3/3 Notes

Update (10:43 PM): Just a clarification on my last update: Holmstrom’s last shift ended around the 14 minute mark of the third period. I apologize for wording it so ambiguously before. Thanks to Justin for pointing that out.

Also, Ansar Khan informed me via email that neither Robert Lang nor Tomas Holmstrom practiced today. Mike Babcock told him there were no injuries during the game against the Hawks, however. - Matt

Update (6:35 PM): I just remembered something I’d meant to mention earlier: Tomas Holmstrom left the game around the 14 minute mark and didn’t return, as pointed out by the FSN crew, who had noticed he wasn’t on the bench.

I haven’t seen anything indicating he has an injury, so it may have just been a case of Mike Babcock resting his top line, as neither Pavel Datsyuk nor Valtteri Filppula took any shifts from about 16:00 on, after they had helped kill of a penalty with Danny Markov and Nicklas Lidstrom. (via the shift chart) - Matt

So, I got home on the Detroit side of the state last night (for “Spring Break”) at around 2:30 AM after watching the game in Holland, thanks to terrible weather until around Lansing. Then I slept about four hours longer than I meant to, and now I’m way behind the eightball on the day. So, some links to people more on top of things than me, with a little commentary:

… The Wings won last night, 6-2 over Chicago. I watched the game but don’t have a heck of a lot to say about it, except that it’s nice to see the Wings can produce offense without Henrik Zetterberg in the lineup. However, as Dave at Gorilla Crouch has pointed out today, the Blackhawks aren’t exactly a Grade “A” opponent, so the jury’s still out.

For a reaction to the game from someone who was there, see Steph’s report at No Pun Intended.

… Jason Williams scored twice on his former team, prompting Mike Babcock to give the quote of the year:

“It’s good to see him score, too. What the heck.”

(via. Abel to Yzerman)

… It looks like the Wings having taken such a vested interest in rejuvenating the second line has awakened Robert Lang, who had four-point night and was as involved in the offense as he’s been all season. The Free Press wins the award for most lame headline today, with their story on the game: “Lang time coming: Center leads Wings past Hawks.”

… Nicklas Lidstrom scored his 200th career goal (finally) in the third period, and Christy Hammond of Behind the Jersey was there to cheer him for it.

… The FSN crew made a big deal out of the fact that Jiri Hudler came out for warmups wearing his red helmet last night. Apparently, he was thrown off by the fact that the Wings usually wear red at home, but were wearing white so that the Hawks could use their black jerseys. Ansar Khan reports that Robert Lang finally told him, after the whole team had a good laugh. Jiri scored a nice breakaway goal later in the game, making that the most memorable thing he did last night, rather than than the helmet thing.

… It looks like Chris Osgood will get another start, as Dominik Hasek will not be able to return tomorrow against the Avalanche, according to Ansar Khan. The Wings, needless to say, are taking every precaution with Dom and will not be rushing him back. Khan also says that Chris Chelios will be a game-time decision tomorrow.

… The Free Press reports that Mikael Samuelsson skated yesterday, though not with the team. He’ll still take some time to get back into game-shape so don’t expect to see him too soon.

… Lastly, non-Wings related: James Mirtle has been blogging about the Cam Janssen elbow on Tomas Kaberle last night, a vicious hit which knocked Kaberle unconscious and out of the game. Janssen has been suspended for three games, a verdict with which I wholly agree, as those kinds of hits should have no place in the game. However, it’d be nice if the League were more consistent in dealing out such penalties for those types of hits. A shoulder to the head is about as bad as an elbow, NHL.

4 Responses to “3/3 Notes”


  1. 1 Justin

    Damn it you should’ve said “14 minute mark of the third period”. I thought you meant 14 minutes into the game and I got worried.

    I also think they need to make hits to the head illegal. It’s dangerous and there’s no good reason not to. Their excuse for not changing the rules is that they don’t want to make the game less physical. That’s the dumbest excuse I can think of. I don’t see how forbidding head hits will take away the physicality (you can’t hit people in the head in football and yet you don’t see anyone complaining that football isn’t physical enough). And even if it would, how is physicality more important than safety? Seriously! Just more proof that Bettman is the worst commissioner in all of professional sports.

  2. 2 Matt Saler

    Sorry about that, Justin. Thanks for point it out!

    And yes, that is about the dumbest excuse the League could possibly have. I used the football analogy myself after Raffi Torres went unpunished for his hit on Jason Williams, but the dunderheads in the League office are too concerned with talking about changing the net size or adding another puck to the play, or whatever other gimic is currently on the table, to care.

    My opinion on those types of hits remains the same: the NHL is in danger of being criminally negligent as long as they refused to punish hits to the head, regardless of intent. I don’t care who the player is, they should have to serve a suspension. The League can have a scaled suspension system, but that kind of contact to the head should be worth at least a game.

    Physicality is not more important than safety, and until the NHL realizes it, they are running the considerable risk of having someone become seriously hurt or injured by a preventable play.

  1. 1 3/5 Notes at On the Wings
  2. 2 St. James: Holmstrom may return Sunday at On the Wings

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