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3/18 Notes

… The Wings blew their Division/Conference/League lead last night when they lost 4-1 to Vancouver while Nashville and Jordin Tootoo were beating up Dallas to win 3-2.

I missed the first period, which I see was penalty-ridden, but I got to see the second and third periods and it didn’t seem much better. I haven’t got much more to say, except that they need to stay out of the box better than that. When they’re getting bench minor penalties for having six players not just on the ice, but in the zone playing, something’s wrong. They were obviously not on top of the mental game.

Anyway, if you didn’t read the liveblog from last night, read it now.

… I had a reason to mention Tootoo above and the reason is this:

For that disgusting example of disrespect, Tootoo was given a roughing penalty while Robidas was called for charging. Did I mention that Robidas had to be carted off the ice on a stretcher? No? Oh. Well, he did. How, exactly, does that work?

Now, Barry Trotz obviously isn’t going to throw his own player under the bus, but his defense of Tootoo sickens me:

“Toots obviously hit their top player, and the current response in hockey is someone has got to get over there and defend your honor. Robidas was really charging at Toots, and he just reacted. I give him a lot of credit – he kept his gloves on.”

“The current response in hockey”? That’s how it’s always been, Trotz. Robidas was going in to defend Modano, which is exactly what he should have done.

I’m not convinced Robidas was technically charging, but all Tootoo had to do was sidestep it or absorb it (Robidas wasn’t going that fast). If he had a chance to swing, he had a chance to step aside instead. I don’t know what condition Robidas is in, but had Tootoo had a chance to drop his glove, Robidas might have been seriously injured. Oh, and Tootoo would probably have a broken hand, so I guess Trotz is right to give him credit for that.

Robidas obviously has a concussion, but it doesn’t seem like the League is looking at a suspension. If there isn’t some kind of disciplinary action, the League is going to look incredibly stupid. That kind of stuff has no place in the game, whether it’s Tootoo or anyone else doing it. The kid’s had a red-letter week, that’s for sure.

… Apparently, this is the week that Todd Bertuzzi will return to the ice. He’s had a number of pain-free practices and should be good to go Thursday or Saturday. I’m definitely looking forward to it. I want to see what he’ll do for us in the Winged Wheel.

Norstrom, Smyth moved

The Los Angeles Kings have dealt their captain, Matthias Norstrom, to the Dallas Stars, according to TSN. Not sure yet what they got in return. Norstrom has 2 goals and 9 points in 62 games this season.

The bigger news is that the Edmonton Oilers were unable to resign their star. Spector’s cites Newsday as saying that Ryan Smyth has been traded to the New York Islanders for two prospects (Ryan O’Marra and Robert Nilsson) and a first round pick.

Wings 3, Stars 1

I caught the game last night, but didn’t take notes so all I have is a few brief comments.

… It was a pretty even game, I thought, with both teams getting good chances and being thwarted by stellar goaltending at both ends. Both Chris Osgood and Mike Smith looked great last night. Maybe Turco ought to be watching his back. Also, Osgood’s finger isn’t 100%, making his performance all the more impressive.

The Stars’ goal was off a great set up and was aided by the fact that Niklas Kronwall was taken out of the play when a shot went off his knee, causing him to collapse to the ice. Osgood was well out of position, but the play should have been covered by the defense.

… Henrik Zetterberg’s assist on Pavel Datsyuk was a thing of beauty. The Highlight Machine replay really doesn’t do it justice. A perfect pass through his legs and those of the defenseman, along the edge of the goal, right to Pavel. The best part, aside from the actual goal, was seeing Mike Smith totally faked out, only to turn his head at the last second and realize his mistake.

… It was good to see the #1 line show up on the radar in the third period after a pretty quiet first 40+ minutes. Somehow Pavel and Hank logged over 20 minutes each, but I hardly remember seeing them on the ice until some time in the third. Kirk Maltby, Kris Draper, and Johan Franzen were much more visible, for whatever reason. Still, Hank and Pavel ended up with a goal each, so I guess I can’t say they had a bad night.

… One thing I thought the Stars did better than the Wings last night was forecheck. They were very dangerous in the Detroit end when forcing the puck carriers, often making it very difficult for the Wings to get it out of the zone.

… Overall, not a bad game. Very defensively oriented, but the Wings stacked up well, of course, and were able to make plays when it was needed. It was an important win, as they keep pace with Nashville, who beat San Jose 5-0 last night. The Wings have a couple days off before they play in Phoenix on Saturday.

GameDay: @ Dallas (34-20-2, 70 Pts) 8:30 ET

Update (4:40 PM): Correction on the Dallas starter for tonight: Mike Smith will be in net, according to the Dallas Morning News (I should have seen that earlier - sorry for the lazy assumption). Apparently, Mike Tippett isn’t impressed with Turco’s play recently, not to mention his record against the Wings. (via Left Wing Lock). - Matt

Update (3:25 PM): Ansar Khan, via email: “Osgood starts tonight, with MacDonald as the backup, Hasek will start in Phoenix. Dan Cleary is out with the flu and Danny Markov is back in, giving them seven defensemen.” - Matt

Tonight is the third of four games between these two teams this season. The Wings lead the series 2-0, with wins October 27th (4-3) and November 27th (2-1). The fourth and final game will come next month, on the 30th.

The Stars are 4-1-0 thus far in February, with their only loss coming to the Blues on the third. They’ve won their last three, including a 1-0 win over Anaheim on Saturday. Their most recent win came on Sunday against Colorado, a 7-5 decision.

Dallas is currently sixth in the Conference, but is looking to climb the ladder all the way to 2nd place as they are only 4 points behind Anaheim for the Pacific Division lead. They’re only a point behind San Jose and will be watching the scoreboard for the results of the Preds/Sharks game tonight. They play host to the Sharks on Sunday.

Marty Turco should be in net tonight for the Stars. He has struggled a bit since the All Star Break, according to the AP, who say he was pulled Sunday after allowing three goals in the second period. Turco is 1-8-5-0 against the Wings in his career.

The Wings are 4-2-0 in February, but those losses have come in their last three games. They are coming off a 6-1 embarrassment in Philadelphia that came the day after a dominating 7-4 win over Calgary.

They are currently fourth in the Conference, but can vault ahead to first with a win tonight if Nashville loses to San Jose.

The Detroit News reports that Dominik Hasek will be “available” for tonight’s game, while the Free Press says that “in all likelihood, Osgood will get the nod.” We’ll know more after the morning skate, though it sounds like the papers may have an opportunity to use Osgood’s headline suggestion tomorrow: “Sexy tandem back in the saddle in Dallas.” In any case, it looks like at least one of them will be back, as the team has sent Jimmy Howard back to Grand Rapids.

Looks like Danny Markov is “probable” for tonight.

It’s not just the two goalies that need to get “back in the saddle” tonight. The team as a whole needs to rebound from Monday night’s debacle with at least a solid game tonight, if not a win. The Stars are fighting to climb the standings so it won’t be an easy one, but Detroit ought to have a lot of motivation considering the fact that Nashville very well could go up three points tonight, if they win and the Wings do not. Hopefully, this year’s father/son trip will be more successful than last year’s (1-1-1).

2/12 Quick Links

Update (2:30 PM):Ansar Khan writes on the Peter Forsberg situation and has a few interesting tidbits, particularly the possibility that the Wings might look to trade away Robert Lang for a winger on top of making a push for Forsberg. - Matt

… Henrik Zetterberg has been named the “First Star of the Week” by the NHL.

… Also Zetterberg-related: see also Dave’s response to the Freep’s Michael Rosenberg column advising Wings fans to maintain proper “perspective.” Rosenberg believes the jury’s still out on Zetterberg, and Dave is right to point out that he’s way off base there.

… Ottawa Senator’s goalie Ray Emery is only getting suspended for three games after this vicious slash last night.

… Ladislav Nagy is now a Dallas Star. So much for this rumor.

11/28 Notes

Update (4:59 PM): Helene St. James reports that Jason Williams may return to the ice Friday night in Minnesota. Apparently, he feels a lot better today than he did last night and the pain could very well be gone in time for the game.

She says Ken Holland will be in Grand Rapids Wednesday (I’ll keep an eye out for him, though I won’t be leaving campus tomorrow) to check out the Griffins in case Williams does not return and the team needs an extra forward.

St. James believes Josh Langfeld is the most likely choice in such an event, though I think Darryl Bootland could be the one to get the call, despite what she says. Krys Kolanos, who stopped practicing with the team last week and with whom Bootland may have clashed, is now officially gone*, therefore removing a possible reason for Darryl’s recent benchings. He would bring a needed dimension, if he’s no longer in the doghouse.

*Interestingly enough, so is Stefan Liv, who has been sent down to Toledo of the ECHL in order to fine-tune his game after an awful North American debut. - Matt

Update (12:37 PM): George Malik links to a Windsor Star piece that points out that the Wings’ miserable power play isn’t operating in a vacuum: teams know they won’t have to pay for cheap shots as long as they’re facing the league’s worst PP percentage.

I can’t disagree, though only one of the three big injury-causing cheap shots so far this season (Wiliams 1, Franzen, Williams 2 below) has resulted in a Detroit power play. Kind of hard to use the man advantage for revenge when the officials aren’t calling penalties on the plays. - Matt

Update (11:37 PM): … IwoCPO is in fine form with his recap of last night’s game. Check it out here. - Matt

The Wings won last night, 2-1 over Marty Turco and the Stars. Guess Tippett’s gamble to counter history didn’t work. Definitely a win the team needed.

I caught a little of the game, but was distracted by homework (among other things) at the time and don’t have much to say on it. I will comment that they seemed to be turning the puck over a lot, though they seemed to do a fair job of getting back to make up for their mistakes. Also, is it just me or does Dom fall a lot more this year?

… I did happen to be watching when Niklas Hagman’s knee caught Jason Williams just above his own knee behind the net in the Dallas end. I saw the replay from a couple angles and didn’t immediately think “Intentional knee-on-knee contact,” but some of the Wings are saying that it was, including alternate captain Kris Draper, who’s not known for shooting off his mouth. Mike Babcock, however, doesn’t believe Hagman went out of his way on the play, which resulted in a charley horse for Williams and fortunately not any knee damage. He’s listed as day-to-day, as of last night.

If it was intentional, I’d like to see some kind of disciplinary action by the NHL because then this lack of respect would be truly ridiculous. If it was just bad luck, that’s little consolation for Williams, who doesn’t need any more injury troubles on plays like that.

… Gotta love the title of the Freep’s Wings Corner today: “Datsyuk plans to shoot more.”

Apparently, he’s afraid that his opponents around the league have figured him out and know that he’s always looking for the pass. His solution? Shoot more. I’ll believe it when I see it, Pavel. I suppose it’s a good thing he realizes the puck doesn’t go into the net on its own.

Helene St. James provides two other excuses for Datsyuk: he has no proven Shahanan-like finisher, and he’s called on more to play a defensive role, like the rest of the forwards.

Yeah, well, you still need to produce offensively, Pavel. Just because you don’t have cannon for a wingman or because you’re meant to be more responsible defensively doesn’t mean you need to skate into a crowd and turn the puck over.

GameDay: vs. Dallas (16-6-0, 32 Pts) 7:00 ET

Update (9:15 PM): Uh, I guess I should have read around a little more before guessing Smith would start tonight. According to the Dallas Star-Telegram, Marty Turco will be in net, after all. Apparently, Dave Tippett isn’t worried about Turco’s habit of losing to the Wings. Not that I blame him, really… (via A2Y). - Matt

Tonight is the second of four meetings between these two teams this season. The Wings won the first game 4-3 a month ago in Dallas, the second win in what would become a nine-game winning streak.

Over the past month, the Stars have gone 8-4-0, losing to two Northwest Division teams (Vancouver, Calgary) and two Eastern Conference teams (the Islanders, Carolina). Three of their losses came on the road. They’ve won their last three, which have all been at home, including a 1-0 decision over Nashville on Wednesday. The Stars are third place in the tough Pacific Division when they’d be tied for first in the Central, as the AP’s preview points out.

Looks like the Stars have been going with rookie goaltender Mike Smith lately. Veteran Marty Turco was pulled during the team’s 5-4 win over Colorado after giving up two goals on five shots and Smith has been playing ever since, posting his second shutout of the season. Given Turco’s career record against the Wings (1-7-5), I’m guessing the rookie will get his third-straight start tonight.
The Wings have lost five in a row, including an embarrassing 6-2 loss to Nashville Saturday night. They’ve earned a point in three of the five losses, but have fallen four points behind the Predators in the Central Division. The team’s lack of offense has become a critical problem during this stretch, as three goals seems to be their upper threshold at the moment.

Dominik Hasek should be in net for the Wings.

The injury list remains the same: Johan Franzen (knee, concussion) and Chris Osgood (wrist).

The Wings better hope they can find some offense tonight or else they’ll be in trouble. Saturday night may or may not have been an “aberration,” but the lack of scoring has been a problem all season. This Smith kid looks to be very good and if he doesn’t start, Marty Turco is probably ready to beat the Wings for just the second time in his career. Neither goalie is going to be beaten by half-hearted attempts.

The game is on Versus tonight, not FSN.

I won’t be able to cover the game tonight due to homework. Sorry.

GameDay: @ Dallas (8-1-0, 16 Pts) 8:30 ET

The Wings are in Texas tonight to face one of the league’s hottest teams, the Western Conference-leading Dallas Stars. The two teams split the 2005-2006 season series 2-2, with the Wings winning the first (4-1) and last games (3-2) and the Stars winning the middle two (6-3, 2-1). Tonight is the first of four games between the clubs this season.

The Stars are in the middle of the best start in franchise history, winning five in a row before losing to the Sharks last Tuesday. Since then, they have won three in a row, beating Chicago, Phoenix and Vancouver in a home-away-home stretch.

They are getting adequate offense, notching 29 goals, with 11 of those coming in the last three games alone. Their defense has been great and leads the league with a 1.67 GAA.

The team leader in goals is former captain Mike Modano, who is no doubt highly motivated this season after losing the “C” to Brendan Morrow. Marty Turco is quieting those who questioned him after last season, posting 7 wins and a 1.86 GAA.

The Dallas Morning News had a piece yesterday detailing the apparent difference in fates between the Stars and other teams that have been strong in recent years, such as the Wings, Avs, and Flyers. While the latter three have struggled in various ways, Dallas is winning and staying ahead of the pack in the West. Based on what the media reports the Stars players as saying, they don’t see themselves as having been especially dominant thus far, but what matters is that they’ve been coming out on top.

The DMN and Star-Telegram each have similar pieces today about the Wings’ effect on ticket sales in other cities. Despite the perception that the Wings are a falling star, they still seem to sell out arenas wherever. The Stars are wary of the Wings, despite their mediocre start to the season, but will be playing in front of a large crowd, which will give them a boost.

The Wings, in contrast to the Stars, have not had such a hot start, going 4-4-1 in the first nine games. They are coming off a fairly dominate (despite the low score) 2-1 win over the Sharks at home on Wednesday. The win followed up their annual awful West Coast (plus a stop in Edmonton) road trip, in which they went 1-3 and were outscored 11-7.

Although the team offense has not been on par with expectations, its 22 goals isn’t vastly worse than the Stars’ production. They could definitely put up better numbers and, if Wednesday’s game is any indication, they will. The defense has allowed 22 goals, which is disappointing given the talent the team has on D but they took 97 minutes in penalties on the trip alone, so it’s not terribly surprising.

The team leader in goals for the Wings is defenseman Mathieu Schneider, who has four. Dominik Hasek, whose performances thus far have, honestly, been underwhelming (not necessarily bad, just not stellar), has posted 3 wins and a 2.13 GAA.

The Detroit News reports Johan Franzen is questionable for tonight while the Free Press lists Brad Norton as out and Mikael Samuelsson as doubtful. Valtteri Filppula will stay with the Wings for a little longer, at least, though it appears Norton could come back at any time. If he does, there’s a chance Samuelsson could be put on the IR, which would allow Valtteri to stay. If Franzen, Samuelsson, and Norton all can’t go tonight, the Wings will be short two forwards instead of just one, as they have been since Samuelsson’s injury.*

According to the Freep, Dominik Hasek will start tonight and will sit tomorrow in St. Louis while Chris Osgood gets a shot.

According to Ted Kulfan of the News, the Wings have regained confidence after beating the Sharks Wednesday night and are mentally out of the rut that they were in on the West Coast trip. The biggest thing was their success on special teams, which produced a power play goal and killed off four of five penalties. If they can improve on that, or at least keep it up, as well as maintain the same level of intensity, they should be well off.

This is an important game for the team, who could use another win over a fast-starting team to help with their confidence and to get a on a roll.

NHL.com prevew

*11 forwards instead of their usual 13. Add the standard six-man defensive corps and two goalies, and you have an undermanned 19-player lineup. The Wings would only down one player if they weren’t forced to carry a third goalie, Joey MacDonald. He occupies the last spot in the allowed 23-man roster, of which 21 are dressed when everyone is healthy.

Wings 1, Stars 2 (SO)

The Wings dropped their second game to Dallas this month, losing 2-1 in a shootout despite outplaying the Stars for much the time. It wasn’t a highly offensive game, having more of a physical playoff-like feel, but I felt the Wings controlled much of the offensive aspect of it. They just couldn’t solve Marty Turco, who played very well and won the game for his team, particularly in overtime.

Manny Legace was in net for the Wings and wasn’t tested as much as Turco but he was solid and made some good saves when needed, for the most part. He didn’t come through in the end but Dallas is undefeated in shootouts for a reason and this loss wasn’t Manny’s fault.

The Western Conference lead was on the line in this game and because the Wings got a point for going to overtime, they retain that lead, though it’s pretty precarious given their inability to score even strength goals. Their power play continues to be strong, having scored at least one power play goal in each of their last 13 games (19 total), but they haven’t scored five-on-five in four games.

The first period was marked by an early parade to the penalty box for both teams, starting with Robert Lang’s inadvertent tripping penalty at 2:07. Draper’s hooking penalty a minute and a half gave Dallas a two-man advantage but they committed a penalty of their own and instead ended up with a nine-second 5-on-4 that soon became a longer stretch of 4-on-4 play.

At one point during the 4-on-4, Henrik Zetterberg stole the puck at the Dallas blueline and took it into the Stars’ end, with Robert Lang on the other side. He dished the puck off to Lang, who sent it right back but the Dallas defenseman’s stick deflected it up into the air. Hank, in an impressive display of hand-eye coordination, got his stick on it and knocked it into the net out of mid-air. It was immediately ruled “no goal” because it was knocked down with a high stick.

Soon after that, Dallas got another penalty and the Wings got their first power play chance for about 31 seconds. In the Dallas zone, Brendan Shanahan sent the puck across to Nick Lidstrom in the slot but he was hauled down, drawing another penalty for the Stars.

After Draper left the box, the Wings got a lengthy 5-on-3 power play but they were unable to convert. At one point during this time, Marty Turco dealt Pavel Datsyuk a cheapshot, giving him a clothesline/facewash as he skated out front. Pavel got a shot soon after that and when Turco was forced to hold on to it, he skated up to the goalie and said something to him. I’d hoped Pavel would back his words up some later in the game but it was not to be.

The game settled down a bit after that, though Dallas kept it interesting by playing a physical style.

Turco was solid when the Wings got chances but he wasn’t tested too much. The Red Wing offense was controlling the puck well but the Dallas defense was doing a good job of staving them off, pressuring the puck carrier with hard skating and persistence.

The second period opened with the teams playing fairly evenly but the Wings took control of the puck once again but they didn’t finish on their chances and the score remained 0-0. They had a couple power play chances but couldn’t take advantage of them, a disturbing trend given their apparent inability to score even-strength.

The Wings finally got on the board at 2:53 of the third period. Tomas Holmstrom had drawn a penalty out front when Marty Turco took his stick to him and was called for slashing. Homer got his revenge when he knocked in the rebound from Jason Woolley’s shot to make it 1-0 Wings.

Dallas came on after that and a couple minutes later, they came extremely close to tying it up. The Wings collapsed into the crease, however, and, Henrik Zetterberg in particular, kept the puck out themselves as Manny Legace was flat on the ice after making a couple saves.

The Stars finally scored at 14:48. Jere Lehtinen took a pass from Jussi Jokinen in the slot off a rush and ripped it just inside the left post, tying the game at 1 and waking up the crowd.

The Wings ended regulation shorthanded, with Johan Franzen in the box, and the Stars had a short power play to start overtime. Detroit controlled overtime, however, outshooting Dallas 7-1 and coming close to putting the game away. They were aided by the fact that they were on the power play but it wasn’t enough and soon we headed to a shootout.

Pavel Datsyuk was the first shooter for the Wings and should have been able to score on Turco, given his history with the Stars’ goalie. He didn’t try to deke, however. Instead he just tried to beat Turco with a quick shot but it didn’t work.

Sergei Zubov was the first shooter for Dallas and he did what Datsyuk had tried to do. His shot beat Legace and gave the Stars the lead in the shootout.

Jason Williams was next for the Wings and he did deke and was successful doing so. He got Turco moving to the right and scored on the backhand into the left side of the net.

Next for Dallas was Jussi Jokinen. He busted out his “Forsberg move” and de-pantsed Legace sufficiently well to slide the puck into the vacated net. Manny was slightly out-matched on that play.

Henrik Zetterberg was next up for the Wings and it looked like he would score but he lost control of the puck when Turco’s stick knocked it away and it looked as though the Stars had won the shootout. NBC thought it was conclusive enough to switch to a horse race and I was convinced it was over too so I turned the TV off.

I only found out this morning that Turco had thrown his stick and that the shootout had continued, though with the same result.

Lang shot next for the Wings but didn’t score. Mike Modano put it away after that and Dallas pulled within one point of the Conference lead.

Abel to Yzerman’s game report


Lines*

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

D-pairings

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

PP

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

*compiled by Brian

Wings 3, Stars 6

The Wings blew a three-goal lead, allowing six unanswered goals in the second and third periods, to lose 6-3 at the Joe today. In contrast to the trend of just a few games ago, Detroit came out of the gates flying in the first but faltered after scoring their second and third goals early in the second period. The Stars took advantage of this and dominated for the next 35 minutes or so, getting an important win for their franchise.

The Wings showed us their two sides tonight: in the first and early goings of the second, it was the crisp-passing, game-dominating team we love to see so much. In the rest of the second and all of the third, they were the sloppy-passing, on-their-heels team we see all too often. In a month where that first team needs to show up more often than not, it is extremely disappointing to see the Wings play their “B” or even “C” game.

The game started out fairly well, with an okay pace and both teams skating. Dallas helped Detroit out by taking two penalties in the first three minutes, handing the Wings a lengthy 5-on-3 power play opportunity. They took less than a minute to score, giving themselves a one-goal lead at 3:13. The goal came from Henrik Zetterberg to essentially one-timed a Mathieu Schneider shot/pass and beat Marty Turco just inside the right post. The rest of the power play was uneventful as the Wings couldn’t get set up until the waning seconds.

Dallas came on a bit after this and had a good pressure shift in the Detroit zone. The Wings soon took the puck the other way, however, and drew a penalty on the resulting rush. This power play was not so successful and merely resulted in some sustained pressure that was continued after the penalty expired when the Stars inadvertently iced the puck.

At this point, the Wings were passing the puck well and out-skating Dallas, who had to commit penalties, much the way the Predators did in the last game, in order to keep up. It took the Stars until 13:20 to even get a shot and this was from 76 feet away from the net. Whatever his teammates were or were not doing, Marty Turco was equal to the task of stopping the Wings, however, and they couldn’t get the puck past him again in the first, though they got yet another chance on the power play before the end.

The first period ended with a glorious scoring opportunity for the Wings. Marty Turco, known around the league as a puck-handling goalie, sent a pass up the middle that was intercepted by Zetterberg. Hank walked in on Turco and then passed the puck across the crease to Jason Williams, who had joined the play. Somehow, Turco made the save and the puck stayed out, saving his own hide.

Shots in the first were 10-3 Wings.

Detroit started the second period with a goal, scoring at :25 to double their lead. This time, it was Mathieu Schneider, notching his second point of the night, who scored from the point after receiving a pass from Pavel Datsyuk. The goal was the result of Dallas’ inability to clear the zone, despite numerous chances to do so. For Datsyuk, it was his 200th career point.

Less than a minute later, the Stars took another penalty and the Wings went back on the power play. Again, they wasted no time in taking advantage of it, scoring at 1:32, just nine seconds into the man-advantage. Jason Williams scored this time, after getting the puck from Datsyuk. He took a shot from the point that found its way into the net, likely due to the good screen Tomas Holmstrom had going on Turco, who saw it too late to stop it.

Turco was pulled for the second straight game at this point and was replaced by Johann Hedberg.

The Stars rebounded well after the Wings scored and finally got themselves on the board less than a minute later. Chris Osgood made a couple good initial saves but Brett Lebda, falling into the net, got in his way and he was not able to get firm footing in order to slide across the make the final save. So, Niklas Hagman had an easy goal from the backdoor to put his team within two goals.

Dallas started to come on after this, though the Wings did have a couple of good shifts to counter this. They got another power play but spent most of it passing and skating with little shooting.

The Wings finally took a penalty at 10:12 and handed the Stars their first power play of the game. It took them a minute, but Dallas took advantage of the man-advantage, scoring at 11:10 to put them within one. Jere Lehtinen took a pass from the corner and one-timed it, with Zetterberg covering him, past Osgood, beating him stickside. I’d like to see Osgood make that kind of save but it was a bit of a defensive breakdown so it wasn’t all his fault.

Zetterberg took a holding penalty half a minute later, though I thought it was a bit of a weak call. Osgood was quick, however, and stopped Dallas’ shots as they set up and cycled the puck.

The Wings were becoming more and more sloppy, not connecting on passes and not standing up very well to the pressure from Dallas.

Tomas Holmstrom went off for roughing at 16:38 and again, the Stars scored within a minute, tying the game at three. This time, it was a shot from the point that may have been screened, though I still thought it a bit weak. The puck beat Osgood in the top right corner.

Just after the goal, Zetterberg had a nice scoring chance, making a nice move around the Dallas defenseman and letting loose a shot from 26 feet out. Hedberg made the save, however, and did also on a flurry around the net that soon followed.

The Wings got a power play late in the period but it looked much more like a Dallas power play than anything else as the Stars had a couple of good chances shorthanded. Osgood was sharp, however, and kept the puck out of the net.

Shots in the second were 15-8 Dallas.

The Wings began the third period on the power play but accomplished little. I thought the teams looked fairly even here but the Stars were about to take off.

Holmstrom took another penalty at 5:23 and the Stars went on the power play once again. They quickly got set up and then Jere Lehtinen scored again less than a minute later to put Dallas ahead. Sergei Zubov took a shot from the point that did not get through but Lehtinen picked up the puck and backhanded it past Osgood, who was taken off-balance by the initial shot from the point and was not in any position to stop the new one. I don’t know what was going on in Osgood head on that one but it looked like a bad goal to give up.

Fourty-one seconds later, Dallas scored again. This time, the puck was turned over and the Stars got an odd-man rush going the other way. Niko Kapanen, the last man to join the rush for Dallas, received the pass and ripped the puck past Osgood, who was left out to dry by his defense. Still, it would have been nice if he could have made the save.

The Stars finished piling on the goals just under two minutes later when Mathias Tjarnqvist’s shot from the top of the right circle beat Osgood at 8:44. Head coach Mike Babcock pulled Osgood in favor of Manny Legace at this point. Ken Daniels and Mickey Redmond kept saying that it wasn’t because they were playing bad that the two goalies were pulled, it was that the puck wasn’t hitting them. Yes, that’s true, but both of them could have made a save or two more than they did.

The Wings were very much outplayed in the third period, though they did not give up as many chances as they could have. They were not connecting on passes and couldn’t complete the scoring chances they got themselves. As usual, they were trying to be too cute with the puck, one-timing passes back to each other instead of one-timing shots into the net. All too often, they would start out going toward the net and then angle away from it only drop a pass behind them in vain hope that a teammate would brave the low slot and score.

Henrik Zetterberg was called for hooking at 15:56, though nothing came of it. I only point it out because it was an awful example of the new NHL rules and how such a strict interpretation can lead to such BS calls. Because of the angle at which the ref was looking at the play, it looked like Hank hooked the Stars player when in fact, he did not even touch him. I’m all for calling hooking but it’s when they start making phantom calls that I get angry.

Anyway, the clocked ticked away and finally the horn blew with the Wings on the other end of a 6-3 loss.

Shots in the third were 14-7 Dallas and 32-25 Dallas for the game.

Manny Legace was solid replacing Osgood, who has very likely lost the starting job, despite playing with a lack of support from his teammates.

The Wings’ penalty kill was awful tonight for some reason. 2-for-5 is not acceptable for a team hoping to do well in the playoffs.

Neither is blowing a three-goal lead to a likely playoff opponent. I agree with Ken Daniels, who said, “I can’t remember the last time anybody scored six unanswered goals on the Wings.” Neither can I.

Johan Franzen sat out another game with that mysterious upper body injury. Maybe the papers will shed some light on it tomorrow. Mark Mowers played again in his place.

Marty Turco still hasn’t beaten the Wings, since he was pulled, but his coach, Dave Tippetts now has. The Stars hadn’t beaten Detroit since January 16th, 2002, going 0-5-5 in 10 meetings until this win.

So, of a possible 28 points from the 14 games in January, the most the Wings can get now is 24.

Staying ahead of the Predators will not get any easier with this loss. They play the Chicago Blackhawks tonight and as of this writing, are leading them 5-1 in the third period. The Wings’ six-point lead will become a four-point one soon.

Next up, the Southeast Division-leading Carolina Hurricanes. The puck drops at 7:00 ET and the game will be aired on OLN.

UPDATE (09. Jan): Well, it looks like the Predators know how to hold on to leads. They beat Chicago 5-1 and are now just four points behind them. The two games coming later this month just became a whole lot more important.

Also, check out Abel to Yzerman’s recap.

UPDATE (12:37 PM, 09. Jan): The News mentions Franzen today, though his injury is still listed as an “upper body” one, with no more detail. They report that Babcock is “optimistic” that Johan will be back in the lineup tomorrow night. (News)

Lines*

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

D-parings

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

PP

Lidstrom-Samuelsson-Williams-Datsyuk-Shanahan
Lidstrom-Datsyuk-Williams-Zetterberg-Holmstrom

*compiled by Brian