Monday, March 10, 2008

Jagr Retiring A Possibility???

Reading an article on yesterday's 1-0 shootout win in today's New York Post, a pretty glaring quote comes through Larry Brooks' pen/typewriter/tape recorder/iPod/keyboard, whatever he uses.

Jagr, in Brooks' article said:"I have a pretty good idea what I'm going to do next year, and I've known for three or four weeks, but I'm not going to say anything. I don't want that to become an issue," Jagr said. "I'm not going to say something that's going to be a distraction to the team."

I know it is sort of vague but it just sounds like the type of quote that seems to come when an athlete has decided to retire.

Jagr, who is in his 17th season as an NHL player, is having his least productive season ever. Now while an undetermined portion of the blame for that could be attributed to having a very difficult time finding a center who could help Jagr play his game, the point still remains that the Ranger captain's skills may be deteriorating.

In the past, poor performances by Jagr were always attributed to him either sulking, or just not caring about the overall result of his past teams. I can thankfully say that has not been the case in his tenure as a Blueshirt. While he may have coasted at times and seemed to give up on occasion due to sheer frustration of having to fend off multiple defenders anytime the puck came near him, one thing remained. He cares. He hates losing.

The past month or so I've watched him closely and he is putting in a very strong effort each and every night. While the points totals may not show it, the effort is there.

If this indeed is the home stretch of a distinguished NHL career, there is only one more thing I can say when it comes to Jaromir's final games as a Ranger. Cheers, it's been a pleasure watching.

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

NHL TRADE DEADLINE:LIVE BLOG

8:00 AM: NHL Network is on, Kids are running around, TSN feed on NHL Network reporting Hossa to either Ottawa or Montreal.

8:09 AM:Trade Proposal, Brad Richards to Vancouver for... Minor Leaguers. The returns for Hossa's proposal respectively, Vermette and prospects from ottawa. Higgins, Lapierre and, Ryder.

8:27 AM: One negative about having the TSN broadcast on NHL network is the Canadian slant. They've just spent 15 minutes talking about Mats Sundin and his refusal to waive his NTC.

8:40 AM: Trade Proposal, Richards to Dallas for Smith, Halpern and Jussi Jokinen. Goaltending help in Smith could be the deal maker here.

9:02 AM: Marcel Hossa is already in Montreal. The Thrashers are playing the Habs tonight. Still no mention of any team south of the Canadian Border. It's all Habs, Leafs and Sens.

9:10 AM: I'm starting to understand how Geraldo felt. Darren Pang's top 5 cup favorites. Anaheim,Detroit, New Jersey, Montreal, Dallas Pittsburgh. John Buccigross, Ducks, Devils, Wings, Sens, Stars. Millbury, Red Wings, Stars, Ducks, Devils, Habs. Pierre McGuire, Ducks, Stars, Wild, Pens, Rangers.

9:27 AM: This Just In!!! The Toronto Maple Leafs have decided to have a team workout on the beach in Florida. They even have a guy live outside the hotel on the beach reporting. Holy Hell guys this is airing in the US, how about a little love for the US teams.

10:07AM: Guys on TSN mentioning there will be fewer trades. Reasons, Parity in the NHL, Teams looking for large returns, Not wanting to trade young cheap talent. WOW where have I heard that before. These guys are geniuses.

10:33AM: Trade: New Jersey Devils acquire Bryce Salvador from St. Louis for Cam Janssen.

10:45AM: Janssen being interviewed on TSN, Happy to be heading to St. Louis apparently his hometown.

11:00AM: Doomsday alert set to 5hrs. TSN/NHL network is turning into THN, The Hossa network. Earthshattering news out of Montreal, Hossa will not skate with the Thrashers in the morning skate. At this point I hope Hossa goes anywhere other than Montreal. It would be great to see the looks on these broadcasters faces. No news as to what he had for breakfast or what color underwear he is wearing,if any.

11:18AM: Spoke too soon. TSN reporter"Marcel Hossa is sitting in his hotel room with a beautiful view of Montreal having a nice Brunch."

11:20AM: Trade: Toronto Maple Leafs trade Wade Belak to the Florida Panthers for a 5th round draft pick.

11:26AM:Trade: Brian Campbell to the San Jose Sharks, return unstated as of yet.

11:35: The return on the Campbell deal is Steve Bernier and a First Round pick.

I must admit I thought Campbell would fetch more than that.

11:38AM: Brad Richards to Dallas, terms have been approved by both sides, Richards has to waive his NTC.

11:44am: Trade: Brad Richards has waived his No Trade Clause and is headed to Dallas, along with Johan Holmqvist for Mike Smith, Jussi Jokinen and Jeff Halpern.

11:50am: Trade: Montreal trades Cristobal huet to the Caps for a 2nd Rnd pick.

Strange move by the Habs unless they have another deal set up. Hard to believe they'd bail on their #1 goalie now. Maybe Hedberg will be part of a deal with Hossa to MTL.

12:05pm: Deadline less than 3 hrs: Well three hours to go and one big name remains. Marian Hossa. This past hour has flown by with the activity. This live blogging stuff is fun. Fast paced, mind going in 20 different directions at once, feeding kids lunch. Craziness.

12:16pm: Trade: Florida has traded Ruslan Salei to Colorado for Dmitri Skrastins and a 3rd round pick.

12:22pm: Trade: Chicago Blackhawks trade Tuommo Ruttu for Carolina's Andrew Ladd.

12:47PM: Just dropped my daughter off at school, now I get to play catch up.

12:49PM:Trade: At 12:36 Matin Lapointe was traded from Chicago to Ottawa for a 6th round pick. My guess is this is to add some grit and depth with Chris Neil being injured.

1:00PM: 2hrs left until trade deadline.

1:03PM: Trade: Adam Foote has been traded to Colorado from Columbus for a First round pick. Rob Blake also rumored to head back to the Mountains, no word on if Roy and Borque will come out of retirement to have a reunion of the '02 cup winners.

1:12PM: Trade rumor, Sergei Fedorov to Washington for ??? Fedorov with Ovechkin will be alot of fun to watch.

1:26pm: Trade:Fedorov to Washington is confirmed for Theo Ruth? Freshman at Notre Dame. Way to cash in Columbus.

1:37pm: Trade: Vancouver has traded Matt Cooke for Matte Pettinger, Washington is going to make a run at the Southeast title. Good trade for them.

1:40pm: Trade rumor, Davidson from San Jose to The Islanders. for a possible 7th rounder. No confirmation yet.

2:00PM: 1 Hour until trade deadline.

2:06PM: Trade: Rob Davison D from San Jose to the Islanders for the Isles 7th round pick. Special thanks to TSN's trade tracker crapping out and their site running at the pace of a Marek Malik wrist shot.

2:32PM: I'm starting to get really antsy here. I want an upgrade on the blueline for the Rangers. An upgrade over Malik and Strudwick would bode well, the clock is ticking though. I'm expecting a flurry of deals to go down to the wire with the announcements not occuring until later in the afternoon. I'll do my best to keep up.

All is clear on the mail front.

2:45PM: 15 minutes until deadline.

2:50PM: 10 minutes and the crickets are still chirping.

2:53PM: Trade: Rangers Acquire Christian Backman for a fourth round pick
2:53PM: Trade:Penguins acquire Hal Gill from Toronto for 2nd round pick and 5th round pick

2:58PM: Trade: Penguins acquire Marian Hossa and Pascal Dupuis for Eric Christiansen, Colby Armstrong , Angleo Esposito.

3:11PM: Trade:Chris Simon traded to the Minnesota Wild for a 6th round pick.

3:14PM: Trade: Detroit Red Wings acquire Brad Stuart from LA Kings for a 2nd round pick and a 4th round pick.

3:20PM: Trade: Rangers acquire Fredrick Sjostrom, and prospects for Al Montoya and Marcel Hossa.
3:21PM:Trade: Anaheim acquires Marc-Andre Bergeron for a 3rd Round Pick
3:21PM: Trade: Florida acquires Chad Kilger for a 3rd Round pick.

Monday, February 25, 2008

Trade Deadline: Prelude

The trade deadline looms just over the horizon. In 24 hours we will finally know what NHL rosters will look like for the remainder of the season, barring any waiver moves of course. So as far as the New York Rangers go, what should we expect. Not much, in my opinion.

There are a few reasons why I don't think anything major will happen, some linked together, some legitimate roadblocks on their own.

1. Parity in the NHL: With the standings, particularly in the Eastern Conference, being so bunched up, leaving so many teams with realistic playoff aspirations the amount of NHL general managers willing to give up quality players are few and far between.

Four teams fall into the "Put a fork in them" category, Tampa Bay, Toronto, Los Angeles and, Edmonton.

A few other teams are nearing that stage, Chicago, St. Louis, Atlanta and, Florida all probably fall into the "Seller" group that those below them in the standings are in.

Other than those eight teams, there are 20 teams looking to improve themselves between now and 3pm tomorrow February 26th. This means it's a sellers market and teams looking to make a big impact on their roster will be paying through the nose to do so.

2. Cap space: The Rangers have $2.3 Million in cap space to work with, not a whole lot when considering any player that would be a significant addition would likely cost quite a bit more than that. Of course you have to factor in the salary of whatever player is leaving and adding that amount to the cap space. Cap space at this point for THIS season is not really an issue. With the 2.3 million and whatever goes the other way it is enough to add just about any player in the NHL. But it what needs to be considered is, if a high priced guy is acquired, and reasonably thinking that a significant ransom was sent the other way, that player would have to be re-signed, and at what price, could end up hurting the team's cap effect in the long run.

3. Chips to deal with: With Paul Mara now injured, Glen Sather has one less chip to trade with. The only defensemen that I could see as being a part of a trade would be Thomas Pock and Marek Malik. Forwards that could be part of a deal, Martin Straka, Petr Prucha, Marcel Hossa.

These players are not going to be enough to bring in a player or players that will have enough of an impact to make trading them worthwhile. Which means then you come to prospects and draft picks. The hot commodities for the Rangers are Artem Anisimov and Bobby Sanguinetti. Now I'm not going to get into the many reasons why I don't want to see them traded, that's another issue. Plain and simple, Do Not Trade These Players.

Part of the reason why Sather has done a fairly decent job at building this organization is that he has acquired a lot of players through the draft. Sather and his staff have done a pretty good job of stockpiling 2nd 3rd and 4th line wingers, and a pretty impresive corps of defensemen through the draft. My point is, draft picks are valuable, proceed with extreme caution when giving them up.

Overall I don't think the Rangers have chips, that they could justify giving up, to acquire the type of player it would require to push this team over the top. Again the sellers market may push the Rangers out of the running for impact players.

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Premature Ecapulation Volume 2.

Okay, first things first. When first looking at the contract cost of Henrik Lundqvist's new deal it obviously jumps out at you as a huge land mine just waiting to obliterate everything from the waist down. But when thinking of contracts I always try to take a deep breath and look at the overall picture with regards to the salary cap.

A few months ago I dove into the Rangers cap situation and tried to see where they were headed going into next season. I had predicted Lundqvist to have a cap hit of $6.5 million for next year so really the scenario that I presented then pretty much still stands up. Having 3/4 of a season to see how things are developing however leaves me with a few revisions to my previous speculations. So here we go, the 3/4 pole edition of Premature Ecapulation.

Forwards under contract for 2008-2009: Scott Gomez, 7.35. Chris Drury, 7.05. Petr Prucha, 1.6. Brandon Dubinsky, .633. Blair Betts, .615. Colton Orr, .538. Ryan Hollweg, .507. Ryan Callahan, .489. Dane Byers .608.

That is nine forwards under contract for the season, total cap hit for that group is $19.39 million.

Restricted Free Agents and their current salaries: Sean Avery,1.9. Nigel Dawes, .475. Greg Moore, .740. Marcel Hossa, .780.

First, Sean Avery. I love watching him play. He adds alot to the experience of being a Ranger fan. If it's not arguing with those that love or hate him, it's laughing at the outlandish things he comes out with in interviews. The entertainment factor alone would want me to see him come back. Since he's been injured alot this season, and will have surgery in the off season, I could see the Rangers getting a decent deal for Avery's services. I'd like to see a 1 or 2 year deal at $2.5 million. Nigel Dawes, when in the lineup, has shown some very nice things. He seems to be the kind of guy that has gotten all he will get out of AHL experience. It's time he became a legit NHLer. I could see him getting a deal a bit lower than Petr Prucha's since Prucha's deal was based on two seasons in which he scored a total of 52 goals. In the sample I've seen from Dawes I would think a 2 year deal at about $950,000 would be about right. Greg Moore would probably be signed for a bit less than his current deal, putting him in the Brandon Dubinsky range of $630,000. Marcel Hossa, Ughhh. Do the Rangers give it one more shot? Only if his brother comes at a discount. More on that later.

So with resigning RFA's for a total of $4.o8 million that brings the total to 12 forwards for $23.47 million.

Defensemen under contract for 2008-2009: Marc Staal, .827. Thomas Pock, .667.

Yep that's it. Obviously the defense corps is going to look a bit different than this year. Or will it.

Restricted Free Agents and current salaries: Fedor Tyutin, 1.02. Daniel Girardi, .750. Ivan Baranka, .521.

Back during Volume one of this thing I had projected Tyutin and Girardi to continue to develop and in turn demand a higher pricetag to retain their services. Well fortunately for cap reasons this hasn't exactly been the case. Both are having difficulties this season, but not so terrible that I'd like to see them go the way of their UFA brethren Marek Malik and Paul Mara.

I'd re-sign them both, Fedor Tyutin for 3 years for $4.75 million and Girardi 3 years for $3.3 million. Tyutin's cap hit would be 1.58, Girardi's 1.1. Baranka I would resign 2 years for $1.5 for a cap hit of .750.

I would also re-sign Jason Strudwick for 1 year for .550 as a depth guy.

That is 6 defensemen for the low low price of, $5.53 million . Add the 23.48 million for the forwards and that brings the skaters under contract total to $29.01 million.

Goaltenders: Henrik Lundqvist, 6.87
Well any speculation about the goaltending situation is gone. The haircut is the #1 goaltender and will be until he turns 31. Case closed. Steve Valiquette has shown that he can be a very capable backup I'd re-sign him and even give him a little raise for his troubles. 2 years at $800,000 per year.

Goaltenders total $7.67 million

That brings us to $36.68 million towards the cap. I'll even prudently add $3.00 million to that figure in bonuses that may or may not carry over to next season so that is $39.68 million of eaten up cap space. If the salary cap does not go up from the $51.00 million that it is this year that would leave a shade over $10 million to sign a top free agent defensemen and a forward. If the cap goes up, even better. If the Rangers re-sign Jaromir Jagr that would obviously put a bit of a dent into that cap space. And what about the prospects that may or may not be available next season. I myself think it's time to let the Jagr era go. I'd make an effort to sign Brian Campbell in the neighborhood of $5 million and hope that works. If it doesn't I roll the dice with prospects and see what they have. If Marian Hossa can be had for less than say 6.5 to 7 million I might consider it, but I'd be hesitant. Would he come at a discount if his brother was re-signed, I doubt it, but I'd still look into it.

So it's back to the "wait and see" game until July for as far as next season's roster goes. The trade deadline looms not too far off so we'll see if there are any shakeups that throw a wrench into my little plan here.

Monday, December 31, 2007

Prucha Sets NHL Record Book On Fire

Anyone who watches the NHL Network particularly late at night has seen the bit about Darryl Sittler's 10 point game. He tells you he usually had a little Bass and Steak as his pregame meal and so on. I found it really cool at first, much happier than the suicide inducing "Don't Give Up" cancer awareness commercial. Don't get me wrong, I fully support cancer awareness, but that tune on that commercial simply has to be the most tear inducing half a bar of music I've ever heard, but seeing it over and over again while watching on the fly has made me think. Wouldn't it be awesome for someone to break Sittler's record? This way they'd stop running that damned piece every 20 minutes. So then inside my little brain, half awake, is what popped into my head. Al Trautwig of MSG Network interviewing Petr Prucha after Prucha not only broke Sittler's record, but also the single game assist and goal records, in the same game.


Al Trautwig: Welcome back everyone to MSG. What a night it was here. Petr Prucha, with his 8 goal and 8 assist night has broken three seemingly unreachable records in one night. He broke Joe Malone's record of 7 goals, Billy Taylor's record of 7 assists and, Darryl Sittler's record for points in a single game. Ah, and here he is joining us in Studio 16, Petr, welcome, quite a game you had.

Petr Prucha: Yah, it was uhh, fun, great night.

AT: I'll say, you gave the Garden crowd quite a thrill. I'm sure you are overcome with excitement right now and it hasn't soaked in yet, but tell me. How huge did Sean Avery come through in helping you achieve what you did tonight?

PP: Whole team was, mmm, great, Aves had goal on power play, I thought was mine but went in off of his helmet, like soccer.

AT: Well yeah and he had an assist on your fifth goal do you remember?

PP: Mmmm not right now.

AT: He had come out of the penalty box and dumped the puck down the ice. Gomez beat out the icing call and found you in the high slot. Anyway, I'm sure you'll remember, as soon as you can sit back and appreciate the moment.

PP: Yah, was great, I always say I not real goal scorer so always is suprise to me when I score goal.

AT: You said that alot during your rookie season and I think people around here are starting to think you were right.

PP: Oh, Ha Ha.

AT: Tell me when Sean Avery came to this team, did you think he would have such a positive effect on your own performance?

PP: Uhh, I don't know, all I really know him from is talking lots of curses and diving from when Jags bump him. Jags had hat trick and two assists tonight and Gomer had goal and 5 assists, G-man and Toots had goals and couple of assists, they play great.

AT: Oh of course they did, and I'll bet you guys are all going out on the town after this one.

PP: Yah, we go to club and have few drinks and dances.

AT: HA! And you know I'll bet if you ask Sean Avery he could get you guys some dates for tonight.

PP: Uhh, maybe, yes.

AT: What did you think, I think it was soon after your tenth point of the night that tied you with Sittler, when the Crowd started the familiar chant of "Ave-Ry Ave-Ry" after he had gotten into the fight he had to complete the Gordie Howe Hat-Trick?

PP: I don't know, we all were suprise he fight with big lead and take instigator too.

AT: Well that is part of his game and these things will happen. As Joe Paterno always says, Boys just being boys.

PP: Joe who?

AT: Haha, doesn't matter, Hey did you ever notice how perfectly Sean Avery's eyes match the home blue of the Rangers jersey?

PP: Umm no have not notice, But I wa...

AT: Sorry to cut you off Peter but John Giannone is standing by down the hall with the man of the hour, Sean Avery. So Peter thank you for joining us here at Studio 16, again congratulations on a great night.

PP: I thought it was studio 11.

AT: We renamed it, cya later.

Monday, December 10, 2007

Is The Paint Dry Yet?

It's bad enough that the Rangers and Devils played their game on a Sunday during the NFL season. And since it was at 5pm of the final week of the regular season for most Fantasy Football leagues it was probably even more of an afterthought for a casual observer. Really the only positive thing that came out of the game was the final result. A 1-0 win for the Rangers in overtime.

Brendan Shanahan scored 30 seconds into OT on a play that simply defied anything the Rangers have shown offensively over the past week/ month/ entire season. A play in which all four Blueshirts on the ice were involved in the play. Crisp, decisive passing. Scott Gomez passes from the right corner to Dan Girardi. Girardi passes to his defense partner Fedor Tyutin, across the ice along the blueline, Tyutin diagonal pass back to Gomez in the right faceoff circle. Gomez passes to Shanahan in the slot for a one-timer that hits the top corner above Martin Brodeur's blocker.

Was it an abberation? Was it luck? Was it because it was four-on-four and the Devils had one less defender on the ice? Was it because it was four-on-four and Shanahan and Gomez were not saddled with their linemate Marcel Hossa? I happen to think it was a combination of all of the above.

Strangely not much has been mentioned about Henrik Lundqvist's performance yesterday. He was not tested often but made 3 or 4 saves that were legit robberies. Aside from that there was not much to discuss. However I am going to harp on the next issue for a while, until the Rangers change their thinking, or until Sean Avery returns. And that issue is toughness, or lack there of.

The softness of this team is beginning to wear on me. During the second period of yesterday's game Zach Parise tried some sort of half gainer-double toe loop-triple lindy combo which he failed to land cleanly. He landed on his shinguards and slid, full speed into Lundqvist, the play was blown dead. Well the tv coverage (for lack of a better word) went to commercial, and I expected to see Parise in the sin bin when the game came back on. Well I was incorrect apparently. Parise was not penalized. Not only was he not sent to do penance for his sins, not one Ranger took it upon himself to distribute any justice for running into the franchise goaltender.

Soon after Brendan Shanahan, while trying to bull rush through a duo of Devil defensemen, while carrying the puck, took a stick to the forehead from Colin White. Again no penalty. No retribution either.

Now I understand that these occurances happened during a 0-0 hockey game where it seemed that one goal could/would win the game. But Come On. Somebody on the Rangers has to stick up for themselves and their teamates. Hell if that isn't what 2/3 of the fourth line isn't in the game for, than what in the hell are they doing in the lineup? This was fourth game in a row where an opponent has started to show that getting rough against the Rangers is something that can be effective and also can be gotten away with. I just hope the Rangers answer before an injury at the hands of an opponent is the result of this Charminism.

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

Ecstasy & Agony

Two words that could describe the Rangers last two performances. On Saturday afternoon, against the Ottawa Senators, the Blueshirts played possibly their best first 20 minutes of the season en route to building a 3-0 advantage after the first period.

Dan Girardi, Jaromir Jagr and, Brendan Shanahan all lit the lamp in the first period, with Jagr's goal coming on the Power Play. Shanahan also scored a Power Play goal in the second period on a beautiful deflection from the high slot off a feed from Martin Straka.

The first line was dominant in the Ottawa zone throughout the game, playing a puck possesion cycle with Brandon Dubinsky having a strong game. This made the third game in a row that the top line played like a top line. A mere coincidence that Straka returned and Marcel Hossa was moved down the lineup?

After the second Shanahan goal the Rangers seemed to let up a little bit, and the Senators seemed to awaken. The final score ended up being 5-2 with Blair Betts sealing the scoresheet with an empty net goal, his first goal of the season, off of a beautiful pass from Tom Corvo. Unfortunately for Corvo, who scored the first Senator goal, he was not given an assist on the play.

It was a big win for the Rangers. A win that they haven't had many of through the first quarter. A win against a first place team, A win against the Eastern Conference leader. All signs seemed to be pointing upwards for them. It was a game where they could all look around the locker room and say that they took two steps forward. Well, I don't think I need to say the next part of the cliche'. But I will. Because the next game on Monday night was exactly that, well, maybe not exactly, it might have even been two steps back.

Monday night the Rangers had a chance to come back to home ice on a high after a nice road win and put the exclamation point on it. A win against the Southeast Division leading Carolina Hurricanes could have done so.

If the first period on Saturday was the team's best, a frontrunner for the worst would have been Monday night's first frame. The Broadway boys came out slow, they came out flat, they came out unfocussed. And the 2-0 deficit at the end of the first certainly showed it. Marek Malik, playing in his first home game in a month due to a back injury lasted a good shift and a half without being booed for a bad turnover.

Brandon Dubinsky made bad plays that led to both of the 'Canes goals. Jagr looked like his head was still in Ottawa, if not his head than his legs.

For one night Henrik Lundqvist seemed to say, "Hey boys, I don't have it tonight to carry you on my back, how about you guys take this one?" And the rest of the team replied, "Huh". I can't recall a decent scoring chance from the entire game for the Rangers. So Cam Ward got a shutout that may be the easiest shutout I've ever seen.

The final score was 4-0, and I don't think there was a single positive to point out, other than Sean Avery seemed to have a good time up in the Heavenly Blues again. He's out at least another 2-4 weeks after undergoing Arthoscopic Surgery on his wrist.

As he was shown signing autographs up in the rafters I thought, wouldn't it be funny if the Rangers recalled 20 year old defenseman Ivan Baranka and had Malik sit out. Would Avery be able to take Malik on a tour of the blue seats, without a riot ensuing?

The Rangers face Darcy Tucker and the Toronto Maple Leafs on Thursday night and it's a shame we won't see Avery defend his home turf.