Thrashers ride Moose to blank Canes headlines this morning’s Sunday Thrasherville Times

Thrasherville Times

- If it isn’t in the Thrasherville Times, it didn’t happen -

Sunday March 28, 2010

I Guess The Message Was Received, Coach

Friday morning before the team took to the practice ice at the Duluth Ice Forum, John Anderson held a closed door meeting with the coaching staff and players. Well, whatever was said needs to be repeated …and repeated often… for the remaining seven games of the season as the Thrashers then flew to Raleigh, North Carolina and shutout the Hurricanes 4-0 behind Johan Hedberg’s 34 save performance.

Atlanta got away 43 shots on Manny Legace.

It was win number 20 on the season for Moose and his GAA dipped to 2.63 and saves percentage raised to .915.

“It’s always fun. It’s not often I get a shutout,” Hedberg said after the game. “It was a total team effort. We got some great goals, some amazing goals. We stayed with it the whole way. We didn’t have any lapses, which was the key.”

Not two weeks ago it was Legace that shutout the Thrashers 4-0 here in Atlanta. Turn-about being fair play and all that, I suppose.

By collecting the two points in Carolina the Thrashers keep hope alive in the playoff picture as the 78 points they now have in the standing are but two behind Boston and Philly. And in my opinion…if the Thrashers are going to catch either, it’s probably going to be the Flyers. They are a mess right now and fell to Pittsburgh 4-1 earlier in the day.

Also helping matters for Atlanta was New Jersey downing Montreal 4-2 allowing the Thrashers to pull to within 4 points of the Canadiens. A big thanks goes to the Leafs  as well for their come-from-behind 3-2 overtime win over the Rangers…putting two points between Atlanta and New York.

Manny Legace stopped the first 20 Thrashers shots he faced, 18 in the first period alone…numbers 21 and 22, not so much. Rich Peverley got Atlanta on the board with his 21th goal of the season at the 7:46 mark of the second. 57 seconds later, Evgeny Artyukhin…the A-Train…raced his way in from the right side and snapped off a shot that beat Legace, putting the Thrashers up 2-0.

Nic Bergfors made it 3-0 with under three minutes before the second intermission. On a 2 on 1 break, Bergie entered the zone on the right said with Maxim Afinogenov to his left. When Jamie McBain opted to cover Max, Bergfors said, “Thank you very much for the space”…and shoveled a backhand past Legace. It was his 8th goal as a Thrasher.

Colby Armstrong and Tim Stapleton celebrate with Jim Slater after his power play goal in the third period (AP/Gerry Broome)

Colby Armstrong and Tim Stapleton celebrate with Jim Slater after his power play goal in the third period (AP/Gerry Broome)

The icing on the cake came in the third while on the power play as Jimmy Slater scored his 11th goal of the season…a new career high for the 30th overall pick in the 2002 draft.

Coming into the game, Atlanta had failed on all 14 power play chances against Carolina this season, but they went one for three on this winning night. The penalty kill stopped all of the Canes four man advantage situation…this after surrendering 7 power play goals to them on 20 chances in the previous four games played this season. They’ve now gone six consecutive games without allowing a power play goal, denying their opposition on all 17 chances in those games.

Same teams, different venue Monday night as the Thrashers host the Hurricanes in Philips Arena. If the Devils take care of Philly this afternoon in regulation, the the Thrashers will be playing to pull even with the Flyers at 80 points. At the same time, we’ll be watching the scoreboard as Boston plays Buffalo.

Gotta be a Sabres fan again….aack, gag…ew, I just spit up a little in my mouth…why is that?

Being a Braves Fan in the 80s Prepard Me To Be a Thrashers Fan Today

Last Tuesday night, after the disappointing 4-0 beating the Thrashers suffered at the hands…or is that paws…of the Boston Bruins, I remarked to a friend of mine that being a Thrashers fan in the first decade of their existence has been a lot like being a Braves fans back in the 1980’s.

Back then… long before the Braves remarkable streak of 14 straight division titles, five NLCS Championships and one World Series victory… the Atlanta Braves were just about as miserable a franchise as there was in professional sports. We used to have a running joke in these parts that went something like…”There’s good news and bad news about the Braves. The bad news is they’ve started the season 3-8. The good news is…they are already in mid-season form”!

The Braves finished that decade with but one playoff appearance…1982 when the won the Western Division by one game over the L.A. Dodgers…but were swept away in the NLCS by the St. Louis Cardinals. While they flirted with a return to October’s extra-season play the following two years, they fell short, finishing in second in ’83 and ’84.

The manager for the Braves during those three seasons was none other than Joe Torre, who managed the New York Yankees to four World Series titles and six AL Championships in the ‘90s. After being fired in ’84, he remarked, “I finished first, second and second. If I had finished second, second then first…I would still be managing in Atlanta today”.

For the rest of the decade, however, the Braves’ main mission was to try and not finish the season with 100 losses. Something they failed to do in 1988…and only once between ’85 and ’90 did they lose fewer than 90 of the 162 games played.

The young lady I was dating back then used to rib me about retaining such loyalty to a team so bad. ”They’re terrible, simply awful”, she used to say. “They’ll never win a World Series”.

However, she would sit with me in old Fulton County Stadium on many a Saturday night nonetheless…doing needlepoint. By the sixth inning, we would be on first name basis with the 1,400 or so other fans that bothered to show up as well and we always managed to have fun, regardless of how bad the Braves were being beat that night.

Now, to fair to the Thrashers, this season they managed to work themselves closer to a playoff birth than Lotterypickville with their recent 5-1-2 record over the last eight games and Saturday’s win in Carolina has helped turned the feeling of despair that followed Tuesday night’s giant ice-steamer into another renewed sense of hope. The Braves, on the other hand, never ‘teased’ their fans this way during the mid-to-late ‘80s. They just got it over with quick and easy, right at the beginning.

But this past decade of frustration has been painfully close to what Braves fans suffered through a quarter century ago…you know, just before they made a general manager change and began an unprecedented string of success throughout the 1990s and the first few years of the 21st century. Like the Braves of the ‘80s, the Thrashers have but one playoff appearance…being swept by the Rangers. Since that time, late season games have taken on little more significance than an exercise to see just where they would wind up in the land of lottery ping-pong balls.

So, I suppose following those Braves teams back then sort of prepared me for following the Thrashers over the course of their initial 10 seasons. I am hoping that it’ll pay off soon much the same way it did for Braves fans starting in 1991. I promise you, if the Thrashers become a regular inthe Stanley Cup Playoffs during this next decade…it won’t be too much more of a surprise than it was around here in the ’90s.

Oh…and the lovely gal that suffered through the painful 1980’s Braves seasons with me? Well, when the Braves did actually win the World Series in 6 games over the Cleveland Indians back in October of 1995… she and I celebrated together while our two sons, ages 3 and 2, slept in their rooms.

My youngest one, now almost 17, recently asked a young lady to go to a Thrashers game with him. She responded, “The Thrashers? Aren’t they terrible…”?

Funny…where have I heard that before?

Boulton vs. Artyukhin – Who to Re-Sign?

Two Sundays ago while I, along with several others in the Thrasherville blogosphere, viewed the Coyotes game from high atop the press box. Toward the end of the first period, the Falconer leans over to me to say how well Eric Boulton was playing so far. Not 5 minutes later, I receive a text from a “lurker” that read, “Give Boulton more ice time”.

Eric Boulton has been the Thrashers main enforcer for four years now, but could he lose his spot on the fourth line to Evgeny Artyukhin? (Johhny Crawford/AJC)

Eric Boulton has been the Thrashers main enforcer for five seasons now, but could he lose his spot on the fourth line to Evgeny Artyukhin? (Johhny Crawford/AJC)

Indeed Boulton did play with a good deal of energy and jump during the 3-2 shootout loss to the Coyotes…as has been the case since sitting four straight games in the press box just after the trade deadline acquisitions that brought in Evgeny Artyukhin and Clarke McArthur.

Bolts has on a constant basis provided a lot of energy and fight for the Thrashers in his almost five season in Atlanta. However, one could get the impression that he is also performing for his job these days.

Both Boulton and newcomer Evgeny Artyukhin are UFAs this summer and, as such, the Thrashers may opt to bring just one back for the 2010-11 campaign. If that is indeed the case, which would you prefer to see return?

Boulton, the 6’-1”, 225-pound native of Nova Scotia, is currently playing out the final year of a contract that pays him $600,000 per season and is scheduled to be a UFA come July 1. Artyukhin… who was obtained two weeks ago from Anaheim in exchange for Wolves defenseman Nathan Oystrick and a condition draft pick in 2011…is finishing up a contract that pays him $950,00 per season.

If the Thrashers chose to re-sign only one of the two, who would you like to see remain?

  • Eric Boulton (26%, 23 Votes)
  • Evgeny Artyukhin (74%, 67 Votes)

Total Voters: 90

Loading ... Loading ...

For the season, Boulton has 2 goals and 6 assists and has a -1 during 59 games played this year. His 106 penalty minutes are also indicative of the enforcer role he plays for the team. He is in the fifth year in a Thrasher uniform and has amassed 545 PIM in the 305 games played here.

Last season alone he collected 174 PIM in 76 games…and back in the 2002-03 campaign he racked up a whopping 178 penalty minutes in just 58 games played as a member of the Buffalo Sabres. The year before that he managed 129 PIM in just 35 games.

Evgeny Artyukhin has combined for 7 goals and 7 assists during 49 games between the Ducks and Thrashers with 55 PIM on the year. Since making his way from SoCal, the 6’-4”, 255-pound native of Russia has 3 goals, 2 assists in 12 games played with 14 penalty minutes and is a –3.

Evgeny was the 94th overall pick by the Lightning in the 2001 draft and between Tampa Bay, Anaheim and Atlanta he has put up career numbers of 17 goals, 30 assists, 296 PIM and is a –6 in 194 games played.

The Man With The Bag Over His Head Is A Paying Customer, Mr. Yormark

Fans showing up to games with bags over their head has become a common form of displaying displeasure with the team they support when things are going poorly…especially over long periods of time. It began, I believe, back in the late 70’s or early 80s when New Orleans Saints fans were suffering through what was then yet another abysmal season.

Oh…and haven’t times changed for them, eh?

Anyway… recently Chris Lisi, a fan of the woeful NBA New Jersey Nets, donned the proverbial paper bag over the head during a home game against the Miami Heat. With the Nets trailing 79-67 between the third and fourth periods, Brett Yormark…the team’s CEO… left his courtside seat, making his way up the steps into the stands. As he passed Lisi, who was seated in the second row, Yormark noticed the bag-headed fan and asked why he do such a thing.

Because the Nets are so good”, Lisi quipped back sarcastically.

The two then proceeded to throw verbal jabs at each other in front of other fans and the cameras.

Neither Lisi, or the friend he was sitting with, are season ticket holders and didn’t seem to know who they were having the little spat with. But if I’m Yormark, I would be thankful anyone is paying money to show up to watch a team that is now 9-64…bag on the head or not.

Quotes of the Week

“We played a great game and they had nothing” – Ondrej Pavelec following the 3-1 over Philadelphia Sunday night.

“They beat us at every situation. They beat us at faceoffs, goaltending, loose pucks. They beat us all over the ice” – Johan Hedberg after the Thrashers 4-0 loss to Boston Tuesday night.

“I’m disappointed and really dismayed. We’ve got to show that we want it. We didn’t put forth our best effort tonight, and that really bothers me” – John Anderson after Thursday night’s 2-1 overtime loss to Toronto.

“They had some good scoring chances…they just didn’t shoot” – Leafs goalie Jonas Gustavsson on Atlanta’s 20-shot effort Thursday night

“They came out more desperate than we did” Carolina’s captain Eric Staal regarding the 4-0 loss to Atlanta Saturday night.

“I’m happy with the effort. They did the little things we asked them in the meeting. They responded very, very well” — John Anderson after the 4-0 win in Carolina which came a day after the closed door meeting

135 comments Add your comment

Brendan

March 29th, 2010
11:06 pm

WBF, I think this season will be defined by the ‘misreading’ of the Kovalchuk contract negotiations, that saw a stretch of 1-7-4 while it was going on. There was also that 0-4-1 stretch. But always remember, Atlanta was 14-7-3 at one point this season. That’s seven games over .500, “NHL-style.” Finishing the year seven games over .500 would put the Thrashers at 89-points for the year. And take a good look, folks, eight-nine (89) points would probably put us in the playoffs this year.

Brendan

March 29th, 2010
11:10 pm

Rawhide, is there a Ranallo warning forthcoming? I sense it, but don’t see it.

R. Stroz

March 29th, 2010
11:12 pm

Speaking of Colby Armstrong, the undrafted Pascal Dupuis has 18 goals, 16 assists, and a positive 3 plus/minus rating for Pittsburgh this season.

World Be Free

March 29th, 2010
11:18 pm

Brendan, if I had a choice today of keeping Armstrong or Slater I’d keep Jimmy in a heartbeat. Slater has raised his game this season. Armstrong should have been put in the press box a few times instead of being allowed to float most of this season.

Armstrong has the talent. he’s just dogging it. He’ll be asked to contribute to the team where ever he goes next season. Let’s hope for his sake that he can restart his engine.

Trixie (Rawhide's Secretary)

March 29th, 2010
11:27 pm

Mr. Brendan – I do not believe there is a Ranallo Warning to come tonight. Mr. Rawhide got back from the game…mummbled something like, “well, that sucked…again”….laid his jersey over the back of a chair, then went upstairs to bed.

Maybe he will feel better in the morning.

C. Sheen

March 30th, 2010
1:36 am

That sucked, part deux.

LAC

March 30th, 2010
3:49 am

This EGG that was laid, was the Final nail in the coffin.

Major offseason overhaul starting with a NEW GM Who knows what he is doing.

The LOSING record of worthless waddell has to stop and he MUST BE FIRED, simple as that Stupid Group !

Pittsburgh Pirate Fan

March 30th, 2010
5:47 am

LAC, I second the motion.
What’s so complicated about this?
Trade 2 draft picks for Clarke MacArthur?

Agree on Armstrong too-he’s a loafer

Lee

March 30th, 2010
6:46 am

They blew it. Always. They didn’t take the game seriously. They have ONE (not two) chance left, if they blow it, it’s impossible for them to make the playoffs.

stendek

March 30th, 2010
7:26 am

Hi Bill. Just do not feel much like typing this morning. Man did that suck! Heartless with a capital “H”. How can these guys accept their blasted paychecks without smirking? Quitters! The Trashers wore their pink uniforms on Monday. Even my hero Johan Moose Lehtonen. Truly disheartening. Guess pink uniforms will be in vogue from here on out. Sad. Would say more but no matter how much is said about filth it is still throwaway refuse. Just like Trashers! ++STENDEK++ Forgive us Hamilton.

Kevin

March 30th, 2010
7:56 am

I am proud to say after are lost ciach anderson said…We lost cause i told to make them look bad for Don (teflon waddell the worst GM this side of other GM own by the same owners of hawks….after all folks we goin be in winnipeg in 2012…..there we win a stanley cup while u look at empty arena…and oh when NJ devils come to Kovachuck will have 4 goals in his return here to show his womderfull inept GM the Finger with a F*U after….Its time fire Don waddell n his puppet Coach!

DWTOO

March 30th, 2010
8:08 am

Last night just sucked! We saw the Max that WBF knows and loves – the Human Turnover Machine. He had a tough night. Saw three guys who played last night – Slater, Stapleton, and the A-Train. Bogo had some hustle. Everyone else was going thru the motions.

Maybe time for another closed door meeting.

Hookyboob

March 30th, 2010
8:17 am

Armstrong wasn’t a loafer in Pittsburgh. He must hate this place with a passion. Atlanta’s losing ways have sucked the play out of him. Truly the biggest loser in the Hossa trade was Armstrong.

By the way the Thrashers Suck and you guys are idiots! Everyone in the city knew the Thrashers wouldnt make the playoffs except you freaks.

World Be Free

March 30th, 2010
8:27 am

Hooky-as Stroz noted, our buddy Du-puss is having a great year in Pittsburgh. Helps playing with Crosby! There’s a big different between the Pittsburgh and Atlanta cultures. As for your last 2 lines, well, you have to be an equal idiot if you continue to watch the team and post about its shortcomings. We’re just hockey fans who love the game despite this team’s shortcomings. I won’t defend that fact to you or anyone else.

Kevin-moving to Winnipeg or any other Canadian city is not the tonic for this or any other NHL team.

DWTOO-this is the Max that has been well-hidden for ost of this season. He’s played with guys who set him up in Bergfors and Antropov. Max just played like most of the team last night.

David Bowie “Chi, chi, chi changes”

Red Light

March 30th, 2010
8:44 am

Nice to catch up with Smoothie and the Blueland Chronicle, and Mr. and Mrs. Badger Bob last night. Now, what I find most unacceptable about last night’s game is simple. The Canes, without Gleason, Ruutu and Picard, had four defensemen in the lineup with fewer than 60 games of NHL experience. Two of those McBain (8 games) and Carson (53 games) played more than 21 minutes and a lot of time on the PK. In response, the Thrashers managed to convert on 1-of-6 on the PP and took 3 shots in nearly 9 minutes of with a man advantage. Worse than that, you limit Staal, Whitney and Jokinen to eight total shots on goal for the game and lose 4-1 at home.

By the way, the Canes all-time record at Philips Arena is now 21-6-3-1. They had every reason to throw in the towel in November, and then again at the trade deadline, yet they now have a better record in March than Atlanta and the Rangers, teams that have responded to the playoff race like John Edwards does to marriage counseling.

Meanwhile, all is quiet and that stroke of coaching genius – holding a “closed-door meeting” (as if there is another kind C-Viv between players and coaches) that made an impact for at the most three hours, is now a distant memory.

Against teams at the bottom of the NHL standings, teams ranked 23rd-30th overall, the Thrashers record this season is 13-14-5 and 7-7-3 at home, which is worse than their record against the Top 22 teams.

I believe that categorically states the case that this team doesn’t belong in the playoffs and as LAC, Stendec, Brendan and many others have said…Alas poor Donald, we hardly knew ye!

Red Light

March 30th, 2010
8:45 am

Sorry we missed you World Be Free!

DWTOO

March 30th, 2010
8:53 am

WBF – I shouldn’t have been too tough on Max. He was not the only problem last night. His errors just stood out – the rest just stood around. Think sometimes Max tries too hard – as evident from some of the passess he tried last night. When the guys around him click Max is super as we have seen. Would really like to see us sign him for next year.

World Be Free

March 30th, 2010
9:11 am

DTWOO-agreed, he has been a pleasant surprise this season.
My Buffalo buddies have been waiting for him to revert to the Old Max all season. Nice to shut them up!

Badger Bob

March 30th, 2010
9:17 am

For the third straight home game, we were the second most desperate and committed team on the ice. Turn out the lights, the party’s over… Hopefully, DW and JAs parties are over, too.

My buddy Rutherford Sydell was a no-show, too. Nice! Considering every Thrasher knows exactly where you sit, perhaps you may want to show you care? Nah. Have some integrity and sell the team.

My formerly favorite Swedish Thrashers defenceman has tanked brutally and has earned a demotion to second favorite. Toby’s miscues have been killers – Bruins goal #2 due to a terrible “pass around the boards with forecheckers everywhere”. Laffs goal #1 on a hideous decision in the neutral zone. Canes goal #2 after an icing caused by an eyebrow-high pass out of the zone. Toby is wasted and at the very least needs a break. JA needed to realize it.

Great meeting you, Smoothie! I’ll get up to 317 next year during my free agency. Besides, I like the beer guy up there (for legal reasons I can’t say why).

Badger Bob

March 30th, 2010
9:21 am

Late entry for blog post of the year: RL “Atlanta and the Rangers, teams that have responded to the playoff race like John Edwards does to marriage counseling”

Red Light

March 30th, 2010
9:27 am

Since the Thrashers playoff appearance when they finished 27 points ahead of Washington in 2006-07, they finished 18 points behind the Caps in 2007-08 (a 45-point swing in one season), 32 points behind the Caps last season, and currently trail by 31 points.

The playoff system provides a false sense of security to owners who don’t know anything about the game. Yeah, you might be only a few points out of a playoff spot, but during the past three seasons you finished a collective 81 points behind a team in your own division. How is that acceptable?

In 1974-75, the NHL went from two divisions to four. The largest margin of points between the first- and second-place teams since that time occurred during the 1977-78 season when the Canadiens finished 51 points ahead of the Red Wings. Right now, the Caps lead of 31 points over the Thrashers would rank 8th in the largest margin between 1st and 2nd place in a division race, and largest margin since 1995-96. Here is the Top 10.

129-78 Canadiens and Red Wings 51 points 1977-78
132-83 Canadiens and Kings 49 points 1976-77
127-85 Canadiens and Kings 42 points 1975-76
119-82 Oilers and Flames 37 points 1983-84
111-77 Oilers and Canucks 34 points 1981-82
131-97 Wings and Blackhawks 34 points 1995-96
107-74 Canadiens and Kings 33 points 1979-80
107-76 Blues and Canucks 31 points 1980-81
115-85 Canadiens and Penguins 30 points 1978-79
119-89 Oilers and Flames 30 points 1985-86

Red Light

March 30th, 2010
9:28 am

Of course, the NHL went to six divisions in 1998-99.

Bob

March 30th, 2010
9:33 am

“Toby’s miscues have been killers”

I have always had disdain for Enstrom’s game. He’s indicative of what is wrong with this club, too small and too soft. We seem to be trying to get bigger, I would assume that’s Dudley’s input. But Enstrom is constantly getting forechecked off the puck and manhandled on rushes into our zone. Sure he’s piled up a bunch of assists passing the puck around our zone on the PP all year, but any PP specialist will get those points and he won’t shoot on the PP. If we’re going to improve our D, Enstrom needs to go.

Smoothie

March 30th, 2010
9:35 am

Good Lord has there ever been a team more allergic to potential “success” than the Atlanta Thrashers?? They cannot handle any kind of good fortune at all. And why is it that they never seem mentally prepared for the neutral zone trap when an opponent makes it obvious from the get-go that they have no intention of taking any risks or forcing the issue. The Thrashers were simply horrible last night.

Red Light – was truly a pleasure having the good fortune of bumping into you last night at the game. And I really appreciate the seat upgrade you so graciously imparted upon me and Big Shooter (Blueland Chronicle fame). If it wasn’t for the good company, intelligent discourse and lively chatter, I probably would’ve drank myself into oblivion in the upper level during that pathetic 3rd period.

Badger Bob – twas very nice making your acquaintance as well. Sorry we didn’t have more time to shoot the breeze. But now I certainly won’t hesitate approaching you when I see you again even if it isn’t until next fall when the puck drops on another fruitless season! The one thing that has heartened me this season is the number of truly classy and generous fans we have within our little dysfunctional hockey family. Actually, the fans aren’t nearly as dysfunctional as the team eventhough Sage would have you believe otherwise. It’s just a shame more people don’t realize how enjoyable the hockey experience can be even if the product on the ice sucks rotten eggs!

Lastly, PLEASE DO NOT RE-SIGN MAX AFINOGENOV!!! That is all.

World Be Free

March 30th, 2010
9:39 am

Smoothie- I thought you were a Max fan?

Badger Bob

March 30th, 2010
9:43 am

RL, at number 10 on your list, 1985-86 Oilers and Flames. The year my namesake engineered the greatest playoff upset in the history of sport and put that beautiful blemish on the Oilers reign. Warm memories… ahhh…. now back to the sad reality that is hockey in Atlanta.

Badger Bob

March 30th, 2010
9:46 am

On the bright side, the No. 2 overall pick is still attainable. Hey, if we can’t beat the Broons to a playoff spot, perhaps we can at least knock them down one spot in the draft.

DWTOO

March 30th, 2010
9:50 am

Smoothie – Guess we’ll have to agree to disagree about Max. He may foul up some, but, at least he tries. MRS DWTOO calls him the Wherling Dervish – always moving, never getting anywhere.

Next season Rawhide should pick a game, perhaps in the exhibition season, where all the posters could meet up. I’d enjoy sharing a cold beer with everyone. We’ve probably bumped into each other on different occaisions without even knowing it.

Red Light

March 30th, 2010
9:53 am

No Vanek, no Connolly, no Kaleta for Buffalo last night and they still win on the road. Boston now 3-10-3 at TD Garden since the Winter Classic. Good thing they’re battling for 8th instead of 4th, because they sure don’t want home-ice advantage.

Smoothie

March 30th, 2010
9:57 am

WBF – I would really like to be a Max fan or advocate. He certainly can be electric too watch, but too often he fails to make the simple play. This team needs a radical paradigm shift and keeping a “enigmatic Russian” (sorry, couldn’t resist) free-lancer like Max just doesn’t fit the identity this team should be working to develop. Looking at the young players we have like Kane, Bogosian, Kulda, Machacek, Cormier (shudder), Morin, Klingberg etc, we seem to be transforming the mental make-up of this team. Problem is we need more grit on the blueline to really cement the changes Rick Dudley wants to implement. Anyway, I just don’t see how keeping Max really helps us in doing this. We can only afford to have one soft-ish play-making line and I’d rather have a more conservative play-maker like Little who can win a face-off and win some battles in the corner. The second line is going to need some serious grit upgrade, but luckily we have Kane to build around. I’m not so sure Peverley is a true 2nd line NHL’er but playing alongside Kane and let’s say a Patrick Sharp type 2-way player might just be the ticket. I like a 3rd line consisting of Slater, Arty and perhaps Machacek, but the key may be bringing in a 3rd line UFA who will play like he gives a crap more than every 4th or 5th game (yes, I’m directing this at you “armdog”). Seriously, without the benefit of Slater or Kane’s speed, what the hell has Armstrong done other than lay out an unsuspecting Marian Hossa??

Sorry for the long rant, but I’m sick to my stomach after yet another seriously rotten egg so close to Easter. Oh yeah, lastly, fire John Anderson as well. AFTER WADDELL IS SHOWN THE DOOR.

Smoothie

March 30th, 2010
10:04 am

DWTOO – it’s not that I hate Max. He has always had the potential to be brilliant…and sometimes he even achieves brilliance. But that’s just it: for ten years he has flirted with brilliance. He is what he is and if he isn’t playing top line minutes, I don’t want him on my team. Perhaps I am being unfair to a player who does indeed try hard on pretty much every shift of every game, but if we don’t invest in our future (Bergfors, Little, Kane etc), I think we’re just delaying what really needs to happen — a shift in identity. A shift away from the softy, skill-laden, speed-driven Europeans to the grittier, grind-it-out, puck battling mentality of the North American game that seemed to dominate at the Vancouver Olympic showcase…even the Slovaks seemed to understand that and surprised teams with their willingness to make sacrifices on both ends of the ice.

Trixie (Rawhide's Secretary)

March 30th, 2010
10:13 am

:!: RANALLO WARNING!! :!:

This is your official 10-minute Ranallo Warning.

New blog to be posted in 10 minutes.

Red Light

March 30th, 2010
10:17 am

Excellent points Smoothie. Max isn’t the type of player to keep for long-term success.

If you want a hockey team with an identity, you can’t have Evgeni Plushenko doing his triple Salchow in the offensive zone every night.

Smoothie

March 30th, 2010
10:19 am

Precisely Red Light! I think Dudley understands this. Of course we have good cause to worry about Waddell’s judgment. The dream is over. Dream another dream Donnie and start your retirement please.

Time to take this to the next blog cohorts!

Sage of Bluesland

March 30th, 2010
10:21 am

Wow…It’s humorous reading the conclusion some are coming to after it’s been pointed out by yours-truly since 2002…

Oh well, at least you’re at the party…a late arrival certainly, but better late than never.

The next “revelation” some will have is to stop subsidizing the incompetence and offensive disdain shown to you by the owners of this abomination of an organization.

Until then, keep bewieving…