Thursday, June 30, 2011

NBA Season in Review

Final Standings
Eastern Conference
Chicago (62-20)
Miami (58-24)
Boston (56-26)
Orlando (52-30)
Atlanta (44-38)
New York (42-40)
Philadelphia (41-41)
Indiana (37-45)
Milwaukee (35-47)
Charlotte (34-48)
Detroit (30-52)
New Jersey (24-58)
Washington (23-59)
Toronto (22-60)
Cleveland (19-63)

Western Conference
San Antonio (61-21)
LA Lakers (57-25)
Dallas (57-25)
Oklahoma City (55-27)
Denver (50-32)
Portland (48-34)
New Orleans (46-36)
Memphis (46-36)
Houston (43-39)
Phoenix (40-42)
Utah (39-43)
Golden State (36-46)
LA Clippers (32-50)
Sacramento (24-58)
Minnesota (17-65)

Conference Quarterfinals
1 Chicago 104-96-88-84-116
8 Indiana 99-90-84-89-89

2 Miami 97-94-100-82-97
7 Philadelphia 89-73-94-86-91

3 Boston 87-96-113-101
6 New York 85-93-96-89

4 Orlando 93-88-84-85-101-81
5 Atlanta 103-82-88-88-76-84

1 San Antionio 98-93-88-86-110-91
8 Memphis 101-87-104-110-99

2 LA Lakers 100-87-100-88-106-98
7 New Orleans 109-78-86-93-90-80

3 Dallas 89-101-92-82-93-103
6 Portland 81-89-97-84-82-96

4 Oklahoma City 107-106-97-101-100
5 Denver 103-89-94-104-97

Conference Semi-Finals
1 Chicago 95-86-99-88-95-93
5 Atlanta 103-73-82-100-83-73

2 Miami 99-102-81-98-97
3 Boston 90-91-97-90-87

2 LA Lakers 94-81-92-86
3 Dallas 96-93-98-122

4 Oklahoma City 101-111-93-133-99-83-105
8 Memphis 114-102-101-123-72-95-90

Conference Finals
1 Chicago 103-75-85-93-80
2 Miami 82-85-96-101-83

3 Dallas 121-100-93-112-100
4 Oklahoma City 112-106-87-105-96

The NBA Finals
2 Miami 92-93-88-83-103-95
3 Dallas 84-95-86-86-112-105

Awards
NBA MVP- Derrick Rose, Chicago Bulls
NBA Defensive Player of the Year- Dwight Howard, Orlando Magic
Most Improved Player- Kevin Love, Minnesota Timberwolves
Sixth Man of the Year- Lamar Odom, LA Lakers
Rookie of the Year- Blake Griffin, LA Clippers
Coach of the Year- Tom Thibodeau, Chicago Bulls

NBA First Team
PG- Derrick Rose, CHI
SG- Kobe Bryant, LAL
F- Kevin Durant, OKC
F- LeBron James, MIA
C- Dwight Howard, ORL

NBA Second Team
PG- Chris Paul, NO
SG- Dwayne Wade, MIA
F- Dirk Nowitzki, DAL
F- Kevin Love, MIN
C- Al Jefferson, UTA

NBA All-Rookie Team
PG- John Wall, WAS
SG- Gary Neal, SAS
F- Blake Griffin, LAC
F- Ed Davis, TOR
C- DeMarcus Cousins, SAC
 

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Pacific Division Recap

Corey Perry became the first player to win the Hart Trophy in a Ducks uniform
Standings
*San Jose (48-25-9-105)
*Anaheim (47-30-5-99)
*Phoenix (43-26-13-99)
*Los Angeles (46-30-6-98)
Dallas (42-29-11-95)

Statistical Leaders
Goals- Corey Perry, ANA (50)
Assists- Ryan Getzlaf, ANA (57)
Points- Corey Perry, ANA (98)
plus/minus- Toni Lydman, ANA (+32)
Save PCT- Jonas Hiller, ANA (.924)

All-Pacific First Team
LW- Loui Eriksson (DAL)
C- Ryan Getzlaf (ANA)
RW- Corey Perry (ANA)
D- Lubomir Visnovsky (ANA)
D- Drew Doughty (LA)
G- Jonathan Quick (LA)

All-Pacific Rookie Team
LW- Kyle Clifford (LA)
C- Logan Couture (SJ)
RW- Brandon McMillan (ANA)
D- Alec Martinez (LA)
D- Cam Fowler (ANA)
G- Jonathan Bernier (LA)

Division Awards
Hart Trophy- Corey Perry (ANA)..Led the NHL with 50 goals, and had 98 points in what was a breakout season. Won the NHL's Hart Trophy as a result.

Vezina Trophy- Jonathan Quick (LA)..Was in the top 10 in the NHL with 35 wins, and had a 2.24 GAA and a .918 save PCT.

Norris Trophy- Lubomir Visnovsky (ANA)..Led all NHL defensemen with 68 points and had a +18 rating with an average of 24:17 in 81 games.

Calder Trophy- Logan Couture (SJ)..Was second among rookies with 32-24--56 with a +18 and won 53% of all faceoffs.  Nominee for NHL Calder, I felt he should have won it.

Lady Byng- Anze Kopitar (LA)..Had 73 points and just 20 PIMs in 75 games.

Selke Trophy- Logan Couture (SJ)..Made a big splash defensively his rookie year.

Jack Adams- Dave Tippett (PHX)..Continues to do a wonderful coaching job in Glendale, this time keeping the Coyotes from falling into the proverbial hangover year.

Masterton Trophy- Ray Emery (ANA)..returned from bone-graft surgery to lead Ducks into first round of the playoffs.

Players in the Penthouse
- Corey Perry (ANA)
- Teemu Selane (ANA)
- Ryan Getzlaf (ANA)
- Bobby Ryan (ANA)
- Lubomir Visnovsky (ANA)
- Brad Richards (DAL)
- Loui Eriksson (DAL)
- Brenden Morrow (DAL)
- Anze Kopitar (LA)
- Dustin Brown (LA)
- Drew Doughty (LA)
- Jonathan Quick (LA)
- Shane Doan (PHX)
- Keith Yandle (PHX)
- Ray Whitney (PHX)
- Ilya Bryzgalov (PHX)
- Patrick Marleau (SJ)
- Joe Thornton (SJ)
- Joe Pavelski (SJ)
- Logan Couture (SJ)
- Dan Boyle (SJ)

Players in the Elevator
- Cam Fowler (ANA)
- Toni Lydman (ANA)
- Jonas Hiller (ANA)
- Jamie Benn (DAL)
- Justin Williams (LA)
- Alec Martinez (LA)
- Radim Vrbata (PHX)
- Taylor Pyatt (PHX)
- Ryane Clowe (SJ)
- Devin Setoguchi (SJ)
- Antti Niemi (SJ)

Players in the Doghouse
- Andrew Raycroft (DAL)
- Steve Ott (DAL)
- Jack Johnson (LA)

Thoughts on the 5 Teams

Anaheim Ducks
- Is it even a question that Ryan/Getzlaf/Perry is the best line in hockey?
- This team could be close to another Cup run, looking at all the young talent they have.

Dallas Stars
- Not really sure about this team and what direction they're headed in.

LA Kings
- If Jack Johnson can come back from a tough year, he and Doughty could be two of the top blueliners in the league, with a great goalie behind them in Quick.
- This team strikes many similarities in my mind to what the Blackhawks were two years ago.

Phoenix Coyotes
- Those who aren't paying attention in the desert, are missing out on a pretty good hockey team down in Glendale.

San Jose Sharks
- After two years of losing in the Conference Finals, will next year finally be the year when they break through and the long-awaited arival of June hockey comes to the Bay area?

Monday, June 27, 2011

Northwest Division Recap

Standings
Vancouver (54-19-9-117)
Calgary (41-29-12-94)
Minnesota (39-35-8-86)
Colorado (30-44-8-68)
Edmonton (25-45-12-62)

Statistical Leaders
Goals- Jerome Iginla, CAL (43)
Assists- Henrik Sedin, VAN (75)
Points- Daniel Sedin, VAN (104)
plus/minus- Kevin Bieksa, VAN (+32)
Save PCT- Roberto Luongo, VAN (.928)

All-Northwest First Team
LW- Daniel Sedin (VAN)
C- Henrik Sedin (VAN)
RW- Jerome Iginla (CAL)
D- Kevin Bieksa (VAN)
D- Christian Ehrhoff (VAN)
G- Roberto Luongo (VAN)

All-Northwest Rookie Team
LW- Taylor Hall (EDM)
C- Mikael Backlund (CAL)
RW- Jordan Eberle (EDM)
D- Clayton Stoner (MIN)
D- Jeff Petry (EDM)
G- Corey Schneider (VAN)

Division Awards
Hart Trophy- Daniel Sedin (VAN)..A year after a Hart Trophy campaign by his twin brother, he followed it up with a bid of his own, putting up 41-63--104, with a +30.  He was nominated for the award, but was edged out by Anaheim's Corey Perry.

Vezina Trophy- Roberto Luongo (VAN)..Has a league-leading 38-wins, with a Western Conference-leading 2.11 GAA and a .928 save PCT.  A Stanley Cup run begins between the pipes, and there was nobody in the Western Conference more solid than this guy in the net over the course of the season.

Norris Trophy- Christian Ehrhoff (VAN)..Posted a career-high 50 points and had a +19 rating in roughly 24:00 of ice time per game.

Calder Trophy- Taylor Hall (EDM)..Began his career with a respectable rookie campaign, netting 22-20--42 in 65 games.

Lady Byng- Alex Tanguay (CAL)..Has been one of the NHL's most underrated players over the years, but has handled the lack of attention in the most professional way possible; just going out there and doing his job.  He also had just 24 PIMs in 2010-2011.

Selke Trophy- Ryan Kesler (VAN)..Played in all 82 games, posting 73 points and winning 57% of faceoffs and averaging over 20 minutes of ice time.  He also won the NHL's Selke Trophy.

Jack Adams- Alain Vigneault (VAN)..Led the Canucks to their first Presidents Trophy and to game 7 of the Stanley Cup Finals for the second time in team history.  Also nominated for NHL's Jack Adams Award.

Masterton Trophy- Manny Maholtra (VAN)..Came back from a devastating eye injury that threatened his career in March to play in the Cup finals.  Would be surprised if he was not a 2011-2012 NHL Masterton bid.

Players in the Penthouse
Jerome Iginla (CAL)
Alex Tanguay (CAL)
Brendan Morrison (CAL)
Matt Duchene (COL)
John-Michael Liles (COL)
David Jones (COL)
Ales Hemsky (EDM)
Mikko Koivu (MIN)
Niklas Backstrom (MIN)
Daniel Sedin (VAN)
Henrik Sedin (VAN)
Ryan Kesler (VAN)
Christian Ehrhoff (VAN)
Kevin Bieksa (VAN)
Roberto Luongo (VAN)


Players in the Elevator
Curtis Glencross (CAL)
Anton Babchuk (CAL)
Mikael Backlund (CAL)
Paul Statsny (COL)
Taylor Hall (EDM)
Jordan Eberle (EDM)
Sam Gagner (EDM)
Brent Burns (MIN)
Matt Cullen (MIN)
Corey Schneider (VAN)

Players in the Doghouse
Olli Jokinen (CAL)
Rene Bourque (CAL)
Mikka Kiprusoff (CAL)
Milan Hedjuk (COL)
Brandon Yip (COL)
Peter Budaj (COL)
Linus Omark (EDM)
Nikolai Knabibulin (EDM)
Eric Nystrom (MIN)

Thoughts on the 5 Teams

Calgary Flames
- Great job resigning Tanguay, but this team needs to look to the future a little bit, with him and Iginla not getting any younger.  A two year playoff hiatus is very indicative of that.

Colorado Avalanche
- A franchise that needs a total overhaul.  The days of the Avs battling it out with the Red Wings for the Western Conference crown and players like Joe Sakic, Petr Forsberg, Adam Foote, and Patrick Roy that brought the Stanley Cup to the Rockies in 1996 and 2001.

Edmonton Oilers
- A great group of young guys that have come from the past two drafts, Taylor Hall and Jordan Eberle most notably.  Certainly the talent capable of bringing the Oilers back to their glory days of the 1980s.

Minnesota Wild
- Another team from the Northwest division that has fallen from grace over the past few years.

Vancouver Canucks
- This team had more talent than the Bruins, but severely lacked toughness, which was a big reason why they lost.

MLB Week in Review

The surprise resignation of Nats skipper Jim Riggleman has been one of the big stories of the week
Divisional Races
AL East- NY Yankees (45-31); Boston (45-32, -0.5); Tampa Bay (44-34, -2)
AL Central- Detroit (42-36); Cleveland (40-36, -1); Chicago White Sox (38-41, -4.5)
AL West- Texas (41-38); Seattle (39-39, -1.5); LA Angels (39-40, -2)
AL Wildcard- Boston (45-32); Tampa Bay (44-34, -1.5); Cleveland (40-36, -4.5)
NL East- Philadelphia (49-30); Altanta (44-35, -5)
NL Central- Milwaukee (44-35); St. Louis (41-38, -3); Pittsburgh (39-38; -4); Cincinnati (39-38, -4)
NL West- San Francisco (44-34); Arizona (43-36, -1.5)

MLB Leaders
Average- Adrian Gonzalez (BOS), .361; Jose Reyes (NYM), .341; Victor Martinez (DET), .333
OBP- Jose Bautista (TOR), .468; Miguel Cabrera (DET), .350; Joey Votto (CIN), .443
SLG- Jose Bautista (TOR), .655; Matt Kemp (LAD), .619; Prince Fielder (MIL), .611
Runs- Curtis Granderson (NYY), 68; Jose Reyes (NYM), 61; Jose Bautista (TOR), 60
Hits- Adrian Gonzalez (BOS), 114; Jose Reyes (NYM), 113; Starlin Castro (CHC), 105
Doubles- Adrian Gonzalez (BOS), 25; Ben Zobrist (TB), 25; Alex Gordon (KC), 23
Triples- Jose Reyes (NYM), 14; Shane Victorino (PHI), 8
Homers- Mark Teixiera (NYY), 23; Jose Bautista (TOR), 23
RBI- Adrian Gonzalez (BOS), 71; Prince Fielder (MIL), 68; Ryan Howard (PHI), 60
10-win Club- Roy Halladay (PHI), CC Sabathia (NYY), Jair Jurrjens (ATL), Justin Verlander (DET)
ERA- Josh Beckett (BOS), 1.86; Jared Weaver (LAA), 1.97; Jair Jurrjens (ATL), 2.07
Strikeouts- Clayton Kershaw (LAD), 128; Justin Verlander (DET), 124; Roy Halladay (PHI), 123

The Hot/The Not
C- AJ Pierzynski/Carlos Corporan
1B- Jason Giambi/Eric Hosmer
2B- Brandon Phillips/Kelly Johnson
3B- Evan Longoria/Ryan Zimmerman
SS- JJ Hardy/Cliff Pennington
OF- BJ Upton/Jacoby Ellsbury
OF- Nick Markakis/Drew Stubbs
OF- Adam Jones/Angel Pagan
SP- Clayton Kershaw/Luke Hochevar
SP- Tim Hudson/Jeremy Guthrie
SP- Anibal Sanchez/Fausto Carmona
SP- Jared Weaver/Juan Nicasio
Team- NY Yankees/Cleveland Indians
Team- Tampa Bay Rays/Florida Marlins
Team- Washington Nationals/St. Louis Cardinals

Top 5 MLB Teams
1- Philadelphia Phillies
2- NY Yankees
3- Boston Red Sox
4- Milwaukee Brewers
5- San Francisco Giants

Bottom 5 MLB Teams
1- Houston Astros
2- Chicago Cubs
3- Florida Marlins
4- San Diego Padres
5- LA Dodgers

Notables
- Yankees closer Mariano Rivera has converted his last 23 interleague saves, and has an interleague-record 67 saves
- Paul Konerko became the only player in White Sox history to hit 20 or more homers in 12 seasons.  The previous record was 11 seasons by Frank Thomas, who did it from 1991-1998, 2000, 2002-2003
- Alex Rodriguez has 185 interleague RBI, more than any player
- With a 2-1 loss to Seattle in 10 innings, the Marlins have now lost 13 consecutive 1-run games

Some Thoughts
- Imagine how different things would be in the AL East and NL East if the Yankees got Cliff Lee? 
- The best has yet to come for the Brewers, meanwhile the Cardinals have a lot of questions to answer now that Pujols is out.
- The career of Albert Pujols could very well be a retelling of the Ken Griffey Jr. story.
- Justin Verlander is the best pitcher in baseball.
- Interleague play could very well be the catalyst for the end of Major League Baseball as we know it.
- Jim Riggleman's antics this week disgustingly lacked professionalism, and I'd be absolutely shocked if he even got an interview for a manager's job ever again.  That being said, the Nats are playing great baseball.
- Jack McKeon and Davey Johnson are great for baseball, and their times on the bench will give baseball what it deserves- students of the game of baseball, as opposed to math geeks.
- Boy have the Florida Marlins fallen off the face of the Earth this month.  Maybe a name change in 2012 (Miami Marlins) will help their fortune (or lack thereof).  Hey, it worked in Tampa.

Central Division Recap


Standings
Detroit (47-25-10-104)
Nashville (44-27-11-99)
Chicago (44-29-9-97)
St. Louis (38-33-11-87)
Columbus (34-35-13-81)

Statistical Leaders
Goals- Patrick Sharp, CHI (34)
Assists- Henrik Zetterberg, DET (56)
Points- Henrik Zetterberg, DET (80)
plus/minus- David Backes, STL (+32)
Save PCT- Pekka Rinne, NSH (.930)

All-Central First Team
LW- Henrik Zetterberg (DET)
C- Jonathan Toews (CHI)
RW- David Backes (STL)
D- Niklas Lindstrom (DET)
D- Shea Weber (NSH)
G- Pekka Rinne (NSH)

All-Central Rookie Team
LW- Brian Bickell (CHI)
C- Jake Dowell (CHI)
RW- Matt Halischuk (NSH)
D- Grant Clitsome (CLB)
D- Kevin Shattenkirk (STL)
G- Corey Crawford (CHI)

Division Awards
Hart Trophy- Jonathan Toews (CHI)..Had a career-high 76 points and was one of the best all-around forwards in the NHL, during a season in which the Blackhawks had to find their identity while defending a Stanley Cup, just struggling to make the playoffs.  Without Toews, there's a good chance they don't make it.

Vezina Trophy- Pekka Rinne (NSH)..Possibly the best goaltender in the NHL not named Tim Thomas, was possibly the MVP of this Predators team, who won a playoff series for the first time in franchise history.

Norris Trophy- Shea Weber (NSH)..Had less points than NHL Norris Winner Lindstrom (DET), with 48, but had a higher plus/minus, played more minutes while playing all 82 games for the Predators.

Calder Trophy- Corey Crawford (CHI)..Arguably the NHL's best rookie goalie, posting a .917 Save PCT with a 2.56 GAA, and winning 33 of the 57 games he played in.  Helped many Blackhawks fans with their Antti Niemi hangover.

Lady Byng- Pavel Datsyuk (DET)..One of the game's most respected players, had just 15 PIMs in 56 games in 2010-2011.

Selke Trophy- Jonathan Toews (CHI)..Had a +25 rating while winning over 56% of faceoffs and averaging just under 21:00 of ice time.

Jack Adams- Barry Trotz (NSH)..Also nominated for the NHL's Jack Adams Award.

Masterton Trophy- Pavel Datsyuk (DET)..struggled through injuries during the 2010-2011 regular season, limited to just 56 games, but had a great run in the playoffs, putting up 4-11--15 in 11 postseason games.

Players in the Penthouse
Jonathan Toews (CHI)
Patrick Kane (CHI)
Duncan Keith (CHI)
Marian Hossa (CHI)
Brent Seabrook (CHI)
Rick Nash (CLB)
RJ Umberger (CLB)
Antoine Vermette (CLB)
Henrik Zetterberg (DET)
Pavel Datsyuk (DET)
Niklas Lindstrom (DET)
Johan Franzen (DET)
Brian Rafalski (DET)
Shea Weber (NSH)
Patric Hornvquist (NSH)
Ryan Suter (NSH)
Pekka Rinne (NSH)
David Backes (STL)
Andy McDonald (STL)
Alex Pietrangelo (STL)
Jarislov Halak (STL)

Players in the Elevator
Patrick Sharp (CHI)
Brian Bickell (CHI)
Troy Brouwer (CHI)
Brian Campbell (CHI)
Corey Crawford (CHI)
Derick Brassard (CLB)
Grant Clitsome (CLB)
Danny Cleary (DET)
Niklas Kronwall (DET)
Patrick Eaves (DET)
Martin Erat (NSH)
Sergei Kostitsyn (NSH)
Colin Wilson (NSH)
Patrik Berglund (STL)
Alexander Steen (STL)
Matt D'Agostini (STL)

Players in the Doghouse
Tomas Kopecky (CHI)
Marty Turco (CHI)
Kristian Huselius (CLB)
Samuel Pahlsson (CLB)
Scottie Upshall (CLB)
Steve Mason (CLB)
Mike Modano (DET)
Todd Bertuzzi (DET)
Nick Spaling (NSH)
Vladimir Sobotka (STL)
Erik Johnson (STL)
Jay McClement (STL)
BJ Crombeen (STL)

Thoughts on the 5 Teams

Chicago Blackhawks
- The team is rebuilding nicely from the post-Stanley Cup dismantling of the Hawks with young players like Bickell, Dowell, and Crawford topping out a good group of rookies this year in Chicago.  As long as they have Kane and Toews, with the top line of Seabrook/Keith, good goaltending, and a solid group to compliment, they'll be Cup contenders for a while.
- Jonathan Toews was one of the most overlooked great forwards in hockey this year.

Columbus Blue Jackets
- This team needs to decide whether or not Steve Mason is the goaltender of the future or not.
- They acquired Jeff Carter, and have one of the game's best players in Rick Nash, a good start in the attempt of this team finallly becoming a contender as opposed to the forgotten franchise in central Ohio that has been over the past decade-plus since the franchise's inception.  It is just a start, however.

Detroit Red Wings
- The New York Yankees of hockey, seemingly ageless at times, with the best example being the 41-year old Nicklas Lindstrom winning the Norris Trophy.  That and they have now had 11 consecutive 100-point seasons.  I'll pick them to extend that streak until I see it broken.

Nashville Predators
- With a goalie like Rinne, a shutdown duo of Weber/Suter, all this team needs is some snipers and theres a solid chance at the Cup coming to Nashville.

St. Louis Blues
- Not true indication of what this team is or when they'll find their identity.  Certainly the biggest losers of the lockout.
-  It has seemed like years since they days of Brett Hull, Chris Pronger, Al McInnis, Keith Tkachuk, and Roman Turek.

 

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Southeast Division Recap

Standings
Washington (48-23-11-107)
Tampa Bay (46-25-11-103)
Carolina (40-31-11-91)
Atlanta (34-36-12-80)
Florida (30-40-12-72)

Statistical Leaders
Goals- Steven Stamkos, TB (45)
Assists- Martin St. Louis, TB (68)
Points- Martin St. Louis, TB (99)
plus/minus- Alex Ovechkin, WAS (+24)
Save PCT- Cam Ward, CAR (.923)

All-Southeast First Team
LW- Alex Ovechkin (WAS)
C- Steven Stamkos (TB)
RW- Martin St. Louis (TB)
D- Dustin Byfuglien (ATL)
D- John Carlson (WAS)
G- Cam Ward (CAR)

All-Southeast Rookie Team
LW- Johan Harju (TB)
C- Jeff Skinner (CAR)
RW- Evgeni Dadonov (FLA)
D- John Carlson (WAS)
D- Jamie McBain (CAR)
G- Michal Neuvirth (WAS)

Division Awards
Hart Trophy- Martin St. Louis (TB)..Only player who had more assists or points than St. Louis had the last name Sedin.

Vezina Trophy- Cam Ward (CAR)..Led the league in games played (74), and faced more shots and stopped more pucks than anyother goalie in the league.  Also put up a more than respectable .923 Save PCT and 2.56 GAA.

Norris Trophy- John Carlson (WAS)..Had a rookie-high +21 rating to go along with 37 points.  Him along with Mike Green should prove to be a great top line in DC for the near future.

Calder Trophy- Jeff Skinner (CAR)..Led all rookies in points and was the lone rookie All-Star Selection.  Won the NHL Calder Trophy for that reason.

Lady Byng- Martin St. Louis (TB)..Won the NHL Lady Byng as well.

Selke Trophy- Nicklas Backstrom (WAS)..Had a +24 rating while blocking 64 shots and laying 69 hits in 77 games.

Jack Adams- Guy Boucher (TB)..Took a team that missed the playoffs in 2009-2010 to within one win of the Stanley Cup Finals.

Masterton Trophy- Dewayne Roloson (TB)..The 41-year old goaltender went down South from Long Island in January and led the Lightning to Game 7 of the Eastern Conference Finals

Players in the Penthouse
Dustin Byfuglien (ATL)
Bryan Little (ATL)
Tobias Einstrom (ATL)
Andrew Ladd (ATL)
Eric Staal (CAR)
Jeff Skinner (CAR)
Tuomo Ruutu (CAR)
Erik Cole (CAR)
Cam Ward (CAR)
Tomas Vokoun (FLA)
Martin St. Louis (TB)
Steven Stamkos (TB)
Vincent Lecavalier (TB)
Teddy Purcell (TB)
Dwayne Roloson (TB)
Alex Ovechkin (WAS)
Nicklas Backstrom (WAS)
Alexander Semin (WAS)
John Carlson (WAS)

Players in the Elevator
Evander Kane (ATL)
Nik Anthropov (ATL)
Ondrej Pavelec (ATL)
Jamie McBain (CAR)
Brandon Sutter (CAR)
Stephen Weiss (FLA)
Mike Santorelli (FLA)
David Booth (FLA)
Ryan Malone (TB)
Domonic Moore (TB)
Sean Bergenheim (TB)
Brooks Laich (WAS)
Michal Neuvirth (WAS)

Players in the Doghouse
Johnny Odyua (ATL)
Zach Bogosian (ATL)
Joe Corvo (CAR)
Chad LaRose (CAR)
Dennis Wideman (FLA)

Thoughts on the 5 Teams

Atlanta Thrashers
- Sad to see hockey fail in Atlanta for the second time, but the fans have nobody to blame but themselves. If there are no fannies in the seats, they'll just move to a place where there will be fannies in the seats.  They did just that by going to Winnipeg.
- The Jets should have an exciting wave of young talent over the next few years if they can keep the core of solid guys together.  Of course that has been a problem for this franchise, not being able to retain guys like Healtey, Kovalchuk, and Savard, among others.

Carolina Hurricanes
- Ever since being the first post-lockout team to hoist the Cup, the Canes have been a bubble team nearly every year.  But when they get in, boy are they ever capable of making noise, with a goalie like Cam Ward, and playmakers in Eric Staal and Jeff Skinner

Florida Panthers
- Not really sure whats going on in Sunrise.  That 10-year playoff drought doesn't look like it's going to end anytime soon.
- Tomas Vokoun might be the best goalie nobody's talking about.

Tampa Bay Lightning
- They have one of the best young GMs in Steve Yzerman, one of the best young coaches in Guy Boucher, and one of the best young players in Stamkos.  This team isn't going away anytime soon.
- Rolo will most likely be gone, now it is all up Mike Smith, who has a ton of upside and is a great puckhandler.  Sure looked good in his limited minitues during the Eastern Conference Finals.

Washington Capitals
- This Caps team is beginning to come together as a Cup contender quickly, with a goalie with a high ceiling in Neuvirth, and if Mike Green comes back healthy, will make for a potent blue line with Carlson.
- Bruce Boudreau is the guy for this team.  He has won at every level and certainly hasn't disappointed in DC, despite the playoff disappointments.  The Cup coming to the nation's capital is a matter of when, not if, and this guy should be behind the bench for it without a doubt.

Friday, June 24, 2011

Atlantic Division Recap


Standings
*Philadelphia (47-23-12-106)
*Pittsburgh (49-25-8-106)
*NY Rangers (44-33-5-93)
New Jersey (38-39-5-81)
NY Islanders (30-39-13-73)

Statistical Leaders
Goals- Jeff Carter, PHI (36)
Assists- Claude Giroux, PHI (51)
Points- Claude Giroux, PHI (76)
plus/minus- Andrej Mazaros (+30)
Save PCT- Henrik Lundqvist (.923)

All-Atlantic First Team
LW- Matt Moulson (NYI)
C- Jeff Carter (PHI)
RW- Claude Giroux (PHI)
D- Kris Letang (PIT)
D- Matt Carle (PHI)
G- Henrik Lundqvist (NYR)

All-Atlantic Rookie Team
LW- Mats Zuccarello (NYR)
C- Derek Stepan (NYR)
RW- Michael Grabner (NYI)
D- Travis Hamonic (NYI)
D- Michael Sauer (NYR)
G- Sergei Bobrovsky (PHI)

Division Awards
Hart Trophy- Claude Giroux (PHI)..Played in all 82 games for the Flyers, was 8th in the NHL with 51 assists to go along with 25 goals, and was fifth in the Eastern Conference with 76 points.

Vezina Trophy- Henrik Lundqvist (NYR)..Tied for third in the NHL with 36 wins and had an NHL-leading 11 shutouts between the pipes for the Rangers, who finished 8th in the Eastern Conference

Norris Trophy- Matt Carle (PHI)..Was tied for 4th among NHL defenseman with a +30 rating and was 5th in the Eastern Conference with 39 assists while averaging about 22:00 of ice time.

Calder Trophy- Michael Grabner (NYI)..Led all NHL rookies with 34 goals and was third with 52 points, was nominated for NHL Calder Trophy.

Lady Byng- Patrik Elias (NJ)..One of the NHL's most respected veterans, had just 16 PIM in 81 games.

Selke Trophy- Mike Richards (PHI)..tied for 7th in the NHL with 73 blocked shots and had a +11 rating.

Jack Adams- Dan Bylsma (PIT)..led the Penguins to a 106-point season without having stars Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin after January 5th, won the NHL Jack Adams Award as well.

Masterton Trophy- Ian Laperriere (PHI)..How quickly he came back from that injury last year was an amazing story; big reason why he won the NHL's Masterton Trophy.

Players in the Penthouse
Patrik Elias (NJ)
Michael Grabner (NYI)
Frans Nielsen (NYI)
John Tavares (NYI)
Andrew McDonald (NYI)
Ryan Callahan (NYR)
Brandon Dubinsky (NYR)
Michael Sauer (NYR)
Henrik Ludqvist (NYR)
Claude Giroux (PHI)
Danny Briere (PHI)
Jeff Carter (PHI)
Mike Richards (PHI)
Scott Hartnell (PHI)
Matt Carle (PHI)
Kimmo Timonen (PHI)
Sidney Crosby (PIT)
Kris Letang (PIT)
Chris Kunitz (PIT)
Tyler Kennedy (PIT)
Pascal Dupuis (PIT)
Marc-Andre Fleury (PIT)

In the Elevator
Travis Zajac (NJ)
PA Parenteau (NYI)
Matt Moulson (NYI)
Travis Hamonic (NYI)
Al Montoya (NYI)
Derek Stepan (NYR)
Artem Amisov (NYR)
Brian Boyle (NYR)
Marc Staal (NYR)
Ville Leino (PHI)
James Van Reimsdyk (PHI)
Andrej Mazaros (PHI)
Sergei Bobrovsky (PHI)
Alex Goligoski (PIT)
Jordan Staal (PIT)
Craig Adams (PIT)
Brent Johnson (PIT)

In the Doghouse 
Ilya Kovalchuk (NJ)
Jamie Langenbruner (NJ)
Matt Martin (NYI)
Rick DiPietro (NYI)
Marian Gaborik (NYR)
Daniel Carcillo (PHI)
Michael Rupp (PIT)
Matt Cooke (PIT)

Thoughts on the 5 Teams

Philadelphia Flyers
- The acquisition of Bryzgalov was big, but did they need it so bad that they should've given up their captain and one of their top scorers for it?
- If the Flyers had a goalie this year, a second consecutive Prince of Wales would've been within the realm of possibility

Pittsburgh Penguins
- Dan Bylsma did one of the finest coaching jobs in recent memory, getting Pittsburgh to a 106-point season missing Crosby and Malkin the whole second half of the year
- If Crosby wants to stop getting concussions, Matt Cooke must go because I believe the cheapshots on Crosby are a direct result of Matt Cooke's on-ice antics.  Players aren't going to go after Cooke, a third-line type of guy, they're going to go after the star player.

New York Rangers
- Henrik Lundqvist is quietly being one of the NHL's best goalies despite playing under the bright lights of New York. Not something you see too often.
- This team has alot of good young players, could have possibly made some noise in the playoffs if not for the injury to Callahan.

New Jersey Devils
- This year was a big wake up call that the Devils are getting old quick, which could mean Lou Lamorello's next project could be a rebuilding project.
- Martin Brodeur's days are now past him, the question now is how many more years does he play before he walks off into the sunset?
- There may very well be quite a few people in Newark thanking the NHL for not approving Kovalchuk's 17-year deal.

New York Islanders
- If this team stays on Long Island, there will be alot of excitement in Uniondale for many years to come.
- Rick DiPietro needs to figure it out, but lucky for him he still has 10 years to do so before his contract expires.

New Name, Same Blog

Don't worry, my blog was not hacked.  Just figured I would change the name of my blog considering that the Happy Hour Radio Show will probably not happen next year.  I'll still be on the radio, just a different show, with a different name.  Possibly cohosting with Frank Maturo, but not official or certain on that yet.  Haven't taken that up with him just yet, but would certainly be something I'd be completely on board with after doing a few shows with him during the second semester, and was a lot of working with him and we had great chemistry.  That being said, regardless of when I do the show and/or/if who I do the show with, I will be on WNEK 105.1 FM at WNE or WNEU, whatever their changing WNEC to.  So be sure to tune in come fall and I can't wait to talk with you guys!

My Thoughts on the Northeast Division's teams

Forgot to add this in yesterday when I posted the Northeast Division Recap.  Hope everyone can find it in their hearts to forgive me.

Boston Bruins
- Will they repeat? The jury is out on that, and I say 75/25 no due to the number a playoff run like this does on the players.  The Penguins will be right there, and the Flyers now have their goalie.  Looking out west, the Kings have a legitimate shot, plus you can never count out Detroit or Vancouver.
- Ryder had a great playoffs, but Chiarelli should remember how inconsistent his play has been in the regular season over the last 2 years before he overpays on him.
- Kind of torn on Kaberle, not resigning him could mean him being the answer to another team's blueline and could come back to bite the B's.
- This team has a high ceiling, and this won't be the last cup before the decade is through.

Montreal Canadiens
- Not really sure about how close or far they are from Cup #24.  Its hard to get an idea because they have the goalie in Price and a potential shutdown duo on D if Markov comes back healthy and Subban alongside him.

Buffalo Sabres
- Should be battling for the top of the division next year based on how they played in the second half of the season.
- Ryan Miller needs to find the game that won him the Vezina in 2010, and led USA to the Olympic Silver in Vancouver, as opposed to the inconsistent play that has seemed to plague his game since the Olympic Break ended last year.
- Future couldn't be more promising with this team looking at Tyler Ennis and Nathan Gerbe having great rookie seasons to back up Tyler Myers' 2009-2010 campaign that won him the Calder Trophy.

Toronto Maple Leafs
- Team that I feel is in the best position to break the Canadian Stanley Cup drought that goes back to 1993, with James Reimer continuing to improve in net under the apprenticeship of Conn Smythe winner JS Giguere, plus plenty of shooters up front.  They just need to improve on the blue line, and they couldn't have a better guy in the front office than Brian Burke, who was the architect of Anaheim Ducks Stanley Cup team in 2007, and played a big role in the success of the Canucks by drafting the Sedins and Ryan Kesler among others in his time in Vancouver.
- If Phil Kessel will ever be a star in this league, he must learn to play 2-way hockey.

Ottawa Senators
- Obviously in the midst of a long rebuilding project, but have to feel good about themselves after their AHL affiliate, the Binghamton Senators, won the Calder Cup.
- It has seemed like decades, but the Sens are just 4 years removed from their first and only Prince of Wales Trophy in franchise history, which they won in 2007 before going to the Cup and losing to Anaheim.
- This team needs to hold on to Jason Spezza and build around him, a guy who is a star on a bad team.  As the Boston Bruins have demonstrated, as far away as the Cup may seem, it could be that close, and Spezza is a guy that can lead a team to the promised land.  Should be the heir appearant to Alfredsson as the captain when he leaves Ottawa, which seeing as he's 38 and coming off a season puting up 14-17--31 (40 point dropoff from the year before), should be sooner rather than later.

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Northeast Division Recap

Standings
*Boston (46-25-11-103)
*Montreal (44-30-8-96)
*Buffalo (43-29-10-96)
Toronto (37-34-11-85)
Ottawa (32-40-10-74)

Statistical Leaders
Goals- Thomas Vanek, BUF (32)
Assists- David Krejci, BOS (49)
Points- Thomas Vanek, BUF (73)
plus/minus- Zdeno Chara, BOS (+33)
Save PCT- Tim Thomas (.938)

All-Northeast First Team
LW- Thomas Vanek (BUF)
C- Patrice Bergeron (BOS)
RW- Phil Kessel (TOR)
D- Zdeno Chara (BOS)
D- Erik Karlsson (OTT)
G- Tim Thomas (BOS)

All-Northeast Rookie Team
LW- Tyler Ennis (BUF)
C- Zack Smith (OTT)
RW- Brad Marchand (BOS)
D- PK Subban (MTL)
D- Adam McQuaid (BOS)
G- James Reimer (TOR)

Division Awards
Hart Trophy- Tim Thomas (BOS)..Put together arguably he best single season performance by a goaltender.  Allowed just 2.00 goals per game, and posted an NHL-Record .938 save percentage.  The Bruins don't win the cup without him

Vezina Trophy- Tim Thomas (BOS)..for all the reason above and more.

Norris Trophy- Zdeno Chara (BOS)..Led the NHL with a +33 and won the Mark Messier Award for leadership, and averaged 25:26 of ice time per game.

Calder Trophy- Tyler Ennis (BUF)..Was on my NHL All-Rookie team, ranked top 5 among rookies in assists (29), points (49), and was 7th in goals (20).

Lady Byng- Brian Gionta (MTL)..Represents the true meaning of wearing a Canadiens jersey and what it stands for.  The way of which he conducts himself as captain of le club de hockey Canadien, and is certainly not representative of some characters on that Montreal payroll.

Selke- Zack Smith (OTT)..had 27 blocked shots and won 54% of faceoffs.

Jack Adams- Claude Julien (BOS)..always stuck to his system and as a result saw his team hoist the Cup last week.

Masterton Trophy- Tim Thomas (BOS)..overcame alot of obstacles following his hip surgery that ruined his 2009-2010 season en route to becoming the second player to win the Vezina, Conn Smythe, and Stanley Cup in one season.

Players in the Penthouse
David Krejci (BOS)
Patrice Bergeron (BOS)
Zdeno Chara (BOS)
Mark Recchi (BOS)
Tim Thomas (BOS)
Thomas Vanek (BUF)
Drew Stafford (BUF)
Tyler Myers (BUF)
Tomas Plekanec (MTL)
Brian Gionta (MTL)
Mike Cammalieri (MTL)
Carey Price (MTL)
Jason Spezza (OTT)
Mikhail Grabovski (TOR)
Nikolai Kulemin (TOR)

Players in the Elevator
Milan Lucic (BOS)
Brad Marchand (BOS)
Adam McQuaid (BOS)
Tyler Ennis (BUF)
Nathan Gerbe (BUF)
Steve Montador (BUF)
Andrei Kostitsyn (MTL)
PK Subban (MTL)
Mathieu Darche (MTL)
Erik Karlsson (OTT)
Bobby Butler (OTT)
Clark MacArthur (TOR)
James Reimer (TOR)

Players in the Doghouse
Tim Connolly (BUF)
Jordan Leopold (BUF)
Scott Gomez (MTL)
Hal Gill (MTL)
Milan Michalek (OTT)
Filip Kuba (OTT)
Tyler Bozak (TOR)

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

NHL Season in Review

Final Standings 
Eastern Conference
Washington (48-23-11-107)
Philadelphia (47-23-12-106)
Boston (46-25-11-103)
Pittsburgh (49-25-8-106)
Tampa Bay (46-25-11-103)
Montreal (44-30-8-96)
Buffalo (43-29-10-96)
NY Rangers (44-33-5-93)
Carolina (40-31-11-91)
Toronto (37-34-11-85)
New Jersey (38-39-5-81)
Atlanta (34-36-12-80)
Ottawa (32-40-10-74)
NY Islanders (30-39-13-73)
Florida (30-40-12-72)

Western Conference
Vancouver (54-19-9-117)
San Jose (48-25-9-105)
Detroit (47-25-10-104)
Anaheim (47-30-5-99)
Nashville (44-27-11-99)
Phoenix (43-26-13-99)
LA Kings (46-30-6-98)
Chicago (44-29-9-97)
Dallas (42-29-11-95)
Calgary (41-29-12-94)
St. Louis (38-33-11-87)
Minnesota (39-35-8-86)
Columbus (34-35-13-81)
Colorado (30-44-8-68)
Edmonton (25-45-12-62)

Conference Quarterfinals
1 Washington 2-2-2-4-3
8 NY Rangers 1-0-3-3-1

2 Philadelphia 0-5-4-0-3-5-5
7 Buffalo 1-4-2-1-4-4-2

3 Boston 0-1-4-5-2-1-3
6 Montreal 2-3-2-4-1-2-2

4 Pittsburgh 3-1-3-3-2-2-0
5 Tampa Bay 0-5-2-2-8-4-1

1 Vancouver 2-4-3-2-0-3-2
8 Chicago 0-3-2-7-5-4-1

2 San Jose 3-0-6-6-1-4
7 LA Kings 2-4-5-3-3-3

3 Detroit 4-4-4-6
6 Phoenix 2-3-2-3

4 Nashville 4-3-4-3-4-4
5 Anaheim 1-5-3-6-3-2


Conference Semi-Finals
1 Washington 2-2-3-3
5 Tampa Bay 4-3-4-5

2 Philadelphia 3-2-1-1
3 Boston 7-3-5-5

1 Vancouver 1-1-3-4-3-2
5 Nashville 0-2-2-2-4-1

2 San Jose 2-2-4-3-3-1-3
3 Detroit 1-1-3-4-4-3-2

Conference Finals
3 Boston 2-6-2-3-3-4-1
5 Tampa Bay 5-5-0-5-1-5-0

1 Vancouver 3-7-3-4-3
2 San Jose 2-7-4-2-2

Stanley Cup
1 Vancouver 1-3-1-0-1-2-0
3 Boston 0-2-8-4-0-5-4

Awards
Norris Trophy- Nicklas Lindstrom (DET)
Selke Trophy- Ryan Kesler (VAN)
Jack Adams Award- Dan Bylsma (PIT)
Calder Trophy- Jeff Skinner (CAR)
Ted Lindsay Award- Daniel Sedin (VAN)
Masterton Trophy- Ian Laperriere (PHI)
Lady Byng- Martin St. Louis (TB)
Vezina Trophy- Tim Thomas (BOS)
Hart Trophy- Corey Perry (ANA)

NHL First Team
LW- Daniel Sedin (VAN)
C- Henrik Sedin (VAN)
RW- Corey Perry (ANA)
D- Zdeno Chara (BOS)
D- Shea Weber (NSH)
G- Tim Thomas (WAS)

NHL Second Team
LW- Alex Ovechkin (WAS)
C- Joe Thornton (SJ)
RW- Martin St. Louis (TB)
D- Niklas Lindstrom (DET)
D- Toni Lydman (ANA)
G- Pekka Rinne (NSH)

NHL All-Rookie Team
LW- Tyler Ennis (BUF)
C- Logan Couture (SJ)
RW- Michael Grabner (NYI)
D- PK Subban (MTL)
D- John Carlson (WAS)
G- Corey Crawford (CHI)

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

NHL and NBA postseason review coming out Wednesday

Starting Wednesday I'll be starting my postseason review of the NHL and NBA.  It'll feature recaps, final standings, leaders, playoff recaps, team reviews and evaluations.

Wednesday- NHL Recap
Thursday- Northeast Division Recap
Friday- Atlantic Division Recap
Saturday- Southeast Division Recap
Sunday- Central Division Recap
June 27- Northwest Division Recap
June 28- Pacific Division Recap
June 29- NBA Recap
June 30- Atlantic Division Recap
July 1- Central Division Recap
July 2- Southeast Division Recap
July 3- Northwest Division Recap
July 4- Pacific Division Recap
July 5- Southwest Division Recap

Its been a wild 10 years

How crazy has this been?  Undoubtedly something we will never see again in any city.  This is Boston's answer for 27 world championships.  Its hard to come to grips with it.  Something tells me I'm about to wake up and turn on NESN Daily to see the highlight of the Sox game at the New Fenway Park, in the midst of the age-old question, "Will this be the year?" The year of course where they win their first World Series since 1918.  There will be talk about the Patriots upcoming season, as they go through their 5th coach in 10 years, as Drew Bledsoe plays before a half empty Gillette Stadium.  Meanwhile, Jeremy Jacobs continues to hold the Bruins franchise hostage as he establishes himself as the Donald Trump of the West End.  And the Celtics..well lets just say Larry Bird ain't walking through that door.  Basically just the typical life of what a Boston sports fan is accustomed to- suffering, suffering, and more suffering...

Ranking the 7 Championships
1- 2004 Red Sox-  Is this even up for debate?  Total no-brainer in my opinion.  The fact they did it, their first since 1918 of course, was big enough to the people of New England and all those who followed the Red Sox so religiously for so many years, waiting for next year to come.  But what was even more remarkable is the way of which they did it.  Coming back from down 3-0 to knock off the Yankees, then making a mockery of the 105-win Cardinals.  It was the biggest of the 7, and will always be the biggest in Boston sports.

2- 2011 Bruins- Boston has always been a hockey town, with so many big names in the hockey world coming out of the Boston area, its also home to the Hockey East, mecca of college hockey, the most prestigious college hockey tournament in the Beanpot, and one of the most prestigious high school hockey tournaments in the Super 8.  What it did was make it an NHL city, where hockey became the forefront of talk at the local Dunkin Donuts, in the bar rooms, and on the sports talk radio stations.  To add to that, the Bruins represented everything good about Boston and its people- blue-collar, hard working, with undying resolve.

3- 2001 Patriots- It was the championship of them all.  It was a long 16-year wait between championships for Boston, and for that it was of great significance.

4- 2008 Celtics- It brought the Celtics back to the top of the NBA after such a long dip.  Larry Bird, Kevin McHale, and Robert Parrish weren't walking through that door, but instead it was Paul Pierce, Kevin Garnett, and Ray Allen were.  These three had been three of basketball's best for nearly a decade, and they finally got that well earned ring.  It was even more special for Pierce, since the ring now allowed him to be mentioned in the same breath of Bird, Russell, Havlicek, Cousy, and all the other great Celtics over the years.

5- 2004 Patriots-  The third in four years, it made the Patriots football's first dynasty in the new milenium.  It made the Pats a first-class model organization and put Belichick officially in the same breath of Vince Lombardi, Tom Landry, Don Shula, and Bill Walsh as the greatest coach to ever patroll an NFL sideline, and put Tom Brady in the same light as Montana and Unitas as the greatest to go under center.

6- 2007 Red Sox- It was the championship built by the Henry administration.  While they won in 2004 with many of Duquette's pieces, this one was truly tailored by Theo and the Red Sox current front office.  It also put to sleep any thoughts of another 86 years.

7- 2003 Patriots- The least significant, but still very significant. Like the dumbest kid at MIT.  It proved that Brady wasn't a one-year wonder, and the 2001 Pats weren't just a cinderella story, but a team that was here to stay.

- We must remember that there could easily have been more.  If not for a circus catch by David Tyree and a freak three-pointer by Ron Artest, there could very easily have been 9 in 9 years.

Other Champions in 4 major sports in New England since 2002
Eastern Connecticut State Warriors- 2002 NCAA Division III Baseball Champions
Norwich Navigators- 2002 Eastern League (AA Baseball) Champions
Williams College Ephs- 2003 NCAA Division III Basketball Champions
Norwich University Cadettes- 2003 NCAA Division III Hockey Champions
Connecticut Huskies- 2004 NCAA Division I Basketball Champions
New Hampshire Fisher Cats- 2004 Eastern League (AA Baseball) Champions
Portland Sea Dogs- 2006 Eastern League (AA Baseball) Champions
Amherst College Lord Jeffs- 2007 NCAA Division III Basketball Champions
Boston College Eagles- 2008 NCAA Division I Hockey Champions
Trinity College Bantams- 2008 NCAA Division III Baseball Champions
Boston University Terriers- 2009 NCAA Division I Hockey Champions
Boston College Eagles- 2010 NCAA Division I Hockey Champions
Norwich University Cadettes- 2010 NCAA Division III Hockey Champions
Connecticut Huskies- 2011 NCAA Division I Basketball Champions

2010-2011 Bruins: The New Impossible Dream

1967.  The country was in the middle of a deep conflict with Vietnam, and a big activist movement was challenging authority.  In Boston, the Celtics were in their glory days, there was a fledgling football team in the Boston Patriots led by quarterback Babe Parilli.  The Bruins were showcasing a 20-year old phenom in Bobby Orr.

The real story, however, was the Boston Red Sox.  The once proud baseball team had gone through a stretch of 8 consecutive losing seasons, and hadn't made the playoffs since 1946, when they lost the World Series in 7 games to the St. Louis Cardinals.  The franchise was still recovering from the retirement of Ted Williams, who walked away from the game in 1960 after a career that had 521 balls clear the fences, more home runs than any other player to wear a Red Sox uniform.

In 1967, the team would make a complete 180 from the year before, when they went 72-90, to go 92-70, taking the AL Pennant.  They lost the World Series to the St. Louis Cardinals, but regardless of the result, it was a run that was completely unexpected.  It was the Impossible Dream.

And Boston was a baseball town once again.

To this day, the Red Sox are worshiped by all those in Boston and Greater New England, with that passion for the local nine never settling.  It reached a high when the Sox finally won the World Series in 2004 for the first time since 1918.

But can lightning strike a second time in the great city of Boston?

Appearantly so.  The Impossible Dream has happened again, except this time with the Boston Bruins, the beloved hockey team in the hub since 1924; an original six franchise.

At one time, the Bruins were the talk of the town.  Bobby Orr, Phil Esposito, Gerry Cheevers, and Terry O'Reilly among others started a hockey renaissance, which brought about the stars of the next generation like Tony Amonte, Keith Tkachuk, among others.

It had seemed like centuries upon meleniums since the Boston Bruins were a relevant team within the Stanley Cup conversation, a hot ticket in town, or even a common topic of conversation in a bar room near you.  The last time the Bruins were in this position, the fans worshiped the likes of Raymond Bourque and Cam Neely.  That was over 20 years ago.

The past years have seen playoff disappointments, questionable trades, an owner who seemed to care more about making money than putting out a good product, and two debilatating lockouts, one of which whiped out the 2004-2005 season.  There was also the three other major sports teams in Boston taking the spotlight, with the New England Patriots winning three Super Bowls, the Boston Red Sox winning two World Series, and the fellow TD Garden tennants Boston Celtics winning their 17th championship in 2008.  The heroes of the city were guys like Tom Brady, David Ortiz, and Paul Pierce.  No love for guys like Joe Thornton, Glen Murray, or Sergei Samsonov.  They were just players quietly being the NHL all-stars, with very little fan fare to go along with it.  But recently, it all changed.

In 2006, after the team went just 29-37-16--74, good enough for last in the Northeast Division, their worse point total/divisional finish since 2000, it became agreed that enough was enough.  The front office was blown up, President Harry Sinden being replaced by icon Cam Neely, and GM Mike O'Connell, who made the bizarre deals that sent franchise cornerstones Joe Thornton and Sergei Samsonov packing in exchange for little value, after both had been locked into long term deals prior to the 2005-2006 season that was supposed to keep them in black and goal for years to come.  Instead, they got Marco Sturm, Wayne Primeau, Brad Stuart, Marty Reasoner, Yan Statsny, and a draft pick in exchange for the two.  Meanwhile Thornton went on to win the Hart Trophy that same year with San Jose, and Samsonov scored a combined 9-22--31 in 43 games for the Edmonton Oilers, a big part of the playoff run that found the Oilers in game 7 of the Stanley Cup Finals, depsite losing to Carolina.

O'Connell was fired in April of 2006, and eventually replaced by Peter Chiarelli following a short stint in the GM office by Jeff Gorton.  This marked the groundbreaking on a project to bring the Stanley Cup to Boston, something that took 5 years.

Chiarelli got right to work, signing the two biggest free agents on the market, 6'9 defenseman Zdeno Chara (largest man in NHL history), and Marc Savard, a 28-year old center who was gaining a reputation as one of the most up-and-coming pivots in hockey.

After a disappointing year that resulted in yet another last place finish in 2006-2007, Chiarelli went and found his coach: Claude Julien.  Julien would bring the team out of the cellar, leading the Bruins to a 94-point season in 2007-2008, bringing the arch-rival and top-seeded Montreal Canadiens to a decisive game 7 after falling behind 2-0 in the series.

The next two seasons was the "almost-getting there" seasons.  In 2008-2009, the team finished within a point of the franchise's second President's Trophy, awarded to the team with the NHL's best record.  Goalie Tim Thomas won the Vezina Trophy awarded to the best goalie, Chara with the Norris Trophy as best defenseman, and Julien with the Jack Adams award for the best coach.  The run would end, however, with an overtime loss to the Carolina Hurricanes on home ice in game seven of the conference semi-finals.  The next year, the playoff disappointments elevated.

This time the Bruins were right back in the conference semi-finals, this time against the Philadelphia Flyers.  The Bruins would go up 3-0 in the series after a game 3 win on Broad Street by the score of 4-1.  It seemed all but over, with two of the remaining four games in Boston if need be.  The Flyers would storm back to tie the series at 3 games apeice.  In game 7, however, the Bruins jumped out to a 3-0 lead in the first 14:10 of the game.  It seemed all but over, the Bruins would move on to face the rival Montreal Canadiens for the third time in as many years, this time in the conference finals.  This was before the Flyers went on to score four unanswered goals, taking the fourth on a power play for a too-many-men-on-the-ice infraction.  Just like that, the Bruins were hitting the links.

Fast forward 11 months.

The Bruins had finished a season in which they went 46-25-11, earning them their second Northeast Division Championship in three years.  They had Tim Thomas, who posted an NHL-record .938 save PCT and allowed just 2 goals per game the whole season.  Their top defenseman Zdeno Chara was the league's plus/minus champ at +33.

And they were facing a familiar foe- the hated Canadiens.  After falling behind 2-0, the Bruins charged back with three consecutive wins, two of which were at Montreal's Bell Centre, with games 4 and 5 requiring more than 60 minutes to decide a winner.  In game 7, with the series tied 3-3, the team faced overtime once again.  This time it was Nathan Horton, who was acquired from Florida via a trade that had blueliner Denis Wideman taking his talents to South Beach last summer, scoring his second walkoff goal in three games, propelling the Bruins into the Eastern Conference semi-finals for the third consecutive year.  The opponent: The Philadelphia Flyers.

The Bruins once again jumped out to a 3-0 series lead, with game 1 and game 3 blowouts, 7-3 and 5-1, respectively.  Game 2 was a 3-2 overtime victory that saw Tim Thomas stop 52 shots in net, including the final 46.  This year they wasted no time ending the series, winning 5-1 at the TD Garden, and the Bruins were in the NHL's final 4 for the first time since 1992.

The Conference Finals? Another series of epic proportion entertained by the Spoked-B's and the Tampa Bay Lightning.  The Bruins got caught up in four high-scoring games, allowing 5 goals in games 1, 2, 4, and 6.  All games with the exception of game two resulted in a loss.  But the story of the series was game seven, which was a perfect a hockey game as one can imagine.  No penalties, non-stop back-and-forth play, and just one goal, scored by Nathan Horton with 7:30 remaining in the game.  And the Bruins were off to the Cup.

This time, the big, bad Vancouver Canucks.  The Presidents Trophy winners and Western Conference Champions.  They had a Hart Trophy Candidate in Daniel Sedin, the defending Hart Trophy winner in Henrik Sedin, a Vezina Candidate in Roberto Luongo, and one of the best, if not the best all-around forward the game has to offer in Ryan Kesler.  They were expected to be there.  The Bruins were huge underdogs.  It was David vs. Goliath, Globo Gym vs. Average Joe's Gymnasium.  The Canucks had the smug arrogance of White Goodman, while the Bruins had the blue-collar attitude of Peter LaFleur.  There were not many outside Vancouver who wanted to see the Canucks win it.

Ryan Whitney of the Edmonton Oilers was quoted as saying, "I'd say that 90% of the guys in the league want nothing to do with seeing them win. The team is pretty amazing...but just who makes up that team makes them so tough to like it's frustrating to see them do this well," saying the team was, "so easy to hate it was unbelievable." 

All of Boston saw what Whitney was saying right away in the series, with Alex Burrows biting Patrice Bergeron in game 1.  After Burrows was not suspended for the bite, the team decided to make a mockery of it, most notably Maxim LaPierre sticking two of his fingers in Patrice Bergeron's face after a third period whistle.  Goalie Roberto Luongo was then caught critiqing Tim Thomas' game following a game 5 win, saying the lone goal Thomas allowed would have been an "easy save for (Luongo)".  Just to clarify, Thomas had allowed a grand total of 6 goals in the five games of the series, despite losing 3 of the matches.  Luongo meanwhile allowed 14 in the five games.

The Bruins wouldn't lose another game following the comments by Luongo aka the world's greatest goaltender in his own mind.  In Game 6, the Bruins chased Luongo in the first period after allowing three goals within a span of three minutes, and had Bruins nation alike asking the question, "You think Timmy would've made those saves??"  In Game 7, the Bruins marched into Rogers Arena to take the cup with a 4-0 decision.

And as the streets of Vancouver quickly turned into the streets of Baghdad, the Boston Bruins were hoisting the Stanley Cup for the first time since 1972.

The road leading up to this moment was most scenic of scenic routes.  It was one that included 25 games, 3 game 7 victories (unprecedented in Stanley Cup playoffs), six overtime periods (5 overtime games), a record 849 saves by goalie Tim Thomas, and an injury to their first line wingman Nathan Horton, who was knocked out of the series after a dirty hit by Canuck Aaron Rome.  Horton had netted 8 goals, 3 game winners, 2 of which were in walkoff fashion.

It was this scenic route that led the Bruins to the streets of Boston, who joined in celebration with over 1 million members of Bruins nation, bringing home the Cup after a 39-year absence.

And Boston was a hockey town once again.

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Adrian Gonzalez Blockbuster Trade working for both sides


It was December 6, 2010 when the Boston Red Sox finally landed the impact hitter they had been missing in their lineup since Manny Ramirez was traded to the Dodgers in July 2008.  They got the well-rounded first baseman who could hit for power, hit for average, and play solid defense that they came ohh so close to landing just two years previous to the trade (Mark Teixiera).

This guy, who goes by the name of Adrian Gonzalez, was the first overall pick in 2000 by the Florida Marlins, brought tremendous promise to Red Sox nation.  Gonzalez became a full-time starter in 2006 with his hometown team, the San Diego Padres, and in those five seasons, hit .288/.374/.514 with 176 2B, 161 HR, and 501 RBI, an average of 35 doubles, 32 HR, and 100 RBI.  He also appeared in 3 All-Star games, won two gold gloves at first, and finished 4th in the 2010 NL MVP voting.  He probably could have a couple silver sluggers under his belt if it weren't for a guy named Pujols.  All this was done playing 81 games a year at Petco Park, notoriously known for being a pitchers ballpark.  He also had to play about 9 games a year in San Francisco, Arizona, and Chavez Ravine; yards that wouldn't appear on too many hitter's favorite places to play list.

With that in mind, many wondered just what he would do in playing 81 in Fenway, in a division that includes Yankee Stadium, Camden Yards, the Rogers Centre, and Tropicana Field as the yards used for the AL East Division.

Through about 10 weeks, we have seen just what he could be- one of the best players in all of baseball and an MVP candidate.  At this point of the 2011 campaign, he leads the American League in average (.341), hits (91), doubles (22), RBI (60), and total bases (156).  He also ranks 6th in the AL in OBP (.392), and 4th in slugging (.584) and OPS (.977).  With runners in scoring position, he has hit .376, and has yet to make an error in 65 games at first base. 

As for his success Fenway, he is currently hitting .359/.408/.573 in the yard he now call home, compared to .279/.383/.438 in 2010 at Petco.

Gonzalez has been everything the Red Sox expected when they got their early Christmas gift from San Diego GM Jed Hoyer, the right-hand man of Theo Epstein until 2009 when he took his talents out west.  This Christmas gift, however, came at a price.

In order to obtain Gonzalez, the Sox had to give up three top prospects, Anothy Rizzo, Casey Kelly, and Ray Fuentes, as well as journeyman Eric Patterson, who was thrown in as the player-to-be-named later.    The initial three players were brought in to as a big part of the rebuilding effort in the San Diego farm system, one of key projects of the Hoyer administration.

The most player with the most success thus far has been Anthony Rizzo, who is Gonzalez's long-term replacement in the California's largest city not named LA.  Rizzo, a 2007 6th round draft pick by the Sox as well as a Cancer survivor, was named top infield prospect in the Padres system, made his big-league debut on June 9, going 1-2 with a triple, a run scored, and walked twice.  He hit his first home run on June 11 off the Nationals' John Lannan, providing the only offense in a 2-1 loss to Washington.  Prior to being called up, Rizzo had put up monster numbers in 52 games at AAA Tacoma, hitting .365/.444/.715 with 20 2B, 16 HR, and 63 RBI that punched his ticket to the big club.

The prospect with the most hype in Spring Training, Casey Kelly, has been good as well despite not making an impact at the Major League level.  Kelly, the top rated Padres prospect by Baseball America going into 2011, who has made 13 starts at AA San Antonio, going 4-2 with a 3.98 ERA, and a K/BB ratio of 2.75.  Fuentes, the #7 prospect in the San Diego organization and 2009 first overall draft pick by Boston, currently leads the High A California League with 27 steals, but has a BB/K ratio of 17/56.

The three guys who were sent out to San Diego have shown promise that they can make an impact with the Padres some day, just like Adrian Gonzalez is making right now.

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Stanley Cup Finals Preview

Boston Bruins
2010-2011 Record- 46-25-11-103, 1st place Northeast Division
Playoffs- Defeated Montreal 4-3, Philadelphia 4-0, Tampa Bay 4-3

Projected Game 1 Lines
Horton-Krejci-Lucic
Marchand-Bergeron-Recchi
Ryder-Kelly-Seguin
Paille-Campbell-Peverley

Chara-Seidenberg
Ference-Boychuk
McQuaid-Kaberle

Key Injuries- Stephen Kampfer (knee)

Starting Goalie- Tim Thomas (35-11-9/2.01/.938; 12-6/2.29/.929)
Top Scorers- Brad Marchand (21-20--41, +25; 6-6--12, +6), Nathan Horton (26-27--53, +29; 8-9--17, +10), David Krejci (13-49--62, +23; 10-7--17, +5), Milan Lucic (30-32--62, +28, 3-6--9, +9), Zdeno Chara (14-30--44, +33; 2-3--5, +11)

Coach- Claude Julien, 4th year with team, 183-103-46 regular season; 29-20 playoffs..this is the fifth time Julien has led a team to the postseason in 8 seasons of coaching, it is the first time he has been to the Stanley Cup, though he did coach the New Jersey Devils for their first 79 games before being fired in 2003; that team went on to defeat Anaheim in 7 games for the Cup that year.  The team has played well under Juliens system this season, leading to a Northeast Division Championship, as well as a first round victory over Montreal after falling down 2-0, then sweeping Philadelphia in the second round.  The system couldn't have been more effective in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference Finals, as the team played 60 minutes of mistake-free hockey in a 1-0 victory over Tampa Bay.

Team Overview- Led by Tim Thomas in the first three rounds, has also gotten great contributions from their top two defensemen, Zdeno Chara and Dennis Seidenberg, especially in the 7-game Eastern Conference Finals against Tampa.  The team also benefited greatly when they got Patrice Bergeron back from a concussion, while rookie Tyler Seguin was a sparkplug, with 6 points in the seven games of the Eastern Conference finals.

X-Factor- Team Defense..With the defensive game of the Boston Bruins at their best, they are a big reason of Tim Thomas' success.  In games 1, 2, 4, and 6, the Bruins allowed 20 goals between those four games.  This was a result of defensive breakdowns such as turnovers deep in their own zone, and allowing second chances to the Lightning.  The defense must play mistake free, avoid costly turnovers, and limit the second chances for the Canucks, and Tim Thomas will do the rest, as he is a goalie who almost always makes the initial save.

Vancouver Canucks
2010-2011 Record- 54-19-9-117, Presidents Trophy Winners
Playoffs- Defeated Chicago 4-3, Nashville 4-2, San Jose 4-1

Projected Game 1 Lines
D. Sedin-H. Sedin-Burrows
Raymond-Kesler-Higgins
Torres-Lapierre-Hansen

Hamhuis-Bieksa
Ehrhoff-Rome
Edler-Salo

Key Injuries- Mikael Samuelsson (lower body), Manny Maholtra (eye)

Starting Goalie- Roberto Luongo (38-15-7/2.11/.928; 12-6/2.29/.922)
Top Scorers- Ryan Kesler (41-32--73, +24; 7-11--18, +6), Daniel Sedin (41-63--104, +30; 8-8--16, -4), Henrik Sedin (19-75--94, +26; 2-19--21, -4), Christian Ehrhoff (14-36--50, +19; 2-9--11, -6), Alexandre Burrows (26-22--48, +26, 7-7--14, +4)

Coach- Alain Vigneault, 5th year with team, 236-133-41 in regular season, 29-23 in playoffs..First time in Vigneault's career that he has led a team to the Stanley Cup in five trips to the playoffs, four that have been in Vancouver (other in Montreal).  Has been very good in the regular season, leading the Canucks to four 100-point seasons, with this season resulting in a Presidents Trophy, but has been not as good in the playoffs, winning just 29 of 52 playoff games, and was bounced from the second round in all three playoff appearances with Vancouver preceeding this year.

Team Overview- A very front-loaded team that specializes in scoring goals, a high-octane offense that has prolific playmakers in Kesler, Burrows, and the Sedin twins.  On the blue line, they have one of the games best offensive defenseman in Christian Ehrhoff, who has 28-66--94 and is a +55 since taking his talents to the West Coast of Canada in 2009 following 5 seasons in San Jose.  Outside that, the four defensemen have averaged over 23 minutes of ice time per game, and should see more valuable minutes from Rome as he will be paired with Ehrhoff.  The postseason for the Canucks began kind of rocky, as they went to a game 7 with Chicago after having a 3-0 lead with the defending champs, and also had a tough series with Nashville that went to a game 6 before being decided, but made easy work of San Jose in the Western Finals, knocking them off in five games.

X-Factor- Ryan Kesler..Kesler is a big reason why this team is here, and is the best answer for Boston's Patrice Bergeron, with his 2-way style and success at the faceoff dot.  Played a big role in the second round making up for the lack of production from the Sedin twins, as they were shutdown by the defensive pairing of Ryan Suter and Shea Weber.  This is something that will most likely happen again, as Chara and Seidenberg will most likely be put on the Sedin twins.  Kesler will need to come up big once again.

Team Comparisons
Center- The center position is a strength of both teams, with Boston very deep at the position with Krejci, Bergeron, Kelley, Campbell, and Peverley, all serviceable centermen.  The Canucks should get Manny Maholtra back sometime during the series, which would provide a boost to the center unit that led the NHL in faceoff percentage in the regular season.  Advantage: Vancouver

Forwards- The Canucks have two very good wingers on the first line in Hart Trophy Finalist Daniel Sedin and Alex Burrows, while the Bruins are very deep at the position, going four lines deep with serviceable forwards.  This is depth that Vancouver doesn't have, as they are more front-loaded with two explosive lines and two serviceable lines.  Advantage: Boston

Defense-  The Bruins have the best defenseman in the series in Chara, as well as Seidenberg, Boychuk, and Ference who are solid shut-down defensemen, and a great puck mover in Kaberle.  The Canucks have a defensive unit that values possesion and move the puck well, but play as physical as Boston.  Advantage: Boston

Goaltending- Tim Thomas has been hockey's best goaltender this year, while Luongo has been great as well.  Advantage: Even

Prediction- Bruins in 7