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It’s official: Shanahan now a Ranger

(via New York Rangers official site)

The New York Rangers have issued a press release announcing the signing and are holding a conference call at 2:00 PM today as well.

So ends another era in Detroit, less than a week after the Yzerman Era ended. Shanahan came to Detroit in at the start of the ‘96-’97 season and scored 46 goals for the Wings through 79 games. He is generally seen as the final piece of the Stanley Cup puzzle for the team and has become one of the most popular players in the city over time.

Ansar Khan reminds us of the scene in the lockerroom after the Wings were eliminated by Calgary in 2004 where Shanahan was in tears because he was afraid that he would be taking off the Winged Wheel for the last time. And now he’s gone, despite the Wings desperately trying to bring him back by offering more than they could afford in a two-year deal at $4 million in the first year.

Since Shanahan went on the market last week, there had been many conflicting reports on where he was headed. Some thought he was just testing the market as a staunch union man or for kicks, to see what he would get, but that he always intended to sign with the Wings. Others said he was looking to leave the Wings because of Mike Babcock or because he wanted more money than the Wings were willing or able to offer him.

It was easy to believe Babcock and Shanahan had clashed due to the coach’s apparent distaste for the older players on the team but I remembered Shanny’s resurgence this past season and thought perhaps that Babcock made an exception with him. Therefore, I allowed myself to believe reports such as a blog post by Ansar Khan, which came late last night, that assured Wings fans that Shanahan wasn’t going anywhere (Khan has since taken the post down - a big no-no in the blogging community, Ansar). We even had it straight from The Captain.

Well, the Wings have lost two of their greatest leaders in just a few days. I have no idea what Holland can, or will, do to fill in the holes. The leadership shoes will have to be filled by players such as Henrik Zetterberg, Niklas Kronwall and Pavel Datsyuk with the help of Nick Lidstrom, Kris Draper and the rest of the remaining veterans. The hole left in the offense by Shanahan’s departure will be harder to fill (remember, he scored 41 goals last year). Anson Carter, Michael Peca and Scott Gomez are names already being thrown around. None of them will really replace Shanahan, even if they produce 20-30 goals a year.

Ken Holland is not to blame for this. The Wings really couldn’t afford to give Shanahan such a raise and the real shame here is that he wouldn’t take a pay cut to help the team stay competitive. I will not be angry at Brendan for leaving. He’s done too much for the team to deserve that. But I am very disappointed in him.

We wanted change this off-season and we’re getting it, folks. It hurts, doesn’t it?

The Wings’ 2002 Playoff CD had a variation of Shanny’s Irish Jig that incluced Ken Daniels and Ken Kal calling a number of Shanahan goals from that season. I don’t know about you guys but I can picture a number of the goals and it’s hard to believe that we’ll never again hear the Jig played for a Shanahan goal at JLA. Click here to listen to it and remember (.wma, 1.2 MB).

Goodbye, Brendan. Thanks for the memories. I hope you find what you’re looking for in New York.

Report: Shanahan signs with Rangers

A one-year, $4 million deal, which apparently was less than what the Wings offered him. More later.

Link

Update - Brian (7/9 12:17)

Before learning of the news from my brother this morning, I read Helene St. James’ article in the Free Press about how the Rangers were wooing Shanahan. I quote:

“Now Shanahan is being courted by Montreal, and, according to a report in the New York Daily News, the Rangers. The paper said Shanahan was in Manhattan last week being wooed by team officials, who apparently got a little carried away.

According to the paper, Shanahan’s name and likeness appeared on Madison Square Garden’s Seventh Avenue marquee with the words: ‘The Rangers welcome Brendan Shanahan.’

Perhaps it will turn out to be a test run for the real thing; perhaps it will turn out to be no more than wishful thinking…”

Well, I guess that was a lasting impression enough for Shanny to reject similar offers from the Wings. It will be shocking to see Shanahan in a Rangers uniform, as he has been a Red Wing since October 9, 1996. I had read his shopping on the free agent market as nothing but a veteran taking his last chance to do so, and merely to see what kind of offers he could get. I guess I was in denial to what I’ve also been saying lately about the Wings: that I see no reason for anyone to want to sign with us other than for a lucrative contract. I don’t see the Wings getting past the second round of the playoffs next season, and that Shanahan and Yzerman are both gone in a matter of days makes this only more likely. I don’t blame Shanahan at all for leaving, as this is the first off-season as a fan where I actually have said I wouldn’t even sign with the Wings, outside the fan perspective.

In other news, Yzerman reportedly favors Nicklas Lidstrom as the next Captain, according to a Drew Sharp article this morning.

Wings/Oilers series could start Friday instead

Ansar Khan expains that because of complications with Buffalo’s arena and NBC’s plans to broadcast both a Wings and a Rangers game this weekend, the first round may not start Saturday after all. So, if the Rangers beat Ottawa tonight, therefore winning their division, they’ll avoid playing Buffalo and the Wings will play Saturday, getting an extra day to rest.

Link

Wings 4, Rangers 3

The Wings’ first game on NBC in years turned out to be a success, as they beat their old rival, the New York Rangers, 4-3 downtown at the Joe. It was a well-played game by both teams and definitely an entertaining one, as the Rangers kept it interesting right to the end.

I enjoyed the NBC broadcast much more than the OLN versions, though I still prefer FSN. Bill Clement and Ray Ferraro were the studio crew, with Mark Messier joining them in the intermissions. Mike Emrick and John Davidson were in the booth but Pierre McGuire was between the benches and provided insights throughout the game. NBC kept track of the ice time of Brendan Shanahan and Jaromir Jagr, keeping a special clock under the scoreboard whenever either of the two were on the ice. I can’t say I paid much attention to it, though.

The game started with both teams looking like they needed to first get their footing so it wasn’t too exciting in the first few minutes. The Wings came out of it first, getting a couple of chances but finding that Henrik Lundqvist was equal to the challenge.

The Rangers got to go on the power play first, at 4:10, when Robert Lang was slapped with a boarding call. Not a very smart play by Lang, who lost an offensive zone faceoff to start the play off. Fortunately for him, the Rangers power play is miserable, as the NBC crew informed us, going just 2-for-27 in their last 29 chances. They failed to score again, this time, and the Wings got a good kill.

The Wings came close to scoring at 6:53, when Nick Lidstrom’s shot went through Lundqvist and stopped about a foot from the goalline. The Rangers goalie fell back on it and kept it from being knocked in, however, and the scored remained 0-0.

Detroit was penalized again at 8:01. This time it was Mikael Samuelsson, who tied up Jagr at center and was called for holding. The Wings had some trouble controlling the puck in their own zone but they finally got it out and it led to a nice scoring chance down the right wing by Daniel Cleary. The Rangers came back and set up, forcing Manny Legace to be sharp.

Legace looked pretty good in the first, most notably when he made a great glove save on Petr Sykora with 9:01 left. Sykora was left all alone in the slot by the Red Wing defense but Manny was on his game and made the necessary save.

Not long after that, Jason Williams and Lang had what basically amounted to a 2-on-0 (each about a step behind the NY defense) but Williams’ pass was a little off and the best Lang could manage was a weak backhand shot at a sharp angle, though Lundqvist did his best to make the save looked spectacular.

The first Red Wing power play, starting at 12:08, was unimpressive. The Wings were messy with passes and had trouble getting it into the zone until late. Then, they did get a couple of shots off from the point but nothing too serious.

With 3:50 or so left, Pavel Datsyuk and Brendan Shanahan skated in on a 2-on-1 but Tom Poti made a nice diving play to keep Pavel’s pass from getting through to Shanny, saving his goalie’s bee-hind, not to mention his defense partner’s.

One thing about Lundqvist that I noted at this point is how good he is positionally. I don’t remember seeing him out of position the whole first period, he was always square to the shooter.

The Rangers opened the scoring at 18:45 when Jaromir Jagr one-timed a pass from Martin Rucinsky, who was behind the net. Nick Lidstrom was just a half a step away from tying Jagr up on the play but the Czech ended up being pretty well wide open. The puck beat Manny between the legs but it came so suddenly that I don’t really blame him for the goal. A rare mistake by Nick Lidstrom, though Jagr is no stooge and is tough to cover even if you are the best defenseman in the world.

Soon after the start of the second period, the Rangers took a dumb delay of game penalty when Jason Strudwick knocked the net off its moorings. The Wings had a great pressure power play but the Rangers were able to kill it off pretty impressively.

Starting at 3:59, Kris Draper’s line, with Maltby and Franzen, put on a lot of good griding pressure in the New York zone for an impressive shift that resulted in a couple decent shots. Those three showed their usual good energy and kept the Rangers busy.

Chris Chelios laid a big hit on Petr Prucha along the boards and then another one on someone else at center ice during a long shift around the 5:00 mark. The NBC crew later seized on these plays as having fired the Wings up.

The Wings got another power play at 5:40 and did a pretty good job on it but weren’t going anywhere until the Rangers took another penalty with 14 seconds remaining in their first. The Wings made good use of the resulting 5-on-3 and, though the 14 seconds had gone, they scored while still on the power play at 7:45. Nick Lidstrom took the initial shot from he point and Lundqvist made the save but the rebound ended up on Lang’s stick to the right of the net. He put it right under the crossbar and tied the game at one. Nice goal by Lang, who may be finally getting it together and who scored his 11th on the play.

Not even a minute later, the Wings struck again. This time, it was Brendan Shanahan, who took the puck in with Kris Draper on the other wing and let fly a shot. Lundqvist made the save with his pads but the puck still ended up behind his arm and when he went to stop a possible shot from Draper, he knocked the puck in with his stick before Draper could get to it. ‘Bout time, Shanny. 2-1 Wings.

The Rangers came on after the goal but Manny was sharp. The Wings had to kill off another penalty but did so in convincing form and seemed to be very much in control of the game.

Still, New York wasn’t going to let the Wings keep them from scoring again and score they did, at 19:45. This time it was Michael Nylander, who put the puck over Legace’s shoulder as his teammate Ville Nieminen crashed the net. Apparently, Nieminen ran just enough interference to keep Manny from making a save but not enough to get a penalty, though the Wings tried to argue for it. I thought it was a clear case of goaltender interference but the goal stood. Nieminen’s run one of our goalies before, during the 2004 playoffs, if you remember. This time it wasn’t quite so nasty, though the result was a little harder to take. 2-2 tie.

The third period began with both teams playing pretty evenly. Each team had a couple scoring chances but nothing too exciting happened in the first five minutes.

Then, the Wings scored. It was sort of a fluky/weird play: Chris Chelios was swarmed by three or four Rangers at the blueline and knocked down. Pavel Datsyuk kept the play alive by taking the puck down the left wing boards and passing it to Zetterberg. Hank centered it to Shanahan in front of the net and Lundqvist made the stop on the ensuing shot but fell backwards into the net. The puck ended up between his legs and Shanahan made a second attempt at it, just barely getting his stick underneath it to flip it over Lundqvist, who was sitting up just in time to see the puck roll up his chest and by his head on the way into the net. Great goal, Shanny’s 22nd of the year and second of the game. 3-2 Wings.

Though the Wings had the lead, the Rangers were still dangerous and coming close on their scoring chances. They actually rang a shot off the outside of the post on one play but shot themselves in the foot when they took a penalty on a Draper near-breakaway at 12:10.

The Wings got a good setup and a couple of good shots off but didn’t score due to Lundqvist and some good penalty killing by his teammates.

Despite their efforts on the PK, the Rangers gave up another goal. This time it was Johan Franzen, who got his stick on Kris Draper’s centering pass and redirected the puck into the net. The goal came off a fast break and wouldn’t have happened if Maltby hadn’t slammed on the breaks at the blueline to keep the play onsides. The goal came at 14:39 and gave the Wings a two-goal lead. It was Franzen’s 8th of the year.

The Wings were really showing some good energy at this point, doing a good job of pursuing the puck and not laying back much at all.

Shanahan came close to scoring a hat trick a couple times, most notably when he went on a 2-on-1 with either Zetterberg or Datsyuk (regrettably, I neglected to write down which it was) and ringing a shot off the crossbar, to the disappointment of 20,066 fans in JLA.

Bench-reporter Pierre McGuire, in one of the more entertaining anecdotes he related during the game, told the viewers that Steve Yzerman was giving Jed Ortmeyer some lip from his spot on the bench. Ortmeyer and Yzerman had faced each other on their teams’ respective fourth lines and Yzerman was trying to generate some hostility in preparation for their next shift against each other. Well, Ortmeyer left the bench right about then and ended up putting his team within one, whether as a result of Yzerman’s talk or not. No, I’m not blaming you, Steve.

Anyway, Ortmeyer took a shot from the point that was blocked partially by someone in front. It was going wide of the net when it hit Lebda and that put it back on target. It beat an unsuspecting Manny Legace to make it 4-3 at 17:34.

Nevertheless, the Wings kept the pressure on and forced the Rangers to take a timeout after the puck was frozen in their zone. They lost the ensuing faceoff and the Wings burned a good 40 seconds in the zone until New York could finally get it out. They pulled Lundqvist as they headed up the ice but to no avail.

As the buzzer sounded, Henrik Zetterberg sent the puck over to Shanahan, who took a shot from behind his own blueline and would have scored had time not run out. So, no hat trick, though it was a nice gesture by Hank.

Not a perfect game by the Wings but a good one. Next up, is the game at fluffball Columbus, on Wednesday.

Lines*

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

D-pairings

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

PP

Lang-Yzerman-Shanahan-Woolley-Schneider
Zetterberg-Holmstrom-Datsyuk-Williams-Lidstrom
Shanahan-Yzerman-Lang-Schneider-Williams

Weird Line (3 Defensemen?!)

Zetterberg-Datsyuk-Schneider-Lebda-Lilja

*compiled by Brian

GameDay: vs. NY Rangers (25-12-7, 57 Pts) 2:00

The Wings will play host to their old Original Six rivals, the New York Rangers, at Joe Louis Arena this afternoon on NBC. They had a seven game win-streak over the Rangers - dating back to 1999 - halted in 2003-2004, when they lost the one-game season series, 3-1 in New York on October 25th, 2003. This also is the only game between these clubs this season.

Detroit is coming off a very good win over Philadelphia on Thursday. Neither team scored in the first period, though they traded a number of power plays, but both scored once in the second to make it 1-1 going in to the third. Then, the Wings’ offense exploded, scoring five goals to give the team a 6-3 win. The newly-formed Zetterberg-Datsyuk-Shanahan line combined for 12 points and accounted for three goals in just the third period. Steve Yzerman notched his 1,050th assist on Robert Lang’s goal to end the night’s scoring and passed Gordie Howe for 7th all-time in assists. The game helped the Wings save some face after dropping their previous two, first to Dallas on Sunday and then to Carolina on Tuesday.

The Rangers are no longer the pushover they have been in recent years. They are just second in the Atlantic Division and are one of the top teams in league standings. They have won their last three games, the most recent of which was a 5-4 overtime decision over the Edmonton Oilers. The game was the last of a five-game homestand for the Rangers, who will now begin a four-game road trip today. The Ranger offense has improved from recent years and has posted a respectable 138 goals so far this season. Jaromir Jagr has returned to his old form and leads the league with 67 points. The Rangers’ success can also be attributed to very good goaltending. Rookie goalie Henrik Lundqvist is fourth in the league with a 2.13 GAA (compare to Legace’s: 2.11) and third in the league with a .926 save-percentage.

Manny Legace should get another start today and will hopefully have shaken off the cobwebs.

Expect a good game today. Both teams have momentum going in and have been highly competitive this year. Add in a classic Original Six rivalry and you should get a high quality matchup. The Wings need to show that Flyers-type games are their norm, not Stars-type games or even ‘Canes-type. They need to shut down Jagr and solve Lundqvist and they have the tools to do both.