Hello, this is a feature that will run through the entire
season and aims to recap the weekend’s events and boils those events down to
one admittedly superficial fact or stupid opinion about each team. Feel free to
complain about it.
I was 100 percent on board with Mario
Lemieux’s statement about the Islanders’ suspensions. I really was. What
the Islanders did was disgusting
and has no place in hockey. I thought that they probably got off a little
easy, even with the $100,000 fine to the team. So as I was reading through it,
there was a lot of head nodding.
"Hockey
is a tough, physical game, and it always should be." Yes.
"But
what happened Friday night on Long Island wasn’t hockey. It was a
travesty." Yup.
"It
was painful to watch the game I love turn into a sideshow like that."
True.
These
points are irrefutable. Only the most loathsome of Islanders fans (and believe
me, they exist) would actually say that this was all part of the game and a
team coming together.
Mario
continues: "The NHL had a chance to send a clear and strong message that
those kinds of actions are unacceptable and embarrassing to the sport. It
failed." Agreed again.
The NHL really needed to be far harsher with EVERYONE
involved, especially minor league thug Michael Haley, who got off with no
punishment at all for his role in escalating the matter unnecessarily.
Frankly, I think both Jack Capuano (and maybe even Garth
Snow) should have been disciplined more heavily by the league as well. Much of
the hate-fest on Long Island was ratcheted up by their giving Haley a call-up
and a dozen shifts or so. That they voiced no concerns about their teams’
actions, and even supported them — evidenced by Snow’s
repugnant presser on the matter, especially the part where he says the
Islanders "showed restraint" — exhibits an appalling lack of
compunction for what was in no uncertain terms a bad day for hockey.
But then Mario started to go a little overboard when talking
about what needs to be done about this.
(Coming Up: Avs coach on the hot seat; Modano’s
return; Michael Grabner is incredible; Kopitar finally scored a goal; Marian
Hossa is MIA; Braydon Coburn schools Jeff Skinner; Bruins care not about the
Kampfer family; nastiness in the Panthers’ system; Cam Fowler’s brilliant
game-winner; the importance of being Tobias Enstrom; Alex Ovechkin smells; David
Backes bleeds Joffrey Lupul is a hypocrite; Roberto Luongo saves everything;
and an absurd Rangers trade proposal.)
"We,
as a league, must do a better job of protecting the integrity of the game and
the safety of our players," he said. "We must make it clear that
those kinds of actions will not be tolerated and will be met with meaningful
disciplinary action."
And
he is of course correct. Even ignoring the Matt Cooke-shaped elephant in the
room (no small task), the League does need to stiffen punishment for most
infractions, because forfeiting a few thousand dollars and a couple games
clearly doesn’t serve as much of a deterrent in most cases.
But
really, how much more can be done, realistically? Precedents have been set, in
previous cases and now here as well. Next time this happens, likely in the
distant future, there will already be baselines in place. Nine games for
actions like Gillies’, four for Martin’s. That’s how it is.
The
last line, though, is where he lost me. It makes him look like an absolute infant.
"If
the events relating to Friday night reflect the state of the league, I need to
re-think whether I want to be a part of it," he positively whined.
Well
that’s just gross. I’ve seen it espoused that Mario’s choosing to speak out
lends additional gravity to the message, and makes it worth listening to.
Why?
Because he’s earned that level of respect? Please.
If Lemieux is going to resort to threatening to take-his-puck-and-go-home,
then he’s invalidating what should be an incredibly easily-won argument, and
forfeiting what respect he’s owed. It’s a tactic that worked for him in the
past with the whole "garage league" quote. But that’s what children do when
they’re not getting what they want.
You can bet this method, boo-hooism though it may be, carries
a lot of cachet down at the head offices. Can’t have the owner of one of the
league’s most prominent franchises, who happens to be the second-best player to
ever play the game, lying down in a toy store aisle, kicking and screaming that
Bettman and Campbell won’t buy him all the Ninja Turtles.
I know it’s not the best example, because it would have been
none of his business, but if this had been Mario choosing to come out after a
similar incident between the Islanders and Blue Jackets, that would have been
something worth listening to and respecting. But because it’s his team, that
dulls the force of his supposed convictions, and that he threw in the petulant
temper tantrum at the end in sickeningly self-serving.
If we’re to believe that we should consider this
proclamation from Mario important because he almost never speaks out, then it
stands to reason that, as a whole, the NHL would suffer little if he were no
longer part of it. We haven’t heard a word from Bobby Orr in forever. Until his
50th birthday last month, we hadn’t heard much from Gretzky since he got run
out of Phoenix. Nonetheless, the league seems to be doing just fine overall.
It would probably do KO without another owner who whines
when things don’t go his way.
What We Learned
Anaheim Ducks: What
a great goal by Cam Fowler in OT on Friday night.
How did all those teams pass on this kid?
Atlanta Thrashers:
Toby Enstrom came
back over the weekend. The Thrashers went 1-4-1 without him in the lineup
and Dustin Byfuglien had one point without him on the opposite point. Neither
is a coincidence.
Boston Bruins: Michigan
native Steve Kampfer bought tickets for about 50 family and friends to come see
him play at Joe Louis Arena yesterday. Then
he was a healthy scratch.
Buffalo Sabres:
Lindy Ruff is now the third-longest tenured coach in North American sports, behind only Tony LaRussa and Gregg Popovich.
He is also first on the list of guys I can’t believe still have a job after 14
freaking years.
Calgary Flames: The
Flames lost
to the Canucks 4-2 on Saturday, making it the first time they’d lost in regulation
in 10 games. I honestly can’t believe that streak happened. Even Olli Jokinen
played well during it.
Carolina Hurricanes:
Cousins Brett and Brandon Sutter are now both
playing for the Hurricanes. THEY SHOULD SWAP JERSEYS JUST TO CONFUSE
EVERYONE.
Chicago Blackhawks:
Marian Hossa really
needs to get going here. Just one assist in the last four games and he’s
missed a bunch of time to injury this year. Good thing he’s signed up through
2021. I like three-quarters forgot about that and holy hell. He’s already 32.
Oh man.
Colorado Avalanche:
Joe Sacco is on
Adrian Dater’s hot seat. That is, until he starts playing Peter Forsberg 45
minutes a night. Then he’ll be the best coach ever.
Columbus Blue Jackets:
On Feb. 3, the Blue Jackets recalled D prospect John Moore. He’s
played in one game. Why keep him up?
Dallas Stars: The
Cup push begins with this Jason Williams signing. Yessir.
Detroit
Red Wings: Mike Modano will probably be back later this month, perhaps against the Dallas Stars of all teams. Maybe
afterwards he can come out in their jersey, skate around a little bit, then
sign somewhere else at the end of the year.
Edmonton
Oilers: You know how you know when
you’re a bad hockey team? You lose to the Senators. The Oilers dropping a 5-3 decision gave Ottawa its
first win in 13 games. Not to be outdone though, Nikolai Khabibulin lost his
14th in a row. It was Brian Elliot’s first win since late December. These are
two atrocious teams right here.
Florida Panthers:
I don’t know how a business arrangement between two professional sports teams
can get too ugly, but the
partnership between the Panthers and Rochester Americans is really, really,
realllllllly ugly.
Los Angeles Kings:
Anze Kopitar scored against the Capitals on Saturday, giving him a
goal for the first time in 11 games. The Kings are 12-3-0 when he scores,
and 18-19-3 when he does not. So I think this means Terry Murray’s gonna want
more goals out of the guy.
Minnesota Wild: Clayton
Stoner picked up the ignominious task of fighting David Backes, and made the
Inglourious one bleed his own blood. No small feat, that one.
Montreal Canadiens:
David Desharnais has looked
really good lately, with 11 points in 18 games (six in his last three) and
the first star against Toronto on Saturday. Not bad for a guy who was in the
ECHL as recently as 2008.
Nashville Predators:
It’s
official: the Predators love Mike Fisher. Picked up an assist on the game’s
empty-netter and won a ton of draws. Now they might even win a few playoff
games.
New Jersey Devils:
After Friday’s 2-1 win over surging San Jose, Jacques Lemaire is eighth on the
all-time coaching wins list with a
whopping 601, only four back of Ron Wilson. And oddly you don’t hear him
bring that up any time someone even makes the slightest move to perhaps
question a decision he made.
New York Islanders:
Can we talk for a minute about how great Michael Grabner has been for the
Isles? Here’s a guy the
Canucks traded as a throw-in for Keith Ballard, and who the Panthers simply
let walk. Now he’s pretty much the second-best player on the Islanders this
season with 24 goals, on pace for an easy 30.
New York Rangers:
This is gonna shock you — Sean Avery doesn’t
get calls from officials. I’ll give you a moment now to collect yourselves.
Ottawa Senators: Mike
Fisher did the classy things many athletes do when they leave a city. He took
out an ad in the Ottawa Citizen thanking the fans for their support. I
didn’t see the ad, so I don’t know whether he thanked Bryan Murray for getting
him the hell off the Senators.
Philadelphia Flyers:
Textbook work by Braydon Coburn to get in little Jeff Skinner’s kitchen. Two
big clean collisions and he draws a penalty from the kid.
That ruled.
Phoenix Coyotes: Radim
Vrbata scored
against the Blackhawks on Saturday and added the game’s only shootout goal
after regulation. Shockingly, that makes four in his last three games and five
in his last six. Where did that come from?
Pittsburgh Penguins:
No one is very
sure just how bad Eric Tangradi’s head injury is after that disgusting
cheapshot by Trevor Gillies. Just terrible.
San Jose Sharks: It’s
interesting that on the Sharks’ recent 9-0-1 run, their
special teams barely improved at all. Power play jumped from 22.2 to 22.4,
and the PK went from 81.8 to 81.9. But what does that tell you? Better
five-on-five play, which is more important than anything.
St.
Louis Blues: The Blues are 4-9-4 in their last 17 games, and were eight points out of the playoffs after
their loss to Minnesota on Saturday. They, too, are clearly distraught over the
ongoing Albert Pujols situation.
Tampa Bay Lightning:
The good news for the Bolts is that Ryan Malone doesn’t
need abdominal surgery. The bad news is that he’s still out six or eight
weeks.
Toronto Maple Leafs:
Joffrey Lupul is the latest to pile onto the PK Subban is a Jerk Who Doesn’t
Respect the Game bandwagon. The Brash Young Defenseman didn’t
take his visor off before their fight. Left unmentioned is that in all of Lupul’s previous NHL
fights, he kept his windshield firmly in place as well. All aboard anyway!
Toot toot.
Vancouver Canucks:
Holy hell, Roberto Luongo hasn’t
lost in regulation since Dec. 5. He’s 16-0-5 in that stretch with a .933
save percentage and a 2.04 GAA. That is just absurd.
Washington Capitals:
Alex Ovechkin smells.
That’s all.
Gold Star Award
As mentioned above, Michael Grabner is pretty good. He had five
goals, including a hat trick, and an assist in two games between Friday and
Sunday.
Minus of the Weekend
Brent Johnson not only gave up seven to the Islanders, but
by coming out of his crease to exchange words with that idiot Michael Haley, he
escalated an already absurd situation and is part of the reason Eric Godard got
suspended for 10 games.
Play of the Weekend
Skip to about 1:30 in on this video to see the Bolts blow a
two-goal lead inside 52 seconds to go. Tampa won in OT but this Carolina
comeback was pretty cool.
Perfect HFBoards trade proposal of the week
User "Zuccarello Awesome" wants to mix things up.
To
Carolina: Gaborik, Staal, Anisimov, Del Zotto, 2ndTo
New York: Skinner, Ruutu, Pitkanen, McBain
Yup,
that is a proposal alright.
Signoff
I’m
not greedy. As long as I’ve got my health, my millions of dollars, my gold
house, and my rocket car, I don’t need anything else.
Ryan Lambert publishes
hockey awesomeness rather infrequently over at The Two-Line Pass. Check it out, why
don’t you? Or you can e-mail him here
and follow him on Twitter if you
so desire.
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