Monthly Archive for October, 2007Page 3 of 5

Hank’s production

As a big Henrik Zetterberg fan, I have to draw attention to this blurb from The Sports Forecaster:

Zetterberg, who turned 27 last week, ended the 2006-07 campaign with 49 points in his final 31 contests. Including this year’s 13 points, that works out to 62 points in his last 38 regular season games, which pro-rates to 134 points over a full season. … Over his last 147 games, he is an astonishing plus-60.

Nice numbers to have on hand when someone tries to tell you Zetterberg isn’t a Grade-A superstar in the NHL. (via Snapshots)

GameDay: @ San Jose (3-2-1, 7 Pts) 10:30 ET

Update (6:00 PM): Welcome visitors from HockeyFights.com!

A clarification: below I suggested that the Wings would be playing short a forward, but didn’t make it clear that they would be short only if Zetterberg was out. As far as I know, Aaron Downey will be in the lineup tonight along with Matt Ellis due to the injuries to Mikael Samuelsson and Johan Franzen. So, yes, there is the possibility of a fight in the game tonight, with both Drake and Downey dressing for the Wings. - Matt

Update (4:05 PM): Helene St. James reports that both Nick Lidstrom and Henrik Zetterberg will play tonight. Great news for the Wings as they get ready to face an amped-up Sharks team. - Matt

Tonight is the first of four games between these two Western Conference Semifinalists. The Sharks won the season series last year, 3-1, but the Wings got the last laugh by beating them in six games in the second round of the playoffs. The teams will face each other next Friday and will finish the season series with games in January and February.

The Sharks lost their opener to Edmonton, 3-2 in a shootout. They rebounded the next night, however, with a 3-1 win over Vancouver. They ran into Paul Stastny and the Colorado Avalanche on October 7, losing 6-2 on Stastny’s 5-point night. They came back with a win over Chicago three nights later, 2-1. The visiting Bruins defeated them on the 13th, 2-1, but the Sharks won their most recent game, a 4-2 decision over Vancouver on the road. On Saturday, they’ll face the Predators before taking off on a four-game road trip in which Detroit will be their second stop.

Joe Thornton, predictably, is the team’s point leader with 7. He is also listed as the leader in goals, but he and Milan Michalek both have 3. Jonathan Cheechoo has been held to one goal and one assist through six games.

Evgeni Nabokov has a GAA of 2.40 and a save-percentage of .896 through six games. The Colorado game skewed what would have been pretty good numbers, though. He should be in net tonight.

The Wings are in the middle of a four-game road West Coast road trip. They won the first game, 4-1, but lost the next night to Anaheim, 6-3. After tonight, the team will fly to Phoenix to play the Coyotes on Saturday before heading home to face the Canucks on Wednesday.

Henrik Zetterberg, the team leader in points, may be out tonight with a hip flexor problem. He and Nick Lidstrom (ribs) did not practice yesterday. Nick may also sit. As I wrote last night, look for Mikael Samuelsson to return from his groin injury or for the Wings to play short a forward. Derek Meech may be inserted into the lineup to help fill in for Lidstrom.

Chris Osgood will be in net tonight for the Wings.

San Jose will be looking for revenge tonight, so the Wings will need to get their act together if they want to come out on top. Taking 13 penalties is not an option. The Sharks still believes it defeated itself in the second round and this would be a great time to hand them a reminder that they lost because the Wings were better. It’ll be tough if Lidstrom and Zetterberg are both out, but they should be able to do it as long as they stay out of the box.

Osgood to start in San Jose; Zetterberg, Lidstrom possibly out

Ansar Khan writes that Chris Osgood will be in net against the Sharks, saying it’s a case of Ozzie being rewarded for playing better than Hasek.

He also reports that Nick Lidstrom (ribs) and Henrik Zetterberg (hip flexor) did not practice Wednesday and are therefore questionable for the San Jose game. He takes Babcock’s word for it when the coach told him he hadn’t really thought about possible lines if Hank can’t go.

If Zetterberg does sit, look for Mikael Samuelsson to return or for the Wings to go with 11 forwards. I doubt they’d call up a Griffin and fly him out to California. If Lidstrom can’t go, we’ll likely see Derek Meech’s regular season debut.

Losing either one of those players to injury would be huge. Losing both would really suck. Hopefully they got the rest they needed to be ready to go. We should find out sometime before the game.

Red Wings pre-game rituals

If you’ve ever wondered what the Wings do before each game, the Detroit News’ David Goricki has a great piece in today’s edition.

10/17 Notes

Sorry for the lack of posting this week. I’ve been otherwise occupied and haven’t been able to put a post together. I missed the game Monday night, but based on what I’ve read about it, that was probably good for my blood pressure. I know the officiating has been wildly inconsistent, so I don’t what the Wings have to do to stop getting called, but they have to find some way to keep the penalties to a minimum as they prepare to face the Sharks tomorrow. It’s going to be interesting.

Anyway, a few odds and ends:

The Wings have mentioned to Kris Draper’s agent that they’re looking at extending his contract 2 or 3 years, though no actual talks have begun quite yet. Drapes is 36 now, so that timeframe works pretty well, especially given the longevity of other Red Wings. He still brings a lot to the team and is invaluable in the lockerroom. He’s certainly making a case for another contract with the start he’s had!

The Detroit News reports that Matt Ellis could surpass Jiri Hudler in the depth chart. Apparently, Babcock has been less-than-impressed with Jiri and Ellis has stood out enough to warrant the speculation. The problem with that is Ellis isn’t a replacement for Hudler. He does not have the same offensive upside and wouldn’t necessarily be able to fill the void Hudler is expected to fill in the scoring. I would think that the Wings’ goal would be to get Jiri going, not to demote him. Ellis has looked strong out there and has helped make the fourth line tough to play against, but I don’t see him moving up on the depth chart at Hudler’s expense.

… In that same News article, Ted Kulfan mentions that the November $9 tickets will go on sale Saturday at 10:00 AM. Remember, you can only get them at the JLA box office.

… The League is looking at a revolutionary idea: heated skate blades. The heat reduces the friction between the blade and the ice and will increase gliding speed and make it easier to start skating. The most obvious benefit of these skates would be the reduction in fatigue, which would mean players would have more energy later in games and would be able to play longer shifts.

I’m not really sure I like this idea much. Changes in blade design? Yes. Changes in skate weight? Good. Innovation in arena cooling? Great. Little gadgets attached to skates boosting skating ability? Not a big fan. What’ll be next? HUDs in visors?

For now, only a few players will be given the skates for use in practice. If they work out, they’ll apparently begin to be used in actual games.

… The Detroit News site has been redesigned. It looks pretty good. Their Wings Blog now has permalinks, but still doesn’t have an RSS feed.

… If you’re in to graphs and numbers, check out this excellent post by James Mirtle on NHL attendence.

… Over at Gorilla Crouch, Dave projects the final Central Division standings.

… Finally, some consolation for those of us who are fed up with Andreas Lilja.

And if you thought all that was bad, read this. And for the video evidence:

GameDay: @ Anaheim (2-4-1, 5 Pts) 10:00 ET

Because I did not take notes on the game last night, I’m going to skip the full recap and jump right into the preview for tonight’s game, with some thoughts on the win over LA included. Be sure to check out Dave’s recap over at Gorilla Crouch.

Tonight is the second of four games between Detroit and Anaheim this season. The Wings won the first game, 3-2 in a shootout on October 3rd. The loser of this game will have to wait until January 23rd to get revenge.

Since losing to the Wings, the Ducks have posted a 1-3-0 record. They lost on October 5th to the Blue Jackets and fell to the Penguins the next night before rebounding with a win over Boston on October 10th. They were shut out by the Minnesota Wild last night, losing 2-0. Needless to say, it has not been an auspicious start for the defending Stanley Cup Champions.

The Ducks had one player return to the lineup last night, but lost another to injury. JS Giguere made his debut and posted 23 saves, but Todd Bertuzzi took a hit from Derek Boogaard and did not return. The LA Times is reporting that Bertuzzi suffered a concussion, but it’s also possible that his back was re-injured on the play.

Giguere should get his second straight start tonight.

The Wings have gone 3-1-1 since beating the Ducks in their opener. Both loses came to Chicago, 4-3 in a shootout on the 6th and 3-2 in regulation on the 12th. They beat Edmonton (4-2) and Calgary (4-2) between their loses. Last night, they beat a weak LA team, 4-1. The Kings, while dangerous offensively, struggle in their own end and they were saved from a blowout by a combination of dumb luck, the at times average play of the Red Wings, and the play of their 19-year-old goalie, Jonathan Bernier. The Kings’ ineptitude with can be seen in the fact that they were credited with 27 giveaways last night, compared to the Wings’ 10. It was really quite pathetic how easy it was for the Wings to strip the puck. In the other hand, the Wings had a little too much trouble with a team they should have steamrolled. The Kings offense forced Osgood to make a number of big stops and the Wings at times narrowly escaped losing their lead.

The big line of Henrik Zetterberg, Pavel Datsyuk, and Tomas Holmstrom stood out in a big way again last night, posting 8 of the teams 9 points. They continue to make it difficult to justify separating the line into two. Bill at Abel to Yzerman says we need to think of a name for the line. Any ideas?

Mikael Samuelsson was out with a groin injury and his replacement, Aaron Downey, helped spark the Wings’ fourth line to an impressive showing. Matt Ellis, Dallas Drake, and Downey gave the Kings fits, especially in the first period, and showed great chemistry. There’s a possibility that Samuelsson could return to the ice tonight, but if he doesn’t, the Wings will have a great energy line to create headaches for the Ducks.

Dominik Hasek will start tonight. It’s a bit of an odd choice, given that he won’t be able to go through is full pre-game regimen because the team won’t have their normal pre-game practice, having played last night.

This is the Wings’ first big test of the season. The Ducks are struggling at the moment, but they’ll be on their home turf and didn’t have to fly across the country to get there. The Wings generally don’t do well on back-to-back games in general, and seem to have special trouble when out West. They’ll be in trouble if they start taking a lot of penalties because of fatigue. Hopefully, the early start last night will have helped them settle in out there. Should be an interesting game.

GameDay: @ Los Angeles (1-4-0, 2 Pts) 8:00 ET

Update (7:35 PM): via Red Wings pre-game on FSN:  Mikael Samuelsson is out with a groin injury. He could return sometime during the trip. In the meantime, Aaron Downey (#20) will get some playing time. - Matt

Tonight is the first of four games between these two teams this season. The Wings won last year’s series, 3-1. The remaining three games will be played in December, January, and February.

The Kings have dropped four in a row since winning their opener September 29 in London, 4-1 over the Ducks. They lost the second of the London miniseries, 4-1 and returned home to lose to the Blues on October 6, 5-3. The Stars wiped them out, 5-1, four days later in Dallas and then they dropped another home game, 8-6 to Boston. Tonight’s game is the second in a three-game homestand that began against the Bruins.

Former Michigan star Mike Cammalleri and Anze Kopitar lead the Kings with 7 points each. Kyle Calder has just one goal thus far this season and is a minus-2, averaging 13:29 in ice time.

The Kings have used two goalies this season, with rookie Jonathan Bernier starting three times and Jason LaBarbera twice. Bernier has a GAA of 4.04, but given that he’s 19 years old, that isn’t really that bad. LaBarbera’s 4.50 GAA, on the other hand, is bad. It looks like he’ll be the one in net tonight, as Bernier started against the Bruins.

The Wings lost for the first time in regulation Friday night, dropping a game to the Chicago Blackhawks for the second time this season. They had a two-game win streak going after beating the Edmonton Oilers and Calgary Flames earlier in the week. Tonight is the first stop in a four-game road trip. The team will be in Anaheim tomorrow night before heading up to San Jose Thursday. After that, they’ll head to Phoenix Saturday before flying home.

The only injury at the moment is Johan Franzen. The only lineup change that could be considered likely is a defensive one, as Mike Babcock could possibly decide that Andreas Lilja has made enough mistakes for the time being. In that case, Derek Meech would get the nod. That’s more wishful thinking than anything else, though.

Chris Osgood will be in net tonight and Dominik Hasek will start tomorrow against the Ducks.

The Kings are a struggling team at the moment and that puts the Wings in prime position to start their trip off right. They shouldn’t take LA for granted, though, as they do have talent and could use it. The Wings just need to play their game and come out with a win or tomorrow night will be that much harder.

Wings 2, Blackhawks 3

With the help of some mediocre officiating and average play, the Wings fell to 3-1-1 last night, losing 3-2 to Chicago at home. It was the second game the team has lost to the Blackhawks this season and the second time they blew a two-goal lead to do it. It was a frustrating game, because it wasn’t the Wings’ best and it didn’t help that the officials chose to call some chintzy penalties against them while often letting the Hawks have their heads in contrast.

The Wings started out sloppy in their own end, but managed to prevent any real Chicago scoring chances. Going the other way, Brian Rafalski made a nice between-the-legs drop pass to Jiri Hudler that wowed more than it resulted in anything. For the first few minutes, there wasn’t a whole lot of offense.

The offense for Detroit began, oddly enough, on the penalty kill. With Niklas Kronwall in the box for interference, Nick Lidstrom and Kris Draper both had solid scoring opportunities. Draper’s came off a turnover in the middle of a Chicago line change, but unfortunately, he was unable to convert. In the other end, Jonathan Toews pirouetted through the crease and Dominik Hasek somehow kept the puck out of the net while his arm got run over. Dom was in a flopping mood from the start, but it was working.

There was a scary moment not long after the Kronwall penalty when Jiri Hudler was ridden into the Chicago bench door frame by a Blackhawk. Jiri hit with his right hip and landed on his side, but got up soon enough and play continued. Dangerous situation, that’s for sure.

Brent Sopel opened the scoring at 7:26 of the first when Henrik Zetterberg took a pass from Tomas Holmstrom along the left wing boards, just about on the goalline. Hank centered the puck, and Sopel angled his skate just the right way to redirect the puck into the net. Fortunately, when the opposition does it, the goal isn’t waived off. I assume it must have been Pavel Datsyuk Zetterberg was just aiming for, but it’s so much more funny to have Sopel score on his own team, eh?

For the next minute or so, play was end to end. Then Nikolai Khabibulin put the Wings ahead 2-0. Kris Draper took a heavy shot from 53 feet out and Khabibulin managed to slow it down about 90% by nearly trapping it with his arm. The puck kept heading to the net, however, but it might have stopped had Khabibulin not tried to knock it out out of the crease with his blocker hand. As he fell back to do that, his hand slipped with the puck under it and he put it in the net, just before Dan Cleary crashed in and knocked it off. The goal came at 9:05 of the first.

Following the goal, Datsyuk, Zetterberg, and Chris Chelios had a nice shift in the Chicago end, resulting in a drawn penalty. The subsequent power play was highlighted by a Lidstrom shot that rang off the post.

Minutes after the power play, Khabibulin coughed up the puck behind the net and Dallas Drake almost made a play to one of his linemates, which would have made it 3-0.

At 13:11, Tomas Holmstrom was called for goaltender interference when he knocked over a Chicago defenseman on to Khabibulin. It was all in an effort to get to the rebound off a heavy Zetterberg shot that had been stopped by the Blackhawk goaltender. Homer did get to the rebound and did knock it in, but he had already committed the penalty so the “goal” was waived off. The power play than followed was dominated by Patrick Kane and Jonathan Toews, who were unable to score despite a couple of great chances.

I noticed Holmstrom the forecheck not long after that. He did a great job, which seemed a little weird, to be honest.

After a period of end-to-end hockey, there was a strange sequence of events in the Detroit end. With the Red Wing forwards headed out of the zone on a breakout, the Chicago forecheckers somehow forced a turnover. Lebda lost his stick, then Chelios fell, and Jason Williams found himself all alone with his old teammate, Dominik Hasek. Rather than sit there, Dom came out and dove across Williams’ path, knocking the puck away, but getting called for tripping in the process. I guess whether or not it was a penalty is debatable, but as it was, it was a good one to take, because it short-circuited a gift-wrapped scoring chance and the team was able to kill off the Chicago power play that followed. It was a penalty kill not without it’s tense moments, however, as Patrick Sharp whistled a shot over the net, and Patrick Kane hit the post.

At 19:47, Dallas Drake had his third fight of the season and second against the Blackhawks. This time, it was with Adam Barish, and Drake got the upper hand when Barish hopped to make a punch and then fell. Not sure what triggered the fight, but Barish got up with a smile on his face and there didn’t seem to be any lingering animosity.

The first few minutes of the second were sloppy and choppy. Draper and Maltby each had a nice scoring chance early on, but Khabibulin made the necessary saves. There was an awkward collision behind the Chicago net between Matt Ellis and James Wisniewski where the Blackhawk went feet first ito the endboards and somehow managed not to break both his legs. Perhaps coming to his teammate’s defense, Andrei Zyuzin saw fit to hold Ellis to the ice and received a penalty as a result. The power play was uneventful.

At 8:08, Burish went all out to draw a penalty on Lebda when he found the defenseman’s stick between his legs. He kept on skating hard and fell flat on his face, but got the call. Sometimes, that tactic seems just a shade or two away from diving. Andreas Lilja didn’t help matters when he took an “interference” penalty at 9:33. I say “interference” because it should have another name, preferably an obscenity describing someone monumentally stupid. This was no standard interference penalty, folks. Our glorious Fourth Defenseman saw fit to knock an abandoned stick into the path of a Chicago shooter. Not only is such a move illegal, but that stick was Draper’s and he was just about to pick it back up before Lilja decided to shoot it away. I’m sorry, but I don’t see any rational justification for the continued presence of Andreas Lilja in the lineup. The man evidently cannot find it in himself to play well unless he is either in competition for a spot, or covering for an injury such as he did in last year’s playoffs. He’s too comfortable and needs a shaking up.

Anyway, the Wings killed off both penalties, but the Hawks were starting to assert themselves in earnest. They took a penalty at 15:10, however, and would have had to put their comeback attempts on hold for two minutes had the ref not called Hudler for holding the stick at 17:03. At 17:33, the Hawks got on the board. While on the power play, a flurry developed out front, with Patrick Kane getting 3-4 whacks at the puck while Hasek made snow angels and the Wings’ defense watched, dumbstruck. Soon enough, Sharps swept in and flipped the puck over Hasek to make it 2-1.

A minute later, the Blackhawks tied it on an even more frustrating goal. Brent Seabrook threw the puck at the net from 1,000 feet out (really it was 66 feet). It floated between defensemen and forwards before gliding over Hasek’s right shoulder. It was not deflected or even screened too badly, but Hasek must not have seen it until the last second, based on his body language. And just like that, the Wings’ lead was gone.

Valtteri Filppula started the third period with Pavel Datsyuk and Tomas Holmstrom. They had a good shift and were followed up by Henrik Zetterberg, Dan Cleary, and Mikael Samuelsson.

At 2:20, Chris Chelios was called for holding. Evidentally, playing defense is a penalty these days, as Chelios did nothing remotely illegal on the play as he angled Sergei Samsonov around the back of the net. Worst call of the night. The Hawks looked pretty sharp on the power play there, but the Wings held them off. Chicago kept on swarming afterwards, though, and the Wings began to look to be a little bit in trouble.

Zetterberg and Hudler had a couple great scoring chances at the other end around the 5:50 mark, but Khabibulin was a combination of lucky and sharp, and made the stops. Kirk Maltby stole the puck on a nice play while on the forecheck, but nothing developed. Just another piece of evidence to show people who don’t think he has any value these days.

After some end-to-end hockey, Lilja took another penalty. This time, it wasn’t his fault, as Rene Bourque’s stick fell apart in his hands when Lilja’s happened to be on top of it. It must have broken just before that somehow, with the contact with Lilja’s stick doing it in. The official was looking the other way at the time, but when he looked back, he saw a broken stick and a big Red Wing defenseman and naturally assumed Lilja must have hacked his way through that rock-solid composite stick with all the rage of a berserker. If only. Second worst penalty of the night.

This time, the Wings paid for it. After a couple setups were thwarted, Robert Lang (curse him) put his new team up a goal. Our old friend unleashed a shot that must have contained all the resentment and hate built up over two seasons under Mike Babcock’s thumb, a shot that slammed into Hasek’s shoulder, popped up, over, and into the net. As Mickey Redmond said, it was an example of putting the puck through a goalie rather than around him. It would have been nice to have seen a few more of those when you were in Detroit, Robert. 3-2 Chicago at 9:19.

At 9:41, Martin Lapointe demonstrated great hand-eye coordination when he intercepted a clearing pass in mid-air and redirected it into the stands. After a brief debate, the Wings were awarded a power play for Marty’s delay-of-game. It wasn’t such a great power play, with the highlight being the spectacular shattering of Brian Rafalski’s stick at a key moment (when else do they break?).

Khabibulin continued to instill confidence in Red Wings fans everywhere throughout the period, beginning with a play in which he couldn’t handle a Tomas Kopecky shot and ended up giving out a monster rebound. Unfortunately, the Wings had trouble following up on plays all night and weren’t about to improve in the third. Pavel Datsyuk had a nice chance on a Khabibulin gaffe, but nothing came of the flurry that followed.

Hasek, apparently bored at losing by only one goal, took a stroll in the last five minutes of the game. He lost the puck and Patrick Sharp nearly scored, but shot it wide of the empty net.

In the final minutes of the game, the Blackhawks largely controlled play, with their offense keeping the Detroit defense awake and their defense doing a solid job of shutting down the Red Wing forwards. Patrick Sharp, in particular, stood out late in the game as he stole the puck from Datsyuk a couple times and was generally looking like a beast out there.

The Wings devolved into a dump-and-chase style near the end. Nick Lidstrom attempted to take command of the game by becoming heavily involved in the offense. He ended up as low as the bottom of the circles a couple times, but couldn’t do anything beyond generate chances.

Babcock tried to pull Hasek with a minute left, but Dom ended up staying in net as the puck headed his way. The Hawks iced the puck at 19:13 and the Wings called a timeout. Pavel Datsyuk beat Robert Lang on the draw, but the puck ended up frozen by Khabibulin at 19:22. Perrault beat Datsyuk on the next faceoff, but took a penalty with about 15 seconds left. Although the Hawks touched almost immediately, the whistle was not blown until 19:49. The Wings had come close to scoring in the flurry that led to the Perrault penalty. The Hawks took their timeout at this time. The Wings won the faceoff, but the puck was cleared and time ran out. 3-2 Hawks final.

One comment about the crowd: the atmosphere in that final minute at the Joe was great. The fans were on their feet and cheering, hoping to see their team come back. It was nice to see.

Anyway, not the Wings’ greatest game. For some reason, they bring out the best in the Hawks, but can’t find it in themselves to match that intensity. They were fortunate to get the two goals they did, but once they were up by two, they should have held the lead. The Blackhawks are obviously not pushovers any more, but blowing leads in two games is not acceptable. The officiating wasn’t great, but they still had the game in hand and could have walked out of there with a win if they’d just held defensively.

Next up, they face the Kings in LA as they kick off a four-game West Coast trip.

Wings 4, Flames 2

I didn’t take notes on the game last night, so this will be more brief and less detailed than usual.

… Chris Osgood got the start for the Wings and I thought he looked good - until the Flames two goals, the second especially. On the first goal, he at least had the excuse of being on the business end of a beautiful play by Huselius, but even then he committed just a bit too early. Some may say Brett Lebda overplayed the pass there, but I felt he played it well. Huselius was Ozzie’s responsibility and his early commitment put him just enough out of position for the Flame to pot one.

On the second goal, Osgood just looked bad. My guess is that he was watching for a centering pass from Huselius to the slot, but in the process, he forgot to hold the post. I don’t know if Huselius was surprised or what, but he only just managed to bank it in.

Ozzie’s had far worse games in his career, but he’s also had far better. No big deal, though. The Wings won, after all.

… The top line walked all over the Flames. They had their way with them. They owned the Flames. Any way you want to say it, Henrik Zetterberg, Pavel Datsyuk, and Tomas Holmstrom were great last night.

The fun began in the first period with the Wings’ first goal. Miikka Kiprusoff made the gaffe of the night when he sent a long pass up ice - right to Pavel Datsyuk. Pavel broke to the net while the Flame defense scrambled to recover. Just before he reached Kiprusoff, Datsyuk dropped the puck to Zetterberg, who had an easy one-timer of a goal. It was another of Pavel’s maddening passes to someone off screen, but he knew best.

Following a nice turnover by the Flames at the Red Wing blueline, the puck ended up on Datsyuk’s stick with Holmstrom accompanying him on a fast break the other way. One pinpoint pass later, Holmstrom golfed the puck through Kiprusoff to put the Wings up 2-1. A nifty play.

The Eurotwins+Homer had other great plays that didn’t make the scoresheet. If they keep playing like that, it’s going to be hard to justify breaking them up.

… Andreas Lilja had another bad game. I was going to say sub-par, but that wouldn’t be true, because he generally has bad games. One of his ill-fated pinchups resulted in a major collision that took him completely out of the and allowed Huselius to take the puck the other way, with only Lebda back. I already went over what happened there. As far as I’m concerned, Lilja should never, ever venture behind 10 feet into the offensive zone. We have other guys who can pinch up and can do it a thousand times better. Lilja’s job, which is in jeopardy more every game, is to be a defensive defenseman.

… Kris Draper’s hand-eye coordination on his tip-in goal was something to see.

… I hate to whine about officiating, but the inconsistency was staggering last night. The Wings got called at least a couple times on chintzy plays, while the Flames were interfering, tripping, and hooking like mad, especially when the Eurotwins were out there. I’d be more upset if it had actually played a role in deciding the outcome of the game, but it didn’t. That doesn’t make it right, though.

… I thought the crowd at the Joe was pretty solid last night. Still a lot of empty seats, but the people who were there were fairly vocal. That’s good to see. One thing that’s been bugging me in this whole debate over whether or not Detroit is still Hockeytown (or a hockey town) is that no one ever talks about TV ratings. Sure, the Joe isn’t packed out, but what kind of ratings do the Wings’ broadcasts get? I’m going to try to look into that.

… Next up, we’ll see the Blackhawks on Friday at home. It looks like Hasek will be back in net for that one, while Osgood will start Sunday in LA.

Links
Gorilla Crouch
Highlight Reel
Boxscore
Freep
News

GameDay: vs. Calgary (0-1-1, 1 Pt) 7:30 ET

Update (12:20 PM): Helene St. James reports that Chris Osgood will start tonight due to Hasek’s leg bruise. The bruise isn’t a serious injury by any means, but, as Babcock told her, “there’s no sense fooling around.” Dom will back up Osgood, which is not something that happened very often last year due to the risk of having to send Hasek out there cold. It’s obviously not worth calling up Jimmy Howard or someone else for backup purposes here.

The only way Dom sees the ice tonight is if Ozzie goes down with an injury of his own. - Matt

Tonight is the first of four games between these two former Western Conference Quarterfinal opponents. The teams split the 06-07 series, 2-2, while the Wings won their first-round playoff matchup, in six games. They’ll play twice more next month and will finish up with the fourth game in February.

The Flames are winless thus far this season. They dropped their opener to Philadelphia, 3-2 on the 4th, and then followed that up with a 4-3 overtime loss to Vancouver on Saturday. Both games were at home. They kick off a four-game road trip tonight and will make stops in Dallas, Nashville, and Denver before returning home for a seven-game homestand beginning against the Kings on the 18th.

Daymond Langkow has had a fast start to the season, having scored two goals in each of his team’s games. Jarome Iginla provided secondary assists on two of Langkow’s four goals, but that’s all the offense the Flames’ captain has provided so far.

Miikka Kiprusoff has shouldered both losses and stands with a pedestrian 3.36 GAA and .877 save-percentage. He’ll be in net tonight.

The Flames’ have two players injured, according to the Free Press: David Moss, a forward out with an “upper body” injury, and Brent Krahn, a goalie, out with a knee injury on top of the fact that he’s Kipper’s backup.

The Wings have won two of their first three, beginning with a 3-2 shootout win over the Ducks in the opener. Then they lost in a shootout, Saturday night in Chicago 4-3. They rebounded from that disappointing loss with a solid game Monday night, beating one of their old playoff nemeses, the Edmonton Oilers, 4-2.

Tomas Holmstrom is the team’s goal leader with three, but Henrik Zetterberg leads the team in points with seven. Captain Nick Lidstrom is not far behind, with five points.

Dominik Hasek has started all three games so far this season and has mostly looked sharp. He has a respectable 2.21 GAA, but his save percentage is .887. That’s a product of the Wings’ shot-limiting defensive philosophy, so any shot that does get through Hasek wrecks his percentage. Dom may not play tonight due to a bruise above his right knee. If he doesn’t, Chris Osgood will get the nod.

Johna Franzen is the only other Wings injury. The player standing in during his absence, Matt Ellis, only had 3:11 in ice time Monday night. He didn’t stand out in any negative way, however, so he may have earned another minute or two tonight.

The Wings need to pick up where they left off Monday night and then take it up a notch from there. The Flames haven’t had a fast start, but they’re not pushovers and no doubt will be prepared to take advantage of the Wings if they come out taking them for granted. Kiprusoff always presents a challenge, if nothing else, so the offense will have to be on top of things (i.e. rebounds) tonight.