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GameDay: vs Columbus (4-6-1, 9 Pts) 7:00 ET

Tonight is the first eight games between these two Central Division teams this season. The Wings won the 2005-2006 series 7-1, with four wins coming in 2005: October 22nd (6-0), October 24th (6-2), December 20th (4-3 SO), and December 31st (5-2); and three wins coming in 2006: January 18th (4-0), April 7th (6-5), and April 8th (4-2). Their only loss to the Jackets came on March 25th, 2006 (5-4 SO), a result of a Wings meltdown in the third period.

The Blue Jackets are coming off a 5-4 shootout win over Calgary last night, thus halting a two-game slide that included losses to Colorado and New Jersey. David Vborny looks to be the player to stop on the team: he has 13 points in 11 games, including two goals in last night’s game. Nikolai Zherdev has five in six, and former Red Wing Sergei Fedorov scored a goal and notched an assist last night. Sergei has just two goals and one assist so far this season, but has only played five games since returning from a pre-season shoulder injury on October 23rd.

The Wings are looking to extend their win-streak to six games tonight. They are coming off a third period-comeback win over the Hawks in Chicago on Friday, the night after they beat Calgary 3-2 at home.

The News today focuses on Henrik Zetterberg, who cracked a nine-game goalless streak Friday night, while the Freep looks at the Wings’ defense, which Helene St. James says is turning out to be one of the best in the league, something I saw coming when the team signed Danny Markov. It’s not just the defensemen, however, as the whole team has been putting in strong efforts defensively. This is definitely a different Detroit Red Wings team.

Valtteri Filppula has been called up from the AHL once again, after a busy night in Grand Rapids. I guess Brad Norton will have to wait at least another game before coming back.

The papers report that Mathieu Schneider and Andreas Lilja should play tonight, so the team will be at full strength.

Tonight’s a good opportunity for the Wings to fine-tune their game before they hit a patch of schedule with games against better opponents such as Edmonton and Nashville. Hopefully they’ll be able to get the power play back on track (maybe by trying someone other than Jason Williams on the point). I may or may not be able to watch the game, so there might not be a game report for this one. Sorry.

Filppula and Quincey Make Quick Impact in GR

Valtteri Filppula and Kyle Quincey wasted no time once returning to Grand Rapids. Filppula was sent down on Wednesday and Quincey was just sent down today. The Griffins played the Manitoba Moose tonight- AHL affiliate of the Vancouver Canucks. The Moose are a divisional rival and common playoff opponent.

Grand Rapids took the first of the eight game series, 4-0. No small amount of credit goes to the two players that just returned from Detroit. Quincey scored first at 4:49 of the first period. Filppula followed suit at 10:39 of the same period. In the second, Quincey assisted on Josh Langfeld’s goal at 3:31. Not to be outdone, Valterri assisted on Dan Syrvet’s goal exactly fifteen minutes later, at 18:31. Quincey’s game-winning goal earned him first star honors. If not for Jimmy Howard’s shutout, Filppula probably would have gotten second star. However, he was forced to settle for third. Sorry, Fil.

It was fun to see Filppula in Detroit, and he played especially well. However, as a Griffins fan, I must confess to a sense of relief now that he has returned to Grand Rapids. In just one game, he has already made an offensive impact. Unfortunately, as reported by George Malik, the likelihood of Filppula staying in Grand Rapids is not good. Babcock seems to be fighting harder and harder to keep him in Detroit. Valterri is doing his part, making it very difficult for the Wings to send him down.

Both their play in Detroit and strong return to GR further prove that Filppula and Quincey are two very important pieces of Detroit’s future.

Filppula sent down, Quincey brought up

Update (3:53 PM): Ansar Khan reports that Schneider and Lilja will both sit out tonight with their respective injuries. That leaves the Wings with Lidstrom, Chelios, Kronwall, Lebda, Markov plus the newly-added Quincey. Khan thinks there’s a chance that Norton will play defense when activated, if Schneider and Lilja still aren’t ready to come back. I’m guessing he bases this on the fact that Norton played defense in practice yesterday (bottom of the page). So he’ll have a practice or two of experience on the blueline? Great. Let’s hope he never has to play there. - Matt

Griffins Central reports that the Wings have sent down forward Valtteri Filppula and brought up defenseman Kyle Quincey. The move is verified by the AHL’s transaction page. I guess this could mean Babcock wasn’t serious when he assured us that the injuries to Andreas Lilja and Mathieu Schneider were nothing to worry about. This seems like an insurance move in case one of the two injuries gets worse. Bringing up Quincey means Brad Norton still can’t come off the IR without the Wings going over the roster limit. (thanks to Megan for the heads up)

10/30 Notes

Update (7:50 PM): … Helene St. James reports in a blog post that both Brad Norton and Mikael Samuelsson are ready to return to the ice. Samuelsson expects to play Wednesday against the Flames, and Norton just needs to be cleared by some doctors. Norton still has not been taken off the IR, but when he does, the Wings will be over the 23-man active roser limit, meaning Valtteri Filppula’s stint in Detroit will probably soon be over. That is, of course, unless the Wings decide to send someone else down, which would most likely be Norton, if anyone.

… The Calgary Sun has a piece by Randy Sportak today that provides more details on Darren McCarty’s bankruptcy. For anyone thinking Darren brought this on himself by throwing money away, there’s this:

“It sounds as if I blew $6 million, which isn’t the case. A lot of it had to do with a couple of properties that we owned and I signed my name to. It’s not as if I was blowing the money.”

Apparently, it was more a case of being stabbed in the back by a business partner than anything else. (via Snapshots)

… When Evgeni Malkin and Sergei Fedorov both went down with injuries, I was in need of a center on my fantasy team so I traded Kari Lehtonen for Marc Savard and David Aebischer. It was probably a dumb trade then, but I feel really stupid now, after reading this. - Matt

… In the Freep’s Wings Corner today, George Sipple focuses on Chris Chelios, who will tie Wayne Gretzky in games played on Wednesday when the Wings play the Flames at home. Gretzky currently holds 12th place on the all-time list with 1,487 games (over 20 seasons) while Chelios obviously has 1,486 games (over 22 seasons).

Cheli will be able to pass Gretzky (how unlikely does that sound?!) on Thursday when the Wings travel to Chicago to play the Blackhawks.

… In his Red Wings Notebook, Ted Kulfan writes on the contrast between the Wings’ three game slide during their West Coast trip, and their three-game win-streak since. They’re making mediots like Damien Cox look pretty dumb, though, granted, it is a long season and they’ve only been able to string three together so far. However, I think they’ve got it together now, and I wouldn’t expect any more three-game losing streaks.

… Kulfan also has a quote from Mike Babcock on why the Wings’ power play went 0-for-5 Saturday night:

“We wouldn’t shoot the puck. We passed it around, passed it around, passed it around and wouldn’t shoot. I don’t know why that happened.”

Well, Mike, it was that, and the fact that the guys seemed to revert back to the power play strategy of last season. You know, the one that didn’t work any more and the one you had the players work on last week? Why does the PP focus on the defensemen at the point again?

… Mathieu Schneider, a popular player around here, was interviewed by The Sporting News’ Ray Slover this weekend. It’s not very long but definitely worth a read.

I like this part:

SN: Tomas Holmstrom scores from the dot. Did you guys about fall over on that one?

Schneider: He never ceases to amaze me. He finds different ways to score all the time. He still gets heck. I think he had a goal like that in the Olympics, but most of them are obviously inside the crease. But he’s just a great presence in front of the net. He doesn’t get the credit he deserves for being able to handle the puck and move it outside the top of the circles.

Link via Snapshots.

… Ansar Khan looks at the coming roster problem in an article for Booth Newspapers today.

As far as I’m concerned, I think they should keep Valtteri Filppula up and send Norton down, but only if Babcock is able to give Filppula an appropriate amount of ice time. The problem is, that will be difficult once Mikael Samuelsson returns and picks up the 15-16 minutes in ice time he was getting before injuring his shoulder. If Valtteri were covering for just Norton, it would be no question, but with Mikael coming back soon, it may not be the best thing for him to stay with the Wings. I know the Griffins could use him.

Sending Norton down isn’t the Wings’ only option if they’re looking to keep Filppula on the roster. According to Khan, Brett Lebda is a player the Wings could send down to make room for Valtteri since he wouldn’t have to clear waivers. Haha, very funny, Ansar (to be fair, he does say it’s unlikely). Another option would be sending extraneous third goalie Joey MacDonald for a two-week conditioning stint.

… The Wings aren’t the only team that is proving the hockey media wrong. The Colorado Avalanche, who also have been picked to fall by the columnists, have won four in six, including a big one over the Minnesota Wild last night.

Wings 3, Blues 2

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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.

Filppula Called Up

The Red Wings today called up forward Valterri Filppula after the injury to Brad Norton. Norton has a left shoulder injury suffered in last night’s game against Anaheim. If he arrived in time, he could be in the lineup tonight. In two games with Grand Rapids, Filppula has recorded one goal and one assist, with a rating of +1.
Also, Brett Lebda will replace Anreas Lilja tonight.

Link

4/10 Notes

…. Ansar Khan reports that Robert Lang was hurt during the early stages of practice today and is questionable for tomorrow night’s game against the Oilers. It’s another mysterious but non-serious “upper body” injury and is a new thing, not a reaggravation of a lingering problem. He’s gone in for tests as a precaution.

…. Khan goes on to say that Henrik Zetterberg did not practice today. He skated for 15 minutes, though, and confirmed how he was injured. Apparently, Holmstrom was right, it was a puck.

…. Khan also mentions that Mathieu Schneider may not play until Saturday, perhaps even later than that. Apparently, he’s had something of a setback in recovery from his groin injury. This contradicts the report by Ted Kulfan in today’s Detroit News, which said, “Schneider should return sometime this week.”

Because of cap restraints, the Wings are only able to call up one player from Grand Rapids (Valtteri Filppula) and if both Hank and Lang cannot play tomorrow night, they’ll only be able to suit a maximum of 17 skaters.

…. Wings fans who have expressed a wish that the Predators would fall to 8th place in the West because of their sudden loss of goalie Tomas Vokoun will be disappointed. The worst they can finish is 7th and since the Wings will finish #1 in the West no matter what (thanks to San Jose’s win over Dallas last night), they cannot face Nashville in the first round.

…. The Freep posted an interesting fact today. With another win, Chris Osgood will have his 20th, making it the third time in Red Wings history a goalie tandem has had at least 20 wins each. The two previous instances also included Osgood:

Osgood won 25 games and Legace 24 for the Wings back in 2000-2001
Osgood won 39 games while Mike Vernon won 21 for the Wings in 1995-96

The feat has been accomplished 37 times before and has already been done by two tandems this season (Ryan Miller and Martin Biron of the Buffalo Sabres and former Wing Dominik Hasek and Ray Emery of the Ottawa Senators).

Ansar Khan: Zetterberg is OK; should play Tuesday

According to Babcock, he sustained the injury (which remains unspecified but we know now it’s not the flu) in the second period but everything appears to be fine. Filppula will replace him in the lineup tonight. Still very mysterious but it’s a relief to know he’s okay.

Link