Saturday, March 19, 2011

Building Devils Pride in the Tiers of the Prudential Center

This is a focus article for the new Supporters Section which had started in December and a follow up to an earlier article of mine. The section was an organized effort of fans trying to show their dedication to the players and sending a message that they haven't quit on their team, and they wont.

Read the full article here: Building Devils Pride in the Tiers of the Prudential Center

An Objective View on the Chara-Pacioretty Hit

The following casual conversation took place between myself and a good friend, Steve Saal, in between our bickering over whose team will do better, Devils or Rangers, when a general discussion of the state of the NHL broke out:

Steve: The enforcement in the NHL is such a joke that I don’t judge anyone.

Me: Yeah, inconsistencies are pathetic

Steve: and Chara not being disciplined is basically contrary to everything in our entire society

Me: He needed to get a game or two because he was not aware of where he was on the ice.
No question he needed to get a game or two.

Steve: Hell, more than that. We'll throw people in jail for doing things that are illegal, and, while you would never foresee a specific type of injury from the action, you'd be responsible for it nonetheless. But we won’t suspend a hockey player

Me: very very good way to look at it

Steve: There's a guy up in Boston facing man slaughter charges, and deservedly so, because, in a dispute, he threw a glass. the glass bounced awkwardly, shattered, stabbed, and killed a young guy from long island who was in no way connected to the confrontation. Did he ever think he was going to slice someone's artery and kill them when he threw that glass? Of course not, but it was still illegal and stupid and he deserves to be held accountable.

Me: You know what I think, and it’s very narrow sighted, I think his [Commissioner Gary Bettman] contract extension has a big role in Chara not getting anything.

Steve: Chara illegally finished a check towards the boards. Normally, nothing comes of it, but it was illegal and the crazy results are his responsibility.

Steve: [In response to my comment] Maybe.

Steve: To me, there's no difference in those two examples, Chara, and that bar incident.

They are unlawful, overt and intentional acts that unfortunately resulted in something catastrophic that no one would ever predict.

If we were out on the street and were fighting, and I moderately pushed you and you stumbled, nothing happens. If I moderately push you and don’t see the pole I push your head into --> ASSAULT. That's life.

The law sees the intent of the act, and the injury. Intent to cause the injury is an escalating issue but not determinative.

Sorry, been fighting with people on this all week. It gets me annoyed.

For whatever reason, in sports, intent to cause the injury somehow got into the punishment process.

Saturday, March 12, 2011

Hope is a Good Thing for NJ Devils

This is the first post I have made for TheHockeyWriters.com. I utilize the memorable quote from 'The Shawshank Redemption' to discuss the New Jersey Devils' approach to the playoffs and how well it has paid off for them.

Read the full article here: Hope is a Good Thing for the New Jersey Devils

Enjoy!

Update Regarding Myself and the Blog

To My Readers,

In case you have not already heard via my Twitter or Facebook, as of late Thursday night, I have accepted a position as contributing writer with TheHockeyWriters.com covering the New Jersey Devils.

I am extremely excited for this opportunity and look forward to the chance of not only becoming part of a large community of writers, but also the chance to reach a greater number of hockey fans through a site much more notable than this blog.

With that being said, I will continue with the Cracking the Ice blog and am seeking to expand it by adding writers who can focus on other teams. Will it work out or even come to fruition? We will have to just wait and see.

I will post links to my articles on THW and excerpts, and I strongly encourage all of my readers to not only continue following my work, but my fellow writers as well.

Thank you again for your continued support of taking the time to occasionally read my work.

Sincerely,

Kevin

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Playoff Life Support - March 10th

A night after the scenarios nearly played out to perfection, the idle Devils again turn their eyes to the scoreboard and hope for help from the rest of the Eastern Conference.

Atlanta at Carolina

Last night, the Atlanta Thrashers sprinted to a 2 goal lead on the Carolina Hurricanes before the end of the first period. They just couldn't sustain the same intensity throughout the remaining two periods of play.

Carolina turned the game around and by the end of the second, not only were they within a goal of tying the game but they were in complete control of Atlanta.

The Thrashers found themselves surrendering chance after chance as Carolina spread faltering Atlanta out, as odd man rushes became the angle of attack for the Hurricanes.

Late in the third, Eric Cole found himself behind the Thrashers defense and was fed a beautiful pass en route to his equalizer. The goal would prove to be huge for the Canes as the two teams headed to overtime.

But the Thrashers refused to go quietly into the night as they found a way to turn the pressure back on during the extra period, and it resulted in Tim Stapleton netting only his second goal of the season for the winner.

Rangers at Ducks

A few hours after the Thrashers pulled off a rare road victory, the Rangers faced off against the Ducks at the Honda Center in Anaheim.

Rangers controlled most of the play early on and capitalized on a poor change by the Ducks to set up the opening goal. Artem Amnisimov picked up a loose puck and broke in on a 3 on 2 as the Ducks scrambled to complete the change. Amnisimov moved the puck to Ryan Callahan who took only a second to move the puck to the right wing to Brandon Dubinsky who ripped a wrister behind the glove and pad of Ban Ellis.

Just four minutes later, Corey Perry changed the complexion of the game as he took a seamlessly harmless shot on goal from the right corner behind the Ranger net. The “pass” deflected off the skate of defenseman Dan Girardi and between the legs of Henrik Lundqvist.

Two minutes later, the Ducks struck again. This time a defenseman took the shot, Lubomir Visnovsky, which again banked off a Ranger player, Marc Stahl, before hitting the back of the net.

With under a minute to go, Visnovsky struck again with another shot from the point. This time, however, it didn’t need any help from Ranger players to get home.

The Rangers had come out of the gate on fire, looking like they’d have another dominating performance off the heels of their route of Philadelphia on Sunday, but the Perry bounce and followed by Visnovsky’s goals seemed to break their backs. They tried to mount a concentrated offensive effort late in the 2nd but ran out of time, and luck, as Ellis was equal to the task.

The Ducks would strike quickly in the 3rd, as Bobby Ryan added his second point of the game with a goal of his own, and the Rangers would answer to keep the game within two off a goal from Marion Gaborik. However, Ryan and Perry would put the lead back to three after some crisp passing on a rush which resulted in Perry’s second goal of the night.

The Rangers continue to squander critical points as they are now within reach of two teams, with only one space between them and being out of the playoffs. With the bottom 7 teams getting their acts together, now is the absolute wrong time for New York to hit a rough patch.

It is, however, fortunate for those chasing them, such as the Devils who are 10 points back with 2 games in hand.

Tonight, there are four games for Devils fans to keep their eyes on tonight:

Buffalo at Boston

Sorry Sabres fans, we joined you last night pulling for mutual demise of opposing clubs, however you’re in our crosshairs and it’s your time to be cheered against. The Devils need Boston to win this one in regulation in order to have a chance in redeeming their Tuesday night blunder against Ottawa. Keeping the gap at 8 points would be huge entering tomorrow night’s contest against the Thrashers.

Flyers at Toronto

Which Flyers’ team will show up tonight: the pathetic waste against meek Eastern Conference foes that can’t seem to motivate themselves to victory, or the one which dominated the Edmonton Oilers the other night? The Devils hope the latter team arrives in Toronto and shuts down a team that’s ahead of NJ’s quest for the playoffs.

Senators at Florida

With both teams behind them, one would think it wouldn’t matter what the outcome of this game was. However, even with a game in hand, the Devils need the Sens to win this one in order to not fall back behind another team. Florida is only a point behind New Jersey so a loss in overtime/shootout is okay due to the tiebreakers, however a Panther win puts the Devils back into 13th.

Canadiens at Blues

Montreal has a 17 point lead on the Devils, so no big deal who wins this game, right? Well, if they falter like every East team has done lately, why not believe they can be caught. So it may be a little farfetched, but keeping teams close is always a plus, so let’s go Blues!

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Playoff Life Support - March 9th

For at least one night, Buffalo Sabres fans can join together with New Jersey Devils as their teams sit idle and cheer for the same teams. Two games tonight have major playoff implications for both teams as the season starts to wind to a close.

Here’s a quick look at the match-ups and their impact on the race:

Atlanta at Carolina

For the Devils: This game needs to end in regulation. A 3 point match-up, while not completely devastating at this point, down the road could be brutal as the Devils try to climb their way from the basement of the league to the top 8 in the conference. The optimal result is the Thrashers winning, and while it will put New Jersey 3 back from catching Atlanta, the bigger picture is to keep the Hurricanes from putting any further distance between them and the Devils.

For the Sabres: Atlanta can win this match up in extra time, but the optimal result is a regulation victory. Should the Hurricanes force overtime, but fail to win, they would pull into a tie with Buffalo, but still be on the outside looking in by way of wins. If the Hurricanes win this game, the Sabres fall back to 9th by a point but they do gain the game in hand, thus keeping the Sabres in control of their own destiny.

Rangers at Anaheim

For both teams: This game not only needs to end in regulation, but the Ducks have to get this one. The more teams at the bottom of the pack, the better the Devils odds get as long as they get back to their winning ways and the rest play mediocre. New Jersey sits 10 points back of the Rangers after failing to close any ground with their regulation loss last night. Buffalo is in a much better position, obviously, being in the 8th seed. The Sabres’ currently sit only 2 back of the Blue Shirts, but 9 back of 6th placed Montreal. Both Buffalo and New Jersey have 2 games in hand on New York, making a loss tonight for the Rangers a critical hit to their playoff chances. Yes the Rangers currently sit in the playoffs in 7th place, but Carolina also has 2 games in hand and is only 3 points back. If you want to stretch even further, Toronto is 6 back, with a game in hand.


It should be an interesting night for the Eastern Conference.

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Devils Miss Big Chance

Two critical points were left on the table by the Devils tonight.

Sure, Ottawa had two fortunate bounces go their way in the form of both Condra goals, but the Devils did not do themselves any favors tonight.

During the firs period, they had numerous chances to fire home rebounds and loose pucks, Craig Anderson was equal to the task.

The second period returned to its old form as the bane of the Devils' game tonight.

The first of the Senators two fortunate bounces came early in the period and because of it, the Devils would have to play catchup. Erik Condra deposited his own rebound while jumping over Brodeur's left pad following an impressive pass from Jason Spezza.

The Devils would have chances of their own on two 5 on 3 power plays in which they failed to mount any significant scoring threat. The Devils focused so heavily on getting Ilya Kovalchuk the puck, they seemed to forget that if they spread the Senators defenders or, more space and lanes would open up.

Their best chance to score came on a disallowed goal off the stick of Patrik Elias who slapped home a rebound off an alleged high stick by Jacob Josefson who not only didn't hit the puck with his stick above the crossbar, he didn't hit the puck at all.

The Senators would exit the second period with the lead but the Devils and their fans still had that feeling they could make the comeback.

Patrik Elias would make everyone believe again when he avenged his earlier disallowed goal. Elias quietly broke in behind the Senators' defenders as Brian Rolston controlled the puck in the low right corner before he fed Elias for the back door goal.

With the two teams level again, the crowd did their best to fuel the Devils' push for the lead. The team responded by generating chances of their own but, again nothing came to fruition.

What seemed like the Devils' chance and game for be taking, quickly turned for the worst as Spezza struck again by setting up another goal just under 3 minutes to play in regulation. He possessed the puck in the high left point waiting for reinforcements and it was Condra who snuck behind Nick Palmieri and managed to tip the feed between Brodeur's right pad and the right post.

The Devils quickly threw their game into desperation mode but could not generate an organized attack to try and mount another comeback.

The only consolation for the Devils in their quest on this improbable playoff run is that the Buffalo Sabres failed to put further distance between them and the rest of the East with a 3-1 loss in Pittsburgh to the Penguins.

The Devils return to action Friday against the Atlanta Thrashers, and hopefully return to their winning ways. The game Friday could have positioning implications as the two teams are separated by only a point.

Monday, March 7, 2011

Devils Maintain Hot Streak

To say this run is impressive is a tremendous understatement to what the New Jersey Devils on the verge of accomplishing.

Should they win their matchup tomorrow night against the Ottawa Senators it will mark the first time since the start of the season that the Devils were a .500 team.

On January 8th, the Devils had lost the 31st game to the Philadelphia Flyers to put themselves 21 games below .500.

After yesterday's thrilling victory against the Islanders, the Devils have made up an astounding 20 games and turned one of the most disappointing seasons in franchise history, into one of the most improbable, and straight up amazing runs in NHL history.

Brian Rolston opened up the scoring with a power play goal in the second period. His 12th of the year was set up from Ilya Kovalchuk and Travis Zajac.

Josh Bailey equalized the two teams with a power play marker of his own. The goal came after the puck pin-balled around the crease and Brodeur was out of position as he prepared for the follow-up from PA Parenteau. Parenteau flubbed the shot but it found Bailey's stick for the goal.

Kovalchuk would continue his second half resurgence with a goal on a 2 on 1 set up by a drop pass from Jacob Josefson. Kovalchuk ripped the shot glove side past Al Montoya for his 24th of the year. With his assist, Josefson registered his first career point. Anton Volchenkov was also given an assist on the goal for his 7th.

He resurgent Islanders refused to quit, however and with over 3 minutes to play Blake Comeau scored his 18th the year.

With the Islanders forcing overtime, both teams earned a point, but the Devils again needed the winner's point to help close the gap, albeit temporarily, between them and Carolina.

It would take a shootout to determine a winner after an uneventful overtime session. Frans Nielsen opened the shootout with a goal, beating Brodeur glove side. Three shooters later, Kovalchuk would save the Devils again with the equalizer.

Eight tries later, Jacques Lemaire made a curious decision by electing to send Rolston out to try and win it. Rolston came in deked Montoya to a sprawling save attempt, Rolston countered by lifting the puck over Montoya’s pads for the winner.

After play on Sunday, the Devils pulled to within 8 points of the 8th seed in the Eastern Conference. The team they’re chasing now, however, has changed to the Buffalo Sabres who reached the top 8 for the first time since October 9th [the 2nd game of the season].

The Hurricanes and Rangers are both off until Wednesday, but both Buffalo and the Devils.

The Devils will host Ottawa on Tuesday for not only a chance at reaching .500 but also to pull within 5 of the idle Hurricanes and 8 of the Rangers. Pending the outcome of Buffalo’s game in Pittsburgh, the Devils could be as close as 6 points of 8th by the end of play Tuesday night or simply keep pace with the Sabres should both teams win.

Saturday, March 5, 2011

Pominville Puts Sabres on the Verge

For the most part, the Buffalo Sabres are in the best position of any of the seven teams outside of the top 8 in the Eastern Conference.

Literally, they’re sitting in 9th place, a mere 1 point behind the Carolina Hurricanes for 8th and 2 points back of the New York Rangers for 7th.

What is more impressive is the fact that the Sabres are tied for the fewest games played in the East. They control their own destiny with two big games in hand on Carolina and three on the struggling Rangers.

Today, the Sabres rallied from being two goals down at the end of the first period to escape Philadelphia with a 5-3 victory over the top seeded Flyers.

First period goals from Kris Versteeg, who has benefited immensely thanks to a change of scenery after being acquired from Toronto, and James van Riemsdyk, the Flyers looked poised to cruise to the 2 points which would give them a 5 point cushion on the Boston Bruins for the top spot in the East.

But the Sabres would not leave the City of Brotherly Love without putting up a fight.

Thomas Vanek moved deep into the Flyers zone and fed Drew Stafford in front of the Philadelphia net. Stafford had snuck behind the defenders, took the pass on his forehand and lifted a shot above Sergei Bobrovsky’s left pad to cut the deficit in half.

Buffalo would strike again under two minutes later on one of the strangest looking goals of the season.

Tyler Ennis carried the puck to the blue line, looking as if he would fire a shot on goal and force a whistle. Instead, he lifted the puck and sent it into the corner where he would chase it down. He carried the puck towards the back of the net and then centered a pass looking for Patrick Kaleta who was battling Sean O’Donnell for positioning. O’Donnell pushed Kaleta into Bobrovsky and the Flyers goal as the pass then deflected off of O’Donnell and into the goal, right behind Kaleta. Ennis would get credit for his 8th of the year as the Sabres pulled even.

Andrej Sekera would add a rare goal to give Buffalo their first lead of the game just past the midway point of the 2nd period. Although a Thomas Vanek turnover lead to a shorthanded goal by Kimmo Timonen, the Sabres still maintained the momentum exiting the 2nd.

6 minutes into the 3rd period, Jason Pominville broke between the Flyers back check as Thomas Vanek fed him a pass from the left wing boards, which Pominville tipped into the back of the net for the 2nd Buffalo lead of the game.

Nathan Gerbe would add an empty net goal to seal the victory with just over a minute to go in regulation.

Buffalo has a quick turnaround as they head to Minnesota for a Sunday match up against the Wild.

Kovalchuk Keeps Devils Believing

It was one of those nights, you could just feel it. Even if you were watching on TV, you knew something big was going go happen.

Sustained pressure and continuous chances were the MO for the Devils during the third period of last night's matchup versus the Penguins. Chance after chance, the Devils tried to break through goaltender Brent Johnson, and often they would maintain possession after the initial shots or rebounds. Even when entering the attacking zone, the Devils did so much more aggressively and confidently than their previous matchups versus the Tampa Bay Lightning.

Penguin counter attacks brought tension to fans, but not to the players. Chances which would have surely resulted in goals for the Penguins in games prior to the turn of the New Year were blocked, controlled or deflected harmlessly away from Martin Brodeur and the Devils’ net.

Whether it was Brian Rolston’s shot blistering off the cross-bar, or Patrik Elias’ one-timer that was unleashed just a fraction of an inch off target while Johnson was completely out of position, the Devils chances continued to mount. Although they did not capitalize during regulation, the team nor fans seemed to panic heading to overtime against a team much higher than them in the standings.

The Devils would be given their first power play of the game just under halfway through the extra frame, when Travis Zajac carried the puck into the Pittsburgh zone, batting off two defenders and drawing a hook from Zbynek Michalek.

The power play was patient, much to the chagrin of the fans in attendance who craved a win and the two critical points to pull back within 9 of the playoff positions. Using the extra space to create gaps, Kovalchuk possessed the puck frequently to quarterback the play from his typical spot on the right wing face-off circle.

A feed to Rolston lead to a shot on goal on the right side of the net. The rebound kicked to Elias who tried to put his follow up shot between Johnson’s pads as he slid across, and out, of the crease. Johnson got it with his left pad, but was well out of position and could not control the rebound as it again found Elias’ stick. He ducked the puck behind the net, wrapped around and fed Kovalchuk who ripped the shot into the almost completely vacant net for the winner.

The crowd and team erupted in jubilation as they met Kovalchuk at the blue line of the Devils’ zone to celebrate the big win.

The overtime winner was Kovalchuk’s 22nd goal of the year, his 9th game winning goal of the season, and the 13th overtime winner of his career. To further sweeten the pot, Kovalchuk now has 6 game winning goals in the last 12 games.

It is no secret from that every game is huge from here on out, but the Devils have a chance to put further distance between them and the teams below them with a win Sunday afternoon on Long Island versus the Islanders.

Friday, March 4, 2011

Huge Night in the East

Tonight's match-ups in the Eastern Conference have steep implications for three teams in terms of their playoff hopes and dreams.

The Devils face-off against the Pittsburgh Penguins at the Prudential Center in Newark. In order to keep pace with the top 8 teams in the Eastern Conference, the Devils need to win this match up. For a change, it really does not matter if the Devils win in regulation or not, as long as they get those two critical points.

A half hour after the Devils and Penguins face-off, the Rangers begin their critical matchup with the Ottawa Senators in Ottawa. Just a night ago, the Rangers fell to the eighth seed in the East. Just two points are separating the them from the Buffalo Sabres and being on the outside looking in. This is almost a must win for the Blueshirts because not only are they in an absolute free-fall, but they have played a considerable number of more games when compared to every team in the Eastern Conference.

Then at 830 pm, the final game which fans of teams on the bubble are keeping an eye on is the Hurricanes vs the Chicago Blackhawks. This matchup has playoff implications for both conferences as both Carolina and Chicago are in the thick of the hunt, both are in for the time being.

Optimal results for Devils fans is obviously for both the Rangers and Hurricanes to lose their games in regulation. Should the Devils win and these results come to fruition, the deficit would be 8 and 9 points, respectively. This would be a huge turn of events as the Devils have games in hand on both teams to their advantage.

It should be an entertaining Friday night for hockey fans across the league.

It could also be a great start for New Jersey Devils fans with growing dreams.

Teams Fail to Capitalize

On a might where the Eastern Conference playoff race picture could have gotten a lot clearer, it only got tighter.

Going into play last night, the Buffalo Sabres trailed the Carolina Hurricanes by two points and the New York Rangers by three. All three of these teams were in action, with the Sabres and Hurricanes squaring off in Raleigh while the Rangers played host to the Minnesota Wild at the Garden.

The beat case scenario for Devils fans, and fans of any team below Buffalo in the standings for that matter, would have been a Rangers loss in regulation, and a Sabres win also in regulation. If this had played out, Buffalo and Carolina would have been in a virtual tie and the Rangers only a point away.

The Wild did their part as they easily handled a struggling Rangers team who have looking unimpressive over the course over the past month. The 3-1 loss personified how the Rangers have struggled and scoring has come at a premium for the squad that out shot the Wild 41-19 during last night's contest.

In Carolina, the Sabres were able to strike first when Steve Montador score his fifth of the year from Tyler Ennis and Andrej Sekera. But Juri Tlusty equalized the game just over two minutes later with a talley of his own.

Brad Boyes, who scored in his first game with Buffalo against the Rangers earlier this week, put the Sabres ahead again with his second in as many games. Montador and Sekera would add assists on Boyes' 14th. The lead again would be short lived as Chad LaRose would level the two teams just over a minute later for he most offensively explosive period of the game.

Both teams would earn a point by way of heading to overtime, but the Hurricanes would walk away with the extra one as Jamie McBain would net the game winner. The win pushed the Hurricanes ahead of the Rangers for 7th in the Conference, keeping Buffalo in 9th by 2 points.

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Devils Take Two from Tampa

(Photo by Andy Marlin/NHLI via Getty Images)
Going into tonight’s match-up with the Tampa Bay Lightning, the Devils knew anything less then getting the full two points would be a major blow to their playoff hopes.

With Carolina winning their game over Pittsburgh last night, the Devils fell back behind by 11 points from playoff contention. Even with two games in hand, failing on chances to gain ground on idle opponents would be devastating.

During the first period, you could tell the Devils were playing a little tighter than they usually would be on home ice. Their defense was very solid and prevented any significantly threatening scoring chances from the opposition, but their offense was just as hesitant to try and take the zone as they were during their Friday night loss in Tampa.

The second period saw a bad bounce which earlier in the season would have crippled this team. Pavel Kubina took a shot from a top the left circle which deflected off of the skate of Dominic Moore and into the back of the Devils’ net. The power play goal gave the Lightning a much needed go-ahead goal, but the game was far from over at this point.

Just before the end of the period, Ilya Kovalchuk danced with the puck deep in the Tampa zone and let go of a shot which created a scramble in front. As players battled for the loose puck, it kicked out to the right point to Henrik Tallinder, who faked two shots and fired a wrister through the chaos in front. The shot deflected off of the stick of Martin St. Louis and found it’s way behind Dwayne Roloson for the equalizer.

The teams played a much faster paced 3rd period, exchanging chance for chance for most of the first 10 minutes. Just past the midway mark, Travis Zajac’s shot on goal kicked into the corner off Roloson’s pad and was controlled by Matt Smaby. Smaby then tried to force a pass between Zajac and the boards, but was picked off by Zajac who quickly fed a streaking Kovalchuk with a crisp tape-to-tape pass. The pass handcuffed Kovalchuk a little, but he still was able to blast a one-timer past Rolson while falling for the Devils’ first lead of the night, and his 22nd of the season.

The Devils would not sit back and defend the lead as they produced numerous chances, including a beautiful wide open, one-timer look from Patrik Elias late in the period that Roloson was able to get just enough of to prevent a back-breaking goal.

Tampa’s best chance to equalize came during the final 5 seconds as St. Louis broke out with Steven Stamkos through the neutral zone, but Stamkos had gone offsides before St. Louis could make it to the blue line and fire a last-ditch effort on net.

With the win, the Devils again pulled to within 9 points of the Hurricanes. Carolina travels to Buffalo tomorrow night for a critical match-up with the Sabres, who if they win in overtime, will take over the 8th position in the Eastern Conference based upon wins.

Devils fans, at least for one night, should be pulling very hard for the Sabres to win in regulation. If the Sabres can grant the Devils’ fans wish, the gap will remain at 9 points.

NOTES: David Steckel, who played his first game with the Devils since being acquired from the Washington Capitals for Jason Arnott, had a solid game defensively. He lost his first five face offs, and ended the night just 4 for 12, far below his seasonal average of roughly 60%...Zach Parise, who has been recovering from a partially torn meniscus since October, was given the okay from doctors today to resume skating on his own. General Manager Lou Lamoriello said he’s at least 2-3 weeks away from skating hard and the team would then take it from there…Dainius Zubrus shook off a hit from behind from Simon Gagne just before the Kovalchuk goal. Gagne was not penalized on the play…Martin Brodeur made a great left arm save on Nate Thompson on a breakaway during the first period.

Boyes Delivers in Debut

Congratulations, Sabres fans! After the first period of last night's game against the New York Rangers, this year's deadline acquisition is already 100% more productive in terms of goals than last year, and is one point away from equaling that of Raffi Torres's short stint in Buffalo.

Almost a year ago, the Sabres traded Nathan Paetsch and a second round pick. The trade was widely regarded as a successful move for the Sabres and was a borderline steal when they acquired the player who amassed 50 points at that point in the year for a struggling Blue Jackets.

Torres, however, failed to live up to any of the expectations held for him while wearing the Blue and Gold. He failed to register a goal for the club and only amassed 5 assists through the remaining portion of the regular season and the first round of the playoffs.

Late Sunday night, the Sabres beat the Deadline Day Rush and made a trade in the midnight hours to acquire power forward Brad Boyes from St. Louis. The Blues received the Sabres 3rd round pick in this year’s draft to complete the deal.

During the second period of their matchup with the New York Rangers, the Sabres were on the power play when Boyes registered his first goal with the team. Andrej Sekera fired a shot from the blue line which Henrik Lundqvist kicked out to his left side. Paul Gaustad took the rebound and released a blind, between the legs pass across the top of the crease to a waiting Boyes who deposited an off-balanced shot behind Lundqvist for the marker which gave the Sabres a brief 2-1 lead.

Boyes would later say sarcastically of the play, “Goose and I had talked about doing that play during the skate, guess it actually worked.”

With the win, the Sabres were able to keep pace with the Carolina Hurricanes, who also won on the night, but also gained two valuable points on the Rangers. With three games in hand on the Blueshirts and two on the Hurricanes, the Sabres are in control of their own destiny as they’re behind by only three and two points respectively.

The Sabres expect the Boyes to be a critical component of a playoff run, and his durability cannot be understated. Boyes is one of only four players to have played over 400 consecutive games, as hit currently sits at 471 games played.

Next up for the Sabres is a critical matchup versus the Carolina Hurricanes.

If Buffalo can emerge victorious in regulation, they will take over the 8th position in the Eastern Conference standings.