Archive for the 'Flyers' Category

4/16 Links

Update (3:57 PM): “Is the President’s Daughter Dating a Ranger?” asks Eric McErlain. - Matt

Update (3:49 PM): Tom Benjamin has more thoughts on the firing of Dave Nonis. Meanwhile, Nonis defends his actions as Vancouver’s GM. - Matt

Update (12:13 PM): According to the Washington Post’s Tarik El-Bashir, former Red Wing Sergei Fedorov will play between Alexander Ovechkin and Viktor Kozlov tomorrow night in Philadelphia.

Rookie Niklas Backstrom has been moved down to the second line. - Matt

Update (8:31 AM): George Malik has the latest on the Brunnstrom saga. - Matt

… The Sidney Crosby Beard Watch: Day 8.

… The Sharks avoided going down 3-1 in their series with Calgary last night with a 3-2 comeback win.

… And San Jose’s Evgeni Nabokov continued his excellent post-season by … allowing two goals on ten shots. Maybe playing him in 77 games was a mistake, Ron Wilson.

… The Avalanche took apart the Wild 5-1 last night. It was the first time in the series that the game did not go to overtime. It’s now tied up 2-2.

… Anaheim staved off a Dallas sweep last night with a 4-2 win on the road. Ah well.

… The Caps are having trouble carrying through on their impressive regular season finish. They dropped another game to Philadelphia last night, falling behind 2-1 in their series. They must now win on the road and display some defensive ability in the process.

… Montreal did what we hope the Wings will do tonight: go up 3-1 in their series.

4/14 Links

Update (4:18 PM): Ansar Khan has more on Fabian Brunnstrom’s decision to spurn winning in favor of playing time. - Matt

Update (4:16 PM): Mike Chen provides some perspective on the Avery Rule. - Matt

Update (3:54 PM): Further followup: the “Sean Avery Rule” is now official. - Matt

Update (12:39 PM): Highly-touted Red Wings prospect Dick Axelsson has gotten in trouble with the law in Sweden. As a result, he’s been kicked off the national team for the world championships and it looks like this may hurt his chances of coming over to North America this summer. (via Snapshots) - Matt

Update (11:27 AM): Followup: Bettman says the League will look at making what Avery did unsportsmanlike conduct or goaltender intereference.

Good. Just so long as they don’t do anything further to limit proper screening as practiced by Tomas Holmstrom. - Matt

Update (11:17 AM): Followup: Ken Holland confirms that the Wings are out of the running for Fabian Brunnstrom. - Matt

Update (10:11 AM): A new low for the Senators. (via Going Five Hole) - Matt

… Over at Abel to Yzerman, IwoCPO is considering taking a more serious tone. The result is about what you’d expect.

James Mirtle comments on the latest Sean Avery shenanigan.

Judging by that replay, Avery has completely foregone the whole team concept. He basically took himself completely out of active participation the power play with his mimicry of Brodeur there.

… The Flames staged a major comeback last night in San Jose. I have to say, I loved reading that this morning.

… Kulka has footage of the hit that helped change the momentum in favor of the Flames.

… The Devils were one of two teams that avoided going down 3-0 in their series yesterday. They beat the Rangers 4-3 in the first overtime.

… The Bruins also avoided a 3-0 hole yesterday by defeating Montreal 2-1 in the first overtime.

… Philadelphia evened up their series with Washington yesterday with a 2-0 win on the road. During the period and a half or so that I was able to catch, Martin Biron was incredible and the Caps were more like a bunch of individuals than a team.

4/12 Links

… Washington came back from a two-goal deficit to defeat Philadelphia 5-4 last night in Game 1 of their series. Who had the game-winner? Alexander Ovechkin, following a Pavel Datsyuk-like steal.

… A very unfortunate event from that game: Philadelphia’s Patrick Thoresen took a Mike Green shot off a very bad place and as a result, he had to be taken to the hospital. Green went on to score seconds later, after the play was not stopped.

… As a blogger covering the decidedly anti-New Media Detroit Red Wings, I can’t even fathom being in this position.

… So the Senators haven’t completely given up on each other after all. They still lost, though.

… The Wild/Avs series went to overtime for the second time. This time it was Minnesota that scored, tying the series 1-1.

The Devils lost 2-1 to the Rangers last night and fell behind 2-0 in their series. Lou Lamoriello was not happy with the officiating.

3 Way Trade Yields Kyle Calder for Jason Williams

Update (Matt, 27. Feb, 12:03 AM): One last thing tonight: what number will he wear? He can’t have #19, which he had in Philly, nor can he have #16 or #9, both of which he has worn at different points in his career. He wore #25 his first year in Chicago, but I would think that’s also untouchable. Hopefully he won’t go fo #91 or else I’ll be pissed. He’s worn #32 before and could wear it again, even though it seems like a goalie’s number. Steve Thomas wore it during his time in Detroit so it actually might be fitting for Calder to take it. Anyway, it’s all speculation. We’ll find out tomorrow. (thanks to Sarah for doing the detective work on the numbers). - Matt

Update (Matt, 11:48 PM): Here’s what Ken Holland has to say about Calder, via the Freep:

“He chases the puck, he’s a forechecker. Come playoff time, that’s an ingredient you need. He’s not pretty, but he’s a gritty, greasy type of player.”

Sounds good to me. I’m very interested in seeing Calder play and it looks like we’ll get our chance tomorrow night as he’s expected to be in the lineup. - Matt

Update (Sarah, 10:53PM): Just a little more info on Calder for those (like me) who weren’t too familiar with him. He’s a 28-year old forward currently making $2.9 million a season. I spent a little time reading over his stats page on TSN and was pleased to read that he, “Provides his team with a bundle of energy every shift. Has a propensity to step it up in key situations. ” Sounds pretty good to me. Most sources seem to feel that he’s a gritty player (something there has certainly been a major outcry for…). One thing that stood out to me is that the guy hasn’t missed a game due to injury since October of 2005. Durability - there’s something to add to your list of pros. As for cons - well, this season’s stats top that list. +/- has never been stellar (though -31 is far below the norm). Personally I’m feeling pretty good about it at this point. I think once this guy gets on a winning team and starts having some fun, he could start putting up good numbers again. I bet Ken Holland does too. -Sarah

Update (Matt, 10:14 PM): Okay, the more I read about Calder, the better I feel about him. The general concensus seems to be that he’s a good player who’s just having a bad year. And if he’s a grittier player than Williams with a strong work ethic and good hands, I’m thinking he’ll fill the Wings’ need pretty well. Of course, we’ll have to see how he actually gels with the team, but I’m optimistic. - Matt

Update (Matt, 10:05 PM): Here’s James Mirtle’s take, plus the tidbit that the Wings are rumored to be close to getting Bill Guerin. I still find that hard to believe, but I could be wrong. Can the price have gone down that much? - Matt

Update (Matt, 10:00 PM): First of all, I’m unsure about how I feel about this deal. I know very little about Calder except that his stats are probably deflated from having been on a bad team, as Sarah pointed out below. I’m not sure what we gain by the trade, but perhaps Calder will be jumpstarted by a change in scenery. We’ll just have to see.

It’s a little hard to believe that Williams is no longer a Red Wing. It had to be awkward tonight when he got the call in Chicago. It will be strange if he’s on the ice tomorrow night for the Hawks, that’s for sure.

No comment from the Wings yet, but Jason Williams had a parting shot that struck me as a little odd, via the TSN article:

“I’m happy to be going to a team that wants me and I’m looking forward to helping the Blackhawks.”

From that I’ll assume he means he was Mike Babcock’s boy, not the front office’s. Interesting. Well, good luck in Chicago, Jason. - Matt

I’d be surprised now if anything else happens for the Wings on the trade front.

Paul Kukla is reporting a three way deal between the Blackhawks, the Flyers and the Red Wings

Apparently Chicago dealt Lasse Kukkonen and a third round pick to Philadelphia for Kyle Calder. Then Chicago traded Calder to the Wings in exchange for Jason Williams.

Hey, now we don’t have to worry about Babs putting Willy on the point anymore! That alone makes the trade worth it in my eyes (sorry Jason…).

TSN says Calder has 9 goals and 12 assists in 59 games with a +/- of -31

I was a little stunned by the -31 at first but then I remembered he’s been playing for the bottom-feeding Flyers. I expect that will improve playing with the defensive-minded Wings. We’ll see how he does in Willy’s spot on the 2nd line. Hopefully he’ll provide the offensive spark we’ve been looking for.

Wings 1, Flyers 6

Update (10:55 PM): George Malik has a nice roundup up reactions to the game in the media here. - Matt

Here’s a shocker for you: the Wings lost last night to a team they should have been able to handle in their sleep, if the standings were any indicator. However, at times it seemed as though the Wings were ranked 30th and the Flyers were fighting for first place in their division, not the other way around. The 6-1 Philadelphia result would have been surprising if the Wings didn’t have a penchant for losing to teams that have no business beating them. Now, Philly has many of the tools of a good team, but when last night’s win was their just their 15th through 56 games, I think it’s fair to say the Wings were favored last night.

Joey MacDonald was in net for the Wings and looked great through two periods as he kept his team in the game with a number of stellar saves. However, he pretty much collapsed in the third period under a combination of being unused to so much playing time (it was his third start in a row after a layoff of just over two months) and of being run by the Flyers at least three times. He gave up five goals in the final period, a couple of which were flat out his fault (such as RJ Umberger’s shorthander, in which Joey’s holding of the post left much to be desired), the others of which were a result of a dogged defense that seemed to give up.

By the time the fourth goal went off the right post and in, I started thinking that Babcock ought to pull MacDonald, just to get him out of there for his own good. However, Babcock chose not to, even when the 5th and 6th goals were scored. I like Babcock and what he’s done with the team, but I hate - hate - the way he refuses to pull goalies when it’s just not their night. I don’t care if he was defending Jimmy Howard from the wolves or whatever. There was no reason to keep an obviously physically and mentally exhausted MacDonald in there last night except as some kind of power trip. To me, deciding not to pull MacDonald meant he had given up on the game. How often is it that you see a team sparked by a backup coming in? It doesn’t happen always, but it does happen, and the Wings could have used that when the game was 4-1.

Peter Forsberg was pretty quiet through two periods, but he kick-started the Flyers’ onslaught with a goal at 4:20 of the third. He finished the night with two points, having assisted on Simon Gagne’s backhander, and while I’ve seen him dominate games much more than he did, he looked good for a player who’s had the injury troubles he’s had this season. He was strong on his skates, which is a good sign for whoever’s hoping to trade for him, since it means his ankle is giving him minimal problems.

One thing that was blatantly obvious last night was the Wings’ lack of size. The Flyers owned them physically all night, which is disheartening for a fan who has seen the team become more physical than ever this year. They may hit more and may be able to handle punishment better, but they really got manhandled last night by a seemingly huge Philadelphia team.

Shock of the night: Andreas Lilja actually did something that provoked a fight. At 16:11, he hit Simon Gagne from behind into the boards and was immediately (and I mean immediately - he’d hardly taken a breath) attacked by Denis Gauthier, whose gloves were off with amazing quickness. Lilja, I’m ashamed to say, submarined and cowered (granted, Gauthier wasn’t man enough to challenge him face-to-face, he just started throwing punches from behind), but it was over soon and the Wings got a four-minute power play. Somehow, Andreas’ boarding of Gagne was missed. Unfortunately for the Wings, the Flyers killed off the double minor and got a big momentum boost.

Another shock: Derian Hatcher’s offensive foray at the start of the third period. Philly’s Big Pylon somehow found himself at the bottom of the left circle with the puck and he advanced as far as the back of the net before drawing a high-sticking double minor from Mathieu Schneider. Yes, Schneider somehow managed to get his stick high enough to clip Hatcher in his face. It hardly cut Derian at all, but any blood is enough for a 4:00 penalty, obviously.

Least surprising event(s) of the night: Joey MacDonald got run over by Mike Richards on a Philadelphia shorthanded chance in the first period and apparently none of the Wings even went over to him to at least tell him not to do that, even though MacDonald was laid out on the ice. MacDonald was run at least two more times, but nothing was done about it by his teammates, though the officials finally handed out a penalty for it at 12:57 of the third period.

The Wings’ well-established practice of making average goalies look spatectacular was in full effect last night, as Michael Leighton got a nicely padded 32-save performance with shots going into the crest of his jersey 88% of the time. Not to downplay his performance, which was strong, but he didn’t have it as rough as Kiprusoff and McLellan had the night before, when Pavel Datsyuk, Henrik Zetterberg, and Tomas Holmstrom showed up to play. The most dangerous line he faced all night as Kris Draper, Kirk Maltby, and Johan Franzen, with the Young Gun Line of Valtteri Filppula, Jiri Hudler, and Josh Langfeld tied at second with Robert Lang, Dan Cleary, and Jason Williams. Offensively, the top line was relatively silent, even though it came away with earned by anyone in the Winged Wheel last night, as Zetterberg assisted on Holmstrom’s goal in the first.

Just as the Flames shot themselves in the foot Sunday night by turning over the puck repeatedly, so did the Wings. There were players giving away the puck two or three times on the same shift and in the defensive zone. For a team priding itself in its puck possession style, it was appalling, even accounting for the Flyers’ highly-motivated puck pursuit.

My perception of the game is distorted by the lens of the third period, which was straight-up awful. The Wings weren’t nearly as terrible through two periods and I don’t want to leave the impression that they were. But the fact is, they were average or worse for the greater part of the game and, given that and the fact that the Flyers were working their butts off, the Wings had no chance to win. I’d put it down to having played the night before, but they had just had a decent break between the Blues game and the Calgary game, so they should have been fairly rested. I don’t think the road trip is much of an excuse either considering they didn’t leave the time zone. If it was just plain exhaustion, then that raises concerns about the team’s stamina.

If it was a problem of motivation, that raises a whole other set of concerns, not the least of which is what better motivation is there at this point in the season than the fact that a win last night would have put them a point ahead of Nashville for the Division lead? As it stands, they’ll have to win in Dallas on Wednesday and hope the Preds lose the same night against the Sharks at home if they want to pass them.

If you want to see the damage, check out the NHL Highlight Machine’s reel from last night.

Wings 7, Flames 4

Update (5:15 PM): I had written and email to Ansar Khan because I had been wondering why the Wings called up Howard without making sure he would play a game, given the fact that he’s just returned from an injury and could use the playing time. He responded thus (in part):

I’m guessing they called up Howard instead of Liv because they wanted to see how MacDonald would play Sunday before declaring him the starter in Philly. If MacDonald would have s#!t the bed against Calgary, they surely would have started Howard against the Flyers. In that case, it would have been kind of awkward to suddenly send Liv back down to GR after the Flames game and rush Howard to Philly. Howard wouldn’t have been able to fly out with the team Sunday night and would have had to fly to Philly Monday morning, not a good thing.

That makes sense, and if I’d have checked, I would have seen that Jimmy wouldn’t have played even if he had stayed in GR. The Griffins don’t play until Friday, so the question of lost playing time is moot. - Matt

Update (2:15 PM): Ted Kulfan writes on the Detroit News Wings blog that Joey MacDonald will in fact start tonight, contradicting his earlier report. Also, Danny Markov apparently will not be back. - Matt

The Wings won a wild one last night, beating the Calgary Flames 7-4 and extending their home-win streak to 12 games. It was much more of a blowout than the score indicates, as the Flames controlled play for only about 3:00 in the third period, scoring three of their goals then, when the Wings had let up. It was as much a case of the Wings dominating as it was of the Flames playing bantam hockey.

Joey MacDonald was in net for the Wings and hardly got any work through two periods. He looked steady, though, when he did face a shot, and made the stop when needed. When the Flames started scoring, the first two goals were the result of bad defense, but the third was a little weak. All in all, Joey had a strong game, and it was good to see the Wings’ take the task of defending for him seriously.

The first couple minutes of the game were pretty choppy as there were a couple stoppages due to off-sides and icings. At 3:03, play stopped again for a Stepha Yelle elbowing penalty and the Wings got their first power play. The Wings didn’t do a lot with it and they had to be careful with picking the puck up in their own zone as the Flames were forechecking hard. At 4:54, Robert Lang took his customary hooking penalty and we got 9 seconds of 4-on-4 hockey before a Calgary power play. The Flames had trouble setting up and the Wings did a good job of killing it off.

The Wings got on the board at 8:43 after Miikka Kiprusoff misplayed the puck behind the net on a slow shoot-in by Dan Cleary. Jason Williams picked it up and saw Henrik Zetterberg in the high slot. He sent it to him and Hank wasted little time releasing a snap shot that beat Kiprusoff inside the left post. Kiprusoff had taken his sweet time getting back, but should have been set. It’s not often you see him beaten like that.

The Wings struck again four minutes later. Zetterberg took the puck in on a nice rush, distracting the defense by the right point, before dishing the puck to a streaking Tomas Holmstrom in the middle. Homer didn’t get all he wanted on his shot, but Kiprusoff didn’t control the rebound and Pavel Datsyuk was able to get his stick on it. He slammed it into the net and made it 2-0 Wings at 12:44.

Right after the goal, Johan Franzen nearly made it 3-0 as he hit the post on a shot down low. Kiprusoff was slow to react and Johan had a half-empty net to shoot at, but couldn’t finish.

They did get a third goal not long after that, as Robert Lang, Jason Williams, and Dan Cleary forced a faceoff at 13:48. Four seconds later, Mathieu Schneider’s shot careened off Dion Phaneuf and into the net to make it 3-0 Wings. By that time, Jim Playfair had seen enough and Kiprusoff was pulled in favor of Jamie McLennan. It was very much an uncharacteristic game for Kiprusoff, who seems unbeatable whenever the Wings play him.

The Wings didn’t waste much time before testing McLennan. Within a minute, Datsyuk and Zetterberg flew into the zone, with Hank dishing the puck off to Pavel, whose shot rang off the corner junction.

The rest of the period consisted mainly of the Flames giving up the puck and the Wings getting chances as a result. Zetterberg, Datsyuk, and Holmstrom seemed to be out there every other shift, but they didn’t look tired at all as they continued to dominate Calgary.

Continue reading ‘Wings 7, Flames 4′

2/10 Notes

Update (4:00 PM): Taking a page from James Mirtle’s book, I’ve added a section the sidebar (”Other reading”) that will display links to hockey-related items of interest that don’t get blogged here (or that I haven’t yet had time to mention). It’s through Google Reader and is something I’ve wanted to do for a while, but it wasn’t very easy to implement on WordPress blogs until recently. - Matt

… Chuck Gormley continued his “Forsberg watch” for the Courier Post yesterday with another installment. Nothing very new, though Gormley expands on his idea that Forsberg would like to come to Detroit, saying that it’s because

“two of the Red Wings’ top four scorers, defenseman Nicklas Lidstrom and left wing Tomas Holmstrom, are from Sweden.”

I see your point, Mr. Gormley, but three of their top four scorers are from Sweden. Not sure how you missed Henrik Zetterberg.

Anyway, he goes on to say that the Wings may be interested in dealing either Andreas Lilja or Niklas Kronwall as part of the package. Personally, I think that if the Flyers are dumb enough to take a Lilja package (perhaps with Williams), it wouldn’t be such a bad deal. But if they demand someone like Kronwall or Hudler, I’d hope they’d say “no.” There is little use in throwing away two key pieces of the future for a player who may only be with the team until July 1st.

The story that was being reported earlier in this saga was that the Wings would demand that Forsberg sign a contract with them as part of any deal, and that may still be one of their stipulations. However, it doesn’t look like Forsberg would be willing to do so, as there is talk that he’d look to return to Philadelphia after a playoff run with another team. The Wings may decide Forsberg is worth the short-term benefit and hope that they could convince him to stay afterwards, but I think it would be foolish to give away one or more of their future stars in exchange for a player that could retire (if he does sign a long term contract) or bolt (if he doesn’t) at any moment.

Peter Forsberg certainly has the ability, if healthy, to make a huge impact on the team, as Nick Lidstrom told Ted Kulfan yesterday, but, given the likely asking price, it doesn’t seem to me that the Wings have the organizational depth to pursue a deal without really hurting their future.* Now, if Forsberg works out some kind of Hasek-like deal with Philly (”Don’t take too much from them, I want to be able to win.”) or the Flyers get conned into taking Lilja and Williams, it’d be worth it, if he were healthy. That’s a pretty big “if,” in my mind, even though he seems to have found a solution. My question is: will it last or will it be like the other “solutions”?

George Sipple reports that Joey MacDonald will get another start in the coming back-to-back series. It will almost certainly be Monday night in Philadelphia as Dominik Hasek ough to be in net tomorrow against Calgary. Joey is still looking for his first NHL win and hopefully his teammates will show up to play this time around. He’s played extremely well in almost all his games this season, but hasn’t gotten the support he deserves from the skaters.

… Sipple also says that the Wings are concerned about their slow starts in the last nine games. I am too, though I have been impressed by their comeback ability and determination not to give up. Still, they’ll have a much harder time pulling off such comebacks in the playoffs, so hopefully they’ll find motivation to play hard from the first drop of the puck to the buzzer at the end.

… There is some variety to the reports on the nature of Danny Markov’s injury: The Freep calls it a “contusion in his middle back” and claims Piet Van Zant’s authority; the News calls it a “sore shoulder, ribs”; and TSN just calls it a shoulder injury. All three say he’s listed as day-to-day.

*There are those fans who dislike Niklas Kronwall, Jiri Hudler and even Valtteri Filppula for mistakes they make and for their lack of production. This is because we were spoiled by Pavel Datsyuk and Henrik Zetterberg making an immediate impact. We have forgotten that most young players need years to develop and that they aren’t likely to be stars right off the bat. Kronwall, Hudler, and Filppula are very likely to be big names in the League in years to come, but they aren’t going to be that immediately, though I personally think they’re pretty good even now. So, that’s why I say the Wings would be mortgaging their future if they trade any of them away, even though they might not seem so valuble now.

Wings 6, Flyers 3

Well, thanks for a friend of mine, Dan of Detroit Sports, I got to go to my third Red Wings game this season and got to watch them win for the third time live. This time, though, it wasn’t the dregs of the NHL, the Blues or Blue Jackets. This time, it was the league-leading Philadelphia Flyers.

And unlike the other two games, I was sitting one row from the top, with my view obstructed by a long line of heads in front of me. So I stood most of the game but that just meant I was ready beforehand to celebrate all the goals. Because I was standing, I didn’t take notes so this won’t be so much a summary of events as of impressions.

The story of the game was the Shanahan-Datsyuk-Zetterberg line, which accounted for four Red Wings goals and 12 points (four each). These three were especially potent in the third period, when they lit the lamp three times in 10 minutes. They were magic together
and you could sense the change in the atmosphere of JLA when they were on the ice. I was really hoping for a hat trick from either Pavel or Hank but didn’t get it. Don’t expect that line to be around long, though, because it’s hard for the Wings to spread the wealth offensively with such a high concentration of talent on one line, as A2Y points out.

Steve Yzerman notched his 1,050th assist on Robert Lang’s third period goal. It came on a 2-on-1 in which The Captain exacted revenge on a borderline dirty hit Sami Kapanen laid on him as he was leaving the ice. Yzerman came back on his next shift and, after he laid a big hit on Randy Jones along the boards, he was sprung on the 2-on-1 and made a great pass to Lang, who scored an easy goal. The goal came so close after Henrik Zetterberg’s second that Budd Lynch had to announce them at the same time. When he informed the crowd that the assist put Yzerman one ahead of Gordie Howe on the all-time list, everyone in the Joe stood up and gave The Captain their congratulations. To make it even more special, Mr. Hockey himself was in attendance.

More on Robert Lang. He was pretty useless the whole night and continues to be unimpressive. If he hadn’t scored on that 2-on-1, I would have jumped the glass and torn his head off. I don’t know what’s wrong with the guy but he rarely seems to put in any kind of special effort. Maybe that goal will jumpstart him. I hope so. Am I alone in my assessment of the guy?

One guy who had a great night, though he did not get on the scoreboard, was Mikael Samuelsson. He was involved in the play every time he was on the ice, both offensively and defensively. The puck seemed to heading his way constantly and I really thought it was too bad he did not score.

Kris Draper, Kirk Maltby and Johan Franzen did a great job of shutting down Peter Forsberg, who seemed hardly noticeable for once. They didn’t do such a great job of shutting down Simon Gagne, however. He scored his 30th and 31st goals last night and kept it interesting until the Wings pulled away with their 5th and 6th goals.

I went with a friend who had never been to a game and had really never watched hockey before. She came away not really knowing how to describe it (unusual for an English major, huh?) but did say it was “fast.” Yes, it was fast. I like the quote A2Y found from Flyers center Jeff Carter: “It was definitely the fastest game I’ve been in.” Fast because of the skating speed and fast because of the suddennesss of the goals. The third period was wild and one of the most enjoyable periods of hockey I’ve seen in a while.

Last night, we saw the Red Wings that can make a strong run for the Cup. The goaltending was a little shaky but as mLive’s Ansar Khan points out in his new blog today, it’s too early to second-guess Legace. The skaters played very well as a whole and will need to play like that if they want to accomplish anything significant this season. Whether they will is the question.

Next up, we have the Rangers. It’s the first game the Wings will play on NBC this season and starts at 2:00 ET on Saturday.

Lines*

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

D-pairings

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

*compiled by Brian

GameDay: vs. Philadelphia (28-9-6, 62 Pts) 7:30 ET

Tonight is the only game between these teams this season. The Wings won the 2003-2004 season 1-0 with a 4-3 win at home on February 29th, 2004. Robert Lang, making his debut with Detroit, notched three assists and Brendan Shanahan scored his first goal in nine games.

The Wings will look to stop a two-game skid from becoming a three-game one tonight. They are 2-3-0 so far in January, the toughest month they’ve had so far and the most important. A loss to Minnesota opened the month but was followed with two masterful wins, one over St. Louis and another over Nashville the next night. Then, they collapsed, first by blowing a three-goal lead against Dallas and giving up six straight unanswered goals. Their last game was in Carolina, where they allowed three more goals before finally scoring themselves late in the first period. Despite a furious last minute comeback attempt, they still lost, 3-2.

The league-leading Flyers will wrap up an 11-game road trip tonight that has spanned 21 days (though they never left the Eastern Time Zone). They are 8-1-1 in the first ten games of that trip. They were shut out 3-0 by New Jersey on Monday but rebounded with a 5-2 win over Chicago Wednesday. According to Red Wings scout Mark Howe, they have the best depth of any team in the league and with a 28-9-6 record, it appears they have made good use of it. That depth includes two faces familiar to Wings fans: Peter Forsberg and Derian Hatcher. Forsberg, an old enemy, has continued his dominating ways, notching 42 assists on the way to 56 points so far this season. Hatcher, who was bought out by the Wings last year, is plus-14 and playing an average of 24:20 a night. It’s a shame Derian’s knee injury precluded him from really contributing while he was in Detroit but it’s good to hear he’s found success again.

Manny Legace will start again tonight.

Tonight may be the night we see Shanahan break out of his slump, much like he did against the Flyers in 2004. According the Babcock, he played his best game in 7 against the Hurricanes.

As A2Y points out, the Wings are an impressive 14-0-2 against the Flyers at home since 1988. Tonight is a great time to get win #15, I think. Especially because I’m going to the game, having been given a couple tickets by a friend of mine. So, I’m hoping for a fast start and a full 60 minutes of solid play by the Wings. If the Wings do that, it should be a good game. Give the league leaders a fight, at least!