Monthly Archive for February, 2007Page 5 of 6

Wings 7, Flames 4

Update (5:15 PM): I had written and email to Ansar Khan because I had been wondering why the Wings called up Howard without making sure he would play a game, given the fact that he’s just returned from an injury and could use the playing time. He responded thus (in part):

I’m guessing they called up Howard instead of Liv because they wanted to see how MacDonald would play Sunday before declaring him the starter in Philly. If MacDonald would have s#!t the bed against Calgary, they surely would have started Howard against the Flyers. In that case, it would have been kind of awkward to suddenly send Liv back down to GR after the Flames game and rush Howard to Philly. Howard wouldn’t have been able to fly out with the team Sunday night and would have had to fly to Philly Monday morning, not a good thing.

That makes sense, and if I’d have checked, I would have seen that Jimmy wouldn’t have played even if he had stayed in GR. The Griffins don’t play until Friday, so the question of lost playing time is moot. - Matt

Update (2:15 PM): Ted Kulfan writes on the Detroit News Wings blog that Joey MacDonald will in fact start tonight, contradicting his earlier report. Also, Danny Markov apparently will not be back. - Matt

The Wings won a wild one last night, beating the Calgary Flames 7-4 and extending their home-win streak to 12 games. It was much more of a blowout than the score indicates, as the Flames controlled play for only about 3:00 in the third period, scoring three of their goals then, when the Wings had let up. It was as much a case of the Wings dominating as it was of the Flames playing bantam hockey.

Joey MacDonald was in net for the Wings and hardly got any work through two periods. He looked steady, though, when he did face a shot, and made the stop when needed. When the Flames started scoring, the first two goals were the result of bad defense, but the third was a little weak. All in all, Joey had a strong game, and it was good to see the Wings’ take the task of defending for him seriously.

The first couple minutes of the game were pretty choppy as there were a couple stoppages due to off-sides and icings. At 3:03, play stopped again for a Stepha Yelle elbowing penalty and the Wings got their first power play. The Wings didn’t do a lot with it and they had to be careful with picking the puck up in their own zone as the Flames were forechecking hard. At 4:54, Robert Lang took his customary hooking penalty and we got 9 seconds of 4-on-4 hockey before a Calgary power play. The Flames had trouble setting up and the Wings did a good job of killing it off.

The Wings got on the board at 8:43 after Miikka Kiprusoff misplayed the puck behind the net on a slow shoot-in by Dan Cleary. Jason Williams picked it up and saw Henrik Zetterberg in the high slot. He sent it to him and Hank wasted little time releasing a snap shot that beat Kiprusoff inside the left post. Kiprusoff had taken his sweet time getting back, but should have been set. It’s not often you see him beaten like that.

The Wings struck again four minutes later. Zetterberg took the puck in on a nice rush, distracting the defense by the right point, before dishing the puck to a streaking Tomas Holmstrom in the middle. Homer didn’t get all he wanted on his shot, but Kiprusoff didn’t control the rebound and Pavel Datsyuk was able to get his stick on it. He slammed it into the net and made it 2-0 Wings at 12:44.

Right after the goal, Johan Franzen nearly made it 3-0 as he hit the post on a shot down low. Kiprusoff was slow to react and Johan had a half-empty net to shoot at, but couldn’t finish.

They did get a third goal not long after that, as Robert Lang, Jason Williams, and Dan Cleary forced a faceoff at 13:48. Four seconds later, Mathieu Schneider’s shot careened off Dion Phaneuf and into the net to make it 3-0 Wings. By that time, Jim Playfair had seen enough and Kiprusoff was pulled in favor of Jamie McLennan. It was very much an uncharacteristic game for Kiprusoff, who seems unbeatable whenever the Wings play him.

The Wings didn’t waste much time before testing McLennan. Within a minute, Datsyuk and Zetterberg flew into the zone, with Hank dishing the puck off to Pavel, whose shot rang off the corner junction.

The rest of the period consisted mainly of the Flames giving up the puck and the Wings getting chances as a result. Zetterberg, Datsyuk, and Holmstrom seemed to be out there every other shift, but they didn’t look tired at all as they continued to dominate Calgary.

Continue reading ‘Wings 7, Flames 4′

GameDay: vs. Calgary (29-18-8, 66 Pts) 6:00 ET

Update (5:35 PM): Looks like it was Jimmy Howard that got the call, not Stefan Liv. Maybe Joey won’t get two starts after all. It’d be a real waste for Jimmy to sit on the bench after having just returned from an injury. Given that, I wouldn’t think they’d call him up if they weren’t intending to play him.  - Matt

Tonight is the third of four games between these teams this season. The series stands at 1-1, with the Wings winning the first meeting 3-2 on November 1st and the Flames getting revenge with a win on November 17th, 4-1. The fourth game will take place on March 20th in Calgary.

The Northwest Division-leading Flames are 2-1-2 thus far in February and have managed at least a point in nine of their last ten games. They beat Vancouver 3-2 on the 3rd, but have lost each game since, including matchups against Chicago (SO), Columbus, and Buffalo (SO). Tonight will be the last in a three-stop road trip for the Flames, who have a three-game homestand after this.

The Flames made a splash on the trade market yesterday when they dealt defenseman Andrew Ference and forward Chuck Kobasew to Boston in exchange for blueliner Brad Stuart and forward Wayne Primeau. Stuart was one of the most sought-after defensemen said to be on the market and it’s pretty impressive that Calgary was able to lock him up two weeks before the trade deadline. He should be an immediate help to the Flames, whose defense will be even deeper. He and Primeau are expected to be in the lineup tonight.

Miikka Kiprusoff will be in net tonight for the Flames.

The Wings had a five-game winning streak extending back to January 28th ended by a 1-0 loss to St. Louis on Thursday. It was the first time they had been shut out since January 7, 2004 when the Bruins won 3-0. They’ll try to get right back in the saddle tonight before heading out on a three-game road trip that will take them to Philadelphia, Dallas, and Phoenix. I’m interested in the Flyers game, which is tomorrow, because we’ll get to see Peter Forsberg in action.

Detroit is three points behind the Predators for the Central Division lead. Nashville, surprisingly enough, lost last night to the Kings at home, 4-1, and now have a couple days off before they play a tough San Jose team on the 14th.

Joey MacDonald will be in net tonight as Dominik Hasek will be resting his wrist, which is inflamed. Dom will sit out at least two games in hopes that the rest, along with some medication, will cause the inflammation to go down. If not, they’ll take another look and consider giving him cortisone.

As of 11:30 AM, the AHL site does not list either Stefan Liv or Jimmy Howard as being called up to serve as MacDonald’s backup. Megan and I were talking about it last night and she pointed out that the Wings will probably call up Liv because they’d rather Jimmy get playing time instead of sitting on the bench for a couple games.

Danny Markov is slated to return tomorrow in Philadelphia, not tonight.

This is an important game for the Wings, who need to get right back to winning after a disheartening loss on Thursday. They’ll have to play better in front of MacDonald than they have been and give him the support he deserves. This is a great opportunity for them to start playing a whole game, as well.

Hasek out with tendonitis

Ansar Khan reports that Dominik Hasek has tendonitis in his right wrist and that he will not play tomorrow against the Flames. Apparently, the belief is that he hurt it while trying to make a poke-check during the Coyotes game on Wednesday. Khan says it’s not broken, but if the pain hasn’t subsided by Monday, Dom may be given a cortisone shot.

Khan only says that Joey MacDonald will be in net tomorrow, but it seems likely to me that Joey may very well play Monday as well since Chris Osgood is not ready to return from his finger injury and neither Jimmy Howard nor Stefan Liv are really NHL-ready. However, one of them will be brought up to fill in as a back-up, at least. We’ll know who it is later tonight after the Griffins’ game against the Iowa Stars.

Well, this is an interesting development. It should be something that can be taken care of, but a wrist problem was the last health issue I ever thought Dom would have.

Also, Bruce MacLeod of the Macomb Daily posted on Hasek’s wrist at Red Wings Central message boards. He didn’t say much of anything different than Khan (except that he and I apparently agree that MacDonald may get two starts), but he has a tidbit on Markov: “Markov skated and felt ok. He won’t play Sunday, but is possible for Monday.”

2/10 Notes

Update (4:00 PM): Taking a page from James Mirtle’s book, I’ve added a section the sidebar (”Other reading”) that will display links to hockey-related items of interest that don’t get blogged here (or that I haven’t yet had time to mention). It’s through Google Reader and is something I’ve wanted to do for a while, but it wasn’t very easy to implement on WordPress blogs until recently. - Matt

… Chuck Gormley continued his “Forsberg watch” for the Courier Post yesterday with another installment. Nothing very new, though Gormley expands on his idea that Forsberg would like to come to Detroit, saying that it’s because

“two of the Red Wings’ top four scorers, defenseman Nicklas Lidstrom and left wing Tomas Holmstrom, are from Sweden.”

I see your point, Mr. Gormley, but three of their top four scorers are from Sweden. Not sure how you missed Henrik Zetterberg.

Anyway, he goes on to say that the Wings may be interested in dealing either Andreas Lilja or Niklas Kronwall as part of the package. Personally, I think that if the Flyers are dumb enough to take a Lilja package (perhaps with Williams), it wouldn’t be such a bad deal. But if they demand someone like Kronwall or Hudler, I’d hope they’d say “no.” There is little use in throwing away two key pieces of the future for a player who may only be with the team until July 1st.

The story that was being reported earlier in this saga was that the Wings would demand that Forsberg sign a contract with them as part of any deal, and that may still be one of their stipulations. However, it doesn’t look like Forsberg would be willing to do so, as there is talk that he’d look to return to Philadelphia after a playoff run with another team. The Wings may decide Forsberg is worth the short-term benefit and hope that they could convince him to stay afterwards, but I think it would be foolish to give away one or more of their future stars in exchange for a player that could retire (if he does sign a long term contract) or bolt (if he doesn’t) at any moment.

Peter Forsberg certainly has the ability, if healthy, to make a huge impact on the team, as Nick Lidstrom told Ted Kulfan yesterday, but, given the likely asking price, it doesn’t seem to me that the Wings have the organizational depth to pursue a deal without really hurting their future.* Now, if Forsberg works out some kind of Hasek-like deal with Philly (”Don’t take too much from them, I want to be able to win.”) or the Flyers get conned into taking Lilja and Williams, it’d be worth it, if he were healthy. That’s a pretty big “if,” in my mind, even though he seems to have found a solution. My question is: will it last or will it be like the other “solutions”?

George Sipple reports that Joey MacDonald will get another start in the coming back-to-back series. It will almost certainly be Monday night in Philadelphia as Dominik Hasek ough to be in net tomorrow against Calgary. Joey is still looking for his first NHL win and hopefully his teammates will show up to play this time around. He’s played extremely well in almost all his games this season, but hasn’t gotten the support he deserves from the skaters.

… Sipple also says that the Wings are concerned about their slow starts in the last nine games. I am too, though I have been impressed by their comeback ability and determination not to give up. Still, they’ll have a much harder time pulling off such comebacks in the playoffs, so hopefully they’ll find motivation to play hard from the first drop of the puck to the buzzer at the end.

… There is some variety to the reports on the nature of Danny Markov’s injury: The Freep calls it a “contusion in his middle back” and claims Piet Van Zant’s authority; the News calls it a “sore shoulder, ribs”; and TSN just calls it a shoulder injury. All three say he’s listed as day-to-day.

*There are those fans who dislike Niklas Kronwall, Jiri Hudler and even Valtteri Filppula for mistakes they make and for their lack of production. This is because we were spoiled by Pavel Datsyuk and Henrik Zetterberg making an immediate impact. We have forgotten that most young players need years to develop and that they aren’t likely to be stars right off the bat. Kronwall, Hudler, and Filppula are very likely to be big names in the League in years to come, but they aren’t going to be that immediately, though I personally think they’re pretty good even now. So, that’s why I say the Wings would be mortgaging their future if they trade any of them away, even though they might not seem so valuble now.

2/9 Notes

Update (10. Feb, 12:45 AM): Over at KK, Chuck Gormley has some more on the Forsberg situation. He believes that if Forsberg decides to ask for a trade to one of a list of teams, his preferences, “would probably be, in order, Detroit (Lidstrom), Vancouver (Naslund), Anaheim and San Jose.”

I’ve heard the Forsberg-Naslund connection talked up a lot (i.e., they’re childhood friends and used to hope to play together again for their hometeam, MoDo - which they did during the lockout), but not one with Lidstrom so much (it must be from their time together on national teams as they’ve never played together professionally). Interesting that Nick may be a bigger pull than Naslund, thought it could be more because of the Wings’ chances than anything else. If it’s true. - Matt

Update (2:50 PM): ESPN’s Scott Burnside has a take on the Mark Messier GM story that’s similar to my reaction, though his commentary is quite a bit less inflammatory than my knee-jerk rhetoric. - Matt

The Wings were shut out for the first time in 176 games last night as the Blues beat them 1-0 in St. Louis. It looks as though they had another slow start to the game and never really recovered, despite strong goaltending by Joey MacDonald. Joey gave them a chance to win by stopping everything except for a freak goal that went in off Chris Chelios.

For Blues fans, the bad news is that Manny Legace was hurt during the second period in a collision with Thomas Holmstrom.

The Wings play Calgary at home next, on Sunday at 6:00 PM ET.

Since I did not see the game and cannot provide a first-hand account, I suggest going to Gorilla Crouch, where Dave will probaby publish one soon, and No Pun Intended, where Steph already has.

… Unfortunately for the Wings, the Predators did not lose last night. They beat the Leafs in a penalty-filled affair in Nashville and are again in the lead by three points. They can go up by five with a win over the Kings on Saturday.

…. Ted Kulfan suggests that Henrik Zetterberg could be in the running for the Selke Trophy this year. I agree, and thought the same thing last year. It’s the young stars in the East that get all the attention, and though they obviously deserve a lot, I’m with Wayne Gretzky in saying Zetterberg is flying under many people’s radar.

… Kulfan and George Sipple of the Free Press both mention the rumor that the Wings are interested in Todd Bertuzzi. I’ll be frank: I would be absolutely appalled if they do end up going that route. You know may recall my opposition toward acquiring Peter Forsberg due to the uncertainty about his health. Well, I’d take Foppa any day over Bertuzzi, ankle problems and all (even more so now that he’s found some kind of workable solution). Ugh. There is no reason to bring Todd and his baggage into the lockerroom. Please Kenny, no Bertuzzi.

Oh, and by the way, the Forsberg rumor is heating up slightly, with the story currently being that he would be willing to waive his no-trade clause for three teams only: Detroit, Anaheim, and Montreal.

Wings 4, Coyotes 2

Update (6:35 PM): I neglected to mention that the Wings can only pass Nashville with a win if the Predators lose to Toronto tonight.  The Leafs are riding a 4-game win streak, while the Preds are 1-3-0 over their last four, but that win came at home and that’s where the game is, starting at 8:00 ET. Keep an eye on that one, folks. - Matt

Update (6:05 PM): Ansar Khan reports that Danny Markov will sit out tonight’s game with an “undisclosed upper body injury,”suffered when Jeremy Roenick hit him into the end boards in the third period last night.

I wrote below that it looked like a rib injury and Khan concurred in an email, though it looks like we may be wrong: Markov was supposed to have an MRI today, which seems to imply there was something to Ted Kulfan’s speculation about the injury being to his left shoulder. As Megan pointed out to me in conversation, if it was his ribs they’d just do an X-ray. For a shoulder injury, they’d check it out with an MRI just like they would with a knee. So, it may be safe to assume that for “upper body” you can read “left shoulder.”

In any case, the Wings aren’t too worried about it and expect Danny back soon, as this quote from Mike Babcock indicates:

“Markie’s tough as a rattlesnake, he’ll bounce back.’’

Andreas Lilja will be in the lineup tonight after being a healthy scratch since Schneider returned on February 2nd. - Matt

The Wings extended their win-streak to five last night as they beat Phoenix 4-2 at home. It honestly wasn’t much of a contest, as the Wings controlled the greater part of the play, but the Coyotes were kept in it by the great goaltending of Curtis Joseph. The former Red Wing made 44 saves, many of which were high-quality, and gave his team a chance to win before Detroit pulled ahead in the third.

Dominik Hasek was in net for the Wings and looked solid. He made 20 saves and didn’t have to work too hard, though he did have to make a good save occasionally. He was the victim of the Wings’ chronic inability to clear the crease on the first goal and of the team’s offensively opportunistic doctrine for defensemen on the second, and can’t really be blamed for either one, though he made a bad gamble on the latter and compounded the problem.

The Wings controlled play from the start, with their early shifts being mostly in the Phoenix zone. Joseph was sharp and made the necessary saves, including a great one on Pavel Datsyuk on a give-and-go with Josh Langfeld before the 4:00 mark. The Coyotes brought the puck the other way and nearly scored when Hasek missed on one of his wandering pokecheck attempts. Chris Gratton sent the puck just wide, however, and the score remained 0-0.

The Coyotes had a light 1-man forecheck going early in the game, but seemed to be dangerously opportunistic. Fortunately, the Wings’ defense was up to the task, as they generally diffused any Coyotes offensive chance.

Pretty early on, it was clear that Henrik Zetterberg had brought his “A” game and was set to have a big night. He had a good scoring chance around the 6:45 mark and continued to create plays for the rest of the game.

Phoenix took a 1-0 lead at 9:06 when Owen Nolan walked out from behind the net and got off a shot on Hasek, which was stopped. There was a rebound, however, and Nolan kept whacking at it as Danny Markov ineffectively pushed him with his arms. Ladislav Nagy ran interference on Mathieu Schneider as Nolan got his stick on the puck, spun, and backhanded it into the net just before Hasek fell on his back to close off the post. It was one of those plays were Nolan would have been on his back had he tried that against most any other team. It was a little sad that even with Markov out there, they couldn’t clear the front of the net. Maybe Dom could have held on to the puck better on the initial shot, but he should have had to.

Henrik Zetterberg had a nice shift following the goal as he kept the puck away from three Coyotes, but nothing came of it. Owen Nolan forced Hasek to come up big soon after with a quick shot in the high slot that was more dangerous than it looked.

Around 13:50, Pavel Datsyuk made a nice takeaway at the Phoenix blueline (just as they got away with having too many men on the ice) and carried the puck into the zone. He centered it to Zetterberg, who had a nice scoring chance as a result, but Joseph stoned him.

The Wings went on the power play at 14:17 and had a couple good opportunities to tie it up, but Joseph was too sharp and they couldn’t get it past him. After the penalty expired, the Coyotes switched to a hard forecheck and forced the Wings on a carry-out attempt that ended up taking maybe 45 seconds as a result.

All in all, the first period wasn’t overly exciting. The Wings looked a little off and the Coyotes looked to have a little more desire, but they didn’t necessarily have the ability to do much with it, despite their lead.

The Wings began the second period with some chances in the first minute or so, but Joseh was equal to the task. Granted, the Wings did a pretty good job of blowing chances, as in the first four minutes, they failed on at least three big ones: first, Cleary’s slow cross-ice pass meant Joseph arrived at the other side of the net long before Lang could one-time the puck; second, Jiri Hudler sent a shot high over the net 40 seconds later; third, Kirk Maltby had a goal on his stick but couldn’t get a shot off before the defense closed in on him.

They did finally score at 4:51 on a nice give-and-go between Lang and Lebda. Robert carried the puck down the right wing and sent it across to Lebda, who took it deep before making a great pass across the goalmouth to Lang at the right post. Slam-dunk into a wide open net. 1-1 game.

Nik Kronwall really stood out a couple minutes later with a few nice shifts as he got involved offensively. On the first, he forced a faceoff on a chance sneaking up and on the second, he made a smooth manoeuvre around the defense before getting off a shot, and the rebound was almost knocked in by Lang and Cleary.

Henrik Zetterberg made a nice play at center when he tipped the puck to himself and took it in on a rush around 8:50. Pavel Datsyuk was doing similar things and was putting in a good effort, but almost looked to be trying too hard, as he often went one deke too far or attempted passes that were too pretty. Still, Hank, Pavel, and the rest of the Wings were dictating play around mid-period and beyond.

Zetterberg put the Wings ahead by one at 16:27 with a nice personal effort. He carried the puck down the right wing 1-on-1 with Derek Morris covering him. He threatened a backhand shot from that side and faked Joseph into commiting before taking it around the back of the net and coming out the other side. With Joseph down and out, he got underneath the puck and roofed it in the top right corner with a backhander. Great play by Hank, and kind of a sequel to his goal on Manny Legace last week.

Soon after the goal, the Wings went on the power play. They had a couple chances, but couldn’t quite click, and before long, they were called for a penalty themselves and we went to 4-on-4 hockey. This stretch was uneventful and soon the Wings were killing off a short power play.

Things were going pretty well until Datsyuk turned the puck over in the Phoenix zone after getting hooked slightly by Keith Ballard. Chris Chelios had pinched up, hoping to pick up a drop pass from Pavel, but Michael Zigomanis got to the puck first and sent it up ice to Yanic Perreault at center. Perreault just tipped it to the left wing just as he got nailed by Danny Markov and Shane Doan was away as Chelios skated as hard as I’ve ever seen him skate in trying to catch up. Dominik Hasek chose this opportunity to come out of the net and challenge Doan, but the Coyotes’ captain deked just before Dom got to him and, though he was tripped up, managed to maintain possession as he fell. He got off a shot and the puck slide into the gaping net to make it 2-2 with one second remaining on the power play, at 19:43. In hindsight, it was not a great decision by Dom, but that’s his practice on breakaways and it’s worked more often than not until recently.

The Wings still had jump as they started the third period and they scored again within three and a half minutes. The play began with Holmstrom getting nailed before a Zetterberg takeaway and subsequent Lidstrom shot off the post. Zetterberg picked the puck up off the rebound along the boards and sent it back to Lidstrom, who returned it to Hank right away. Zetterberg stepped up and took a snap shot that ricocheted off a Coyote skate before beating Joseph glove side at 3:22. It was Hank’s 100th career goal.

Not long after the goal, the game hit a patch of penalties. First, the Wings went on the power play at 5:07, then they got a 5-on-3 at 5:43. Once the initial penalty expired they had a short 5-on-4 powerplay but it was cut even shorter by a BS goaltender interference call on Holmstrom, who had been irritating the Phoenix defense all night and was in serious danger of having his head taken off. Following a faceoff, Homer headed to the net while Ballard did the same, only he was gliding backwards. He bumped into Holmstrom and pushed him back toward the net, but Homer ended up at the side of the net rather than out front and Ballard bumped Joseh ever so lightly. Joseph, however, decided he wanted an Oscar nomination and threw up his arms before falling like a sack of potatoes. The ref, unfortunately, fell for it and slapped Homer with the penalty. Fortunately, the subsequent stretch of play was uneventful, mostly due to Lang’s casual disruption of a Phoenix near-breakaway by slowly putting his stick out to knock the puck out of reach.

After their power play, the Coyotes showed some life and the Wings narrowly avoided a possible tied score when Derek Morris’ stick betrayed him by breaking on a slap shot. Dom had to make a couple big saves in sequence around the 9:30 mark and by then, the Wings had regained control.

Kris Draper, aggressively forechecking as usual, was called for hooking at the transition point from fore- to backcheck when Ballard either lost an edge or took a page from Joseph’s book at center. Danny Markov was hurt on the resulting Phoenix power play when Jeremy Roenick nailed him in the end boards following a clearing shot. At first it looked as though it was his right arm, but based on the way he was laying, I think it may be his ribs. Roenix hit him with his elbow or shoulder and may have cracked something. Markov skated off eventually, and the Wings killed off the rest of the penalty.

Soon after the power play ended, Pavel Datsyuk had a nice break down the middle. He a shot from pretty far out in order to get something before the defense closed on him, and its surprising quickness forced Joseph to be sharp.

The teams traded penalties again before the period ended, with some 4-on-4, 4-on-3, and 5-on-4 play resulting. Finally, with a minute left, the Coyotes pulled Joseph. He had hardly even made it to the blueline before Perreault’s pass was intercepted by Zetterberg. Hank took a couple steps before sending it to Datsyuk, who skated in the middle and sunk it in the empty net at 19:00. After the formality of the last minute, the Wings won 4-2.

According to Ken Daniels, Wayne Gretzky said before the game that Henrik Zetterberg is the most underrated player in the NHL. Hard to disagree after seeing how much he dominated the game last night. He was easily the #1 star, though Joseph should be thought of as a solid #2.

It was a pretty complete win for the Wings, unlike their recent comeback victories. It put them one point behind Nashville and gave them a chance to pass the Preds tonight with a win in St. Louis. The Blues have lost their momentum a bit and have won only one game in their last five. They are 12 points out of the playoffs and have very little chance of making it now. A loss tonight would make it even more difficult. However, they’ll be certain to fight hard and that means the Wings could be in trouble, having played a game last night.

Unfortunately, I will not be able to watch the game tonight. So, no game report tomorrow. Sorry about that.

Messier wants Rangers GM job

I almost commented on this yesterday, but didn’t want to overreact and end up sounding too snarky. However, more has come out about it and now I can say what I wanted to say: Read this TSN report and tell me it isn’t further proof that Steve Yzerman is the better man. Sure, the Captain has stated he’d like to work in management, perhaps even the general manager spot, but he obviously expects to have to pay some kind of dues. Messier, on the other hand, is apparently expecting to be the immediate successor to Glen Sather and decided to tell the world about it before letting the Rangers know. Also, see Matt’s take at Battle of Alberta. I have to agree with that last bit there.

Kukla’s Korner: Facts on Forsberg

Flyer’s beat writer Chuck Gormley has an interesting guest-piece on KK worth reading. Most interesting:

  • Forsberg has been a “force” since the Break, having apparently found a solution to his skate problem
  • Chris Chelios has come out saying he’d love to have him on the team.

Hmm. I still think it’s too much of a risk, but, given the above, I must admit I’m warming to the idea slightly. Still, it doesn’t seem very likely to happen, since the asking price would probably be too high for Holland given the possibility that Forsberg would strictly be a rent-a-player looking to return to Philadelphia this summer.

GameDay: vs. Phoenix (25-27-2, 52 Pts) 7:30 ET

Update (5:55 PM): I forgot to thank Sidney Crosby and Company for beating Nashville last night and making it possible for the Wings to get within a point of  the Preds with a win tonight. - Matt

Tonight is the third of four games between these two teams this season. The Wings lead the season series 2-0, with wins October 11th (9-2) and January 11th (5-1). They’ll play each other once more this month, in Phoenix on the 17th.

The last time we saw the Coyotes, they were one of the hottest team in the league, having won 8 of their previous 9 games, including 7 straight, providing their fans with a glimmer of hope for a dismal season. Since losing to the Wings last month, however, they have reverted somewhat to form and have posted a 5-6-0 record. During that 11-game stretch, they have beaten such teams as Nashville and Colorado, but lost to San Jose, Anaheim, and Pittsburgh. So, it’s been win a couple, lose a couple for nearly a month now, though they have two wins in February thus far and just one loss. One of those wins came last night in Columbus, a 3-0 decision.

Following the game tonight, they will head to Florida to play the Panthers on Saturday and the Lightning on Tuesday.

As far as post-season prospects go, the Coyotes are 12 points out of a playoff spot and will need a miracle at this point to make it.

I expect Curtis Joseph to be in net tonight as Wayne Gretzky evidently does not have a policy against starting his #1 goalie in back-to-back games, having started CuJo on Jan. 31st as well as Feb. 1st.

Since beating the Coyotes in January, the Wings are 7-2-1. They’ve won their last four, which included games against the Avalanche (3-1), the Islanders (4-3 OT), the Blues (5-3), and, most recently, the Rangers (4-3). Their last loss came to the Blues in overtime, a 2-1 decision on January 26th.

They have been alternating home and away games since they played Colorado on the 28th and will continue to do so by travelling to St. Louis after tonight’s game to play the Blues tomorrow night before returning home to play Calgary on Sunday. After that, they’ll head out on a three-game road trip to Philadelphia (the 12th), Dallas (the 14th), and Phoenix (the 17th). Philly to Dallas, eh? A nice turnaround.

Although they have the league’s third-best record, The Wings are currently solidly in the 4th seed and will be unless they can catch Nashville for the Division lead. They are just three points back with five games against the Predators remaining.

Dominik Hasek will be in net tonight per the Wings’ policy to only play him on days in which he’s able to go through his full pre-game routine. Since they’ll be leaving for St. Louis tonight after the game and will probably only do a light skate in the morning, it’s not possible for him to do all the things necessary to safeguard his groin before playing the Blues. Joey MacDonald will be in net tomorrow instead since Chris Osgood is still out with a broken finger in his stick/blocker hand.

Mikael Samuelsson is the only Wing with a short-term injury but his recovery time just got extended to another couple weeks so he definitely won’t be back tonight.

The Wings will need to settle down and play a full game tonight, without needing to come back in the third period. I’m sure the Coyotes will be playing hard but Hasek and the defense should be able to contain them and the offense should be able to add to the 14 goals they’ve already scored on Phoenix this season.

Khan: Samuelsson has setback

According to Ansar, Mikael Samuelsson worked himself into another couple weeks of recuperation time after hearing a pop during practice Monday morning. That’s good news for Josh Langfeld, who’ll get more time at the NHL level (unless the Wings bring someone else up and send him back down), but bad news for the Wings, who could use Samuelsson back in the lineup.

Also, Dominik Hasek will be in net tomorrow night against Phoenix, but Joey MacDonald will start Thursday in St. Louis. Another instance of Babcock starting Dom against the lesser team while the backup gets the nod against the tougher team (which the Blues, as a team fighting for a playoff spot, are).