Archive for the 'Blackhawks' Category

4/21 Links

Update (3:54 PM): Tapeleg of Jerseys and Hockey Love has a post up on the use of the term “bandwagon” in sports.

Clearly, we need adopt a definition of “bandwagoning” that differentiates actual hockey fans who support a new team post-elimination from those non-fan leeches who ride the coattails of a team’s success and bail at the first sign of adversity. It’s one thing to follow a team that’s not your own in as a show of support for the League. It’s another to act like you’ve been there for years.  - Matt

Update (1:52 PM): James Mirtle points to an interesting quote on the octopus question in a New York Times article from last season. The League’s sudden turnaround on the issue becomes even more mystifying. - Matt

… With the Ducks getting eliminated last night, the LA media is pointing to the defense as the reason. A former Red Wing is getting particular heat:

… Schneider is incurably soft and untrustworthy defensively.

Soft maybe relative to the Ducks’ hardboiled goon squad, but then again, so are most actual hockey players. Schneider had a definite edge to him, as anyone who ever saw him react to being hit could tell you.

As for defensive untrustworthiness, he worked out pretty well in Detroit.

As Steve Ovadia points out, the problem in Anaheim can’t be pinned on one player. IwoCPO has some thoughts on this as well.

… Speaking of the Ducks, the League has belatedly decided to fine Scott Niedermayer for not showing up for training camp, as stipulated by the CBA. Why this is happening now and not in December is a mystery. James Mirtle suggests that someone in the front office of another team pushed for the fine.

Mike Chen thinks that the officiating has been awful across the board so far in the playoffs. Dead on.

… Apparently, Wolf Blitzer doesn’t know who Sidney Crosby is. I can’t decide whether that’s sad for Blitzer as a professional journalist expected to be aware of the world around him or sad for the NHL as a professional sports league that has been pushing Crosby with all its might with that kind of reward. Probably both.

… It looks like a Wings/Blackhawks outdoor game is likely to happen (scroll way down) next season. Does anyone really think the League will foot the $200,000 bill necessary to get the Rangers and Bruins into Yankee Stadium? I didn’t think so.

Larry Brooks says (so take it with a grain of salt) that the League is looking at eliminating the “Wayne Gretzky jersey tuck” in a bid for NFL-like uniformity. I guess it wouldn’t be surprising given the fact that the League spent tons of money on adopting sweaters that lack excess material. However, there are good ways to imitate the NFL and there are are bad ways. This is the latter.

4/7 Notes

… The Wings wrapped up the 2007-2008 regular season with a 4-1 win over Chicago yesterday afternoon. There isn’t much to say about the game. The Hawks put up a fair fight, but were too shorthanded to do much, and the Wings were too businesslike to let the game get out of hand.

… We can hope that Jiri Hudler’s goal is a sign of more to come in the post-season. Darren McCarty’s feed on the goal may not become a regular event, but it looks like he’s rounding into form. Dominik Hasek’s performance also helped put to rest some doubts about his readiness for the playoffs.

… Two defensemen with minor injuries, Brian Rafalski (neck) and Chris Chelios (groin), sat out the game for rest purposes. Derek Meech filled in for Rafalski and Jonathan Ericsson was called up late to fill in for Chelios.

… Dallas Drake also had the game off, though apparenly not because of an injury. Justin Abdelkader subbed for the elder Wings forward.

… Tomas Holmstrom returned from a groin injury but wasn’t overwhelming.

… The Wings won the Jennings Trophy for fewest team goals-against, though not without some controversy. George Malik covers that here.

… Pavel Datsyuk finished with the best plus-minus in the NHL at +41. He still wasn’t mentioned during the NBC broadcast as a possible Selke candidate. The old stereotype of Pavel Datsyuk, the typically offensive Russian forward, persists.

Nick Lidstrom finished +40, by the way.

… NHL.com is launching a re-design this week. It sounds like it’ll be pretty good

GameDay: vs. Chicago (40-33-8, 88 Pts) 12:30 ET

Update (12:42 PM): Dallas Drake has been given the game off in favor of Justin Abdelkader. Chris Chelios is also resting in favor of Jonathan Ericsson. - Matt

Update (11:18 AM): Additional Blackhawk injuries via the Chicago Tribune: Dustin Byfuglien (back disc), Andrei Zyuzin (groin), and Robert Lang (back) are out. Brent Sopel also will not play. - Matt

Update (11:17 AM): George Malik scouts the Blackhawks here. - Matt

This afternoon, the Detroit Red Wings and Chicago Blackhawks meet in the season finale at Joe Louis Arena. The Blackhawks lead the season series 5-2 with wins October 6th (4-3 SO), October 12th (3-2), November 11th (3-2), November 17th (5-3) and March 2nd (6-2). The Wings won the January 6th (3-1) and March 11th (3-1) meetings.

The game will be broadcast on NBC.

The Hawks are winners of their last four and have done everything within their power to make the playoffs. The Predators’ win over the Blues last week, however, eliminated them from contention. Currently with 88 points, they have a chance today to finish one point out of the playoffs.

Rookie Patrick Kane leads the team with 71 points, 51 of which are assists. Patrick Sharp leads the team in goals with 36. Rookie Jonathan Toews (24), Robert Lang (21), and Kane (20) are the only other Blackhawks to crack 20 goals this season.

Martin Havlat (shoulder) and Ben Eager (shoulder) are bothj questionable for today.

Nikolai Khabibulin should get the start.

For the Hawks’ perspective, see The Third Man In.

The Wings are 2-1-1 in their last four. They clinched first place overall with their 3-2 win over Columbus on Thursday and will face Nashville in the first round of the playoffs. They can max out at 115 points with a win today.

Pavel Datsyuk leads the team with 97 points and 66 assists. Henrik Zetterberg’s 92 points are good for second, but his 43 goals are a team high. Datsyuk (31), Johan Franzen (27), Dan Cleary (20), and Tomas Holmstrom (20) are the other Wings to crack 20 goals. Valtteri Filppula has been seitting at 19 goals for the past six games.

Tomas Holmstrom (abdomen/groin) is expected to return today after missing 13 games.

Mikael Samuesslon (groin) remains out. He has not been on the ice much since March 25th and no return timetable has been set.

Kris Draper (groin) also remains out, but told the media yesterday that he’d be in if this were a playoff game. He is expected to play in the post-season opener.

Brad Stuart (broken finger) is out, but should be back for Game 1.

Tomas Kopecky (knee) will be out until training camp or beyond. He is missing the playoffs for the second year in a row.

Brian Rafalski will have the game off today. Derek Meech will play in his place.

The team called up Darren Helm from Grand Rapids yesterday, giving them 13 active forwards. Mike Babcock told the media yesterday that all 13 would dress for warmups and he’ll decide who sits after that. Players likely on the cusp: Justin Abdelkader, Darren Helm, Aaron Downey, and Darren McCarty.

Projected lines:

Datsyuk-Zetterberg-Holmstrom
Filppula-Franzen-Cleary
Drake-Hartigan-McCarty
Hudler-Helm-Abdelkader

Abdelkader was the odd man out in practice yesterday, but my hope is that he plays. I’d also like to see McCarty get in another game, so in this scheme, Downey or Helm sit. I chose Downey because Helm makes that fourth line more dangerous.

Projected pairings:

Lidstrom-Meech
Kronwall-Lilja
Chelios-Lebda

Dominik Hasek is slated to start today.

For more of the Wings’ perspective, see Snapshots, Abel to Yzerman, HockeyTownTodd, Behind the Jersey, No Pun Intended, yzerman is god, Detroit Hockey, LetsGoWings, Red Wings Brasil, BR Red Wings, and Winging It In Motown.

The Blackhawks play for pride today. The Wings play to finetune their game as they head into the post-season. Expect the Hawks to seek to put another feather in their cap with a sixth win over the Wings by playing hard. I hope the Wings can get in this game mentally and avoid that embarrassment.

GameDay: @ Chicago (38-33-8, 84 Pts) 8:30 ET

Update (2:53 PM): Ansar Khan has even more, including evidence of disagreement between Babcock and Holmstrom. He also confirms the lines as given below. - Matt

Update (2:49 PM): Helene St. James has some more on the injury situation.

Basically, Holmstrom is not at 100% and is not likely to be so when the playoff start. The team is counting on him playing through it.

Homer told St. James that he might play tomorrow. We’ll see.

Tests on Kris Draper (groin) revealed nothing, but the team is being cautious. It sounds like he won’t be back until Game 1.

Mikael Samuesson (groin) confirmed he’s out for tonight and likely tomorrow, but apparently left open the possibility of playing Sunday.

St. James also basically confirms the lines provided below by saying the Eurotwins will start the game apart, with Pavel Datsyuk flanked by Dan Cleary and another forward (Filppula?), and Henrik Zetterberg skating between Johan Franzen and someone else (Hudler?). - Matt

Update (2:41 PM): Bruce MacLeod reports that Tomas Holmstrom (abdomen) will not play tonight and probably won’t return tomorrow night, either. He did skate today,  though, so this is not because of a setback. The team still expects him to be able to make the start of the playoffs.

The team can afford to be cautious, particularly given the likely payoff of a healthy #96 in the post-season lineup.

MacLeod also says that Henrik Zetterberg had the (optional) morning skate off, though he will play tonight.

Mikael Samulesson (groin) skated on his own, but did not take part in practice. Still no word on a possible return date for him. It’s looking like he could miss some playoff time.

Brad Stuart (broken finger), other the other hand, is looking like he’ll be back in time to start the playoffs. He practiced today  and MacLeod says he was characterized by Babcock as being a definite lock for Game 1. - Matt

Update (9:52 AM): George Malik scouts the Blackhawks here. - Matt

Update (8:02 AM): Mistake in the intro corrected. Thanks, Justin. - Matt

Tonight is the eighth and final seventh game between the Detroit Red Wings and the Chicago Blackhawks this season. The Hawks lead the series 4-2 with wins with wins October 6th (4-3 SO), October 12th (3-2), November 11th (3-2), and November 17th (5-3). The Wings won the last two meetings, 3-1 on January 6th, and 3-1 again on March 11th. The teams meet again on Sunday in Detroit for the final game of the season.

Chicago posted an 8-5-2 record in March, finishing the month with a pair of wins. They were 4-2-1 in the second half of March after a rough start in which they lost four in a row following a three-game winning streak to start.

The Hawks stand in 11th place in the West, five points out of the playoffs with just three games remaining. They can max out at 90 points, which would be enough to sneak into the playoffs if Nashville (89) and Vancouver (88) lose their remaining games (two each). They can pass Edmonton, whose playoff hopes ended last night when they fell in regulation to Calgary. With 86 points and just one remaining game, the Oilers can’t make up the difference.

The Hawks are led in scoring by Patrick Kane, who has posted 66 points in his first NHL season. Patrick Sharp is the second-highest scoring Chicago player with 60 points. His 36 goals are a team high. Former Red Wing Robert Lang has 20 goals and 53 points.

Chicago will be without Martin Havlat (shoulder) and Ben Eager (shoulder). Dave Bollard (sore ankle) and former Red Wing Jason Williams (charley horse) missed practice yesterday, but could play tonight. The Chicago Sun-Times reports that it will be a game-time decision.

The Sun Times also reports that Nikolai Khabibulin will start tonight.

For the Blackhawks side of things, see the excellent The Third Man In.

The Wings went 10-2-1 in March, with their two regulation losses coming together on the 15th and 16th. They began the month 5-0-0, lost two, and finished with a 4-0-1 run.

Detroit sits atop the NHL standings with a 52-20-7 record and 111 points. The San Jose Sharks are just three points back with two games remaining. However, as long as the Wings earn at least one point in one of their three remaining games, they will clinch 1st place overall.

If the playoffs started today, the Wings would face Nashville, who just moved into 8th after beating St. Louis in overtime last night.

The Wings are led offensively by Pavel Datsyuk (94 points) and Henrik Zetterberg (90 points), but the hot hand of late has been Johan Franzen. He has 14 goals and 18 points in his last 13 games, which earned him the NHL’s Third Star for the month of March.

Detroit will be without Kris Draper (groin) tonight. He suffered a recurrence yesterday of a groin injury that kept him out of five games last month.

Mikael Samuelsson (groin) will miss his third consecutive game and does not appear close to returning.

Brad Stuart (broken finger) remains out, but should return for the start of the playoffs next week.

Tomas Holmstrom (abdomen) may return tonight depending on how he feels during the morning skate, but it is more likely he’ll be back tomorrow night against Nashville.

Projected lines (via MacLeod):

Filppula-Datsyuk-Cleary
Hudler-Zetterberg-Franzen
Kopecky-Hartigan-Maltby
Downey-Drake-McCarty

As pointed out by Ansar Khan yesterday, we can probably expect to see the Eurotwins split up when the team is on the road. That makes it more difficult for the opposition to defend against them despite the fact that they have the last change.

Projected pairings:

Lidstrom-Rafalski
Kronwall-Chelios
Lebda-Lilja

Dominik Hasek will start tonight.

This is an important game for the Blackhawks, who need a win to keep their playoff hopes alive. The Wings have to find motivation to play hard tonight, despite the fact that they need just a point in their final three to clinch the top seed. The simple fact that staying sharp before the playoffs means an easier transition to post-season play ought to be motivation enough. As a veteran group, I would hope that there won’t be a problem with concentration and effort tonight.

There may be some bumps in the road, though, with the team’s best faceoff man, Kris Draper (58.6%), out of the lineup. The Hawks have some pretty good faceoff men in Yanic Perrault (64.3%), Jonathan Toews (53.6%) and, yes, Robert Lang (53%).

Wings 3, Blackhawks 1

Update (09. Jan, 3:55 PM): Corrected Denis Savard’s name below. - Matt

Unfortunately, I don’t have much time today, so this will be brief.

… It was good to see the Wings exorcise that demon last night. You could tell from the onset that the game wasn’t going to be a repeat of their four losses to Chicago. They came out looking determined to put to rest any doubts about their ability to take care of the Hawks and looked nothing like a team that had played a pretty hard-fought game the day before. They had an energy normally reserved for games following a two- or three-day rest.

Henrik Zetterberg’s goal at :50 of the first period was a thing of beauty, as was the play that set it up. However, you have to wonder what the heck Chicago was thinking to let Hank sneak in completely uncovered like that. I mean, he dishes the puck off to Jiri Hudler at the blueline and suddenly all eyes are on the little Czech. Then Jiri passes it across to Andreas Lilja and all five Hawk skaters turn to watch the most defensive defenseman in Detroit, while Zetterberg skates in completely unmolested. A nice Swede-to-Swede pass later and Hank is netting his 26th.

… Chris Osgood was strong once again and very much deserved the shutout. It’s a real shame he didn’t get it.

… Dan Cleary’s looking like a goal-scorer again. I hope he can keep it up when Tomas Holmstrom returns and he’s not a lock to play with Zetterberg or Pavel Datsyuk.

… Who knew Nikolai Khabibulin was so vicious? Tomas Kopecky joined Tomas Holmstrom and Martin Lapointe in the ranks of Red Wings who’ve had goalies freak out and attempt to make them eunuchs. How Khabibulin didn’t get booted is beyond me.

… Valtteri Filppula has returned to his habit of falling to the ice inexplicably. He also seemed to have trouble carrying the puck in open ice last night. Put him in a crowd and he’s suddenly a stickhandling genius, but give him space and the puck just falls off his stick.

… The Hawks never gave up last night, but the Wings never took their foot off the pedal, so it didn’t matter. Khabibulin was pulled late in the game and the Wings came close to putting it in the empty net twice before Chicago iced it with 30 seconds left. They then pulled Khabibulin again with 14 or so seconds left. Not sure what they were trying to accomplish there. Two goals in 14 seconds? It’s been done, but wasn’t exactly likely. Maybe it had something to do with Denis Savard’s idiotic comments yesterday.

… Again, it was good to see the Wings do what they should have done four times before: beat the Chicago Blackhawks. Now they can turn their attentions to another injury-depleted team, the Colorado Avalanche.

Links

GameDay: @ Chicago (19-18-3, 41 Pts) 7:00 ET

Update (5:45 PM): Chris Block of Third Man In has a very thorough preview posted. - Matt

Tonight the Detroit Red Wings and Chicago Blackhawks meet for the fifth time this season. The Hawks lead the series 4-0, with wins October 6th (4-3 SO), October 12th (3-2), November 11th (3-2), and November 17th (5-3).  The remaining three games will be played on March 11th, April 2nd, and April 6th.

The Blackhawks have dropped three straight, each of which came on the road during a Pacific Division swing. They began 2008 with a 9-2 loss to LA on the 1st and followed that up with a 4-2 loss to Phoenix two nights later. The next night, the Ducks defeated them 2-1. Following a 5-6-1 December and their troubles thus far in January, the Hawks have fallen to fourth in the Central and are four points out of a playoff spot. Tonight is their third game in four nights.

The Hawks have had a rash of injuries in the last month and a half or so. They lost Jason Williams to a groin injury on November 28th, Martin Havlat to a groin pull on December 22nd, Brent Sopel to a broken finger on December 26th, James Wisniewski to a knee sprain on the 26th, and  Jonathan Toews to a knee sprain on January 1st.

They’ve also been without Kevyn Adams (knee, Nov. 7), Dave Bolland (broken finger, Dec. 23rd), and Ben Eager (concussion, Dec. 23rd). Needless to say, their fall in the standings should come as no surprise given those injuries.

The Chicago Sun-Times, though, says that Sopel could return tonight.

Patrick Kane and Patrick Sharp lead the team in points with 39 and 34, respectively. Sharp’s 21 goals leads the team as well, six over Toews’ 15. Kane leads the team in assists with 30, twelve more than Robert Lang’s 18.

Nikolai Khabibulin will be the starter tonight.

For the Hawk side of things, see The Third Man In, Second City Hockey, and The Blackhawk Experience.

The Wings are coming off a 3-0 win over Dallas yesterday afternoon. It was a close game and a bit of a goaltending duel, as both Dominik Hasek and Mike Smith made some spectacular saves. I’d say the Stars had the edge in play most of the game, or at least that’s how it seemed, as they were determined to break their slide and had a lot of jump. The Wings, however, took an early lead off a Brian Rafalski goal and clung to it until Dan Cleary scored a surprise one at 10:08. To their credit, the Stars did not give up and continued to press the attack. They forced the Wings to ice it at 19:32, but a nice faceoff win by Kris Draper, the Wings’ took possession and Johan Franzen potted an empty-netter.

I wouldn’t say the Wings played their “A” game yesterday, but the ice probably played a role in that. They didn’t play poorly, however, and the Stars, even given a boost by the return of Sergei Zubov and the confident goaltending of Smith, couldn’t find a way past Dominik Hasek. With the Stars’ bending the Wings’ defense all game, Dom was the reason it didn’t break.

The roster will remain the same as it was in Dallas. Tomas Holmstrom (knee bruise) and Kirk Maltby (back strain) won’t be back until Tuesday. Homer is apparently ready to go, but the team is taking extra precautions, which has the Swede “snarly,” just like Mike Babock likes him. Because Derek Meech is in Grand Rapids for two weeks, Chris Chelios will play the second game of a back-to-back for the first time this season.

Chris Osgood will get the start for the Wings.

For more of the Wings’ perspective, see Snapshots, Abel to Yzerman, HockeyTownTodd, Behind the Jersey, No Pun Intended, Red Wings Nation, yzerman is god, Detroit Hockey, LetsGoWings, and Winging It In Motown.

The Blackhawks have, needless to say, owned the Wings this season. Since they last faced-off, however, the Hawks’ injury troubles have made them seem less dangerous. Still, they’re in prime position to build on a close game with Anaheim with a win over a tired Red Wings team tonight. I don’t know what to expect from this game, but if the Hawks and their seven minor leaguers, still well up with youthful exuberance when they see the Winged Wheel, it may turn out like the other four games.

However, the Wings will have the benefit of a rested Chris Osgood between the pipes tonight and that should help off-set the skaters’ fatigue.

Wings 2, Blackhawks 3

The Wings lost to the Blackhawks for the third time this season and deservedly so. With the exception of brief periods of play in the beginning and toward the end, they were outclassed by Chicago and looked completely out of sync. The Hawks, on the other hand, earned the win with hard work and hustle, pretty much from the first puck drop to the final horn.

I don’t have a lot more to say about this one, but here’s what I’ve got:

… Tomas Kopecky had a decent night. He had a nice assist on Hudler’s goal and just after that, put on a good show in a fight with Patrick Sharp. Although Sharp took Kopecky to the ice, I’d say the Blackhawk lost the fight, as he was cut badly by one of Kopey’s upper cuts.

… Hudler was one of the few Wings that looked sharp. He finished with a goal and an assist.

… Henrik Zetterberg extended his point streak to 17 games with a secondary assist on Hudler’s goal. He didn’t stand out too much.

… Chris Osgood’s unbeaten-in-regulation streak ended at 20 games. He didn’t look bad, though.

… Some real chintzy calls on both sides last night. It’s times like these that I really, really hate the new standards. It’d be nice if the officials could tell the difference between a hook that is consequential and one that’s not. Too many calls these days leave even long-time fans like myself mystified.

… I didn’t mention it for fear of jinxing things, but, like so many times in the past, the Wings had a chance to set a team record for consecutive wins with a tenth. I wonder if I’ll live to see them do it.

… I don’t like the idea of seeing the Wings face the Blues Tuesday if they’re going to come out like they did last night.

GameDay: @ Chicago (9-7-0, 18 Pts) 7:00 ET

Update (7:50 PM): You can watch the game in progress here on NHL TV, via the Chicago feed. - Matt

Tonight is the third of eight games between these two Original Six teams this season. The Blackhawks lead the series 2-0, with wins October 6th (4-3 SO) and October 12th (3-2). They’ll meet once more this month, on the 17th, before wrapping things up with games in January, March, and April (2).

Since beating the Wings on the 12th, the Hawks have posted a 7-5-0 record. Their wins have come in pairs over that stretch, with losses preventing longer streaks. They dropped three in a row from October 23rd to October 27th, two of which came to Eastern Conference opponents (Boston and Atlanta). They have won their last two games, beginning with a 5-2 win over Columbus on Wednesday and then continuing with a 4-2 win over St. Louis on Friday. It was the third time in 12 games they’ve played St. Louis and their second win over the Blues. Tonight’s game ends a four-game homestand that will be followed by a six-game roadtrip beginning Wednesday.

Rookie Patrick Kane leads the Hawks in the three major offensive categories: goals (6), assists (13), and points (19). Any one of five Blackhawks could be said to lead the goals category, as former Red Wings Robert Lang and Jason Williams, as well as rookie Jonathan Toews, and Patrick Sharp have six goals as well. Lang isn’t far behind Kane in points with 15.

It looks as though Martin Havlat may return today after going down in the first game with a shoulder injury.

Patrick Lalime has backstopped the Hawks to their last two wins at the expense of Nikolai Khabibulin, who last played in the team’s November 4th loss to Nashville. Nonetheless, Lalime will be on the bench, as Khabibulin has been named the starter for tonight. The Russian is 2-0 against the Wings this season.

The big story tonight is that the game will be locally televised in the Chicago area for the first time in decades. It’s a landmark day for the Blackhawks and hopefully the start of a healing of the fanbase that was ravaged during the Bill Wirtz years.

Be sure to check out The Third Man In, Second City Hockey, and The Blackhawk Experience.

The Wings have posted a 10-1-0 record since losing to the Hawks last month. Their only loss came October 15th to Anaheim on the road. Since then, they’ve won nine in a row. They are coming off a solid 4-1 win over Columbus Friday night, a game which followed a shaky 3-2 shootout win over Nashville two nights before. The Wings are now three games in to a nine-game stretch against Central Division opponents.

Despite the fact that Sidney Crosby played last night, Henrik Zetterberg remains the NHL point leader, if only by one point, with 26. He is the only Red Wing to crack the double-digit mark in goals with 13. Tomas Holmstrom is second, with nine.

The Wings have no injuries, but it is possible there could be a lineup change or two. Tomas Kopecky is coming off what Mike Babcock called his best game of the season, so it’s unlikely he’ll sit. However, Dallas Drake may get the night off in favor of Matt Ellis or Aaron Downey.

Chris Osgood will get the start tonight and Dominik Hasek will back him up, though it’s highly unlikely he’ll relieve Osgood for anything less than an emergency.

Be sure to visit Snapshots, Gorilla Crouch, Abel to Yzerman, HockeyTownTodd, Gloveside, Behind the Jersey, No Pun Intended, and Winging It In Motown today.

The Wings haven’t been at all successful against the rejuvenated Blackhawks this season and that needs to change tonight. If they pick up where they left off Friday night, they should be in good shape. They’ll need to keep out of the box, which is easier said than done, and find ways to shut down the dynamic duo of Toews and Kane. It’ll have to be one of their tighter defensive efforts. Expect the Hawks to put on a strong performance for the fans on TV. If the Wings don’t come out flat, we should have a good game.

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 3, Blackhawks 4 (SO)

I said yesterday that I’d be surprised if the Hawks gave the Wings much trouble. Well, color me surprised. In my estimation, Chicago outplayed the Wings by a fair margin last night. That’s not to say the Wings played terribly, but it did seem as though they took the Hawks for granted somewhat, and as a result, they looked pretty average. In contrast, the Blackhawk skaters looked pretty good and if they can get more reliable goaltending from Khabibulin, the Central may be a bit more interesting this year. Still, in spite of the fact that they were outplayed, the Wings should have won, but we’ll get to that.

Aside from the fact that the Wings lost, the big story from the game is the injury to Johan Franzen not seven minutes into the second period. It was a bit of a freak accident at center ice, with Pavel Datsyuk tripping up Tuomo Ruutu, who fell into Franzen at about waist level. Franzen sprawled out, twisted his right knee and hyper-extended his left leg. It did not look pretty. He had to be helped off the ice by Piet Van Zant and Pavel Datsyuk, and went directly to the lockerroom. FSN announced at the start of the third period that he would not return. Bruce MacLeod quotes Franzen on his blog:

“I had almost the same kind of thing last year … (but) that was worse. It’s OK right now. It hurts a little bit right now, but I’ve got pain-killers.”

If you recall, Johan left knee was injured last year in a collision with Vancouver’s Willie Mitchell and he missed nine games as a result. Hopefully he’ll be back faster this time around. I think it’s safe to say he won’t play Monday, at least, so it looks like Matt Ellis will get some time this week.

And now, some thoughts on the game.

… Pretty early in the game, it was apparent that the Hawks had come out of the gates with more jump. For the first few minutes, they skated all over the Wings and it was only because Dominik Hasek was so sharp that they did not go up a goal or two. The Wings didn’t help their cause by taking an early penalty, but they weathered that storm and gradually began to gain their feet.

… Dallas Drake, who has probably had the fastest-to-fan-favorite time of any recent new acquisition, had his second fight in two games at 5:10 with James Wisniewsk. Drake won on a takedown. Both players kept their helmets on, but neither of them wear a visor. Drake isn’t the best fighter, but I like that he’s getting under the opposing team’s skin so well.

… With the teams skating four aside, Detroit took a 1-0 lead rather suddenly of a booming shot by Brian Rafalski. With the Wings having just entered the Hawks’ zone, Henrik Zetterberg dished the puck back to Nick Lidstrom the blueline. Nick passed it across to Rafalski, he stepped up, waited a second, and then released his shot, with Pavel Datsyuk and Tomas Holmstrom out front. As near as I could tell, it went in clean. It was good to see Rafalski’s shot in action. It’s nowhere near as scary as Schneider’s, but it’ll do.

… Following the goal, the Hawks continued their territorial dominance until they took a penalty of their own. The Wings may have gained confidence from that power play because after that they started to pick up the pace a little. Valtteri Filppula and Kris Draper had a nice 2-on-1 break not long after the penalty kill, but Fil’s pass was too hard for Draper to take on his backhand and the play did not connect.

… Toward the end of the period, the Wings had a couple more good chances. The first came when Pavel Datsyuk stole the puck at the Detroit blueline and broke in on Khabibulin, who, unfortunately, made the save. Not long after that, Dallas Drake had a great chance in the slot, but, I believe, he shot the puck wide. The Hawks were somehow penalized on the play, but the Wings couldn’t convert before the end of the period.

… Just over a minute into the second period, Kris Draper took a dumb holding-the-stick penalty. It didn’t come back to bite the Wings, though, as 21 seconds later, Jason Williams was whistled for a very weak hooking penalty. With the teams skating four aside, it took the Wings 5 seconds to score again. Henrik Zetterberg won the faceoff (beating Robert Lang, by the way) to Mikael Samuelsson, who sent the puck back to Nicklas Lidstrom. Nick’s shot from the blueline beat Khabibulin high without any deflection or even much of a screen. Khabibulin was upset with himself on that one, but also apparently able to have a good laugh about it.

… The rest of the 4-on-4 stretch was pretty eventful, with Dominik Hasek making a big save following a Rafalski turnover and Pavel Datsyuk cycling the puck well with Johan Franzen in the other end. On the Wings’ brief power play, Homer had a great scoring chance out front, but Khabibulin was sharp and made the save.

… Franzen’s injury came at 6:58 or so, when the play was whistled dead for the penalty committed by Datsyuk that led to the injury. The subsequent Blackhawk power play was a good one, as they held the Wings in their zone for the majority of the time. The Wings did a good job of blocking and limiting shots, though, and they were able to kill it off.

… Following that penalty kill, Henrik Zetterberg, Jiri Hudler, and Mikael Samuelsson had a nice shift in the Chicago end, but the puck somehow ended up going the other way on a Blackhawk 3-on-2. Patrick Kane passed it to Magnus Johansson, who sort of shot/passed it at the net. Ruutu intercepted the shot (or took the pass, whichever you prefer), and put it behind Hasek, who had little chance. It was just a nicely set up play by the Hawks, whether the pass from Johansson to Ruutu was intentional or not. 2-1 at 9:43 of the second.

… At 10:50, the Hawks took a tripping penalty, and three seconds later, the Wings scored a power play goal to go up two again. Datsyuk won the offensive zone faceoff to Zetterberg, who sent it back to Rafalski at the blueline. Rafalski sent a slapper in the general direction of the net (it may have been going a little wide right) and Holmstrom got his stick on it for a perfect deflection between Khabibulin’s pads.

… Following the goal, the Hawks regained control of the play and I realized that, with a few exceptions, the Wings had not been so great 5-on-5 the whole night.

… The last few minutes of the period were pretty choppy and there isn’t much to report about them, except that the Hawks took another late penalty that carried over into the third.

… On the power play to start the final period, the Wings appeared to have scored a goal to make it 4-1. It came off a flurry around the net, one in which the puck fell to Khabibulin’s feet after he made a chest save. The puck then ended up to his left, where Pavel Datsyuk slammed it into the empty part of the net, a few tenths of a second after the back ref blew the whistle. Apparently, this official had lost sight of the puck, despite the fact that it was at no time covered by Khabibulin, who never left his feet. A monumentally stupid thing for the ref to have done. 9 times out of 10, they blow the whistle long after the puck is covered, but not this time. I made the mistake of commenting at the time that, “It won’t matter … hopefully.”

… At 2:22, Kane took a penalty and the Wings returned to the power play. This one was pretty sloppy and before long, the Hawks had a 3-on-1 break going the other way. Brian Rafalski was the only Wing back, with Lidstrom skating hard to provide support. Wisniewski had an easy tip-in goal from the left wing as he was uncovered by Rafalski, who had the other two Hawks on his mind. Hasek could only hope the puck would hit him. The play came out of a bad pass in the Hawks zone, which led to a Lidstrom turnover. 3-2 at 3:41.

… The pace picked up after that. The Wings sort of huddled in a defensive-esque mode while the Hawks mostly controlled the play. Detroit remained dangerous, earning a couple chances to put the game away, but failing to do so. The officials were letting both teams play at this point, as there were a number of things that could have been called that weren’t, on both sides.

… Robert Lang, unfortunately, tied the game up at 16:20. It was a nice goal for Robert, who put it right over Hasek’s left elbow, a place where a save is nearly impossible to make. That called-back goal was looking pretty important at this point.

… The last few minutes of regulation were pretty frantic, with lots of action in both ends, but neither team scored and we headed to overtime.

… Early on in the extra five, the Wings had some nice pressure and a chance or two to win the game, but the Hawks eventually took over. We then entered a stretch where Chicago could have won the game any one of 5 or 6 times, but Dom pulled the Wings through. He stoned Duncan Keith first, then withstood a solid two minutes of sustained pressure. The tension culminated in a glorious scoring chance for Patrick Sharp, who forced Hasek to make a save to his left out front, and then picked up the puck and took it around the back of the net on a wraparound attempt. Watching the play live, it had a certain inevitability about it. But somehow, Dom got over, and made a diving save. The replay showed that Sharp’s shot wasn’t actually on net and would have headed out into the slot (it rolled off his stick), but it was still spectacular, almost too much so.

… In the shootout, none of the Wings got what would have counted as a shot on goal. Pavel Datsyuk’s fore- to backhand deke rang off the post, Henrik Zetterberg’s back- to fore-hand deke was deflected wide by Khabibulin’s poke-check, and Jiri Hudler’s straight-up shot went wide. Patrick Kane, the Hawks’ first shooter, deked Hasek forehand to backhand and put it just over Dom’s left pad. A pretty goal. Yanic Perrault streaked in, effectively faked a shot, and then released a shot Hasek stopped. Hudler had to score to keep things going, but it wasn’t his night to be hero, and the Wings lost, 4-3.

… We Wings fans can be upset about the waived-off goal (believe me, I am), but the fact is the Wings blew a two-goal lead. They should not have needed that goal. On the other hand, they were fortunate to have had that lead in the first place, as they had not played up to par for the majority of the game. They deserve credit for taking advantage of those opportunities to score, but if they had won, it would have been a stolen game. They’re going to have to do better than that in the future.

As for the Hawks, I’m thinking they aren’t going to be the pushovers they have been in recent years. The Wings certainly can’t take them for granted after this game.