Showing posts with label Los Angeles Kings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Los Angeles Kings. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Leaving the Door Open


The Sharks defeated the Los Angeles Kings tonight by a final score of 2-1. This extends San Jose's road winning streak to nine, and their string of games with at least a point to thirteen.

I almost envy other sports bloggers who have grounds to rail against their team's front office, but I honestly think it would be difficult for any Sharks fan to be critical of Doug Wilson...as a GM, he has way more wins than losses to his credit. (The Guerin trade last year didn't work out so well, but that was a rare misstep.) The Thornton deal alone would be the pinnacle of any GM's career, but his major moves this season are proving to be very savvy as well. Jody Shelley has been an excellent addition, of course the Campbell deal has all Sharks fans giddy (although the real measure of the success of that move will be whether or not Soupy can be persuaded to stay in teal), and Brian Boucher played his second excellent game tonight in spot relief of Evgeni Nabokov, finally conceding his first (and so far only) goal as a Shark after more than 115 minutes of shutout play.

The goal wasn't Boucher's fault--the sequence which led to it appeared to begin with a miscommunication amongst the San Jose defense, and things just got worse from there--but it still bothered me, because for what seems like the umpteenth time this year the Sharks showed an almost magical ability to turn a 2-0 lead into a 2-1 lead. Too often, those 2-1 leads have then morphed further into tie games. If they were a baseball team, you'd say they were in dire need of a closer.

But hockey isn't baseball, and what the Sharks really need is a greater ability to turn 2-0 leads into 3-0 leads...it's less about keeping the other guy off the board than it is about chasing that extra goal. I've already worried much in this space about the number of 6-on-5 goals the team has given up; despite the Sharks' gaudy record over the past month, a lot of those wins have come by razor-thin margins. On the one hand this is good...most games in the playoffs are tight, so it's good to know you can win those close ones. But on the other hand, letting opponents hang around is asking for trouble. Now that the team is firing on all cylinders, I'd really like to see them give themselves some lessons on slamming the door and putting the opposition away.

Sunday, February 17, 2008

Sunday Scraps - February 17th


Awesomeness or Cartoonish Super-Awesomeness?

The Detroit Red Wings have a 41-14-5 record (good for 87 points) which places them very comfortably atop the NHL. Yet their current five-game losing streak cannot be ignored. It has included losses to last-place (but improving) Los Angeles and second-to-last-place (and floundering) Toronto, not to mention a 5-1 drubbing at the hands of the Columbus Blue Jackets Friday night (at home). All-Star goalie Chris Osgood has been chased in two consecutive games. Is there cause for concern in Detroit?

Probably not. Any discussion about the Red Wings pretty much boils down to a debate about whether they have achieved awesomeness or cartoonish super-awesomeness (to paraphrase Waylon Smithers). It's a long season and no team will maintain any particular level of play, good or poor, from wire to wire. Roll together a couple of injuries (Niklas Kronwall has been out for a while and Brian Rafalski didn't play against Columbus), a bit of a slump by an otherwise good goalie, maybe a game against an inferior opponent who happened to get hot at precisely the wrong time (Toronto had won at Le Centre Bell two nights before beating the Wings in a shootout--perhaps the Leafs dug deep and found some pride after getting smoked by the Panthers 8-0 on February 5th), and BAM!, there's your five-game losing streak.

A brief survey of the internet appears to reveal some rumblings among the Red Wings' considerable fan base about the need for the team to acquire some help at defense. What's this? A contending NHL team is looking for another solid defenseman as the trade deadline looms? Stop the presses! Seriously, at this time of year, every GM in the league who thinks they have a shot at a Cup run is shopping for help at the blue line.

If this current slide has any consequence, it's that the pressure to make a move could oblige GM Ken Holland to overpay for a quality defenseman. Regardless, there's little doubt in my mind that the Wings will win the President's Cup and be the odds-on favorite to win it all.


Kings-Coyotes Observations

Los Angeles visited Phoenix tonight and I decided to check it out. The Kings and the Coyotes are both intriguing teams lately, especially for a fan of another Pacific Division squad. Phoenix, unexpectedly, is in the playoff hunt out west--if they do squeak in, I think that Wayne Gretzky has to be considered a legitimate candidate for the Jack Adams Award. Los Angeles, as of this writing, is dead last in the league in points, but one gets a strong sense that they are headed in the right direction. They just finished an eight-game road trip with a very solid 4-3-1 record; they are very young and seem to be getting better by leaps and bounds.

Good game tonight in the desert. Phoenix took a 3-1 lead into the third period, then the Kings rallied to tie before Radim Vrbata scored to win the game for the Coyotes 4-3. The highlights are worth checking out if for no other reason than to see Phoenix's second goal, scored by Joel Perrault. Perrault was very deep in the attacking zone, nearly to the goal line and outside the dot to Dan Cloutier's right, when he took a pass from Shane Doan and snapped a beautiful one-time laser short side. Extraordinary shot from a very bad angle. (There was also a weird sequence late in the second period in which Kings defenseman Brad Stuart's stick became entangled in Cloutier's equipment during the course of play. With the Coyotes attacking, neither player could really do anything about this, so Cloutier continued to play with Stuart's stick sprouting from his equipment...he looked like a mammoth that had been speared by an ice-age hunter. I'm not sure if that will show up on the highlight reel, though.)

(UPDATE: But it is on Youtube...)

Part of the reason I was interested in watching this game was to have a look at Kings rookie center Brian Boyle. A Massachusetts native, the kid is enormous--listed at 6'6", 222 pounds--and a veteran of four years of high-level play at Boston College. He scored four goals in his first seven NHL games, and though he wasn't listed on the scoresheet tonight, I have a feeling he's going to be giving Sharks, Ducks, Stars, and Coyotes fits for a while.

The Kings aren't quite there, yet. They definitely have some guys who can score--Anze Kopitar, Alexander Frolov, Mike Cammalleri, Dustin Brown--but goaltending is still a bit of a question mark. Nineteen-year-old Jonathan Bernier, who actually did get a little NHL playing time this season early on, is presumably the goalie of the future for the Kings organization. If he matures into that role, and the young guys who seem to be meshing now continue to do so, this could be a dangerous team before you know it.

(Incidentally, Los Angeles' old war horse, Rob Blake, has been mentioned in various trade rumors as the deadline approaches. He has been dealing with some injury issues, which would presumably drive his trade value down at least a little bit. With the Kings' kids seeming to bloom recently, one wonders if maybe Blake doesn't have more value as a veteran presence in the Los Angeles locker room than he does as trade bait. Just a thought.)

From the perspective of a Sharks fan, all of the above means that the Pacific Division is not only likely to remain the toughest division in hockey, but is likely to get even tougher in the near future.


R'uh R'oh!

Speaking of tough opposition, I caught a little of the Rangers game today. They were firing on all cylinders and blew the doors off Buffalo, 5-1. The Sharks, of course, visit Madison Square Garden tomorrow. Zoinks!