Tuesday, February 23, 2010

All Things (Olympic) Hockey: Part 2

USA! USA! USA!

It has been 3 hours now since the USA knocked off team Canada in the last game of group a play. The United States has essentially clinched a spot in the medal games, pending a game with the winner of the Switzerland versus Belarus. Canada has to play their way into the second round (more on that later). I can’t believe it. I am still absolutely amped. I need to calm down. USA! USA!! USA!!!

Maybe this picture of Air Force One flying over Mt. Rushmore will help.

Nope, how about Toby Keith standing in front of an F-150?

Still not working, how about a few sticks over the flag, projected on a rink.


Celebrating after the last goal?

Yeah, this is actually having the opposite effect.

(Deep breaths)

Ok. What a game. Nothing I can say will really capture just how big a win that is. What a year this is starting out as for the United States national team. Two wins over Canada, both on Canadian ice. Unbelievable.

It really was an all around great win for the Americans. Sure, they got badly outshot (a final count of 45-23), but in a weird way, they actually outplayed the Canadian team. The US got offense when they needed it, kept the puck out of the zone when they needed to, and bunched up to withstand the USA effort when they needed to. Ryan Miller was, obviously, as spectacular as he needed to be, but the scoring chances were way closer to even than the shots would suggest in my opinion.

To me, the most encouraging thing, amongst coming right out and quieting a Canadian crowd, immediately responding to Canada’s tying the game, and not losing a period (tying the second), was that when the USA needed to contain Canada, they did, but not just by preventing.

When the USA started the period by scoring on their third powerplay, there were still 15 minutes on the clock, and still at least 15 guys on the red bench that could score two likethat. I wrote at the time that America couldn’t hang back, let Canada control the play, and hope to hold them off for the rest of the game. They needed to attack when they had the chance, control the play (to the extent that they could), and play defense first by not making mistakes, controlling the middle of the ice and, getting the puck out/deep etc, but not bunch up in their own end.

That is exactly what they did. Miller only had to make 3 saves in the first 15 minutes of the third period. Sure, he had 7 in a flurry at the end, but that is inevitable when a team that good not only gets a couple of powerplays, but pulls their goalie and needs to pour it on for a last run. That was when Miller (I’m told by everyone breaking down the game, anyways) channeled Jim Craig and held off the Canuck attack.

This game has turned around the way I look at this tournament. I am no longer objective. I am now 100% emotional about the US team. I don’t care that I don’t think all of the guys should be on the team, or that one of my favorite players is on the Ducks. They are our boys now. There is a feeling that they can win it, and I am not alone.

I quoted twitter a couple of times during the game, and nothing regarding the game made it to trending, but believe me if there was a sports twitter, it would have been at the top of the charts. People like Jason Whitlock, Bill Simmons, and Peter King, who don’t usually even mention hockey were all over the game. It really was the forefront of the sports world for a few hours, and it didn’t disappoint for a second.

Even facebook was blowing up, as friends who play hockey, and those that couldn’t give a crap alike were posting things like “USA USA USA USA .... World Juniors-USA ... Olympics-USA. I think we may just be the better hockey country” by a former coach (of mine, a current coach, actually), "Team USA Hockey Jersey: $50 Big Screen TV: $1150 Cable: $179 Watching US beat Canada twice in one year on Canadian soil: Priceless There are some things in life money can't buy. For everything else, there is USA Hockey” by my brother, or “F*** YEA AMERICA!!! F*** THE CANUCKS!!! HAHA USA HOCKEY FTW!!!” by a kid who hasn’t skated in his life. Most of my friends, seemingly were chiming in, mostly with just a “USA” or “USA HOCKEY,” but it was definitely there.

I went into today knowing that it could be an epic hockey day. I now know that even though the third game has thus far lacked luster, you couldn’t have asked for much more. Even the ending was perfect, with my arch-nemesis Corey Perry making his fourth questionable play, and getting beat by Kessler a guy I have always liked to ice it.

The Rest of the Prelims

I said just a few paragraphs ago that the USA Canada changed my outlook on this tournament, and turned me from someone who was rooting for a team, but also watching interestedly for all of the games, to a fan, who is consumed rooting for one team, not observing and following all of them. Still, I can watch and look back on the rest of the games. I usually manage with the Sharks.

Before the final day when the USA-Canada game overshadowed everything else that happened to that point in the tournament, there were three games that stuck out.

The first was the biggest upset to that point, the Slovakians beating the Russians. There is no real take from this game, though. The Russians still got the bye from the win over the Czechs, and the Slovakians still have to play their way in with the loss. It showed though, that Russia is far from infallible, and that this Slovakian team is extremely talented. They really are. Just look at the roster. In my opinion, this doesn’t even qualify as a major upset. The scoring punch of Gaborik, Hossa and Satan is not quite on par in depth with the Russians, but the difference is at least partially made up by their superior D core. Sweden can’t be too excited about their pending matchup in the quarters. Slovakia has earned their spot amongst the powers of international hockey, and as such, one group was bound to have 3 power teams. This game was, more than anything, an implication of that. No surprise that group B ended up a mess.

The second interesting game ended up being one that no one likely saw coming. It was Belarus taking Sweden to the brink almost making C an equal mess, but falling in a closely played 4-2 game to the reigning gold medalists. I have to admit, I didn’t see this one, but the main thing that I would say is that Belarus is one of the most suceptable teams to a blowout, and yet no one seems concerned for Sweden. I didn’t see a lot of group C, but I would be somewhat worried by their lack of dominance in this one.

I was more concerned for the Canadians (excited, actually, would be a better word) and their lack of dominance against the Swiss. Hiller, like Miller, was great in that game, but teams like Sweden and Canada should simply not be taken to the brink like that by reams who have NHL talent going 3 and 4 deep. My main comment was that I had hoped that Nino Niederreiter would be on the Swiss team (he played with Olympian Luca Sbisa in the World Juniors), and I don’t think they go 0-4 in the shootout if he is. YouTube him, and you will know what I mean.

Finally, regarding the other games on rivalry Sunday, it was a great slate, and it didn’t let down. The Russian/Czech game lived up to expectations, was intese and well played. An all around good game. As for the Ovechkin hit on Jagr, no one looks twice at it and questioned it like this if Dustin Brown throws that hit. He exploded into him but it was clean. End of story. As for the Scandinavian game, it really wasn’t even as close as the 3-0 score. Finland just looked bad.

Equal time—The Women’s Tournament

Everyone has dirty little secrets. Some people, John Edwards for instance, have dirty big secrets. Some people, like Tiger Woods, have lots. I have a dirty little secret, but like Tiger, I am getting it off my chest to get ahead of the media storm that will ensue if it gets out.

I, Jackson Morgus, have watched at least 10 women’s hockey games this Olympics. And I have enjoyed most of them.

It started out as a small problem. “Oh…the USA is playing China. It will be interesting to see a Chinese hockey team. I have played with Hilary Knight, I wonder how she is doing. Come on, it’s USA Hockey, besides what else is on.” Then it got worse. I started mapping out time to watch the American games. This was still okay though. After all, it was for country, and USA hockey was involved.

Then, one day, I hit rock bottom. It started innocently. I was sitting in my room, at my computer. I was surfing the internet when things went bad. I went to NBC Olympics. I saw what was on live. There was nothing too exciting. So I clicked on the only live hockey game. And I watched Finland play China. I need a shower just telling the tale.

Ok, obviously I speak somewhat in jest. I am not nearly as ashamed as I let on about watching girls’ hockey. If there is nothing great on, I would rather watch hockey than just about anything else. On the other hand, it does warrant mentioning, that against my expectations, I have been enjoying the tournament.

Sure, it has problems. The action is slower and generally worse. There is no hitting. There are teams that barely lift the puck. Then there is the big problem. The fact that there are two levels. There is the USA and Canada, and there is everyone else. Look at the scores, this is a fact.

The thing is, it doesn’t really bother me. The other teams can still compete against each other, and it is worth it to get to the championship game. I don’t know why, despite its problems, it has been fun to watch, maybe it is just fun to have America be the power (and they are, that Quest Tour, having the girls national team play together for months leading to the tourney, did wonders and made them an absolute juggernaut). I can’t explain it, I just needed to get that off my chest.

Back to the USA- The Implications

Apart from being an impressive win over Canada on their home soil, despite being in the prelims, the implications of America’s win are huge. Don’t let anyone tell you differently. Sure, it is great to have a first round bye, and the number one seed looks great, but that is just the beginning.

Consider this:

There are two really scary teams in this tournament, maybe three. Those are Sweden, Canada and Russia. The earliest that the Americans could play one of those teams would be in a medal game. Those are the three teams that one could say are more talented than the US, and yet for the US to go out to one of them, it would likely be for a silver medal. Don’t get me wrong, after the last game, only a gold will be satisfactory, but no reasonable fan would write off the tournament as a failure if silver was the result.

In order to get to that silver game, the United States could not have asked for a more favorable schedule. First they will play the winner of Belarus versus the Swiss. Both teams played some elite squads close in the first round, and can’t be taken lightly, but no matter what, America will be a heavy favorite to advance to the semi-finals.

There, it gets a bit tougher, but not all that much so. The Czech team will likely take care of the Latvians, setting up a date with the Finnish, who earned a bye as the top team not to win their bracket, thanks to wins over Belarus and Germany. They had an easy road there, as they were handled in their only trying game, but none the less they get the bye thanks to a stocked group B (Russia, Czech Republic and Slovakia), and the Swiss taking Canada to the shootout.

No matter who takes the Finland versus the Czech Republic game, the USA has to like their matchup in the semis. The Czech team was known to be a bit down going into the games. They are missing perhaps their most talented player in Ales Hemsky, have a goalie who has been very succesful, but also shaky at times in the NHL in Thomas Vokun, and are relying on a 38 year old who hasn’t played in the NHL for two years for offense in Jagr. They are, of course, a good team, but I like the Americans should be favored once again if they meet on Friday.

If the Finnish take care of the Czechs, that would be an equally favorable matchup for the red, white and blue, if not more so. Without breaking it down to far, suffice to say the Finnish lacked luster in a major way when they faced the Swedish team that they profess to be rivals with. Pardon me for not being too impressed by wins over Belarus and Germany, but while the Americans aren’t quite good enough to take anything for granted, they have to like the matchup all the way to the finals.

Then there is the most incredible thing, in my opinion, to come from the American win. A look at the bracket shows the game to circle is the potential quarter final matchup on the other side. It pits the three seed against the winner of the six versus eleven matchup. The three seed is Russia, the six the mighty Canadians. That means Crosby will meet Ovechkin, not in the finals, as many predicted, but in the quarterfinals. That means that one of these two powers will leave without a medal. The winner then gets Sweden. If it is Canada, it will be their third game in four days, all against teams (Germany, Russia and Sweden) chocked full of NHL talent.

Sure, you wouldn’t bet against them in any of those games, but it is a hell of a road to the finals for the Canucks. Sure, it may not have been an elimination game, but it certainly had a huge effect on how the rest of the tournament will play out.

The end result is phenomenal. We have to be the prohibitive favorite to roll to the finals, and the competition is to see who will meet us there. I couldn’t be happier. Is this what it feels like to be Canadian?

Power Rankings

Since there are only 12 teams, there is no use for a top 8 bottom 8, rather they will just go together here. This isn’t any sort of prediction, just a ranking of how each team has looked so far.

12. Latvia- Thus far, they have been unable to keep a game close.

11. Germany- A disappointing showing, not getting a point and falling to Belarus. They have a good goalie in Thomas Greiss, and a few good NHL players. They should be better than this.

10. Norway- They hung with the United States and Canada for longer than anyone could have expected, and took the Swiss to OT. So far it has been a successful tournament without a doubt for the realistic Norway fan.

9. Belarus- They gave Sweden a game, but they haven’t really threatened anyone and the United States would love to see them rather than the Swiss, believe you me.

8. Switzerland- Their play in the preliminary round was a step above the 9-12 teams. Ironically, the game that they won was their least impressive.

7. Finland- The Finnish looked downright punchless against Sweden. Once again from a USA perspective, I’d rather see them than the Czechs.

6. Czech Republic- Played Russia tight, they just don’t have a very impressive roster though.

5. Slovakia- The most underrated talent team in the tournament. Way less suprising to see them beat Russia than many would have you belive.

4. Canada- They have the best roster, but Norway played them tight for half the game (a lot considering that, well, it is Norway), the Swiss took them to a shootout, and the Americans took them down. They really shouldn’t be this high based on performance, but I cant justify leaving them out of the top four while they are mathematically alive in the tournament.

3. Russia- Need to see a little bit more. Their only convincing performance was against Latvia. I think that their lack of talent at defenseman will come to hurt them, it is just a matter of when.

2. Sweden- Survived a scare against the Belarus team and took care of business in a weak pool.

1. USA- They are the 1 seed, have the most impressive win by a country mile, and went undefeated. Done deal.

Top 8, Bottom Eight

Since I just did power rankings, we’ll step away from hockey, assigning the downs to the sports that I could do without, and the ups to the winter Olympic sports I am enjoying.

On the Down

8.Louge/Skeleton/Bobsled- I actually don’t mind watching it that much, it is just that every run looks exactly the same, and it basically comes down to gravity. You could watch ten runs without commentary or graphics, and unless someone crashed, have no idea who came in where.

7. Biathalon- Have had lengthy debates about this one. My buddy is enthralled by the skill it takes to steady your heart to steady your gun and is impressed by the athleticism. I agree with all of that, but

6. Ski Jumping (Judged)- Fundamentally opposed to anything that is judged being in the Olympics. That makes it a show, not a sport.

5. Snowboarding (half pipe)- I snowboard. I like snowboarding. But I’m against this. People complain a lot about it being “not in the Olympic spirit” or an excuse for the Americans to rake medals. Neither of those things bothers me, but like I said, if it is judged, it isn’t a sport I can get behind.

4. Freestyle Skiing- see above.

3.

2. Figure Skating- The games are geared towards women, I get that, and the commercials make it clear, but how is this interesting? I just don’t get it.

1. Ice Dancing- I can’t tell the difference between these two, and I don’t care to. And it was on over hockey….

On the Up

8. Ski Jumping (Distance)- Actually, ski jumping is just one event, with judging and distance combined for the score, but I really wish they could just ditch the judging. The guy who goes farthest wins. Why wouldn’t that work?

7. Snowboard Cross- Super exciting races, but more importantly, unlike the half pipe, someone wins!

6. Skiing (Slalom, GS, Super G)- Skiing is, in my opinion, the staple of the winter games, and I just don’t understand how people can point to the figure skating over it as the quintessential event.

5. Curling- The strategy! The theater! Ok, so it isn’t the most exciting sport, but you can’t tell me it isn’t bizarrely interesting.

4. Speed Skating- I can’t really explain it, maybe it is because I grew up taking power skating lessons, but I love watching the skaters fly around the ice. On the other hand it is an awkward conflict, wanting to root for America, but being unable to root for Apalo Ohno, who I can’t get behind.

3. Women’s Hockey- It is slower, not as skilled, there is no hitting, and the level of competition is ridiculously lopsided unless the United States is playing Canada. It is also proof that if USA Hockey is involved, I’m in. I have watched every game.

2. Skiing (Downhill)- All the skiing is good, like I said in the number six spot, and the downhill is by far the best event. The speed is incredible.

1. Men’s Hockey- Obviously.

Looking Ahead- Projecting the Medal Rounds

Just for fun, let’s run through the remainder of the games, and project the results, NCAA tournaments style.

Starting in the qualifying round, I hate to go chalk, but I just don’t see an upset here. Latvia looked hapless in the first round (sorry Kris and Regnars), and the Czechs should have no problem in round one. The Germans have, as I mentioned, NHL talent in Greiss, Christian Ehrhoff, Marcel Goc, Dennis Seidenberg and Marco Sturm. They are really too talented tobe the eleven seed, and would be a dangerous matchup for some teams. There is no way that Canada is going out to them, though.

Rounding things out, Slovakia has way too much talent to be taken out by Norway. The most interesting game, then is probably the Belarus-Switzerland game (I don’t ever include 8-9s as upsets, so either way is chalk). Both had similar first rounds, winning the other non-elite nation in their pool, and bringing a power to the brink. I am going to go with offensive potential in the Kostitsyns and Mikhail Grabovski over the goaltending of Jonas Hiller, and pick the Belarusians to face the Americans in round two.

Moving on to round two, the brackets will go unchanged, not only because I see it going pretty chalk, but also because the tournament does not reseed (America, as the 1, gets the 8-9 winner, even if the 11 seed were to win and be the bottom team). That leaves the Americans against the Belarusians, and I’m going with the States in an easy decision there. The two seed, Sweden, would then play the Slovakians. I would love to go with Slovakia here, and I think that they have a legitimate chance to take down the 2006 champs, but in what is essentially a tossup, I’ll give Sweden with the extra rest (and more importantly, extra practice) the edge, although it pains me to do so.

Squaring off to face the Americans in the semifinals, would then be the Czechs and the Finish. I thought that Finland looked terrible in the prelims. I was completely unimpressed. Much like America in 2006, they appear to be between two generations of national teams, leaving goaltending depth (Mikka Kipprusoff, Niklas Backstrom, Tukka Rask, Antti Niemi, Antero Nittymaki, Pekka Rinne and Vesa Toskala are all Finish) as their greatest strength. Unfortunately, they can only play one, so that isn’t an advantage at all. The Czechs don’t have their strongest team ever, either, but they have played well in a tough pool, beating a tough Slovakia, and hanging with the power, Russia. I still don’t like their lack of scoring, but Vokun has been good, and I like their back end, so I think that they will face the Americans in the semis.

Finally, you have the game that everyone wants to see. Crosby! Ovechkin! It’s the Olympic… quarterfinals? Well, that is what it comes down to. The top two teams in the world (according to the IIHF rankings) will face off, and the loser will go home. Empty handed. Without a medal. I have said for a long time, that the Russian defense core is weak. It is. They rely on Dimitri Kalinin, an average NHLer at best before he fled for Russia. Sergei Gonchar is still a solid anchor, but he is up there in years, more so than you would like for your number one guy, as Gonchar is for the Russians.

To me, this doesn’t mean that the Russians are going to give up 5 goals a game. Team defense comes down to so many things, and most of their guys are capable defenders. The problem that I think that they are going to find, is rather in that as talented as their forwards are, the other forwards in this tournament are also elite. As such, the Russians can’t reasonably expect to control the play the entire game. While they will be capable of handling the attack, since like I said they have decent defenders and good goaltending, the point where their lack of talent on the back end will come in the transition game. There is a reason that the Russian offense struggled against a good Slovakia team, and against the Czechs (5 goals in 2 games before an empty netter isn’t what you would expect from the likes of Ovechkin, Semin, Kovalchuk and company).

I am a big believer that while all six guys on the ice have a large say in goals against average, and that defense is played as a unit, I also think that defenseman is the most important position on the ice. Defensemen, unlike forwards, face the play at all times, and can control it in a way forwards can’t. Against Latvia, Russia was dominant. Their forwards were able to control the puck, cycle it, and control the play. There was little to no need for a transition game. In more evenly matched games, defensemen are relied upon on the breakout, regrouping the puck, and facilitating offense. The term puck moving defenseman is used a lot. Elite ones are rare, but good ones are key. They control the play with D to D passes, start the rush with outlet passes, and create opportunities by rushing the puck and finding forwards. Without them, it is hard to create offense. This is where Russia will struggle.

They are the only elite team in the tournament without a good puck moving defenseman (The Czechs have Thomas Kaberle, the Canadians have 6, the Americans have Ryan Suter, Erick and Jack Johnson, and Brian Rafalski, the Slovaks have Zedeno Chara and Lubomir Visnovsky, the Swedes have Lindstrom, and the Finish are the weakest of the bunch with Kimmo Timonen, , but I would take all of them over Andre Markov and Gonchar, the Russians best options and I would even take the German’s option in Christian Ehrhoff, who moved the puck really well in San Jose and continues to do so in Van). Even the goals they score have come off of plays like Ovechkins hit on Jagr, where there was a turnover and a rush, not a manufactured play involving their D moving the puck. This hurt them against Slovakia, and despite their incredible fire power, I think it will do the same against Canada, and they will go out early.

That leaves us with the semifinal matchups. Canada will face Sweden, and the USA will play the Czechs. It seems premature, though, to project that now. That will be edition three, which I will post on Thursday, looking back at the first two rounds and ahead at the 4 team final. Until then, enjoy it America.

Speaking of enjoy it, I leave you with this:

Sunday, February 21, 2010

USA - Canada Live Blog

Here is the live blog that I did during the USA-Canada game tonight, verbatim. If you followed it, the posts went up as the action was going, but I decided to put them together here, in proper order, so that you can read them from start to finish if you missed the live blog. Also, it is only about 2500 words, so to have it take up 17 posts seems a bit ridiculous. Anyways, here it is as it appeared, unedited.

Live Blog I (4:45 PM)

Screw it, we are going with the first ever OV Sports live blog.

I just ran down my cousin's staircase (where we are coming to you live from San Francisco) yelling "IT'S OK...WE HAVE HORS'DOUVES!" It must be game time.

AND A GOOOAAAAAAL!

The USA goes up 1-0 just 41 seconds in. If we have a chance, I really think that it is on a goaltending advaltage.

Rafalski's shot was tipped by Sidney Crosby and sneaked by Brodeur. Miller has already made a big save on on Iginla, but the USA has 3 scoring opportunities early on. I would be way more afraid of Luongo, I just don't think Brodeur is elite anymore.

Ryan Malone, by the way, just mishandled a breakaway pass.

Broduer has USA on the knob of his stick. He knows what's up.

Live Blog II (4:55 PM)

Unfortunate call goes against the USA, Pavelski's stick rode up Getzlaf's stick on a clearing attempt follow through and hit him in the head for a high stick.

Callahan was the recipient of a shorthanded break but missed the net badly. We had Callahan and Drury on the PK, against Heatley, Thronton and Marleau (with Boyle no less), becuase any time you can get a mediocre team's PK against the second best team's PP in the Olympics you gotta do it.

The PP got killed, but Canada sustained pressure, and Erik Stall tipped one in. Crap. 1-1.

Live Blog III

BRIAN RAFALSKI!

I can't believe it, he has the USA's last four goals, he only has 4 this season for Detroit. What a response for the good guys (who it bears mentioning, are wearing the worth-buying-good 1960 Olympic throwbacks).

Really though, this one is 100% on Brodeur. He made a really dumb play, trying (and succeeding) to bat the puck off of a dump in mid air. He did what he wanted, but the result was exactly what they tell you not to do, a weak clearing attempt up the middle. A really boneheaded play. To top it off, he not only matched Rafalski's fan, but managed to kick it in. I'm not saying I told you so, but really I'm just not saying it yet.

Live Blog IV (5:09 PM)

I'm having a hard time not following the "gotta root for Patrick Marleau, Joe Thornton and Dany Heatley" instinct. I'm not, I just have to fight it. That has been Canada's best line so far thought, and Miller just made a great save on Marleau. Crosby, and maybe Thornton and Marleau seem to be the only Canadians matching the United States' energy at the moment.

Canada is buzzing a bit right now. They are sustaining pressure here in the final quadrant of the period. The Kessler-Ryan-Kane trio (Kane was moved from the Statsny-Parise combo) got two great opportunities. Ryan got a shot from his spot at the bottom of the circle, and Kessler tipped a pass that nearly got passed Brodeur. Good save.

By the way, the instinct I mentioned for Marleau and co is more than made up for by my hatred for Cory Perry (who has already been pulled off of Miller twice), in case you are wondering where I'm at emotionally.

Live Blog V (5:18)

That’s the end of 1, all in all a great period, despite an 18-6 shot advantage for Canada. Let's wrap it up with a few lists.

GUYS I'M HAPPY WITH

RAFALSKI

MILLER

Kessler

Ryan

Kane

Suter

NEED MORE FROM

Backes

Pavelski

Kessel

GUYS I'M AFRAID OF

Crosby

Thornton

Marleau

Heatley

JR

NBC

Someone named Dylan Ratigan just talked about how he has turned a black and white T-Shirt (which he described as the most liberating thing he has ever seen) into a career. His show is on the same network that the most exciting day of hockey ever is carried on. I don't know whether to vomit or to light myself on fire.

Live Blog VI(5:39 PM)

The inevitable happened, as Heatley made it 2-2 early in the second. We are spending way too much time in our own zone (to the tune of about 80% of the time). Rick Nash followed that up with a golden oppertunity for Miller's 20th save. Jesus.

Any emotional advantage has been neutralized by now, as Canada has cotrolled the last 15 minutes of game time. They have all of the energy and momentum. All of it.

In unrelated news, Jamie Langenbrunner and Ryan Callahan shouldn't be on this team. They just shouldn't.

NBC just did the "stars in the stands shot, we have Michael Phelps (who I correctly identified by saying "is that the dude from the office?”), Gretz, and Gary Bettman, among others. The crowd has been good, but not great. Not quite what you would expect, at least from what I can tell on TV. Tons of red though.

Live Blog VII (5:46)

The USA is not using their speed right now. They have been completely neutralized offensively, and are just getting pummeled in their own end. I was about to point out that I haven't heard Kessel's name this period, but really there are six or seven guys that could be said about. Pat Kane just got a good chance from Kessler, but other than that, the flow is essentially sustained Canada pressure, one USA rush, more sustained Canada pressure.

One thing I will say right now for the USA is their team D has been solid. As much as the puck has been in their zone, Miller really hasn't had to do anything spectacular lately.

The ine right now is Callahan, Pavelski and Brown. The USA needs a hard-nosed, dump and bang shift from these guys that can swing some momentum.

Live Blog VIII (5:52)

Dustin Brown saw himself coming down on Drew Doughty, thought he was in practice, and tried to throw the puck through his own legs to beat him. He actually almost got it, and would have got to the net but for a great recovery by Doughty.

America has calmed a bit here, and Parise got another good chance for the US off of a draw. At the other end, Miller has been as good as the Americans need him to be (really, really good). This game is getting really physical. Both teams seem to know what is at stake. Miller's 26 saves means that Canada's rate of shooting is a little bit less than in period one, surprising because the momentum has been all in the American zone.

I'm still looking for more from the Pavelski, Kessel, Malone line. They haven't had a quality chance all day. I also hate having Langenbrunner on a line with Parise and Statsny. His game is (if anything) defensive at this line. It doesn't work to have him with two of our best scorers.

By the way, Eric Staal just accidentally lit up Corry Perry, who went to the lineup, and I couldn't be happier. Apparently, also, the fans are great. Bad job by the NBC production on that point, since you really can't tell.

Live Blog IX (6:01)

I would like to apologize to Chris Drury. I never had him on the team, but he has worked his ass off, embraced his role, and been a huge asset for team USA. Basically, he has done what Langenbrunner has been unable to do.

...

WHAT A SEQUENCE!

First, Brown was sprung on a breakaway. Marleau sort of ran him down, but Brown got a shot off. Brodeur handled it, and Canada immediately sprung Thornton on a chance. He tried to jump around Rafalski, who had caught Thornton on his breakaway, and the USA recovered. Another long pass sprung Bobby Ryan on a breakaway off of the bench, but Brodeur made another save and covered.

Quite a bit of shoving now after the whistle at the end of the second period as Niedermeyer slammed Jack Johnson into the glass, but nothing appears to be coming of it. All in all, it wasn't pretty, but it was another good period for the USA.

Live Blog X (6:11)

This warrants its own post:

Congratulations, NBC, on airing the best hockey game, with the broadest appeal, that we have seen in quite a while, on your third network. What a joke. This is why no one likes you right now. This is why you are failing. Between The Office, the NHL on network TV, SNL, two late night talents, and a well done Football Night in America, Dick Ebersol's job should be easy, but this damn peacock just can't get out of its own way. It is disgusting.

Live Blog XI (6:18)

From Peter King (Monday Morning Qarterback writer for SI)'s twitter feed-- "RT @abarajasm5: @SI_PeterKing what do you think about the buffalo bills next season?? ... I think Ryan Miller should replace Trent Edwards."

Good stuff. This game really has the attention of the sports world. It is about time. It is all over Twitter, if you follow sports people, ESPN.com has it on the front page, and even NYTimes.com has it up. Good thing ice daancing is on in prime time in New York. No I will not drop it.

We are back in action in Vancouver. I think I speak for all USA Hockey fans when I say thank God we don't have Jamie on the point anymore. I should explain that I don't really have anything against Langenbrunner, I would love to have him on the Sharks, I just don't think he brings much to this team.

Canada killed the USA PP after a couple of chances, but Crosby took a high stick, and we will go back on the advantage.

This period is going to come down to this: Will the USAbe able to keep it a back and forth game or will they turtle in their own zone? Canada is too good to simply hold off for 20 minutes. The chance that they have is to play a game on both ends.

The second powerplay has seen plenty of USA pressure, but not a lot on net, and not a lot of quality chances. The two man advantages served ultimately to kill 4 of the 20 miles the USA has to climb here.

Finally, Langenbrunner just made another mistake. The USA has been good at not giving up odd man rushes, but Langenbrunner just threw a centering pass up the middle which Crosby took the other way. You can't make that play, even 200 ft from your own net, against a team like Canada.

Live Blog XII (6:29)

Great start to the third for the USA. They are getting their third PP, after a slash from Perry. They have even managed to control the small amount of 5 on 5 play lately. A PP goal here would be huge. Not converting so far has been the only thing that could leave Americans in want.

Word is (again from Twitter), that Canadians have been chanting for Luongo.

That may have been the most beautiful shot that I have ever seen. To watch Cory Perry skate to the Canada bench, with the USA making it 4-2...beautiful.

That was followed by a miraculous paddle save by Miller. 12 minutes to go. Replay shows that Nash actually just hit Miller with most of an empty net. The USA has controlled this period, they can't stop now, even up 2.

Live Blog XIII (6:35)

Powerplay for Canada after a Patty Kane hook. Questionable but not outrageous...this is gonna be scary. I should have mentioned, great job by Langenbrunner setting the screen. Gotta call it both ways.

Olczyk has been great, he just pointed out that the USA has been doing a great job of keeping pressure on Canada, but also managed to stay in the middle of the ice. He just said that this is the game one way or the other. I am sweating right now. Fortunately, the USA has a lot of good PKers like Kessler, Pavelski or even Drury.

One more from Twitter that I found funny, this time from Jason Whitlock:

"USA USA USA!!! Do you believe in small upsets?"

Live Blog XIV (6:41)

KANE IS OUT! SAVE BY MILLER! 7 MINUTES LEFT USA UP TWO!

This is unbelievable. What a game so far by the USA. They have done everything they need to. No complaints, and I see old glory being waved in the stands. This is when we need to make sure we keep the pressure on.

Doc Emerick - "The Deficit is 2", me - "Obama wishes"...not sure why that partucular joke came to mind. Anyways, uh...USA! USA!

3 shots in 15 minutes (including a PP) for Canada. I can't say enough about htis effort so far.

Johnson trips Marleau (maybe) and Canada is back on the advantage. The Sharks first line has had the puck in the USA zone their entire time today. Good game by them.

Back to the nervous PK here...

Live Blog XV (6:46)

Oh. My. God.

Rick Nash did an incredible job attacking the net, and Ryan Miller just made two more big saves. I feel like i am going to read this later and realize it is just me saying that Miller made a great save again and again. It would be an appropriate reflection. What a performance.

As I type that, Crosby taps one in from the crease. He beat Rafalski to cut it to one.

More twitter:

"sportsguy33 This is incredible. My Dad made a great point: lack of commercials helps the breakneck pace, You can't breathe."

These are going to be the three longest minutes of my life. I would say more but my hands are shaking.

Live Blog XVI (6:50)

Timeout Canada. This has been tremendously tremendous, according to Olczyk. I couldn't agree more, and I'll give Olczyk a break because he has been insightfully insightful tonight.

My buddy has pointed out that Canada is just firing it on net right now. The next two minutes are goinf to look like a powerplay. I would expect nothing less from perhaps the most talented team I have ever seen.

Stand and clap for a clear and change. It is more like a 5-3. THe American defense seems to be "try to block shots and clear it if you can." 1:05 left.

WHAT A PLAY BY KESSLER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
EMPTY NET GOAL! BEDLAM!

USA! USA! USA!

Live Blog: fin (6:55)

Unbelievable. I Cannot believe it. Canada has to face Germany. I can't believe it. We are 3-0 and in the quarters. I don't even know what to say. I think I hear a USA chant. It isn't a miracle on ice, but damn it feels good.

So many things I'm sure I could say, but I'm gonna let it sink in first, thanks for reading.

One last thing. As for my prediction: I don't count empty net goals.

All Things (Olympic) Hockey: Part 1

I have a hard and fast rule in life that I just made up. Every time that I have a couple of hours on a train on what could very well be the best hockey day we will see for years, I have to break out the old typewriter and figure out something to say.

Now, that seems like a grandiose statement, and you’re right to think that, because I am, of course typing on a laptop, not a typewriter. It was a joke. It isn’t 1984, I mean this is a blog that is on the internet so of course I don’t have a bottle of white out at my side in case I hit the wrong stroke.

The other part of that statement, though, is even more profound, and I stand by it. This Sunday, the 21st of February, is perhaps the best slate of games, Olympic, NHL, college or otherwise that we have seen any time in the recent past, and unless they decide to move back the championship game for the IIHF World Championships by about a month, and the Frozen Four back about 3 to correspond with the Stanley Cup Finals, it is the best day that we are bound to see anytime soon. Consider the following about the three games:

- First of all, the pure games are incredible. The Czechs versus the Russians, the Swedes versus the Fins, and the good guys versus the bad guys, er, uh, USA versus Canada are all great games no matter the circumstances or jerseys.

- The circumstances and jerseys help though. First of all, the rivalries are there to add intrigue. USA versus Canada pits the two geographic rivals against each other. They are also the two most populous nations in terms of NHL players in the world. Did I mention that like 99.9% of Canada’s population lives within 50 miles of the US, that Canada has a massive inferiority complex when it comes to America, and that hockey is perhaps the one bastion of pride that they maintain over us here in the States?

- Sweden versus Finland is also an obvious natural rivalry. The pride of Scandinavia is put on the line when these two pace each other. Beyond the natural geographical rivalry, along with the Norwegians, Swedes and Fins make up one of the many groups of people that Americans can’t tell apart. (Just for fun, the other groups include but are not limited to, Peruvians and Argentineans, Mexicans and Puerto Ricans, Japanese, Chinese and Koreans, and anyone from the Middle East. USA! USA!)

- Russia versus the Czechs is a much less obvious geographical rivalry, but is perhaps the most heated politically. If you are one of the aforementioned Americans who can’t tell Norway from Sweden from Finland (Sweden is a longstanding neutral nation since the imperial reign of King Gustav although they are much less known for this than the Swiss, is perhaps the most successful social state in the history of the world, although they maintain some free markets mixed with a gigantic public sector, Finland fought a long political battle not to become a Soviet state, has been a political battleground between capitalism and communism, and has had a difficult recovery from the fall of the USSR, and Norway is where the 1992 Olympics were…remember, I am on a train right now. That was off the top of my head, apart from the Norway bit, don’t act like you’re not impressed), and therefore don’t know what the rivalry between the Czechs and Russians could be about, look up why Jaromir Jagr wears #68. Or just read this…Prague was occupied by the Soviets from the end of World War II, until 1968 when the Czechs (then the C zechoslovakians) fought off the Russians to avoid becoming a Soviet State, although like Finland, the Czech Republic was very much the front line of the Cold War (or as I call it, they Olympic Gift that Keeps On Giving…not one shot was fired between the USA and Russia, but we get generations of manufactured storylines. What could be better?)

- Perhaps most intriguingly, these are the last three Gold Medal games. Torino, Nogano and Salt Lake City failed to see one repeat Gold or Silver Medalist. The Russians lost to the Czechs in 1998, the Canadians stole it from America (still bitter) in 2002, and Sweden beat Finland in a bizarre (and oddly forgettable) 2006 tournament. That can only mean one thing: this year’s gold medal game will be Slovakia against Switzerland.

- Finally, what ties it all up, is that there is a fairly valid criticism of the Olympic tournament, that the opening round is essentially meaningless. No one actually gets eliminated from the Olympics (Olyminated, if you will), rather the games are simply for seeding. Not the case here. The winner of the three pools (A: USA, Canada, Switzerland and Norway, B: Sweden, Finland, Belarus and Germany, C: Russia, Slovakia, Czech Republic and Latvia) get a bye, as well as the team with the most points, or else the tiebreaker (head to head, goal differential, and so on). On the day of rivalries, all three games have bye implications. For the USA and Canada, the winner simply moves to the quarter finals. If Canada loses, since they only got two points for the shootout win, they will play in the first round. If the USA goes down, they will have a shot at the at large bye, although as you will see, all hell will break lose in that no matter what. As for Sweden Finland, it is also a simple winner goes on, although either loser would likely get into the tie breaker. Pool C is the messy one. If the Czechs win, they move on. If that is the case, the Russians would likely move into the 4th slot, their only loss being in a SO, unless another game goes into OT, in which case those two teams would move into a tie. If the Russians win, they go into the quarters despite the loss to Slovakia (I think), and my head starts to hurt figuring out who gets the 4 slot.

So there you go. It is about as great a day for hockey as you could ask for today. If you saw the title of the post though, you noticed that this does indeed mark the return of all things hockey. We are going to go ahead and ignore the hiatus-ed NHL for now, and break down the Olympic tournament, what we have seen and what we have to look forward to.

The Returns

Perhaps the most interesting development for me has been the influx of quality players in this tournament that don’t come from the NHL. Gone are the days that the players from Europe are guys who couldn’t make it as NHL role players. Many of the KHL guys could be successful NHL players. Only two (won’t say names yet) would be stars, but many could hold a spot on a roster. In 2006, before the Kontinental league became a success, I don’t think that this was the case. Now, half of the Russian team plays close to home, and not because they have to.

The two most intriguing figures that make up this group of non-NHLers are familiar faces. Peter Forsberg and Jaromir Jagr are both making their returns to North America, after a couple of years on the continent, Jagr playing for Omsk in Russia, and Forsberg, who is with Modo in Sweden, both left a couple of years before they were done playing, and have enjoyed a level of success in Europe.

Because they share a circumstance, they have been lumped together in much of the Olympic coverage, although I don’t think that they should be. Jagr has looked great in this tournament. He is playing at a high level in the K, and was the best player on the ice in my opinion for the Czechs against the Slovakians. Should he chose to play in the NHL again, I think Jagr could be a successful player steside once again, although at 38, the clock is ticking.

Forsberg, sadly, seems to have lost a step. He is by no means the best player on a talented Swedish team, and probably couldn’t be much resembling the player he once was in the NHL. Jagr would be one of the guys I would consider a star if he returned to the NHL, but Forsberg looks a little too beaten up to be considered in that light.

That leaves one other star that isn’t playing in the NHL, and that is another former NHL player, this one who went home, if anything, before his prime. Alexander Radulov was on his way to becoming a star with the Predators before he decided to go home to play in Russia. He seems not to have taken any steps back in his development since leaving the NHL though. Rather, he has developed and looks right at home amongst the star studded Russian line up. Hopefully, he will see fit to return to the NHL, and you can bet he will be a hot commodity when he does.

Finally, on the other hand—not so much related to Forsberg, Radulov or Jagr, Russia has, in my opinion, taken way too many KHL players. A desire to show off their shiny new national league has led to them compromising their national team by passing up more talented NHLers. I really believe that they will come to regret this, since their team I definitely weakened by it.

Goaltending: A Worldwide Phenomenon

There was a time when the Russians had a great goaltender in Tretiak, the Americans would produce a goalie here and there, and Quebec produced the majority of the world class netminders. Those days are over. Sweden boasts a goalie who has led the NHL in many statistical categories, in Henrick Lundqvist, the United States does as well, in Ryan Miller, Canada is still world class with Roberto Luongo (though less so with Martin Brodeur), and even teams like the Swiss (Jonas Hiller), Germans (Thomas Greiss, look him up he has been great as the Sharks’ backup) and Norwegians who have gotten great play from a guy we haven’t heard of, all have seen great play in net.

This is serving as a serious equalizer in the tournament. If Jonas Hiller, an elite NHLer doesn’t backstop the Swiss, they are never hanging with the Canadians. The level of goaltending is stellar for every team in the tournament, and it really does mean that any team can hang with any other team on a given night.

Flag Waving Homer Note of the Week: The USA so far

Basically, the USA has been pretty good so far. It has been hard to find too much wrong with the way they took care of Switzerland, especially following their taking Canada to the wire, and their handling of Norway. Really, the preliminary round of the tournament will be judged on today’s performance against Canada, but that isn’t to say I can’t find a few things to say about the first two tilts.

Against Switzerland, even though the score suggested a fairly evenly played game, I was pretty happy with the effort. Jonas Hiller was causing some painful Déjà vu for me as a Sharks fan, when he stood on his head to hold an inferior team in a game. The shots didn’t show it, but the Americans controlled the play against the Swiss attack, and had way more quality scoring opportunities than the Swiss, who scarcely tested Miller. These feelings were re-affirmed when Switzerland forced Canada to the shootout.

Against Norway, it was hard to be pleased with the first two periods. The scrappy Norwegian team kept it close, and caused a breakdown on the power play to make it a game, at 3-1 after 2 periods. I was pretty encouraged though, the way that the USA managed to pour it on when they took over in the third period. It bodes well, in my opinion, for the rest of the tourney. The main concern is the amount of odd man rushes that the USA gave up. Defensemen were downright careless with their pinching. I wouldn’t be the first, second, or hundredth person to point this out, it has been the main criticism of Ron Wilson’s squad, but it is true, and bears repeating. I think this was largely a symptom of them trying to get involved offensively against an inferior team, but it goes without saying that they can’t let that happen against Canada, or in the Medal Rounds. Barry Melrose said it best, when he pointed out that the five two on ones that the USA gave up probably wouldn’t be five goals against Canada, but it could easily be three, more than enough to swing the game.

Really, though, none of it matters. Those are essentially Ws, and are in the bank. Like I said, this team’s preliminary round will be judged tonight against Canada.


Finally, a prediction, I believe is in order. My head says that Canada is deeper, and has much more star power with scoring. My heart is too busy chanting "USA! USA! USA!" to stop and make a prediction. Screw it, I'll go with it. USA 4 USSR, er, I mean, Canada 3.


That's it for part 1, which I wanted to get up for gametime. Enjoy the battle, and look for part 2 tonight or tomorrow morning, complete with reactions to tonights games, as well as the usual clutter that makes up All Things Hockey.


Monday, February 8, 2010

Dead Weight

I have stated many times on this space that when it comes to the San Jose Sharks, I am not an objective source, nor do I pretend to be. Having said that, being as objective as I possibly can be, I would contend that the Sharks are at worst the second best team in the National Hockey League. Watching the Toronto game, though, I came to a profound and worrying realization regarding San Jose.

If Jody Shelly, Brad Staubitz and Scott Nichol are all in the lineup for the Sharks, they will not win the Stanley Cup.

(In the Toronto game Dwight Helminen, who was in the Wallin deal and has struggled to crack the lineup of one of the worst teams in hockey, played in addition to those three. I would put him in there, but I am pretty sure that once Manny Malhotra is healthy, Helminen will be out of the lineup.)

I’m not saying that it weakens their chances. I am saying that with those three playing, it will not happen. It is too much dead weight to carry. All three bring little to the table, other than the occasional scrap in the case of Staubitz and Shelly, and the not-occasional-enough dumb penalty or turnover in the case of all three. You can win the cup with one guy who only fights, and with one guy who only does whatever it is that Scott Nichol supposedly does (go into the corner with his head down and sort of finish a check but not really do anything resembling an effective forecheck, or look like you are hustling a lot on defense, but only because you have to take six strides to get from the blue line to the red line and because you got beat in the first place…I guess), but not with three.

This isn’t to say that the Sharks can’t win the cup. They have plenty of guys who are capable of filling the third and fourth lines. Jamie McGinn, Logan Couture and Benn Ferierro all can bring secondary scoring, yet they sit in Worchester. Hell, even Ryan Vesche, Mike McCarthy, or Steve Zalewski could do what those three do, but with a bit more upside. The obvious counter that the Sharks need those guys to drop the gloves (Staubitz and Shelly anyways) doesn’t hold water either. Ryan Clowe and Douglas Murray are both capable, and have shown themselves willing to police the other team should they take liberties with the likes of Joe Thornton or Patrick Marleau. The counter that they need those guys on the ice would be a fair, if debatable one, but still doesn’t excuse the presence of those two. Frazier McLaren scrapped in well over half of the games that he played in this year, but did so while being a capable power forward and NOT TAKING DUMB PENALTIES AND TURNING THE DAMN PUCK OVER. Yet for some reason, since Shelly has been healthy, McLaren has sat in favor of the worthless veteran.

(I wrote that I liked McLaren way more than Shelly when Shelly was hurt, and hoped that he had proven that Shelly wasn’t needed. It appeared to me, at least, that he had, but Doug Wilson and Todd McLellan thought otherwise, and I want to vomit…so there you go)

Ultimately, one of these guys has to go. Personally I would dump all three and call up McLaren, Couture and McGinn, but that isn’t going to happen. Instead I would settle for one being replaced which alone, in my mind would make the Sharks the favorites that they should be. If I had to chose one, it would be Nichol, because Staubitz and Shelly at least fight, which does have an effect on the team (knowing that someone has their back, and getting them charged up after a scrap), while Nichol is, as far as I can tell, completely worthless. Unfortunately, Scott has compromising pictures of everyone involved with the Sharks, including every fan but me or something, because people seem to think he doesn’t suck (and don’t give me this “he is a hustle guy” crap…you know who else hustles? 99.9% of the players in the NHL. You don’t have to mention it, though, because they actually have skills you can talk about instead).

Between Staubitz and Shelly, then, I would have to go with Shelly to get the axe from the lineup. Really, it is pretty much a tossup, but Staubitz, while far from a consistent player, shows flashes of belonging in the NHL and can play the point in a pinch (although if he has to, the Sharks are in trouble). For Shelly, aside from dropping the mitts, the only thing I have ever heard for him is that he is a good guy in the dressing room. Fantastic. 2 counters to that. First of all, he can be as good a guy as he wants in the room as a healthy scratch. Let’s try that. Second, I would say the same thing that I said regarding hustle. Thornton is great in the room. He is also great on the ice though, unlike Shelly. As such, we tend to focus on his leading the league in assists, where as with Shelly we have to waste time pretending that if he wasn’t there being so likable, the Sharks might actually win fewer hockey games.

I know this sounds angry and bitter for a fan whose team is on top of the Western Conference and is playing pretty well, but this really bothers me. People talk about how the Sharks haven’t won in the playoffs because they choke, or because guys like Marleau and Thornton aren’t ‘playoff guys.’ The same people seem to think that we need to change what has been the best team in the league over the last season and a half because they played six bad games at the worst possible time and ran into a hot goaltender. I don’t buy that. Hockey is hockey, be it in October or May and the Sharks are a good enough team to win sixteen games without losing four of seven. I am convinced of that. Sure, they can tinker to make the team better (the Wallin trade making it so that they don’t have to dress two rookie defensemen at once, or Jay Leach at all being a good example), but there is no reason to do anything drastic.

The problem is, this year is the last chance. Nabby, Marleau, Blake, Malhotra, Ortmeyer and the three guys I just destroyed are all UFAs. Pavelski and Setto are RFAs, and will almost certainly demand raises. That means to be under cap, the Sharks are almost certainly going to look a little bit different next year (especially since none of the contracts coming off are bad deals). I really believe that this team is good enough to at least win the Western Conference, probably the cup, and they have an arsenal of young talent that can help them get there by filling out the third and fourth line. The problem is, you can’t win the cup with three players that don’t contribute. One? Yes. Two? Probably. Anything more? No way. I would hate to see the last chance ruined by playing guys like Shelly, Staubitz and Nichol for their faux toughness and grit over more capable pieces that can get this team where it wants to be.