Wednesday, December 24, 2008

"All We Are Say-ing... Is Give Us a Goal!!"

No no no. I'm just kidding, this will not be a post about how angry I am with the result of tonight's game, cause the reality of it is, I'm okay with it. I am not thrilled with losing to Boston, but they fought hard. Also, its going to be a sloppy article, don't really care at the moment, read, enjoy, deal.

Okay, so we lost one, some streaks were snapped, here was my take on the game from my perspective in section 1 row 4:

--Madden looked rusty as all heck out there tonight, but having missed 2 games, gotta expect some rough patches.

--Rolston also looked shakey out there with the puck. thomas made a good save on his slapper in the first that got the post, didn't really see him do much after that... well other than taking a puck to the upper body while sitting on the bench. I also wasn't thrilled with the turnover to seal the game for the Bruins.

--Elias should have burried that goal on the 2-on-1 with Langs, but the d-man made a good play on it, and thomas got a heck of break by getting it with the heel of his stick.

--Speaking of Tim Thomas, you heard it here first, with Ryan Miller's struggles, Thomas will be the USA starting goalie next winter in Vancouver.

--Parise showed me the most heart tonight, throwing the body around, fighting in the corners, doing everything to spark the offense. He will someday be captain of this team, he already shows flashes of brilliance and leadership by taking charge out there, so its only a matter of time before he dons the C on his chest.

--Colin White, my whipping boy as of late, surprised me early by playing a good game, blocking shots, breaking up passes, playing smart hockey. But then his game came apart. I dont know who was to blame for the goal in the 3rd, Clemmer made a good save but Whitey and Oduya both left Lucic wide open in the slot. I'll blame lack of communication for that one for the time being. I'll watch it on the DVR later and see if I can point a finger at any one player. My biggest gripe, however, is still his refusal to use his full force when playing the bod. In the 2nd he was simply shoving one Bruin before parise came in and threw a HUGE hit on the player [dont remeber who it was].

--Mike Rupp was a force tonight, throwing bodies, having the fight, and even throwing in some decent chances on offense.

Overall i thought it was a good game of hockey vs. a trap team. Boston was patient, and exploited our one major mistake. Simply put, they showed tonight why they are atop the east right now.

last point of the night: I thought the refs played too much of a factor in the game. weird penalties, phantom offsides calls, and how they missed parise getting the high stick off the visor from Chara was beyond me. Chara also tossed Clarkson on his backside with a stiff arm to the face yet no call was made either.

We get 2 off days for the holiday, then need to step up again vs. Pitt on Friday.

Merry Christmas and go Devs!

Sunday, December 21, 2008

20 Games A.B. [After Brodeur]

The Good

Scott Clemmensen – Hands down playing lights-out hockey right now. He could be considered the MVP of the Devils, or at least sharing that title with their leading scorer Zach Parise. Once Marty went down hurt, and Kevin Weekes could not achieve a level of consistency, Clemmensen rose to the occasion. Amidst the rumors of Khabibulin and Roloson, Clemmer took it upon himself to establish an air of consistency in net for the Devils. Making save after save, Clemmensen allowed the devils to focus their efforts on attacking the other team’s next, which then allowed them to get hot. 6 wins in seven games and nine of 10 helped thrust the Devils right in the middle of the playoff hunt. This type of streak is uncommon for goalies not named Brodeur on the Devils. Also, with today’s victory, his 11th, Clemmensen has the most wins of a Devils goalie not named Brodeur since Chris Terreri in 1993-1994. [Special thanks to Steve Cangailosi for that statistic.]

The Devils Offense – Yes, you did read that correctly, the Devils offense is Hotter than Jessica Biel in her bikini scene in Summer Catch [see here]. They have accounted for 33 goals in 9 games in the month of December alone, which translates to just below 4 goals a game at 3.67. Since the loss of Brodeur 20 games ago, the Devils have tallied 5 or more goals in a game 6 times, that’s right, 6 times, including back to back 5 goal performances against Buffalo and Ottawa. The top two lines are gelling well, and are firing on all cylinders. If a team plans on going far into the playoffs, they need at least two solid lines who can provide a scoring threat. The Stanley Cup finalists from last year, Pittsburg and Detroit, proved that last season, and it continues on back down the line.

Zach Praise continues to wow the crowds with his ability to single handedly carry this team as well as put points on the board. Travis Zajac has rediscovered his scoring touch which he seemed to lose last season in a sophomore slump. Patrik Elias is also on fire right now, with a 10 game, 17 point streak going and has tallied points in 15 of his last 16 games where he has added 28 points to his season total. Prior to that, he had only 8 points in 15 games. His current point pace would put him on the cusp of 100 at 95, which would be his highest since he added 96 in 2000-2001. Both he and Parise are in the top 10 in the NHL, and the last time 2 Devils players finished in the top 10 in scoring, assistant coach John MacLean was donning an A on his jersey.

Brian Rolston – Back after missing 14 games with an ankle injury, Rolston has began to find his scoring touch as well. While he only has 4 points on the season, he has goals in two of his last three games, all the while playing on the third line with a rotating cast of characters, today he was with David Clarkson and Jay Pandolfo. As Rolston works his way back to 100% health, look for him to continue to add firepower to the offense.

Mike Mottau and Jay Leach – Many people, myself included, were confused and maybe even a little upset that Mike Mottau was retained in the offseason. I, for one, thought he was too much of a liability and his inconsistent play would doom the team considering he would have to play a good amount of minutes this season. This season, however, Mottau has played 28 out of 31 games, logging an average of 18 minutes of ice time. His plus minus sits at a comfortable plus 9 while he has contributed 6 assists to the team. He has become very smart with the puck as the season has progressed, and his awareness on both sides of the puck is something desperately needed on this defense.

Leach has also been a pleasant surprise. While Andy Greene had been injured and Sheldon Brookbank continues to be as useful as wet toilet paper, Leach has stepped up to earn playing time with the Devils. He received two games in early November, then was sent back to Lowell, only to be recalled again on the 23rd. Since that recall, Leach has not missed a game, playing in all 10 of the Devils’ contests. Typically Leach is paired with Mottau, and has contributed just as effectively. He adds both size and a take-no-crap attitude on the defense, and is not afraid to throw down the gloves. In today’s game, for example and as Ken Daneyko pointed out in the post-game, Leach and Rupp were quick to stand up for their teammates who were being harassed by the Flyers players. While both Leach and Mottau are not major offensive threats from the blue line, by bringing consistency and solid defense to whichever line they pair up allows that forward set to take more chances and be a much larger threat down ice.

The Bad

Surrendering Leads – Yes, the offense is potent, and yes, they have managed to hang on or come back for the eventual victory, but far too many times already the Devils have gotten leads, and given them up. Today, they had a two goal lead on the Flyers before surrendering a goal in the 2nd and another in the 3rd to allow Philly to still gain a point by forcing overtime. Since the beginning of the current hot streak, the Devils have surrendered leads on six different occasions, including a four goal lead against the Rangers, a game the Devils eventually would win by three goals. Only one of these instances, however, have the Devils failed to emerge with a point in the game and that was at the hands of the Buffalo Sabres, a game where the final was 4-2. The other instance where the Devils lost was a 3-2 shootout loss to the Maple Leafs.

Kevin Weekes – Enough has been said about the poor performance of Weekes in the previous article about the goaltending. My biggest gripe: rebound control. Rebounds mean second chances which unfortunately have turned into goals in most cases for the struggling and the now back up to the 2nd backup.

John Madden – While he hasn’t been performing poorly, Madden hasn’t played in back to back games with a supposed flu bug, but with the team firing on all cylinders and the defense rising to the occasion, many have been speculating that Madden might be on the chopping block, especially after his absence from the active roster Friday night against the Senators, which was the last game before the holiday roster freeze. Madden and his sub-$3 million price tag have recently been subject to movement as he as a valuable asset for a team needed a solid defensive forward. It will also free up some cap space going into free agency next summer as Travis Zajac will need his contract renewed along with a handful of other Devils, Madden included. Don’t get me wrong, I love Madden, he’s a gritty player and always plays hard, game in and game out, I am just speculating what I have read on nj.com.

The Ugly

Colin White – Please, for a moment, forget the points and the plus minus total, they are VERY deceiving. Yes, he has 10 points, one of which is a goal, but how many of those assists are of the secondary nature? His shot against the Leafs was saved and the rebound was buried by Mike Rupp in one heck of an offensive effort by the 4th line and Whitey, but early in the 2nd, he looked lost as the Leafs netted the equalizer. Today, on the Flyers’ first goal, he didn’t even lay a finger on Jeff Carter as he scored on the power play as they pulled the score within one. He has been way too large of a liability on defense, I would rather see Sheldon Brookbank starting in his spot, and that says a lot because I despise Brookbank.

Whitey was a force to be reckoned with in the past, but ever since nearly losing an eye in an accident in practice during the summer of 2007, he has not been even remotely the shell of the player he used to be. I don’t know if it is because of his injury or what, but he just does not seem to know what is going on. His awareness has plummeted and his physicality is almost non-existent during play. Sure, he will act tough after the whistle once in a while and go face to face with an opposing player, but he never fights anymore, and takes stupid, lazy penalties. Sadly, he is under contract at $3 million a season until 2013, that’s right, four more full seasons of this contract blunder. If he would do more with his size, I would be more opt to let him get away with his defensive blunders, but he wont even be tough with his size. He’s like a telephone booth, big but freakin’ useless nowadays. Maybe a team will come calling that will have a need for White and the Devils could luck out with unloading the remainder of his $12 million contract. Only time will tell.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Game 29: Devils at Sabres, Game Log

After setting up my Christmas tree with the family, having the fuse on the lights blow and spending 15 minutes finding a new one, I finally get to watch the game, 3.5 hours after the start. Thank you DVR. I already know the devils will jump out to the early 1-0 lead, thank you very much Lance, but now I shall enjoy seeing who gets it and how.

1st period
--0:45 - MacArthur with a nice stiff arm on Elias 1915 of the first to send him flying.
--1:36 - ZAJAC with a rebound off a Mottau shot. Ryan Miller looked like Weekes did on Saturday night on that rebound. Chico thinks he tried to play it to the winger, I think he just didn’t wanna bother freezing it. Langenbrunner with the secondary helper.
-- 3:55 – Elias gets revenge on Mcarthur.
--520 – Holik knocks Numminen right over behind the net.
--555 - Hect hits the post after a feed from Pomminville.
--658 - STAFFORD with a hell of a touch on a feed from MacArthur and Roy. It may have gone off his skate... My sister chimes in with “Stafford looks like the brother in law from ‘Forgetting Sarah Marshall’” and we both have a laugh going “wow he really does.”… 2 different angles initially, no definitive view of the shot. The overhead and corner view make it look like he hits it with his skate. Ref calls good goal. I then wonder “When did this become the NFL with the “upon further review” crap?”
--729 Holik with a dumb penalty. Pulls Kaleta down, for holding. Then I remember that the Devils haven’t killed off a powerplay versus the Sabres since 2 games ago.
--White tries to size up Clarke Mcarthur time and time again. Its one thing to send a message, its another to push someone around, but its pathetic when you wear a visor that goes below your mouth, you really are not a tough guy, just sotp it.
--946 Mcarthur goes after white and cross checks him, gets the devs a powerplay
-- 1036 Tallinder gets a blaitent hooking, 5-on-3 for the devils.
-- 1144 PARISE with a PPG. Langs with a nice pass through the slot to zach down low, gets his own rebound, then scores. The 5 on 4 still remains. Elias with the secondary helper.
-- 1650 – Clemmensen makes a split save on Afinogenov’s wrap around. Paul Martin helps with his stick too.
-- 1734 Rupp takes an interference penalty on Kaleta.
Just before the end of the period Numminen hits a bad piece of ice and nearly wipes out trying to start the rush. I had a small chuckle, as did the Devils’ announcers.
--STAT OF THE PERIOD – Devils took 17 shots in the period. Compared to the 9 in the first last night, I’m impressed.

2nd period
--I love how doc points out what signs on the boards the puck deflects off of. Its pretty entertaining.
--John Madden might not be on the bench to start the period… not good…
--400 they found him at the end of the bench, but he’s stretching out his legs. He apparently didn’t play much of the first either, 4 shifts 322. yeah, he’s hurting
-- 1052 SALVADOR scores from the point through traffic. Gionta may have tipped it. Give Elias the primary assist for feeding Bryce at the point, Gionta the secondary.
--1110 KALETA gets a goal immediately after. Another nice tip goal. Paille broke in on the left wing, sent a pass through the traffic in front of the net, where Kaleta was crashing and he beats Clemmensen glove side. Both Sabres goals thus far have been "wow" worthy. Spacek with the secondary assist.

Intermission- goal given to Salvador, turns out Gionta never got a piece of it.
3rd period
-- 226 Colin White takes a stupid holding penalty. My disdain for him only grows with every mistake. His flashes of intelligence aren’t enough to counter my loathing.
-- 319 kotalik gets sloppy, falls and trips madden swinging for the puck
-- Salvador is not on the bench, has not been since the end of the 2nd. Strange since he was interviewed at the end of the period.
-- Sekera and Roy do a good job killing the devils power play by maintaining puck possession in the devils’ zone.
-- 604 CLARKSON after one hell of a hit by bobby Holik to free the puck, and Clarkson walks in with the puck and beats miller in the 5 hole. Holik drops his shoulder into MacArthurs chin, knocks him down and dazes him.
-- During the commercial break, I begin to wonder if I am the only one sick of the Geico caveman commercials where they storm off all bitching and moaning like a 5 year old who was told he cant have a piece of candy from the checkout line…
-- Rupp his Nathan Paetsch behind the net, more sound of the boards than physical contact.
-- 931 WELCOME BACK BRIAN ROLSTON. Gets a Clarkson rebound after he keeps the puck back in the zone, runs into Numminen and Miller and Rolston calmly nets the loose rebound.
-- 943 Sabres answer: GAUSTAD nets Pominville’s rebound. White over skates the play and covers the far left post. Didn’t you know? Inanimate objects are a 6th man on the ice posing a threat to the Devils…. Oh wait… they’re not… he’s such moron….
-- 1053 Hecht takes a slashing penalty just as the Sabres looked like they were carrying the momentum back.
-- Just told by Doc that Salvador has an upper body injury, will not return this period. Crap…
-- 1939 COLIN WHITE TAKES ANOTHER STUPID PENALTY. Well ahead of the play he punches Vanek in the face and gets nailed for interference. I hate him, I HATE him I FREAKING HATE HIM. Why take that penalty there WHY?!
-- Gaustad takes exception to a cross check from paul martin. Replay shows goose crosschecked martin first, martin retaliates, goose counters with a left hook. Both players go off for crosschecking.
-- Game over, Devils win!!

Three stars of the game:3) Kaleta 2) Elias 1) Clarkson [yes, david Clarkson is the #1 star of the game]

Stat of the night: Scott Clemmensen has 9 wins in his last 11 starts. I am impressed and give a little golf clap, as should you.

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

A Tale of Two Goalies

On November 1st, many hockey fans officially wrote the Devils off as done for the season. Martin Brodeur tore his biceps tendon on his catching arm, knocking him out for the better part of the season.

After the official announcement later that week, the Devils’ options looked grim.

Option A: Trade for one of the few available goaltenders out there. Dwayne Roloson of Edmonton was struggling before Brodeur was injured, but of course, hit a hot streak, thus sending his trade value through the roof. The same can be said for Nikolai Khabibulin of the Blackhawks. Initially, he wanted to be shipped out in favor of not platooning with off-season acquisition Cristobal Huet. But, like Roloson, he hit his stride just when Brodeur got hurt, and also increasing his trade value.

Option B: Continue the season, and see how backups Kevin Weekes and Scott Clemmensen would perform carrying the workload of the future Hall of Famer.

Option B appears, at least as of the past month or so, the wise choice. In the first 6 games after losing Brodeur, Weekes started four of the six games, losing 3 of 4 by an average of two goals. Clemmensen, over his two starts in the span, surrendered a total of 5 goals but only receiving 2 goals of support.

Then on November 15th, against the Washington Capitals and in front of a nearly sold out Prudential Center, something clicked with the Devils. The Devils got out to an early 1-0 lead, but as the early trend had shown, they would vanquish the lead by allowing two tallies from the Caps. Then, just 41 seconds into the 2nd period, Jamie Langenbrunner netted his fourth of the season. Patrik Elias added a power play goal to take back the lead. Former Devil added the tying goal for the Caps before the end of the 2nd. The Devils and Caps would trade two goals before the end of regulation. After a scoreless overtime came the shootout. Clemmensen stopped shootout guru Kozlov, superstar Alex Ovechkin and Boyd Gordon. The Devils first shooter, and the player who nearly single handedly carried the Devils during the fallout of Brodeur’s injury, netted the only goal in the shootout to give Clemmensen his first win of the season.

With the offense clicking, Clemmensen was able to focus on being the last line of defense, rather than being the superstar to replace Brodeur for the time being. He won two starts in a row for the first time in his career, and, following a victory by Weekes, Clemmensen extended his streak to four games.

He dropped a game to the Pens, but then fired off yet another four in a row. The first four gamer was against weak teams, beating Florida twice, the Tampa Bay Turmoils [Lightning], and last seasons 8th seed Capitals. This one, however, was much more significant. Clemmensen helped guide the Devils to back to back overtime victories over the Flyers and Canadians, both teams who have extremely potent offenses. He then withstood a barrage thirty five shots from the Penguins, only allowing one behind him as the Devils stopped Pittsburg. Then, in one of the best offensive games in the NHL this season, the Devils surrendered a four goal lead against the Rangers, only to retake the lead with three goals in the third period to clinch a remarkable 8-5 victory.

Over this span, Weekes had only gotten one start, which he did manage to win. The game against the Islanders was a 5-2 victory where Weekes was able to stop 25 of 27 shots. But in his next start, almost three weeks later, he struggled mightily. The Sabres bombarded the goalie with 34 shots on goal, of which he only stopped 30, and at least two of the goals were entirely on his shoulders.

On the first goal, Tomas Vanek took a Derek Roy rebound and buried it to the vacant side where Weekes was not even close to covering. While the goal could also be attributed to the pathetic defense by the struggling Colin While, the loose rebound is entirely on Weekes. This was a common struggling point of Weekes’ night, rebound control, as there were far too many which defenders bailed him out on, but they could only do so much as Vanek netted another rebound goal late in the 3rd to put the game out of reach.

Clemmensen came back last night against the Maple Leafs and played well enough to win the game, but the offense could not find its potency. The Devils got a late goal from Parise to tie the game and force overtime, but after a fury of activity, they failed to score, and if not for a brilliant spin-o-rama by Jason Blake, the shootout could have realistically gone on the entire night.

Clemmensen is hands down the most consistent player on the Devils right now. He provides a good backstop for the defense which can help open the offense up. If given an early lead, it provides him with confidence which then translates into victories. Sadly, you cannot get this type of guarantee out of Weekes, who, with the diminished amount of playing time thanks to the successes of Clemmensen, is far too inconsistent for this team to be the starting goalie. For proof, see the first dozen games since Brodeur was injured.

For now, I'll place my money on Clemmensen to carry the Devils. His 8-3-1 record, 2.38 goals against and his cool demeanor are all the evidence you need.