… I only caught the first period of the Wings’ 4-1 win over the Blues last night. I was reasonably impressed with what I saw, though it’s obvious they aren’t quite firing on all cylinders yet. Still, it’s a marked improvement over their February play, that’s for sure.
I have to say something about the phantom Pavel Datsyuk call that led to the Blues’ late first period power play. What the heck was that? I’d like to think that the official who called the penalty knows the difference between a trip and a player falling on his own. Apparently not.
In the end, it doesn’t matter, but my confidence in the officiating is waning. What with the missed call in the Sharks game Friday night, the play that was not stopped in Buffalo Sunday, and various phantom calls, how are we expected to trust in the referees? It’s not as though it’s just a problem in Wings games either. Just ask the Philadelphia Flyers. I hate to complain about the officiating, but to me this is a League-wide quality issue, not a Wings fan-specific gripe.
… I’ve been trying to cut Andreas Lilja some slack lately. I figure there’s a reason he remains in the lineup, despite his more visible blunders. With that change in mindset, I’ve been able to appreciate big #3 more.
On the Blues’ goal, however, I thought his attempt to knock the puck down was a little on the boneheaded side. It turned out to be a perfect redirect. I thought the conventional wisdom was that defensemen leave the puck alone if they can’t outright block it. With Stempniak right there, I can understand what Andreas was trying to do, but it just didn’t turn out so well.
… It wasn’t Brett Lebda that Mike Babcock sat in favor of Jonathan Ericsson last night. It was Derek Meech. I admit it, I was surprised. Meech apparently hit a high point against Edmonton last week, but his play since was still quite good, I thought. I assume Babcock was just demonstrating to Meech that his spot on the roster is not a given. Hopefully it won’t backfire, somewhat like we saw with Quincey.
… Giving Ericsson another game paid off, if only because of a little drop pass that kicked off the cycle leading to Pavel Datsyuk’s first goal. If Nick Lidstrom does return Sunday, however, last night was probably Ericsson’s last game in the Winged Wheel this season as he’ll be returned to Grand Rapids.
… Since I missed the second and third periods, I didn’t see the hit on Tomas Kopecky or the aftermath. It didn’t make the cut on the highlight reel, and neither did the Rafalski throwdown or Downey’s coming off the bench. Too bad. IwoCPO says he’ll have video later.
I’m glad to read that Kopecky’s okay. He looked good in the first period and I assume played a strong game in the second and third, as well.
… I don’t know what he looked like in the second and third, obviously, but you get the feeling that Jiri Hudler is finally going to break out of this horrendous slump. I thought he looked strong in the first.
… Where was Manny Legace’s head on Brian Rafalski’s goal? It just blew by him.
… The Dallas Stars lost at home to the Coyotes last night. That’s two home losses in a row for the second-ranked team in the Conference. Much ballyhooed trade deadline acquisition Brad Richards has zero points in both games since posting five in his debut with the Stars. That’s called being brought back to earth.
The Wings’ two consecutive wins have put them 7 points ahead of Dallas and they retain two games in hand.




Pavel was spectacular last night, worth the price of admission to see him catch up to guys and he pokes his stick up and the puck is off the oppositoins stick and he is skating the other way with it. Truly impressive.. He did it three times that I can think of, last night. There were times in the second period and third that the wings were pretty dominate. Downey gets an atta boy for his effort in the third, at one point he had three blues chasing him firing punches at his head, very funny! That took all heat of the other wings players.
About the Kopecky hit, was ridiculously blatent intereference, it was called but so musch is not ie. Lappies hit on Norris.
Anyway its a bit frustrating that the cheap little hooks are being called and the interefernce rule has been ignored, guys are getting hurt.
Ron:
About those turnovers.
Most of the Wings best opportunies last night came from turnover.
That is a situation that was not Unique to the Blues game.
Replay the games that the Wings lost and you will find a distinct lack of turnovers. As son as they disappear the win streak is over.
Matt:
Happy to see you are noticing a few of the many things Lilja does so naturally. When he looks bad, he is usually scrambling to cover someone else’s errors.
Forgot to mention:
Lilja is also one of top PK’ers in the league.
Isn’t the problem with Lilja the fact that he often makes horrendous passes through the middle of the defensive zone and many times fails to pick up his man? I will give props as he has been playing well lately, but he has made some serious goal causing blunders.
It is time for the league to offer challenges when a goal is scored. Not just replay in the warroom in Canada, but ice-level coach challenges. I hear all the BS about the refs doing the best they can, but if they are so busy out there that they can’t call too many men on the ice when a game winning goal is scored, we have a problem. I thought having an additional linesman was supposed to fix that problem!
LOTS of blown calls lately, and teams should be livid. It is affecting the playoff seeds and that is not cool for anyone.
I wondered if Meech was a little bit tired, since he has been playing so many more minutes the last few games than he was used to, and if the sit-down was more a means of giving him a small mental and physical break.
Lilja is, to me, a classic example of a player who fills a particular role well, but when asked to do more than he is capable of looks very bad. When he isn’t out of his depth he is fine.