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Phantastic in Philly

February 1st, 2008 by Paul Cavanaugh

ValleyAfter thoroughly dominating the arch rival Philadelphia Flyers last night at the Wachovia Center, the Rangers head down the turnpike to battle another one of their division rivals, visiting the New Jersey Devils at the Prudential Center. The Flyers controlled the puck and tempo for the first 5 minutes of last night’s games as backup goalie Stephen Valiquette was forced to make some tough saves to keep Philadelphia off the board but after that it was New York who controlled the game.

Nigel Dawes got the scoring started for the Rangers when Chris Drury fed the speedy winger a perfect pass to spring him down the right side. Dawes faked a slap shot to get Flyer goalie Antero Nittymaki down to his knees and leaving an open net which Dawes hit to give the Rangers a 1-0 lead. It was a good sign for New York to see the third line and especially Drury to produce an early goal. It set the stage for a big night for the blue shirts.

A little bit later, the struggling Petr Prucha cashed in on a juicy rebound by Nittymaki on a perfect shot by Dan Girardi. It looked as if Girardi purposely fired a low softer slap shot to force a rebound for the crashing forward. After head Coach Tom Renney blistered his team in practice the day before, screaming for his forwards to get to the net, the guy who has built his reputation on doing this finally came through. Prucha has been disappointing so far this season but a goal like that could be just what he needs to snap out of his funk. Time will tell.

Chris Drury then scored a power play goal 23 seconds into the second period which took the air out of the Philly fans for good. With the goal and assist, Drury now should have his confidence back as he needs to continue to play this way night in and night out.

Valiquette, making just his seventh start this season, notched his first career shutout in the NHL by stopping 20 shots. “I’m pumped, yeah, but with a 4-0 win, we’re more excited about that as a team then a shutout for me, that’s for sure,” the goalie said. He will step aside tonight as The King will be back in net for the Devil game.

 The Rangers have now won 3 out of 4, a good start for the second half of the season. However, if the team can’t feed off of last night’s dominating win tonight against another one of their long time rivals, then it is all for naught.

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“NYR Lose Game, Avery”

October 7th, 2007 by icemancometh

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NYR 0

Ottawa 2

These Ottawa Senators…when they weren’t busy trapping they were beating a path back to their own end, strategically retreating on the backcheck to render Ranger offensives null and void before the promissary notes of a Scott Gomez rush or a Chris Drury pass could pay dividends. And when they failed to backcheck, they made up for the momentary lapse by covering the slot, clogging the shooting lanes, making it difficult for the Rangers to get quality scoring chances, and canceling any chance whatsoever of an easy putback on a loose puck or a rebound.

Hmm…Could it be that’s partly where our Rangers out-of-town fortunes failed, where their more business-minded and harder working opponents succeeded? Setting aside the Laurel & Hardy that led to the second goal when Jason Strudwick inadvertently set a pick on a puckcarrying Chris Drury as he attempted to break out of the defensive zone, the initial goal against was clearly a result of a failure to hustle back and mark the loose man. A habitual, and given the quality of Ranger coaching, inexplicable Rangers’ curse, one that might lead to a second, 50-year Stanley-less drought if this team doesn’t correct what has become their trademark transgression.

Once again, the Rangers have no one to thank but King Henrik that the score wasn’t 4, or even 5 to nuthin’. And while overall goal production and goal surges like the one the Rangers enjoyed on opening night after a period and a half of somnambulism, long-term, like Google stock, can be projected to rise steadily and fall cyclically, but dip only slightly; the defense and backchecking forwards of this blue-chip team simply have to elevate their focus if they want to win their division and avoid the late season bottom-half conference scramble to qualify for the post-season.

Is it way too early to be prognosticating about Atlantic division standings and the regular season net results for the Eastern Conference playoff positioning? Not when so few points will separate so many solidly competitive foes — teams with plenty of snarl, and in small metro markets, not too much in the way of after-dark curriculum to distract them from taking the number of our Bright Lights, Big City, Broadway matinée heros.

Other Post-Game Notes, Observations & Conjecture

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Gosh, darn! Can one say too much about the play of newly designated number 5, one official rookie playing his first full-year in the Bigs, defenseman Dan Gerardi? Putting on some extra muscle mass in the off-season to ratchet up his overall game, Gerardi was indeed a physical presence in Ottawa last night, both in the Rangers’ end of the ice, and when challenging opposing wingers as they attempted to skirt past him as he held the point. He repeatedly moved the puck on the breakout simply, intelligently and quickly —once incorporating a neat, little semi-spinnerama before dishing the biscuit laterally to a forward with some steam and a forward trajectory. In a word, Gerardi inspires confidence. And at age 23, people. What will he play like in two-to-three years?

—The Chris Neil/Sean Avery hit, while unfortunate in that it took one of our favorites from the game (and hopefully only a game, no more) to my eye looked like a clean check, and the appearance of an offending elbow a matter of Neil’s deliberate follow-through after the collision. Scott Stevens would often make a similar motion, pushing through the finish of the check with his forearm. And we all can recall the endlessly replayed check on Eric Lindros when Stevens did just that. Yes, Avery had his head down and for a moment was vulnerable. But having one’s head down when receiving or playing the puck has always been the accepted liability — and one of the defining differentiators — of this dangerous game. And while the NHL and the referees may have good intentions in paying more strict attention to physical head-hunting, and by rule, illegal, methods of body contact. Hitting a guy with his head down with a shoulder or hip should not be outlawed from the NHL’s gladiatorial pageantry. That’s hockey. Beginning last season, and evidenced by the Neil call for elbowing, there clearly seems to be a worrisome trend to remove hard, admittedly, possibly injury producing, but nonetheless heretofore considered legal, bodychecking from the game. The liability here is more than the loss of spectator thrills. If the NHL and on ice officials don’t clarify what does and does not constitute an illegal hit — during the broadcast, Micheletti mentioned the league was concerned with hits levied upon players caught at a vulnerable or “helpless” moment (I think that was the wording, which, no fault of Joe, here, could hardly be less definitive) — the danger is that the game’s officiating could become hopelessly and frustratingly ambiguous. With one referee perhaps known to be more tolerant of clean but hard hits (old time hockey), while another referee calls the game, or an ersatz, would-be infraction committed against a player skating for the home team, in a way that will ultimately sanitize the NHL’s DNA.

— Granted, the Iceman isn’t a graduate of New York’s F.I.T., but is it me, or do both the home and away versions of the New York Rangers’ new RBK Edge Uniform Systems sport an over-measurement of white below the traditional, horizontal waist stripe, such that the visual effect created as our guys are skating away makes it appear that they are wearing some form of adult diaper.

— Kudos to MSG for creating their interactive feature, Game On!, which offers fans the opportunity to post questions or comments on a dedicated blog to which Al and Stan then respond during the first and second intermission.

Devils Schadenfreude: Part Deux…Just when you thought it could never get much weirder than it perennially is for the team in the swamp across the river, Lou-cifer Lamoriello’s latest minion, rookie coach Brent Sutter, goes deeper and deeper into his mind-f%#*k player motivation Book of the Dead — stripping the captain’s jersey of his ‘C,’ breaking up successful tandems — and sits his franchise, future hall of famer netkeep, Martin Brodeur, in just the Devils second match of the season. Congrats to our friend and supreme gentleman, former NYR Kevin Weekes on earning Sutter his first NHL win. But I get an unsettling foreboding that only grows with each successive sound bite heard and move from behind the bench observed. How long before the sound of a muffled implosion drifts across the Hudson from the vicinity of Newark and the Prudential Arena, and as the foul smoke clears, we see John MacLean standing behind Lou’s bench?

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“On the Fly: Season Opener Game Notes”

October 4th, 2007 by icemancometh

Periods One & Two

—With only three sticks to be found among five skaters, the Rangers suddenly fell behind the Putty Cats 2-1 mid-way through the second period, revealing the same mysterious tendency to lose focus for long stretches during a game, and their over-reliance on Henrik Lundquist, which plagued them at varous turns during last season.

—I’m sure he’s a great guy and family man if you were to get to know him that way. But Joe Micheletti’s performance as a New York Rangers color commentator (Joe on Scott Gomez’s puckhanding abilities: “Look how Gomez skates away from everybody!”) continues to suggest that if you took him out on a boat to go marlin fishing he’d spend the entire trip describing the blue of the water.

—Marc Staal’s Mom, who, along with Marc’s Dad were briefly interviewed during the game — they’d driven the entire distance from Thunderhead Bay, Ontario to attend the game (with three kids earning NHL salaries they couldn’t splurge on Jet Blue?) — is a babe.

—My pre-game prediction of a NYR victory — NYR 4, FL 3 — is in jeopardy as we approach the third period.

Third Period

Prucha, Drury, Callahan in quick succession find the back of the net as the team recovers their legs and the feel for the puck. Holy sh#t! The Ranger talent depth is a reality.

Final

NYR 5

FL 2

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“Bedeviled, But Victorious”

September 21st, 2007 by icemancometh

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Preseason Game Notes and On Gals in Hockey

Okay, so much of the tilt at the Garden last evening resembled a level of play more familiar to opponents in a sloppy NCAA Division III Hockey contest than a game fought between NHL rivals. “Tilt,” here, is employed as a double entendre, since the ice at MSG seemed set at a downward slope in the direction of the Devils defensive zone throughout the first period.

Some “on the fly” thoughts and observations…

—Did you happen to catch the interview clip of Ranger GM Glen “Slats” Slather discussing the Sean Avery arbitration during MSG’s Season Preview Special? You did? Then like me, you heard Sather describe the arbitration process as a “fight” between parties involving “arguments that aren’t always the most truthful.” Kudos, to MSG to replay the clip during the game, not least because it allowed me to be sure to get the quote right. Pshew… “…aren’t always the most truthful,” Slats? I don’t know. I’m no Randy Cohen, who writes “The Ethicist” column for the New York Times. For me, to engage in the occasional duplicity, while not advisable, is at some point, one would hope all too infrequent, reality of our imperfect lives and human interactions. To shamelessly justify mendacity, and rationalize it as an acceptable tactic in the arbitration process, goes beyond the common flaws of poor management, mishandled player relations or moral ambiguity, to arrive at scumbaggery. Nice work.

—In the same MSG Season Preview Special, how about Rangers Coach Tom Renney — whose polished communication skills, honest humility, and charmingly intelligent and thoughtful charisma never ceases to amaze — describing Brendan Shanahan as quote, “An icon,” unquote. Not only is Tom dead right, of course, but in another life he was most certainly a Poet.

—The size, relative mobility and poise of Ranger Hugh Jessiman.

—The poise and puckhandling ability goalie Al Montoya displayed in the first period…which he left behind in the lockeroom before returning to the ice for the second period.

—After Avery crashed the net and interfered with Johhny Oduya causing Oduya to fall back and slam against Devils’ goaltender Weekes, whose bell was obviously rung as a result, and had to be helped off the ice and leave the game, I wondered if Coach Renney later speaks to Sean advising against the behavior, proposing the resulting penalty not worth the loss of a talented player, not to mention playing shorthanded for the subsequent two minutes.

—The technique of the MSG camera crew and their director calling their cues still suck sweaty shinpads and caused us to miss a goal, choosing instead to treat us to B-roll of some youngster in camp. Friendly suggestion: Take the camera guys, producer and director to Toronto or Montreal to sit, watch, listen and learn how to shoot hockey right.

—Marc Staal is still not ready, it’s becoming evident he may never be, and it’s time for the Rangers to cut their losses. While I would agree with the common wisdom that it takes longer to develop defensemen to the NHL level than it does forwards, and personally I believe defense is a considerably more difficult position to play. S%$t, I don’t care who the blueliner in question is —all too frequently it’s near impossible for D-men to play effectively given the way NHL referees have taken to call games in this post lockout, new rules NHL. But as concerns Stall, I’m just not seeing it.

—Jason Strudwick, while probably already shopping for an apartment in Hartford, or visiting travelocity.com for the best rates on Swissair, is a Dude with a capital ‘D’.

—Did anyone see Devils’ assistant coach Larry Robinson sidle up to Kaspar in the runway leading to the players’ dressing rooms between the second and third periods? Do you think Larry was talking to him about subjects in common —anxiety disorder, or the name of a good psychotherapist Kaspar might recommend. Or perhaps, what I suspect, Larry was Lucifer Lamoriello’s go-between in floating the idea to Kaspar of moving to Newark. If the Rangers can’t make sufficient cap room to keep Darius on Broadway, let’s hope the pride of Lithuania finds himself on his skates where he’s productive and appreciated. I’d rather see Kaspar become a Devil than suffer another season in a north-central Connecticut sinkhole. He deserves better Slats.

—On first glance, Anisimov — in addition to sounding like an after-dinner drink that would get you unexpectedly hammered and give you a Grade II hangover the next morning — looks like the real thing.

Final Thought…

Trade Joe Micheletti for Deb Kaufman. While I know their current job descriptions aren’t exactly the same. And it goes without saying yet merits saying anyway that the Rangers broadcasts haven’t been the same since the dark day John Davidson forsook his priceless on-air chemistry with Sam Rosen and vacated the booth to find his nirvana in St. Louis. …St. Louis, John? I can’t help but believe Deb would soften our loss, there’s some special quality to Deb’s camera friendly persona that obviates her name is actually Deb-BAHKauf-man. She took her early inspiration to pursue television journalism from the Mary Tyler Moore Show. (I’m not making that up.) And I won’t attempt to aptly describe the sexily, slightly askew line of Deb’s mouth which somehow seems appropriate to an attractive, genuinely warm woman who happens to be a career television sports professional covering hockey. For that, of course, I’d call on the Bard of Broadway, Tom Renney.

Rangers 4
Devils 3

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