Friday, February 27, 2009

February 27, 2009, feature on the New York Islanders for Yahoo! Sports


Isles look to past for success



Watch a New York Islanders game.


Listen for the clichés.


You will hear variations of “the Islanders are a hard-working, young team that is experiencing growing pains” type statements.


And while the NHL’s 14th youngest franchise (as of Opening Night) is a hard-working team that experiences growing pains on a nightly basis, what is not heard about the 18-36-7 Islanders is Spanish poet and philosopher George Santayana’s famous “Those who cannot remember past are doomed to repeat it” truism.


In the 1970s, Al Arbour and Bill Torrey used the draft to form the nucleus of the team that won the Stanley Cup four consecutive years. In the third millennium, the only major professional sports franchise on Long Island is being rebuilt through the draft.


If the Santayana theorem holds, the Islanders and their fan base may be condemned to a future of remarkable success.


“You had two guys in Al Arbour and Bill Torrey that really wanted to win. They had a lot of great drafting success early, when they drafted people like Billy Harris, Denis Potvin; Clark Gillies and Bryan Trottier in the same year [1974]. They went out and got John Tonelli out of the World Hockey Association and they did a lot of smart things and were becoming a real good team,” recalled Neil Smith, who was a scout when the Islanders won the four Cups between 1980 and 1983.


“Teams like the Rangers, who had been doing things on the moment and not on a long-term plan like the Islanders had, weren’t as good at that moment. The Islanders were coming together at the same time. I think Bill and Al recognized they had a great opportunity to win during that time, the late 70s and early 80s. Their mandate was to win a championship.”


And while a quarter century has passed since the rise of the Islanders dynasty until today, the necessity to have young players remains. In the new NHL salary-cap world, it behooves an organization to have a stable of homegrown players. Phoenix, Los Angeles, Chicago and Pittsburgh are poised to be competitive for years due to those organizations’ wealth of affordable talent for the foreseeable future.


Smith championed that viewpoint during his term as Islanders’ GM in June and July of 2006, trading four mid-to-late round picks for eight selections in that year’s draft.


“When I was with the Islanders that one summer, I just believed in accumulating as many young assets as we could. That’s why we had so many draft picks because I traded around to get that many. I believe in the philosophy of getting as many young players as possible so you have more chances to develop; the more players you have, the more chances you have to develop NHL players,” Smith said. “That’s a philosophy I’ve had for a long time: The more spaghetti you throw at the wall, the more strands will stick.


“I think the key when you’re not a big revenue team – and the Islanders are not a large revenue team – you have to draft really well and develop your players and have as many young, good players as you can. The more good, young players you can have, the lower your payroll because young players don’t get paid as much as the older players.


“So drafting and procuring young players is the most important part of today’s NHL because that gives you long-term building blocks and also the ability to stay within the cap more easily,” Smith explained. “It’s even more important for teams that are smaller revenue markets that can’t go out and buy free agents, although the Islanders have – with Bill Guerin, Doug Weight and [Mark] Streit – certainly spent money on those guys. They’re making an attempt to find young players and develop them.”


The developmental plan was aided by the recent trade of center Mike Comrie and defenseman Chris Campoli to Ottawa for veteran center Dean McAmmond and a 2009 first-round pick.


“We’re extremely happy with the deal. It obviously gives us another first-round draft pick. It’s a big draft for us as an organization,” Islanders’ GM Garth Snow said. “It’s supposed to be a strong draft. We’re confident that we’ll be able to get a good hockey player with that first-round draft pick.”


The Islanders now have two first-round picks, five picks in the first two rounds and 10 picks overall in the 2009 draft.


“I know last year’s draft, we ended up getting numerous picks. We traded from five to seven and seven to nine and still were able to draft our targeted player [Josh Bailey],” Snow said.


“It was a situation where we got to add to our prospect pool and going into this year’s draft, we have two first-round draft picks and three second-round draft picks along with the rest of our picks. We’re going to build this organization the right way: Through the draft.


“Especially for the situation we’re in, where we are in the salary-cap world, our focus is on drafting [and] our homegrown players, and developing our homegrown players,” Snow said. “It’s a situation that we’re looking to build a consistent contender to compete for the Stanley Cup on a year-to-year basis. The best way to do that is to develop your own hockey players. We’re in a situation where we had a great draft in 2008 and looking for another good draft in 2009.”


While being able to add another pick the Comrie trade, the Islanders were also able to clear $5.266 million off the payroll. According to NHLSCAP.com, the Islanders only have $30.185 million worth of contracts on the books for next season. With the cap set at $56.5 million for the 2009-10 season and a good crop of unrestricted free agents (Maxim Afinogenov, Craig Anderson, Francois Beauchemin, Jay Bouwmeester, Mike Cammalleri, Erik Cole, Marian Gaborik, Martin Havlat, Mike Komisarek and the Sedin twins, among others), the possibility arises that Islanders could be major players come July 1.


“I can’t comment on players with other organizations. There are strict rules on policing that. I won’t get into talking about players from other organizations,” Snow said. “The situation we’re in cap wise this year, really has no bearing on the salary cap for next year. It’s a situation for me where I’m going to make the decision based on the best interest for this organization in the long haul.”


It is wholly appropriate to let Arbour have the final words on the state of the organization with which he is most closely identified. Four Cups, 1500 games behind the bench, 740 wins and permanent residence in the Hall of Fame will guarantee that.


“The only way to get better is to pay the price,” Arbour said. “Hopefully, the Islanders can be a playoff contender shortly.”



http://sports.yahoo.com/nhl/news;_ylt=AhE4cOE68gpFnP9C9twpHIl7vLYF?slug=ys-islanders022709&prov=yhoo&type=lgns

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

February 11, 2009, Ilya Kovalchuk story for Yahoo! Sports




Thrashers say they won’t trade Kovalchuk


One of the NHL’s premier snipers sat semi-hunched over at his stall in the visiting team’s locker room at Madison Square Garden.


Ilya Kovalchuk was tired.


Despite a fairly vigorous early skate, the fatigue was not physical. It was mental; frustration owing to another season that can best be described as rigor mortis. In the homestretch of the 2008-09 campaign, the Thrashers are double-figure points behind the Eastern Conference’s eighth seed. All-time, Atlanta has only one playoff appearance to its name – a first-round sweep two years ago.


“It (hasn’t) been the best season in my career, but there (are) still a lot of games (remaining) so hopefully we can turn it around,” Ilya Kovalchuk said before a recent game. “We should think about how to turn it around. We are so far from the playoffs and there are a lot of games to go. We just need to hope to win every game.”


By any measure, this has not been a banner season for the organization and its marquee player. With 28 games remaining, it is a safe bet that the Thrashers will finish out of the playoffs for the eighth time in its nine years.


In the East, Atlanta’s 41 points has them in 14th place, ahead of only the moribund New York Islanders. Overall, the Thrashers are 29th of the league’s 30 franchises.


“We’re disappointed to be in the situation that we’re in, that’s for sure. We’re frustrated. In my 29 years of professional hockey as a player, coach and manager, this by far is my most frustrating year because we’re a better team than what our record is,” Thrashers general manager Don Waddell said. “We’ve proven that at times, but not enough. We’ve got games to play and our goal has to be to play for each other and play with some pride.”


Individually, Kovalchuk is 18th in the league in goals (22) and points (52), and tied for 23rd in the league in assists (30). His minus-17 rating has the first Russian to be selected No. 1 overall tied with teammates Vyacheslav Kozlov and Ron Hainsey, Ottawa’s Nick Foligno, the Coyotes’ Enver Lisin and the Wild’s James Sheppard’s for 815th in the league.


Unquestionably, those aren’t the names that should surround a player who has scored 40 or more goals four times, including two 52-goal seasons. It should be noted that Kovalchuk has scored 29 points in the last 29 games he’s appeared.


“My impressions were that he was one of the top five forwards in the world and nothing’s changed,” Thrashers’ first-year coach John Anderson said. “He still is. I think he’s not as scoring as good as he has in past years, but he is getting the chances.


“When you’re a goal-scorer you want to score 50 every year, and he has that capability,” he added. “It’s not like he’s starved for goals right now. But you’ve seen how he can go on a real good streak. We need him to go on a streak for our team. He has to be our leader. He has to be our No. 1 guy.”


The reality is that Atlanta does not have enough talent around Kovalchuk. Unlike years past, there is no Marc Savard or Dany Heatley or Marian Hossa to skate alongside No. 17.


And that brings up a question: In an effort to rebuild the franchise, would the Thrashers trade their captain?


There has been season-long speculation that Atlanta could deal Kovalchuk by the March 4 trade deadline. Certainly, any NHL team could not use a scorer in the prime of his career. And there are some teams – the Rangers and Penguins immediately come to mind – that could use him more than others.


In the right deal, Kovalchuk, who is under contract for another season, could bring back a treasure trove of young players and picks to an organization that two years ago mortgaged its future to reach the playoffs.


A trade is an intriguing idea. Save for fact that the Thrashers are not intrigued.


“Not a chance. It’s been a rumor; it’s been a bad rumor all year. We just made him captain here,” an adamant Waddell said. “Our plan is to keep this player and to continue to move forward with him. There’s no chance that we’ll trade him.


“It’s nice to have a marquee player in the league, that’s for sure. He’s been the face of the franchise since we drafted him. We want that to continue because we all know that fans gravitate to your best players and when you have a player that has been in how many All-Star Games and scored 50 goals the last few years, people in Atlanta certainly know who Ilya Kovalchuk is,” the GM added.


When asked whether he wants to be traded or would accept a deal, Kovalchuk was pragmatic.


“I like everything here and my family loves the city,” he said. “I don’t want to go anywhere. But it’s a business and we’ll see what happens.”




http://sports.yahoo.com/nhl/news;_ylt=Annp.eTUN.rhj.9AQhSK2nd7vLYF?slug=ys-kovalchuk021009&prov=yhoo&type=lgns

Sunday, February 08, 2009

February 7, 2009, LA Kings-New Jersey Devils game story for LA Kings.com

ROYAL ROAD REPORT: SULLY SEALS IT

Feb 7, 2009, 11:21 PM EST
Patrick O'Sullivan's second period penalty shot put the Kings up 3-0.

NEWARK -
Walking into the Los Angeles Kings locker room Saturday night, you were greeted by the sounds of Journey's "Don't Stop Believing" and players singing along to it.

At first listen, it sounded like 20 men crooning in varying degrees of off keyness, as if in their own private karaoke contest.


But that's not what it was. Rather what the sound in the room was the sound of a winning team.


In an 82-game season, there are wins and then there are wins. The Kings victory Thursday night in Washington and Saturday night's 3-1 triumph over the Devils at The Prudential Center, fall into the latter category.


A LOOK AT THE PLAYOFF PICTURE


Saturday's win guarantees that the Kings will finish this five-game road trip with a winning record, highlighted by the consecutive triumphs against legitimate Stanley Cup contenders Washington and New Jersey. As vital are the two points the Kings gained, coupled with Edmonton's 8-3 loss to Detroit earlier in the day, the Kings are now two points out of the Western Conference's 8th seed. The Kings have 53 points.


"We're shooting to make the playoffs. We know you have to play very well to get yourself in there. Guys are responding. There's a great locker room in there. They care for each other and it's carried onto the ice," Terry Murray said in the hallway outside of the Kings dressing room.


TONIGHT'S KEY: FORECHECK


Throughout the season, Murray has been preaching a heavy forechecking system.


Saturday night, his coaching paid off as the Kings forced New Jersey into repeatedly committing obstruction penalties.


"I think we did a pretty good job on our forecheck. We wanted to get pucks in and establish the forecheck early and we were doing that," said Murray. "We were kind of following the way things were set up in the pregame: Get it in, get on top of their defense and make good reads with your two and three."


Jarret Stoll's 13th goal of the season, at 10:23 of the second, broke open what had been a scoreless match to that point. With Devils center Brian Rolston in the box for elbowing, Stoll took a pass from Michal Handzus on the half boards and hammered a slap shot from the point that rolled off of New Jersey defenseman Johnny Oduya's stick and past goaltender Scott Clemmensen.


"I think I had a couple guys in front--maybe three with their guy--and I was just trying to hit the net (on) the power play," said Stoll of his fourth goal in his last six games. With the helper, Handzus earned a point for the fourth straight game.


The Kings kept pressuring the Devils. Two minutes after Stoll's score, New Jersey forwards Zach Parise and Brian Gionta collided behind Jonathan Quick's net and the Kings counter attacked, finishing with an Anze Kopitar redirection of a beautiful centering feed from Patrick O'Sullivan to increase the lead to 2-0.


"Transition game is a lesson I think I learned from the New Jersey Devils over the last 15 years. They're one of the best transition teams in the game. You have to have good defensive posture, and when you do, maybe you get lucky and knock the puck down and you get back on the attack right away," Murray said. "With three skilled players (Kopitar, O'Sullivan and Alex Frolov) entering the offensive zone, and they made a good play. Maybe we got a little bit lucky with that pass in the air but it was a big goal."


SULLY SEALS IT


O'Sullivan's penalty shot goal at 14:37 pushed the advantage to 3-0. The third-year left wing had been awarded a penalty shot after Devils defenseman Mike Mottau closed his glove on the puck while it was in the crease.


It was the Kings first penalty shot goal of the season after missing two previous attempts and the Kings first successful penalty shot since Alexander Frolov scored vs. Andrew Raycroft at Boston on Jan. 12, 2006.



The goal broke a span of five-straight penalty shots being denied. Kings Penalty Shots


O'Sullivan skated towards Clemmensen, made a subtle move and let a wrist shot fly. It beat the Devils goaltender with a wrist shot low to the stick side. For all intents and purposes, even with 25:23 remaining, the game was over.


"I just tried to do the same thing I do in the shootouts: take my time, let the goalie make the first move, pick the right side and luckily it went in," said O'Sullivan of his 13th goal of the season. It was also his second penalty shot of the season as Columbus' Steve Mason stopped his penalty shot attempt on Dec. 6. "That's what I usually do in shootouts. A couple quick stick handles and the blocker side was open."


Compiled By Denis Gorman | Special to LAKings.com


http://kings.nhl.com/team/app/?service=page&page=NewsPage&articleid=408338

Saturday, February 07, 2009

February 7, 2009, early skate story for LA Kings.com

ROYAL ROAD REPORT: WHITE OUT

Feb 7, 2009, 2:59 PM EST

The philosophy does not change.

That has been the Kings message since arriving in Newark following Thursday night's entertaining 5-4 win over the Capitals.

Whereas the Capitals are one of the NHL's premier offensive teams, they are fifth in the league in goals scored, with 173. Detroit's 182 goals scored leads the league, the Devils are, well, the Devils. New Jersey is fifth in the league in goals against, having yielded 129 in 52 games. That comes out to a GAA of 2.48.

So, yes, it is safe to assume that tonight's game wont be quite as wide open.

"I don't think so," said defenseman Sean O'Donnell when asked if the Kings will have to make specific adjustments to their game plan for the Devils. "I think the sign of a good team is if they play their game. Certain teams have different styles. Whether it is Washington's style or New Jersey's style, whoever plays their style better that night is going to win the game. I think we've proved a couple nights ago in Ottawa that we can win a 1-0 game and we have also proved that we can win a 5-4 game. I think we can adapt to either style, but for the most part we like to play a good forechecking tight style; smart and try to stay out of the penalty box; limit the other teams chances and get some timely goals.

"Certain teams it is easier to do it against, and certain teams, it is more of a defensive battle."

What makes the 2008-09 Devils different from previous editions is that this year's team possesses firepower not seen in these parts since The Sopranos. New Jersey is ninth in the league in goals scored with 160. All-Star Zach Parise leads the Devils with 30 goals and 61 points.

"They're a pretty good team right now. They're playing really good hockey. They're a patient team," said captain Dustin Brown. "We have to stick to our system and be patient ourselves because they don't make many mistakes. We have to be ready when they do.

"They're a tighter team than most, but coming from the West, we have to play our game and the rest will take care of itself."

BROWN AND PARISE PART TWO
During the All-Star Game, Brown and Parise jokingly talked about hitting each other. Being that it was the All-Star Game, where there is no checking, it did not come to pass. This evening, however, if Brown has a chance to hit his long-time friend, he said he would.

"Obviously, this game is a lot more intense," Brown said. "I know Zach pretty well (but) if it comes down to finishing my checks, I'm going to."

QUICK TO START AND CLEMMENSEN IN
Expect Jonathan Quick to start in net tonight. Quick has played in 15 of the last 20 games. Following last night's 5-1 thumping of the Thrashers, Devils coach Brent Sutter announced that Scott Clemmensen will start against the Kings. Clemmensen has been a revelation for the Devils. In the season-long absence of future Hall-of-Famer Martin Brodeur, Clemmensen has become the Devils No. 1 goaltender, posting a 22-10-1 record with 2.34 GAA and .918 save percentage.

WHITE OUT

The Devils will be without defenseman Colin White, who injured his left hand against the Thrashers last night. According to reports, a first period shot from Atlanta defenseman Mathieu Schneider hit White on the hand. White, a physical presence on the Devils blueline, played another five shifts in the first but sat out the last two periods.


SERIES HISTORY
The Kings all-time record against the Devils is 48-27-11-1. Since the 2005-06 season, the Kings are 1-2-0 against the Devils, with their lone win coming in the 2006-07 season, a 3-2 shootout victory. The last time these two teams met, New Jersey won 5-1. Four Devils had multiple points in that game, led by third year center Travis Zajac, who finished with a goal and two assists.


Compiled by Denis Gorman | Special to LAKings.com

http://kings.nhl.com/team/app?articleid=408247&page=NewsPage&service=page

Friday, February 06, 2009

February 6, 2009, off day story for LA Kings.com

ROAD REPORT: SIMMONDS MEETS WILLIE

Feb 6, 2009, 6:29 PM EST


The Kings laughed and joked with each other during today's practice at The Prudential Center. Their smiles were wide.

And why wouldn't they be?

Following Thursday night's 5-4 win over the Capitals, the Kings have gone 2-1-0 through three games of a five-game road trip through the Northeast. With two games remaining against New Jersey Saturday night and the Islanders Tuesday night, the Kings have the opportunity to go 4-1-0 on a five-game road trip for just the fourth time in team history, matching the 1976-77, 1990-91 and 2001-02 teams.

"It's been good. We gave ourselves every chance to win in Montreal. Unfortunately, we came up a little short. But four points out of six points is a good start," said defenseman Sean ODonnell. "We still have two big games left, but so far its been a pretty good road trip."

More importantly, it keeps the Kings in the midst of the Western Conference playoff race. The Kings are four points behind Edmonton for the 8th seed. The last time the Kings qualified for the playoffs was the 2001-02 season.

"I think you try to talk about the big picture as far as the playoffs, but you really have to focus game to game. If we get a little bit closer to the playoff picture, then its something that well stress a little bit more, said ODonnell, one of nine Kings (Michal Handzus, Kyle Calder, Brad Richardson, Jarret Stoll, Denis Gauthier, Matt Greene, Tom Preissing and Kyle Quincey) to have playoff experience.

"All of these games are so important. You play the best you can; you work hard every night and realize that certain games are against teams that you are vying for the playoffs (against).

MOLLER MAYBE
Oscar Moller skated in Friday afternoons practice, but it is still uncertain when he will return to the lineup. He has participated in five practices, including contact drills, during this road trip.

"I'm feeling pretty good. I've been working hard and it's just up to the coaches (to decide when to re-introduce him to the lineup)," Moller said following today's practice. "They've said that they want to be 110 percent sure that I'm healthy.

" I feel pretty good right now."

Moller injured his shoulder against Russia in the World Junior Championships. He said that his shoulder was stuck in the glass following a normal hit.

"It was great for me. It was my last chance to play that (tournament) and we had a powerhouse; we had a really good chance of winning. But the outcome just (stunk) for us because we battled hard all the way through and thought we could win."

HOCKEY IS FOR EVERYONE
Forward Wayne Simmonds appeared with Washington's Donald Brashear and NHL pioneer Willie O'Ree at a Washington D.C. area rink Wednesday night to skate with a minority youth hockey team.

"The league asked me if I wanted to participate in the Diversity Program and I jumped at the opportunity," Simmonds said. "I hadn't met Willie before, so it was the first time I met him. I was like a kid on Christmas, meeting him.

"It was unbelievable. He made it all possible for African-Americans in hockey. I am very thankful for that."

On Monday, Simmonds will sign autographs at the NHL Store in Manhattan as part of the Hockey In Harlem program, which introduces the game to inner-city youth in New York.

"I think the more people that help out with the program, the more black kids will start playing hockey," said Simmonds. "I just think the more that they see we can do, they'll want to do it as well."

ALL ABOARD KINGS
Rather than flying Thursday night, the Kings opted to take Amtrak to Newark Friday morning. The Kings had three specially chartered cars and the trip between Washington and Newark took two hours.

By Denis Gorman | Special to LAKings.com

http://kings.nhl.com/team/app/?service=page&page=NewsPage&articleid=408124