Archive for the 'Blues' CategoryPage 4 of 4

Wings 3, Blues 2

The Wings looked a little more tired than expected coming off an energetic victory in Dallas Friday, but still got the job done, pretty solidly beating the Blues in St. Louis last night. Chris Osgood made the start for the Wings opposite his former teammate, Manny Legace, and looked good. With Dominik Hasek playing well in Dallas and Osgood doing the same in St. Louis, we Wings fans should have a little more confidence in the team’s goaltending than we have of late. Legace played well himself, having little chance on each of the Wings’ three goals. He did not get the support he deserves.

Mike Babcock demonstrated his confidence in rookie Valtteri Filppula by starting him on Henrik Zetterberg’s left wing with Kris Draper on the right. Nick Lidstrom and Danny Markov made up the first defensive pairing for the Wings. The first units didn’t get much done offensively, with only a couple small chances getting produced. The Blues got the first shot of the game, a short wrister from Keith Tkachuck that Osgood stopped.

At 4:33, Tomas Holmstrom put the Wings ahead 1-0 with a rocket slap shot from the slot after receiving a nice drop pass from Pavel Datsyuk. The puck went in over Manny’s glove hand and came out so fast that Ken Daniels’ was slow to call it a goal. Nice play by Pavel to get the puck to Holmstrom, whose shot was a great one. Legace had little chance to stop it, even with his fast glove hand. It was the Wings’ first shot of the game. 1-0 Detroit.

Just after the goal, Jiri Hudler dished the puck in the offensive zone to Robert Lang, who sent it just wide of the net for a nice chance. On the same shift, in the defensive end, Lang took a stick to the face, and the trainers came onto the ice to check him out. He had a small cut below his left eye but was otherwise okay. It was Brett Lebda’s stick, which had been caught up in a Blues player trying to get between him and Lang. Robert went down the tunnel to the lockerroom but was soon back on the ice.

At 6:32, Valtteri Filppula scored a beautiful backhand goal, showing why Mike Babcock so adamantly insists he should be in the NHL. Niklas Kronwall began the play with a nice up ice pass to Kris Draper at the St. Louis blue line. Draper tipped the puck to a streaking Filppula, who took it in down the left side, split the defensemen, cut across the net while switching to the backhand, and lifted it into the upper right corner. It was the second time Legace was beaten high on the glove side and it was the Wings’ second shot. 2-0 Detroit.

Not long after the second goal, Ken Daniels pointed out that the Blues had been down 2-0 in each of their three wins so far this season, and he wasn’t the only one who remembered that little stat. St. Louis was not ready to give in, and put some good effort toward a comeback. At 9:29, Billy Guerin rang a shot off the goalpost and for the next few minutes, it was mostly Blues chances. At 13:15, Holmstrom gave away the puck and Doug Weight sent a long slap shot at the net, forcing Osgood to make a quick glove save. Weight had another great chance two minutes later, but, again, Osgood’s glove hand was too fast.

Going the other way, the Wings had a great scoring chance when a Draper pass to Filppula went under the Finn’s stick (which had been lifted by the St. Louis defenseman) and on net. Legace redirected the puck out to his left, where Zetterberg happened to be. Hank got his stick on it and deflected it back on net, but Legace made it across in time to make the save. Had Zetterberg gotten more of the puck, it may have been a goal. Great chance, though.

The refs really let the teams play in the first period, allowing much of what would normally be considered penalties. Definitely not a good thing. Filppula was very noticeable this period, seemingly always involved in the play whenever he was on the ice, which was a lot (he finished with 15:22 in ice-time). It would be hard to imagine the Wings being interested in sending him back down to Grand Rapids after a game like last night’s. Even though Brad Norton would have to clear waivers (and he probably would clear), it’s probably worth sending him down instead, though Valtteri will probably not get as much ice time when Mikael Samuelsson returns.

Apparently the officials decided during the first intermission that it wasn’t acceptable to go a whole period without calling anything, because just 55 seconds into the second, they called high-sticking on one of the men least likely to commit a penalty: Nick Lidstrom. So, the Wings went on the penalty kill for the first time, but had little trouble killing it off.

The Wings may not have much problem on their first PK but they were sloppier offensively early in the second than they were in the first. A good example of this came around 3:40 when Robert Lang whiffed on a pass out front. They got their first power play at 5:18, though little came of it beyond a strange chance that resulted from a Lidstrom shot that totally missed the net and hit the backboards. Johan Franzen picked it up and sent it out front to Jiri Hudler, who got it on net, but Legace was there to make the save. Other than that, this PP was pretty anemic.

At this point in my notes, I have, “51 nice hustle at center,” written in response to seeing Filppula bust his butt to catch up to the puck carrier on a quick transition by the Blues. He showed some good speed there and an impressive effort. I liked what I saw from him more and more each play. While the game was slowing down and the Blues were taking it to the Wings physically, Valtteri was one of a couple Detroit players who had real intensity.

Also at this point in my notes is a mention of FSN’s Check of the Game, which came early in the game but was a good pick. I’m not sure when it happened but the check involved Weight and Guerin trying to sandwich Filppula. He somehow evaded both of them, causing the two Blues forwards to collide, thus earning their efforts the honorable status of the game’s best check (or, most humorous).

At 10:08, Dennis Wideman took a holding-the-stick penalty, and put the Wings back on the power play. This one was even worse than the first, with their initial efforts at setting up failing miserably and their eventual setup failing purely due to Jason Williams’ incompetence on the blueline. I have no idea why Babcock insists on putting Jason on the point during power plays, but he does, and there is no doubt in my mind that it is one of the reason’s the team’s PP percentage is so awful this year.

Williams made a bad decision with the puck and it resulted in an easy clear by the Blues, who had it easy only because they sent it out past Jason, who can hardly keep the puck in to save his life. When the Wings got it back into the St. Louis zone, they set up a nice play, the culmination of their efforts, really, to Williams, who prompty blew it by hesitating rather than quickly shooting the puck. By the time he released the shot, the opportunity was lost and the Blues defenseman was able to block it. It was a bad power play that would have been redeemed by a goal there but it was not meant to be.

Note to Mike Babcock: if you like Filppula so much, please give him some PP time over Williams. I also would have liked to have seen him get some power play time over Franzen, who I don’t think is offensively-minded enough to be out there in that situation when you have a kid like Filppula on the bench.

About a minute and a half after the Wideman penalty expired, the Blues cut the Wings’ lead in half. Christian Backman took the puck in down the left wing and let loose a shot at the net that Osgood would have had easily had Guerin not gotten his stick on it 17 feet out. The puck beat Osgood, who had very little chance on the play, at 13:35, making the score 2-1 Wings.

The Wings responded with some offensive pressure that was momentarily killed around 15:00 when Andreas Lilja couldn’t handle an easy pass at the blueline. I don’t remember any other glaring mistake from the big defenseman, but that one was pretty sad.

At 16:14, the Blues took another penalty and Detroit went back on the power play. The first set-up resulted in Lang planting the puck in the crest of Legace’s jersey. The Wings kept the puck in the zone after the ensuing faceoff but it was cleared when Hudler fumbled a pass on the cycling stage. After that, the puck did not stay in the Blues zone for very long, and they were able to kill off another penalty. It was a better effort, but still not great, by the Wings.

With about 40 seconds left in the period, Danny Markov made a nice play on a 1-on-1 rush, diving to knock the puck away from the Blues skater, though Osgood had to make a save on the followup.

The Wings looked a bit more tired in the second, but maybe I was expecting too much after reading reports of their play in the Stars game.

The Blues came out strong in the third period, keeping the pressure on for most of the first couple minutes and drawing a penalty, a Datsyuk slash at 2:10. It was a good kill by the Wings, who allowed the Blues only hints at scoring chances. After that, the game entered a back-and-forth stage, with both teams exchanging reasonable opportunities at scoring.

The Wings put themselves up 3-1 at 6:34 when Holmstrom got his second of the night. With a couple Blues players converging on him at the far-side boards, Datsyuk sent the puck to Williams in the right circle. Williams wheeled and took a shot on net, which Legace stopped but didn’t properly absorb. An uncovered Holmstrom got his stick on the rebound and backhanded it - wait for it - in high on Manny’s glove side. Not very good defense by the Blues, to be sure. Legace was left out to dry.

About a minute after the second Homer goal, the Wings took another penalty and went back to the PK. The Blues set up and cycled the puck, coming very close to scoring when Wideman sent the puck off the post two separate occasions, one of which consisted of a ricochet off both posts. That particular instance resulted in the goal light coming on but the referee waived off a possible goal, and this decision was confirmed when they looked at it upstairs, though the St. Louis fans weren’t happy about it.

At 13:23, Brett Lebda took a holding-the-stick penalty and put the Blues back on the power play. Osgood made a good save on a Tkachuk tip-in on the initial St. Louis set up, and his teammates took the puck the other way. Back in the Wings’ zone, the Blues had a couple good chances but Osgood was sharp and they were unable to score. Detroit cleared it and pursued it down the ice, with Franzen leading the way. While Johan was along the near-side boards, Martin Rucinsky thought it good to hit him sort of from behind, with his stick held high and most of the hit going to Franzen’s head, which bounced off the glass. Johan was hurt on the play and was bleeding pretty badly from his nose, causing the ref to give Rucinsky a double-minor penalty. The Wings would have been better without it, however.

Apparently, the Blues chose to ignore the fact that they were at a disadvantage since they continued to press the attack. They got a couple chances but the Wings were able to clear the puck and take it the other way. While at center ice, however, Lang chose a most inopportune time to cough up the puck to Radek Dvorak, springing him on a two-man breakaway. Osgood gambled and went the poke-check route but failed, leaving himself vulnerable and making it easy for Dvorak to rip a shot past him. The shorthanded goal came at 16:34 and put the Blues within one.

They followed up the goal with another good chance down low, no doubt causing Wings fans everywhere to ask, “Whose power play is this, anyway?” Finally the Wings got a scoring chance of their own, with Holmstrom attempting to complete the hat trick. Legace made the stop, however, and the crowd really began to get into the game.

The Wings’ power play ended when Zetterberg took a holding penalty with 29 seconds left in the double minor and just under a minute and a half left in the game. With Legace pulled, St. Louis was prepared to make a big push, especially after they called their timeout. The Wings didn’t make it easy on themselves when they iced the puck just as the Rucinsky penalty expired and they officially went on the PK. They won the ensuing face-off and cleared it only to see the Blues bring it right back in offsides. The game ended with Johan Franzen battling for the puck in the Blues end. 3-2 Wings final.

… Chris Chelios did not play last night. I have not heard anything about an injury so he was almost certainly just getting a rest after playing the night before … Joey MacDonald was the back-up goalie tonight … Pavel Datsyuk has a four game point streak going (2-4-6) … Tomorrow night at 10:00 ET, FSN Detroit will air an episode of their “Spotlight” series that will focus on Henrik Zetterberg … The Blues outshot the Wings 30-25 … … Holmstrom’s first goal was his 300th career point … My three stars of the game: 1. Valtteri Filppula (first NHL goal) 2. Tomas Holmstrom (points 300 and 301) 3. Johan Franzen (possibly a broken nose but intense as ever) … BoxscorePlay-by-PlayShift ChartAP Recap

Next up: vs. Calgary Flames, Wed 01. Nov 06 @ 7:30 ET.

GameDay: @ St. Louis (3-3-2, 8 Pts) 8:00 ET

The Wings will face their first Central Division opponent tonight when they face the Blues in St. Louis at 8:00 ET. It is the first of eight games these two teams will play against each other this season, thanks to the intradivison play-heavy NHL scheduling format. The Wings won the 2005-2006 season series 7-1, with their only loss to the Blues coming November 19th, 2005 (2-3).

The Blues began the season with a rough road trip to three Pacific Division cities, San Jose, LA, and Anaheim, and came out with just a point from an OT loss. Their wins this season have come against two struggling teams, the Hawks (twice) and the Bruins. They’ve lost to the Coyotes, a shame to any team this season, especially given the 5-2 score. They are third in the Central Division, having lost their #2 spot when the Wings’ won last night. The Blues are are coming off a 4-3 win over the Blackhawks in Chicago a full week ago.

After such a ridiculously long break - especially at this time of the season, where teams are warming up and don’t need the rest - the Blues could be cold in contrast to the Wings, who have some momentum built up with two recent games. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch sees this as a concern but notes that the team had a few intense practices that the players believe kept them sharp during the last week.

The Dispatch has another piece today that looks at the next five games the Blues are to play, which will be against teams that were in the playoffs last year. Their angle is that this stretch of games will be an indication of the Blues’ playoff-readiness. Seems to me that it’s a little early to be thinking about that, guys. The article also has a little gem from Manny Legace where he compares Steve Yzerman to William Wallace.

Another Dispatch story of interest is the cleverly named “Defenseman hopes river of change stops here,” which is about unlamented former Red Wings defenseman Jamie Rivers.

There’s a good chance that the Wings will face off against their former teammate, Manny Legace, tonight.

The Wings are coming off a 4-3 win of their own, though theirs came over the then-Conference-leading Dallas Stars last night (a game I was unfortunately unable to watch). Their offense finally produced (though two goals still came from a defenseman, Nick Lidstrom), but their penalty kill is still unacceptably bad. All three of the Stars’ goals came on the power play, but Ted Kulfan sees hope in the fact that they killed off a 4-minute double minor in the second period. Hopefully that was enough to get the PK unit going again.

Beyond the fact that the Wings finally scored more than a goal or two, the other good news appears to be that Dominik Hasek looked good last night, making several key saves at the end of the game, according to the papers. He’ll get a chance to rest tonight, however, as Chris Osgood will be in net for the Wings.

Mikael Samuelsson and Brad Norton did not play last night, though Johan Franzen did. Samuelsson participated in the team workout yesterday, however, but will not return until he is able to shoot the puck effectively, according to the News. George Sipple has a piece about Franzen in today’s Free Press that points out the incongruity of a defensive forward like him would have the most shots of anyone on the team going into the Stars game (28).

Now that the Wings have a little bit of momentum, tonight is a perfect opportunity to build on it. Although I was unable to watch last night, I get the impression that they played with intensity, and if they can continue to do so tonight, they shouldn’t have much trouble against the Blues.

NHL.com preview

St. Louis signs Legace to a one-year deal

About time someone got around to signing him. Sheesh. Congratulations, Manny! And good luck. We’ll be seeing you.

Blues in talks with Legace but keeping options open

This is news to me. Last I heard, Manny wasn’t getting anything. Good to know someone’s interested in him.

Link

Wings 4, Blues 1

The Wings went into the game last night knowing they had to make a statement, that anything less than a commanding win wouldn’t be an acceptable response to their embarrassing implosion on Saturday night. They had a Blues team gunning for them and the anti-Red Wing factions of the media licking their chops, looking for more reasons to spread doubt. They even risked the loss of some of their bandwagoners (gasp!). They did not disappoint. It’s pretty safe to say that last night was one of the Wings best sustained efforts all season. Because the Blues came to play as well, it wasn’t completely a Detroit-dominated game but it was close.

Manny Legace was in net for the Wings and was a mere 58 seconds away from his second shutout in as many games but just like the Sharks game, he wasn’t worked much. The credit for this win goes to the team.

Other than the win, the best thing to happen last night was Steve Yzerman’s 690th goal, which tied him with Mario Lemieux for 8th all-time. The goal came at 9:45 of the second period and was the result of a nice set up by Brendan Shanahan, who dished the puck to Niklas Kronwall in the slot to get things going. Kronwall’s shot was blocked but Robert Lang and Yzerman were right there on the doorstep. Lang got it to The Captain, who got an easy goal at the side of the net from 13 feet out.

True to form, it seemed to be just another goal for Yzerman, who didn’t make a scene with wild celebration. The OLN guys didn’t even mention what it meant until a few minutes later and it was in sort of an off-hand way, not at all like Ken Daniels and Mickey Redmond would have. It’s great to see The Captain move up the charts and at the rate he’s been scoring lately, 700 doesn’t seem completely out of the question for this season.

The Blues came out of the gates flying and for about a minute it seemed like they would be setting the tempo, as the puck spent the first 50 seconds or so in the Detroit end. The Wings soon put those worries to rest, however.

Kirk Maltby opened the scoring at 2:01 with just his fifth goal of the season. The Wings took the puck on a broad-front rush, all three forwards at once, with Dan Cleary carrying the puck. He crossed the blueline and passed it to Maltby, who waited a second before releasing a wrister from the right wing. I thought at first it had just gone off the crossbar but the goallight went on, indicating it had gone in, if just barely. 1-0 Wings.

Henrik Zetterberg and Company followed up with a good, strong shift and the tone was set. Or it would have been had the Wings not gotten into penalty trouble.

At 6:22, Andreas Lilja, who seems to be good for about a penalty a game if not much else, went to the box for holding. The kill was going well until 6:53, when Draper was called for holding himself, handing the Blues a nice long 5-on-3 opportunity. St. Louis got off a couple pretty good shots but after their initial pressure, they had trouble getting much going in the face of strong penalty killing by the Wings.

Both teams looked good but the Wings were more dominant, for sure. The Blues had a few chances but nothing sustained and Legace was up to the task of stopping their shots. In the process of one such scoring opportunity, Nick Lidstrom was called for hooking. The Wings controlled most of the subsequent power play and when Mathieu Schneider went to the box for another hooking penalty at 17:24, they killed that one off easily as well.

Late in the period, OLN had a close in shot of Robert Lang on a breakout with the puck. Just after he passed it, they cut away to a wider shot and the first thing I saw was the puck being intercepted by a Blues player and going the other way. No comment.

With just 3.9 seconds left in the period, Mark Rycroft was sent off for hooking. The Wings won the deep zone faceoff and Cory Cross’ shot rang off the post as the buzzer sounded.

Shots for the period were 8-4 Wings.

Detroit began the second on the power play but it wasn’t very well orchestrated until later on and it resulted in a St. Louis kill. The Blues were looking pretty good but they couldn’t score on yet another power play just four minutes into the period.

The Wings’ second power play, beginning at 7:25, was much better than the first. Both units were strong and created some good chances but Patrick Lalime was too good. Another kill for the Blues.

Yzerman’s goal came 20 seconds after the penalty had expired. It was followed less than a minute later by another goal, this time from Johan Franzen. Kirk Maltby kicked the puck free behind the net to Franzen, who took it out front. His initial shot was stopped by Lalime but he picked up his own rebound and scored off the backhand while cutting across the net. The goal put the Wings up 3-0 at 10:32 of the second period.

At this point, the Blues called a time out but it didn’t appear to have much effect. The Wings started to really swarm and St. Louis spent much of the remainder of the period on their heels. Mikael Samuelsson had a glorious scoring chance at about the 15 minute mark and it was followed up by scoring opportunities for Henrik Zetterberg and Tomas Holmstrom. Patrick Lalime was standing on his head while his defense played the pylon game and prevented a much more lopsided score, especially during this stretch.

Lalime was given some relief when Lilja got his second penalty of the night, at 16:31. The Blues set it up and generated some good pressure but the power play was killed off relatively easily by the Wings. It was followed, however, by a St. Louis flurry down low late in the period, a storm which was fortunately weathered.

Shots for the period were 13-5 Wings (feel bad for Lalime, yet?).

It took the Wings less than 34 seconds to score in the third. The All-Sweden Line of Samuelsson, Zetterberg and Holmstrom took the puck on an 3-on-2 rush over the St. Louis blue line, Hank carrying on the left wing. Samuelsson went to the net and Holmstrom waited for the pass in the slot. He got it and waited for a second as the St. Louis defenseman cleared the way before roofing it backhand over the abandoned Lalime. 4-0 Wings.

Officially, Jesse Boulerice was called for hooking at 3:08 but I think he actually committed the penalty about a minute or more earlier. The Wings were already controlling the puck in the St. Louis zone when Boulerice committed his sin but once the ref put his arm up and the Wings’ brought on a sixth skater, it was as though the officials had skipped the formality of stopping play to escort Boulerice to the box. It was already a power play. They cycled the puck and absolutely dominated until it was finally touched up and the official power play began.

They set up and got off a couple shots but nothing serious. The Blues took another penalty less than a minute into the first and the Wings got 1:11 of 5-on-3. Unfortunately, they couldn’t take full advantage of it, as Lalime was strong once again.

It was clear at this point that the Wings weren’t about to let up. Although I can’t say I didn’t feel uncomfortable at how easily they took the lead and controlled the game as they had on Saturday, they didn’t get as casual at any point during last night’s game as they did on Saturday. The Blues may get the odd chance but 45 seconds out of any given minute was played with the Wings in control of the puck, it seemed. They were going for the kill.

Yzerman and Lang went to the box five minutes apart in the second half of the period but the Wings were up to the task of killing the penalties off. Legace had to come up big just before Lang’s penalty, though, and it was clear the Blues were weren’t going to give up any sooner than the Wings let up.

St. Louis came even more late in the game and Legace was strong. But they still scored, at 19:02. The goal came off a faceoff, with two Blues in front and just one Red Wing (Chelios). Legace was down and out, making it pretty easy for Petr Cajanek to ruin the shutout.

The refs were intent on calling the game right to the end as well. They called Dennis Wideman for delay of game (they had to - he shot the puck out of the rink) at 19:27, giving the Wings one more chance to score. They got off a shot on their first try and forced another faceoff but after it was cleared, they let the clock run down. Final score 4-1 Red Wings.

Shots for the period were 12-11 St. Louis and 32-21 Wings for the game.

A good win for the Wings, after their loss Saturday brought doubters to the forefront. As others have pointed out, this game could very easily have been a loss under Dave Lewis but under Mike Babcock, there are no such worries. Ken Holland has got to be the best GM around and not just because of the gems he’s found in Samuelsson, Franzen, Cleary and all. Getting Mike Babcock on the bench is looking like the best thing to happen to this team in years.

Have to feel for the Blues and their fans. They weren’t unimpressive last night and it makes me wonder just how different things could have been for that team this year, had things gone just a little better. They put up a respectable fight and will hopefully get their feet back on the ground next season.

Maybe it wouldn’t have been such a bad thing if Chris Osgood had been in net last night since now people can point to Manny and say Osgood’s the reason they lost Saturday. Ah well. Who am I kidding? Osgood’s critics will never shut up because it’s so easy to become one.

Next up, the Predators on Thursday at 8:00 ET. It’s the makeup game for the homegame they lost as a result of the scheduling fallout after Jiri Fischer’s heart incident.

Also, this week’s The Hockey News Player Poll asks “Excluding your team, who has the best chance to win the Stanley Cup?” The top three teams picked were Ottawa (30%), Detroit (30%) and Carolina (17%). I guess nine players haven’t read all the media whining about the Wings’ weak divisional schedule. Update (29. Mar, 12:24 PM ET): ESPN has the player-by-player results here. A lot of Eastern Conference guys picked the Wings but the picks mostly cross conference lines so I guess that’s understandable.

GameDay: @ St. Louis (20-37-12, 52 Pts) 8:00 ET

Tonight is the seventh of eight games between these two Central Division teams. The Wings lead the season series 5-1, with their only loss coming November 19th (3-2).

The Wings are coming off a 5-4 shootout loss to Columbus on Saturday. After playing strong for about 40 minutes, they completely fell apart in the third, blowing a three-goal lead in a span of seven and a half minutes. Pavel Datsyuk salvaged the game with a late goal to tie it at four and force overtime. Neither team could score in the extra period so the game went to a shootout. Although only one Columbus player scored on Osgood in the shootout, the Wings ended up losing because their three shooters couldn’t solve Pascal Leclaire. The loss was just their second in nine games (7-0-2).

Manny Legace is slated to start tonight for the Wings and Dan Cleary will return to the lineup after missing two games with the flu. Mark Mowers will most likely be the odd man out.

The Blues have been plagued by injuries this season, having lost nearly 300 man-games to injury, and haven’t performed well in the face of this adversity. Some of their injured players are nearing a comeback, though, so the Blues team we see tonight will be different than the team the Wings’ll face April 15th. St. Louis is last in the West, just a point behind Chicago, and have lost six straight.

Six losses may sound pretty bad but they’ve had a tough schedule in that stretch, playing San Jose twice (one at home, one on the road) as well as LA (road), Nashville (road), Calgary (home) and Colorado (home). Their last win came on the 13th, a 3-2 overtime decision over Columbus at home. They’re coming off a 3-2 overtime loss to the Avs on Saturday, a game in which they blew a two-goal lead in the second period. Joe Sakic scored the game winner on the power play at :57 of overtime.

Looks like Patrick Lalime will get the start tonight for the Blues.

After their meltdown on Saturday, the Wings need to bounce back with a commanding win tonight. Apparently, Babcock didn’t say anything to the team about the loss, counting on the veterans to take a lead in correcting the mistakes that were made. Probably not a bad strategy but it will be disappointing if it doesn’t pay off. Should be interesting.

The game is on OLN and begins at 8:00 ET, so don’t forget.

Also, Mike Babcock has another fan.

Wings 3, Blues 0

The Wings did what they needed to do tonight and notched a solid, if rather dry, win over St. Louis at JLA. Manny Legace made the start for the team and looked sharp on the rare occasions in which he was called upon to make a save. He only needed to stop the puck 15 times to earn his third shutout of the season. His two others came October 15th over Phoenix and October 22nd over Columbus. It was probably a good thing that Manny didn’t have to stand on his head in his first came back from injury.

Steve Yzerman looked okay in his return. He didn’t stand out but he seemed to fit in pretty well. He looked healthy. He had a nice chance in the second period, about midway through, when a lane opened up in front of the net. He took a shot but the save was made and he did not score. Honestly, I did not notice him much other than that and the crowd didn’t really give him any special attention, for whatever reason.

The first period was probably the most exciting to watch, with the Wings getting a fair number of chances and the crowd still pumped for the game. The Wings scored on the power play at 9:42 when Pavel Datsyuk took a shot from the right circle that was deflected by the St. Louis defenseman out front. Initially, the goal was given to Tomas Holmstrom but they changed it later in the game. The Wings looked pretty good at this point and did not start the game out as slowly as they have recently.

Brendan Shanahan went off for high sticking at 18:05, a call that had many fans booing as though there were some doubt. Well, there wasn’t any doubt since Shanahan drew blood and got an extra two minutes. Fortunately for Shanny, Chelios and Draper hooked up 15 seconds later to give the Wings a two goal lead. Chelios took the puck in on a rush along the left wing and sent the puck across the net to Draper who redirected it into the net for the score.

The second period wasn’t so exciting. There were no penalties this period, a first this season, and all the Blues seemed capable of doing was dumping the puck into the Detroit zone. The Wings had a couple of good chances, Yzerman’s being one of them and a shot by Franzen off a rush with Draper being another. Probably the highlight of the period was Mo Cheese’s dance down by the zamboni entrance during a TV break. Always entertaining, though we just missed getting a picture since my sister was changing rolls of film at the time.

The crowd, though still pretty vocal at the exciting points, settled down a bit and the arena started to sound like a big restaurant, with running conversations constituting the bulk of the crowd noise. There was a near goal toward the end of the period that interrupted everyone’s conversations but the eruption as aborted when the puck did not go into the net.

At 18:58 or so, some wiseguy behind us asked, “Budd how much time is left?” Budd Lynch answered, “Last minute of play in the second period,” like he always does at 19:00. It was a good defensive period for the Wings and an okay one offensively.

Henrik Zetterberg opened the third period with a bang when he scored at 1:45 to put the Wings ahead by three. He had dished the puck to his linemate, Mikael Samuelsson, who took a shot that was stopped by Sanford. Hank skated across the net and stole the puck, then put it in the open net. After Budd Lynch announced the goal, they played “I’m Henry VIII I am” over the PA system.

Around 8:45, the “Fire Millen!” chant went up in our end of the arena (behind Sanford). A couple minutes later, this was replaced by a loud “Lets Go Red Wings!”

At 12:54, Brendan Shanahan ended up all alone with the puck in the slot. Everyone in the Joe took a deep breath in preparation for wild celebration but Shanahan shot the puck wide. We barely had time to express our disappointment when a flurry around the net immediately followed and Shanahan ended up backhanding in. The red light went on and we fans got started to celebrate. Then we noticed there was a scrum and some of the brighter ones noticed the goal horn hadn’t sounded yet. We cheered on the scrum but also wondered what the heck had happened to the goal. Someone behind me informed his friends that the play had been whistled down when Sanford seemingly had possession of the puck. This was confirmed a few seconds later when Budd Lynch informed us of the same. Needless to say, we fans were not happy and we let the officials know it. I say Shanahan should have scored to begin with, on the initial chance, but that’s just me.

Late in the game, Robert Lang of all people got into a scrum and got two for roughing, as did Barrett Jackman. Both of them left the game, though there were over two minutes left.

The arena was getting fairly empty, as the fat cats in the lower bowl decided the beat the everyman rush by making their own traffic jam.

Johan Franzen was rocked along the boards in the final goings of the game by Jamal Mayers (I think) as he carried the puck into the zone. The crowd loved that one, though I’m sure Johan wasn’t too happy. (Correction: apparently, it was Eric Brewer who hit Franzen, who was injured on the play but didn’t know it until the next day)

The Wings made it exciting at the end as they continued to keep the pressure on the Blues in the final minutes. Then, the horn sounded and the crowd cheered as they filed out of the arena.

A couple thoughts:

Usually, the linesmen do a good job of making calls at the blueline but there were two instances where I thought they made the wrong call and it hurt the Wings by whistling the play dead when it should have continued. I know they were a lot closer to the puck than I was but I would swear the Wings kept it in on those two occasions and the rest of the fans at the Joe would agree with me.

Now that the fluff game against the Blues is over, the Wings can turn their attention to Nashville, where they’ll be heading tonight for the game tomorrow. It’s the biggest game of the season so far and whatever they have done so far this year won’t mean much if they can’t at least put up a good performance there. A win would be very good but even more important, I think, is that they show up to play and bring their “A” game with them.

Hopefully, nothing like what happened last time these teams met will take place tomorrow night. It’s hard to believe the Wings have played the Preds this season, if only for 12:30. In case you forgot, the home game the Wings lost when Jiri Fischer’s collapse resulted in the cancellation of the November 21st game was rescheduled for January 23rd. The Predators will start the game leading 1-0.

My sister got a lot of pictures tonight. We’ll see how they turned out when we get them developed. I’m hoping to do that tomorrow and have them up by Saturday

Lines*

Shanahan-Datsyuk-Williams
Maltby-Draper-Franzen
Yzerman-Cleary-Holmstrom
Samuelsson-Zetterberg-Lang
Maltby-Franzen-Zetterberg
Datsyuk-Holmstrom-Zetterberg
Franzen-Shanahan-Datsyuk
Shanahan-Samuelsson-Zetterberg
Datsyuk-Shanahan
Maltby-Draper

D-parings

Lilja-Lidstrom
Chelios-Schneider
Woolley-Lilja
Lidstrom-Lebda
Schneider-Woolley
Lebda-Chelios
Lidstrom-Schneider
Schneider-Lilja
Lidstrom-Chelios
Lidstrom-Woolley

*compiled by Brian.

Update (06. Jan 06): About half of the pictures have been uploaded. They are linked to in the top right corner of the page.

GameDay: vs. St. Louis (10-23-5, 25 Pts) 7:30 ET

Tonight is the fifth of eight games between Detroit and St. Louis this season. The two teams opened the season against each other with two games, both of which were won by the Wings: 5-1 on October 5th at home and 4-3 the next night in St. Louis. They didn’t play again for a month but the Wings won again, 4-1 in St. Louis, on November 6th after an unsuccessful homestand. The Blues got a little revenge later in the month when they visited the Joe and handed the Wings their fourth straight loss (3-2, November 19th).

The Wings had a nice five-game winning streak going before it was halted Tuesday night by the visiting Minnesota Wild, who won a frustrating game 4-2. The Wings did not play well and started the most important month of the season so far, January, off totally wrong. Tonight’s game will the last “easy win” (with the exception of the Columbus game on the 18th) until February first, when they play St. Louis for the sixth time. Between now and then, they will face some of the league’s best teams, including Nashville, New York (Rangers), Philadelphia, Dallas and Carolina. Fourteen games and a possible 28 points to begin with, now it’s just thirteen games and 26 points with Tuesday night’s loss.

The Blues are one of the biggest disappointments of the year and are in the middle of a nightmare season. They are 1-2-1 in their last four and have basically alternated wins and losses since December 20th. They started January off on the right foot with a win against the Canucks on Monday (4-2) but lost to Nashville two nights later, 4-3. The Preds had lost four in a row going in to that game and evidently the Blues thought they could get a fairly easy win. They were wrong. St. Louis kicks off a five-game road trip tonight, one that will take them next to Colorado and then out East to play three teams in the Southeastern Division.

Manny Legace will get the start in place of Chris Osgood tonight. Legace has been out with a sprained knee since November 25th.

Steve Yzerman is slated to make his return to the ice after going down with yet another groin injury December 9th.

Brendan Shanahan has been having some back spasms and apparently was a game-time decision Tuesday night, though the papers made no mention of it until today. I guess that explains why he hasn’t scored in four games. He did not practice yesterday but is expected to play.

Jason Woolley also did not practice, though he also is expected to play.

The Wings need a win tonight if only to have some momentum going in to tomorrow’s game against the Predators. Although the Blues are struggling, Detroit cannot take them for granted and expect to roll over them. They need to play a disciplined game and pull off the win.

I will be at the game with my sister and was expecting to be able to utilize her camera to get some good pictures but it looks like the Joe has pretty strict rules that may not allow us to bring her good camera in. So, we’ll see what we can get.

Update (2:18 PM): Well, after finding out that the don’t let Joe Blow take a half-way decent camera into JLA (because we might sell the pictures and rob the Illitches of tens of dollars), we tried the PR Department route. Our appeal was shot down when I was told that the Wings do not give credentials to independent media, not even a photo pass.

It’s outdated and frustrating but it’s the rule so we’ll have to stick by it. So, because the lense on my sister’s good camera is too “zoomy” (new word), we’ll have to use one of her lesser cameras and hope for the best.

It’s funny. The new blogger-type, independent media is getting recognition all over the place but I can’t get permission to bring a decent camera to a game I paid for with money I could have spent on textbooks. I’m not asking for a season press pass! Just one game and just for a photo pass at that!

Oh well.

Blues 3, Wings 2

The St. Louis Blues have won their first two straight games this season by beating the Detroit Red Wings, 3-2. The Red Wings continued their winless streak in four games with tonight’s loss being their first to a Central Division opponent. They face the Nashville Predators on Monday at Joe Louis Arena. Tonight’s game marked the fourth time the two teams have met this season, each previous game had resulted in a Wings’ win while outscoring the Blues, 13-5.

First Period
Not a whole lot happened in the first period. There were no goals and three penalties (2 on St. Louis and 1 on Detroit). Detroit outshot St. Louis in the first period, 10-6.

Second Period
Jamal Mayers scored the first goal of the game 7:32 into the second period with even strength to put the Blues on the board first. With a little under five minutes left in the second period, Mikael Samuelsson beat Blues goaltender, Curtis Sanford, by tipping in a pass from Jiri Fischer. In the second period, the Wings were able to successfully kill three penalties including a near minute long 5-on-3 opportunity for the Blues. Both teams had 11 shots on their opponent’s net in the second period.

Third Period
Seven minutes into the third, Mike Sillinger scored the Blues’ second goal of the night. A minute and forty-six seconds later, Doug Weight beat Manny Legace on the power play. The Blues had two penalties in this period and the Wings were not able to convert on the power play.

With 52 seconds left in the game, Brendan Shanahan scored on a pass from Henrik Zetterberg to put the Wings within one goal. He then received a penalty (for charging) diminishing any chance the Wings had to tie the game up. Both the Wings and Blues had 13 shots apiece in the third period.

Overall
The Wings outshot the Blues, 34-30, but were unable to convert on six power play opportunities. Blues goalie Sanford made 32 saves to lead the team to a victory over the Wings.

Mike Babcock: “We got ourselves behind the eight ball and couldn’t scramble back…Everybody has a tough schedule, there’s no point in making excuses for having no energy. We needed to win this game…We weren’t sharp…Manny gave us an opportunity on the 5-on-3, but we failed [him]. We got to find some energy [before the game versus Nashville].”

Personal Thoughts
While I was bummed that the Wings lost to the likes of Vancouver and Calgary, I am completely frustrated with the Wings’ performances against the Oilers and Blues. After being up 3-1 over Edmonton at the end of the second period, the game ended in a Wings OT loss. I figured that the Wings would want to redeem themselves and defeat an opponent that we have handily beat thus far the season. However, this was not the case. I’m not going to panic, but we really needed to win tonight and we couldn’t even beat the Blues.

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