1.31.2008

All about the "O"

THIS is why he got a $124 million contract extension!

This also is why there’s playoff chatter in the Beltway.

Anyone who didn’t know the name Alexander Ovechkin before this weekend certainly now knows who he is – quite possibly the face of the NHL.

During Saturday’s SuperSkills competition during All-Star weekend in Atlanta, he was the showboat, bouncing the puck on his stick like he was playing hurley before trying to the bat the puck past the goaltender.

His attempt to emulate Washington Nationals star Dmitri Young failed. Then again, it’s a safe bet Young could never do on skates what Ovechkin has done recently either.

Ovechkin, the league’s leading goal scorer with 39 heading into the break, scored twice in the first period for the Eastern Conference in their 8-7 All-Star win over the West on Sunday. He and the rest of the Washington Capitals were blanked in Tuesday as regular-season play resumed.

But Ovechkin more than made up for that on Thursday despite a broken nose – his fourth goal and career high-tying fifth point lifted the Caps to a 5-4 overtime win over the Montreal Canadiens.

"Today was a special day," Ovechkin said with a smile. "I broke my nose, have stitches (and) score four goals. Everything (went) to my face."

In just two-plus seasons, Ovechkin already is 14th on the Caps’ all-time goal scoring list with 141, having passed Dmitri Khristich on Thursday. Nine more goals will move Alexander The Great past Sergei Gonchar, Steve Konowalchuk and Kevin Hatcher.

Perhaps justifiably so, the NHL has been shoving the Pittsburgh Penguins’Sidney Crosby down our throats. The reigning Hart and Vezina Trophy winner has been anointed the face of the league as it continues to recover from a lockout that burned off the 2004-05 season.

It may simply be that the league is more comfortable with a Canadian at the forefront of its marketing efforts. Ovechkin is shown during commercials for the league’s “Live Every Shift” campaign, saying “is this the year” in his native Russian, but taking a back seat to Crosby, Ryan Miller of the Buffalo Sabres and Eric Staal of the Carolina Hurricanes.

Ovechkin also was in the commercial for the NHL08 video game, but don’t be mistaken: that was not him warbling Rockwell’s “Somebody’s Watching Me.”

While Crosby recovers from high ankle sprain that could easily keep him out another month, Ovechkin would be wise to use this time to keep carrying the Caps on his back. Washington was 6-14-1 when Bruce Boudreau replaced Glen Hanlon behind the bench, and Ovechkin has responded with 29 goals and 18 assists in 31 games.

That surge has pushed the Caps into playoff contention.

It’s also signaled that there may be a new face of the NHL.

THREE STARS OF THE NIGHT, JAN. 31

1. Alexander Ovechkin, Washington Capitals: A surprise to no one. His fourth goal and fifth point of the game 3:34 into overtime lifted the Caps to a 5-4 win over the Montreal Canadiens for a split of their home-and-home series. In 52 games, Ovechkin has 43 goals – three short of his total in 82 games last season, and 10 shy of a new career high (he had 52 as a rookie in 2005-06.)

2. Stephen Valiquette, New York Rangers: The backup to Henrik Lundqvist made 20 saves for his first NHL shutout in a 4-0 win over the Philadelphia Flyers. Valiquette's effort helped New York snap a five-game road losing streak while extending its winning streak at the Wachovia Center to six.

3. J.P. Dumont, Nashville Predators: Dumont extended his points streak to 16 games -- the league's longest this season -- with two assists in a 4-2 win over the Columbus Blue Jackets. Nearly half of Dumont’s 43 points this season have come during this run, in which he has eight goals and 14 assists.

1.30.2008

S-t-r-e-t-c-h run

In my best Andy Rooney voice: "You know what I hate? Calling the remainder of the NHL season after the All-Star break the 'second half of the season.'"

In an 82-game schedule, the halfway point is 41 games, but heading into play on Wednesday, no team has played fewer than 49.

OK -- rant over.

Now that the festivities in Atlanta are done, the league can get back to another stretch run for the postseason. In the East, the New York Islanders and New York Rangers each have 54 points to tie for the eighth and final playoff spot with the Isles having a game in hand. Only nine points separate the conference cellar-dwelling Tampa Bay Lightning from the sneaking into the postseason.

Out West, it's an even better race: just 13 points separate the fourth-place Dallas Stars from the Chicago Blackhawks, who are in 14th place. Three teams -- the Phoenix Coyotes, Colorado Avalanche and Columbus Blue Jackets -- are tied for the eighth and final spot with 56 points, and the Nashville Predators are just one point in back of that logjam.

The only team that could be playing out the string, not shockingly, is the Los Angeles Kings, who have 43 points. Quick fix: fire coach Marc Crawford, make a deal for goaltender Ray Emery of the Ottawa Senators.

THREE STARS OF THE NIGHT, JAN. 29

1. Evgeni Nabokov, San Jose Sharks: In his first action after the All-Star Game, Nabokov needed to make just 13 saves for his sixth shutout this season, 3-0 over the Edmonton Oilers. In Atlanta on Sunday, Nabokov stopped all eight shots he faced in his one period of play, becoming the first goalie to blank the opposition in an ASG since Nikolai Khabibulin in 2002.

2. Peter Mueller, Phoenix Coyotes: The eighth overall pick in last season's draft scored twice in the Coyotes' 4-2 win over the Blue Jackets. With 15 goals, Mueller is tied with Jonathan Toews of the Blackhawks for the most this season among rookies.

3. Cristobal Huet, Montreal Canadiens: Huet stopped 35 shots -- including four from All-Star sniper Alexander Ovechkin -- in a 4-0 victory over the Washington Capitals. It was Huet's second shutout of the season, matching his total from last season, and he likely will be in net again Thursday when the Habs and Caps complete a home-and-home set at the Verizon Center. Huet also needs one win to match his career high set last season.

1.24.2008

Rocky Mountain High

Lifeless. Disinterested. Dull.

No, those words do not describe my two-plus day visit to Denver by any means, but it certainly described how poorly the Colorado Avalanche played in a 4-0 loss to the Nashville Predators on Tuesday night.

First, the visit itself. I like Denver very much … it’s almost the same kind of love affair I had with Minneapolis in the mid-80s and early 90s. I spent much of the time this trip with a former co-worker from New York who’s now at the Denver Post, and though she’s been in Colorado for some three years now, this was her first Avs game.

From the airport, we had dinner at a funky Mexican restaurant called LOLA followed by a visit to the Tattered Cover bookstore and Twist & Shout record shop. It’s hard for me to resist a bookstore, chain or independent – though I should spend more at the latter so the former doesn’t gobble all of them up.

Tuesday started off by discussing the world over specials at The Breakfast King, a diner where the waitress said she would be watching me to make sure I ate all my food.

“We don’t do small here,” she said, wearing what looked like a nurse’s white uniform with an orange apron.

Amen to that. The special was:

    Coffee. Not Starbucks or Dunkin’, but still really good! (I had three cups – about the size of the one extra-large I am used to getting.)
    A small tumbler of pineapple juice.
    Two hard-fried eggs.
    Hash browns – crispy, some burnt edges, but no peppers, onions and not soggy (add a little salt, and to quote Martha, “This is a good thing.”)
    Four strips of bacon, cooked perfectly – so much for the pig.
    Two pancakes, each roughly the diameter of a small dinner plate.
Aside from the drinks, I ate the eggs, half the hash browns, two strips of bacon and not quite one of the pancakes. Carb coma set in shortly after.

From there, we headed to South Broadway – another funky area with a bunch of used bookstores, and the like. For 2 1/2 hours, we wandered through several of these shops (with Angie buying enough to stock a small publishing house, it seemed, including a sweet, old oversized book on baseball for $12.50!)

In one shop, I found a book produced almost 40 years ago about hockey – kind of a historical thing, with a shot on the front cover of the Chicago Blackhawks’ Bobby Hull trying to stickhandle around and unidentified member of the New York Rangers while being pursued by Brad Park.

“The Golden Jet” even lent a blurb to the back cover: “Super!” he said of this tome. I passed. I regret.

In another of the shops, they had old maps and travel brochures, including one from the ‘50s showing you how to get away to Havana. Seemed like a pretty happening place, pre-Fidel. I also found a bunch of old Smithsonian Travel Guides to America – heavyweight, glossy trade paperbacks with really amazing photos. One of these depicted the Plains States: North and South Dakota, Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska and Missouri,

As a former resident of Southwest Missouri, I felt the need to look up what they found so interesting in Joplin. No pictures, a lot about the history of zinc ore, or ‘jack’ as it was called, hence “The Town That Jack Built.”

Nothing about the meth trade, there, though, Pity, really, because that’s what it’s probably best known for now.

More coffee at a shop called Mutiny Now, where there was a bookstore worker/barista roughly 55 and sporting a ducktail this guy would have proud of. That may have been the best coffee I had here, though!

Then there was the candy/appliance shop. I wasn’t looking for a second-hand washer, but the candy took you back: Pop Rocks … Chick-O-Stick … Sugar Daddies, sadly though, no Sugar Babies … Teaberry gum … Adams Sour Apple and Cherry gum … Jolly Rancher sticks.

Amazing the memories these bring back. In the 1970s, near my old elementary school, there was a guy who used to sell candy out of the back of a beat-up, brown station wagon. Today, there is no way this would happen, but then it was a simpler time, and when you needed a sugar fix, you knew where to go.

The smell of the Adams gum … when I was a kid, riding with my father toward the Queensboro Bridge on Sunday nights, bringing my Aunt Rose back into the city … passing by the factory where they made this stuff. Now, I had no idea if gum was being produced 24-7-365, but it seemed whenever you passed that building, the air smelled sweeter.

From the candy shop, off to get Angie’s VW washed and then over the Pepsi Center. We were there early enough to have to wait for them to open the front doors and start letting us in. Spoke with a man from Pueblo was where there with his son and twin daughters. Wife didn’t make the trip, probably happier at home with the dog, he said.

Following more coffee at the game, we wandered downtown some more to a bar/vegetarian restaurant called City ‘O City. Over a pesto plate (I nibbled on some pita bread with a little hummus, feta and cup a Mint Gunpowder tea), we played Scrabble – Chicago versus Denver.

295-193. No 7-letter bingos, but I was pretty proud of “veering.”

It was nice to get away from my job for a couple days, and after losing touch with Angie for almost eight years up until reconnecting through Facebook some five months ago, it was great seeing her again.

As for the hockey game … it would be easy for Colorado to point to injuries as an explanation why they’re struggling to score. Joe Sakic – and his 1,600-plus career points – had hernia surgery, and not expected back until late next month. Underachieving Ryan Smyth, whom the Avs shelled out $31.25 million for five years, is gone with a broken ankle and probably not coming back until early next month. Paul Stastny was headed to next week’s All-Star Game in Atlanta, but his appendix had something to say about that.

The Avs started quick, though, firing a flurry of quality shots early at rookie goaltender Dan Ellis. A couple of glove saves had me thinking this was going to be a long night in Colorado.

Ellis made 38 saves en route to his fourth shutout, which now makes me ask why isn’t he starting ahead of Chris Mason? Mason inherited the starting job with Tomas Vokoun was traded to the Florida Panthers. but Ellis has looked good when he’s had the chance to play.

Could Mason be on the move then? It wouldn’t be a surprise to me if his $3 million annual salary was shipped to someplace like Los Angeles, Tampa Bay or Washington by next month’s trading deadline. Available starting goaltenders are few and far between.

The question for the Predators would be their comfort level with Ellis and Pekka Rinne from the Milwaukee Admirals if they were to deal Mason. Considering the Preds are currently two points out of a playoff spot, the new ownership group that has pledged to keep the team in Tennessee may not feel comfortable with that.

"I know my role and I like it," said Ellis, who recorded his 11th win. "I'm comfortable making starts after Chris has played the night before and I feel good playing after not playing for several days."

Colorado kept it close, trailing only 1-0 after two periods, but Nashville beat Jose Theodore three times in the first six minutes of the third period. Martin Erat sandwiched goals around one by Alexander Radulov.

Poorly as the Avalanche played in spite of the number of shots on goal, they seemed to be going through the motions. Perhaps this game was just a glitch in an otherwise good bounceback season for the Avs – their 17-7-1 home record is second best in the league behind the Detroit Red Wings.

In 2006-07, Colorado missed the playoffs for the first time since 1993-94 when they were still in Quebec.

But heading into play Thursday night, Joel Quennevile’s club is one of four teams in the Northwest Division separated by two points. That’s also the difference between being among the top three in the Western Conference and eighth, where they are now. A slump could drop Colorado into 14th in the West – Edmonton is there now with 49 points.

On Wednesday morning, there was one more restaurant before the drive to the airport: Zaidy’s Deli. I had a breakfast of potatoes, mushrooms, onions and bits of corned beef with sourdough toast and coffee, while Angie tucked into challah French toast with bananas – delicious!

The only bad thing about the trip was leaving. Not just saying good-bye to Denver for now, but taking off. A one-hour delay before boarding (thank God for the free Wi-fi at DIA), a 45-minute wait at the gate on followed by a short delay in a holding pattern over Chicago due to light snow and about 14-degree temperature that was dropping with each minute it seemed.

All things considered … I should do this more often. I need to.

1.20.2008

Walking wounded

OK .. I haven't slept yet, I need to do laundry and hit the gym one more time (because the elliptical and the iPod are mah friends) before flying to Denver for three days on Monday.

Quickly -- the last thing the NHL needed, I'm sure, was an All-Star weekend without one superstar and another in waiting.

Reigning Hart and Art Ross Trophy winner Sidney Crosby of the Pittsburgh Penguins suffered a high ankle sprain Friday night in a 3-0 loss to the Tampa Bay Lightning. Unlike a traditional sprained ankle, this affects the ligaments that connect the bones in the lower leg. It also can take a month or more to heal -- Maxime Talbot and Marc-Andre Fleury can attest to that.

Jonathan Toews of the Chicago Blackhawks got off to a quick start with 15 goals and 17 assists. But the third overall pick in the 2006 NHL draft has been sidelined since Jan. 2 with a sprained knee, and is still probably about two weeks away from returning.

Toews was selected to play in the YoungStars Game to showcase the league's star first-year players. Teammate Patrick Kane, the favorite to win the Calder Trophy, will be playing.

One more thing -- the Food Network on Sunday mornings is almost as good as porn: Nigella Lawson. Giada de Laurentiis. Rachel Ray. Yum.

Now then ...

THREE STARS OF THE NIGHT, JAN. 19

1. Johan Holmqvist, Tampa Bay Lightning: Holmqvist made 25 saves en route to his second straight shutout, leading the Lighting to a 2-0 win over the Ottawa Senators. Holmqvist hasn't given up a goal in more than 121 minutes.

2. Scott Hartnell, Philadelphia Flyers: Hartnell certainly loves playing in New York -- he recorded his second hat trick this month there in the Flyers' 5-3 win over the Islanders. On Jan. 10, Hartnell scored three goals in a win over the New York Rangers at Madison Square Garden.

3. Scott Nichol, Nashville Predators: Nichol scored two short-handed goals as the Predators tallied three times in the second period of a 5-2 win over the St. Louis Blues. Of Nichol's 34 career goals since 2001-02, six have been short-handed.

1.16.2008

Hossa headed back to Senators?

Here's something to consider.

With Dany Heatley expected to miss up to six weeks with a shoulder injury, the Ottawa Senators may be looking for someone to step in to that high-powered offense.

Someone familiar with the team and their philosophies. Someone like, say, Marian Hossa.

Hossa registered a natural hat trick on Tuesday night in Atlanta's 5-1 rout of the league-leading Detroit Red Wings. After setting career highs with 43 goals and 57 assists last season, Hossa has 19 and 23 through 44 games.

With the trading deadline coming up on Feb. 26, it's not a stretch to think that Hossa could be headed back to Canada's capital city. Hossa's three-year, $18 million contract -- signed in 2005 when he was acquired for Heatley, who wanted to leave the Atlanta Thrashers after causing the 2003 death of teammate Dan Snyder in an alcohol-related car crash -- expires after this season.

Selected 12th overall by the Senators in the 1997 NHL draft, Hossa still ranks third on the franchise's all-time list with 188 goals, sixth with 202 assists and fifth with 390 points.

Heading into play on Wednesday, the Senators lead the Eastern Conference with 62 points and their 157 goals scored are second only to the Red Wings.

THREE STARS OF THE NIGHT, JAN. 16

1. Henrik Lundqvist, New York Rangers: Lundqvist made 23 saves for his 20th win in the Rangers' 2-1 triumph over the Buffalo Sabres, who have dropped 10 in a row. Lundqvist, now in his third season, needs seven more wins to move past John Davidson for eighth on the franchise's all-time list.

2. Bill Guerin, New York Islanders: Guerin scored twice in a 3-1 victory, the Islanders' sixth straight over the New Jersey Devils dating back to last season. Guerin was the Devils' first-round selection in the 1989 NHL draft.

3. Patrick Kane and Jack Skille, Chicago Blackhawks: Rookie Kane scored twice and fellow first-year player Skille had a goal and assist in the Blackhawks' 6-1 win over the St. Louis Blues.

THREE STARS OF THE NIGHT, JAN. 15

1. Jose Theodore, Colorado Avalanche: Theodore made 22 of his 32 saves in the third period of a 3-0 win over the Tampa Bay Lightning -- his first shutout since 2004.

2. Scott Niedermayer, Anaheim Ducks: The reigning Conn Smythe Trophy winner posted a goal and two assists as the Ducks beat the Dallas Stars 4-2 for their fourth straight win overall and seventh in a row at home. Niedermayer has recorded six of his 11 points during his abbreviated season during a four-game points streak.

3. Ed Jovanovski, Phoenix Coyotes: The All-Star defenseman had a goal and three assists in a 5-3 win over the San Jose Sharks.

1.14.2008

Just playing catch-up

After a Sunday of football upsets, it's time to catch up from the weekend ...

THREE STARS OF THE NIGHT, JAN. 12

1. Rostislav Klesla and Nikolai Zherdev, Columbus Blue Jackets: Klesla scored the tying goal midway through the third period and Zherdev scored the only goal in the shootout as Columbus beat Nashville 2-1, snapping a 12-game losing streak to the Predators.

2. Mark Recchi, Atlanta Thrashers: Who says revenge isn’t sweet? Recchi scored the lone shootout goal in the Thrashers’ 2-1 win over the Pittsburgh, snapping the Penguins’ eight-game winning streak. Recchi, now in his 19th season, was acquired by Atlanta off waivers from Pittsburgh in November.

3. Joe Pavelski, San Jose Sharks: Pavelski’s goal with less than 10 minutes to play capped a three-goal third period and helped the Sharks rally for a 3-2 win over the Toronto Maple Leafs. The victory helped San Jose earn seven of a possible eight points on a four-game homestand.

THREE STARS OF THE NIGHT, JAN. 13

1. Patrick Sharp, Chicago Blackhawks: Sharp continued his breakout season by scoring his 22nd goal in regulation, then adding one in a shootout to help Chicago beat the Nashville Predators 3-2, and halt an eight-game skid.

2. Doug Weight and Francois Beauchemin, Anaheim Ducks: Weight tied the score with 28 seconds to play in regulation and Beauchemin tallied the game-winner 33 seconds into overtime of the Ducks’ 4-3 win over the San Jose Sharks.


3. Marc-Andre Bergeron, New York Islanders: Bergeron’s second goal of the game 4:36 into the third period proved to be the game winner as the Isles topped the Ottawa Senators 3-1. The Isles had six losses and a tie in their last seven visits to Scotiabank Place.