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Wings 5, Blues 3

I didn’t take notes on the game so I can only offer a few comments off the top of my head today.

… Dominik Hasek rebounded from his less-than-stellar performance on Long Island with a strong game last night at home, though the score may not indicate it. He was the victim of some bad breaks, but came up huge in the third period when the Blues were trying to mount their 4th comeback. Considering what happened to Dom at 7:43 of the second period, his performance last night was amazing.

It was worst moment of the season: Ryan Johnson got behind the Wings defense, and Brett Lebda could do little more than try to disrupt his shot. Johnson got it off, however, but kept driving to the net at full speed. He left his feet and absolutely nailed Hasek, knocking Dom flat on his back, before ending up against the boards, which finally stopped his momentum. The first Red Wing to go after Johnson was Lebda, and soon he was mobbed, while the training staff came out to check Dom out. He ended up being okay, but the situation had never looked bleaker than when he was laying flat on his back at the edge of the trapezoid.

Johnson got away with a slap on the wrist, a goaltender interference penalty, when he should have been thrown out of the game. He was not hit into Hasek, was not tripped into Hasek, and had ample time to change direction before he bowled him over. It could be argued that he tried to avoid the hit by jumping, but he could have avoided it by going to the right of the rather than across it. I’m trying to find a replay of it and if anyone has one, let me know. I’ve rarely been as upset by a play before.

Andy Murray, the Blues’ coach, had the gall to argue the penalty, but had he taken a second to actually watch the replay, I’d like to believe he would have admitted its validity. However, he was still whining about something at the start of the third period and good money says it had something to do with the Johnson call. My respect for Murray, who is a great coach, went down considerably after seeing how much he fought that penalty.

As for Johnson, he’s joined the Public Enemy Pantheon, with Scott Hartnell, Jordin Tootoo, Raffi Torres, etc. I would have given anything for the Wings to have had Brendan Shanahan on the team last night, because they had no one to set Johnson straight.

One more thing about Dom: he really was in a wandering mood last night, leaving the net on fast breaks at least three times and giving us heartattacks a number of others. Two of his slide-tackle attempts failed pretty badly, which is unusual because he generally makes that play, but only one resulted in a goal, and that was just bad luck.

… Henrik Zetterberg looked great last night. His goal at :33 of the first period should go on highlight reels and his play for the rest of the game was exemplary. He finished with 4 points and the arena first star.

Watching the play develop just before his goal, I definitely didn’t see it coming, because it was a chance similar to many others he’s had this year and I expected him to do what he’s always done: take the puck around the back of the net to try a wraparound or look for a centering pass. Instead, Hank cut to the front of the net and scored with an incredible backhand shot to the top right corner.

… Mathieu Schneider made his return last night and looked mostly solid, though it was evident he was a little rusty (which he admitted) on a few plays, such as the Blues’ first goal. He saved Dom’s behind in the first period when the latter tried to break up a scoring chance by charging the blueline. When Dom missed nabbing the puck, the Blues had a great scoring chance, and Schneider was able to keep it out of the net by good positioning. It was good to have him back.

… Tomas Holmstrom also had a good game. His breakaway goal in the third period was a pleasant surprise and his tip-in goal in the second was all the revenge for the Johnson hit that we can hope for.

… I wasn’t too impressed with the shortness of the review on Tkachuk’s third period goal. The question was whether or not he had knocked it down with a high stick and they took about 30 seconds to decide. FSN had barely gotten its replay up before the goal was being confirmed and the puck was getting dropped at center. However, the replay seemed to show his stick was far too high and I would have liked to have seen them look at it longer to decide. Not sure why they can spend 15 minutes when Holmstrom scores a similar goal, but turn around and be so sure when Tkachuk scores it.

… Chris Chelios looked great last night. He made a very impressive play on a 2-on-1 at one point and I wanted to see a replay of it, but it never came. Basically, he stood his ground on the puck carrier, went to his knees and took it away. I hadn’t seen an odd-man rush played like that before, but it worked very well.

… Overall, the game served to inflame my dislike of the Blues, from Johnson’s run on Hasek, to Cajanek’s tomahawk chop high-sticking of Kirk Maltby in the second period, to Murray’s whining about calls. I’m glad the Wings made their playoff hopes all the more dim, and while part of me would like to see them play St. Louis in the playoffs, I’d probably rather see the Blues fall on their faces and fail in their attempt to redeem their season.

Next up: @ NYR on Monday at 7:00 ET.

GameDay: vs. St. Louis (20-23-8, 48 Pts) 7:30 ET

Tonight is the sixth of eight games between these two teams this season. The Wings lead the series 3-2, with wins October 28th (3-2), December 5th (5-1), and December 7th (4-3 OT). The Blues won the November 24th (3-2) and January 26th (2-1 OT) games. They’ll face each other once more this month (the 8th) before wrapping up the season series next month (March 24th) n Detroit.

In the week since we last saw the Blues, they have lost both games they’ve played. The first was a 6-3 disappointment at home to Nashville the next night and the second was a 5-2 decision to the Wild, also at home. The loss to the Preds was their sixth this season, but it was the loss to Minnesota that probably hurt them the most, as it put them 10 points back of the 8th place Wild. With Minnesota’s win over Colorado last night, the Blues are now 12 points back of a playoff spot, making winning over the next couple months very important for a team hoping to salvage its season with a postseason berth.

Manny Legace, who has beaten the Wings twice this season, should be in net for the Blues tonight.

The Wings have won both games since losing to St. Louis a week ago, notching a statistically impressive 3-1 win over Colorado on Sunday and mounting a comeback to beat the Islanders 4-3 in overtime on Tuesday. The two wins kept them on Nashville’s heels for the division lead, pulling them within 5 points of the Preds, who have dropped their last two. If the playoffs were to start today, the 4th-place Wings would play 5th-place San Jose, a highly undesirable matchup, while the 1st-place Predators would play the 8th-place Minnesota Wild, making catching Nashville very important.

Dominik Hasek should be in net tonight and I’m sure we’ll see him put on a great performance as a rebound from his shaky one on Tuesday.

Mathieu Schneider is slated to return tonight from his knee injury. He has missed the last 10 games and has had his return delayed as the Wings were careful not to rush him back as soon as he could play. As frustrating as that was as a fan wanting to see him back, it will definitely help in the long run as he’ll be rested for the dash to the finish line.

However you look at it, tonight is an important game for the Wings, who have a good opportunity to deal the Blues a major blow to their playoff hopes, especially if they couple a win tonight with another next week. A St. Louis team no longer hoping to make the playoffs would be a team more willing to deal away forwards such as Bill Guerin or Keith Tkachuk, who are being talked about as trade deadline acquisition posibilities for the Wings.

On the other hand, a Blues win tonight would keep their playoff hopes alive and give them a greater chance of finishing 7th or 8th, which could potentially be a good thing for Detroit. If the Wings manage to pass the Predators and finish 1st or 2nd, a first round matchup with St. Louis would be ideal as they have historically owned the Blues in the playoffs.

Not that I’m advocating the Wings throw the game, but if they do lose, I won’t be enormously disappointed, because it could mean success in the future at the cost of a loss or two now. Of course, the Wings need to keep winning if they want to catch Nashville, so another win tonight is more important than any other consideration. Playing the Blues in the first round might just be a pipe dream, but I do like the idea.

Wings 1, Blues 2 (OT)

The Wings’ loss streak continued last night as they lost 2-1 to St. Louis in overtime. It was their third loss in a row and, with Nashville’s 3-1 win over Chicago, put them 7 points back of the Central Division-leading Predators. It wasn’t terribly exciting, as both teams played a conservative, defensive game, which was hardly surprising as the Wings were without four regulars and the Blues were trying to maintain momentum.

As reported just before the puck drop last night, Dominik Hasek did not play last night, having contracted the flu. Chris Osgood played instead and looked strong. Both goals he allowed were more due to defensive lapses than anything he did wrong, though he could have, perhaps, controlled his rebounds a little better. All in all, he did his job and it was the offense that failed to do theirs.

In my opinion, the Wings’ best line last night was made up of the Grand Rapids call-ups, Josh Langfeld, Matt Ellis, and Matt Hussey. They only got 9:59, 9:22, and 9:32 in ice-time, respectively, but it seemed like they pinned the Blues in their own end on almost every one of their shifts together. Part of that may have been due to the fact that they were relative unknowns to St. Louis, having been called up either the day of the game or the day before, in Langfeld’s case. However, most of it, I think, was due to their own hard work. They cycled the puck very well along the boards and generated a few scoring chances, with each of them coming close once or twice. Ellis and Hussey are back in Grand Rapids, however, where they will play the Toronto Marlies tonight. They could return to Detroit on Sunday, however, if Lang and Draper are not ready to play.

As expected, Jiri Hudler, Valtteri Filppula and Jason Williams composed the second scoring line last night, but they didn’t do much to impress and mostly squandered their 14-15 minutes on the ice, including significant power play time. Apparently, Filppula has gotten the flu himself, but the other two don’t have much excuse. Hudler stood out at times offensively and showed good effort on the backcheck, but Babcock was looking for results on the scoresheet. I can’t say Williams was disappointing because he’s been useless enough for months now that my disappointment has worn off and I’ve come to accept that he is going to bungle every offensive chance and blow it at the blueline on every power play he’s “quarterbacking.”

Kirk Maltby, Johan Franzen, and Dan Cleary looked pretty good together last night, and two of them were the only Wings to make it to the scoring category on the boxscore. Cleary came as close to scoring last night as he has in weeks and Franzen was pretty much a beast on the puck along the boards, shedding Blues like they were nothing. He exhibited some nice offensive skill on his goal in the second period, splitting the defense by stepping around Dennis Wideman and, after losing the puck momentarily, taking it back when Jamie Rivers tipped it right to him. He, in turn, tipped it past Legace at 9:59 and tied the game at one.

As far as disappointment goes, the top line, Henrik Zetterberg, Pavel Datsyuk, and Tomas Holmstrom, probably top the list, though that’s only because expectations are so high. They showed magic at times, but were otherwise underwhelming and couldn’t generate as much pressure as the Grand Rapids Line. Of course, in contrast to the GR guys, they’re one of the most scouted lines in hockey, so it shouldn’t be surprising when they get shut down at times. Holmstrom did “score” a goal in the first period, but review showed the puck was knocked down with a high stick and it was negated.

The two Blues goals happened like this

  1. Chris Chelios pinched on the play in the St. Louis zone and missed the puck. It ended up on Ryan Johnson’s stick and after a nice cross-ice outlet pass to Jamal Mayers, the Blues had a 2-on-2 rush with Brett Lebda covering Mayers and Pavel Datsyuk back covering Eric Brewer. Both did a decent job, and, though Mayers got off a good backhand shot in the slot, Osgood was able to make the save. With Datsyuk and Lebda sealed off by Mayers and Brewer, however, Johnson was able to follow up on the play and pounce on the rebound to Osgood’s left. He got to it and knocked it in before Henrik Zetterberg could make it back. 1-0 Blues at 8:03.
  2. In overtime, Doug Weight took the puck down the right wing on a quick rush, 2-on-2. He took a long backhand shot at the net and Osgood redirected the rebound to the right wing, where Bill Guerin happened to be streaking in. Johan Franzen was right there but he somehow didn’t see Guerin early enough and could only put his stick out in a vain effort to disrupt the one-timer, which blew past Osgood and won the game for St. Louis at 1:09 of the extra period.

… FSN showed a replay before the game of Mikael Samuelsson blocking a shot in the first period of the Colorado game. Apparently, that’s when the injury happened, so I was wrong to assume it happened in the third period. … Niklas Kronwall chose to wear the cage rather than a full plexiglass shield last night. He looked good and didn’t seem to be too much affected by it. … The refs really let both teams, but especially St. Louis, get away with murder last night. Then they’d call something that was completely harmless. I hate that. … Ken Daniels said that one of the reasons the Wings are planning on playing Hasek more is because they have a couple five-day breaks over the last months of the season. That may be true, but I still think it’s a mistake to play him more often, even with those extra days of rest. … Brett Lebda made a great defensive play in the second period when Jamal Mayers took the puck in on a scoring chance. Mayers got behind him, but Brett switched his stick over his head to his left side and was able to disrupt Mayers’ shot, which went wide. Mayers fell on the play, and the fans wanted a call, but Lebda never touched his feet. Lebda is very underrated, I have to say. … Speaking of the fans, they were very spirited last night, but seemed very classless. They taunted Osgood often and booed Manny Legace when he allowed the Franzen goal. They booed at least one icing call and were constantly calling out for calls on plays that clearly were not penalties. It’s one thing to support your team, it’s another to be so vocal with crap like that. …

Next up, the Wings have Colorado tomorrow afternoon on NBC. Hopefully the Wings’ll be more healthy and able to put up a better effort.

GameDay: @ St. Louis (19-21-8, 46 Pts) 8:00 PM

Update (4:20 PM): Dominik Hasek will start tonight. - Matt Update (8:06 PM, just before the puck drop): Apparently, Dom has the flu, so Osgood will be the starter instead. - Matt

Update (5:45 PM): Ansar Khan has some thoughts worth reading on starting Dominik Hasek versus starting Chris Osgood down the stretch. I couldn’t agree more. The Wings have been smart so far, but playing Dom as much as they have been will be a mistake, especially given the fact that they have an entirely capable backup. I’m especially shocked to see that he’s been cleared to play back-to-back games. Why stray from the plan now? It makes no sense. Hasek is on this team to play and win in the playoffs, not win us the Central Division. If they somehow think playing Osgood means they won’t win the Division, so be it.

Khan also says Babcock is challenging Valtteri Filppula and Jiri Hudler to prove they’re ready for more minutes. Apparently, they haven’t been doing enough with the time they’ve been given, though I thought they’d been doing pretty darn well.

Apparently, our line projections earlier were a little off, as Khan says the three GR call-ups will be together tonight. So, does that make Williams-Filppula-Hudler the #2 scoring line? If Franzen, Cleary, and Maltby are together, I’d say it does. Tonight’s a great opportunity for the young guns. - Matt

Update (12:45 PM): Not that there was any doubt after the call-ups, but the Freep confirms that Lang and Draper are too sick to play and that they will be replaced in the lineup by Ellis and Hussey. - Matt

Update (9:38 AM): It looks like Kris Draper and Robert Lang will both sit out with the flu tonight as the Wings have called up Matt Ellis and Matt Hussey from Grand Rapids. To fill in for Ellis and Hussey in GR, Evan McGrath was called up from Toledo and Jamie Tardiff was given a professional tryout.

This’ll mean a bit of line shuffling for tonight. Megan and I project these lines:

Holmstrom-Datsyuk-Zetterberg
Hudler/Langfeld-Williams-Cleary
Franzen-Ellis-Maltby
Hudler/Langfeld-Filppula-Hussey

With Hudler playing as well as he has, he could very well move up to the second line, as Dave of Gorilla Crouch proposed yesterday. Ellis may center the checking line since he’s very good at faceoffs, but Franzen is also a likely choice. - Matt

Tonight is the fifth of eight games between these two clubs this season. The Wings lead the series 3-1, with wins October 28th (3-2), December 5th (5-1), and December 7th (4-3 OT). The Blues won the November 24th meeting, 3-2. They’ll play twice more next month before finishing up the 8-game series on March 24th in Detroit.

The last time we saw the Blues, they were in the midst of what would turn out to be a 0-8-3 losing streak and were falling as fast as they could. However, since December 19th, when they beat Pittsburgh 4-1 on the road, they’ve put up a 12-2-2 record, making them the hottest team in the League going into the All Star Break. If they can continue this and things go their way with the other teams, they’ll be able to think playoffs. They are currently just eight points behind Minnesota for eighth in the conference, but don’t have much room for error as the season hits the final stretch. Their upcoming schedule is tough and maintaining momentum will be very difficult.

One of the biggest reasons for the Blues’ recent success has been former Red Wing Manny Legace, who is 10-2-2 in his last 14 starts. He has posted an impressive .928 save-percentage in that span and earned three shutouts.

The Wings have not been quite as successful since December 19th, posting an 11-5-1 record in that span, with those losses coming in clumps of three and two. They are six points behind Nashville for the division lead with 65 and will need to have a fortunate finish if they want to catch the Predators by season’s end. An exhausted Detroit team dropped two games going into the All Star Break, first to Columbus and then to Colorado the next night. Only one player, Nick Lidstrom was in the Game so the team should be well-rested now and ready to go for the 33-game sprint to the post-season.

I assume Dominik Hasek will start tonight for the Wings, though the team did say a couple weeks ago that Chris Osgood would get the nod more often toward the end of the month.

Mikael Samuelsson is out with a broken/fractured right foot and will be replaced in the lineup by Josh Langfeld.

Mathieu Schneider remains out with a knee sprain.

Robert Lang and Kris Draper couldn’t practice because of the flu yesterday and if either one of them can’t go tonight, the Wings will call up someone from Grand Rapids.

It’ll be good to return to meaningful hockey now that the Break is over. After the rest, I expect the Wings to be back to form and to put up a good performance tonight. The Blues are playing well and can smell a shot at the post-season, but they’re still vulnerable and the Wings need to take advantage of it. Should be a high-tempo game with some good goaltending and hopefully Detroit’ll come out on top.

The Blues accuse Illitch of foul play

St. Louis president John Davidson has accused Red Wings owner Mike Illitch of breaking the rules after hearing that the latter talked to the officials between the second and third periods of Thursday night’s game, according to Ted Kulfan. Davidson, who did not see it himself, told the St. Louis Dispatch,

“We have more of a concern about the owner of the Detroit Red Wings going down to escort the officials off the ice to their dressing room during the second intermission. That’s more of a concern that defies the spirit of the game. We think as an organization that that was wrong. A Hall of Fame owner decides to have a conversation with the officials during a game. It’s our opinion that’s not right.”

Davidson would not say whether or not he believed Illitch had attempted to influence the referees, even though the Blues had four successive penalties in the first 10 minutes of the third period.

The matter is being reviewed by Colin Campbell, the League VP, who received a report from referee Kerry Frasier after the game, writes Jeremy Rutherford of the Dispatch. Apparently, Illitch approached Frasier and the other referee, Chris Rooney, just before they took the ice for the third period, and asked them, “politely,” about a hit, which the officials were already looking at. The “hit,”, as Rutherford points out, was most likely that which Dallas Drake laid on Brett Lebda late in the first period. The hit went unpenalized at the time, but Drake was suspended two games on Friday after the League reviewed it.

If Frasier’s report and Campbell’s recounting of it are to believed, Davidson was incorrect about Illitch going with the officials to their dressing room between the periods. It would seem he is also wrong to say Illitch broke any rules, as the Dispatch quotes Campbell as saying, “We have a standing rule that managers and coaches are not allowed to go to the officials room. He did not go into the room.”

I personally have no problem with Illitch approaching referees in such a manner, especially if he was asking about the Drake/Lebda hit. Davidson perhaps cannot understand it, but the Wings have had two players taken out this seaon because of headshots, and if Mike Illitch wants to talk to the officials about a play that endangered another one of his players, he should be able to.

Campbell says they were already reviewing the play, but that does not automatically mean punishment was guaranteed to be dealt out, as we recently saw with Alexander Ovechkin’s brutal hit on Daniel Briere. Ovechkin, aside from being ejected from the game, got away nearly scot-free (he may be fined more than the automatic $100), a decision likely driven more by revenue concerns than anything else. With Ovechkin set to play Sidney Crosby in a much publicized game on Monday, the League couldn’t have one of their two best young stars just coming off a suspension, could they? Even if he literally almost killed a fellow player.

If the results of similar plays earlier this season say anything about the likelihood of punishment in the NHL today, Drake may very well have gotten away with that hit had Illitch not approached the officials, even if the League was already planning on looking at it. Two other instances of headhunting Wings have gone without penalty, despite the fact that they caused injury.

After the Drake hit, Lebda was a little woozy, but he returned to the ice seemingly none the worse for wear in the second. So, if the League isn’t going to suspend players for hits that cause injury, why would they for a hit that didn’t? Illitch’s comments to Frasier may have been necessary, sadly, just as Babcock’s may have been.

If Davidson is implying that the Illitch somehow either influenced Frasier and Rooney to make pro-Wings calls, he’s being ridiculous. It’s insulting to the officials, for one thing, and deflects blame from his players, who earned what they got, for another. However, Illitch may have had something to do with Drake’s suspension, which should have been coming to him anyway because there’s no place for hits like that in the game.

Davidson should be more concerned with his 7-16-4 team’s place in the standings than with Mike Illitch’s effort at looking out for one of his young players.

Wings 4, Blues 3 (OT)

I caught the second and third periods of the game last night but was so tired and distracted that I only have a few comments on it.

The Wings as a whole seemed out of it for much of the time that I was watching, but Dominik Hasek was especially off. I’ve been gaining confidence in the goaltending lately but Dom’s performance last night was not encouraging. He was not at fault on the first goal, based on the replay I saw, but, though he made a great save just before the second goal, it was a save that took him well out of position and the rebound made it easy for the Blues to score. On the third goal, he looked awful as Drake sniped the top right corner from the Wing. But it wasn’t just the goals, it was the plays around the net that concerned me. Sometimes it seemed as though he was almost completely unaware of his surroundings. Now, I can’t expect him to play perfectly game and I don’t. I’m just pointing out some oddities and I hope they’re gone Saturday.

Back to the third goal: Dave of Gorilla Crouch calls it the result of a, “bonehead play by Mathieu Schneider,” a response I knew was coming when I saw it live. The thing is, if the puck hadn’t ended up on Drake’s stick, Wings fans would be praising Schneider for keeping the puck in the zone. Well, maybe they wouldn’t be, since most of them seem to hate the team’s #1b defenseman for some reason. Blame Holmstrom for the bad pass that made Schneider have to dive. Watch for yourself.

Robert Lang’s assist on the Jason Williams goal has to be one of the prettiest I’ve ever seen. If you can’t quite see it on the replay, he put it through the first defenseman’s legs and then used his body on the second before making a perfect pass to Williams at the side of the net. That is why we have Lang on the team. Too bad he doesn’t do it more often.

I didn’t see Derek Meech much but he did what he was brought up to do: fill in the gap.

The Wings are upset about Drake’s first period hit on Brett Lebda. I only saw the replay once so I can’t say much more other than that it was nasty. Definitely another example of players take runs at the Wings. And, of course, Drake got away with it, rewarded even, with the Zetterberg penalty seconds later that resulted in a Blues goal.

It was good to see Pavel shoot the puck on the game winner. I had just been criticizing him for holding on to it in bad situations when he should be passing it. He made me eat my words by keeping it on that 2-on-1, that’s for sure. If you’re going to get a shot off, keep it as long as you want, but if you’re going to lose it, dish it off beforehand.

One last comment: The officiating was pretty awful last night. Making ghost calls while blowing it on the big things. I don’t know that I expect any different any more, though.

Anyway, not the greatest win but a win nonetheless. Next up is Toronto on Saturday.

GameDay: vs. St. Louis (7-16-3, 17 Pts) 7:30 ET

Update (2:00 PM): Ansar Khan reports that Derek Meech will make his NHL debut playing with Nick Lidstrom tonight.

It’s a good move by Mike Babcock since playing with the best defenseman in the league should give the kid some confidence as he dons the Winged Wheel for the first time. So you can rest easy, Wings fans. Nick will be there to cover for Meech if the rookie makes mistakes.

I guess Andreas Lilja will have to wait to play with Lidstrom, though he should get more ice time. - Matt

Update (7:17 AM)- Derek Meech has been called up from Grand Rapids, as reported by Griffinscentral. He’ll be in the lineup tonight against the Blues. With the Griffins, Derek has 3 assists for 3 points in 24 games. He is also +4, in a tie for third on the team with Galvin. Meech has played extremely well this season, and is projected as a depth defenseman. Tonight will be his first appearance in the NHL.

-Megan

I’m short on time so this will be brief:

Tonight is the fourth of eight games between these two teams this season. The Wings won the last meeting, 5-1 on Tuesday.

The Blues will be without former Red Wing Manny Legace for at least a week after he was knocked unconscious during practice by a puck hitting his mask. By the sound of it, Blues fans won’t miss him. Classless.

The Wings announced yesterday that defenseman Danny Markov has a broken hand and will be out 2-3 weeks. As of 5:45 AM, no one has been called up from Grand Rapids.

The current injury list is Markov (hand), Franzen (knee), Kronwall (groin), Osgood (wrist).

The Wings need to pick up where they left off on Tuesday, with another dominating performance.

GameDay: @ St. Louis (7-15-3, 17 Pts). 8:00 ET

I don’t have time to do a full preview so here are just a few quick notes.

Tonight is the third of eight games between these two teams this season. They will play again on Thursday, in Detroit.

The Blues have lost four straight since beating the Wings 3-2 on November 24th. The losses were to Phoenix, San Jose, Nashville, and Chicago.

The Wings won two in a row before losing 3-2 to the Sharks in their most recent game (Saturday).

The Wings’ injury situation is as reported yesterday: Johan Franzen (knee), out; Niklas Kronwall (groin), out; Chris Osgood (wrist), out.

The Blues will be retiring Brett Hull’s #16 tonight before the game. Hull will be remembered by the League and most fans as a Blue, but my memories of Brett will be of him in the Winged Wheel. Congratulations, Brett.

Let’s hope the Wings can put on a better performance this time around.

I have to work on a paper so I don’t think I’ll catch any more than snippets of the game. Sorry.

GameDay: vs. St. Louis (6-11-3, 15 Pts) 7:30 ET

Tonight is the second of eight meetings between these to Central Division “rivals” this season. The Wings won the first meeting 3-2 on October 28th in St. Louis.

Since losing to the Detroit, the Blues have gone a pitiful 3-7-1. Their three wins came against the Colorado Avalanche and Edmonton Oilers at home earlier this month, and the Columbus Blue Jackets on the road Wednesday night. The win over the jackets ended a three-game losing streak that started with a loss to the Flames to kick off a five-game road trip that will end tonight in Detroit. Their road record is second-worst in the league at 2-7-1.

Manny Legace should be in net for the Blues tonight. It will be just the second time in his career he has played against the Wings, after six seasons with them.

The Wings have fared better since they last saw the Blues, posting a 6-1-2 record. They are on a three-game losing streak, however, with one regulation loss (Calgary), a shootout loss (Edmonton, 3-4 SO), and an overtime loss (Vancouver, 3-4 OT) sending them on a slide for the first time since mid-October when they also dropped three in a row. The most recent game, Wednesday’s loss to Vancouver, came after they blew a 3-1 lead in the third period, eventually giving up a breakaway goal on a line-change in overtime.

The team has been having some injury troubles and matters were not helped Wednesday night when Johan Franzen went down with a concussion and a possible knee injury after a late hit by Canucks defenseman Willie Mitchell. Franzen is expected to be out for at least a week. The Wings apparently have no plans to bring anyone up since they already have enough healthy guys.

Niklas Kronwall skated yesterday but we won’t know if he’ll be playing until after the morning skate.

Dominik Hasek will start tonight, meaning either Joey MacDonald will start against the Central Division-leading Predators or the Wings will start Hasek two nights in a row, therefore going against all their rhetoric about not overplaying him early in the season. I don’t see why Babcock wouldn’t just start MacDonald tonight instead of wasting Dom on one of the worst teams in the league. The idea of a tired Hasek, or an inexperienced MacDonald, for that matter, starting against the speedy Preds is a little scary.

It may not matter quite as much since the Preds’ excellent starter, Tomas Vokoun, may not play tomorrow night due to injury.

Tonight’s a good night to end the losing streak, that’s for sure. Having periodic games against teams like the Blues is one of the benefits of the NHL’s new scheduling format because the team gets a break between games against stronger opponents and has the possibility of a confidence-building win. Hopefully, they’ll take advantage of it, with tomorrow night’s game being against a much tougher Nashville team.

Unfortunately, I will not be able to watch the game so there will be no first-hand reaction from me.

10/29 Notes

Update (1:57, 02. Nov): Greg Gaz of The Blue Note Blog eventually did post a well-written response to the game in the evening on Sunday. Gaz toes the “soon-to-be Dead Wings” line and looks forward to a day where the Blues will be the dominant team, thinking it’s going to be sooner rather than later. Sorry, Greg, the Wings aren’t done quite yet. The Blues have just shown that they don’t have to be doormats anymore, while the Wings are showing that they still know how to win. - Matt

Update (7:46 PM): … Here’s the highlight reel for the goals from last night, including some good looks at Filppula’s first, via the NHL’s Highlight Machine. - Matt

… In his report on the game last night, Ted Kulfan confirms that Mike Babcock gave Chris Chelios a rest due to it being the second of back-to-back games, not because of some injury. I basically thought that was the case, though it’s good to hear for sure.

George Sipple reports that the team had a special meeting yesterday morning where they focused stritctly on having confidence on the penalty kill. It was Mike Babcock’s response after the Wings gave up three power play goals on seven chances to the Dallas Stars Friday night. Apparently, the meeting had the desired effect, as they were perfect 5-for-5 on the PK against the Blues.

… According to Sipple, Robert Lang had to get eight stitches under his eye aftertaking Brett Lebda’s stick to the face in the first period.

… Sipple wins the award for lamest pun with the headline to his report on the game:

MANNY THANKS: Wings score early on ex-goalie Legace in 3-2 win over Blues

… No reaction to the game yet at the only Blues blog I could find, The Blue Note Blog.

… I’d say the St. Louis Post-Dispatch’s Jeremy Rutherford is a little hard on Manny Legace today for saying he wasn’t sharp last night, but I wholly agree with him when he says the defense wasn’t so hot. Legace stopped what he could and was left out to dry on the Wings’ goals.

… Before the game began last night, we were reminded of the Tigers’ loss in the World Series to the St. Louis Cardinals the night before when Cardinals manager Tony La Russa came out to center ice for a ceremonial puck drop. Not that it will make Tigers fans feel any better, but the Wings’ win is at least a small amount of revenge.

… Gloveside.net, after basically telling Manny to shut up and play, addresses concerns over Henrik Zetterberg in a post today. Basically, they point out that, while Hank isn’t scoring, he’s doing all kinds of things that don’t show up on the scoresheet, and is being invaluble to the team. He’ll be contributing offensively soon, as well.