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The Report - Episode 10 - Deadline Day Approaches!

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Back to my old podcasting habits, I guess.

Yep, I'm not even going to pretend like I have an excuse. I blow at podcasting. It is what it is.

That said, there's one thing I manage to do every year, and that's to sit down with Mike at or right before the trading deadline to break everything down. And we did that again this year. For a long time, in fact. This one is a doozy, clocking in at over 1:40. But, when you don't do a podcast for three months, that's what you get, I guess.

Mike and I cover as much as we can, without notes or a pre-mapped discussion. I also had some beers. As such, it's a bit of a meandering journey, but a good discussion none-the-less. Some curse words may be dropped, so EARMUFFS and all that.

Enjoy!

If the player above isn't working, you can Download this episode (right click and save) click here to download as well. Also, the podcast is available in iTunes. If that's your bag, simply search for "Cannon The Report" in iTunes and you should be able to find it and subscribe!


Gophers Hockey: Brady Skjei's role growing

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The junior defenseman got some power play time last weekend and has been helping his fellow defensive pairing Ryan Collins adjust.

There was a new player on Minnesota's second power play unit last weekend in State College. It was a good thing too because Brady Skjei played a role in Justin Kloos' game-winning power-play goal Friday, setting up the sophomore forward and getting the primary assist.

"Skjei right-upped it to me," Kloos told SB Nation College Hockey after Friday's win. "I had some space so I it in and then (Penn State's) D kind of overplayed me on the side wall and I was able to get to the middle. Luckily I was able to sneak one in the corner."

The junior defenseman admittedly is not the most offensive player on the ice. That's not his style. It took time in college for him to get the green light shooting. In his three seasons at Minnesota, Skjei has just 26 total points.

His fellow blue liner Mike Reilly has more assists (29) than that just this year.

A constant presence on both the penalty kill and the Gophers' defensive top pairing, the smooth-skating 2012 first round pick of the New York Rangers (28th overall) is more likely to be seen cutting down gaps and keeping high-scoring forwards at bay for Minnesota. But Skjei will take time to enjoy himself on the power play.

"I do. Obviously the coaches show some faith in me back there and it's been so far," he said. "Hopefully I can get a few more than that, though."

Still, he's been doing more than adding offense. Skjei's first two seasons were spent as the younger player on pairings with Nate Schmidt and Justin Holl. This year, the 6'3", 206 lbs defenseman, who has 9 points (1G-8A) this season in 23 games split across a pair of injuries, has been paired for most of the season with freshman Ryan Collins.

Like Skjei, Collins is a high NHL draft pick (2nd round by the Columbus Blue Jackets) that is not likely to be confused for a fourth forward anytime soon. The two don't have assigned roles, instead feeling off one another as to which player is going to jump ahead into the play.

Even more, Skjei has been in the position Collins is currently as the team faces Michigan State at Mariucci Arena today (February 26) and Friday. That helps when things go wrong like Scott Conway splitting the pair and leaving the freshman in his wake for a goal Saturday happen.

"I know it is tough as a freshman coming in here and playing right away. He's matured a lot so far this year," said Skjei, who had a couple instances of being in and out of the lineup himself, about Collins. "He's been playing some big minutes towards the end of games too, which also helps for confidence. He's been having a really good year so far."

Despite being benched for the remainder of the period, Collins finished Saturday's 4-3 overtime loss back on the ice with playing time down the stretch. A weekend before the freshman had played some of his best hockey at the collegiate level with both Skjei and him shutting down Michigan's top line of Zach Hyman, Dylan Larkin and Alex Kile.

The end result is that Skjei is one of a number of upperclassmen helping and gradually growing with new roles. Over the Gophers' 6-1-1 stretch that has the team back in NCAA Tournament and Big Ten contention, the senior class has stepped up on the scoresheet while juniors like Skjei and Reilly and senior Ben Marshall have done the same on the blue line.

"I think we've improved a ton. The freshmen are playing very well," Skjei said. "I think all three pairs of defensemen are playing well. Adam's playing well again. Defensively I think we're getting back on track."

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Nathan Wells is a college hockey columnist for SB Nation mostly covering both the University of Minnesota and Big Ten. You can also follow him on Twitter --

Game Preview #60 - Which Team Is Showing Up?

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With three games to go before the deadline amidst interesting rumors swirling, which Jackets club takes the ice tonight? The competent almosts, or the losers to Buffalo?

Montreal Canadiens at Columbus Blue Jackets

February 26, 2015 - 7:00 pm EST
Nationwide Arena - Columbus, Ohio
Radio - WWCD 102.5 FM - TV - Fox Sports Ohio
Opponent's Blog: Eyes On The Prize

Oh, hey, there's a game tonight!

I can't even get up for this one, to be honest. Tuesday's game was so gross. I just hope it's not a beat down.

Projected Lineups

Columbus Blue Jackets
(26-29-4, 56 Points; 7th division, 13th conference)

Alexander WennbergRyan JohansenNick Foligno
Matt CalvertBrandon DubinskyCam Atkinson
Scott HartnellArtem AnisimovMarko Dano
Corey TroppMark LetestuJared Boll
Jack JohnsonDavid Savard
Jordan LeopoldJames Wisniewski
Fedor TyutinCody Goloubef
Curtis McElhinney
Oscar Dansk

Montreal Canadiens
(39-16-5, 79 Points; 1st Division,1st Conference)

Max PaciorettyDavid DesharnaisBrendan Gallagher
Lars EllerTomas PlekanecAlex Galchenyuk
Brandon PrustJacob De La RoseDale Weise
Michael BournivalManny MalhotraDevante Smith-Pelly
Andrei MarkovP.K. Subban
Nathan BeaulieuTom Gilbert
Jarred TinordiGreg Pateryn
Carey Price
Dustin Tokarski

Season Series

MON - 2-0-0
CBJ - 0-2-0

01/14/15 - Montreal 3 at Columbus 2
02/21/15 - Columbus 1 at Montreal 3
02/26/15 - Montreal at Columbus

Head to Head Stats

MontrealColumbus
2.60 (21)GPG2.56 (23)
2.18 (1)GAPG3.08 (26)
17.0% (24)PP%20.7% (6)
85.6% (5)PK%80.8% (17)
Max Pacioretty, 29G leaderNick Foligno, 23
P.K. Subban, 33A leaderNick Foligno / Ryan Johansen, 32
Max Pacioretty, 52Pts leaderNick Foligno, 55
Brandon Prust, 102PIM leaderScott Hartnell, 82
18-9-1Road/Home12-15-2
7-1-2Last 105-4-1
2/24 @ St. Louis, W 5-2Last Game2/24 vs. Buffalo, L 4-2

Game Day #60 - Blue Jackets vs. Canadiens

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With three games to go before the deadline amidst interesting rumors swirling, which Jackets club takes the ice tonight? The competent almosts, or the losers to Buffalo?

Montreal Canadiens at Columbus Blue Jackets

February 26, 2015 - 7:00 pm EST
Nationwide Arena - Columbus, Ohio
Radio - WWCD 102.5 FM - TV - Fox Sports Ohio
Opponent's Blog: Eyes On The Prize

Oh, hey, there's a game tonight!

I can't even get up for this one, to be honest. Tuesday's game was so gross. I just hope it's not a beat down.

Projected Lineups

Columbus Blue Jackets
(26-29-4, 56 Points; 7th division, 13th conference)

Alexander WennbergRyan JohansenNick Foligno
Matt CalvertBrandon DubinskyCam Atkinson
Scott HartnellArtem AnisimovMarko Dano
Corey TroppMark LetestuJared Boll
Jack JohnsonDavid Savard
Jordan LeopoldJames Wisniewski
Fedor TyutinCody Goloubef
Curtis McElhinney
Oscar Dansk

Montreal Canadiens
(39-16-5, 79 Points; 1st Division,1st Conference)

Max PaciorettyDavid DesharnaisBrendan Gallagher
Lars EllerTomas PlekanecAlex Galchenyuk
Brandon PrustJacob De La RoseDale Weise
Michael BournivalManny MalhotraDevante Smith-Pelly
Andrei MarkovP.K. Subban
Nathan BeaulieuTom Gilbert
Jarred TinordiGreg Pateryn
Carey Price
Dustin Tokarski

Season Series

MON - 2-0-0
CBJ - 0-2-0

01/14/15 - Montreal 3 at Columbus 2
02/21/15 - Columbus 1 at Montreal 3
02/26/15 - Montreal at Columbus

Head to Head Stats

MontrealColumbus
2.60 (21)GPG2.56 (23)
2.18 (1)GAPG3.08 (26)
17.0% (24)PP%20.7% (6)
85.6% (5)PK%80.8% (17)
Max Pacioretty, 29G leaderNick Foligno, 23
P.K. Subban, 33A leaderNick Foligno / Ryan Johansen, 32
Max Pacioretty, 52Pts leaderNick Foligno, 55
Brandon Prust, 102PIM leaderScott Hartnell, 82
18-9-1Road/Home12-15-2
7-1-2Last 105-4-1
2/24 @ St. Louis, W 5-2Last Game2/24 vs. Buffalo, L 4-2

Blue Jackets Return Adam Cracknell To Blues For Future Considerations

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The Cracknell has been released to return to the depths of the St. Louis depth chart.

The Blues dealt something called "future considerations" to the Columbus Blue Jackets for former fourth-liner and fan favorite Adam Cracknell. Cracknell had an assist and two penalty minutes in 17 games with the Jackets this year.

So, what's the point of all of this, other than to give the Wolves a bit of a boost?

Setting up a future deal to unload some salary bloat in a trade? Who ever is salary bloated in a role that Cracknell can easily fill?

It will be difficult to unload the contracts of underperformers; players such as Patrik Berglund will more than likely not go anywhere unless it's part of a package. Perhaps packaged with someone who employs a large amount of grit in their play Bergie will look appetizing enough to someone who would like to shuffle off a defenseman to fill in for the time being (or longer).

Basically I'm saying that perhaps Ott is out of here. But probably not. But maybe. At the very least this gives the Blues some flexibility in the fourth line.

David Clarkson Unceremoniously Thrown Away

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The Leafs traded David Clarkson. Seriously.

The Leafs swapped David Clarkson to the Columbus Blue Jackets for Nathan Horton. The deal centers around Horton's contract not being insured. The Blue Jackets would rather get any tiny return on the money they have to pay while the rich Leafs are happy to stash Nathan Horton on LTIR and be free of his contract aside from tagging room in the summer.

David Clarkson was garbage while he was here. Despite the trade today his contract was a bad enough signing that Dave Nonis will almost certainly be canned for signing. Expect to hear it from the guys who work at the gas station near you when he scores 3pts in 10 games next year but really who cares? He's gone.

We won't have to suffer through him gently wrestling opposing players when the refs were near, or him falling on his face eight times a period, or him spinning slowly in a circle on the second power play unit while the commentators wait for Nazem Kadri to bank pucks off his stupid head.

We won't have to listen to people who think he brought grit or compete or any other nonsense Randy Carlyle-isms. Just like Colby Armstrong before him this was a bad signing with too much money and term for a marginal NHLer.

Nice job by the management team today. I almost feel optimistic about the future.

Wait, WHAT? Nathan Horton Traded for David Clarkson

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No, seriously. What happened? We did what now? Really?

Well, I guess he's changing his number.

The Blue Jackets just made a trade that stunned the NHL.

Unfortunately, it was because nobody in the NHL believed anyone would ever trade for David Clarkson.

The team has sent LTIR-Wing Nathan Horton to Toronto, straight up, for Clarkson. No salary retained by either side, no picks. A pure player to player swap.

In remarks to the press, Jarmo is praising Clarkson as a "physical, hard skating, goes to the net" kind of guy, and that is true, but he's being paid over $5 million a year for the next five years...and is very much NOT a perennial 30 goal scorer. Having hit that mark once, he cashed in big for Toronto off the strength of that season, and has been a disappointment ever since.

Seriously, have you ever seen a team's fans react like this for a guy who they think has some value?

Now, I will say this - fans in Toronto were told that Clarkson was going to come in and be a savior for them. He was put under pressure to be a top line scoring winger, and that's not his game. Maybe the Blue Jackets ask him to do less, and he's able to play better out from under the Toronto pressure cooker. 30 goal scoring dynamic forward better? I find that incredibly doubtful. But perhaps he'll be a serviceable 3rd line guy.

The news also came out that part of why the team needed to trade Horton was that the winger's contract was not being covered by insurance. As others have mentioned, Toronto has the money to pay someone to never play again. Columbus really couldn't. So the organization will at least get a player on the ice for the money they had been spending in vain.

Clarkson is flying to Columbus tonight, and the team expects to have him in the lineup for the game against the Devils on Saturday, so I guess we'll see what happens then. If nothing else, he's certainly going to get a new jersey number - #71 is taken.

I suspect that many people are hoping that perhaps David Clarkson can prove a lot of people wrong, but doubting that it will happen.

Canadiens vs Blue Jackets second period thread

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The Habs are up 3-1 heading into the second period.

The Habs wasted no time getting on the board. Manny Malholtra won a face-off to P.K. Subban who snapped it in for his 12th goal of the season. Manny got his 2nd assist of the year on the face-off win.

Watching Brandon Dubinsky get contorted on a hit from Tom Gilbert in slow-motion makes you realize what a rough game hockey is. The goal he scored on Carey Price came from a bad angle, and although it tied the game the Habs regained the lead on a blast from Andrei Markov as he took a past from a buzzing David Desharnais who had picked up a dumped-in puck from the Blue Jackets' corner.

Five minutes into the game and it was 2-1 Habs.

The pace didn't slow. Both the Habs and Jackets kept coming at each other. The difference was in the Habs 90% shooting accuracy, having registered 9 shots on 10 shot attempts.

Max Pacioretty scored his 30th goal to give the Habs a 3-1 lead with 5:24 to go in the period. By the end of the first period the Habs had out-CORSI'ed the Blue Jackets 21-14, and had successfully landed 13 shots on net.

Scoring Summary

1ST PERIOD
01:49MTLP.K. Subban (12) Slapshot - ASST: Andrei Markov (30), Manny Malhotra (2)1 - 0 MTL
02:43CBJBrandon Dubinsky (8) Snap shot - ASST: David Savard (14), Cam Atkinson (12)1 - 1 Tie
04:25MTLAndrei Markov (8) Slapshot - ASST: David Desharnais (27)2 - 1 MTL
14:36MTLMax Pacioretty (30) Wrist shot - ASST: Brendan Gallagher (19), P.K. Subban (34)3 - 1 MTL

Penalty Summary

1ST PERIOD
10:59MTLDale Weise Interference  - 2 min against  Cody Goloubef
19:58MTLBrendan Gallagher Tripping  - 2 min against  Scott Hartnell

Shots

PERIODMTLCBJ
1st139
Total139

Team Stats

CATEGORYMTLCBJ
Power Plays0/00/2
Hits812
Faceoff Wins86
Giveaways40
Takeaways22
Blocked Shots34
Penalty Minutes40


Canadiens vs Blue Jackets third period thread

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The Habs still lead 3-1 heading into the third period.

From the 15 minute mark of the first period to the five minute mark of the second period, the Habs had only allowed 1 shot attempt. The Blue Jackets did eventually get their shots, with Carey Price not absorbing the pucks as well as he normally does (but stopping them nonetheless), which led to a ridiculous goal attempt by Corey Tropp, who flicked the puck off the top of the net to himself and smacked it in out of the air, all on his back. Nice try.

Midway through the second period and the Jackets  had caught up to the Habs offensively and were outshooting them 15-14. The trend would continue, with the Blue Jackets holding the edge in play to end the second period 35-31 CF, and 21-19 in shots on goal.

Line Change: It looks as though Devante Smith-Pelly has replaced Lars Eller on the second line alongside Tomas Plekanec and Alex Galchenyuk after a few shifts to conclude the second period.

Scoring Summary

1ST PERIOD
01:49MTLP.K. Subban (12) Slapshot - ASST: Andrei Markov (30), Manny Malhotra (2)1 - 0 MTL
02:43CBJBrandon Dubinsky (8) Snap shot - ASST: David Savard (14), Cam Atkinson (12)1 - 1 Tie
04:25MTLAndrei Markov (8) Slapshot - ASST: David Desharnais (27)2 - 1 MTL
14:36MTLMax Pacioretty (30) Wrist shot - ASST: Brendan Gallagher (19), P.K. Subban (34)3 - 1 MTL
2ND PERIOD
NONE

Penalty Summary

1ST PERIOD
10:59MTLDale Weise Interference  - 2 min against  Cody Goloubef
19:58MTLBrendan Gallagher Tripping  - 2 min against  Scott Hartnell
2ND PERIOD
NONE

Shots

PERIODMTLCBJ
1st139
2nd612
Total1921

Team Stats

CATEGORYMTLCBJ
Power Plays0/00/2
Hits1521
Faceoff Wins1516
Giveaways62
Takeaways24
Blocked Shots85
Penalty Minutes40

Corey Tropp's remarkable goal disallowed

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An incredible play, all for naught.

This is one of the best goals you will see all year. Unfortunately, you won't see it on any score sheets.

Eight minutes into the second period, Carey Price stopped Columbus forward Corey Tropp on a prime scoring chance at the doorstep. This created a scrum in the crease, and the puck ended up on top of the net. Tropp then poked the puck upwards and slapped it home mid-air -- all while falling on his back.

The goal was immediately disallowed. The NHL explained why:

At 8:00 of the second period in the Montreal Canadiens/Columbus Blue Jackets game, the Situation Room initiated a video review to further examine a play at the Montreal net. The referee informed the Situation Room that he blew his whistle to stop play when the puck landed on top of the net. According to Rule 78.5, apparent goals shall be disallowed "when the Referee deems the play has been stopped, even if he had not physically had the opportunity to stop play by blowing his whistle." This is not a reviewable play therefore the referee's call on the ice stands - no goal Columbus.

Canadiens vs Blue Jackets Top Six Minutes: A night to remember

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The Habs down the Columbus Blue Jackets in their final meeting this season.

For our new readers and members, Top Six Minutes is a brief overview of the Habs game, and a continuation of the discussion threads usually happens in the comments. We try to keep it light and entertaining. Full recaps are up the morning after every game.

First Period

  • What a goal! PK Subban is wow. Is PK Subban anything but wow? (shush Sportsnet, who cares if it's his first goal in 15 games).
  • More importantly, Manny Malhotra got an ASSIST! Which will no doubt translate to even more ice time.
  • And that lead lasted approximately 30 seconds. Thank you loud cannon noise for adding to my misery.
  • Markov scores off a sick pass from DD and the Habs have the lead again. Keep in mind, only 5 minutes have passed in the period and we already have 3 goals.
  • Uh oh, Subban looks hurt. Habs nation collectively holds their breath.
  • By the way, how unlucky does he have to be to be hit in the exact same spot as last time?
  • Subban is still playing. Habs nation exhales in relief.
  • Dutch Gretzky got sent to the sin bin but the Habs kill of the penalty. The Blue Jackets were distract by his amazing flow.
  • The Blue Jackets are dropping like flies.
  • And we get another goal! Pacioretty scores of some nice work from Gallagher and Subban.
  • This is the 30th goal of the year for American Hero-Wolverine-Mad Max!
  • Beaulieu's stick just snapped in half on a dump in.
  • The Canadiens are back on the penalty kill with 1.5 seconds left on the clock which is a very Canadien thing to do.
  • The Habs have a 3-1 lead heading into the second. Never in my wildest dreams, did I imagine I would get to write that.

Second Period

  • Markov is a funny, grumpy Russian bear. Sportsnet told me so.
  • Speaking of grumpy, Brendan Gallagher looks none too pleased to be starting the period in the penalty box.
  • The Canadiens killed their second penalty of the night and another Blue Jacket just took a tumble. What is with the ice in Columbus?
  • Carey Price just makes being a goalie look the easiest job in the world.
  • So far, so good for Devante Smith-Pelley. DSP's looking pretty swell in his first game.
  • That was obviously not a goal but it was definitely the best non-goal of the season.
  • The Habs have a lead and immediately switched to dumping and chasing mode. Why can't EOTP have nice things?
  • Gallagher and Desharnais just traded premium scoring chances but not-Bobrovsky just had to make two saves.
  • The Columbus Blue Jackets are outshooting the Canadiens because the Habs are really sitting back on their lead.

Third Period

  • Greg Pateryn looks like a lumberjack.
  • All of a sudden Eller isn't on the second line anymore and DSP isn't on the third line anymore.
  • JDLFR SCORES HIS FIRST NHL GOAL! It is Michel Therrien approved.
  • PK Subban rushing to grab the puck before De La Rose figured out he scored may have been the funniest thing I've seen all day.
  • Of course some irrelevant Blue Jacket had to score on Price. How does one get only their 3rd goal of the season against the best goalie in the league? This is some non-playoff team voodoo.
  • And again with that scary cannon.
  • Montreal's powerplay has returned to it's typically putrid form. The Blue Jackets had no trouble killing it off.
  • Oh wait, we get another Montreal powerplay. Sigh. Which is also killed off. Sigh.
  • Habs please deny the POWERPLAYS already! Your powerplays are as threatening as golden retriever puppies.
  • The Habs still can't beat an empty net.
  • No wait, we have a JDLFR! He is the empty net champion we deserve.
  • 10 straight wins for the Habs Carey Price!

EOTP 3 Stars

1. Columbus just made a huge mistake.

2. For a while there, I had the same doubts.

3.


Highlights

Game 60 Recap: Les Voyages de Marko Dano

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After the Blue Jackets made big news in the NHL with the Horton / Clarkson trade, there was still a game to play. Unfortunately, the Canadiens would score first, and keep the hammer down for the rest of the night.

They say that if you can't say anything nice, you shouldn't say much at all, but that doesn't get the blog much in the way of page views, so I guess I'll have to give things a shot.

The good news for Blue Jackets fans is that they've reached the 3/4 point of the 2014-2015 season. There's no question it's been a hard, disappointing year, but there's still hope on the horizon.

Tonight was almost a microcosm of the struggles the team has dealt with, and it started right off the bat when Manny Malhotra won a faceoff in the Blue Jackets zone back to Andrei Markov, who wired a pass to P.K. Subban for a one-timer that beat Curtis McElhinney to open the scoring less than two minutes into the period.

There was a flash of hope as the Jackets responded almost immediately thanks to Brandon Dubinsky busting into the offensive zone and faking Carey Price out with a bit of a wiggle before firing a top-corner shot, but that turned to ashes as Tom Gilbert wiped out after the goal, slamming into Dubi from behind and sending him headfirst into the boards.

Dubinsky stayed down for a long moment, managed to make his way to the bench, and sat with head trainer Mike Vogt for a brief conversation before heading to the dressing room. The team later announced that the injury "didn't appear to be serious", but that he would not return for the rest of the game with an upper body injury.

The Jackets were off balance after Dubinsky's loss, and it wasn't long before Montreal took advantage. After Curtis McElhinney attempted to clear the puck from behind the net, David Desharnais intercepted and set up Andrei Markov before the goalie was able to get set back up into the net, the point shot blasting cleanly past his glove side.

The Jackets tried to return the favor, but Carey Price was back on his game, and they simply couldn't get enough sustained pressure to shake him, and as the period ran down, the Jackets were clearly anything but on their game.

Another bad clearing attempt was kept in at the line by Subban, who would move the puck down low and set up Max Pacioretty for a goal at the side of the net. Given his success against the Jackets this season, the only shock was that it took him 15 minutes into the period before scoring his 30th of the season - and his fifth goal of the Montreal / Columbus series.

That score would hold through the end of the period, though the Jackets would at least have a power play opportunity carrying over to start the second, giving some hope that they might be able to claw their way back.

Unfortunately, as the second began, Brandon Dubinsky wasn't the only player missing from the Columbus bench.

Fedor Tyutin would not start the period with the team, and though he eventually returned for limited ice time, the Columbus bench wasn't shortening so much as collapsing. Lines were shuffled, pairs re-arranged, and cohesion visibly eroded.

Unsurprisingly, the Jackets weren't getting much going offensively under those conditions, but they did a surprisingly good job of bottling the Canadiens up, pushing them back and getting rubber on Price - sometimes in the most remarkable fashion.

One of the best was a play by Corey Tropp that, well, I'm going to describe it, but you really should go check it out.

Tropp was driving to the net when the puck went up into the air, bouncing off the top of the cage. Falling to his back, Tropp managed to get his stick up and redirect the puck past Price, but the goal was waved off because of the official blowing the play dead when the puck hit the top of the net.

The war room, not realizing the play had been blown dead, attempted to review the goal (which otherwise would have been legal, and breathtaking!), but the intent to blow rule meant that the play could not be reviewed, much to the crowd's displeasure.

That chance, sadly, was the closest the Jackets came to cracking Price in the second, and though they outshot Montreal 12-6 in the period, the Canadiens still had firm control of the game.

The third period began, and it wasn't long before Montreal tightened that control just a little bit more, and even upheld the old tradition of having a player score his first NHL goal in Columbus just to add a little more salt to the wound.

Canadiens rookie Jacob De La Rose will remember this game for a long time, but even he will admit it was kind of an unremarkable play. Taking a shift with Brandon Prust, the Swedish winger was in the right spot to deflect the veteran's shot past McElhinney and into the net for his first career marker, and he celebrated to the sound of thousands of TVs being changed to the Food Network.

Sadly, the people who decided to bail would miss one of the few positive moments in the game - as the Jackets did their best to respond to the De La Rose goal, the Foligno / Anisimov / Dano line was reassembled and did an excellent job (along with a few nice keep ins from David Savard) of putting real pressure on Price, getting the puck to the net again and again, until finally Marko Dano was able to flip the rebound of an Artem Anisimov shot up and over Price's shoulder for his third goal of the season.

You have to find pleasure in the little things at this point in the season, and Dano's excitement at scoring (and the offensive tenacity that he showed to create it) was really great to see. Even better, the fans who kept the faith at Nationwide seemed to grasp that, too, and it wasn't long before we started to hear "Marko....DANO!" chants rolling around the stands.

As time wound down, the Jackets searched for a goal to cut the two goal deficit, but simply weren't able to get anything past Price. With two minutes left in regulation, Coach Richards called for a time out, and it wasn't a surprise to see the net emptied for an extra attacker...and unfortunately, much like their meeting on Saturday, the Canadiens would find their way past the extra attackers, and tonight it would be De La Rose scoring his second NHL goal (and second of the night) in a bit more memorable fashion, winding up and hammering the shot down the ice and into the empty cage.

There's not much else to really say. More injuries, more frustration, more struggles...but more signs of silver linings under the clouds, and some real hope for the future.

22 games left. A new player coming into the mix (hopefully) for Saturday's game against the Devils. A chance that perhaps Dubi, Bob, Tyutin, or Kevin Connauton will be able to rejoin the lineup this weekend.

There's probably going to be more games like tonight in there. But there's a pretty good chance that the pain we're feeling today will lead to positives next season. So you just try to find a few good things, and keep going.

What else can we do?

Devils in the Details - 2/27/2015: Goodbye Edition

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New Jersey Devils & Related Hockey Links for 2/27/15

Here are your links for today:

Devils Links

The Devils traded Jaromir Jagr to the Florida Panthers for a second-round pick in 2015 and a conditional third-round pick in 2016. Goodbye, Jaromir. [Fire and Ice] [NJ.com] Lou doesn't think this trade means the Devils are out of the playoff race just yet. [Fire and Ice]

Jagr's final game as a Devil was a 3-1 loss to the Flames. [Fire and Ice] [NJ.com]

Hockey Links

The Leafs worked a miracle, somehow:

It's a strange deal, but it sort of makes sense for both sides. [Puck Daddy] [PHT]

The Kings have traded for Andrej Sekera. [PHT]

Patrick Kane looks to be out 12 weeks with an injury. [PHT]

Feel free to discuss these and any other hockey-related stories in the comments below.

Montreal Canadiens vs Columbus Blue Jackets recap: The wins just keep on coming

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All the Canadiens do is win. This is the tale of their latest exploit.

If you had to pick only one Habs game to watch this season, Thursday's match up would probably be a wise choice.

We were treated to a great pace early on, which included three goals in the first five minutes. P.K. Subban scored his 12th of the year early in the frame, on what can only be described as a classic play. Manny Malhotra won an important face-off in the offensive zone, sending the puck to Andrei Markov, who didn't hesitate to put it on a silver platter for his defensive partner. Subban made no mistake, using his patented blistering slap which Curtis McElhinney never saw, to give the Habs a 1-0 lead.

Brandon Dubinsky would quickly answer for the Blue Jackets, but the tie would be short lived. Markov decided to unleash a rocket of his own, via a quality pass from David Desharnais, restoring Montreal's one-goal lead.

What happened next was fairly predictable. It had been one (!) game since Max Pacioretty's last goal, and frankly the goal-scoring drought was unacceptable. Pacioretty decided to put an end to the embarrassing run, by utilizing his NASA-engineered shot release, which saw the puck find its way behind McElhinney before he had a chance to react.

The Blue Jackets appeared to turn the tide during the second period, but the play was whistled dead before the puck had the chance to enter the net.  After a great save from Price, the puck found its way to the top of the net, where it stayed for a couple seconds before Corey Tropp popped it off the mesh, displaying some ridiculous hand-eye coordination.

The reason given by the referees as to why the goal was disallowed was, "Because the puck was on top of the net. Once the puck is on top of the net the whistle goes."

Fair enough, but that's not the exact rule.

85.2 Puck Unplayable -  When the puck becomes lodged in the netting on the outside of either goal so as to make it unplayable, or if it is "frozen" between opposing players intentionally or otherwise, the Referee shall stop the play. The puck may be played off the goal netting by either team. However, should the puck remain on the goal netting for more than three (3) seconds, play shall be stopped. Should the goalkeeper use his stick or glove to freeze the puck on the back of the net or should a defending player shield an attacking player from playing the puck off the back of the net, the face-off shall take place at one of the face-off spots in the defending zone. Should the puck go under the goal either from behind or the side, or through the mesh from behind or the side, if this is witnessed by an on-ice official, play should be stopped immediately and the ensuing face-off should take place at the nearest face-off spot in the zone nearest to the location where the play was stopped.

Was it three seconds? You be the judge.

Despite how many seconds the puck remained on top of the net, it's worth noting that Tropp might have scored the prettiest no-goal in NHL history. He had Jarred Tinordi sprawled all over him, yet he managed to not only dislodge the puck, but also connect with it in mid-air. Simply beautiful.

The third period set the stage for an NHL first from young stalwart Swede, Jacob de la Rose. Brandon Prust made his way into the offensive zone with the help of a few sweet moves. Prust threw a quick and dirty shot towards the net, which gave de la Rose an opportunity to get a stick on it.

Marko Dano would cut the lead to two a few minutes later, but it was de la Rose's night, as he capitalized on an empty Columbus net to score his second goal of the game.

Lasting impressions
  • It's starting to get impossible to find new ways to describe Price's level of play. You can only look up "otherworldly" so many times in the thesaurus before you run out of options. It's gotten to the point that if Price allows a goal that would fool most netminders, people quickly call it a bad goal. His standard is ridiculously high, and he still comes out of every game looking like the best player in the league. Let's take a moment to appreciate that during his last two starts he's produced a .926 & .931 save percentage, and both of those results lowered his season average.
  • P.K. Subban is quietly lining up for another Norris trophy. He's now only one point behind Mark Giordano for the defenseman scoring race, but more importantly he's playing a staunch defensive game.
  • Devante Smith-Pelly's first game was rather uneventful, although that's to be expected when a player joins a team mid-season.
  • Defensive expert de la Rose is quickly making himself an invaluable member of the roster. Secondary scoring is one of Montreal's biggest weaknesses, and if de la Rose can start to contribute in that department on a regular basis, he'll quickly find himself climbing up the depth roster.
  • Andrei Markov found the fountain of youth, and he's not going to share with you so don't bother asking.
  • I got more excited the last time I stopped the gas pump at exactly $20.00 than Max Pacioretty did after he scored his 30th. He seems to be reserving his excitement for a bigger number.
The win was Montreal's third in a row, padding their lead over all Eastern Conference teams in the process. With a game in hand, and 21 left to play in the campaign, the Habs sit four points behind the league-leading Nashville Predators.  As crazy as it sounds, the Presidents' Trophy is starting to look like a legitimate possibility for Michel Therrien's team. They'll have an opportunity to carry the momentum into Saturday's game, when they'll face the Clarkson-less Toronto Maple Leafs.

Dallas Stars Daily Links: Jason Demers Hosts Casino Night

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One of the Stars' newest faces is also the most serious when it comes to reporting. Also, two massive trades, only one of which anyone ever could have predicted.

I wanted to have a big old set up for this video below, but this will have to do instead.  This video features Jason Demers, one of the newest Dallas Stars, during the annual Casino Night fundraiser.  Most of the players were either playing or stewarding the gaming tables, but Demers had the honor of being bestowed with a microphone and a video camera.  He did all right.

Demers is known for having a bit of personality.  The Stars, as you'll see, wisely decided to employ Demers in the entertainment field on Casino Night.  And by "the entertainment field," I mean "journalism," which I majored in at college. However, something I also did at college was work for the campus safety department for two and a half years.  The extra money came in handy for paying rent, buying Taco Bell at 2am, and rushing to Albertsons on the way to my then-girlfriend's graduation for some "cheap-but-not-cheap-looking" flowers.  I bring up my tenure with this department because during my senior year, my friend Eric and I hosted the annual banquet for the department.  We had all sorts of designs on making this banquet a hilarious cavalcade of nonstop hijinx and witticisms, but it turns out most of the people who make a career out of working in a college security department don't always get obscure Norm Macdonald jokes.  I wonder if that's what Jason Demers felt like during this video.

Anyway, to the tape:

Here are some of my takeaways from this great video (although I will say that you get more out of this video each time you watch it, kind of like Tree of Life, but not really):

Demers begins with "let's win some money," but he knows full well that he will not be playing tonight.  Is this a lie, or was Demers lied to about being paid for his services as a host?  We may never know.  Or, I dunno, someone ask him.

B-roll footage of Lindy Ruff dealing cards, Tyler Seguin laughing really hard, and Kari Lehtonen calmly (of course) smiling.

Lehtonen always seems to have a grin just begging to be let out.  One suspects he knows exactly what Demers is up to here, and so he gives him one word.  Good goalies never give you more than they have to.

Ryan Garbutt is even more suspicious of Demers, as his nervousness causes him to break the only rule of interviews: Don't look at the camera.  (this is a screenshot, not a video.  Don't try to click.)

I see you

Dang it, I said not to click.  You clicked, didn't you?

Jamie Benn tries his best to give Demers some straightforward material, but then the "dealer" comment gets made, and you can almost see Benn having flashbacks right afterwards.  Demers is sneaky.

Jokipakka and Sceviour tie for my favorite interviews in the entire video.

Clearly Ritchie and McKenzie's response to Demers was way too inappropriate for the internet, because we don't see a word of it.  We did, however, get this, which is almost as good:

#dallasstars #casinonight was a blast and Harry and Lloyd made an appearance courtesy of Ritchie and @muckbro16

A video posted by Jason Demers (@jason_demers) on

Roussel speaks French for a bit, and one of y'all can confirm whether Demers is mistranslating.  I suspect not, but what do I know?

Jordie Benn is playing blackjack and decides to hit on a 12, and he busts.  This is an apt metaphor.

Demers, unsatisfied that Benn didn't take the "dealer" bait earlier, descends upon the smiling Seguin.  Tyler finishes the assist just like a goal-scorer is supposed to do, I guess.

We end with Demers going full Manny Ramirez on Roussel.  Something tells me Roussel will have the final word before too long down the line.

* * * * *

Do you know what happens tonight?  This happens tonight:

Jack Campbell has been recalled to the Texas Stars after his successful stint in the ECHL.  [100 Degree Hockey]

This is kind of odd.  Ales Hemsky is the Stars' best piece that "could be dealt" at the deadline?  I object, your honor.  [THN]

Patrick Eaves is still not quite ready for action, but Kari and Hemsky are looking good.  [DMN]

The Stars have nothing to worry about next year apparently.  [iSportsWeb]

The Stars' goalie situation hasn't cleared up much since the Enroth trade.  In fact, it has kind of done the opposite of that.  [DMN]

And now, join me for a quick trip to TRADER JOE'S:

So, WOW.  What many people thought was the worst contract in hockey got traded yesterday, as the Toronto Maple Leafs sent David Clarkson to the Blue Jackets for Nathan Horton, whose career may be over.  Essentially, this is the Leafs getting cap space (via LTIR) while the Blue Jackets get an able-bodied hockey player for roughly the same amount they were paying Horton not to play.  [Puck Daddy]

Jaromir Jagr to the Panthers for 2nd and 3rd-round picks.  I love this move so much from a purely "old guy to young team" perspective.  Buy your Jagr cats shirseys NOW.  That is an order.  [CBS Sports]

Chicago made a minor move as well, trading away defenseman T.J. Brennan to Toronto for forward Spencer Abbott.  [Blackhawks]

Sean McIndoe has his thoughts for all the deadline action we might [not] see.  [Grantland]

So, what's going on in Chicago?  Rumors of fistfights in the locker room, nbd, nbd, nbd.  [Puck Daddy]

This is pretty cool: how many draft picks each NHL team has this year.  Tampa Bay, hoo boy.  [ESPN]

Conspiracy theory time: where does the NHL really want Connor McDavid to wind up?  [SportsNet]

Finally, here is a glimpse of Zach Sill interacting with Dion Phaneuf and the Leafs, who are now his teammates:


Breaking Down the Trade: Clarkson for Horton

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In some ways, it looks good. In other ways, it looks bad. Let's look at all of the angles.

David Clarkson for Nathan Horton.

Boom.

Wow.

On the surface, both teams have reason to be happy about this move. However, the potential downside is far worse for the Blue Jackets than it is for the Maple Leafs in this writer's opinion. Here's why.

To really evaluate this trade, we have to think of it as two separate trades, in reality: The Business Trade, and The Hockey Trade.

The Business Trade

On one hand, there's the business standpoint, which was clearly the driver in the short term for both clubs. This trade is proof that, no matter how "un-tradeable" a contract seems in a vacuum, there's really no such thing. In that regard, for Columbus and for Toronto, this trade makes sense from a purely financial standpoint. The Maple Leafs get some cap relief as they begin their complete gut-job. The salaries are identical, but Nathan Horton may never play again, and in fact the Leafs would probably prefer that. The second they get up to the salary cap, they simply invoke Long Term Injured Reserve, and POOF, he's gone from their salary cap. They still pay him his money, but it immediately gives them cap relief for the next five years.

Likewise, for Columbus, they were stuck paying Nathan Horton his contract no matter what, thanks to the revelation that his contract was not insured. I'm not here to debate the wisdom of signing that contract without insurance (my gut says "not wise") because I'm not a business major who dabbles in insurance underwriting. And, in some ways, having that argument is like having a hangover and blaming the food you're eating for breakfast for making you sick. The damage was done long ago.

So, Toronto and Columbus both are still paying the exact same amount of money they were paying before: however, they both get something for their money now that they weren't getting yesterday: cap relief for Toronto, and an actual hockey player for Columbus. In that regard, both teams did a great job swapping out their problems for "solutions".

But, for Columbus, there's a whole other aspect to this.

The Hockey Trade

This is where it gets muddy. For Toronto, it's open and shut: there is no hockey aspect to this trade. They're rebuilding. They got salary cap relief, and they traded a player who was underperforming for a player who will never play for them. They are bad and are planning on scorching the earth. There's no hockey down-side to the deal.

For Columbus, there's a lot more happening. On one hand, they get an actual hockey player--and one who has had some level of success in league previously in his career--for the money they were previously paying to a player who was never going to play for them again. On the surface and in a vacuum, that's a win.

But, what kind of player are they getting? At their peaks, they're getting a player not as good as the one they gave up. In real-world terms, they're getting a player who will play, but who has struggled mightily under the expectations of the contract he signed. He isn't the first, and won't be the last, to do that.

Is he a hockey black hole? Is he a Balrog? It's hard to argue that he hasn't been a colossal failure in Toronto in the context of the contract he signed and the expectations coming in. But, that's not on us, Columbus. Let's try to figure out what kind of player he MIGHT be, assuming he gets a fresh(ish) start here in Columbus. To do that, we HAVE to take the contract out of it. After all, Columbus is paying the money either way; they've chosen to pay it to a guy who can play.

So, how well can he play?

Clarkson's played 544 NHL games, and has scored 112 goals (0.21 gpg) and added 84 assists (0.36 ppg). That said, his last two years in Toronto have been abysmal, to the tune of 15 goals and 11 assists in 118 games. That's 0.13 gpg and 0.22 ppg, which are obviously big departures from his career averages.

But, maybe in looking at that, we can also look at the inverse: before he got to the giant sucking sound that is the Maple Leafs, he had 97 goals and 73 assists in 426 games with New Jersey, good for 0.23 gpg and 0.40 ppg. Both of those are at or above his career averages.

This begs the question: is Clarkson bad, or is Toronto bad?

There's no arguing Clarkson's numbers with the Leafs: based on his contract, they're B-A-D bad. But, the glimmer of hope for Columbus is that we offer him a fresh start, and a system most likely more suited to his strengths. Let's dig a little deeper.

During the past two seasons, Toronto has posted THE SECOND WORST Even Strength CorsiFor numbers in the league. In Clarkson's first season there, the ENTIRE TEAM had an EV CorsiFor% of 42.8%. THAT IS HORRIFIC. It improved this season, but not by much: so far at EV, their CorsiFor% is 46.3%. Their total over that span? 44.3%. Only Buffalo has been worse.

By comparison, Columbus has been an aggregate 48.6% over that span. Not a ton better, but better none-the-less. More importantly, when the team is healthy and playing the way we know they can, they are much better: to wit, in the '13-'14 season, Columbus sported an EV CorsiFor% of 50.0%.

In Clarkson's first full season there, no Toronto forward who played more than 50 games had an EV CorsiOn better than -10.74. Clarkson's was -17.16, but goal scorers like Phil Kessel and Joffrey Lupul weren't much better, at -12.19 and -15.65 respectively. This season, the team numbers are slightly better overall (Nazem Kadri got to a postive CorsiOn!!), and Clarkson's has been much better at -9.44. He's scored 10 goals this season, too, so it's not like he's a giant black hole. He's merely a slightly more stinky turd on top of a giant pile of crap up in Toronto.

For whatever reason, he's become Public Enemy #1 for it. One can only assume it's because of his contract. But, we don't care about his contract in the here-and-now, because it was already a sunk cost for us.

Let's go back and look at his New Jersey days, though. It's safe to argue that New Jersey's style of play is a better comparison to the Jackets, in my opinion.

Clarkson became an every day player in New Jersey beginning in the fall of 2007. From that point until he left as a free agent, the Devils were a strong even strength possession team, boasting an EV CorsiFor% of 52.1%, which was good for sixth-best in the league. Similarly, Clarkson was a fairly strong possession player. His six full seasons in New Jersey produced the following EV CorsiFor% for Clarkson:

SeasonEV CorsiFor%EV CorsiOnEV GoalsEV Points
'07-'0850.5%0.84819
'08-'0950.0%0.561325
'09-'1046.3%-6.94616
'10-'1151.9%3.741116
'11-'1251.0%2.701826
'12-'1361.2%23.03814


It should be noted that Clarkson missed almost half of the '09-'10 season due to injury. During Clarkson's final three years in New Jersey, he was very much a driver of possession, especially (of course) in his contract year. He also scored 57 goals in those last three combined seasons.

In short, David Clarkson was NOT a terrible hockey player before he went to Toronto.

He may never get back to those levels, but suffice it to say he was also on some very solid teams in New Jersey before signing in Toronto. So, is Columbus getting a guy who could help them in their middle six like the player who played six seasons in New Jersey, or is he getting the completely ruined shell of that player spat out by Toronto yesterday?

There's no way of knowing, for sure. And, that's where the risk comes in for Columbus. We can look at the player devoid of his contract because of the "sunk cost" nature of it, but then again we can't. Clarkson has a no-movement clause, so for better or worse he's on our roster for the next five seasons after this one.

And that's where the downside comes in: suppose Clarkson is completely unsalvageable. While we would be paying the money either way, Horton would NOT have been playing, and thus wouldn't have been eating up a roster spot AND the corresponding salary cap space. The Jackets, much like Toronto, could simply LTIR Horton to free up the cap space.

With the glut of offensive prospects that are coming in the pipeline, Clarkson becomes a giant $5.25 million road block to a roster spot for someone like Sonny Milano--or Marko Dano or Josh Anderson or Oliver Bjorkstrand or someone we haven't even drafted yet--if he turns out to be completely done as a helpful player. At best, he becomes a $5.25 million bottom six guy, which is still a gross misallocation of resources.

So, while the argument of "we're paying the money regardless!" works today and in the near-term, it may not work in the long term--especially if Clarkson continues to flounder in a new setting. And that is the risk for Columbus: with Horton's contract, you were paying the money, but you knew exactly what you were getting for the next five years: an open roster spot to be filled by someone else of your choosing, be it a young player coming up and another signee. With Clarkson, we don't know what we're getting, both now and four or five years from now when there will be plenty of contenders coming up for that roster spot.

Think of it this way: five years from now, if there's no room for Josh Anderson because we're stuck paying Clarkson to play on the fourth line, even that in my eyes is a loss.

Summary

Today, this trade makes business sense for both teams. They don't save any money in any real terms, but Toronto gets salary cap relief and Columbus gets actual production for their money.

Tomorrow, well, we'll have to see. What kind of production will the Jackets get for that money? Suffice it to say that, unless Clarkson literally starts shooting pucks into his own net, it will be more than what they got from Horton. That's a small win. It also has the potential to be a bigger win if Clarkson can finally take a breath, rediscover even a moderate amount of what he showed in New Jersey, and become a 15-20 goal guy again for Columbus.

Five years from now? Anybody's guess. If Clarkson rejuvenates his career, Columbus will have won long-term. If he's serviceable, the Jackets still win. If he bombs and ends up being a giant road-block for a younger, better player, Columbus loses.

The reason I think Columbus has more to lose over the entirety of this trade is that Toronto has basically nothing left to lose. They pay Horton not to play, they get LTIR relief if they spend to the cap, and that's it. Columbus gets something for their investment, but that something could be a help or a hinderance. The long-term down-side is much worse in that regard.

BUT

Jackets fan, it's not the best trade ever, but it's not THAT bad. Ignore the braying of the jackasses from Toronto who are completely oblivious to how disgusting their team has been the past two seasons and look at it as objectively as possible. For Columbus to completely lose this trade, a lot of additional bad things would have to happen. We have no way of knowing if those things will happen, so let's just wait and see before we completely go off the deep end.

Canadiens vs Maple Leafs game preview

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Can the Habs earn a third straight win over the rebuilding Maple Leafs?

All season long, the Canadiens have relied on the Vezina Hart-calibre play of their goaltender, Carey Price. He has been the team's best player, and month after month, his numbers get stronger. Like any other team, the Habs have a number of flaws, but with Price as their insurance policy, they find themselves only four points back (with a game in hand) in the Presidents' Trophy race. Carey Price has been more than the great equalizer - he's been an unstoppable force, pushing the Habs to top of the league.

Lately, however, he's begun to falter. Well, by ridiculous Price standards at least.


This week, Price has allowed a total of three goals on 56 shots, earning a save percentage of .931 against the St. Louis Blues, and .926 against the Columbus Blue Jackets. While lesser goaltenders may be satisfied with these marks, these merely elite numbers are a departure from the superhuman .935 standard that Price has upheld this season.

With a tougher stretch of schedule looming and the playoffs on the horizon, the Canadiens need Carey Price to be in top form. Matched up against a team firmly in sell mode, this evening's affair should be a perfect opportunity for the Habs star to reclaim his game.

How to Watch

Start time: 7:00 PM ET
In Canada (French): TVA
In Canada (English): CBC
Elsewhere: NHL GameCenter, NHL Center Ice

Tale of the Tape

CanadiensStatisticMaple Leafs
40-16-5Record25-31-5
7-1-2L10 Record3-6-1
49.4Score-Adjusted Fenwick %45.6
167Goals For170
135
Goals Against185
1.215v5 Goal Ratio0.89
16.8PP%18.8
85.8PK%81.6

Know Your Enemy

It's been only two weeks since the Habs last saw the Maple Leafs, but the team already looks different. The players we anticipated would be traded last game, Mike Santorelli and Cody Franson, are now gone. Both were packaged up and flipped to Nashville, a team gearing up for a run deep into the postseason.

The same fate has befallen Daniel Winnik, as the Leafs cashed in their rental winger for futures. Then, in another future-orientated deal, the Buds shipped out salary cap burden David Clarkson, taking back Nathan Horton's pay cheque, but not his cap hit.

In the short-term, these moves make the Leafs a weaker team. The club is forced to substitute AHLers Korbinian Holzer, Zach Sill, and Brandon Kozun for the useful NHLers they just traded away. Price, meanwhile, is forced to find a new victim in front of his net.

Looking further ahead, though, these moves belie a change in philosophy in Toronto. They're executing the creative financial tactics that good teams use to keep their budget balanced. They're cashing out players that have more value on the market than on the team. And they seem to recognize the value of the good players already playing for the franchise, as Nazem Kadri and Jake Gardiner are no longer the subjects of frequent trade rumours.

It would behoove the Habs to enjoy their game tonight, and earn two readily available points. If the Leafs' administration keeps working the way it has for the last few months, games against Toronto are about to get more difficult.

Last Time Out

It was the play of several now absent players that characterized last game. Winnik got the Leafs only goal in regulation, while Santorelli registered their only shootout marker. Clarkson may be gone, but his influence on the Habs has extended well past James van Riemsdyk's game-closing shootout attempt of a fortnight ago.

The former #71 left last game early, sent to the showers after boarding Sergei Gonchar, and earning a game misconduct. Gonchar hasn't seen another shift since the hit, but fortunately he looks ready to return. Even better, the play of the speedy and skilled Kozun doesn't exactly fit into the Clarkson dirt bag mold, so the veteran rearguard should be safe to make his return. Coincidental to Clarkson's departure, and for the first time in what feels like forever, it looks like the Leafs likely won't dress a player prone to dropping the gloves this evening.

That game-ending shot sent wide by JVR was preceded by an unbelievable deke by Alex Galchenyuk, and a deft display of puck control by David Desharnais, both of which ended up behind Jonathan Bernier.  Tonight's Toronto squad may be buoyed by the talents of Joffrey Lupul, who was nursing an injury last time out, but on paper, this should be great opportunity to take home two points.

Many young Canadiens talents banded together to terrorize Toronto last time out, but two of them, Jarred Tinordi and Christian Thomas, will not be available this evening. Instead,  with his first two NHL goals under his belt, it looks like the Habs will have to rely on Jacob de la Rose for some secondary scoring.

New Jersey Devils at Columbus Blue Jackets: Game Preview #63

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Tonight, the New Jersey Devils will play their final game before Monday's trade deadline. There is a very good chance that some of the Devils in tonight's game will be on the move on Monday. This preview will take a look at both the Devils and Blue Jackets ahead of tonight's action.

Tonight is the back end of a back-to-back for the Devils and could be the final game for some players in a Devils sweater.

The Time: 5:00 PM EST

The Broadcast: TV - MSG+2; Radio - 660 AM & 101.9 FM WFAN

The Matchup: The New Jersey Devils (25-27-10) at the Columbus Blue Jackets (26-30-4; SBN Blog: The Cannon)

The Last Devils Game: Last night the Devils came back from a 2 goal deficit to force overtime, but ultimately fell to the Bruins. John has a full recap here where he writes how the Devils struggled in the first half of the game before finding their stride. Once again it was Cory Schneider stepping up to keep the Devils in the game was they were routinely out-shot and out-attempted. Travis Zajac had a power play goal off some nice passes from Adam Henrique and Jacob Josefson to start the comeback. Jordin Tootoo remained hot, with scouts in attendance, as he scored the Devils second goal off a nice feed from Mike Cammalleri with Adam Larsson also getting an assist. However, the Devils would fall in overtime when a failed attack by Patrik Elias and Martin Havlat resulted in a Bruins odd man rush that would finish with Ryan Spooner netting the game winner.

The Last Blue Jackets Game: Columbus lost to Montreal 5-2 on Thursday. Matt Wagner has this recap available on The Cannon. Brandon Dubinsky and Marko Dano had the goals for the Blue Jackets. David Savard assisted on both goals. Curtis McElhinney made 22 saves on 26 shots in the loss. Both teams had 27 shots each and went 0/2 on the power play.

The Last Devils-Blue Jackets Game: These two teams have only met once this season, back on November 1st, where the Devils came through with a 3-2 victory. Here is the NHL boxscore from that game. Marek Zidlciky had a goal and an assist. Adam Henrique and Adam Larsson each had a goal while guys like Michael Ryder, Damon Severson, Jaromir Jagr, Bryce Salvador, and Patrik Elias had an assist each. Cory Schneider made 32 saves on 34 shots as his counterpart Anton Forsberg made 26 saves on 29 shots. That game was so long ago that it featured Damien Brunner, Reid Boucher, and Ryane Clowe.

The Goal: To repeat what has been said many, many times this season, just play simple hockey. Execute the basics. Columbus is one of the few teams below New Jersey in the standings so they on about the same level. Simple entries/exits, clean passes, and disciplined hockey should be enough to keep the Devils in contention to pick up the win. Columbus (47.1 CF%) and New Jersey (47.1 CF%) are both weak possession teams so this is an opportunityfor the Devils to not be the team pinned back for the bulk of the game. Let's see if they can capitalize on it.

About Columbus: As I mentioned earlier, Columbus is one of the few teams below the Devils in the standings and they both have similar CF%'s. This is pretty much a matchup of two bad teams. As you can tell be the War-On-Ice usage graphs for the forwards and defensemen, the amount of injuries and overall struggle has the team a bit of a mess. On special teams, Columbus ranks 7th in PP% (20.5%) and 17th in PK% (81%). Nick Foligno leads the team in goals (23) and points (55) and is tied for the lead in assists (32) with Ryan Johansen who has the 2nd most points on the team (53). Scott Hartnell, James Wisniewski, and Jack Johnson round out the top 5 in points. The top pairing of Jack Johnson and David Savard is averaging over 22:30 a night while Ryan Johansen leads the forwards at 19:39.

Blue Jackets Injuries: The Blue Jackets have been hit hard by injuries all season. According to The Columbus Dispatch, on Thursday they placed LW Matt Calvert on the injured reserved because of a concussion. C Brandon Dubinsky returned to practice on Friday after leaving Thursday's game early. As the Dispatch notes, they now have 9 players out injured.

An Old Friend:David Clarkson is set to make his Blue Jackets debut against his original NHL team. He is expected to play somewhere in the top 9 according to The Columbus Dispatch. Dan P. of The Cannon has a post breaking down the Horton-Clarkson trade that took the hockey world by surprise on Thursday. I personally hope that Clarkson can turn his career around in Columbus - just don't do it against the Devils.

Who Starts for Columbus?:Sergei Bobrovsky is coming back from a groin injury and expected to skate by himself in the morning to see if he can play tonight, according to The Columbus Dispatch. He hasn't appeared in a game since 1/21. In 32 starts he has a .913 SV%, 2.85 GAA, 16 Quality Starts, and a Goals Saved Above Average of -0.37. A bit down from his previous years but also a small sample size. Curtis McElhinney has been starting in Bobrovsky's absence and has a .915 SV% in 23 starts. There is also the chance that Oscar Dansk could make his first NHL start on his 21st birthday. He has a .883 SV% in 19 AHL games in his rookie season.

A Daily Reminder Schneider is Awesome:Tom Gulitti confirmed last night that Cory Schneider will start. No matter how the team plays, when he's in net the Devils have a chance to win the game - or at least be competitive. He's currently 4th in SV% (.926) and coming into last night had the 2nd highest amount of Quality Starts (35) and 3rd most Goals Saved Above Average (19.77) according to Hockey Reference.

Is This It?: A handful of Devils are an expiring contracts and could be moved. Marek Zidlicky is the most valuable of these players but has a no-trade clause. Will Lou ask him to waive it? Other guys like Michael Ryder and Martin Havlat  have been out of the line up more often than not recently due to a lack of production and are likely trade candidates, assuming their are teams that would be interested. Do they get a final showcase tonight? Jordin Tootoo is hot lately and may appeal to a playoff team looking for a depth player that can chip in offense here and there, could this be his final game as a Devil?

Your Take: How do you see this game playing out? Are you excited to see David Clarkson with his new club? Are you hoping this is the last game for some Devils players, and if so, which ones? Leave your comments below and thank you for reading!


New Jersey Devils at Columbus Blue Jackets: Game Stream #63

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Tonight, the New Jersey Devils will take on the Columbus Blue Jackets in the final game before the trade deadline.

Tonight is the back end of a back-to-back for the Devils and could be the final game for some players in a Devils sweater.

The Time: 5:00 PM EST

The Broadcast: TV - MSG+2; Radio - 660 AM & 101.9 FM WFAN

The Matchup: The New Jersey Devils (25-27-10) at the Columbus Blue Jackets (26-30-4; SBN Blog: The Cannon)

The Last Devils Game: Last night the Devils came back from a 2 goal deficit to force overtime, but ultimately fell to the Bruins. John has a full recap here where he writes how the Devils struggled in the first half of the game before finding their stride. Once again it was Cory Schneider stepping up to keep the Devils in the game was they were routinely out-shot and out-attempted. Travis Zajac had a power play goal off some nice passes from Adam Henrique and Jacob Josefson to start the comeback. Jordin Tootoo remained hot, with scouts in attendance, as he scored the Devils second goal off a nice feed from Mike Cammalleri with Adam Larsson also getting an assist. However, the Devils would fall in overtime when a failed attack by Patrik Elias and Martin Havlat resulted in a Bruins odd man rush that would finish with Ryan Spooner netting the game winner.

The Last Blue Jackets Game: Columbus lost to Montreal 5-2 on Thursday. Matt Wagner has this recap available on The Cannon. Brandon Dubinsky and Marko Dano had the goals for the Blue Jackets. David Savard assisted on both goals. Curtis McElhinney made 22 saves on 26 shots in the loss. Both teams had 27 shots each and went 0/2 on the power play.

The Last Devils-Blue Jackets Game: These two teams have only met once this season, back on November 1st, where the Devils came through with a 3-2 victory. Here is the NHL boxscore from that game. Marek Zidlciky had a goal and an assist. Adam Henrique and Adam Larsson each had a goal while guys like Michael Ryder, Damon Severson, Jaromir Jagr, Bryce Salvador, and Patrik Elias had an assist each. Cory Schneider made 32 saves on 34 shots as his counterpart Anton Forsberg made 26 saves on 29 shots. That game was so long ago that it featured Damien Brunner, Reid Boucher, and Ryane Clowe.

The Goal: To repeat what has been said many, many times this season, just play simple hockey. Execute the basics. Columbus is one of the few teams below New Jersey in the standings so they on about the same level. Simple entries/exits, clean passes, and disciplined hockey should be enough to keep the Devils in contention to pick up the win. Columbus (47.1 CF%) and New Jersey (47.1 CF%) are both weak possession teams so this is an opportunityfor the Devils to not be the team pinned back for the bulk of the game. Let's see if they can capitalize on it.

About Columbus: As I mentioned earlier, Columbus is one of the few teams below the Devils in the standings and they both have similar CF%'s. This is pretty much a matchup of two bad teams. As you can tell be the War-On-Ice usage graphs for the forwards and defensemen, the amount of injuries and overall struggle has the team a bit of a mess. On special teams, Columbus ranks 7th in PP% (20.5%) and 17th in PK% (81%). Nick Foligno leads the team in goals (23) and points (55) and is tied for the lead in assists (32) with Ryan Johansen who has the 2nd most points on the team (53). Scott Hartnell, James Wisniewski, and Jack Johnson round out the top 5 in points. The top pairing of Jack Johnson and David Savard is averaging over 22:30 a night while Ryan Johansen leads the forwards at 19:39.

Blue Jackets Injuries: The Blue Jackets have been hit hard by injuries all season. According to The Columbus Dispatch, on Thursday they placed LW Matt Calvert on the injured reserved because of a concussion. C Brandon Dubinsky returned to practice on Friday after leaving Thursday's game early. As the Dispatch notes, they now have 9 players out injured.

An Old Friend:David Clarkson is set to make his Blue Jackets debut against his original NHL team. He is expected to play somewhere in the top 9 according to The Columbus Dispatch. Dan P. of The Cannon has a post breaking down the Horton-Clarkson trade that took the hockey world by surprise on Thursday. I personally hope that Clarkson can turn his career around in Columbus - just don't do it against the Devils.

Who Starts for Columbus?:Sergei Bobrovsky is coming back from a groin injury and expected to skate by himself in the morning to see if he can play tonight, according to The Columbus Dispatch. He hasn't appeared in a game since 1/21. In 32 starts he has a .913 SV%, 2.85 GAA, 16 Quality Starts, and a Goals Saved Above Average of -0.37. A bit down from his previous years but also a small sample size. Curtis McElhinney has been starting in Bobrovsky's absence and has a .915 SV% in 23 starts. There is also the chance that Oscar Dansk could make his first NHL start on his 21st birthday. He has a .883 SV% in 19 AHL games in his rookie season.

A Daily Reminder Schneider is Awesome:Tom Gulitti confirmed last night that Cory Schneider will start. No matter how the team plays, when he's in net the Devils have a chance to win the game - or at least be competitive. He's currently 4th in SV% (.926) and coming into last night had the 2nd highest amount of Quality Starts (35) and 3rd most Goals Saved Above Average (19.77) according to Hockey Reference.

Is This It?: A handful of Devils are an expiring contracts and could be moved. Marek Zidlicky is the most valuable of these players but has a no-trade clause. Will Lou ask him to waive it? Other guys like Michael Ryder and Martin Havlat  have been out of the line up more often than not recently due to a lack of production and are likely trade candidates, assuming their are teams that would be interested. Do they get a final showcase tonight? Jordin Tootoo is hot lately and may appeal to a playoff team looking for a depth player that can chip in offense here and there, could this be his final game as a Devil?

Your Take: How do you see this game playing out? Are you excited to see David Clarkson with his new club? Are you hoping this is the last game for some Devils players, and if so, which ones? Leave your comments below and thank you for reading!


Game Recap 61: Shooting Blanks

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The Blue Jackets came out hard, played mostly solid hockey with a makeshift lineup, but could not solve Cory Schneider, falling 2 - 0.

Coming into this late afternoon affair at Nationwide Arena, the Blue Jackets got some good news in the form of the activation of Sergei Bobrovsky. Although Bob would not start this one, it was a positive note heading into the final 21 games. That was the only good news, however, as both Brandon Dubinsky and Matt Calvert are out for an extended period, due to concussion-like symptoms. Newly  acquired David Clarkson took the wing on the top line with Ryan Johansen and Nick Foligno, while Brian Gibbons was called up to fill the remaining void. So, on the bright side, Columbus had no defensemen playing forward on this night.

With the Devils being 28th in the NHL in scoring, and the Blue Jackets sitting 24th, this did not figure to be a high scoring affair, and the game did not disappoint in that regard.  For obvious reasons, we'll dispatch with the period-by-period recitation, and get down to the essentials.

Addressing one of the big questions entering the evening. David Clarkson looked like a player figuring out where his new teammates were, but was very involved in the play, showed a nose for the puck, and did nothing to earn the ire of the assembled crowd of over 17,000.  He ended the night with 2 shots on goal, 3 shots blocked, 3 shots missed, 4 hits and 1 blocked a shot of his own. His 16:13 of ice time trailed only Johansen, Foligno, Atkinson and Wennberg, and he saw some meaningful time on the power play.  That included a nasty deflection in first that had Schneider beaten, but skittered just outside the post.  Little did anyone realize that Clarkson's effort was the closest a Blue Jacket would come to scoring all night.

Unlike recent games, Columbus came out strong.  They skated hard, played smart defense and registered the first nine shots of the game.  In fact, New Jersey did not register a shot until just over five minutes were left in the period.  However, Cory Schneider had the answer for everything the Blue Jackets could throw at him. In his post game remarks, coach Todd Richards stated that he "liked our first period."  I'd amend that by saying that I loved the first eleven minutes of the first.  The Blue Jackets did not register a shot for the remainder of the period.  In the meantime, New Jersey scored on their third shot of the game.  With 4:13 left, Andy Greene took the puck down to McElhinney's right, and simply beat Curtis high glove.  No screen, no deception -- McElhinney simply didn't get the glove up fast enough.  Patrik Elias earned the assist, and Columbus was once again compelled to come from behind.  The period ended 9 - 6 in shots on goal, and you had the feeling that the Blue Jackets would eventually get rewarded.  Your feeling would have been wrong.

The second was not a good period for the Blue Jackets. While they managed to square the shots on goal for the period at 8 - 8 , much of the period was spent in their own zone, and McElhinney had to make some strong saves to keep this one within a single goal.  Still, there were many positives, as Columbus dominated the face-off circle (33 - 17 for the night), and had more takeaways and blocked shots.  They just could not get the puck to enter the net.

In the third, the Blue Jackets put 16 shots on goal, while allowing only five for the Devils.  They were hampered by an ill-timed holding penalty on Dalton Prout with 4:20 left in the period, which took away a much-needed two minutes of continued offensive pressure.  While the penalty was easily killed (the PK unit was perfect for the night), that time could not be regained.  The power play did not strike pay dirt, but they generated eight shots with the extra man, moved the puck well once in the zone, and just could not beat Schneider.  Their entrances left something to be desired, but that was largely attributable to the overall raggedness in execution that is the natural extension of once again having to adjust to new faces and new roles on the ice.  Also give New Jersey credit for playing their customary shut-down game to a tee.  They clogged the middle, challenged the puck high in the zone, and made few real mistakes.  Artem Anisimov had perhaps the best even strength chances, but Schneider denied him with two outstanding saves.

The final margin was provided by Travis Zajac's empty netter with thirty seconds left in the game.  Stephen Gionta and Mike Cammalleri had the helpers, and Schneider had another shutout in his pocket.

This one will provide every sector with the fan base with some fodder.  The pessimists will focus on the final result and point to it as proof the team sucks and should be dismantled.  The optimists will note the statistical domination as proof the club is on the right track.  The pragmatists will cite a solid effort under trying circumstances, but note that injuries have simply sapped the chemistry and essence of the club for this season.

Count me among the pragmatists.  There were a lot of good individual efforts out there tonight, but a hot goaltender in the other crease and just enough errors in execution to stifle some opportunities conspired to create the final tally.  Back at it in 24 hours in Pittsburgh.  Richards would not commit to a goalie for tomorrow night's tilt, but one would thing that Bob might provide a needed boost in emotion, as well as skill.  Stay tuned.

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