just four points back of Toronto in 10th with games in hand. Just gotta keep winning.

Apologies for the lateness of this preview. Work. Can't be helped sometimes.

Projected Lineups

Columbus Blue Jackets
(18-17-3, 39 Points; 5th division, 12th conference)

Scott HartnellRyan JohansenNick Foligno
Matt CalvertBrandon DubinskyCam Atkinson
Sean CollinsAlexander WennbergJack Skille
Jeremy MorinMark LetestuJared Boll
Jack JohnsonDavid Savard
Kevin ConnautonJames Wisniewski
Fedor TyutinCody Goloubef
Sergei Bobrovsky
Curtis McElhinney

Toronto Maple Leafs
(21-17-3, 45 Points; 6th Division, 10th Conference)

Daniel WinnikTyler BozakPhil Kessel
James van RiemsdykNazem KadriRichard Panik
Leo KomarovMike SantorelliDavid Clarkson
David BoothSam CarrickTrevor Smith
Dion PhaneufCody Franson
Morgan RiellyRoman Polak
Jake GardinerStephane Robidas
Jonathan Bernier
James Reimer

Season Series

10/31/14 - Toronto 4 at Columbus 1
01/09/15 - Columbus at Toronto
04/08/15 - Toronto at Columbus

Head to Head Stats

TorontoColumbus
3.15 (2)GPG2.53 (22)
3.10 (25)GAPG3.16 (26)
19.9% (11)PP%23.9% (3)
82.5% (11)PK%79.9% (19)
Phil Kessel, 18G leaderNick Foligno, 17
Phil Kessel, 23A leaderRyan Johansen, 23
Phil Kessel, 41Pts leaderNick Foligno, 38
Dion Phaneuf, 69PIM leaderJared Boll, 54
14-9-0Home/Road9-8-1
2-8-0Last 107-2-1
1/7 vs. Washington, L 6-2Last Game1/6 @ Dallas, W 4-2

Jackets sign Sergei Bobrovsky to 4 year extension

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Done deal- Bob will be a Blue Jacket for four more years.

Well, this came out of nowhere!

Shortly after locking up Nick Foligno to a multi-year deal, the Jackets locked up another crucial member of their core, signing Sergei Bobrovsky to a four-year contract extension.

Aaron Portzline reports the deal is worth almost $30 million, giving an AAV of $7.425 million. This makes him the second-highest paid goale (cap hit) in the league behind Henrik Lundqvist. (Numbers courtesy of Spotrac.)

Bobrovsky is a Vezina winner, and the MVP of the Jackets. This deal is fair for both sides, and will only look better as the cap increases. Stability in net is a vital part of any championship team- and the Jackets just ensured themselves of having elite goaltending for at least the next four years.

Now in his third year in Columbus, Bobrovsky has appeared in 123 games for the Blue Jackets, posting a 68-41-13 record, with a .921 save percentage and a 2.43 GAA -- by far the best numbers for a Blue Jackets goalie.  But, as we all know, the numbers are only part of the story.  Sergei brings a boatload of intangibles to the table, not the least of which is the calmness and focus he provides to the squad in front of him.  The club plays differently in front of him, because it can.  His work ethic is unmatched . . .anywhere, and he has endeared himself with the fan base through his applauding of the crowd after victories and his ritual hug with Nick Foligno -- also the beneficiary of a new deal.  In fact, we could have predicted that this deal was close, when Bobrovsky replied "More hugs, yes?" when told of Foligno's contract.

The Blue Jackets brass are to be commended for getting this done early, and for resisting the urge to provide a Garth Snow inspired eight year deal.  Goalies are the left-handed pitchers of hockey -- absolutely essential, but just a little goofy and unpredictable.  The guy who shuts down everybody one season can be a human sieve the next, without rhyme, reason or warning.  Bob will be just 30 years old when this deal expires -- just over the average age of a starting NHL net minder.  There is ample room and time for him to be rewarded for continued good play, and if his game should go south, the club is not tied to a massively long deal.

This sends a great message to the fan base -- and the NHL -- that the Blue Jackets are serious about the long term development of the franchise and that Bobrovsky is committed to the Blue Jackets.  Aaron Portzline reported that Bobrovsky's agent reached out to the club just before Christmas, and that the deal was done in two weeks.  That's huge.

This all amounts to just one thing:  More Hugs!   And hopefully a Stanley Cup . . .


Game Recap #39: The Maple Leaf Ragged

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The Blue Jackets ventured to the epicenter of the hockey world, facing a Toronto team that has been at the center of a media storm in the wake of Randy Carlyle's dismissal. Which team would emerge from the chaos? Hint: It was not Columbus.

The Toronto Maple Leafs have been at the center of a hockey maelstrom for the last several days, involving the dismissal of coach Randy Carlyle and the media pillorying of Phil Kessel.  Brandon Shanahan engaged in a lengthy discourse about the need to maintain possession in the offensive zone & to stop being massively outshot.  (Yes, he was talking about the Maple Leafs, not the Blue Jackets)  The club promptly lost its first outing under the new regime, 5 - 2.   What would tonight bring?

Period One:  "I Can't Find a Pulse, Doctor . . ."

From the drop of the puck, the Maple Leafs played with an edge of desperation, while the Blue Jackets shuffled their feet and shoved the puck up the ice with no apparent intent.  Fortunately, the Toronto execution was a bit off in the early going, and Ryan Johansen took advantage. Just 3:15 in, Johansen took advantage of a turnover up high, sprinted down the ice between the circles, and beat Jonathan Bernier.  1 - 0 Blue Jackets, and it seemed that order had been restored. Except that it hadn't.

The Blue Jackets continued their version of the Ickey Shuffle, rather than skating, and once again chose to adopt the collapsing defensive strategy, which provides tons of time and space in the upper half of the zone, and allows chaos in front of the net minder, particularly when the offense is swarming, as the Maple Leafs were.  Add two unfortunate bounces and four stupid penalties, and the recipe for disaster is complete.

After surviving a delay of game penalty incurred when Kevin Connauton sent the puck out of play, Columbus was able to resume its passive play.  At the 8:30 mark, the Blue Jackets were predictably defending in their zone, when Tyler Bozak attempted a cross-ice pass to Phil Kessel.  However, the puck instead found the skate of Cody Goloubef, and caromed between Sergei Bobrovsky's legs. Bob never had a chance, and it was suddenly a tie game.

It was more of the same for the following six minutes, then the collapsing defense again took its toll.  After an extensive possession, abetted by Cam Atkinson's insistence that empty ice requires close attention, Daniel Winnik came up with the puck in the middle of the ice, and his shot found its way through the sea of bodies from both clubs fronting Bobrovsky.  2 -1 Maple Leafs, with Tyler Bozak earning the assist.

Enter the penalty bug.  David Savard went off at 15:35 for interference, and the penalty kill was doing a good job of challenging the puck.  In fact, the Blue Jackets gained possession and were just about to start a short handed odd man rush when the whistle blew.  Too many men on the ice, and Toronto had a two-man advantage for 1:39.  It took just 35 seconds for them to convert.  James van Riemsdyk sent the puck at the net from the right hand circle, and it ended up in the back of the net.  The official scorer ruled that Phil Kessel tapped it in at the right post, but replay seemed to indicate that the puck deflected off Mark Letestu's stick.  Officially, it was Kessel's goal, with van Riemsdyk and Cody Franson gaining the assists.

That gave Toronto a two-goal lead, which is the most dangerous lead in hockey . . . unless you score another goal 52 seconds later, which Toronto did.  Still on the power play, van Riemsdyk wristed one past a shell-shocked Bobrovsky for a 4 - 1 lead.  Kessel and Franson notched the helpers, giving them good games in just one period.  Adding insult to injury, Jared Boll took a blatant and stupid slashing penalty with just 52 seconds left in the period.  Sorry, but Boll does not deserve a spot in this lineup, and how Todd Richards  can justify his persistent use of Boll on the ice is one of the great mysteries of this season.

The numbers merely confirmed the scope of the carnage.  Toronto outshot the Blue Jackets 17 - 8, and it wasn't that close.  For his part, Todd Richards showed no emotion, made no adjustments, nothing.  It was, simply stated, a pathetic period of hockey.

Period Two:  "There is a Pulse, but it's Weak . . ."

The Blue Jackets came out for the second, having apparently applied oil to their knee and ankle joints.  They skated, looked better with the puck, and put more pressure on the Maple Leafs in their own zone.  They still got bogged down in their own zone too frequently, but it was a distinct improvement over the first period.

In fact, the early skating put pressure on the Toronto defense to the point that Winnik took a tripping call just 2:31 into the frame.  The Blue Jackets calmly maintained possession during the extra man situation, and with 48 seconds left in the power play, Nick Foligno worked the puck up top to David Savard. Savard found Johansen to his right, and Ryan worked his way toward the net, feinting a shot, then zipping a nasty snapper high to Bernier's right and into the back of the net. The lead was trimmed to 4 - 2, with Savard and Foligno picking up the assists.

The balance of the period was a snoozer.  The Blue Jackets had a few tantalizingly close chances, and you could feel the crowd become increasingly restive as the ice tilted ever so gently toward the Blue Jackets.  Shots for the period were 6 - 4 in favor of Toronto. (Yes, you read that correctly).  So, while the effort was better for Columbus, they failed to maintain consistent offensive pressure. They did, however, manage to stay out of the box for the full twenty minutes.

The game was not out of reach, but the Blue Jackets would have to exploit a fragile Maple Leafs' psyche in the third.

Period Three:  "Sorry, Doctor . . . the Patient Died."

O.K. . . . you're down by two goals against one of the worst possession teams in the NHL, and know that a little pressure is all that is needed to trigger a meltdown.  So, what do you do?  Nothing, apparently.  The Blue Jackets played an indifferent third period -- generating a total of eight shots . . .the same number put on net in the first, which was quite possibly the worst period this season for Columbus.  So, in short, there were no answers.

The Blue Jackets played a clean period from a penalty perspective, and were the beneficiaries of a single power play, which they could not convert.  They pulled Bobrovsky for the extra man with just over two minutes left, which resulted in the obligatory empty netter by van Riemsdyk with 1:13 left.  Winnik earned another assist on that one.  That made the final score 5 - 2 for the home team, making Columbus .500 for the road trip.  Not an awful number in the abstract, but with the way this one was lost, the trip ends with a bad taste in the mouth.

Post Mortem

There is little redeeming social value to this effort.  Full marks to Johansen, Foligno and Scott Hartnell, who played hard.  Calvert started off like a firecracker, but disappeared when Richards fooled with the lines.  Atkinson was invisible.  Dubinsky was good in the face-off circle, but otherwise did little.  Cody Goloubef put forth another solid effort, and David Savard had a good effort as well.  Sergei Bobrovsky was more victim than perpetrator.

What is deeply troubling about this loss is the total lack of response when challenged.  Toronto is one of the worst possession and defensive clubs in the world.  Jonathan Bernier is a vulnerable goaltender.  The organization is in turmoil. Those circumstances cry out for a high pressure game that generates lots of shots, and accordingly lots of pressure.  For some mystifying reason, the Blue Jackets could muster but 20 shots on goal.

Part of the blame on this one rests behind the bench.  In his post-game remarks, Todd Richards inexplicably characterized the club's 5-on-5 play as "O.K.", and attributed the troubles exclusively to penalties and losing battles along the boards.  Sorry, but that explanation doesn't match up to a review of the tape.  This was a situation where the Blue Jackets reverted to the collapsing defense, which comes out regularly when the opposition is perceived to have a surplus of speed.  However, that approach has not worked this season, and for obvious reasons.  Teams with speed and skill can use the top of the zone to make passes and maintain possession, tiring out the defenders and eventually creating openings.  Meanwhile, the collapsing defenders create confusion in front of the goaltender, and the possession time becomes skewed in favor of the opposition.

To show that advanced stats are not necessarily all they are cracked up to be in all situations, the Blue Jackets only lost the team Corsi battle tonight by a margin of 52.3% to 47.7%, due in large part to 21 missed shots.  The optics of this one were far worse than those numbers would suggest.

This was a case of criminal indifference, both by the team and the coach.  The TV cameras kept panning to Richards, obviously hoping to catch him in some twitch, some display of emotion that would suggest he cared or was otherwise invested in the game.  Nada. Zip. Zilch. Nobody is suggesting that he transform himself to John Tortorella, but a pulse would be welcomed. It's tough for the players to care when the coach appears not to.

Fortunately, as has seemed to be the case of late, the Blue Jackets have the chance to redeem themselves within 24 hours, as they did in Colorado after a 6 - 3 pasting at the hands of a very beatable Arizona Coyotes team.  However, this time the opponent is a very, very skilled New York Islanders team, which invades Nationwide Arena as the #2 overall team in the Eastern Conference.  Indifference will not cut it tomorrow.  That's why the patient died tonight.

Saturday Habs Links: Eller Trusted With More Responsibilities

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Here are your daily links covering the Canadiens, including Eller's evolving role, Fucale's goodbye to Halifax, and atrocious NHL All Star jerseys.

Montreal Canadiens

  • Lars Eller's faceoff prowess may make Manny Malhotra redundant. Eller's 57.0 faceoff winning percentage is allowing Coach Therrien to trust him with more of Malhotra's responsibilities. [RDS - French]
  • Lars Eller is also taking the Canadiens' no excuses motto to heart, having this to say about the team. "There are going to be times when we're a  little bit tired, but it's the same for the other teams so I don't want to use that as an excuse."[TSN]
  • With the Habs hitting the halfway mark, take a look at some of the grades they've received so far. It shouldn't be a surprise that Carey Price is the only one who received an A+. [Sportsnet]
  • Fresh off of winning a gold medal with Canada, Zach Fucale went back to Halifax to say his goodbyes. The former Halifax Moosehead had been traded to the Quebec Remparts, but returned to show his appreciation. [Halifax Mooseheads]
  • A trade between Montreal and New Jersey involving Jaromir Jagr seems unlikely to happen. [Twitter]

Around The League And Elsewhere

  • The NHL released its NHL All Star game jerseys and they were predictably awful. Really NHL, neon green trim? [SB Nation]
  • The UK's Elite Ice Hockey League doled out an 18-game suspension to forward Joe Grimaldi, after he threw an illegal check to the head, speared an opposing player in the stomach and threw his helmet at him as well. [CBS Sports]
  • The Toronto Maple Leafs' issues go beyond Randy Carlyle's inability to coach. [Hockey Graphs]
  • The Columbus Blue Jackets have signed goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky to a "4-year, $29.7 million dollar extension". [Puck Daddy]
  • Zemgus Girgensons not only managed to be the leading vote-getter at the NHL All Star game, but he now has a rap song named after him too! Enjoy. [YouTube]


[Saturdays FTB] - Sorry, I just got up

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Leafs link inks after an awesome win over Columbus

Oh man, how do people go out at night? I was out until midnight after the game last night. I'm so old. Had a blast at the game, and the ACC proved its doubters wrong. I heard about 27 "Go Leafs Go" chants, a wave lasted 4 minutes straight, and damn was there noise everytime something happened. The second period was lackluster, aside from some drunk showing up and dripping beer on the kid in front of him. But after I had him tossed all was well.

Now it's a Saturday with no Leafs game. How is this allowed?

Here's your links.

Maple Leafs beat Columbus 5-2

Game Recap #39: The Maple Leaf Ragged - The Cannon

BWB Post-Game: Game 42 - Columbus @ Toronto - Blue & White Brotherhood

Game in 12 - Leafs 5, Blue Jackets 2 | Maple Leafs Hotstove

Game 42 Scoring Chances: Maple Leafs 5 vs. Blue Jackets 2 | Maple Leafs Hotstove

Game Review: Game #43, Toronto Maple Leafs 5 vs. Columbus Blue Jackets 2 | Maple Leafs Hotstove

Leafs Open Horachek Era 1-1: Fall to Caps 6-2, Top Blue Jackets 5-2 - Pension Plan Puppets

Other Stories

Dustin Byfuglien: Back to business as usual or something new? - Arctic Ice Hockey

The All Star Jerseys are totally rad | Barry Melrose Rocks

Is Rick Nash’s All Star season being underrated? - Blue Seat Blogs

Why Mike Babcock coaching Philadelphia Flyers is possible, but an extreme long shot - Broad Street Hockey

The Key Components to the New York Rangers' Current Run - Blueshirt Banter

Down Goes Brown: Grab bag: I have no idea what the Spengler Cup is

Shanahan puts Leafs core players on notice - The Globe and Mail

Jarred Tinordi knocked out cold in AHL fight - Eyes On The Prize

Game on: Going behind the scenes of Hockey Night in Canada - The Globe and Mail
When I was in Broadcasting school (note: do not ever choose this career) I was interviewing at the CBC for a general intern position, set up lights, pull cables, etc.. and I was in the HNiC truck, alone, and the head of CBC Sports comes in. So instead of talking to him, sucking up, as you do in TV, I just said "Hi" and left.

I was never cut out for that industry.

Is Sidney Crosby injured? Or having bad luck? - PensBurgh

Jackets sign Sergei Bobrovsky to 4 year extension - The Cannon

Boston University scores unique own goal against Wisconsin (Video) | Puck Daddy - Yahoo Sports

Game Preview #40 - It Doesn't Get Any Easier From Here

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Welp. The Jackets have been Jekyl and Hyde the past few games, and another tough test comes tonight at home.

New York Islanders at Columbus Blue Jackets

January 10, 2015 - 7:00 pm EST
Nationwide Arena - Columbus, Ohio
Radio - WBNS 97.1 - TV - Fox Sports Ohio
Opponent's Blog: Lighthouse Hockey

Come on, man.

Last night's loss hurt a bit. If you're trying to climb over teams for the playoffs, especially teams that are really struggling, the last thing you can afford to do is get smoked by those teams. After a 1-0 lead was quickly eviscerated in the first period, the Jackets are reeling just a bit as they return home to face the resurgent Islanders.

Many of us have had our worst fears realized in the last several games, even with Columbus notching wins along the way. The "fancy stats" have been unkind to the Jackets, despite them continuing to win. And, when it's come back to earth in losses, it has come back with a mighty thud. In their last three losses (wrapped around four wins), they've been outscored 16-6, and three of the Jackets' goals have come in absolute garbage time/score effects. They led in two of those games. When it goes bad, it goes really bad.

Special teams seem to be what keeps this team afloat. The Power Play has been good all year. The PK has been streaky. When it's been good (see: December), the team has been winning. When it hasn't (see: Arizona and Toronto), they lose. Grossly.

Overall, the Jackets need to figure out how not to keep getting blitzed on the shot clock. I don't know if it's more getting the puck out of their own zone with consistency (they certainly don't do it right now), or setting up in the offensive zone more (they often don't very much), but something needs to change. Many of us wondered or complained that the December run was unsustainable for the long haul because the numbers under the surface simply weren't very good, and those chickens are circling the coop looking for a place to roost, it would appear.

Both teams played last night, and there was no CBJ morning skate, so the lineups are guesses based on previous games. Speaking of lineups, the word is that the NHL will announce the All Star rosters around 6 PM.

Projected Lineups

Columbus Blue Jackets
(18-18-3, 39 Points; 5th division, 12th conference)

Scott HartnellRyan JohansenNick Foligno
Matt CalvertBrandon DubinskyCam Atkinson
Sean CollinsAlexander WennbergJack Skille
Jeremy MorinMark LetestuJared Boll
Jack JohnsonDavid Savard
Kevin ConnautonJames Wisniewski
Fedor TyutinCody Goloubef
Sergei Bobrovsky
Curtis McElhinney

New York Islanders
(27-13-1, 55 Points; 1st Division, 2nd Conference)

Josh BaileyJohn TavaresKyle Okposo
Anders LeeFrans NielsenRyan Strome
Michael GrabnerBrock NelsonNikolay Kulemin
Matt MartinCasey CizikasCal Clutterbuck
Calvin de HaanTravis Hamonic
Nick LeddyJohnny Boychuk
Thomas HickeyBrian Strait
Chad Johnson
Jaroslav Halak

Season Series

01/10/15 - NY Islanders at Columbus
02/14/15 - Columbus at NY Islanders
04/02/15 - NY Islanders at Columbus
04/11/15 - Columbus at NY Islanders

Head to Head Stats

TorontoColumbus
2.93 (10)GPG2.51 (22)
2.76 (21)GAPG3.20 (26)
19.3% (13)PP%24.3% (3)
76.7% (26)PK%79.0% (22)
John Tavares, 19G leaderNick Foligno, 17
Kyle Okposo, 28A leaderRyan Johansen, 23
John Tavares, 39Pts leaderNick Foligno, 39
Travis Hamonic, 54PIM leaderJared Boll, 56
13-9-1Road/Home9-9-2
6-3-1Last 106-3-1
1/9 @ New Jersey, W 3-2 (OT)Last Game1/9 @ Toronto, L 5-2

Game Day #40 - Blue Jackets vs. Islanders

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Welp. The Jackets have been Jekyl and Hyde the past few games, and another tough test comes tonight at home.

New York Islanders at Columbus Blue Jackets

January 10, 2015 - 7:00 pm EST
Nationwide Arena - Columbus, Ohio
Radio - WBNS 97.1 - TV - Fox Sports Ohio
Opponent's Blog: Lighthouse Hockey

Come on, man.

Last night's loss hurt a bit. If you're trying to climb over teams for the playoffs, especially teams that are really struggling, the last thing you can afford to do is get smoked by those teams. After a 1-0 lead was quickly eviscerated in the first period, the Jackets are reeling just a bit as they return home to face the resurgent Islanders.

Many of us have had our worst fears realized in the last several games, even with Columbus notching wins along the way. The "fancy stats" have been unkind to the Jackets, despite them continuing to win. And, when it's come back to earth in losses, it has come back with a mighty thud. In their last three losses (wrapped around four wins), they've been outscored 16-6, and three of the Jackets' goals have come in absolute garbage time/score effects. They led in two of those games. When it goes bad, it goes really bad.

Special teams seem to be what keeps this team afloat. The Power Play has been good all year. The PK has been streaky. When it's been good (see: December), the team has been winning. When it hasn't (see: Arizona and Toronto), they lose. Grossly.

Overall, the Jackets need to figure out how not to keep getting blitzed on the shot clock. I don't know if it's more getting the puck out of their own zone with consistency (they certainly don't do it right now), or setting up in the offensive zone more (they often don't very much), but something needs to change. Many of us wondered or complained that the December run was unsustainable for the long haul because the numbers under the surface simply weren't very good, and those chickens are circling the coop looking for a place to roost, it would appear.

Both teams played last night, and there was no CBJ morning skate, so the lineups are guesses based on previous games. Speaking of lineups, the word is that the NHL will announce the All Star rosters around 6 PM.

Projected Lineups

Columbus Blue Jackets
(18-18-3, 39 Points; 5th division, 12th conference)

Scott HartnellRyan JohansenNick Foligno
Matt CalvertBrandon DubinskyCam Atkinson
Sean CollinsAlexander WennbergJack Skille
Jeremy MorinMark LetestuJared Boll
Jack JohnsonDavid Savard
Kevin ConnautonJames Wisniewski
Fedor TyutinCody Goloubef
Sergei Bobrovsky
Curtis McElhinney

New York Islanders
(27-13-1, 55 Points; 1st Division, 2nd Conference)

Josh BaileyJohn TavaresKyle Okposo
Anders LeeFrans NielsenRyan Strome
Michael GrabnerBrock NelsonNikolay Kulemin
Matt MartinCasey CizikasCal Clutterbuck
Calvin de HaanTravis Hamonic
Nick LeddyJohnny Boychuk
Thomas HickeyBrian Strait
Chad Johnson
Jaroslav Halak

Season Series

01/10/15 - NY Islanders at Columbus
02/14/15 - Columbus at NY Islanders
04/02/15 - NY Islanders at Columbus
04/11/15 - Columbus at NY Islanders

Head to Head Stats

TorontoColumbus
2.93 (10)GPG2.51 (22)
2.76 (21)GAPG3.20 (26)
19.3% (13)PP%24.3% (3)
76.7% (26)PK%79.0% (22)
John Tavares, 19G leaderNick Foligno, 17
Kyle Okposo, 28A leaderRyan Johansen, 23
John Tavares, 39Pts leaderNick Foligno, 39
Travis Hamonic, 54PIM leaderJared Boll, 56
13-9-1Road/Home9-9-2
6-3-1Last 106-3-1
1/9 @ New Jersey, W 3-2 (OT)Last Game1/9 @ Toronto, L 5-2
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