Monday, January 28, 2013

Weekly Flashback: 1994

[This is the first of multiple trash talking posts I'm making as League Manager of my Fantasy Hockey League with a crop of hockey friends and family, Enjoy!]

Why are we looking back nearly 20 years, you ask?

Well, last year, the Rangers came within two games of making it back to the Stanley Cup Finals for the first time since their 54-year-drought ending Cup win. So, rather than hoist a "NYC Area's Second Best" banner, let's give the Rangers fans out there something to look back on:

The Last Time the Rangers Won the Cup…

-Brazil won the World Cup
-Cowboys beat the Bills in Super Bowl XXVIII – the last of 4 straight appearances by the Bills
-Rockets beat the Knicks in 7 games

The Good Parts:
-Schindler’s List won the Oscar for Best Picture
-The following movies came out: Ace Ventura: Pet Detective, Blank Check, D2: The Mighty Ducks are Back, Major League II, Speed, The Lion King, Blown Away, Little Big League, Forest Gump, Angels in the Outfield, True Lies, The Mask, Clear & Present Danger, Pulp Fiction, Little Giants, The Shawshank Redemption, Dumb & Dumber
- Woodstock was revived with Woodstock ‘94
- Green Day released ‘Dookie’
- Nirvana’s ‘Unplugged in NY’ came out
- Soundgarden released ‘Superunknown’
- Aerosmith released ‘Get a Grip’
- 'All That!' and 'Ahh! Real Monsters' make their debuts on Nickelodeon.


And Now The Bad:
- Kurt Cobain offed himself [or Courtney Love killed him, whichever way you prefer]
- John Candy died of a massive heart attack
- Richard Nixon died.
- ‘Dinosaurs’, ‘Tale Spin’ and ‘Saved by the Bell: The College Years’ were cancelled… okay, maybe that last one was a gift from god and should be placed in the “good” list.
- Cesar Romero died, he was the original Joker.
- Dakota Fanning was born.
- Baseball went on strike, and that pretty much killed the Montreal Expos

Oh and if you needed any more of a reason why 1994 sucked...

...Justin Bieber was born... nuff said.

Saturday, January 26, 2013

Devils Cap Off Perfect Week with OT Win


The long layoff for the NHL ended last Saturday night as 24 teams kicked off their respective seasons.

New Jersey, fresh off their run to the Stanley Cup Finals, began their quest to repeat their Eastern Conference Championship run by squaring off against Atlantic Divisional rival, New York Islanders.

Travis Zajac got the scoring going after burying a beautiful crossing feed from Ilya Kovalchuk and David Clarkson sucked the life out of the crowd at Nassau Coliseum with his goal moments after Travis Hamonic leveled the two teams at 1 with just over 10 minutes remaining in the 3rd period. Martin Brodeur stopped 18 of 19 shots for his first win of the season.

Three days later, the Devils Squared off against the Philadelphia Flyers who were playing their third game in four days. Having lost to Pittsburgh at home and then falling to Buffalo on the road, the Flyers were desperate for a victory. Unfortunately for them, they got off on the absolute wrong foot as Travis Zajac again ignited the scoring, netting his second of the season just 67 seconds into the game. Clarkson, too, would get his second of the year on the power play with 25 seconds remaining in the opening stanza.

Kovalchuk would add a short handed, penalty shot goal in the third as the Devils continued their domination of Flyers’ goaltender Ilya Bryzgalov dating back to last season’s Eastern Conference Semifinals matchup where the Devils made the Russian keeper look amateurish.

Brodeur stopped all 24 Flyers shots he faced for his second win and 120th shutout of his career, 10 of which coming against the Flyers.

The shutout streak would continue into Friday night where the Devils would play host to the Washington Capitals. Stephen Gionta would finish a Jacob Josefson attempt to net his first of the season and only his second career regular season goal. Patrik Elias would register his 897th point of his career when he pushed home a rebound off a Marek Zidlicky shot and a Clarkson deflection on the power play late in the 2nd period.

The Devils’ discipline came apart nearly entirely during the third period as they took 5 consecutive penalties including three within seconds of each other. Washington seized the opportunity by scoring once on the power play [Mike Ribeiro] and then again as their final advantage expired [Mike Green].

Their gifts from the Devils would cease there as New Jersey came out a different team in the overtime period, bombarding Michal Neuvirth with 7 shots before Kovalchuk wristed a tight angle attempt top shelf to win the game for the Devils with just 20 seconds remaining in the extra frame.

Their 3-0 start is the best the Devils have had since the 2002-2003 season in which they went on to win the Stanley Cup in 6 games against the Dallas Stars.

Saturday, January 19, 2013

Fast Start Imperative in Shortened Season


Only 20 minutes into this young season, for two teams its quite obvious their mantra: Score early, score often.

Both the Chicago Blackhawks and Pittsburgh Penguins ran up multi-goal leads in their respective season openers.

While it is extremely early in their respective games and the season, its quite obvious how much emphasis has been placed on them to have solid starts to this abbreviated season.

Hopefully, the New Jersey Devils are taking note while they wait for their clash with the New York Islanders later tonight.

The Devils, who many predict to miss or just squeak into the post season, are relatively intact from last year’s team minus Alexi Ponikarovski and Zach Parise. Both played critical roles in their run to the Eastern Conference Championship and while neither will be easy to replace, the Devils seek to show the League they are more than just a one-man team.

Tonight, they need to jump on a weaker opponent in the Islanders, a team they have struggled with, especially at Nassau Coliseum, in recent years.

One thing that will certainly interesting to watch will be the Devils’ new power-play attack, introduced by Assistant Coach Matt Shaw. Said Head Coach Peter DeBoer of the new system, “We’re going to be shooting more and looking for that perfect look less.”

Last season, the Islanders were one of the least penalized teams in the league, being shorthanded only 236 times, only 11 ahead of San Jose’s league best 225. Their penalty kill percentage, however, was a botton-10 low 80.5%.

Hopefully, the Devils, who drew around the league average of 267 penalties last year,  will be able to convert on both even strength and the advance tonight to start their season off on the right foot.

Adam Larsson, Krys Barch and Peter Harrold will be tonight’s scratches while Mattias Tedenby will get another chance to prove he’s NHL ready and will start on the 2nd line with Patrik Elias and David Clarkson.

Thursday, January 17, 2013

Devils' Details - 1/17

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Zajac Re-signs
For the first time in a long while, the New Jersey Devils locked up a potential free agency before the season started.

On January 16th, first-line center Travis Zajac signed an 8-year deal worth $46 million. Zajac, who was set to become a free agent on July 5th [moved up from July 1st due to the event we will not name] signed the first max contract allowable for teams to retain their own free agent under the new Collective Bargaining Agreement.

Critics are quick to question the Zajac contract citing his career numbers not being as impressive as other who are in the same pay grade, but Zajac’s talents extend beyond the scope of just points. He’s one of, if not the, best centers in the Devils’ lineup, he’s excellent in both ends of the ice and Zajac is an excellent leader even though he does not garner a letter on his sweater.

Expect Zajac to produce around 35 points this year with at least 10 goals.



Captain Salvador
On Thursday, Bryce Salvador was named the 10th captain in Devils’ history.

This came as a surprise for many, thinking either Patrik Elias would get a second shot at the “C” which was stripped from him by Brent Sutter or Ilya Kovalchuk would get a crack to be the captain of a second team. 

This, however, is a solid reward from a player who showed extreme loyalty to the team where he made a name for himself.

Playing for the St. Louis Blues, Salvador was a bottom pairing defender. At the 2008 trading deadline, the Devils acquired Salvador in exchange for Cam Janssen.

Since his arrival, Salvador had progressively improved his way of play on the blue line for the Devils until 2010-2011 season where he had to sit out with post-concussion syndrome. There were extreme fears Salvador’s career would be over as a result of PCS, but Bryce persevered and returned to form during the regular season, then exceeded them becoming an offensive surprise from the blue line during the playoffs most prominently during the second round matchup with the Philadelphia Flyers.

Hitting the free agent market on July 1st of 2012, Salvador could have easily taken his talents to a handful of other teams and been a steady point in their defensive corps. He instead, however, waited for the Devils to deal with the Zach Parise soap opera and signed the day before Parise jumped ship to head home to Minnesota.

Salvador’s deal secured him to be part of the organization for the next 3 seasons. Now, those 3 years, he’ll be the Devils leader both in public and behind closed doors, as was the case apparently for a while prior.

Matteau Impresses
In June, the Devils made a surprise move in the eyes of critics by drafting Stefan Matteau, a grinding forward from the US Under-20 national team.

Fans, for one, were shocked because Matteau’s father is the same Matteau who is part of Devils’ infamy.

Even after being dropped from the eventual gold medal winning Under-20 team, Matteau refocused and was the only Devils’ junior player invited to camp.

Since his arrival, Matteau has done nothing but impress his future teammates with his focus, drive and overall on-ice play. He even managed to pull off a feat his father had done prior and score on Brodeur during the inter-squad scrimmage earlier this week.

As of Thursday, Matteau was still in contention for a spot on the Devils’ 23-man roster. Should he survive the final cuts on Friday, he could still be tested out for the 6 game maximum before being returned to his junior team.

The future of camp-invitee Matt Darche with the Devils rests entirely on their decision of Matteau. Should Matteau stick beyond the 6 games, Darche would more than likely not be offered a contract at least at the NHL level. A two-way deal is not out of the realm of possibility however, he is 36 and do the Devils need yet another over-30 forward with plenty of youth ready for shots?

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Welcome Back

It's been a long freaking off season.

Parise put his best diva routine combined with deception on par with a Las Vegas magician. The NHL-NHLPA reenacted their high school drama queen days, and Ilya Kovalchuk was a pawn of the KHL pretending to be an actual hockey league people care about.

But in just a few short days, the puck drops and story lines will again be about athletic competition rather than just social media posturing.

One thing that also happened over the off-season is Deviling the Details has moved here.

Gone are the old articles, the inaccurate scrolling header and a well made webpage. But here's what we can deal with for now.

New articles will be up shortly, but for now, welcome back.