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Tag: Senators
Posted on Thu Dec 13, 2007 at 12:55:25 PM EST in NHL If you thought that head-butts were exclusive to WWE murdering psychopaths, idiotic foreign kids, Zinedine Zidane and tiny jockeys then you are sorely mistaken. Of course, you're not as sore as Mike Fisher is after he took a few fists and a forehead to the face from the Hurricanes Scott Walker.
Nice technique. Walker must have been taking lessons from this guy.
Links:
Posted on Thu Jun 07, 2007 at 11:19:28 AM EST in NHL
I'm not even going to discuss this game, because it was never in doubt. Honestly, these Cup Finals were pretty much never in doubt - once Buffalo got eliminated, I thought it was pretty much over; the Sabres had the best chance of rolling with these Ducks. Here's two things of a broader societal sports trend nature I'd like to bring up: 1. Southern California is, indeed, hot right now: Consider some examples. USC football - sure, they lost to UCLA last year and doomed their national title shot, but hell, they've been the best team in college sports the past half-decade (with 1, maybe 2, national titles). The Angels won it all in 2002, and are arguably the best team in the AL right now. The Lakers won three straight titles, and are probably 1 legitimate point guard away from being able to get back to the Western Finals at least. The Dodgers might be a sleeper candidate for the World Series. And hell, even the Clippers have a bunch of talent. Oh - don't forget about USC (O.J. Mayo!) and UCLA hoops, and UCLA football. And now, the Ducks. Pardon the pun, but that area's Cup runneth over. 2. The NHL needs to intervene; You have to figure Buffalo is knocking on the door, i.e. they might finally win a Cup next year. Pittsburgh, with Crosby and Malkin, isn't far off. Anaheim will stay good. Detroit always has dudes, and I have to guess Colorado will rebuild as well. What do all these teams have in common? They don't play in Canada. The last north of the border team to raise Lord Stanley happened in 1992-1993, which was almost a decade and a half ago. Bettman needs to do something completely illegal, and move Crosby to the Canadiens on some "home draft" principle he creates out of thin air, just to keep this sport moving in the right direction. If the Canucks (the people, not the team) get turned off on hockey because they keep getting trounced on its grandest stage, well, the sport is utterly doomed. I mean, your last three champions are now from SoCal (beach), North Carolina (college hoops and tobacco), Tampa Bay (slutty co-eds mingling around huge pirate ships), and New Jersey (industrial waste). I see nothing about snow and French-speaking people in there, do I? One positive from all this: Pronger, Selanne, and Giguere now will have their name etched on the trophy. They all deserve it. Pronger has probably been the best defenseman in hockey since Scott Stevens; Selanne has been around forever and done some amazing things with the puck at the end of his stick; and Giguere is probably the best goalie in hockey at this moment, all things considered. I'm happy for all them. That concludes our Stanley Cup series over at Sportscolumn. Give me a visit or a shout anytime at A Price Above Bip Roberts. I'll be back here from time to time, but be sure to visit. I get lonely, and that's not a good thing. Permalink | Post A Comment | Read Comments (1 comment)
Posted on Tue Jun 05, 2007 at 03:50:20 PM EST in NHL
Ducks 3, Senators 2 It'd be easy to discuss the ramifications of the Pronger suspension, but the fact is: it didn't matter. When you've got Jiggy between the pipes, I don't care if you've got two acne-riddled teenagers who weigh 100 pounds soaking wet in front of him. If he's in the zone, ain't nothing gonna light the light. It would also be easy to discuss Dustin Penner, who scored what ultimately proved to be the game-winner, but again, that's just too easy. The true story of this game was Andy McDonald. McDonald is the Ducks center, and he's entirely too small to be playing that role in any type of competitive playoff series. If this dude was staring down Scott Stevens, Stevens might just start cackling. But there he was last night (McDonald, not Stevens - I need to work on my modifiers), deking and out-thinking cockroach-eating Ray Emery en route to two goals in the 2nd period. Once you give Giguere that kind of support, you're winning the game. McDonald might be the Ducks' Daniel Gibson for these playoffs, which is to say Dustin Penner might be Daniel Gibson, Giguere might be LeBron, Chris Pronger might be Z, and McDonald might be Larry Hughes. Heck, I'm just trying to make it relevant to a broader audience. [Ted Bauer will be covering the NHL playoffs for us this year. You can find more of Ted's work at A Price Above Bip Roberts.] Permalink | Post A Comment | Read Comments (6 comments)
Posted on Thu May 31, 2007 at 10:21:32 AM EST in NHL
Ducks 1, Senators 0 To be perfectly honest, I didn't actually watch this game, because I was at a coffee bar in Hartford, CT trying to pick up some foxy ladies. It's a good thing, too - not that I failed miserably in trying to get girls (that's bad), but that I didn't watch it - because me, not being a hockey purist, probably wouldn't have appreciated this see-saw battle. The only goal came from Samuel Pahlsson, interesting in the sense that Sami's main role in this series was supposed to be checking the hell out of good, scoring-centric Sens players. Now, for two consecutive games - that being 1 and 2, for those of you in the know - an Anaheim player mostly responsible for checking (Travis Moen in Game 1) has scored the essential goal for the Ducks, in the process giving them a 2-0 advantage and helping them to retain home ice advantage. As we said earlier, no Canadian team has actually hoisted Lord Stanley's chalice since 1992, when the Montreal Canadiens did it. That's 15 years, which seems like an egregiously long period of time considering that Canada is probably the No. 1 thing you associate with hockey, at least in a geographic sense. For the Sens to make this interesting, here's what has to happen:
1. Emery has to enter complete lockdown mode, like Giguere was in last night. No mental mistakes.
Brett Hull predicted this series would be over in five games. One win in Ottawa, and I'll go with him. Every Cup Finals since '01 with just one exception has gone seven games. I'd love to see this one join it, so long as we can get a few 5-4, 2OT finals in there as well. Permalink | Post A Comment | Read Comments (1 comment)
Posted on Tue May 29, 2007 at 10:12:43 AM EST in NHL
Ducks 3, Senators 2 In many respects, the key to the 2007 Stanley Cup Finals is probably going to be Anaheim's checking line. See, if and when they match up with Ottawa's first line - easily the best line in this entire series, with no disrespect to Anaheim intended - they need to hold their own against the Alfredsson, Heatley, Spezza dynamic, because those boys can go off at any time. It was interesting, then, that Anaheim's checking line did play a key role in Game 1, but not - ahem - for checking. Rather, Travis Moen of that line scored the game-winner to help the Ducks hold home-ice advantage after a hot Senators start (they scored maybe 1 minute into the game, immediately followed by a Versus interview of Cuba Gooding Jr in the stands, a guy who knows way more about hockey than you might assume). Moen's Wikipedia page makes a big deal for no apparent reason (read: the editor is from Calgary) over the fact that he was drafted by the Flames, but never played for them. The Flames can't be happy. Maybe if they had Moen in '04, they woulda been able to win one of those close games in the Finals against the Lightning, and the Red Mile would still be celebrating. For now, though, "Quack Attack" or whatever the bars in Anaheim call themselves when people get sloppy and celebrate the Ducks, is rolling. Game 2 could be more of the same: if Giguere stays his sharp self, Pronger and Niedermayer get even more uncorked and just go around nailing people, and Ray Emery has a couple of mental mis-steps on the Canadian side, well... it could be 2-0 series wise pretty quickly. The last time a team from north of Michigan hoisted the Lord's goblet was 1992 and the Montreal Canadiens. C'mon, Ottawa. Get after this. (Also, since the NBA playoffs have been yawn-inducing, we need this puppy to go 7, and then 3OT). [Ted Bauer will be covering the NHL playoffs for us this year. You can find more of Ted's work at A Price Above Bip Roberts.] Permalink | Post A Comment | Read Comments (2 comments)
Posted on Wed May 23, 2007 at 11:11:24 AM EST in NHL
Ducks 4, Red Wings 3 See, Jean Sebastian Giguere had a rough final period - allowing three red light specials to the Wings - but he was stone cold lights out for the first two periods, when nothing got past him. Hasek was pretty much the reverse, but in the end, the Ducks still won (with help from a Samuel Pahlsson goal). Whether or not this means the adage "It's not how you start, it's how you finish" is something that's complete bollox, I'm not ready to say just yet. What I am ready to say is this: the Cup Finals are set, and it's Anaheim vs. Ottawa. Anaheim was here four years ago, when they lost to the Devs in seven. Ottawa has never been here, at least not in their present, since-1992 version. The series is boring for this reason: small markets. Anaheim is 10th in the state of CA alone, and Ottawa is 4th in Canada. People will consistently use that argument to prove no one cares (meanwhile, if Cleveland somehow stuns Detroit, the NBA Finals would pit Cleveland against San Antonio, which has to be equivalently disastrous markets). The series is interesting for this reason: Ottawa's first line has been incredible during these playoffs. Hell, it's been just about the only thing Ottawa is doing really well (besides Ray Emery). Anaheim has the personnel to really rumble with that line, and maybe even create a few fights in the process. That's going to be the Ducks' big advantage; dudes like Pronger might just level dudes like Spezza as the series winds on. Depending on how you view the Angels of baseball geographically, you might think that neither Anaheim or Ottawa has had a major sports championship in quite some time. It's also interesting for that reason: two "fringe" sports communities battling for arguably sports' most renowned hardware. Y'all ready for this? We'll be back Thursday with a detailed preview and prediction in this very spot.
Posted on Wed May 16, 2007 at 10:06:16 AM EST in NHL Every time the playoffs come rolling around in any sport, it can only mean one thing: it's time for some opportunistic musician to exploit the occasion by making a crummy song about some team that attempts to unify a city's dreams. In Ottawa that opportunistic musician is local rapper Belly and that crummy song is cleverly entitled "Go Sens Go."
We don't know if the song is actually hyping up the players necessarily since it has only been played inside the arena once, which was during Monday night's win in Ottawa that gave the team a 3-0 lead in the East finals, but it certainly appears to be mesmerizing the locals. Since debuting the song last Thursday, as many as 50 calls per hour have been flooding the Hot 89.9 station. So, without further ado, we give to you "Go Sens Go;" crappy voiceover by Ray Emery at the beginning and all.
Did we just see Snoop sporting a Senators jersey? Damn, talk about a jumping on the bandwagon! Last month Snoopy was rooting for the Ducks and now this. And what ever happened to being purple and gold through and through? This guy jumped on The City's postseason wagon as well. What's next? Are we going to start seeing The Dogfather in the stands in Salt Lake City during the West finals?
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Posted on Fri May 11, 2007 at 08:40:03 AM EST in NHL
Senators 5, Sabres 2 Since I didn't write up my Eastern Conference Preview yesterday (sue me; I was at Spider Man 3), I'll offer it up now, by way of a story from the way back. When the Red Wings and Avalanche were predominant, year-in-and-year-out rivals, they were playing in (I believe) the Western Conference Finals in the late 1990s or early 2000s. In one game, Claude Lemieux laid an absolutely disgusting hit into the boards on Kris Draper. Gary Thorne, calling the game, said (with limited emotion, which is odd for him calling hockey): "Far boards. Draper. (Pause) Draper's hurt. (Pause) Oh, Draper's hurt. He was leveled by Claude Lemieux." It's funny if you hear it, and also if you see it, because the ref just grabs Lemieux and shoves him towards the penalty box. The relevance of that story is simple: every time I think about this series, I can hear Thorne in my head saying: "It wasn't blood. It was paint." No, no, that's not it. I can hear him saying: "Far boards. Drury. Drury's hurt." Chris Drury, the lifeblood of the Sabres in many respects (notably being a guy consistently associated with winning, which they aren't), is going to get absolutely leveled by someone in this series, and that's gonna cause another brawl the size of the one they had in February. As Lindy Ruff screamed at Bryan Murray during a recent meeting between those teams, "Do that (expletive) to some hack. Don't go after our (expletive) captain." Point is, this series will get personal. Once it does, I think the Sabres can show enough fire to get themselves back to a Cup - hell, they need this more than any sporting city needs anything right now, I'd argue - and contend with whoever I think is winning the West, which you'll learn tomorrow. I'd say it takes 'em 7, and hopefully Game 7 is epic, and blood is all over the ice. Then we know hockey's back. [Ted Bauer will be covering the NHL playoffs for us this year. You can find more of Ted's work at A Price Above Bip Roberts.]
Posted on Mon May 07, 2007 at 11:01:19 AM EST in NHL
Sabres 5, Rangers 4 Sure enough, the Rangers were down 1 at The Garden - the same place where so much magic has happened, and yet, so much defeat has been wrought - and across the final 2 minutes, they got about 9 looks at Ryan Miller. The problem was, none of the looks was actually legitimate; he stoned them on every ill-conceived shot along the way. However, with about five seconds left - as my friend's boyfriend screamed "This is it, gentleman! This is your season!" - Miller was sweating profusely, reminding me of Game 7 of the Eastern Finals last year. Speaking of the Eastern Finals, this year's edition has a chance to be the series that "saves hockey," in much the same way that De La Hoya vs. Mayweather was supposed to "save boxing," or this past weekend's Nationals vs. Cubs series could have "saved Washington, DC sports." Uh, scratch that last one. The Senators and Sabres friggin' hate each other. This series will go seven - mark my words - and there's a good chance Chris Drury, the Golden Boy of the entire thing, may not make it through unscathed. These two teams had the most epic NHL brawl of the past five years in February of this season, and Lindy Ruff - who is certifiably insane - has delivered so much venom at the Senators in post-game pressers over the years, you'd think a holy war was about to break out. Also, the fact that it's two cities a geography major might not be able to explain the relevance of makes it even more interesting; it's literally a battle for redemption, and there's gonna be a lot of red on that ice.
Posted on Thu May 03, 2007 at 10:05:43 AM EST in NHL
Senators 3, Devils 2
Red Wings 3, Sharks 2 [Ted Bauer will be covering the NHL playoffs for us this year. You can find more of Ted's work at A Price Above Bip Roberts.] Permalink | Post A Comment | Read Comments (2 comments)
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