Everything Else

250px-Ozymandias vs. 15452729736_ffba7f9e29_b

PUCK DROP: 6:30pm Central

TV/RADIO: CSN for the locals, NBCSN for the outer rim, WGN Radio

THE QUEBECOIS: Habs Eyes On The Prize

Habs Stats

Habs War On Ice

The Hawks will take their scorching performance art piece on the road the next two nights, and into the cradle of hockey. If you don’t believe it is, just ask the citizens of Montreal and Toronto. It’s an Original 6 week for the Hawks. What they’ll find when they get to “The Keg” is a team and fanbase that’s been pulling it’s hair out for so long and so aggressively parts of their brain are flicking out of their scalps. No one does panic quite like the Canadiens.

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From last night’s editorial in the C.I. 

You probably didn’t see it, because you were watching the Hawks on Sunday. But Alex Ovechkin’s 500th goal was a pretty cool moment. I can’t remember a time when the whole team spilled off the bench to celebrate a goal like that, but the Caps did for Ovi. It didn’t feel scripted at all. Just totally on impulse, they were so excited they had to be out on the ice.

It has to be some sort of vindication for Ovechkin, who has gone through more bullshit than a player of his quality should ever have to. Think about it, Ovi was the fifth fastest player to reach 500 goals. He was behind Gretzky, Lemieux, Bossy, and Brett Hull. Now think about the time those guys played in, the late 70s and 80s and early 90s. To think that Ovechkin has joined them… in some ways if you rate it we’re basically watching the best goalscorer of all-time, at least in relation to the era he played in.

Ovechkin, as was pointed out to me by McClure, has averaged the most shots-on-goal per game in history. Again, this is in an era where blocked shots are not just the norm but expected. Every team struggles to get shots, and Ovi does it with ease game after game, year after year. He just has a way of getting the puck through from whatever angle, and it’s almost always a dangerous shot due to its venom and his release. Certainly there’s no one out there playing the game in the way Ovi does.

But instead of cherishing what we have here, Ovi has had media and coaches for years tell him what he can’t do and what’s wrong with him. He didn’t backcheck hard enough. He didn’t want it bad enough. He only scores goals. This or that. Here we have at least the most unique scorer in the game today, and it’s always about what he’s not.

Have I been guilty of it? Sure have. Sometimes you fall into the noise. I criticized his sometimes one-way approach. Or that there wasn’t enough variance to his game. Sometimes I laughed at the backchecking GIFs you’d find on the internet (the one with the Xbox controller breaking is a personal favorite). I lost sight of what it is he does do, and how no one else is doing it or no one before has done it in quite the same way. You live and learn, I guess.

I wonder if that would be happening if he weren’t Russian. Phil Kessel would probably suggest it still would be, and maybe that’s true. It feels like hockey has the most instances where a coach tries to make his mark by going to war with the team’s best player. You just saw Tortorella chasing Ryan Johansen off to Nashville from the moment he showed up in Ohio. Somehow the coach always knows better, at least the bad ones do.

Sure, everyone points to Scotty Bowman changing Steve Yzerman’s game, though people forget the Wings actually traded Yzerman to Ottawa before a last minute nixing of the trade. And at the point that Yzerman was asked to change, he was in the later stages of his career and Sergei Fedorov had kind of passed him as the best player on the Wings.

Ovi has been fucked with in the prime of his career. It feels like he could have been even more if Adam Oates had a clue or Bruce Boudreau didn’t lose his mind.

The thing about Ovi is the joy has almost always been evident in his game. He looks like he just loves being on the ice, because he does. Crosby has sometimes looked that the game is a burden to him. Sometimes it’s the same with Toews. Ovi has always had that exuberance. How can you not be drawn in by that?

Does that exuberance get the best of him sometimes? Sure, he’s been guilty of some spotty hits in his career. Been too much in a hurry to assert himself physically, whether it was some misguided attempt to lead as captain or to bow to the pressure of being “a presence.” But I don’t know that I think of Ovi as a dirty player, certainly not in the same way I see the cheap shit Malkin and Crosby pull constantly.

Now, Ovi is the best player on the best team in the league, once again. And there he was capping 500 goals, which won’t be anywhere close to his career-ending totals. There was definitely catharsis in that moment. If the Hawks can’t do it again, I think I’d like to see Ovi get his. Maybe then all the narrative crap will stop. Though I doubt it.

I don’t know if it’ll be the same outpouring for Hossa when he gets there. He’s never been through that here in Chicago, where he’s basically always been appreciated. It’ll be more affirmation for Hossa. And that will be cool to see too. There was just more to it with Ovechkin. I hope we all appreciate what he’s doing.

Everything Else

Jan 12, 2016; Chicago, IL, USA; Chicago Blackhawks goalie Corey Crawford (50) makes a save during the third period against the Nashville Predators at the United Center. Chicago won 3-2. Mandatory Credit: Dennis Wierzbicki-USA TODAY Sports

Box Score

Event Summary

War on Ice 

Natural Stat Trick

The Nashville Predators rolled their stinkwagon into town for a divisional matchup. They and their “All-Star” goaltender Pekka “Shit Hip” Rinne came into tonight fresh off three straight losses. Rinne missed out on the 4-0 thrashing from Arizona the other night but he’s been terrible lately and for most of the season. Without him playing like he did before Barry Trotz left him in a steaming pile, the Predators just aren’t nearly as scary.

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predator vs evil empire

Game Time: 7:30PM Central
TV/Radio: CSN Plus, SportsNet, WGN-AM 720
All The Young Dudes: On The Forecheck

Tonight with the visiting Predators on the frigid near west side, the Hawks will close out a four game homestand before a swing through the two self-appointed capitals of the hockey universe in Toronto and Montreal, and close out January playing 6 of its final 8 games on the road. And the team the Preds ice tonight is drastically different than the one they brought about a month ago, and not necessarily for the better.

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We have Kristopher Martel from OnTheForecheck.com (@kmartel_sports) and JRLind from NashvillePost.com (@JRLind) to answer our questions about the Preds before tonight’s game.

Easy enough to know where we’ll start. Your feelings on Johansen-Jones? We know the Preds have never had a #1 center and Johansen is very good, but Jones looked to be a future Norris winner and it seems at least a little steep.

JR: Obviously Seth Jones is already amazing and is going to be amazing for years to come. What this trade tells us is A) David Poile is comfortable with Ellis and Ekholm long-term and B) Shea Weber isn’t for sale. The trade upset me for a lot of non-hockey reasons – Seth was great with kids, good in the community, really committed to growing the game and really easy to deal with – but from a hockey standpoint, the Preds obviously felt like Jones was going to get in a traffic jam and the franchise has needed a center for 18 years now. With Johansen at 23, under contract for a couple of years and headed into another RFA period, it’s a good deal to make.

Martel: Plenty of folks weren’t bothered at all that Nashville gave up Jones for Johansen, however I may be one of the few that felt as if the price was steep, but necessary, for a player of Johansen’s caliber. Johansen has already shown Nashville what he’s capable of and how dynamic of a center he is, but was it worth giving up Jones? Right now, it’s impossible to tell. Jones had a definitive ceiling with Nashville in the name of Shea Weber — as long as he was around, Jones would never see his true potential realized with the Predators. Now with Columbus, he’ll be able to play those top minutes. Ultimately, I think Nashville wins the trade now, but it could even out as time goes on.

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This is something we’re hopefully going to do regularly, but our friend Cyndi B drops in to update all on what’s going on with the NWHL and CWL. This is from yesterday’s C.I. program. 

NWHL

BUF 4 – BOS 3 (OT)

Boston dug in early in this one with a 2-0 lead, but Buffalo’s Hailey Browne tied it up with a goal in the middle of the first and another early in the second. Browne also assisted on Devon Skeats’s go-ahead goal in the third, but with five minutes to go Hilary Knight and Brianna Decker tied it up again. Buffalo went into overtime riding a 4-on-3 advantage, Megan Bozek got the power play goal, and that was the end of that.

Many years ago, in October 2015, I went to Buffalo to watch these two teams open their inaugural seasons against each other. Back then, it was an easy and common assumption that the Pride were going to be the juggernauts steamrolling the rest of the league; not only was their roster heavy on USWNT players, many had hopped leagues from the CWHL’s Boston Blades and had history together in pro hockey as well. In any brand-new league, it was inevitable that the one team of women who already knew each other would have an advantage. As an event it was a great place to be live; as a hockey game…well, there was a very visible difference in level of play.

This weekend looked nothing like that. This was a matchup between two professional, alarmingly good teams, and no one watching should have doubted that.

From the viewers’ end, an advantage to a new league with only four teams is that it’s easy to follow as teams grow into themselves. (This was the fifth of six games between the Pride and Beauts this season.) Buffalo may have stumbled out of the gate–they’re still only 2-7-2–but the quality of their game is grinding upwards with impressive consistency. They started out getting creamed, and then losing by narrow margins or sheer bad luck, and then scattering some wins in there. If ever there was a team winning or near-winning games by sheer force of will, it’s probably the Beauts right now, and I would be surprised if their record in the second half of the season looks much like their first half.