Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Off Season Dolldrums: Episode 2 - Free Agency

Today, we bring you a special guest appearance from Tony "Cappucino" Morash, he of Hingham High School fame.

July 5, 2009

The free agency period began on Wednesday afternoon with a bang for many teams, but the Boston Bruins were not among them. As of July 4, the Bruins had resigned Byron Bitz, Johnny Boychuk and Mark Recchi, and added a prior-Julien product in Steve Begin. Recchi is back for one last shot at the Cup, and as a veteran who knows what it takes to win it, Bruins fans can be buoyed by his choice to stay.

The Bitz signing gets a bit more complicated. While I don’t mind the choice—particularly because Bitz played very well in his final playoff games—I wonder if Peter Chiarelli thinks Bitz might be a more attractive trade piece now that he has been signed. The Bruins management has not been shy about the desire to add a strong, gifted defenseman to the mix (see Tomas Kaberle). Johnny Boychuk stands to be good, but on a one-year contract, the Bruins clearly aren’t sold on his long-term potential. Thus, a signed, sealed and delivered Bitz, as opposed to the rights to Bitz as a free agent, may be more likely to grease the wheels of a potential trade. Then again, it’s possible he is part of the Bruins long-term plans. Food for thought.

On to the puzzler. There is no doubt the Bruins were after some prized free agents in the early going, and also no doubt that the lack of cap space has hindered these efforts. Steve Begin was apparently the compromise. Begin played for Julien in Montreal, and made some very speculative comparisons of himself to Michael Ryder as a man who simply got a chance to play—and thus played better—under Coach Claude. The comparisons simply end there. Begin has never scored more than eleven goals in a professional season and, in ten NHL season, averages no fewer than 41 games per year. More importantly, Begin did not record a point nor a penalty minute in five playoff games this past season with Dallas, averaging about ten minutes of ice per game. His role is admittedly different than that of Ryder, but we should not hold our breath for the renaissance of Steve Begin.

Perhaps the Bruins management has seen the (*ahem*) sniper potential of Shawn Thornton and need a banger to replace him. Perhaps there won’t be an effort to re-sign a personal favorite in Stephane Yelle. Either way, it’s a bizarre fit for the Bruins. Begin will undoubtedly play the system well. But until he can stay healthy, put up consistent numbers, and help a club in the playoffs, I am decidedly skeptical.

Now on to the rest of the League, with the Winners and Losers of the first few weeks of the offseason:

Winners:

Chicago Blackhawks. The Blackhawks added a huge piece in snatching Marian Hossa away from the Red Wings. Granted, Hossa has become a perennial Finals loser, but his combination of skill and experience is an enormous upgrade to each player on the roster. So too will the veteran experience of acquired free agent John Madden help this young Blackhawks squad. The only negatives to be seen were in letting Sami Pahlsson slip away, and relinquishing Nikolai Khabibulin’s massive contract. While this freed up necessary cap space for Hossa’s contract, Cristobal Huet will have a firm load of a true Stanley Cup contender on his shoulders.

New York Islanders. No, the Islanders are not fit for the Cup Finals yet, and maybe not even the playoffs, but this team significantly upgraded over the last two weeks. The selections of John Tavares and Calvin de Haan with the number one and eleven picks in the draft give the team two excellent potential stars, one of whom (Tavares) could be ready for NHL action by training camp. Also, seemingly sick of the oft-plagued Rick DiPietro, GM Garth Snow opted to sign solid backstop Dwayne Roloson away from the Oilers. Roloson may simply be an insurance policy, but remember how well the tandem of Roloson and Manny Fernandez served in Minnesota, when both got plenty of rest and stayed healthy throughout the season. There is nothing more DiPietro needs at this point in his career.

Losers:

New York Rangers. But they signed Marian Gaborik, you say. And yes, this is true, and it was a tremendous coup at that. However, the Rangers are this year’s true loser because they have shown yet again that they simply do not have a game plan. This is a team that was downed in the playoffs by a lack of consistent goaltending and an enormous hole in the defensive core. The solution? Signing Gaborik and talented Avs forward Tyler Arnason, and trading for Kings prospect and Boston local Brian Boyle, who spent almost all of last season at forward for the Manchester Monarchs of the AHL. While plugging a hole left by the departure of woeful Nik Antropov, the Rangers have done nothing to address their needs as a contender, even swapping Scott Gomez for a left wing in Chris Higgins. The Rangers emerge from these past few weeks in no greater position than they were after game seven with the Capitals a few months ago. Inexcusable for a team with such potential.

Toss-up: Montreal Canadiens. The Canadiens were the busiest of teams on Day 1 of free agency, locking up several key players in Brian Gionta, Mike Cammalleri and Jaroslav Spacek, and dealing for Scott Gomez. While significantly upgrading at forward, the defensive corps is now anchored by Andrei Markov, Spacek and…Hal Gill. Every Bruins fan would surely find this funny, were not the largest woman on skates getting a day with Lord Stanley’s Cup this summer. Quite frankly, however, as long as Cary Price and Jaroslav Halak between them cannot figure out how to consistently keep pucks out of the net, the Habs remain a true enigma.

Final thoughts: Poor Jordan Leopold. He is a tremendous (though injury-plagued) young defenseman who is sought after by so many clubs that he is usually the centerpiece of a deal going the opposite way of a superstar. A very talented defenseman, he has signed with Florida as part of the Jay Bouwmeester trade.

Woe is Scott Clemmensen. He too will find his way to Miami to don the Panthers colors, his reward for virtually assuring the Devils a high seed in last years playoffs, only to be summarily seen off to the minors upon the return of Martin Brodeur. He is likely to start the season behind Tomas Vokoun, though he could very well play himself into a starting role.

Dany Heatley seems stuck in Ottawa for now. He’s tried to play games with GM Bryan Murray and Murray won’t have it. After declining to waive his no-trade clause on a deal that would have sent him to Edmonton, Heatley waited until a $4million bonus kicked in earlier this week. Murray subsequently said that he would make no deal since he would be paying the bonus, and Heatley seems stuck. Negotiations are apparently still ongoing, but surely the new package will have to include compensation for the $4million the knuckle-headed Heatley is owed by the Senators.

Steve Sullivan is true to the Nashville Gold and Blue. The veteran predator has signed a multi-year deal to stay on with the franchise, despite an almost-certain depth of interest for his services elsewhere around the league.

Finally, the Coyotes seem exceptionally concerned with their goaltending situation, indicating they feel the need to rebuild from the net out. With Ilya Bryzgalov still showing flashes of brilliance, but with no great consistency, the Coyotes pursued former Flyer Robert Esche. Esche declined the offer to remain in Russia, an indication of the true chaos in which the Coyotes find themselves. The backup replacement target was Jason LaBarbera, who signed this past week and, while starting the season with a bang, failed to show the fans in Los Angeles and Vancouver what all the hype was about. The entire showing did, indeed, show us the true state of the franchise. Are you ready for this, Hamilton?

Friday, June 26, 2009

Off Season Dolldrums: Episode 1 - Trade Rumors

Are you at all surprised that we haven't put anything in this space for the last month? Well, you shouldn't be. In fact, until the B's extended Krecji, I couldn't stomach reading about them. Now...I'm ready to start making the summer pass a bit quicker. Maybe a weekly post or something to keep the overwhelming masses at bay. All three of you.

Let's look at what's coming up...

The Bruins have some decisions to make in the next week. They have multiple RFA's (Kessel, Bitz to name two) who they will be tendering offers to and they have the draft this weekend. With the 25th overall pick, the Bruins are supposedly looking to move up. They certainly have chips to do so with guys like Kessel and Bergeron who they clearly haven't committed to long term (i dont care what Bergy's contract says...they aren't sold on him past Monday).

And now as I'm writing this i read the following from the Boston Globe:

"Boston's interest in acquiring Tomas Kaberle, reported here on Boston.com last night, took an interesting twist here today when TSN.ca's Bob McKenzie reported that the Bruins have offered Phil Kessel to the Leafs for Kaberle and the Leafs' seventh pick in tonight's NHL draft here at the Bell Center."

I texted my brother this news and he said "Maybe i'd jump on it for a 5th rounder". No Mike, not the 7th ROUND pick...the 7th OVERALL!

Kaberle is 31. He averages about 8 goals and 42 assists per season and is a career +43. He has two years remaining on a 5 year, $21.5 million deal he signed in February of 2006. Interesting to note that Kabrele and Ray Bourque have something in common...they are two of the four players to hit all four targets in just four shots in the skills competition at AllStar Weekend.

Interesting...More to come...

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

GNH: Bringing it back home...

Bergeron sparks B's
To another win; which brings
the series back home

Now we're right back where we left off last year. Storming back from a 3-1 series deficit against a bunch of clowns with red in their jerseys. Let's look for this year to turn out differently in game 7 as we're a far superior team to last year and maybe, just maybe, this video will be all too appropriate...


Monday, May 11, 2009

GNH: Bruins show signs of life...


Physical effort

Leads to much improved chances

and they're not dead yet



Monday, May 4, 2009

A flood of emotions

That was an intense sports weekend. I'm not gonna lie, i spent the entire weekend thinking about what to write in this space, or any other, for that matter. Landing on substantive analysis just didn't seem like something i could pull off. And then the Bruins went ahead and lost their first playoff game of the year...let's just say that didn't serve my emotional state well. Thankfully, i'm a blogger (allegedly) and i'm damn sure that restrictions on bloggers overtly displaying emotion as a means of release are non-existent. Let's face it, Simmons does it every time he writes.

I went from a dominant Bruins win in game 1 (sort of unexpectedly) accompanied by a few Jager shots to a wierd Kentucky Derby that made me smile ear to ear (don't ask, Calvin Borrel just does something wierd to me) and a great Celtics victory in Game 7 to last night. What happened last night anyway? I spent over $150 to watch Game 2 in a suite with the girlfriend, Caveman, Mr Friday Night and a number of new friends in the Boston Media who shall remain nameless for the time being. Then an ominous sign came: As I watched the first period, i noticed Glen Wesley in the suite next to us - wearing a nice red tie to emphasize his affiliation with the Hartford Whalers, er, 'Canes. At that point, as i became momentarily starstruck, i realized we were boned.

No way were we winning a game in which the Robin to Ray Bourque's batman shows up in the opponent's colors. Then to boot, Patrice Bergeron nearly broke a scoreless tie with a shot that flipped inches over the crossbar of an empty net...shades of Mr. Wesley himself from Game 1 of the 1990 Cup finals. I felt like Michael J Fox was suddenly calling the game in my head and it was only a matter of time before Peter Klima would break the city's collective heart.

Well, i was right. From the Bruins skating in mud, to bad decisions by Thomas and Chara, to a hot Cam Ward, we simply couldn't muster a meaningful shot from there on in and fell 3-0 in anticlimactic fashion.
Thankfully, this is not 1990. This is just one game. This is still the beginning. The Bruins will rebound and i'm pretty sure that no team has ever gone 16-0 through the playoffs - so you could say this was inevitable. (Dwight Howard is huge and i want him to die)
Right now, i know that Claude is hammering the Bruins for not being more aggressive and will have them coming out strong Wednesday night, but frankly i'm still pissed as hell at the showing they posted last night. Hopefully, the Bruins are composed. Like Mark Recchi said, "Never get too high, never get too low"

Monday, April 27, 2009

Timmy Receives Vezina Nomination


As expected, Tim Thomas was announced as a finalist for the Vezina, awarded to the league's top netminder.

The Awards are to be dished out on June 18th in Las Vegas. I've already laid out my argument for why Tim should and will win and you can read my debate with the Caveman about it, and other awards, here.

Sunday, April 26, 2009

Rangers, Penguins or Whalers?


Fun stuff coming out of these other series in the Eastern Conference. Just to bring everyone up to speed...
  • John Tortorella was suspended for game six of the series against Washington. This guy has gone full retard. There is no way you can take yourself out of a potential clinching game on account of squirting fans with a water bottle, throwing said water bottle at those same fans, and then trying to get at them with a hockey stick. Bravo, John. And this is the same guy who expects Sean Avery to act mature.
  • Oh, and Washington won 4-0 on Sunday in John's absence and now has all the momentum in the series.
  • The Whale is beating Dirty Jersey right now by a score of 4-0 late in the 3rd period so it's looking like a game seven there, too. This is awesome because if the Whale can pull it off, and the Caps win that means the B's get the Whale and not the Penguins. I hate the Penguins and I think they're beatable ... but if we can avoid them I'll take it. Plus I get to break out my Kevin Dineen jersey.
  • I shot a 113 today at Mount Hood in Melrose. I suck at Golf.