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GameDay: vs. Edmonton (29-26-6, 64 Pts) 7:30 ET

Tonight is the fourth and final game between these two teams this season. The Oilers lead the series 2-1, with wins October 21 (3-1) and November 18th (4-3 SO). The Wings won the November 8th meeting, 3-0.

The Oilers are 4-4-2 in February so far, with their wins coming against Colorado, Chicago, Atlanta, and Columbus. The win over the Blue Jackets, which came last night, halted a 0-2-2 stretch in which they lost to Boston, Buffalo (OT), Toronto, and Ottawa (SO), all on the road. Edmonton is nearing the end of a 7-game road trip that began on the 13th in Boston, and will end on Sunday in Minnesota.

They trail Calgary by 7 points for the last playoff spot.

Their leading goal-scorer is Ryan Smyth, who stands at the “when pigs fly” end of the Wings’ trade options spectrum. He scored his 30th goal last night and notched two assists.

Dwayne Roloson played last night and had 28 saves for his fourth shutout this season, but the AP suggests that Jussi Markkanen may play tonight.

The Wings have posted a 7-2-0 record in February thus far, with their only losses coming in St. Louis and Philadelphia. They have won their last three, including games in Dallas and Phoenix, and coming off a solid 4-2 win over Chicago on Wednesday. They’ll fly to Nashville after the game tonight to kick off a two-game road trip tomorrow night.

Because the Predators lost to the Habs in a shootout last night (6-5)*, the Wings remain on top of the Western Conference, though both teams have 84 points. Although the Preds have more wins (40), the Wings have won more (39) in fewer games (61 versus 62), so they win the tie-breaker.

The Free Press reports that Dominik Hasek will start tonight, but will not play tomorrow. The Wings are apparently not yet ready to start Dom in back-to-back situations, though there is talk that he will do so next month. Chris Osgood will be in net instead. I personally don’t have a problem any more with them going with Dom the first night because it’s all about keeping him healthy. The team doesn’t get a full workout tomorrow and since a good skate is a big part of a pregame routine that is designed to prevent injury, it’s better if Dom doesn’t play if he can’t go through that.

This is a important game for the Wings, who need to capitalize on the Preds’ loss last night and get some separation from the Preds going into the game in Nashville tomorrow night. The Oilers aren’t going to roll over, though, and so the concern is that the Wings will end up being too tired to handle the Predators tomorrow night. It’s going to be interesting to see how they deal with playing back-to-back games against such speedy and physical opponents.

*Update (12:16 PM): I just want to point out that Peter Forsberg wasn’t on the ice for any of the Preds’ five goals. Peter the Great has zero points and is minus-1 in three games with Nashville. That should make you feel happy. I know it makes me smile. - Matt

Khan: Torres gives Williams the cold shoulder

After the hit on Jason Williams, there was a lot of talk about how Raffi Torres felt terrible about it, as he watched the medical team work on him in the corner and talked about it after the game. Well, maybe the talk was true, but any remorse couldn’t have lasted long, as Ansar Khan reports:

Williams said Torres did not say anything to him on the ice during Saturday’s game. No, “Sorry about that, hated to see your face slam to the ice and all the blood spill out,” no “Hope you’re feeling better, too bad you had to be carried off on a stretcher.”

However, two of Torres’ teammates put him to shame:

Instead, Williams said Oilers defenseman Matt Greene came up to him after a whistle and asked him how he felt and forward Ryan Smyth told him it was good to see him back.

Impressive.

Khan goes on to point out that, though the hit was seen as clean by the team, no one went after Torres Saturday. To contrast, he cites the Oilers’ response to Danny Markov’s hit on Jarret Stoll, with Ethan Moreau and Steve Staios going after him over two games, as an example of a team willing to defend itself against physical play.

Khan notes that teams are still unafraid of taking runs at the Wings, even though the team is trying to become more physical.

Good points, Ansar. It does not bode well for their efforts at shedding their old reputation in favor of a new, tougher one, if they can’t even defend one of their own teammates. They may not be shying from physical play so much any more but there’s still a missing dimension.

Wings 3, Oilers 4 (SO)

The Wings finished up their Western Canada trip with a 4-3 shootout loss to Edmonton last night. It was another game in which the Wings dominated the Oilers in statistical categories such as shots (41-21), but this time, it wasn’t enough to win. Not the most exciting game, it nonetheless had some moments that should cause Wings fans some nightmares.

Joey MacDonald made his first NHL start last night and looked good after a slightly shaky start. It looks like he’s having some issues adjusting to the speed of the game with one goal resulting in his not getting to the post fast enough and another coming from his not being quite square to the puck and leaving the same post uncovered. On the first goal, however, he was left out to dry by Chris Chelios.

There has been much talk this season about how amazing Chelios’ continuing playing run is. Well, it’s all true, but the Wings’ injury situation meant Cheli had to play the second game of a back-to-back sequence and to be honest, his age showed. He looked notably tired and made a number of bad decisions with the puck, the most notable being the breakout pass that went straight to Ryan Smythe. Smythe dished the puck to Horcoff and the resulting slap shot blew by a helpless MacDonald to give the Oilers a 1-0 lead. Hopefully, Kronwall will be back this week so Chelios doesn’t have to play back-to-back games this Friday and Saturday.

I don’t know what’s gotten into Dan Cleary lately but he continues to impress at both ends of the ice. He’s been playing so well that Babcock has put him on the power play. Yes, that’s right, our penalty kill specialist is getting power play time, and last night wasn’t the first time: he scored a meaningless power play goal against the Flames Friday night. He was on the ice last night when the Wings were making a comeback push with an empthy net and it paid off. With time almost out, Cleary centered the puck from the right wing boards and found Jiri Hudler, who tipped it into the net with just over 3 seconds left. The goal tied the game at 3-3 and forced overtime. After OT, Cleary was given a shot in the shootout. He took full advantage, ripping the puck into the net through Dwayne Roloson’s 5-hole. The goal made up somewhat for his being robbed earlier in the game when Roloson dove across the net to make a glove save on what seemed like a sure goal.

Pavel Datsyuk looked good last night. He demonstrated some speed and actually used his moves, though his only point was an indirect second assist on the Markov goal.

It pains me to say it but I think Andreas Lilja had a good game last night. He was in on a number of offensive opportunities and apparently decided it was time to forego his award-winning impression of a pylon by actually playing pretty decent defense. Of course, it was probably a one-time deal so I’m not getting hopes up on seeing it again.

I hate, hate, hate the shootout. I did not need the heart attack-inducing tension after having my heart ripped out, stomped on, and partially eaten by Troy Smith and Co. earlier in the day. Seeing Henrik Zetterberg, my favorite player, mind you, successfully attempt the Forsberg shootout move only to see the puck slide into the post, was brutal. Seeing Raffi Torres score a possible winner and then watching Robert Lang try to even things up by sniping Dwayne Roloson (no deke, Robert?), only to fail, added insult to injury.

Sorry for the disjointed rambling. I guess I’m kind of in a daze after a terrible day of watching one team shoot itself in the face and another have a win stolen from them. Oh, and the spectre of an unholy amount of homework is rising. So, writing a coherent, in-depth game summary just isn’t in the cards today.

Oh, one more thing. Oilers fans = classless. When a player (say, Brett Lebda) takes a random puck to the mouth (off the stick of, say, Joffrey Lupul) and is spitting blood and teeth, the officials are going to whistle play dead. Booing a player for getting injured is about as classless as it gets.

Next up: Tuesday Wednesday versus Vancouver at 7:30 ET.

A2YNewsFreepBoxscore

GameDay: @ Edmonton (10-8-1, 21 Pts) 10:00 ET

The Wings are in Edmonton tonight to face the Oilers for the third time this season. They’ve split the two previous games, with Detroit winning the last meeting, 3-0 on November 8th, but lost the first, 3-1 on October 21st.

The Oilers have one of the best home records in the NHL at 7-2-0, with only New Jersey, Minnesota, and Anaheim winning more in their own building. Since losing to the Wings, Edmonton has gone 3-1-0, beating the Blue Jackets, and the Avalanche, but losing to the Blues, on the road before returning home to beat St. Louis in their last game.

Ryan Smythe has been a scoring machine this season, notching 14 goals, eight of which have come at home.

The Wings failed for the fifth time to surpass the team record in consecutive wins by losing to the Flames 3-1 in Calgary last night, ending the streak at nine. I was unable to watch the game so I can’t comment much on it, but it sounds like they got owned. According to IwoCPO, the weakness of the power play is no longer something we can laugh at as an aberration in an otherwise strong team, because last night the Flames took it to the Wings knowing they wouldn’t have to suffer.

Of course, it was just one game so it’s not the end of the world. The streak had to end sometime. It just sounds like they played badly enough last night for there to be some concern. They certainly won’t get away with it tonight.

The Wings will be without Niklas Kronwall, Jason Williams, Tomas Holmstrom, and Chris Osgood again tonight. Darryl Bootland and Evan McGrath could play tonight and Stefan Liv will be backing up Joey MacDonald.

The Wings need to rebound with a win tonight. It’s that simple.

Wings 3, Oilers 0

Update (1:31 AM): TSN reports that Williams does not have a concussion, that he has no headache, and that he is at home resting. He’s slated to return to practice tomorrow. Apparently, he needed 30 stitches for the pressure cut on his forehead. It’s definitely good to hear for certain that he’s okay. - Matt

The Wings extended their win streak to seven last night as they shut out the Edmonton Oilers at home with a smothering defensive effort. Dominik Hasek started for the Wings and faced his first shot at :21 of the second period, which gives you some idea about Edmonton’s offensive, and the Wings’ defensive, prowess. The Oilers managed a mere 16 shots on net last night while allowing the Wings 45 shots.

Rather than recapping the game in chronological order, I’m just going to express some impressions and explain why I came away from such a dominating win with a feeling that we had somehow lost.

Nearly a year after Jiri Fischer collapsed on the bench, the Wings had another scary incident take place during the game as Jason Williams was nearly decapitated by Raffi Torres after attempting a wrap-around shot on the Edmonton net at 10:54 of the second period. Williams landed face first on the ice, went limp, and slid into the corner as play continued. Dwayne Roloson, however, got the attention of the officials and they stopped the play.

Piet Van Zant came out and FSN cut to commercials. When they came back, Tony Colucci, the team physician was on the ice with a stretcher. After a few minutes, Williams was taken off with his body held nearly immobile. By that time, we had seen his leg move but as he was carried to the ambulance, he waved his arms to the crowd. A few minutes later, FSN reported that he had never lost consciousness, that he was okay, and that he was being taken for observation and stitches for a cut on his face.

Now, Torres’ hit was technically legal. In any other situation, it would have been just a good, solid bodycheck. However, the circumstances made it a dirty hit, as far as I’m concerned, regardless of its technical legality.

Williams came out from behind the net on the wrap-around attempt with Oilers captain Jason Smith covering him out front. Smith came at him as Jason released the shot and had Williams’ full attention. Jason’s head was definitely not down, as some have reported. He was just looking at the defenseman directly in front of him.

With Williams looking at Smith and preparing to avoid a hit there, Torres came from the top of the circles at high speed and blind-sided him, laying his shoulder into his face and sending him to the ice. Torres had ample time to pull up or avoid the hit but he made zero attempt to do so and instead took advantage of a vulnerable Williams by hitting him with 30 feet’s worth of momentum behind him.

Regardless of the legality of the hit, it was dirty because it demonstrated a complete lack of respect for Williams’ safety. This was no Scott Stevens hit where the victim had their head down and were asking for it. Williams had his head up but was looking in the wrong direction. He had already taken his shot and was well covered by Smith, not to mention Roloson, who had made the save and probably had the rebound under control. Torres’ hit was completely unecessary.

He’s lucky Smith backed off or else they could have hit Williams at the same time and we might be talking about a serious injury today. Because the contact was technically legal, Torres got off without any sort of penalty, but that doesn’t make what he did okay. I honestly do not see how it wasn’t charging, especially given that Mathieu Schneider was given a charging penalty later in the game for a much tamer play. Torres had an enormous amount of speed built up and there is no way he had only taken two steps. He had Williams tagged from the top of the slot.

You can try to make the argument that he didn’t have intent to injure but that won’t fly with me. Sure, he probably didn’t think, “Yes! Here’s my chance to give someone a concussion!” but he did see a chance to nail someone and he didn’t back off when he should have. He says he needs to finish his checks, and that’s a fair assertion because that’s his game. However, he should have held off there.

Williams may not be one of the game’s super stars but you’d think the league would be interested in protecting its players from incidents like that. Again, Williams did not have his head down so you can’t say he had it coming. There’s nothing wrong with laying big hits on guys but there is a line between safe hitting and unsafe hitting that is wholly separate from the question of whether or not it was technically legal. I think Torres crossed it.

Off Wing has the replay, if you’d like to see it.

Moving on.

I have to say that, as a whole, the officiating last night was awful. Whereas Edmonton seemingly got away with murder, the Wings were victims of some ridiculous calls. Some examples:

  • The first penalty of the game was a tripping call on Niklas Kronwall, who was apparently guilty of being next to Ryan Smyth when the latter lost an edge at center.
  • The Oilers’ second power play was the result of a crap cross-checking call on a nice play by Mathieu Schneider at the blueline.
  • A Nick Lidstrom high sticking penalty in the second period was lame because his stick hit the Edmonton player when another Oiler lifted it into his teammate’s face. Probably a good call due to the League’s mandate that a player control his stick at all times, but they missed an obvious high sticking call on Torres later in the game when his swinging stick hit Schneider in the face.
  • The ultimate insult came at 17:52 of the second period when Mathieu Schneider was called for charging Petr Sykora on the corner. Sure, it probably was charging, but then so was Torres’ hit. The fact that it was called on Schneider’s relatively innocuous play on Sykora and not on Torres’ dangerous headhunting hit on Williams was pretty ridiculous.
  • Schneider was justly called at 5:06 of the third for boarding Winchester. He should have pulled up and let off on the play, but even so, it felt wrong after seeing the Oilers get away with similar plays the whole game.

Now, the Wings’ penalty killing was excellant last night so facing so many power plays wasn’t really that big a deal. Often, complaints about officiating are just whining and groundless, but I try to be realistic and relatively fair, despite being a Wings homer, and truthfully, they got the shaft a few times last night. I don’t know if it’s because of some kind of unconscious desire to make up for “Magoo’s” gaffe the other night but some calls were just plain mystifying. After the Williams hit, it was real rich to see Wings players getting called for charging and boarding while Edmonton was just as rough as before.

I loved seeing Danny Markov defend himself so ably when Steve Staios went after him, conceivably because he was seeking revenge for the hit Jarret Stoll and Ethan Moreau’s shoulder injury.

First of all, the hit on Stoll was perfectly okay and there’s no way Edmonton has any claim to retribution on it, beyond what Moreau already got. You may be crying “hypocrite!” but think for a second. Stoll was skating through center with his attention on getting into the zone. He wasn’t paying attention to his surroundings but if he had been, he could have avoided Markov’s hit. Jason Williams, on the other hand, was down low, having shot the puck tenths of a second earlier. He was both looking for a rebound and at avoiding Jason Smith when Torres nailed him from the side. You can’t say Williams wasn’t paying attention. Markov on Stoll = legal and okay, Torres on Williams = legal but not okay.

Second, it’s even more stupid to go after him for what happened to Moreau. Markov had nothing to do with that. Moreau hurt himself. So go ahead and fight Markov, Staios, and give your team 17 minutes in penalties. You’re lucky the Wings’ power play is weaker than a Ford Fiesta.

The Oilers in general last night were pretty nasty. Apparently, they got to Detroit at 3:00 AM Wednesday morning, so I don’t know if it was because they didn’t get their beauty sleep or what. Maybe they should have taken a nap instead of skating earlier in the day.

Comment on Nick: at one point, Ales Hemsky tried about five moves on Lidstrom but didn’t fool him. Later in the game, Hemsky tried one average deke to the outside and Nick conceded the net to him. Fortunately, Hemsky basically skated into Hasek and didn’t get a goal, but it was slightly disturbing to see Lidstrom beat like that.

Good to see Zetterberg scoring again. Keep it up Hank!

Pavel Datsyuk looks slow lately. He still has some good dekes but he rarely, if ever, turns on the jets any more, so most of his plays seem to fizzle out. I wonder if he’s hurt. You’d think that if he was, they’d sit him for a few games like they did with Schneider and are doing with Andreas Lilja. Something to watch, for sure.

I don’t know how Hasek is keeping hiimself entertained back there while his defense keeps the puck away. What do you do as a goalie when you go a whole period without facing a shot? The Wings’ defense might want to consider letting up a little bit or else Dom is going to be at risk of hurting himself when he does finally face a shot after long stretches of inactivity. You can see Dom trying to stay loose by leaving the net far more often than he needs to. That’s reason enough to let him see more shots. He did get his 70th career shutout, though.

As well as the Wings played last night, the Oilers played poorly, with the exception of Roloson. And Edmonton fans are not happy.

The Williams hit and the poor officiating had me come away from the game with a real feeling of disgust. I did not feel like it had been a shutout win at all. It felt more like a loss, strangely enough.

Well, they’ve won 7 in a row, and are one of the hottest teams in the league right now. Strangely enough for a Red Wings team, it’s due mainly to their smothering defense rather than an offensive superiority. Regardless of how badly the Oilers played last night, it was a stiff test for the Wings, especially for the PK units, and good preparation for Friday’s game against the Predators.

GameDay: vs. Edmonton (7-6-1, 15 Pts) 8:00 ET

Tonight is the second of four games between these two teams this season. The Oilers won the first meeting 3-1, dealing the Wings their third loss in a row at the time. The teams split the 2005-2006 season series 2-2, with Edmonton winning the first two (4-3 OT, 6-5 OT), and Detroit winning the last two (4-3 SO, 2-0). The teams then met in the first round of the playoffs, with the Oilers winning in six.

The Oilers have lost three in a row, including a shootout loss in Montreal last night. It was the first game of a five-game road trip that will take them on to play Columbus, St. Louis, and Colorado, giving them a good chance of improving on their 1-4-1 road record so far this season. They are fourth in the Northwest Division, ahead only of Calgary, but they are in ninth place in the conference, just a point behind Colorado.

Free agent acquistion Peter Sykora seems to be performing well. He leads the team with 18 points (9 goals, 9 assists), and scored the equalizer in the thrid period of last night’s game. It doesn’t look like Dwayne Roloson has been the rock for the team this season that he was during the playoffs, posting a 6-5-1 record and a 2.54 GAA. The NHL.com preview reports that he is 4-10-1 in 18 career games against Detroit.

The Wings are riding a six-game win streak, having won each game since losing to Edmonton on October 21st. They are, “looking forward to making amends for that,” loss, as Ted Kulfan quotes Mike Babcock as saying.

Mathieu Schneider is expected to make his return to the ice tonight after missing three games due to a groin injury.

Tonight’s a good opportunity for the Wings to pick on a struggling team. The Oilers’ speed won’t make it easy, but if they play strong defensively like they have been, they should be able to pull out the win. It will be good preparation for Friday night’s game against Nashville, who are on a five-game win-streak at the moment.

10/26 Notes

Update (4:02 PM): … In a blog post this afternoon, Helene St. James reports that Johan Franzen left practice early because of a charley-horse and may not be ready to play tomorrow night in Dallas.

She also says Samuelsson did not practice, and she doesn’t think it’s likely he’ll be back in time to play against the Stars (seems like a pretty good assumption).

Lastly, she reports that Brad Norton returned to the ice for his first full practice since sustaining a shoulder injury last Wednesday in Anaheim, but has not been pulled off the injured reserve list yet. When he does come off the IR, the Wings will be over the roster limit and someone will have to be sent down to Grand Rapids. The most likely candidate is Filppula because he does not have to clear waivers, like Norton, Hudler, or Kopecky would have to do.
link via Slapshots. - Matt

… John Wawrow of the Detroit News has a piece on Danny Markov today in the Red Wings Notebook. He begins by describing Markov’s hit on Ethan Moreau in the Edmonton game on Saturday.

“Saturday’s open-ice collision with Edmonton’s Ethan Moreau, which dislodged Moreau from the puck and resulted in a breakaway goal by Pavel Datsyuk, was a snapshot of why the Wings wanted Markov.”

Only problem is, that hit was on Jarret Stoll. Maybe Wawrow links Moreau to the play because he dislocated his shoulder when pulling his arm back for a sucker punch on the Wings defenseman in revenge for the perfectly legal check on his teammate. Now, he’s out until for a few months because it turns out he needs surgery.

… Wawrow also provides a little update on Mikael Samuelsson’s shoulder injury. Sammy is, “not on the radar screen,” according to Babcock, since he has not practiced or skated since he sustained the injury on the 18th in Anaheim.

He’s been taken off The Hockey Recap’s injured players list, however, though I’m not sure what they’re basing that on, given the Babcock quote. Wawrow does say the Wings could be without Samuelsson, “for a few more days,” so that may be it.

… Helene St. James profiles Valtteri Filppula in today’s Freep Wings Corner. Filppula played on a line last night with Kris Draper and Henrik Zetterberg, and looked pretty decent. It was a show of confidence by Mike Babcock, who had him playing with Jiri Hudler and Tomas Kopecky on Saturday. You have to wonder how much longer Brad Norton is going to stay “injured,” with Babcock’s new favorite young player Valtteri taking his place temporarily.

… The Wings beat the Sharks 2-1 last night and looked pretty good while doing it. They outshot San Jose 39-24 and could have won by a wider margin had Evgeni Nabokov not been so strong. Still, it’s a little disconcerting that the team leader in goals is a defenseman (Mathieu Schneider) and not one of our skilled forwards.

Robert Lang has been pretty strong so far this season and will hopefully continue to be so.

Neither Pavel Datsyuk nor Henrik Zetterberg were particularly noticeable last night but I didn’t watch the game too closely. Helene St. James says they had their chances, even if they didn’t score, so maybe there’s nothing to worry about there.

The power play unit finally scored, which was good to see. They didn’t get that many opportunities to demonstrate their new PP strategy, though, and should have, which wasn’t a good thing. Both teams got away with too much last night.

One thing I like from this year’s Wings team is that they seem to be more physical. They were outhitting the Sharks last night, which is not something they usually do against anybody. They had noticeable intensity and will be well off if they keep that up.

Dominik Hasek looked weak on the lone Sharks goal but it was a defensive lapse more than anything else and he was strong for the rest of the game.

It was good to see them come home and get a win. Now it’s time to see if they’ll be able to build on it.

They play the Stars on Friday in Dallas before travelling to St. Louis to play the Blues on Saturday.

I didn’t do a full game summary so here are the Freep and DetNews reports, as well as the boxscore.

Eric Duhatschek on economic realities in the NHL

Good read about the two big deals at the draft yesterday but I like the last two paragraphs the best, especially this part:

The Oilers won’t be in any hurry to accommodate Pronger’s wishes until they get the right deal in place (how about Pronger to Florida for hometown boy Jay Bouwmeester?) ….

After thinking more about that trade request, I’m becoming more and more glad that there’s no chance of the guy coming to Detroit. If requesting to be traded, whatever the reason, is all the thanks the Oilers get for putting Pronger in a position to win the Cup for the first time in his career, maybe they ought to send him where he’ll have no chance of getting that far for as long as his contract lasts (four more years). Maybe his wife would like Miami. (link via. James Mirtle)

The ‘Canes are the new Stanley Cup Champions

For all the talk about how tired Carolina was, it was Edmonton that looked comparatively drained as the Hurricanes returned to form for Game 7. Congratulations to both teams for their long runs and to the ‘Canes for their first Cup win.

Link

Edmonton wins Game 6 in decisive fashion

Update (1:04 PM): Alanah over at VCOE takes issue with my comments on the fans at Rexall place.

Like I said, I understand the sentiment, but I think that kind of chant should be saved for times when the Cup is a guarantee. It’s a celebratory cheer but Edmonton hasn’t won it yet. I know I kept thinking, “It’s too bad this isn’t Game 7,” and I’m sure the fans there were thinking the same thing so maybe it’s a natural reaction. Still, it was just Game 6 and the Oilers have only put themselves in a position to win the Cup, no more. Tomorrow night, we’ll find out whether or not they’ll finish the job.

I’m not berating the fans at Rexall place. I think they’re great for the overwhelming show of support they give the Oilers. They really do put fans in other areans around the league to shame. I just think that particular chant was premature.

By the way, Alanah, you’ve been writing far more great material lately than I have! - Matt

I have to say I’m a little shocked at how much the Oilers dominated tonight. Did Carolina forget that they could have won the Cup had they shown up to play?

Edmonton clearly wanted it more and absolutely outworked the Hurricanes, who put up one of the most pitiful performances of the playoffs, notching just 16 shots, seven of which came over the first two periods.

Scott Oake was trying to pin it on travel, which Carolina is not all that used to, but it’s hard to discount Edmonton’s performance. Their power play was strong, racking up three goals in nine chances and putting on a good show on a couple power plays on which they didn’t score. They were far more physical than the ‘Canes all game long and won the majority of the battles along the boards.

Cam Ward kept the ‘Canes in it, as did their skill (luck?) at blocking shots. Otherwise, it could have been ugly.

Laviolette’s pep talk in the second period during his time-out got Carolina playing more respectable hockey but they still were nowhere near the form of earlier in the series.

Once again, the fans at Rexall place put other arenas to shame with their raucous support of the Oilers throughout the game. I have to say, though, that their chant, “We want the Cup!” toward the end was pretty lame. As far as I’m concerned, you only cheer that during a clinching game or between the end of the game and the actual presentation. You don’t cheer it in Game 6 when the series is going back to the other city. All that’s going to do is give the ‘Canes that much more to draw on for the seventh game. Besides, I don’t think anyone in Edmonton really wanted to see the Cup tonight because it would have meant a Carolina victory. I understand the sentiment but it’s just obnoxious.

I stuck around and watched the post-game interviews on CBC and think I am scarred for life after seeing probably all but about three inches of Chris Pronger’s thighs as he sat with Michael Peca to talk with Oake and Kelly Hrudey. I know you’re a big man, Pronger, and it must be hard to find shorts long enough, but I never want to see that again.

Game 7 is Monday night in Carolina and I hope the ‘Canes show up to play, for their fans’ sake. The Oilers obviously smell blood and have a heck of a lot of momentum. If the Hurricanes react to tonight the way they should, Game 7 ought to be amazing.