sport-scan daily brief - Columbus Blue Jackets
Transcription
sport-scan daily brief - Columbus Blue Jackets
SPORT-SCAN DAILY BRIEF NHL 4/2/2014 Anaheim Ducks 732158 732159 Ducks FYI: Team of destiny? They'll have to wait and see Ducks' Perreault has the hot hand, and he's playing it Boston Bruins 732160 732161 732162 732163 732164 732165 732166 732167 732168 732171 732198 Buffalo Sabres 732201 Murray, Nolan share common vision to improve Sabres now that coaching job is stable Grigorenko hopes to excel with Amerks, show Sabres he'll be ready for NHL Sabres, Nolan agree to contract extension Leino‘s shootout winner draws big cheers Leafs keep faint playoff hopes alive with win over Flames Van Brabant the 10th Flames player to make his NHL debut this season Calgary Flames Snapshots: Team doesn't want to enter tailspin now 732173 732174 732175 732176 732177 732178 732179 732180 732181 732199 732200 732203 732204 732205 732206 Skinner, Lindholm help Canes dominate Penguins 4-1 Chicago Blackhawks 732210 Toews or no Toews, Blackhawks have things to fix No NHL hearing set for hit on Toews Did Hawks' Cup hopes crumple to ice with Toews? Will Blackhawks answer ‗wake-up call‘? A healthy Toews is more important than vengeance No defense for not defending Hawks‘ Toews No disciplinary hearing expected for Orpik's hit on Toews By the numbers: Blackhawks limp through March Jamal Mayers: You'd certainly like to see response to Toews hit 732211 732212 732213 732214 732215 Colorado Avalanche 732182 732183 732184 732185 732186 Matt Duchene to miss 4 weeks, opening of playoffs for Avs with injury How the Avs can still beat Chicago without Matt Duchene Nate Guenin struggles in return home Colorado Avs rally late, then win in OT over Columbus Blue Jackets Patrick Roy adjusts Avalanche lines, gets game-tying goal and OT win at Columbus Columbus Blue Jackets 732187 732188 732189 732190 732191 732192 732193 732194 732195 Blue Jackets: Final push in playoff race will be grueling Blue Jackets notebook: Backup McElhinney‘s work in net provides needed lift Michael Arace commentary: A smiling Johansen is good sign for Blue Jackets Blue Jackets notebook: Nick Holden fits in with Avs Michael Arace commentary: Bad breaks lead to a painful loss for Blue Jackets Avalanche 3, Blue Jackets 2 (OT): Bad bounces Blue Jackets playing for postseason as April nears Three takeaways from the Blue Jackets 3-2 OT loss to the Avalanche Avalanche top Blue Jackets 3-2 in OT Addition or audition? Stars want to see what they have in defenseman Patrik Nemeth Stars taking depth scoring to new levels, unheralded forward scores two in win over Capitals He said it: Players and coaches comment after Dallas' 5-0 win in Washington Cody Eakin runs into some old friends, plays against organization that drafted him Stars dominant Capitals to win battle of ninth-place teams fighting for playoff spots Stars coach Lindy Ruff tries to stop Kevin Connauton from getting frustrated as Patrik Nemeth replaces him in Detroit Red Wings 732202 732207 732208 732209 Carolina Hurricanes 732172 732197 Patrice Bergeron named Second Star of the Week Duchene out about 4 weeks with knee injury Red Wings get last lease at Joe Louis Arena Bruins Notebook: Jarome Iginla shines brightest Motivation in Motown: Loss fuels Bruins in return trip Calgary Flames 732169 732170 Dallas Stars 732196 Detroit Red Wings' Mike Babcock reveals the secret to financial success Pavel Datsyuk returning to Detroit Red Wings this week, but which day? HoneyBaked hockey: Top-ranked under-16 team boasts NHL-level coaching, potential Detroit Red Wings' opponent tonight: Boston Bruins provide tough test in possible playoff preview Chris Ilitch, Ken Holland discuss Red Wings at Detroit Economic Club lunch Red Wings' Pavel Datsyuk aims for Wednesday return Red Wings' Gustav Nyquist is a real goal-getter Their youth, the playoff hunt and Gustav Nyquist‘s highlight reel goal: Detroit Red Wings at DEC luncheon Red Wings' Gustav Nyquist named NHL's second star of month after scoring 12 goals in 15 games Red Wings expect Pavel Datsyuk to return Friday, but he hasn't ruled out playing on Wednesday City Council to consider agreement for Detroit Red Wings' Joe Louis Arena today Red Wings look to carry momentum into April as they control their own destiny in playoff race Datsyuk takes a step in the right direction, practices with teammates Pavel Datsyuk could return Wednesday or by Friday at latest Edmonton Oilers 732216 732217 732218 732219 732220 Ference adds to long list of Oiler injuries with ripped pectoral Sharks bounce back to edge Oilers Oilers drop 5-4 decision to Sharks Oilers injuries a concern San Jose Sharks won‘t underestimate the Edmonton Oilers 2 Florida Panthers 732221 732222 732223 732224 Injuries plague Florida Panthers early in loss to New York Islanders SCOTT CLEMMENSEN: Playing in the NHL and for the Panthers was a 'Privilege' END OF THE ROAD: Panthers Lose Final Road Game of 2013-14 to Islanders ... Upshall Leaves and Returns End of the road as Panthers fall 4-2 to Islanders Los Angeles Kings 732225 732226 Kings learned a lesson in desperation in loss to Wild on Monday Taking a look at Michael Mersch Minnesota Wild 732227 732228 732229 732230 Recovery by Wild's Koivu turns him into Captain Fantastic Wild: Big line gets biggest goals from its smallest player, Zach Parise Minnesota Wild: Road trip gives Zach, J.P. Parise time to bond, reminisce Wild sign defenseman Christian Folin Montreal Canadiens 732231 732232 732233 732234 732235 Lightning beat Habs as both teams clinch playoff berths Emelin will be in Habs lineup against Lightning ‗Happy we‘re in the playoffs,‘ Price says after loss Price on short end of goalie duel About last night … Nashville Predators 732236 Predators enforcer reaches out to foe he hurt in fight New Jersey Devils 732237 732238 732239 732240 732241 732242 732243 732244 732245 732246 732247 732248 732249 732250 732251 732252 732253 Devils Lose to Sabres in Shootout Ennis, Leino Lead Sabres to 3-2 Win Over Devils Devils: Tim Sestito, Anton Volchenkov only players to skate Tuesday morning With Ryane Clowe unable to play, Devils recall Mike Sislo from Albany (AHL) Tuomo Ruutu's first month with Devils has been enjoyable, but Finn isn‘t happy with his play Devils talk like they know their ship is sinking after falling to 0-11 in shootouts Studs and duds from Devils' shootout loss No. 11, this one to NHL's worst team Devils fall to Sabres, 3-2, after nine-round shootout Ex-Ranger Sean Avery: I was forced off 'Dancing with the Stars' Lamoriello: No reason to think Clowe won‘t be back this season; Sestito, Sislo both to take warm-ups Devils call up left wing Mike Sislo Clowe ―fine‖, but did not accompany Devils to Buffalo, Sestito, Volchenkov ready to go if needed Devils know time running out after latest shootout loss; Pay for letting Sabres hang around Devils notes: Ryane Clowe 'fine' Devils fail in another shootout in 3-2 loss to Sabres Devils fall victim to Tyler Ennis, Sabres in shootout loss Devils‘ latest shootout loss hurts playoff hopes New York Islanders 732254 732255 732256 732257 Bailey Has Goal, Assist as Isles Top Panthers 4-2 Islanders pound Panthers with four-goal onslaught for 4-2 win Islanders roll past woeful Panthers Islanders' rookie-laden lineup beats Florida New York Rangers 732258 732259 732260 732261 732262 732263 732264 732265 732266 732267 732268 732269 732270 Rangers Set Road Record With Win in Vancouver Martin St. Louis scores first goal as Blueshirt as NY Rangers top John Tortorella‘s Canucks Chris Kreider‘s injury has exposed Rangers weakness Rangers‘ Ryan McDonagh hurts left shoulder in win over Canucks Could be one and done with Canucks for Torts Rangers 3, Canucks 1: McDonagh‘s left shoulder injury said to be not serious by the team Alain Vigneault's calming influence, faster-paced system embraced by Rangers Rangers responding to Alain Vigneault while Canucks struggle with John Tortorella Rangers notes: Dominic Moore moved up to play with Marty St. Louis and Brad Richards Rangers top Canucks, 3-1, in Vancouver Rangers-Canucks in review Rangers 3, Canucks 1 … post-game notes Rangers at Canucks … It‘s Go Time! Ottawa Senators 732271 732272 732273 732274 Karlsson nominated for Masterton Ottawa Senators still in it, but will need some help Erik Karlsson named Senators' Masterton Trophy nominee The Ottawa Senators paradox Philadelphia Flyers 732275 732276 732277 732278 732279 732280 732281 732282 732283 732284 732285 732286 Ice hockey: Homecoming for Johnny Gaudreau Bernie Parent: I don't have a clue Do Flyers need shootout specialist? Flyers Notes: With Timonen out, Flyers go with Gustafsson With Timonen out, Gustafsson gets another chance Flyers show spirit again in St. Louis shootout loss Emery's masterpiece goes for naught in shootout loss Skate Update: Rare appearance for Gustafsson Claude Giroux named NHL Third Star of the month Steve Mason energized by playoff race pressure Flyers stifled in shootout loss to Miller, Blues Instant Replay: Blues 1, Flyers 0 (SO) Phoenix Coyotes 732287 732288 732289 Coyotes earn a point but blow chance in shootout Phoenix Coyotes' Jeff Halpern took scenic route back to NHL Latest loss drops Coyotes out of playoff seed Pittsburgh Penguins 732290 732291 732292 732293 732294 Lottery-bound Hurricanes bury listless Penguins at Consol Penguins Letang nominated for NHL‘s Masterton Trophy Gene Collier: Penguins' nice start soured quickly by awful effort Penguins notebook: Veterans don't expect letdown after division title clinched Penguins fall to Hurricanes, 4-1 San Jose Sharks 732295 732296 732297 732298 732299 732300 732301 732302 Sharks face another troubling opponent Sharks can't afford to lose more ground tonight vs. Oilers San Jose Sharks end modest two-game slide with win over Edmonton Oilers Sharks rally to beat Oilers 5-4, stay close to Ducks Burns sparks Sharks' top power play unit Pacific Watch: Ducks gain two points on Sharks with epic comeback Sharks' game not where it needs to be in win over Oilers Instant Replay: Sharks top Oilers in come from behind win St Louis Blues 732303 732304 732305 732306 732307 732308 732309 732310 732311 Blues beat Flyers 1-0 in shootout overtime with Miller's shutout Blues will shake things up against Flyers Hockey Guy: Blues did OK by missing on Lecavalier Hitchcock plans to give new 'Bergie Bunch' an extended look Blues beat the Flyers in a shootout Blues seeking more balance on offense Miller, Blues blank Flyers 1-0 in shootout Depleted Flyers fall to Blues Miller's first Blues shutout is a big one Tampa Bay Lightning 732312 732313 732314 732315 732316 732317 732318 Bolts clinch playoff spot with victory Bolts Notes: Lightning honor Paralympian Lightning can clinch playoff spot tonight Ondrej Palat is the NHL's rookie of the month for March Goaltending to headline Lightning-Canadiens showdown Lightning's Mike Kostka takes big hit Lightning clinches playoff berth with win over Canadiens Toronto Maple Leafs 732319 732320 732321 732322 732323 732324 732325 732326 732327 732328 732329 732330 732331 732332 732333 732334 732335 Mirtle: Ghosts of Brian Burke‘s tenure still haunt struggling Leafs Desperate Leafs edge Flames to snap eight game losing streak Flames looking to snuff out Leafs‘ faint playoff hopes Kessel has bruised foot but is expected to play against Flames Clarkson, Bolland, McClement in Leaf penthouse, Raymond in doghouse David Clarkson rescues Leafs vs. Flames: Cox Leafs finally get some good luck in streak-ending win over Flames LeafsBeat: Time to start looking at Maple Leafs prospects If the Maple Leafs fire Randy Carlyle, is it the right thing to do? Maple Leafs not getting caught up in outside chatter Maple Leafs snap eight-game slide with 3-2 win over Flames It‘s no joke, Leafs need to ‗win a hockey game‘ Win by Leafs a 'big relief,' Phaneuf says 'Thank God it's over,' McClement says of Leafs losing skid Toronto Maple Leafs break eight-game slide in beating Calgary Flames, keep slim playoff hopes alive MLSE CEO Tim Leiweke has been meeting with Toronto Maple Leafs players since collapse began, assistant GM says Toronto Maple Leafs try to take minds off losing streak, focus on Calgary Flames Vancouver Canucks 732348 732349 732350 732351 732352 732353 732354 732355 732356 732357 Canucks‘ David Booth busses Billy the bear Canucks Game Day: Vancouver clings to faint playoff hopes as road warrior Rangers come calling (with video) Alain Vigneault-led, playoff-bound Rangers down Canucks Torts talk: Canuck coach on 3-1 loss to NY Rangers Canucks left looking for meaning to season A David Booth bear story that actually ends well Canucks Game Day: Vigneault‘s Rangers on a roll; Torts ignoring speculation on his demise; Lack to get 17th st Willes: Canucks need to heed hiring history in coach hunt Rangers 3 Canucks 1: Plug pulled on Canucks' season St. Louis scores first goal as Ranger in win over sinking Canucks Washington Capitals 732336 732337 732338 732339 732340 Capitals show ‗zero urgency‘ in blowout loss to Stars Capitals brace for matchup with desperate Stars Capitals shuffle defense again; Grabovski at left wing against Stars Stars rout Capitals 5-0 to maintain playoff push Careless mistakes doom Capitals in deflating home loss to Stars Websites 732358 732359 732360 732361 732362 732363 732364 732365 732366 732367 732368 732369 732370 732371 ESPN / Will the Loo finally get a Cup parade? ESPN / Rumblings: Callahan staying in Tampa? Canucks making changes? NBCSports.com / Michael Lewis‘ new book could be bad timing for Panthers‘ new owner CNN/Sports Illustrated / Report: Pavel Datsyuk could return to Red Wings‘ lineup on Wednesday CNN/Sports Illustrated / Devils drop another shootout, now winless in last 15 attempts CNN/Sports Illustrated / Washington Capitals‘ Troy Brouwer takes veiled shot at coach Adam Oates CNN/Sports Illustrated / Brian Cazeneuve>INSIDE THE NHL CNN/Sports Illustrated / FHL hug-and-beer-hockey-fight stunt falls flat; players suspended CNN/Sports Illustrated / Allan Muir>NHL POWER RANKINGS CNN/Sports Illustrated / Top Line: Blackhawks get wake-up call; 2013 NHL Draft revisited; more links CNN/Sports Illustrated / Calgary Flames make good after mascot screw-up TSN.CA Kerry Fraser/ it on Toews USA TODAY / Islanders GM in can't-win situation with draft pick YAHOO SPORTS / A 'remarkable' return even though Lightning flash Steven Stamkos won't be full speed until next Winnipeg Jets 732341 732342 732343 732344 732345 732346 732347 Phoenix ties it up at 1-1 Jets reassign Comrie, Morrissey to St. John's Winnipeg fans exude negativity — because they care Winnipeg Jets fan miffed over team holding season ticket holders deposits Jets epic collapse in Anaheim just part of an ugly big picture Jets' coach Maurice defends Pavelec Lucky Ladd scores shootout winner SPORT-SCAN, INC. 941-284-4129 732158 Anaheim Ducks Ducks FYI: Team of destiny? They'll have to wait and see By Lance Pugmire April 1, 2014, 6:28 p.m. It took an ear-splitting scolding from Coach Bruce Boudreau, a game-turning hit by team leader Ryan Getzlaf, an amazing save by goalie Frederik Andersen, a power-play conversion, and Corey Perry‘s won‘t-be-denied rush to the net. But was destiny also at play in the Ducks‘ franchise-record comeback from a four-goal deficit to defeat the Winnipeg Jets, 5-4, in overtime Monday? With seven games remaining, the victory gave the Ducks (49-18-8) the most regular-season wins in team history and, with 106 points, put them in position to grab the Pacific Division title and finish first in the Western Conference. The day after scoring his 39th goal of the season with 22.7 seconds left to force an overtime that led to Stephane Robidas‘ deciding goal, Perry said the comeback victory could provide a lasting burst of momentum into the Stanley Cup playoffs. ―That‘s a win to build off. You need to have that kind of drive to show we can come back from any point,‖ Perry said. ―If you have that confidence and belief, you can beat any team.‖ ―Our character just took over. It‘s a full 60-minute game. The start wasn‘t what we wanted, but the finish is where we want to get to and what we did is a special thing. There‘s a lot of happy faces in here today.‖ Boudreau said he believed the Ducks had a chance to rally from a 4-0 deficit with less than three minutes left in the second period, but he stopped short of buying the notion that the magic automatically continues. ―I don‘t think those thoughts,‖ Boudreau said. ―I think it‘s great in the moment. It gives you confidence from now on you‘re never out of a game. ―But I had those thoughts once [coaching] Washington, down 4-1 in a playoff game, we won in overtime. I said it‘s a team of destiny, and then we lost in the second round. So that destiny didn‘t last too long. ―I don‘t want to put the same kind of burden on this team. You don‘t want to have to win 5-4 games, because you can‘t survive in the playoffs.‖ Injury update Out since March 14, defenseman Cam Fowler (sprained knee ligament) skated at Tuesday‘s practice and Boudreau said Fowler, a U.S. Olympian with six goals and 30 assists, could return to play by next week. The team had no update on defenseman Mark Fistric, who underwent an MRI exam Monday to address a lower-body nerve ailment that has kept him sidelined since March 15. DUCKS VS. EDMONTON When: 7. On the air: TV: KDOC; Radio: 830. Etc.: The Ducks renew acquaintances with the Oilers for the second of three games within a nine-day span. They lost Friday in Edmonton when ex-Kings goalie Ben Scrivens stopped 48 of 51 shots in a 4-3 overtime win. The teams meet again Sunday in Canada. LA Times: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732159 Anaheim Ducks Ducks' Perreault has the hot hand, and he's playing it BY ERIC STEPHENS / STAFF WRITER ANAHEIM – Mathieu Perreault insists there is nothing he is doing with his sticks that is special. Hasn‘t put them next to a heater. Isn‘t covering them with blankets. Didn‘t ask for a magic spell from the hockey gods. Something is happening, though. ―I don‘t know what‘s going on,‖ Perreault said, smiling broadly. ―Stick is hot.‖ Perreault got an assist on Ryan Getzlaf‘s power-play goal that was part of a stunning Ducks comeback Monday to beat Winnipeg, 5-4, in overtime. His point streak is now at nine games, which is four more than he‘d ever had in a row. Six of the 10 points scored during the run have been goals. Perreault scored in each contest during the club‘s recent three-game trip, including tying scores in Calgary and Edmonton in the third period. He got the final tally in a 5-1 rout of Vancouver. ―I‘m just taking it as they go right now,‖ Perreault said. ―It‘s the end of the season, and we‘re coming close to the playoffs. I feel good about myself. ―It‘s almost like when you‘re not scoring, before a game you feel like you‘re not going to score. Now every time I step on the ice, I feel like I am going to score.‖ It is the feeling when a player gets hot. The diminutive center‘s streak gives him a personal-best 40 points, which comes in handy since he can be a restricted free agent in July. Perreault, who's a bargain at $1.1 million this season, also has a new high of 18 goals. ―Even when I wasn‘t scoring as much, I had chances and they weren‘t going in,‖ Perreault said. ―And now it works that way when you don‘t get any and then you start getting them in bunches. It just evens out, you know. ―Right now, I‘m just getting the bounces. I don‘t think I do anything different. I don‘t think I‘m working harder or anything. It‘s just bounces going my way. I‘ll take it.‖ Ducks coach Bruce Boudreau is seeing something different of late. There is an edge to his game that is on display more often. ―I think the tenacity in his game has picked up in that he‘s not having the slides of no energy,‖ Boudreau said. ―He seems to have an awful lot of energy out there and he can really fly. ―That really helps, when he‘s got the puck and he‘s skating the way he is. And when he‘s got the confidence right now that he does have, I think it benefits his linemates tremendously.‖ Perreault has found chemistry with left wing Pat Maroon and Boudreau has recognized that by keeping them together on the second line. Orange County Register: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732160 Boston Bruins Patrice Bergeron named Second Star of the Week By Fluto Shinzawa, Globe Staff Patrice Bergeron has been named the NHL‘s Second Star of the Week. Bergeron scored five goals in four games last week. Bergeron scored twice against Chicago last Thursday, including the game-winning goal. Bergeron has a seven-game goal-scoring streak in progress. Bergeron extended his streak in Sunday‘s 4-3 shootout win over the Flyers with a second-period goal. Bergeron also scored one of the Bruins‘ two shootout goals. Boston Globe LOADED: 04.02.2014 732161 Boston Bruins Duchene out about 4 weeks with knee injury Monday, March 31, 2014 By: Associated Press ENGLEWOOD, Colo. — The Colorado Avalanche will be heading into their first postseason in four years without leading scorer Matt Duchene after the forward suffered a quirky left knee injury. Duchene hurt his medial collateral ligament when he ran into a teammate on the opening shift against San Jose over the weekend. He's expected to miss about four weeks. The loss is a big blow for the Avalanche, who have turned things around in coach Patrick Roy's first season in charge and are in the running for home-ice advantage with eight games remaining. "We hope for a speedy recovery to be back as soon as he can," Ryan O'Reilly said after practice Monday. Duchene was trying to avoid a collision with teammate Jamie McGinn, but they awkwardly bumped anyway near the Sharks blue line. Duchene fell to the ice and then gingerly skated to the bench. "One of those freak accidents in hockey," McGinn said. McGinn said he's called and texted Duchene, telling him to "stay positive." Duchene posted on his Twitter account Monday that the "thought of not playing in the first round for me has been devastating." He added that he will be "doing everything in my power to be ready for Game 1... And if not then, shortly after!" The 23-year-old Duchene has set career highs this season in points (70), assists (47) and shots (217). He missed three games earlier this season with an oblique injury. The team went 3-0 in his absence. For now, Roy said the plan is to move rookie Nathan MacKinnon to center to fill in for Duchene, with O'Reilly and McGinn playing on the wings. "We've been finding ways to win games," Roy said. "We'll continue to find ways to win." Here's an encouraging sign: P.A. Parenteau, who sprained his knee on March 10, briefly skated on his own Monday. Roy said Parenteau could possibly be back for the regular season finale in Anaheim on April 13. "We have depth and a lot of confidence in our players," Roy said. "Our players have a lot of confidence in themselves. It's a team concept. It's how we've been winning our games. It's not going to change." Right after practice, Roy assembled his team at center ice, just to give them one final pep talk before taking off for their game in Columbus on Tuesday. He told them he was "proud of them" and that the team shouldn't be satisfied, especially with Colorado trailing Central Division-leading St. Louis by only seven points. The message was well received. "All year, guys have stepped up and done a great job," McGinn said. "We just stay positive and work hard and good things will happen." Asked if there was any pressure stepping in for Duchene, MacKinnon responded, "No." "I'm not going to try to replace Dutchy, because you can't," said MacKinnon, a clear favorite for rookie of the year. "Matt is a big-time player and we're going to have to find ways to win without him." Roy knows all about missing an integral player for the postseason. He and the Avalanche were without Peter Forsberg during their 2001 Stanley Cup run when Forsberg had to have his spleen removed after the first round. The team carried on without the Swedish star, beating the New Jersey Devils in Game 7 to win the title. "That's the way it was in 2001 — it was about the team," Roy said. "Peter was a very important player on that team, don't get me wrong. But our culture was we had to work hard every time we were on the ice. We had to find ways to win hockey games. "That's what this team has been doing all year. This is what we're talking about when you're talking about a team changing their culture. We're not looking for an excuse. We're looking for a solution." Boston Herald LOADED: 04.02.2014 732162 Boston Bruins Red Wings get last lease at Joe Louis Arena Photo by: The Associated Press DETROIT — The city council has approved a new lease with the Detroit Red Wings for the NHL team's final years at Joe Louis Arena. The deal approved Monday, 5-4, includes $5.2 million from the team to settle a dispute over cable TV fees. The Red Wings will pay $1 million a year in rent, retroactive to 2010. The lease ends in 2015, although it could be extended. The Red Wings hope to move into a new arena as early as 2016. Council member Mary Sheffield voted against the agreement, saying the city deserved to get millions more in the cable TV dispute. Attorneys advising the city say Detroit didn't have a strong case. Joe Louis Arena is 35 years old. Boston Herald LOADED: 04.02.2014 732163 Boston Bruins Bruins Notebook: Jarome Iginla shines brightest Wednesday, April 2, 2014 By: Steve Conroy WILMINGTON — Bruins forward Jarome Iginla was named the NHL‘s first star for March yesterday. The 36-year-old Iginla scored 13 goals — five of them game-winners — and added four assists and a plus-12 rating in March. ―It‘s an honor and it‘s been an enjoyable month,‖ Iginla said. ―For our whole team we‘ve had a great month. There have been a lot of guys who‘ve had great streaks. You look at (Patrice Bergeron) and he‘s been as hot as I‘ve seen. So it‘s been good, it‘s been fun. I‘ve gotten some great passes from my (linemates) and stuff, and it‘s been great.‖ How long the good times keep rolling for Iginla in Boston has become an increasingly hot topic as his performance has steamed up. Scheduled to become an unrestricted free agent this summer, Iginla has proven to be the perfect fit for the Bruins that everyone suspected he‘d be. General manager Peter Chiarelli told the Herald‘s Stephen Harris over the weekend that he has had preliminary discussions with Iginla‘s camp about an extension for the future Hall of Famer. Iginla is being paid a base salary of $1.8 million this year, while he‘s hit all but $500,000 of his bonuses that would pay him an extra $4.2 million, which would carry over into the team‘s payroll for next season. It‘s expected the cap will go up from $64.3 million this year to approximately $70 million next season. Asked about possibly re-signing with the B‘s, Iginla spoke positively about his experience as a Bruin but was still noncommittal about an extension. ―I‘ve really, really enjoyed my time here,‖ he said. ―The guys here are a great group of guys. I think there‘s a great balance with the young guys coming in and some of the older guys who I think can play for a while and some guys that are right (in their prime). The team is in great shape to compete for a while. ―I‘ve been put in a great situation to play with (David Krejci and Milan Lucic); they‘re very competitive and they do a lot of things very well. I‘ve gotten some great back-door passes and things like that. It‘s been a great experience for myself and my family and I feel very fortunate to be here this year,‖ Iginla added. ―Hopefully everything works out. At the same time, I know the best thing I can do is to focus on the now and just enjoy this now, the run that we‘re on, and getting ready for the playoffs and the goal of winning. That‘s where most of the focus is, but I‘ve definitely enjoyed it. But those are the decisions that the team, the organization and personally are for after the season.‖ Spooner promoted The B‘s recalled center Ryan Spooner from Providence (AHL) and he traveled with the team on the trip to Detroit and Toronto, though coach Claude Julien said it‘s not definite he‘ll get into either game. There could be a couple of openings. Carl Soderberg‘s wife is expecting a baby any day now, and Julien said Krejci has been battling a sore throat. For Spooner, he‘s feeling much better now than when he was sent down. He was so weary that he had to be held out of some practices. ―When I first got sent back, I think I was 170 pounds and I just didn‘t really feel great. I got my weight back up and I feel a lot better,‖ said Spooner, who said it took him nearly a month to feel normal again. ―I don‘t know what I had; I just know I wasn‘t my best. And my play kind of showed it . . . but I played a lot better in the last three or four weeks.‖ . . . Julien gave some of his big guns more rest yesterday, keeping Bergeron, Iginla, Krejci, Loui Eriksson and Zdeno Chara off the ice. Julien had given some of his top players two days off two weeks ago. ―I think that makes a big difference in guys trying to recover,‖ Julien said. Boston Herald LOADED: 04.02.2014 732164 Boston Bruins Motivation in Motown: Loss fuels Bruins in return trip By:Steve Conroy WILMINGTON — The Bruins will not play another big game until April 16 or 17, when the puck is dropped for Game 1 of the Stanley Cup playoffs. But you can bet that tonight‘s opponent has the B‘s attention. Not only did the Bruins suffer a truly embarrassing 6-1 loss the last time they played at Detroit‘s Joe Louis Arena, but the Red Wings could very well be their first-round opponent. It was the worst loss of the season, the type of lopsided defeat that has been a rarity in the Claude Julien era. Anything to remember from that Nov. 27 game? ―Ah, the disgusting taste it left in our mouths,‖ defenseman Torey Krug, a minus-1 on that miserable Thanksgiving Eve, said yesterday at Ristuccia Arena. ―They‘re a good team. They‘re fast, they have high offensive power, they like to spring the zone. And when we have defensive breakdowns, they like to take advantage of it. They‘re one of those teams that you can‘t be just near guys. You have to make sure you take them away. Otherwise, they‘re still going to get a good opportunity.‖ That loss shook up the B‘s, in a good way. After that, they ripped off a six-wins-in-seven-games run. ―I don‘t recall much, but I know it just didn‘t sit well with this group,‖ Krug said. ―I know we have a lot of guys in here that, when we do lose games, they‘re usually close games. That one got out of hand and we didn‘t like that. I think it was an eye-opener. I think guys started bearing down after that.‖ A lot has happened since that game for both teams. The Bruins lost Dennis Seidenberg for at least the regular season, but the combination of defensemen Krug, Matt Bartkowski, Dougie Hamilton, Kevan Miller and now Andrej Meszaros has made it work along with stalwarts Zdeno Chara and Johnny Boychuk. Up front, the B‘s eventually found the right mix for the second and third lines, moving Carl Soderberg to center on the third line and flipping right wingers Reilly Smith and Loui Eriksson, which has made a world of difference for the Eastern Conference leaders. The Red Wings, meanwhile, have lost forwards Henrik Zetterberg and Pavel Datsyuk (who also did not play in the Nov. 27 game) for extended periods. But Gustav Nyquist has stepped into that void and become a star. ―They have a lot of young guys in their lineup coming from Grand Rapids (of the AHL) and they want to make a statement,‖ Krug, a Michigan native, said. ―They want to keep their spots in the lineup. Obviously, all of them won‘t once people start coming back, but that‘s what‘s making them win games right now, their mentality. They‘re working hard. That‘s what you get out of young guys.‖ Datsyuk, out since Feb. 27 with a knee injury, could return tonight as the Red Wings, who hold one of the East‘s wild card slots, look to improve their playoff position. ―I‘m not so much concerned that they beat us badly,‖ Julien said. ―We didn‘t play very well the last time we were in there and they actually had a real good game. So there was a big difference there. But I think we have to recognize the fact that we could see them in the playoffs. It‘s getting closer to being finalized here in these last few games. We need to go there with a purpose. . . . It‘s not an absolute must-win, but we have to play better than we did the last time we were there.‖ This game does have that added significance. ―I think it does,‖ Krug said. ―We‘re playing some teams right now that could be our first-round opponents and I think you want to send a message. Let them know it‘s going to be a tough series for them. Obviously, we‘re still fine-tuning our game as well, so it‘s a good test. They‘re already in playoff mode. They‘re fighting for position, they‘re playing playoff hockey, so it will be good for us.‖ Boston Herald LOADED: 04.02.2014 732165 Buffalo Sabres Murray, Nolan share common vision to improve Sabres now that coaching job is stable By John Vogl The finalization of Ted Nolan's contract today is more of a start than a finish. It allows the Sabres and their fans to know that an important position -- head coach -- is stable after a wild year of uncertainty and down times in Sabreland. ―I‘m really excited about going with the next step,‖ Nolan said this afternoon during a joint news conference with General Manager Tim Murray. ―Hopefully, one day we‘ll battle for a championship.‖ Nolan will be on board for the next three seasons after signing a long-awaited contract extension, which removed his interim status. Murray didn‘t have a ―Eureka!‖ moment when came to deciding Nolan should stick around. Rather, the GM saw a talent-lacking squad respond to its coach on a daily basis. ―Every day has been a trying situation,‖ Murray said in First Niagara Center. ―There‘s been very few games we haven‘t been competitive. ―From the players, all I‘ve heard is positives.‖ Dealing with the players is the next step. Murray and Nolan, a pair of midseason replacements, are aware the roster will need an overhaul for Nolan to do the best job possible. ―We have to get him better players,‖ Murray said. Buffalo News LOADED: 04.02.2014 732166 Buffalo Sabres Grigorenko hopes to excel with Amerks, show Sabres he'll be ready for NHL March 31, 2014 - 5:59 PM | By John Vogl Sabres prospect Mikhail Grigorenko joined the Amerks for practice today and will play Wednesday when Rochester hosts Syracuse. He played two playoff games for the Amerks last season. ―This year is going to be better for me than last year because I have two, three weeks to be more part of the team,‖ he said in Rochester. ―I really have a chance to help the guys.‖ The Amerks could use the assistance. They are 0-7-2 in their last nine and have fallen out of a playoff spot. They have nine games left. ―Hopefully, it‘ll be a good jumpstart for us,‖ Amerks coach Chadd Cassidy said. ―Obviously, he brings in a lot of offensive ability. We‘ve had a hard time scoring goals, and every little bit helps.‖ Grigorenko started this season with the Sabres but was sent to his junior team in Quebec shortly after Ted Nolan and Pat LaFontaine took over in November. The 19-year-old views this as an audition for the coach and General Manager Tim Murray. ―I think it‘s a good opportunity for me,‖ Grigorenko said. ―I‘ll do my best and show the new general manager and Ted Nolan that I can step to the NHL next year.‖ Buffalo News LOADED: 04.02.2014 732167 Buffalo Sabres Sabres, Nolan agree to contract extension March 31, 2014 - 8:34 AM By John Vogl Pen has finally met paper as Ted Nolan signed a contract extension today to stay on as head coach of the Buffalo Sabres. ―We are very happy to get this deal done and have Ted Nolan as our permanent head coach going forward,‖ General Manager Tim Murray said in a statement. ―Teddy has proven time and again that he is an exceptional leader, motivator and teacher. He is exactly what we need in a head coach for our hockey team, and we‘re confident in his ability to guide our players and turn this team around.‖ Nolan, who was named interim coach in November, was set to sign the extension last month before the chaos erupted involving the departure of Pat LaFontaine, his friend and president of hockey operations. Nolan took a break to reassess the matter, and the contract has been in the hands of his agent for weeks. ―I said back in November that it was a dream to be able to come back and coach the Sabres, and that‘s still true today,‖ Nolan said. ―Hockey is my life, and Buffalo is a special place for hockey. I‘m excited by the challenge facing our team and our organization, and I‘m truly thankful to have this opportunity.‖ The contract is believed to be a three-year deal. Nolan finally has the long-term contract with the Sabres he had desired since 1997, when he was named NHL Coach of the Year but left the team after a mere one-year offer by incoming GM Darcy Regier. The Sabres were 4-15-1 when Nolan took over Nov. 13. They have gone 16-30-8 with him on the bench. The Sabres' next game is Tuesday, when they host the New Jersey Devils. Buffalo News LOADED: 04.02.2014 732168 Buffalo Sabres Leino‘s shootout winner draws big cheers By John Vogl | April 1, 2014 - 10:39 PM Ville Leino had no idea what was going to happen when Ted Nolan called his name to take part in the rollicking shootout. The Sabres‘ coach did. ―I mentioned to John Scott, ‗Watch the crowd go crazy on this one,‘ ‖ Nolan said with a smile. Indeed, the folks in First Niagara Center raised their voices, arms and bodies Tuesday night when Leino hopped over the boards as Buffalo‘s ninth shooter in the breakaway challenge against New Jersey. Everyone in the building was well-aware Leino hadn‘t scored this season, which has made him the most-maligned player on the last-place team. Despite – or, more likely, because of – the forgettable times, the fans jumped at the chance to cheer and applaud Leino‘s time in the spotlight. ―I didn‘t know if they were going to boo or cheer, so I was pretty happy about that,‖ said Leino, who scored to join goaltender Nathan Lieuwen in delivering a 3-2 win. ―It was actually pretty awesome. I just wanted to score for them, and they gave me a little extra effort there.‖ Leino is still stuck on zero goals in 53 games because shootout winners count only toward the team total, but even a real tally won‘t elicit the same emotion that roared through downtown Tuesday. ―I miss a little bit of that feeling when you get that,‖ Leino said. ―Obviously, we haven‘t been in playoffs for a while or been winning that much, so it‘s tough. It‘s tough times, but those moments you get a little energy, extra effort to want to win it, put it in.‖ The victory was the first in the NHL for Lieuwen, a 22-year-old rookie who made 33 saves during the game and seven in the shootout. ―It was unbelievable, one of the most amazing feelings of my life,‖ said Lieuwen, who was serenaded with chants of ―Loooo‖ through the game. ―I felt like I belonged, and that‘s a good feeling.‖ Tyler Ennis scored twice to jump from 19 goals to 21. He also scored 20 goals during his rookie season of 2010-11. He stared at an empty net on both his third-period goals as Leino and Cody Hodgson set him up with pinpoint passes. ―Hopefully, I‘ll get 20 or more for a long time to come,‖ Ennis said. ―I didn‘t have to do a lot of work to get it. I was the beneficiary of great playmaking. It was nice to get them, and it was even better to win.‖ Jake McCabe, who starred collegiately at Wisconsin and for the United States in the world junior tournament, may pass up his senior year with the Badgers and join the Sabres. ―Jake McCabe is close to signing,‖ General Manager Tim Murray said on WGR-AM 550. ―If it gets done, he‘ll more than likely be here versus going‖ to Rochester. The Sabres selected McCabe in the second round of the 2012 NHL Draft. The 20-year-old served as an alternate captain at Wisconsin and put up eight goals and 25 points in 36 games this season. The product of the U.S. National Team Development Program has 14 goals, 44 assists and 58 points in 100 games with the Badgers. McCabe shot up the prospect charts in January 2013 when he captained the United States to the gold medal at the world juniors in Russia. The Sabres have signed Justin Kea, their third-round pick in the 2012 draft, to a three-year deal potentially worth $1.94 million. Kea brings size to the organization‘s corps of forwards. The 6-foot-4, 210-pound center had 22 goals and 49 points in 58 games with Saginaw of the Ontario Hockey League. The 20-year-old will finish this season with the Rochester Amerks on a tryout contract, and his entry-level deal will kick in next season. email: jvogl@buffnews.com Buffalo News LOADED: 04.02.2014 732169 Calgary Flames Leafs keep faint playoff hopes alive with win over Flames By Michael Traikos, Postmedia News April 1, 2014 Toronto —So this is what a win looks like. The Toronto Maple Leafs snapped an eight-game losing streak on Tuesday with a 3-2 victory against the Calgary Flames. But while the two points should go a long way in building back the team's confidence, it did not change much. The Leafs, who moved up from 10th to ninth place in the Eastern Conference standings, still remain a long shot to make the playoffs. According to sportsclubstats.com, the team's playoff chances improved from 4.6% to 8.6% with Tuesday night's win. If Toronto manages to run the table and go on a six-game winning streak — something that the team accomplished in January — the odds would increase to 81.7%. In other words, this win might have kept the playoff hopes alive for now. But the Leafs remain on life support. Still, the general feeling inside the dressing room was relief. After going 18 days between wins, the Leafs needed this one. "It's been a long time, hasn't it? Too long," said head coach Randy Carlyle. "Obviously, it's a much better feeling than we've been able to enjoy here over the last while, that's for sure. You hope that you can build on it. But I don't want to get too far ahead of ourselves, because we didn't paint a Mona Lisa here tonight." Toronto now turns its attention to Boston on Thursday, which represents another must-win. After that, the Leafs will have to defeat Winnipeg on Saturday and finish the season with a string of wins against Tampa Bay, Florida and Ottawa. Even then, they will also need help from the teams around them in the standings. They received a bit of assistance in that regard on Tuesday night, when the eighth-place Columbus Blue Jackets (one point ahead of Toronto) lost in overtime and the 10th-place Washington Capitals (one point behind Toronto) lost in regulation.Columbus has two games in hand while the Capitals have one on the Leafs. "Our main focus was to win one," said goaltender Jonathan Bernier, who made 22 saves. "Now we have to get back on track and not celebrate too much, because Thursday is a big one for us." What Tuesday night's win helped increase, beyond the Leafs' playoff odds, was their confidence. Having lost eight straight games in regulation — something no other team had done this season — and fallen out of a comfortable playoff spot had began to wear on the players in the room. You could see it on their faces, in their play, and obviously in the results. "It's a relief for our team to get this win," said Leafs captain Dion Phaneuf. "We needed it, we got it, and now we move forward. We can feel good about ourselves, because we won this game and it's been a tough stretch . . . but now we build on it." Advanced stats has done a fine job of explaining how the Leafs fell from grace in a season where they were the beneficiaries of above-average goaltending, a potent power play and opportunistic scoring. But this slump was about a lack of confidence. The Leafs took a step towards building back that confidence with Tuesday's win. As Carlyle said, it was not a masterpiece. Toronto had difficulty generating offence against the second-worst team in the Western Conference standings and committed the same defensive mistakes that have plagued them during this losing streak. But they held Calgary to just 22 shots. And on a night when Phil Kessel was hobbled by a bruised foot, the Leafs received unlikely contributions from Jay McClement, Dave Bolland and David Clarkson, the latter scoring for the first time since Feb. 4. "We tightened up our D-zone a bit and limited their chances," said defenceman Cody Franson. "We made it a little easier on ourselves tonight." The first period was played as though neither team wanted to score. After five minutes, the shots were 0-0. And while the Flames finished the period with six shots, it seemed like half of them went off Kessel's foot. The Leafs took a 1-0 lead 50 seconds into the second period on an odd play off a dump-in, with Cody Franson setting up McClement at the side of the net for his first goal 17 games. Toronto caught a break soon after when Calgary's Curtis Glencross had a goal disallowed after a video review showed he had tipped the puck in with a high stick. With the score tied 1-1, Morgan Rielly helped put the Leafs ahead when he rushed the puck up the right side of the ice and fed a cross-seam pass to Bolland, who caught a lucky bounce when his tip-in went off Calgary defenceman Brodie's skate. It was the type of break that had seemingly been going against Toronto during the losing streak. A few minutes later, Clarkson snapped a 16-game point streak and scored his first goal in nearly two months on a breakaway deke. Calgary made it close when Kris Russell buried a wrist shot over Bernier's shoulder. But the Leafs, who had not won a game since March 13, finally ended their drought and picked up two points. Now, they just have to do it five more times. "The big thing is we have five games here and we have to play hard, be good in our own zone and take care of what we can," said Clarkson. "I think at this time of the season, you stay positive." Calgary Herald: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732170 Calgary Flames Van Brabant the 10th Flames player to make his NHL debut this season Former Quinnipiac power forward skates against the Toronto Maple Leafs By SCOTT CRUICKSHANK, Calgary Herald April 1, 2014 TORONTO — The latest lad in a long line? Bryce Van Brabant. His inclusion in Tuesday‘s contest at the Air Canada Centre gives the Calgary Flames a total of 10 players who have made National Hockey League debuts. Like those before him this winter — goalies Joni Ortio, Reto Berra; defencemen Chad Billins, Tyler Wotherspoon, Chris Breen; forwards Sean Monahan, Corban Knight, Markus Granlund, Kenny Agostino — Van Brabant‘s memorable night is a dandy development. Which equals a franchise record, matching the double-digit baptisms of 1979-80 and 1997-98. It‘s always a fun story. For the player, for the team, even for reporters. But no one is losing sight of the big picture. That an American Hockey League education is essential in (nearly) every case. ―Detroit‘s got it right,‖ says Mark Giordano. ―The way they make their players play in the minors. Guys are playing two, three years (in the AHL). Talk to a guy like (Jiri Hudler). He had to play a few years in the minors‖ — 185 contests with Grand Rapids — ―before they gave him the chance to be a regular in the NHL.‖ The most recent success story out of the Red Wings program is Gustav Nyquist, who — after 137 games for Grand Rapids, including 15 this season — has erupted for 27 goals. ―It really helps you mentally and physically,‖ says Giordano, himself a veteran of 144 appearances — with Lowell and Omaha — in the AHL. ―But those are the tough times in hockey. Getting cut. Getting scratched. ―I don‘t know if you can find that many players who don‘t know that feeling.‖ Giordano‘s not wrong. In the Flames‘ lineup, only two gents — Van Brabant and stellar rookie Sean Monahan — have not served time in the AHL. The others represent more than 2,500 games‘ worth of farm-team experience (and that doesn‘t include Bob Hartley‘s 320, while at the helm of Cornwall and Hershey). Experience ranges from Kris Russell‘s 14 minor-league notches to Joey MacDonald‘s 339. ―Those kids, from major junior and college, everyone is telling how nice they are, how good they are, and suddenly they think that the NHL is just a normal step,‖ says Hartley. ―It‘s not a normal step.‖ Which makes AHL dues-paying a near-necessity. ―It‘s the best hockey school in the world,‖ says Hartley. ―Mentally, with (three-games-in-three-day scheduling), the travel, everything. You get called up. You don‘t get call up. Every day is a different challenge. But it makes you stronger mentally and it makes you a better person and a better player. ―There‘s very few exceptions. ―I‘m a big believer in the American Hockey League.‖ For junior kids, it‘s a chance to play against grown-ups. For college kids, it‘s a chance to play weekdays, to play without cages, to play frequently. And for all hopefuls, the minors is a chance to tiptoe into a livelihood brimming with obstacles. ―In a lot of the NHL cities, there‘s pressure,‖ says Kevin Westgarth, who, after graduating from Princeton University, got into 224 matches with Manchester. ―If you‘re a young guy and, all of a sudden, that hits you when you go through a slump, it can crush you. The AHL provides a great environment for improving your game — with a little less pressure. ―It‘s cutting your teeth at a highly professional level. It definitely prepares you for what we do every single day.‖ Adds Lance Bouma, a 95-game man with Abbotsford: ―Biggest thing — it helps you grow up pretty quick. You don‘t have anyone there to cook for you — or do anything for you — so you‘re on your own. The American league is a grind, for sure. You get pretty tired by the end of the year . . . at the same time, it really, really makes you want it that much more.‖ Yes, never under-estimate the power of avoidance. As if the jet-set life of the NHL isn‘t appealing enough, toiling in the AHL will surely motivate a man. ―It makes you appreciate it,‖ says Chris Butler, who, in 2008-09, skated 27 games for Portland, Maine. ―The long bus trips. The $18 you get for per diem instead of $100. The Motel 6 instead of the Ritz-Carlton. So when you do get that chance to come up, you never want to go back down. ―I‘m not saying it‘s a bad life. But compared to this lifestyle, it‘s a night and day difference.‖ Calgary Herald: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732171 Calgary Flames Calgary Flames Snapshots: Team doesn't want to enter tailspin now By RANDY SPORTAK,First posted: Tuesday, April 01, 2014 TORONTO -- All that remains is a six-pack. It may bode well for a draft position for the Calgary Flames, but a late-season swoon is not what this team wants. And not just because going down in defeat the rest of the way would mean matching the eight-game losing skid the Toronto Maple Leafs snapped Tuesday night. "This is an evaluation period for everyone," said left-winger Curtis Glencross, one of many Flames miffed after falling 3-2 to the Maple Leafs on Tuesday in Toronto. "None of us like to lose. We've got a lot of pride. Obviously, we're not in the playoffs now, but at the same time, you don't like losing games. "We're going to play it hard right to the end." The Flames arrived in Ontario to kick off their five-game swing all against Eastern Conference teams with positive vibes of being the little engine that keeps trying. Even if they weren't winning, the Flames were known for being the NHL's hardest-working club. That wasn't the case in Ottawa during a 6-3 loss to the Senators, and they were again without much spark in falling to the Maple Leafs, who were reeling from their eight-game slide to the point they looked like a boxer who figures the knock-out blow is coming once they get through the standing eight count. Now, considering how the Flames aren't a playoff team, falling further down the standings isn't all bad. Finishing 26th overall means 8.1% odds of winning the lottery and gaining the No. 1 pick in the coming NHL Draft. Finishing 27th increases those odds to 10.7%. The New York Islanders vaulted over the Flames on Tuesday night, and even hold a game in hand. Still, the Flames built up some positive P.R. with their fans this season by being a gritty, fight-to-the-end squad. It would be a shame to see it wash away. Off the glass Certainly must say all of the NHL's three stars of the month for March were deserving. Jarome Iginla, of the Boston Bruins, Gustav Nyquist, of the Detroit Red Wings, and Philadelphia Flyers forward Claude Giroux all had very impressive months, but it's a shame neither of the two best Flames were lauded. Captain Mark Giordano collected four goals and 16 points in 16 games, along with a plus-10 rating, while Michael Cammalleri compiled 11 goals, four of them game-winners, plus a shootout winner, and 18 points "¦ Not sure what to make of this but here's a comment on Twitter just before the game by Riddick Bowe, who's become a crazy Maple Leafs fan. "Leafs are gonna win tonight #AprilFoolsDay" "¦ Credit newest Flames forward Bryce Van Brabant for managing to keep his NHL debut in perspective. When asked after the morning skate what it would take for his game to be a success, Van Brabant replied, "I guess it's already a success. My family's coming in, and to share it with them is more than anyone could ask for." "¦ Van Brabant made it 10 players to play their first NHL game this season for the Flames, which ties a franchise record also reached in the 1979-80 season while the team was in Atlanta, and the 1997-98 squad. The other nine players this season are goalies Joni Ortio and Reto Berra,defencemen Chris Breen, Chad Billins and Tyler Wotherspoon, and forwards Sean Monahan, Markus Granlund, Kenny Agostino and Corban Knight. By the way, the 10 players from the 1997-98 team were Derek Morris, Steve Begin, Denis Gauthier, Chris Dingman, Tyler Moss, Travis Brigley, Sergei Varlamov, Eric Landry, Erik Andersson and Rocky Thompson. In the crease Good to see Leafs D Paul Ranger return to action. He was last on NHL ice being taken away on a stretcher March 19 "¦ The Leafs dressed seven defencemen, maybe that's why the Flames needed more than 10 minutes to register a shot on goal "¦ I'm assuming there's a law somewhere stating the song Fifty Mission Cap by The Tragically Hip MUST be played every game at the Air Canada Centre "¦ Calgary's franchise-record 46 one-goal games has come with a 22-17-7 mark "¦ Things that don't make sense: The Leafs have the NHL's best home-ice powerplay and the worst home-ice penalty-killing "¦ What you may have missed: Former Flames defenceman and current Leafs captain Dion Phaneuf would have been a dream for anybody having him as their penalty-minutes man in a hockey pool. Not only did Phaneuf receive a minor for cross-checking in the dying seconds, he was given a minor for unsportsmanlike conduct, a 10-minute misconduct and a game misconduct, which totaled 24 minutes worth of infractions. Calgary Sun: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732172 Carolina Hurricanes Skinner, Lindholm help Canes dominate Penguins 4-1 By WILL GRAVES Lindholm put Carolina in front to stay 9:24 into the second with a power-play goal that included a pretty feed from Skinner, who threaded a pass between Pittsburgh defenseman Olli Maatta's legs right to Lindholm's stick. Fleury never had a chance. The goaltender was equally helpless five minutes later when a turnover by teammate Deryk Engelland handed Skinner and Lindholm a breakaway that Lindholm converted into the first multi-goal game of his brief career. AP Sports WriterApril 1, 2014 Updated 3 hours ago Any late push by the Penguins ended when Staal's tip-in eluded Fleury with just over 8 minutes left. PITTSBURGH — The Pittsburgh Penguins are heading to the playoffs for an eighth straight year. Instead of skating off the ice with their fourth division title since Crosby's arrival in 2005, Pittsburgh trudged to the locker room wondering when the consistency that propelled them to the top of the Eastern Conference before the Olympic break will return. Barring an epic collapse, a Metropolitan Division title is all but clinched. What happens after that, however, is anybody's guess. "There's not much good to take out of it," Crosby said. "So we've just got to make sure we respond the next game." Dominant in the beginning but dismal at the end, the Penguins let a chance to clinch their second straight division crown slip away in a 4-1 loss to Carolina on Tuesday night that left Pittsburgh just 8-8-2 since returning from the Olympic break. NOTES: Carolina played without F Alexander Semin, who was scratched due to an illness. ... The Hurricanes return home to face Dallas on Thursday. ... The Penguins fell to 45-8-4 this season when Crosby scores a point. Not exactly the kind of momentum a Stanley Cup contender wants to bring into the final days of the regular season. "If you're not 100 percent, they can expose you and make you look pretty silly," Penguins defenseman Brooks Orpik said. "That's what happened here tonight." Carolina rookie Elias Lindholm scored twice for the first multi-goal game of his career, Eric Staal and Justin Faulk also scored while Jeff Skinner added two assists. Anton Khudobin stopped 30 shots as the Hurricanes avoided being swept in the season series by Pittsburgh for the first time in 18 years. "I thought we kept it simple and kind of slowly frustrated them as it went on and it was a win we needed," Staal said. Chris Kunitz scored his 35th goal to give Pittsburgh an early lead, but the Penguins crumbled over the final two periods. Sidney Crosby picked up an assist to push his NHL-leading point total to 100, but the Penguins appeared to lose interest after failing to bury the Hurricanes during a frenetic opening barrage in which they appeared ready to run Carolina out of the arena. "We all felt like the first 10 minutes we were carrying the play ... for whatever reason we got away from that," Crosby said. "Maybe we thought that came easy or we could get away with cheating. And it didn't work." No, it didn't. Marc-Andre Fleury made 24 saves, but received little help playing behind a sloppy defense. The Penguins turned it over 13 times, including a series of miscues the Hurricanes were only too happy to turn into goals. "I think we started mismanaging the puck and started having turnovers in the neutral zone," Pittsburgh coach Dan Bylsma said. The Penguins appeared to right the enigmatic final third of their season with a spirited 4-1 victory over Chicago on Sunday night. Two days later, the sense of urgency evaporated when the Hurricanes — who are about to miss the playoffs for the fifth straight year — failed to roll over. Pittsburgh recorded 12 of the first 14 shots, including Kunitz's wrist shot from the left circle that Khudobin never saw. Crosby picked up the secondary assist to lift his point total to the century mark for the fifth time in his career, drawing a roar from the usual sellout crowd at Consol Energy Center. It had all the makings of a blowout. One developed, just not the one the Penguins were expecting. Carolina steadied itself late in the first, evening the game on a knuckling slap shot by Faulk that gave the Hurricanes the confidence boost they needed to get back in it. The Penguins' malaise did the rest. "That goal from (Faulk) really evens it up and then we kind of just took a deep breath, got our legs going better and then I thought we just started moving better and playing a much smarter game," Carolina coach Kirk Muller said. News Observer LOADED: 04.02.2014 732173 Chicago Blackhawks Toews or no Toews, Blackhawks have things to fix By Chris Kuc, Chicago Tribune reporter 6:17 PM CDT, March 31, 2014 As captain Jonathan Toews made his way to the dressing room cradling his left arm with the team physician in tow, the Blackhawks ramped their game up a notch Sunday night against the Penguins. It is that kind of response — but on much grander scale — that the defending Stanley Cup champions will need if they are to gather themselves and gain some momentum heading into the playoffs. The injury to Toews during the second period of an eventual 4-1 loss to the Penguins only compounded the Hawks' recent woes. With the team off the ice for a full two days, no update on Toews, who was drilled into the boards by the Penguins' Brooks Orpik, is expected until Wednesday. That will maintain the suspense surrounding a team that is already without winger Patrick Kane for the rest of the regular season because of a knee injury. A source said Monday that the NHL took a long look at the hit but did not schedule a disciplinary hearing for Orpik, who blasted an unsuspecting Toews with his shoulder. "It was a big hit," Hawks winger Patrick Sharp said. "You could tell he was trying to hit him hard. He knew who he was hitting. It's tough when you see your captain get hit like that." Coach Joel Quenneville said after the Hawks' third consecutive loss — all on a three-game road trip — that he believed Toews' injury was "not serious" but then added there likely will be a need for others players to step up and fill the center's role. The team will take great pains to ensure their top player will be 100 percent for the postseason. "Whenever you lose players someone's got to step up and take the spot," Sharp said. "In the case of (Kane and Toews), it's kind of tough to replace them. It's an opportunity for other players to get ice time. It happens all the time in hockey, players go down and it's an opportunity for someone else." "We're not going to put that on any one player's shoulders to get us out of it. Every night there is a different reason to why pucks are going in our net. ... We believe in each other, believe in our team and we'll find a way to get out of it." Three days between games should help, not only with the physical side but the mental as well as the Hawks look tired after a particularly difficult stretch of their schedule. "Certainly we'll use (the days) to our advantage and get some rest," Quenneville said. "We just played 11 games in 19 days; it was our busiest stretch of the year. There were stretches over the last three games that showed maybe we need this break." When the Hawks return to practice Wednesday in advance of the final six games of the regular season, there will no doubt be an emphasis on straightening out shaky defensive play that has led to too many odd-man rushes by opponents. "We have to play much tighter, definitely," Marian Hossa said. "We play much better when we check tighter and we've got lots of guys who can go offensively. But we just cannot hang up there and just (keep) getting odd-man rushes." Said Quenneville: "We have a tendency, if we're doing the right things, (to) go into that puck area before they get the odd-man break and I think we're a little bit off. ... Our coverage over the last couple of games has been looser than we've seen all year. That's why it looks like the odd-man breaks are popping up a little bit more frequently." The Hawks might have to fix it without the services of one of the top two-way players in the league in Toews. "It's time pretty much all of us have to step up," defenseman Niklas Hjalmarsson said. "This road trip for us has been a bit of a wake-up call. It's not good enough the way we played the last three games." Chicago Tribune LOADED: 04.02.2014 732174 Chicago Blackhawks No NHL hearing set for hit on Toews By Chris Kuc, Tribune reporter 10:08 AM CDT, March 31, 2014 No disciplinary hearing has been scheduled by the NHL for the crunching hit delivered Sunday to Chicago Blackhawks captain Jonathan Toews by the Pittsburgh Penguins' Brooks Orpik, a source said Monday. Toews was forced to leave Sunday's 4-1 loss at Pittsburgh after suffering an apparent left-arm injury as the result of a hard check into the boards by Orpik during the second period. The Blackhawks said Toews would be evaluated Monday and that there is no timetable for when an update on his condition might be released. Asked about the injury after the game, coach Joel Quennevile said, "I don't think it's serious." The Hawks have three days off before returning to action Thursday against the Minnesota Wild at the United Center. Chicago Tribune LOADED: 04.02.2014 732175 Chicago Blackhawks Did Hawks' Cup hopes crumple to ice with Toews? Steve Rosenbloom The RosenBlog 8:35 AM CDT, March 31, 2014 If you wondered what the end of the Blackhawks' championship hopes might look like, then Jonathan Toews crumpling along the boards after a devastating hit by Brooks Orpik in Pittsburgh on Sunday night qualifies as one depressing example. Toews had his head down. Orpik drilled him. I don‘t think we‘ll be needing Grant Park this June. Toews is the most indispensable Hawk. He does everything in every situation and he seems to do it first and best. He‘s the hardest-working and the most talented all-around Hawk, the way a captain should be. Now he‘s injured, and nobody is saying how badly or for how long as the playoffs loom in 16 days. Joel Quenneville said he doesn‘t think it‘s serious. This would be a good time for the coach to be right, because the hit looked serious enough to give every other Stanley Cup contender new hope. NBC Sports Network analyst Mike Milbury said Orpik hits to hurt players. He should. That‘s the object of the exercise, if done legally. Milbury seemed to want to call Orpik a cheap-shot artist, but the tough-talking analyst pulled that punch. Whatever, if you get the chance to legitimately check a guy out of the game, you do it. And Orpik‘s hit looked legal. Orpik appeared to hit Toews with both skates on the ice at contact, launching as part of the follow-through. Something else, people: Toews has a responsibility here, too. He has to keep to his head up, and he knows it. There‘s no reason any opponent would ease up on the Hawks‘ best player, and he knows that, too. Every opponent targets him first and hardest. Keith Jones, the other NBC Sports Network studio analyst, didn‘t seem to like the lack of caveman response by the Hawks, the default setting for old analysts. No, Hawks players did not immediately jump Orpik, which would‘ve drawn a penalty and perhaps a suspension. The Hawks had a game to win. They needed points to gain home-ice advantage in the first round of the playoffs. Truth is, the troglodyte talking heads didn‘t realize the Hawks were displaying playoff-like discipline. And an additional truth is this: It doesn‘t matter if the hit was dirty or cried for an answer. It only matters to the Hawks‘ future that Toews appeared to be hurt badly. Even with Toews, the Hawks might not repeat as Stanley Cup champions. Without him, I can‘t see them even beating Colorado in the first round. The Hawks already had an issue at center, no matter what Stan Bowman thought. Without Toews, the Hawks would be a complete doughnut. Perhaps Toews will come back for the playoffs, or perhaps earlier, but I‘m not confident he‘ll return in top form, not when an injury to his left arm or shoulder area easily could hamper everything from faceoffs to shooting. Same goes for Patrick Kane, just substitute a knee hampering everything from his speed to his power-play talent to his world-class game of keepaway. The Hawks already were playing badly without Kane. They look disorganized, their best players are making some of the worst mistakes, and they seem to have little confidence. Now this. We can hope Quenneville‘s right. We can hope it‘s not serious. Otherwise, it‘s baseball season. Chicago Tribune LOADED: 04.02.2014 732176 Chicago Blackhawks Will Blackhawks answer ‗wake-up call‘? BY MARK LAZERUS Staff reporter April 1, 2014 4:30PM Updated: April 1, 2014 10:52PM For so long, the Blackhawks appeared to be living a charmed life. When Daniel Carcillo was hurt in the first game of last season, Brandon Saad came out of nowhere to become a major contributor. On their way to the Presidents‘ Trophy and the Stanley Cup, the biggest bit of adversity was a 3-1 series deficit to the Detroit Red Wings. And while stars were falling left and right at the Olympics, the Hawks — with a league-high 10 guys competing — emerged unscathed. But the hockey gods appear to have turned against them. Patrick Kane is out for the rest of the regular season. Michal Rozsival has missed eight games in a row and Bryan Bickell six. And now Jonathan Toews is injured, and his status is uncertain. No official update will come until Wednesday, with the Hawks on lockdown mode during their two days away from the rink. With less than two weeks left in the regular season, this can break one of two ways. Either everything falls apart and the Hawks flame out in the first round against the Colorado Avalanche, or all four key contributors come back healthy, rested and rarin‘ to go for the playoffs while others gain more playing time and confidence in their absence. It‘s either a disaster or a blessing in disguise. ‗‗We‘re going to have to find out about some other guys,‘‘ coach Joel Quenneville said. ‗‗Maybe somebody steps up in the middle [for Toews], but that‘s quality and quantity ice time. This time of year, we want to make sure Jonny gets better and fresh.‘‘ The Pittsburgh Penguins have plenty of experience in dealing with what the Hawks suddenly are dealing with. They‘ve played significant stretches during the last few seasons without Sidney Crosby and have been playing the homestretch this season without Evgeni Malkin, Kris Letang and Paul Martin, among others. Defenseman Brooks Orpik — mere hours before delivering the hit that knocked Toews out of the game Sunday with an apparent shoulder or arm injury — talked about how such adversity could benefit a team in the long run. ‗‗We‘ve unfortunately experienced it probably too much the last three or four years,‘‘ he said. ‗‗I think guys use it as motivation. When you‘re a younger team, maybe you panic a little bit, and it crushes your confidence a little bit. You look around the room waiting for somebody else to do it. So maybe that‘s a good thing we‘ve had so much experience with it.‘‘ Bickell likely will be back Thursday against the Minnesota Wild. But if Toews misses any time, it‘s another huge blow to an offense that, in an eight-day span, was shut out twice and scored only once in another game. Perhaps even more alarming have been the defensive lapses. The Penguins had several odd-man rushes — and not merely once the Hawks began to chase the lead late in the game. Winger Marian Hossa called the recent bout of adversity a ‗‗wake-up call.‘‘ ‗‗We‘ve got different guys who can step up and have to step up,‘‘ Hossa said. ‗‗And, obviously, some other guys are going to have different minutes and somebody else is going to take another role.‘‘ To their credit, the Hawks don‘t sound rattled despite having lost three games in a row and four of their last five. They‘re embracing the challenge. Whether they can meet it remains to be seen. ‗‗You‘re already in the playoffs, so you can get guys playing a little more than they‘re used to and also get them out of their comfort zones,‘‘ winger Kris Versteeg said. ‗‗You lose arguably one of the best offensive players in the world, and it‘s tough to find offense at times. But it also gives a guy like Kaner, who‘s played an extreme amount of hockey, some rest. It‘s not the end of the world. You just have to keep battling.‘‘ Chicago Tribune LOADED: 04.02.2014 732177 Chicago Blackhawks A healthy Toews is more important than vengeance By Mark Lazerus Staff reporter March 31, 2014 1:24PM Updated: March 31, 2014 6:45PM however, the focus is on the postseason, and making another Cup run. Patrick Kane will be back for the playoffs. The Hawks should be just as cautious with Toews, regardless of the nature of his injury. Toews is day to day, and the Hawks won‘t rush him back with just two weeks left in the regular season. Because a healthy Toews in the playoffs is the most important thing — certainly more important than some nebulous and antiquated idea of vengeance. Chicago Sun Times LOADED: 04.02.2014 It would have felt good, no? It would have been viscerally rewarding to find Brooks Orpik and go after him, to hand out swift, eye-for-an-eye punishment to anyone and everyone on the Pittsburgh Penguins roster, to seek and destroy. The Blackhawks had just seen their captain, Jonathan Toews, plowed into the boards by Orpik — a man without a history of suspensions, but a man with a reputation for playing as close to the edge as possible. They had just seen Toews slow to get up, wincing in pain, clutching his left arm and leaving the game. As Patrick Sharp noted, Orpik knew darn well whom he was hitting, and made sure to do it as hard as he could. ―You obviously don‘t like your captain getting hit like that,‖ Sharp said. The initial reaction, the knee-jerk, is to attack. Attack Orpik. Attack Sidney Crosby. Attack everyone. Retaliation. Retribution. Old-time hockey, right? It would have been immensely satisfying. It also would have accomplished nothing. And so while Mike Milbury and Keith Jones called for blood on NBC Sports Network, the Hawks responded to the Orpik hit by playing better. By playing harder. Yes, Andrew Shaw took a quick run at Orpik later in the period, but he didn‘t go out of his way, didn‘t take a dumb penalty, didn‘t go after a random Penguins star to exact some archaic idea of revenge. The Hawks played hockey. They still lost, because, well, sometimes you lose. But they handled it the right way, no matter what the talking heads said. During the intermission, Jones said, ―The two points aren‘t that important tonight for the Blackhawks,‖ saying their focus should have been on answering the Orpik hit. It‘s exactly that kind of Neanderthalic line of thought that keeps hockey on the fringe of American mainstream sports. The two points were plenty important to the Hawks, who are fighting for home-ice advantage in a series against the Colorado Avalanche, who have won four of five meetings between the two teams and who play at high altitude. What‘s not important is ―sending a message‖ — particularly to an Eastern Conference team you see twice a year. ―If I were coaching that team, I‘d say let‘s do something about this,‖ Milbury said. Mike Milbury went 146-160-45 as an NHL coach, was one of the worst general managers in sports history, and gets paid to say dumb things on TV. Joel Quenneville is the third-winningest coach in history, with two Stanley Cups in the last four seasons. Who do you want to cast your lot with? It wasn‘t even a dirty hit — the NHL won‘t have a disciplinary hearing for Orpik. It was a dangerous hit, and a devastating hit, but it wasn‘t dirty. Orpik didn‘t leave his feet until after contact was made, and the principal point of contact was not Toews‘ head. Had a Hawks player picked a fight with Orpik, fine, whatever. But Orpik hasn‘t had a single fighting major in the last four seasons, so good luck getting him to drop the gloves. Retaliation brings nothing but re-retaliation, and a greater risk of another player getting hurt. This notion of ―standing up for your teammate‖ is a relic of hockey‘s more barbaric days, and it does nothing to help your team win a hockey game, which is the point of playing hockey games. The idea that the Hawks aren‘t tough enough? That other teams won‘t be afraid of the Hawks because they didn‘t knock someone into next week in response to the hit? Please. They looked awfully mentally tough coming back from 3-1 down against Detroit last spring. Looked plenty physically tough in dispatching the bruising Kings, then surviving the Bruins with both rosters filled with the walking wounded. A John Scott on the Hawks roster wouldn‘t have stopped Orpik from leveling Toews. Wouldn‘t stop the next big hit, either. The goal Sunday night was to beat the Penguins, get two points and keep pace with the Avalanche. That remains the short-term goal. Long-term, 732178 Chicago Blackhawks No defense for not defending Hawks‘ Toews By Mike Imrem A debate has raged as the town waits for a health report on Jonathan Toews. Something becomes clear when head hits are deemed unacceptable: The rest of the body is fair game regardless of who‘s at fault, the captain for being careless or the opponent for being reckless. A little stick work is appropriate. Is that too Gordie Howe-ish or Stan Mikita-esque for you youngbloods? Then follow tennis where there are rules against racket abuse. A little whack to the Penguins‘ privates might not have helped the Hawks win that game, but it might make future opponents reluctant to use Jonathan Toews for target practice. Actually the debate should be whether the issue is even debatable. Go ahead and debate that if you want, but I‘ll have to assume you‘re wrong if you disagree. It isn‘t. Daily Herald Times LOADED: 04.02.2014 Sure the Blackhawks should have retaliated against the Penguins for Brooks Orpik taking liberties with Toews. No penalty was called. The hit might have been clean. It might have been dirty. It might have been within the rules but unnecessary. None of that matters. Toews came up hurting. If his injury is serious it‘ll jeopardize the Hawks‘ championship aspirations. Toews is the Hawks‘ best player. He is their captain. He is their leader. He is their conscience. He is everything that they need him to be whenever they need him to be it. Hockey protocol is that teammates defend the teammate with the ―C‖ on his sweater whenever an opponent runs at him. On this occasion the Hawks did very little. Hockey commentators both locally and nationally were outraged by the lack of reaction to Orpik‘s action. Most of the critics are former NHL players who have scars where current players have wounds. Yes, these guys are old school in an age of new school that has reduced cherished rituals of just about every sport. Look, old school or new, hockey players might as well play in tank tops, shorts and sandals if they no longer take offense to their captain being violated. These aren‘t career clergymen out there on the ice inclined to turn the other cheek. Nor are they sports writers in workrooms where namby meets pamby meets Bambi. Hockey players are hockey players. It‘s difficult to compare them to any other occupations except maybe lion tamer and oil-fire fighter. Certain principles are sacred in all sports, and protecting that ―C‖ is one of them. Another is an offensive lineman shoving a defensive lineman who gave the quarterback the business. Another is Team A knocking down Team B‘s best hitter after Team B knocked down Team A‘s best hitter. Mess with an NHL captain and you or your captain or your best player gets messed with. A longtime sports columnist asked at the White Sox‘ opener, ―The Hawks had to do something about it, didn‘t they?‖ The question was rhetorical. He knew the answer. After all, intimidation and retaliation and retribution still reside in the NHL. Those activities are embedded in the league‘s DNA. The game is becoming sports‘ last bastion of barbarism. When that ceases to be the case, hockey isn‘t hockey anymore. They might as well roll out a soccer ball and let goal scorers shoot at a bigger net. The Hawks aren‘t weak. No team wins two Stanley Cups in four years without physical, mental and emotional strength. Even some of their most adept players — their core players — will leap into the fray when it‘s called for. So, no, the Hawks aren‘t soft. But they aren‘t all that hard either. They win with skill and skating rather than roughing and fighting. That shouldn‘t mean that the Hawks are exempt from seeking revenge when an Orpik rips into a Toews. 732179 Chicago Blackhawks No disciplinary hearing expected for Orpik's hit on Toews Staff March 31, 2014, 11:15 am The NHL does not have a disciplinary hearing scheduled for Pittsburgh defenseman Brooks Orpik for his hit on Chicago Blackhawks captain Jonathan Toews on Sunday night, a source said on Monday morning. Toews suffered an apparent left arm injury on the hit, which came late in the second period. Orpik hit Toews along the boards and the captain got up holding his left arm/elbow. He went to the bench momentarily but then went to the locker room with 6:30 remaining in the second; he did not return. Coach Joel Quenneville said after the game that Toews is day to day and that he ―didn‘t think it‘s serious.‖ The Blackhawks did not practice on Monday, nor did they have practice scheduled for Tuesday. The Blackhawks went on to lose Sunday‘s game to Pittsburgh, 4-1, their third consecutive loss and fourth in the past five games. "We're going to have to find out about some other guys," Quenneville said. "Maybe somebody steps up in the middle, but that's quality and quantity ice time down there. This time of year we want to make sure Johnny gets better and fresh. Whether he gets a break or not, we'll see. Certainly, we want to make sure our health and being rested going into the playoffs is a priority." Comcast SportsNet.com LOADED: 04.02.2014 732180 Chicago Blackhawks By the numbers: Blackhawks limp through March April 2, 2014, 12:15 am CSN Staff While the Blackhawks were able to clinch a playoff berth in March, the month came with its bumps and bruises. The defending Stanley Cup champions lost two key pieces to their team when Patrick Kane and Jonathan Toews were injured during games this past month, but both hope to return for the start of the playoffs. CSN recaps the month of March for the Blackhawks using key numbers: Blackhawks resting up for playoff push] 5 - Corey Crawford tallied the 5th best save percentage in the league 6 - Number of games the Blackhawks have played without Kane 9 - Goals by Toews, leading the Blackhawks for the month 15 - Patrick Sharp's team leading point total 25 - Minutes of ice time averaged by Duncan Keith Comcast SportsNet.com LOADED: 04.02.2014 732181 Chicago Blackhawks Jamal Mayers: You'd certainly like to see response to Toews hit April 1, 2014, 9:45 pm CSN Staff There's been much criticism surrounding the Blackhawks and their lack of a response following Jonathan Toews' injury. Count former Blackhawk Jamal Mayers as one of those critics. "You definitely have to protect your better players," Mayers said. "When you see a guy like Toews here who puts it all on the line for his teammates everyday, you certainly want to stick up for him." [WATCH: SportsTalk Live debates Toews hit] Mayers also believed that although the hit may have been clean, it was "predatory". Toews was knocked out of Sunday's game against the Penguins with an arm injury and hasn't been given a timetable to return with the playoffs just a few weeks away. See what else Mayers had to say in the video above when he joined SportsNet Central on Tuesday. Comcast SportsNet.com LOADED: 04.02.2014 732182 Colorado Avalanche Matt Duchene to miss 4 weeks, opening of playoffs for Avs with injury McGinn said he thought Mitchell "did a great job" on the line against San Jose. He added of playing with MacKinnon, "I think Nate's pretty similar to Dutchy. He has a lot of speed up through the middle, so we're just going to continue to play the same way and use systems and work as hard as we can. We've dealt with injuries all year, and I think we've done a pretty good job." The Denver Post McGinn said he and Duchene "just ran into each other. We were both going for the puck. I think we both tried to get out of the way and maybe that's what made ourselves vulnerable. It was just a freak play ... I felt a tweak, but obviously not to the extent of Dutchy." Posted: MacKinnon, 18, said he was fine with moving back to center. By Terry Frei Updated: 03/31/2014 09:15:49 AM MDT 03/31/2014 01:07:48 PM MDT As the Avalanche was beginning practice Monday, the team announced that leading scorer Matt Duchene would be unavailable for about four weeks because of the left knee injury he suffered Saturday against the San Jose Sharks. After practice, Avalanche coach Patrick Roy confirmed the injury involved Duchene's medial collateral ligament. "We'll take our time, and we'll be patient," Roy said. That timetable would mean Duchene likely would miss the first round of the playoffs, but possibly be available in the second round, if the Avalanche advances. Colorado's first-round opponent almost certainly will be the Chicago Blackhawks, and the series will open April 16 in Chicago or April 17 in Denver, depending on which team finishes second in the Central Division and secures the home-ice advantage. The Avalanche (47-21-6) leads the Blackhawks (42-19-15) by one point in the standings, and Colorado next plays at Columbus on Tuesday night. The Avalanche does not make injured players available to the media, but Duchene communicated via Twitter and wouldn't rule out returning in time for the playoffs. Pieced together, his message was: "Been waiting to tweet til the official release but just a few thoughts here for you guys. 100 pts & playoff bound is something all of us have been working towards for a long time. Something to be majorly proud of #AvsNation! "Hockey's hockey and I'm sure people will think I feel pressure, but I don't," he said. "That's the least pressure situation I've been in all year, I think." He added of playing with O'Reilly and McGinn: "I'm just going to try and step in and create some chemistry with them. They'll be easy guys to play with. The way they play, they play a simple game, a give-and-go game, and that's what I like best. I like guys who move the puck quick and keep it simple. Especially in this league, you can't get too fancy. These two guys are big-time players. Factor (O'Reilly) has had a heck of a year and Ginner (McGinn) is big and physical. "I'm not going to replace Dutchy. That's just not going to happen. He's been one of our best players and you can't replace him, especially at this time of year. It's going to be tough, but we're going to have to find wins without him." O'Reilly said Duchene's absence represented "a challenge to step up ... He's big on the power play and big with his offensive ability, the way he moves the puck and creates with the puck. So for me, I have to step up that way and make sure I'm contributing. Nate's a great player as well and has great speed in the middle. It's going to be good. I've played with him a couple of times before, and when you play at this level, everyone can find some chemistry with everyone." O'Reilly, a natural center who played there for most of his first four seasons in the league before moving to wing under Roy, said that as far as he knows, no consideration had been given to him moving back to the middle in the wake of the Duchene injury. "I do love center and miss it a bit," he said. "But I like playing the wing and I think it's good when I can be versatile like that." Avs F Matt Duchene 2013 Colorado forward Matt Duchene (John Leyba, Denver Post file) "Secondly, the thought of not playing in the first round for me has been devastating. We have outstanding medical and training staff that will be helping me to get healthy ASAP. I will be doing everything in my power to be ready for Game 1. And if not then, shortly after! We are a helluva team ready for the playoffs. Thanks to all of you for your thoughts and prayers they are greatly appreciated!" Without Duchene, the Avalanche's major options, at least in the short term, are to slide John Mitchell into his spot centering Ryan O'Reilly and Jamie McGinn, or to move Nathan MacKinnon back to center. Mitchell centered the line against San Jose after Duchene was hurt on his first shift, but MacKinnon was skating there in the initial stages of practice Monday. After practice, Roy said that at least for the near future he would use MacKinnon at center on that line. He said he would put Mitchell at wing on the line with Paul Stastny and Gabriel Landeskog. (Landeskog didn't skate Monday, but Roy said it was a rest day for the team captain and that he would play at Columbus.) The move of MacKinnon back to center, Roy said, was "just to give us different options. You can't just go 'bang' in the playoffs and try that. It's good to try different things. Our situation in the standings allows us to do this." The wild card in all of that is the possible return of winger P.A. Parenteau, who has been out three weeks with a sprained MCL, but skated hard on his own for about 15 minutes before his teammates came on the ice Monday. Roy said he hoped Parenteau would play the final game of the regular season, at Anaheim on April 13. VIDEO: Avs confident in wake of Matt Duchene's injury "If not, we're pretty confident that he will be back for the first game against Chicago," Roy added. Before heading to the airport for their chartered flight to Columbus, the Avalanche players were upbeat despite the injury news. "Dutchy's obviously a big piece, but we have to stay positive and continue on," said McGinn. Mitchell said that regardless of which line he's skating with, "I just have to go out there and play my game and try and do whatever I can, offensively, defensively in any situation. It's obviously tough to fill someone's role like Dutchy's, but I'm going to do the best I can. I know that we've made the playoffs, but we want to strive for home-ice advantage." Stastny called the Duchene injury "tough luck ... With him, you just hope he gets back as quick as possible and doesn't come back too early, doesn't rush it and is smart about it. For us, it's just another situation where we can't use an excuse, we just keep playing the way we've been playing. We've got different line combinations now, but different guys will step up. All these guys have played with each other, with different guys, and I think we're kind of fortunate to have a lot of centers and wingers who have played different line combinations." For his part, Roy reprised a familiar theme. "We've been finding ways to win since the start of the year," he said. Only two Avalanche players — MacKinnon and Patrick Bordeleau — have appeared in all 74 games. Duchene missed three games in November with an oblique injury, and the Avalanche was 3-0 in those games. Colorado beat Chicago 5-1 at home, then won twice in overtime on the road — at Phoenix and Los Angeles. Duchene's 70 points lead the Avalanche, and his 23 goals are tied for third on the team with MacKinnon, behind O'Reilly (26) and Landeskog (24). Denver Post: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732183 Colorado Avalanche How the Avs can still beat Chicago without Matt Duchene By Adrian Dater The Denver Post Hey, chins up folks, chins up. Let me, the optimist Adrian Dater, talk you off the ledge here. No, losing Matt Duchene for a month or so isn‘t a good thing for the Burgundy and Blue‘s playoff chances. But in a short-term situation, in a seven-game playoff series, possibly with home-ice, the Avs can withstand this and advance. First, a history lesson: I was one of the first to proclaim the Avs were done like dinner after they lost Peter Forsberg to a ruptured spleen after the second round in 2001. No way the Avs could win a Cup without Foppa, I said. Judges? (Insert loud buzzer sound here). The Avs just pulled up their socks, everybody just asked a little more from themselves and they got that Stanley Cup all right. (Of course, that Avs team also had Patrick Roy, Joe Sakic, Rob Blake, Adam Foote, Milan Hejduk, Chris Drury and Alex Tanguay, but I digress). No, this Avs team isn‘t as talented as that ‘01 squad, and so the loss of Duchene hurts a little more in proportion probably. But here‘s how they can still beat Chicago: - Nathan MacKinnon now moves to center on a line with O‘Reilly and McGinn. Assuming he plays like…Nathan MacKinnon…that‘s a pretty darn good replacement at center. - P.A. Parenteau will be back in time for the playoffs. He should take MacKinnon‘s spot on a line with Stastny and Landeskog. I‘ll take my chances with that line in a best-of-seven. - John Mitchell has to up his game some at third-line center, and I think he can. - Erik Johnson, Tyson Barrie and Nick Holden might have to think a bit more offensively now, but they‘re capable of producing more there. - And for goodness sakes, Semyon Varlamov has to stand on his head. OK, maybe he won‘t have to be quite that good. This Chicago team has a few issues of its own right now too, with injuries to Kane and Toews and a distinctly Hangover-ish look about them these days. What, Varly can‘t outplay Corey Crawford in a playoff series? I think he can. Teams almost never overcome the loss of a star player in the long term. But in the short term, it can and often does happen. The Avs might even play better as a five-man unit defensively now that Duchene is out – something they haven‘t been doing all that consistently of late and would need to in the playoffs, Duchene or no Duchene. So, buck up kids. All is not lost. Take it from me, the optimist. Denver Post: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732184 Colorado Avalanche Nate Guenin struggles in return home By Mike Chambers The Denver Post Posted: 04/02/2014 12:01:00 AM MDT COLUMBUS, Ohio — Nate Guenin played four years at Ohio State before embarking on an eight-year professional career that has finally paid full-time NHL dividends. The Avalanche defenseman spoke proudly about returning to his college town in his 61st game of the season for Colorado, which defeated the Blue Jackets 3-2 in overtime Tuesday night. "This is home for me in the summers; I come back here and train," Guenin said after Tuesday's morning skate, and before he struggled mightily as his two turnovers resulted in Columbus' two goals. "I rented a car here so we went out to my place and cruised through campus. It's real special. I feel really good here." The 31-year-old Guenin, who entered the season having played just 32 career NHL games, is currently in a lineup rotation with fellow defensemen Andre Benoit and Cory Sarich. Benoit, who has played 72-of-74 games, was the odd man out Tuesday. It appears Nick Holden, who was a healthy scratch in 13 of the first 14 games of the season, is now a regular because of his offensive abilities (nine goals, 21 points in 46 games). Defenseman Ryan Wilson was also scratched for his 16th consecutive game. Umberger scratched. Columbus is in playoff position in its first season in the Eastern Conference, but the Blue Jackets have lost faith in one of their veteran scorers. R.J. Umberger, who played at Ohio State with Guenin was a healthy scratch for the fourth time in the last seven games. Umberger, who is making $4.6 million and has three full seasons remaining on a five-year, $23 million contract, has 18 goals but just two in his last 10 games. He was replaced in the lineup by forward/enforcer Jared Boll, who hadn't played since Nov. 22 because of injury. Footnotes. The Blue Jackets also played without forward Nathan Horton, who was injured in the team's previous game. ... In his 300th career NHL game, Columbus' Derek MacKenzie was convincingly beaten by Avalanche fourth-line center Brad "Bugsy" Malone in a first-period fight. Denver Post: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732185 Colorado Avalanche 2. Brad Malone. Young forward scored a goal and convincingly won a fight for Colorado. Colorado Avs rally late, then win in OT over Columbus Blue Jackets 3. Cam Atkinson. Former Boston College standout had a goal in 18:15 for the Blue Jackets. By Mike Chambers What you might have missed: The game-tying goal came on the first shift after Avs coach Patrick Roy put Nathan MacKinnon at right wing on the Paul Stastny-centered line. John Mitchell had been playing right wing on that line. The Denver Post Posted: Updated: 04/01/2014 07:40:58 PM MDT 04/02/2014 12:43:26 AM MDT COLUMBUS, Ohio — "Finding a way" has coincided with the Avalanche's opening-night motto "Why not us" all season, and Tuesday night the Avs fought hard enough to earn two points at Nationwide Arena. Next up: New York Rangers, Thursday at the Pepsi Center, 7 p.m. Mike Chambers, The Denver Post The race for no. 2 The Avalanche is three points ahead of the Chicago Blackhawks in the race for second place in the Central Division. They are likely to play each other in the first round of the NHL playoffs, with the second-place team having home-ice advantage: A fluke third-period goal by Brad Malone and a real nice one by captain Gabe Landeskog erased Columbus' two-goal lead, and Landeskog scored off a fortunate bounce with 32.2 seconds remaining in overtime for an improbable 3-2 victory that stunned a playoff-hopeful Blue Jackets crowd of 16,550. Avalanche: 48-21-6, 102 points "We're certainly finding ways to win," said Landeskog, who is on a scoring tear with five goals and seven points in his last four games, "and that's what you have to do at this time of year with home-ice advantage at stake." Next game: Thursday vs. New York Rangers Beginning the playoffs in Denver against Chicago is looking more realistic for the Avs, who extended their Central Division lead over the defending Stanley Cup champion to three points. Colorado has seven remaining games; the Blackhawks have six. Games remaining: Six The Avs, now a remarkable 14-6 in OT, improved to 4-0 without star center Matt Duchene, who missed the first game of his likely three- or four-week absence with a knee injury. Colorado previously beat Chicago, Phoenix and Los Angeles in November without Duchene, the latter two in OT. Denver Post: LOADED: 04.02.2014 "We changed our culture and we never give up," said Avalanche coach Patrick Roy, whose 102-points team is on pace to finish with the franchise's most points since the Stanley Cup-winning season of 2000-01 (118). "We keep working hard and we believe in ourselves, and I think it's one of the reasons we came back in this game." Colorado improved to 48-21-6, including 23-10-3 on the road. The Blue Jackets' only minor penalty came 2:39 into OT and the Avs made them pay. With the help of Columbus defenseman Jack Johnson, that is. Submit a Question Adrian Dater takes readers' questions about the Avalanche and NHL. Artem Anisimov was serving the final 12 seconds for holding when Landeskog's attempted centering pass to rookie Nathan MacKinnon caromed off Johnson and behind goalie Sergei Bobrovsky. It was the second big bounce for the Avs, who trailed 2-0 entering the third. Malone cut the deficit in half with a shot from the corner behind Bobrovsky. The puck caromed in off forward Nick Foligno and the Avs had the momentum. "We're resilient and we came back in the third working even harder," Roy said. "The goal that Malone scored was a big one for us. He used his speed going into the corner, put it in front and hit off their guy and in." Landeskog's game-tying goal was no fluke. On MacKinnon's first shift with Landeskog and center Paul Stastny — the rookie began the game centering Ryan O'Reilly and Jamie McGinn — he drove into the right wing and found Landeskog atop the paint, and the captain's one-touch zipped by Bobvrovsky. "After the second entering the third we talked about not finding any excuses and the need for guys to step up. And a lot of guys did," Landeskog said. "We played a playoff-type third period. Worked hard and chipped away, got a couple bounces obviously. We showed some character." Mike Chambers: mchambers@denverpost.com or twitter.com/mchambers Denver Post three stars 1. Gabe Landeskog. Avs captain scored the game's final two goals, the latter in overtime on the power play. Games remaining: Seven Home (two), away (five) Blackhawks: 42-19-15, 99 points Home (three), away (three) Next game: Thursday vs. Minnesota 732186 Colorado Avalanche Patrick Roy adjusts Avalanche lines, gets game-tying goal and OT win at Columbus By Mike Chambers The Denver Post COLUMBUS, Ohio — The evolving game story from the Avalanche‘s improbable 3-2 overtime win over the Blue Jackets on Tuesday night looks at the bounce-induced rally from a 2-0 deficit, the Avs‘ record without star center Matt Duchene (it‘s 4-0), Colorado‘s remarkable OT record (it‘s 14-6), the Avs‘ three-point lead over fading Chicago for the home-ice playoff spot (with one game in hand), and it briefly looks at Patrick Roy‘s move that paid big dividends when his team needed a big goal. Rookie Nathan MacKinnon replaced John Mitchell at right wing on the Paul Stastny-centered line with Gabe Landeskog. On their first shift of the game together, the trio hooked up for Stastny‘s pass to MacKinnon and MacKinnon‘s direct assist on Landeskog‘s tap-in from the doorstep with 4:57 left in regualtion. MacKinnon had been centering Ryan O‘Reilly and Jamie McGinn. ―With Landy and Pauly they were more dangerous (with MacKinnon),‖ Roy said. ―He brings so much speed with Landy on that line.‖ Jack Adams, meet Patrick Roy. Roy won‘t win the NHL coach of the year award because of tonight. He‘s been making great calls all season. Meanwhile, Avs defenseman Nate Guenin seemingly had a tough game, but after talking to him it didn‘t sound so bad. What I had written before talking to him: His two turnovers in the defensive end directly led to Columbus goals. Guenin‘s D-to-D pass behind the Colorado net was intercepted by Brandon Dubinsky, who immediately fed Cam Atkinson for a 1-0 lead midway through the second period. Five minutes later, Guenin couldn‘t handle the puck just inside the Avs‘ blue line and Nick Foligno set up a 2-on-1 rush and passed to Blake Comeau for an easy tap-in. Turns out D-partner Tyson Barrie called for that D-to-D pass and Dubinsky made a nice read (or cheated on Barrie‘s words). ―When that happens you feel like the arena is caving in, but Dubinsky made a great play,‖ Guenin said. ―The reverse was there and right when Tyson yelled (Dubinsky) cheated. On the second one the puck was bouncing and we were just swinging at it like it was a pinata. But that‘s why you‘re on a team. We banded together. Nobody (pointed fingers), if anything they‘re building you up. You could sit there and dwell on it or you can bounce back on your next shift. That‘s what‘s great about the game. You get a chance to redeem yourself.‖ Brad ―Bugsy‖ Malone was an assist shy of a Gordie Howe hat trick. In his 300th career NHL game, Columbus‘ Derek MacKenzie was convincingly beaten by Malone in a first period fight. Credit MacKenzie for respecting the game. He was matched up against Malone for a good chunk of the game and didn‘t automatically go looking for a rematch. Had there been another altercation like the one that led to the fight, no problem. But MacKenzie didn‘t go looking for it. Of course, he might have still been stunned by Malone‘s big blows. Denver Post: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732187 Columbus Blue Jackets Blue Jackets: Final push in playoff race will be grueling By Aaron Portzline The Columbus Dispatch • Monday March 31, 2014 5:07 AM With two weeks left in the NHL‘s regular season, the Blue Jackets are bracing for a final wave of games to prove that they‘re worthy of a spot in the Stanley Cup playoffs. Yesterday was an off day. Today will be the final practice day of the regular season, as all other non-game days will be used for rest and recuperation and perhaps an optional skate. ―We better solve all the problems on Monday,‖ coach Todd Richards joked. The Blue Jackets play eight games in 12 days beginning on Tuesday, when they play the Colorado Avalanche in Nationwide Arena. No NHL team since the 1979-80 Quebec Nordiques has ended a marathon season with such a steep hill at the finish line. That‘s three back-to-backs and no more than one game off between games until the April 12 finale at Florida. ―I don‘t know what it‘s going to be like,‖ left winger Matt Calvert said. ―You sleep a little more when you can. You spend your off days in recovery. But at some point, the mind takes over for the body this time of year.‖ A thumbnail look at the final two weeks for the Blue Jackets and the cluster of teams in the race for playoff spots in the Eastern Conference: Division N.Y. Rangers (88): The Rangers have won six of seven, pretty much locking down the No. 2 or 3 spot in the Metropolitan Division. They end the season with three of four at home, all against non-playoff teams. Philadelphia (86): The Flyers are rolling, but this is a difficult stretch. They lost in a shootout against East-leading Boston yesterday and will face West-leading St. Louis on Tuesday. A Metropolitan Division showdown with the Blue Jackets on Thursday in Philadelphia looms large. Blue Jackets (82): The Jackets are in pretty good shape to hold down a wild-card spot, but they‘d prefer to avoid No. 1 seed Boston or No. 2 seed Pittsburgh in the first round. Columbus is 0-7-1 against those two teams. Six of the Jackets‘ final eight games are against teams that are in the playoffs or still fighting for a spot. A murderous back-to-back — at Philadelphia on Thursday, at home against Chicago on Friday — looms this week. Washington (81): The standings are deceiving. The Capitals are really three points behind Columbus because — with only 25 regulation-overtime wins — they won‘t win any tiebreakers. New Jersey (77): The Devils are running out of time. On Saturday, they fell to 0-10 in shootouts. Imagine how different this season could be if they‘d won two of those. Wild card Detroit (84): Pavel Datsyuk? Henrik Zetterberg? Who needs ‘em? The Red Wings, despite being gutted by injuries, are looking good for a 23rd consecutive appearance in the Stanley Cup playoffs. Toronto (80): An eight-game losing streak has sent Toronto free-falling out of the picture. They have six games remaining, fewest in the East. Playoff key The second- and third-place teams in each division will meet each other in the first round, while the No. 1 seed will play the second wild-card and the No. 2 seed will play the first wild-card. Columbus Dispatch LOADED: 04.02.2014 732188 Columbus Blue Jackets Blue Jackets notebook: Backup McElhinney‘s work in net provides needed lift By Aaron Portzline The Columbus Dispatch • Monday March 31, 2014 5:06 AM RALEIGH, N.C. — For nearly two months, Curtis McElhinney could have been called the Blue Jackets‘ mop-up goaltender, not the backup goaltender to Sergei Bobrovsky. That‘s how McElhinney was used — not to start games, but to come on during the game should Bobrovsky feel sick or struggle. Even when coach Todd Richards tried to give him a start — March 10 in Dallas — the game was postponed after Stars forward Rich Peverley collapsed in the first period. But McElhinney‘s role should not be overlooked, even as Bobrovsky seems likely to handle the bulk of the work in the final eight games of the season, and in the Stanley Cup playoffs, should the Blue Jackets qualify. McElhinney stopped 76 of 81 shots (.938 save percentage) in the past three games, beginning when he came on for Bobrovsky (flu) after one period against Detroit on Tuesday and continuing over the weekend in a 2-1 loss to Pittsburgh and a 3-2 overtime win over Carolina. ―It can be difficult at times‖ not playing, McElhinney said. ―But I‘ve been very focused in practice, making sure I haven‘t picked up any bad habits. ―These last few games, I haven‘t felt like I‘ve been out that long.‖ McElhinney had 25 saves against the Hurricanes on Saturday. He‘s now 10-10-1 this season, including a month-long stretch in December and early January when he and Mike McKenna kept the Blue Jackets afloat when Bobrovsky nursed a groin injury. ―We needed Curtis to step up,‖ Richards said after Saturday‘s game. ―The first five minutes, (Carolina) was buzzing, and we had some turnovers, but he made two or three really big saves to keep it 0-0. It let us settle into our game, and it kept the crowd out of it.‖ McElhinney knew that Bobrovsky was the undisputed No. 1 when he signed with the Blue Jackets as a free agent, so there has been no issue about playing time. Bobrovsky had made 19 consecutive starts before Friday‘s game. ―It‘s a treat, because Bob is a pretty special goalie to watch on an everyday basis,‖ McElhinney said. ―I just love watching him play; he‘s incredibly fast. ―But this has been a great opportunity for me, and I‘m glad I could help out, especially this time of year. It‘s nice to be a part of it in that way.‖ Any way you slice it The Blue Jackets are 0-7-1 against Boston and Pittsburgh this season, suggesting that the Jackets would benefit greatly by catching Philadelphia or the New York Rangers in the Metropolitan Division to avoid a first-round matchup against the Bruins or Penguins as a wild-card team. If the season ended today, the Blue Jackets would play Boston in the first round after going 0-2-1 against them this season. Blue Jackets left wing Nick Foligno said the only thing that matters is getting into the playoffs. ―I learned playing in a few series (in Ottawa) that everything is different in the playoffs,‖ Foligno said. ―Everybody elevates their game, and you don‘t know what that‘s going to look like until you get there. ―A team like us … maybe teams don‘t want to face us in the first round. We‘re one of those teams that‘s built to grind you down. Seven games is a lot of games against a team like that.‖ Columbus Dispatch LOADED: 04.02.2014 732189 Columbus Blue Jackets Michael Arace commentary: A smiling Johansen is good sign for Blue Jackets closed with seven victories in their final eight games, and it was Anisimov one night, and Mark Letestu the next, and Nick Foligno the next, and Fedor Tyutin the next, and Jack Johnson the next ... They are will need everyone, Johansen as much as anyone. They will need him smiling. Columbus Dispatch LOADED: 04.02.2014 By Michael Arace The Columbus Dispatch • Monday March 31, 2014 5:06 AM The big kid smiled. Did we see that right? Late in the third period of a tight game, Ryan Johansen glided toward the right faceoff dot to take a draw, and, as he came in, he carried on a conversation with the official, and he smiled. An ice-level television camera caught the scene at PNC Arena on Saturday night. Johansen readied for the draw, tried to cheat and was tossed from the circle. He looked right at the official as he backed out, and the smile never left his face. It was an interesting interlude. The Blue Jackets and Carolina Hurricanes were tied in a game that was heavy with playoff ramifications, especially for the Jackets, and the big kid was smiling as if there were no pressure, as if he knew something. At that point, the Blue Jackets had had nary a second of power-play time while the Hurricanes were 1 for 3 with the man advantage. Johansen later was asked about the discrepancy, and he said: ―I was talking to the ref about that. I was asking him, ‗Are we going to get a power play sometime tonight?‘ And he said, ‗I‘ll see what I can do for you, big guy.‘ ‖ The referee was joking, of course. It was idle banter. It turned out to be foretelling. The Blue Jackets got a power play in overtime, and Johansen scored the winning goal, 4 on 3. On the second night of a back-to-back, coming off a home loss, in danger of losing for the fourth time in five games, Johansen smiled and scored, and the Jackets beat the Hurricanes 3-2. With all sincerity, he credited Artem Anisimov for creating the chance. Johansen has always had personality. Now, he is asserting it. He has scored the winning goal in the Blue Jackets‘ past three one-goal victories: at Montreal with three minutes remaining in regulation, at Minnesota in a shootout and at Carolina in overtime. Three goals of huge importance, each of highlight-reel quality and followed by a mob scene of euphoric Blue Jackets. ―I sense a quickening maturity in Joey and, I think, an appreciation of where he fits with the team and the role he plays,‖ Blue Jackets broadcaster Jody Shelley said. ―At the same time, I think there is still an innocence there. I think he still doesn‘t know how good he is.‖ The goal on Saturday night was Johansen‘s 30th of the season. He is the third Blue Jacket to reach that plateau, joining Rick Nash (seven times) and Geoff Sanderson (twice). Check the stats: Going into yesterday, Johansen had as many goals as Ryan Getzlaf, Jamie Benn and Jarome Iginla. He had one more than Patrick Kane and Martin St. Louis, and two more than Jonathan Toews. ―Keep watching,‖ Blue Jackets coach Todd Richards said. ―Maybe he‘ll hit 35 by the end of the season.‖ Shelley tells a couple of stories about Johansen. One involves Joe Thornton, a perennial All-Star with the San Jose Sharks. The other involves Los Angeles Kings defenseman Willie Mitchell. Thornton used to think that Johansen was from Sweden, Shelley said. ―But the last time I asked Thornton about Johansen, Thornton said: ‗He‘s real good‘ — and believe me, that is high praise coming from Joe,‖ Shelley said. ―And when I asked Willie Mitchell about the Jackets, he said: ‗Hard to play against — and that Johansen kid is a lot like Getzlaf.‘ ―That was unsolicited, coming from a guy (Thornton) that Joey looks up to, and a guy (Mitchell) who is one of those shut-down defensemen. That‘s impressive to me, coming from his peers.‖ The Blue Jackets have eight games remaining over the last 12 days of the season. They will need some of that magic they had last year, when they 732190 Columbus Blue Jackets Blue Jackets notebook: Nick Holden fits in with Avs By Shawn Mitchell The Columbus Dispatch • Wednesday April 2, 2014 5:08 AM A lack of young offensive defenseman in the organization was part of the reason that undrafted free agent Nick Holden signed his first professional contract with the Blue Jackets in 2008. Five years later, it was an abundance of youthful Blue Jackets defenders that helped put Holden into an everyday role with the Colorado Avalanche. ―This year has gone way better than I ever imagined or expected,‖ said Holden, who played 295 games for the Blue Jackets‘ American Hockey League affiliates. Holden had nine goals and 30 assists and was the No. 4 scorer for minor-league Springfield last season. But he and the Blue Jackets mutually agreed that he needed to move on when his contract expired after last season. Holden signed a two-year deal with the Avalanche in July. ―I really expected to be in the AHL this year, maybe get some (NHL) games and next year really push to stay up,‖ Holden said. ―But I had a good camp and I ended up sticking around.‖ Holden was Colorado‘s seventh defenseman for most of the season‘s first three months, but has been a mainstay of the lineup since Jan. 2, earning spots on the power-play and penalty-killing units. Only Avalanche defenseman Tyson Barrie (10 goals) has more goals than Holden (nine), who got his 13th assist and improved his plus/minus rating to plus-10 in a 3-2 overtime victory over the Jackets last night. Holden played five games for the Blue Jackets in the 2010-11 season and two more last year but was ―always on the verge,‖ he said. ―They drafted some quality guys here, John Moore and others, and I was battling with them. I was talking this morning about how six of the seven defensemen that started the season in Springfield last year are playing in the NHL now,‖ Holden said. Avalanche coach Patrick Roy said he was surprised by Holden‘s emergence. He envisioned Holden and fellow former Blue Jacket and Ohio State standout Nate Guenin to be the team‘s first two defensive callups from AHL Lake Erie. ―He has improved his game to the point where he is an important defenseman on our team now,‖ Roy said. Tynan signs contract The Blue Jackets signed Notre Dame senior T.J. Tynan to a two-year, entry-level contract that begins next season. Tynan, 22, had 54 goals and 161 points in 164 games for the Irish, who were eliminated from the NCAA tournament last weekend. Tynan, a 5-foot-9, 165-pound center from suburban Chicago, was selected by the Jackets in the third round (66th overall) of the 2011 draft. Tynan is expected to sign an amateur tryout agreement with minor-league Springfield and join the Falcons this weekend for the remainder of the regular season and the AHL playoffs, general manager Jarmo Kekalainen said. Slap shot The Blue Jackets were credited with 52 hits last night, a franchise record. Nick Foligno and Brandon Dubinsky each had seven. Columbus Dispatch LOADED: 04.02.2014 732191 Columbus Blue Jackets Michael Arace commentary: Bad breaks lead to a painful loss for Blue Jackets Michael Arace By The Columbus Dispatch • Wednesday April 2, 2014 5:07 AM It was like one of those episodes of ―Willie and Frankie‖ on Saturday Night Live, circa 1985, when Billy Crystal talks about shoving a meat thermometer in his ear, and hammering it with a ball-peen hammer, and Christopher Guest says, ―Boy, that must smart.‖ It happened last night at Nationwide Arena, where the Blue Jackets kicked three goals into their net — two in the third period and one in overtime — and lost 3-2 to the Colorado Avalanche. It was like rolling over a hundred thumbtacks in the nude, then getting in a hot tub. You hate it when that happens. True, the Jackets picked up a point. True, they managed to hang on to eighth place in the Eastern Conference. But this was a stinging loss. They let the game get away from them — something they can ill afford to do, especially at home, in the midst of a wicked playoff race. It was partially self-inflicted, and partially the product of incomprehensively awful luck. ―Sometimes, one goes in on kind of a bad bounce, and you kind of live with it and say you didn‘t get the bounces,‖ forward Nick Foligno said. ―But three? Man, that‘s tough.‖ There is no shame in losing to the Avalanche, which has a lock for coach of the year in Patrick Roy, a lock for rookie of the year in center Nathan MacKinnon and a leading Vezina Trophy candidate in goaltender Semyon Varlamov. The Avs are, without a doubt, the biggest surprise of the NHL season. They were not supposed to be this good this fast. Last season, they finished with 39 points and had the worst record in the Western Conference. Last week, they crested the 100-point mark and clinched a playoff spot. Their captain, left wing Gabriel Landeskog, is 21 years old — which is the average age of their four leading scorers. This team is young and gifted, and Roy, the rookie coach, has worked wonders with them. Yet, the Blue Jackets were all over them — especially in the second period, which was one of the best periods this team has played all season. Cam Atkinson scored on a one-timer from the mid-slot, his 20th goal of the season. Blake Comeau and Foligno manufactured a goal through sheer will and finished the scoring play with a deft pass and an equally deft redirect by Comeau. The Blue Jackets carried the 2-0 lead into the third period. Then, midway through the third, came the first sign of capriciousness. Someone named Brad Malone shot the puck from the left corner to the front of the Jackets‘ net. None of Malone‘s teammates was in the vicinity. The puck bounded off the shaft of Foligno‘s stick and shot past Sergei Bobrovsky. It was Malone‘s second goal of the season. Then, with less than five minutes remaining in regulation, MacKinnon threw one in front, aiming for Landeskog. The puck went off either Jackets defenseman Dalton Prout or center Brandon Dubinsky, or both, and shot past Bobrovsky. Suddenly, the score was tied. The Jackets gave the Avalanche an overtime power play. Landeskog threw one in front, aiming for MacKinnon. Blue Jackets defenseman Jack Johnson knelt down in front of the crease to intercept the pass. The puck caromed off the inside of Johnson‘s leg and shot past Bobrovsky. ―Hopefully, the bounces even out at the end of the year,‖ a dejected Johnson said. ―But we might have to wait until next year because we‘ve had a lot of those this year. We‘ve been scratching and clawing the whole way.‖ The Blue Jackets were unified in their postgame message: They cannot dwell on this because there is no time to do so. They have another huge game on Thursday, at Philadelphia, a place where they have had a carrot scraper stuffed in their nose, followed by a mentholated eucalyptus cough drop. A crazy test of will is before them, and we shall see what they have. Columbus Dispatch LOADED: 04.02.2014 732192 Columbus Blue Jackets Avalanche 3, Blue Jackets 2 (OT): Bad bounces By Aaron Portzline The Columbus Dispatch • Wednesday April 2, 2014 5:17 AM The puck moves fast and takes funny bounces in the NHL. Last night, for the Blue Jackets, it took three not-so-funny bounces. The Colorado Avalanche came back from a 2-0 deficit in the third period to win 3-2 in overtime in front of 16,550 at Nationwide Arena, and not one of the goals was scored directly into the net by Avalanche players. All three went in off Blue Jackets shins, skates or sticks, leading to a dressing-room scene afterward that was caught between shrugging shoulders and cursing luck. The crusher, with 32.2 seconds remaining in overtime, was the second goal awarded to Avalanche captain Gabriel Landeskog, a cross-slot pass that went into the net off the right leg of Jackets defenseman Jack Johnson. ―We were the best shooters in the game tonight vs. our own guy,‖ Blue Jackets coach Todd Richards said, trying to make light of it. ―You might see one of those … three‘s a lot, and that was all of their goals. We were good shooters against our own guy.‖ John Davidson, the Blue Jackets‘ president of hockey operations, estimated he has seen nearly 4,000 games in his 40-plus years in and around the NHL. ―And I‘ve never seen that,‖ Davidson said. ―Not three.‖ Goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky shook his head: ―It‘s crazy. Seriously.‖ The Blue Jackets got goals from Cam Atkinson and Blake Comeau in the second period and appeared in fine shape midway through the third, leading 2-0. Bobrovsky, in his first game back after a bout with the flu, was strong and quick, nearing his fourth shutout of the season. But then … At 9:46 of the third, Avalanche fourth-line center Brad Malone turned and shot from deep in the corner, with the puck hitting off the shaft of Blue Jackets left wing Nick Foligno‘s stick in front of Bobrovsky and shooting into the net. At 15:03 of the third, Landeskog went hard to the net for a centering pass from rookie Nathan MacKinnon, and his stick redirected the puck off the skate of either Blue Jackets defenseman Dalton Prout or center Brandon Dubinsky — replay wasn‘t conclusive — before ending up in the net. Then, the Blue Jackets were 11 seconds away from killing off a 4-on-3 Avalanche power play in overtime when Landeskog took possession of the puck in the right circle. He was trying to find MacKinnon to Bobrovsky‘s right, just as Johnson dropped to a knee. ―I knew (Landeskog) was going to try and pass it across,‖ Johnson said. ―I was trying to keep it so it‘s not an empty net on the other side. I want to keep (Landeskog) shooting so Sergei‘s got a chance on the short side. It hits you and goes the wrong way. What can you do? Usually, they hit me and sit there. I‘ve been doing it my whole life.‖ Richards tried to view it as a point gained, not an additional point lost. The Blue Jackets remained in eighth place, the second wild card, in the Eastern Conference. ―You guys look at it as a loss,‖ he said. ―I don‘t look at it as a loss. Granted, one team won. They got the two points. But we still got a point. That might be a huge point. We don‘t know. We‘ll find out in a couple weeks.‖ Columbus Dispatch LOADED: 04.02.2014 732193 Columbus Blue Jackets FOX SPORTS DAILY NHL TEAM EDITION Blue Jackets playing for postseason as April nears NHL News To Your Inbox! CHOOSE YOUR TEAM(S) Rick Gethin FOX Sports Ohio MAR 31, 2014 9:39a ET Over the next 13 days, the Blue Jackets will play their final eight games of the regular season. As of today, they own the second wildcard spot in the Eastern Conference. With 82 points, they are four behind the Philadelphia Flyers (third place in the division) and six behind the second-place New York Rangers in the Metro. It has come down to this. Who would have seriously thought back in November that Columbus would be in the mix for postseason play with two weeks remaining on the schedule? There is always the "what if" questions that will be asked, no matter how they finish the season. What if they had beaten Pittsburgh or Boston just one time each? What if they had not had the four-game losing streak in October, followed by the five-game skid to start November? They played the first three months of the schedule to a 17-19-4 record (38 points). They were 13th in the Eastern Conference and seventh in the Metropolitan Division as 2014 dawned. Their goal differential was -8. Since the Jan. 2 game in Phoenix, they have gone 21-11-2 (44 points). They are in the mix for the playoffs, being chased by the likes of the Washington Capitals, Toronto Maple Leafs and New Jersey Devils. Their goal differential is now a more respectable +8. The website sportsclubstats.com has the Blue Jackets chances of making the post-season at 78.8%, as of today. After 74 games, they are 38-30-6. The rollercoaster ride of their play in the early stages of the season has been supplanted by the rollercoaster ride of the standings, both within the division and for a wildcard spot. 1182014-FSO-NHL-SergeiBobrovsky-PI Russell LaBounty-USA Today Sports COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS 2013-2014 Schedule | Team Page Standings | Stats | Roster | Injuries | Latest NHL news on FOXSports.com For them to climb into third place in the division for a guaranteed trip to the postseason, they would likely have to go 6-2-0 over the final eight games. Is this feasible for Columbus? They have four home and four away games beginning tomorrow evening as they host the visiting Colorado Avalanche, who are 22-10-3 on the road. Four of the remaining games are against Western Conference teams (Colorado, Chicago, Phoenix and Dallas), all of which have more points than Columbus. The four games against Eastern Conference teams include two versus Metropolitan Division foes the Flyers (23-13-2 at home) and the New York Islanders (17-17-2 on the road). The Blue Jackets finish the season on the road against the Tampa Bay Lightning (21-8-6 at home) and will have the finale at the Florida Panthers (14-17-5 at home). Looking back at the last eight games of their one playoff season (2008-2009), Columbus went 2-3-3 over that stretch. They had spent their energy getting to the playoffs and were running low. Eventually, they were swept by the Detroit Red Wings in the first round. The difference this year is that they haven't expended all of their energy and are starting to get respect from other teams. Gone are the days of seeing their opponents' backup goalie on an almost nightly basis. Similar to last year, there are rumblings that Columbus could be a very dangerous team in the post-season. They are a team that has had to dig themselves out of self-made holes and continued to climb the ladder. The "country club" atmosphere within the room is history. They have become a proud group of men who refuse to surrender. They have forged an identity, at long last, of being a hard-working team that is tough to play against. *By clicking "SUBSCRIBE", you have read and agreed to the Fox Sports Privacy Policy and Terms of Use. SUBSCRIBE Inside the room, it is a "one-for-all and all-for one" mentality among the players. They have something to prove, almost a chip on their collective shoulder. As of today, they would face the cream of the crop in the Eastern Conference, the Boston Bruins. The chowdah is mighty tasty in New England and the Blue Jackets have an appetite that needs satiated. A matchup between these two clubs would not be a walk in the park, for either. In the season series between them, Columbus went 0-2-1 with none of the games being of the "blowout" variety. They haven't played each other since Nov. 30. It would be the cagey veterans versus the young upstarts in a first round series. Who knows how a series between Boston and Columbus would play out? But don't get ahead of yourself. The Blue Jackets must get through these last eight games before anything else. It continues tomorrow within the friendly confines, as they host Colorado. foxsportsohio.com LOADED: 04.02.2014 732194 Columbus Blue Jackets Three takeaways from the Blue Jackets 3-2 OT loss to the Avalanche Rick Gethin FOX Sports Ohio APR 01, 2014 11:01p ET One: A slow start with non-crisp passing is no way to get into playoff form. Columbus needs to start getting "up" for games from the first drop of the puck. There was very little of that in the first period. Two: The second period was where they got their mojo working. They had sustained pressure in the Colorado zone and were able to cycle the puck with relative ease. Scoring a couple of goals helped to keep the Avs at bay. Three: Although one point is good, two points are better. That is never more magnified than at this time of year, in this tight of a playoff race. Columbus holds onto 8th place (2nd wildcard) in the East. How important will that one extra point become over the next 11 days? foxsportsohio.com LOADED: 04.02.2014 732195 Columbus Blue Jackets Avalanche top Blue Jackets 3-2 in OT APR 01, 2014 10:18p ET Associated Press COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -- Gabriel Landeskog scored twice, including a power-play goal at 4:27 of overtime to help the Colorado Avalanche extend their winning streak to four with a 3-2 victory over the Columbus Blue Jackets on Tuesday night. Rookie scoring leader Nathan MacKinnon, centering the top line with Matt Duchene expected to miss a month with a knee injury, assisted on both of Landeskog's scores. Semyon Varlamov stopped 26 shots -- including a prime chance by Blake Comeau late in regulation to pick up his league-leading 38th win. With 102 points, Colorado moved three ahead of Chicago for second place in the Central Division. Cam Atkinson and Comeau scored in the second period for Columbus, which is hanging on to the second wild-card spot and eighth playoff seed in the Eastern Conference. All three Colorado goals caromed off Columbus players with Landeskog's winner and 26th of the season -- extending his career high -- banking off defenseman Jack Johnson and behind Sergei Bobrovsky, who returned after missing nearly three games with the flu and finished with 25 saves. Trailing 2-0 after two periods, Brad Malone and Landeskog scored 5:17 apart in the third period to draw Colorado even. Malone made it 2-1 at 9:46 of the second with his second of the season on a seemingly innocent play. He threw the puck from deep in the left corner that hit Nick Foligno near the crease and went into the net. Then Landeskog redirected a feed from smooth-skating MacKinnon for his 25th that deflected off the Blue Jackets' Dalton Prout. Early in the second period, Ryan Johansen clanged a shot off the post. It was a turnover by defenseman Nate Guenin behind his net that got Varlamov leaning the wrong way. Brandon Dubinsky sent a centering pass to Atkinson, who scored his 20th at 10:52. Colorado counterattacked after each goal, but Bobrovsky stopped MacKinnon from in tight. He later stretched to make a nice toe save on a hard Paul Stastny shot with the Avalanche revving up the pressure in the Blue Jackets' zone. Then later in the period on a quirky play, the Blue Jackets made it 2-0. A bouncing puck on a long clear by Fedor Tyutin hopped past two Colorado defensemen and was finally settled by Comeau. He worked a high-speed give and go in little space with Foligno to tuck home his fourth and first since Dec. 19. Notes: The overtime power play was the only one for the Avalanche in the game. ... Columbus played its first of eight games in 12 days to close out the regular season. ... Blue Jackets big off-season signing RW Nathan Horton, who has mostly struggled since returning from shoulder surgery in January, missed the game with lower-body injury. Columbus LW R.J. Umberger, who has 18 goals and 33 points, was scratched for the fourth time in seven games. ... Blue Jackets C Derek MacKenzie played in his 300th career game. foxsportsohio.com LOADED: 04.02.2014 732196 Dallas Stars Addition or audition? Stars want to see what they have in defenseman Patrik Nemeth MIKE HEIKA Published: 01 April 2014 01:33 PM Updated: 01 April 2014 05:09 PM The decision to call up Patrik Nemeth and insert him into the lineup is not one that was taken lightly by the Stars. Nemeth is a regular call-up and constitutes one of the four call-ups the team has between the NHL trade deadline and the end of the regular season. Because Colton Sceviour will need a regular call-up once Erik Cole is ready to play, that would be the team's second call-up and leave them with only two (outside of emergency call-ups). Bottom line, the Stars believe Nemeth is ready and would love to give him a chance to help the team out in the final eight games. Why? Well, because he could slot in perfectly on the third pair with Sergei Gonchar and offer some physical defending. The Stars have tried to get that out of Aaron Rome, but he is injured again. What's more, when he's been healthy, the coaches have opted to not play him much. In his last six games, Rome has played 4:58, 11:55, 7:25, 10:14, 14:34 and 6:19. Whether that is because of injuries or not, it's not the kind of dependability Dallas needs down the stretch. Ironically, Nemeth also has battled injuries in his career, but he has been a rock since returning from a broken foot in Cedar Park. Since returning in February, he has played 18 games and is plus-13. Now, that's a good team in Cedar Park, but he clearly has been their best defender. He also has played beside skill guys, and the Stars have plenty of those _ including tonight's partner Sergei Gonchar. "He's played a solid game down in Austin, and he's done a really nice job defending,'' said Stars coach Lindy Ruff. "So we're hoping he can step in and be that same guy here.'' "Where we're playing Nemeth is more of a role where we want someone who is sound defensively,'' Ruff added. "We don't need a lot of high risk, we really don't need a lot of offense out of that slot where we've got him playing.'' In calling Nemeth up, the Stars are by-passing Kevin Connauton, who has played 35 games for the Stars this season and averages 15:02 when he is in the game. Connauton has been a healthy scratch in five of the past six games, and the reason for that is the Stars need a more physical defensive presence. Connauton is a skilled player who doesn't mind leaving his post to take forays up the ice. "I've talked to Kevin and it is frustrating,'' Ruff said. "I really think that Kevin has come a ways this year and still has a ways to go. I think his strength is more on the offensive side of it where Nemeth's is more on the defensive side, and we're turning a little bit more in that direction. I asked Kevin not to get frustrated, because I do see improvement. I just told him that I know it's frustrating but I think you can get there, you're just a little ways away yet.'' We'll see what happens with Rome's injury, but this clearly is a great opportunity for Nemeth, and the 22-year-old from Sweden said he's ready to grab that opportunity. "I've been looking forward to this for a long time, so it's going to be a lot of fun,'' said Nemeth, who will make his NHL debut. "I watch (the NHL) every chance I get, so it's exciting.'' Nemeth said the injuries have slowed his progress (he played just 47 games in the AHL last season because of a concussion), but that he feels great now and is playing his best hockey. "That's probably been the biggest obstacle, my injuries,'' he said. "When I've been healthy, I think I've been playing pretty good. You can't be a good hockey player when you're injured, but I almost forgot about them now. When you're out there now, you just want to play so bad, so I just want to go out and play and have fun.'' Dallas Morning News LOADED: 04.02.2014 732197 Dallas Stars Stars taking depth scoring to new levels, unheralded forward scores two in win over Capitals MIKE HEIKA Published: 01 April 2014 09:50 PM Updated: 01 April 2014 10:32 PM WASHINGTON, D.C. — The Stars are taking this depth scoring thing to new levels. After bemoaning the weight on top scorers Tyler Seguin and Jamie Benn while their playoff hopes were slipping away two weeks ago, the Stars now are getting goals by the bucket from every line on the ice. Dustin Jeffrey on Tuesday tallied two goals — his first in a Stars uniform — to lead Dallas to a 5-0 win over the Washington Capitals at Verizon Center. Jeffrey, Colton Sceviour and Ryan Garbutt each has had two-goal performances in the past four games, and those were sandwiched around a seven-goal performance against Nashville. The victory moves the Stars to 37-27-11 (85 points) and keeps them square in the hunt for a wildcard playoff spot in the Western Conference. The Capitals, who are fighting for a wildcard spot in the East, fall to 34-29-13 (81 points). While the depth scoring was great — and necessary — the key for the Stars might have been the intensity of the Stars. While Dallas was faster and quicker than the Capitals, the real difference was the fact Stars players won a majority of the puck battles. "We came out pretty hard and they pushed back, but I think we handled that well," said winger Ray Whitney, who had a goal and an assist. "Our compete level was really there tonight." Whitney was part a fourth line that contributed three goals. He and Jeffrey combined with winger Alex Chiasson, who had three assists. Each of the three players were plus-3. "We have some skilled players there," said Chiasson. "From Day 1, it seems Ray and I have clicked. We have struggled at times, and I‘ll be the first to admit that, but I think he‘s a great gut to play with. And tonight, D.J. played a great game. We‘re going to try to build on this and help the team as much as we can." The top line broke a scoreless first period when Seguin tipped in a Jamie Benn shot at the 15:06 mark, and then the depth players piled it on in the second period. Chiasson found Whitney open on an odd-man rush, and Whitney slipped in his ninth goal of the season. Then, Jeffrey and Chiasson went to the net, and Jeffrey was able to flip in a rebound for his first goal in a Stars uniform to make it 3-0. He followed that early in the third period with a one-timer off a nice pass from Whitney to make it 4-0. Jeffrey went to the minors after a long stretch of healthy scratches, and has struggled to get on the board with the Stars. But after a successful stretch in the AHL, he has proven to have some offensive skill. "It was important for me to get my confidence back,‘‘ Jeffrey said. "To go down and play there and get a lot of opportunities, that has been big." And as for the added depth scoring, Jeffrey said that has been enormous, as well. "It‘s huge," he said. "If you look at our top line, everyone is focusing on them, so we have to be able to score. Especially on the road, we have to chip in." The Stars have won three in a row and outscored the opposition 16-4 in that span. They have started a five-game road trip with a 2-0-0 start, and they have regained their swagger. And much of that can be attributed to balanced scoring and rolling four lines. "It takes a lot of pressure off the team because if you‘re not scoring, you‘ve got to defend hard," said coach Lindy Ruff. "It‘s great to see the puck go in the net. We made some real good plays. I thought our [defense] were real active, but I thought our forwards had some looks and instead of just shooting sometimes, they went off the back side and made some real nice plays." Dallas Morning News LOADED: 04.02.2014 732198 Dallas Stars real good plays. I thought our [defense] were real active, but I thought our forwards had some looks and instead of just shooting sometimes, they went off the back side and made some real nice plays." He said it: Players and coaches comment after Dallas' 5-0 win in Washington Dallas Stars forward Ray Whitney on how his team started and how they had some open looks tonight… MIKE HEIKA "We came out well and they had a couple pushes at different times of the game, but I thought we handled that well. We played a fast game tonight and we got a lot of chances. We had a lot of two-on-ones and we even had a two-on-none, so it's not often you see that many scoring chances." Published: 01 April 2014 09:41 PM Updated: 01 April 2014 10:28 PM Dallas Stars forward Alex Chiasson on his team getting some depth scoring… Courtesy of Washington PR: Postgame Quotes Washington Capitals head coach Adam Oates on what he said to the team after the second period… "We're all a group. I said to the guys in the second intermission, 'You know what, we're down and if we come back - we have before, we could - we can't come back playing wrong. If somehow we make the playoffs and we play like this who are we kidding? We have to figure out a way to get better together. It is just us collectively in here.' Obviously it's very disappointing." Washington Capitals head coach Adam Oates on the desperation of the team throughout the game… "In hindsight, probably the thing that bothers me the most is that we had a very good first period, very good. In terms of desperation I thought the guys played very solid in the first period. We let a goal in the second period deflate us. That's surprising, if anything. The third period is as ugly as it can get, and unfortunately those things happen sometimes." Washington Capitals forward Eric Fehr on the play of the Dallas Stars… "They [Dallas] are a really fast team, and they got a lot of pressure on us. We didn't react well to it. We turned over too many pucks, we didn't make the easy plays - the 10 foot plays - we were looking for long passes and they hemmed us in our zone pretty good. We talk about it in the room that we want to keep things simple and just make sure that we get it out of the zone, make the tag-up and re-attack, but tonight we didn't do it very often." Washington Capitals forward Eric Fehr on tonight's game… "There wasn't one part of the game tonight that was good enough - 5-on-5, power play, penalty kill, everything. It looked like we weren't prepared. We talked about everything, but it looked more like a preseason game for us than a game that we needed to win to make the playoffs." Washington Capitals defenseman Karl Alzner on why the desire to win isn't translating to ice… "It's frustrating to see it, for all of us. We are all asking ourselves the exact same question and everybody wants to do it and be the guy, sometimes it's being 20 guys and not just the guy, and maybe that has something to do with it. I am not too sure. It's frustrating. Obviously, we are not happy with the way that we have been playing. Terrible time to go on a skid." Washington Capitals defenseman Karl Alzner on why the Capitals can't keep it simple… "It goes back to wanting to be 'the guy.' You want to make the nice play to spark the team, to get a goal or make the nice pass to break us out. Very few teams can do that; it's about playing simple, and it's not always fun to play that way, and we sure haven't helped ourselves by us all being irresponsible on the ice with the puck in all three zones. We've got to be smarter and we've got to make simple plays." Dallas Stars head coach Lindy Ruff on this game becoming a blowout in the third period… "Once we got midway through the third, you start to feel pretty good about where you're at. It was a pretty tight game in the first period, and we were able to put one away. I think as soon as we got two [goals], it forced them a little out of their element and to take some chances." Dallas Stars head coach Lindy Ruff on the team getting some depth scoring tonight… "It takes a lot of pressure off the team because if you're not scoring, you've got to defend hard. It's great to see the puck go in the net. We made some "You look at last game and [Stars forward Cody Eakin]'s line has been playing pretty great…I think it probably takes a little bit of weight off Jamie [Benn] and Tyler's [Seguin] shoulders, but they got us going tonight, and I think everyone tries to contribute as much as they can, and I think when you go into a playoff push that is what makes a difference." Dallas Stars forward Alex Chiasson on goaltender Kari Lehtonen… "I think he made some big saves in the second period, and even in the third [period] there he robbed them a couple times. I think we know this year, he's our best player, and he makes the difference." Dallas Stars goaltender Kari Lehtonen on his play tonight and whether he's up for the challenge in the last few games… "I just try to stay extra calm and wait for the players to make their moves. I'm fortunate to have a few good games in a row here and hopefully I can keep it going…It's fun playing when there's a lot on the line and every game is so huge. We just have to keep taking this one game at a time and try to win the next one." Dallas Morning News LOADED: 04.02.2014 732199 Dallas Stars Cody Eakin runs into some old friends, plays against organization that drafted him MIKE HEIKA Published: 01 April 2014 09:04 PM Updated: 01 April 2014 10:34 PM Stars center Cody Eakin was drafted 85th overall by Washington in 2009 and played both in the AHL and NHL for Washington. He said getting the rare chance to play against his old team was a treat. ―It's fun, I still know a lot of guys over there,‖ said Eakin, who has 34 points (16 goals, 18 assists) in 73 games with the Stars. ―I‘ll be focused on winning the game, but it‘s fun to play in this building.‖ Eakin played 30 games for the Capitals before being traded to the Stars for Mike Ribeiro and the 54th overall pick in 2012. Briefly: Erik Cole (upper body) and Aaron Rome (lower body) are both on the trip. Cole, who has missed six games, skated in a red jersey Tuesday morning. Ruff sais he might be ready by the end of the road trip. … Flower Mound product Chris Brown played for Washington on Tuesday. It was his 16th NHL game. Brown, 23, played at the University of Michigan, was drafted by the Phoenix Coyotes and was traded to Washington this year. … Sergei Gonchar is four points shy of 800 for his career. Dallas Morning News LOADED: 04.02.2014 732200 Dallas Stars "We had a lot of 2-on-1s, and we even had a 2-on-0," Whitney said. "Not often do you see that many scoring chances." Stars dominant Capitals to win battle of ninth-place teams fighting for playoff spots Ovechkin last had a 5-on-5 point on Feb. 27, a streak of 16 games. Nicklas Backstrom, who leads the teams in points, is also without a 5-on-5 goal since Feb. 27. Associated Press Multiple players in the Capitals locker room faulted the team's lack of urgency. Published: 01 April 2014 06:10 PM Updated: 01 April 2014 10:27 PM ASHINGTON (AP) — The Dallas Stars and Washington Capitals both began the game one point away from a playoff spot. The Stars? They played like a team determined to get to there for the first time since 2008. The Capitals? They looked like a group tired of having their yearly routines disrupted by such a trivial thing as postseason hockey. It was no contest. The Stars' 5-0 win over the Capitals on Tuesday night was a victory of confidence over embarrassment. Dallas has won five of six, outscoring opponents 16-5 over their last three games. "It's a big obstacle," said Ray Whitney, who scored in the second period. "It's been, what, five years now? ... We're no different than anybody else who's been out for a while. We want to get in pretty bad." The victory, at least for a few hours, moved the Stars ahead of the Phoenix Coyotes for the final postseason berth in the Western Conference. The Coyotes hosted Winnipeg later Tuesday. "It's scoreboard-watching time," Whitney said. "We'll be flying to Carolina tonight, but we'll be watching the game and the score. As soon as we land everybody will check their phones." The Capitals will probably want to shut off their phones for a while. They were booed heavily in their home rink, particularly after an abysmal stretch in the second period in which they allowed several odd-man rushes, took a slashing penalty and gave up two goals in 34 seconds. "If I was a fan, I'd be booing us right now," said goaltender Braden Holtby, who relieved Jaroslav Halak in the second period after Dallas' third goal. "A playoff race like we're in? To lose 5-0, it's awful. There's no words for it." The Capitals began their run of playoff seasons in 2008. Like Dallas, they started the day as a ninth-place team, but they ended up dropping a spot to 10th. They would lose a tiebreaker against every team contending for the final postseason spots in the Eastern Conference. They have lost four straight and were shut out for the seventh time this season. Alex Ovechkin — the league's leading goal-scorer — hasn't scored a 5-on-5 goal in more than a month. "If somehow we make the playoffs playing like this, who are we kidding?" coach Adam Oates said. "We have to figure out a way to get better. We have to stick together." Tyler Seguin scored his 33rd goal, Dustin Jeffrey got his first two of the season, and Whitney and Ryan Garbutt also scored for the Stars. Alex Chiasson had three assists, and Kari Lehtonen made 35 saves for his fourth shutout. After over-relying on Seguin and Jamie Benn to carry the scoring load, Dallas suddenly has been getting points from seemingly everyone. "If you look at our top line, I think a lot of teams are focusing on that. They're getting the harder matchups," said Jeffrey, who has been back and forth to the minors after being claimed off waivers in November. "We have to be able to score up and down our lineup." Seguin redirected Benn's wrister from the left circle in the first period, then there were Capitals miscues aplenty in the second, with the Stars taking advantage. Alex Goligoski's long pass sprang a 2-on-0 break for Whitney's goal. Jeffrey scored shortly afterward, then again in the third. Garbutt capped the scoring with a short-handed goal on a breakaway. "It can't be justified. It's terrible. ... It's like we expect the next guy to make the play," defenseman Karl Alzner said. "It's been kind of off and on like that for a lot of the season, and we've got away with it at times. It clearly hasn't worked the last little bit, and you pay for it in the end." Notes: D Patrik Nemeth made his NHL debut for the Stars as D Aaron Rome sat out with an injury. . Capitals D Patrick Wey sat out after taking an uppercut in a fight that forced him out of Saturday's loss at Nashville. Washington RW Dustin Penner (illness) and D Jack Hillen (upper-body injury) also missed the game. ... Capitals F Chris Brown played after getting called up from the AHL earlier in the day. Dallas Morning News LOADED: 04.02.2014 732201 Dallas Stars Stars coach Lindy Ruff tries to stop Kevin Connauton from getting frustrated as Patrik Nemeth replaces him in lineup MIKE HEIKA Published: 01 April 2014 08:46 PM Updated: 01 April 2014 10:34 PM WASHINGTON — Patrik Nemeth was called up Monday and made his NHL debut Tuesday, a sign that there could be good things ahead for the 22-year-old defenseman. Nemeth, who has battled injuries the last two seasons, has been one of the Texas Stars‘ more reliable defenders when healthy, and Dallas decided he‘s the perfect fit for the team with Aaron Rome battling lower body injuries again. ―He‘s played a solid game down in Austin, and he‘s done a really nice job defending, so we‘re hoping he can step in and be that same guy here,‖ Stars coach Lindy Ruff said. ―Where we‘re playing Nemeth is more of a role where we want someone who is sound defensively. We don‘t need a lot of high risk, we really don‘t need a lot of offense out of that slot.‖ Nemeth broke his foot earlier in the season, but is plus-13 in 18 games since his returning in February. His 6-3, 235-pound frame is exactly what the Stars need right now. While Kevin Connauton has been on the Stars‘ roster and has played 35 games, registering a goal and seven assists, the 24-year-old is more of a skilled defenseman, Ruff said. Connauton has been a healthy scratch in six of seven games, and Ruff said he has talked about the choices he has made with Connauton. ―I‘ve talked to Kevin and it is frustrating,‖ Ruff said. ―I really think that Kevin has come a ways this year and still has a ways to go. I think his strength is more on the offensive side of it, where Nemeth‘s is more on the defensive side, and we‘re turning a little bit more in that direction. I asked Kevin not to get frustrated, because I do see improvement. I just told him that I know it‘s frustrating but I think you can get there, you‘re just a little ways away yet.‖ Nemeth, who was drafted 41st overall in 2010 out of Sweden, said he was excited about his NHL debut. ―I‘ve been looking forward to this for a long time, so it‘s going to be a lot of fun. I watch (the NHL) every chance I get, so it‘s exciting.‖ Nemeth said the injuries have slowed his progress (he played just 47 games in the AHL last season because of a concussion), but that he feels great now and is playing his best hockey. ―That‘s probably been the biggest obstacle, my injuries,‖ he said. ―When I‘ve been healthy, I think I‘ve been playing pretty good. You can‘t be a good hockey player when you‘re injured, but I almost forgot about them now. When you‘re out there now, you just want to play so bad, so I just want to go out and play and have fun.‖ Dallas Morning News LOADED: 04.02.2014 732202 Detroit Red Wings Detroit Red Wings' Mike Babcock reveals the secret to financial success 12:30 PM, April 1, 2014 By Helene St. James In the continuing Free Press series of Detroit Red Wings coach Mike Babcock revealing the secrets of life, today's topic is fiscal health. This past weekend, Babcock spoke on the subject of marriage, saying that the key to a successful one was that "you don't worry about the last one, you don't worry about the next one, you worry about the one you're in." Today, the Red Wings are participating in their annual excursion to the Detroit Economic Club, where Babcock and players will take part in roundtable question-and-answer sessions. Asked whether he would be to blame if the stock market crashes this afternoon, Babcock smiled and revealed another life lesson. "This would be my tip for you, financially," he said. "My father-in-law once said to me, he said, your financial adviser, is he rich? And at the time, no, the guy, he wasn't rich. So he said, 'Why would you let a guy with no money invest your money?' I thought that was the best kind of farmer-type question I'd ever been asked. We go to all these advisers, do they even know what they're doing? I wonder. That's my financial advice." Detroit Free Press LOADED: 04.02.2014 732203 Detroit Red Wings Pavel Datsyuk returning to Detroit Red Wings this week, but which day? 12:07 PM, April 1, 2014 | By Helene St. James Pavel Datsyuk was back to tormenting Detroit Red Wings teammates with his puck-thieving skills — and could be back doing the same to opponents as early as Wednesday. Following a 40-minute practice today at Joe Louis Arena, Datsyuk said he'll be a "game-time decision," against the Boston Bruins on Wednesday (8 p.m., NBCSN). But he also said his conditioning isn't quite where he'd like it to be. Coach Mike Babcock said he had been told that he'll have Datsyuk available Friday, when the Wings host Buffalo. Datsyuk hasn't played since Feb. 27, when the inflammation that has troubled his left knee since December flared beyond endurable pain. Since the Winter Classic on New Year's Day, Datsyuk has played for the Wings four times. He emerged from a three-week shutdown last week, skating on his own and then joining Friday's practice. The time off helped, but pain remains and conditioning is a concern. "Need little bit more time to pick up pace, pick up everything," he said. Asked whether he'd play Wednesday, Datsyuk said, "Tomorrow is tomorrow. See how I feel." Babcock said that "someone told me he's playing Friday. It's up to him. I haven't been involved in those things all year. I spend my time worrying about the players that are playing. "The whole thing to understand is it's not about Pavel one bit. It's about the Red Wings and the guys that have been playing, and we've just got to keep grinding. I don't want to get caught up in that whatsoever. I want to just have us keep on working." The Wings sit in seventh place in the Eastern Conference with seven games remaining in the regular season. They are two points up on eighth-place Columbus, but the Blue Jackets have a game in hand. Detroit Free Press LOADED: 04.02.2014 732204 Detroit Red Wings HoneyBaked hockey: Top-ranked under-16 team boasts NHL-level coaching, potential April 2, 2014 USA Hockey Tier I Youth 16U tournament Where: Cornerstone Community Center, Green Bay, Wis. When: Today through Sunday. Teams: HoneyBaked of Michigan, Central (Conn.) Capitals/Selects Academy, Thunder Hockey, Buffalo Regals, Ohio Blue Jackets, L.A. Jr. Kings, Omaha AAA, St. Louis Blues, Colorado Thunderbirds, Team Wisconsin, Valley Jr. Warriors, Scranton Jr. Knights, Chicago Mission, Chicago Young Americans, Long Island Gulls, Shattuck St. Mary‘s. HoneyBaked roster Forwards PLAYER HT WT Collin Adams 5-8 160 Bruce Chard 5-10 158 Luke Cowan 5-8 154 Cole Gallant 5-10 170 David Keefer 5-9 170 Patrick Khodorenko 5-11 185 Noah LaLonde 5-10 170 Igor Larionov 5-10 151 Mitchell Lewandowski 5-8 157 Michael Pastujov 6-0 180 Nick Pastujov 6-0 190 German Samvel 5-10 189 Defensemen PLAYER HT WT Ryan Bederka 5-10 170 Dan Weaver 5-8 170 Drew Anastos 6-1 165 Nick McKeeby 5-11 170 Mitch Eliot 5-11 160 Nicholas Azar 6-4 205 Goaltenders Pat Peake and Kevin Hatcher, former teammates on the NHL‘s Washington Capitals, coach the team, along with Todd Gardiner. Most of the players — many with notable hockey parents — have been teammates for the past few years and won a national title last year. ―This is the most mature and accountable group I‘ve ever been around,‖ Peake said of this year‘s team. ―The biggest challenge with this team has been keeping them playing for each other. They‘re moving on with their careers and you know they‘re playing for their own position, for Michigan State, for the U.S. program, for this, for that. So you want to make sure the guy next to you gets what you have.‖ Peake said he‘s confident every player on the team will end up playing college hockey or in the Ontario Hockey League. ―This has been the hardest year I‘ve had to coach, simply because of the exposure that these kids have gotten,‖ he said. Not only have they been hearing for a while that they‘re some of the best hockey players at their age group, but they‘ve received interest from some of the top hockey programs known to develop NHL talent. Peake, in his eighth season as a head coach at HoneyBaked, is there to remind them the young players they have a long climb ahead. ―I try to relate that you guys are just good midgets,‖ he said. ―You‘re not even a good junior or college player yet. We gotta keep them grounded. You never want to squash dreams, you want to pump them up, but they have to realize exactly what they have ahead of them.‖ Some of the players are used to seeing their parents deal with media attention. Defenseman Drew Anastos, who is hoping to earn a college scholarship to an Ivy League school, is the son of Michigan State hockey coach Tom Anastos. Forward Igor Larionov II, who recently began skating after being sidelined the past two seasons with injuries, is the son of former Red Wings great Igor Larionov. Goaltender Dylan St. Cyr, who played in five of the six games at the state tournament, is the son of former goaltender Manon Rheaume, the only woman to ever play in an NHL exhibition game. Defenseman Mitch Eliot, one of five players on the team who has already committed to play for Michigan State, is the son of former NHL goaltender and current Wings television analyst Darren Eliot. Defenseman Ryan Bederka and forwards Noah LaLonde and Mitch Lewandowski will join Eliot as part of the MSU recruiting class for 2016. Forward David Keefer has committed to join them in East Lansing in 2017. In addition, Peake said defenseman Nick McKeeby has committed to Western Michigan and defenseman Nick Azar, who also is an outstanding shortstop, has committed to play baseball at Michigan in 2015. Forwards Cole Gallant, Patrick Khodorenko and the Pastujov brothers, Nick and Michael, are mulling several offers from top national programs, including U-M. Khodorenko and Nick Pastujov have committed to play next season at the Ann Arbor-based U.S. National Team Development Program. Eliot and LaLonde also tried out for the NTDP program and are waiting to find out if they‘ll be selected. Dylan St. Cyr 5-7 150 Linemates Lewandowski, Khodorenko and Gallant are the team‘s top scorers. Before the state tournament — the last time the team‘s statistics were totaled — Lewandowski had 47 goals and 53 points for 100 points. Khodorenko had 28 goals and 58 assists for 86 points, and Gallant had 32 goals and 53 assists for 85 points. They might be the most talented collection of hockey players in North America for their age group. Bederka (15 goals, 36 assists, 51 points) and Eliot (15-25-40) led the defensemen in scoring. The HoneyBaked midget minor hockey team has already won a prestigious tournament in Toronto against some of the best competition in Ontario and recently won the state tournament. ―When you put guys together and they know their role, everything clicks and you get it perfect,‖ Lewandowski said. PLAYER HT WT Alec Roye 5-7 141 Now the group heads to Green Bay, Wis., as the top-ranked team in the USA Hockey 16-and-under Tier I national tournament, which runs today through Sunday. Peake said one of the things he likes about coaching these players is their high commitment level, whether at practice or in games. ―It‘s not a glorified babysitting job,‖ he said. ―They all want to get better. It‘s not like some high school baseball coach, where you have some guys that really care and some that can‘t wait to party after practice.‖ These players ultimately want to reach the NHL, a level that Peake reached. He suffered multiple injuries and his career was eventually cut short due to a broken right heel. ―It can be over in one play, just like mine was,‖ Peake said. ―They‘re naïve ... they are kids who think they‘re going to play in the NHL as an 18-year old. The reality is it‘s not going to happen.‖ The HoneyBaked team goes into the national tournament with a 62-6-2 record. Peake expects the top competition will come from Omaha, Team Wisconsin and a Colorado team coached by former Avalanche defenseman Adam Foote. ―They‘re loaded,‖ Omaha AAA hockey coach David Wilkie said of HoneyBaked. ―They‘ve got depth, they play the right way, they‘re skilled, they‘re physical. They‘ve got it all from the goaltender out.‖ Drew Anastos said with the collection of talent on the team, he figures in 10 years a few players will end up making it to the highest level in the sport. ―I think it‘s weird to think kids I‘m playing with now as a teenager I could be watching in the NHL one day,‖ Anastos said. Peake said this is a special group. He has had other teams that were considered special, though, that didn‘t win a national championship. He coached a squad with 1991 birthdates that included five players drafted in the first two rounds of the NHL draft — Cam Fowler, Chris Brown, Drew Shore, Kevin Lynch and Kenny Ryan. ―They‘ll never play on a team this good again, I can promise you that,‖ Peake said of his current team, which is mostly players born in 1998. ―They gotta go out on the right note.‖ Peake would like to go out on top as well, since this could be his last season with the organization. He said he has received job offers in the USHL and OHL and isn‘t sure where he‘ll coach next season. Detroit Free Press LOADED: 04.02.2014 732205 Detroit Red Wings Detroit Red Wings' opponent tonight: Boston Bruins provide tough test in possible playoff preview April 2, 2014 By Helene St. James Tonight: Bruins Matchup: Red Wings (36-26-14) vs. Boston (52-17-6). Face-off: 8, Joe Louis Arena. TV/radio: NBCSN; WXYT-AM (1270). Just how committed the Red Wings are to working hard and grinding out games is going to be put to a test against the best. The Boston Bruins lead the race for the Presidents‘ Trophy, presented to the team with the best regular-season record in the NHL. They‘ve got 52 victories — only one of them against the Wings — and rank first in defense and third in offense in the league. ―They don‘t give anything up easy, and you know it‘s going to be a game where it will be close for a while and then it seems like they can pounce on one mistake and end up scoring two goals late and win 5-2,‖ veteran forward Daniel Alfredsson said Tuesday. ―Patience is extremely important against a team like that, in the neutral zone.‖ Alfredsson didn‘t practice Tuesday but said he anticipated playing tonight. There‘s a chance Pavel Datsyuk will play, too, as his comeback from a left knee injury is going in the right direction. Datsyuk said he would see how he feels after the morning skate, but he also said he still lacks pace. Coach Mike Babcock was under the impression Datsyuk won‘t play before Friday, when the Wings host lowly Buffalo, and iterated that no matter what, the focus needs to be on hard work — and that counts double against a team like the Bruins. ―They do it right, so we‘re going to have to do it right,‖ Babcock said. ―We‘re going to have to have unmatched work ethic and have real good detail.‖ The teams last played the night before Thanksgiving, with the Wings winning again after a victory mid-October in Boston. The Bruins haven‘t lost to many teams of late — since dropping two games coming out of the Olympics, Boston is a staggering 15-0-1. In those 16 games the Bruins have allowed just 23 goals. ―They play a little bit different than most teams,‖ Alfredsson said. ―They forecheck hard when they can, but if they don‘t have good pressure, they‘re going to set up in the neutral zone, and they‘re really good at it. And in their end, they‘re tough to get a forecheck on because they use their D really well going from one side to the other, and they kind of want you to commit, and then they throw a cross-ice pass wide and open you up that way. So spot the puck in good areas in their end and then get the forecheck from there, that‘s going to be the key for our success.‖ Detroit Free Press LOADED: 04.02.2014 732206 Detroit Red Wings Chris Ilitch, Ken Holland discuss Red Wings at Detroit Economic Club lunch Gregg Krupa Detroit — The ninth annual Red Wings' lunch with the Detroit Economic Club raised the specter of eating and socializing with a team that might not make the playoffs for the first time in more than two decades, let alone nine years. But with Red Wings players sitting around at tables and members and the brass up on the dais, the club rested in the top wild card spot in the Eastern Conference at the noon hour and there was considerable confidence, amid bites of chicken, asparagus and potatoes. About 700 people gathered in the Motor City Casino Hotel for the event. Chris Ilitch, the president and chief executive officer of Ilitch Holdings, said that for his parents Mike and Marian Ilitch, who were not in attendance, the season feels very much like their early years of ownership. In those days, the Red Wings were scouting Canada and Europe for young talent with which to stock the lineups of a franchise that would win four Stanley Cups, before the likes of Steve Yzerman and Nicklas Lidstrom retired. "To my parents, it feels a lot like the early years, with one exception," Ilitch said, referring to players like Henrik Zetterberg and Pavel Datsyuk, who are injured, and Niklas Kronwall and Jimmy Howard, who remain to lead a young lineup. "We didn't have the great foundation to build on." Ken Holland, general manager of the Wings, said despite the difficulty of the season, the play of lots of young new players from Grand Rapids means the franchise is considerably deeper than at the start of the season. "Injuries are part of our sport," Holland said. "We had a lot of injuries last year, but we were able to play our way into the playoffs. "Probably the difference is, last year Pavs and Z were in the lineup every night." But the effort of the new additions is impressive, Holland said. "Everybody has stepped up and pitched in, to a place where we have an opportunity to make the playoffs in the next few days, if we play well," he said. "We probably feel more positively about our team than we did six months ago, knowing the depth that we have." Detroit News LOADED: 04.02.2014 732207 Detroit Red Wings Red Wings' Pavel Datsyuk aims for Wednesday return …Keep an eye on defenseman Torey Krug (Michigan State) on the Bruins power play. Krug, a Livonia native, leads all rookies with 18 power-play points and is tied with for the assists lead with 12 (with New Jersey‘s Eric Gelinas). ...It‘s also another matchup between the Smith brothers, Brendan Smith and his brother Reilly Smith of the Bruins (19 goals). Ted Kulfan Detroit — Maybe Wednesday, maybe Friday. One of these games coming up, Pavel Datsyuk sounds like he‘s returning to the Red Wings‘ lineup. Datsyuk is going to skate Wednesday morning and he‘s pointing toward returning later that night against the Boston Bruins. Which came as news Tuesday to coach Mike Babcock, who was was under the impression Datsyuk was shooting for Friday‘s game against Buffalo. Regardless, it sounds like Datsyuk‘s getting closer. He‘s been out of the lineup since Feb. 27 with an inflamed knee, which has bothered him since the Jan. 1 Winter Classic. ―I‘m going to assess him in the game,‖ Babcock said. ―Someone told me he‘s playing Friday.‖ When told Datsyuk aims to return Wednesday, Babcock said he‘s concentrating on players who‘ll be available and doesn‘t want the anticipation for Datsyuk‘s return to get out of hand. ―I haven‘t been involved in those decisions all year,‖ said Babcock, adding it‘s Datsyuk‘s call if he‘s ready. ―I only spend time worrying about the players who are playing. If I hear he‘s playing (Wednesday), I‘ll start worrying about him tomorrow. ―The thing to understand is it‘s not about Pavel one bit. It‘s about the Red Wings and the guys who‘ve been playing. We have to keep grinding. I don‘t want to get caught up in that whatsoever. I want us to keep working.‖ Datsyuk was on the ice for Tuesday‘s practice but largely spent time doing drills and stickhandling on his own. ―Game-time decision, we‘ll see how I feel,‖ said Datsyuk, who met briefly with reporters after Tuesday‘s practice. ―Happy to be back (at practice). I need a little more time to pick up the pace. Datsyuk added he can do more things on the ice than three weeks ago when the team and doctors shut him down to rest the knee. ―I need more time,‖ said Datsyuk at one point, possibly suggesting Friday might be more realistic. ―But games start, short shifts, that helps a lot. ―I have to make sure I am able to help the team. That is important. We‘re in a good race for the playoffs, and that‘s more important. ―They (the team) are playing well.‖ How big would it be to have Datsyuk back? ―It would be huge,‖ forward Daniel Alfredsson said. ―It‘s great to see him out on the ice skating and being part of practices. We feel we‘re playing pretty consistent hockey right now and getting a guy with his experience and his offensive abilities, among other things, will be a big boost.‖ Big, bad Bruins The Bruins have the best record in the league (52-17-6, 110 points) and are a staggering 15-0-1 in the last 16 games. Few teams can match Boston‘s combination of depth, size and skill. ―They seem like a real complete team,‖ goalie Jimmy Howard said. ―They have everything going for them right now. It‘s going to be a tough game.‖ The Bruins rank third on the power play (21.0 percent), eighth on the penalty kill (84.3 percent) and have a nine-game road win streak. ―I don‘t know if the league is really surprised, we all think they have a good team,‖ Babcock said. ―(They‘re) machine-like for sure, the way they have it going. Since the Olympic break, they‘ve been outstanding.‖ Ice chips Alfresdsson didn‘t skate Tuesday, calling it a ―maintenance day,‖ but expects to play against Boston. ―He‘s doing great,‖ Brendan Smith said. ―It‘s impressive watching him, what he‘s done.‖ Detroit News LOADED: 04.02.2014 732208 Detroit Red Wings Red Wings' Gustav Nyquist is a real goal-getter The scoring pace is beyond what it will be, and the scorching 19.6 shooting percentage — nearly one of five of Nyquist‘s shots are goals this season — will cool. But the player, cerebral and calm, is likely to remain a considerable presence in the Red Wings lineup for some time. Gregg Krupa ―I‘m a believer that he‘s going to consistently produce offense,‖ said Jeff Blashill, coach of the Griffins, with whom Nyquist won the AHL championship last season, the Calder Cup. Detroit — It resulted from considerable skill, certainly. It was another important goal for Gustav Nyquist and the Red Wings. It also demonstrated something that may be more consequential in the long run for both. With defenseman Matt Carle committing multiple infractions to try to keep Nyquist from breaking in all alone against the Lightning late in the first period last weekend, the 5-foot-11, 185-pound forward simply persisted. ―Every single level he has played at he‘s been a guy who‘s put up lots of points. Just historically, the guys who have done it all of the way up are the guys who have the chance to continue to produce some points. ―Now that he‘s showing that he can produce at the NHL level, I think he will continue to do that. I do think he will be able to maintain a strong offensive performance over the course of an entire career.‖ The scoring came early for Nyquist. Tough enough, he continued skating toward the net. In his second season with Malmo in the Swedish Under-20 league, he had 11 goals and 20 assists in 24 games. He also scored for Sweden in the 2007 World Junior Championship. Nyquist repeatedly tried to disentangle himself from the increasingly desperate defenseman. The puck slid away as he curled to his right, suddenly free from his captor. Before then, while playing tennis, soccer, hockey and golf as a boy, he learned a lot about the sport from Sven Svensson, who coached Nyquist several years. Regaining possession, the hot-shooting 24-year-old turned to face the net and did what few expected, least of all the Lightning‘s fine goaltender, Ben Bishop. Nyquist let one rip from an extreme angle. Last year, Svensson, a coach for the Limhamn Limeburners Hockey Club, died at a young age of cancer. Since he was drafted in the fourth round, 121st overall, six years ago by the Red Wings, the evaluation of Nyquist is he can be a top-six forward if he stands up to the physical and mental rough and tough stuff in the NHL. His 27th goal was for the highlight reels. It put the Red Wings up by one at a crucial juncture of a critical game, only adding to Nyquist‘s significant contributions during the stretch drive in which he has scored nearly 30 percent of the goals as the Red Wings seek a 23rd consecutive postseason appearance. It also provided more evidence of Nyquist‘s mettle. And his response to all the attention he is receiving around the league in recent weeks shows him persevering on another issue of character: Being the same person regardless of events. ―The pucks are going in, right now,‖ said Nyquist, whom Red Wings coach Mike Babcock describes as ―wise beyond his years.‖ ―There‘s been a lot of media and stuff around, and I try just to not think about it,‖ Nyquist said. ―There‘s so many great leaders in this room and people I look up to and see how they handle this stuff day in and day out, and it‘s the first time probably I‘ve gotten so much attention. And it‘s a matter of not getting too high or too low, just keeping it on an easy level and keep going. ―We‘ve got a job to do here as a team and that‘s to make the playoffs. It doesn‘t matter who scores out there, as long as the team wins. That‘s most important.‖ More than talent Nyquist is smart about hockey and life. He is talented, and trained in Sweden to always consider that hockey is a 200-foot game played at both ends of the rink and all along the way in between. He also is determined, showing enough guts to erase fears size might keep him from performing at the level of a top-six forward and tempt the thought he can push the limit as Henrik Zetterberg and Pavel Datsyuk age. The son of a surgeon and an architect, Nyquist was third in his high school class and a dedicated schoolboy athlete. After a particularly great season of college hockey, he was prepared to a state of overly ripe in Grand Rapids. Now, he focuses on working with a bunch of other young guys to propel one of the oldest, proudest franchises in the NHL into the playoffs, while tamping down unrealistic expectations about his performance. ―I think a lot of guys have stepped up with all the injuries,‖ Nyquist said. ―That‘s what we‘ve needed from the young guys, including me. ―It‘s given me more opportunity to play. Obviously, if you play more, you get more comfortable out there. You get a lot more confidence with the puck. And, I think that‘s what‘s happened with a lot of other guys, too.‖ Nyquist, nonetheless, is the outstanding performer. ―I‘ve been very fortunate with a lot of good coaches over the years, but he had one of the biggest influences on me,‖ Nyquist said. ―He meant a lot to me and some of my friends that are still in Sweden, and we all have remained in touch. ―It was very sad.‖ Goal-oriented Nyquist was born in Halmstad and raised in Malmo, the third largest city in Sweden. His parents, Eva and Fredrik, stressed education. After playing for Malmo club, he decided to leave Sweden, where college and hockey do not mix, to attend Maine on a hockey scholarship and study economics. Nyquist‘s sister, Caroline, works for a major energy company in Sweden and his brother, Oscar, plays hockey for Limhamn after a couple seasons for Wilkes-Barre Scranton in the Atlantic Junior Hockey League. The hockey continued working out for Nyquist. He led Maine in scoring all three years he attended the school. As a sophomore, he had 19 goals and 42 assists for 61 points in 39 games, leading the nation in scoring. Nyquist was named a finalist for the Hobey Baker Award. During the 2010-11 season, he received a tryout contract from the Griffins and immediately looked comfortable, garnering four points in eight games. In 2011-12, he was the second leading scorer for the Griffins with 22 goals and 58 points in 56 games. He also played in several regular-season games with the Red Wings, and all five playoff games. Last season, despite playing 22 games for the Red Wings, he led the Griffins in scoring with 23 goals and 37 assists for 60 points in 58 games. He appeared in the desperate playoff run and all 14 playoff games for the Red Wings. Nyquist‘s first playoff goal beat the Ducks in Anaheim to even the opening round series 1-1. He also scored the first goal of Game 3 against the Blackhawks in the next round. This season, he began the year in Grand Rapids again while the Red Wings worked to clear cap space. Most of the clearing came through injuries and the reserve list. The Red Wings currently pay Nyquist $1.9 million and have him under contract for the same next season, the last of his two-year deal. From March 17-24, he led all players with six goals while tying for the NHL lead with seven points, as the Red Wings garnered seven out of a possible eight points and utterly rejuvenate their playoff hopes. ―We always knew he was a good player,‖ Zetterberg said. ―The situation we had at the beginning of the year when he went down, he played well in Grand Rapids and as soon as he came up he showed where he belonged and just kept going. ―Not a lot of things really faze him.‖ Playoff push As the Red Wings continue to mount a stretch drive for the playoffs against the seemingly insurmountable odds, with more than half of the roster including Zetterberg and Datsyuk injured, more than Nyquist‘s offensive performance impresses the Red Wings. It is his pluck. ―If you asked players in our locker room, guys who‘ve played in the NHL, guys who are now American league veterans that are older than Gus, they would tell you they‘re not surprised at all,‖ Blashill said. ―They raved about his character last year and the way he handled himself, both during the times that our season when he as up and down, when we came back in in the playoffs and at the beginning of this year when started with us. They just raved about it.‖ His current coach is impressed, too. ―You know, you never know until these players play here whether they can do it in this league,‖ Babcock said. ―He‘s been a dominant scorer in every league he‘s ever played in. He‘s got great hockey IQ. He seems to be mature beyond his years ―Maybe Gus found out he can shoot the puck. That‘s something we could suggest wouldn‘t be a bad idea, and now he‘s on a roll and he‘s feeling good about himself.‖ For Nyquist, it is all going good, right now. But the important part is making the playoffs, and this season that means him and a lot of other young players must persist in making big contributions. ―We still want to make the playoffs,‖ Nyquist said. ―We‘ve said that as a team, in this group. ―Whatever team we have, even with the number of injuries we‘ve had, we‘ve told ourselves we‘re going to make the playoffs. And then hopefully get some guys back. ―Everybody‘s been doing a great job. It‘s all about winning a game out here.‖ Detroit News LOADED: 04.02.2014 732209 Detroit Red Wings Their youth, the playoff hunt and Gustav Nyquist‘s highlight reel goal: Detroit Red Wings at DEC luncheon Ilitch mentioned Yzerman as well as Nicklas Lidstrom and Tomas Holmstrom. ―And of course we all know those players went on to accomplish great feats,‖ Ilitch said. One audience member asked team coach Mike Babcock about how the "young guns" were able to fill in so well amid the injuries. David Muller on April 01, 2014 at 2:22 PM, updated April 01, 2014 at 5:06 PM ―I don't know if they're filling in, that's an undersell, big time‖ Babcock said. He added. ―To me, they're not filling in. They're NHL players that got an opportunity and they're going to keep that opportunity because they're hungry, and they're too good.‖ DETROIT, MI - With just seven games remaining in the NHL regular season, the Detroit Red Wings have a 23rd-straight playoff appearance in their sights. The team‘s post-season prospects got a boost form back-to-back wins over the weekend and losses by other teams vying for the final spots in the Eastern Conference. Then, fittingly, Babcock gave a business-world comparison for his group‘s apparent determination and drive. With a bout with the league-leading Boston Bruins looming, Red Wings players traded their jerseys and skates for suits and ties and joined team staff Tuesday to speak about a wide range of issues at a Detroit Economic Club luncheon. Michigan Live LOADED: 04.02.2014 Here are some highlights: The playoff hunt The team has coursed a shaky road to get to its current 35 wins and 26 losses, including 14 overtime losses. But with 84 points, the Red Wings lead a pack of six teams competing for two wild-card spots in the Eastern Conference. Anyway, what happened in the last 82 games will matter little once the post season starts. ―Once you get in you throw all the regular season stats away, it‘s a clean slate,‖ said Ken Holland, general manager. But the Red Wings still need to close out the season on a strong note, and the team starts its seven-game stretch with league-leading Boston Bruins coming to the Joe Louis Arena Wednesday. Gustav Nyquist‘s goal versus Tampa Bay Gustav Nyquist scored a highlight-reel worthy goal Sunday against the Tampa Bay Lightning at Joe Louis Arena. His 27th goal of the season, some are calling it one of the best made shots in the NHL this season. Nyquist was asked Tuesday to rank it in terms of his career goals. ―Well I don‘t think I‘ve scored that many goals in my career, so I don‘t have that many to chose from,‖ he said to laughter. Nyquist said he remembers one of the first goals he scored as a Red Wing - one that was assisted by Pavel Datsyuk - as among his favorites. ―But this one was probably one of the best ones too,‖ he said. Brendan Smith faces brother Reilly on Wednesday The Red Wings‘ move to the Eastern Conference this year means defenseman Brendan Smith plays against his brother Reilly, who plays right wing for the Boston Bruins. With the Bruins coming to town Wednesday, an audience member asked elder brother Brendan if he had the chance, would he take out his little bro? ―It depends. He hit me pretty hard this year, and I think I was coughing up blood, so I‘ll get him back for that.‖ Smith said to laughter. He said when the siblings face each other it reminds him of playing casual pond hockey growing up. And he said if he has a chance, he probably will take a shot at him. The team‘s youth Though the team has been saddled with injuries this season, young and rising stars such as Nyquist have helped fuel the Red Wings' march toward yet another post-season appearance. Christopher Ilitch, whose family owns the Red Wings as well as the Detroit Tigers, said his parents, Mike and Marian Ilitch, told him the current team reminds them of the young squad that was playing when they first became team owners in 1982. In 1983, the Detroit Red Wings drafted Steve Yzerman. ―That‘s what separates you in the business world and that‘s what separates you everywhere else,‖ he said. ―And we have a determined group.‖ 732210 Detroit Red Wings Red Wings' Gustav Nyquist named NHL's second star of month after scoring 12 goals in 15 games Ansar Khan on April 01, 2014 at 1:15 PM, updated April 01, 2014 at 2:52 PM DETROIT – The Detroit Red Wings‘ Gustav Nyquist was recognized for a spectacular March Tuesday by being named the NHL‘s second star of the month. Nyquist ranked second in the league with 12 goals and tied for fifth with 18 points in March. He scored at least one goal in nine-of-15 games, including a six-game goal-scoring streak from March 16-25. The 24-year-old leads the league with 22 goals in 27 games since Jan. 20 and leads the club with 27 goals (along with 18 assists) in just 50 games, after starting the season with the AHL Grand Rapids Griffins. Nyquist is currently on a nine-game point streak (11 goals, two assists), the longest by a Red Wing since Dec. 22, 2010-Jan. 10, 2011, when Henrik Zetterberg recorded points in 11 consecutive games (six goals, 10 assists). "I think he‘s really confident and really knows how to play all areas of the ice and not just scoring goals," teammate Daniel Alfredsson said. "He‘s been great at that but I like his work ethic, his attention to details, and just being a young guy who is leading by example for everybody.‖ Nyquist will be facing the NHL‘s No. 1 star for March on Wednesday when the Red Wings host the Boston Bruins and Jarome Iginla. Iginla, 36, led all players with 13 goals, scoring on league-best 31 percent of his shots, to propel the Bruins to a 15-1-1 record during the month and the lead in the overall standings (110 points). He recorded 17 in 17 games. Playing in his first season with the Bruins, Iginla has30 goals and 61 points in 75 games and is tied for third in the league with a plus-34 rating. Claude Giroux of the Philadelphia Flyers in the third star. He led all players with 15 assists and 21 points during the month. Michigan Live LOADED: 04.02.2014 732211 Detroit Red Wings Red Wings expect Pavel Datsyuk to return Friday, but he hasn't ruled out playing on Wednesday Said goaltender Jimmy Howard: ―He‘s one of the best two-way players in the game. We could definitely use him.‖ Alfredsson didn't skate Tuesday but said he will play Wednesday. Here are the lines and defense pairs they practiced with: Johan Franzen-David Legwand-Gustav Nyquist Ansar Khan on April 01, 2014 at 12:20 PM, updated April 01, 2014 at 12:43 PM Tomas Tatar-Riley Sheahan-Tomas Jurco Joakim Andersson-Darren Helm-Todd Bertuzzi (for Alfredsson) Drew Miller-Luke Glendening-Justin Abdelkader DETROIT – Pavel Datsyuk didn‘t rule out the possibility of playing Wednesday, but at the very least, he should be back in the lineup on Friday. Niklas Kronwall-Brendan Smith Kyle Quincey-Danny DeKeyser That is Detroit Red Wings coach Mike Babcock‘s assumption. Brian Lashoff-Jakub Kindl Datsyuk on Tuesday took part in his first full practice with the team in more than a month. He didn‘t participate in line rushes and was skating on his own at one end of the ice during power-play drills Jimmy Howard Datsyuk said his status for Wednesday‘s game against the Boston Bruins at Joe Louis Arena (8 p.m., NBC Sports Network exclusive) will be a game-time decision based on how he feels after the morning skate. Michigan Live LOADED: 04.02.2014 He was encouraged. ―I‘m happy to be back with the team,‖ Datsyuk said. ―I need a little more time to pick up the pace, pick up everything. ―I can do full skates, lots of things that they do that I cannot do before, that‘s why I take three weeks (off).‖ The Red Wings shut down Datsyuk for three weeks on March 5 to give his inflamed left knee some time to heal. He said he still feels pain some days, but added, ―I can handle it.‖ Conditioning is a concern, after not having played since Feb. 27, when he left after the second period of a 6-1 victory in Ottawa. ―You can see, barely move,‖ Datsyuk said. ―I need more time for this one. But one game, short shifts will help a lot.‖ Babcock seems to be preparing as if Datsyuk will return Friday at home against Buffalo. ―I‘m going to assess him in the game,‖ Babcock said. ―Someone told me he‘s playing Friday.‖ Told that Datsyuk hadn‘t ruled out Wednesday, Babcock said, ―I spend my time worrying about the players that are playing, so if I hear he‘s in tomorrow, I‘ll start worrying about him then. ―We‘re going to worry about the ones that are dressed. We‘re not going to spend a whole bunch of time talking about the ones that aren‘t. When they‘re dressing then we‘ll talk about them.‖ Winners of back-to-back games, the Red Wings are focused on preparing for the league-leading Bruins, who are 15-0-1 in their past 16 games. ―The whole thing is to understand it‘s not about Pavel one bit, it‘s about the Red Wings and the guys that are playing and we just got to keep grinding,‖ Babcock said. ―I want to have us keep on working.‖ With seven games remaining and his club battling to earn one of two wild-card playoff spots in the Eastern Conference, Datsyuk feels a sense of urgency to return. ―Make sure I help team, that‘s more important,‖ Datsyuk said. ―We‘re in race to make playoffs. That‘s more important; they‘re playing well.‖ Datsyuk has appeared in only four games since the Jan. 1 Winter Classic. Even at less than 100 percent he could provide a huge lift. ―It‘s great to see him out on the ice skating and being part of practices,‖ Daniel Alfredsson said. ―We feel that we‘re playing pretty consistent hockey right now and getting a guy with his experience and his offensive abilities, among other things, will be a big boost for this team.‖ Datsyuk has 15 goals and 33 points in 39 games. ―He looks good, but it‘s all about how he feels,‖ Justin Abdelkader said. ―He could look good, but if his knee is bothering him … it depends how he feels on the ice, but he looks good.‖ Jonas Gustavsson 732212 Detroit Red Wings City Council to consider agreement for Detroit Red Wings' Joe Louis Arena today David Muller on March 31, 2014 at 7:46 AM, updated March 31, 2014 at 1:20 PM DETROIT, MI – Detroit City Council on Monday morning is to consider a new lease with Olympia Entertainment, the owners of the Detroit Red Wings, for the Joe Louis Arena downtown, where the pro hockey team currently plays. The meeting is at 8:30 a.m. at the Coleman A. Young Municipal Center in downtown Detroit. The new lease is meant to settle outstanding matters between Olympia and the city, as the latter has agreed to transfer 39 properties to the former for a $650 million new arena and entertainment district. That project, revealed in greater detail in June, is slated for a 45-block area of the lower Cass Corridor. The new, 18,000-seat arena and accompanying entertainment district would be funded with a mix of $365.5 million in private investment and an estimated public investment of $284.5 million. Here are key aspects related to the lease currently being considered by the city: The total valuation of the deal to the city, including rent, is $12,187,466. That includes, among other things, $5,175,000 Olympia will pay the city in six equal installments over the next three years. Annual rent is $1 million, offset by property taxes Olympia already paid to the city since July 2010, when the last lease expired. Olympia agrees to pay the city $250,000 for the next two and half years for police and traffic services and to pay insurance costs of about $350,000 a year, beginning last January 1. Olympia will restore 600 unused parking spaces at the city-owned parking garage for a cost of $1.25 million. The lease is retroactive to July 1, 2010 and expires at the end of June 2015. The city then has five one-year renewal options. The earliest a new arena would be built, according to economic development officials, is 2016. Once Olympia‘s lease is up at the Joe Louis Arena, the city agrees to that no events would be held there until it is demolished. On March 25, the Michigan Economic Development Corporation's Michigan Strategic Fund board approved up to $6 million in demolition costs of the Joe Louis Arena. The city would have to reimburse the state funds through tax increment (TIF) financing. The lease, once approved by the city, resolves any outstanding matters Olympia has with the city in regards to the Joe Louis Arena. ‖Claims includes any and all disputes related to Prior Agreements; any and all disputes related to the New Agreements as of the date the New Agreements are signed, and any and all disputes related to the Joe Louis Arena, Cobo Arnea and Joe Louis Parking Garage.‖ the lease says. Michigan Live LOADED: 04.02.2014 732213 Detroit Red Wings Red Wings look to carry momentum into April as they control their own destiny in playoff race Ansar Khan on April 01, 2014 at 6:04 AM, updated April 01, 2014 at 6:16 AM DETROIT – The Detroit Red Wings head into April having regained control of their own playoff destiny by winning back-to-back games over the weekend while getting help from other teams. With seven games remaining, the Red Wings‘ margin for error remains slim. ―We can‘t get complacent,‖ forward Justin Abdelkader said. ―There are big games ahead of us. Columbus is playing really well. We can‘t count on anyone losing any games.‖ After a two-day break, the Red Wings host the league-leading Boston Bruins Wednesday (8 p.m., NBC Sports Network exclusive). The Bruins have opened a nine-point lead in the race for the top spot in the Eastern Conference by going 15-0-1 in their past 16 games. The Red Wings are 2-1-0 vs. Boston, having won the past two meetings. The Red Wings, with 84 points, lead a pack of six teams competing for two wild-card spots in the East. Columbus looks to be their toughest competition. The Blue Jackets have 82 points but have one game in hand and own the first tie-breaker (33 wins in regulation or overtime vs. 30 for Detroit). But the Red Wings just need to stay ahead of Washington (81 points), Toronto (80), New Jersey (79) and Ottawa (78) and they‘ll extend their playoff streak to 23 seasons. ―All the games are big right now,‖ goaltender Jonas Gustavsson said. ―If you look at the standings it‘s tight and it will be tight all the way, so all the points that you can get you‘ve got to grab them. ―We can‘t be satisfied with these two games; we‘ve got to try to improve as a team and battle and we‘ve got to get some more wins.‖ The Red Wings have more regulation/OT wins than the Capitals (25) and Maple Leafs (27). The free-falling Leafs, losers of eight in a row, have the toughest road, with only six games remaining. ―It‘s huge to get four points back-to-back on the weekend,‖ David Legwand said. ―The race is so tight and if we can start gaining some ground and getting some traction we‘ll be all right.‖ Coach Babcock liked his club‘s determination in beating Toronto (4-2) and Tampa Bay (3-2) over the weekend. ―We‘ll come in here, have a good practice (Tuesday) and get ready to play Boston,‖ Babcock said. ―Boston is a machine right now." Datsyuk update: Pavel Datsyuk will practice with the team on Tuesday before it's determined whether he can play on Wednesday or later in the week, general manager Ken Holland said. Michigan Live LOADED: 04.02.2014 732214 Detroit Red Wings Datsyuk takes a step in the right direction, practices with teammates comeback. If he doesn‘t we still have to plug away with the group that we have.‖ Nyquist receives honor Nyquist was named the NHL‘s second star of the month. By Chuck Pleiness, The Macomb Daily Posted: 04/01/14, 5:18 PM EDT | Nyquist has the second most goals in the month (12) and finished tied for fifth with points (18). Nyquist has 11 goals in his past nine games and 22 goals in his past 27 games. And that goes for Pavel Datsyuk as well. Boston‘s Jarome Iginla was the first star, leading all players with 13 goals, scoring on a League-best 31.0 percent of his shots (13-of-42) to power the Bruins to a 15-1-1 record in March and the top spot in the NHL standings (110 points). He recorded 17 points (13 goals, four assists) in 17 games. Datsyuk could return as early as Wednesday against the Boston Bruins, or at the latest by Friday at home against the Buffalo Sabres. Philadelphia‘s Claude Giroux is the third star. He led all players with 15 assists and 21 points during the month. ―I‘m going to assess him in the game,‖ Babcock said after practice Tuesday at Joe Louis Arena. ―I think someone told me he‘s playing Friday, I don‘t know. Macomb Daily LOADED: 04.02.2014 DETROIT >> Wings coach Mike Babcock has said all along he only spends time worrying about the healthy players on his team. ―I thought it was up to him (when he would start playing again),‖ Babcock continued. ―I haven‘t been involved in those things all year. I spend my time worrying about the players that are playing, so if I hear he‘s in tomorrow, I‘ll start worrying about him then.‖ Datsyuk said he‘s a game-time decision for Wednesday‘s game after his first practice with teammates in more than a month. ―I‘m happy to be back with the team,‖ Datsyuk said. ―I need a little more time to pick up the pace, pick up everything.‖ Asked if returning Wednesday was possible Datsyuk said, ―Tomorrow‘s tomorrow. (We‘ll) wait for tomorrow.‖ The Wings announced they were shutting Datsyuk down for three weeks at the trade deadline to rest his ailing left knee. Last Friday marked that three-week time frame. Datsyuk played for Russia at the Olympics, but has only been able to play in two games with the Wings since returning. He last played on Feb. 27, leaving in the second period of a 6-1 win over Ottawa. ―The whole thing is to understand it‘s not about Pavel one bit, it‘s about the Red Wings and the guys that are playing and we‘ve just got to keep grinding,‖ Babcock said. ―I don‘t want to get caught up in that whatsoever, I want to have us keep on working.‖ Datsyuk, who has missed the last 15 games, has 15 goals and 18 assists in 39 games this season. He‘s played in just four games since the Winter Classic. ―We‘ve got to keep doing what we‘re doing, keep grinding,‖ said Babcock, whose squad is 7-6-2 over its last 15 games without Datsyuk. ―The players that are here, we‘re going to worry about the ones that are dressed. We‘re not going to spend a whole bunch of time talking about the ones that aren‘t. When they‘re dressing, then we‘ll talk about them.‖ Despite not having Datsyuk and Henrik Zetterberg for a good chunk of the season, the Wings still find themselves in the playoff race. They hold down the first wild card spot in the Eastern Conference heading into play Tuesday night. ―To me, (Datsyuk) always looks great,‖ Nyquist said. ―But I don‘t think he feels 100 percent shape-wise or anything like that. But he‘s so good out there, he‘s always good, I think, when he‘s on the ice. ―I‘m sure he wants to see how it feels with a couple full skates, especially conditioning-wise when you‘ve been out for a while, it‘s different to be on the bike here and then do some skates without the team,‖ Nyquist added. ―It‘s going to take some practice to get in game shape again.‖ The Wings have seven games left in the regular season. ―He looks good, but it‘s all about how he feels,‖ Justin Abdelkader said. ―He could look good, but if his knee is bothering him. It depends how he feels on the ice, but he looks good. ―Teams key on him,‖ Abdelkader continued. ―They key on him on the power play and 5-on-5. He‘s usually going to take the best matchup from the (other team‘s) defensemen. He‘s a big part of this team. It‘ll be huge if he can 732215 Detroit Red Wings Pavel Datsyuk could return Wednesday or by Friday at latest By Chuck Pleiness, The Macomb Daily Posted: 04/01/14, 12:21 PM EDT | Updated: 15 secs ago DETROIT >> Wings coach Mike Babcock has said all along he only spends time worrying about the healthy players on his team. And that goes for Pavel Datsyuk as well. Datsyuk could return as early as Wednesday against the Boston Bruins, or at the latest by Friday at home against the Buffalo Sabres. ―I‘m going to assess him in the game,‖ Babcock said after practice Tuesday at Joe Louis Arena. ―I think someone told me he‘s playing Friday, I don‘t know. ―I thought it was up to him (when he would start playing again),‖ Babcock continued. ―I haven‘t been involved in those things all year. I spend my time worrying about the players that are playing, so if I hear he‘s in tomorrow, I‘ll start worrying about him then.‖ Datsyuk said he‘s a game-time decision for Wednesday‘s game. ―We‘ll see tomorrow how I feel,‖ Datsyuk said. ―It was (my) first full practice with team. I‘m happy to be back with the team. I need a little more time to pick up the pace, pick up everything.‖ Asked if Wednesday was possible Datsyuk said. ―Tomorrow‘s tomorrow. (We‘ll) wait for tomorrow.‖ The Wings announced they were shutting Datsyuk down for three weeks at the trade deadline to rest his ailing left knee. Last Friday marked that three-week timeframe. Datsyuk played for Russia at the Olympics, but has only been able to play in two games with the Wings since returning. He last played on Feb. 27. He‘s missed the last 15 games. ―The whole thing is to understand it‘s not about Pavel one bit, it‘s about the Red Wings and the guys that are playing and we‘ve just got to keep grinding. I don‘t want to get caught up in that whatsoever, I want to have us keep on working. Datsyuk has 15 goals and 18 assists in 39 games this season. ―We‘ve got to keep doing what we‘re doing, keep grinding,‖ Babcock said. ―The players that are here, we‘re going to worry about the ones that are dressed. We‘re not going to spend a whole bunch of time talking about the ones that aren‘t. When they‘re dressing then we‘ll talk about them.‖ Despite not having Datsyuk and Henrik Zetterberg for a good chunk of the season, the Wings still find themselves in the playoff race. They hold down the first wild card spot in the Eastern Conference heading into play Tuesday night. ―To me, he always looks great,‖ Nyquist said of having Datsyuk take part in practice. ―But I don‘t think he feels 100 percent shape-wise or anything like that. But he‘s so good out there, he‘s always good, I think, when he‘s on the ice. ―I‘m sure he wants to see how it feels with a couple full skates, especially conditioning-wise when you‘ve been out for a while, it‘s different to be on the bike here and then do some skates without the team,‖ Nyquist added. ―It‘s going to take some practice to get in game shape again.‖ The Wings have seven games left in the regular season. ―He looks good, but it‘s all about how he feels,‖ Justin Abdelkader said. ―He could look good, but if his knee is bothering him. It depends how he feels on the ice, but he looks good. ―Teams key on him,‖ Abdelkader continued. ―They key on him on the power play and 5-on-5. He‘s usually going to take the best matchup from the (other team‘s) defensemen. He‘s a big part of this team. It‘ll be huge if he can comeback. If he doesn‘t we still have to plug away with the group that we have.‖ Macomb Daily LOADED: 04.02.2014 732216 Edmonton Oilers Ference adds to long list of Oiler injuries with ripped pectoral By Joanne Ireland, Edmonton Journal April 1, 2014 San Jose — Any inclination Andrew Ference had about remaining in the Edmonton Oilers lineup was erased by the results of his MRI. He has a small rip in his pectoral muscle and if he were to continue to play, he would risk suffering a more significant tear. Or, as the medical staff explained it to the Oilers captain, it was akin to a piece of licorice. ―If you‘re pulling it, it gets a hole in it, which is kind of where I‘m at right now,‖ Ference said on Tuesday before going out for a light skate at the SAP Center. ―If you pull a little bit more, it snaps.‖ Ference had been playing with the injury, which occurred when he was jammed up against the boards, but it was just getting worse every time he‘d aggravate the area during games and practices. Once he lifted an opponent‘s stick and realized he was in trouble. Another time, his elbow got jammed in the stanchion. Still, he hasn‘t ruled out a return before the last regular season game is played on April 12, but only if there‘s significant improvement. Luke Gazdic, meanwhile, had been playing with a bad shoulder but was not at risk of further damage so rather than sit on the sidelines and wait for the surgery, he stayed in the lineup until the team headed to San Jose to play the Sharks. Gazdic will have surgery in Cleveland, following the likes of Taylor Hall and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins to the office of the Ohio specialist. Acton gets another shot There were times when Will Acton wondered if he‘d get another shot with the Edmonton Oilers, particularly with so many of his AHL teammates getting called up to fill in the holes in the injury riddled lineup card. But he also knew he had better make the most of his the time with the Oklahoma City Barons. ―I‘d be lying to you if I said that sometimes those thoughts don‘t creep into your mind. It‘s your profession, it‘s something you work for your entire life, but at the same time it‘s important to focus on the task at hand and in OKC we‘re in a playoff push. I had my focus on that,‖ he said before heading out to centre the fourth line. Acton, a free agent off-season acquisition, made the Oilers opening day roster and played his first 23 NHL games before receiving a ticket to the Barons. ―Going down to OKC, it was important to work on the execution of some skills,‖ he continued. ―It was just a general approach: confidence, just being able to execute the little plays that get the puck down the ice and gain momentum for your team. That‘s where I think I fit in, and down in OKC you have more opportunity to do those things. I think I‘m better prepared. ―You never know how many opportunities you‘re going to have at it, so it‘s important to make the most of them.‖ Edmonton Journal: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732217 Edmonton Oilers Sharks bounce back to edge Oilers By Joanne Ireland, Edmonton JournalApril 1, 2014 11:42 PM SAN JOSE — The lineup was patched together with call-ups from the farm team and with whatever players were still standing in the Edmonton Oilers room.Will Acton arrived from the Oklahoma City Barons for Tuesday‘s game against the mighty San Jose Sharks, defenceman Philip Larsen moved up to the wing, the lines were readjusted, yet somehow, the Oilers managed to stick around the game until the final 10 minutes of a game they would eventually lose 5-4. With Nail Yakupov, Andrew Ference, Luke Gazdic, Ryan Jones and Jesse Jonesuu all unlikely to return before the season ends, this is how the team will limp into the off-season: short-handed and short on the kind of purpose that propels playoff contenders. ―We‘re all struggling with the fact we‘re 29th and not in the spot we want to be. We just have to stay as positive as we can,‖ said Taylor Hall, who wristed a power-play goal past Antti Niemi at 12:34 of the opening period, tying the game 1-1. ―I think it‘s safe to say this has been the toughest year out of the four I‘ve faced — just with the expectations we had coming in and the way that we‘ve played has let everyone, including ourselves, down.‖ The Oilers, who will go straight into another game against another team prepping for the playoffs, surrendered the game‘s first goal just three minutes after the puck had dropped. Andrew Desjardins, left unchecked in the slot, banged the rebound of a Tyler Kennedy shot past Ben Scrivens. Late in the period, Anton Lander was schooled by Joe Thornton in the faceoff circle, setting up Dan Boyle‘s 11th goal of the season. Tommy Wengels put a power play rebound past Scrivens in the second to make it 3-1, but the Oilers mustered some pushback against a team that has had its struggles against the league‘s bottom tier teams. Of the 14 games the Sharks have lost since Jan. 1, seven have been against the teams now residing in the last seven spots in the standings. That tally includes one loss to the Oilers, two to the Calgary Flames, and another to the 30th place Buffalo Sabres. ―When you look at the names on the backs (of the jerseys), there‘s certainly not a lot of experience,‖ said Oilers head coach Dallas Eakins, whose team will play the Anaheim Ducks Wednesday then wrap up their final road trip of the season against the Phoenix Coyotes on Friday. ―We have guys playing out of position, guys who are going to end up playing more minutes than they normally would, but with injuries comes opportunities. Now it‘s time for players who have said, ―I can play more for you, I need a chance.‘ Well, here it is. Let‘s see what you do with it.‖ What the Oilers did do at the SAP Center was get a lift from Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, who snapped in his 17th of the season, his first of the game. After scoring just once in his previous 21 games, he scored twice against the Sharks. Just 38 seconds after his first, Jordan Eberle broke up the wing and sent a centring pass that hit the Sharks‘ Justin Braun on its way into the net erasing the Sharks two-goal lead. Midway through the third, Joe Pavelski, with a nifty flick of his skate, kicked the puck over to Joe Thornton, who then put it on the stick of Brent Burns. Patrick Marleau then wasted no time converting a Sharks power play into a 5-4 advantage. ―It‘s tough when there‘s not much to play for except to spoil things for other teams,‖ said Eberle. ―It has been really tough. It‘s worn on all of us, but we still have six games left to try to finish as strong as we can. That‘s all you can really do. ―It‘s been the toughest one (I‘ve played through) so far but we still have an opportunity to feel good about ourselves.‖ The Oilers, now 26-41-9 with six games left to play, are 5-3-2 in their last 10 road games. The Sharks are a commanding 27-6-5 on home ice. ―Going into next year, it‘s hard to give some expectations because we‘ve lowered them this year,‖ Hall said. ―It‘s going to interesting to see what happens, but I think we‘re all committed to finish as strong as we can.‖ Edmonton Journal: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732218 Edmonton Oilers Oilers drop 5-4 decision to Sharks Robert Tychkowski First posted: Tuesday, April 01, 2014 11:23 PM MDT | Updated: Tuesday, April 01, 2014 11:32 PM MDT SAN JOSE — No matter how it ends, this is still the most disappointing season in Edmonton Oilers history. They just don‘t want the end to be as ugly as the start. And it showed. With nothing left to play for down the stretch but to avoid seven more beatings, the Oilers fought like it meant something Tuesday in a stirring battle with the San Jose Sharks. The Sharks still won, like teams with 105 points are supposed to do against teams with 61, when Brent Burns and Patrick Marleau scored a couple of quick ones midway through the third period before an empty netter in the final moments capped the 6-4 win, but Edmonton‘s spirit didn‘t go unnoticed. The Oilers had a chance to check out, trailing 3-1 midway through the second, but they stayed and fought instead, getting up off the canvas to score three straight goals to take a brief lead. The line of Ryan Nugent Hopkins (two goals, two assists), Taylor Hall (one goal. two assists) and Jordan Eberle (one goal, two assists) spearheaded the effort, combined for a 10-point night. Eberle knows that these final games aren‘t going to change much, but he does know that rolling over will only make it worse. ―Just based on coming into the year, the expectation we had on us, and the way the last few of games had gone, it has been really tough, it‘s worn on all of us,‖ he said. ―That being said, we still have six games left to try and finish as strong as we can. That‘s all you can really do. ―It‘s been the toughest year so far, but looking forward we still have an opportunity to feel good about ourselves.‖ There hasn‘t been anything to feel good about here for eight years - 25th, 19th, 21st, 30th, 30th, 29th, 24th and 29th if you‘re scoring at home - but this season is the worst. Hall hasn‘t even been here for all of it but admits he can‘t think of anything more disappointing than what was supposed to be the fourth year of the rebuild. ―I think it‘s safe to say that this has been the toughest year out of the four that I‘ve been here for sure,‖ he said. ―Just with the expectations we had coming into the year and the way that we‘ve played has kind of let everyone, including ourselves, down. It‘s been a tough year for everyone involved. ―Going into next year it‘s kind of hard to give expectations because we‘ve kind of lowered them this year, but I think we‘re all committed to finishing this season as strong as we can.‖ Things were looking pretty bleak for a while there. The Oilers had been outscored 21-4 in losing four of their previous five (3-1, 8-1, 5-2, 5-0) and were outshot 51-23 in the only win. And on top of the losses, they‘ve been bleeding players, with Ryan Jones, Luke Gazdic, Nail Yakupov, Jesse Joensuu and Andrew Ference falling out of the mix. They‘ve got a handful of guys called up from Oklahoma City, they‘ve got players playing ahead of where they should be on the depth chart, they‘ve got defencemen playing wing and they delivered a game like that against the Sharks. It doesn‘t change the year, but good on ‗em. ―No one‘s going to feel sorry for us,‖ said head coach Dallas Eakins. ―If you look at the names on the backs it‘s certainly not a lot of experience. We‘ve got guys playing out of position, guys who are having to play more minutes than they normally would. But with injuries comes opportunity. Now it‘s time for players who‘ve said ‗I can play more for you, I need a chance.‖ Here it is, let‘s see what you can do.‖ Edmonton Sun: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732219 Edmonton Oilers Oilers injuries a concern Robert Tychkowski First posted: Tuesday, April 01, 2014 09:59 PM MDT | Updated: Tuesday, April 01, 2014 10:06 PM MDT SAN JOSE - At this stage of the season almost any injury is a season-ending injury, but Andrew Ference isn‘t giving up hope that he‘ll be back before the Edmonton Oilers are packing up their bags for the summer. The 35-year-old captain, who hasn‘t played since his overtime winner against the Anaheim Ducks last week, is trying to wait out a partially torn pectoral muscle, but time is running out. ―This road trip is just let it get some rest and hopefully feel better by the end of the week,‖ said Ference, who accompanied the team on its three-game California-Arizona road trip. ―Then we‘ll re-assess it.‖ He says it‘s not an issue of unbearable pain, but rather the risk of a full tear, which takes forever to recover from and would sabatoge his off-season training. ―It‘s uncomfortable, but the cut off point is having more danger to do something worse. If I can get out of the woods where it‘s not as risk to do something, I‘ll play for sure. That‘s kind of the doctor‘s call.‖ He‘s been playing hurt for several games after being running into the boards awkwardly March 18 against Nashville. ―It just kind of kept getting worse every time something happened in the games or practices that followed. Dallas (Eakins) finally said let‘s get a picture and see what‘s going on here, make sure that it‘s not something that could turn into something really bad.‖ It was. ―The trainers gave the analogy of a piece of licorice, if you‘re pulling it and it gets that little hole in it, that‘s kind of where I‘m at right now. Pull a little bit more and it snaps. So we‘ll let it scar up a little bit and see.‖ FORWARD PROGRESS? - With the Oilers losing Ryan Jones and Luke Gazdic to season-ending knee and shoulder injuries, they‘ve had to call Will Acton up from Oklahoma City and move Philip Larsen from the blueline to the wing. ―You have to ask the coaches why they chose me, I don‘t know to be honest with you,‖ said Larsen, who‘s glad to help. ―We‘re a little banged up and we need some guys up front. It‘s fun, it‘s a challenge.‖ Playing forward isn‘t entirely foreign to the 24-year-old Swede, though. ―I played centre until I was 16,‖ he said. ―You just have to think a little bit when you haven‘t played forward in a little while.‖ WHERE THERE‘S A WILL - Acton was hoping to spend the entire season up in Edmonton after making a strong impression in camp and spending the first 29 games here, It didn‘t work out that way, but all he can do now is try again to make another lasting impression. ―It‘s a very fluid industry and you have to be able to roll with things a little bit and go with the flow,‖ he said. ―At the same time you have to come to work every day to improve yourself to get better. You never know how many opportunities you‘re going to have at it so it‘s important to make the most of it.‖ He watched a lot of injuries and a lot of losses pile up in Edmonton, and hoped he‘d get another look long before this, but made sure not to dwell on it. ―I think it‘s been a crazy year for everybody. I‘d be lying to you if I said that sometimes those thoughts don‘t creep into your mind. It‘s your profession, it‘s something you work for your entire life. That‘s natural. But at the same time it‘s important to focus on the task at hand. We were in a playoff push (in OKC) and I kind of had my focus on that. But when the call came it was very exciting.‖ Edmonton Sun: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732220 Edmonton Oilers San Jose Sharks won‘t underestimate the Edmonton Oilers 2 BY ROBERT TYCHKOWSKI ,EDMONTON SUN FIRST POSTED: TUESDAY, APRIL 01, 2014 05:43 PM MDT SAN JOSE - The way things are going right now, it‘s tempting to ask San Jose Sharks coach Todd McLellan how many shorthanded goals he thinks his team will score against Edmonton tonight, or how many goals he thinks they‘ll win by. Taking the Oilers lightly seems like an easy and viable option these days, with the Oilers 29th, slumping and gutted by injuries. But the Sharks have been stung by more than a few bottom-feeders this season, having come up short to the likes of Buffalo (twice), Florida, the Islanders and even once to these very Oilers. And with time running out on their desperate race for first place in the division - meaning they won‘t have to play the Los Angeles Kings in the first round McLellan is hoping his players aren‘t already looking past their lowly visitors tonight. ―I hope our group doesn‘t do that,‖ he said after the Sharks morning skate. ―We‘ve been taught some lessons, I don‘t know if we‘ve learned lessons, but we‘ve been taught, by some of the teams that will not make the playoffs. We haven‘t had much success against those on some nights.‖ McLellan admits the Sharks have a tendency to daydream against teams well below them in the standings. They are 42 points ahead of the Oilers heading into tonight. ―We were sloppy at times,‖ he said. ―We‘d play really well for 15 minutes in a period and go to sleep for five. Details, that‘s what maybe gets away on us a little bit more against some of the non-playoff teams than it does against the Bostons and St. Louises.‖ Like all Oilers opponents, though, McLellan says you have to wary of Edmonton‘s ability to suddenly generate a wave of momentum that‘s hard to stop. They also have a goalie who made 59 saves last time they met. ―We‘ve played (Edmonton) enough and understand them enough to know that they can win a game 6-1 against any team in the league, they have that ability,‖ said McLellan. ―They‘re NHL players, there‘s something about being an NHL player that you‘ve got that pride chromosome in you. They‘re not going anywhere, they‘re going to play and we expect that from them.‖ The Oilers, who‘ve four of their last five games (badly), and had Ryan Jones, Luke Gazdic and Andrew Ference shelved by injury in the last four days, are just trying to make something good happen. ―We‘ve got to be desperate, we have to find a way to stay in games and eliminate that big, head-shaking mistake,‖ said head coach Dallas Eakins. ―It seems like we get into the games and everything is fine and there‘s that hiccup along the way that sends us spiralling sometimes. ―If we can eliminate the big mistake we should be fine.‖ Edmonton Sun: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732221 Florida Panthers Injuries plague Florida Panthers early in loss to New York Islanders By George Richards Panthers coach Peter Horachek was thinking he may have to start Tuesday‘s game down a forward. Turns out he was without Brad Boyes for much of Florida‘s 4-2 loss to the host Islanders. Scottie Upshall and Brad Boyes were both game time decisions because of various injuries. Both played in Florida‘s final road game of the season, although both left in the first period — with Upshall returning in the second. Boyes‘ sore back tightened up forcing him to leave the game for good with 7:55 left in the first period after five shifts. Upshall was knocked out by a big hit from Matt Carkner late in the period. Upshall got hit in the face while skating up the ice and hit the deck hard. Upshall remained flat on the ice for a few minutes as he was attended to by head athletic trainer Dave Zenobi and would later slowly be helped off the ice by Zenobi. Horachek, the initial fear was Upshall broke his jaw. He returned midway through the second period and finished the game. ―Losing guys right off the bat puts you behind from the start because you‘re mixing and matching,‖ Horachek said. ―That put us a little bit behind the 8-ball but other guys went out and had opportunities. It‘s not an easy situation.‖ Upshall didn‘t comment on the incident as he headed to the training room. ―Sorry guys, have to go put ice on my jaw,‘‘ he said. The nasty hit led Erik Gudbranson to fight Carkner as Zenobi was tending to Upshall a few feet away. Carkner was given two minutes for high-sticking Upshall, but because it was determined Gudbranson initiated the fight, he was penalized as well and there was no power-play chance. Carkner would later fight Krys Barch as well. Florida got off to a rare good start Tuesday. Defenseman Jonathan Racine made quite an impression in his first NHL start, hammering Cal Clutterbuck with a big hit that was called interference 42 seconds in. The Panthers, for only the fourth time in their history, got a shorthanded goal for the second game in a row as Quinton Howden picked the pocket of Frans Nielsen and raced down the ice, beating Evgeni Nabokov with a wrister. That was about the it for Florida highlights as the Islanders scored the next four goals before Brandon Pirri scored with 3.9 seconds left. New York tied it with a Travis Hamonic shot from 50 feet out with seven seconds left on the power play 45 seconds after Howden scored. After being deadlocked at 1 for some time, the Islanders added a pair of goals in the second and never looked back. Scott Clemmensen, likely making his final appearance with the Panthers, played well at times and didn‘t get much help. Florida was being outshot 28-13 by the end of the second period and ended up at a 40-22 disadvantage. ―Playing in the NHL is a privilege and playing for the Panthers was just that,‖ said Clemmensen, who could return to Florida‘s minor league team in San Antonio in the coming days. ―I played with a tremendous amount of guys over my five years and I don‘t know what‘s going to happen in the future. I‘m taking it one day at a time and appreciating everything. I‘m taking it all in. Regardless of what happens, I‘ll look back and know I laid it all on the line. I‘ll have no regrets.‖ This and That • The Panthers made two roster moves but only used one. Although Racine made his NHL debut by filling in for Ed Jovanovski, Bobby Butler was scratched. Racine apparently heard he was joining the Panthers on Sunday so he was able to get some friends and family to the New York area. ―I tried to play hard, play my game and do my best on the ice,‖ Racine, 20, said. ―I was so happy to get the call. I think I did a very good job for my first game.‖ Florida expected either Upshall [lower body] or Boyes [back] to miss Tuesday‘s game but both decided to play after warmups so Butler watched. He could play Friday if Boyes is out. • The Panthers will take Wednesday off as it appears the team will have been stuck on Long Island Tuesday night because of a problem with its chartered plane. Miami Herald LOADED: 04.02.2014 732222 Florida Panthers SCOTT CLEMMENSEN: Playing in the NHL and for the Panthers was a 'Privilege' Posted by George Richards UNIONDALE, N.Y. -- Scott Clemmensen likely made his final appearance with the Panthers in Tuesday's 4-2 loss to the Islanders. Clemmensen played well at times and didn't get much help. Florida was being outshot 28-13 by the end of the second period and ended up at a 40-22 disadvantage. "Playing in the NHL is a privilege and playing for the Panthers was just that,'' said Clemmensen, who could return to Florida's minor league team in San Antonio in the coming days. "I played with a tremendous amount of guys over my five years and I don't know what's going to happen in the future. I'm taking it one day at a time and appreciating everything. I'm taking it all in. Regardless of what happens, I'll look back and know I laid it all on the line. I'll have no regrets.'' Miami Herald LOADED: 04.02.2014 732223 Florida Panthers END OF THE ROAD: Panthers Lose Final Road Game of 2013-14 to Islanders ... Upshall Leaves and Returns Posted by George Richards UNIONDALE, N.Y. -- Peter Horachek was thinking he may have to start Tuesday's game down a forward. Turns out he was without Brad Boyes for much of Florida's 4-2 loss to the host Islanders. Scottie Upshall and Brad Boyes were both game time decisions because of various injuries. Both played in Florida's final road game of the season, although both left in the first period -- with Upshall returning in the second. Boyes' sore back tightened up forcing him to leave the game for good with 7:55 left in the first period after five shifts. Upshall was knocked out by a big hit from Matt Carkner late in the period. Upshall got hit in the face while skating up the ice and hit the deck hard. Upshall remained flat on the ice for a few minutes as he was attended to by head athletic trainer Dave Zenobi and would later slowly be helped off the ice by Zenobi. According to coach Peter Horachek, the initial fear was Upshall broke his jaw. He returned midway through the second period and finished the game. "Losing guys right off the bat puts you behind from the start because you're mixing and matching,'' Horachek said. "That put us a little bit behind the 8-ball but other guys went out and had opportunities. It's not an easy situation.'' Upshall didn't comment on the incident as he headed to the training room. "Sorry guys, have to go put ice on my jaw,'' he said. The nasty hit led Erik Gudbranson to fight Carkner as Zenobi was tending to Upshall a few feet away. Carkner was given two minutes for high-sticking Upshall, but because it was determined Gudbranson initiated the fight, he was penalized as well and there was no power play chance. Carkner would later fight Krys Barch as well. Florida got off to a rare good start Tuesday. Defenseman Jonathan Racine made quite an impression in his first NHL start, hammering Cal Clutterbuck with a big hit that was called interference 42 seconds in. The Panthers, for only the fourth time in their history, got a shorthanded goal for the second straight game as Quinton Howden picked the pocket of Frans Nielsen and raced down the ice, beating Evgeni Nabokov with a wrister. That was about the it for Florida highlights as the Islanders scored the next four goals before Brandon Pirri scored with 3.9 seconds left. New York tied it with a Travis Hamonic shot from 50 feet out with seven seconds left on the power play 45 seconds after Howden scored. After being deadlocked at 1 for some time, the Islanders added a pair of goals in the second and never looked back. -- The Panthers made two roster moves but only used one. Although Racine made his NHL debut by filling in for Ed Jovanovski, Bobby Butler was scratched. Racine apparently heard he was joining the Panthers on Sunday so he was able to get some friends and family to the New York area. "I tried to play hard, play my game and do my best on the ice,'' Racine, 20, said. "I was so happy to get the call. I think I did a very good job for my first game.'' Florida expected either Upshall [lower body] or Boyes [back] to miss Tuesday's game but both decided to play after warmups so Butler watched. He could play Friday if Boyes is out. -- The Panthers will take Wednesday off as it appears the team will have been stuck in New York on Tuesday night. The team was planning on staying on Long Island because of a problem with its charter plane. -- Florida ends the 2013-14 season 13-25-3 away from Sunrise. Miami Herald LOADED: 04.02.2014 732224 Florida Panthers End of the road as Panthers fall 4-2 to Islanders By Harvey Fialkov, Sun Sentinel 10:50 PM EDT, April 1, 2014 With playoff hopes on the line the Panthers and Islanders battled it out for Eastern Conference supremacy Tuesday night at a packed, ultramodern Nassau Coliseum. April fools. The sad reality was that about 18 players from both sides could've qualified for the Panthers' preseason rookie tournament at their Coral Springs training facility. While 22 teams are either vying for a remaining playoff berth or preparing for the postseason, the only thing on the line for players from these two Eastern Conference bottom feeders is the mutual incentive to avoid the unemployment line next year. And of course, a higher draft pick. With most of the apathetic Islanders fans opting to stay home to watch the Yankees season-opener, rather than show up at antiquated Nassau Coliseum, the young, injury-wracked Panthers took another 4-2 whipping to end their road record at 13-25-3. The Panthers' 25 losses on the road without a point are the most in franchise history, eclipsing the 23 lost in the 2005-06 and 2010-11 seasons. "Midway through the season we tried to prove ourselves and did that quite a bit,'' said rookie center Nick Bjugstad, who was demoted to the third line on Monday and again Tuesday. "As of lately we haven't done that. It's been disappointing. We got five more games to do what we can. "We had some momentum but we let it get away from us.'' The reeling Panthers have lost seven of eight but finish the season series with a 2-1 edge over the lowly Isles, who surprisingly have gone 4-0-1 over their last five games to widen their lead over Florida to eight points for all-important 14th place. The Islanders feature 10 rookies on their roster, while Florida utilized eight players with about one year or less experience, including defenseman Jonathan Racine, the fourth Panther to make his NHL debut this season (Vincent Trocheck, Aleksander Barkov, Garrett Wilson). The 6-foot-2 Racine, 20, filling in for Ed Jovanovski because of the back-to-backs, made an immediate impact – to the head of Isles' winger Colin Clutterbuck to earn his first NHL penalty just 42 seconds into his career. "I wanted to put the pressure off my shoulder,'' said Racine, who had five relatives, including his mother at the game. "That's my style defenseman. I like to hit some guys.'' The ensuing Islanders' power play wrought two goals, one for each side as Panthers rookie forward Quinton Howden stole the puck and streaked past everyone for a breakaway snap-shot past the stick side of goalie Evgeni Nabokov (20 saves) at 1:50 for Florida's second shorthanded tally in two nights. However, just 45 seconds later defenseman Travis Harmonic's wrister from the blue line whizzed past goalie Scott Clemmensen (36 saves) for the Panthers' league-leading 60th power-play goal allowed this season. "We wanted to make sure we weren't sitting behind 3-0,'' Panthers coach Peter Horachek said. "They scored a couple of goals, that had a lot to do with our decision-making.'' Clemmensen, an impending free agent who was recalled from the AHL last week when Roberto Luongo was injured, made his first NHL start in a month. It could be his last game as a Panther with Luongo expected back for the final five games and struggling Dan Ellis as his backup. "Regardless of where I'm at or who I'm playing for I'll try my hardest and when the summer comes whatever happens happens, I could live with that,'' said Clemmensen, 36. "I have no regrets.'' The Islanders took the lead for good at 11:18 of the second when Josh Bailey jumped out of the penalty box in time to poke in a rebound of Colin McDonald's shot. They took a two-goal lead into the third when a wide-open Mike Martin – earth to defenseman Erik Gudbranson – slammed in another rebound. Isles' rookie Mike Halmo poked in a rebound of his own shot at 4:21 of the third for his first NHL goal in his 13th game. The Panthers snapped their eight-game power-play drought with 3.9 seconds left on rookie Brandon Pirri's goal, his 11th. … Two of the Panthers leading scorers, forwards Scottie Upshall and Brad Boyes, were game-time decisions because of ankle and back issues respectively. Boyes lasted five shifts before leaving the ice for good. Upshall made it through eight shifts of the first period before an inadvertent stick to the face from Isles' Matt Carkner sent him to the training room for repairs. He returned late in the second period when X-rays on his jaw came back negative. Panthers plane issues The Panthers plane had some issues, so the team was stranded in Long Island overnight and had to move to another hotel. Sun Sentinel LOADED: 04.02.2014 732225 Los Angeles Kings Kings learned a lesson in desperation in loss to Wild on Monday By Lisa Dillman 4:48 PM PDT, April 1, 2014 Desperate Hockey Teams, Part II. The other entry in the three-way battle between Minnesota, Phoenix and Dallas for two wild-card playoff spots in the Western Conference, the Coyotes, visits the Kings on Wednesday night. It's no coincidence that Minnesota and Phoenix are the only teams to beat the Kings this season when the Kings led after two periods. They both did so in March with the Wild rallying for a 3-2 win Monday night. "It's hard but you just have to realize the desperation of teams," Kings center Mike Richards said. "Last night Minnesota came out and you could see right from the get-go they were flying around pretty good. "I don't know if it caught us off guard but I just don't think we matched that until later in the first [period] and it kind of tailed off near the end. It's just an understanding how teams are going to play against us that need points and we have to be ready for that." The Kings are perceptive enough to acknowledge that their status in the Pacific Division is part of the equation. They are locked in third place and desperation would be the last word they would use about the stretch run. Limbo might be more accurate. They have six games remaining, two at home and four on the road. Oftentimes, the grind of a recent trip will catch a team in its second game back at home, not the first. The Kings beat Winnipeg, 4-2, on Saturday at Staples Center. "I thought we were really flat," Kings Coach Darryl Sutter said of the Minnesota game. "I think it caught up with us. We played good enough to win, good enough to lose. We weren't sharp early and that was the difference in the game. "…Last night, some of our younger guys that have to bring some energy and do a little bit more in games like that didn't." Later, Sutter talked about the coach-player dynamic, stressing the importance of relationships in the modern game. Generally, the Kings, are fairly low-key. "I have zero tolerance for these guys that are high-low all the time. Zero. Not just players," Sutter said. "Anger is not a good emotion to have. It's more: 'Be real and figure it out.' Get going again." King update Dwight King was on the ice again Tuesday morning but didn't put a timetable on his return to the lineup. King missed Monday's game against the Wild because of an unspecified injury. It was understood not to be serious. "Right now, it just wasn't worth it," King said. "I'm fortunate we do have these two weeks here [before the playoffs] … trying to get myself back to where I feel I can help the team. That's my main goal. Not going to put a date or game in mind." Transactions Two collegiate forwards signed entry-level contracts with the Kings. Michael Mersch (Wisconsin) signed a three-year deal, and Nic Dowd (St. Cloud State) a one-year deal. Dowd, a seventh-round draft pick in 2009, had 40 points in 38 games this season at St. Cloud (Minn). Mersch had 22 goals and 35 points in 37 games at Wisconsin. He was a fourth-round selection in 2011. Both will report to the Kings' AHL minor league affiliate in Manchester, N.H. KINGS VS. PHOENIX When: 7:30. On the air: TV: NBCSN; Radio: 1150. Etc.: The Coyotes have been playing reasonably well with Thomas Griess in goal in the aftermath of what could have been a devastating loss of starting goalie Mike Smith. Smith suffered an apparent knee injury, according to reports, and the Coyotes hope to get him back before the end of the regular season. LA Times: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732226 Los Angeles Kings Taking a look at Michael Mersch Posted by JonRosen on April 1, 2014 The Los Angeles Kings announced the signings of forwards Michael Mersch (4th round / 2011) of Wisconsin and Nic Dowd (7th round / 2009) of St. Cloud State to entry level contracts earlier today. Per the collective bargaining agreement, Mersch‘s ELC spans three years, and Dowd‘s spans one year. For more on Dowd, a Hobey Baker finalist, read this LAKI story from last week. Both players will report to AHL-Manchester. Mersch, 21, signed with Los Angeles after deciding to return to Madison for his senior season one year ago. With 22 goals, the Chicago native and Ottawa prospect Ryan Dzingel tied for the most goals scored by a Big Ten player in 2013-14. He also led the conference with 10 power play goals and 162 shots and was named first-team All-Big Ten. After winning the inaugural Big Ten tournament, the Badgers, a one-seed, fell 5-2 to fourth-seeded North Dakota in the first round of the NCAA tournament. Mersch finished his collegiate career by totaling 120 points (67-53=120) while playing in all 157 of Wisconsin‘s games over that time span. ―We‘re real excited,‖ said Nelson Emerson, Los Angeles Kings Player Development. ―He went back for his senior year, and he kind of lived up to what he had hoped would happen, that he would have a successful season. He played on a good team that had a good year. Obviously he fell a little short, but he was able to go there and succeed. He had 20 goals again. He led the conference in goals, and so his development as a player that way, he lived up to what he wanted to do.‖ In case you missed his earlier highlight reel goal, here‘s one that graced the pixels of LA Kings Insider last season: Earlier this month, Chris Dilks of SB Nation ranked Mersch 70th amongst the top-100 NHL prospects in NCAA Hockey. Mersch‘s skating has always been his biggest weakness, but there‘s no doubt that he knows how to put the puck in the net. The senior is just one goal away from his second consecutive 20-goal season. It‘s tough to tell if Mersch will be able to keep up that scorer‘s touch at the pro level, or if his lack of foot speed will finally catch up to him, but his upside as a power play sniper should earn him a contract from Los Angeles after he graduates this spring. Ryan Evans, also of SB Nation, took note of Mersch‘s skating stride. While he displayed elite goal-scoring ability at the NCAA level, Mersch needs to develop his skating, which was his primary weakness in college, to translate that to the pro game. His power play prowess and good size will afford him the opportunity to showcase himself at the pro level and he has the potential to develop into a solid power forward. He is ―diligent‖ in developing his skating, according to Badgers head coach Mike Eaves. ―Michael will bring his big body and his ability to use that to the professional level,‖ Eaves said in a press release. ―He is a big man. He scores goals in the hard areas using that big body, and he has been really diligent in becoming a better skater. He is a much better skater now than he was as a freshman and he‘ll have to continue to work on that because he is going to the next level. He has a work ethic and the character to get that done.‖ In speaking with Emerson, it‘s clear the Kings have an offensive-minded prospects who isn‘t afraid to go to areas on the ice where goals are scored. ―He‘s a guy that once the puck gets into the offensive zone, he has an asset that very few players have,‖ Emerson said. ―He‘s big, he‘s strong on the puck, he wins all these offensive battles around the boards and around the paint that makes him have an asset that very few players have, and that asset is scoring goals in the tough areas. So why it makes us so excited about him becoming a pro is that he‘s going to be able to hopefully bring these assets to us in our organization as a King. He‘s able to do it better than anyone else. Why we get excited is because when you look at players like an Andrew Brunette or someone like that who‘s good in front of the net, like a [Tomas] Holmstrom or someone like that. This is that type of player. We use that. We keep continuing to build that and make it better, and then we work on all the other parts of his game.‖ Emerson, on college seniors facing a particular challenge: It is worrisome, because senior years are tough, because the only one pushing you is yourself, right? He had to push himself to be a contributor to their team, and also to be their leader offensively. That‘s hard in itself, and he was able to accomplish that. He went back for his senior year. He kind of lived up to his obligation that he was going to go back for school, get his degree and continue his good hockey playing, which he did. He was all team, all-league forward. So there you go. He‘s lived up to his obligation. He achieved that, and you know what? The kid‘s got a degree from Wisconsin. That‘s pretty darn good. Emerson, on Mersch and Dowd joining the Monarchs: We‘re real excited about that. We‘ve got obviously a great group down there, a group that‘s been together for a few years, a group that‘s had a tremendous season. We‘re excited that these two players can just step in there and fit in there, and they‘ll fit in great because of what we talked about. Mersch will go in there and be a bigger body, and then he‘ll start learning the pro game and the way the LA Kings work. It‘s going to be great. It‘s great for him that he‘s been able to finish his season, get the schooling. He‘s set to graduate, and now he gets to go and become a pro. Everyone‘s all excited. It‘s a good time. We‘re excited about both players. LA Kings Insider: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732227 Minnesota Wild Recovery by Wild's Koivu turns him into Captain Fantastic ―Winning is his priority. He wants to bring a championship to Minnesota, and that‘s how he plays the game.‖ Superiority down the stretch Parise rolls his eyes at the criticism Koivu receives. Article by: Michael Russo ―People have their opinions on different people,‖ Parise said. ―All I‘ll tell you is he‘s so important. We need him playing well and to be a great player for us to be a good team, and he‘s played really well as of late. CHICAGO-Mikko Koivu struggled to find the words. ¶ ―I don‘t know how to say it in English,‖ Koivu, a proud Finn, said as he gnashed his teeth and looked off in the distance. The Wild‘s 31-year-old captain finally settled on a word: ―Frustrating.‖ ¶ ―I was very, very frustrated,‖ said Koivu, the feeling unmistakable on his face. ―It‘s hard coming back from an injury. It‘s tough because of where everyone else is at in their season — 65, 70 games. You miss two months like Mikko, you‘re way behind. Everyone is fresh and flying, so it‘s tough to get back into a rhythm. But he‘s back playing great for us.‖ Koivu returned to the Wild‘s lineup March 3 after missing eight weeks, 17 games and the Olympics following surgery on his right ankle. But those first five or six games, Koivu could not function at the level he expected from himself. ―Somebody tells you they‘re not thinking about the standings and where you are, I think they‘re lying,‖ Koivu said, smiling. ―But this is what you want, where every single game matters. I think you really saw that [Saturday] in Phoenix. His ankle hurt. Skating was a chore. His game suffered, and so did the team. ―That was intensity, and it‘s not about who scores the goal or who makes the big play. The big picture is how we played the game, and that was a good first step. Now we have to keep building our game.‖ ―It was harder that I thought it would be,‖ Koivu said Monday, hours before scoring the winning goal in the Wild‘s come-from-behind victory over one of the league‘s stingiest teams with a lead, the Los Angeles Kings. ―It‘s not like it happens overnight and it feels good. It took a lot of time. I was very frustrated.‖ Koivu‘s ankle was throbbing (he described it as an unrelenting pressure), and it affected his skating, balance, shooting, playmaking, faceoff prowess — basically, everything. When Koivu returned from previous injuries, the warmer the ailment got, the better it felt. This frustrating injury was the complete opposite late in games. ―And this time of year, you need to get to your game as soon as you can,‖ Koivu said. ―Sometimes it‘s just not possible, but as an athlete, you don‘t realize that always.‖ But slowly, starting in Boston nine games ago, Koivu has begun to resemble the Koivu of old. He has split defensemen, made power moves, set up teammates, been a defensive stalwart and won big faceoffs. His play is a large reason the Wild has won three of the past five games with third-period comebacks. In the past eight games, Koivu, the Wild‘s career leading scorer, has 12 points and is plus-5. He‘s riding a six-game point streak with two goals and seven assists, including three two-point games. Thursday night, Koivu will lead the Wild into the United Center to face the Chicago Blackhawks, the team that dispatched the Wild in five games last spring and went on to win the Stanley Cup. In that first-round playoff series, Koivu had no points. Linemate Zach Parise had one. Like Parise, Koivu said it weighed on him all offseason. ―It bothered me a long time last year how we finished and when you can‘t help the team the way you want,‖ Koivu said. ―You take a lot of pride in your game and you want to be at the level that you need to be. If it didn‘t bother me, something‘s wrong.‖ Under pressure Koivu heads into the final six games of this regular season and the postseason sounding motivated by last year‘s individual and team failure. ―You can and you have to learn from the past, the good things and the bad things,‖ he said. ―That‘s something you realize as you get mature and grow up a little bit from your first years in the league. We did take steps last year. We didn‘t finish the way we wanted. We learn from that. It bothers you and you want to show you can do better and we can do better as a team.‖ Few players on the Wild are as scrutinized as Koivu. Critics pick and prod, wishing he‘d sacrifice some defense for offense, that he‘d shoot more, that he was faster. Maybe it‘s because it‘s his fifth season with the captain‘s ‗‗C‘‘ or the fact that he has been Wild property for nearly 13 years, or because of his $6.75 million salary cap hit, but some seem to blame him for every pitfall, from no playoff rounds won by the Wild since 2003 to any losing streak. ―That‘s unfair,‖ coach Mike Yeo said. ―They don‘t see all the little things he does night in and night out to give you a chance to win. That‘s what you ask for in a leader. This is a guy that‘s never going to cheat, he‘s always going to do it the right way to give his team the best chance to win. Koivu is excited and nervous, all at the same time, by the tight playoff race. Star Tribune LOADED: 04.02.2014 732228 Minnesota Wild Wild: Big line gets biggest goals from its smallest player, Zach Parise By Chad Graff Posted: 04/01/2014 12:01:00 AM CDT CHICAGO -- When Wild coach Mike Yeo was forming his new top line, he wanted a big trio. Mikko Koivu (6 feet 3, 222 pounds) and Charlie Coyle (6-3, 221) fit the bill, and Zach Parise -- well, he plays big. As Yeo put it, "Zach is an interesting player." Parise is a relatively standard 5-11, 197 pounds, but because of his relentless style and willingness to crash the net, he fit right in. The line has been together for only four periods, but it has accounted for four goals -- three by Parise and one by Koivu -- in two victories. "Those guys have the ability to play against (anyone)," Yeo said. "Whether it's big forwards or big lines." Success is expected from Koivu and Parise; they're veteran leaders. But Coyle's recent play has been making the difference. Since Yeo publicly asked more of Coyle, 22, he has been one of the team's best players. In a 3-2 win Monday over the Los Angeles Kings, Coyle set up Koivu's game-tying, third-period goal by winning a battle along the boards. "He's stepping up; that's what we need," Yeo said. "This is a guy that we can't just say is a second-year guy; he's a real important part of our team, and the reason ... is because of what we see in him. We're going to keep pushing him because, as far as we're concerned, this guy has the potential to be a real quality NHL player." Monday's victory meant the Wild has won back-to-back games for the first time since Feb. 28 and March 3. A path to the playoffs still isn't set, but those two wins have given the Wild a small cushion with six regular-season games remaining. The road ahead still could be rocky. Nino Niederreiter and Mikael Granlund both left Monday's game with apparent head injuries. An update on their status is expected Wednesday. But so far, Yeo's new top line has stepped up when needed -- especially Parise, whose 28 goals lead the team and 51 points rank second to Jason Pominville's 53. "He's obviously high-skilled and a great goal scorer, but at the same time he's so strong and so competitive and so effective in the offensive zone," Yeo said of Parise. "We've seen those guys be real effective in the past in those types of games, and that was a big part of why we put them on the ice." Pioneer Press LOADED: 04.02.2014 732229 Minnesota Wild Minnesota Wild: Road trip gives Zach, J.P. Parise time to bond, reminisce By Chad Graff Much has changed in the NHL since J.P. Parise wrapped up a 14-year career in 1979. But he's glad to see one thing that hasn't: the camaraderie among players. Parise, 72, a two-time all-star who played eight seasons with the Minnesota North Stars, is feeling like one of the guys again this week. He's traveling with the Minnesota Wild and his son Zach, a Wild forward, on their current seven-day, three-game road trip. When Zach played for the New Jersey Devils, general manger Lou Lamoriello never had father-son road trips, something quite a few NHL teams do these days. When Wild GM Chuck Fletcher heard that, he told Zach to invite J.P. on the Wild's trip to Phoenix, Los Angeles and Chicago. "I've been treated like a king," J.P. said before the Wild's 3-2 victory over the Kings in Los Angeles on Monday night. The trip allowed J.P., 72, to see Zach score two goals Saturday in Phoenix and another goal Monday in L.A. Zach's second goal in Phoenix was a family milestone, giving him 239 career goals -- one more than his father. "The thing is," J.P. said, "he accomplished in about seven years what took me 12 (years)." During the road trip, J.P. has attended coaches meetings, player meetings and traveled on the team's chartered plane, which he said is much different than the travel he had. "They have sushi" on the plane, J.P. said. "I think we took maybe four chartered planes" my whole career. J.P. went out to dinner with Zach and teammates in Los Angeles on Sunday, and father and son are spending the travel day together Tuesday as the team heads to Chicago for a game Thursday night. "It's awesome," Zach said. "A lot has changed since he was playing. (But) being around a group of players and going through the daily routine has got to be fun for him -- just coming to all the meetings and everything and seeing what it's like to be a player again. He's having an awesome time. And for me, it's been great, too." "It's brought me back in terms of the camaraderie and all that stuff; it hasn't changed," JP said. "The guys are together. Of course, the financial part of it has changed -- the charter (plane) and all that. But they all go out for dinner together." Pioneer Press LOADED: 04.02.2014 732230 Minnesota Wild Wild sign defenseman Christian Folin The Associated Press ST. PAUL, Minn.—The Minnesota Wild signed college free agent defenseman Christian Folin to a two-year, entry-level contract. Folin ended his career with Massachusetts-Lowell, finishing his sophomore season with four goals and 16 assists in 41 games. The deal was done late Monday while the Wild were in Los Angeles on their way to a win over the Kings. Folin is expected to join the team in Chicago for the game Thursday against the Blackhawks. He will not be eligible for the playoffs. The 6-foot-3, 215-pound Folin is a mobile puck-mover with a hard right-handed shot. The native of Gothenburg, Sweden, had a plus-10 rating and three game-winning goals for the River Hawks, who reached the NCAA Northeast Regional final. Pioneer Press LOADED: 04.02.2014 732231 Montreal Canadiens Lightning beat Habs as both teams clinch playoff berths TAMPA, Fla. — The Associated Press Having completed their regular-season series, the Tampa Bay Lightning and Montreal Canadiens soon could find themselves battling in the post-season. Tyler Johnson scored the go-ahead goal on a short-handed breakaway late in the third period and the Lightning clinched a playoff berth with a 3-1 victory over the Canadiens on Tuesday night. Montreal Canadiens left wing Thomas Vanek (20) celebrates his goal against Colorado Avalanche with teammates defenceman Mike Weaver (43) and centre David Desharnais (51) and left wing Max Pacioretty (67) during the second period at Bell Centre. Hey sports fans, leave the wives alone, it‘s not their fault Toronto Maple Leafs head coach Randy Carlyle, back right, shouts to his players during the third period of an NHL hockey game against the New Jersey Devils Sunday, March 23, 2014, in Newark, N.J. Podcast The Maple Leafs and their fatal flaw ―Just being in the right spot and getting lucky sometimes,‖ Johnson said. The win and losses by New Jersey and Washington gave Tampa Bay its first post-season berth since 2011 and only its second in seven years. Montreal ended a five-game winning streak, but also qualified for the post-season by virtue of the losses by New Jersey and Washington. Canadiens goalie Carey Price took some consolation in advancing to the post-season. ―We‘re disappointed with our game today, but big picture, we‘ve got to be happy with that,‖ he said. The win moved Tampa Bay, with a game in hand, into a second-place tie with Montreal in the Atlantic Division. The second- and third-place teams in each division will meet in the first round of the playoffs. ―It‘s just one game, but it‘s really the 76 games all bottled into one,‖ Tampa Bay coach Jon Cooper said. ―What you are really striving for is to win the Stanley Cup, but you cannot win the Cup if you don‘t get into the playoffs.‖ With teammate Nate Thompson serving a minor penalty for boarding, Johnson picked up a loose puck near the Montreal blue line, skated in on Price and backhanded a shot inside the left post with 7:19 remaining in the game. Canadiens right wing Brendan Gallagher was on one knee in the low slot when he redirected a rebound past goalie Ben Bishop to open the scoring 10:18 into the first period. Ryan Callahan made it 1-1 on a power play 9:19 into the second, skating through the left circle toward Price and lifting a shot high into the net. Tampa Bay was on a power play when Alex Killorn closed out the scoring with an empty-netter with 45 seconds left in the third period. Bishop finished with 25 saves, while Price stopped 30 shots. Tampa Bay winger Teddy Purcell slammed a shot past Price with 11.7 seconds left in the second period, but the officials ruled forward J.T. Brown made contact with the goaltender and disallowed the goal. The call drew an angry response from Tampa Bay fans after a replay appeared on the video screen. The crowd also became irate when Montreal‘s Douglas Murray drew a match penalty for an illegal check to the head of fellow defenceman Michael Kostka, setting up a 5-on-3 advantage for the Lightning with 2:13 left in the game. ―If the crowd‘s reaction was anything after they saw it, then it seems that it was illegal,‖ Cooper said. ―Those are the hits you want to take out of the game. I‘m sure Murray wasn‘t looking to hit him in the head.‖ Lightning forward Ondrej Palat, who earlier in the day was named the top NHL rookie for the second time in three months, assisted on the goals by Callahan and Killorn. NOTES: Tampa Bay C Valtteri Filppula, who came in with the longest points streak in the league at 12 games, came up empty. . Montreal C Tomas Plekanec returned after missing one game for personal reasons. . The home team won for the first time in the four-game season series. Lightning captain Steven Stamkos was sidelined with a broken leg for the first three games, each of which went to overtime tied at 1. . Price came in victorious in nine of his 10 previous starts. Bishop improved to 8-1-1 in his last 10. Globe And Mail LOADED: 04.02.2014 732232 Montreal Canadiens Emelin will be in Habs lineup against Lightning Posted by Stu Cowan Alexei Emelin, who returned to Montreal on Monday for family reasons, rejoined the Canadiens Tuesday in Tampa and was on the ice for a morning skate as the team prepared to face the Lightning Tuesday night (7:30 p.m., TSN-HABS, RDS, TSN Radio 690). The return of Emelin means defenceman Jarred Tinordi will be a healthy scratch for the second straight game. Carey Price will start in goal for the Canadiens, while Ben Bishop will be in the Lightning net. The lines at Tuesday‘s morning skate were the same as during Monday‘s practice, with Lars Eller on the third line with Daniel Briere and Brian Gionta, while Rene Bourque drops to the fourth line with Ryan White and Michael Bournival. George Parros will be a healthy scratch. The game could be a playoff preview with the Canadiens and Lightning looking like they will be first-round opponents. ―Given that this could be a playoff preview tonight, this is a game that everyone‘s been waiting for,‖ defenceman Francis Bouillon told reporters in Tampa after the morning skate. ―We‘re two teams that play similar styles of hockey. They‘ve got good depth, a good goaltender and also a lot of speed. It‘s important for us to go out there and win this one to earn a playoff spot. It‘s an important game and we definitely want to win it.‖ The Canadiens have won five straight and can clinch a playoff spot with a win over the Lightning. In the first three meetings between the teams this season, one went to overtime and two went to a shootout with the Lightning holding a 2-0-1 record. Said Lightning sniper Steven Stamkos: ―We‘re fighting with them for home ice. It‘s going to be a playoff atmosphere. … We‘re not worried about the playoffs now, we‘re just worried about playing hockey and getting as many points to finish as high as we can.‖ Canadiens forward Max Pacioretty was announced Tuesday as the Molson Cup winner for the February-March segment of the season based on three-star voting. Pacioretty, who has a career-high 35 goals this season, was named the first star four times during that segment of the season. Here‘s how the lines and defence pairings are expected to look for the Canadiens against the Lightning: Pacioretty-Desharnais-Vanek Galchenyuk-Plekanec-Gallagher Eller-Briere-Gionta Bourque-White-Bournival Markov-Emelin Bouillon-Subban Murray-Weaver In other news, prospects Connor Crisp and Brady Vail have both signed contracts with the AHL‘s Hamilton Bulldogs after completing their junior seasons. Crisp, a 6-foot-3, 226-pound forward, played 67 games with the OHL‘s Sudbury Wolves this season, posting 28-27-55 totals and 120 penalty minutes. He was selected by the Canadiens in the third round (71st overall) of the 2013 NHL draft. Vail, a 6-foot, 194-pound forward played 67 games with the OHL‘s Windsor Spitfires this season, posting 32-51-83 totals and 39 penalty minutes. He was selected by the Canadiens in the fourth round (94th overall) at the 2012 NHL draft. Montreal Gazette LOADED: 04.02.2014 732233 Montreal Canadiens ‗Happy we‘re in the playoffs,‘ Price says after loss By pat hickey, THE GAZETTE April 2, 2014 TAMPA, Fla. — Canadiens coach Michel Therrien said it was a great accomplishment for the Canadiens to earn a playoff spot with five games remaining in the regular season, but he wasn‘t happy with the way his team performed in a 3-1 loss to the Tampa Bay Lightning Tuesday night at the Tampa Bay Times Forum. ―We made too many turnovers,‖ Therrien said. ―We were trying to make fancy plays and that‘s not the way you beat a team like this.‖ The Canadiens might have beaten themselves when an errant pass from David Desharnais turned a Montreal power play into a shorthanded winner by Tyler Johnson. Desharnais was attempting to get the puck back to the point when Johnson grabbed the loose puck and scored his fifth shorthanded goal of the season to break a 1-1 tie at 12:41 of the third period. ―The special teams were the difference tonight,‖ said captain Brian Gionta. While the Canadiens went 0-for-4 on the power play, the Lightning went 2-for-8, with the second power-play goal going into an empty net with 45 seconds to play. That empty-netter came with defenceman Douglas Murray serving a match penalty for elbowing Michael Kostka. Murray will be hearing from NHL disciplinarian Brendan Shanahan before the Canadiens play the Senators Friday night in Ottawa, but he began pleading his case after the game. ―I‘ve never been suspended before and I‘m not a dirty player,‖ said Murray. ―He‘s coming through the middle and I have a guy on my right and I‘m trying to finish my check while at the same time, I‘m keeping an eye on the guy to the right of me,‖ said Murray. ―I felt like I had arm tucked in but ... I really don‘t want to comment on it because I haven‘t looked at it and I expect I‘ll be suspended.‖ Murray said he was glad that Kostka was able to skate off after lying unconscious on the ice. The Lightning said Kostka will go through the protocol for a concussion. Both teams clinched playoff berths, but the Lightning earned their spot with the win while the Canadiens backed in earlier after the Washington Capitals lost to Dallas 5-0. ―We‘re disappointed with our game today, but in the big picture we‘re happy we‘re in the playoffs,‖ said Carey Price, who turned in another solid effort that was wasted because his teammates couldn‘t generate any offence. Therrien described Price‘s performance as ―excellent,‖ while Gionta said the goaltender ―gave us another chance to win.‖ The result virtually assured a Montreal-Tampa Bay matchup in the first round of the playoffs, but Gionta said the team couldn‘t afford to look ahead. He said it‘s important for the team to learn from its experience last season, when the team clinched a playoff spot early and then lost its focus going into the playoffs. Ottawa eliminated the top-seeded Canadiens in five games in the first round. Meanwhile, there are bound to be questions about P.K. Subban‘s ice time. He played a season-low 17:48 and every other d efenceman played more at even strength. It was only the second time this season he played fewer than 20 minutes The Canadiens caught a break with 11.7 seconds remaining in the second period when referee Chris Lee waved off an apparent goal by Ted Purcell. Lee ruled that J. T. Brown impeded Price‘s movement in the crease. The replay showed there was no contact between the two and, while the Lightning fans were unhappy with the call, Lee received a thumbs-up from Hall of Fame coach Scotty Bowman. ―They don‘t call that often enough,‖ said Bowman. ―The goaltender has to have the chance to come out and play the puck.‖ Montreal Gazette LOADED: 04.02.2014 732234 Montreal Canadiens Price on short end of goalie duel By pat hickey, THE GAZETTE April 2, 2014 TAMPA, Fla. — The Canadiens and the Lightning offered probable a preview of the first round of the Stanley Cup playoffs with Tampa Bay taking a 3-1 decision on a shorthanded breakaway goal by Tyler Johnson at 12:41 of the third period. The win gave the Lightning a 3-1 edge in the season series between the teams and moved Tampa Bay into second place in the Atlantic Division. Montreal and Tampa Bay each have 93 points, but the Lightning has the edge because it holds a game in hand. Johnson‘s goal was the difference in a goaltending duel between Carey Price (30 saves) and the Lightning‘s Ben Bishop (25 saves). Playoff bound: The Canadiens were assured of a playoff berth early in the third period when the Dallas Stars put the finishing touches on a 5-0 win over the Washington Capitals. Tampa Bay was assured of a playoff spot with the win. Scary moment: Douglas Murray received a major penalty when he delivered an elbow to the head of Michael Kostka late in the game. Kostka lay on the ice for several minutes, but was able to leave under his own steam. Murray was in the penalty box when Pointe-Claire‘s Alex Killorn scored an empty-net goal. Go to the net: That‘s what youngsters Alex Galchenyuk and Brendan Gallagher did when Mike Weaver threw a backhand shot at the net. The puck was loose at Bishop‘s feet and Galchenyuk had a swipe at it before Gallagher knocked it home for his 19th goal of the season at 10:18 of the first period. The equalizer: The Lightning pulled even at 1-1 when the Canadiens gave up a power-play goal at 11:19 of the second period. Ryan Callahan was given far too much space and he scored with a backhander that found the far post over Price‘s shoulder. The Chris Lee factor: Montreal fans love to complain that referee Chris Lee hates the Canadiens, but he did the visitors a favor when he waved off an apparent goal by Ted Purcell with 11.7 seconds remaining in the second period. Purcell beat Price with a low shot to the blocker side. Lee ruled that J.T. Brown impeded Price‘s movement in the crease. Montreal Gazette LOADED: 04.02.2014 732235 Montreal Canadiens About last night … Bishop was untroubled for the rest of the game – including the four shorthanded situations during which the Canadiens managed two shots. This while Price was standing on his head to keep the score respectable. Posted by Mike Boone In his chalk talk on L‘Antichambre, Gaston Therrien showed an example of Tampa Bay‘s relentless forecheck. The only Canadiens‘ defencemen capable of handling that kind of pressure, TV Therrien said, are Andrei Markov and P.K. Subban. Your Montreal Canadiens are in the playoffs. And P.J. Stock, not my favourite panelist on the show, made a good point when he said that with five games left to play, Therrien is STILL juggling his lines. But unless their Tuesday night performance in Tampa Bay was an aberration, we may see a repeat of last spring‘s first-round fiasco. Riding a five-game winning streak into the home rink of a very good hockey team, perhaps the Canadiens were due for a letdown. What we saw, however – particularly in the third period – was a collapse. Michel Therrien began his post-game media scrum by accentuating the positive. Results elsewhere guaranteed postseason hockey for the Habs. Therrien said the Canadiens‘ objective of making the playoffs had been attained. Therrien had the right to be satisfied. Many pundits and fans thought the Canadiens would struggle all season and go down to the wire to ensure a playoff berth. I didn‘t think they‘d make the cut. But with five games to play, we know there will be mid-to-late April hockey in Montreal. Will the Canadiens still be playing in May? Not if the 3-1 loss to Tampa Bay was an indicator. The score flattered the Canadiens. If Carey Price hadn‘t played what may have been his best game of the season, the Lightning would have won 6-1. ―We played back on our heels,‖ Therrien said. The coach cited ―too many turnovers‖, adding ―you can‘t take eight penalties and expect to win.‖ ―It hurts your tempo and disrupts time on ice,‖ Therrien said. ToI was particularly discombobulated in the case of P.K. Subban. Last season‘s Norris Trophy winner played a season-low 17:48. That less ice time than Douglas Murray. But P.K. will get a chance to catch up during the suspension Murray is going to get for that absurd elbow on Mike Kostka. P.K. averages 24:52 per game this season. In Tampa Bay, he had less even-strength ice time than any other defenceman dressed for the game. If there‘s a logical reason for this, I‘m afraid it eludes me. But the Canadiens didn‘t lose because of P.K.‘s low ice time. The loss was a team effort. And the list of players who had an off night would include every player in a white jersey – with the exceptions of Carey Price, Mike Weaver, Ryan White and Michäel Bournival. Similarly, Tampa Bay‘s win was a team effort. The Lightning are a fast, tenacious and well-coached team. They pressured the Canadiens into ill-conceived plays, bad decisions and lazy penalties. With his team leading 1-0, Lars Eller was called for holding in the Tampa Bay zone. With the game tied 1-1 in the third period, Eller took another O-zone penalty, this time for a trip. Paroled from fourth-line duty, Eller had more penalties than shots on goal. He is playing his way out of Montreal. With another year on his contract, Daniel Brière will be staying put. The veteran who is supposed to elevate his game at this time of the long season played played a shade over eight minutes against Tampa Bay and had the grand total of one shot, which was blocked. Brendan Gallagher was opportunistic in tipping his 19th goal of the season past Ben Bishop. Alex Galchenyuk kept the puck alive in the Lightning crease and drew an assist on the goal, as did Weaver. That‘s your highlight reel. As a reward for how well they played in the second half of March – starting with that crazy comeback against Ottawa – the Canadiens are staying in sunny Florida until Thursday. Then they fly to Ottawa for a Friday night game against the loosey-goosey/nothing-to-play-for Senators. On Saturday, the Canadiens are home to the playoff-hungry/everything-to-play-for Red Wings. In addition to figuring out his third and fourth lines, Therrien will have to cope with the likely loss of Murray, whose physical presence on the back end would be an asset in Ottawa. There‘s time for tinkering before the playoffs. Montreal Gazette LOADED: 04.02.2014 732236 Nashville Predators Predators enforcer reaches out to foe he hurt in fight Chip Cirillo Predators enforcer Rich Clune has taken some criticism in the media and from Washington fans for his fight against inexperienced rookie defenseman Patrick Wey during Sunday's 4-3 shootout win over the Capitals. Clune landed a series of punches to Wey's face before dropping him to the ice with an uppercut in the first period at Bridgestone Arena. Clune (5-foot-10, 188 pounds) has been in 32 fights in 113 NHL games, and Wey (6-2, 200) fought in his first scrap. Wey's only previous pro fight was in the 2008-09 U.S. Hockey League season. Wey missed the rest of the Predators game with a head injury. "I reached out to the kid on Washington just to express the fact that I hope he's OK and it wasn't my intention to hurt him," said Clune, who sent a text message. "He was the one kind of engaging me, and I had no idea who he was. I don't even look at the other team's roster before the game. I just see the names they write on the board. The kid said he was OK." Wey isn't listed on the Capitals' injury report for players who are out of the lineup. He checked Clune into the center-ice boards in between the benches before the fight. "He stepped up on me," Clune said. "I didn't have the puck. He finished his check and kind of whacked my head off the boards. He was yelling at me and kind of signaled me. I took a half-step to get away and around him. He was pretty vocal and wanted me to turn around. We looked each other in the eye and agreed that we were going to fight, and went at it." Capitals enforcer Tom Wilson (6-4, 194) tried to fight Clune several times afterward, but Clune said he declined because the Predators had the lead in the game. "I can understand the Washington organization and the Washington fans being mad, but there's not much more I can say other than we'll see each other at another date," Clune said. "Patrick is going to bounce back." Injury updates: Defenseman Seth Jones (concussion-like symptoms) practiced and should be able to play Friday at Anaheim. "He's been cleared, so unless there's anything (unusual) he should be fine," coach Barry Trotz said. PREVIOUSLY: Predators "very cautious" with Seth Jones' injury Center Paul Gaustad (upper body) skated on his own and might be able to practice with the team on Wednesday. Winger Nick Spaling (lower body), who was scratched against Washington, practiced and will be available for a three-game road trip that starts Friday. Forward Patrick Eaves (lower body) didn't practice and is questionable for the Anaheim game. Rare shootout win: The Predators improved to 2-8 in shootouts with Sunday's win over Washington. They ranked 27th in the NHL entering Tuesday's games. Craig Smith scored the winning goal, and backup goalie Carter Hutton stopped all three Capitals in the shootout. "It's nice to win one of those," left wing Eric Nystom said. "We haven't fared that well in shootouts this year and we played against a really skilled team, and came out with a shootout win so that's a bonus. Carter played extremely well in that game and made some great saves in the shootout, especially on that last one and got us the win." Nashville is 1-4 at home and 1-4 on the road in shootouts. Needed day off: After playing three games in four days, the Predators were off Monday. "For me personally, it was a good day," Trotz said. "I had been coming in every day for about six weeks straight. For us guys, we just finished eight games in 12 nights and we had some travel involved there. I know the guys need a mental break sometimes just from being at the rink or thinking about a game." Tennessean LOADED: 04.02.2014 732237 New Jersey Devils Devils Lose to Sabres in Shootout By THE ASSOCIATED PRESSAPRIL 2, 2014 Tyler Ennis scored twice in the third period and again in the shootout to lead the host Buffalo Sabres to a 3-2 win over the Devils. Dainius Zubrus and Tuomo Ruutu scored for the Devils, who are 0-11 this season in shootouts. They are 3 points out of the Eastern Conference‘s final wild-card spot. ■ Tyler Seguin scored his 33rd goal and the visiting Dallas Stars routed the Washington Capitals, 5-0, in a game between two ninth-place teams trying to leapfrog into a playoff spot. ■ Josh Bailey had a goal and assist, and the Islanders kept up their strong finish with a 4-2 home victory over the Florida Panthers. ■ The host Toronto Maple Leafs snapped an eight-game losing streak to remain in the playoff chase, beating Calgary, 3-2. ■ The Canadian women‘s star Hayley Wickenheiser helped her country win the gold medal at the Olympics while playing with a broken foot, she revealed. New York Times LOADED: 04.02.2014 732238 New Jersey Devils Ennis, Leino Lead Sabres to 3-2 Win Over Devils By THE ASSOCIATED PRESSAPRIL 1, 2014, 10:34 P.M. E.D.T. BUFFALO, N.Y. — Tyler Ennis scored twice in the third period and again in the shootout to lead the Buffalo Sabres to a 3-2 win over the New Jersey Devils on Tuesday night. Ville Leino had the winner in the ninth round of the shootout and Nathan Lieuwen made 33 saves for his first NHL win. Dainius Zubrus gave New Jersey a 1-0 lead at 8:16 of the second period and Tuomo Ruutu tipped Andy Greene's shot past Lieuwen at 6:58 of the third to tie it 2-2. The Devils, 0-11 this season in shootouts, are three points out of the Eastern Conference's final wild card spot. Cory Schneider made 25 saves for New Jersey. The Devils outshot Buffalo 10-8 in the opening period, but dominated possession and had the best chances. New Jersey broke the deadlock in the second, when Michael Ryder's cross-crease pass appeared to be knocked into the Sabres goal by Jamie McBain. The goal was awarded to Zubrus. Lieuwen returned to form after the goal, making a diving stick save on Ryder to keep the score 1-0. Moments later, he stopped Ruutu on a partial breakaway. The Sabres managed just four shots in the second period. Buffalo got the equalizer 1:39 into the third period on a play started by Drew Stafford and completed by a cross-slot pass from Leino to Ennis, who scored on a wrist shot to become the first Sabres player to score 20 goals this season. Buffalo took its first lead of the night on a power play just over three minutes later. Cody Hodgson slid a pass through several players to Ennis, who shot high into the net at 4:41. The Devils attempted to counter off the ensuing face-off, but Lieuwen stopped Jagr twice. New Jersey tied the score on the power play, when Ruutu deflected Greene's shot past Lieuwen. Stafford and McBain had quality scoring chances in overtime, but Schneider foiled both. Lieuwen made back-to-back stops on Adam Henrique and Patrik Elias with just over a minute left in overtime. Leino had not scored a goal all season in regulation and has been the subject of catcalls in Buffalo, but drew a roar of approval with his shootout tally. NOTES: Stafford was selected as the Sabres' Masterton Trophy nominee by the Buffalo Chapter of the Pro Hockey Writers Association earlier Tuesday. ... New Jersey LW Ryan Clowe missed the game with a head injury sustained Monday against Florida. ... Buffalo signed 2012 third-round pick Justin Kea to a three-year, entry level contract before the game. New York Times LOADED: 04.02.2014 732239 New Jersey Devils Devils: Tim Sestito, Anton Volchenkov only players to skate Tuesday morning By Rich Chere/The Star-Ledger BUFFALO, N.Y.— Tim Sestito and Anton Volchenkov were the only Devils players to skate at First Niagara Center Tuesday morning. It appears Sestito may be the player who replaces Ryane Clowe in the lineup. Clowe suffered an apparent head injury when he was checked onto the boards by Florida's Quinton Howden with 1:42 remaining in the second period Monday night at Prudential Center. Clowe, who has a history of concussions, struggled as he slowly skated along the blue line towards the Devils' bench. The big left winger had to be helped off the ice and pulled onto the bench once he reached the gate. Cory Schneider, who replaced Martin Brodeur in the 6-3 victory over the Panthers, will be in goal against the Sabres Tuesday night. He'll face 20-year-old Sabres rookie goalie Nathan Lieuwen. Volchenkov said he has been skating three or four days since suffering a groin injury Mar. 22 against the Rangers. "It was my groin. I just extended it when the guy pushed me in the back," Volchenkov said. "It feels good. I'm not sure if I'm playing tonight. Maybe." Sestito is prepared to fill in for Clowe. Although the Devils would not say if Clowe had made the trip to Buffalo, there was no name plate for him in the visitors' dressing room. "Ill come in prepared to play. I'm good to go if my number is called," Sestito said. "I haven't had any setbacks." Sestito took a Nate Prosser forearm to the head in a Mar. 20 game against the Minnesota Wild and had concussion symptoms. "My last (concussion) was probably two ears ago, so I probably know the symptoms," Sestito said. He said he passed all the tests, but has been held out because of concussion symptoms. "I felt pretty good but I had some symptoms," he said. Sabes coach Ted Nolan said Tyler Myers will not play. Star Ledger LOADED: 04.02.2014 732240 New Jersey Devils With Ryane Clowe unable to play, Devils recall Mike Sislo from Albany (AHL) By Rich Chere/April 01, 2014 BUFFALO, N.Y.— With Ryane Clowe unable to play after suffering a head injury Monday night, the Devils recalled forward Miks Sislo from Albany (AHL). Sislo will wear No 9. General manager Lou Lamoriello sad Clowe is fine, but was left home. The big winger hit the back of his head on the boards late in the second period Monday night after a hit from Florida's Quinton Howden. "We left him home. He's fine. We'll see. Anytime somebody's not in the lineup you have concern," Lamoriello said. "You cringe anytime somebody gets hurt." More so with Clowe, who has a history of concussions. Lamoriello would not use that word and suggested Clowe could play again this season. "I have no reason not to think so," Lamoriello said. "I think I've answered it the best I can. The doctors say he's fine. We'll see." That was a relief for coach Pete DeBoer. "He was playing well. I got the same update from Lou and the doctors. I think everyone is glad," DeBoer said. "I think it was a big relief for everybody, knowing what Ryane has been through. Hopefully we'll get him back soon." DeBoer said Tuomo Ruutu would remain at left wing on the top line. Defenseman Jon Merrill, who was hit in the cheek by a Travis Hamonic shot that deflected off his own stick Saturday night against the Islanders, also remained in New Jersey. "He had some (dental, medical) work done. He wanted to play with the cage but he's not ready to play with a cage yet," Lamoriello said. "He was cut on the side of the face and it's swollen. It (the cut) went right through." *** DeBoer said Sislo and Tim Sestito would both take the pregame warmup and a decision will be made as to which forward plays. The coach said Anton Volchenkov (groin) will not play Tuesday night against the Sabres. Star Ledger LOADED: 04.02.2014 732241 New Jersey Devils also took a shot at DeBoer shortly after the trade by telling Carolina reporters that his old coach rearranged forward lines too much. Tuomo Ruutu's first month with Devils has been enjoyable, but Finn isn‘t happy with his play One more thing: Loktionov is making just $725,000 this season – he can become a restricted free agent this summer – while Ruttu joined the Devils‘ with a $3.8 million cap hit that runs through 2015-16. By Randy Miller/NJ.com Ruutu will be worth it if he returns to something close to his best seasons. While with Carolina, he scored a career-high 26 goals and put up 54 points in 2008-09, and in 2010-11 he had 19 goals and a personal-best 57 points. BUFFALO – For Tuomo Ruutu, one of the best things about his trade from the Carolina Hurricanes to the Devils last month is the opportunity it‘s provided to be around and getting to know some of hockey's biggest names. He‘s enjoyed seeing what Martin Brodeur, the NHL's winningest goalie ever, is like off the ice. He‘s gotten a kick out of experiencing Jaromir Jagr just about 24/7 … everything from his sometimes hilarious dressing room antics to his off-the-charts work habits. He‘s also appreciated watching and listening to Patrik Elias to learn what makes the Devils‘ all-time leading scorer tick. ―I‘m like a little kid,‖ said Ruutu, whose team plays the Sabres on Tuesday night in Buffalo. ―I love sports. I love hanging out in the locker room and seeing what the other guys do. We have a really experienced team, a bunch of older guys that you can learn from. I love that stuff. Like I said, I‘m just a little kid who is still playing hockey.‖ Ruutu, who grew up in Finland a big fan of Mario Lemieux, really isn‘t a kid anymore. He‘s 31 years old and a 10-year NHL veteran. And on March 5, he was acquired from Carolina for center Andrei Loktonov to be difference maker for a Devils‘ playoff push that hasn‘t gone as well he‘d hoped. Four points in his first three games was a great start, one that reminded everyone of the player Ruutu was when he was a pretty good scorer as well as a hard-hitting pest at different parts of his career. Unfortunately for the Devils though, the well dried pretty quickly for Ruutu, who followed those first three games by not scoring a single point over his next eight. Finally, the drought ended Monday night when Ruutu was credited with an assist on Travis Zajac's hat trick goal in the third period of a 6-3 win over Florida. ―I‘m not satisfied with the way I‘m playing,‖ Ruutu said. ―I have more to give for sure. The first thing is right now, to be honest, I‘m only thinking if we‘re going to make the playoffs or not. I want to make the playoffs and right now I don‘t really care how much I score. At the same time, I think I can produce more and I think I can play better.‖ What‘s been the problem? He‘s not sure. He is sure that it has nothing to do with adapting to Devils coach Pete DeBoer‘s systems, which stress defense and forechecking. ―I don‘t think there are any difficult systems, to be honest,‖ he said. ―You go to the National team and play in the Olympics right away. It‘s a different system than your team. I don‘t think there are any difficult ones, so that‘s no excuse for me.‖ Ruutu hasn‘t been a total disappointment. His point total is up from what he‘d produced this season in Carolina, and as always, he‘s racked up a lot of hits. For the season, he‘s tied for 25th in the league with 196 hits. While with the Devils, he has 28 in 12 games for a team-best 2.3 per game. The one thing about (Ruutu) is, at the very least, even on an off night, he‘s going to bring energy and physical play,‖ DeBoer said. ―He‘s going to finish hits, he‘s going to be hard to play against. That‘s the bear minimum even on a bad night. You get at least that. I think that‘s what‘s valuable about him. ―We know he‘s not to score every night or create offense every night. I think he can do more than he‘s done lately, and I think he agrees with that. But it‘s never for lack of effort. That‘s a good thing from a coaching point of view.‖ Since Ruutu‘s arrival, some Devils fans have been quick to judge this trade as a win for the Hurricanes. Loktionov, 23 didn‘t produce much this season for the Devils – he had four goals and 12 points in 48 games – but the Russian went on to do a little scoring for Carolina with three goals and six points in his first 13 games. He Hip surgery just prior to the start of the NHL‘s lockout-shortened 2013 season has affected Ruutu‘s offense game. It took Ruutu a long time to recover. Now, he‘s saying that he's back to 100 percent. ―Yeah, yeah, yeah,‖ he said. That may be true, or it may be that Ruutu is the type of guy who will not make an excuse for less than stellar play. Short on offensive weapons, the Devils really need Ruutu to be score goals like he once did, this season and beyond. ―I think when we acquired him, the hope was that he would get healthy and be able to get back to those types of numbers again,‖ DeBoer said. ―We‘ll see. I like him as a kid. I like what he brings. I like his energy. You‘ve got to deliver. ―The nice thing is he has a track record. We‘re not looking at a guy who‘s never done this before. So he‘s obviously capable of doing it again. He‘s just got to get back to that level.‖ Ruutu believes in himself. Right away, he played his way on the Devils‘ top line. Then he played himself off of it. Now he‘s back on it again due to Ryane Clowe suffering a possible concussion Monday. "They really wanted me to be here to help the team and I‘m only looking forward and trying to be positive,‖ Ruutu said. ―I know I can play better." Star Ledger LOADED: 04.02.2014 732242 New Jersey Devils Devils talk like they know their ship is sinking after falling to 0-11 in shootouts Randy Miller/NJ.com | April 01, 2014 BUFFALO – Wrapped in two towels, Jaromir Jagr stopped on his way from a post-game shower to a back room to try explaining the unexplainable. At first, the Devils' 42-year-old future Hall of Famer seemed so distraught that he spoke almost in a whisper. After three minutes, Jagr politely ended his interview and started making his way out of the Devils‘ dressing room. Jagr couldn‘t have been moving any slower when he suddenly stopped to take a swig of Gatorade. With no one around, Jagr just stood there for another few seconds thinking about what just went down again. The Devils lost another shootout Tuesday night, this one a 3-2 setback to a Buffalo Sabres team that is the worst team in hockey and went into the game 0-11-1 in its last 12. ―Same old story,‖ Jagr mumbled. The way the Devils lose points in game against bad teams and lose every single time they get to a shootout, it‘s hard to believe they‘re not mathematically dead in a playoff fight they‘re losing. This time, the Devils‘ actually scored two shootout goals - that makes three for the season - but Buffalo put in three in a nine-round finish that was a thriller to a few thousand Sabres fans who showed up to First Niagara Center and a continuing nightmare for the visitors. Last Saturday, the end result was the same when the Devils lost a shootout on the road to the Islanders, another bad team … and one that dressed 10 rookies. Diaster against another bad team almost occurred Monday night at home, too, as the Devils nearly blew a 3-0 lead before putting away the Florida Panthers, who are next-to-last in the Eastern Conference standings. ―I don‘t know man,‖ Devils goalie Cory Schneider said. ―It shouldn‘t get to that point. All year long it‘s been our problem. We‘ve let teams hang around, hang around. Teams we‘re better than. No disrespect to Buffalo. They played hard. So did the Islanders. But this time of the year? ―We‘re a better team and you let teams linger, they make a nice play or get a lucky bounce and you‘re in that situation. There wasn‘t enough urgency tonight to put this game away and get the two points.‖ Something sure is missing when the Devils play teams below them in the overall standings. They‘ve beaten some of the league‘s best – Anaheim, Pittsburgh, St. Louis, Boston – yet frequently wind up losing to the worst ones in regulation, overtimes and shootouts. What is going on? ―I don‘t know, I don‘t know,‖ Schneider said. ―I can‘t tell you. We usually work hard. It‘s not that we don‘t work hard. But if you don‘t execute against any team, it‘s not gonna work. I don‘t know what it is, if we don‘t get up for the games enough, or what. ―Even against Florida we let them crawl back in the game and finally pulled away. But three games we should have had six points and we end up with four, and that‘s probably going to be the difference at the end of the year.‖ How‘s that for confidence? Then again, how can anyone be confident in these Devils? As bad as they‘ve been at times, it‘s amazing that they‘re still just three points behind Columbus for the final wild card. But the Devils‘ season is down to six games and the Blue Jackets have a game in hand. The Devils were a league-best 12-4 in shootouts in 2011-12. The last two seasons they‘re 2-18 with 14 consecutive losses. "We can't be crybabies and say this is the worst thing ever," said veteran forward Dainius Zubrus, who scored the Devils' first goal. ―Every team is in the same boat." The Devils‘ boat is taking water and they know it, even if Jagr maintains his team ―fight until there‘s a chance.‖ The Devils do still have a chance, but not much of one because they‘ve lost 11 points in their 11 shootout losses and because they‘ve played so poorly against the bad teams. The Devils are just 6-3-4 with four shootout losses against the five teams in hockey with losing records – Buffalo, Florida, the Islanders, Calgary and Edmonton. ―I think that‘s why we kind of find ourselves in the situation that we‘re in,‖ Zubrus said. ―For big games and big teams we get up, and we‘ve beaten some good teams. But for whatever reason our mental edge is not there every night.‖ Star Ledger LOADED: 04.02.2014 732243 New Jersey Devils Studs and duds from Devils' shootout loss No. 11, this one to NHL's worst team By Randy Miller/April 01, 2014 BUFFALO – Every time the Devils really seem to get a chance to make something out of this season, they blow it. They blow it with shootout losses. They blow it by losing to bad teams. Tuesday night, they lost a shootout to the worst team in hockey, falling 3-2 to the Buffalo Sabres at First Niagara Center. Coming in, the Sabres had been 0-11-1 in their last 12, scoring 15 goals in the stretch. But this 21-45-9 club beat the Devils for the second time this season at home. That‘s 11 shootout losses in a row this season, 15 straight dating to March 13 for the Devils, who dropped this one 3-2 in nine rounds. Here our are studs and duds: STUDS 1. DAINIUS ZUBRUS: Mired in a long scoring slump, Zubrus finally got off the schneid 8:16 into the second period with the opening goal. This snapped a 20-game goal drought for Zubrus, and it also was his first point in 13 games. Zubrus worked hard for the goal, too, as he scored a dirty goal after getting to the front of the Buffalo net. 2. ADAM LARSSON: The 21-year-old Swede, stuck in the minors for two months, returned Monday and has looked good playing two games in two nights. Against the Sabres, Larsson blocked five shots in 18:05 of ice time and did some good work clearing the zone. He also finished with a plus-1, as he was on for Zubrus‘ goal. 3. MICHAEL RYDER: Right winger‘s goal slump is now one in his last 30 games, but he made a nice play to set up Zubrus‘ goal. Ryder took a pass from Zubrus behind the Buffalo net, skated forward and then gave the puck back to Zubrus, who fired a shot by Sabres 6-foot-5 rookie goalie Nathan Lieuwen. Ryder also had three shots on goal. 4. JAROMIR JAGR: No. 68 was scoreless the night after putting up a season-high four points, but he did a lot of dazzling with his stick-handling and slick passes, and he also scored a shootout goal. DUDS 1. STEVE BERNIER: Buffalo had just scored the tying goal early in the third when Bernier kept the momentum for the Sabres by taking a high-sticking penalty at 3:32. Bernier‘ minor proved costly, as Buffalo scored for a 2-1 lead at 4:31. 2. MARK FAYNE: On the top defensive pair most of the season with Andy Greene, Fayne didn‘t do a good job breaking up the play before the Sabres‘ first goal and on their second a pass zipped past him in front of the net and onto the stick of Ennis, who both of them for a 2-1 Buffalo lead. 3. ADAM HENRIQUE: Henrique had just one shot and misfired on a shootout shot that could have won it for the Devils. Star Ledger LOADED: 04.02.2014 732244 New Jersey Devils Devils fall to Sabres, 3-2, after nine-round shootout Zajac hit the right post in the fifth round, Ruutu was stopped in the sixth, Elias couldn‘t score in the seventh and Henrique missed on a backhander in the eighth round. By Rich Chere/April 01, 2014 Left winger Ville Leino gave the Sabres a 3-2 lead in the ninth round, leaving it to Mike Sislo to keep the Devils alive. Sislo, called up from the minors Tuesday morning because Ryane Clowe was unable to play, had be be driven from Albany, N.Y., to Buffalo and arrived just before lunch time. BUFFALO, N.Y. — What more could the Devils have wanted? ―I‘ve done a lot of shootouts in the American League with Albany, so it wasn‘t anything really new for me, to be honest,‖ Sislo said. ―I thought I had the goalie bite on the move pretty good. I just needed to get it up a little higher.‖ They had five chances to finally win a shootout, with Marek Zidlicky Travis Zajac, Tuomo Ruutu, Patrik Elias and Adam Henrique each having an opportunity to end the team‘s bizarre run of failures in tie-breakers. And still they couldn‘t do it. This time it was a lengthy nine-round competition in which Jacob Josefson and Jaromir Jagr scored. But that was not enough to prevent the Devils and goalie Cory Schneider from falling to the Buffalo Sabres, 3-2, Tuesday night at First Niagara Center. The Devils are now 0-11 in shootouts this season and have lost an NHL-record 15 in a row going back to last season. This was the second-longest shootout in Devils history. They went 10 rounds in a 4-3 loss to the Atlanta Thrashers on Feb. 15, 2008, at Prudential Center. Although the Columbus Blue Jackets lost in overtime and the Washington Capitals suffered a lopsided defeat, the Devils remain three points out of an Eastern Conference playoff spot with six games left. ―Probably it‘s in our heads right now. We should win the game before the shootout,‖ Jagr said. It is to the point where coach Pete DeBoer won‘t even discuss the shootout. The Devils haven‘t won one since March 10 of last season over the Winnipeg Jets. ―It is what it is. I don‘t haves any comments on the shootout. We‘ve beaten that to death,‖ DeBoer said. ―What are you going to do but move on? We got some help tonight. Columbus lost and Washington lost. We have to get ready for Friday night.‖ Blaming the 11 points they‘ve failed to capture in shootouts for what could wind up being a second straight season out of the playoffs is valid. But just as valid is the fact the Devils haven‘t been able to take advantage of the NHL‘s easiest schedule since the Olympic break. They have points in each of their last five games (2-0-3), but left points in the table against non-playoff clubs like the Panthers, Islanders and Sabres. ―We scored some goals in the shootout and I made some saves. We had a few chances to win it, but again their guy made the extra save,‖ Schneider said of Sabres 22-year-old rookie goalie Nathan Lieuwen. ―It shouldn‘t get to that point. All year long it‘s been our problem. We‘ve let teams hang around and hang around. Teams we‘re better than. No disrespect to Buffalo. They played hard. So did the Islanders, but this time of year we‘re a better team than they are. You let teams linger and they make a nice play or get a lucky bounce and you‘re in that situation. Not enough urgency to put this game away and get the two points.‖ It was a 1-1 game early in the third period when Zajac had a shorthanded scoring chance. Drew Stafford made a diving sweep check to break up the play, but the Devils were stunned when no penalty was called. ―I didn‘t get an explanation. I‘m baffled by that,‖ DeBoer said. Tyler Ennis wound up scoring on the power play, his second goal of the game, and it took a power play tip by Ruutu at 6:58 to get the game to overtime. ―(Lieuwen) was playing good,‖ Jagr said. ―He was very quick. It looked like you had an empty net and he was already there. He‘s a very good and quick goaltender.‖ Once it got to the shootout, the Devils were in trouble. Josefson, who said he found out he would be the Devils‘ first shooter ―two seconds before,‖ tied it at 1-1. Stafford and Jagr exchanged goals in the fourth round to make it 2-2. He was stopped, leaving the Devils‘ shooters 3-for-39 in shootouts this season. By not finishing off the Sabres in regulation time, the Devils‘ season is on the line. ―I don‘t know what it is, if we don‘t get up for the games enough or what,‖ Schneider said. ―Even against Florida, we let them crawl back in the game. Three games we should've had six points, we had four and that‘s probably going to be the difference at the end of the year.‖ Star Ledger LOADED: 04.02.2014 732245 New Jersey Devils Ex-Ranger Sean Avery: I was forced off 'Dancing with the Stars' Janelle Griffith/The Star-Ledger | April 01, 2014 Former Rangers star Sean Avery says his early ouster from "Dancing with the Stars" was the result of a dispute with a producer — not his dancing. "I will tell everyone on #GMA tomorrow why i was voted off ... my partner @Karina_Smirnoff is AMAZING," he tweeted, after his elimination from the show last week. The following morning, the 33-year-old appeared on "Good Morning America" with pro partner Karina Smirnoff, 36, and hinted that a dispute with "Dancing" producer Conrad Green was to blame for the pair's exit from the series. "I think we knew as of probably Monday last week that our fate was sealed," Avery said. "I had a conversation with Conrad, one of the producers, and I was upset at the package that they had brought in the week previous, and it was a very tacky attempt to show me as the bad boy of DWTS. And I think in reality TV or some sort of competition, if you have a disagreement with the producers then generally that seals your fate quite early." The ABC video package showed Avery's infamous "sloppy seconds" comment — which he made publicly — about his ex-girlfriend, actress Elisha Cuthbert, for which he was suspended by the National Hockey League in 2008 and which he later apologized for. Avery appeared annoyed on "Dancing" after the video clip was shown but played into the bad boy image during early rehearsal footage, saying he would not count out jumping across the judge's table if he received a score he didn't like this season. Some media outlets have reported Avery complained to Green about his portrayal in the video package, which may have ultimately led to his early exit from the program. He and Smirnoff were among the lowest performers in week one, but would have likely been spared dismissal had it not been for the surprise double elimination. ABC denied it sought any retaliation against Avery. "Eliminations are based solely on public voting combined with scores from the judges," ABC said in a written statement. "The double elimination in week two was planned in advance and producers have no hand in determining who is voted off each week." Star Ledger LOADED: 04.02.2014 732246 New Jersey Devils Lamoriello: No reason to think Clowe won‘t be back this season; Sestito, Sislo both to take warm-ups Staff With Ryane Clowe out for tonight‘s game in Buffalo, forwards Tim Sestito and Mike Sislo will both take pre-game warm-ups and Devils coach Pete DeBoer said he‘ll decide afterward which one will play. Sislo was called up from Albany earlier today. Defenseman Anton Volchenkov made the trip with the team and skated this morning, but won‘t play tonight, DeBoer said. Volchenkov has been working his way back from a groin strain he sustained on March 22 against the Rangers. Tuomo Ruutu, moved up to take Clowe‘s place on the top line in Monday‘s 6-3 win over Florida, will play there again tonight, DeBoer said. Devils general manager Lou Lamoriello repeated that the doctor said Clowe is ―fine‖ after appearing to hit the back of his head on the boards following a hit from Florida‘s Quinton Howden in the second period Monday. Clowe appeared dazed on the bench afterward and sat out the remainder of the game. He did not accompany the Devils to Buffalo. ―He‘s fine and we‘ll see,‖ Lamoriello said. ―Any time someone‘s out of the lineup, you have concerns, but we‘ll see. One concern would seem to be Clowe‘s recent history of concussions, including one earlier this season that caused him to miss 32 games. Lamoriello believes Clowe will be back to play again this season, though. ―I have no reason not to think so,‖ Lamoriello said. ―I think I‘ve answered everything the best I can. The doctors say he‘s fine, so we‘ll see. I can‘t answer any questions other than what I know.‖ DeBoer said the Devils will miss Clowe tonight, but was relieved to hear that he should be fine. ―He was playing well,‖ DeBoer said. ―I got the same update you guys did from Lou from the doctors at home and I think it was a big relief for everybody knowing Ryane and what he‘s been through, so hopefully we‘ll get him back here soon. ―We could use him, obviously, the way he‘s been playing, but it‘s the time of year that everyone deals with this (injuries) and someone‘s misfortune and is someone else‘s opportunity.‖ Lamoriello said rookie defenseman Jon Merrill had some dental work done and also has a cut on the side of his face from being struck with a deflected shot in Saturday‘s 2-1 shootout loss to the Islanders. ―He wanted to play with a cage, but he‘s not ready to play with a cage yet,‖ Lamoriello said. ―He‘s cut right on the side of the face and it‘s swollen. (The cut) went right through. But he‘s fine.‖ The Devils are 2-0-2 in their last four games and 3-1-2 in their last six, but need a win tonight to continue the push toward a playoff spot. They trail Columbus by three points for the final playoff spot in the East. The Blue Jackets, who have a game in hand, host Colorado at 7 p.m. tonight. The Devils also are two points behind Washington, which hosts Dallas at 7 p.m., and one behind Toronto, which hosts Calgary at 7 p.m. A win tonight would give the Devils eight points in their last five games. ―It would mean everything,‖ DeBoer said of winning tonight. ―We have to. There‘s no option here. We‘ve picked up points in five of the last six games. Obviously, we know the shootout issues we‘ve had. Otherwise, we‘d have a few more wins, but I think we‘re playing well at the right time, we‘re putting points in the bank and it has to continue tonight.‖ It would help if the Devils got another hat trick from Travis Zajac tonight after he got the first of his career Monday. ―I told Travis, ‗Let‘s do that again.‘ That would be nice,‖ DeBoer said. ―It‘s the time of year we need big games from different people. A hat trick here, a shutout there, whatever it takes to get a win.‖ Bergen Record LOADED: 04.02.2014 732247 New Jersey Devils Devils call up left wing Mike Sislo Staff With left wing Ryane Clowe out for tonight‘s game in Buffalo with an apparent head injury, the Devils have recalled left wing Mike Sislo from Albany of the AHL. Sislo, 26, played seven NHL games for the Devils earlier this season and did not register a point. Sislo leads the Albany Devils with 23 goals and ranks third on the team with 39 points in 57 AHL games this season. Sislo will wear No. 9, as he did earlier this season. Bergen Record LOADED: 04.02.2014 732248 New Jersey Devils Clowe ―fine‖, but did not accompany Devils to Buffalo, Sestito, Volchenkov ready to go if needed Staff Devils general manager Lou Lamoriello said left wing Ryane Clowe is ―fine‖, but did not accompany the Devils to Buffalo for tonight‘s game against the Sabres after appearing to hit his head on the boards in the second period of Monday night‘s 6-3 win over Florida. Lamoriello said Clowe is ―day to day.‖ Clowe needed help getting off the ice after being hit by Panthers Quinton Howden and appearing to have the back of his head hit the boards with 1:45 left in the second period. As of now, the Devils have not called up any forwards to replace Clowe. The team did not hold a morning skate today at First Niagara Center. The only Devils‘ players that skated were defenseman Anton Volchenkov and left wing Tim Sestito. Volchenkov has missed the last four games with a groin injury. Sestito has not played since being elbowed in the head by Minnesota‘s Nate Prosser on March 20. Both say they are ready to play if needed. If no other player is called up, one of them will have to play tonight. ―It feels good,‖ Volchenkov said. ―Not sure if I‘m playing, but maybe.‖ Volchenkov said he‘s been skating for ―three or four days.‖ He was injured in the second period of a 2-0 loss to the Rangers on March 22. ―I just extended,‖ Volchenkov said. ―A guy pushed me in the back and I was so low and my legs went to turn to the side. It‘s hockey. It‘s so quick and sometimes there‘s no control.‖ Sestito said he‘s ―good to go if my number‘s called,‖ but did not know what the lineup is. ―I haven‘t had any setbacks,‖ Sestito said. ―I‘ve felt fine. I just needed some time practice and skates and stuff, but since then I feel like I‘m up to speed.‖ Sestito said his last had a concussion ―probably two years ago.‖ ―So, I kind of know the symptoms and whatnot,‖ he said. ―I‘ve been through the process before. Your head‘s not something you can mess with.‖ Sestito said he hasn‘t had any symptoms ―since a couple days after it.‖ ―I‘ve felt pretty good,‖ he said. ―I just had some symptoms. Doctors say you‘re more susceptible, so you‘ve really got to make sure you‘re fully healed before you get going again.‖ Cory Schneider will start in net for the Devils against Sabres‘ 22-year-old rookie Nathan Lieuwen, who will be making his third NHL start and looking for his first win. Devils coach Pete DeBoer will hold a pre-game media availability at 4:50 p.m. Bergen Record LOADED: 04.02.2014 732249 New Jersey Devils Devils know time running out after latest shootout loss; Pay for letting Sabres hang around Tom Gulitti When Jaromir Jagr starts quoting Al Pacino‘s character in the football movie ―Any Given Sunday‖ to describe the Devils‘ continuing misfortunes in the shootouts, you know they‘ve pretty much run out of new things to say. They tried a few different things tonight in Buffalo. They tried some different shooters. They tried not watching. In the end, they just found a new way to torture themselves. They came into the night with only one goal on 30 attempts this season, but actually got goals from Jacob Josefson in the first round and Jagr in the fourth round. The start to the shootout looked familiar as Ennis scored on the Sabres‘ first shot – a backhand that went off Schneider‘s glove, off the right post and dropped into the net. It was the sixth time in the seven shootouts Schneider has been in this season that he gave up a goal to the first shooter. ――I thought I should have had the first one,‖ Schneider said. ―I thought I did and it just trickled in the net there. Kind of indicative of the year.‖ DeBoer pulled a surprise next and sent out Josefson for his first attempt of the season. Josefson, who was 0-for-2 in his career in shootouts before tonight, weaved back and forth but also came in with decent speed before beating Lieuwen over the blocker. Josefson said he found he was going to shoot first ―about two seconds before.‖ Unlike in their first 10 shootouts this season, the Devils were actually one shot away from beating the Buffalo Sabres five times and couldn‘t get the deciding goal to go in past rookie goaltender Nathan Lieuwen. Schneider stopped the next two Sabres‘ shooters – Cody Hodgson and Zemgus Girgensons – giving Marek Zidlicky a chance to win it for the Devils in the bottom of the third round (after Damien Brunner failed to score in the second round). So, the ending was the same as it‘s always been for the Devils this season, as Ville Leino scored the deciding goal in the ninth round to give the Sabres a 3-2 victory. But, Zidlicky, who was taking his first shootout attempt of the season, had his shot go off Lieuwen‘s glove and wide right. The Sabres won the shootout by the same score with Leino beating goaltender Cory Schneider between the pads in the top of the ninth round before rookie Mike Sislo, called up earlier in the day to fill in for the injured Ryane Clowe, couldn‘t lift a backhand over Lieuwen‘s right pad in the bottom of the round. ―We scored some goals in the shootout and I made some saves,‖ Schneider said. ―We had a few chances to win it, but again their guy made the extra save.‖ This shootout loss was particularly costly because the Devils had a chance to make up some ground on Columbus in the race for the final playoff spot in the East. Instead, with the one point from the shootout loss, the Devils remained three points behind the Blue Jackets, who also picked up a point for losing in overtime to Colorado. Now the Devils have only six games left and the Blue Jackets have a game in hand. And, though Washington lost to Dallas, Toronto pulled back even with the Blue Jackets by defeating Calgary tonight. The Devils have picked up points in five consecutive games (2-0-3), but that includes shootout losses to Phoenix, the Islanders and Buffalo in the last six days. ―It‘s the same old story,‖ right wing Jaromir Jagr said. ―We have chances to win and it just didn‘t happen.‖ Jagr was talking more about the 65 minutes of hockey that preceded the shootout. The Devils had the last-overall Sabres on the ropes for much of the first two periods, but led only 1-0 on Dainius Zubrus‘ goal 8:16 into the second. That left the Sabres within striking distance and Tyler Ennis scored twice in the opening 4:41 of the third to give them a 2-1 lead. A Tuomo Ruutu power-play deflection at 6:58 got the Devils back even, but they could not get a third goal past the 22-year-old Lieuwen, who made 33 saves to earn his first NHL win in just his third big league start. After Drew Stafford beat Schneider between the pads in the top of the fourth round, Jagr kept the Devils alive by doing the same against Lieuwen. When Marcus Foligno fired wide left on his attempt to lead off the fifth round, Travis Zajac had a chance to win it for the Devils and appeared to have Lieuwen beat, but hit the right post. ―It‘s pretty disappointing,‖ Zajac said. ―That‘s about all I can say about it.‖ On the bench, the Devils‘ players had turned their backs and looked away while their shooters were going, Jagr said, ―Just to change our luck.‖ ―Sometimes it‘s all about the luck,‖ Jagr said. ―If Travis would hit the post and it would go in, it‘s game over. It‘s a game about the inches. Like the coach in Any Given Sunday said, it‘s a game about inches.‖ Ruutu (first attempt this season), Patrik Elias and Adam Henrique also had chances to win in the next three rounds and couldn‘t finish, leaving the door open for Leino to score the winner. ―A lefty coming in, he kind of opened up low blocker, so I was reading he was going to get it over the pad low blocker,‖ Schneider said of Leino‘s attempt. ―And he just sort of came over at the last second and snapped it five hole and I got a pretty good piece of it, but he put enough on it that it snuck through. ―So, again, disappointing to give up the winning goal.‖ Sislo, who is 2-for-12 in shootout attempts this season with Albany, had a chance to answer for the Devils, but could not lift his backhand over Lieuwen‘s right pad. ―That was what I wanted to do, obviously just get it up a little higher over his pad,‖ said Sislo, who could not recall facing Lieuwen in a shootout in the AHL. But, again, that‘s not where the Devils thought they lost this game. ―He was playing good,‖ Jagr said of Lieuwen. ―He was very quick. It sometimes looked like you had an empty net and he was already net and he was already there. He‘s a very good and quick goaltender.‖ ―It shouldn‘t get to that point, man,‖ Schneider said. ―All year long it‘s been our problem. We‘ve let teams hang around, hang around. Teams we‘re better than. No disrespect to Buffalo. They played hard, so did the Islanders, but at this time of year we‘re a better team than they are. You let teams linger and they make a nice place or get a lucky bounce and you‘re in that situation. The Sabres had won only one of their previous 12 games (1-10-1). ―So, not enough urge tonight to put this game away and get the two points.‖ ―I thought the story of the game was us coming out of the second period. I thought we should have been up 2-0 or 3-0,‖ frustrated Devils coach Pete DeBoer said. ―That for me is the story of our recent play. We‘re playing well enough to build on leads and we don‘t. We let teams hang around and the margin of error is real small when you can‘t get the second or third goal.‖ Schneider doesn‘t believe it‘s a matter of effort, though. The nine-round shootout was the second longest in team history, surpassed only by a 10-rounder in a 4-3 loss to Atlanta on Feb. 15 2008. The Devils are 0-11 in the shootout this season and have lost an NHL record 15 consecutive tiebreakers dating back to last season. ―We usually work hard. It‘s not that we don‘t work hard,‖ he said. ―But if we don‘t execute against any team it‘s not going to work. I don‘t know what it is – if we don‘t get up for the games enough. Even against Florida, we let them crawl back into the game. We finally pulled away, but it‘s three games we should have had six points and we end up with four and that‘s probably going to be the difference at the end of the year.‖ The Devils know they are running out of opportunities. They‘ll have to hope they‘re still only three points out when they play their next game Friday night against Washington. On Thursday night, Columbus plays at Philadelphia and Toronto hosts Boston. ―We still have a chance,‖ Jagr said. ―Anything can happen. One team can get on a bad stretch and lose five or six, so you have to fight while there‘s a chance.‖ ―It is what it is,‖ DeBoer said. ―We‘ve beat (the shootout) to death. What are you going to do, but move on? We got some help tonight. Columbus lost and Washington lost, so we‘ve got to get ready for Friday night.‖ *** With no flights from Albany to Buffalo, the Devils had a car pick Sislo up in Albany this morning and drive him (about three and a half hours). He said he arrived ―just before lunchtime.‖ ―It was a busy day, but I thought I prepared for it as well as I could have and got the rest I needed and was ready to go,‖ Sislo said. *** Both DeBoer and Zajac thought Stafford should have been penalized when he slashed Zajac (and lost his stick) on shorthanded breakaway (preventing Zajacx from getting a shot off) only moments before Ennis scored the Sabres‘ second goal. ―I guess they didn‘t see it that way,‖ Zajac said. ―But you get some calls and you don‘t. It was kind of unlucky. They come right down and they scored right afterward.‖ ―I didn‘t get an explanation,‖ DeBoer said. ―I‘m baffled by that.‖ Bergen Record LOADED: 04.02.2014 732250 New Jersey Devils Devils notes: Ryane Clowe 'fine' Tom Gulitti April 2, 2014 Clowe is ‗fine‘ Although left wing Ryane Clowe did not accompany the Devils to Buffalo for Tuesday‘s game, general manager Lou Lamoriello said the team‘s doctors say he‘s "fine" after he appeared to hit the back of his head on the boards on a hit from Florida‘s Quinton Howden in the second period Monday night. "He‘s fine and we‘ll see," Lamoriello said. "Any time someone‘s out of the lineup, you have concerns, but we‘ll see." One concern would seem to be Clowe‘s recent history of concussions, including one earlier this season that caused him to miss 32 games. Lamoriello believes Clowe, 31, will be back to play again this season, though. "I have no reason not to think so," Lamoriello said. "I think I‘ve answered everything the best I can. The doctors say he‘s fine, so we‘ll see." Clowe had a goal and two assists Monday before he was injured, but coach Pete DeBoer was just happy to hear that he should be OK. Merrill‘s recovering Lamoriello said rookie defenseman Jon Merrill had some dental work done and also has a cut on the side of his face after being struck with a deflected Travis Hamonic shot in Saturday‘s 2-1 shootout loss to the Islanders. "He wanted to play with a cage, but he‘s not ready to play with a cage yet," Lamoriello said. "He‘s cut right on the side of the face and it‘s swollen." Briefs The nine-round shootout was one short of the Devils‘ record of 10 rounds in a 4-3 loss to Atlanta on Feb. 15, 2008. … D Anton Volchenkov accompanied the team to Buffalo and skated Tuesday morning, but missed his fifth straight game with a groin injury he sustained March 22 against the Rangers. Bergen Record LOADED: 04.02.2014 732251 New Jersey Devils You let teams linger and they get a lucky bounce and you‘re in that situation. ―So, not enough urge tonight to put this game away and get the two points.‖ Devils fail in another shootout in 3-2 loss to Sabres By TOM GULITTI BUFFALO, N.Y. – Just when you thought the Devils had run out of ways to torture themselves in a dreaded shootout, they found a new one Tuesday night at First Niagara Center. Unlike their first 10 shootouts this season, the Devils actually were one shot away from beating the Buffalo Sabres five times and couldn‘t get the deciding goal past rookie goaltender Nathan Lieuwen. So the ending was the same as it‘s always been, as Ville Leino scored the deciding goal in the ninth round to give the Sabres a 3-2 victory. The Sabres won the shootout by the same score with Leino beating goaltender Cory Schneider between the pads in the top of the ninth round before rookie Mike Sislo, called up earlier in the day to fill in for the injured Ryane Clowe, couldn‘t lift a backhand over Lieuwen‘s right pad in the bottom of the round. ―We scored some goals in the shootout and I made some saves,‖ Schneider said. ―We had a few chances to win it, but again their guy made the extra save.‖ This shootout loss was particularly costly because the Devils had a chance to make up some ground on Columbus in the race for the final playoff spot in the East. Instead, with the one point from the shootout loss, the Devils remained three points behind the Blue Jackets, who also picked up a point from their overtime loss to Colorado. The Devils have picked up points in five consecutive games (2-0-3), but that includes shootout losses to Phoenix, the Islanders and Buffalo in the last six days. And now the Devils have only six games left and the Blue Jackets have a game in hand. ―It‘s the same old story,‖ right wing Jaromir Jagr said. ―We have chances to win and it just didn‘t happen.‖ Jagr was talking more about the 65 minutes of hockey that preceded the shootout. The Devils had the last-place overall Sabres on the ropes for much of the first two periods, but led only 1-0 on Dainius Zubrus‘ goal 8:16 into the second. That left the Sabres within striking distance, and Tyler Ennis scored twice in the opening 4:41 of the third to give them a 2-1 lead. A Tuomo Ruutu power-play deflection at 6:58 got the Devils even, but they couldn‘t get a third goal past the 22-year-old Lieuwen, who made 33 saves to earn his first win in his third NHL start. ―I thought we should have been up 2-0 or 3-0,‖ frustrated Devils coach Pete DeBoer said. ―That for me is the story of our recent play. We‘re playing well enough to build on leads and we don‘t. We let teams hang around, and the margin of error is real small when you can‘t get the second or third goal.‖ The nine-round shootout was the second-longest in team history. The Devils are 0-11 in shootouts this season and have lost an NHL-record 15 consecutive tiebreakers dating back to last season. They came into the night with only one goal on 30 attempts in shootouts, but actually got goals from Jacob Josefson in the first round and Jagr in the fourth. After Buffalo‘s Marcus Foligno fired wide on his attempt in the top of the fifth round, Travis Zajac had a chance to win it for the Devils in the bottom of the round and appeared to have Lieuwen beat, but hit the right post. ―It‘s pretty disappointing,‖ Zajac said. ―That‘s about all I can say about it.‖ Ruutu, Patrik Elias and Adam Henrique also had chances to win it in the next three rounds and couldn‘t finish, leaving the door open for Leino to ruin the Devils‘ night. ―It shouldn‘t get to that point, man,‖ Schneider said. ―All year long it‘s been our problem. We‘ve let teams hang around, hang around. Teams we‘re better than. No disrespect to Buffalo. They played hard, so did the Islanders, but at this time of year we‘re a better team than they are. Bergen Record LOADED: 04.02.2014 732252 New Jersey Devils Devils fall victim to Tyler Ennis, Sabres in shootout loss Lieuwen made back-to-back stops on Adam Henrique and Patrik Elias with just over a minute left in overtime. He then had a chance to win the game after Stafford scored in the fourth round of the shootout. Ennis scored twice in the third period and again in the shootout to lead Buffalo to a 3-2 win. ―I had a ‗Welcome to the NHL‘ moment when Jagr came down on me with a chance to win the game and I think I was a little too excited about what was happening,‖ Lieuwen said. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS But after Leino scored, Lieuwen rebounded to pick up that first win with a stop on Mike Sislo that he doesn‘t quite remember. BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) — Ville Leino was happy to bask in some rare cheers after netting the winning goal in the shootout. ―Today was awesome,‖ Leino said after scoring in the ninth round of the shootout to give the Buffalo Sabres a 3-2 win over the New Jersey Devils on Tuesday night. ―Obviously we haven‘t been winning that much, so it‘s tough times but those kind of moments, you get a little extra energy.‖ Leino had not scored a goal in regulation all season and has been the subject of catcalls in Buffalo, but drew a roar of approval with his shootout tally. When asked why he tabbed Leino to shoot, Buffalo coach Ted Nolan cited necessity as the reason he used the slumping forward. ―He played a real good game for us tonight, and we were running out of forwards,‖ Nolan said. ―He‘s had a tough, tough go, but he‘s a real good player and I was glad to see him get one.‖ Tyler Ennis scored twice in the third period and again in the shootout, while Nathan Lieuwen made 33 saves for his first NHL win. Dainius Zubrus gave New Jersey a 1-0 lead at 8:16 of the second period and Tuomo Ruutu tipped Andy Greene‘s shot past Lieuwen at 6:58 of the third to tie it 2-2. The Devils, 0-11 this season in shootouts, are three points out of the Eastern Conference‘s final wild card spot. ―We had a bunch of chances to score and we have guys who are good in the shootout,‖ Zubrus said. ―Tough to say it‘s luck because it‘s been 11 games in a row, but maybe a bit of bad luck has to be there.‖ Cory Schneider made 25 saves for New Jersey. The Devils outshot Buffalo 10-8 in the opening period, but dominated possession and had the best chances. New Jersey broke the deadlock in the second, when Michael Ryder‘s cross-crease pass appeared to be knocked into the Sabres goal by Jamie McBain. The goal was awarded to Zubrus. Lieuwen returned to form after the goal, making a diving stick save on Ryder to keep the score 1-0. Moments later, he stopped Ruutu on a partial breakaway. ―The one word that Teddy keeps using is compete,‖ Lieuwen said. ―I just went out there and competed. Good things happened.‖ The Sabres managed just four shots in the second period. Buffalo got the equalizer 1:39 into the third period on a play started by Drew Stafford and completed by a cross-slot pass from Leino to Ennis, who scored on a wrist shot to become the first Sabres player to score 20 goals this season. ―He‘s a dynamic player,‖ Nolan said. ―He scoots in and out, and for him to get that 20, it‘s a magical number he was waiting on for a while.‖ Get Adobe Flash player Buffalo took its first lead of the night on a power play just over three minutes later. Cody Hodgson slid a pass through several players to Ennis, who shot high into the net at 4:41. ―He made a pretty ridiculous pass through two or three guys right on my tape,‖ Ennis said. ―I just had to throw it on the net.‖ New Jersey tied the score on the power play, when Ruutu deflected Greene‘s shot past Lieuwen. ―I blacked out,‖ Lieuwen said. ―The guy came in and as soon as I made that save, I was just all smiles. I was excited and I‘m very grateful.‖ Buffalo snapped a four-game skid with the win, while the Devils now have points in five consecutive games. New York Daily News LOADED: 04.02.2014 732253 New Jersey Devils Devils‘ latest shootout loss hurts playoff hopes ―I blacked out,‖ Lieuwen said. ―The guy came in and as soon as I made that save, I was just all smiles. I was excited and I‘m very grateful.‖ Buffalo snapped a four-game skid with the win, while the Devils now have points in five consecutive games. New York Post LOADED: 04.02.2014 By Associated Press April 1, 2014 | 11:02pm BUFFALO — The Devils can‘t find a way to win a shootout, and it looks like it could cost them a playoff berth. Ville Leino goal in the ninth round of the shootout gave the Sabres a 3-2 win over the Devils on Tuesday night. The Devils, 0-11 this season in shootouts, are three points out of the Eastern Conference‘s final wild-card spot. ―We had a bunch of chances to score and we have guys who are good in the shootout,‖ Zubrus said. ―Tough to say it‘s luck because it‘s been 11 games in a row, but maybe a bit of bad luck has to be there.‖ Cory Schneider made 25 saves for New Jersey. Leino had not scored a goal in regulation all season and has been the subject of catcalls in Buffalo, but drew a roar of approval with his shootout tally. ―Obviously we haven‘t been winning that much, so it‘s tough times but those kind of moments, you get a little extra energy.‖ Tyler Ennis scored twice in the third period and again in the shootout, while Nathan Lieuwen made 33 saves for his first NHL win. Dainius Zubrus gave the Devils a 1-0 lead at 8:16 of the second period and Tuomo Ruutu tipped Andy Greene‘s shot past Lieuwen at 6:58 of the third to tie it 2-2. The Devils outshot Buffalo 10-8 in the opening period, but dominated possession and had the best chances. The Devils broke the deadlock in the second, when Michael Ryder‘s cross-crease pass appeared to be knocked into the Sabres goal by Jamie McBain. The goal was awarded to Zubrus. Lieuwen returned to form after the goal, making a diving stick save on Ryder to keep the score 1-0. Moments later, he stopped Ruutu on a partial breakaway. ―The one word that [coach] Teddy [Nolan] keeps using is compete,‖ Lieuwen said. ―I just went out there and competed. Good things happened.‖ The Sabres managed just four shots in the second period. Buffalo got the equalizer 1:39 into the third period on a play started by Drew Stafford and completed by a cross-slot pass from Leino to Ennis, who scored on a wrist shot to become the first Sabres player to score 20 goals this season. ―He‘s a dynamic player,‖ Nolan said. ―He scoots in and out, and for him to get that 20, it‘s a magical number he was waiting on for a while.‖ Buffalo took its first lead of the night on a power play just over three minutes later. Cody Hodgson slid a pass through several players to Ennis, who shot high into the net at 4:41. ―He made a pretty ridiculous pass through two or three guys right on my tape,‖ Ennis said. ―I just had to throw it on the net.‖ New Jersey tied the score on the power play, when Ruutu deflected Greene‘s shot past Lieuwen. Lieuwen made back-to-back stops on Adam Henrique and Patrik Elias with just over a minute left in overtime. He then had a chance to win the game after Stafford scored in the fourth round of the shootout. ―I had a ‗Welcome to the NHL‘ moment when [Jaromir] Jagr came down on me with a chance to win the game and I think I was a little too excited about what was happening,‖ Lieuwen said. But after Leino scored, Lieuwen rebounded to pick up that first win with a stop on Mike Sislo that he doesn‘t quite remember. 732254 New York Islanders Bailey Has Goal, Assist as Isles Top Panthers 4-2 By THE ASSOCIATED PRESSAPRIL 1, 2014, 9:52 P.M. E.D.T. UNIONDALE, N.Y. — Josh Bailey had a goal and assist, and the New York Islanders kept up their strong finish with a 4-2 victory over the Florida Panthers on Tuesday night. New York, on the verge of elimination in the Eastern Conference playoff race, bounced back quickly from Quinton Howden's short-handed goal less than two minutes in and sent the Panthers to their fourth straight loss. Travis Hamonic, Matt Martin and Mike Halmo also scored, Colin McDonald had two assists, and Evgeni Nabokov made 20 saves for the Islanders, 4-0-1 in their past five games. Florida, which won the two earlier meetings this season, is one of only three NHL teams with fewer points than New York. Brandon Pirri closed the scoring for Florida, making it 4-2 with his 11th goal — on a power play — with 5.9 seconds left in the game. Scott Clemmensen stopped 36 shots for Florida, which lost 6-3 at New Jersey on Monday. The Islanders shook off the early deficit and got even 45 seconds later on the same power play when Hamonic netted his third goal. The action started quickly for the Panthers, who scored short-handed for the second straight night — the fourth time that has happened in team history. On his first NHL shift, defenseman Jonathan Racine was called for interference when he leveled forward Cal Clutterbuck in the New York end just 42 seconds in. But it was Florida that struck first. Howden knocked the puck free at the left point and raced the other way alone. He easily stayed in front of Frans Nielsen and beat Nabokov at 1:50. That lead was short-lived as Hamonic connected late in the power play. Bailey won a faceoff in the right circle and got the puck back to the right point to Hamonic, who glided into the middle and snapped a shot through traffic at 2:35. Florida gave the Islanders two other power plays in the period in which the Panthers were outshot 11-5. They were about to get an advantage with 2:19 left in the first when Matt Carkner high-sticked Scottie Upshall in front of the penalty box and knocked him to the ice. But Panthers teammate Erik Gudbranson charged Carkner, and they immediately dropped the gloves and fought. Gudbranson was given an extra penalty for instigating, wiping out the impending power play. The Islanders added two goals in the second, including Bailey's seventh that came 17 seconds after he left the penalty box. McDonald got two whacks at the puck in close, and Bailey found the rebound and slammed in the goal at 11:18. New York stretched the lead to 3-1 with 2:24 remaining. McDonald knocked the puck away from Racine at the left point and took off alone. The hard-charging Martin came down the middle and ripped in the rebound of McDonald's shot for his eighth goal. Halmo converted his rebound 4:21 into the third to make it 4-1. It was his first NHL goal in his 13th career game. NOTES: For the third straight season, Martin was presented with the team's Bob Nystrom Award, given to the Islanders player who best exemplifies leadership, hustle and dedication. ... Nabokov was the third Islanders goalie in three games to start against the Panthers this season. ... Racine and RW Bobby Butler were both recalled from San Antonio (AHL) on Tuesday. Butler was scratched. New York Times LOADED: 04.02.2014 732255 New York Islanders Islanders pound Panthers with four-goal onslaught for 4-2 win Josh Bailey had a goal and an assist at Nassau Coliseum as the Islanders won for the fourth time in their last five games. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tuesday, April 1, 2014, 10:02 PM UNIONDALE, N.Y. (AP) — The New York Islanders were even with the Florida Panthers in the first period, and coach Jack Capuano liked nothing about it. He let his players know it, and they responded with an impressive final 40 minutes. Josh Bailey had a goal and assist, and the Islanders kept up their strong finish with a 4-2 victory over the Panthers on Tuesday night. ―We got off to a real slow start,‖ Capuano said. New York, on the verge of elimination in the Eastern Conference playoff race after qualifying for the postseason a year ago, quickly bounced back from Quinton Howden‘s short-handed goal less than two minutes in and sent the Panthers to their fourth straight loss. Travis Hamonic, Matt Martin and Mike Halmo also scored, Colin McDonald had two assists, and Evgeni Nabokov made 20 saves for the Islanders, 4-0-1 in their past five. ―Guys have done a good job keeping each other up, keeping the spirits up even though it can be tough,‖ Bailey said. ―When you think about last year down the stretch and how much fun it was, it‘s difficult. We definitely don‘t want to find ourselves here ever again, but you‘ve still got a job to do.‖ Florida, which won two earlier meetings this season, is one of three NHL teams with fewer points than New York. ―No one is happy with where we are,‖ Martin said. ―It‘s a rough year and a year we‘re not proud of, but to be going down the stretch with some wins and playing good hockey definitely feels a little bit better.‖ Brandon Pirri closed the scoring for Florida, making it 4-2 with his 11th goal — on a power play — with 5.9 seconds left in the game. Scott Clemmensen stopped 36 shots for Florida, which lost 6-3 at New Jersey on Monday. ―We let them capitalize on too many chances,‖ Panthers center Nick Bjugstad said. ―We have to stay positive and try to end the season with better efforts.‖ The action started quickly for the Panthers, who scored short-handed for the second straight night — the fourth time that has happened in team history. On his first NHL shift, defenseman Jonathan Racine was called for interference when he leveled forward Cal Clutterbuck 42 seconds in. Florida then struck first. Howden knocked the puck free at the left point and raced the other way alone. He easily stayed in front of Frans Nielsen and beat Nabokov at 1:50. The Islanders tied it on the same power play, 45 seconds later, when Hamonic netted his third goal. Bailey won a faceoff and got the puck back to Hamonic, who snapped a shot through traffic at 2:35. Get Adobe Flash player ―The surge started to go our way a little bit, but we didn‘t play our style in the first,‖ Capuano said. ―I wasn‘t happy at all, and I know the guys weren‘t happy, either, but you‘ve got to find a way. You can‘t have slow starts in this league.‖ Florida gave the Islanders two other power plays in the period in which the Panthers were outshot 11-5. They were about to get an advantage with 2:19 left when Matt Carkner high-sticked Scottie Upshall in front of the penalty box and knocked him to the ice. But Panthers teammate Erik Gudbranson charged Carkner, and they immediately fought. Gudbranson was given an extra penalty for instigating, wiping out the power play. The Islanders added two goals in the second, including Bailey‘s seventh 17 seconds after he served a penalty. McDonald got two whacks at the puck, and Bailey slammed in the rebound at 11:18. New York stretched the lead to 3-1 with 2:24 remaining. McDonald knocked the puck away from Racine at the left point and took off alone. The hard-charging Martin came down the middle and ripped in the rebound of McDonald‘s shot for his eighth goal. ―They kept coming at us, kept crashing the crease,‖ Clemmensen said. ―They never stopped working, never gave up on plays all night.‖ Halmo converted his rebound 4:21 into the third to make it 4-1. It was his first NHL goal in his 13th career game. ―Everyone in here wants to play hard and be successful and give management something to think about for next season,‖ Martin said. ―We‘re in a profession where no one‘s job is really safe, so if you want to play here, you‘ve got to show it.‖ New York Daily News LOADED: 04.02.2014 732256 New York Islanders Islanders roll past woeful Panthers By Brett Cyrgalis April 1, 2014 | 10:13pm So it‘s that time of year again when Islanders‘ games don‘t mean anything and so, in turn, they start playing well. Though ‗well‘ was a relative term Tuesday night at the Coliseum, when they thumped the absolutely atrocious Panthers, 4-2, making the Isles 5-1-1 in their past seven — and still hopelessly out of the playoff conversation, 30-35-10 with just seven games remaining. ―I don‘t believe in any of that stuff — I don‘t believe teams play loose when they have nothing to play for,‖ said coach Jack Capuano, who again dressed nine rookie skaters. ―To me, you coach and try to prepare you team to win a game and players prepare to win.‖ When that same question about the change in their game once out of the playoff picture was posed throughout the locker room, a common refrain came back. ―I have no idea,‖ said forward Colin McDonald, who played arguably his best game all season in collecting two assists, his first game since being announced as the team‘s nominee for the Masterton Trophy for perseverance and dedication to hockey. ―The whole reason why you play the game is to play for something, so when you‘re not playing for anything, it‘s disappointing,‖ McDonald said. ―I think guys are fighting for jobs, and maybe that‘s one reason we‘re playing the way we are, because we know no job is safe.‖ Josh Bailey, who got his seventh goal of the season and is a renowned late-season scorer, had a more cerebral answer. ―I just think guys are working hard and not really thinking too much,‖ Bailey said. ―I think sometimes you can tend to over-think things, and sometimes you just go out and work hard and let the game kind of come to you, it tends to go in your favor.‖ Matt Martin got his eighth of the season late in the second to make it 3-1, and it was followed early in the third by fourth-line rookie Mike Halmo getting his first career goal, making it 4-1. Quintown Howden opened the scoring for the Panthers (27-42-8) just 1:50 into the first, and Brandon Pirri finished it off with four seconds remaining. ―I think it‘s easier to get wins when you‘re winning — it‘s contagious,‖ Bailey said. ―Everyone goes through their ups and downs, but obviously our downs were a little too much this season.‖ New York Post LOADED: 04.02.2014 732257 New York Islanders Islanders' rookie-laden lineup beats Florida By MARK HERRMANN mark.herrmann@newsday.com Mike Halmo drove hard to the net and shot, then shot again. It all happened so fast that he had no time to reflect that it was a moment he will remember for the rest of his life. It wasn't the red light or the cheers that got his attention. It was the sound of his name bouncing off the walls of Nassau Coliseum. "It took a few minutes afterward, sitting on the bench to sink in. Then I heard it, through the speakers," said the 22-year-old, whose first NHL goal came at 4:21 of the third period in the Islanders' 4-2 win Tuesday night over the Panthers. Halmo is one of 10 rookies in the Islanders lineup, a setup that means every game is a big game for the guys on the ice. To the rest of the world, Tuesday night was an irrelevant matchup of two teams out of the playoff picture. But for the rookies and for the veteran role players who now have bigger roles, every night has the potential to be an occasion. "It's a rough year and a year we're not proud of, but to be going down the stretch with some wins and playing good hockey, it definitely feels a little better," said Matt Martin, who continued showing a new offensive dimension with the second-period goal (his eighth of the season) that made the score 3-1. The Islanders' current 6-2-1 and 4-0-1 runs aren't necessarily omens of a bright future. But they are signs that guys are playing for their professional lives and playing hard. That goes for Halmo and rookie center Ryan Strome, who retrieved the puck from the corner and set up the tiebreaking goal in the second period. It also goes for Colin McDonald, who has flourished on a line with Martin and Strome and had two assists in the second period, and Josh Bailey, who had a goal and an assist. "All those guys who have come up have done a great job for us. From practice to games, they're always giving 110 percent. It has paid off for us," Bailey said, adding that the bench was bursting with excitement after the rookie's first goal. Newsday LOADED: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732258 New York Rangers Rangers Set Road Record With Win in Vancouver By LUCAS AYKROYDAPRIL 2, 2014 VANCOUVER, British Columbia — Benoit Pouliot scored the winning goal in the first period as the Rangers earned their franchise-record 25th road win, beating the Vancouver Canucks, 3-1, on Tuesday at Rogers Arena. The old mark of 24 wins was attained three times, in 1993-94 under then-Coach Mike Keenan, and in 2010-11 and 2011-12 under John Tortorella, who has fared dismally in his first year as the coach of the Canucks. Vancouver remains sits in 10th place in the Western Conference, and this loss puts them one step closer to mathematical elimination from the playoffs. The Rangers solidified their grasp on second place in the Metropolitan Division. With 90 points, they are three points ahead of the Philadelphia Flyers, although the Flyers have two games in hand. The Rangers have won seven out of their last eight games, dating back to an 8-4 road trouncing of the Ottawa Senators on March 18. Rangers Coach Alain Vigneault swept the season series against Tortorella. The Rangers beat the Canucks, 5-2, in their previous encounter this season at Madison Square Garden on Nov. 30. Tortorella and Vigneault essentially swapped teams after their clubs were eliminated in last year‘s playoffs. Vigneault was hired by the Rangers in May and Tortorella by the Canucks in June. Martin St. Louis scored in the third period to end his goal-scoring drought in his 15th game in a Rangers uniform. The former captain of the Tampa Bay Lightning was traded to New York for Ryan Callahan, the ex-captain of the Rangers, on March 5, and had registered just three assists for the Rangers before Tuesday‘s game. In a duel between Swedish goalies, Henrik Lundqvist outplayed Vancouver‘s rookie starter, Eddie Lack, as the Canucks outshot the Rangers 35-31. Lack, 26, has started every game for the Canucks since the disgruntled Roberto Luongo, a two-time Olympic gold medalist, was traded to the Florida Panthers on March 4. At 4 minutes 59 seconds, Dan Carcillo opened the scoring with his fourth goal of the season. It was the first time the 29-year-old enforcer has scored since notching the game-winner against the Islanders in an outdoor game at Yankee Stadium on Jan. 29. Pouliot gave the Rangers a 2-0 lead at 14:43, capitalizing on the power play on a beautiful set-up from Derrick Brassard. Ryan Kesler cut the Rangers‘ lead to 2-1 at 6:21 of the second period, firing a one-timer home on a pass from Daniel Sedin. The Canucks were unable to build momentum from Kesler‘s goal. The atmosphere in the arena remained subdued with empty seats aplenty in the lower bowl, symptomatic of how the fan base has been alienated during the brief Tortorella era. The Canucks were unable to rally in the third period, despite some chances when Carl Hagelin and Brian Boyle took back-to-back minor penalties near the midway point. St. Louis put the Rangers up, 3-1, when he took a nice cross-ice pass from Rick Nash on a two-on-one shorthanded rush with 9:45 seconds remaining. A scrum erupted in the final minute when Vancouver‘s Alexandre Burrows ran Rangers defenseman Ryan McDonagh into the end boards to Lundqvist‘s right. Burrows received a five-minute major for elbowing and a game misconduct. New York Times LOADED: 04.02.2014 732259 New York Rangers Martin St. Louis scores first goal as Blueshirt as NY Rangers top John Tortorella‘s Canucks BY Pat Leonard Updated: Wednesday, April 2, 2014, 2:14 AM VANCOUVER — Martin St. Louis‘ first goal as a Ranger was short and sweet. St. Louis sealed a 3-1 victory over the Vancouver Canucks Tuesday night with a shorthanded, third-period finish off a two-on-one feed from Rick Nash, lifting the Blueshirts (90 points, five games left) closer to a playoff berth and turning the heat on John Tortorella‘s seat on the Canucks‘ bench from hot to burning. ―It‘s always nice to score goals, especially in a winning way,‖ St. Louis said. ―I guess the first one is the toughest one to get.‖ Henrik Lundqvist has 30 saves during a terrific performance. Jonathan Hayward/AP Henrik Lundqvist has 30 saves during a terrific performance. But the positive vibes of the victory could be short-lived: Top defenseman Ryan McDonagh injured his left shoulder with 43.8 seconds remaining on a hard hit into the boards by Canucks defenseman Alex Burrows. A Rangers spokesman said an initial diagnosis revealed the injury is "not serious," but McDonagh still could miss time. ―It‘s not a good thing to see him laying on the ice,‖ Brad Richards said. ―He‘s probably been our best player the last few months.‖ Tortorella, St Louis‘ and Richards‘ coach during their shared 2004 Stanley Cup season with the Tampa Bay Lightning, fell to 0-2 this season against the organization that fired him following last year‘s lockout season. Daniel Carcillo (l.) gets the puck past Canucks goalie in the first period. Anne-Marie Sorvin/USA Today Sports Daniel Carcillo (l.) gets the puck past Canucks goalie in the first period. Alain Vigneault, on the other hand, saw his Rangers whittle their magic number to secure a playoff berth to just three with their seventh victory in eight games and their eighth in 10 matches. Their number is three because the Capitals (81 points, six games left) are the only team that can knock the Blueshirts out of the playoffs. The Caps‘ maximum potential finish is 93 points, but the Rangers already have 90 and own the tiebreaker, so three points either gained by the Rangers or lost by Washington clinches a postseason berth for Vigneault in his first season. The Rangers set a franchise record with their 25th road victory of the season (25-14-0), withstanding a furious second-period push by Vancouver (79 points, five games left), which got its lone goal of the night in that period from Ryan Kesler. Get Adobe Flash player The Rangers got smoked in the faceoff circle, winning just 22 of 56 draws, and failed to get the puck deep for much of the night but got terrific goaltending from Henrik Lundqvist (30 saves). Derek Stepan‘s line floundered early, and Vancouver would have had a lead, except Lundqvist stopped Vancouver‘s Ryan Kesler twice in front and denied a Chris Higgins breakaway. Dan Carcillo opened the scoring 4:59 into the first period in a scrum at the net off assists from Derek Dorsett and Brian Boyle. The referee should have blown the play dead when Canucks goalie Eddie Lack put his hand over the puck, but Boyle jammed it free undetected amid a crowd of bodies. Benoit Pouliot then gave the Rangers a 2-0 lead 14:43 in on his seventh power-play goal of the season, tied for the team-high with Derick Brassard. Brassard dished the primary assist to Pouliot in the slot after Mats Zuccarello had a shot blocked. With that secondary assist, Zuccarello set a record for points by a Norwegian in an NHL season (54), snapping Espen Knutsen‘s 53-point mark in 2000-01 for the Columbus Blue Jackets. New York Daily News LOADED: 04.02.2014 732260 New York Rangers Thus, the jumbled lineup after a long stretch of stability. New York Post LOADED: 04.02.2014 Chris Kreider‘s injury has exposed Rangers weakness By Larry Brooks VANCOUVER — The Rangers‘ lack of organizational depth up front has been exposed by the absence of Chris Kreider, the first-line left wing who will be sidelined for the remainder of the regular season (and indefinitely beyond that) following left hand surgery to address the injury he sustained March 21 in Columbus. For without the rookie, coach Alain Vigneault either has been forced or has elected to repeatedly jumble his line combinations over the last week after having gone through the guts of the schedule with an uncommonly healthy and therefore stable lineup. He has moved Marty St. Louis from one spot to another; experimented with Dan Carcillo on the first line in Edmonton; broke up and reunited the Benoit Pouliot-Derick Brassard-Mats Zuccarello triumvirate; had J.T. Miller in a top-nine role, then out of the lineup altogether. And when Miller is scratched, that leaves the Rangers one forward shy on their top three lines. Thus, Vigneault not only has to move a fourth-liner into a role that doesn‘t particularly suit that forward, but in doing so breaks up the extremely effective Brian Boyle-Dominic Moore-Derek Dorsett unit. Vigneault was planning on just about mixing it all up for Tuesday‘s match against the Canucks even in the wake of the Blueshirts‘ 5-0 rout of the downtrodden Oilers on Sunday. The coach went so far as to return Brad Richards to left wing for the first time since Dec. 20 in conjunction with moving Carl Hagelin off the Richards-St. Louis unit into the spot that belonged to Kreider with Derek Stepan and Rick Nash, while also shifting Moore into a top-nine playmaker‘s role. ―That‘s just me being me,‖ Vigneault said following Monday‘s practice here in which he rolled out his new combinations that included a fourth line of Carcillo and Dorsett flanking Boyle. Actually, it was more like Vigneault being John Tortorella, the Vancouver coach who was famous — or infamous — for his constant line-shuffling when he roamed behind the Rangers bench for the last four-plus seasons. The concept behind moving Hagelin into Kreider‘s spot that he held from Dec. 15 through March 21 — a span in which the line was intact for 33 straight games and 39 of 40 — is to replicate the rookie‘s speed and forecheck ability. But Hagelin lacks Kreider‘s strength, physicality and ability to get to the front of the net and plant himself there as a screen. In other words, same speed but very different player. At the same time, though, with Vigneault set to scratch Miller for the second straight night after benching him for the entire third period of Friday‘s 5-4 defeat in Calgary, the Rangers had to start with the square-peg-round-hole thing. Richards played the first 10 games of the season on the wing, filling in for Hagelin, who was on IR recovering from off-season shoulder surgery. He moved out of his natural center spot for six other matches, the last time on Dec. 20 against the Islanders. He is clearly more comfortable in the middle. Vigneault, who has talked about his belief in ―duos‖ rather than three-man combinations, is committed — at least for the short run — to keeping Richards with St. Louis, who enters the Vancouver match scoreless in his 14 games as a Ranger. So without Hagelin to complete the trio, the coach chose to go with Moore, who does have some history playing with St. Louis in Tampa Bay, but not much of one. According to hockeyanalysis.com, Moore and St. Louis played 187:03 as 5-on-5 linemates in 2010-11 and 2011-12. Each recorded five points, with Moore getting two goals and St. Louis one. Miller, who spent most the year in Hartford before his latest promotion following the Kreider injury, was considered the only top-nine, NHL-ready forward in the AHL. Vigneault obviously doesn‘t believe he is ready to play in a playoff race and doesn‘t seem to consider Ryan Haggerty, the recent free-agent signee out of RPI who is traveling and skating with the team as a condition of his signing, a viable option. 732261 New York Rangers Rangers‘ Ryan McDonagh hurts left shoulder in win over Canucks ―But we battled and did a great job killing penalties and kept our composure. It‘s just about winning, now.‖ It‘s about McDonagh‘s health, as well. New York Post LOADED: 04.02.2014 By Larry Brooks VANCOUVER, British Columbia — The Rangers‘ 3-1 victory on Tuesday night over the Canucks that extended the club‘s lead for first-round home ice while reducing the playoff clinching magic number to three points may have come at a heavy cost. For Ryan McDonagh — the Blueshirts‘ best skater throughout the season and their most valuable other than Henrik Lundqvist — left the ice with an apparent left shoulder injury and in visible pain after taking a wicked hit into the rear boards by Alexandre Burrows with 43.8 seconds remaining in the contest. ―It‘s not serious,‖ a Rangers spokesman said, referring to the initial diagnosis for McDonagh, who left the building with his left arm in a sling. Nevertheless, the defenseman received treatment for an extended amount of the time following the match, and the Rangers already have lost Chris Kreider for an indefinite period to a left hand injury. After being remarkably healthy most of the year, the Rangers cannot afford to be without McDonagh for any significant stretch. ―You get worried,‖ said Lundqvist, steadfast in the face of relentless Canucks‘ traffic and pressure throughout the first 50 minutes of the match. ―We have important weeks ahead of us — hopefully months — and it‘s important that we‘re healthy. ―Hopefully it‘s not too bad.‖ McDonagh, who was in the process of retrieving the puck, was first hit by Zack Kassian on the left before Burrows nailed him from the right, blindside. Burrows received a five-minute elbowing penalty and game misconduct. ―It‘s not a good thing to see him laying on the ice,‖ Brad Richards said. ―But he‘s resilient and battles through a lot. Hopefully it‘s short-term and nothing serious.‖ The Rangers‘ victory, their seventh in the last eight games overall, established a franchise record for wins on the road, this one in the Alain Vigneault-John Tortorella matchup behind the bench in their league-leading 25th away from home (25-14), with two more to go including Thursday night‘s match in Colorado and the season finale at Montreal on April 12. ―We‘re going after home-ice,‖ said Marc Staal, whose team leads the Flyers by three points in the battle for second place in the Metro Division, though Philadelphia holds two games in hand. ―The mindset is to keep winning and building into the playoffs.‖ Marty St. Louis put an end to our long civic nightmare by getting his first goal in 15 games wearing the Blueshirt on a shorthanded two-on-one at 10:15 of the third with the Rangers clinging to a 2-1 lead. It was the 30th overall for the winger, who expressed relief at finally getting off the schneid. ―The first one is the hardest to get,‖ said St. Louis, who buried Rick Nash‘s feed to record the Rangers‘ seventh shorthanded goal in the last 15 games, a stretch during which the club has scored five power play goals, including one by Benoit Pouliot that gave the team a 2-0 first-period lead. ―I‘ve tried to stay the course and play the right way.‖ Vigneault juggled his combinations for the game, moving Carl Hagelin up with Nash and Derek Stepan, while also shifting Dom Moore to the left with Richards and St. Louis and constructing a fourth line of Brian Boyle between Dan Carcillo and Derek Dorsett. The Brassard-Benoit Pouliot-Mats Zuccarello unit remained intact. The Canucks, facing elimination from the playoffs, were a desperate team and played like it, hemming the Rangers in most of the way. The Blueshirts were unable to create much time and space. Their defensemen were reduced to attempting to simply bang the puck out of the zone rather than make plays and then join the attack. ―We played a bit more in our end than we want to,‖ Staal said. ―We weren‘t able to find the middle of the ice like we normally do. 732262 New York Rangers Could be one and done with Canucks for Torts Staff Before the Rangers and Lightning completed the first captain-for-captain swap that anyone around the NHL could remember, the Rangers and Canucks exchanged coaches this past offseason, though that was not by design. Ex-Canucks coach Alain Vigneault has already brought his Rangers to Vancouver once, in the preseason, a 5-0 win for the Canucks on Sept. 26, so he called tonight‘s game at Rogers Arena less emotional for him. For the man he replaced with the Rangers and the man who replaced him in Vancouver, John Tortorella, this could be one of the six last games he spends behind the Canucks bench. His team is all but eliminated from the Western Conference playoff chase, five points out with six to play and the ninth-place Stars four points ahead of them in the race for the two wild-card spots. Tortorella‘s message has seemingly never taken in the Canucks‘ room or, if it did, quickly dissipated. The organization is also not likely to forget his six-game suspension for trying to charge into the Flames‘ dressing room that, if not at the epicenter of the Canucks‘ collapse this season, certainly spurred it along. Here‘s the article in today‘s Record regarding all that. No morning skate for the Rangers prior to tonight‘s game. Beyond the Tortorella quotes in the article regarding how he gets that he looks like an ―idiot‖ compared to Vigneault being a ―smart guy‖ because of how the Canucks and Rangers are doing this season, plus thoughts on Ryan Callahan being in Tampa Bay (where Tortorella led the Lightning to the Stanley Cup) and Marty St. Louis being with the Rangers, here‘s the rest of what the Canucks coach is thinking prior to tonight‘s game: On his thoughts about the Rangers: ―I‘ve been gone long enough, I don‘t do too much reminiscing right now.‖ On what he‘s seen from the Rangers: ―I haven‘t. I‘m just trying to spend my time trying to keep this team playing and we don‘t spend a lot of time on the other team, it‘s a matter of our execution and our game so that‘s what we spend a great deal of our time with.‖ On whether the Canucks need to win all six remaining games: ―I don‘t know what the arithmetic is. Losing the other night (5-1 to the Ducks), it puts us in a real precarious spot, we all know that. We went about the business as usual and we‘re trying to get better and against a team that‘s playing very well. We have our hands full (tonight).‖ On not following the Rangers: ―One thing that‘s different for me is that three-hour change out West, you really don‘t spend too much time or have the opportunity to really worry about it. We could see what our division was right away that we were in here and we had our hand‘s full. We spent a lot of time there on what we needed to do as a club. It might be a little different for me. I‘m not going to lie to you, always when you leave a team, you spend five years, sure you look at some guys. But when it‘s East-West, it kind of blocked it out and worried about our business here.‖ On the Canucks‘ playoff chances: ―Are we going to get in? It‘s very slim and we‘ve known that but it‘s still doesn‘t stop you from working at your business with your team. We continue to do the that until the bitter end.‖ Which might be the appropriate phrase because it could be a very bitter end for Tortorella‘s tenure in Vancouver. Bergen Record LOADED: 04.02.2014 732263 New York Rangers So, in the end, beating a former coach or helping the new coach beat his former team was not part of the equation. Rangers 3, Canucks 1: McDonagh‘s left shoulder injury said to be not serious by the team ―Probably more so in the preseason,‖ said Boyle, referring to the Rangers‘ 5-0 loss at Vancouver on Sept. 30. ―It‘s a big two points at the end of the year, that‘s probably enough motivation for [Vigneault]. I think if you lose this game it stings anyway.‖ Posted by Andrew Gross on 04/02 at 03:19 AM The Rangers do not practice on Wednesday as they travel to Colorado for the following night‘s game against the Avalanche. Lastly, from the Rangers: When Ryan McDonagh went down hard with 43.8 seconds remaining in the Rangers‘ 3-1 win over the Canucks Tuesday night, the No. defenseman helped to the dressing room after apparently hurting his left shoulder, it superseded any other sub-context to this game. A team spokesman reported the initial diagnosis is that the injury ―is not serious.‖ Still, it was no longer about Alain Vigneault‘s first regular-season visit back to Rogers Arena, where he coached the previous seven seasons. Or the Rangers coming within three points of clinching a postseason berth. Nor was it about ex-Rangers coach John Tortorella‘s tenuous status with the Canucks, his team all but mathematically eliminated from the postseason and widespread speculation he will be fired after just one season. McDonagh‘s condition even overshadowed Marty St. Louis finally getting his first goal as a Ranger, 15 games after being acquired from the Lightning for Ryan Callahan. ―Yeah, it‘s not a good thing to see him laying on the ice,‖ center Brad Richards said. ―He‘s probably been our best player the last two months night in and night out. He‘s resilient and he battles through a lot. Hopefully, it‘s short term and nothing serious.‖ McDonagh‘s left arm was in a sling after the game. ―You get worried,‖ said Henrik Lundqvist, who made 34 saves. ―We have important weeks ahead of us, hopefully months. Now we want to make sure he feels good and healthy.‖ McDonagh was hurt as he was sandwiched between Alex Burrows and Zack Kassian going into the backboards. Burrows drew a five-minute major for elbowing. ―I‘m just trying to get in on the forecheck and get the puck back,‖ Burrows said. ―My intention wasn‘t to be dirty or hurt the guy.‖ 04.02.201404.02.201404.02.201404.02.201404.02.201404.02.201404.02.2 01404.02.201404.02.201404.02.201404.02.201404.02.201404.02.201404. 02.201404.02.201404.02.201404.02.201404.02.201404.02.201404.02.201 404.02.201404.02.201404.02.201404.02.201404.02.201404.02.201404.02. 2014 Follow me on Twitter at twitter.com/AGrossRecord Follow the Record Sports Staff at twitter.com/TheRecordSports The Rangers (43-30-4), now 2-1-0 on this four-game road trip as they set a franchise record with their 25th road victory, do not practice today as they travel to Colorado for Thursday night‘s game against the Avalanche. Any combination of three points gained by the Rangers or lost by the Capitals, currently in ninth place in the Eastern Conference, will clinch a playoff spot for the Rangers. The Rangers, in second place in the Metropolitan Division with five regular-season games remaining, have 90 points, three more than the third-place Flyers, who have played two fewer games after losing a 1-0 shootout to the Blues on Tuesday. St. Louis clinched the victory with a shorthanded goal at 10:15 of the third period, the Rangers‘ third shorthanded goal in two games and their 10th of the season. ―Throughout my career I‘ve been a pretty streaky goal scorer,‖ St. Louis said after his 30th goal of the season come 17 games after his 29th. ―I‘m trying to stay the course and play the right way.‖ ―Hopefully it can kick start something that goes on fire,‖ added Rick Nash, who set up St. Louis‘ goal on a two-on-one. - New York notched both a power play goal and a shorthanded goal in the same game for the fifth time this season, and for the second consecutive contest. The last time the Rangers tallied both a power play goal and a shorthanded goal in consecutive games was during the 2011-12 season (Dec. 8-10). - The Rangers‘ power play was 1-3 (3:58) in the contest, while the penalty kill was 2-2 (4:00) with one shorthanded goal. The Blueshirts are now 2-9 (22.2%) with the man advantage in the last two games, while the penalty kill is 38-41 (92.7%) with seven shorthanded goals in the last 15 games. - Henrik Lundqvist made 34 saves and is now 31-23-4 overall, including a 17-10-0 mark on the road this season. He is now 6-1-0 in his last seven games (2.00 GAA, .930 Sv%, 1 SO) and 9-3-0 in his last 12 (1.84 GAA, .937 Sv%, 2 SO). Lundqvist has reached the 30-save mark in 17 games this season, posting a record of 13-3-1 with a 2.11 goals against average, .941 save percentage, and two shutouts in those contests. - Martin St. Louis notched his first goal as a Ranger with a shorthanded tally and logged 16:42 of ice time. The goal was his 30th of the season, marking the seventh time in his career St. Louis has reached the 30-goal milestone. It was also his first shorthanded goal since a 3-1 win on Feb. 9, 2010 against Vancouver as a member of the Tampa Bay Lightning. - Benoit Pouliot tallied the eventual game-winning goal, on the power play, and registered a team-high, four shots in 15:09 of ice time. The goal extended his point streak to three games (one goal, two assists), and he has now recorded five points (one goal, four assists) in the last five games. Pouliot tied his single-season career-high with his 32nd point, a mark he originally established during the 2011-12 season. - Mats Zuccarello registered a power play assist and three shots in 18:02 of ice time. The assist gave Zuccarello 54 points this season, the most by a Norwegian-born player in one season in NHL history. The record was previously held by Espen Knusten, who had 53 points with Columbus during the 2000-01 season. Zuccarello has recorded 19 points (four goals, 15 assists) in his last 20 games, including nine points (two goals, seven assists) in the last eight contests, and he now leads the team in points (54) this season. - Daniel Carcillo opened the game‘s scoring with an even strength goal at 4:59 of the first period and logged 10:15 of ice time. He is now eight points shy of 100 for his career. - Rick Nash tallied a shorthanded assist and two shots in 16:17 of ice time. He has now registered three points (two goals, one assist) in the last two games, and six points (five goals, one assist) in the last eight contests. - Derick Brassard recorded a power play assist and two hits in 15:17 of ice time. He has tallied seven points (five goals, two assists) in the last eight games, including a power play point in each of the last two games (1 PPG, 1 PPA). Brassard now leads the team with 18 power play points this season. - Brian Boyle tallied his 100th career point with an assist and won 3-5 faceoffs (60%) in 11:56 of ice time. He has now registered three points (one goal, two assists) in the last four games. - Derek Dorsett recorded one assist, three shots, and two hits in 9:59 of ice time. He has now tallied three points (one goal, two assists) in the last four games. Bergen Record LOADED: 04.02.2014 732264 New York Rangers Alain Vigneault's calming influence, faster-paced system embraced by Rangers By STEVE ZIPAY VANCOUVER, British Columbia - Roll back the tape to October. After training camp away from home and in the midst of a nine-game, season-opening road trip under new coach Alain Vigneault, the Rangers were confused and concerned. "There were a lot of meetings, him trying to figure us out, [us] trying to figure him out," Brad Richards recalled. "Torts was here for 41/2 years, there was a lot of autopilot on the D-zone coverage, now it's man on man, there were a lot of questions. We gave up six and nine goals back to back [to the Sharks and Ducks] and we're sitting here trying to figure it out. [Vigneault] kept it calm." The turnaround took months. After 40 games, the Blueshirts were a middling 19-19-2, but had revived after a 3-7 start. "It took us awhile to get going, but the coaching staff has been awesome from Day 1," Henrik Lundqvist said here in Vancouver where Vigneault coached for seven years, twice leading the Canucks to the NHL's best regular-season record. "It was a lot about being patient. It's big when players feel the trust, you have so many new things to get used to. The dialogue has been good. Our season has been a building process and hopefully you have your best games at the end, in the playoffs." At 42-30-4 and with 88 points before Tuesday night's game, the Rangers are succeeding with a faster-paced style under the experienced Vigneault, and closing in on an East playoff spot. That was what general manager Glen Sather envisioned when he chose Vigneault over the iconic but untested Mark Messier. Sather saw the league changing to a speedier game, with younger players and the need to roll four lines nightly, and sought a different approach, a different voice. The domineering John Tortorella favored the muck-and-grind style, leaned heavily on top players and ground down even his most ardent supporters. Vigneault, a Quebec native, was challenged by the roster and the metropolis. Derek Stepan missed camp in a contract dispute. Rick Nash was out for 17 games with a concussion and Lundqvist, Ryan Callahan and Dan Girardi were in midseason flux over their futures. "You definitely have to tailor [your system] to the team you have," Vigneault said Monday. "We play north-south, we use the speed to defend and to generate some good offense when the opportunity is there." It has been, he said, a fair comparison to his first year with the Canucks. "I've got some younger players who are really on the upswing, developing as players and as leaders, whether it be Ryan McDonagh, Step, [Carl] Hagelin, [Derick] Brassard, and we have a couple veteran leaders." During the season, "some teams progress and some teams fade away," Vigneault said. "We have progressed, we were playing .500, then Hank sort of found his game, and the rest of the parts sort of fell in and we took off." Only rarely has Vigneault, who delegates far more power to his assistants than Tortorella, publicly displayed anger or frustration. His demeanor tends more to self-deprecation. On Monday, for example, he mentioned Martin St. Louis, who hasn't scored in 14 games since the Callahan trade. "I'm fortunate to have the top scorer in the NHL for the past four years," he said. "We're 9-4-1 since he's been here . . . and I've turned him into a defensive specialist. It's part of my devious plan." Newsday LOADED: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732265 New York Rangers Rangers responding to Alain Vigneault while Canucks struggle with John Tortorella April 2, 2014 | ANDREW GROSS VANCOUVER, B.C. – Different players, different coaches and, certainly, different results. The Canucks, coached — for now — by John Tortorella, hosted his former team, the Rangers, Tuesday night at Rogers Arena, all but mathematically eliminated from playoff consideration. The Rangers, led by ex-Canucks coach Alain Vigneault, had split the first two games of their four-game road trip but appear headed toward the postseason barring a major collapse. And the most simplistic explanation for the teams‘ current situations is Vigneault has been more flexible in coaching his new personnel than the fiery Tortorella. "You definitely have to tailor to the team that you have and the personnel you have," Vigneault said. "I don‘t have the same personnel now. There are some things that we do similar but it is a different team." Tortorella still favors the grinding, shot-blocking mentality with heavier workloads for his top forwards he employed to success with the Rangers, taking them to four playoff appearances in five seasons including, in 2012, their first berth in the Eastern Conference final since 1997. But under Tortorella, superstar twins Henrik (10 goals, 36 assists) and Daniel Sedin (14 goals, 28 assists) have struggled through injuries, spent time apart as linemates and are no longer point-a-game players. Right wing Alexandre Burrows went 35 games without a goal. "It‘s unfair for me to comment in any shape or form," Vigneault said of the Canucks‘ struggles. "I‘m 3,000 miles away. I have no idea what‘s going on here. "If you‘re talking about the core guys that have been together for a long time, they‘re good players and they‘re good players that are real professional and compete real hard and I don‘t think that has changed," Vigneault added. The Rangers, after a travel-heavy, disjointed training camp and then a 3-6-0 road trip to open the season due to renovations to Madison Square Garden, have adapted well to Vigneault. The team plays with the puck more and the defensemen, particularly Ryan McDonagh, have become more productive offensively with the encouragement to be active in the offensive zone. "He‘s been very calm," Rangers center Brad Richards said of Vigneault. "We had some rough patches to start the year and he got us through that with some confidence and let us figure it out on our own." The Rangers were still 16-18-2 on Dec. 20. "It could have got ugly but he kept it calm," said Richards. "In the end, it was full confidence in our group and we got through it." Richards had a falling out with Tortorella, also his coach with the Stanley Cup-winning Lightning in 2004, after Richards was demoted to the fourth line in the playoffs and finally made a healthy scratch the final two games of the Rangers‘ five-game, second-round loss to the Bruins. For Tortorella, it‘s likely more than missing the playoffs that may have doomed him in Vancouver. Besides the Sedins‘ scoring dip, Ryan Kesler may or may not have requested a trade. Eddie Lack made his 17th straight start in net Tuesday night and Roberto Luongo was traded to the Panthers on March 4, two days after Tortorella started Lack over Luongo in a 4-2 loss to the Senators in the Heritage Classic at B.C. Place, part of the NHL‘s Stadium Series. Plus, Tortorella was suspended for 15 days and six games for trying to charge into the Flames‘ dressing room. The Canucks went 2-4-0 with Tortorella suspended, then went 1-7-1 upon his return. In a way, though, Vigneault may have complimented Tortorella for the work ethic he left behind with the Rangers "The one thing about my team is that it‘s a hard-working group," Vigneault said. "They come to practice and they work and they bust their butt." Newsday LOADED: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732266 New York Rangers Rangers notes: Dominic Moore moved up to play with Marty St. Louis and Brad Richards Andrew Gross The trickle-down effect of coach Alain Vigneault‘s continuing quest to find a suitable replacement for the size and speed Chris Kreider (left hand) brought to Derek Stepan‘s line with Rick Nash, led to an elevated role for usual fourth-line center Dominic Moore on Tuesday. With Carl Hagelin moved to Stepan‘s line, Moore, who came into Tuesday with six goals and 12 assists in 67 games, played on Brad Richards‘ left wing along with Marty St. Louis, his former teammate with the Lightning. "They‘ve killed penalties together and they‘ve got some chemistry going back from the Tampa days," Vigneault said. "[Assistant] Dan Lacroix told me they played together a little bit." The revamped fourth line featured Brian Boyle moving from left wing to center in between grinder/agitators Dan Carcillo and Derek Dorsett. With both Carcillo and Dorsett in the lineup, J.T. Miller was a healthy scratch for the second straight game. Moore nears return D John Moore, who suffered concussion symptoms on Blake Comeau‘s check at Columbus on March 21, skated with the extras Tuesday morning but could be ready to rejoin the lineup. Vigneault said he needed "one more practice and then it would be my decision to put him in or out." The Rangers are not scheduled to skate today as they travel to Denver for Thursday night‘s game against the Avalanche. "It was kind of a weird injury but, every day, they‘re working me hard and I‘m feeling more and more comfortable," John Moore said. "I feel good. The biggest thing is just getting my feet under me." In John Moore‘s absence, Raphael Diaz, a member of the Canucks until his March 5 trade to the Rangers, played in his sixth straight game. Newsday LOADED: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732267 New York Rangers Rangers top Canucks, 3-1, in Vancouver Wednesday, April 2, 2014, By ANDREW GROSS VANCOUVER, B.C. – This isn‘t about the coaches because everything is about the playoffs now. And Alain Vigneault‘s Rangers are now within three points of clinching a postseason berth after beating the Canucks, his previous team, 3-1, Tuesday night at Rogers Arena. The Canucks, in their first and possibly only season under ex-Rangers coach John Tortorella, are all but guaranteed to miss the playoffs. Any good feelings were tempered when No. 1 defenseman Ryan McDonagh appeared to hurt his left shoulder as he was jammed into the backboards with 43.8 seconds left in the game as Alex Burrows received a five-minute major for elbowing. Henrik Lundqvist made 34 saves as the Rangers (43-30-4), despite losing too many puck battles and going 22-for-56 on faceoffs, won for the seventh time in eight games and are 2-1-0 on this four-game road trip that concludes Thursday at Colorado. The Rangers set a franchise record with their 25th road victory this season. Plus, Marty St. Louis finally scored a goal for the Rangers in his 15th game since being acquired from the Lightning. St. Louis‘ shorthanded goal – the Rangers‘ third in two games and 10th of the season – made it 3-1 at 10:15 of the third period off a two-on-one with Rick Nash. Now, any combination of three points gained by the Rangers or lost by the Capitals, currently in ninth place in the Eastern Conference, will clinch a playoff spot for the Rangers. The Rangers, in second place in the Metropolitan Division with five regular-season games remaining, have 90 points, three more than the third-place Flyers, who have played two fewer games after losing a 1-0 shootout to the Blues on Tuesday. Eddie Lack stopped 28 shots for the Canucks (34-32-11), who have lost three straight. The most simplistic explanation for the teams‘ current situations is Vigneault has been more flexible in coaching his new personnel than the fiery Tortorella. ―You definitely have to tailor to the team that you have and the personnel you have,‖ Vigneault said. ―I don‘t have the same personnel now. There are some things that we do similar but it is a different team.‖ Though Tortorella was known for constantly tinkering with his lines while coaching the Rangers, Vigneault, in a rare move for him, changed his combinations following a solid win, in this case Sunday‘s 5-0 victory at Edmonton. Vigneault moved speedy left wing Carl Hagelin to Derek Stepan‘s line with Nash, put Dominic Moore on Brad Richards‘ left wing with St. Louis and slid Brian Boyle to center on the fourth line in between Dan Carcillo and Derek Dorsett. ―Step and Nasher, they look better when they‘ve got speed on that left side,‖ Vigneault said. ―So I figured even though Brad and Hags have good chemistry that Hags up there would help Step and Nasher…I‘m hoping that helping my top end, it‘s not going to affect that chemistry.‖ Lack misplayed a puck coming off the backboards through his crease on McDonagh‘s dump-in, leading to Carcillo‘s goal to make it 1-0 at 4:59 of the first period. Lack‘s inability to cover the puck led to a lengthy scramble at his crease, though he may have had the puck knocked free from his glove by Boyle. Benoit Pouliot‘s power-play goal at 14:43 of the first period – the Rangers now have power-play goals in consecutive games for the first time since March 1-2 – made it 2-0. Derick Brassard showed great recognition as he got the puck on the left after collecting the rebound of Mats Zuccarello‘s shot. Looking like he would shoot, Brassard instead found Pouliot open in the slot. Zuccarello‘s assist was his 54th point of the season, setting the record for most points by a Norwegian in the NHL. Ryan Kesler‘s one-timer low in the left faceoff circle – he beat both Moore on the draw and then for position – made it 2-1 at 6:21 of the second period. Newsday LOADED: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732268 New York Rangers Rangers-Canucks in review 02 April 2014, 4:27 am by Carp in Game review Hockey New York Rangers v Vancouver Canucks Thoughts: 1) Going to state the obvious here, but the Ryan McDonagh injury at the end of the game knocks all the luster off what was a pretty solid win on a big (in terms of the playoff race) night. Not going to speculate, but it‘s probably not the stinger Ron Duguay said he was going to assume it is. And I am not sure the Alex Burrows hit was the dirtiest, filthiest hit we‘ve seen in a while, or even the worst in the league last night. I didn‘t think it was a head shot, but I could be wrong. At best it was a dangerous, reckless and dirty play by a guy who plays like that. That the on-ice officials felt it was a major and a game misconduct for elbowing tells me that they thought it was a head shot. So it‘s going to be interesting to see how NHL Player Safety interprets it. If the Rangers thought it was dirty, then their response was pretty weak. New York Rangers v Vancouver Canucks2) McDonagh sure has been a target lately. I mean, he was even knocked to the ice, slamming the back of his helmet, by one of the Sedins (I can‘t tell them apart). Stick to the mouth the game before. Repeated slashes by Wayne Simmonds Monday. And there is nobody who will be on the ice with him who can do a thing about it. Not that the heaviest of all heavyweights is going to prevent Burrows from hitting him like that. Not a chance Burrows doesn‘t hit him. Shortly after Alain Vigneault said he didn‘t know about the severity, the reports came out that the initial diagnosis was ―not serious‖ though McDonagh had his left arm in a sling. 3) New York, your long wait is over! Martin St. Louis just needed to get past April Fools‘ Day to score. Pretty funny that AV and the players all jumped through hoops to get St. Louis new linemates, to get him the puck late in games, on the power play, etc., and that he finally got it short-handed. It was a pretty cool goal, though. Maybe it really will get him going. BTW, since he‘s been a Ranger—15 games now—the PK has outscored the PP, 7-5. 4) The out of town scoreboard was somewhat kind to the Rangers, whose magic number to clinch a playoff spot is three points. Philly and Columbus each only got a Bettman Losers‘ Point against top opponents. So the Rangers are looking really good for the 2-3 matchup. Some people are starting to think it might be better to get the wild card and play Pittsburgh than 2-3 vs. Philly. I don‘t agree. Plus, if you get a wild card you could easily end up with Boston and you want no part of Boston. How about the New Ro kid and NYR fan (growing up), Kevin Shattenkirk, helping the NYR in the shootout in St. Louis. The deeper we get in these playoff races, and the more critical each point becomes, the dumber the shootout seems.New York Rangers v Vancouver Canucks 5) Henrik Lundqvist. He looked really, really sharp start to finish. Saw a lot of shots, a lot of quality shots. This wasn‘t the Rangers‘ best game of the season in their own end—and it wasn‘t terrible. But he had to make a lot of saves in a game that was 2-1 late. He made some eye-poppers, too. gamble, pulling Dominic Moore off that dominant fourth line to give Brad Richards and St. Louis some help. But the fourth line (which really is Brian Boyle and Moore and either Derek Dorsett or Daniel Carcillo) minus Moore was just as good again. Carcillo scored a goal huge … @JColch tweeted ―And if anyone told you NYR would trade for St. Louis and Carcillo, who would you expect more goals from?‖ On Carcillo‘s goal, all three forwards were within a foot of the paint. How many times have you seen that from the Richards or Derek Stepan lines? Anwer: None. This really is the first trustworthy and effective fourth line they‘ve had in years. Better try to keep it intact this summer. 9) Daily Nash-O-Meter. Thought Rick Nash and Stepan and new running mate Carl Hagelin had some good shifts. And some invisible shifts. Nash had a terrific set-up for Stepan early. But, I‘m telling you, the guy is better on the PK than he is on the PP, and more dangerous. You can say the same for Stepan lately, too. Who would believe that? 10) So Dom Moore moves to the St. Louis-Richards line, forgets how to win a draw, how to defend. Ironic. There sure was some mayhem in the defensive zone on many of that line‘s shifts. 11) Seriously? The Rangers are just getting worse and worse at faceoffs (won 22 of 56, 39 percent). Of the many things that will be on the plate this summer, that must be addressed. It cost them in this game, and has many times this season. 12) MSG Network schedules its games to run two and a half hours all the time. Trouble is, games never ever last two and a half hours. So it‘s a problem for DVRing, for example. If you set the DVR for the scheduled game, you miss the last 7-10 minutes of hockey. Last night that problem was worse because Devils-Sabres was scheduled to end at 9:30 for the Rangers pregame show, which was a pipe dream anyway. When the Devils went OT and then to a long shootout, there was no pregame show at all, in an AV vs. Torts meeting and a critical game, to boot.New York Rangers v Vancouver Canucks 13) Ryan Kesler=Beast. 14) Speaking of which, you had to like that Brian Boyle penalty. Knocked Kesler on his Keyster in front of Lundqvist‘s net. There‘s not nearly enough of that going on. 15) Don‘t want to make a big deal out of this, and it kind of became one post game here. Alain Vigneault is not to blame whatsoever for McDonagh‘s injury. But McDonagh had already been on the ice for a long shift of 5-against-6, and two icings. With a two-goal lead and 1:04 left, why in hell wouldn‘t AV use a timeout? I get on him a lot because he doesn‘t use them, as if they can carry over or he can cash them in for frequent flyer miles or something. That‘s almost always a joke when I do. But why not call a timeout there? Again, I doubt very much that a timeout prevents the injury. But maybe McDonagh, a bit fresher, avoids the hit, or whatever. I just don‘t get why you don‘t call a timeout in that spot if, for nothing else, to let your top guys who have played a ton of minutes catch a breath. Games that matter tonight: None. Games that matter tomorrow: Rangers-Avalanche, and the enormous Columbus at Philly matchup. The Rangers are seven ahead of the Blue Jackets now, three up on Philly. The Flyers have two in hand, but the Rangers have the tiebreaker by three. The Jackets have two in hand, but are six behind on the tiebreaker, so that seven-point lead is actually eight. 6) No. 1 line and No. 1 PP unit (which gets on the ice second) has been their best and most consistent line all season long. Imagine. Derick Brassard is losing his ―inconsistent‖ label (yes, he still has a stinker here and there). Early in the season people were saying it was a mistake to bring back Mats Zuccarello, who was just too small and ineffective; and many (me included) were saying that you could see why Benoit Pouliot had been on so many teams in such a short time. Well, he is turning into one of Glen Sather‘s best signings ever. ************************************* 7) Vigneault vs. John (Hot Seat) Tortorella. AV‘s 2-0 now and looking like a really good replacement for Torts in NY. Torts not looking like a very good choice North of the border, though. I know it‘s a lot of money to eat, but I don‘t necessarily think his four years, $8M remaining guarantee he doesn‘t get fired. Then again, the owner who forced GM Mike Gillis to hire Torts might fire Gillis (who has the same remaining contract). Somebody‘s got to go, though, and it‘s pretty evident that Torts‘ shelf life up there will be shorter than it was here.New York Rangers v Vancouver Canucks ************************************* 8) So AV made some interesting juggles before the game (up front) and throughout (Ulf Samuelsson shuffled his D pairs a lot). I thought it was a My Three Rangers Stars:Martin St. Louis 1. Henrik Lundqvist. 2. Benoit Pouliot. 3. Ryan McDonagh. Kenny Albert‘s Three Rangers Stars: 1. Henrik Lundqvist. 2. Benoit Pouliot. 3. Martin St. Louis. Rockland Journal News: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732269 New York Rangers Rangers 3, Canucks 1 … post-game notes 02 April 2014, 1:45 am by Carp in Hockey The Rangers continued a four-game road trip with a 3-1 victory over the Vancouver Canucks tonight at Rogers Arena. With the win, the Blueshirts established a new franchise record for road wins with their 25th of the season. New York is now 8-2-0 in their last 10 games, and 6-1-0 in their last seven on the road. The Blueshirts have posted a record of 43-30-4 overall (90 pts), including a 25-14-0 mark on the road this season. The Rangers are now three points ahead of the Philadelphia Flyers for second place in the Metropolitan Division standings. New York has now won 23 of their last 31 road games (23-8-0 over the span), and lead the NHL with 25 road wins this season. The Blueshirts improved to 21-2-0 when allowing two or fewer goals on the road. The Rangers extended their winning streak against the Canucks to four games, having out-scored Vancouver 13-3 during the streak. New York notched both a power play goal and a shorthanded goal in the same game for the fifth time this season, and for the second consecutive contest. The last time the Rangers tallied both a power play goal and a shorthanded goal in consecutive games was during the 2011-12 season (Dec. 8-10). The Rangers‘ power play was 1-3 (3:58) in the contest, while the penalty kill was 2-2 (4:00) with one shorthanded goal. The Blueshirts are now 2-9 (22.2%) with the man advantage in the last two games, while the penalty kill is 38-41 (92.7%) with seven shorthanded goals in the last 15 games. The Blueshirts were credited with 14 blocked shots in the contest, including 11 players registering at least one blocked shot. Dan Girardi, Kevin Klein, and Ryan McDonagh each tied for the team-high with two blocked shots apiece. Player notes: Henrik Lundqvist made 34 saves and is now 31-23-4 overall, including a 17-10-0 mark on the road this season. He is now 6-1-0 in his last seven games (2.00 GAA, .930 Sv%, 1 SO) and 9-3-0 in his last 12 (1.84 GAA, .937 Sv%, 2 SO). Lundqvist has reached the 30-save mark in 17 games this season, posting a record of 13-3-1 with a 2.11 goals against average, .941 save percentage, and two shutouts in those contests. Martin St. Louis notched his first goal as a Ranger with a shorthanded tally and logged 16:42 of ice time. The goal was his 30th of the season, marking the seventh time in his career St. Louis has reached the 30-goal milestone. It was also his first shorthanded goal since a 3-1 win on Feb. 9, 2010 against Vancouver as a member of the Tampa Bay Lightning. Benoit Pouliot tallied the eventual game-winning goal, on the power play, and registered a team-high, four shots in 15:09 of ice time. The goal extended his point streak to three games (one goal, two assists), and he has now recorded five points (one goal, four assists) in the last five games. Pouliot tied his single-season career-high with his 32nd point, a mark he originally established during the 2011-12 season. Mats Zuccarello registered a power play assist and three shots in 18:02 of ice time. The assist gave Zuccarello 54 points this season, the most by a Norwegian-born player in one season in NHL history. The record was previously held by Espen Knusten, who had 53 points with Columbus during the 2000-01 season. Zuccarello has recorded 19 points (four goals, 15 assists) in his last 20 games, including nine points (two goals, seven assists) in the last eight contests, and he now leads the team in points (54) this season. Daniel Carcillo opened the game‘s scoring with an even strength goal at 4:59 of the first period and logged 10:15 of ice time. He is now eight points shy of 100 for his career. Rick Nash tallied a shorthanded assist and two shots in 16:17 of ice time. He has now registered three points (two goals, one assist) in the last two games, and six points (five goals, one assist) in the last eight contests. Derick Brassard recorded a power play assist and two hits in 15:17 of ice time. He has tallied seven points (five goals, two assists) in the last eight games, including a power play point in each of the last two games (1 PPG, 1 PPA). Brassard now leads the team with 18 power play points this season. Brian Boyle tallied his 100th career point with an assist and won 3-5 faceoffs (60%) in 11:56 of ice time. He has now registered three points (one goal, two assists) in the last four games. Derek Dorsett recorded one assist, three shots, and two hits in 9:59 of ice time. He has now tallied three points (one goal, two assists) in the last four games. Rockland Journal News: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732270 New York Rangers Rangers at Canucks … It‘s Go Time! 01 April 2014, 9:34 pm by Carp in Hockey Alain Vigneault returns to Vancouver for his first regular-season game there as Canucks‘ ex-head coach. The preseason game last fall, though, kind of takes some of the luster off the return, as do the previous meetings between the Rangers and John (Hot Seat) Tortorella. Ya boys have won six of their last seven. Third of four-game trip (1-1 so far) that ends in Denver Thursday. Then all that‘s left is a three-game homestand and a season-ending visit to Montreal. More line juggling in an apparent attempt to get Martin St. Louis going—because giving him his buddy Brad Richards wasn‘t enough. So Dominic Moore, who played with St. Louis a bit in Tampa, moves to the left wing with Richards and St. Louis. Carl Hagelin jumps up to the, ahem, first line with Derek Stepan and Rick Nash, while the actual first line—Benoit Pouliot-Derick Brassard-Mats Zuccarello—remains intact. Daniel Carcillo goes back down to the fourth line, with Brian Boyle moving to center. Henrik Lundqvist in goal against Eddie Lack. J.T. Miller, Ryan Haggerty and Justin Falk remain prucha‘d and John Moore (concussion) sits out but is getting close to returning. Big few nights on the out-of-town scoreboard, too, with the Jackets and Flyers both playing quality opponents tonight, and then Columbus visiting Philly Thursday. Click here for the NHL standings heading into tonight‘s games. Other games that matter tonight: Colorado 3, Columbus 2 (OT); Philadelphia at St. Louis (in progress). Rockland Journal News: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732271 Ottawa Senators Karlsson nominated for Masterton by Ken Warren on April 1, 2014 Erik Karlsson celebrates his goal in the 1st period as the Ottawa Senators take on the Montreal Canadiens in NHL action at the Canadian Tire Centre in Ottawa, January 16, 2014. (Wayne Cuddington / Ottawa Citizen) Erik Karlsson isn‘t satisfied. He knows he‘s not all the way back to where he once was: the National Hockey League‘s unquestioned best defenceman, the guy who owned the game night after night. At the same time, perhaps we all need some occasional reminding of where he was a year ago, separated from his Ottawa Senators teammates and working out on his own, just beginning a desperate comeback from his devastating Achilles tendon injury. While Karlsson made an impressive comeback — months ahead of schedule — to give the Senators a lift in the 2013 playoffs — he wasn‘t operating at anything close to his usual high standards, but rather somewhere around ―60 per cent‖ in his view. Even now, almost 14 months after the left skate of Pittsburgh Penguins forward Matt Cooke sliced across the back of his left leg, Karlsson says the leg feels ―weird‖ and he suggests he‘s only in the ―high 80s‖ or ―almost 90‖ per cent of top form. Karlsson‘s push to regain his elite status — he leads the Senators and all NHL defencemen in scoring with 70 points, including 20 goals — has made him the Senators‘ nominee for the Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy as selected by the Ottawa chapter of the Professional Hockey Writers Association. Named after the Minnesota North Stars player who died after his head struck the ice during a game in January 1968, the Masterton is awarded annually to the NHL player who best combines dedication, perseverance and sportsmanship. ―It‘s nice to be recognized,‖ Karlsson said Tuesday, a day off from practice for all Senators players before they resume their long-shot quest for an Eastern Conference playoff berth with Wednesday night‘s game against the New York Islanders at Canadian Tire Centre. ―When I played the first 14 or 15 games or whatever it was (last season), I felt really good about myself,‖ Karlsson added. ―I felt that my game was going to the peak of where I wanted to be and this came along and kind of ruined everything and I kind of had to start all over a bit. It was tough physically and mentally to try and figure out what to do to be successful.‖ Now that he has almost played a full season since recovery, Karlsson has mixed emotions about the state of his game. Much of that, no doubt, has to do with his and his team‘s inconsistent play all season, which has them clinging to a last grasp hope of making the playoffs. While Karlsson had share of highlight games this season, he has also experienced a few clunkers, including a sub-par performance in Monday‘s 2-1 shootout victory against the Carolina Hurricanes. The pain is long gone and he‘s no longer thinking about his surgically repaired Achilles during games, but, in his perfect world, he wanted to be all the way back by the anniversary of the operation, when he was representing Sweden in the Sochi Winter Olympic Games. ―I didn‘t really know what to expect going into this year,‖ he said. ―It has been tough. It has been going up and down, I think, and it has a lot to do with not being able to work out (last off-season) like I usually do in the summers.‖ Yet, considering that several other players who had been through Achilles surgery previously cautioned Karlsson that full recovery often took longer than a year, he knows his rehabilitation has probably gone as well as could be expected. ―Where I‘m at today is further than I thought I would be,‖ he said. ―Obviously, I‘m very pleased with how the progression has gone. It‘s weird. It doesn‘t feel like it did before, but, at the same time, it feels good enough to be able to play at the level that I kind of want to be at. ―I know I‘m going to have to give it time, and this summer is going to be big for me, when, hopefully, I can go back to the normal routine and do the things I normally do in the summers.‖ Karlsson said it was difficult to describe exactly how his leg felt different than from before the injury. ―It‘s a little bit of everything,‖ he said. ―The flexibility is the same. It‘s back to where it normally is. It‘s just about muscles and all the scar tissue I still have. That has been slowing down the process, and it‘s really hard to break through it when you skate. I think just being in shoes and running and doing that stuff (in the summer) will tear it all off.‖ Barring a remarkable string of good fortune for the Senators in the final two weeks of this season, however, Karlsson can‘t consider the 2013-14 season as anything other than a disappointment. ―We‘re not pleased where we are at,‖ he said. ―I don‘t think anyone is pleased with the season. There are always things you want to be better at. As for my season, I haven‘t felt the way I really wanted to, things I couldn‘t do that I thought I could normally do. That‘s a big part of why I‘m not happy where I‘m at.‖ Ottawa Citizen LOADED: 04.02.2014 732272 Ottawa Senators Ottawa Senators still in it, but will need some help By Bruce Garrioch ,Ottawa Sun First posted: Tuesday, April 01, 2014 06:00 PM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, April 01, 2014 09:26 PM EDT The Senators spent Tuesday night scoreboard watching. In the midst of a stretch of six games in nine days, the Senators had Tuesday off to get rested and ready for Wednesday's visit by the New York Islanders to the Canadian Tire Centre. The Senators are 4-0-1 in their last five games. Making the playoffs is a longshot, but they did head into Tuesday's action trailing Columbus by four points for the final wild-card spot. The Jackets, Leafs and Devils, all teams in front of the Senators, were playing Tuesday night. Ottawa players don't really want to get caught up in the post-season talk with seven games left. The reality is this team has to win its remaining games and then get some help. "We love this. This is great. It reminds me of last season of having that feeling in our room of being confident," said defenceman Marc Methot. "It's a great atmosphere. This is what we strive for and we're going to try to keep it going. "I don't want to say that we're parading around the room now. We understand the severity of the situation and where we are in the standings. We're trying to be professional about it. It's good to enjoy it after the games. That's what you play for: That good feeling in the room." The Senators don't control their own destiny. They have to keep winning and there is no margin for error. Coming off a 2-1 win over Carolina, the club still has two sets of back-to-back games. People also seem to be ignoring the fact the Maple Leafs, Capitals and Devils are also ahead of the Senators in the standings and are still in the mix. There is still a huge hurdle here to climb. "When you win games you have more fun around the rink," said goalie Craig Anderson. "We don't know what's going to happen. We need a lot of help. If we win games, and worry about ourselves, anything can happen." The Senators will decide Wednesday morning if captain Jason Spezza and defenceman Jared Cowen, who are both day-to-day with lower body injuries, will be able to return against the Isles. THIS N' THAT The club signed college free agent winger Garrett Thompson from Ferris State Wednesday along with 2012 No. 3 pick Chris Driedger, a goalie from the Calgary Hitmen. Ottawa Sun LOADED: 04.02.2014 732273 Ottawa Senators Erik Karlsson named Senators' Masterton Trophy nominee By Bruce Garrioch ,Ottawa Sun First posted: Tuesday, April 01, 2014 03:00 PM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, April 01, 2014 04:54 PM EDT There have been mental hurdles along the way for Karlsson but he feels like he‘s dealt with those. ―I would say, yes. I don‘t think I‘ve really thought about it at all while I play,‖ said Karlsson. ―It‘s not something that‘s been stopping me from trying to do stuff. ―I don‘t think that‘s really been an issue for me at all.‖ If Karlsson can score 70 points not feeling 100%, what will accomplish next season? Ottawa Sun LOADED: 04.02.2014 Erik Karlsson certainly looks like he‘s in fine form most nights this season. He insists he‘s not quite there. Thirteen months removed from having his Achilles tendon severed by former Pittsburgh Penguins‘ winger Matt Cooke on Feb. 13, 2013, Karlsson is back to playing as much as 30 minutes a night. As the season winds down, the Senators‘ top defenceman is the first blueliner in 15 years to reach the 20-50-70 point plateau and he‘s achieved that without even being completely healthy. Given all the hard work and what he‘s achieved, Karlsson, 23, was announced Tuesday as the club‘s nominee for the Bill Masterton Trophy in voting by the Ottawa chapter of the Professional Hockey Writer‘s Association. The Masterton Memorial trophy is an award given to a player each year, who best exemplifies perseverance, sportsmanship and dedication to hockey. It‘s been a long road back for Karlsson. ―I‘ve heard about it before and it‘s nice to be recognized,‖ said Karlsson. ―It was a tough time last year. ―When I played the first 14 games I felt really good about myself and I felt that my game was going to the peak where I wanted to be. Then, this came along and kind of ruined everything. I had to start over a bit. It‘s been tough both physically and mentally to figure out what I need to do to be successful.‖ The issue for Karlsson is that as a result of the injury and the surgery there‘s still lingering scar tissue that he was told would be a problem. He believes he‘s probably at 90% right now. If the Senators don‘t make the playoffs and whether he takes part in the world championships for Sweden or not, he‘ll still have a full summer of training to get ready for next September. ―I didn‘t really know what to expect coming into this year. It‘s been tough,‖ said Karlsson. ―It‘s been going up and down and it has a lot to being able to work out (last year) like I usually do in the summers. ―Where I‘m at today is further than I thought would be but I‘m also pleased with the way the progression has gone. It doesn‘t feel like it did before but at the same time it feels good enough to be able to play at the level I kind of want to be at it. ―This summer is really going to be big for me when I go back to the normal routine and do the things that normally do during the summers. It‘s getting better and better. I don‘t think I‘m 100% but I‘m getting really close.‖ A winner of the Norris Trophy as the league‘s top defenceman in 2011-12, Karlsson was in fine form before he went down with the injury last season. He had 70% of his Achilles severed by the cut. He was told at the times it was going to be a long road back. Karlsson admitted he scoffed at the suggestion by some it would take over a year before he completely felt right again. Karlsson wasn‘t even close to 100% when he suited up for the final three games of the season and the playoffs last year, but he felt good enough to play and wanted to be part of it. ―I came back fairly fast and even thought I didn‘t feel great I still thought that it would go a lot faster than it has,‖ said Karlsson. ―I was hoping by the OIympics (in February) I was going to be back to normal. ―It hasn‘t really felt the same yet. Now, I‘m just waiting. I can still skate okay and do everything like that. There‘s been no pain since I got back which has been really nice.‖ 732274 Ottawa Senators Ottawa: 218 GOALS-AGAINST The Ottawa Senators paradox Boston: 158 Ottawa: 250 By Tim Baines ,Ottawa Sun First posted: Tuesday, April 01, 2014 06:12 PM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, April 01, 2014 06:46 PM EDT POWER-PLAY PERCENTAGE Boston: 21% Ottawa 18.4 PENALTY-KILLING PERCENTAGE So let me get this straight. Boston: 84.3% One season ago, Erik Karlsson gets hurt. Jason Spezza gets hurt. Craig Anderson gets hurt. Ottawa 80.6% And the Senators, defying all odds with their stars injured, keep winning. PENALTY MINUTES/GAME Their stars return. And the team makes the playoffs. Boston: 11 This year, relatively healthy, the Senators stumble and bumble their way through much of the regular season. The overachievers become underachievers. And now, with more stars -- Bobby Ryan and Spezza -- on the sidelines, the Senators are winning again. Maybe too little, too late. Ottawa: 13.2 It's been a weird season, a year where the stats really don't explain the team's shortcomings. THE CAP GAME (According to capgeek.com, a look at where NHL teams are in the standings, with their salary cap hit in brackets) League standings Blame it on Eugene Melnyk? Is he too much of a tightwad for your liking. Sure, the Senators are about $8 million under the salary cap. But the surprisingly successful Colorado Avalanche are more than $11 million under the $64.3-million salary-cap ceiling. And, remember, the Senators did try to sign David Clarkson as a free agent. Add that $6 million or so to the Senators' payroll and you think you're any better off? Boston ($64,300,000) You don't think the Senators are physical enough? With 2,202 hits, they're ranked fourth in the NHL, behind only Los Angeles, Toronto and Columbus. Pittsburgh ($64,300,000) St. Louis ($64,045,331) Anaheim ($62,992,491) San Jose ($64,300,000) Colorado ($52,931,503) Maybe they don't block enough shots, maybe they allow too many shots on goal, maybe their defencemen have been too jittery, maybe their goalies haven't stopped enough pucks, maybe the strategy has fallen off the tracks? It's hard to put a finger on what's gone wrong and why it's gone right at the most unlikely of times. So let's get into the numbers. For comparison's sake, let's take a look at Ottawa's statistics vs. those of the league-leading Boston Bruins. POINTS Boston: 110 Ottawa: 78 HITS Boston: 1,862 (Milan Lucic, 232) Ottawa: 2,202, fourth in NHL (Chris Neil, 225) BLOCKED SHOTS Boston: 986 (Johnny Boychuk, 140) Ottawa: 884, third-worst in NHL (Marc Methot, 100) GIVEAWAYS Boston: 561 (Milan Lucic, 66) Ottawa: 690, sixth-most in NHL (Eric Karlsson leads NHL with 103) TAKEAWAYS Boston: 502 (Patrice Bergeron, 46) Ottawa: 541 (Erik Karlsson, 62, 10th in league) SHOTS AGAINST Boston: 2,037 Ottawa: 2,608 GOALS Boston: 241 Chicago ($64,300,000 Los Angeles ($64,172,268) Montreal ($64,087,785) Tampa Bay ($64,300,000) NY Rangers ($63,369,497 Minnesota ($63,718,969) Philadelphia ($64,300,000) Phoenix ($61,541,431) Detroit ($64,300,000) Dallas ($59,440,634) Columbus ($63,561,446) Washington ($64,300,000) Toronto ($64,233,433) Vancouver ($63,532,081) New Jersey ($63,482,308) Nashville ($59,440, 634) Ottawa ($56,451,818) Winnipeg ($63,676,648) Carolina ($63,578,465) Calgary ($53,718,463) NY Isles ($51,652,810) Florida ($50,615,662) Edmonton ($57,248,845) Buffalo ($57,248,845) (Ottawa ranks 26th in league in spending. Cap floor is $44 million, ceiling is $64.3 million) Ottawa Sun LOADED: 04.02.2014 732275 Philadelphia Flyers Ice hockey: Homecoming for Johnny Gaudreau Phil Anastasia Posted: Tuesday, April 1, 2014, 2:28 PM The NCAA Frozen Four will be a homecoming for Johnny Gaudreau. Gaudreau, the former Gloucester Catholic star who probably is college hockey's best player, will lead Boston College into the national semifinals April 10 at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia. "It's going to be exciting for me to get back home," Gaudreau said on a conference call with reporters on Tuesday. "I have heard from so many family and friends and old teachers who have texted me or emailed me. "I'm just trying to take it all in and enjoy it." Gaudreau, who grew up in Carneys Point in Salem County, said he never played a game in the Wells Fargo Center -- although he once took the ice at one of those "Mites on Ice" events between periods of a Flyers game. "I was younger than everybody else so I probably was out there making snow angels," Gaudreau said. "I was always a big Flyers fan." Gaudreau, a left wing, is the leading candidate to win the Hobey Baker Award, college hockey's equivalent of the the Heisman Trophy in college football. Gaudreau leads BC (28-7-4) with 77 points (36 goals, 42 assists). Known in the Boston area as "Johnny Hockey," Gaudreau scored a point in 31 straight games this season. In the regional semifinals against Denver, Gaudreau had a goal hat trick and an assist hat trick -- three goals and three assists. Denver coach Jim Montgomery, the former Flyers player who coached Gaudreau in juniors, compared Gaudreau to Detroit Red Wings star Pavel Datsyuk. "He's a dominant, dominant player at our level," BC coach Jerry York said Tuesday. Gaudreau will have a big decision to make when Boston College's season is over. He either can sign with the NHL's Calgary Flames, who drafted him in the fourth round in 2011, or opt to return to college for his senior season. In the latter case, he would sign with Calgary after his senior season, according to his father, Guy Gaudreau, the rink manager at Holleydell Ice Arena in Sewell. Guy Gaudreau said that he and his wife, Jane, were leaving the decision to their son. "He's 20 years old," Guy Gaudreau said. "He has to make this decision." At around 5-foot-9, 155 pounds, Gaudreau faces questions about whether he is too small to succeed in the NHL. He has dealt with the same issue for his entire career. "His whole life he's been proving people wrong," Guy Gaudreau said. "All he's ever wanted to do was play in the NHL." Note: You can read more about Johnny Gaudreau's remarkable rise from South Jersey star to college hockey's most intriguing player in the days to come as The Inquirer previews the NCAA Frozen Four. Philadelphia Inquirer / Daily News LOADED: 04.02.2014 732276 Philadelphia Flyers Bernie Parent: I don't have a clue Bernie Parent, For Philly.com Posted: Tuesday, April 1, 2014, 12:47 PM I don't have a clue about most of the things that are happening in my life. I just don't. You may spend time planning where you want to be and what you want to do, but you really have no clue how that plan is going to pan out. Ask a lot of successful people. They had a purpose, a vision, but they had no clue how they were going to get there. For example, when I was younger, my vision was to play in the National Hockey League, but I had absolutely no clue how to get there. It was shown to me day in and day out. People get frustrated because there's never a direct line to what you want to achieve. It's never that easy. To get to St. Louis, you have to pass through Pittsburgh. You keep your purpose in reach, but you have no idea what the ride will be like. Things happen. People come into your life. And if you wake up without a clue as to how you're going to reach your purpose, stay away from your negative thoughts. Be ready for the positive things that life will bring you today. If you pay attention to the things happening around you in your life, you will be shown the way. When I would step on the ice for every game, they sang the National Anthem, and my vision was winning. It could be 5-2, we might lose, we might win, might be a tie, might be a fight, might be a penalty, etc. And I didn't have a clue what was going to happen. The same scenario can be applied to everyday life. When I leave Cherry Hill, N.J., I'm heading back down to the shore. The shore is my destination. I plan the route I'm going to take, but I don't have a clue how it's going to work out. There could be an accident, there could be traffic, I could be delayed, all sorts of things. You know where you want to go, but there could be a whole bunch of deviations and detours that were unexpected for multiple different reasons. But the detour could lead you to unique situations, so enjoy the ride. Setbacks can be good. What about when I got traded from the Flyers to Toronto? I had no clue how this situation would pan out for me. But it was the best thing that ever happened to me. I got to spend two great years with my mentor, Jacques Plante, learning everything I had to learn about goaltending before I went back to Philadelphia. I made the best of that situation, and it ultimately got me closer to my purpose. "I don't have a clue," is a cousin to risk and fear. You don't know how this decision you're about to make will affect your life, but you take the risk anyway and make the best of every situation and see where it leads you. You face that fear of the unknown. But guess what? If you let your fear paralyze you and remove you from taking risks, you won't get any closer to your purpose. The people who play it safe in life are often unhappy with how their lives have turned out. I was talking to a fan at the game the other day, and she was talking about buying a home in Florida ... but she was hesitant. She was giving every excuse and reason not to go through with it. I told her, "If that's the way you feel, then don't get it." But I told her to reprogram her thoughts, think of that beautiful house in Florida, the beautiful weather, and if you keep that positive attitude, everything will work out. She has no idea how this will pan out, but her vision will get her there one way or another if she stays positive. All it takes is one step. You may not have a clue, but pay attention to your vision, because it will be shown to you. Philadelphia Inquirer / Daily News LOADED: 04.02.2014 732277 Philadelphia Flyers Do Flyers need shootout specialist? Frank Seravalli So, if one of the brightest minds in hockey believes that a fourth line may be expendable in some ways, why not experiment? Find a player who isn‘t a total liability when he‘s on the ice and ride the heck out of him in the shootout. He‘s a total hypothetical, but a player like Brad Boyes would fit the bill. He can contribute on a couple different lines. He‘d only earned $1 million in each of the last two seasons. And he is the NHL‘s all-time leader in goals scored (37) in the shootout, operating at 46.2 percent. Posted: Wednesday, April 2, 2014, 3:54 AM Approximately 14.2 percent of all 1,230 games this season have gone to a shootout - just a few ticks off the record of 14.96 percent. They aren‘t going anywhere. ST. LOUIS -- Try as the NHL‘s general managers may to diminish it, the shootout isn‘t going anywhere. Even if a supposed shootout specialist were to make up only half of the points lost by the Flyers this season - two through Tuesday‘s game - he would be well worth that million and roster spot. He won‘t be able to stop pucks at the other end, but he could be the difference between home-ice and/or missing the playoffs entirely. That isn‘t great news for the Flyers, who dropped their second straight game in a shootout - be it against two of the league‘s best teams. Within minutes of the final horn sounding in overtime, the social media commentary from fans began pouring in about the Flyers‘ shootout woes. Most were chalking up the loss before overtime even ended. And, well, it‘s hard to blame the fan frustration. The statistics are extraordinary. The Flyers are far and away the NHL‘s worst shootout team (27-50) since it was instituted in 2005. They also have the worst save percentage (.571) in the shootout by a wide margin (29th ranked team, Toronto, is .607). The Flyers are now 3-7-0 in shootouts this season, leaving 4 points in the standings on the table. Craig Berube only has two players - Claude Giroux (43.6 percent), Matt Read (40 percent) - with career numbers who are above the league average of 32.6 percent. Ray Emery, now 0-2 in shootouts in the season, has allowed 5 goals on 7 shots. So, what can the Flyers do to win more shootouts? The common refrain from coaches is to practice it more. With practice time being such a valuable commodity, especially during a condensed schedule, coaches often have a hard time squeezing it in with so much work focused on special teams. Couple other quick hits from Scottrade Center: > Hal Gill‘s mentoring role with Erik Gustafsson was the subject of today‘s notebook in the paper. Gill, who is probably in better shape than most players in Berube‘s lineup, said he‘s tried to focus on not looking past this season. He was dripping sweat yesterday after going through skating exercises on his own with assistant coach Ian Laperriere, long after scratches Steve Downie and Jay Rosehill had retreated to the locker room. That‘s a pretty impressive drive for a 38-year-old with a Stanley Cup ring who is far down on the Flyers‘ depth chart. Since he‘s gotten a taste of the mentoring role, learning the ins-and-outs of team makeup, is coaching in his future? ―I won‘t lie to you and tell you I‘m not thinking about it,‖ Gill said. ―Right now, my big focus has to been ready in case I do play. I just keep a positive attitude. I enjoy the game, I enjoy being around the game. I come to the rink and practice hard and wait my turn.‖ Gill is a smart guy. Amazingly, even after a 1,106-game career, he‘s trying to glean everything he can from watching his teammates play. He still wants to be better. We‘ve heard that before. ―I‘m watching the game, trying to get better,‖ Gill said. ―It‘s nice to be able to watch a guy like Kimmo play and see how he handles himself. I‘ve learned from him, I‘ve learned from ‗Coby‘ and ‗Grossy‘ and try to become a better player. I‘ll worry about the rest of that (my career) after the fact.‖ Watching T.J. Oshie do his thing against Emery, the same way he repeatedly victimized Russia in Sochi for the United States, was a poignant reminder of what a powerful weapon a successful shooter can be. Of course, Oshie is so much more than just that for St. Louis. After this one last run with the Flyers, it‘s hard to imagine Gill straying too far from the rink. Told he has the best job in the world - earning $700,000 a year to play 4 games, skate every day and be a part of a team - he couldn‘t deny that. Oshie, 27, is now 9-for-12 on the season. He is the NHL‘s all-time leader in shooting percentage (56.2) and he‘s already closing in on the record for game-deciding goals. ―It‘s not a bad gig,‖ Gill said. ―I think anyone in my position, though, would want to be in the lineup. I have a great job. I‘m not complaining about it.‖ All of that which begs the question: are we reaching a time in the NHL where shootout specialists will have a role on the roster? > One possible injury to watch: Defenseman Andrew MacDonald really seemed to be favoring his right ankle post-game, after blocking a shot against the Blues. He was walking pretty gingerly. Football teams have long-snappers. Basketball teams have three-point snipers. Baseball teams have pinch-hitting gurus. The Flyers have a complete day off on Wednesday, so he‘ll have time to heal up a bit. With such a premium being placed on points in the NHL, it‘s a modern miracle we haven‘t seen it happen already - considering some teams are still paying big money for an enforcer who might not play more than 4 minutes or 40 games a season. > Quotable. One positive of the Flyers‘ brutal schedule over the final month of the season was that they‘ve learned to play a versatile style to match some of the big guns in the NHL, says MacDonald: I never would have thought that to be a possibility until speaking with Ken Hitchcock before Tuesday‘s game against the Blues. Mind you, it wasn‘t about the shootout, but rather about the role of a fourth line. Hitchcock, the proud owner of a gold medal from Sochi as an assistant coach for Team Canada, said he used to believe it was important to roll four lines in a game to get everyone acclimated. No more. ―Between all of the penalties, special teams and stoppages, I‘m starting to change the way I‘m thinking about that,‖ Hitchcock said. ―We‘re beginning to get back to the way we were maybe 20 or 30 years ago, when fourth line guys had a role and were specialists.‖ ―We competed. I thought we did a good job of getting in there on the forecheck. It was a really grind-type game from both sides. That‘s the type of style (the Blues) play, we need to learn how to play in those type of games. I think it‘s good for us to know that we can go out and perform in those type of situations.‖ Philadelphia Inquirer / Daily News LOADED: 04.02.2014 732278 Philadelphia Flyers Flyers Notes: With Timonen out, Flyers go with Gustafsson Sam Carchidi, Inquirer Staff Writer Posted: Wednesday, April 2, 2014, 1:09 AM ST. LOUIS - Defenseman Erik Gustafsson had been alternating with the since-traded Andrej Meszaros, but ever since the Flyers acquired Andrew MacDonald from the Islanders, he has been a forgotten player. Until Tuesday night. Gustafsson, a healthy scratch in the previous 14 games, returned to the lineup against St. Louis because of an undisclosed facial injury to Kimmo Timonen. "You don't want to be on the side; it's not easy, especially mentally, to stay ready," Gustafsson said after the morning skate Tuesday in St. Louis. "But it's part of the business we're in and I'm happy to get the chance tonight." Coach Craig Berube said he wanted Gustafsson - who was plus-9 with 10 points in 27 games before Tuesday - "to be a good defender and move the puck. Gus does that." "Gus is one of my favorite players, to be honest," star center Claude Giroux said with a smile. "He's small, but he's a hard-nosed player and he's really smart out there. He reads the plays pretty good." With Timonen sidelined - he is expected to return Thursday - the Flyers altered all three defensive pairings Tuesday. The pairings: Gustafsson and Luke Schenn, Braydon Coburn and Nick Grossmann, and Mark Streit and MacDonald. Berube said Timonen, 39, "probably could have came and played, but I think it's important he's rested and feeling good" for the home stretch. Giroux honored Giroux was named the NHL's third star of the month. Boston winger Jarome Iginla, who had a league-high 13 goals in March, and Detroit winger Gustav Nyquist (12 goals in March) were named the first and second stars. Giroux led the NHL with 15 assists and 21 points in March, helping the Flyers compile a 9-3-2 record. "His work ethic is really high, and that's what makes it all go for him - his hard work and competitiveness, along with his skill," Berube said. "He doesn't try to play a skill game . . . as much as he works. When you have a skill guy that works like that, they're dangerous players." Breakaways Goalie Steve Mason, rested Tuesday, will oppose his former team, Columbus, in a key matchup Thursday at the Wells Fargo Center. . . . The Flyers missed out on highly touted University of Massachusetts-Lowell defenseman Christian Folin, who signed with the Minnesota Wild. The Flyers were one of the finalists for the free agent. Philadelphia Inquirer / Daily News LOADED: 04.02.2014 732279 Philadelphia Flyers With Timonen out, Gustafsson gets another chance March 22) was probably one area we weren‘t ready for ... they were bringing all five men to the top of the circle.‘‘ Hitchcock has the Blues on top in the Western Conference and some believe he has a legitimate chance to bring St. Louis its first ever Stanley Cup. Emery starts Posted: Tuesday, April 1, 2014 8:10 pm | Updated: 9:06 pm, Tue Apr 1, 2014. Wayne Fish Staff writer Ray Emery was named the starting goalie for Tuesday night's game. Berube said Steve Mason has been playing a lot of games and could use a rest. Plus, Mason's old team, the Columbus Blue Jackets, are in Philly on Thursday. Burlington County Times LOADED: 04.02.2014 ST. LOUIS -- First he was parked behind Andrej Meszaros. Then Erik Gustafsson watched the Flyers send Meszaros to Boston, only to pick up Andrew MacDonald at the March 5 trade deadline. So Gustafsson had to sit patiently until there was an opening on defense. That space finally appeared Tuesday when Kimmo Timonen had to sit out a game against the Blues due to an upper body injury, believed to be a cut beneath his chin suffered in Sunday's game against Boston. Gustafsson's career has been a stop and start affair. Every time he gets rolling, he either gets injured or gets in the coach's doghouse. After a minus-2 effort in the Flyers' 7-3 loss to San Jose on Feb. 27, Gustafsson was sent to the bench by coach Craig Berube and hasn't been heard from since. That's 14 games without action. "It (the Sharks) was a bad game,'' Gustafsson said at Tuesday morning's skate at the Scottrade Center. "But I don't think one game can ruin your season.'' Gustafsson, who was scheduled to be paired with Luke Schenn, is the highest rated defenseman at a plus-9 but has appeared in only 27 games. "When I play good I think I'm a good defenseman,'' Gustafsson said. "I just need to play consistently, move the puck all the time and move my feet. I just have to keep those two things in line and that will go a long way.'' Berube still believes in Gustafsson, who's on the last year of a $1 million, one-way contract. He's a restricted free agent for 2014-15. "Be a good defender, move the puck, Gus does that,'' Berube said when asked what he expects from Gustafsson. "If he moves his feet, he'll be fine.'' Captain Claude Giroux thinks Gustafsson can have an impact on games. ―He‘s one of my favorite players,‘‘ Giroux said. ―He‘s a hard-nosed player, he‘s small but he works really hard. He‘s smart out there with the plays he makes. He just reads the play really good.‘‘ Giroux third star Giroux was named the NHL's third star for the month of March. Boston's Jarome Iginla (13 goals) was first star and Gustav Nyquist (12 goals) of Detroit was second. Giroux was the leading point man (21) for the month. According to Giroux, it's the first time he's ever received the honor. "I've been playing good, so it's a lot of fun,'' Giroux said. Berube said: ―His work ethic is really good, really high. That makes it all go for him. He doesn‘t try to play a skill game so much as he works. When you have skill guys who work like that, they‘re dangerous.‘‘ Hitchcock‘s take on Flyers When St. Louis coach Ken Hitchcock visited Philadelphia a couple weeks ago, he called the Flyers a ―dangerous‘‘ playoff team. Then the Flyers went out and beat his Blues 4-1. Tuesday morning, Hitchcock held court after the morning skate and reiterated the Flyers are, in his estimation, a tough opponent, even with Timonen out of the lineup for this game. ―Their defensemen are coming all the time on the attack,‘‘ said Hitchcock, who coached the Flyers from 2002-06. ―It‘s more of our defending against the rush. They‘re one team that‘s brought more numbers on the attack than we‘ve seen for a long time. ―The teams in the West are more conservative -- whereas the Flyers‘ defensemen are coming, sometimes they‘re acting as forwards. That (on 732280 Philadelphia Flyers Flyers show spirit again in St. Louis shootout loss Berube juggled his defense pairings with Timonen gone. With Erik Gustafsson inserted in the lineup, he was paired with Luke Schenn. Braydon Coburn was matched with Nick Grossmann and ex-Islanders Streit and Andy MacDonald worked as a unit. Grossmann and Coburn spent a lot of time clearing traffic in front of Emery. Posted: Tuesday, April 1, 2014 11:53 pm | Updated: 12:41 am, Wed Apr 2, 2014. By Wayne Fish Staff writer ST. LOUIS — It isn‘t easy shutting out one of the NHL‘s best teams on its home ice but the Flyers don‘t seem to be backing down from any challenges these days. First they took No. 1 Boston to the limit Sunday before losing in a shootout. The trend continued Tuesday night at the Scottrade Center, where the Flyers battled No. 2 St. Louis to a 65-minute double shutout before losing in another shootout, this by a 1-0 score. T.J. Oshie and Kevin Shattenkirk scored shootout goals while the Flyers came up empty in the tiebreaker but the Flyers did secure another valuable point to stay four points up on fourth-place Columbus in the Metro Division standings. It was the first time St. Louis failed to score a goal before the shootout on home ice all season. Ray Emery supplied the goaltending heroics for the Flyers, who are now 4-0-2 recently against the likes of St. Louis, Boston, Pittsburgh and Chicago. Ryan Miller was equally sharp in goal for the Blues. Emery has played in hard luck all season but on this particular night, his defense played well in front of him. ―Yeah, it‘s frustrating,‘‘ Emery said, ―going the distance and then falling short in a shootout. But you know, I thought we did well. (St. Louis) is a great team and we poured it on at the start. ―We had a lot of chances throughout the game. (Miller) played really good down there. But, it was definitely a good effort on our part, I think.‘‘ It was just the fourth time since the shootout was instituted in 2005 that the Flyers have played a scoreless tie that was decided by a shootout. Even though top defenseman Kimmo Timonen was scratched due to an upper-body injury, the backliners played well in front of Emery. ―Definitely,‘‘ Emery said, ―that‘s a tough team to play against. They cycle a lot, they spin it out of the corner. They just kind of throw it at the net. They try to make that backdoor pass where they bounce it off guys. I thought we worked really hard down there — did a good job in the defensive zone.‘‘ Both teams had good scoring chances but couldn‘t cash in. The Flyers‘ Michael Raffl received a nice cross-ice feed from Mark Streit early in the second period but Miller was able to get his left pad out in time to make the stop. Raffl also had a good opportunity early on when Claude Giroux broke free on a breakaway. Again Miller made a sprawling save. ―Miller played outstanding,‘‘ Raffl said. ―I thought G was going to go for the breakaway, I didn‘t expect him to pass it. ―I thought it was a great battle for us. We played well defensively. We‘ve got it a little bit together more, we check harder, we play better defense. You‘re not happy when you lose but every point is huge right now.‘‘ Coach Craig Berube sounded satisfied with the effort, knowing he had just taken three of four points over the high-flying Blues in the space of 10 days. He was especially pleased with Emery‘s performance. ―Great job,‘‘ he said. ―It‘s been a lot of tough games and he‘s come up big. He‘s a winner, he‘s a battler, he battled hard tonight.‘‘ The Flyers continue to improve their chances of making the playoffs by getting at least a point in most of these games. ―Down the stretch here we‘ve done a great job,‘‘ Berube said. ―Coming in, we knew it was going to be a tight-checking game,‘‘ Grossmann said. ―We needed to play good defense. I thought guys played well in front of Ray and he played a heck of a game. ―It seems like guys are coming together well, playing as a team for each other, playing with a lot of heart, determination. That‘s good to see, that‘s what we need from everyone.‘‘ Giroux was asked if the Flyers now should be considered a legitimate contender late in the season. ―We‘re still trying to get better,‘‘ Giroux said. ―We‘re still trying to be good playing as a team. It doesn‘t matter what people say, it‘s about what you do out there. Our confidence is up right now. But we need to make sure that we keep getting better with seven games left.‖ Short shots The Flyers are now 2-2 in shootouts that decided games that were scoreless through regulation and overtime. The others: Flyers over Calgary on Dec. 6, 2005; New York Islanders over Flyers on Feb. 7, 2012; Flyers over Toronto, March 10, 2012. Burlington County Times LOADED: 04.02.2014 732281 Philadelphia Flyers Emery's masterpiece goes for naught in shootout loss By R.B. FALLSTROM, Of The Associated Press Posted: 04/02/14, 12:12 AM EDT | Updated: 10 secs ago ST. LOUIS — Ryan Miller stopped 31 shots and T.J. Oshie and Kevin Shattenkirk scored in a shootout in the St. Louis Blues‘ 1-0 victory over the Flyers on Tuesday night. St. Louis has 109 points, one fewer than Boston for the top spot in the NHL. Miller, who earned his 29th career shutout, made a skate save against Vincent Lecavalier and a glove save on Claude Giroux in the shootout. One of Miller‘s best saves came with 1:30 to go in overtime when he stretched out and denied Jakub Voracek‘s bid to slide the puck under his pads. Emery earned his 16th career shutout and second this season. Oshie, who scored on a backhand, is 9 for 12 in the shootout. Giroux is 5 for 10. Both teams killed penalties in the final five minutes of regulation, with a high-sticking call to Giroux stretching into the first 36 seconds of overtime for the Flyers. St. Louis penalty killers have allowed three goals on 36 chances the past 12 home games. The Flyers played in St. Louis for the first time since the 2010-11 opener. Miller foiled two breakaways in the opening minutes, one created when defensemen Alex Pietrangelo and Shattenkirk collided. He made an outstanding left pad save on Michael Raffl to thwart a 2-on-1 break early in the second period. Two Blues hit the goalpost in the second period, Jaden Schwartz in the opening minute and Pietrangelo in the final minute. lll NOTES: Kimmo Timonen did not make the trip after taking a puck to the chin. Alex Gustafsson played for the first time since Feb. 27. ... The Blues tricked a fan between the second and third periods who was blindfolded at center ice and then shot several yards wide of the net, telling him he‘d won $15,000. The fan did a celebratory belly flop on the ice before being told he‘d been duped. ... The Blues‘ last 0-0 regulation game was March 22, 2012, at Los Angeles, a 1-0 shootout loss. ... The Flyers have been shut out four times. Delaware County Times LOADED: 04.02.2014 732282 Philadelphia Flyers Skate Update: Rare appearance for Gustafsson Staff April 1, 2014, 3:30 pm games last month, and he lit the red lamp for two game-winners. He ranks third in the NHL with 78 points, on 25 goals and 53 assists. Berube called the honor ―very good,‖ adding that Giroux ―plays with a lot of energy out there. His work ethic is really good, it‘s really high, and that makes it all go for him -- his hard work and competitiveness out there, and his skill. ―He doesn‘t try to play a skill game so much. He lets his skill happen, and he works. When you have a skilled guy who works like that, they‘re dangerous players.‖ Emery in net ST LOUIS -- With linchpin defenseman Kimmo Timonen home in Philadelphia, Erik Gustafsson reappears in the Flyers' lineup for the first time in almost five weeks since going minus-2 in a 7-3 loss to San Jose on Feb. 27. The player known as ―Gus‖ had been a healthy scratch for 14 consecutive games, and with the Olympic break and all, his appearance Tuesday at St. Louis is only his second game action since Feb. 6. ―It‘s gonna be a lot of fun to get in tonight,‖ he said after the Flyers‘ morning skate at Scottrade Center, repeating that mantra later. As to why Gustafsson had been scratched for the entire month of March, the minus-2 vs. the Sharks stands out, though he didn‘t put much stock into that and coach Craig Berube cited a numbers game. ―Just a bad game, I didn‘t really think much of it,‖ said Gustafsson, who at age 25 is in his first full season with the Flyers after three seasons in which he split time between the AHL and NHL. ―I don‘t think one game can ruin your season like that.‖ Gustafsson did allow that not playing in an actual game was ―frustrating.‖ ―You don‘t want to be on the side,‖ he said. ―It‘s not easy, especially mentally, to stay ready, but it‘s part of the business we‘re in. I‘m happy for the chance tonight, and we‘ll see where we go from there.‖ Gustafsson, 5-10, 180 pounds, will be teamed with Luke Schenn, 6-2, 229, in the Flyers‘ third pairing vs. the Blues as Berube juggled all three of his pairings with Timonen out. Braydon Coburn and Nicklas Grossman will be the top pairing, with Andrew MacDonald and Mark Streit in the second group. Coburn and Grossman are big sides of beef at 6-5/220 and 6-4/230, respectively, and are together to play against the Blues' beefy top line of David Backes (6-3/220), Alexander Steen (5-11/212) and T.J. Oshie (5-11/189), Berube said. From Gustafsson, Berube expects, ―Normal play ... be a good defender, first of all, and move the puck. ... If he moves his feet, he‘ll be fine. ―He‘s had some real good games this year, and there‘s time he didn‘t play as well, didn‘t move the puck and stuff. I don‘t think I‘m looking for anything more than what he‘s capable of doing. He‘s a puck mover. ... Gus defends well.‖ And the healthy scratch thing? Merely numbers, according to Berube. ―Our D has been pretty healthy; a lot of times it was just he was the odd man out,‖ said Berube, adding that after the San Jose game, ―Gross[mann] came in and played well, then we got MacDonald.‖ For his part, Gustafsson cited the ―move your feet‖ stuff and also consistency. ―When I play good, I think I‘m a good defenseman in this league,‖ he said. ―I just have to find consistency, move the puck ... move my feet, just keep those two things in mind. That‘ll go a long way.‖ Rest for Timonen Alternate captain Kimmo Timonen remained home in Philadelphia, rather than take the quickie rip in-and-out of St. Louis. The Flyers return to Philly and play host to Columbus in a division game Thursday. Timonen took a puck in the chops Sunday vs. Boston, and at age 39, he could use the R&R. ―Older guy; he‘ll be ready,‖ Berube said, adding, ―I think he‘ll be fine. He could have probably came and played today, but I think it‘s important, too, that he‘s rested and feeling good.‖ Giroux honored Center Claude Giroux was named the No. 3 star for the month of March by the NHL (see story). Giroux led the NHL with 15 assists and 21 points in 14 Ray Emery will get the start in goal Tuesday night, with Steve Mason as the backup in a resting mode. ―He‘s played a lot of games,‖ Berube explained. ―Ray has played well. I had no problem putting him in tonight.‖ Comcast SportsNet.com LOADED: 04.02.2014 732283 Philadelphia Flyers Claude Giroux named NHL Third Star of the month Staff April 1, 2014, 1:15 pm For the first time this season, the NHL has recognized a Flyer for his accomplishments on the ice. Flyers captain Claude Giroux was named the league‘s Third Star for the month of March. Boston right wing Jarome Iginla was named No. 1 star, followed by Detroit right wing Gustav Nyquist. Giroux led the three honorees during March in both assists (15) and points (21). The Flyers went 9-3-2. Giroux, 26, accrued at least one point in 11 of 14 games, including seven multi-point performances and three three-point efforts. He is currently third in the NHL scoring race with 78 points in 74 games. The Flyers are 19-2-1 when Giroux scores a goal this season and 32-13-3 when he records at least one point. Comcast SportsNet.com LOADED: 04.02.2014 732284 Philadelphia Flyers Steve Mason energized by playoff race pressure Staff April 1, 2014, 9:45 am It‘s been five long years since goalie Steve Mason was last in an NHL playoff race. It's been so long, his wait dates all the way back to his Calder Trophy year of 2008-09. Mason won a career-high 33 games his rookie season to push Ken Hitchcock‘s Columbus Blue Jackets into the playoffs -– their only playoff appearance in franchise history -- where they were swept in four games by Detroit. The Flyers are in the thick of a playoff race with the New York Rangers. Both clubs are virtually certain to make it, and the only guesswork is who finishes second in the Metropolitan Division. The loser will drop to third and forfeit home-ice advantage for the first round. ―This is what we play hockey for,‖ Mason said. ―Situations where you are playing meaningful games this time of year. To be in the position we are [now] after the start we had to the season says a lot about this time. It‘s definitely exciting.‖ Mason, who will not start tonight when the Flyers meet the Blues for the second time in less than a month -- Ray Emery will -- has 31 victories. Given the eight remaining games on the schedule, the soon-to-be 26-year-old has an opportunity to surpass his rookie win total. He hasn‘t felt this playoff pressure in a long time, either. ―There‘s always pressure,‖ Mason said. ―Being in this situation now, everyone in this organization and in this dressing room believes we have a team that can make a long playoff run and there‘s pressure there. At the same time, it‘s fun to have that. ―I haven‘t played a playoff game in this building, but watching it on TV, how intimidating a building it is for opposition teams to come into, and have that kind of fan support here is going to be huge come playoff time. If we can get home ice, that‘s a step in the right direction. Tonight is Game 10 of the Flyers' 12 very difficult games against similar playoff-bound opponents. The Flyers are 6-2-1 with 13 of a possible 18 points so far. Flyers coach Craig Berube and many of his players have been saying recently these 12 games, tough as they have been, were exactly what the club needed to get ―playoff ready.‖ The Blues lost to the Dallas Stars over the weekend. Hitchcock hasn‘t lost twice to the Flyers in the same season since he became head coach in St. Louis, so he is looking for payback from the 4-1 loss in Philly on March 22. ―We‘ve done a great job of going up against some of the best teams in the league and coming out on top,‖ Mason said. ―Finding ways to win hockey games that aren‘t easy to win. It says a lot about the guys in this room. And the claim they have in Chief‘s [Berube] system. ―To be in this position is something to be proud of but no one is going to be happy until we get into the playoffs securely and start making some noise.‖ It‘s entirely possible it will take until the final game of the season to determine whether the Rangers or Flyers finish second even though both should clinch a playoff spot soon. ―I think it‘s going to go down to the last couple games of the regular season just to sort things out for good,‖ Mason said. ―We only got one point [Sunday] and [the Rangers] got two, so you are definitely doing some scoreboard watching. At the same time, we can only control what we do. The important thing is, we‘ve put ourselves in this position [to get it done].‖ Comcast SportsNet.com LOADED: 04.02.2014 732285 Philadelphia Flyers Flyers stifled in shootout loss to Miller, Blues Staff ―It was a great battle for us,‖ Raffl said. ―I think we played really good defensively, and Ray was outstanding, as well as Miller over there. It was a heck of a game, a real fun game.‖ Flyers coach Craig Berube agreed, calling it ―a good game, had some good chances. Ray battled hard tonight and did a really good job. … Miller made some big saves all game. Both goalies were really good.‖ April 2, 2014, 12:45 am In the end, the Flyers earned the one point, could have used the two, but oh, well. ST. LOUIS – This was the very definition of a goaltenders‘ duel. ―I look at how we played,‖ Berube said. ―We played a good hockey game. We got a point out of it. Of course, we want two points. We didn‘t put it in the back of the net.‖ Two shutouts, 0-0 through the actual play of 60 minutes and the five-minute overtime. Flyers backup Ray Emery took turns with St. Louis Blues No. 1 Ryan Miller in making save after save -- 31 for Miller in 65 minutes of play, 28 for Emery. In the end, Miller prevailed in his first shutout wearing the bluenote in the Blues‘ 1-0 in a shootout (see Instant Replay). No surprise there, really. The Blues are 9-3 this season in the postgame-skills competitions; the Flyers are 3-7. T.J. Oshie lit the red lamp in his shootout round, just as he did for Team USA vs. Russian in the Sochi Olympics. He dipsyed, he doodled, and ultimately put the puck behind Emery. After Alexander Steen lost control of the puck on his salvo, Kevin Shattenkirk put a wrister past Emery to clinch it. At the other end, Miller robbed Vincent Lecavalier with his right pad, then gloved a shot by Claude Giroux to set up the Shattenkirk‘s winner in round No. 3. The adage is that a tie is said to be like kissing your sister; losing in a shootout is much the same. ―It‘s frustrating going the distance and falling short in the shootout,‖ said Emery, who nevertheless pitched his second shutout of the season and 21st of his career. ―It‘s a good effort, but at the same time, it‘s kind of frustrating losing in the shootout the last couple games.‖ The Flyers are unbeaten in regulation in the past three games, with shootout loses to the NHL‘s best teams – first overall Boston on Sunday and the second overall Blues on Tuesday. They whipped up on Toronto on Friday. ―I thought we did well,‖ Emery said, adding that the Blues are ―a great team. We had a good start and a lot of chances throughout the game; we played really good [defensively]. It was definitely a good effort on our part. ―They‘re a tough team to play against. They cycle a lot, spin out of the corner and they just kind of throw it at the net, kind of make that backdoor pass and try to bounce it off guys. They really work you hard down there. I thought we did a good job in the defensive zone.‖ The Flyers beat the Blues 4-1 on March 22 at Wells Fargo Center, so they have limited the NHL‘s No. 4 scoring team to one goal in 125 minutes of play over two games. This game wasn‘t like the previous one, though, with Miller on top of his game and on top of his crease throughout. Two of his best saves were on Michael Raffl, one each in the first and second periods. Raffl had a 2-on-0 with Giroux in the first period after Blues defensemen Alex Pietrangelo and Jay Bouwmeester collided and fell down. Then, he had a point-blank shot in the second period, but Miller slid across to make the left pad save. Raffl said he‘d change nothing about the first shot. ―I got a good shot off there. I got it high up, but Miller played outstanding tonight and he was right there,‖ said Raffl, adding that he was somewhat surprised to be the one taking the shot. ―Both their D-men fell and I thought G was going to go for the breakaway. I didn‘t expect that he was going to pass it.‖ Raffl would change his approach on the second-period chance, though. ―I could have taken my time a little bit more, get it up there and it would have been a sure goal,‖ said Raffl, whose low shot was stopped by Miller. ―It happens quick out there. If I could go back, I‘d change it.‖ The Flyers would change little else about their effort Tuesday in holding one of the league‘s elite teams off the scoreboard in the actual on-ice competition. Comcast SportsNet.com LOADED: 04.02.2014 732286 Philadelphia Flyers Instant Replay: Blues 1, Flyers 0 (SO) Staff April 1, 2014, 10:45 pm ST. LOUIS – The Flyers and the St. Louis Blues locked horns in a scoreless battle Thursday at Scottrade Center. Up and down the ice they went, as Flyers understudy Ray Emery went skate-to-glove with Blues leading man Ryan Miller in the save department. Miller made 31 saves in regulation; Emery 28. It was 0-0 at the end of regulation and after the five-minute overtime. But the Blues finally earned a 1-0 victory in the postgame-skills showdown known as a shootout. In the SO, T.J. Oshie and Kevin Shattenkirk lit the red lamp for the Blues, with Oshie dipsy-doodling all over the place before beating Emery and Shattenkirk scoring on a wrister to clinch it. (Alexander Steen didn‘t get off a shot, losing control of the puck.) At the other end, Miller stopped Vincent Lecavalier with his right pad and gloved a salvo from Claude Giroux. The Blues are 9-3 in SOs this season; the Flyers 3-7. It was a quite different game than the teams‘ meeting March 22 at Wells Fargo Center. In that one, the Flyers decisively beat the Blues 4-1 to extend their winning streak to five games; they‘ve gone 1-2-1 since then. The Blues won three in a row after the loss in Philly before losing to Dallas on Saturday. So, the Blues had revenge on their minds, and the Flyers wanted to show the victory on the 22nd wasn‘t a fluke in any way. The Flyers started strongly Thursday, controlling the play early on and making Miller earn his keep. Once the Blues got their sea legs, they tested Emery at the other end as Steve Mason got a much-needed day off to rest up for the Flyers‘ game Thursday vs. Columbus. Michael Raffl had the Flyers best‘ scoring chances through two, but Miller stopped him twice. Emery also stood tall and benefited from the Blues‘ hitting a couple of posts in the second period. Penalty killing was solid with the Blues killing two and the Flyers one, including Giroux‘s high-stick of Oshie in a center-ice collision with 1:24 to play. The start The Flyers came out like gangbusters with odd-man rushes/situations in what seemed like every time down the ice and/or in the Blues‘ zone. One time, Blues defensemen Alex Pietrangelo fell down and took out partner Jay Bouwmeester on the Blues‘ side of center ice, giving the Flyers a two-on-none rush -- a two-on-none! Ryan Miller stopped the shot by Raffl on a pass from Giroux, a nightmare of a break for a goalie to see coming at him if there ever was one. Another time, the Blues‘ Patrik Berglund made like Jaromir Jagr and stickhandled around several Flyers in the Philly zone, then hit Brayden Shenn on the shin and the puck bounced out of the zone for another Flyers‘ rush. The shots were 5-0 in favor of the Flyers before Jaden Schwartz got the first shot for the Blues 4:21 in. Miller kept the Flyers off the board and helped the home team survive the visitors‘ onslaught and take the crowd out of it just like home teams do all the time. Yep. After one The Blues ended up outshooting the Flyers 11-10 in the first period, 11-5 after the Flyers‘ strong start, and Emery stood tall. He made strong stops on Schwartz, Ryan Reaves and Maxim Lapierre among others. Both goalies were the stars of the first period, through two periods really with the Blues holding a 19-18 edge in shots. Ping The goalie‘s best friend -- the post -- helped out Emery twice in the second period. Schwartz hit the pipe on a slapper from the slot less than 10 seconds into the second period. The end of the period provided the perfect bookend, as the Blues‘ Pietrangelo also did the ping routine behind Emery in the final 15 seconds. Mutual foul Referees Tim Peel and Don VanMassenhoven pretty much let the lads play without interfering with them. Only one foul was called in the first period -- the Blues‘ Barret Jackman for delaying the game by clearing the puck out of play -- and the tone was set early in the second period when Andrew MacDonald and Alexander Steen went off for coincidental penalties for roughhousing in front of Emery at 1:28. There would be no monkey business on this night. (The crowd later gave VanMassenhoven a cheer -- yes, they cheered the ref -- when the PA man announced that he was reffing his second-to-last game before retiring after 23 years.) Great chances Raffl had a glorious scoring chance in both the first period and in the second. Miller stopped him on the two-on-none with Giroux in the first period, and Miller slid to his left to rob Raffl with his left pad on a pointblank salvo early in the second period. He had yet another chance in the third, but Miller stoned him on a semi-break-in. Miller also stopped Jakub Voracek on a wrap-around in overtime. He‘s baaaack D-man Erik Gustafsson returned to the Flyers‘ lineup after being lost in the vortex known as March -- 14 games as a healthy scratch; he hadn‘t played in an actual game since Feb 27, when he was minus-2 in a 7-3 loss vs. visiting San Jose. He replaced injured defenseman Kimmo Timonen, who stayed home in Philadelphia for the quickie in-and-out trip after taking a slapshot on the chops Sunday vs. Boston. Gustafsson started the game on a pairing with Luke Schenn. Comcast SportsNet.com LOADED: 04.02.2014 732287 Phoenix Coyotes Coyotes earn a point but blow chance in shootout Ladd's goal was the first shot scored on Greiss this season in the shootout. Before then, he was 9-for-9 and 2-0. Greiss finished with 21 saves. "A game of inches. That's just where it is," Tippett said. "We're asking for high effort, high compete level, doing things right and we're getting that a lot of time. Now you have to find a way to get results out of it." Sarah McLellan, azcentral sports 11:38 p.m. MST April 1, 2014 Considering the Jets playoff odds are slim, this was not only a must-win game but a should-win game for the Coyotes. Still, the Jets hadn't been an easy out this season for the Coyotes, who previously lost twice in Winnipeg. The Coyotes might not have an out-of-town scoreboard hanging in their dressing room, but it would have been pretty hard to overlook one particular result that had posted before they took the ice for Tuesday's game. "We played at home. We played against a team that is below us in the standings, and we would have loved to have had two points," Michalek said. "But it was a tight game. Both teams played hard. In the shootout, it's about luck." Thirty-four minutes before puck drop between the Coyotes and Jets, the Dallas Stars thumped the Washington Capitals 5-0 to wrestle the final wild card spot in the Western Conference from the Coyotes. But the Coyotes didn't respond accordingly to the neck-and-neck race and lost 2-1 in a shootout to the Winnipeg Jets in front of 13,724 at Jobing.com Arena to move into a tie with the Stars for the eighth spot with 85 points. But because the Stars have a game at-hand, they hold the first tie-breaker and currently sit in a playoff position and that bumps the Coyotes to ninth. "It's hard to ignore," defenseman Zbynek Michalek said. "They played on the East Coast, and they finished before we started. So I think everybody knew the score and knew that they won, and we had to respond. We got one point, and we'll move on." Jets captain Andrew Ladd was the lone scorer in the shootout, settling a 1-1 tie that stood for most of the game. Ladd's shot hit off the post and off goalie Thomas Greiss' left leg before trickling in for the win. "It's a game of inches," coach Dave Tippett said. "There's an extra point there you'd certainly like to have, but it wasn't for lack of trying. It was a fast, hard, tight hockey game. They got a couple bounces, and we didn't." For the first time in five games, the Coyotes fell behind first not long after the Jets were handed the first power play of the game. Defenseman Keith Yandle's pass caromed off a referee Frederick L'Ecuyer in the Coyotes zone, and the Jets picked up the puck. Center Bryan Little fed Ladd, who went top-shelf glove-side on Greiss at 10:01. A single point is invaluable, but this definitely was a missed opportunity to boost their total especially considering the game was a first of a back-to-back. The Coyotes traveled after the game to Los Angeles to play the Kings today. "We got a point out of it," Michalek said. "I guess we'll see at the end if it was enough or not." REPORT KEY PLAYER: Jets captain Andrew Ladd scored his team's only goal in regulation and added the shootout winner. KEY MOMENT: The Coyotes tied it at 1 only 19 seconds into the second with a goal from D Zbynek Michalek. KEY NUMBER: 32 Faceoff wins for the Coyotes compared to 16 for the Jets. VIEW FROM THE PRESS BOX: He's only been the starter for a week, but G Thomas Greiss hasn't disappointed. It's a difficult challenge, no doubt, getting plopped into the net at this juncture of the season, but the pressure doesn't seem to bother Greiss. That seems to be a valuable attribute to have during a frenzied playoff push. Wednesday night's game Coyotes at Kings When: 7:30 p.m. "He's trying to do his job as well," Yandle said. "It's a tough break." Where: Staples Center. It was the first time the Coyotes trailed after one period at home since Jan.20 against the Toronto Maple Leafs, but they replieed only 19 seconds into the second on a pretty passing play. TV/radio: NBCSN/KMVP-AM (860). Winger Mikkel Boedker sent a cross-ice pass to center Antoine Vermette, who directed a drop pass to Michalek. With Jets goalie Ondrej Pavelec out of position, Michalek buried the puck into the empty net to make it 1-1. "I was wide open," Michalek said. "You don't score many easier goals than that. I think our team responded very well after the first period when maybe they were the better team. After that, we picked up our game a lite bit." The Coyotes had 13 other shots in the period, clearly looking like the rested team unlike the Jets. They played the night before in Anaheim and lost 5-4 in overtime after having a 4-0 lead. Early in the third, the Coyotes went on the power play for the first time and it wasn't unrealistic to expect the unit to deliver. It had tallied 11 power play goals in the previous 13 games. But the Coyotes blanked on the opportunity. What's more, Boedker rang a shot off the post midway through the period. That called for overtime, and winger Blake Wheeler took a high-sticking penalty on Boedker to put the Coyotes back on the power play with 1:15 left. And again, the Coyotes couldn't convert. "Maybe we wish we did a little more in the overtime there when we had the power play, but unfortunately we didn't," Michalek said. In the shootout, Boedker and Little both missed the net with their attempts. Winger Radim Vrbata was stopped and with the chance to tie it up after Ladd's make, Vermette's shot rang off the post. "Their goal goes off the referee and then ends up in the back of the net," Tippett said. "The shootout goal hits the posts, hits the back of Greiss and goes in. And then ours hits the post and goes out. Sometimes as good as you want to be, the game doesn't let you be good." Kings update: The Kings have a comfortable lead on the third spot in the Pacific Division despite a loss Monday to the Minnesota Wild. Before then, the Kings were in the midst of a six-game winning streak. That loss to the Wild was only the second time this season the Kings were defeated when they led after two periods. The Coyotes were the first team to rally in the third against the Kings when the teams last played March17. Center Anze Kopitar continues to pace the Kings with 63 points. Center Jeff Carter has a team-high 26 goals. Arizona Republic LOADED: 04.02.2014 732288 Phoenix Coyotes Phoenix Coyotes' Jeff Halpern took scenic route back to NHL Sarah McLellan, azcentral sports 8:54 p.m. MST April 1, 2014 It was unusual territory, being a 13-year veteran of the NHL and not having a contract when training camp arrived. But Coyotes center Jeff Halpern was prepared to do whatever it took to preserve his career, which included a detour to Europe to play in the Finnish Elite League. An eight-game stint there in which Halpern tallied four goals no doubt helped stoke the Coyotes' interest in adding a right-handed centerman, and the decision hasn't been a letdown. Since joining the Coyotes, Halpern has been a faceoff specialist, reliable penalty killer and a regular on the secondary scoring committee. Those contributions after an unexpected obstacle have led to Halpern's nomination by the Phoenix chapter of the Professional Hockey Writers' Association for the Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy, which recognizes the player who best exemplifies the qualities of perseverance, sportsmanship and dedication to hockey. "My head and the goal for this year was somehow to put myself in a position to play in the NHL," Halpern said. "Things didn't work out this summer probably the way I would have liked things to go or an easier route, but I knew going into this year I was prepared to play different places or go wherever in order to try to get back in to the NHL. I've kind of really been appreciative of getting a chance to play." Not only did Halpern have to go overseas before landing an NHL contract, but he's played in Phoenix with his family still living in his native Washington, D.C. Those sacrifices, however, haven't caused Halpern to lose passion for the game. "This is a blast," the 37-year-old said. "Every part about it. Even I was kind of commentating the other day, getting ready for these games, the morning skates and shooting around maybe because there's no pressure in those moments, I really enjoy being part of a group that's preparing for these games and getting ready for those kind of matches. You're playing at this point for the chance to continue playing, and that's probably the biggest thing for me." Back in the mix Defenseman Derek Morris returned to the lineup Tuesday against the Winnipeg Jets after being a healthy scratch for the previous three games. Morris was one of two veterans recently scratched by coach Dave Tippett. Center Mike Ribeiro sat two games last week before playing Saturday against the Minnesota Wild. "If you put them back in, you expect them to do the job," Tippett said. "Could be any player, whether it's a young player that comes out and then comes back in or a veteran player. Every day, you gear your lineup to try to figure out the best way to win a game. "Sometimes it's young energy. Sometimes it's veteran leadership. Sometimes it's just the chemistry you're looking for in your group. Ultimately, you've got players that are going to be selected on some nights — some on other nights. It's all geared toward helping you win." Injury update Winger Dave Moss skated in the pregame warm-up Tuesday but ended up missing a second consecutive game with a lower-body injury. Moss was considered a game-time decision by Tippett. • Goalie Mike Smith (knee) skated again Tuesday, this time while wearing his equipment. "He continues to move along like we'd hoped," Tippett said. Arizona Republic LOADED: 04.02.2014 732289 Phoenix Coyotes Latest loss drops Coyotes out of playoff seed Craig Morgan FOX Sports Arizona APR 02, 2014 1:12a ET GLENDALE, Ariz. -- Reality taunted the Coyotes before they ever took the ice Tuesday: Dallas Stars 5, Washington Capitals 0. That result dropped Phoenix into ninth place in the Western Conference and out of the playoff picture. The must-win mantra is overplayed in professional sports, but the Winnipeg Jets were coming off a demoralizing, 5-4 overtime loss the night before in Anaheim in which they held a 4-0 lead and the Jets had dropped 11 of their last 14 games (3-7-4). It wasn't hyperbole to say the Coyotes needed this one after losing their previous home game to Minnesota. And Phoenix owed the Jets after losing both games in Winnipeg earlier this season. None of that mattered one bit when Andrew Ladd scored the shootout's lone goal and Winnipeg handed the Coyotes a crushing, 2-1 defeat at Jobing.com Arena hours after the Stars laid down the gauntlet. "It's hard to ignore. They played on the East Coast and they finished before we started so I think everybody knew the score and we knew that they won," Coyotes defenseman Zbynek Michalek said of the Stars' win. "We got a point out of it. I guess we'll see at the end if it was enough or not." The Jets got an early break when Coyotes defenseman Keith Yandle tried to reverse the play away from pressure with a pass behind the net. The puck struck referee Frederick L'Ecuyer's skate and ended up on Jets center Bryan Little's stick. Little fed Ladd, who was crashing the net, and Ladd's one-timer beat goalie Thomas Greiss to stake the Jets to a 1-0 lead at the 10:01 mark of the first period. Winnipeg's lead marked the first time the Coyotes had trailed at home after one period since Jan. 20 (a stretch of 12 games) against Toronto. But the lead didn't last long. On a delayed penalty and an odd-man rush, Coyotes left wing Mikkel Boedker slid a pass across the slot to center Antoine Vermette, who dropped the puck to Michalek for an easy slapshot into an open net. Michalek's second goal of the season tied the game just 19 seconds into the second period. The Coyotes carried the play much of the second period, but the problem -an age-old problem -- was that they couldn't finish. Boedker hit a post just like he had against Minnesota and the Coyotes failed to cash in on a 4-on-3 power play in overtime. "It's a game of inches," Phoenix coach Dave Tippett said. "There's an extra point there that you'd certainly like to have but it wasn't for a lack of trying." The loss dropped the Coyotes into a tie with Dallas with six games left in the season in the race for the Western Conference's final wild-card spot, but the Stars have a game in hand and own the tiebreaker based on more regulation/overtime wins. The Coyotes host the Stars in the final game of the regular season, April 13. There will be plenty of games the Coyotes can point to at the end of the season if they miss the postseason by a hair. Getting swept by the lowly Buffalo Sabres will surely top the list, but three losses to the Jets, who will miss the playoffs again, will sting just as much. Six games remain to avoid that sting. "It's tough, especially when you don't get two points this time of year, but it's something where you've got to push forward," Yandle said. "We really can't be worried about (Dallas). They're a good team. They're going to win games. We've got to do our part and win games." foxsportsarizona.com LOADED: 04.02.2014 732290 Pittsburgh Penguins They also owned the East's best point total. They even had a shot at the NHL's best record. Lottery-bound Hurricanes bury listless Penguins at Consol A week ago, a players-only meeting was called after a listless home defeat against Phoenix. Teammates said Orpik spoke up about a lack of discipline. By Rob Rossi No meeting happened Tuesday night, though Crosby said the Penguins ―maybe thought … we could get away with cheating (work ethic).‖ April 1, 2014 9:52 p.m. ―And it didn't work,‖ Crosby said. Not much has worked consistently, Bylsma conceded. The Penguins already have had their players-only meeting. What now? After a 4-1 loss to the lottery-bound Carolina Hurricanes at Consol Energy Center on Tuesday night, defenseman Brooks Orpik said he is ―not too worried‖ about an 8-8-2 slide since the NHL broke for the Winter Olympics. Coach Dan Bylsma waited 14 seconds before addressing that topic when asked about it in his postgame media session. ―The word ‗worried,' ‖ Bylsma said, ―I guess when you look at the last six games and the inconsistency of our play, I don't think any player looks at that and says we're all right with that.‖ Orpik, the longest-tenured Penguin, was joined only by fellow veteran defenseman Rob Scuderi and captain Sidney Crosby inside a somber dressing room as reporters entered. Actually, winger Brian Gibbons was there, too, but unlike the other veterans at their locker stalls, he was not a member of the Penguins squads that lost in the 2008 Stanley Cup Final and returned to win it the next season. What is happening to the Penguins is not about Gibbons, one of four players who dressed against Carolina but who were not with the club to open the season. It is not about the league-high 479 man-games lost to injury, players and coaches have insisted. Those players and coaches also have said it is not about a lack of urgency since around New Year's Day. The Penguins (48-23-5, 101 points) need only one point from their final six games to wrap the Metropolitan Division and the Eastern Conference's No. 2 playoff seed. Whatever this rough patch is about seems to elude those who are part of it. ―That's one of those things about the grind — 82 games — making sure you prepare yourself mentally and make sure you're 100 percent ready,‖ Orpik said. ―It doesn't matter what team you're playing, even if they're at the bottom of the standings. If you're not 100 percent, they can expose you and make you look pretty silly. ―That's what happened here (Tuesday night).‖ The Penguins led 1-0 on winger Chris Kunitz's goal. Crosby's secondary assist gave him 100 points in a season for the fifth time. However, Crosby's evening was more memorable for his pro wrestling-like slamming of Hurricanes defenseman Jay Harrison late in regulation, which seemingly was a first for Crosby in the NHL. The Penguins once held a 13-1 lead in shots. That was about 12 minutes into the game. The Hurricanes finished on a 27-18 run and rocked the Penguins for four consecutive goals. ―We kept it simple and kind of frustrated them,‖ said center Eric Staal, whose Hurricanes had lost in a shootout at Ottawa on Monday. One of Carolina's goals against the Penguins — center Elias Lindholm's first of two markers in the second period — came on the power play. Nothing new for the Penguins, who were at 87.0 percent (23 for 177) on the penalty kill before the Olympics but are at 79.3 percent (46 of 58) since. With two weeks before the start of the playoffs, the Penguins are trending like a bottom-five team on the penalty kill even though they officially are ranked fourth. They were first overall once. Everybody took two weekend wins — at Columbus and at home against defending champion Chicago — as signs of progress toward playoff-quality performance. What now? Bylsma, after another long pause, said those games were ―indications of our team being in the right spot.‖ ―This game is not,‖ he said. ―We're going on the road for three games, and two out of three isn't an indication we're in the right spot.‖ Tribune Review LOADED: 04.02.2014 732291 Pittsburgh Penguins Penguins Letang nominated for NHL‘s Masterton Trophy April 1, 2014 10:05 AM By Dave Molinari / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Defenseman Kris Letang is the Penguins‘ nominee for the NHL‘s Masterton Trophy, which recognizes perseverance, sportsmanship and dedication to hockey. Letang, 26, is recovering from a stroke and has not played since Jan. 27. He has resumed practicing, but it is not yet known if he will return to the lineup this season. Letang, a contender for the Norris Trophy as the NHL‘s top defenseman last season, had 10 goals and eight assists in 34 games before his stroke was diagnosed. Each of the 30 NHL teams has one nominee for the Masterton. Members of the Professional Hockey Writers‘ Association select the nominee for the team they cover and vote on the eventual winner. Lowell MacDonald (1973) and Mario Lemieux (1993) are the only Penguins to win the Masterton. Post Gazette LOADED: 04.02.2014 732292 Pittsburgh Penguins Gene Collier: Penguins' nice start soured quickly by awful effort "The first [Carolina] goal is not indicative of our poor puck management; it was an execution play and it gets away from Matt Niskanen," Bylsma said when I asked if he was surprised his team could not recover from the totality of its second-period errors. "The turnovers at the blue line and through the neutral zone, that was indicative of our play in the game. "I don't think anyone should be accepting that from our team." April 1, 2014 11:39 PM By Gene Collier / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette You could point out at this juncture, in that quasi-snarky way of yours (meaning mine), that performances such as the past dozen and a half by the Penguins are the very reason you bother starting 40-15-2 -- so that maybe you can play this way for the final six weeks and get away with it. Not sure if the Penguins purposefully chose the second intermission to make this announcement or if I simply missed it in the first, but reminding the live audience that tickets for the first two games of the Stanley Cup playoffs go on sale Monday seemed suddenly ill-advised. But now you're facing a three-game road trip, not to mention the embarrassment of having to clinch the Metropolitan Division in some not-terribly-Metropolitan outpost such as Winnipeg or perhaps the wilds of Minnesota. Would those also be the last two games of the Stanley Cup playoffs, as in the only two played in Pittsburgh this spring? That'd be a good name for a hockey team. Don't think that some grumblers in the customary sellout hadn't just absorbed that very thought, having just been freshly insulted by some 20 minutes of the worst hockey seen Uptown in a long time. Outshot, 12-6, and out-goaled, 2-0, in the middle frame, the Penguins had just escaped to the dressing room down, 3-1, to the spectacularly indifferent Carolina Hurricanes. If you've always wanted to see an AHL game and just never got around to it, you can cross that off the list if you've got a ticket stub from this one. "Our effort the last 50 minutes was unacceptable, 1 through 20," said defenseman Brooks Orpik, referring to all but the first 10 minutes of play and everyone in a dark sweater. "Every guy out there was getting beat on loose pucks and battles. In the first 10 minutes, we played the right way, but we couldn't keep it up, and that's disappointing." True, the Penguins outshot the Hurricanes at the start, 11-1, and put the 12th shot behind Carolina netminder Anton Khudobin, the affable Kazakhstanian, but Chris Kunitz's 35th of the season was the final productive image of a dreadful night. "I don't know if it's focus, but the effort was very questionable for everybody," Orpik went on matter-of-factly, as though he had just witnessed a fender bender on Center Avenue. "You see guys out there like [Carolina's Jeff] Skinner and [Nathan] Gerbe, who aren't the biggest guys, and they're pushin' us around and winning battles. "It doesn't matter what team you play. They can be at the bottom of the standings. If you're not ready, they can exploit you and make you look pretty silly. That's what happened here tonight." No one walked into the building trying to find a plot line like this one: Could the Penguins match Carolina's rampant fecklessness with a giant collective shrug of their own? But darned it they couldn't. Worse, it wasn't all that surprising. The Hurricanes floated onto the ice with a record of 32-32-11. They take that kind of perfect mediocrity pretty seriously, apparently, their tepid competitive yin and yang extending even to the fact that they were a virtually mirror-imaged 15-17-5 on the road against 17-15-6 at home. The Penguins didn't flinch; after all, they are themselves a markedly flaccid 8-8-1 since March 1. Between themselves and the 'Canes, it was hard to tell which was the team playing out a dreary winter and which was the team hawking playoff tickets between periods. Dan Bylsma's team has spent too much time trying to differentiate between opponents who are already playing playoff hockey and those already playing for next season, and there's no longer much question as to the urgency level wafting off the Penguins. You've heard that tired construct "If the playoffs were to begin tonight ... "? Well, had the playoffs began Tuesday, the Penguins would be down, 1-0. Facing a genuine playoff-caliber opponent, they could easily have lost, 8-0. The more foreboding aspect of this one was that even after the home team surrendered three consecutive goals in a comically bad stretch, they still had more than 25 minutes to work out of a two-goal deficit. They refused. The Penguins will return home a week from tonight with three games left on the schedule and at least four remaining in the postseason. Perhaps by then they'll be of a mind to extend themselves. Post Gazette LOADED: 04.02.2014 732293 Pittsburgh Penguins Penguins notebook: Veterans don't expect letdown after division title clinched Each of the 30 NHL teams has one nominee for the Masterton. Members of the Professional Hockey Writers‘ Association select the nominee for the team they cover and vote on the eventual winner. Lowell MacDonald (1973) and Mario Lemieux (1993) are the only Penguins to win the Masterton. Tip-ins April 1, 2014 9:10 PM By Dave Molinari / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette The banner could have been ordered last week. Or anytime last month, for that matter. Or probably even last year. The Penguins entered their game Tuesday night against Carolina knowing that a victory would lock up the Metropolitan Division championship for them, but the reality is that took a choke hold on the division long ago. What isn‘t clear is how they‘ll react after the division title and No. 2 seed in the Eastern Conference behind Boston is nailed down — whether they‘ll play with genuine urgency when there is no major objective to be chased. ―If you look at past seasons, if you try to rest guys too much, if you try to ease in there— tiptoe into the playoffs — I think we‘ve seen it has a direct carryover on how you play in the first round,‖ defenseman Brooks Orpik said. ―Obviously, you don‘t want to kill yourself, physically, but you want to be up to speed.‖ Left winger Chris Kunitz said ―we have to play the right way‖ because ―you don‘t want to get out of sync,‖ and Orpik said that having a team with a heavy veteran presence should help the Penguins avoid losing their focus. ―Maybe three or four years ago, or maybe when you have a younger team, there‘s more of a danger of that,‖ he said. ―We have guys who know the trap you can fall into. We‘ve experienced it before.‖ Hurricanes veer off course Five years ago, the Penguins faced Carolina in the Eastern final. The Hurricanes haven‘t been back to the playoffs since. And because they‘re marooned in 13th place in the conference with less than two weeks remaining in the regular season, it‘s pretty certain they won‘t qualify this time, either. Nonetheless, Carolina has some high-quality talent, and many people seem surprised by the Hurricanes‘ run of playoff misses. One of them is Penguins center Brandon Sutter, who played for Carolina before being acquired in the Jordan Staal trade in 2012. ―A couple of the years I was there, we only missed by one or two points,‖ Sutter said. ―It‘s tight every year. I‘m sure it‘s frustrating, but that‘s just the way the sport goes sometimes. ―I‘m sure they‘re not in the position they want to be in, but they do have a good team, still. I‘m sure that, in the near future, they‘ll be getting in that top eight.‖ Letang is Masterton nominee Defenseman Kris Letang is the Penguins‘ nominee for the NHL‘s Masterton Trophy, which recognizes perseverance, sportsmanship and dedication to hockey. ―It‘s a great honor,‖ Letang said. ―But, at the same time, I wish I wouldn‘t be [the nominee].‖ Letang, 26, is recovering from a stroke and has not played since Jan. 27. He has resumed practicing, but said again Tuesday that he does not know if he will return to the lineup this season, let alone have a target date for playing. ―I will let you know when I‘m going to play,‖ he said. ―If I‘m going to.‖ Letang, a contender for the Norris Trophy as the NHL‘s top defenseman last season, had 10 goals and eight assists in 34 games before his stroke was diagnosed. Penguins defenseman Paul Martin (hand) reiterated that he hopes to return Thursday in Winnipeg. ―I feel better today than I did [Monday],‖ he said. ―That‘s good. I thought I‘d be a little sore, but no issues.‖ … The Penguins signed forward Bryan Rust, a third-round draft choice in 2010 who spent the past four years at Notre Dame, to a two-year entry-level contract that takes effect next season. He is 6 feet, 191 pounds and had 43 goals and 54 assists in 161 career games with the Fighting Irish. Post Gazette LOADED: 04.02.2014 732294 Pittsburgh Penguins Gibbons was awarded a penalty shot at 2:26 of the first period. "I went to shoot it, and he took my hands [out of the play], so I think it was the right call," Gibbons said. Penguins fall to Hurricanes, 4-1 On the penalty shot, Hurricanes goaltender Anton Khudobin got his stick on Gibbons' shot, and it remained scoreless. April 2, 2014 12:10 AM Khudobin held the Penguins in check until 9:01 of the first period, when Kunitz scored on the Penguins' ninth shot for a 1-0 lead. His quick-release shot from the left dot glanced in off the stick of Hainsey for his 35th goal. By Shelly Anderson / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette That left the shots 9-1 in favor of the Penguins. The Penguins had quite a checklist of moments and milestones within reach going into their game Tuesday night. They missed on most. They failed to clinch the Metropolitan Division title when they could not follow through on a strong start and fell, 4-1, against the Carolina Hurricanes at Consol Energy Center. The Penguins also missed a chance to make coach Dan Bylsma the fastest NHL coach to 250 wins. He stands at 249-116-30. And they missed a chance to pick up their 100th win at Consol Energy Center. They stand at 99-38-6. One milestone that was crossed off the list was center Sidney Crosby, who leads the NHL in scoring, reaching 100 points for the fifth time in his career and first time since 2009-10. Crosby assisted on Chris Kunitz's first-period goal that gave the Penguins a 1-0 lead. At that point and for a bit after, the Penguins were in control and ran up a 13-2 edge in shots. "We all felt like the first 10 [minutes] we were carrying the play," Crosby said. "I think the shots were pretty evident of that. For whatever reason, we got away from that. Maybe we thought that came easy or thought we could get away with cheating. It didn't work." Justin Faulk's tying goal at 14:39 of the first period came after a turnover by Penguins defenseman Matt Niskanen. It gave Carolina a spark, and triggered an unwanted tone for the Penguins. "From there, momentum kind of shifted our direction," Hurricanes center Eric Staal said. "We kept it simple and slowly frustrated them as game went on." The Penguins figured their level of blame topped the credit Carolina deserved. "The goal didn't change it; we started mismanaging the puck and having turnovers in the neutral zone," Bylsma said, describing the way his club succumbed to pressure by Carolina's defense. "That's what it was." It continued through the second period, and the Penguins found themselves trailing, 3-1, and in shots, 23-20, going into the third period. Crosby was left to ponder why there was such a momentum shift. "I thought that there was not really any reason to change the way we were playing, but they play aggressively and we seemed to kind of play into their hands a bit," he said. "We turned pucks over, and when they're aggressive like they are, they have numbers coming the other way. "We played a dangerous game, and that ended up hurting us." The Penguins are 8-8-2 since the Olympic break with six games left before the playoffs. They had been feeling better about themselves after wins against Columbus and Chicago that put some distance between them and a three-game losing streak. Penguins defenseman Brooks Orpik is not anxious about a possible slide this late in the regular season. "No, I'm not too worried," he said. "We've just got to approach these last six games the right way, and I think we'll be fine." Their approach against Carolina was fine while it lasted. The Penguins were attempting to sweep their four-game season series against the Hurricanes, and, for a while, it looked like it might be a breeze. Penguins winger Brian Gibbons blocked a pass by Carolina's Ron Hainsey and took off on a breakaway. Hainsey backtracked and hooked Gibbons in the gloves. Crosby got his league-leading 100th point with the secondary assist. "It's nice when you have an opportunity to do it, but it's a lot better when you win," he said. Carolina tied it, 1-1, at 14:39 of the first period when Faulk's shot from the right point handcuffed Penguins goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury, The Hurricanes took a 2-1 lead at 9:24 of the second period on a power-play goal by Elias Lindholm. Jeff Skinner flipped the puck to Lindholm from behind the net, and Lindholm beat Fleury on a shot that went between the skates of the Penguin defenseman Olli Maatta. By the time the Hurricanes took a 3-1 lead at 14:57 of the second period, they led in shots, 20-17. Lindholm got his second goal on a shot from the left dot after the Penguins' Deryk Engelland turned the puck over. Carolina increased its lead to 4-1 at 11:47 of the third period when Staal deflected a shot by Andrei Loktionov and sent it knuckling past Fleury. Post Gazette LOADED: 04.02.2014 732295 San Jose Sharks Sharks face another troubling opponent By David Pollak Posted: 04/01/2014 12:53:50 PM PDT SAN JOSE -- With their hopes for a Pacific Division title dwindling, the Sharks face exactly the kind of team that has given them problems lately when they meet the non-playoff-bound Edmonton Oilers on Tuesday night. San Jose is 2-3-2 in its last seven games and although one of those wins came last week against Edmonton, the Sharks have left points on the table over that stretch against four teams that won't be in the postseason. So does coach Todd McLellan need to remind his players not to take the Oilers for granted? "I hope we don't do that," he said. "We've learned some lessons -- we've been taught some lessons, I don't know if we've learned them -- from some teams that will not make the playoffs. We haven't had much success against those on some nights." As an Edmonton team that did defeat San Jose 1-0 on Jan. 29, he added, "We've played them enough, I think we understand them enough to know that they can win a game 6-1 on any given night against any team in the league." Is there a common theme in San Jose's losses to lower-ranked teams? "Inconsistency," McLellan said. "We were sloppy at times, play real well for 15 minutes in a period and go to sleep for five. Details. That maybe gets away from us a little more against the non-playoff teams than against the Bostons and St. Louis." Goalie Antti Niemi, who backstopped the Sharks to a 5-2 win one week ago in Edmonton, will be back in net for San Jose. With 103 points and six contests remaining on the schedule, the Sharks trail the Anaheim Ducks by three points and have played one more game. On Monday night, the Ducks overcame a four-goal deficit to beat the Winnipeg Jets in overtime, 5-4. James Sheppard's 14 points over the last 20 games has earned him the Sharks' player of the month honor for February-March. The two months were combined because of the Olympic break. San Jose Mercury News: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732296 San Jose Sharks Sharks can't afford to lose more ground tonight vs. Oilers April 1, 2014, 1:00 pm Kevin Kurz SAN JOSE – The worst part of the Sharks‘ schedule is over. A brutal 17 games in 31 days concluded on Saturday in Colorado, and the team was able to relax for a day and a half before resuming practice on Monday. Now, there are six games remaining in the regular season, and the Sharks cannot afford to squander many (if any) more points if they want to capture the Pacific Division. That includes Tuesday against Edmonton, which is playing out the string after yet another failed season. ―We knew when we sat down before the season even started, we looked at this segment and knew it would be our toughest run of games, travel, opponents,‖ said Todd McLellan, adding that the team‘s injury situation hasn‘t helped, either. ―All of that is taxing, but we‘re through it now. We‘ve got four of our last six here at home, and got to get back at it. We‘ll find enough time to rest our players and make sure they‘re ready to go.‖ A game against the Los Angeles Kings on Thursday stands out in a three-game homestand, but it‘s sandwiched between Tuesday‘s game against the Oilers and a Saturday tilt with Nashville. The Sharks have lost as many games as they‘ve won against the bottom four teams in the Western Conference, with a 7-5-2 mark against Edmonton, Calgary, Nashville and Winnipeg. That doesn‘t even include post-Olympic break defeats to Florida, Buffalo and Carolina. Has there been a general theme in those losses? ―Inconsistency,‖ McLellan said. ―We‘re sloppy at times, play well for 15 minutes in a period, go to sleep for five. Details that maybe gets away on us a little bit more against some of the non-playoff teams than it does against the Boston‘s and St. Louis‘s.‖ The Sharks will almost certainly have to take care of business against the Oilers tonight in order to remain in Pacific Division race. They now trail Anaheim by three points, after the Ducks‘ epic comeback from a 4-0 hole against Winnipeg on Monday night. The Ducks have one game in hand, and will own the tiebreaker from here on out. McLellan‘s message to his club will be to not take the lowly Oilers for granted, after Edmonton played the Sharks well in the previous meeting before San Jose‘s power play broke out of its slump and took the game over in a 5-2 win on March 25. ―We‘ve played them enough. I think we understand them enough to know that they can win a game 6-1 on any given night against any team in the league,‖ McLellan said. ―They have that ability.‖ Logan Couture said: ―They‘re proud players over there. We can‘t take them lightly.‖ San Jose Mercury News: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732297 San Jose Sharks San Jose Sharks end modest two-game slide with win over Edmonton Oilers By David Pollak Posted: Updated: 04/01/2014 10:16:57 PM PDT 04/01/2014 11:42:03 PM PDT He had talked before the game about his team's lack of consistency -- "play real well for 15 minutes in a period and go to sleep for five" -- and agreed that was the case again Tuesday. "It's a bittersweet win," McLellan said. "It was nice to see us come back and score five and the power play contributed. Those types of things are nice, but I'm going to leave the rink a little more frustrated than excited. I'm sure some of our players will leave that way, too." He described his team as lethargic -- "not as much physically as mentally" -and welcomed the week at home to try and get everything straightened out in the five final games of the regular season. Thursday's game SAN JOSE -- The Sharks managed to keep a little suspense in the Pacific Division title race Tuesday night, but they needed a little soccer-style magic to come from behind against one of the NHL's bottom-feeders to do it. San Jose ended a two-game losing streak, beating the Edmonton Oilers 5-4 on two goals midway through the third period by Brent Burns and Patrick Marleau after coughing up a two-goal lead earlier in the game. The win closed the gap behind the Anaheim Ducks to one point, but the Sharks have now played two more games. "You're happy with the two, but we've got to tighten up a lot before the postseason," said Sharks captain Joe Thornton, who had two assists. "We have five games to do that. We'll take the points, but we've got to play a lot better than that." San Jose Sharks forward Andrew Desjardins (10) celebrates his first period goal against Edmonton Oilers goaltender Ben Scrivens (30) during their game on San Jose Sharks forward Andrew Desjardins (10) celebrates his first period goal against Edmonton Oilers goaltender Ben Scrivens (30) during their game on April 1, 2014 in San Jose, Calif. (Aric Crabb/Bay Area News Group) ( ARIC CRABB ) San Jose's other goals came off the sticks of Andrew Desjardins, Dan Boyle and Tommy Wingels, while Edmonton got a pair from Ryan Nugent-Hopkins and singles from Taylor Hall and Jordan Eberle. The Sharks were trailing 4-3 when their comeback began on a play that saw Joe Pavelski kick the puck to Thornton, who then found Burns for a one-time from just outside the crease at 10:35 of the third. "It was great," Thornton said of Pavelski's no-look pass off the skate. "I was just saying, we play soccer before the game, and a nice little play by Pav." Less than two minutes later, the Sharks were just starting a power play that had been 0-for-5 when Burns only got a piece of his shot from the blue line, but the puck deflected to Marleau on the right side of the net, and he poked it into an all-but-open net. "Yeah, coming down that back side looking for any scraps," he said of his urgency on the play. The late goals avoided what could have been a disastrous loss to yet another team that will be on the golf course by mid-April. The Sharks had built a 3-1 lead early in the second period only to have the Oilers tie it on goals by Nugent-Hopkins and Eberle just 38 seconds apart. "The intensity probably dropped a little bit," said Boyle, who scored a goal in his third consecutive contest after a 30-game drought. "We're up 3-1 against a team that's not in the playoffs. Sometimes you take your foot off the gas a little bit." San Jose did stake itself to an early lead when the fourth line chipped in a goal by Desjardins at 3:11 of the first period as he potted the rebound of a shot by Tyler Kennedy. But the Oilers tied it up on a power-play goal by Hall a little more than eight minutes later. Still, the Sharks seemed in control at 15:54 of the opening period when Thornton won a faceoff in the Edmonton zone, then found Boyle open for a shot that beat Oilers goalie Ben Scrivens high on the far corner. The lead grew to 3-1 in the second period when, just as a power play ended, Wingels tucked the puck into the net at 2:45 after a shot from the point by Brad Stuart. The Edmonton comeback followed and that all but overshadowed the win for Sharks coach Todd McLellan. Los Angeles (44-26-6) at Sharks (48-20-9), 7:30 p.m. NBCSN San Jose Mercury News: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732298 San Jose Sharks Sharks rally to beat Oilers 5-4, stay close to Ducks Ross McKeon Updated 12:01 am, Wednesday, April 2, 2014 Ineffective all night, the Sharks needed just eight seconds on their sixth power play to decide Tuesday's game. Patrick Marleau's tie-breaking backhand goal, No. 32 on the year, at 12:31 of the third period enabled the Sharks to cap a comeback en route to a 5-4 win over the Edmonton Oilers at SAP Center. "We're happy with the two (points), but we've got to tighten up for the postseason," captain Joe Thornton said. San Jose pulled to one point behind Pacific Division-leading Anaheim, but the Ducks have played two fewer games. Anaheim hosts Edmonton on Wednesday. The Sharks were 0-for-5 on the power play before Oilers forward David Perron tripped defenseman Justin Braun in the San Jose end at 12:23. Marleau beat a diving Matt Hendricks to a loose puck in the right circle for the game-winner. "I was coming down that backside looking for any scraps," Marleau said. Edmonton's Ryan Nugent-Hopkins scored his second goal of the game at 6:16 of the third to break a 3-3 tie. His 18th goal beat goalie Antti Niemi on the short side after Jordan Eberle made a nice spin move to create space. Suddenly a game the Sharks led 3-1 turned into a 4-3 deficit. "The intensity probably dropped a little bit. We're up 3-1 on a team that's not in the playoffs," defenseman Dan Boyle said. "Sometimes you take your foot off the gas a little bit." But the hosts rallied back at 10:35 when Joe Thornton found Brent Burns on the weakside. Burns fed his 22nd goal through the pads of Edmonton goalie Ben Scrivens to tie it 4-4. It was a far cry from the last time these teams met, when Scrivens set the NHL record for saves in a regular-season shutout (59) as the Oilers won 3-0 at home. The Sharks looked to be in a good shape when Tommy Wingels snapped a 10-game scoreless drought with his 16th goal at 2:45 of the second period, a putback of his own redirected shot off Brad Stuart's stick to give the hosts a 3-1 lead. But Nugent-Hopkins and Eberle struck later in the period on consecutive shots within 38 seconds to enable the visitors to pull into a 3-3 tie. "Five on five, we can't give up that many goals," Boyle said. "Coming down the stretch with the playoffs coming, we can't give up four goals and expect to win hockey games." The Sharks escaped a lackluster first period up 2-1. Defenseman Jason Demers forced a turnover inside the Edmonton zone, which led to a rebound of a Tyler Kennedy shot that Andrew Desjardins deposited behind Scrivens for his third goal at 3:11. San Jose's penalty killers allowed the Oilers to enter the zone on a rush and Taylor Hall scored his 26th goal of the season with a wrister to the far post at 12:34 to tie it. San Jose grabbed the lead when Thornton fed Boyle in the slot and the defenseman delayed to beat Scrivens at 15:54 for his 11th goal and third in three games. Briefly: Right wing Raffi Torres (sore knee) missed his 12th straight game. He expects to be ready for the playoffs. ... Defenseman Scott Hannan was the lone healthy scratch. Playoff tickets The Sharks announced Tuesday that tickets for the team's first three home playoff games will go on sale at 10 a.m. Friday. They can be purchased at the SAP Center ticket office, through Ticketmaster ticket centers, over the phone at (800) 745-3000, or online at Ticketmaster.com. Buyers are limited to eight tickets per game. San Francisco Chronicle LOADED: 04.02.2014 732299 San Jose Sharks Burns sparks Sharks' top power play unit April 1, 2014, 12:15 pm Kevin Kurz SAN JOSE – Despite giving up some valuable points in the standings recently, one bright spot in San Jose‘s game has been the resurgence of the power play. In the last three games, the Sharks have potted six goals with a man advantage in 11 opportunities. The hot streak began against the Edmonton Oilers one week ago at Rexall Place, when they were a perfect 3-for-3 in a 5-2 win. The Sharks host Edmonton in the fifth and final game of their season series on Tuesday night. So, what helped get it going, other than maybe going up against the league‘s worst team? Oddly enough, putting Brent Burns in Logan Couture‘s place seemed to give it a little jolt, after Couture wasn‘t able to play the previous game against the Oilers due to a deep cut from blocking a shot. Burns has remained on the top unit ever since, and indicated his role is to try and get open and fire the puck towards the net at every opportunity. ―I think they were playing well before. Those guys have been playing together a long time, so just try to get on the same page as them and stay out of the way, and make sure you get in position to shoot,‖ said Burns, who has one goal and three assists in his last three games, all on the power play. ―It‘s been good to get it going.‖ The playmaking on that five-some, which also includes Joe Thornton, Joe Pavelski, Patrick Marleau and Dan Boyle, will be left to others, according to Burns. ―I don‘t really read stuff. Just go. Not a lot of reading going on,‖ Burns said, with a smile. Todd McLellan sensed another factor in the power play finally living up to expectations. ―I think they were tired of hearing about the performance woes of the power play, to tell you the truth. So, the urgency went up a little bit,‖ the coach said. ―We talk about puck movement, entries, all that type of stuff. It‘s getting the puck back. You‘re not going to score on every shot, but if you can retrieve and recover loose pucks and create open ice after that rebound or after that shot, the second or third one eventually you‘ll have a chance to score.‖ As for Couture, no one would suggest that he was the reason the top unit was struggling prior to his one-game absence. If anything, he can help make the second unit much more dangerous, and he scored a power play goal of his own against Winnipeg in a 4-3 loss last Thursday with assists from Marty Havlat and James Sheppard. He admitted it's ―always tough‖ to come off of the top unit, but will try and create on a second unit that hasn‘t done a whole lot this season. ―The first unit has gone out and done a good job. My job is to go out there and try and contribute to the second unit,‖ Couture said. Havlat, who has had ample time on the second unit this season, said: ―Every power play opportunity we get, it doesn‘t matter who is on the ice. It‘s very important, especially in the playoffs. It‘s a game breaker right there.‖ Comcast SportsNet.com LOADED: 04.02.2014 732300 San Jose Sharks Pacific Watch: Ducks gain two points on Sharks with epic comeback April 1, 2014, 1:00 am Staff ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) Once the Anaheim Ducks wiped out a four-goal deficit, all the stress shifted to the visiting Winnipeg Jets. Stephane Robidas scored 16 seconds into overtime, and the Ducks staged the biggest comeback in team history by rallying from four goals down to beat the Jets 5-4 on Monday night. "You're down 4-0 and you come back 4-4, now the pressure is on the other team because they gave up the lead," Robidas said. "We just tried to play our game, and I got lucky and it went in." Andrew Cogliano and Luca Sbisa assisted on Robidas' fifth goal of the season. Anaheim outshot the Jets 25-6 in the third period and outscored them 3-0 to force overtime. Corey Perry tied it 4-4 with 22.7 seconds remaining in regulation, scoring his 39th goal after Anaheim pulled rookie goalie Frederik Andersen for an extra skater. "If I'm going to the net and crashing around the blue paint, that's where I'm effective," Perry said. "If I'm not doing that, I'm not playing my game." Nick Bonino cut the Ducks' deficit to 4-1 in the second period, and Ryan Getzlaf and Hampus Lindholm scored in the third to set up Perry's heroics. Andersen (18-5) stopped 32 shots. The Ducks (49-18-8) established a franchise record for most wins in a season. "When you always believe you can win, you're never out of the game," Ducks coach Bruce Boudreau said. "I think that was what happened. We were so vastly outplayed in the first 35 minutes of the game. "When Nick Bonino scored and Freddie Andersen made the big save 20 seconds later, we thought if we could get another one, you never know." The Ducks never stopped attacking. "We didn't get a great start," Perry said. "We said if we keep pushing and playing that style we established in the second half of the second period, no team can play with us. That's the way we've got to keep playing." The Jets struggled to put into words what happened in their collapse. "You're just awfully disappointed because you liked so much of what you saw, and then to have it go away ... it's just frustrating," Winnipeg coach Paul Maurice said. Defenseman Mark Stuart echoed that sentiment in just as few words as Maurice. "It's frustrating," he said. "There's not a whole lot to say right now. It's shock after a game like that." Anaheim remained atop of the Pacific Division, three points ahead of idle San Jose with a game in hand. The Ducks trail Western Conference-leading St. Louis by one point. Jacob Trouba, Matt Halischuk, Blake Wheeler and Eric Tangradi scored for Winnipeg, which is last in the Central Division. The Jets are 1-2-1 on their road trip that ends Tuesday at Phoenix. Winnipeg took a 1-0 lead on Trouba's ninth goal of the season 8:48 in. Bryan Little earned an assist to extend his point streak to six games. Later in the period, Winnipeg took advantage of a Ducks mistake in their zone and made it 2-0. Halischuk scored his fifth of the season at 13:39. Winnipeg dominated play in the first period and outshot the Ducks 19-4 and had a 31-11 edge in shots after two periods. The Jets increased their lead to 3-0 just 33 seconds into the second on a power-play goal by Wheeler, Winnipeg's goal leader with 27. The Jets have scored five power-play goals the past five games. Tangradi added Winnipeg's fourth goal of the game, from Zach Redmond and Anthony Peluso, midway through the second period. "It wasn't pretty. They were all over us," Robidas said. "You have to give them credit because they came out hard. We didn't really show up in the first period. It's a lesson learned. We need to move on now." Bonino's 20th of the season brought the Ducks within 4-1 with 2:16 left in the second. Getzlaf added a power-play goal, his 31st tally of the season, at 3:06 of the third, and Lindholm made it 4-3 just 1:13 later. Patrick Maroon had two assists for the Ducks. Teemu Selanne, who began his NHL career and scored 147 goals with the original Winnipeg Jets, played his final game against the new Jets franchise that relocated to Winnipeg from Atlanta in 2011. Selanne has scored 684 career goals. NOTES: The Ducks opened a three-game homestand and will play four of their remaining seven games at home. ... Getzlaf returned to action after leaving Saturday's game against Vancouver after blocking a shot and injuring his lower leg. ... The Jets snapped the Ducks' home unbeaten-in-regulation streak (20-0-2) with a 3-2 win in Anaheim on Jan. 21. ... Anaheim's Mathieu Perreault had an assist to extend his point streak to nine games. Comcast SportsNet.com LOADED: 04.02.2014 732301 San Jose Sharks Sharks' game not where it needs to be in win over Oilers April 1, 2014, 11:30 pm Kevin Kurz SAN JOSE – He didn‘t use the catchphrase on Tuesday night, but Sharks head coach Todd McLellan often refers to winning ugly as ―not a Picasso.‖ The 5-4 conquest of Edmonton wasn‘t a Picasso, a Monet, a Cezanne or a Pollock. Actually, by the Sharks‘ standards, the win over the worst club in the Western Conference more resembled a third grader‘s paint-by-numbers. Sure, there was a sense of accomplishment for getting the required two points to remain in the Pacific Division race. But McLellan and many of the team‘s veteran leaders showed concern for their overall effort and execution. ―We weren‘t what we needed to be – giving up too much, sloppy, not really trusting each other to play the system,‖ said the head coach. ―We‘ve got to fix that quickly before the playoffs roll around.‖ Captain Joe Thornton said: ―You‘re happy with the two, but we‘ve got to tighten up a lot before the postseason. We have five games to do that. We‘ll take the points, but we‘ve got to play a lot better than that.‖ The Sharks built up a 3-1 lead in the second period thanks to goals from Andrew Desjardins, Dan Boyle and Tommy Wingels. They seemed to relax at that point, though, and it cost them when the Oilers stormed back to tie it and eventually gain a 4-3 edge in the third. At five-on-five, the Oilers looked like the stronger team for much of the night. The Sharks were saved by more than 12 minutes of power play time, even though they only cashed in once, on the game-winner by Patrick Marleau with seven-and-a-half minutes left in regulation. ―I think the intensity probably dropped a little bit. We‘re up 3-1 against a team that‘s not in the playoffs,‖ Boyle said. ―Sometimes you take your foot off the gas a little bit. We had a let down there. We fought hard to battle back in the third. So, good things, and then things we could certainly work on.‖ The game-tying goal came about two minutes before Marleau‘s deciding marker. On the play, Joe Pavelski managed to reverse-kick the loose puck to an open Thornton, who fed Brent Burns for an easy conversion at 10:35 of the third period. The play is sure to make the team‘s in-arena highlight reel at some point. Pavelski is tied for the team lead in scoring with Thornton, who had two assists against the Oilers, at 74 points. ―Saw Jumbo, we talked – communication there. I was able to kick it to him,‖ Pavelski said. ―He made kind of a nice little play quick, and then Burnzie was there.‖ Thornton said: ―It was great. We play soccer before the game, and a nice little play by Pav.‖ Although Marleau‘s goal came on a broken play when Burns didn‘t get all of a slapper at the point, the power play continued to work well despite failing on six of its seven tries. Wingels‘ goal came one second after a hooking minor to Mark Fraser expired early in the second. ―We‘ve strung and put a few games together where we‘re passing it around pretty well,‖ Boyle said. ―We‘re putting the puck in the net. That was a positive thing.‖ Conversely… ―Five-on-five, we can‘t give up that many goals. Coming down the stretch and especially in the playoffs, you can‘t give up four goals and expect to win hockey games. We‘ve got to tighten up defensively.‖ The Sharks will remain at home for the week, hosting Los Angeles on Thursday and Nashville on Saturday. Now only two weeks from the playoffs, McLellan will try and get his club back to where it needs to be before the tournament commences and while a division title is still possible. ―I think this week‘s important for us,‖ McLellan said. ―We get a little bit of practice time, some opportunities to rest and then get ready again. Right now we‘re still in a fight, which I think is good for us to stay focused and have that battling mentality. Some of that slipped over that last little bit, but we‘ve got to get it back.‖ Comcast SportsNet.com LOADED: 04.02.2014 732302 San Jose Sharks Instant Replay: Sharks top Oilers in come from behind win Jason Demers returned after a one-game absence due to illness. Scott Hannan was scratched for the third time in the last four games. Boyle‘s scoring streak reached five games. He has three goals and three assists over that span. Up next April 1, 2014, 9:45 pm Staff The Sharks have five games left in the regular season. They host the Kings on Thursday and Predators on Saturday. Comcast SportsNet.com LOADED: 04.02.2014 SAN JOSE – It wasn‘t pretty by any means, but the Sharks managed to get a vital two points to stay in the race for the Pacific Division title with a 5-4 win over Edmonton on Tuesday night at SAP Center. The Oilers erased a 3-1 deficit to take a 4-3 third period lead. Jordan Eberle‘s pass was knocked away by Matt Irwin, but ended up on second-year forward Ryan Nugent-Hopkins‘ stick. He turned around and beat Antti Niemi‘s cleanly for his second goal of the game at 6:16. The Sharks‘ top line tied it, though. While nearly falling flat on his face, Joe Pavelski managed to reverse-kick the puck to an open Joe Thornton at the side of the cage. The captain quickly found Brent Burns on the other side for an easy slam-dunk at 10:35. After looking dangerous all night but having nothing to show for it, the top power play unit finally came through when David Perron went off on a tripping minor. Burns flubbed a one-timer at the point, but the puck squirted to Patrick Marleau, who backhanded in his 32nd goal at 12:31. That held up as the game-winner. The Sharks (48-20-9, 103 points) are one point behind Anaheim. The Ducks, who host the Oilers on Wednesday, have two games in hand and have clinched the tiebreaker of more regulation/overtime wins. Edmonton erased a 3-1 hole with two second period goals just 38 seconds apart. First, Nugent-Hopkins curled toward the top of the circle from the wall, and beat Niemi to the short side with a wrist shot at 13:04. He helped tied the game soon after by driving the net on a rush with Eberle, who skated past Brad Stuart and centered the puck, which deflected in off of Justin Braun‘s skate with Nugent-Hopkins in the crease. The Sharks opened the scoring early with a goal from the fourth line. Tyler Kennedy‘s shot rebounded to Andrew Desjardins, who flipped it past Ben Scrivens at 3:11. Desjardins‘ goal, his third, was his first since Jan 9 vs. Detroit, 31 games ago. Edmonton tied it with a power play goal, when Taylor Hall‘s wrist shot sailed just inside the far post at 12:34 of the first. San Jose regained its lead later in the period, though, with Dan Boyle‘s third goal in as many games. Thornton started it by winning a faceoff, driving through Anton Lander and giving Boyle a perfect pass. Boyle picked the top corner at 15:54. The Sharks upped that lead to 3-1 on Tommy Wingels‘ first goal in 11 games. The forward stationed himself in front of Scrivens, tipping a Braun shot before it hit the goaltender. Wingels poked in the loose pick for his 16th goal at 2:45. Nugent-Hopkins finished with four points (2g, 2a). Burns and Boyle each had one goal and one assist, while Thornton acquired a pair of assists. The Sharks took four of five games against Edmonton in the season series (4-1-0). Special teams The Sharks have scored at least one power play goal in each of their last four games, going 7-for-18 over that span. They were 1-for-7 against the Oilers. Edmonton finished 1-for-3. In goal Niemi gained his 37th win with 35 saves. He‘s tied for second in the league with Tampa Bay‘s Ben Bishop, one behind Colorado‘s Semyon Varlamov. Scrivens allowed five goals on 33 shots. Lineup 732303 St Louis Blues Blues beat Flyers 1-0 in shootout overtime with Miller's shutout 5 hours ago • By Dan O'Neill ‗ The Blues matched the franchise record for victories in a season Tuesday night at Scottrade Center, and they did so in style. As the game went on, both teams had their moments in what Hitchcock called a "track meet." But Blues were accumulating an unhealthy total of missed shots. And with 16 seconds remaining they added one more, as Alex Pietrangelo rang another post behind Emery. The period ended with the Blues carrying a 2-0 lead in posts-hit, a 16-4 edge in missed shots, and a 0-0 game into the third. The third stanza was more of the same, as the play raged back and forth. With 4:57 to play, there was trouble in River City when Vlad Sobotka took a penalty on Matt Read. In one of the most exciting games of the season, the Note beat the visiting Philadelphia Flyers 1-0 in a overtime-shootout before 18,647. But the Blues penalty-kill never allowed Philadelphia's potent power play the No. 1 road PP in the league - to get untracked. The reward was a Blues power play with 1:24 remaining. After 65 minutes of a scoreless standoff, Olympic shooting star T.J. Oshie began the shootout session with his ninth SO goal in 12 attempts. Hitchcock called timeout to get his team organized and the Blues applied pressure. But they couldn't get an open crack at Emery. With that 1-0 edge, Blues netminder Ryan Miller stopped Vincent Lecavalier and Claude Giroux in succession before defenseman Kevin Shattenkirk beat Flyers goalie Ray Emery to end the struggle. The last time the Blues took a 0-0 game to overtime was March 22, 2012. They lost 1-0 in overtime at Los Angeles to goaltender Jonathan Quick. After a disappointing loss to Dallas on Saturday, Miller showed Blues fans what all the excitement was about when he was acquired in a March 1 trade. This time, both teams had golden opportunities in the extra period, but neither could convert. Miller added one more eye-popper, stoning Jakub Voracek alone in front with 1:25 to play. He stopped 31 shots, often in spectacular fashion, to get his first Blues shutout and 29th career whitewash. He then capped the evening with two shootout stops and the Blues - 9-3 in shooting galleries - had their record-tying win. "He was terrific," Blues coach Ken Hitchcock said. "He was focused and competitive and whatever else we needed him to be ... We needed him badly today. St Louis Post Dispatch LOADED: 04.02.2014 "He stood tall. This was a game that was 1-0 in overtime (shootout) and it could have been 7-6, easily." In the 46-year history of the franchise, this Blues team (51-17-7) became the second to reach 51 wins, matching the total achieved by the 1999-2000 Blues, a team coached by Joel Quenneville and quarterbacked by Al MacInnis and Chris Pronger. It should be pointed out this edition has captured nine of its 51 wins via overtime-shootouts, a tie-breaking vehicle that did not exist before 2005. The 1999-200 team had 11 ties. Shattenkirk is now three for six in shootouts, which pales to Oshie's resume. But it ain't bad for a defenseman. "It's exciting," Shattenkirk said. "Every kid grows up wanting to win the game in those moments. When you finally get the opportunity, it's really something you hope to cherish and make the most of." One thing is certain, win No. 51 was one of the most hard-earned of the season. And for Miller, it was redemption. "It comes on the heals of a couple of games where I've been trying to re-establish and bounce back and be in the form I need to be in," Miller said. "It was a fun night. When the puck is hitting you it's a lot of fun." The Flyers came in having lost three of their last four, after putting together a five-game win streak. They set a fast, physical pace from the outset, giving the proceedings a playoff ambiance. With the help of some loose play by the Blues, the visitors had several high-quality chances in the first three minutes. The best came when Shattenkirk and Pietrangelo got tangled up and the Flyers broke in alone on Miller, three abreast. Miller read the passwork and stopped a point-blank shot by Michael Raffl to foil the attack, one of many special goaltending moments on the evening. Flyers netminder Emery was matching the performance save for save. The Blues rebounded somewhat to out-shoot the Flyers 11-10 in the first period. Then, eight seconds into second, Jaden Schwartz stole the puck from defenseman Brayden Coburn and ripped a shot off the post. Moments later, the Flyers broke in 2-on-1 and Wayne Simmonds appeared to give Raffl an open net to hit. But Miller miraculously slid across to make the save and keep things scoreless. "For a guy who makes that many great saves ... it was really neat to watch." Hitchcock said. "And the feeling on the bench was they weren't going to score, and I haven't had that feeling in a game where I've been outplayed in a long time." 732304 St Louis Blues Blues will shake things up against Flyers lockout-shortened 2011-12 season, Shattenkirk had 23 points in 48 games, which computes to some 39 points over 82 games. So when the 25-year old defenseman assisted on both of Alexander Steen's goals on Saturday, he reached a career high in assists (35) and secured point No. 44. 10 hours ago • By Dan O'Neill ―It's funny, I've kind of been there in year's past,‖ said Shattenkirk, a first-round pick of Colorado in 2007. ―I can think of a million opportunities that probably would have gotten me past it. The Blues will feature some realignment tonight when they face the Philadelphia Flyers at Scottrade Center. ―But I think it's just, the way we play, it suits me well and the type of game I play, as well as Alex (Pietrangelo) and Jay (Bouwmeester). You just kind of allow your offensive abilities and instincts to take over and I think that's why I've been able to have success under Hitch. Every year, you just want to get better.‖ Looking for more balance in his team's offensive attack, coach Ken Hitchcock has moved Derek Roy to left wing on the fourth line, next to center Maxim Lapierre and right wing Ryan Reaves. Brenden Morrow has moved to a wing with center Vlad Sobotka and winger Jaden Schwartz. And Hitchcock has reunited a line he formed earlier, putting Magnus Paajarvi on right wing with Patrik Berglund at center and Steve Ott on the left side. Like Ott, Paajarvi is a lefthanded shot, but Hitchcock likes him on the right side. He is hopeful the line will establish itself going forward. T.J. Oshie was named last week's Third Star of the Week by the NHL. Oshie tied for second in the league with six points (4-2-6) in three games to help the Blues (50-17-7, 107 points) remain in first place in the Western Conference. Ottawa Senators forward Kyle Turris was the First Star, while Boston's Patrice Bergeron was named the Second Star. ―When (Vladimir) Tarasenko went down, we tried to use other people on the right wing, but it doesn't suit Steve Ott,‖ Hitchcock said. ―He plays much better on the left. He plays with more tempo. Tonight represents the first time in more than 10 years the Flyers and Blues are meeting more than once in a season (2002-03 was the last time). This is just the third appearance in St. Louis for the Flyers in the last eight years. ―When you're playing on the off-wing, you have play a lot of the game with your back to the play,‖ Hitchcock added. ―Paajarvi is comfortable playing like that. He knows how to spin and get away from people, so it's a better line. Philadelphia defenseman Kimmo Timonen will miss the game with an upper-body injury. ―We've had that line play twice together and it's been very effective. Paajarvi is back feeling good about himself now, so we put him in and keep him going. We want to keep that line together for as much as we can here, finish the season and see how we look.‖ It's been a fractured season for Paajarvi, who came from Edmonton in the David Perron trade last summer. Bothered at various times by injuries, Paajarvi has bounced in and out of the lineup and up and down the lines, playing in 48 games of 74 games. Lineups: BLUES Forwards Alexander Steen - David Backes - T.J. Oshie Brenden Morrow - Vladimir Sobotka- Jaden Schwartz Steve Ott - Patrick Berglund – Magnus Paajarvi But after he sat out the Dallas game on Saturday, it appears Paajarvi is going to get an extended look as the Blues try caulk the hole created by the injury to 21-goal scorer Tarasenko. Paajarvi acknowledged the fluid nature of his status has been a challenge, but he's eager for any opportunity. Derek Roy - Maxim Lapierre - Ryan Reaves ―Of course, it helps when you're on a line for weeks or months, or even days,‖ said the 22-year old Paajarvi, who has six goals and six assists. ―If you bounce around, it is hard to find the chemistry and to get something going. But you have to try and find it. Carlo Colaiacovo - Kevin Shattenkirk ―You have to be professional about it, because it is going to change. Everybody changes over a season, some more than others. But you just have to be professional about, try to bring your game and see if it helps others on the ice.‖ Defensemen Jay Bouwmeester - Alex Pietrangelo Barret Jackman - Roman Polak Goalie Ryan Miller FLYERS Forwards Like Hitchcock, Paajarvi felt his placement with Berglund and Ott was a good mix in previous opportunities. Scott Hartnell - Claude Giroux - Jakub Voracek ―We played really well,‖ he said. ―We felt good with each other. We've had a good talk with each other, feel like we have the chemistry together, so we're just going to go out there and hopefully do some damage.‖ Matt Read - Sean Couturier - Michael Raffi Ott has been on lots of lines in his 11 NHL seasons and he knows the mechanics involved. Zac Rinaldo - Vincent Lecavalier - Adam Hall ―You try to build chemistry any way you can,‖ said Ott, who has 103 NHL goals but is still looking for his first as a Blue since arriving in the Ryan Miller trade. ―I've played with Bergie. So you know what his tendencies are, and you start learning the tendencies of your other teammates. Erik Gustafsson - Braydon Cobrun ―I know Paajarvi's speed is a huge factor. So you start really paying attention to what makes a line good. And when you have depth scoring, that's a key for the playoffs. So we definitely want to get that going here in the next little while and make sure it's going for the real rounds.‖ *** Lost in the disappointment of the outcome against Dallas on Saturday was a momentous occasion for Shattenkirk. He cracked the 43-point barrier. Shattenkirk, who came to the Blues late in the 2010-11 season, finished with 43 points in both the 2010-11 and 2012-13 seasons. During the Tye McGinn - Brayden Schenn - Wayne Simmonds Defensemen Andrew MacDonald - Luke Schenn Mark Streit – Nicklas Grossman Goalie Steve Mason St Louis Post Dispatch LOADED: 04.02.2014 732305 St Louis Blues Hockey Guy: Blues did OK by missing on Lecavalier 22 hours ago • By Jeff Gordon After the Tampa Bay Lightning bought out the remainder of Vincent Lecavalier‘s ridiculous 11-year, $85 million contract last summer, the Blues got in the long line to bid on him. It was an intriguing opportunity. Lecavalier, 33, offered size and skill up the middle where the Blues needed some help. He was no longer a dominant offensive player – which is why the Lightning franchise was willing to spend $32 million to make him go away – but he seemed likely to help on the power play. Perhaps a fresh start in St. Louis playing with young wingers like Jaden Schwartz and/or Vladimir Tarasenko could have triggered his revival. But we will never know if that chemistry would have clicked. Lecavalier picked the Flyers over many other bidders, creating a questionable fit for both sides. Could he really flourish in the intense Philly atmosphere? As a Lindros-sized forward, could he play the robust game the Flyers demand? Given the team‘s depth at center, where did he fit into the offensive chemistry? Sure enough, Lecavalier has struggled to find his place in Philadelphia after signing a five-year, $22.5 million deal. He moved back and forth from center and wing. He played in a variety of forward combinations, seldom finding something worked consistently well. He has 18 goals, 15 assists and a minus-14 rating in 61 games. He went 13 games without scoring a goal earlier this season. When the Flyers face the Blues tonight at Scottrade Center, he may be centering the fourth line again. He scored three goals in his first two games between grinders Zac Rinaldo and Adam Hall. Previously he played on the wing with Brayden Schenn and Wayne Simmonds on the No. 2 line. Originally the Flyers hoped he could mesh with top center Claude Giroux. ―I‘ve always said it. I‘ve always played in the middle,‖ Lecavalier told reporters Sunday. ―Being on the wing is not natural. Wherever I‘m put, I‘ll do my best to try to be good at it.‖ If Lecavalier can step up in the playoffs, his struggles earlier this season will be forgotten. The Flyers are desperate to make a deep postseason run. Vinnie, on the sport's true good guys, could still be a hero. But on balance it appears the Blues have no regrets about losing the Lecavalier bidding. General manager Doug Armstrong spent his budget dollars elsewhere and built a deep offense with lots of interchangeable parts. He retained some long-range flexibility by signing free agents Derek Roy and Brenden Morrow to one-year deals to bolster the supporting cast. He used that flexibility to lock in key forward Alexander Steen to a contract extension. As the old adage goes, sometimes a team‘s best signings are the ones it doesn‘t make. AROUND THE RINKS: The Avalanche got the bad news coach Patrick Roy dreaded: Top center Matt Duchene will be sidelined well into the playoffs with his knee injury. That puts St. Louis-bred Paul (son of Peter) Stastny front and center in the Colorado attack as the 'Lanche tries to earn the home-ice edge of the Blackhawks for the first playoff round. This is a great opportunity for Peter to build his free agency stock . . . Taskmaster John Tortorella could get fired after just one season on the Vancouver bench. Maybe that is why he is trying to make nice with the media . . . On the other hand, former Canucks coach Alain Vigneault has done a brilliant job with the Rangers. Funny how things work out sometimes . . . On balance, fans in the Great White North don't have much to look forward to in these playoffs . . . Given the epic failure of David Clarkson in Toronto, the Maple Leafs may have to buy him out as part of a larger overhaul . . . Taking the "C" away from enigmatic defenseman Dion Phaneuf may be another unpleasant but necessary step toward turning that franchise around. St Louis Post Dispatch LOADED: 04.02.2014 732306 St Louis Blues Hitchcock plans to give new 'Bergie Bunch' an extended look 3 hours ago • By Dan O‘Neill The Blues featured some realignment when they faced the Philadelphia Flyers on Tuesday at Scottrade Center. With seven games to play before the postseason begins, coach Ken Hitchcock has the probe out. He is poking players, tweaking lines and prodding for solutions to an offensive attack that has leaned far too heavily on its top line. But in at least one case, Hitchcock indicated the change will be given a chance to grow roots. Breaking up the ―Dallas Three‖ of Brenden Morrow, Derek Roy and Steve Ott, Hitchcock moved Roy to the fourth line and bumped Morrow to a line with Vlad Sobotka and Jaden Schwartz. At the same time, he re-inserted Magnus Paajarvi into the lineup and reunited a line with the lefthanded-shooting Paajarvi on right wing, Patrik Berglund in the middle and Ott on the left side. Hitchcock is hopeful the new version of the Bergie Bunch will be a keeper. ―When (Vladimir) Tarasenko went down, we tried to use other people on the right wing, but it doesn‘t suit Steve Ott,‖ Hitchcock said. ―He plays much better on the left. He plays with more tempo. ―When you‘re playing on the off-wing, you have play a lot of the game with your back to the play. Paajarvi is comfortable playing like that. He knows how to spin and get away from people, so it‘s a better line. ―We‘ve had that line play twice together and it‘s been very effective. Paajarvi is back feeling good about himself now, so we put him in and keep him going. We want to keep that line together for as much as we can here, finish the season and see how we look.‖ It represents an opportunity for Paajarvi, who has endured a fractured season after coming from Edmonton in the David Perron trade. Bothered by injuries at various times, Paajarvi has bounced in and out of the lineup, playing in 49 of 75 games. But after he sat out the Dallas game Saturday, it appears Paajarvi will get an extended look as the Blues try caulking the hole created by the injury to 21-goal scorer Tarasenko. Paajarvi acknowledged the fluid nature of his status has been a challenge, but he‘s eager for any opportunity. ―Of course, it helps when you‘re on a line for weeks or months, or even days,‖ said the 22-year-old Paajarvi, who has six goals and six assists. ―If you bounce around, it is hard to find the chemistry and to get something going. But you have to try and find it. ―You have to be professional about it, because it is going to change. Everybody changes over a season, some more than others. But you just have to be professional about, try to bring your game and see if it helps others on the ice.‖ BREAKTHROUGH Lost in a 4-2 loss to Dallas on Saturday was a momentous occasion for Kevin Shattenkirk. He cracked the 43-point barrier. Shattenkirk, who came to the Blues late in the 2010-11 season, finished with 43 points in both the 2010-11 and 2012-13 seasons. During the lockout-shortened 2011-12 season, Shattenkirk had 23 points in 48 games, which computes to some 39 points over 82 games. So when the 25-year-old defenseman assisted on both of Alexander Steen‘s goals Saturday, he reached a career high in assists (35) and secured point No. 44. ―It‘s funny, I‘ve kind of been there in years past,‖ said Shattenkirk, a first-round pick by Colorado in 2007. ―I can think of a million opportunities that probably would have gotten me past it.‖ With his 44 points, Shattenkirk is a plus-7 this season and a plus-36 in 228 games with the Blues. ―But I think it‘s just, the way we play, it suits me well and the type of game I play, as well as Alex (Pietrangelo) and Jay (Bouwmeester),‖ Shattenkirk. ―You just kind of allow your offensive abilities and instincts to take over and I think that‘s why I‘ve been able to have success under Hitch. Every year, you just want to get better.‖ St Louis Post Dispatch LOADED: 04.02.2014 732307 St Louis Blues Blues beat the Flyers in a shootout 3 hours ago • By Dan O‘Neill The Blues matched the franchise record for victories in a season Tuesday night at Scottrade Center, and they did so in style. As the game went on, both teams had their moments in what Hitchcock called a ―track meet.‖ But the Blues were accumulating an unhealthy total of missed shots. And with 16 seconds remaining in the second period they added one more, as Alex Pietrangelo rang another post behind Emery. The period ended with the Blues carrying a 2-0 lead in posts hit, a 16-4 edge in missed shots and a 0-0 game into the third. The third stanza was more of the same, as the play raged back and forth. With 4:57 to play, there was trouble in River City when Vlad Sobotka took a penalty on Matt Read. In one of the most exciting games of the season, the Note beat the visiting Philadelphia Flyers 1-0 in a shootout before 18,647. But the Blues penalty-killing unit never allowed Philadelphia‘s potent power play — the No. 1 road PP in the league — to get untracked. The reward was a Blues power play with 1:24 remaining. After 65 minutes of a scoreless standoff, Olympic shooting star T.J. Oshie began the shootout session with his ninth SO goal in 12 attempts. Hitchcock called timeout to get his team organized, and the Blues applied pressure. But they couldn‘t get an open crack at Emery. With that 1-0 edge, Blues netminder Ryan Miller stopped Vincent Lecavalier and Claude Giroux in succession before defenseman Kevin Shattenkirk beat Flyers goalie Ray Emery to end the struggle. The last time the Blues took a 0-0 game to overtime was March 22, 2012. They lost 1-0 at Los Angeles to goaltender Jonathan Quick. After a disappointing loss to Dallas on Saturday, Miller showed Blues fans what all the excitement was about when he was acquired in a trade March 1. This time, both teams had golden opportunities in the extra period, but neither could convert. Miller added one more eye-popper, stoning Jakub Voracek alone in front with 1:25 to play. He stopped 31 shots, often in spectacular fashion, to get his first Blues shutout and 29th career whitewash. He then capped the evening with two shootout stops and the Blues — 9-3 in shooting galleries — had their record-tying win. ―He was terrific,‖ Blues coach Ken Hitchcock said. ―He was focused and competitive and whatever else we needed him to be ... We needed him badly today. St Louis Post Dispatch LOADED: 04.02.2014 ―He stood tall. This was a game that was 1-0 in overtime (shootout) and it could have been 7-6, easily.‖ In the 46-year history of the franchise, this Blues team (51-17-7) became the second to reach 51 wins, matching the total achieved by the 1999-2000 Blues, a team coached by Joel Quenneville and quarterbacked by Al MacInnis and Chris Pronger. It should be pointed out this edition has captured nine of its 51 wins via overtime-shootouts, a tiebreaking vehicle that did not exist before 2005. The 1999-200 team had 11 ties. Shattenkirk is now three for six in shootouts, which pales to Oshie‘s mark. But it ain‘t bad for a defenseman. ―It‘s exciting,‖ Shattenkirk said. ―Every kid grows up wanting to win the game in those moments. When you finally get the opportunity, it‘s really something you hope to cherish and make the most of.‖ One thing is certain, win No. 51 was one of the most hard-earned of the season. And for Miller, it was redemption. ―It comes on the heels of a couple of games where I‘ve been trying to re-establish and bounce back and be in the form I need to be in,‖ Miller said. ―It was a fun night. When the puck is hitting you it‘s a lot of fun.‖ The Flyers came in having lost three of their last four, after putting together a five-game winning streak. They set a fast, physical pace from the outset, giving the proceedings a playoff ambiance. With the help of some loose play by the Blues, the visitors had several high-quality chances in the first three minutes. The best came when Shattenkirk and Pietrangelo got tangled up and the Flyers broke in alone on Miller, three abreast. Miller read the passwork and stopped a point-blank shot by Michael Raffl to foil the attack, one of many special goaltending moments on the evening. Flyers netminder Emery was matching the performance save for save. The Blues rebounded somewhat to outshoot the Flyers 11-10 in the first period. Then, eight seconds into the second, Jaden Schwartz stole the puck from defenseman Brayden Coburn and ripped a shot off the post. Moments later, the Flyers broke in 2-on-1 and Wayne Simmonds appeared to give Raffl an open net to hit. But Miller miraculously slid across to make the save and keep things scoreless. ―For a guy who makes that many great saves ... it was really neat to watch.‖ Hitchcock said. ―And the feeling on the bench was they weren‘t going to score, and I haven‘t had that feeling in a game where I‘ve been outplayed in a long time.‖ 732308 St Louis Blues Blues seeking more balance on offense By NORM SANDERS April 1, 2014 ST. LOUIS — Ken Hitchcock has no problem with a top line generating the impressive level of numbers that T.J. Oshie, Alexander Steen and David Backes have been producing. The St. Louis Blues' top line had 11 of the team's last 13 goals over a four-game span heading into Thursday's game against Philadelphia Flyers. They also had racked up 18 points over the previous three games. What Hitchcock would like to see is a little more production from everyone else, which helps explains the lineup changes he made against the Flyers. "All of us feel as happy as we are for the one line, (but) you can't win with just one line doing that so we're trying to get more people included," Hitchcock said. "We know we're going to need it and we're doing probing and pushing to find it. We're not looking for combinations that work, it's too late for that. "We're trying to get people to understand when they play really well how it looks and what it feels like." As a result, Hitchcock moved Magnus Paajarvi from left wing to right wing, switched Steve Ott from right to left and plunked Patrik Berglund between them. Other changes included putting veteran Brenden Morrow at left wing on a line with Vladimir Sobotka and Jaden Schwartz and moving veteran center Derek Roy to left wing on the fourth line. One of the reason we're so high up in the standings as far as our offense goes is that we've got great seasons from a lot of people other than Backes, Oshie and Steen," Hitchcock said. "That's what's gives us our success." Schwartz (23 goals) is one of five Blues with at least 20 goals and there are 11 players with at least 30 points. A key missing ingredient is Russian winger Vladimir Tarasenko, who had 21 goals and 43 points in 64 games before suffering a broken hand. * Blues prospect Ty Rattie is the top scorer on the minor-league Chicago Wolves with 29 goals and 45 points in 66 games. Top goalie prospect Jake Allen is 29-16-2 for the Wolves with a 2.16 goals-against average and five shutouts. * The Blues' 11 victories in March was their highest win total for the month in franchise history. They were 11-3-1, the same record they had in November. * Steen's 33 goals are the most by a Blues player since Brad Boyes had 33 in 2008-09. Steen and T.J. Oshie are the first Blues teammates to reach 60 points since Boyes and Paul Kariya each had 65 back in 2007-08. Belleville News-Democrat LOADED: 04.02.2014 732309 St Louis Blues Miller, Blues blank Flyers 1-0 in shootout By R.B. FALLSTROM AP Sports WriterApril 1, 2014 Updated 11 minutes ago Notes: Flyers D Kimmo Timonen did not make the trip after taking a puck to the chin. Alex Gustafsson played for the first time since Feb. 27. ... The Blues tricked a fan between the second and third periods who was blindfolded at center ice and then shot several yards wide of the net, telling him he'd won $15,000. The fan did a celebratory belly flop on the ice before being told he'd been duped. ... The Blues' last 0-0 regulation game was March 22, 2012, at Los Angeles, a 1-0 shootout loss. ... The Flyers have been shut out four times. ... The Blues also won 51 games in 1999-2000, when they won the Presidents' Trophy. Belleville News-Democrat LOADED: 04.02.2014 ST. LOUIS — The St. Louis Blues acquired Ryan Miller for moments such as these. Miller stopped 31 shots and kept the net empty in a shootout, too. He was precisely as advertised, a goalie that be a difference-maker when there's no room for mistakes. "Millsy standing on his head — that's what we brought him here to do," forward T.J. Oshie said after the Blues outlasted the Philadelphia Flyers 1-0 on Tuesday night and matched the franchise record with their 51st win. "There were some saves where you feel like you're about to put your head down because it's going to go in the net, and he seems so calm and just sticks his pad out and saves it." Miller is 10-3-1 with a 2.01 goals-against average and .920 save percentage since coming in a trade with Buffalo. Oshie and Kevin Shattenkirk scored in the shootout for the Blues, who have 109 points — one fewer than Boston for the top spot in the NHL. They're 9-3 in the shootout largely because of Oshie, who's an uncanny 9 for 12 after converting a backhand, and also put on quite a show at the Sochi Olympics. "Yeah, I knew he was good and I knew what to expect," Ray Emery said. "But he was real quick on that one." Miller earned his 29th career shutout and first in 101 games since March 21, 2012, against Montreal when he was with Buffalo. He made a skate save against Vincent Lecavalier and a glove save on Claude Giroux — who's 5 for 10 — in the shootout. Emery, the Flyers' backup making just his third start since the beginning of March, earned his 16th career shutout and second this season. "He definitely won us a point tonight," Flyers forward Scott Hartnell said. "In two weeks when the season's over we'll see how big that point is." Miller was motivated after giving up four goals in a loss to Dallas on Saturday night, plus the Flyers are a familiar foe from his seasons in Buffalo. He's 14-13-2 against the Flyers and this was his first shutout against them. "It was a fun night," Miller said. "When the pucks are hitting you, it's a lot of fun." It was the third 1-0 shootout victory in Blues history and first since Feb. 1, 2008, against Anaheim. One of Miller's best saves came with 1:30 to go in overtime when he stretched out and denied Jakub Voracek's bid to slide the puck under his pads. "At this point in my career, I'm just trying to be really calm about everything," Miller said. "No sense letting things get off the rails and panicking too much." Both teams killed penalties in the final five minutes of regulation, with a high-sticking call to Giroux stretching into the first 36 seconds of overtime for Philadelphia. St. Louis penalty killers have allowed three goals on 36 chances the past 12 home games. The Flyers played in St. Louis for the first time since the 2010-11 opener. Miller foiled two breakaways in the opening minutes, one created when defensemen Alex Pietrangelo and Shattenkirk collided. He made an outstanding left pad save on Michael Raffl to thwart a 2-on-1 break early in the second period. Two Blues hit the goalpost in the second period, Jaden Schwartz in the opening minute and Pietrangelo in the final minute. 732310 St Louis Blues Depleted Flyers fall to Blues By SAM CARCHIDI The Philadelphia InquirerApril 1, 2014 ST. LOUIS — The Philadelphia Flyers' No. 1 goalie, Steve Mason, was given the night off, and their top defenseman, Kimmo Timonen, was back home with a facial injury. Still, they managed to take the Western Conference's best team, the St. Louis Blues, to the limit on Tuesday night, only to lose, 1-0, in a shootout at the Scottrade Center. Olympic hero T.J. Oshie and defenseman Kevin Shattenkirk scored in the shootout, and goalie Ryan Miller was flawless as the Blues avenged a 4-1 loss to the Flyers 10 nights earlier. The Flyers are 3-7 in shootouts; the Blues are 9-3. The Flyers managed a point and stayed four points ahead of fourth-place Columbus in the Metropolitan Division. Miller notched his first shutout in 14 games with St. Louis, which is now 27-6-4 at home. The former Sabre made perhaps his best save when he stopped Jake Voracek in front with about 11/2 minutes left in overtime. Flyers goalie Ray Emery played a strong game in just his second start in the last seven games. The Flyers will host Columbus in a key matchup Thursday, and the game will match goalies against their former teams - Mason and Columbus' Sergei Bobrovsky. The Flyers were fortunate to be in a scoreless tie heading into the third period. St. Louis, which dropped a 4-1 decision to the Flyers on March 22, fired shots off the post in the opening and closing minutes of the second period. Jaden Schwartz had the first one; Alex Pietrangelo had the latter with 15 seconds to go. The Flyers had little attack time in the second period, although they had a golden chance thwarted when Michael Raffl tried to finish a two-on-one but was robbed by goalie Ryan Miller, who made a kick save with about 17 minutes left in the stanza. The Flyers had the better scoring chances in the opening period. The best came about 21/2 minutes into the game, when two Blues defenders collided, enabling Claude Giroux and Raffl to head on a two-on-none break. Giroux stickhandled and fed Raffl at the last moment on his left, but Miller stopped the rookie's off-balance shot. The Flyers had the only power play in the opening period but couldn't solve the league's second-best penalty-killing unit. With Kimmo Timonen sidelined by an injury, the Flyers were without their No. 1 defenseman, and coach Craig Berube juggled each of his three pairings. Nick Grossmann replaced Timonen and was alongside Braydon Coburn on the top pairing, and Erik Gustafsson played for the first time since Feb. 27. "It's a chance for other guys to step in and do a good job," Grossmann said before the game. Gustafsson played well in the first two periods and was even used on the power play and penalty kill. St. Louis coach Ken Hitchcock is close friends with Berube. When Hitchcock was coaching the Flyers, Berube was coaching the AHL's Phantoms, who were then in Philadelphia, and their teams practiced on adjacent rinks in Voorhees. "I thought Chief was going to make a good coach because he was a guy who would ask commonsense questions," Hitchcock said Tuesday after the Blues' morning skate. "He didn't have pie-in-the-sky ideas. It was meat and potatoes, the same way he played. "I think the thing that has made him a great coach is that his decisions are void of emotion. He doesn't get wrapped up in the emotion of dealing with the player - it's you're either doing the job or you're not. ... If you're not giving, you have to go down a notch, go down to the fourth line, go out of the lineup. He does what's best for the team." Berube, who replaced Peter Laviolette after the team's 0-3 start, had directed the Flyers to a 39-24-8 record entering Tuesday. In recent weeks, they were 4-0-1 against NHL powerhouses Pittsburgh, St. Louis, Chicago, and Boston. Tuesday's loss to the best-in-the-West Blues can't undo the months of great work that have put the Flyers on the verge of a playoff spot - and have many teams hoping to avoid them in the postseason. Tuesday's win against the best-in-the-West Blues was another step that has the Flyers on the verge of a playoff spot - and has many teams hoping to avoid them in the postseason. And that's no April Fool's joke. Belleville News-Democrat LOADED: 04.02.2014 732311 St Louis Blues The Flyers had a time, but elected to fire off a shot from left wing and Michael Raffl was turned away by Miller. Miller's first Blues shutout is a big one After a struggling first period, the Blues came out with more fire in the second. By NORM SANDERS Just seconds into the period, Blues winger Jaden Schwartz forced a turnover and rang a shot off the goalpost from the slot. News-DemocratApril 1, 2014 ST. LOUIS — Tuesday night was Exhibit A as to why goaltender Ryan Miller was brought here from the Buffalo Sabres. Miller kicked aside numerous difficult chances during regulation and overtime, then stopped both shots in the shootout for his first shutout in 100 games as the Blues edged the Philadelphia Flyers 1-0. The teams battled through three scoreless periods and overtime thanks to Miller and Flyers goalie Ray Emery before T.J. Oshie and Kevin Shattenkirk scored in the shootout to clinch the win. "I think it's his coming out party," Blues defenseman Barret Jackman said of Miller, who stopped 31 shots for his first Blues shutout. "He's been solid most of the games for us and he just stepped it up another level tonight." The win was the Blues' 51st this season, tying the franchise record as they moved to 51-17-7 for 109 points. They remain one point behind NHL overall leader Boston and seven points ahead of second-place Colorado in the Central Division with seven games remaining. Miller was great early, just as good in the middle and saved some of his best stops for the end of regulation and overtime along with the shootout. "That's why we brought him here," said Oshie, whose shootout legend continued after converting for the ninth time in 12 opportunities. "I talked him up a little before he got here, telling the boys he was a good goaltender. It was pretty amazing what was did out there tonight." Miller was at his best again in the overtime, flashing his glove to rob defenseman Nicklas Grossman with 2:19 remaining. A minute later, Miller held his ground in front with the Flyers' Jakub Voracek camped there with the potential game-winner on his stick. "I was happy to get that one because it gives us a chance to get the win and push the game on a far as we can go," said Miller, who improved to 10-3-1 with the Blues. "It was a fun night. When the puck's hitting you it's a lot of fun." In the shootout, he turned away Vincent Lecavalier and then made a glove save on red-hot Flyers forward Claude Giroux. Giroux had scored on five of his nine shootout attempts before Tuesday. Miller had gone 100 games since his last shutout on March 21, 2012 against the Montreal Canadiens. So when Shattenkirk beat Emery to nail down the win, Miller gave a fist pump and was treated to a standing ovation from the Scottrade Center crowd of 18,647. "I didn't want to have to make another save," he joked. "I was just happy to have the win; it's been a while since I've had a shutout, so it felt good to finish the job and keep building the right way towards playoffs." Jackman talked about the confidence level the team has in its new goaltender. "You could see it tonight; they kept coming at us and he kept making save after save," Jackman said. "He showed right from the beginning. The first shift we gave up a chance and Millsie made one save, then another one right after. He gave a chance to get going." The Blues had scored 12 goals in their previous three games. The teams battled through three scoreless periods, with their best chances undone by the goaltending of Miller and Emery, missed shots and shots that clanged off goalposts. The Flyers had beaten the Blues 4-1 on March 22, but five goals looked like 50 in this tight playoff-like affair. Miller was called upon early to make a tough save on Scott Hartnell, then found himself staring down a 2-on-none rush by the Flyers later on during the first period. Raffl's bad luck with Miller continued in the second period. The Flyers' forward was staring at an empty net after taking a cross-ice pass from Wayne Simmonds, but Miller flashed his left pad across to make one of his best saves since coming here from Buffalo. "There were some saves there where you feel like you're about to put your head down because it's going to go in the net," Oshie said. "He seems so calm and just sticks his pad out and saves it." With 14 seconds remaining in the second period, Blues defenseman Alex Pietrangelo sent another shot off the post. Emery stopped 28 shots for the Flyers, or just seven more than the 21 errant shots by the Blues that missed the net entirely. Belleville News-Democrat LOADED: 04.02.2014 732312 Tampa Bay Lightning Bolts clinch playoff spot with victory By Erik Erlendsson Published: April 1, 2014 | Updated: April 1, 2014 at 11:45 PM TAMPA — How fitting a Lightning rookie sent Tampa Bay into the postseason. Tyler Johnson scored a shorthanded goal at 12:41 of the third period to help Tampa Bay beat Montreal 3-1 in front of an announced crowd of 18,808 at The Forum. With the victory - coupled with losses by Washington and New Jersey - the Lightning, with five rookies in the lineup on Tuesday, clinched a berth in the playoffs for the first time since 2011 and just the second time since 2007. Tampa Bay also pulled even with the Canadiens for second in the Atlantic Division, which carries home ice advantage in the first round, with a game in hand. Tampa Bay won the season series with Montreal 3-1, with three of the four games decided in overtime/shootout. The goal by Johnson was his 23rd of the season, tying him with Steven Stamkos for most by a rookie in franchise history. In a season in which the Lightning have faced the loss of Stamkos to a broken leg, the drama surrounding the eventual trade of franchise stalwart Marty St. Louis and at one point this season carrying 11 rookies on the roster, Tampa Bay overcame all of that to earn the right to play for the Stanley Cup. ―You have to give the guys in the room a lot of credit, because probably the hockey world is now opening their eyes to who these guys are,'' Lightning head coach Jon Cooper said. ―But I'm sure for most of this season there were a lot of people that probably looked at our roster and kind of discarded it a little bit. And these guys are starting to make a name for themselves in this league.'' Ryan Callahan - acquired from the New York Rangers in the St. Louis trade scored on the power play, rookie Ondrej Palat had two assists while second-year pro Alex Killorn iced the game with an empty net goal with 44.3 seconds left. Ben Bishop made 25 saves for the Lightning. Brendan Gallagher scored for Montreal while Carey Price was stellar in net, finishing with 28 saves. ―We are proud in here, it's been an adverse season to say the least,'' captain Stamkos said. ―We battled through a lot of things and people were probably doubting us when certain guys got injured, the trades and the amount of young guys we had on this team. So it is an accomplishment. There is a still a lot of hard work to be done, but our goal at the beginning of the year was to get in the playoffs and we did.'' Tampa Bay had to go through a lot of hard work to get Tuesday's victory in a meeting that had a playoff atmosphere surrounding it heading in. But Callahan's backhand power play goal 9:19 of the second period tied the game after Brendan Gallagher gave the Canadiens the lead in the first period. That set up Johnson for the heroics as the Canadiens went on the power play at 12:14 of the third period. But after David Desharnais sent a pass back to Thomas Vanek at the left point. But the puck caromed off the wall and Johnson took off as if he had jet fuel in his skates to blow past Vanek and race in on the breakaway. After freezing Price for a split-second, Johnson pulled the puck to his backhand and lifted it past Price with 7:19 left in the third period that served as the playoff-clinching goal. ―The puck came up the wall, and I had a lot of speed and Price didn't think I could get to my backhand, I don't think, and he kind of over challenged there, so luckily for me I was able to get it over there and get it up,'' said Johnson, who is tied for league lead with five shorthanded goals. ―I never really thought about (the goal as the one to clinch a postseason berth), I'm just happy we got the win, happy we clinched a playoff spot. Late hit There was a scary play late in the game when Douglas Murray clocked Lightning defenseman Mike Kostka with a blatant elbow that appeared to knock Kostka unconscious. A stretcher immediately came on the ice, but after a few minutes Kostka was able to get up to his feet and skated off on his own power. Murray was handed a match penalty for an illegal blow to the head, which carries with it an automatic review and will likely result in a suspension for the Canadiens' defenseman. Kostka was going through concussion protocol following the game, but Stamkos said Kostka was unconscious on the ice as he came over to check on his teammate. ―That's a scary scene when you see someone on the ice, let alone one of your teammates, in that situation where he was out cold,'' Stamkos said. ―You hope that Mike is doing great, but I'll have to look at it again. But if it warranted a (match) penalty, I'm sure there will be some repercussions from the league.'' Tampa Tribune LOADED: 04.02.2014 Bolts Notes: Lightning honor Paralympian ―I thought Mark played extremely well,‘‘ Lightning coach Jon Cooper said. ―He was jumping into plays, and he probably had a couple of our best chances to score. I thought he was very good at breaking pucks out, and it‘s good to have guys that you can plug in.‘‘ By Erik Erlendsson Barberio, who was scratched on Tuesday, is accustomed to being patient and waiting for his opportunities, as he has done at various points this season. 732313 Tampa Bay Lightning Published: April 1, 2014 | Updated: April 2, 2014 at 12:03 AM TAMPA — Before the game, Paralympic gold medalist Declan Farmer dropped the ceremonial opening faceoff and received fist pumps from the Lightning players on the bench as he left the ice. Farmer led Team USA in scoring in the sled hockey tournament at the Paralympics in Sochi, Russia, last month. The 16-year-old Berkeley Prep student has been a member of the Lightning‘s sled hockey program since 2007. ―It took a few days, at least, for everything to really sink in at what our team accomplished,‘‘ said Farmer, who was wearing his Team USA jersey and had his gold medal draped around his neck. Since returning from Russia, Farmer has been receiving plenty of recognition for his accomplishment, whether it was acknowledgment from the school when he returned to class or the attention for bringing his gold medal to school. Farmer said he is just trying to take it all in while taking some time away from the game before getting ready for 2014-15 Team USA tryouts in July as he keeps an eye on the 2018 games scheduled to take place in South Korea. ―It was so much fun over in Sochi,‘‘ Farmer said. ―I definitely want to experience that again.‘‘ Erne signed The Lightning have signed 2013 second-round draft pick Adam Erne to a standard three-year entry level contract on Tuesday. Erne announced the signing via his personal Twitter account with a picture of him signing the contract in a Quebec Remparts office with the comment ―It‘s a dream come true to have signed a contract with the @TBLightning! Thanks to everyone who helped me along the way!‘‘. The Lightning said Erne will report to Syracuse of the American Hockey League on an amateur tryout agreement for the rest of the season. The Crunch have nine games remaining, including Wednesday at Rochester, before the season ends April 19. The Crunch are last in the East Division and will miss the postseason. Erne just finished his season with Quebec after the Remparts were knocked out in the opening round of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League playoffs on Friday in five games by Rouyn-Noranda. Erne suffered a small laceration to his spleen during a game on Feb. 16 that kept him out of the lineup for all but the final game of the series against Rouyn-Noranda, in which Erne scored a goal. In 48 regular-season games, the 33rd overall pick in the 2013 draft finished with 21 goals and 62 points in 48 games. The 18-year-old also represented the United States at the World Junior Championships in January. Rookie honors Lightning LW Ondrej Palat was named the NHL rookie of the month for March, the second time this season Palat has won the monthly award. Palat led all rookies with 16 points in 16 games, registering five goals and 11 assists. He also won rookie of the month honors for January. Palat is the first player in franchise history to be named rookie of the month twice in a season. Entering Tuesday‘s game, Palat leads all rookies with a plus-27 rating and is second in rookie scoring (51 points) and assists (32) while ranking fourth in goals (19). Barbs wired After sitting out nine consecutive games, D Mark Barberio made the most of his opportunity when he was back in the lineup on Sunday against Detroit, The rookie defenseman played 14:28 of effective ice time while dressed as the seventh defenseman, finishing with three shots on goal. Barberio made a strong case to remain in the lineup. ―I was itching to get back in, and I had some fresh legs, I guess,‘‘ Barberio said. ―I just wanted to make sure I came in with energy, and both teams were battling ... so it was good to get into a game like that where it was playoff intensity right off the bat.‘‘ Nuts and Bolts Tampa Bay scratched D Keith Aulie, RW B.J. Crombeen, RW Richard Panik, C Cody Kunyk and Barberio. ... RW Ryan Callahan has four power-play goals in 14 games with the Lightning after having five in 43 games with the New York Rangers. ... Montreal LW Thomas Vanek faced the Lightning for the fifth time this season while playing for three different teams. Tampa Tribune LOADED: 04.02.2014 732314 Tampa Bay Lightning Lightning can clinch playoff spot tonight By Erik Erlendsson Published: April 1, 2014 The Tampa Bay Lightning have the opportunity to officially clinch a playoff spot tonight when they host the Montreal Canadiens. Tampa Bay has 91 points in the NHL standings heading into tonight with seven games remaining. In order for the Lightning to clinch a postseason berth tonight, Tampa Bay needs to beat the Canadiens while Washington would need to lose in regulation to Dallas and New Jersey needs to lose either in regulation or overtime at Buffalo. If Tampa Bay does clinch a playoff spot tonight, the most likely matchup in the opening round would be against Montreal. The Canadiens hold a two-point lead on the Lightning for second place in the Atlantic Division, with Tampa Bay holding a game in hand. Whichever team ends up holding the second spot in the division would earn home ice for the first round. Tonight‘s game starts a six-game homestand for Tampa Bay before the regular season ends April 13 at Washington. The postseason is scheduled to begin April 16. Tampa Tribune LOADED: 04.02.2014 732315 Tampa Bay Lightning Ondrej Palat is the NHL's rookie of the month for March Damian Cristodero, Times Staff Writer Tuesday, April 1, 2014 3:16pm Lightning left wing Ondrej Palat was named the NHL's rookie of the month for March. Palat had five goals, 16 points in 16 games. Palat, 23, is having a terrific season worthy of rookie of the year consideration. His 51 points on 19 goals, 32 assists is second in the league among rookies. His 32 assists also are second, and he is tied for the lead at plus-27. He also was rookie of the month for January. Here is the announcement from the league: Tampa Bay Lightning left wing Ondrej Palat, who led all rookies with 16 points (5-11—16) in 16 games, has been named the NHL‘s Rookie of the Month for March. Palat edged Calgary Flames center Joe Colborne (6-5—11 in 16 games), Anaheim Ducks left wing Patrick Maroon (3-8—11 in 14 games), Florida Panthers center Nick Bjugstad (1-10—11 in 17 games) and Tampa Bay Lightning teammate Tyler Johnson (5-5—10 in 16 games) for the award. Palat, 23, recorded at least one point in nine of 16 games, including a five-game assist/point streak March 8-17 (4-5—9), his third point streak of five or more games this season. He also posted six multi-point performances, including his second career multi-goal and three-point game March 10 vs. PHX (2-1—3). Palat, a native of Frydek-Mistek, Czech Republic, was selected by the Lightning in the seventh round (208th overall) of the 2011 NHL Draft. He has played in 75 games this season, ranking second among rookies in assists (32) and points (51) while placing fourth in goals (19). He also is tied for the lead among first-year players with 36 points (13-23—36) in 36 games since Jan. 1. Palat, who also earned Rookie of the Month honors in January, joins San Jose Sharks center Tomas Hertl (October), Nashville Predators goaltender Marek Mazanec (November), and Los Angeles Kings goaltender Martin Jones and Chicago Blackhawks goaltender Antti Raanta (December co-winners) as recipients of the award this season. Tampa Bay Times LOADED: 04.02.2014 732316 Tampa Bay Lightning Goaltending to headline Lightning-Canadiens showdown Damian Cristodero, Times Staff Writer Tuesday, April 1, 2014 1:27pm There is a reason the three games this season between the Lightning and Canadiens have been so close: goaltending, Tampa Bay coach Jon Cooper said, adding he has no doubt tonight's important matchup between the teams at the Tampa Bay Times Forum will be any different. "These have been one-goal games. They go to shootouts. They go to overtime," Cooper said. "They have had a little bit of everything. But above all they've had outstanding goaltending on both sides." In three starts against Montreal this season, Tampa Bay goalie Ben Bishop is 2-0-1 with a 0.92 goals-against average and .962 save percentage. Montreal's Carey Price is 1-0-2 with a 1.23 goals-against average and .962 save percentage. Eash game this season has ended 2-1 with the Lightning winning one in overtime and one in a shootout and losing one in a shootout. In fact, six straight games between the teams have been decided by one goal and nine of the past 11. The game has lots of playoff implications as the teams seemed destined to meet in the first round of the playoffs. The only question seems to be who gets home ice. The Canadiens currently are second in the Atlantic Division, two points ahead of the Lightning. Whichever team finishes higher, gets home ice. Tampa Bay can also clinch a playoff spot for the first time since 2011 and only the second time since 2007. Tampa Bay must win, the Capitals must lose in regulation and the Devils have to lose in either regulation or overtime. However it happens, as defenseman Matt Carle said, "Things would have to go extremely wrong for us not to make the playoffs, so we're really honing in on how we want to play come the playoffs." One thing a team does not want to do, Carle said, is "take your foot off the gas," especially when you see what has happened to the Maple Leafs who have put themselves in precarious playoff position by losing eight straight games. "You want to be running on all cylinders at playoff time," Carle said. "You can't switch it on like a light switch. It's not something that just comes overnight. You want to be playing at playoff intensity game-in and game-out leading up to it." Which brings us back to tonight's game. "These teams know exactly where they sit and how close they are to each other," Cooper said. "There's a lot on the line tonight, and I'm fairly certain this (game) will have a little different feel than our run-of-the-mill one of 82." Other stuff from the morning skate: Scratches for Tampa Bay will be announced near game time. Certain to be out are defenseman Keith Aulie and forwards Cody Kunyk and B.J. Crombeen. Forward Tom Pyatt and defenseman Mark Barberio both said they will skate warm-ups before a decision is made if they will play. ... It would seem Barberio is a good bet to play after he played so well Sunday against the Red Wings with two prime scoring chances and three shots on goal in 14:28 of ice time. That after nine straight games as a healthy scratch. "He was jumping into play and had a couple of our best chances to score," Cooper said. "I thought he was real good breaking out pucks. It's good to have guys you can just plug in." Players getting game action after extended time off can go one of two ways. They can be rusty or rested. Barberio was the latter. "The biggest thing was to try to stay focused while i wasn't playing," he said. "Still trying to keep my intensity up in practice and keep things up-tempo and strong in the gym, so when I came back I didn't miss a step." ... Tampa Bay will get its fifth look this season at Lightning killer Thomas Vanek, who has 25 goals and 40 points in 35 games against Tampa Bay. In four games this season against the Lightning -- two while he was with the Sabres, the other two with the Islanders -- the left wing has two goals, four points. "He always seem to be around the net every time we play him," Cooper said. "He's a really dangerous player. he's really hard to push off the puck down there. The one thing you have to make Vanek and his line do is play defense, put them somewhere they are a little bit more uncomfortable to play. If they're in the zone tonight we're going to really need Ben Bishop to help us out." ... Lightning defenseman Sami Salo needs one goal to reach 100 in his career. ... Center Valtteri Filppula's 12-game points streak (five goals, 11 assists) is the league's longest active. ... The Canadiens are on an 8-1-0 streak with five straight wins overall and five straight on the road. Tampa Bay Times LOADED: 04.02.2014 732317 Tampa Bay Lightning Lightning's Mike Kostka takes big hit Damian Cristodero, Times Staff Writer Wednesday, April 2, 2014 12:35am TAMPA — Lightning D Mike Kostka apparently was a pretty frightening sight after he took a vicious hit to the head from Montreal's Douglas Murray. Kostka's neck was "contorted," teammate Alex Killorn said. "He was out cold," Lightning captain Steven Stamkos said. Kostka, who was decked with 2:13 left in the third period with what seemed a targeted hit to the head, skated off on his own after several minutes on the ice and after Stamkos helped guide a stretcher to where Kostka laid. "I don't know how he skated off," coach Jon Cooper said. The official word after the game was Kostka still was being evaluated, but he was seen walking around the Tampa Bay locker room. Murray, 6 feet 3, 240 pounds, was given a match penalty. He is eligible for supplemental discipline from the league. "That's a tough one," Cooper said. "It's a fast game. It's an instinctive game. Those are the type of things we're trying to take out of the game. I'm sure he wasn't looking to hit him in the head. Maybe he thought Mike was going to get around him. I don't know." Killorn, who confronted Murray, said Murray actually seemed "kind of concerned." "He was like, 'I don't know. I don't know,' " Killorn said. "As soon as the hit happened I was jumping over the boards," Stamkos said. "That's a scary scene." TOUGH CALL: RW Teddy Purcell's apparent goal with 11.7 seconds left in the second period was disallowed because of "incidental contact" by J.T. Brown with Montreal G Carey Price. The score was tied at 1. The call had the potential to be controversial as replays showed no contact until after the puck was past Price. But Brown was in the crease and there is a provision in Rule 69.3 that allows for goals to be disallowed if "an attacking player establishes a significant position in the crease so as to obstruct the goalkeeper's vision." "I felt a little contact but it was after the puck had gone by," Brown said. "I was just trying to get to the front of the net." Brown said the team was able to shrug off the disappointment. "It's a sign of a good team," he said. "We didn't let that affect us. We just came back out in the third and played the exact same way we did at the end of the second." PALAT HONORED: LW Ondrej Palat was named the league's rookie of the month for March. Palat, 23, who had five goals and 11 assists in 16 games and points in nine games, also was named in January. MINOR MATTERS: F Adam Erne signed a three-year deal that begins next season. He will report to AHL Syracuse for the rest of this season on an amateur tryout agreement. Erne, 18, drafted 33rd overall last summer, had 21 goals, 62 points and 65 penalty minutes in 48 games this season for Quebec of the junior Quebec league and played for the United States at the 2014 world championship. PLAYOFF TICKETS: Single-game tickets go on sale at 10 a.m. Friday. Details to come. ODDS AND ENDS: C Valtteri Filppula's 12-game points streak (five goals, 11 assists) ended. … Forwards B.J. Crombeen, Richard Panik and Cody Kunyk, and defensemen Keith Aulie and Mark Barberio were scratched. Tampa Bay Times LOADED: 04.02.2014 732318 Tampa Bay Lightning Lightning clinches playoff berth with win over Canadiens Damian Cristodero, Times Staff Writer Tuesday, April 1, 2014 11:33pm TAMPA — Coach Jon Cooper said he at first did not know what to make of the well-wishers in the hallway outside the Lightning locker room offering congratulations. Tampa Bay had just beaten the Canadiens 3-1 Tuesday night in front of an announced crowd of 18,808 at the Tampa Bay Times Forum, so he expected people to be happy. But all the congratulations? "That usually doesn't happen after a win," he said. But this win was special because with the Capitals regulation loss and Devils shootout loss, the Lightning (42-25-9) clinched a playoff spot. "I had no idea," Cooper said. "I'm excited for what's happening. It's a really cool feeling." Not only did Tampa Bay beat Montreal — its likely first-round opponent which, despite the loss, also clinched a playoff spot — one of Cooper's prized rookies, Tyler Johnson, scored the winner with a high backhand to finish a shorthanded breakaway that broke a 1-1 tie with 7:19 left in the third period. It was Johnson's 23rd goal, tying captain Steven Stamkos' franchise rookie record. Ryan Callahan's second-period, power-play goal tied the score at 1. Alex Killorn had an empty-netter and Ben Bishop made 25 saves for his 37th win. "It's awesome," Bishop said of clinching Tampa Bay's first playoff spot since 2011. "It's a goal we set at the start of the season. It's something special." "You want to win that Stanley Cup and now we have a chance. We're in the playoffs," Johnson said. "Once you're in anything can happen. We're trying to get some momentum, trying to build on it, trying to be ready for it and see where it takes us." The team's attention now turns to home-ice advantage in the first round of the playoffs. Tampa Bay likely will face Montreal as the second- and third-place teams in the Atlantic Division. Both have 93 points, though because it has played one fewer game the Lightning officially is ahead. If it can hold that spot, it will open the playoffs at the Times Forum. Johnson's goal, his fifth shorthanded which tied the league lead, was started in the defensive zone by defenseman Victor Hedman, who forced David Desharnais to give up the puck. Johnson gained the puck by lifting the stick of Thomas Vanek. He outraced Vanek and P.K. Subban. That left goalie Carey Price, who was outstanding with 30 saves. "Price didn't think I could get it to my backhand, I don't think, so he tried to over-challenge there," Johnson said. "Luckily I was able to get there and try to get it up and I was able to find a way. It was huge." "We're proud in here," Stamkos said. "It is an accomplishment but there still is a lot of hard work to be done." "It's just a wave of emotions right now," Cooper said. And a lot of congratulations. Lightning 0 1 2 3 Canadiens 1 0 0 1 First—1, Montreal, Gallagher 19 (Galchenyuk, Weaver), 10:18. Penalties—Tampa Bay bench, served by Malone (too many men), 11:19; Eller, Mon (holding), 13:43. Second—2, Tampa Bay, Callahan 17 (Palat, Hedman), 9:19 (pp). Penalties—Bouillon, Mon (tripping), 8:43; Gudas, TB (holding), 9:51; Vanek, Mon (tripping), 11:09; Filppula, TB (tripping), 16:21. Third—3, Tampa Bay, Johnson 23 (Hedman), 12:41 (sh). 4, Tampa Bay, Killorn 17 (Palat, Brown), 19:15 (en-pp). Penalties—Eller, Mon (tripping), 4:32; Markov, Mon (hooking), 6:56; Thompson, TB (boarding), 12:14; Emelin, Mon (tripping), 13:00; Emelin, Mon (slashing), 16:05; Weaver, Mon (roughing), 17:47; Murray, Mon match penalty (match), 17:47; Johnson, TB (roughing), 17:47. Shots—Montreal 10-10-6—26. Tampa Bay 10-11-12—33. Power plays—Montreal 0 of 4; Tampa Bay 2 of 9. Goalies—Montreal, Price 32-19-5 (32 shots-30 saves). Tampa Bay, Bishop 37-12-7 (26-25). A—18,808 (19,204). T—2:38. Referees—Chris Lee, Brian Pochmara. Linesmen—Brad Lazarowich, Brian Murphy. Lightning clinches playoff berth with win over Canadiens 04/01/14 [Last modified: Wednesday, April 2, 2014 1:01am] Tampa Bay Times LOADED: 04.02.2014 732319 Toronto Maple Leafs Mirtle: Ghosts of Brian Burke‘s tenure still haunt struggling Leafs JAMES MIRTLE Published Tuesday, Apr. 01 2014, 10:15 PM EDT Last updated Tuesday, Apr. 01 2014, 11:17 PM EDT Then came 2011-12, when the first so-called 18-wheeler went off the cliff, coach Ron Wilson was fired and the Leafs were finally able to benefit in some sense by drafting Morgan Rielly fifth overall. (Burke was able to see some of his handiwork there in person on Tuesday as Rielly helped create Toronto‘s second goal with a terrific foray into the offensive zone. Dave Bolland was ultimately credited with the goal after a Flames defender knocked it in.) But that late-season collapse – almost exactly two years prior to this one – was ultimately the end of Burke‘s time in Toronto. Even if his presence lives on. It was just like old times. Brian Burke, sitting in the Air Canada Centre press box, sporting a scowl, an unbuttoned top button on his shirt and watching on as the Toronto Maple Leafs took the ice. The only change? A new haircut – with the term hockey hair not quite doing the look justice – and a new team, as he is still settling in as president of hockey ops with the Calgary Flames. Montreal Canadiens forward Daniel Briere (48) and forward Rene Bourque (17) celebrate a goal against Toronto Maple Leafs goaltender James Reimer (34) and defenseman Tim Gleason (8) during the first period at the Air Canada Centre. Toronto Maple Leafs head coach Randy Carlyle, back right, shouts to his players during the third period of an NHL hockey game against the New Jersey Devils Sunday, March 23, 2014, in Newark, N.J. ―It‘s weird coming in here tonight,‖ Burke mused to Sportsnet during the first intermission. ―You do take some satisfaction about beating teams that let you go for sure.‖ That wasn‘t how it played out. Playing for their playoff lives, the Leafs pulled ahead with two goals early in the third period in what became a 3-2 win over a green Flames team, finally ending the agony of a season-killing eight-game losing streak. Along the way, they got three goals from surprising sources – including David Clarkson‘s breakaway winner that was only his fifth tally of the season – some depth scoring that has been sorely lacking all year. The win boosts their faint playoff hopes to an 8.6 per cent chance, with a pivotal meeting with the Boston Bruins looming large on Thursday. But the bigger story remained up in the executive suites. What‘s remarkable when you look back at the Burke era – which began 5 1/2 years ago with the bold proclamation that he had no patience for five-year rebuilds – is just how much it continues to haunt the Leafs. Most of the foundation of the roster is leftover from his tenure. There‘s captain Dion Phaneuf, top scorer Phil Kessel, James van Riemsdyk, Joffrey Lupul and Jake Gardiner, with all five added in high profile trades that will forever define the good of Burke‘s time with the franchise. Such as it was. In his absence, the holdover management crew led by Dave Nonis has had very mixed results in attempting to improve the roster. The biggest plus has been the play of netminder Jonathan Bernier, but the minuses are considerable, with Clarkson‘s cap-killing seven-year deal, a failure to bolster the blueline and, of course, this latest meltdown at a crucial point of the season. While some have given Nonis a free pass due to the fact he has only been in the top job a mere 15 months, there‘s a longer history involved here, too, one that matters when you dissect the mess Toronto‘s year has become. Nonis was Burke‘s right-hand man essentially the entire trying time – hired away from Anaheim in December of 2008 – and the majority of the Leafs key executive staff are in the same boat. Vice-president of hockey ops Dave Poulin arrived in the summer of 2009, and the Leafs proceeded to finish second last in the league without the benefit of a first-round pick. Assistant GM Claude Loiselle joined the next off-season, and the following year was again a trying campaign, with a 22nd place finish in large part due to continued woes in goal. Tuesday‘s game against Burke‘s Flames marked the 428th regular season outing that Nonis has been a high ranking hockey exec with the Leafs, the equivalent of more than five 82-game seasons. In that time, they‘ve won just 190 times – or 36 per 82 games – and been the equivalent of an 83-point team in a league where 92 is the average. How you apportion blame for what‘s gone on over those years – including the Leafs playoff hopes once again being on life support, even after Tuesday‘s win – is up for debate, but what‘s noteworthy is just how involved Nonis was in high level decisions even back when Burke was in charge. Several outside executives have noted, for one, that late in Burke‘s tenure Nonis was the de facto GM, dealing with contract negotiations and acting as an influential counterbalance to his mentor‘s more impulsive decision making. What‘s clear, too, is that both men view the game in a similar way. Like Burke, Nonis emphasizes size and toughness in his teams, and even went so far as to tailor his roster in the off-season to a likeminded coach in Randy Carlyle, a Burke hire whose head now sits on the firing line. So while Burke may be long gone, off on another adventure, the Leafs mantra certainly appears largely unchanged, even in the face of all those losses over the years. Nonis, Poulin and Loiselle have carried on a similar vision and it‘s produced similar results, at least in the wake of last year‘s successful half-season, with the roster that had been set when Burke was still involved. In light of that, the biggest question facing new ownership is if this season is simply another chapter in a never-ending rebuild – one about to hit Year 6 with some familiar faces in charge – or something different altogether. It‘s not a pleasant one. Globe And Mail LOADED: 04.02.2014 732320 Toronto Maple Leafs Desperate Leafs edge Flames to snap eight game losing streak But there was still some luck left over from the Bolland goal since Phaneuf managed to wait until there were just three seconds left before he took a bad cross-checking penalty in front of the Leaf net and then talked his way into an additional minor for unsportsmanlike conduct, a 10-minute misconduct and a game misconduct. Globe And Mail LOADED: 04.02.2014 DAVID SHOALTS Published Tuesday, Apr. 01 2014, 9:51 PM EDT Last updated Wednesday, Apr. 02 2014, 12:04 AM EDT There were some positives the Toronto Maple Leafs could take out of Tuesday‘s 3-2 win over the Calgary Flames that broke their eight-game losing streak. Secondary scoring, long one of this team‘s problems, finally showed up. Jay McClement, Dave Bolland and David Clarkson – yes, you read that right, David Clarkson – were the Leaf goal-scorers. Clarkson even provided the winning goal on breakaway, his fifth of the season, coming in at a little more than $1-million per, based on his contract. The defensive game was a little better, as the Flames were limited to 24 shots, practically none by Leaf standards, while the Leafs took 22. Hey, you didn‘t think they would actually outshoot someone did you? And the luck that deserted them since the Olympic break returned, at least for one night. Bolland‘s goal came on a shot almost from behind the net that hit Calgary defenceman T.J. Brodie and bounced in to put the Leafs ahead for good. But, and there is always a but with this team, questions remain with the Leafs, as their chances of making the NHL playoffs are still almost nil. The biggest problem was the Flames game itself. For a group of players supposedly playing for their playoff lives the Leafs showed little passion and were fortunate the opposition was one of the NHL‘s worst teams. In a game that was boring enough to make your eyes bleed, the Leafs still looked like a team playing not to lose rather than one going full out for the win. A couple of the players and head coach Randy Carlyle admitted as much while talking about how great it was to finally stop the string of regulation-time losses. ―You hope you can build on it,‖ Carlyle said. ―But I don‘t want to get too far ahead of ourselves because we didn‘t paint a Mona Lisa tonight.‖ No they didn‘t, not by a longshot. The building must happen, though, as the next opponent is the Boston Bruins on Thursday night. They look nothing like the team of a year ago, the one that stumbled through the last part of the 2012-13 regular season then almost let the Leafs push them out of the playoffs before righting themselves and running to the Stanley Cup final. This year‘s edition of the Bruins is a ruthlessly efficient machine, cruising toward first place overall with a 9-0-1 record in their last 10 games. And they are not relaxing even though the Atlantic Division title is clinched and the Eastern Conference title is pretty much certain. ―We use it for support right now,‖ Leafs captain Dion Phaneuf said of the win and then admitted, ―there‘s still a lot of work to be done. We can‘t sit back and say ‗Whew.‘‖ There are still too many signs the will and the confidence of this team remain fragile. The Leafs do not look like a team that has everyone pulling together and they have a long way to go to inspire any confidence. Carlyle said that is still obvious when you see players do certain things even when the game has gone their way and is finally winding down. ―We need people to step up and we need people to shake the cobwebs or the doldrums which we‘ve been in and get ourselves going,‖ the coach said. ―You see the things like [forward] Mason Raymond ice the puck when nobody‘s around him. He‘s trying so hard not to be the guy who‘s going to turn the puck over. ―Those are the signals you‘ve got to maybe breathe a little bit deeper and try and [remain] calm.‖ In the last minute of the third period, the Leafs were hardly the picture of efficiency after the Flames pulled their goaltender for an extra skater. The familiar running around in their own end ensued, as did the questionable judgment. 732321 Toronto Maple Leafs Flames looking to snuff out Leafs‘ faint playoff hopes JAMES MIRTLE Published Tuesday, Apr. 01 2014, 2:09 PM EDT Last updated Tuesday, Apr. 01 2014, 6:19 PM EDT The Toronto Maple Leafs playoff chances are just 4.6 per cent right now, as they need to basically win out (or go 5-0-1) to have a reasonable shot at the postseason. But the Calgary Flames would like nothing more than to drop those numbers to almost nothing. That‘s what on the line Tuesday at the Air Canada Centre, with the plucky Flames playing for pride and the downtrodden Leafs battling for their playoff lives. Montreal Canadiens forward Daniel Briere (48) and forward Rene Bourque (17) celebrate a goal against Toronto Maple Leafs goaltender James Reimer (34) and defenseman Tim Gleason (8) during the first period at the Air Canada Centre. Toronto Maple Leafs head coach Randy Carlyle, back right, shouts to his players during the third period of an NHL hockey game against the New Jersey Devils Sunday, March 23, 2014, in Newark, N.J. While Toronto has lost eight games in regulation in a row, Calgary has been playing spoiler, going 9-7-0 in March and beating Anaheim, Dallas, San Jose and the New York Rangers in the process. Former Leafs prospect Joe Colborne said the Flames coaching staff has put the pressure on the young team to approach this stretch as their postseason, breaking down the games into seven game series and pushing them to treat the remainder of their season as must-win games. With only seven games left, Calgary is almost definitely going to finish in the bottom five, but little was expected of them entering the year. ―I‘m not going to say anything inflammatory before the game,‖ said Colborne, who is third on the Flames in scoring during that stretch with 11 points in 16 games. ―But any guy who comes back and plays his past team wants to have a good game. We‘ve got a guy playing his first NHL game tonight (Bryce Van Brabant) and a lot of guys with family in the stands so it‘ll be a special game regardless. ―We‘ve been pretending we‘re in series as we go. The more teams that we can beat and make it harder for them the better. That‘s the only way we‘re going to get as close as possible to the playoff atmosphere.‖ Another former Leaf, Matt Stajan, said he could sympathize with what Toronto is going through, but that they shouldn‘t expect any mercy from a team 11 points below them in the standings. ―They‘re going to be a hungry team tonight and they‘re probably trying everything they can to get out of it. We know the situation they‘re in,‖ Stajan said. ―We want to come in and knock them down again.‖ The best hope for the Leafs at this point is that they win a lot of their games and the two teams they‘re fighting with, Columbus and Washington, go into a funk to end the year. Sportsclubstats.com gives Toronto only a 77 per cent chance of making the postseason if they run the table and win six straight, and those odds drop to just 29 per cent if they finish the year 5-1-0. Even finishing with 89 points gives the Leafs a small chance of making it with some help (roughly 11 per cent). Adding to the game‘s intrigue is the fact that former Leafs GM Brian Burke, now the president of hockey operations for the Flames, will be in the visitors executive box for the first time since being let go at the start of the 2012-13 season. And if anyone knows what Toronto‘s going through right now, it‘s Burke. Globe And Mail LOADED: 04.02.2014 732322 Toronto Maple Leafs Kessel has bruised foot but is expected to play against Flames DAVID SHOALTS Published Tuesday, Apr. 01 2014, 12:26 PM EDT Last updated Tuesday, Apr. 01 2014, 2:12 PM EDT The bruised right foot Phil Kessel suffered when a pass from linemate James van Riemsdyk bounced off him last Saturday is not expected to keep him out of Tuesday‘s game against the Calgary Flames. While Kessel did not take part in the Leafs‘ one practice since Saturday and also skipped Tuesday‘s optional game-day skate, Leafs head coach Randy Carlyle said the right winger told him he ―is available‖ to play against the Flames. Also missing from the skate were goaltender Jonathan Bernier, defenceman Dion Phaneuf and forwards Mason Raymond, Nikolai Kulemin, Tyler Bozak and Dave Bolland. All of them are expected to play as well. Bernier will start his fourth consecutive game as the Leafs face the difficult task of breaking their eight-game losing streak and winning all of their last six regular-season games to have any chance of making the playoffs. "Our spirits are up, our morale is up,‖ Phaneuf said. ―That's the way you have to conduct business." Carlyle was asked if the Leafs‘ playoff chances are realistic and said they are ―realistic if you win." The best way to do that, he added, is ―don't look past tonight." The coach said lineup changes are possible but there really isn‘t anything major Carlyle can do with his lineup. Unless you consider Colton Orr and Paul Ranger moving into the fourth line and third defence pair, respectively, major changes. Globe And Mail LOADED: 04.02.2014 732323 Toronto Maple Leafs Clarkson, Bolland, McClement in Leaf penthouse, Raymond in doghouse By: Kevin McGran Sports Reporter, Published on Wed Apr 02 2014 The Maple Leafs won. In very rare fashion. David Clarkson, Dave Bolland and Jay McClement were your goal scorers in a 3-2 victory over the Flames Tuesday night. And they are each in the penthouse. Mason Raymond, only because he‘s such a shining example of how things can go badly in one shift, is in the doghouse. PENTHOUSE Clarkson, welcome to the penthouse. Haven‘t seen you here as much as you might have thought. But that breakaway goal — the one that stood up as the game-winner — was pretty sweet. ―It‘s no secret it‘s been tough,‖ said Clarkson. ―Personally I‘m not happy with my season. I hold myself accountable. The big things is, we‘ve got five games here. We‘ve got to play hard every night.‖ Bolland‘s goal, early in the third, was kicked in by a Flames defenceman. ―He finds a way to get on the scoresheet and score important goals,‖ said Leafs coach Randy Carlyle. ―I don‘t know how he scored the goal tonight. The puck was in the corner and somehow, whatever, he swept the puck across the goal crease and it hit somebody‘s foot, went in the net. All of the goals he scores . . . are from 10 or 15 feet.‖ And McClement not only scored the opening goal, but he played more than 18 minutes, much of it in the third, as the Leafs finally held on to a lead. DOGHOUSE We‘re sorry to pick on Raymond, who played well for the most part. But when the game was on the line, and the Flames were pressing, and it‘s the final minute, and you‘ve got the puck just shy of the red line, you are not supposed to ice it. But Raymond did. It was a symptom, according to Carlyle, of losing confidence due to that eight-game losing streak. ―When you see the thing like Mason Raymond (icing) the puck with nobody around him, he is trying so hard not to be the guy that‘s going to turn the puck over,‖ said Carlyle. ―That‘s (when) you recognize how really tense they are. Any other day he knows the red line is there. ―He was maybe two feet away from it and he iced the puck. Those are the signals that you‘ve got to breathe a little bit deeper, try to get calm.‖ Toronto Star LOADED: 04.02.2014 732324 Toronto Maple Leafs seemed very dangerous, at least until Byron put a hard pass into the skates of Mike Cammalleri, and the Flames lost possession. David Clarkson rescues Leafs vs. Flames: Cox Against a better team, a more skilful team, that turnover would at least have meant a significant scoring chance. Maybe a goal. By: Damien Cox Sports Columnist, Published on Tue Apr 01 2014 But not against the Flames. Still, the visitors did press to the end, and misfortune seemed poised to frown on the Leafs again when, with 50 seconds left in regulation, Tyler Bozak took dead aim at an abandoned Calgary net and hit the right post from 100 feet. It was more anxiousness than anticipation. After a season in which all that could go wrong for David Clarkson had gone wrong, what malady or mishap would stop him this time? A trap door under the ice? A stick snapping in two? The lights suddenly going out at the ACC? An undone skate lace to trip him up? A quick double check — was he even going the right way? In the sixth minute of the third period on Tuesday night, the hard-luck Leaf forward found himself alone and clear from the red line, about as roomy and comfortable a breakaway as one can imagine. Almost a penalty shot. Easy, right? Not in this season. Nothing has been easy for Clarkson after it seemed last July his decision to come back to his hometown was a perfect match between his type of grinding, hard-nosed hockey and the team he had cheered for as a boy growing up in the west end. Four goals in 54 games prior to this contest against the Calgary Flames had of course, left Clarkson exposed to the bitter whims of public opinion after signing a seven-year free-agent contract with the club last summer. Some had decided he was already a bust. It was hard to argue. So many times during the season had he appeared poised to get his game in gear, and every time he had fallen back into the same mysterious state of groggy inertia. Suddenly, with the Leafs leading Calgary 2-1 in a game the home team had to have, here was a chance for Clarkson to make something very positive happen and possibly help end the franchise‘s worst losing streak in almost three decades. He skated in without a Calgary player anywhere nearby to bother him. He stared down goalie Karri Ramo, made a move to his forehand, and Ramo flopped forward, seemingly fooled by the move of a player who hadn‘t fooled any goalies this season. When the puck slid under Ramo, there seemed to be a brief pause, a moment of disbelief. Then the explosion of noise. Clarkson himself didn‘t over-react. He hardly reacted at all. Act like you‘ve been there before, right? That turned out to be the winning tally in a 3-2 Leaf victory, two words that haven‘t been written in sequence for weeks. After eight consecutive losses in regulation, the blue and white stopped the bleeding against the 26th-best team in the league, albeit a Flames team that has been giving many clubs fits over the past two months. The Leafs were solid, nothing more, but solid was a massive improvement after an octuplet of games in which they played one disastrous first period after another, or had been foiled by bad goaltending, or had fallen prey to one costly on-ice decision or another. On this night, goals came not only from Clarkson but from Jay McClement and David Bolland, allowing the top line of Phil Kessel, Tyler Bozak and James van Riemsdyk to experience victory without having to play starring roles. Jonathan Bernier likewise didn‘t have to channel his inner Turk Broda and steal another win, although he came up with some important stops in the final five minutes of play and made 22 saves in all. Instead, the Leafs delivered a competent checking effort, one in which they weren‘t trapped in their own end for sequence after sequence. The Flames don‘t have the offensive weapons to scare anyone, and so it really was a bit of a breather for the Leafs after a long series of challenging games. Case in point: with just over two minutes left, Paul Byron picked off a poorly executed exit pass from Carl Gunnarsson high in the Leaf zone. The play With 20 seconds left, defenceman Kris Russell, who had scored the second Flames goal, closed in from the left faceoff circle with a Grade A scoring chance. And shot wide. The win, of course, didn‘t save Toronto‘s season. But it kept them more than mathematically alive, and allowed them to pass faltering Washington and move one point out of wild card spot in the Eastern Conference. The team the Leafs are now chasing, Columbus, lost in overtime to Colorado, but collected a point to stay one point ahead with two games in hand. The Leafs have five games left, while the Blue Jackets started a tough stretch on Tuesday night in which they‘ll play eight games in 12 days, including three back-to-back scenarios. So we‘ll see. The eight-game slide did horrific damage to the Leaf playoff chances, and Randy Carlyle‘s club still requires at least four wins and a lot of help to gain an invitation to the post-season dance. Perhaps this was a turning point. Perhaps signs of life from Clarkson will prove meaningful. Perhaps that breakaway, that goal, was some kind of new beginning after dark forecasts in recent days that the end was near. Toronto Star LOADED: 04.02.2014 732325 Toronto Maple Leafs Leafs finally get some good luck in streak-ending win over Flames By: Kevin McGran Sports Reporter, Published on Tue Apr 01 2014 Of all his injured players this season, Randy Carlyle may have missed Dave Bolland most of all. Bolland has a knack for scoring big goals and of being in the right place at the right time on defence. Bolland scored the third-period go-ahead goal in the Leafs‘ 3-2 win over Calgary on Tuesday night, a win that ended an eight-game losing streak and got a few would-be bandwagon jumpers to hold to their seats for another game. It was a weird goal — kicked in by Flames defenceman T.J. Brodie, after Bolland simply swept the puck from the corner toward the crease. It was just the kind of bounce that had been going the other way on the Leafs during the lengthy slide that dropped them from a playoff spot. ―Any time you get a bounce like that, you‘ll take it,‖ said Leafs captain Dion Phaneuf. ―We needed it, we got it and now we move forward.‖ Leafs goalie Jonathan Bernier has been on for too many own-goals to bother counting. ―That was a nice bounce and sometimes that‘s what you need to switch things over,‖ said Bernier The Maple Leafs got some scoring from some unlikely sources — Jay McClement and David Clarkson also found the net — in what the team hopes is a turnaround game. ―It has been a long time,‖ said Carlyle. ―It has been too long. Obviously, it‘s a so much better feeling than what we‘ve been able to enjoy over the last little while. ―Now you can build on it. But I don‘t want to get too far ahead of ourselves, because we didn‘t paint the Mona Lisa here tonight.‖ If you believe that history can foretell the future, then you can believe that the Maple Leafs can make the playoffs. Ah, but the Leafs have to run the table, you say, and finish with a six-game winning streak — and they have the Bruins to face on Thursday night. Well, the Leafs have already won six in a row once this year. And they beat the Bruins in the second game of that six-gamer after beating New Jersey 3-2 — the same score by which they defeated Calgary — to get the streak going. ―We know we are going to face a Boston team,‖ said Carlyle. ―But we should feel good about ourselves because we‘ve had a lot of things that have been negative for us. So let‘s enjoy the win and let‘s get ourselves ready to play a real tough opponent in the Boston Bruins.‖ In addition to winning games, however, the Leafs have a bit of scoreboard watching to do between now and the end of the season. The Leafs moved into ninth, a point up on the Washington Capitals, who lost Tuesday night. ―We are definitely aware of where we are, and we are aware of the scores, and what else is going on around you,‖ said Phaneuf. ―You don‘t want to be in the position is that you are scoreboard watching, but that is the position that we are in. ―We accept that, and any time you get help around the league you take it.‖ If there is a theme that has built up around this team — beyond an ability to hold the lead — it is that a former Leaf will always inflict damage. Alex Steen, Clarke MacArthur, John-Michael Liles, Mike Brown, Dominic Moore and Mike Kostka are among those who‘ve scored against their former team this year. Add Matt Stajan‘s name to that list. His goal on a breakaway late in the second tied the game. ―I think it‘s difficult to play anywhere if you lose seven or eight in a row,‖ said Stajan. ―Obviously the media, everyone talks about that, but the same thing happens in any Canadian city. These guys play here all year, we play in Calgary all year — you‘ve got to adjust to that. They dug down and got a win tonight, we weren‘t good enough. We move on, they move on.‖ Toronto Star LOADED: 04.02.2014 732326 Toronto Maple Leafs LeafsBeat: Time to start looking at Maple Leafs prospects By: Kevin McGran Sports Reporter, Published on Tue Apr 01 2014 defenceman Zach Trotman (210th) — has played two games for the Boston Bruins. Ross has yet to find his footing as a pro. ―Brad Ross has had a couple of years now and has really struggled to find his place,‖ says Poulin. ―We continue to work with him. He‘s had a couple of different coaches. Sometimes a coach doesn‘t have a feel for a player.‖ McKegg, picked 62nd, is earning raves as a leader and scorer in his first year in the AHL. Kevin McGran‘s LeafsBeat appears every Tuesday by noon: It says one of two things about the Maple Leafs that Morgan Rielly, the first-round pick in 2012, has played more NHL games than the other 26 players drafted by the team since 2010. Combined. It either says the Leafs have swung and missed big-time on a lot of players, or that the Leafs are now taking a very — unfamiliar for this franchise — patient approach to player development. ―It is the latter, not the former,‖ says Leafs assistant GM Dave Poulin, who is also GM of the Toronto Marlies. ―We haven‘t exactly been picking fifth overall too often. ―We are trying to do it slowly and methodically, and let players grow at their own rate.‖ The 2010 crop — and keeping in mind that their top choice was 43rd overall (Brad Ross) — has so far produced one game (from Greg McKegg). The 2011 crop — the one featuring Tyler Biggs and Stuart Percy, two late first-rounders — has produced 12 games (seven from Josh Leivo, five from David Broll). The 2012 crop has Rielly at the top of the class. The 2013 crop features first-round pick Frederik Gauthier, but so far — and understandably so — none has made the NHL. The Leaf mantra on each of them: patience. ―It‘s not a set time frame for how long it takes,‖ says Poulin. So as the Leafs cross into the abyss of being one of the 14 non-playoff teams, fans will look to this year‘s draft and the team‘s current crop of prospects for hope. If the biggest need is defence, three Marlies stand out: Percy, Petter Granberg and Andrew MacWilliam. The interesting thing here is the route the three have taken to arrive at the same spot. Percy (2011, first round) came up through major junior, the traditional route , and was a first-round pick who made his AHL debut at age 20. Granberg (2010, fourth round) is a Swede the Leafs chose to leave in Europe. Sweden has a pretty good record in developing defencemen. MacWilliam was a late-round pick (2008, seventh round) bound for the NCAA. Changes to the collective agreement introduced in 2005 have meant that NHL teams can hold on to the rights of players who go to the NCAA for as long as the player stays in school. That‘s why you see so many late-round picks bound for U.S colleges. It‘s up to four years of free development. MacWilliam took all four years and could morph into that stay-at-home, big-hitting defenceman so many teams covet. (Under the new CBA created last year, NHL teams will retain rights to European players for four years as well, up from two. Teams continue to hold the rights of players drafted out of major junior for up to two years.) Looking back: 2010 The 2010 draft had a lot of high-end talent, starting with Taylor Hall and Tyler Seguin. Players from every round are in the NHL. The L.A. Kings think they have something big in Tyler Toffoli, chosen 47th, four spots after the Leafs took Ross. The Leafs actually traded up to get Ross, a Darcy Tucker-type rat of a player in the Western Hockey League. The Lightning have defenceman Radko Gudas, taken 66th, four spots after the Leafs took McKegg. The Leafs drafted twice late in round five (Sam Carrick 144th, Daniel Brodin 146th) and Montreal grabbed Brendan Gallagher (147th), the gem of the late-rounders. The last pick overall — ―A real capable centreman for the organization,‖ says Marlies coach Spott. ―He can play in the top two lines or the bottom two lines. He competes hard every night. His skating has come along. We know what he can do offensively. He‘s had a real nice year for he organization.‖ Looking back: 2011 The 2011 draft, led by Ryan Nugent-Hopkins to the Edmonton Oilers, is looking a bit iffy for the Leafs. Players from all seven rounds have seen NHL action. So far, 20 of the 30 first-rounders have made it, but two that haven‘t are Leafs: Biggs and Percy. Picking 43rd, the Blackhawks took Brandon Saad, a rookie-of-the-year candidate last year. And with the fourth-last pick, 207th, the Lightning took forward Ondrej Palat, on course for a 20-goal season. While Percy receives accolades these days as a Carl Gunnarsson-type, Biggs has yet to make an impact in the AHL. Part of Biggs‘ problem was his own personal indecision. He went to college, then quit to join major junior. ‗When he goes to major junior, maybe he‘s thinking he made a mistake and should be in college,‖ says Poulin. ―This in a sense is the first year he‘s been in a place, knows he is where he should be, knows there is no indecision where he‘s going. ―It‘s all about being a hockey player. He‘s a 20-year-old. (The AHL) is a tough league for a 20-year-old. He‘s got to find his game, his place, his niche. We believe he has the tools to do that.‖ Biggs has seven goals and two assists in 53 games with the Marlies this season. Percy struggled as his major junior career came to an end, but found himself again and has a pretty good season with the Marlies, with two goals and 20 assists from the blue line. ―He‘s got a low threshold to panic,‖ says Spott. ―He moves puck well. He‘ll be able to play with an offensive defenceman because he‘s so safe and reliable.‖ The real find for the Leafs might be their third pick, Josh Leivo, taken 86th overall, who has morphed into a gifted scorer even if he‘s not all the way there yet as a power forward. He has 18 goals and 18 assists with the Marlies this year. ―You watch Joffrey Lupul — that‘s what we project,‖ says Spott. ―Big strong power forward good hands. Protects the puck extremely well. He‘ll see a lot of Lupul clips for a while. Our job is to get him to be one of those top nine forwards.‖ Looking back: 2012 It is certainly too early to draw any conclusions (Nail Yakupov was first overall). The Leafs have to be pleased as punch about Rielly, taken fifth in 2012, especially since the guy who went fourth — Griffin Reinhart — has yet to play in the NHL. No one can complain about Rielly, who looks as if he has all the tools to be a dominating offensive defenceman. He‘ll have to escape the pitfalls that will come next year — the sophomore jinx. Both Luke Schenn and Jake Gardiner went through that to a degree after showing promise as rookies. Gardiner, only lately, looks as if he‘s returning to form. Rielly‘s play alone could make the 2012 draft a winner, but there‘s another player on the horizon: Connor Brown, chosen 156th overall. Brown led the OHL in scoring this year with 45 goals, 83 assists for 128 points and just 22 penalty minutes. He led the powerhouse Erie Otters, playing on a wing with Connor McDavid, the can‘t-miss prospect who just turned 17. The Otters are in the second round of the OHL playoffs. Some will say Brown‘s success came from McDavid. Others will say McDavid‘s growth came from Brown. Listed generously on the OHL website as five-foot-11, 170 pounds, Brown is undersized. But Otters GM Sherry Bassin points out undersized players with big hearts, like Brown, have gone on to be bigger and better in the NHL. ―He‘s extremely dedicated and a real good leader for us,‖ says Bassin. ―They have to be patient with him. If they‘re patient with them he‘s going to play with them in time. ―He still has to get stronger for that level. He knows it. He‘ll dedicate himself over the summer to get stronger. He‘s extremely good with the puck. He sees the ice. He‘s got really good instincts. He‘s not afraid to take the hit to make the play. He‘s a rat.‖ Looking back: 2013 It‘s also too early to draw conclusions about the 2013 draft, where Nathan MacKinnon went first overall. The Leafs‘ first pick, 21st overall, was Frederik Gauthier of the Rimouski Oceanic. He‘s intriguing because of his size (six-foot-four). His goal this year was to add offence to his perfectly sound defensive game. His 52 points in 54 games this year — he missed a bunch when he was named to Team Canada‘s world junior entry — was about the same pace as his draft year (62 points, 64 games). He turns 19 this month. Another player to keep your eye on is Carter Verhaeghe, a six-foot-one centre taken 82nd overall last summer. He placed 21st in OHL scoring with 28 goals and 54 assists. His Niagara IceDogs played Game 7 of their OHL Eastern Conference quarter-final Tuesday night in North Bay. Other prospects The Leafs know there is more to building a team than drafting — free agency and trades. That‘s why they‘re particularly happy with Spencer Abbott, T.J. Brennan and Brandon Kozun, the top three scorers on the Marlies this year, each of whom should have a chance to make the NHL. Abbott is a classic late-bloomer, signed in 2012 out of the University of Maine. At 25, he‘s leading the Marlies with 17 goals and 52 assists. ―He‘s one of those players that makes other people better that are around him,‖ says Spott. ―He‘s played in different situations with different players because there‘s been a lot of movement. One thing he‘s done is stayed consistent offensively all year.‖ Brennan, 24, is a much talked about defenceman with a big slapshot that has helped him to a Marlies-leading 22 goals along with 41 assists. ―He‘s proven he can play a complete game,‖ Spott says of Brennan. ―Any time anyone has talked about T.J., it‘s whether or not he can be reliable defensively. He‘s bought in this year. He‘s played hard. He plays physical. He has a compete level that is extremely high and he wants to win. Offensively we know what he can do. Defensively, he‘s come leaps and bounds. He deserves a lot of credit.‖ Kozun, a 24-year-old acquired by trade, is undersized at five-foot-eight but can score with 17 goals and 28 assists. ―Great speed. Had him on a world junior team. Breakaway speed,‖ says Spott. ―Plays bigger than his size. When you look at a Gallagher out there for Montreal, he brings that element of physicality. He can be a pest, but he can really play and score. A real nice acquisition.‖ Around the League BRODEUR‘S FUTURE: Who knows what‘s going to happen with James Reimer, who has fallen on hard times and is out of favour with Leafs coach Randy Carlyle. One thing is certain: GM Dave Nonis wants two capable goalies, not just Jonathan Bernier and any old backup. But how about Martin Brodeur? Sure, he‘d be old. But more than a backup. Brodeur is committed to testing the market as an unrestricted free agent on July 1, says the Newark Star-Ledger. He is ―80 per cent sure‖ he‘ll play next season and he hasn‘t ruled out staying with the Devils. ―I‘m not closing (the door) here at all,‖ said Brodeur. ―It will be a decision I‘ll make after offers are brought to me. It might be July 1st or it might be way after July 1st. ―It all depends on what is on the table, whether it‘s in New Jersey or somewhere else. I‘m open-minded about it. I‘m looking for specific things some teams probably can‘t give me. And that‘s understandable at my age. But if I feel I can play and people want me, we‘ll see.‖ LEAFS ATTENDANCE: When the Leafs lost to Detroit on Saturday to extend their losing streak to eight consecutive games (all losses in regulation time), attendance figures for that game showed 20,270, an all-time attendance high for the Air Canada Centre. That‘s a whopping 107.8 per cent of capacity (regular capacity for hockey is listed at 18,819, and 19,789 with standing room). In fact, the club attracted 19,789 for its home game the previous Saturday vs Montreal. The Leafs are actually reaching out to their fan base, opening up more single game tickets and more seats in private suites to accommodate the interest. JAGR RAZZES ZAJAC: Jaromir Jagr got on teammate Travis Zajac for needing three periods to get a hat trick on Monday night. After scoring twice, Zajac shot wide on two great chances in the first period for his third goal. ―He could have had a hat trick in first 10 minutes if he paid attention to the puck,‖ Jagr said. ―He shouldn‘t have to wait until the third period. He could have celebrated after 10 minutes. But he likes the hard way, I guess.‖ Dot Dot Dot Coach Mike Babcock got win No. 411 in his career with the Red Wings, moving him past Scotty Bowman. And Babcock could conceivably pass Jack Adams for No. 1 on the list this week. Adams heads the list with 413. … Jarome Iginla has tallied at least 30 goals 12 times during his 17-season NHL career and is tied with Guy Lafleur for 24th on the all-time goals list with 560. ... Ryan Johansen is the third player in Columbus Blue Jackets history to reach the 30-goal plateau, joining Rick Nash (seven times) and Geoff Sanderson (two times), and at the age of 21, Johansen is the youngest player in the NHL with at least 30 goals this season. ... Detroit‘s Gustav Nyquist leads the NHL with 21 goals since Jan. 20 (26 games). Toronto Star LOADED: 04.02.2014 732327 Toronto Maple Leafs If the Maple Leafs fire Randy Carlyle, is it the right thing to do? By Steve Simmons,Toronto Sun First posted: Tuesday, April 01, 2014 10:09 PM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, April 01, 2014 10:25 PM EDT The easy thing to do is fire Randy Carlyle. It‘s expedient. It‘s convenient. It provides Maple Leafs fans with the pound of flesh they are already clamouring for and will be demanding at the end of this disastrous run. But is it the right thing to do? There has been, for so much of this NHL season, a disconnect between Carlyle and his hockey club. That much is apparent. The game plan he preaches loudly isn‘t being followed. The template he talks about regularly is a nicely printed piece of paper, but rarely translates to the Maple Leafs‘ ways. The details he has taken so much pride in over his successful career have gone missing. Carlyle likes physical, defensive, cycling hockey, which is nice, except the Leafs aren‘t physical, don‘t play a lot of defence, and rarely cycle the puck. And make no mistake, he is hard on his players. Daily. Even if it doesn‘t look that way. And this much seems obvious now: Either Carlyle is the wrong coach for this team or this collection of players is wrong for this style of coach. And the more he has asked of his team down the stretch — and Carlyle and assistants Dave Farrish, Greg Cronin and Scott Gordon are all considered similarly demanding — the more the Leafs have seemingly tightened up or tuned out. It‘s also not out of the question that GM Dave Nonis will retain Carlyle, but not necessarily the rest of his staff. That‘s done in the NFL and Major League Baseball all the time. You keep the head man and alter the staff. But the main question remains: Does Nonis fire Carlyle — and, maybe more important than that, who takes his place? This isn‘t like most hockey seasons. There isn‘t that obvious list of the next available NHL coach. Ask five senior hockey people for their opinion of who they would hire if they had a coach opening and you are apt to get, as I did, five different answers — none of them sexy. Two did mention John Stevens in Los Angeles for the job, which is hardly exciting. Had this been a year ago, Toronto hockey fans would have been all over Dallas Eakins as the man to replace Carlyle. He was like the backup quarterback in most NFL towns: The most popular guy around. And even when the Leafs hired Carlyle to replace the suddenly chatty Ron Wilson, they seriously considered Eakins for the position. The difference, explained at the time by Brian Burke, was that Carlyle had more NHL experience, had a Stanley Cup on his resume, and was better-suited for the job. Eakins now fights for his own coaching life and his reputation in Edmonton and the former Toronto love affair is but a memory. There is no natural heir apparent for the Leafs job, if in fact there is a Leafs job available. The challenge for Nonis is complex: What does he make of his coach now? How much of this collapse does he attribute to coaching? What does he make of his roster? And how does he make sense of it all going forward? His regular line about Carlyle — that the coach hasn‘t gotten dumb overnight — is now somewhat meaningless. What means something is that Carlyle and his roster, comfortably in a playoff spot 17 days ago, stopped playing, stopped winning, stopped looking anything close to organized as the games became more meaningful. As Lou Lamoriello has said on many occasions, coaches have a shelf life. What Nonis needs to determine is this: Has Carlyle reached his best-before date? Can he get this team to play his game, not their game? And if he can‘t, how much can Nonis alter the roster next year so that Carlyle can play the game he envisions and have the Leafs be successful at it? It is very possible that at least five NHL teams, maybe more, will be looking for coaches in the off-season. It wouldn‘t surprise anyone to see Kirk Muller gone in Carolina, John Tortorella in Vancouver, Jack Capuano on the Island, Barry Trotz in Nashville, and possible coaching changes made in Winnipeg or Minnesota. In other words, there will be too many jobs open and not enough quality candidates to fill them all. Maybe Trotz will land somewhere else. Maybe Peter Laviolette will return. But there doesn‘t seem to be any Jon Coopers or Patrick Roys available, ready to alter their teams — at least, that‘s what league executives are saying. Before committing back to Carlyle, the eternally patient Nonis would have to believe the coach can fix the dreadful penalty killing (second-best last year, third-worst this year). He would need to believe that Carlyle can find a way to fix the Leafs‘ inability to play in the neutral zone, understand their defensive coverages, stop turning the puck over in bad places. There are a lot of issues with this team. Their losing streak has not been all circumstantial. If Leafs management believes that, they are soft-pedalling the problems. These Leafs need an identity, more leadership, more grit, more comprehension of what it takes to be successful, more desperation. But do they need a new coach? The losing streak is over, but don‘t expect Dave Nonis to say anything about his coach until the season ends. It‘s an enormous decision — maybe his most important since taking over from Burke. His natural instinct is to keep Carlyle in place. He likes stability. But these aren‘t natural times anymore. The decision, either way, is more convenient than it is easy. Toronto Sun LOADED: 04.02.2014 732328 Toronto Maple Leafs ―I played with him twice for team Canada (juniors),‖ Rielly said. ―We‘re close buddies and stuff. He‘s had a great year, he‘s a great player and I‘m quite happy for him that he‘s playing well.‖ Maple Leafs not getting caught up in outside chatter The other player to score 20 in his rookie season for the Flames? Jarome Iginla, of course, in 1996-97. By Dave Hilson,Toronto Sun KIDDY CORPS First posted: Tuesday, April 01, 2014 06:39 PM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, April 01, 2014 06:47 PM EDT Collegiate player Bryce Van Brabant was making his NHL debut for the Flames last night. The team signed the Alberta native to a two-year entry-level contract on Saturday. Toronto is a tough city to be a player in when things aren‘t going well. And heading into Tuesday night‘s game against the Calgary Flames, things really weren‘t going well for the Maple Leafs, who had lost eight consecutive games in regulation and were on the outside looking in at the playoff picture. ―There‘s no sense signing kids if our management, if our scouting staff feel that those guys don‘t have NHL potential,‖ Hartley said. ―The best way (for them to grow) is to put them in game action … It was his boyhood dream to play in the NHL, and here he is in Toronto one of the biggest stages in the NHL. It‘s going to be lots of fun. I want him to notice the difference between the NHL and where he was and keep growing until the end of the season.‖ ―Playing here in Toronto, there are people who aren‘t afraid to have a chat with you when you‘re at the mall or something (and let you know how they feel),‖ young defenceman Morgan Rielly said after the Leafs‘ optional gameday skate. ―So you just have to learn to deal with that and not let it worry you too much … They‘re not in our team meetings and they‘re not on our team and they don‘t know everything that is going on.‖ Players do what they can to relax and keep their minds off the losing streak. For Jake Gardiner, that meant catching the new film, Noah. But for the Leafs themselves it must feel more like Groundhog Day, with the team losing over and over and the same questions being asked again and again. ―Yeah, that‘s what it has seemed like for the past couple of weeks,‖ said Gardiner, who, along with his teammates, was facing another must-win situation against the Flames. ―There‘s not much more we can really say about it. Obviously we want to win, we‘re trying our best.‖ Forward Jay McClement says it‘s difficult to avoid all the hockey chatter that goes on in this city. ―It‘s part of playing in Toronto, there‘s a lot of pressure and we just have to worry about ourselves in this room. We put pressure on ourselves. We‘ve got a lot of pride in this dressing room. We can‘t worry about what‘s going on outside this room and we‘ve tried to do that all year.‖ CAPTIVATING COLBORNE Things are working out well for former Leafs centre Joe Colborne. Colborne was sent to the Flames at the start of the season in exchange for what will be a fourth-round pick in this year‘s NHL draft. He has since moved to the right side and hasn‘t looked back, netting 10 goals and 16 assists as the 24-year-old continues to improve his game. The Leafs acquired Colborne a couple of seasons ago in the deal that sent defenceman Tomas Kaberle to the Boston Bruins. ―I have a lot to thank the Leafs organization for, they gave me my first NHL game and first opportunity up there and first playoff game. And I have a lot of good memories here,‖ said the lanky forward, who played a total of 16 games over three seasons with the Leafs and netted one goal. ―Right now he‘s really moving on both sides of the pucks,‖ Flames coach Bob Hartley said. ―Offensively, he‘s really creating a lot for us. Very smart player, unbelievable hockey sense, great hands. Defensively, he has really improved. He has been a great acquisition for us.‖ Sounds like the Leafs could use a player like that. MARVELLOUS MONAHAN Brampton native Sean Monahan joined some elite company when he scored this 20th goal of the season against the Ottawa Senators on Sunday to become just the third Flames rookie — and first since Leafs captain Dion Phaneuf in 2005-06 — to reach that mark. ―Scoring that goal was a relief,‖ Monahan said. ―It‘s pretty cool to have your name there (with the other players.) The former Ottawa 67‘s star has been a revelation for the Flames, making the team out of camp and trailing only veteran Mike Cammalleri in the goals-scored department. The 22-year-old Van Brabant, who played at Quinnipiac of the Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conference, is the 10th player this season to make their NHL debut with the Flames. Toronto Sun LOADED: 04.02.2014 732329 Toronto Maple Leafs ―The fans have been on us and they‘ve had every right to. It‘s been a long time between wins. Maple Leafs snap eight-game slide with 3-2 win over Flames ―Usually, we‘re coming from behind and the guys start squeezing their sticks. That wasn‘t the case out there tonight.‖ By Mike Zeisberger,Toronto Sun With the Flames in town, of course, much of the buzz leading up to the game centred around the return of the bombastic Burke. First posted: Tuesday, April 01, 2014 03:07 PM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, April 01, 2014 11:11 PM EDT Back in 2012, then-Maple Leafs GM Burke compared his team‘s 1-8-1 funk at the time to an ―18-wheeler going right off a cliff.‖ Two years later, Burke‘s Flames had the opportunity to push this edition of the Maple Leafs closer to the edge, if not over the side. TORONTO - When you read the following, keep in mind that this is no April Fool‘s prank. a) The Maple Leafs actually won a game. b) David Clarkson actually scored a goal. c) Toronto‘s playoff hopes are actually still alive, albeit wafer-thin and slim. d) The Leafs actually received help on the out-of-town scoreboard. We would not be so cruel to joke about these things to long-suffering Leafs fans, who have been forced to watch their heroes all but flush away an outstanding opportunity to reach the playoffs by losing eight consecutive regular-season games for the first time since 1985 — Wendel Clark‘s rookie season. Indeed, there remains a pulse in Randy Carlyle‘s team, which recorded its first victory in three weeks thanks to a 3-2 triumph over Brian Burke‘s Calgary Flames on Tuesday night. No need to explain the irony there. ―It‘s a relief, more for the team than for me,‖ said Clarkson, whose third-period goal proved to be the eventual game winner. ―I can take (the criticism), but this is about the team. ―The biggest thing about scoring was that it helped the team win. Now we have to look ahead.‖ Indeed, the Leafs had not been on the winning end of a hockey game in 19 days, a stretch dating back to a 3-2 decision over the 2012 Stanley Cup champion Los Angeles Kings at the Staples Centre. That was the same night goalie Jonathan Bernier left after one period with a groin injury. At that time, there actually was chatter around town about Carlyle‘s team vying for home-ice advantage in the first round. My, how times have changed. Granted, a victory over the Flames, the 26th-place team in the standings, is hardly reason to start planning a parade route along Bay St. But, in this case, Carlyle, Dave Nonis and Co. will take anything they can get. The Leafs now have 82 points in the standings with five games left. In order to reach the 92 point plateau — the total most observers figured would be required to qualify for the playoffs — Toronto will have to win out in home meetings with Boston and Winnipeg, followed by road dates in Tampa, Florida and Ottawa. Of course, if those teams around them in the standings continue to fumble and bumble like they Tuesday night in the race (or should that be ―crawl‖?) for the eighth and final playoff spot in the Eastern Conference, maybe a 4-1 run will be good enough. In Columbus, the Blue Jackets were held to just a single point by dropping a 3-2 overtime decision to the Avalanche. Meanwhile, in Washington, the Caps were humiliated 5-0 by the visiting Dallas Stars. When all was said and done, the eighth-place Blue Jacket gained a single point to move to 83 points, one ahead of the ninth-place Leafs. Columbus does hold two games in hand over Toronto. The victory over Calgary did allow Toronto to leapfrog the Caps, who now drop to 10th with 81 points. They have one game in hand on the Leafs. ―We still don‘t (control our own destiny), but it‘s a relief,‖ goalie Jonathan Bernier said of the long-awaited victory. But they couldn‘t get it done. Relieved of his duties as Leafs GM and president almost 15 months ago, Burke‘s Flames came to the Air Canada Centre for the first time since he took over as Calgary GM. You have to think Burke, deep down, wanted to badly see his Flames beat the franchise that axed him in January 2013. But it was not to be. STAJAN LIFTS SPIRITS WITH GOAL Scoring a goal in the return to his home town will never take the sting away of losing his son. No hockey game will ever do that. But, at least on Tuesday night, playing in front of friends and family at the Air Canada Centre, Matt Stajan did have a chance to flash a rare smile after beating Jonathan Bernier to temporarily pull his Flames even with the host Maple Leafs 1-1. The Leafs went on to beat the Flames 3-2, but at least Stajan gave the entourage of supporters waiting for him after the game something positive to talk about. Back on March 3, he and wife Katie lost their first child shortly after his birth. The passing away of Emerson Stajan had a deep impact not just on the Stajans, but many throughout the league. ―It was nice to score,‖ the ex-Leaf said. ―Of course, I would have traded it in for a win. ―It‘s been a tough month, but it was enjoyable being back and seeing familiar faces. People have been great.‖ Toronto Sun LOADED: 04.02.2014 732330 Toronto Maple Leafs It‘s no joke, Leafs need to ‗win a hockey game‘ By Dave Hilson,Toronto Sun First posted: Tuesday, April 01, 2014 10:20 AM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, April 01, 2014 02:23 PM EDT TORONTO - It may be April Fools‘ Day today, but it's no laughing matter when it comes to how badly the Toronto Maple Leafs need a win on Tuesday night at the Air Canada Centre. Mired in an eight-game losing streak and with their dying playoff hopes already on life support, the Maple Leafs (36-32-8) must find a way to pick up two points against the Calgary Flames (31-37-7) as they begin a three-game homestand. ―Our mindset is, we‘ve got to win a hockey game,‖ beleaguered coach Randy Carlyle said after his team‘s optional gameday skate. ―We can‘t change what‘s happened, we don‘t like what‘s happened, we‘re not comfortable with what‘s happened, but you move on. That‘s what our focus is, get ready for tonight.‖ It seems like the only reasonable way for the Leafs to approach their rather unenviable situation: One game at a time. ―Our focus is on tonight and playing against Calgary,‖ captain Dion Phaneuf said. ―We‘re not looking back because what‘s done is done. You have to regroup and refocus and I feel we‘ve done that. We had a good practice yesterday, our spirits are up, our morale is up and that‘s the way that you have to conduct business. You have to come back to work with the right attitude and you have to be focused on the task at hand and that‘s winning against Calgary tonight.‖ With just six games remaining in their regular season and currently sitting in 10th spot in the Eastern Conference while having played more games than the teams they are chasing for the wildcard positions, the Leafs, realistically, must win a minimum of five games to get back to the post-season. And, indeed, winning out might be the only way they get there. How does Carlyle like their chances of making it to the playoffs? ―It‘s realistic if we win,‖ he said. ―We‘ve got to win the first one, that‘s the bottom line. We can‘t look past tonight. We need to win a hockey game and the first one we need to win is tonight.‖ Doing that will be easier said than done against a feisty Flames team that has upset the Anaheim Ducks, Dallas Stars, San Jose Sharks and New York Rangers over the past couple of weeks. ―We know we are going to play a tenacious team, we know their mandate is going to be to put the puck in and force the play, we know that‘s coming, so we have to be prepared,‖ Carlyle said. At least Phil Kessel and his 36 goals will be in the lineup when the puck drops at the ACC. Kessel was not on the ice for the optional skate and had missed Monday‘s practice due to a bruised foot after taking a James van Riemsdyk shot during a 4-2 loss against the Detroit Red Wings on Saturday, but Carlyle said the sniper will play against the Flames. Van Riemsdyk and defenceman Carl Gunnarsson both were on the ice in the morning and also will play after also missing practice on Monday. Phaneuf did not skate, nor did goaltender Jonathan Bernier, who will be making his fourth straight start for the Leafs. Toronto already beat Calgary once this season, a 4-2 victory on Oct. 30 in their only other meeting of the year, but the Flames are an improved team since then. Calgary is 6-4 in its past 10 games and hasn‘t dropped two in a row in that span. The Flames lost 6-3 to the Ottawa Senators on Sunday, but coach Bob Hartley expects a bounce-back performance from his team. ―We did video yesterday morning, we had a great practice,‖ Hartley said. ―It‘s a great group, they get along well together. It‘s all about our leaders, it‘s all about our young players. They‘re fun to push and they‘re fun to watch. ―I‘m sure we‘re going to be in for a good one tonight.‖ After Tuesday night‘s game, the Leafs play host to the Boston Bruins on Thursday and then the Winnipeg Jets on Saturday before heading out on the road for a three-game trip that wraps up their regular season. Toronto Sun LOADED: 04.02.2014 732331 Toronto Maple Leafs Win by Leafs a 'big relief,' Phaneuf says By Rob Longley,Toronto Sun First posted: Tuesday, April 01, 2014 11:33 PM EDT | Updated: Wednesday, April 02, 2014 12:09 AM EDT Easier for one night against what will in all likelihood be their softest remaining opponent. But before they could win five of their remaining games, they had to take the first. ―You want to build upon it by feeling good about ourselves,‖ Phaneuf said. ―No one feels good when we went through a stretch like we did. No one. ―There‘s a lot of negative energy when you go through a losing streak like that. Now we can enjoy this for tonight. We know there‘s lots of work to do on Thursday.‖ Plenty of work and still plenty of help from other places. Toronto Sun LOADED: 04.02.2014 TORONTO - Clearly, relief was the over-riding emotion for the Maple Leafs as they found the answer to end an eight-game losing streak: A truly horrid opponent in the Calgary Flames. So does the deep sigh afforded from a ragged but winning night of hockey at the Air Canada Centre lead to a glimmer of playoff hope? ―It definitely feels like there‘s a lot of weight lifted off of our team,‖ embattled Leafs captain Dion Phaneuf said following a 3-2 win over his former team on Tuesday. ―I would be lying if I stood here and said it didn‘t feel good to get that one. It was a big relief for our team.‖ While it still has a too-little, too-late tinge to it, if there is any optimism for the Leafs it can be found in the reality that the ―race‖ for the eighth spot in the Eastern Conference isn‘t exactly being contested at a rapid pace. Yes, the Columbus Blue Jackets earned a point on Tuesday with an overtime loss to Colorado, but they blew a two-goal lead in the process. They are not sprinting to the finish. If there‘s another sliver of good news, it‘s that the woeful Capitals seem to be ready to wave the white flag as a 5-0 blowout loss to Dallas on Tuesday would suggest. Realistically, the Jackets are the target for the Leafs now as the gap is down to a single point. But with two games in hand and a schedule mixed with playoff contenders and lightweights, Columbus still clearly holds the upper hand. Of their seven remaining opponents, four are currently in a playoff position. More pressing than the actual chase is the issue of the Leafs‘ own play, the quality of which will have to step up significantly if they are to win four of their five remaining games, the generally accepted requirement for them to sneak into eighth spot. Clearly, the Leafs will need to play much better than they did Tuesday in a game that certainly seemed to lack in desperation for much of the night. Against the Flames, they finally had some bounces go their way — a David Clarkson breakaway and a David Bolland pinball effort that went in off a Flames defenceman. But there were still opportunities in the final 30 seconds for Calgary to tie it up. ―We didn‘t paint a Mona Lisa here tonight,‖ a clearly relieved Leafs coach Randy Carlyle said. ―But we‘re going to enjoy this one for five or 10 minutes. ―We should feel good about ourselves and let‘s get ready to play against a very tough opponent in the Boston Bruins.‖ Ah yes, the Bruins. The next guests here on Thursday will no doubt have a point to prove as they continue their drive for first overall in the standings, a spot they can come close to clinching should they defeat Detroit on Wednesday and the Leafs the following night. For the latter assignment, you can bet the B‘s will be determined to send the message that if the Leafs do defy the odds and claim eighth in the East, it will be the Bruins who are waiting for them in the first round. And the latest version of the Atlantic Division heavyweights aren‘t likely to be as lenient as they were last spring. One game surely shouldn‘t create inflated confidence and optimism, but the tenseness Carlyle saw even in victory may ease a little. It‘s late to the party for little victories, but with the caveat that it was against the Flames, the Leafs tightened up somewhat in their defensive play. ―For us, if we‘re good in our own zone, the rest will take care of itself,‖ defenceman Cody Franson said. ―Tonight we made it a little easier on ourselves.‖ 732332 Toronto Maple Leafs 'Thank God it's over,' McClement says of Leafs losing skid By Terry Koshan,Toronto Sun First posted: Wednesday, April 02, 2014 12:00 AM EDT | Updated: Wednesday, April 02, 2014 12:06 AM EDT TORONTO - Jay McClement summed up in a few words what Leafs Nation felt on Tuesday night. ―Thank God it‘s over now and we can hopefully move on,‖ McClement said after the Maple Leafs beat the Calgary Flames 3-2 at the Air Canada Centre, ending Toronto‘s eight-game losing streak. ―The toughest part of it is just the time of the season we went through it. It wouldn‘t be as huge if we were doing this in October. The points still add up to the same no matter when it is, but just over two weeks ago we were sitting pretty good in a playoff spot. Makes it a little tougher than any other time of year.‖ The Leafs have taken heat during the 2013-14 season, and rightly so, for the lack of consistent scoring depth. But on a night when Phil Kessel, James van Riemsdyk and Tyler Bozak produced zeroes, perhaps it was no coincidence that three players who have been around the NHL block a few times — McClement, Dave Bolland and David Clarkson — were the ones who scored and kept the Leafs‘ playoff hopes from being taken off life support. ―It‘s just a sigh of relief,‖ McClement said. ―It has been a really tough stretch for us and it‘s tough to stop that train when it keeps rolling. The harder you try, the worse things seem to get. There‘s not much of a science to it. We had to grind it out.‖ The Leafs have put themselves into a spot that won‘t get any easier to escape. A visit from the Boston Bruins on Thursday night easily could provide a splash of cold water. POINT SHOTS The Leafs avoided losing nine games in a row in regulation, something the franchise has not experienced since January/February of 1967, when it lost 10 in a row in regulation, a team record. Of course, it was forgotten when the Leafs won the Stanley Cup that spring ... Toronto had 13 shots through 40 minutes, which, no matter how you dissect it, was not indicative of a club that had little choice but to right the ship ... The Leafs allowed five shots on goal in the first period, tying for the fewest an opponent has had in the opening 20 minutes this season. On Dec. 19, the Phoenix Coyotes were held to five shots at the ACC ... Toronto didn‘t get a shot on goal as Calgary‘s Bryce Van Brabant, making his NHL debut, served a high-sticking minor late in the first period. Deservedly so, the power-play unit was booed ... Soon after McClement gave the Leafs a 1-0 lead after a fine pass from Cody Franson, Nazem Kadri almost made it a two-goal cushion but was stopped by Karri Ramo on a backhand deke. Kadri then knocked the net off the moorings in theatrical fashion ... Flames defenceman T.J. Brodie couldn‘t have been more passive as McClement went to the net and scored for the first time since Feb. 6, a span of 17 games. Little in the way of belligerence, truculence and testosterone from Brodie, go figure, on the play ... Ex-Leaf Matt Stajan had no trouble getting behind the defence pair of Franson and Jake Gardiner to take a terrific pass from Brodie and skate in alone on Jonathan Bernier. Stajan slipped the puck between Bernier‘s legs for his third goal in six career games against the Leafs ... Morgan Rielly didn‘t get a point, but his heads-up play resulted in the Leafs‘ second goal. Rielly centred to Dave Bolland, who was at a sharp angle and couldn‘t get complete control for a shot. The puck the went off Brodie‘s right foot and into the net as Ramo scrambled to get back into position. For a change, a bounce went in the Leafs‘ favour. ―Some games, the Detroit game (on Saturday) and a few other games, were playing pretty hard and had a few chances (but) the bounces did not go our way and things did not happen,‖ Bolland said. ―We didn‘t have the prettiest moves, but a slump like that, just to get out of it, is great.‖ ... Clarkson‘s goal was his first point after going 16 games without one. Needless to say, when Clarkson slipped the puck past Ramo on a breakaway, it was his nicest goal (of five) as a Leaf ... Dion Phaneuf, unhappy with a late cross-checking call, complained about it and was assessed an unsportsmanlike conduct minor, a 10-minute misconduct and a game misconduct at the 20-minute mark of the third period. FROM THE HASH MARKS Kessel, frustrated after he got hit in the foot in the first period, smashed his stick when he got to the bench. Coach Randy Carlyle wasn‘t thrilled. ―I don‘t react to those things because usually it becomes a huge negative,‖ Carlyle said. ―That‘s when confrontations start. I just step away.‖ ... When he arrived in the press box approximately 30 minutes before the opening faceoff, Brian Burke strolled into the Leafs‘ management box. After a few minutes engaging the Leafs‘ front office, Burke made his way to his seat, shaking hands along the way ... Connor Brown is the Erie Otters‘ finalist for the Red Tilson Trophy as the Ontario Hockey League‘s most outstanding player. Brown, selected in the sixth round, 156th overall by the Leafs in 2012, led the OHL in scoring with 128 points (45 goals and 83 assists) in 68 games. Toronto Sun LOADED: 04.02.2014 732333 Toronto Maple Leafs Toronto Maple Leafs break eight-game slide in beating Calgary Flames, keep slim playoff hopes alive Michael Traikos | April 1, 2014 9:40 PM ET TORONTO — So this is what a win looks like. The Toronto Maple Leafs snapped an eight-game losing streak on Tuesday with a 3-2 victory against the Calgary Flames. But while the two points should go a long way in building back the team‘s confidence, it did not change much. Latest Leafs loss shows season has been built on unsteady variables The Leafs, who moved up from 10th to ninth place in the Eastern Conference standings, still remain a long shot to make the playoffs. According to sportsclubstats.com, the team‘s playoff chances improved from 4.6% to 8.6% with Tuesday night‘s win. If Toronto manages to run the table and go on a six-game winning streak — something that the team accomplished in January — the odds would increase to 81.7%. In other words, this win might have kept the playoff hopes alive for now. But the Leafs remain on life support. Get Adobe Flash player Still, the general feeling inside the dressing room was relief. After going 18 days between wins, the Leafs needed this one. ―It‘s been a long time, hasn‘t it? Too long,‖ said head coach Randy Carlyle. ―Obviously, it‘s a much better feeling than we‘ve been able to enjoy here over the last while, that‘s for sure. You hope that you can build on it. But I don‘t want to get too far ahead of ourselves, because we didn‘t paint a Mona Lisa here tonight.‖ Toronto now turns its attention to Boston on Thursday, which represents another must-win. After that, the Leafs will have to defeat Winnipeg on Saturday and finish the season with a string of wins against Tampa Bay, Florida and Ottawa. Even then, they will also need help from the teams around them in the standings. They received a bit of assistance in that regard on Tuesday night, when the eighth-place Columbus Blue Jackets (one point ahead of Toronto) lost in overtime and the 10th-place Washington Capitals (one point behind Toronto) lost in regulation. Both teams have played one less game than the Leafs. ―Our main focus was to win one,‖ said goaltender Jonathan Bernier, who made 22 saves. ―Now we have to get back on track and not celebrate too much, because Thursday is a big one for us.‖ What Tuesday night‘s win helped increase, beyond the Leafs‘ playoff odds, was their confidence. Having lost eight straight games in regulation — something no other team had done this season — and fallen out of a comfortable playoff spot had began to wear on the players in the room. You could see it on their faces, in their play, and obviously in the results. We needed it, we got it, and now we move forward ―It‘s a relief for our team to get this win,‖ said Leafs captain Dion Phaneuf. ―We needed it, we got it, and now we move forward. We can feel good about ourselves, because we won this game and it‘s been a tough stretch … but now we build on it.‖ Advanced stats has done a fine job of explaining how the Leafs fell from grace in a season where they were the beneficiaries of above-average goaltending, a potent power play and opportunistic scoring. But this slump was about a lack of confidence. The Leafs took a step towards building back that confidence with Tuesday‘s win. As Carlyle said, it was not a masterpiece. Toronto had difficulty generating offence against the second-worst team in the Western Conference standings and committed the same defensive mistakes that have plagued them during this losing streak. But they held Calgary to just 22 shots. And on a night when Phil Kessel was hobbled by a bruised foot, the Leafs received unlikely contributions from Jay McClement, Dave Bolland and David Clarkson, the latter scoring for the first time since Feb. 4. ―We tightened up our D-zone a bit and limited their chances,‖ said defenceman Cody Franson. ―We made it a little easier on ourselves tonight.‖ The first period was played as though neither team wanted to score. After five minutes, the shots were 0-0. And while the Flames finished the period with six shots, it seemed like half of them went off Kessel‘s foot. The Leafs took a 1-0 lead 50 seconds into the second period on an odd play off a dump-in, with Cody Franson setting up McClement at the side of the net for his first goal 17 games. Toronto caught a break soon after when Calgary‘s Curtis Glencross had a goal disallowed after a video review showed he had tipped the puck in with a high stick. With the score tied 1-1, Morgan Rielly helped put the Leafs ahead when he rushed the puck up the right side of the ice and fed a cross-seam pass to Bolland, who caught a lucky bounce when his tip-in went off Calgary defenceman Brodie‘s skate. It was the type of break that had seemingly been going against Toronto during the losing streak. A few minutes later, Clarkson snapped a 16-game point streak and scored his first goal in nearly two months on a breakaway deke. Calgary made it close when Kris Russell buried a wrist shot over Bernier‘s shoulder. But the Leafs, who had not won a game since March 13, finally ended their drought and picked up two points. Now, they just have to do it five more times. ―The big thing is we have five games here and we have to play hard, be good in our own zone and take care of what we can,‖ said Clarkson. ―I think at this time of the season, you stay positive.‖ National Post LOADED: 04.02.2014 732334 Toronto Maple Leafs MLSE CEO Tim Leiweke has been meeting with Toronto Maple Leafs players since collapse began, assistant GM says in radio interview Sean Fitz-Gerald | April 1, 2014 | Last Updated: Apr 1 2:36 PM ET The Leafs have lost eight straight games heading into Tuesday night‘s game against the Flames. Tim Leiweke, the highest-ranking executive at Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment, has met with Toronto Maple Leafs players since they began their dramatic spiral down the NHL standings, according to the team‘s assistant general manager. Who is to blame for the Leafs' spectacular collapse? Speaking with Sportsnet 590 The Fan in Toronto on Tuesday, Claude Loiselle suggested management has maintained a consistent presence around the team. The Leafs have lost eight straight games heading into Tuesday night‘s game against the Calgary Flames. ―We‘ve had meetings,‖ Loiselle told the station. ―Dave Nonis has had meetings. Tim Leiweke has had meetings. We‘ve had meetings.‖ Daren Millard, the host, asked Loiselle to clarify Leiweke‘s involvement. ―Everybody‘s always talking to players,‖ Loiselle said. ―We‘re always mingling around, and we‘re always trying to be positive and trying to convey, ‗guys, we‘re better than we are right now, and we need a win — mathematically, we‘re not out of the playoffs, but we need a win.‘‖ Millard asked again. ―Well, he‘s down here all the time,‖ Loiselle said. ―He talks to players. He meets with the players; he‘s talking to players, just like Dave Nonis does.‖ THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan Denette The Leafs have not won a game since March 13, and have lost all eight games in regulation. Heading into play on Tuesday, the team is two points behind the playoff pace with six games remaining — chasing teams who have games in hand. ―You don‘t have the magic bullet,‖ Loiselle told the station. ―The games aren‘t the same as they were in October and November … we‘ve had some bad luck.‖ Among other factors, he pegged the losing streak on the after-effects of a long road trip along the West Coast early last month, and quirks in the schedule. Leiweke, of course, has family reasons to speak with at least one player on the roster. He also has at least a small personal stake in the performance down the stretch, suggesting the team‘s strong early-season play was indicative of its true potential. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan Denette ―The problem with a losing streak is, it gets into your head,‖ Loiselle told The Fan. ―One game, you‘ll have 17 guys play real well, three guys make a few mistakes. And the next game, it‘s a different three (who make mistakes). It builds. ―And unfortunately, all these games — these eight games we‘ve played since (a win in) L.A. — have been one- or two-goal games. We haven‘t been blown out, but we‘ve found a way to lose.‖ He defended the team captain, Dion Phaneuf, who has come under fire for a stretch of poor play. ―He‘s trying,‖ Loiselle told the station. ―And sometimes, you‘re trying too hard, and you‘re trying to cover up for somebody else‘s mistake. And then you‘re think of something else instead of everybody doing their job and staying positive.‖ National Post LOADED: 04.02.2014 732335 Toronto Maple Leafs Toronto Maple Leafs try to take minds off losing streak, focus on Calgary Flames Michael Traikos | April 1, 2014 | Last Updated: Apr 1 1:43 PM ET The Leafs have lost eight straight games. Let‘s try this again. Who is to blame for the Leafs' spectacular collapse? Losers of eight straight games, the Toronto Maple Leafs will once again attempt to snap their worst slump of the season against the Calgary Flames on Tuesday night. With six games remaining, the 10th-place Leafs probably need to finish the season without any more regulation losses if they have any hopes of making the playoffs. Even then they will need help. According to SportsClubStats.com, Toronto had a 4.7% chance of finishing with the final wild-card spot. Those odds would increase to 9% if the Leafs win and both the eighth-place Columbus Blue Jackets and ninth-place Washington Capitals lose in regulation on Tuesday night. But for now, head coach Randy Carlyle said he is only concerned about getting that first win and working from there. ―It‘s realistic if we win,‖ he said of making the playoffs. ―We have to win the first one. That‘s the bottom line. We can‘t look past tonight. I know you realize you need to do this or you‘re going to need to do that, we need to win a hockey game and the first one we need to win is tonight.‖ Working in Toronto‘s favour is that the team has a favourable schedule. The Flames, who own the second-worst record in the Western Conference, are one of four teams that the Leafs will play who are currently out of a playoff spot. As a comparable, the eighth-place Columbus Blue Jackets play five of their next eight games against playoff teams. Calgary, though, is 13-10 in its last 23 games; the Leafs are 8-12-3. Still, the Leafs need to win, something that the team has been unable to do since March 13. ―Our mindset is we have to win a hockey game,‖ Carlyle said. ―We have to do what‘s necessary to win a hockey game. We can‘t change what‘s happened. We don‘t like what‘s happened. We‘re not comfortable with what‘s happened. But move on. That‘s what our focus is.‖ THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan Denette For the players, focusing on anything but the losing streak and how far the team has fallen has been difficult. ―It‘s pretty much what everyone‘s been talking about right now,‖ said Jake Gardiner, who tried to take his mind off things by seeing the movie Noah on Monday. ―It‘s been frustrating for us. It‘s been frustrating for [the fans],‖ Jay McClement said. ―It‘s been a real tough stretch for us … It‘s part of playing in Toronto. There‘s a lot of pressure. ―We just have to win a hockey game.‖ National Post LOADED: 04.02.2014 732336 Washington Capitals Capitals show ‗zero urgency‘ in blowout loss to Stars By Katie Carrera | April 1 at 11:45 pm The looks on the Caps bench said it all. (Jonathan Newton/The Washington Post) There‘s no way for the Washington Capitals to gloss over this one. Their chances of reaching the playoffs take a significant hit each time they lose a game, but even that knowledge didn‘t prevent them from falling apart against the Dallas Stars Tuesday night. Capitals suffer fourth straight loss, fall 5-0 to Dallas ―There wasn‘t one part of the game tonight that was good enough — 5-on-5, power play, penalty kill, everything. It looked like we weren‘t prepared,‖ Eric Fehr said. ―We talked about everything, but it looked more like a preseason game for us than a game that we needed to win to make the playoffs.‖ wild card race 4_1With their fourth straight defeat, Washington is slipping further back in the standings. The Capitals are two behind Columbus, which holds the final wild card spot in the East, with just six games left no tiebreakers and the Blue Jackets have a game in hand. At 81 points, they‘re now behind Toronto (82) and just barely ahead of New Jersey (80), whom they visit Friday. While they‘re not mathematically eliminated from the playoffs, the Capitals would likely need to win out to reach the postseason. And if Tuesday was any indication, they might not put up that level of fight the rest of the way. ―There was zero urgency,‖ Braden Holtby said. ―If I was a fan, I‘d be booing us right now. Playoff race like we‘re in, we lose 5-0. It‘s awful. There‘s no words for it.‖ Coach Adam Oates on what he told the team after the second period: ―If somehow we make the playoffs and we play like this, who are we kidding? We have to figure out a way to get better, we have to stick together. It‘s just us collectively in here. Obviously it‘s very disappointing.‖ Washington Post LOADED: 04.02.2014 732337 Washington Capitals Capitals brace for matchup with desperate Stars By Katie Carrera April 1 at 1:06 pm Following the loss in Nashville Sunday night, Troy Brouwer was asked what was missing from the Capitals‘ play over the past week to make them go from riding a high during their California trip to losing three straight. ―It‘s desperation, I think,‖ Brouwer said. ―We‘re desperately fighting for a playoff spot and at times our desperation isn‘t there on the ice. When we let up a little bit teams are coming hard that‘s when they‘re getting their opportunities.‖ Washington‘s opponent Tuesday knows plenty about desperation. The Dallas Stars are in the exact same position in the Western Conference as the Capitals are in the East – they sit one point out of a playoff spot and are frantically trying to catch the Phoenix Coyotes. The main difference, though, is that the Stars have won four of their past five games and their last victory was a 4-2 triumph over the Western Conference-leading Blues in St. Louis. Dallas also hung seven goals on the same Predators who beat the Capitals, 4-3, in a shootout Sunday. It‘s a safe bet that Dallas will be looking to continue rolling as they continue their road trip and the Capitals need to find a way to end their current three-game losing streak if they hope to keep pace in the East. ―Game is better when both teams try to win,‖ Mikhail Grabovski said. ―I like play against [teams] when they have same situation when both teams [need] to make the points. Just great opportunity to move forward in this game.‖ Said Coach Adam Oates: ―We talked about they‘re in the same position as us. It‘s a desperate game; it‘s a must-win tonight for both teams, they‘ve been playing much better hockey lately….I can‘t think of any way you wouldn‘t be up for the game.‖ Three other teams in the East‘s wild card chase are also playing Tuesday night. Columbus, which currently holds the second wild card with 82 points, hosts Colorado at 7 p.m. The New Jersey Devils, who are two points behind the Capitals and own the first tiebreaker, visit Buffalo at 7 p.m. And the free-falling Maple Leafs, who are one behind Washington in the standings, host the Calgary Flames at 7 p.m. Washington can‘t afford to rely on help from the out-of-town scoreboard and they can‘t excuse another sluggish start after a back-to-back games this weekend that saw them chase their opponent for much of the game. For the Capitals to dictate their own game from the start, they need to be concerned about themselves and not their opponents in these final seven games Joel Ward said. ―Regardless who we‘re playing there‘s no easy games. We played against a Nashville team that played hard and they‘re out of [the playoff race],‖ Ward said. ―We‘ve got to worry about ourselves and not so much about who we‘re playing against. We went out to California we worried about ourselves and executed our own game plan and it seemed to work out for us.‖ Washington Post LOADED: 04.02.2014 732338 Washington Capitals Hillen/Erskine/Brouillette Halak, Holtby. Capitals shuffle defense again; Grabovski at left wing against Stars Stars Jamie Benn – Tyler Seguin – Valeri Nichushkin By Katie Carrera Antoine Roussel – Cody Eakin – Ryan Garbutt April 1 at 12:46 pm Shawn Horcoff – Vernon Fiddler – Colton Sceviour Ray Whitney – Dustin Jeffrey – Alex Chiasson The Capitals‘ defense will have a different configuration Tuesday night when they host the Dallas Stars at Verizon Center, but exactly what the pairings will look like remains uncertain. Patrick Wey remains sidelined by the apparent head injury he suffered in a fight with Rich Clune in Nashville Sunday and will not play Tuesday. Coach Adam Oates said Wey is ―still not feeling great.‖ But Jack Hillen, who missed the past two games after a violent collision with Alex Ovechkin on March 25, took part in the morning skate Tuesday and is a game time decision to face Dallas. If Hillen can‘t go, expect John Erskine to draw back into the lineup after sitting out as a healthy scratch against the Predators. Regardless of Hillen‘s status, the Capitals likely will do something they‘ve rarely done this season: Play a blueliner on their off-hand side. Oates is loathe to play any skater, but particularly the defensemen, on their weak side but with Wey‘s injury, the only extra righty on the roster is Connor Carrick and the rookie took part in a lengthy scratches skate Tuesday morning. Hillen, Erskine, Dmitry Orlov and Julien Brouillette are all left-handed shots but a combination of the three is expected to round out the bottom half of the defense. ―Sometimes we have no choice, right?‖ Oates said when asked if he would go with a pairing that featured two left-handed shots. >> Oates put Mikhail Grabovski at left wing on a unit with Alex Ovechkin and Jay Beagle late in the game in Nashville and apparently that will be where he starts Tuesday night as well. ―I thought he did better than I expected,‖ Oates said. ―I thought he did good, gave us a little spark and it had been two months.‖ Grabovski is a natural center but said he didn‘t mind playing wing because of the time he‘s missed. Sunday‘s 4-3 shootout loss to the Predators was Grabovski‘s first full game back in the lineup since late January. ―I play before long time ago on the wing, just simple play. I not 100 percent ready to play at center I think,‖ Grabovski said of his conditioning. ―It‘s good for me to find my game play wing right now, just feel more comfortable, have a puck and go. Beagle is great forward who can play defensively very good, so I like it.‖ >> Dustin Penner went off the ice early Tuesday morning and is ill. The Capitals recalled Chris Brown from AHL Hershey in case Penner can‘t play against Dallas. >> Jaroslav Halak will make his 10th start as a Capital Tuesday night and face another Western Conference squad he‘s familiar with. That familiarity hasn‘t brought consistent results though, as Halak is 4-4-0 with a 2.52 goals-against average and .899 save percentage against the Stars in his career. Dallas will start Kari Lehtonen, who is 12-6-2 against the Capitals with a 2.67 and .922 save percentage in his career. Projected lineups for both teams: Capitals Grabovski-Beagle-Ovechkin Johansson-Backstrom-Brouwer Chimera-Fehr-Ward Penner-Kuznetsov-Wilson Alzner-Carlson Orlov-Green Alex Goligoski – Trevor Daley Jordie Benn – Brenden Dillon Patrik Nemeth – Sergei Gonchar Kari Lehtonen is expected to start, Tim Thomas will back up. Washington Post LOADED: 04.02.2014 732339 Washington Capitals Stars rout Capitals 5-0 to maintain playoff push By JOSEPH WHITE Associated Press Tuesday, April 1, 2014 WASHINGTON (AP) - The Dallas Stars and Washington Capitals both began the game one point away from a playoff spot. The Stars? They played like a team determined to get to there for the first time since 2008. The Capitals? They looked like a group tired of having their yearly routines disrupted by such a trivial thing as postseason hockey. It was no contest. The Stars‗ 5-0 win over the Capitals on Tuesday night was a victory of confidence over embarrassment. Dallas has won five of six, outscoring opponents 16-5 over their last three games. ―It‘s a big obstacle,‖ said Ray Whitney, who scored in the second period. ―It‘s been, what, five years now? … We‘re no different than anybody else who‘s been out for a while. We want to get in pretty bad.‖ The victory, at least for a few hours, moved the Stars ahead of the Phoenix Coyotes for the final postseason berth in the Western Conference. The Coyotes hosted Winnipeg later Tuesday. ―It‘s scoreboard-watching time,‖ Whitney said. ―We‘ll be flying to Carolina tonight, but we‘ll be watching the game and the score. As soon as we land everybody will check their phones.‖ The Capitals will probably want to shut off their phones for a while. They were booed heavily in their home rink, particularly after an abysmal stretch in the second period in which they allowed several odd-man rushes, took a slashing penalty and gave up two goals in 34 seconds. ―If I was a fan, I‘d be booing us right now,‖ said goaltender Braden Holtby, who relieved Jaroslav Halak in the second period after Dallas‘ third goal. ―A playoff race like we‘re in? To lose 5-0, it‘s awful. There‘s no words for it.‖ The Capitals began their run of playoff seasons in 2008. Like Dallas, they started the day as a ninth-place team, but they ended up dropping a spot to 10th. They would lose a tiebreaker against every team contending for the final postseason spots in the Eastern Conference. They have lost four straight and were shut out for the seventh time this season. Alex Ovechkin - the league‘s leading goal-scorer - hasn‘t scored a 5-on-5 goal in more than a month. ―If somehow we make the playoffs playing like this, who are we kidding?‖ coach Adam Oates said. ―We have to figure out a way to get better. We have to stick together.‖ Tyler Seguin scored his 33rd goal, Dustin Jeffrey got his first two of the season, and Whitney and Ryan Garbutt also scored for the Stars. Alex Chiasson had three assists, and Kari Lehtonen made 35 saves for his fourth shutout. After over-relying on Seguin and Jamie Benn to carry the scoring load, Dallas suddenly has been getting points from seemingly everyone. ―If you look at our top line, I think a lot of teams are focusing on that. They‘re getting the harder matchups,‖ said Jeffrey, who has been back and forth to the minors after being claimed off waivers in November. ―We have to be able to score up and down our lineup.‖ Seguin redirected Benn‘s wrister from the left circle in the first period, then there were Capitals miscues aplenty in the second, with the Stars taking advantage. Alex Goligoski‘s long pass sprang a 2-on-0 break for Whitney‘s goal. Jeffrey scored shortly afterward, then again in the third. Garbutt capped the scoring with a short-handed goal on a breakaway. ―We had a lot of 2-on-1s, and we even had a 2-on-0,‖ Whitney said. ―Not often do you see that many scoring chances.‖ Ovechkin last had a 5-on-5 point on Feb. 27, a streak of 16 games. Nicklas Backstrom, who leads the teams in points, is also without a 5-on-5 goal since Feb. 27. Multiple players in the Capitals locker room faulted the team‘s lack of urgency. ―It can‘t be justified. It‘s terrible. … It‘s like we expect the next guy to make the play,‖ defenseman Karl Alzner said. ―It‘s been kind of off and on like that for a lot of the season, and we‘ve got away with it at times. It clearly hasn‘t worked the last little bit, and you pay for it in the end.‖ Notes: D Patrik Nemeth made his NHL debut for the Stars as D Aaron Rome sat out with an injury. . Capitals D Patrick Wey sat out after taking an uppercut in a fight that forced him out of Saturday‘s loss at Nashville. Washington RW Dustin Penner (illness) and D Jack Hillen (upper-body injury) also missed the game. … Capitals F Chris Brown played after getting called up from the AHL earlier in the day. Washington Times LOADED: 04.02.2014 732340 Washington Capitals Careless mistakes doom Capitals in deflating home loss to Stars By Zac Boyer The Washington Times Tuesday, April 1, 2014 An unlikely pair of victories in California two weeks ago had John Carlson thinking the Washington Capitals were playing their best hockey in several years. Why wouldn‘t he? The Capitals defeated the Anaheim Ducks and the San Jose Sharks, the best two teams in the Pacific Division, and snagged a point in an overtime loss to the Los Angeles Kings. ―But you know, it seems like something always knocks us down a peg, and we certainly don‘t need that,‖ Carlson said. On Tuesday, the Capitals were knocked down a few pegs – and it‘s increasingly likely they won‘t be able to recover. A pair of second-period goals were topped off by a backbreaking short-handed goal in the third, and the Capitals lost their fourth consecutive game, falling 5-0 to the Dallas Stars at Verizon Center. That loss, coupled with the Columbus Blue Jackets‗ overtime loss to the Colorado Avalanche and the Toronto Maple Leafs‗ victory over the Calgary Flames, means the Capitals (34-28-13, 81 points) stand two points back of the final playoff position with six games to play. ―If I was a fan, I‘d be booing us right now,‖ said Capitals goaltender Braden Holtby, who replaced starter Jaroslav Halak in the second period. ―A playoff race like we‘re in? To lose 5-0, it‘s awful. There‘s no words for it.‖ Kari Lehtonen had 35 saves for his third shutout of the season for the Stars (37-27-11), who have won five of their last six and entered the game in a similar position as the Capitals in the standings – one point back of the final wild card playoff spot. The problem, as it has all season, lies in the Capitals‗ careless mistakes. After top-line center Tyler Seguin gave Dallas a 1-0 lead with a deflection of left wing Jamie Benn‘s shot 15:08 into the first period, winger Ray Whitney scored 9:16 into the second period on a two-man rush set up by defenseman Alex Goligoski on a pass from the opposite blue line. Then, just 34 seconds later, fourth-line center Dustin Jeffery took advantage of a scrum in front of the crease to poke the puck into the net, all while Capitals defenseman John Erskine and fourth-line center Chris Brown were occupied in a shoving match with Stars winger Alex Chiasson. ―We played a fast game tonight,‖ Whitney said, ―We had a lot of chances. We had a lot of two-on-ones, and we even had a two-on-zero. Not often do you see that many scoring chances.‖ Jeffrey, recently called up from the AHL, scored his second goal of the game 9:55 into the third period, and winger Ryan Garbutt added a shorthanded goal 14:50 into the frame when he blew by Capitals defenseman Mike Green and beat Holtby on his left. Holtby had 11 saves, while Halak, who had started nine of the last 11 games since being acquired from the Buffalo Sabres at the trade deadline, had 20 saves in 26:46. Washington went 0-for-5 on the power play, but the Stars, who entered with the 22nd-ranked power play and penalty kill units, went 0-for-4. The Capitals will play their next four games on the road and won‘t play again at home until they host the Chicago Blackhawks and the Tampa Bay Lightning in the last two games of the season. By then, they might not need to be play with determination and urgency, whether they‘d like to or not. ―I think, you know, as a team, we thought we probably needed all seven to get in, but now we have no choice,‖ Carlson said. ―It‘s definitely probably going to be a win-out situation.‖ Washington Times LOADED: 04.02.2014 732341 Winnipeg Jets Phoenix ties it up at 1-1 Staff PHOENIX - No, that wasn‘t an early April Fool‘s joke last night. The Winnipeg Jets, fresh off a demoralizing 5-4 overtime loss to the Anaheim Ducks will get a quick chance to wash the taste of defeat from their mouths when they return to action tonight (9 p.m., Jets on TSN, TSN 1290) against the Phoenix Coyotes. Winnipeg watched a 4-0 lead disappear in just over a period on Monday as they let the Ducks get their first goal late in the second and then gave up three in the third and another in OT to suffer their 34th loss of the season. The Jets, after a promising start under new head coach Paul Maurice that saw them climb back into the playoff race have now won just four of their last 15 games and are on the verge of elimination. Winnipeg went with No. 1 goalie Ondrej Pavelec on Monday and he will be in net again tonight said coach Paul Maurice. "You have to go back and look at the game. He played a helluva game and made some huge saves for us in the third period," said Maurice. "They had some fine scoring chances and he played well." Backup Al Montoya watched in street clothes last night due to a minor lower body injury and rookie Michael Hutchinson, who spent time this season in both the ECHL and AHL, was on the bench. Montoya will not be ready for tonight and Hutchinson will back up again. Maurice said there would no other players returning from injury so Zach Bogosian won‘t be available. The coach added he would determine any other lineup changes prior to gametime. Veteran Devin Setoguchi has been a healthy scratch three straight games. Phoenix is led by defenceman Keith Yandle with eight goals and 51 points throught 75 games. The blueliner sits 5th in NHL scoring among defencemen and is tied for 3rd in assists with 41. Yandle leads all NHL defensemen in power-play assists (27) and power-play points (30). Coyotes coach Dave Tippett is the winningest bench boss in franchise history with an overall record of 192-123-54 (438 points) in 369 regular season games with Phoenix. Winnipeg Free Press LOADED 04.02.2014 732342 Winnipeg Jets Jets reassign Comrie, Morrissey to St. John's Staff Posted: 04/1/2014 8:58 AM | Comments: 0 | Last Modified: 04/1/2014 10:01 AM | Updates Two of the brightest young stars in the Winnipeg Jets‘ system are going to have their seasons extended in the American Hockey League. As expected, the Jets have re-assigned goaltender Eric Comrie and defenceman Josh Morrissey from their Western Hockey League clubs to the St. John‘s IceCaps. The 18-year-old Comrie played in 60 games with the Tri-City Americans this season, going 26-25-9 while posting a 2.57 goals against average and .925 save percentage. The Edmonton product ranked second in the WHL for save percentage and saves (1,849), was third in games played and minutes (3,523) and sixth in goals against average. As well, Comrie was the WHL‘s top goaltender in January. He was drafted by the Jets in the second round (59th overall) in the 2013 NHL Draft. Morrissey, 19, played in 59 games with the Prince Albert Raiders, and racked up 73 points on 28 goals (a Raiders‘ record) and 45 assists. He is the Eastern Conference nominee for the 2014 WHL Defenceman of the Year Bill Hunter Memorial Trophy. A member of Canada‘s World Junior team this winter, Morrissey was selected by the Jets in the first round (13th overall) in the 2013 NHL Draft. Winnipeg Free Press LOADED 04.02.2014 732343 Winnipeg Jets Winnipeg fans exude negativity — because they care By: Doug Brown Posted: 04/1/2014 4:13 AM | Comments: 0 Multiple Juno award winners Tegan and Sara have only been booed once in their careers — "...at the Winnipeg Folk Festival." Justin Bieber didn‘t even attend the Junos Sunday night and was booed heartily after winning his fourth Fan Choice Award. Hockey parents now have to take an online course to learn about sportsmanship in this province and last week, Bryan Little of the Jets remarked how Winnipeg is distinguished by its negativity. In case you missed his remarks, at the height of the "Baby-gate" scandal last week, he said, "We were joking around before that only in Winnipeg someone would say negative comments about the birth of a child. Then I heard someone actually did. I‘d like to say I‘m surprised, but I‘m not." That is either one hell of a condemnation of the sporting environment here in Winnipeg, or someone is using the media and fans as the fall guys for a season of frustration. There is no argument this city is obsessed with its hockey and football teams. We‘ve sold out every game since the Jets returned, we follow them all over North America and in spite of winning nine games in the last two seasons, the Bombers broke a record, selling more than 25,000 season tickets last year. Yet is it possible we are so passionate about our local teams we are adversely affecting the outcomes? Maybe the late, great, comedian Chris Farley can provide us with an analogy of how loving something too much can ultimately lead to its demise, as he explains his failures as a salesman in the movie Tommy Boy: "Let‘s say I go into some guy‘s office, let‘s say he‘s even remotely interested in buying something. Well then I get all excited, I‘m like JoJo the idiot circus boy with a pretty new pet. The pet is my possible sale. Oh my pretty little pet. I love you! So I stroke it, and I pet it, I massage it, I love it, I love my little naughty pet, you‘re naughty! Then I take my naughty pet and I go, (crushes dinner roll) ‗Oh I killed it, I killed my sale!‘ " Could that be it? Could we, the media and the fans that follow and opine over every imaginable detail we can get our hands on, be killing our own sports teams? Are we "JoJo the idiot circus boy" that loves our teams so much we smother them and crush them with our own enthusiasm? I never believed in this theory, but when a player suggests as a city we stand out because of our negativity, it‘s worth examining. From the football end of things, for years we‘ve heard coaching regimes and players have been run out of town because of the fans and media and maybe it‘s partially true. Yet isn‘t that a hell of a lot better than the alternative — apathy and indifference? As I‘ve witnessed during my tenure in pro football, when a lot of athletes fail, they rarely come to terms with their own culpability, and lash out and redirect their frustration at their immediate environment (fans & media). It is much easier to blame others than accept responsibility for under-performing. Yet when the same athletes succeed and are victorious, they are the first to bask in the sunlight and adoration shined on them by these very same groups. If you embrace the sweetness from these factions when you are winning, don‘t be taken aback when the sour punches you in the mouth. The one thing I‘ve come to learn about passionate sporting fans is they only get mad because they care. Anger and negativity are expressions only worth displaying about things you have an interest in. Even the Jet that has been most scrutinized this season, Ondrej Pavelec, confirmed this reality with Gary Lawless when he remarked, "The people care. That‘s why the media is always here. That‘s a good thing. In Atlanta, nobody cared." During seasons of riches on the Blue Bombers, I‘ve never seen a media so complimentary of our prowess and a fan base so euphoric over our successes. I‘ve also been on teams that broke records for futility and incompetence, and watched fans don paper bags while the local scribes chewed us up and spit us out. The only truth that emerged from it all was that the rewards for success and achievement were far greater than any of the negatives we experienced. When you win, and win consistently in this town, there is simply no better environment for a professional athlete to be in. Winnipeg Free Press LOADED 04.02.2014 732344 Winnipeg Jets Winnipeg Jets fan miffed over team holding season ticket holders deposits By Paul Friesen ,First posted: Tuesday, April 01, 2014 09:18 PM CDT A Winnipeg Jets season-ticket holder says the NHL team is taking advantage of its rabid fans. Andrew Caronte says the Jets are mishandling millions of dollars in season-ticket deposits by not allowing fans to put the money towards their ticket purchase. ―They‘re getting away with it simply because there‘s such a demand for the tickets,‖ Caronte said in an interview with the Winnipeg Sun, Tuesday. ―But I don‘t feel the demand for a product or service should allow companies to, quote-unquote, take advantage of their customers. ―This is money that belongs to the season-ticket holders and should be given back to them.‖ Fans pay from $500 to $1,000 as a ―deposit‖ towards season tickets. But that money, close to $10 million, in all (based on 13,000 season tickets at $750 average) isn‘t applied to their tickets. Caronte says the Jets have had his $500 for three years now, and while he didn‘t think twice about it when he first bought tickets, he wonders why the money couldn‘t be applied to his purchase when he recently renewed. He doesn‘t get interest on the amount, either. ―What other Canadian company does this?‖ he said. ―It‘s not about the money — it‘s the principal of the matter. ―Anytime I leave a deposit for anything else, once I sign the contract it just gets applied to it.‖ Caronte says fans he talks to about the issue agree, although many have forgotten their deposits even exist. He asked his ticket representative for an explanation, and was eventually referred to a True North lawyer, who explained the deposit was collateral in case a fan backs out of a ticket agreement. But that doesn‘t mean fans can simply forfeit their deposit to get out of an agreement. ―He said no, you‘re still bound by the contract,‖ Caronte said. ―It‘s a little bit of double-dipping there.‖ The Jets don‘t hide the policy — it‘s stated in the agreement — but Caronte says that doesn‘t make it right for the hard-working, blue-collar fans who support the team, even shouting out its corporate name during the national anthem. ―It‘s so wrong for me,‖ he said. ―None of (the fans) are as wealthy as Mr. Chipman and Mr. Thomson. ―I‘m a loyal Winnipeg Jets supporter, a huge fan. I don‘t want anyone to think I‘m against the team. But at the same time, I‘m also a customer, a consumer, and what‘s fair is fair.‖ The city‘s other pro sports teams, the Blue Bombers and Goldeyes, apply deposits to the purchase of tickets. The Jets did not return repeated calls for comment. Caronte, who works as a sales manager and has run his own small business, says he wants the team to be profitable, hopefully resulting in a better product, eventually. ―But it doesn‘t mean we should be OK with it as fans, just because we want to have a better product on the ice,‖ he said. ―I would love for True North to just say, ‗You know, maybe we need to reconsider this,‘ and give the deposit back to all the season-ticket holders. ―It‘s just the right thing to do.‖ Winnipeg Sun LOADED 04.02.2014 732345 Winnipeg Jets Jets epic collapse in Anaheim just part of an ugly big picture By Kirk Penton ,Winnipeg Sun First posted: Tuesday, April 01, 2014 05:52 PM CDT GLENDALE, Ariz. — Just how epic was Winnipeg‘s colossal collapse on Monday night in Anaheim? Well, an NHL team ends up losing a game in which it has owned a four-goal lead about once every leap year. The Jets led the Ducks 4-0 at Honda Center and lost 5-4 in overtime, becoming the first team in more than four years to cough up one like that. The last team to blow such a big lead and lose was the Chicago Blackhawks on Jan. 9, 2010, when they gagged on a 5-1 advantage in the third period against the Minnesota Wild and fell 6-5 in a shootout. Interestingly, two members of that Blackhawks team were Andrew Ladd and Dustin Byfuglien, who were also on the wrong bench Monday night at Honda Center. And that brings us to the more important point about the Jets these days. Monday‘s loss was no bigger than any other of the 43 they had suffered this season going into Thursday night‘s clash against the Phoenix Coyotes. Heck, they even got a point out of the disaster. No, it‘s the big picture that is even uglier than Monday‘s debacle for the Jets and their fans: three wins in their last 14 games going into Tuesday night‘s tilt at Jobing.com Arena. It seems no matter how hard the Jets try or who they have coaching the team, this group always seems to find a way to revert to its days in Atlanta. We‘ve said it before, and we‘ll say it again: It has so far been impossible to wash the stench of the Atlanta Thrashers off the Winnipeg Jets. General manager Kevin Cheveldayoff decided to stick with the core from Atlanta, and all it‘s gotten Manitoba and its hockey fans is another year with no playoff hockey. It‘s a trademark of this franchise to slow down, wobble and fall on its face at this time of year. Over the last six seasons the Thrashers and Jets are 38-44-13 between the trade deadline and when they are eliminated from playoff contention. Going into Tuesday night‘s game, which was basically the start of playing out the string, the Jets this year were 3-7-3 since Cheveldayoff stood pat on March 5, which he said was the result of centre Mark Scheifele getting injured the night before. The reasons don‘t matter. All the losing does. So now what? Maurice is definitely an upgrade at head coach, but his record since taking over for the fired Claude Noel was 14-10-5 prior to Tuesday‘s contest, which meant he had lost more games than he‘d won. Some fans are starting to scream for change, most notably at the goaltending position, but there‘s not much Cheveldayoff will be able to do after locking up so much of that core for many years to come — unless he can get creative with a trade or two. And a trade or two would serve this team well. Otherwise, the GM will have to spend his summer looking for minor upgrades here and there. He swung and missed on Devin Setoguchi, who returned to the lineup Tuesday night after being a healthy scratch for three straight games, but Michael Frolik was a decent pickup. He needs to find a few more Froliks if the Jets are going to take on a new identity and stop finding unique ways to lose hockey games. Because that‘s all Monday night was: another way to lose a hockey game. Last Monday night in Dallas they were stymied by a hot goaltender. On Saturday night in L.A. it was a horrendous first period. On Monday night in Anaheim it was one of the worst third periods in the history of hockey. Finding ways to lose is what the Jets do at this time of year and more often than not the rest of the time. That‘s all there is to it. The numbers back that up. And there‘s little reason to believe it won‘t continue unless some sort of serious shakeup happens before next season. Because if it walks like a Thrasher and talks like a Thrasher, it‘s probably a Thrasher. Winnipeg Sun LOADED 04.02.2014 732346 Winnipeg Jets Jets' coach Maurice defends Pavelec By Kirk Penton ,Winnipeg Sun First posted: Tuesday, April 01, 2014 GLENDALE, Ariz. — The Winnipeg Jets, coming off one of their toughest losses in franchise history, will attempt to get up off the mat and finish off their five-game road trip with a victory tonight at Jobing.com Arena against the Phoenix Coyotes. The Jets blew a 4-0 lead last night in Anaheim and lost 5-4 in overtime, becoming the first NHL team in more than four years to lead a game by four goals and not win. Winnipeg, which is 1-2-1 on its road trip and 33-33-10 overall, can‘t be eliminated from the Western Conference playoff race tonight, but it‘s only a matter of time. The Coyotes are in eighth place in the conference, eight points up on the Jets, and Winnipeg has six games left. Ondrej Pavelec will get the start once again for the Jets. Head coach Paul Maurice defended his number one netminder Tuesday morning, even though No. 31 is Enemy No. 1 with Jets fans right now. He had a rough night on Saturday in a 4-2 loss to L.A., and the overtime goal he allowed against Stephane Robidas last night was weak. Maurice said everything is fine with Pavelec. ―He played a hell of a game,‖ Maurice said. ―He made some great saves in the third period and made a couple of great saves leading up to that. It can‘t be the results that we gave up five that our goaltender wasn‘t any good. They had some fine scoring chances. He played well.‖ Pavelec faced a whopping 25 shots in the third period and 16 seconds of overtime, and it looked like he was having a difficult time controlling his rebounds. Again, not so, according to Maurice. ―You go back and look at them, and he steers them to the place. So there are big rebounds, but we got the first touch on five of the seven. So it looks different from the bench. When I went back and looked at the video, he was putting those rebounds in places. Now, the question you ask is: Did he need rebounds? Some of them, yeah. Some of those pucks he couldn‘t get to eat.‖ As for the bigger picture and how Monday night‘s colossal choke job fits into it, Maurice did his best to reason with the fans through the media Tuesday morning. ―My saying it‘s just one game sounds lousy, so I can‘t say it‘s just one game. Right? It just sounds like the coach is blowing off a four-goal collapse,‖ he said. ―We weren‘t as good as you think we were in the first two (periods). We were good, but they weren‘t. And actually after it was 4-3 we did what we needed to do in the third period and held them to the last minute. It‘s not bigger (than one game), but there‘s so many things we gotta learn how to deal with.‖ Maurice couldn‘t say for certain that there wouldn‘t be any lineup changes tonight. He said after last night‘s game than an injury forced him to juggle his lineup for the start of overtime, but he didn‘t identify which player. That man, whoever it is, could be the game-time decision tonight. The Jets are 1-6-1 in the second half of back-to-backs this season and 5-22-2 in that situation since starting up in Winnipeg three years ago. Winnipeg Sun LOADED 04.02.2014 732347 Winnipeg Jets Lucky Ladd scores shootout winner By Kirk Penton ,Winnipeg Sun First posted: Tuesday, April 01, 2014 11:59 PM CDT | Updated: Wednesday, April 02, 2014 12:21 AM CDT GLENDALE, Ariz. — The new Jets knocked off the old Jets on Tuesday night in the desert to keep their slim playoff hopes alive. The Jets got past the Phoenix Coyotes 2-1 in a shootout on Tuesday night in front of 13,724 duelling spectators at Jobing.com Arena, meaning Winnipeg's razor-thin playoff hopes remain alive. They would have been eliminated if Phoenix had won in regulation time. Andrew Ladd scored the only goal in the shootout and Ondrej Pavelec prevented all three Coyotes from scoring. The Jets improved to 34-33-10 and are now seven points back of both Phoenix and the Dallas Stars in the race for eighth place in the Western Conference. Winnipeg has five games remaining, including Thursday night‘s game at MTS Centre against the Pittsburgh Penguins. The Jets, who now have four wins in their last 15 games, finished with a 2-2-1 record on their five-game road trip, with the most memorable tilt being Monday night‘s soul crushing 5-4 loss to the Anaheim Ducks. Pavelec had a solid night in the desert Tuesday, just 24 hours after catching most of the fault from fans for Winnipeg‘s implosion in Anaheim. Pavelec made 29 saves in overtime and regulation against the Coyotes, and then he prevented all three shooters from scoring in the breakaway contest. The usually media friendly Pavelec was no doubt feeling the stress of his last few outings, as he stopped talking to the press after games and on game days when he was starting. He said it was more superstition than blocking out distractions. ―I just tried to change it a little bit, and actually it worked,‖ he said with a smile. ―So it‘s pretty good.‖ Head coach Paul Maurice had a team meeting in the morning and presented all the reasons why they weren‘t expected to beat the Coyotes, from injuries to the pain of the night before in Anaheim. Then they went out and beat the Coyotes. ―He kind of came in and let us know that it was going to be a huge statement game for us tonight, no matter where we are in the standings, regardless of playoff implications and all that,‖ winger Blake Wheeler said, wearing the fighter helmet in the dressing room afterwards. ―He wanted us as men to come in here and respond when everything was stacked up against us. The way we grinded it out tonight to get two points, that was awesome.‖ The Jets opened the scoring midway through the first period Tuesday night in front of thousands of Jets fans who made the journey to Arizona or were already here. Andrew Ladd wired his 23rd of the season over Thomas Greiss‘ left shoulder, and the visitors took a 1-0 lead to the dressing room. The lead didn‘t last long, however, as Michael Frolik and Mark Stuart both went to Antoine Vermette down low and allowed Zbynek Michalek to take a pass and pop his second into the open cage just 19 seconds into the middle frame. Phoenix‘s best chance in the third happened with 9:50 to go when Mikkel Boedker skated hard down the right side and hit the left post. The Coyotes then had a glorious chance to win it in overtime, as Blake Wheeler took a high-sticking penalty with 1:15 to go in the extra frame. Phoenix couldn‘t notch the winner, though. The Jets players were well aware of the presence of their own fans during the contest. ―We were joking after the anthem it kind of felt like a home game a little bit with the ‗True North.‘ So that‘s awesome. I saw walking into the game today a lot of pale legs and Jets jerseys, so it was nice, I‘m sure, for a lot of people to get a little bit of sunshine and come watch us in a different environment. We always appreciate when our fans follow us on the road.‖ AROUND THE GLASS Devin Setoguchi returned to the ice after his three-game exile to the press box. The right winger replaced Anthony Peluso in the lineup … The Jets fell to 2-6-1 this season in the second half of back-to-backs … Defencemen Zach Bogosian (upper body) and Keaton Ellerby (lower), and goaltender Al Montoya (lower) didn‘t play … Evander Kane was on the ice for all three of Anaheim‘s even-strength goals on Monday night. Its other two goals were scored on the power play and with the goalie pulled. Winnipeg Sun LOADED 04.02.2014 732348 Vancouver Canucks Canucks‘ David Booth busses Billy the bear By Elliott Pap, Vancouver Sun April 1, 2014 8:46 PM VANCOUVER — David Booth has hunted bears. Now he can say he was kissed by one, too. The Vancouver Canucks winger spent his day off Sunday visiting Abbotsford animal trainer Mark Dumas and then tweeted a photo of himself getting a smackeroo on the lips from Billy the grizzly bear. Dumas and his wife Dawn train various animals for movies. They also have a polar bear. Their company is called Beyond Just Bears. "It was one of the coolest things I've ever done," Booth said Tuesday, prior to the Canucks-New York Rangers game at Rogers Arena. "A friend of mine set me up with the guy and told me it was hands-on. So I jumped at the opportunity. I have a bunch of other pictures but that one was pretty cool. Being licked right in the face by a grizzly bear is something that I never thought would be possible. I thought it was a very, very cool opportunity and I wanted to take advantage of it." Dumas confirmed that Booth had a grand time at his place. "The visit went great and I don't know what else to tell you," Dumas said Tuesday. "He enjoyed all the different animals but he's not the only person in the world to enjoy them." Needles to say, an NHL player being kissed, or licked, by a grizzly bear does leave some room for chirping. Booth even chirped himself. "My fiancee was there with me and I told her 'sorry for cheating on you,‘ ‖ he chuckled. Two years ago, Booth and bears were in the news for a different reason. Then he was heavily criticized for bear baiting — and killing a black bear — in Alberta for a reality TV show called The Edge. Bear baiting is not legal in B.C. On Tuesday, Canucks teammates Tom Sestito and Zack Kassian could only shake their heads in amazement — and they are the toughest players on the roster based on penalty minutes. "Kissing a grizzly bear is his thing but it's not my thing," said Sestito. "I'm not going to be kissing a grizzly bear. When I saw the photo, I was, like, why? That was the first thing that was going through my mind. But it's what he likes doing. It gives him a rush and you can't blame him for doing what he likes to do." Kassian was impressed by Booth's bravery but concerned for his sanity. "I saw the picture on Twitter Monday and my thoughts were he's bleepin' crazy," Kassian said, laughing. "There are not many humans who would get that close to a grizzly bear, I'll tell you that. It's called living life on the edge. I can tell you right now that I wouldn't be doing that anytime soon. "My dog, that's the only thing I get close to," added Kassian. "But during the Olympic break, he was alligator hunting so if you're going to get close to an alligator, I think you're going to get close to a lot of things. That's the way he is. He's an outdoorsy kind of guy. He seems to like it and have fun with it and he's coming back every time without a scratch." Booth admitted that getting kissed by Billy was, indeed, a bit of risky business. "When you're looking in a grizzly bear's eye, you don't know," he said. "The thing was growling, like, right in my face and I was looking down his throat. It was pretty scary. But (Mark) has had Billy for about three years, ever since he was a cub, and he's trained it and says it's not that dangerous. He says all the experience he's had with bears, you can really train them. But they have stuff to protect you if anything were to go wrong. That was a chance I was willing to take." It wasn't Booth's first experience with a grizzly bear, just his first kiss. "I had one lick my hands with honey on it before and no, it was not a wild one, no, no," he explained. "A grizzly will tear you up. They are one of the fiercest animals in all of creation. I mean, their claws are longer than my fingers. I'm not that dumb." Vancouver Sun: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732349 Vancouver Canucks Canucks Game Day: Vancouver clings to faint playoff hopes as road warrior Rangers come calling (with video) By Elliott Pap, Vancouver Sun April 1, 2014 7:00 PM VANCOUVER — The Vancouver Canucks will be clinging to their mathematical hopes and not much else when they entertain Alain Vigneault and the New York Rangers tonight at Rogers Arena (7 p.m., TSN, Team 1040). With the Dallas Stars and Phoenix Coyotes also playing today, the Canucks won't be able to slow them down in any way. So all they can do is try to beat the Rangers, who just happen to be one of the NHL's top road teams at 24-14-0. The Canucks, meanwhile, have won just half of their home dates and are a mediocre 18-12-6. Beleaguered Canucks head coach John Tortorella has figured out his approach to the game. "We are going about our business the same way as if we were 15 games over .500 and in the playoffs," he said today at the morning skate. "We know what's around us. We know what we're up against and that's what I respect our guys for. They haven't changed their attitude through all of this. They come to work every day and we're trying to get better." The Canucks didn't do any formal line rushes at their morning skate but, based on Monday's practice, they are expected to start this way: Ryan Kesler between Daniel Sedin and Alex Burrows; Shawn Matthias centring for Chris Higgins and Nick Jensen; Brad Richardson with David Booth and Zack Kassian; and Jordan Schroeder pivoting the fourth line with Tom Sestito and Jannik Hansen. Kassian, the Canucks' most productive forward lately with seven points in four games, might see some second-unit power play time tonight. He did take second-unit reps this morning with Higgins, Burrows, Yannick Weber and Jason Garrison. The first unit was Daniel Sedin with Kesler, Jensen, Alex Edler and Kevin Bieksa. "I'm never going to complain about getting more ice, that's for sure," said Kassian, who added that the team isn't feeling blue about its plight. "We're not the type to feel sorry for ourselves. We are going to come to work, play hard and we're going to make teams that are in the playoffs earn every point they get." The Rangers, who are closing in on an Eastern Conference playoff spot, didn't have any of their regulars on the ice this morning but, based on their Monday practice, their lines are expected to go this way: Carl Hagelin-Derek Stepan-Rick Nash; Dan Carcillo or J.T. Miller-Brad Richards-Marty St. Louis; Benoit Pouliot-Derick Brassard-Mats Zuccarello; and Brian Boyle-Dominic Moore-Derek Dorsett. The expected defence pairings are: Ryan McDonagh-Dan Girardi; Marc Staal-Anton Stralman; and Raphael Diaz-Kevin Kline. Henrik Lundqvist, 4-1-0 in his last five starts and 8-3-0 in his last 11, is scheduled to get the start tonight. "The last few weeks we've been playing a really good team game," Lundqvist said. "Everybody is buying in, everybody is doing the little things right and it's been paying off. Obviously it's huge for us. We're in a position now where we control our destiny. We just have to continue to push ourselves to win some more games." Eddie Lack will again start for the Canucks. ICE CHIPS: Canucks captain Henrik Sedin (leg) and defenceman Andrew Alberts (concussion) both worked out on the ice, pre-morning skate, under the tutelage of skills coach Glenn Carnegie ... New Ranger Marty St. Louis has struggled since coming over from Tampa at the trade deadline and has zero goals and three assists in 14 games. The Rangers are still 9-4-1 since he joined them … The Rangers are one of six teams to reached the 40-win mark at least seven times since the 2005-06 season ... Rick Nash has five goals in his last seven games ... Derek Stepan has 18 points in his last 17 games (5-13-18) while Mats Zuccarello has 18 in his last 19 games (4-14-18) ... Referees for tonight's game are Justin St. Pierre and Wes McCauley. INJURIES: The Canucks will again be missing captain Henrik Sedin (leg), D Chris Tanev (finger), C-RW Mike Santorelli (shoulder surgery) and D Andrew Alberts (concussion). The Rangers are without LW Chris Kreider (hand) and D John Moore (head). Vancouver Sun: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732350 Vancouver Canucks Alain Vigneault-led, playoff-bound Rangers down Canucks By Brad Ziemer, Vancouver Sun April 1, 2014 9:49 PM Daniel Sedin, not noted for his hitting, crushed Ranger defenceman Ryan McDonagh in the second period deep in the New York zone. McDonagh was slow to his feet but stayed in the game... Jannik Hansen, who started on the fourth line for the second straight game, had a partial break down the right wing in the middle period but totally missed the net... Ranger defenceman Marc Staal completely tying up Hansen's stick with a loose puck in the crease area without drawing a penalty. TORTS TALK VANCOUVER SUN - Alain Vigneault‘s team did what a lot of his teams have done at Rogers Arena the past several years. His team won. This time was different, of course. This time Vigneault was the visiting coach and his new team, the York Rangers, beat his old team, the Vancouver Canucks, 3-1 on Tuesday night. The Rangers are on their way to the playoffs, a place Vigneault took the Canucks six times in his seven seasons as their coach. The Canucks are heading to the golf course or will be after they play the final five games of their season. The future of their coach, John Tortorella, remains uncertain and before the game a handful of protesters wearing Fire (Mike) Gillis T-shirts were shooed away from outside the arena by security. It has been that kind of season. The stuff happening off the ice is a whole lot more interesting than what is happening on it these days. With their playoff chances hanging by a mathematical thread, the Canucks competed hard but were once again done in by a lack of finish. They had the better scoring chances in the first period. It didn‘t matter, the Rangers led 2-0 after 20 minutes. Ryan Kesler had two excellent chances early in the first, but was stopped on both occasions by Ranger goalie Henrik Lunqvist, who also thwarted Chris Higgins on a breakaway and turned aside an Alex Burrows re-direct. The Rangers, meanwhile, made the most of their opportunities. Daniel Carcillo jammed the puck past Vancouver goalie Eddie Lack following a lengthy scramble in front of the net at the 4:59 mark. That scramble occurred after Lack couldn‘t handle the puck after it bounced off the boards. The Rangers got a power-play goal at 14:43 when Benoit Pouliot converted a pass from Derick Brassard. The Canucks cut the New York lead in half at 6:21 of the second when Kesler fought off a check by Dominic Moore to take a pass from Daniel Sedin and wire a shot past Lundqvist. The Canucks had a chance to tie the game with back-to-back power plays midway through the third period, but instead surrendered a short-handed goal. Martin St. Louis got his first goal in 15 games as a Ranger when he converted a 2-on-1 rush with Rick Nash. That rush was the result of a bad pass back to the point by Vancouver winger Zack Kassian. Defenceman Yannick Weber couldn‘t reach the puck and St. Louis and Nash were set free the other way. The win was the 25th on the road this season for the Rangers, which is a franchise record. THE SKINNY The Rangers' fourth line opened the scoring as Dan Carcillo jammed in a loose puck after Eddie Lack initially mishandled the puck at the side of his net. New York made it 2-0 before the end of the first, Benoit Pouliot one-timing home a Derick Brassard pass on the power play. Ryan Kesler pulled Vancouver to within one in the second when he drilled a Daniel Sedin feed past Henrik Lundqvist. But the Canucks, who almost never come back, surrendered a shorthanded goal to Marty St. Louis in third and went down 3-1. BY THE NUMBERS The Canucks gave up the first two goals of the game for the third straight home game... The St. Louis shortie was just the third shorthanded goal scored on the Canucks this season, all of them on home ice... Ryan Kesler has gone 16 games without an assist but has five goals during the same stretch... The Canucks have collected seven of a possible 56 points when trailing after two periods (3-24-1)... Vancouver won the faceoff battle 34-22, led by Brad Richardson's 9-for-12 night. Shawn Matthias was 11-for-17. DID YOU NOTICE? Asked at the morning skate about the talk concerning his job security, Canuck head coach John Tortorella responded this way: ―All the noise and all that stuff out there, I get it. It's out there but I don't really pay too much attention to it. I don't worry about it. I feel very comfortable just continuing to work with this team and that's how I go about it. I don't get locked into any other stuff. But I know it's around.‖ ...Elliott Pap Vancouver Sun: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732351 Vancouver Canucks Torts talk: Canuck coach on 3-1 loss to NY Rangers April 1, 2014. 10:27 pm • Section: Puckworld Elliott Pap ―I thought it was a good hockey game. I thought we played much better throughout the game than the other night against Anaheim. I thought our team played hard. We don‘t score. They score 3, we score 1. I‘m pleased with the effort. We lose another one but I thought we battled.‖ On the first Ranger goal when Eddie Lack appeared to have covered up the puck, only to have the Rangers pitchfork it free before a whistle: ―They called it a goal. When you‘re in the situation we‘re in, you don‘t whine, you don‘t question the referees, you just go about your business. The puck should have never been in front of the net. Again, no whining. We lost. We‘re losing. We‘re just going to keep on trying to get better.‖ On the Daniel Sedin-Ryan Kesler-Alex Burrows line, which produced the only goal and had nine shots: ―That was a really good line. That‘s the best I‘ve seen Danny play in quite some time.‖ And here‘s a little more from the morning skate, when Torts was asked about the chatter concerning his job security: ―All the noise and all that stuff out there, I get it. It‘s out there but I don‘t really pay too much attention to it. I don‘t worry about it. I feel very comfortable just continuing to work with this team and that‘s how I go about it. I don‘t get locked into any other stuff. But I know it‘s around.‖ Vancouver Sun: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732352 Vancouver Canucks Canucks left looking for meaning to season By Iain MacIntyre, Vancouver Sun columnistApril 1, 2014 11:50 PMen_135x42_advantagehomeice_c01 VANCOUVER - Desperation and urgency were palpable as the Vancouver Canucks faced the New York Rangers Tuesday night. But then you walked past the whimpering ticket scalpers and went inside Rogers Arena, where the strongest sense was one of resignation. It has been a long time since the Canucks were in this position, playing out their final games hopelessly – if not quite yet mathematically – short of the National Hockey League playoffs. In both 2008 and 2006, the only years since Y2K the Canucks failed to make the Stanley Cup tournament, the team fell out of a playoff position at the end. Their games meant something until the final days of the season. But this year is worse: with the Dallas Stars winning 5-0 earlier Tuesday in Washington, the Canucks were six points out of a playoff spot with six games to go and needing to catch not one team but two, both of them holding games in-hand. Then they lost 3-1 to the Rangers. There was an inevitability about the outcome even as the first puck was dropped. ―We've never really been in this situation before, and it's not where we want to be,‖ Canuck defenceman Alex Edler said amid a despondent dressing room. ―There have been a lot of losses; it's been tough. We're going to battle to the end but we need a lot of help here.‖ There entire labour force of China couldn't help enough to get the Canucks into the playoffs. The Phoenix Coyotes, technically ninth in the Western Conference but tied with Dallas on points, play two more games before Saturday, when the Canucks play next against the Los Angeles Kings. By then, Vancouver could be 10 points out with five games to go. ―I think I've played two meaningless games throughout my career,‖ winger Daniel Sedin, a 13-year veteran, said about the prospect of being eliminated with a week to go. ―It's not a position you want to be in, and I think it's unacceptable for this team to be in this position. But we are we are because we haven't won enough games and haven't played well enough. Between Game 40 and Game 60, it cost us the season.‖ The Canucks are 11-21-4 since the middle of the season. In the last three months, they have beaten two teams that held playoff positions Tuesday night. They stayed in the vapor trail of the playoff race in March by beating the Buffalo Sabres, Nashville Predators, Florida Panthers, Calgary Flames, Winnipeg Jets and, to their credit, the Minnesota Wild. But against quality teams, the Canucks lack of quality has been exposed. It's not about determination or will. Canuck players want to win. Most of them, Sedin noted last week, have done nothing but win in Vancouver over the years. But the Canucks' talent, depth and execution are not where Vancouver needs them to be to win. So they haven't won. The Canucks tried to take the game to the Rangers. Vancouver's first line of Sedin, Ryan Kesler and Alex Burrows led from the front, generating terrific scoring chances for Kesler on the trio's first two shifts. But when New York goalie Henrik Lundqvist blockered Kesler's shot on a 2-on-1, then was strong at his near post as Kesler cut hard to the net two minutes later, you could see how this was going to go. How they've all gone recently when the Canucks play good teams. Outchanced and outshot, New York went ahead 1-0 at 4:59 when a puck off the end boards hopped past Canuck goalie Eddie Lack, chaos ensued, and three fourth-line Rangers stood untouched at the crease and swung pitchforks at the puck until finally dislodging it from Lack, allowing Daniel Carcillo to score his fourth goal in 54 games. Kesler had two chances to score and didn't, Carcillo had one chance and did. The whistle could have gone as Lack played the part of pinata, but it didn't. And when Canuck fourth-liner Tom Sestito took a tripping penalty 190 feet from his net, the Ranger power play went 1-for-1 to make it 2-0 at 14:43. And that was the game. Yes, Kesler scored in the middle period and the Canucks continued to hammer away. But they weren't coming from two goals down to beat the Rangers, who are 27-1-1 when leading after two periods. Vancouver is 3-24-1 this season when trailing after 40 minutes. It only seemed like the Canucks had a chance. Against the Rangers and in this playoff race the last few weeks. Irreparable damage was done between Dec. 29 and March 8, when the Canucks went 5-16-4. ―You battle all year to get a chance to play in the playoffs,‖ Burrows said. ―That's what it's all about. But when you're on the outside looking in, you've got to keep playing and be a pro and work for each other. You've got to do that for your teammates and the organization that believes in you.‖ Soon they'll have to do that when the games mean nothing. Vancouver Sun: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732353 Vancouver Canucks A David Booth bear story that actually ends well By Jim Jamieson, The Province April 1, 2014 9:52 PM A David Booth bear story that actually ends well Vancouver Canucks' David Booth — well-known to be a hunting enthusiast — visits the Abbotsford property of well-known movie animal trainer Mark Dumas, where he got up close and personal with a bear. After staring down a season from hell, David Booth evidently thought nothing of doing the same thing with a grizzly bear on the weekend. Booth‘s struggles, both with injury recovery and on the ice, have been well documented. In fact, in the last quarter of this sorry Canucks season, the winger has been one of the few good-news stories around this team. His overall game has come around to the point where there is some discussion of the possibility he might not be a compliance buyout, after all. But back to the grizzly, which Booth — well-known to be a hunting enthusiast — was not stalking, by the way. He was invited, through a friend, for a Sunday visit to the Abbotsford property of well-known movie animal trainer Mark Dumas, who has a grizzly named Billy, a polar bear named Agee and assorted other exotic creatures that are usually only seen in zoos or the wild. ―It was one of the coolest things I‘ve ever done,‖ Booth said on Tuesday before the Canucks took on the New York Rangers. ―A friend set me up with a guy out in Abbotsford. He has a pet polar bear and a pet grizzly. He said it was hands-on, so I jumped at that opportunity. I have a bunch of pictures, but that one was pretty cool, getting licked on the face by a grizzly bear — something I never thought would be possible.‖ Though he was assured that he would be safe getting nose-to-nose with Billy, Booth — an experienced hunter — said he was unnerved when the 600-pound teenage bear first walked up to him. ―When you‘re looking in a grizzly bear‘s eyes, you don‘t know,‖ said Booth, whose fiancée, Ashley Durham, accompanied him and also got up-close with the bear. ―But he said the experience he has with bears is you can really train them. They can do tricks. But this thing was growling right in my face. Looking right down his throat, it‘s pretty scary.‖ Booth, who went alligator hunting in Florida during the Olympic break, said he‘s been up close to big-game animals numerous times, but this experience was unique. ―That‘s one of the fiercest animals in all of creation,‖ he said. ―Its claws were longer than my fingers. I got pictures of the guy wrestling it. I wanted to do that, but they wouldn‘t let me.‖ Not sure if the NHL players‘ insurance coverage includes bear mauling. Booth said he enjoys hunting as much for the interaction as the chase. ―I love animals,‖ he said. ―It‘s just being able to interact with them. The majority of the time I go hunting I don‘t shoot anything. It‘s just cool seeing them in their own habitat, seeing how they interact. That‘s why I enjoy what I do.‖ Booth‘s linemate much of the last 20 games, Zack Kassian, has the size to be called bear-like, but he has no interest in meeting Billy. ―There‘s not many humans that would get that close to a giant bear,‖ said Kassian. ―He‘s coming back without a scratch, so he must be doing something right. I can tell you right now that I won‘t be doing that any time soon. The only animal I‘m getting close to is my dog — and he weighs about 12 pounds.‖ Vancouver Province: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732354 Vancouver Canucks Canucks Game Day: Vigneault‘s Rangers on a roll; Torts ignoring speculation on his demise; Lack to get 17th straight start. April 1, 2014. 11:56 am • Posted by: Jim Jamieson Rangers (42-30-4) at Canucks (34-31-11) TV: TSN; Radio: TEAM 1040. 7 p.m. The red-hot New York Rangers and former Canucks coach Alain Vigneault make their only regular-season visit to Vancouver on Tuesday and the form chart says they will push the locals ever-closer to playoff elimination. Canucks coach John Tortorella said he‘s not paying attention to speculation he might not be back after a disappointing first season in Vancouver. ―I don‘t make my decisions on my future – other people do,‖ said Tortorella. ―So I go about my business by being in that locker room with the team and coaching the best way I know how. So all the noise that‘s out there, I get it, it‘s out there. I really don‘t pay too much attention to it. You should ask the people who make decisions on me. I don‘t worry about it. I feel very comfortable continuing to work on this team.‖ Vancouver is five points behind Phoenix, which has the eighth and final Western Conference playoff spot and a game in hand on the Canucks. The Coyotes host Winnipeg on Tuesday and a win for them combined with a loss for Vancouver could put the Canucks in position to be mathematically as soon as Friday, should Phoenix win all three of its games this week. Phoenix also plays in L.A. on Wednesday and hosts Edmonton on Friday. The Rangers have won six of their last seven games and are coming off a 5-0 win in Edmonton on Sunday that tied a franchise record for road wins (24). The Canucks are coming off a 5-1 loss to Anaheim on Saturday and have lost two in a row after putting together a modest three-game winning streak. Eddie Lack, who‘s struggled since Roberto Luongo was traded, making him the No. 1, will get his 17th straight start in goal. Henrik Lundqvist is expected to start for the Rangers, who didn‘t attend a morning skate. Canucks captain Henrik Sedin (knee) skated before the main on Tuesday along with long-absent defenceman Andrew Alberts (concussion) under the direction of skills coach Glenn Carnegie. It appears Sedin could be getting close to returning, possibly Saturday when the Kings visit. Expected Canucks lineup: D.Sedin-Kesler-Burrows Higgins-Matthias-Jensen Booth-Richardson-Kassian Sestito-Schroeder-Hansen Hamhuis-Garrison Edler-Bieksa Stanton-Weber Lack Vancouver Province: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732355 Vancouver Canucks Willes: Canucks need to heed hiring history in coach hunt By Ed Willes, The Province April 1, 2014 10:03 PM VANCOUVER — If you just walked into the Canucks‘ press room, it was like falling into a time portal and coming out in 2011. There was Alain Vigneault, unfailingly cheerful without being terribly revealing, candid to a point but mindful of the line which crossed into controversy. There were the same jokes. There were the same reporters. T.C. Carling, the Canucks‘ former P.R. director, was even there to enlist Vigneault in an initiative for his Canadian Men‘s Health Foundation. The only thing missing was someone asking a Mason Raymond question. But Vigneault is gone, long gone, and while he did his best to steer clear of the irresistible storyline with his former team and John Tortorella, it was hard to miss the significance of his return to Vancouver with the New York Rangers. Vigneault was shattered when he took the bullet for the Canucks‘ playoff failures in 2012 and 2013, but he‘s since landed on an original-six team which features at least two Hall of Famers (Marty St. Louis, Henrik Lundqvist; Rick Nash might get there) and a bright young nucleus in one of the world‘s greatest cities. Jordan Schroeder for much of the campaign. Just bringing that up in case you still think the Canucks‘ problem was the coach. Vigneault, in fact, contributed to his own demise by creating the impression there was still a champions‘ DNA in this group; that with the right voice, the Canucks‘ core could be re-invigorated and sent on another Cup run. This led to his firing, the hiring of Tortorella and the tire fire we‘ve seen this season. But this story is hardly done as the Canucks head into another tumultuous offseason, and this time, there‘s a lot more riding on the organization‘s decisions than there was a year ago. When they make their next hire, the Orcans would do well to remember life under Vigneault. He wasn‘t a miracle worker. Here‘s a news flash: No one is. But he had a clear idea of the strengths and weaknesses of this team and played to those strengths and weaknesses, which is exactly what he‘s done with the Rangers. He also brought a level of calm to his position in Vancouver, and the importance of that can‘t be overestimated. ―I might be tuned differently, but it never affected my job and I never took it personally,‖ Vigneault said of the pressures of working in a large Canadian market. ―I understood if we lost one, fans would be upset and the media would be upset. It never bothered me. I think you have to be tuned in a special way to handle all the things that can go on in a market like this.‖ As much as anything, the Canucks need that now; someone who can come in and turn down the temperature; someone who can return some semblance of normalcy to the organization while maintaining a high standard of professionalism. The Canucks, meanwhile, have become a three-ring circus, although we still have the ocean and the mountains. They had that during Vigneault‘s run here. You just hope they understand what they‘ve been missing. Tuesday night, Vigneault's Rangers downed the Canucks 3-1 in a spirited affair which highlighted the divergent paths the two teams have travelled since they changed coaches. The Rangers, who've gone 23-10-2 over their last 35 games, have the look of the team no one wants to meet in the playoffs. Against the Canucks, they parlayed first-period goals by Dan Carcillo and Benoit Pouliot, an outstanding goaltending performance by Henrik Lundqvist and a shortie from Marty St. Louis into their eighth win in nine games. Vancouver Province: LOADED: 04.02.2014 How good have the Rangers been? St. Louis' goal was his first in 15 games since coming over from Tampa at the trade deadline. They're 10-4-1 in those games. The Canucks, for their part, tried real hard, produced 35 shots on Lundqvist, and managed to score one goal. Vigneault, it‘s now apparent, got out at precisely the right time. Given the hand he was dealt last season, his firing from the Canucks must have felt unjust, but as things have transpired, he‘s done all right. The Rangers have rebounded since their slow start and now have the look of the team no one wants to meet in the playoffs. The Canucks are now looking at their third coach in three seasons, the fans are in an uproar and everyone from the owner to the general manager to the East Coast regional scout is under the most uncomfortable scrutiny. ―It would be unfair for me to comment in any shape or form,‖ Vigneault said. ―I mean, I‘m 3,000 miles away.‖ Maybe. But his laptop is never that far away, and you have to know the Rangers‘ coach is very much aware of everything that‘s happened in Vancouver since he left. The accepted wisdom, of course, is Vigneault‘s time had come with the Canucks; the players had tuned out his message or he wasn‘t reaching the players or any of the other rationales that are trotted out when a team starts to head south. There was something to that, and everyone who steps behind an NHL bench is aware of the ground rules when they start coaching. But the Canucks just wish they had the problems now they had under Vigneault. Admittedly, you can spin this a number of ways, and the Canucks‘ membership in the Northwest Division as well as the presence of Roberto Luongo and Cory Schneider in net gave Vigneault a competitive edge unavailable to Tortorella. But Vigneault still led them to the equivalent of a 101-point season last year with a centre-ice position that didn‘t have Ryan Kesler but did have, in no particular order, Max Lapierre, Andrew Ebbett and 732356 Vancouver Canucks Rangers 3 Canucks 1: Plug pulled on Canucks' season By Ben Kuzma, The Province April 1, 2014 9:52 PM Rangers 3 Canucks 1: Plug pulled on Canucks' season Vancouver Canucks Eddie Lack looks dejected after the New York Rangers Martin St. Louis 26 scores short handed late in the 3rd period at Rogers Arena in Vancouver on April 1, 2014. The game off the ice was trying to trump the one on it Tuesday. Normally billed as a marquee matchup with the New York Rangers, the lustre was lost months ago when the Vancouver Canucks slipped into a deep offensive coma and their embattled coach snapped and couldn't snap them out of it. And with the pursuit of a wild-card playoff position closer to being taken off life support following a 3-1 loss at Rogers Arena, the angst amid the hockey populace was obvious. There were "Fire Gillis" signs outside the arena and the national media has joined the growing consensus that John Tortorella will pay the price for this mess. Scalpers were unloading tickets at below face value and countless rows of sparsely-filled seats spoke to the how season-ticket renewal time is being received. If that isn't enough, with five games remaining the prognosis of having Game 82 mean something is slipping away. Dallas won 5-0 in Washington on Tuesday and Phoenix was heading to overtime with Winnipeg and it put the Canucks at least six points shy of the playoffs. The one sign you didn't see was 'Let's Win One For Torts'. On a night where you thought the Canucks would be amped from the outset to face former coach Alain Vigneault, they dug an early two-goal hole but were good in the face-off circle yet simply not good enough in other areas of their game. There was a strong second-period push with Ryan Kesler winning a draw and then taking a feed from Daniel Sedin and wiring a slapshot past Henrik Lundqvist. There was Yannick Weber nearly seeing his point shot trickle in, but there was nothing sustained. And sustainability has always been a problem with a coach preaching push and bite and major minutes for aging veterans. Too often they have run out of gas. When it mattered most, the Canucks couldn't manufacture anything in the third period where they've been outscored 74-56 are now 3-25-1 when behind after 40 minutes. Trailing 2-1, they had consecutive power plays but gave up a shorthanded goal to Martin St. Louis on a 2-on-1 break with Rick Nash after Weber couldn't corral a Zack Kassian feed back to the point. Shawn Matthias was foiled on two late chances and it would ensure the playoff-bound Rangers would win for the seventh time in eight games. Outside of a partial breakaway by Chris Higgins and an Alex Burrows re-direct, the Canucks did little in the opening period. They got a scare at the end of the period when Kassian tumbled into the endboards while being checked by Anton Stralman. He didn't put any weight on his right leg and had to be helped off the ice but returned for the second period. Kassian then found himself on the fourth line as Tortorella started mixing combinations to get something started. The only safe bet was Jannik Hansen, who played mostly on the fourth line, doing little to endear himself to any coach with 1:35 of ice time in the first period and being on for both Rangers goals. Woven into all the navel-gazing is how being thrust in the starter's role is either helping or hurting the development of Eddie Lack. In his 17th-consecutive start, Lack was lackadaisical on the opening goal. He waved at a puck coming off the endboards and the mosh-pit that formed in front of him ended up with Daniel Carcillo poking the puck home with Dan Hamhuis and Jason Garrison fishing for the loose disk. Lack then had little chance when Benoit Pouliot wired a power-play slapper by him on a cross-ice feed from Derick Brassard, a sequence that started when Lack made a blocker save. Vancouver Province: LOADED: 04.02.2014 732357 Vancouver Canucks St. Louis scores first goal as Ranger in win over sinking Canucks By DAVID EBNER The win was New York's eighth in their past ten, while Vancouver dropped their third straight game Vancouver Canucks lose 3-1 to the New York Rangers Rangers win eighth of past 10, Canucks lose third straight Martin St. Louis puts game away in third, scoring short-handed, his first goal as a Ranger As the Vancouver Canucks stumble towards the end of their worst season in 14 years, it is suddenly groundhog day at Rogers Arena. A week-and-a-half ago, against the worst team in the league, the Buffalo Sabres, the Canucks yielded the first two goals of the game in the opening period, though Vancouver managed to claw back in that contest and book a victory against one of hockey's truly awful teams. This past weekend, the Canucks were again down 2-0 in the first, this time to the mighty Anaheim Ducks, and the two against came after an early chance for Vancouver, when Brad Richardson nearly opened the scoring short-handed. And so it was again Tuesday night. On the first shift of the game, Daniel Sedin popped a nice backhand pass to Ryan Kesler in the New York Rangers zone and Kesler fired a wrist shot reminiscent of his best years in this town, but New York's Henrik Lundqvist was able to get a piece of the puck with his blocker. New York scored not long after, on a weird play following a scramble in front of rookie Eddie Lack, a play that perhaps should have been whistled dead. New York scored again later in the first, on a power play to make it 2-0 for the visitors. Again and again, the same story repeats. Daniel Sedin after the game expressed exasperation: "It's unacceptable for this team to be in this position." And to watch the show was at least a thousand empty seats in the lower bowl of Rogers Arena, despite the announced sellout crowd. Bill Murray was not, however, spotted. If this season had unfolded differently, as in less bad for the Canucks, Tuesday night's game would be been a highlight on the calendar, the one-and-only return of disposed coach Alain Vigneault and his new team, the Rangers, the squad that Tortorella ran from 2009 before getting fired himself last year. Instead, Vigneault and the Rangers are headed to the postseason and Tortorella and the Canucks are going nowhere. Outside, on television, and in the newspapers, the future of the Canucks is chewed over by all comers. On Tuesday, three young men outside the arena, one in a balaclava, brandished "Fire Gillis" signs to express their feelings about the team's general manager, only to be reportedly asked to leave the property by arena security. In the local papers Tortorella is under considerable fire, with opinion among critics in Vancouver seemingly unanimous and certain that there is no way Tortorella will be back to coach another season in these parts. For the 55-year-old coach, his mien has become something zen. Speaking to reporters on Tuesday morning, his keel was as even as could be, talking about his rookie goalie, the struggles of Daniel Sedin, and his own future. In track pants and a blue turtleneck, Tortorella had his elbows on the podium and his hands folded, a kind-of prayer pose. He spoke as a man comfortable with his future – with a big salary to come in years ahead to comfort even if he is shown the door. "I go about my business by being in that locker room with the team and coaching the best way I know how," said the coach. "So all the noise and all that stuff out there, I get it, it's out there but I really don't pay too much attention to it. I don't worry about it. I feel very comfortable just continuing to work with this team. There's too many things going on here for me to do as a coach to worry about all the other stuff. But I know it's around. We're just going to go about our business." It's such a fine line, between the smart guy and the idiot, to invoke the words of Tortorella on Monday, about himself, losing, and Vigneault, winning. The divide isn't always as great as one might think. The Canucks are, in fact, a slightly better puck possession team this year, and the Rangers slightly worse. Vancouver's power play seems like it has cratered but last year it was 15.8 per cent – 22nd in the league – and this year it's 15 per cent, down at 27th. Worse but not much worse. Meanwhile, New York's power play is a good punch better. On the penalty kill, Vancouver is mostly unchanged, while New York is improved, both teams in the league's top 10. It's goals where the Canucks have really slumped, 2.36 a game this year, 28th in the league, down from 2.54 last year, 19th ranked. The Rangers mosey along, essentially unchanged, 2.62 goals a game last year under Tortorella, and 2.64 under Vigneault. Tortorella also spoke Tuesday morning about his team still bringing it, working to win, working to get better. Those words rang emptier – starting with the yet-again weak start to the game, down 2-0. The Canucks did find some life in the second period, battling. About six minutes in, Kesler won a faceoff in the offensive zone, getting the puck back to Sedin, who sent a sweet cross-ice pass that found Kesler and he made no mistake, burying it while closely checked by New York's Dominic Moore. In the thick of the push to tie the game, the crowd came alive, for a bit, a "Go Canucks Go!" ringing out – before falling silent. Hearty, but brief. There was hope, late, but the Canucks failed in the way that borders on humiliating. Heading towards the midway point of third, the Canucks got a chance to tie on the power play, but could not, and immediately got the chance again, another power play. The Canucks had already ceded a short-handed breakaway on the first power play and the second time round, a poor pass by Zack Kassian in the offensive zone was intercepted and the Rangers were away, a two-on-one, and Martin St. Louis made no mistake, finally scoring his first goal as a Ranger in his 15th outing with the team. Globe And Mail LOADED: 04.02.2014 732358 Websites Bouwmeester gets traded here and before his contract expires, he signs an extension at a dollar value that is certainly a great deal for the Blues and it's a long-term good deal for him? ESPN / Will the Loo finally get a Cup parade? "Players have so many choices now. It's not about how good your towels are in your locker room. It's about how you're managed, whether the ownership is going to give you every opportunity to win, and it's about the city." By Scott Burnside ST. LOUIS -- It's picture day for the St. Louis Blues at Scottrade Center. Everyone is here. GM Doug Armstrong. Head coach Ken Hitchcock, en route to a remarkable seventh season with 45 or more wins. Head trainer Ray Barile and strength and conditioning coach Nelson Ayotte. The players. Their families. Office staff. Even the Blues mascot is on hand. If you are the wiseacre type, you might suggest there is only one thing missing from this picture. It stands about 35.25 inches tall, is shiny and has lots of names on it. It's called the Stanley Cup. You might have heard of it. The Blues know of such a trophy, but only from a distance. They are aware of it only in the abstract, what it might mean, what it might feel like. The "what-ifs" of dreams now carried forward for almost 50 years. Part of the NHL's first major expansion, in 1967, the Blues are the last of those first expansion teams without a Stanley Cup. No NHL team has a longer current Cup drought. Moreover, they have not even flirted with the big prize. The Blues have not been to the Stanley Cup finals since 1970, when the league, in its infinite wisdom, thought it would be a good idea to have all the new teams in one grouping playing the Original Six teams, and the Blues made the finals in their first three seasons, getting swept each time. In the first period intermission of Saturday's game against Dallas, Hall of Famer Brett Hull, repatriated to the Blues as the team's executive vice president, poses for pictures with adoring fans. Hull won a Cup in Dallas but remains one of the most endearing of hockey stars in St. Louis. He believes the changes to the lineup coupled with the team's maturity over the past couple of seasons suggest good things are in the offing. Hull rhymes off the qualities he likes about this version of the Blues: Big, strong, disciplined. "This team is as good, as playoff-built, as any team I've seen," Hull told ESPN.com. But when it comes to success, the Blues are also a team that provides a kind of cautionary tale for all pro sports markets. In spite of the fact the team is near the top in the NHL in point production and considered one of a handful of strong Cup favorites, they do not sell out every single home game as a matter of course. The Blues rank 25th in the NHL in home attendance percentage, filling the Scottrade Center to 88.2 percent of capacity, on average (through last Thursday) and did not register their first sellout of the season until Dec. 28. They had just nine sellouts through Saturday's sold-out home date against Dallas. Some of that is a function of a wacky schedule that saw a preponderance of home dates early in the season, when they were competing with the baseball Cardinals, who advanced again to the World Series in October. And Scottrade Center is a big barn, with a capacity of 19,150. And the team is no longer in the business of simply giving tickets away to artificially inflate attendance numbers, as was the case in the past. NHL Standings Team W L OTL Pts. 1. Boston 52 17 6 110 2. St. Louis 50 17 7 107 3. Anaheim 49 18 8 106 4. San Jose 47 20 9 103 5. Pittsburgh 48 22 5 101 (Entering games April 1) They have failed to advance beyond the second round since 2001. But if you walk into a downtown establishment like Hair of The Dog, you'll find anticipation is percolating in St. Louis in an unprecedented fashion. A mural painted on a column in the Washington Street establishment features the World Series trophy, local landmarks and sports icons. There's also a blank outline of the Stanley Cup. Inside is written "Coming soon." The artist has been put on notice to fill in the outline the moment the Cup dream is realized. "It's a long time; 1967's a long time," former NHL netminder Darren Pang, now a popular broadcast analyst for the Blues, told ESPN.com. "The Toronto Maple Leafs last won a Cup in 1967 and we know what it's like in Toronto listening to their fans. You'd think it's a thousand years." But with the Blues aiming at setting franchise records for wins and points, there is reason to believe that this might be the season that all of that ends. "Pressure, build-up, expectations, as high as ever right now," Pang said of the Blues. Look up the definition of building an NHL winner and you might just see a picture of Armstrong and the Blues' familiar blue-note logo. The team has followed the blueprint step by step, drafting top building blocks such as Alex Pietrangelo, destined for Norris Trophies down the road, emerging young forwards Vladimir Tarasenko, Jaden Schwartz and cornerstone players such as captain David Backes and T.J. Oshie. There have been shrewd trades, including the acquisition of Jay Bouwmeester last season and, most recently, netminder Ryan Miller and forward Steve Ott. All the team lacks is, well, the championship to go with the championship blue print. "Let's say a couple of years ago you think Ryan Miller with a limited no-trade clause looks around and says, 'OK, that's the team I want to go to. And potentially that's the team I want to stay with'?" Pang asked. "You think Jay But an undeniable factor in explaining why this building isn't filled to the rafters every night is the fact that the team has been on the verge of greatness several times and has never been able to get over the hump. The Blues were swept in the second round two years ago against the eventual Cup winners from Los Angeles, and then blew a 2-0 series lead against the Kings in the first round last spring. "It's a blue-collar town," Armstrong explained. "We have to put a product on the ice. We're not a corporate-driven team." ― DobbsI think the fans are just waiting to explode in St. Louis. I'm sure it's been building for a long time. ‖ -- Veteran defenseman Barret Jackman This is not to suggest St. Louis isn't a good hockey market. It is a dynamic one. Has been for years and years. They have sold out nine of their last 17 home games through Saturday, so fans get that the Blues are the real deal -or at least appear to be the real deal. The Blues possess one of the most active, vibrant alumni groups in the league. In fact, when it comes to winning a Cup, veteran defenseman Barret Jackman figures the alumni he runs into on a regular basis either at team functions or around the city might be more pumped about this team's prospects than the average fan. That kind of emotion, the yearning for a winner from former Blues, is not lost on Jackman, who is the team's elder statesman, having joined the team full time in 2002-03, after which he won rookie of the year honors. Yes, there's a certain amount of pressure, a kind of burden that comes with carrying the torch for a legion of former Blues players who are waiting for a chance to celebrate the Cup win they couldn't deliver themselves, but it's also something that is being embraced by the current team, Jackman told ESPN.com. "It would be really special to share that with them," said Jackman. As for the fans, yes, the team feels their rising excitement too, with the playoffs just around the corner and a shot at what would be the team's second Presidents' Trophy. "I think the fans are just waiting to explode in St. Louis," Jackman said. "I'm sure it's been building for a long time." Bob Plager has been with the team since the beginning, since that expansion season. He credits new owner Tom Stillman with pulling out all the stops to bring a winner to long-suffering Blues fans. "This owner showed the city that they are committed to win and win now," Plager told ESPN.com. As much as he'd love to be part of Stanley Cup festivities, Plager said it's the fans who have stuck with the team through the decades that deserve it most. "Does this city deserve a Stanley Cup parade? So bad," he said. "More than anything, I want to win and I want a Stanley Cup for our fans. Will they go crazy? This city will go crazy." Hull, likewise, can only imagine the celebration that would accompany the end of the Blues' Cup drought. "I can't even fathom it," he said. "It would be absolute bedlam." Armstrong knows the numbers off by heart. Since Hitchcock took over for Davis Payne during the 2011-12 season, the Chicago Blackhawks lead the league with 277 points, the same number as the Pittsburgh Penguins. The Blues have 276, and Boston has 270. "The only difference is that three of those teams have a Cup," Armstrong said. The GM knows what goes into building a Cup winner. He was in Dallas as assistant GM and watched firsthand as GM Bob Gainey built a winner there in the late 1990s, culminating in a Cup win in 1999. He recalls working on a contract with veteran Guy Carbonneau and, at the time, it was possible to write in a playoff bonus. Blues Fans Blues fans have never seen their team win a Stanley Cup. "He said, 'I don't want that that, I want to win Cups,'" Armstrong recalled. The implication was clear; if just making the playoffs is the goal, you'll never get to the end of the road. Armstrong also understands what it would mean for St. Louis to win a Cup. He recently attended Mike Modano's jersey retirement in Dallas and remains struck by the bonds from that 1999 Dallas Stars Cup-winning team. Blake Sloan and Hull, Brad Lukowich and Modano, "have a bond that will always be there. And that bond can only be formed in one way in our sport," Armstrong said. And that's by winning a Cup. "I think about that a lot," the GM said. Are they ready? The Blues knocked off San Jose in the first round in 2012 and many thought they were ready last season to take that big step. And when they took a two-game lead over the defending Cup champs from L.A. in the first round, it looked like they had arrived. But they learned a hard lesson in winning -- and losing -- when the Kings reeled off four straight victories, all by the slimmest of margins. "We learned a hard lesson last year and had a long summer to think about it, and hopefully we'll be better going forward because of that," captain David Backes said in an interview. Not that the Blues didn't come up with the effort needed. That series might have been the hardest-hitting of the entire playoff season. "I really felt for the players last year," Hitchcock, who won a Jack Adams Award as coach of the year in his first year in St. Louis, told ESPN.com. "They poured so much into that series. But we weren't rewarded. That's the playoffs. That's just the way it is." The Blues scored just six times in the four losses against the Kings, allowing just 10 goals. But the goaltending wasn't quite where it needed to be against a team such as the Kings, who have Jonathan Quick in goal, and so the Blues added former Vezina Trophy winner Miller at the deadline this season. "It gives them presence," Pang explained. "Gives them the ability to look at other teams' goalies in the eye and say, 'We've got a Vezina Trophy winner here.'" Glenn Healy, another former NHL netminder who has established himself as a top analyst, agreed, saying the Blues might not have a game-breaker offensively like Western Conference game-breakers Ryan Getzlaf or Patrick Kane or Jonathan Toews, but they added the next best thing, an elite netminder. Healy cited Miller's play at the 2010 Olympics, when Miller was named MVP. "You know he can play at a high level and at a high pace," Healy said. Beyond that, Healy said this is the time for the Blues to go for it. The salary cap is expected to continue to rise in the coming years and it's perhaps unrealistic for the Blues to spend to the cap, if the cap goes to $85 million or $90 million. "This is the time to make the move," Healy told ESPN.com. Like all players, Backes is fueled by the Stanley Cup dream. He also understands that this hunger extends across the team's fan base, which has watched for decades as other cities have hosted parades, feted their champions. "Since you've been three years old and started liking hockey, you've dreamed about winning the Cup and envisioned what it's like hold that thing or to kiss or to have your day with it or to be in a parade or whatever," he said. "And you see other guys going through that and you want to have that experience for yourself and for your teammates. And then for a city that's supported this team for 47 years and hasn't gotten there yet, it'd be a nice treat. But it's a lot of work to be done. We've got 28 games potentially in playoffs where we've got to play solid hockey for that whole time. But we think we've got a great group assembled here that can take that task head-on." ESPN LOADED: 04.02.2014 732359 Websites ESPN / Rumblings: Callahan staying in Tampa? Canucks making changes? By Pierre LeBrun The Tampa Bay Lightning made it clear to Ryan Callahan‘s camp that they want the player past this season. The pending UFA's agent, the veteran Steve Bartlett, told ESPN.com Tuesday that he chatted with Steve Yzerman in Buffalo over the past weekend, at which point the Bolts GM made it clear they'd like to talk extension after the season. Yzerman, also reached Tuesday, said for now the focus is on hockey, on making the playoffs and on doing well in the playoffs. The GM will focus on Callahan‘s future later. "He‘s just going to play hockey and we‘ll talk when the season‘s over," Yzerman told ESPN.com. But it‘s clear the Bolts hope the former Rangers captain is more than just a rental. "Yeah, we‘d love to sign him," said Yzerman. "He‘s a good fit, a good person, a good player, has style of play that really complements our group well; he‘s fit in really well. So we hope to sign him. But we won‘t talk until after the year." Tortorella could be out One of the hot rumors that‘s made the rounds around NHL circles is that Folin‘s camp was demanding a guaranteed NHL roster spot for next season, which was a deal breaker apparently for some teams. "We weren‘t demanding, we were seeking, there‘s a difference there, there are no guarantees," Folin‘s agent, Dan Plante, told ESPN.com Tuesday. Plante said it wasn‘t a formal request, it was more about the process and wanting to know where the Swedish blueliner would fit in the organization‘s plan. But yes, teams that communicated a real chance for Folin to play in the NHL season obviously got a leg up. "The message to teams was, 'When Christian decided to leave school, he wanted to have a real shot to be on your team next year,'" Plante told ESPN.com Tuesday. "But there‘s no guarantees, we know that. We said, 'Hey, do you see him fitting in on your team next year and challenging for a spot?' We got lots of 'yes' responses to that. "We wanted to find the safest environment for the kid." They feel they found it in Minnesota, where there‘s a Wild blue-line corps that‘s still a little thin overall and where Folin can definitely step in next season and be a contributor. "He‘s what we need," Wild GM Chuck Fletcher told ESPN.com Tuesday. "We love his combination of size and mobility plus he‘s a right-handed shot. We‘re just so happy and thrilled to have landed him." The Wild had shown interest in Folin for more than a year, in fact. Just what kind of player can the 6-foot-3 right-handed blueliner be? "He has a chance to be a real good No. 4 [defenseman]," said one NHL team executive. Even though he still has four years and $8 million left on his deal, I think it is more than likely that John Tortorella will be fired as head coach after the season in Vancouver. Said an NHL scout: "A very late bloomer. Big, skates well and has a hard shot; needs work defensively, average passer." I like Torts, but he was never the right fit for that team. What pleases Bruins GM Peter Chiarelli the most about his team‘s incredible run over the past two-plus months is the consistency in his team‘s game, which is so important with the playoffs around the corner. The Canucks built a blue-line corps meant for a quick transition game, but the club has played more of a chip and chase, shot-blocking game this season. As one NHL scout told ESPN.com, "The wrong system for that set of players." The real question in Vancouver is whether that‘s going to be enough change. I suspect ownership continues to debate internally whether or not to fire GM Mike Gillis and that‘s really going to be the biggest decision of all. Personally, I would allow Gillis at least one more year to redirect the ship. I think he‘s earned that. Gillis, by the way, also has four more years on his contract. Talks renewed between Markov, Habs Things went quiet between the Montreal Canadiens and Andrei Markov's camp after both sides talked on the eve of the March 5 trade deadline. Markov‘s agent, Sergei Berezin, however, said the dialogue with Habs GM Marc Bergevin was renewed over this past weekend regarding the pending UFA blueliner. "I met with Marc a couple of days ago when they were here [in Florida]," Berezin told ESPN.com Tuesday. "I don‘t think we‘re in any rush to get anything done. I have an idea what they‘re offering, they know what we want, and I don‘t actually think we‘re that far apart. I‘m hopeful in the end it will work out." Jagr, Devils to talk extension There was also activity on the Jaromir Jagr front. The future Hall of Famer is a pending UFA but has really enjoyed his time in New Jersey. A source told ESPN.com Tuesday that Jagr‘s agent, Petr Svoboda, met with Devils GM Lou Lamoriello a few days ago and both sides expressed a desire to get Jagr extended. However, those talks would wait to get going for real until after the season. Wild win Folin derby There was massive interest in college UFA blueliner Christian Folin, 23, and as colleague Craig Custance first reported Monday night, the Minnesota Wild won the derby. Bruins winning in notable ways "We don‘t always win in perfect ways, but when we have deficiencies, we tend to take care of them, which is nice to see at this point in the season," Chiarelli told ESPN.com Tuesday. Most notable is the way in which the Bruins‘ blue-line corps survived the injury loss of Dennis Seidenberg. "It‘s given a few of our young guys more opportunities to defend, which is important come playoff time. To really know how to defend in our system," said the Bruins GM. Seidenberg was an especially impactful player on the penalty kill, but the Bruins entered Tuesday night‘s NHL action eighth overall on the penalty kill, not to mention third overall on the power play. It‘s worth mentioning because the Bruins most often get lauded for their five-on-five play, which as always has been top-notch this season under head coach Claude Julien, but it‘s not the only reason they‘re winning. "Sometimes overlooked in all this is that our special teams have been really good," said Chiarelli. One of the major power-play contributors has been Jarome Iginla, who seems to have found the fountain of youth this season in Boston. He's slated to be a UFA July 1, and there has been expressed mutual interest on both sides to continue the relationship, although contract talks between the Bruins and veteran agent Don Meehan of Newport Sports would wait until after the season. "Absolutely," Chiarelli responded when asked about having interest in bringing back Iginla. "I‘ve talked to Donnie and we‘ll look at it, like we look at everything else, after the playoffs." Carlyle's future There are some people who have wondered over the past few days if the Toronto Maple Leafs might be contemplating a coaching change this late in the season to try to salvage their playoff chances, the reeling club having lost eight straight before hosting Calgary on Tuesday night. I don‘t think that‘s going to happen in terms of right now. That‘s just not the style of GM David Nonis, whose patient approach since taking over the club has been his best attribute -- even if Leafs fans are angry and disillusioned right now. I don‘t think Nonis would see any benefit at all in a coaching change this late in the season. Randy Carlyle‘s future, however, will no doubt be on the table after the season if Toronto misses out. That‘s not to say for sure he‘d get canned, but I think Nonis will have no choice at that point but to evaluate whether Carlyle is the best choice in terms of bringing along the team‘s young talent. Regardless of whether the Leafs make the playoffs or not, I expect Nonis would continue with his patient approach going into next season, preaching the development of young players. Nonis has a long-term view for this club, which has been rare for a Toronto GM over the past 30-odd years. I suppose what‘s going to be interesting in that regard is just how patient Maple Leafs Sports and Entertainment CEO Tim Leiweke will be if the Leafs miss the playoffs. One thing to keep in mind: The Leafs GM who hired Carlyle was Brian Burke. Yes, Nonis was Burke‘s right-hand man at the time, but the fact is, as Leafs GM, he hasn‘t yet hired his own coach. ESPN LOADED: 04.02.2014 732360 Websites NBCSports.com / Michael Lewis‘ new book could be bad timing for Panthers‘ new owner Jason Brough A new book by Michael Lewis, the author who brought the baseball world Moneyball and the football world The Blind Side, could have an effect on the fortunes of one of hockey‘s newest owners. From the Irish Times: The release of Flash Boys: A Wall Street Revolt comes after years of public debate over the lightning-fast trading systems which have grown to dominate a fractured terrain where multiple exchanges and bank-run trading platforms compete for orders. In the two weeks before publication of Mr Lewis‘s book, Goldman Sachs has suddenly thrown its weight behind market reform after years of investment in HFT and has also taken the highly unusual step of telling staff to publicise its support for a competing trading platform. Some market executives have even discussed with Virtu Financial, an HFT outfit preparing the first IPO of a global proprietary trading firm, postponing its share sale amid heightened scrutiny of its core business. Virtu declined to comment, but its roadshow is expected to kick off next week. Virtu, if you thought you‘d read that name before on PHT, was founded by Vincent Viola, the new owner of the Florida Panthers. Just a few weeks ago, the Wall Street Journal wrote the following about the company‘s planned IPO: High-frequency trading could soon officially mint its first billionaire. Vincent ―Vinnie‖ Viola, the founder of Virtu Financial Inc., could have his stake valued at around $2 billion once the company sells shares to the public, according to two people familiar with the matter. We‘re quite certain Viola won‘t be out on the street if Virtu‘s IPO doesn‘t go perfectly, but certainly the timing of the book‘s release isn‘t fantastic. NBCSports.com / LOADED: 04.02.2014 732361 Websites CNN/Sports Illustrated / Report: Pavel Datsyuk could return to Red Wings‘ lineup on Wednesday By Amy Lilek There could be some good news on the way for the injury-riddled Red Wings. Pavel Datsyuk could return to the lineup on Wednesday for Detroit‘s game against the Boston Bruins, according to a report on NHL.com. Every team has to battle through injuries during the NHL season, but for the Detroit Red Wings this season, the injuries just seemed to keep mounting. The Red Wings have the second most man games lost this season, and went through a six-game stretch of losing a player to injury. Despite being without impact players like Henrik Zetterberg, Datsyuk, and Daniel Cleary, among many others, Detroit currently has a three point lead for a wild-card spot in the East. A lingering knee injury has kept Datsyuk out of the Detroit lineup since February 27, but he participated in his first full team practice in a month on Tuesday. Datsyuk will probably be a game-time decision, and coach Mike Babcock would not say for certain whether Datsyuk will return for Wednesday‘s game. But with a battle for a playoff spot down the stretch, getting a healthy Datsyuk back could be significant at an important time for the Red Wings. CNN/Sports Illustrated LOADED: 04.02.2014 732362 Websites CNN/Sports Illustrated / Devils drop another shootout, now winless in last 15 attempts By Amy Lilek The New Jersey Devils could only wish it was an April Fool‘s Day joke. But the reality is the Devils dropped yet another shootout on Tuesday night, this time in nine rounds to the Buffalo Sabres. New Jersey is now 0-11 on the season and extended their NHL-record winless streak in shootouts to 15 games, dating back to last season. While the outcome remained the same, there was a bright spot for the Devils as Jacob Josefson and Jaromir Jagr both scored in the shootout. Previously, Reid Boucher, a prospect currently playing for the Albany Devils of the AHL, had been the only New Jersey player to score in a shootout this season. If the Devils‘ shootout woes continue, it could be the difference between New Jersey being in the playoffs and being on the outside looking in. New Jersey currently has 80 points on the season, just three behind Columbus for a playoff spot. With just a few shootout wins this season, the Devils‘ might be planning for a trip to the postseason, instead of waiting and hoping one manages to materialize. CNN/Sports Illustrated LOADED: 04.02.2014 732363 Websites CNN/Sports Illustrated / Washington Capitals‘ Troy Brouwer takes veiled shot at coach Adam Oates By Allan Muir If there‘s something interesting for a hockey player to say, he will almost certainly choose instead to say something that is the exact opposite. It‘s just the way of the sport. Don‘t call attention to yourself. Don‘t rock the boat. You know how it is. So it‘s pretty unusual when a player offers up something truly honest and insightful. Katie Carerra of The Washington Post nabbed one of those rare gems on Monday from Capitals winger Troy Brouwer, whose team has lost three straight, hobbling its playoff chances. ―I feel like we‘re trying to change our identity every night. Some nights we want to score off the rush, other nights we want to try and grind it out and there‘s just not that consistency in not just our game but in the style of our game,‖ Brouwer said. ―We‘re kind of losing our way in between games and playing towards other teams‘ [styles] and how they‘re dictating the game, and as a result we‘re not getting results.‖ Whoa. It‘s one thing for a veteran to call out a room for indifference or inattention to detail or for forgetting to RSVP, or whatever. But when you talk about identity and inconsistency 24 weeks into a 26-week season, you‘re throwing shade directly at the coach. Brouwer, a veteran of six NHL seasons, is far too savvy to put something like this out there without knowing that it will be read as anything but a shot at coach Adam Oates. And, frustrated or not, Brouwer wouldn‘t say it without knowing that others in the room shared his opinion. Oates, of course, disagrees. ―We‘re trying to do the same thing every night,‖ he told Carerra. But the eye test tells a different story. Washington isn‘t just stumbling down the home stretch. The Caps are a Jekyll and Hyde club with an intensity that varies widely. Their priorities seem completely inverted: focusing on special teams — where stars Alex Ovechkin and Nicklas Backstrom thrive — instead of on five-on-five, which demands more two-way accountability. But accountable hockey is not as much fun as the other kind, and if you don‘t have a complete buy-in, it sets up the exact inconsistencies that plague this team. Oates isn‘t a bad coach. It was just last year that he was being hailed as a genius for pushing all the right buttons with Ovechkin, remember? But when you hear Brouwer‘s words and see Washington‘s disjointed efforts on the ice, it‘s fair to ask if Oates is the right coach for this team moving forward. CNN/Sports Illustrated LOADED: 04.02.2014 732364 Websites CNN/Sports Illustrated / Brian Cazeneuve>INSIDE THE NHL Brian Cazeneuve Happy April Fools' Day, the time you try to convince your hockey-loving co-workers that the NHL has decided to widen the nets and that the Stanley Cup finals will be played entirely outdoors. With only two weeks left in the regular season, it is also time to consider our picks for the league's major awards. Our list includes deserving players as well as some who have looked, well, somewhat foolish. Hart Trophy Likely winner: Sidney Crosby, Penguins Boston got a look at the stylish blueliner during last year's playoffs when he was pressed into service after injuries depleted the Bruins' defense corps. The 22-year-old has 14 goals and 37 points, but is especially adept on the power play, moving the puck quickly and making smart decisions before the opposition has time to react. That has allowed Boston to reduce, if just slightly, the minutes played by overworked captain Zdeno Chara. April Fools' pick: Teemu Selanne, Ducks Rather than pick on a struggling first-year player who still has time to turn his game around, let's acknowledge the man who is playing the game with the gusto and enthusiasm of a rookie -- all while making his farewell tour of the league. Just to watch the 43-year old at work during the Olympics in Sochi, where he helped Finland win the bronze medal while earning tournament MVP honors, gave you even greater appreciation for the NHL's ageless wonder. Norris Trophy Likely winner: Duncan Keith, Blackhawks The outlook on Crosby winning an award always come with the qualifier "if he's healthy." Well, he's been healthy. At the Sochi Olympics, he scored a terrific breakaway goal in the gold medal game -- no overtime heroics needed -- and he's on his way to another scoring title ... and his second MVP honor. He's gotten into the habit of winning in the NHL and at the Olympics, and he plays with diligence at both ends of the ice. The Senators' Erik Karlsson will easily finish with the most points of any backliner this season, but Keith excels in so many situations. For that reason alone, the defending Cup champs cannot be counted out. Under the radar: Ryan Getzlaf, Ducks Under the radar: Alex Pietrangelo, Blues Anaheim's captain does almost everything, from hitting to scoring to leading by example. Consistently a very good player, he's having his best season for a team that has a chance to win the Stanley Cup, and stands second to Crosby with 83 points in the race for the Art Ross Trophy Only the Predators' Ryan Suter sees the ice more often than Pietrangelo (32.1 minutes per game), and he's +23 on a team that's chasing the Presidents' Trophy because of its ability to shut down high-scoring lines. Few players have improved as consistently, and have been as good across the board, for a Cup contending team. April Fools' pick: David Clarkson, Maple Leafs Toronto opened its vault last summer to sign Clarkson to a seven-year contract at $5.25 million per season, and as the Maple Leafs try to pull out of an eight-game losing skid, they really should consider asking for a refund. The man who scored 30 goals in his last full season with the Devils, and 15 during the lockout-shortened 2012-13 campaign, has just four in 54 games; only one since Dec. 21. Clarkson turned 30 the day before April Fools', but the joke has been on his team. April Fools' pick: Alex Edler, Canucks At times, Edler and his coach, John Tortorella, have been like oil and water. Edler has been parked at the end of the bench several times this season, not skating for a team that was supposed to be a contender. His -30 rating, the worst among NHL defensemen, has contributed to Vancouver's free fall. Selke Trophy MUIR: Clarkson among players who had something to prove Likely winner: Patrice Bergeron, Bruins Vezina Trophy Sure Jonathan Toews and Pavel Datsyuk will get votes, but just look at the season Boston is having. Bergeron wins face-offs, hounds opposing scorers and comes through with big goals, as he did in last year's playoffs. He's a logical pick, and with his +36 rating, he's also a good one. Likely winner: Tuukka Rask, Bruins With a 34-14-5 record, Rask has the lowest goals-against average (2.02) and the highest save percentage (.933) of any goalie with at least 30 games played. Boston has an excellent, balanced team, but the recent winning streak -- and the march to a possible Presidents' Trophy -- would not have happened without Rask's fine play. Under the radar: Ben Bishop, Lightning Where would Tampa Bay be without Bishop? The Bolts' turnaround from last season has been remarkable. If you compare his numbers (36-12-7; 2.18 GAA; .926 save pct.) with the best the Lighting had to offer last season -Anders Lindback (10-10-1; 2.90; .902) -- Bishop must be in the Vezina conversation. April Fools' pick: James Reimer, Maple Leafs Let's be clear, here. This is not meant to be a dump-on-Reimer rant. He could still be a top flight NHL goalie, but he desperately needs to get out of Toronto and start fresh. He's on the fans' hit list for the Leafs' collapse in last season's playoffs, and while Jonathan Bernier was on the injury shelf this season, it didn't help matters when he gave up a bunch of softies during the club's free fall from the postseason picture. CAZENEUVE: Maple Leafs No. 1 in SI.com NHL fan misery rankings Calder Trophy Likely winner: Nathan MacKinnon, Avalanche The 18-year-old center has been as good as advertised during his debut campaign, leading all NHL rookies with 23 goals, including eight on the power play, and 56 points. Imagine what Colorado's improving team can look forward to as the kid from Halifax gets better. Under the radar: Torey Krug, Bruins Under the radar: Anze Kopitar, Kings The lack of West Coast winners of this award has little to do with an aversion to defense in one conference. It is simply a matter of public attention for an award that requires years of good PR and paying dues in order to merit a selection. Kopitar is so good offensively that few people realize how well he performs in his own end of the ice. April Fools' pick: Alex Ovechkin Okay, once in a while, Alex, go as hard after a puck in your own end as you do in the other one. Among forwards, Ovi has a league-worst -34 rating. How can that happen to a man who was +45 as recently as 2009-10? He's scored 48 goals, so imagine just how defensively indifferent he's had to be in order to dig such a huge hole. Lady Byng Trophy Likely winner: Rob Scuderi, Penguins How in the world does a defenseman play 23 shift per game for 46 games and not draw a penalty? Some would say that a 35-year old with 169 PIM on his NHL career resume simply isn't being aggressive enough, but Scuderi spent only four minutes in the box while with the Kings last season. Under the Radar: Ryan O'Reilly, Avalanche Forget for a second that O'Reilly has scored 26 goals, which, by itself, tells you how involved he is in every play. Here's his most remarkable numerical combination: he leads the NHL in takeaways with 76. That's a player who puts himself in position to take a penalty if a swipe of the stick goes wrong by even an inch or two. Yet O'Reilly has a drawn total of just two PIM for the entire season. That's Byng-worthy stuff. April Fools' pick: James Neal, Penguins Neal's indifference toward the safety of his opponents got so bad this season that former NHL referee Paul Stewart singled him out, telling HockeyBuzz: "James Neal is not my type of hockey player. He has been involved in multiple incidents, showing reckless disregard for his fellow players." Neal's three suspensions as well as his penchant for diving also did not escape Stewart's notice. Adams Award Likely winner: Patrick Roy, Avalanche Roy did things the right way, taking his time coaching at other levels and turning down a chance to return to the NHL when he didn't feel he was ready. Granted, he's had some pretty good young talent to work with, but he's also led Colorado back to a place of prominence in his first season. Under the radar: Mike Babcock, Red Wings After all this time? Yes. For all Babcock did during Detroit's run of success, and during the Ducks' trip to the Cup finals in 2003, he has never been named coach of the year. But with the injuries in Detroit this season, he's kept the Wings in the hunt for their 23rd straight playoff appearance. That, alone, is Adams material. April Fools' pick: John Tortorella, Canucks Torts was brought in to get this team over the hump. Yes, Vancouver could win Presidents' trophies, but the Canucks needed a taskmaster to steel them for the rigors of the playoffs, when the hardware that really matters is at stake. So much for that idea. Tortorella's demanding approach had run its course in New York after five seasons. He needed just one to flop in Vancouver. GM of the year Likely winner: Peter Chiarelli, Bruins Count the ways that this man has made the right moves in Boston. With young defensemen Torey Krug, Matt Bartkowski and Dougie Hamilton blossoming, Chiarelli made the tough call to let go of popular Andrew Ference. He went after Jarome Iginla anew and watched him fit in after Nathan Horton skipped town for mostly non-hockey reasons. The GM showed patience with improving Chris Kelly after the role-plying center had a poor 2013 season. He made the most of having to move Tyler Seguin to Dallas. And he found backup Chad Johnson, who has merely gone 17-3-1 for the Bruins this season. Well done. Under the radar: Steve Yzerman, Lightning Given Tampa Bay's improvement, this choice may not be much of a surprise, but Yzerman has actually been putting his club in position to make this run for a while. Though it may have been hard to let go of cornerstones Vincent Lecavalier and Martin St. Louis, the addition of Ryan Callahan has given the Bolts some chutzpah and net presence, and Yzerman had enough cap room to enable the deal with the Rangers that made his team younger and feistier. With Ben Bishop in net, Tampa Bay could be strong in some key positions for a while, and there was enough depth there so that when sniper Steven Stamkos went down with a broken leg, the club kept winning. April Fools' pick: Garth Snow, Islanders Hey, if you're wondering how to buy high and sell low, just check out Snow's manual under the heading of Thomas Vanek. CNN/Sports Illustrated LOADED: 04.02.2014 732365 Websites CNN/Sports Illustrated / FHL hug-and-beer-hockey-fight stunt falls flat; players suspended By Sarah Kwak The scene was familiar to any fan, but particularly to those who know and love the trenches of minor minor-league hockey. Off a third-period draw last Friday — in a game in which the Danville Dashers trailed the Dayton Demonz by four goals with less than 10 minutes to go in their Federal League seasons — Danville forward Matt Puntureri and Dayton center Jesse Felten shed their gloves, elbow pads and helmets and made for center ice. They looked at each other as they deked and danced from there to the far blue line, but when Puntureri made his move to scrap, he did so with outstretched arms. Felten, too, opened his arms wide, and the two hugged it out before a punch was thrown. But that‘s not all. Puntureri then reached into his hockey shorts and took out a can of Coors Light, a leftover from the Dashers‘ rookie party last week. He cracked it open and, with his arm around Felten while flashing a peace sign, the two skated around the rink in a surprising show of harmony. On the video of the ―hug and beer fight,‖ which went viral over the weekend, an announcer proclaimed, ―I think that was set up.‖ His ever-astute reasoning proved correct. ―It was my idea, not to brag or anything,‖ Puntureri said on Monday from his home in Wampum, Pa. ―I‘m always pulling silly antics like this, whether it be some celebrations or anything like that.‖ So with the season nearing its end, he came up with his suds-and-a-warm-embrace idea, and before a game between the two clubs the previous Sunday, he approached Felten, a good friend and former teammate. The two had played for the FHL‘s New York Aviators in 2010-11. ―I have a business proposition for you,‖ Puntureri said. Felten enthusiastically agreed to the scheme. The plan was to pull the stunt at around the 10 minute mark of the third period, so during a media timeout, Puntureri slipped the beer into his shorts and gave a knowing nod to Felten as he went out to take the face-off. They had discussed having Felten raise a beer as well, but given that his Demonz were playoff-bound and had games left to play, the two players didn‘t want to risk getting him suspended for the sake of the stunt. Turns out, it didn‘t matter. The FHL has banned Felten for the entire playoffs, and, though Puntureri hasn‘t officially gotten word from the league, he‘s heard through the grapevine that he‘s been slapped with a lifetime ban from the league — a most severe punishment for a largely harmless, and quite hilarious, stunt. ―I wouldn‘t take back what happened, even if it meant not getting suspended, I guess,‖ Felten says. ―Punts has been a real good friend of mine, and it‘s kind of upsetting to see what happened. But at the same time, it was all in good fun. It wasn‘t meant to piss the league off or make them look bad, even though they maybe took it that way.‖ ―We‘ve gotten a lot of attention over it, which has kind of been cool,‖ he added. ―It blew up more than we expected or planned for it to.‖ The league did not respond to SI.com‘s requests for comment, but it seems safe to assume that the FHL thought the ―fight‖ was embarrassing, and that it made a mockery of a league that wants to be considered legitimate. Established in 2010, the fledgling Federal Hockey League, however, is not totally unlike the one depicted in the cult classic movie Slap Shot – which was simply called the Federal League. The FHL is a low-budget minor league with four teams located in small, sleepy towns like Danville, Ill. (pop. 33,000) and Watertown, N.Y. (pop. 27,900). It‘s a circuit in which the leading scorer (Dayton‘s Ahmed Mahfouz, with 96 points) also has 190 penalty minutes. And before Friday‘s stunt turned on the spotlight, it was best known for having had a team fold a month into its existence, only to relocate and be forced to fill its roster by picking up available bodies in nearby towns on the road. The Federal League‘s players may have dreamed of playing in the NHL once upon a time, but they now grind away with no illusions, simply happy to do what they love while making maybe $300 a week, the equivalent of three days of an NHLer‘s per diem road-trip meal allowance. It‘s not a glamorous life, and when players have been through as long a losing season as the Dashers had (16-36-5), sometimes just a little bit of fun can make a world of difference. ―I know the guys were frustrated,‖ Puntureri says. ―But at least we could end the season … I wouldn‘t really call it a high note, but it was a fun note at least.‖ Danville and Dayton make up the FHL‘s de facto western conference, and share a heated rivalry with a history of bench-clearing brawls. Their season opener on Nov. 1 featured four separate fights, the last of which resulted in 75 penalty minutes between both teams. In 20 meetings this season, they‘ve shared fighting majors in all but six games. Perhaps poignantly, Friday‘s match was one of the six without a, well, technical fight. So, the Puntureri-Felten hug-it-out offered an ironic twist to the usual FHL fare, though it wasn‘t even jokester Puntureri‘s favorite prank. Known for his colorful and comedic celebrations, he‘s got plenty to choose from. After scoring, he‘s crouched into the familiar rowboat pose, then thrown his stick and ―jumped overboard‖ to mime swimming on the ice. And once, in a game around Christmas, he hid a candy cane in his pants to use as a goal celebration prop. ―I could feel the candy cane crushing on my first shift and was like, I have to score soon or else this isn‘t going to work,‖ he recalls laughing. He did score soon thereafter, and popped the candy cane in his mouth before throwing it into the crowd. But nothing he‘s done has garnered as much attention as Friday‘s beery hug with Felten. Puntureri‘s phone has been buzzing non-stop, he says, and he even got a call from a Canadian newspaper. Felten changed his Facebook profile picture to one from Friday night‘s game and within 20 hours it had more than 200 likes. ―I was really surprised because I had pulled so many stunts before and it was never a big deal,‖ Puntureri says. ―Most of the feedback‘s been positive, which I‘m very happy for.‖ But, of course, not all of it has been high-fives and belly laughs. The league was not amused, and some, including commissioner Don Kirnan, accused him of making a mockery of the game while explaining that players are forbidden to bring beer onto the ice. The Dashers removed the video of the ―fight‖ from the team‘s Facebook page with the explanation that the incident was ―an internal matter‖ to be resolved. Some people wondered if the stunt was a grand statement about fighting‘s place in hockey — which Puntureri says unequivocally it was not. No, if anything, it was simply a statement about having fun. ―I guess that‘s my message to the world through all my antics,‖ he says. ―It‘s a message about being happy, having fun and not taking everything quite so seriously — just enjoying life.‖ CNN/Sports Illustrated LOADED: 04.02.2014 732366 Websites CNN/Sports Illustrated / Allan Muir>NHL POWER RANKINGS More Columns Allan Muir St. Louis Blues (50-17-7) You have to think the Blues are rooting for the Coyotes to keep the Stars out of the eighth spot in the West, right? St. Louis looked sloppy -- Ken Hitchcock's words, not mine -- while losing to Dallas for the second time this month. Something about the Stars' speed really seems to wreak havoc with Hitch's system. The Blues may be the class of the West, but they're hardly invulnerable. (Last week: 2-1-0) 3 It may be April 1, but this is no joke: Pavel Datsyuk was back on the ice on Tuesday morning with the Red Wings. And his timing couldn't be better. The superstar center has spent the past six weeks on the sidelines with recurring knee problems while his teammates battled to secure a place among the elite eight of the Eastern Conference. To their credit, they've hung in there, but the truth is that Datsyuk-less Detroit doesn't scare anyone. Sure, the Wings have gotten good mileage out of their kids, especially the red-hot Gustav Nyquist, but they're a shadow of the puck possession monsters they used to be. It's like they've forgotten how to enter the zone effectively. They wait for mistakes instead of forcing them. That's not Red Wings hockey ... but that's about to change soon. No word yet on when Pasha will return to the lineup, but if Detroit can hold on to a spot, he'll certainly be ready for the playoffs. And that should make the Bruins and the Penguins sit up and take notice. For all their flaws, the Wings as a group are loaded with playoff experience, and they have a knack for knocking off higher seeds (the Ducks can provide a reference, if needed). And bringing Datsyuk back into the mix changes Detroit. He makes the Red Wings a more confident -- and more dangerous -team. And with other players on the verge of returning (Daniel Alfredsson, maybe Henrik Zetterberg) they'll be a formidable first-round foe no matter where they're seeded. Detroit isn't the only fringe entrant that looks capable of doing some damage. The sixth-seeded Kings are well off the pace in the West, but they look like they're putting it all together at just the right time, with a franchise record-tying 11 wins in March. Anze Kopitar is playing some of the best hockey of his career -- it'll be an embarrassment if he's anything less than a finalist for the Selke Trophy -- and Marian Gaborik has altered the chemistry of the offense. L.A. still isn't scoring a ton, but the club seems to be getting goals when it matters most. For a team that has a world-class goaltender in Jonathan Quick, and an emerging weapon in blueliner Alec Martinez, that could be enough for another deep postseason run. The Stars might not be ready to go long, but they could be a miserable first round opponent if they manage to sneak into the dance. The line of Tyler Seguin, Jamie Benn and (usually) Valeri Nichushkin has been one of the league's best all season, and the trio's speed makes it a difficult matchup. And now that Dallas' depth forwards are clicking and goalie Kari Lehtonen is healthy, the Stars may as well be wearing glass slippers. This team is capable of an upset. Here's how the rest of the league stacks up after Week 24. Notable rise: Anaheim Ducks (8 to 4). Montreal Canadiens (11 to 7) Los Angeles Kings Last Week: 4 Los Angeles Kings (44-26-6) They coughed up more than a third-period lead in Monday night's 3-2 loss to the Wild. They gave away a chance at history. The Kings won 11 games in March, tying a franchise mark set in January 2002. Tough to see a chance like that go by the wayside, but you have to love the way they're playing. And how about Marian Gaborik? He looked like an ill-fitting piece when he was acquired at the deadline, but he's given L.A. exactly what it needed, with three goals and nine points in his last 10 games. (Last week: 3-0-0) 4 Anaheim Ducks Last Week: 8 Anaheim Ducks (49-18-8) If they make the deep run they're capable of this spring, everyone's going to point to March 31 as the moment it all came together. Down 4-0 to the Jets at home on Monday night, Anaheim pulled off the greatest comeback in franchise history, scoring five unanswered goals, including Corey Perry's equalizer with 22.7 seconds remaining and Stephane Robidas' winner 16 seconds into OT. It was a huge win, showing what the Ducks can do under pressure, and it widened their lead atop the Pacific Division. Epic. (Last week: 3-0-1) 5 San Jose Sharks Last Week: 3 San Jose Sharks (47-20-9) They went 9-3-3 during a grueling March, but that wasn't enough to hold on to first place in the Pacific. A pair of losses to the Jets and the Avalanche -- both winnable games -- dropped San Jose into second behind the Ducks. The Sharks play four of their final six contests at home, where they've consistently been one of the toughest teams to beat. They need to take full advantage of that soft schedule. (Last week: 1-2-0) 6 Colorado Avalanche Last Week: 9 Notable fall: Toronto Maple Leafs (23 to 30) NHL Power Rankings 1 Boston Bruins Last Week: 1 Boston Bruins (52-17-6) Instead of battling it out for the Presidents' Trophy, maybe the B's should look for a way to give up home ice advantage in the playoffs. Sunday's 4-3 win over the Flyers made it nine straight on the road for Boston, a new franchise record. Overall, the Bruins moved to a league-best 15-1-2 since the Olympic break, a streak that's gotten a boost from the play of third-line center Carl Soderberg (6-8-14) and rookie Kevan Miller, who has become a surprisingly reliable defensive presence. (Last week: 3-0-0) 2 St. Louis Blues Last Week: 2 Colorado Avalanche (47-21-6) It was a memorable week in Denver where the Avs eclipsed the 100-point mark for the first time in 10 years and secured their first playoff berth since 2009-10. But the news wasn't all good: leading scorer Matt Duchene was lost for a month after colliding with teammate Jamie McGinn on Saturday night, leaving Colorado with a massive hole to fill ahead of a postseason date with the Blackhawks. Might be time to embrace their inner Cinderella. (Last week: 3-0-0) 7 Montreal Canadiens Last Week: 11 Montreal Canadiens (43-26-7) The Habs are hitting their stride at just the right time, winning five straight to slip past the Lightning in the Atlantic race. They key to the hot streak? Start with the play of goalie Carey Price, then consider the hottest line in hockey. Max Pacioretty, David Desharnais and Thomas Vanek have combined for 32 points in their last 10 games, and they're getting it done at five-on-five. Vanek, always known as a finisher, has brought the unit to life with his passing skills. Wonder if that chemistry will convince him to listen to Montreal's contract pitch this summer? (Last week: 3-0-0) 8 Philadelphia Flyers Last Week: 5 five games that the Coyotes have let a third-period advanatage slip through their grasp -- five points they've left on the table. The inability to finish could cost them in the end. (Last week: 2-1-0) 14 New York Rangers Last Week: 13 Philadelphia Flyers (39-27-8) Not to take anything away from Mike Babcock and Patrick Roy, but where's the love for Craig Berube in discussion about the Jack Adams Award? This team was being fitted for a toe tag when Berube was asked to step behind the bench last October. All he's done is turn the Flyers into a pack of ravenous, laser-focused wolves capable of taking down any target. Maybe a strong finish will put him in the conversation -- where he certainly belongs. (Last week: 1-1-1) 9 Pittsburgh Penguins New York Rangers (42-30-4) Remember that brutal nine-game road trip that saw them open the season 3-6, when they seemed to be on an inexorable journey to an early tee time? Funny thing. Since then, the Blueshirts have gone 21-8-0 on the road, with Sunday's win over the Oilers counting as their 24th road victory of the season, which tied a franchise record. New York has three more chances, starting Tuesday in Vancouver, to set a new mark. (Last week: 2-1-0) 15 Detroit Red Wings Last Week: 6 Last Week: 16 Pittsburgh Penguins (48-22-5) Detroit Red Wings (35-26-14) A team that's just 4-5-1 in its last 10 games would probably rather focus on the fact that it has won its last two, including a decisive 4-1 victory over the defending Stanley Cup champs on Sunday, instead of on its inconsistency. But inconsistency has really been the story of these Pens. (Last week: 2-2-0) Big win for Mike Babcock and the Wings on Sunday against Tampa Bay. The victory was his 411th behind Detroit's bench, moving him past Scotty Bowman into second place on the franchise's all-time victories list. Babcock could pass Jack Adams for the top spot with three wins this week. That would be an amazing mark, but given what's at stake, the points Detroit would earn for those victories would be even more meaningful. With the Red Wings three points up on the ninth-place Capitals, it's critical for Detroit to go at least 4-2-1 over its final seven games. (Last week: 2-2-0) 10 Chicago Blackhawks Last Week: 6 16 Chicago Blackhawks (42-19-15) What's more alarming? The injury curse that's seen Jonathan Toews join Patrick Kane on the sidelines? The indifferent play that characterized three consecutive losses last week? Or the fact that the Hawks have won just 14 of 34 games since the calendar turned to 2014? We all know how good they can be, but right now they just aren't that good. (Last week: 1-3-0) 11 Minnesota Wild Last Week: 10 Minnesota Wild (39-26-11) Columbus Blue Jackets Last Week: 15 Columbus Blue Jackets (38-30-6) Whatever fate awaits the Jackets -- and it's entirely up in the air with eight games to go -- this season will be remembered for the breakthrough of Ryan Johansen. Here's a kid who just six years ago scored five goals in 47 games for Penticton of the BCHL, but who is now in the books as just the third player in Columbus history to score at least 30 goals in a season. He's getting the big winners, too, netting the clincher in three of the team's last four victories, including in Saturday's critical 3-2 decision over the Hurricanes. (Last week: 2-1-0) After a pair of sloppy losses to the Canucks and the Blues trimmed their lead over the Coyotes to a single point, the Wild may have turned their season around with come-from-behind wins over Phoenix on Saturday and the Kings on Monday. Goalie Ilya Bryzgalov was big in both victories, keeping Minnesota close until the offense could get going in the third period. He's now 4-0-2 since joining the club at the deadline. (Last week: 2-2-0) 17 12 The Stars are in full-on desperation mode, trying to atone for a brutal four-game skid that almost knocked them out of the hunt for a wild-card spot. They played well enough against the Blackhawks, but really turned it up at home against the Predators (lighting up Pekka Rinne for seven goals) and on the road against the Blues. The win over St. Louis might have been Dallas' most important of the season. Lose that game and the Stars trail the Coyotes by three points. By winning, Dallas didn't just closed the gap, it proved to itself that it could beat anybody if the players kept their feet moving. With the next four games on the road, the ability to play at a high level will be key to the Stars postseason hopes. (Last week: 2-1-0) Tampa Bay Lightning Last Week: 12 Tampa Bay Lightning (41-25-9) Sunday's 3-2 loss to the Red Wings ended a stretch of 11 games in which the Bolts had secured at least one point. That's swell and all, but they've also developed a troubling habit of getting off to slow starts lately. They've usually had the firepower to claw their way back, scoring at least three goals in 10 of their past 12 games. Still, being ready to play when the puck drops will be critical down the stretch. If coach Jon Cooper can't get this matter corrected, he can kiss his Adams chances good-bye. (Last week: 2-1-0) 13 Dallas Stars Last Week: 18 Dallas Stars (36-27-11) 18 Washington Capitals Last Week: 17 Phoenix Coyotes Last Week: 14 Washington Capitals (34-28-13) Phoenix Coyotes (36-27-12) The Caps are playing a lot of hockey lately, with four of their last five games ending with shootouts. Problem is, they've also lost four of their last five, and it has cost them their spot at the Metropolitan Division table ... and maybe their shot at the playoffs. If Washington falls short, it'll be interesting to see how much of the blame falls on captain Alex Ovechkin, who just completed A 9-3-1 tear through March pulled the Coyotes to within a point of Minnesota in the wild card race, but it was another blown lead in a 3-1 loss to the Wild that cost Phoenix the opportunity to pull ahead. That's three times in the last the month of March without scoring a single point at five-on-five. I'd guess he'll be vigorously defended. He shouldn't be. (Last week: 0-1-2) 19 Winnipeg Jets Last Week: 19 Reality has finally set in. That little three-game flight of fantasy behind them, it's now apparent to all that the Canucks are going to miss the playoffs for the first time in six seasons. All that's left now is to see if Alex Edler can regain the "lead" from Alex Ovechkin for the league's worst plus-minus, and to suffer through a visit from ex-coach Alain Vigneault, whose success with the Rangers will remind everyone that he used to win in Vancouver, too. (Last week: 1-1-1) Winnipeg Jets (33-33-10) 25 Monday night's epic collapse in Anaheim cut the Jets' tragic number to one, and maybe also sealed the fate of Paul Maurice, the coach who briefly turned the season around when he was brought on board in January. He now clearly has run out of answers. That's not to say that this team's failings are on him, though. Winnipeg has proved to be a thoroughly forgettable group of hockey players time and again this season, and that's on the guy who put the roster together: GM Kevin Cheveldayoff. (Last week: 1-1-1) Last Week: 26 20 New Jersey Devils Last Week: 20 Nashville Predators (33-32-11) I saw the Preds play only once last week, but was struck by something I've noticed about them several times this season: their ability to create chances by getting behind the opposing defense, followed by an inability to finish. How much longer will they simply accept being offensively inept? They're absolutely brutal at five-on-five, ranked 27th in league. Until they address that, this is a team of little to no consequence. (Last week: 2-1-1) 26 New Jersey Devils (32-28-15) Is there anything more automatic than a Devils loss in a shootout? They dropped two more last week to move to 0-10 on the season. You can look at the goaltending all you want, but when your shooters score just once in 30 attempts -- with winger Reid Boucher, who is currently skating for AHL Albany, on the verge of entering the history books as the lone Devil to score in a skills session this season -- it's clear where the problem lies. Tough not to look at the three points that separates New Jersey from a playoff spot and wonder what might have been. (Last week: 1-0-2) 21 Ottawa Senators Last Week: 24 Nashville Predators New York Islanders Last Week: 27 New York Islanders (29-35-10) Wins, losses, Kardashians ... everything that used to matter seems so trivial now that there's something truly powerful to cling to: the very real chance that Charles Wang is on the verge of selling the team and ending his reign of incompetence. Of course, there's no guarantee that the new guy will be any better, but for a fanbase that simply needs a reason to believe, this is the best of all possible ways to end another disastrous season. (Last week: 2-0-1) 27 Edmonton Oilers Last Week: 28 Ottawa Senators (32-29-14) Lots of intrigue around the club as everyone wants to know what captain Jason Spezza plans to do. His contract is through next season, but his interest in signing beyond that will determine whether he's extended or traded this summer -- a decision that will set off a series of dominoes that are waiting to fall. (Last week: 3-0-1) 22 Carolina Hurricanes Last Week: 21 Edmonton Oilers (26-40-9) Maybe they should look into relocating to the Eastern Conference. Even after a 5-0 thrashing at the hands of the Rangers on Sunday night, Edmonton was a reasonable 14-14-4 on the season against interconference opponents, and an even more admirable 5-1-2 against Metro squads. That puts the Oilers on a lot better footing than their mark against their own Pacific Division: an ugly 5-14-4. (Last week: 1-2-0) 28 Carolina Hurricanes (32-32-11) Looks like the Jim Rutherford era is coming to an end in Carolina, and while he's sure to be feted for his glory days when he finally turns in the keys, don't forget why he's leaving. The Canes have been dreadful for the last five seasons, hobbled by bad drafts, poor signings and trades that failed to deliver. It's time for the GM to move on. Here's hoping Ron Francis is ready to take on the heavy lifting. (Last week: 1-1-2) 23 Calgary Flames Last Week: 22 Last Week: 29 Florida Panthers (27-41-8) How bad are things in Florida? The Cats send Martin Brodeur to the showers on Monday night with three goals on eight shots ... and still get blown out 6-3. With Roberto Luongo sidelined by a sore neck, this team is leaking goals. It's been outscored 12-4 since Dan Ellis took over between the pipes during Thursday's loss to the Hurricanes. He's allowed 11 of those goals on just 68 shots. Not good. (Last week: 1-3-0) 29 Calgary Flames (31-37-7) Their meltdown (four unanswered goals) in Ottawa aside, the Flames are finishing the season strong, having won six of their last 10 games. Coach Bob Hartley won't get any credit when the Jack Adams votes are counted, but he's done as nice a job as any bench boss in the league, molding a young group (of varying talent levels) into a cohesive unit that competes with enviable consistency. There are better days ahead for this bunch. (Last week: 1-2-0) 24 Vancouver Canucks Last Week: 25 Buffalo Sabres Last Week: 30 Buffalo Sabres (20-45-9) Big week in Buffalo, where a shootout loss to the Lightning allowed the Sabres to pick up a point for just the second time in 12 (!) games, Dominik Hasek was inducted into the team's Hall of Fame and coach Ted Nolan finally signed a new deal, removing the interim tag from his title. That last bit of news won't thrill all Sabres fans, but no one said Nolan was Mr. Right. He's Mr. Right Now, the perfect leader for a young team that's learning what it takes to compete. (Last week: 0-2-1) 30 Vancouver Canucks (34-31-11) Florida Panthers Toronto Maple Leafs Last Week: 23 Toronto Maple Leafs (36-32-8) Make it eight and counting for a team that's so emotionally fragile that losing the opening face-off on Tuesday night in Calgary might be all it takes to send Toronto spiraling toward consecutive defeat No. 9. This desolate stretch isn't epic simply for ruining a once-promising season. As one stat geek noted, an eight-game regulation losing streak will happen about once every 29 years ... so at least Leafs fans can say they're seeing something special, right? (Last week: 0-3-0) CNN/Sports Illustrated LOADED: 04.02.2014 732367 Websites CNN/Sports Illustrated / Top Line: Blackhawks get wake-up call; 2013 NHL Draft revisited; more links By Allan Muir An annotated guide to this morning‘s must-read hockey stories: • Marian Hossa says that the Blackhawks‘ losing streak is ―a wake-up call.‖ That can be a valuable thing at this time of year, provided that a team is willing to listen. That‘s no sure thing considering the way Chicago has routinely ignored such calls this season. • There are ways the Avalanche can beat the Blackhawks in the playoffs, but doing so became a whole lot tougher when Matt Duchene was lost to injury. • Pro scouts have an easy solution to the Maple Leafs‘ woes: strip the C off of Dion Phaneuf‘s sweater. It‘s probably a good place to start, but acquiring one or two physical, defensive-minded blueliners would have a greater impact. • Michael Traikos needs two hands to point fingers at everyone who deserves blame for the mess in Toronto. • I‘m a sucker for re-draft talk, so even if Brian Costello‘s look back at the 2013 NHL draft class is a bit early, it still makes for fascinating reading. Makes the Jets look pretty good, too. • The Bruins‘ roster is going to go see some changes ahead of the playoffs. • Want a free Jarome Iginla sweater and a year‘s subscription to NHL Center Ice? Just be willing to do what this lifelong Canucks fan did. • John Tortorella has been charming with the media in Vancouver, but his charm hasn‘t gone over so well on the Canucks‘ bench, which is where it actually matters. That‘s why Larry Brooks expects his old nemesis will be fired after this season. • Bill Hoppe explains why the Sabres love playing for Ted Nolan. Funny how well an approach like that works, eh? • Now that the coaching situation is settled, here‘s the next step to take in Buffalo. • Big night for the Wild, who authored their second consecutive third-period comeback victory to tighten their grip on the first wild-card berth in the West. Minnesota then signed UMass Lowell defenseman Christian Folin, the top free agent in college hockey. Wild fans should get a good look at Folin‘s heavy shot before the regular season is out. • If that wasn‘t enough excitement for Minnesota, then how about the fifth-leading scorer in franchise history tending the twine at practice on Monday? Fortunately, the Wild were able to find someone a little more qualified to play goalie for the actual game against the Kings. Rob Laurie made his third career appearance as an emergency back-up. One of these days he‘s actually going to get into a game, right? • The action was equally thrilling in Anaheim, where the Ducks set two franchise records in their stunning comeback win over Winnipeg. • This old trick actually worked last night: • The Mounties had to be called in to break up a minor league hockey brawl after a linesman was assaulted on the ice. • No one should begrudge Martin Brodeur‘s desire to play one more NHL season, but someone might need to talk some sense into him if he really thinks he can still be a starter in this league. • Dan Rosen really wants to get Pierre McGuire‘s opinion on advanced stats. Pierre ain‘t bitin‘. • There isn‘t much that I love more than seeing a guy who has paid his dues finally get his chance in The Show. Here‘s 30-year-old Mark Van Guilder talking about his NHL debut with the Predators. • Does anyone cut to the quick quite like an editorial cartoonist? Here‘s a succinct jab at the forever rebuilding Oilers. • Maybe you have to know Daryl Reaugh to appreciate this. CNN/Sports Illustrated LOADED: 04.02.2014 732368 Websites CNN/Sports Illustrated / Calgary Flames make good after mascot screw-up By Allan Muir When you‘re a little kid, a chance to meet major-league mascot is kind of a big deal. So when Harvey the Hound, the Flames‘ legendary slack-tongued ambassador of goodwill, failed to show as scheduled at a mite game in Black Diamond, Alberta, many tears were shed. Crying tots aren‘t exactly the sort of PR that Calgary is looking for when the team books Harvey for events, so the Flames realized they had to do something special to make things right for the young players. Their plan started with an appearance by Harvey at the rink in Black Diamond the following week, but then they took it up a notch. Or two. Take a look at this video and imagine being one of these kids. Well done, fellas. CNN/Sports Illustrated LOADED: 04.02.2014 732369 Websites TSN.CA Kerry Fraser/ it on Toews Kerry Fraser 4/1/2014 2:31:27 PM You and I are not the only ones missing something here as players continually elevate their posture and leave their feet at impact to deliver devastating hits. Dangerous and significant contact to the head of their opponent almost always results whenever a player leaves his feet to make a big hit. In the here and now, these hits are deemed "legal." With an eye firmly set on the end game, which I hope still remains to greatly reduce contact to the head and resulting concussions, it is irresponsible to continue down this path any longer. While each camp can passionately debate their respective position on whether to allow or eliminate high hits where significant contact to the head of an opponent results, I respectfully submit this issue should no longer be a matter of personal opinion. Instead, it should only be about "science." Through irrefutable medical evidence, we now know the short and long term effects of blows to the head. This road map can provide us with a clear picture of the end game! Brooks Orpik set up to deliver a body check as he slowed and glided toward Jonathan Toews in the corner. Toews' sole intent was to advance the puck around the end wall. In doing so, Jonathan Toews lowered his body posture to place him (and particularly his head) in a vulnerable position and must share the responsibility for the location of where he was hit. The onus of "how" the contact was delivered and the "degree of force" utilized is exclusively on Brooks Orpik and taken into account by the referee to determine the legality of the check. No differently than the vast majority of current players, Brooks Orpik finished his hit on Jonathan Toews with considerable force as demonstrated by his upward launch with skates high off the ice. This intensified the velocity and violence of the hit regardless of whether Toews was in a vulnerable position or not. In many cases I would even suggest that an opponent's apparent vulnerability is something a player will capitalize on to enhance the degree of force exerted through a hit. We certainly don't see many players let up! Rule 42.1 tells us that a minor or major shall be imposed on a player who "jumps into" an opponent. The "jump" element of this rule was once applied when a player's skates lost contact with the ice. Charging is seldom called in the current era of the game, where players leave their feet with far more frequency in the act of delivering a body check than ever before. The most common "excuse" for not calling this infraction is that a player's skates did not completely leave the ice prior to initiating body contact. This generous and liberal interpretation is extended to include times when the toe tip of one skate remains in contact with the ice at impact. Referees should be directed to impose a charging penalty in every case when a player's skates leave the ice in the act of delivering a body check, period. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to see the end game; just a medical scientist! TSN.CA LOADED: 04.02.2014 732370 Websites USA TODAY / Islanders GM in can't-win situation with draft pick Kevin Allen, USA TODAY Sports 10:57 a.m. EDT April 1, 2014 New York Islanders general manager Garth Snow is in such an undesirable predicament that turning over a high draft pick to the Buffalo Sabres in June might be the most sensible play he has. Snow put himself in this mess in the fall when he agreed to give the Sabres his first-round pick in 2014 or 2015 for Thomas Vanek. In fairness to Snow, the deal seemed less scary when he made it because the Islanders had been a playoff team last season and expected to be better this season. With Vanek coming over, he anticipated the Islanders would be a playoff team again and likely thought he would be giving up a pick in the middle of the first round. The problem is the Islanders' season went south and they will be drafting fourth to sixth, depending upon what happens in the next week. MORE: The latest draft preview But that isn't the problem. A team in this situation normally would take its early draft pick this season and give the Sabres the 2015 first-rounder. You take a talented young player, and then you hope you will improve enough next season to make that 2015 pick less valuable. For example, the Islanders could end up with German-born center Leon Draisaitl, a 100-point performer this season in the Western Hockey League. In terms of public relations, it also works in the short term. The Islanders don't want to say they are giving the Sabres the first pick this year because they are fearful they could be worse next season. Keeping the 2014 pick makes perfect sense under normal circumstances. The problem is these are not normal circumstances. First, the 2014 draft is considered an average one and the 2015 draft class is projected to be talent-rich, led by two potential superstar centers, Connor McDavid and Jack Eichel. MORE: McDavid the next big thing The 2015 draft could be the like the Alex Ovechkin-Evgeni Malkin draft of 2004. The Islanders are moving to Brooklyn's Barclays Center in 2015. Imagine the public-relations nightmare of starting in a new venue if you have to explain why the Sabres are drafting McDavid or Eichel with the Islanders' draft pick. No one knows how the draft order will shake out next season, but common sense tells us the Islanders have a better chance of picking first or second in 2015 than most teams. If you were drawing up teams with a chance to be bad next season, you have to put the Islanders on the list. Yes, they were a playoff team last season, but Mark Streit, Matt Moulson and Andrew MacDonald are gone from that team. The Islanders have impressive prospects coming up, but you don't win in this league with young players. The Islanders can improve through free agency, but it will be difficult to persuade top free agents to join. Remember, they couldn't get Vanek to stay. PLAYERS MOVED AT THE DEADLINE Thomas Vanek, Canadiens. Montreal didn't have to pay too steep a price -- second-round pick and prospect Sebastian Collberg-- but the Canadiens will gladly take it. Vanek boosts a weak offense, immediately becoming their top point producer (21 goals, 53 points.) Lee Stempniak, Penguins. The winger, who has 23 points is a skilled enough player, to slot in on a scoring role and gritty enough to fit in in a bottom-six role. This flexibility was enough for the Penguins to send Calgary a third-round pick. Jaroslav Halak, Capitals: The goaltender was moved to Buffalo as part of the trade that sent Ryan Miller and Steve Ott to the Blues. Then he was dealt to the Capitals at the deadline. He becomes Washington's most reliable option in net. Michal Neuvirth, Sabres. The 25-year-old was sent to Buffalo for Jaroslav Halak. He has had an up-and-down time in the NHL during his career, posting a 2.67 goals-against average and .910 save percentage. He will get a chance to find his confidence while sharing time with Jhonas Enroth. Rostislav Klesla, defenseman. The defenseman didn't even last a day in the Capitals organization after being traded there from Phoenix in the Martin Erat trade. He was included with Michal Neuvirth in the trade to acquire Jaroslav Halak and a third-rounder. Matt Moulson, Wild. One of the league's worst offense (24th, 2.35 goals per game), adds a pure goal scorer in Moulson. Moulson has 17 goals and 21 assists this season and has had three consecutive 30-goal seasons. Minnesota sent Torrey Mitchell and two second-round picks, receiving Moulson and Cody McCormock back. Torrey Mitchell, Sabres. Mitchell was relegated to a fourth-line role with Minnesota this season, tallying nine points in 58 games. He was included in the deal that sent Matt Moulson to Minnesota. Cody McCormick, Minnesota. The depth forward had five points in 29 games. He was sent, along with Matt Moulson, from Buffalo for Torrey Mitchel and two prospects. David Legwand, Red Wings. The 33-year-old center aids a Red Wings offense that has been beset by injuries this season, especially down the middle. The Red Wings sent Patrick Eaves, a prospect and a third-round pick to Nashville. Patrick Eaves, Predators. The Red Wings sent Eaves, along with a third-round pick and a prospect. Eaves will be a bottom-six player for the Predators. Reto Berra, Avalanche. The 27-year-old, in his first NHL season, has had a rough go of it with the Flames, posting a 2.95 goals-against average and .897 save percentage. The Avs gave up a second-round pick for a goalie who could back up Semyon Varlamov next season with Jean-Sebastien Giguere's deal expiring. Raphael Diaz, Rangers. New York sent Vancouver a 2015 fifth-round pick for the defensemen, who will serve as its seventh/eighth defenseman. Andrej Meszaros, Bruins. After Philadelphia acquired Andrew MacDonald, Boston swooped in to find their replacement for injured Dennis Seidenberg. The Flyers got a third-round pick back. Tim Thomas, Stars. As Dallas makes its playoff run, it'll now have a proven netminder who excels under pressure backing up Kari Lehtonen. He was dealt for Dan Ellis. Dan Ellis, Panthers. The 33-year-old will be a backup under Roberto Luongo in Florida. Nick Schultz, Blue Jackets. Edmonton received a fifth-round pick for the defenseman, who buoys a defense that has been nicked with several injuries. Thomas Vanek, Canadiens. Montreal didn't have to pay too steep a price -second-round pick and prospect Sebastian Collberg-- but the Canadiens will gladly take it. Vanek boosts a weak offense, immediately becoming their top point producer (21 goals, 53 points.) Brayden McNabb, Kings. The Sabres acquired prospects Nicolas Deslauriers and Hudson Fasching from Los Angeles for McNabb, prospect Jonathan Parker and two second-round draft picks. McNabb, a 23-year-old defenseman, has 29 points in 38 games in the AHL, but is pointless in 12 games in the NHL this year. Thomas Vanek, Canadiens. Montreal didn't have to pay too steep a price -second-round pick and prospect Sebastian Collberg-- but the Canadiens will gladly take it. Vanek boosts a weak offense, immediately becoming their top point producer (21 goals, 53 points.) Ed Mulholland, USA TODAY Sports Tuomo Ruutu, Devils. The Devils add a player with bite and a scoring touch to their forward group for Andrei Loktionov and a conditional third-round pick. Fullscreen Andrei Loktionov, Hurricanes. The Devils traded the forward, along with a 2017 conditional third-round pick, for Tuomo Ruutu. Loktionov has 12 points this season, but possesses decent offensive upside. Ilya Bryzgalov, Wild: Bryzgalov is more of a "known commodity" for the Wild, who are without Josh Harding and Niklas Backstrom and were leaning on rookie Darcy Kuemper. Minnesota traded a fourth-round pick to get him. Marcel Goc, Penguins. Florida acquired a 2015 third- and fifth-round (2014) pick for Goc, who has 23 points this season and will slide into a checking-line role with Pittsburgh. Dustin Penner, Capitals. The Ducks acquired a fourth-round pick for the 6-4, 245-pound Penner who will add size up front for the Capitals and give them more offensive ability in their forward group. Marian Gaborik, Kings. Los Angeles sorely needed scoring, and Gaborik, when healthy, is a sniper, though he has just six goals in 22 games this year. The Kings sent Columbus Matt Frattin, a second-round pick and a conditional third-round pick. Mike Weaver, Canadiens. The defensemen was traded for a fifth-round pick. He should slot in as a steady presence on the third pair for Montreal. Matt Frattin, Blue Jackets. Included with a second-round pick and a conditional third-round pick for Marian Gaborik, Frattin had six points in 40 games this season with the Kings. He is a bottom-six player. Devan Dubnyk, Canadiens. The Predators acquired future considerations for the netminder, who will give Montreal insurance between the pipes with Peter Budaj behind Carey Price, who is currently injured. <p>Ales Hemsky, Senators. Edmonton received a third-round pick in 2014 and a fifth-round pick in 2015 for the talented, but inconsistent winger. Ottawa lacked right-wing scoring depth after Bobby Ryan. He scored twice against the Senators a day before getting dealt.</p> Cory Conacher, Sabres. Waived by the Senators, Conacher struggled to crack the lineup after a promising rookie season in which he tallied 39 points in 47 games. He'll be given a chance in Buffalo. Conacher played college hockey locally at Canisius. Corey Potter, Bruins. The defenseman was waived by the Oilers. He will provide the Bruins with depth as a right-handed shot on the blueline. Ryan Miller, Blues: THe longtime Sabre was traded to the Blues with Steve Ott. He gives St. Louis more stability between the pipes as it makes its run for the Stanley Cup. Steve Ott, Blues: Acquired with Ryan Miller, Ott gives the Blues leadership, bottom-six toughness and one of the game's best trash-talkers. He's also over 50% on faceoffs. Chris Stewart, Sabres: Acquired in the blockbuster with the Blues, Stewart is a physical forward with a good offensive skillset. He could be on the move again before Wednesday's deadline. Brandon Pirri, Panthers: The Blackhawks acquired two mid-round picks for Pirri, a forward who was the AHL's leading scorer last season. He has top-six upside. Next Slide Maybe they could land a difference-making goalie, but there is no guarantee of that. The Islanders would have to overpay, and they rank 29th out of 30 teams in payroll this season. Plus, the NHL is considering changing the draft lottery rules next season. Martin St. Louis, Rangers. The Rangers acquired the two-time Art Ross Trophy winner from the Lightning for Ryan Callahan, a 2015 first-round pick and 2014 second-round pick. St. Louis instantly improves the Rangers' offense. The Islanders wouldn't want to hand over their 2015 pick and then have the rules change to give them a better chance of landing McDavid or Eichel. One thing being considered is basing it on a team's performance over the past five seasons. Ryan Callahan, Lightning: In a captain-for-captain trade, Callahan was sent, along with a 2015 first-round pick and 2014 second-round pick, to Tampa Bay for Martin St. Louis. Callahan is a less skilled offensive player but is a great leader and heart-and-soul player. The Islanders are about to miss the playoffs for the sixth time in seven seasons. Robert Luongo, Panthers: In the stunner of the day on the eve of the deadline, Vancouver sent the four-time All-Star with seven years left on his contract to the Panthers, a place he spent five years of his career. The consensus around the NHL is that Snow is in a can't-win situation, but he almost has to give Buffalo the 2014 pick and then sell fans on the idea that picking 10th to 15th in 2015 will be the same as picking fifth or sixth in 2014. NHL PLAYER POWER RANKINGS Jacob Markstrom, Canucks. The netminder was dealt, along with Shawn Matthias and minor leaguer Steven Anthony, to Vancouver in the Roberto Luongo trade. Just 24, Markstrom has struggled in his NHL looks, but he has untapped upside. He'll join Eddie Lack, 26, between the pipes. Eleven members of the USA TODAY Sports NHL power rankings panel voted on March 31 for top players for postseason awards. The results - MVP: 1. Pittsburgh Penguins center Sidney Crosby led the league with 99 points. Points: 55. First-place votes: 11. Shawn Matthias, Canucks: The 6-4, 225-pound center was packaged with Jakob Markstromand minor leaguer Steven Anthonyin a deal forRoberto Luongo. He has nine goals and 16 points, while playing third-line minutes with Florida. Eleven members of the USA TODAY Sports NHL power rankings panel voted on March 31 for top players for postseason awards. The results - MVP: 1. Pittsburgh Penguins center Sidney Crosby led the league with 99 points. Points: 55. First-place votes: 11. David Manning, USA TODAY Sports Martin Erat, Coyotes. Erat, who requested a trade early this season, was acquired from the Washington Capitals, along with John Mitchell, for defenseman Rostislav Klesla, Chris Brown and a fourth-round 2015 pick. Fullscreen Rostislav Klesla, Capitals. He, Chris Brown and a 2015 fourth-round pick were acquired from the Coyotes for Martin Erat and John Mitchell. Klesla and Brown will report to the AHL. David Rundblad, Blackhawks: Phoenix sent Rundblad and prospect Mathieu Brisebois to Chicago for a second-round pick in this year's draft. Rundblad is a 2009 first-round pick who has played 50 games in the NHL. Andrew MacDonald, Flyers: The Islanders acquired two picks and a prospect from the Flyers for the defenseman, who leads the league in blocked shots. Viktor Fasth, Oilers. The Ducks, who received two mid-round picks, have a crowded crease and Edmonton is seeking to find a goalie it can count on. Fasth should split time with Ben Scrivens for the rest of the season and battle for the spot next year as well. Stephane Robidas, Ducks. Anaheim shores up its defense with the ultra-competitive 37-year-old. The Ducks sent the fourth-rounder acquired from the Capitals for Dustin Penner to Dallas for Robidas. Eleven members of the USA TODAY Sports NHL power rankings panel voted on March 31 for top players for postseason awards. The results - MVP: 1. Pittsburgh Penguins center Sidney Crosby led the league with 99 points. Points: 55. First-place votes: 11. MVP - 2. Anaheim Ducks center Ryan Getzlaf had 81 points and a plus 28 rating. Points: 41. MVP - 3. Philadelphia Flyers center Claude Giroux has caught fire since early December and has 78 points in 74 games. Points: 26. MVP - 4. Dallas Stars center Tyler Seguin was fifth in the league with 76 points. Points: 9. MVP - 5. San Jose Sharks forward Joe Pavelski had a career-best 73 games in 76 games. Points: 8. MVP - Others with votes: Alex Ovechkin (pictured), Washington, 6; Phil Kessel, Toronto, 6; Carey Price, Montreal, 3; Alexander Steen, St. Louis, 3; Joe Thornton, San Jose, 2; Duncan Keith, Chicago, 2; Matt Duchene, Colorado, 1; Tuukka Rask, Boston, 1; Ben Bishop, Tampa Bay, 1; Anze Kopitar, Los Angeles Kings, 1 Top goalie - 1. Boston Bruins' Tuukka Rask was 34-14-6 with a 2.02 GAA and .931 save percentage. Points: 52. First-place votes: 9. Top goalie - 2. Tampa Bay Lightning's Ben Bishop was 36-12-7 with a 2.18 goals-against average and a .926 save percentage. Points: 37. First-place votes: 2 Top goalie - 3. Montreal Canadiens' Carey Price was 32-18-5 with a 2.36 goals-against average and a .925 save percentage. Points: 25. Top goalie - 4: Colorado Avalanche's Semyon Varlamov was 37-14-5 with a 2.49 goals-against average and a .926 save percentage. Points: 23. Top goalie - 5. Pittsburgh Penguins' Marc-Andre Fleury was 34-15-3 with a 2.34 goals-against average and a .916 save percentage. Points: 17. First-place votes: 1 Top goalie - 5 (tie): San Jose Sharks' Antti Niemi was 36-15-7 with a 2.35 goals-against average and a .914 save percentage. Points: 11. Top goalie - Others with votes: Jonas Hiller, Anaheim, 2; Ryan Miller (pictured), St. Louis-Buffalo, 1; Jonathan Bernier, Toronto, 1; Jaroslav Halak, Washington-St. Louis, 1; Henrik Lundqvist, N.Y. Rangers, 1 Top defenseman - 1. Chicago's Duncan Keith had 51 assists and a plus 17 rating. Points: 52. First-place votes: 9. Top defenseman - 2. St. Louis Blues' Alex Pietrangelo had 50 points and a plus 23 rating. Points: 26. First-place votes: 1. Top defenseman - 3. Minnesota's Ryan Suter had 41 points and was averaging 29:43 a night. Points: 24. Top defenseman - 4. Nashville Predators' Shea Weber was led defensemen with 21 goals. Points: 15. Top defenseman - 5 (tie). Ottawa Senators' Erik Karlsson led defensemen with 70 points but had a minus 17 rating. Points: 10. Top defenseman - 5 (tie): Los Angeles Kings' Drew Doughty had 36 points and a plus 18 rating. Top defenseman - Others with votes: Zdeno Chara (pictured), Boston, 9 (one first-place vote); Mark Giordano, Calgary, 5; P.K. Subban, Montreal, 4; Marc-Edouard Vlasic, 4; Dustin Byfuglien, Winnipeg, 3; Matt Niskanen, Pittsburgh, 1; Cam Fowler, Anaheim, 1 Top rookie - 1. Colorado Avalanche center Nathan MacKinnon had a rookie-best 56 points, a plus 20 rating and five game-winning goals. Points: 53. First-place votes: 10. Top rookie - 2. Tampa Bay Lightning forward Ondrej Palat had 51 points and a plus 27 rating. Points: 30. Top rookie - 3. Tampa Bay Lightning forward Tyler Johnson ranked third among rookies with 47 points. Points: 24. Top rookie - 4. Boston Bruins defenseman Torey Krug had 14 goals, six on the power play. Points: 17. First-place votes: 1. Top rookie - 5. Anaheim Ducks defenseman Hampus Lindholm had 26 points and plus 27 rating. Points. 10. Top rookie - Others with votes: Chris Kreider, N.Y. Rangers, 7; Jacob Trouba (pictured), Winnipeg, 6; Seth Jones, Nashville, 5; Olli Maatta, Pittsburgh, 5; Mark Scheifele, Winnipeg, 3; Valeri Nichushkin, Dallas, 2; Nick Bjugstad, Florida, 2; Frederik Andersen, Anaheim, 1. Next Slide The truth is the Islanders could give up a quality prospect this season, and not be able to land a player as talented next season. But it is the path they probably have to follow to assure this bad situation doesn't become a nightmare that fans will talk about for decades. Snow's situation is like when a contending golfer hooks into the deep rough at the Masters and has to consider whether to try to make a miraculous shot or punch out, take his bogey and move on to the next hole. Analyst Johnny Miller would be telling the golfer to accept the bogey in the name of taking the double or triple bogey out of the equation. Snow probably has to give the Sabres his 2014 draft pick to take "catastrophe" out of his equation. USA TODAY LOADED: 04.02.2014 732371 Websites YAHOO SPORTS / A 'remarkable' return even though Lightning flash Steven Stamkos won't be full speed until next season By Nicholas J. Cotsonika 14 hours ago Yahoo Sports Look at the numbers, and you‘d never know that Steven Stamkos slammed into a goal post, that his right leg bent grotesquely, that a surgeon put a rod into his broken bone. You‘d never know that he missed out on the Olympics, that one of his best friends demanded a trade, that one of the NHL‘s top scorers left his right wing. You‘d never know that – less than four months after surgery, in his first game back, in the first game after the Martin St-Louis deal, just in time for the stretch run – he had the ‗C‘ sewn on his sweater, too. Stamkos has gone through so much this season, and he‘s still feeling some pain, still getting up to speed. He is not himself. He won‘t be until next season, after a full summer of training. Yet in the 13 games since his return to the Tampa Bay Lightning, he has averaged more than 20 minutes of ice time and produced nine goals and 13 points, and he has started to embrace the role of captain. He is about to play in the playoffs for only the second time in his career. ―It‘s remarkable what he‘s done,‖ said coach Jon Cooper. Stamkos is a remarkable player, obviously. He was the first overall pick in 2008. He has led the NHL in goals twice. At age 24, he has 231 goals and 422 points in 403 games. In his only previous playoff appearance, the Lightning went to the 2011 Eastern Conference final. In Game 7, he took a puck to the face and missed less than six minutes, returning with a thick red streak on the right side of his swollen nose and a full metal cage, only to suffer further as the Boston Bruins won, 1-0. He said later that he learned a lot from that run – what it takes to win – and became more determined to be a complete centerman, not just an elite scorer. [Henrik Lundqvist Q&A: Rangers goalie on record-setting season, Sochi & Stanley Cup] He felt he had reached a new level through the first 17 games this season. Not only did he have 14 goals and 23 points – tied for the league lead in both categories – he was playing well defensively, and the team was winning. The Lightning, the second-worst team in the East last season, was No. 1 in the conference. Had he stayed healthy, he could have played on Sidney Crosby‘s right wing in Sochi and competed with the Pittsburgh Penguins captain for the Hart Trophy as the NHL‘s most valuable player. ―Before the injury, anyways, I thought that was probably the best hockey I‘ve played at both ends of the rink…being confident, being counted on in all situations, being out there on the penalty kill and the last minute of games,‖ Stamkos said. ―Obviously, it was tough to have an injury happen at that time.‖ Stamkos slammed into the goalpost Nov. 11 in Boston. He had surgery the next day. He recovered quickly, pushed by the possibility of playing in Sochi. Lightning general manager Steve Yzerman was Team Canada‘s executive director, and he put Stamkos on the roster to hold the spot in case Stamkos could play. But the Olympics were just too much, too soon. Ironically, it was St-Louis who replaced Stamkos on the roster. St-Louis was already upset with Yzerman for not naming him to Team Canada initially, and he‘d had a house in Connecticut and his eyes on the New York Rangers for years. He pushed for a trade, and Yzerman accommodated him at the deadline March 5. Stamkos returned March 6. So after dealing with the interruption of his best season, rehabbing a broken leg, watching the Lightning stay afloat without him and watching Team Canada win gold without him, he had to say goodbye to St-Louis and take over the captaincy while jumping into action at an intense time of year. [Fantasy hockey tips: MVPs & non-MVPs of the week] Vincent Lecavalier is gone. He was bought out last summer and signed with the Philadelphia Flyers. Now St-Louis is gone, too. Stamkos used to defer to them when he was younger, but he has no one to whom to defer anymore and is taking more initiative. One little example: Cooper used to call together the players during TV timeouts. Stamkos is suddenly doing it on his own. ―He leaves an assistant captain, part of the leadership group,‖ Cooper said. ―He comes back, and he is the leadership group. That‘s a lot of different dynamics for a young guy to grasp.‖ Cooper said Stamkos held the team together. Neither Cooper nor Stamkos said this, but can you imagine if Stamkos sulked or even just tried to ease himself in under the circumstances? How would that have looked? How would his teammates have reacted? They lost essentially a goal a game when they lost him, but they stayed in a playoff spot without him and needed him without St-Louis. ―It was a little different situation than I expected, but there‘s a lot of good veteran guys and leaders on this team so that it‘s not too difficult,‖ Stamkos said. ―You just have to be aware of your surroundings at all times. Guys are always watching you as the captain. You want to set a good example.‖ Stamkos doesn‘t have his usual explosiveness in his first three strides, and he coasts in the defensive zone instead of stopping hard. Cooper said the next step for Stamkos is to play the 200-foot game he was playing before, and that is going to take time. He called this Stamkos‘ ―training camp.‖ Stamkos said the leg still felt weak and sore on bad days, and he had to overcome a mental hurdle, going to tough areas of the ice – around the net, near the boards. [Also: NBC's Mike Milbury accuses Alex Ovechkin of plus/minus shenanigans] ―It‘s trusting the fact that everything‘s intact and strong,‖ Stamkos said. ―I feel better and better each time I get on the ice and get engaged physically. Hopefully it keeps progressing.‖ But it‘s all relative. ―He‘s got that sixth gear,‖ said winger Teddy Purcell. ―He doesn‘t really have that seventh gear that he usually has, but most people only have five. He puts a lot of pressure on himself to be at his best all the time, so I think that‘s frustrating for him, but he knows, as we do, it‘s important to have him back no matter how he feels.‖ Stamkos can still shoot the puck, and he‘s getting his timing back. He‘s still as lethal as ever when he can station himself in the left circle on the power play. Though he lost his chance at Olympic gold, the Hart, the Rocket Richard and the Art Ross this season, he‘s headed back to the playoffs, and this is his team now. As he sat at his stall the other day, he crossed his arms and talked about ―the type of hockey you need to play down the stretch,‖ about ―what to expect.‖ He looked forward. He sounded experienced. ―It just goes to show how mature he is,‖ Purcell said. ―He‘s not letting it get to him. Even when he‘s not 100 percent, he‘s still finding ways to get the job done.‖ YAHOO.COM LOADED: 04.02.2014