You know those people that you only see at punk shows? Like you never run into them at the store or on the street? You don’t know where they come from? That’s @ItWasThreeZero. He’s our Sharks guy.
Game #66 Preview Suite
You know those people that you only see at punk shows? Like you never run into them at the store or on the street? You don’t know where they come from? That’s @ItWasThreeZero. He’s our Sharks guy.
Game #66 Preview Suite
You probably missed it last week. It wasn’t a transaction to move the needle. But for some reason, the Sharks brought back Michael Haley off of waivers from Florida. Getting waved by the Panthers should tell you all you need to know, especially given how Dale Tallon likes himself a muttonhead.
And make no mistake, Haley is drain-clog. He amassed 200 penalty minutes last year in Sunrise, which did so much protecting of their stars they missed the playoffs again. He can’t do anything but spit and yell, and occasionally fight when someone is dumb enough to engage him. He is an old-style goon, and one the Sharks have no need of.
And yet claim him they did, because Pete DeBoer–who aside from Martin Jones might be the biggest impediment to the Sharks winning a Cup–thinks he needs this. Who on this roster is he protecting? Logan Couture and Joe Pavelski aren’t shrinking violets. Timo Meier is a pest himself and was doing just fine. Erik Karlsson is hurt anyway, and you never bring in a bouncer for a d-man anyway.
Haley and his dumb haircut and even dumber attitude will be relegated to the pressbox when the real games start, but it’s a mystery why the Sharks though they needed this in games that are supposedly important if they were going to catch the Flames. Haley’s presence hasn’t stopped the Sharks from getting thwacked in three of the four games he’s dressed for, so that’s going well.
Maybe it’s not the goalies the Sharks need to change before the playoffs…
Game #66 Preview Suite
Still working on it. Data here:
| Team | GF_60 | GA_60 | GF% | xGF_60 | xGA_60 | xGF% | SF_60 | SA_60 | SF% | CF_60 | CA_60 | CF% |
| CHI | 2.74 | 3.12 | 46.76% | 2.28 | 2.91 | 43.93% | 31.04 | 34.79 | 47.15% | 55.37 | 59.87 | 48.05% |
| S.J | 2.97 | 2.78 | 51.65% | 2.79 | 2.34 | 54.39% | 32.93 | 26.88 | 55.06% | 63.57 | 50.87 | 55.55% |
Game #66 Preview Suite

Notes: Please, for the love of God, shoot Gustav Forsling into the sun….Ward will get the start. Last time he saw the Sharks it did not go so well…If the Hawks aren’t going to get goals from their loaded top line, they’re going to lose…Perlini can’t do anything but be fast and shoot, but that should be enough, right?…Colliton was shuffling all over the place yesterday, had great effect as you could tell…

Notes: Couple injuries to note. Karlsson definitely won’t play and very well might be put in cotton wool until the playoffs. Evander Kane missed the last game and is questionable, but they don’t need him for this, do they?…Vlasic’s metrics are ugly but he’s doing all of the dirty work to keep Burns in the offensive end and against bums…Pavelski has 11 points in his last eight games…Hertil has only scored one in his last eight…

Game #66 Preview Suite
It will be impossible, and it should be. to unlink the careers of Anze Kopitar and Jonathan Toews. Kopitar came into the league one year earlier, and is one year older, but both were among the best two-way centers in the game. Both anchored two of the pillar teams in the NHL for the decade, and of course there were the two playoff series between the two for Western Conference dominance. Both have similar type games, not exactly excelling in one area but showing just below excellence in pretty much every facet. If either were excellent at anything, it was in their own end and their control of play, setting the stage for perhaps more talented teammates to do their thing.
Both had dips in their careers at the same point. Both signed huge contracts that now their fanbases bemoan and outsiders mock. And both are probably now being improperly viewed by their own teams.
Last year, at this exact point in fact (the Hawks visited the Staples Center in Game #65 last year as well), we showed the differences between Toews and Kopitar at that point. Kopitar was having a bounce-back year, which would end with his first Selke Trophy, and Toews was in the midst of something of a nightmare that had some questioning his place within the team’s future. We concluded that really, there wasn’t much difference between the two and that Kopitar was seeing the opposite side of that fickle coin known as “luck,” while Toews was still getting an unwanted view of its less generous side.
Now, the tables have turned, and they haven’t. Toews and Kopitar continue to dovetail with each other, but both have flipped their perspective on that uncaring and yet vital coin.
Toews, in some ways, is having a career renaissance. Kopitar is in the middle of a perfectly functional season, with 47 points in 63 games, playing amongst true trash. Both have seen a decline in their defensive game, though that could probably be pinned partially on the ineptitude of those around them. That’s a stiff argument to construct though, as both are right around their team-rates for any metric you want to use. This after careers soaring above those rates. No man escapes time.
The difference this year, as it was last year, is one of them is just getting more pucks to go in than the other. Except this time it’s the one in red and not the one in black benefitting. It was Kopitar last year who saw his shooting-percentage rise to 17.5%, while Toews was hearing the NBA Jam guy screaming, “CAN’T BUY A BUCKET!” all season at 9.5%. This year Toews is at 16.6%, while Kopitar has sunk back to a certainly acceptable 14.8%.
Like Kopitar last year, Toews has seen a surge in power play points to cover some of his now not-dominant even-strength work, with 31 points already. Kopitar had 42 PP points last year, with just 13 this year. Toews had 12 last year. They can’t get away from each other.
But more to the point, Kopitar’s totals and rates are probably what a team could expect from him and Toews more than Toews’s production this year. Toews is unlikely to rack up this shooting-percentage again, as the chances and attempts he’s getting don’t really stand out from the previous years. And the power play is unlikely to sizzle like this again, or at least for this long.
And what that is is solid #2 center production. To expect Toews or Kopitar to keep providing #1 production into their 30s is not quite pie-in-the-sky stuff, but it’s not far either. Only one center seems to be managing that and that’s Sidney Crosby, who is made of something else. The Hawks seem to be trying to make up for that with a cheaper option in Dylan Strome. The Kings very well may have Jack Hughes to take that responsibility. But both should recognize what they have, not what they wish to have.
The problem for the Hawks is that Strome will only be cheap for one more season, and is still a longshot to be much more than a high-end #2 if everything works out. The Kings might lose out in the lottery, and then what? With the way the league is shaping up going forward, teams will need a center capable of 85-90 points or more. Toews and Kopitar have spiked that recently, but you wouldn’t bet on them doing so again. So how do you find that when those two are taking that kind of money down? Whichever answers first are probably better set up to get back to where they once belonged.
Game #65 Preview Suite
This keeps happening. Our normal Kings guy has disappeared, though we guess we can understand not wanting to talk about the Kings when you don’t have to. So here’s a link to a Lisa Dillman Q&A on The Athletic that should leave you where you need to be.
Game #65 Preview Suite
When it comes to fanbases you identify as whiners or complainers, you usually think of Toronto and their self-flagellation. Or it used to be Detroit and how no one worshipped them to the degree they thought was reasonable (something around Egyptian king/Commodus level). Or Montreal and their need for past and meaningless glories to still be revered today.
You don’t think of Los Angeles, which only makes them bitch and moan more. You’re better off not paying attention.
A couple years ago, Kings fan kept wailing so loudly and so consistently that no one gave Drew Doughty a fair shake that voters gave him Erik Karlsson’s Norris just to get them to shut up. Last year, Kings fans used Anze Kopitar’s 92 points as a reason to announce that he should be given the award for best defensive forward, one that he hadn’t really deserved to be credited for in three or four years. Past injustices were brought up of course as an excuse to mewl even louder, and again Kopitar was given the award to get the reward of silence.
Kings fans main complaint is that no one stays up late enough to watch their games. Which ignores the fact that no one is going to stay up to watch games that are boring as shit, which the Kings have been for at least five seasons. People stay up to watch the Sharks, you’ll notice. Kings fans have tried to tell everyone that they’re actually big and rugged and that you should appreciate that they are the only ones playing hockey the “old way.” That’s a cover for being slow and dumb and bad, a main reason they suck, and also a ruse to keep you from realizing their games would constitute a war crime.
Sadly, their two Cups (that are getting pretty distant in the mirror now) gave Kings fans a platform, when before even they knew that no one should care about them. Thankfully, due to their incompetent management, bad contracts, and inflexible roster, they’ll be heading back to the black hole of obscurity before too long. Assuming they don’t get the #1 pick. If they do, they’ll start the whining about how Hughes isn’t getting Calder consideration thanks to being on the West Coast the day after the draft.
Game #65 Preview Suite
Note: We’re still crafting new worksheets from different sites thanks to Corsica’s shutdown, so we’re just going to give you the raw data today and we’ll have the charts back soon.
Hawks – GF/60: 2.74 GA/60: 3.12 GF%: 46.7
Kings – GF/60: 2.07 GA/60: 2.35 GF%: 46.8
Hawks – CF/60: 55.3 CA/60: 59.8 CF%: 48
Kings – CF/60: 52.4 CA/60: 57.5 CF%: 47.6
Hawks – xGF/60: 2.26 xGA/60: 2.91 xGF%: 43.9
Kings – xGF/60: 2.16 xGA/60: 2.36 xGF%: 47.7
Hawks – PP: 22.4% (8th) PK: 73.4% (Last)
Kings – PP: 14.9 % (27th) PK: 74.4% (30th)
Game #65 Preview Suite

Notes: With Caggiula’s injury, Saad slides up to form a super-unit, such as it is. Yeah, the bottom six is gross now, but it won’t matter against the Kings. Or at least it shouldn’t. Kampf will sort that out when he returns. Whatever, let’s see it…Wars probably goes this afternoon to save Crawford for the firing squad that will be the Sharks tomorrow night…Perlini and Sikura actually looked good together earlier in the season. It’s a lot of speed on the wings, though Arty will have to catch up…

Notes: The Kings are doing something of a reshuffle with their forwards, so we have no idea what it’ll look like. We’re not sure we care. We know it doesn’t matter…Phaneuf has been awful of late, which won’t come as much of a surprise to you…Quick has given up 16 goals in his last three appearances…Doughty has one goal in 2019…

Game #65 Preview Suite
Predators vs. Jets – Friday, 7pm
Things are still not decided in the Central, and even though the Blues have been pretty spiky of late, it’s hard to see them getting past either of these teams in Round 1. Unless Jordan Binnington continues to sacrifice many small animals and virgins in the crease. So these two still look set to do a merry dance in May, and neither will want to have to travel for a Game 7 (though that didn’t much bother the Jets last year). They’re separated by just two points, but the Jets have three games in hand. Both have found flaws they can’t seem to do much about–the Preds’ PP and the Jets inability to get the puck to their forwards. Both very well might be cannon fodder for whoever comes out of the Pacific. But still, these are two of the five or six teams that can have Cup aspirations, and when any two get together it deserves attention.
Second Screen Viewing
Penguins vs. Canadiens – Saturday, 6pm
At the bottom of the other playoff picture, two of the teams caught up in the mess square off in front of an always interested Montreal crowd. Montreal sits in the first wildcard spot, with Pittsburgh the first team being held at arm’s length by the bouncer outside. Carolina is in between, but Columbus has the same amount of points as Montreal. There are four teams for three spots, though Montreal only has access to two of those. The Penguins beat up on the Jackets after the deadline, clearly buoyed by Erik Gudbranson (it’s still so funny!). That Guddy-Jack Johnson pairing ought to be appointment viewing against the bevy of speed the Habs have. The proverbial four-pointer here, which means it’s going to be a three-point game.
Other Games
Friday
Penguins vs. Sabres – 6pm
Flyers vs. Devils – 6pm
Capitals vs. Islanders – 6pm
Canadiens vs. Rangers – 6pm
Blues vs. Hurricanes – 6:30
Knights vs. Ducks – 9pm
Avalanche vs. Sharks – 9:30
Saturday
Oilers vs. Blue Jackets – 12pm
Devils vs. Bruins – 6pm
Sabres vs. Maple Leafs – 6pm
Senators vs. Lightning – 6pm
Hurricanes vs. Panthers – 6pm
Red Wings vs. Coyotes – 7pm
Stars vs. Blues – 7pm
Wild vs. Flames – 9pm
Sunday
Capitals vs. Rangers – 11:30
Flyers vs. Islanders – 2pm
Canucks vs. Knights – 3pm
Avalanche vs. Ducks – 3pm
Senators vs. Panthers – 4pm
Jets vs. Blue Jackets – 6pm
Predators vs. Wild – 6:30