Archive for October, 2006
links for 2006-10-27
10/26 Notes
Update (4:02 PM): … In a blog post this afternoon, Helene St. James reports that Johan Franzen left practice early because of a charley-horse and may not be ready to play tomorrow night in Dallas.
She also says Samuelsson did not practice, and she doesn’t think it’s likely he’ll be back in time to play against the Stars (seems like a pretty good assumption).
Lastly, she reports that Brad Norton returned to the ice for his first full practice since sustaining a shoulder injury last Wednesday in Anaheim, but has not been pulled off the injured reserve list yet. When he does come off the IR, the Wings will be over the roster limit and someone will have to be sent down to Grand Rapids. The most likely candidate is Filppula because he does not have to clear waivers, like Norton, Hudler, or Kopecky would have to do.
link via Slapshots. - Matt
… John Wawrow of the Detroit News has a piece on Danny Markov today in the Red Wings Notebook. He begins by describing Markov’s hit on Ethan Moreau in the Edmonton game on Saturday.
“Saturday’s open-ice collision with Edmonton’s Ethan Moreau, which dislodged Moreau from the puck and resulted in a breakaway goal by Pavel Datsyuk, was a snapshot of why the Wings wanted Markov.”
Only problem is, that hit was on Jarret Stoll. Maybe Wawrow links Moreau to the play because he dislocated his shoulder when pulling his arm back for a sucker punch on the Wings defenseman in revenge for the perfectly legal check on his teammate. Now, he’s out until for a few months because it turns out he needs surgery.
… Wawrow also provides a little update on Mikael Samuelsson’s shoulder injury. Sammy is, “not on the radar screen,” according to Babcock, since he has not practiced or skated since he sustained the injury on the 18th in Anaheim.
He’s been taken off The Hockey Recap’s injured players list, however, though I’m not sure what they’re basing that on, given the Babcock quote. Wawrow does say the Wings could be without Samuelsson, “for a few more days,” so that may be it.
… Helene St. James profiles Valtteri Filppula in today’s Freep Wings Corner. Filppula played on a line last night with Kris Draper and Henrik Zetterberg, and looked pretty decent. It was a show of confidence by Mike Babcock, who had him playing with Jiri Hudler and Tomas Kopecky on Saturday. You have to wonder how much longer Brad Norton is going to stay “injured,” with Babcock’s new favorite young player Valtteri taking his place temporarily.
… The Wings beat the Sharks 2-1 last night and looked pretty good while doing it. They outshot San Jose 39-24 and could have won by a wider margin had Evgeni Nabokov not been so strong. Still, it’s a little disconcerting that the team leader in goals is a defenseman (Mathieu Schneider) and not one of our skilled forwards.
Robert Lang has been pretty strong so far this season and will hopefully continue to be so.
Neither Pavel Datsyuk nor Henrik Zetterberg were particularly noticeable last night but I didn’t watch the game too closely. Helene St. James says they had their chances, even if they didn’t score, so maybe there’s nothing to worry about there.
The power play unit finally scored, which was good to see. They didn’t get that many opportunities to demonstrate their new PP strategy, though, and should have, which wasn’t a good thing. Both teams got away with too much last night.
One thing I like from this year’s Wings team is that they seem to be more physical. They were outhitting the Sharks last night, which is not something they usually do against anybody. They had noticeable intensity and will be well off if they keep that up.
Dominik Hasek looked weak on the lone Sharks goal but it was a defensive lapse more than anything else and he was strong for the rest of the game.
It was good to see them come home and get a win. Now it’s time to see if they’ll be able to build on it.
They play the Stars on Friday in Dallas before travelling to St. Louis to play the Blues on Saturday.
I didn’t do a full game summary so here are the Freep and DetNews reports, as well as the boxscore.
A Response to Damien Cox
In a column on ESPN today, Damien Cox adds to a growing collection of pieces declaring the fall of the “once-mighty” (a term commonly used in such things) Detroit Red Wings, who, we’re told, are on the fast track to again becoming the Dead Things. He pretty much bases this assertion on the fact that the Wings have lost four games already this season, when it took them over a month to do the same last year.
According to Cox, the Wings no longer intimidate anyone because they don’t have any personnel capable of intimidating opponents in the way they used to. By this he means they no longer have the ability to ice the “swashbuckling combination of passing and shooting and stickhandling and speed,” that had them going into “games with a one-goal lead just because the opposition knows it doesn’t have the same talent quotient as the Red Wings.” And the reason they don’t have the ability is because they have lost most of the big-name players they had, leaving the team a lineup that is, “by comparison, pretty darn ordinary.”
Paralleling the Wings’ “fall” is that of the Avs and the Devils, the latter of which, Cox says, has been kept from mediocrity by the merits of Lou Lamoriello and Martin Brodeur. The Avs and Devils, however, still have their mainstays, which in Colorado is embodied in captain Joe Sakic. The Wings, on the other hand, are doomed because of the “serious leadership vacuum” left by Steve Yzerman’s retirement and Brendan Shanahan’s signing with the Rangers. The Wings are seeing holes in other areas, Cox says, particularly in the defense, which will become depleted after Lidstrom, Schneider, and Chelios leave (when’s that going to be, Damien?).
Okay, enough summary. Here are some comments in response.
First of all, the Wings have never been the fastest team in the league. In fact, one of the most common complaints of Wings fans is that the team is too old and slow. For years, their strength was puck possession, which did not necesitate speed, but put a premium on skill.
Second, the Wings’ mostly young lineup is by no means ordinary. Henrik Zetterberg, Pavel Datsyuk, Jason Williams, Niklas Kronwall, Jiri Hudler, Valtteri Filppula, Tomas Kopecky, Brett Lebda, and Johan Franzen are plenty extraordinary. They may not strike fear in the opposition like Steve Yzerman, Sergei Fedorov, Nick Lidstrom, Brendan Shanahan, Brett Hull, and the Grind Line used to, but they are a major part of the League’s future and are good players now, as well. Cox, to be fair, covers this a little later in the column but not after making some ridiculous assertions.
Third, the Sharks and Ducks are not powerhouse teams. That Cox would label the latter a powerhouse is more indicative of the hockey media’s love affair with Chriscott Niederprongermeyer than just about anything I’ve seen so far. As for the Sharks, they’ve been “on the rise” for so long that I no longer expect great things of them.
Fourth, Cox makes a number of references to the Wings’ 2002 Cup-winning squad (ignoring the 1998 and 1997 teams), which pretty much explains why he’s so shocked that the Wings are where they are now. The 2002 season was very much a special case and was the only time the Wings came close to achieving the reputation of absolute dominance the media has given them. In that year, their roster truly was stacked and all sorts of platitudes were justified. In other years, the Wings were just a talented team with a solid core that demonstrated wide varience in how they performed when it counted.
Cox’s memory of a Detroit team stacked with marquee players has to come mostly from the 2001-2002 season. Not to say they did not have marquee players in other seasons but they had a lot more players Cox would call “ordinary,” (i.e. Doug Brown, Jamie Macoun, Tomas Sandstrom, Joey Kocur, etc.). Where the Wings are now is, to me, not vastly different than where they were in the early 90s, when Lidstrom, Fedorov, Konstantinov, Osgood, and Kozlov were proto-stars.
Again, the Wings have had a bad start, and it is worrisome. However, they still have a pretty strong team and ought to remain competitive, once they get out of this rut. Personally, I’d rather see them fall a little in the standings rather than go into the playoffs on top of the league and complacent. A fourth or fifth place finish (or even lower) may help them rather than hurt them. Someone like Cox wouldn’t remember it but the Wings won the Cup in 1997 and 1998 but didn’t finish on top of the regular season standings (they were third both years).
They just need to get their offense on track.
Wings’ Offensive Woes
So this is the first post on the new On the Wings website address, and my first post using WordPress. This post will be an exercise of me learning how to use WordPress, while also looking at the Wings’ offensive troubles this season.
When I looked at the conference standings this morning, I saw the Wings at 12th in the Western Conference and 4th in the Central. I was also surprised to see the Wings at 20 goals for, and 21 goals against – I can’t remember the last time the Wings were being outscored in regular season goals. The past three games, the Wings have lost 4-1, 5-1, 3-1, against the Ducks, Sharks, and Oilers, respectively. It was certainly a tough road trip for the Wings, who went 1-3 out on the West Coast, and scored only 6 goals in 4 games.
So who is not producing like they should be this season? Datsyuk and Zetterberg are the most obvious players not meeting high expectations. Datsyuk has 2 goals and 2 assists in 8 games, with only 11 shots on goal in that span. Kopecky has more shots (13) in only 5 games played, and obviously much less ice time. The bottom line is that Datsyuk is not getting enough shots, and needs to be more greedy on the offensive end of the ice. Zetterberg has 2 goals and 1 assist in 8 games played, with 26 shots – a shooting percentage of 7.7%. In perspective, Datsyuk had a shooting percentage of 19.3% and Zetterberg had a shooting percentage of 14.4% in 2005-2006. You would expect most forwards getting a lot of shots to score at a minimum 11-15%, so Zetterberg needs to get himself in that range, and soon: 7.7% shooting is not acceptable. Note: Datsyuk tends to have a higher percentage than the range of 11-15%, based on his passing the puck in most players’ shooting situations.
A lot of the offensive troubles are due to special teams. The Wings are ranked 27th on the power play, going only 4/46. On the penalty kill, the Wings are ranked 24th, killing 41/53 chances. The Oct 19 San Jose game certainly didn’t help, with the Sharks going 5/12 on the power play, accounting for all 5 of their goals in their 5-1 win.
Let’s hope the Wings turn the ship around when they play the Sharks Wednesday night at JLA.
Great resource: The Hockey Recap
Filppula Called Up
The Red Wings today called up forward Valterri Filppula after the injury to Brad Norton. Norton has a left shoulder injury suffered in last night’s game against Anaheim. If he arrived in time, he could be in the lineup tonight. In two games with Grand Rapids, Filppula has recorded one goal and one assist, with a rating of +1.
Also, Brett Lebda will replace Anreas Lilja tonight.
Malik: Wings’ Foul-Out Endemic Of An Arrogant Organization
George Malik continues his practice of posting excellant columns on Kukla’s Korner with this critique of the Wings’ PR department. He gets a lot right in the first section, where he accuses the organization of arrogance. I do think, however, he somewhat overestimates the response the team would receive if they were to change its ways. Hockeytown has become more and more Pistonstown and Tigerstown lately, and I suspect it will be hard to return to the glory days of Wings fanship.