Friday, October 29, 2010

October 29, 2010, Ilya Kovalchuk-New Jersey Devils column with notes for HockeyPrimeTime.com


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Atlantic

Written by Denis Gorman
Friday, October 29, 2010 12:00


Benching Ilya Kovalchuk is the kind of turning point that could define the Devils' season (and end a coach's career). John MacLean's decision may ultimately work out but the results have yet to come.

Denis Gorman
The coach of the presumptive preseason Stanley Cup favorite may have defined his reign, and may have mapped the course of a season, with one controversial decision Saturday night.


First-year Devils head coach John MacLean scratched Ilya Kovalchuk before their team was steamrolled 6-1 by the Buffalo Sabres at the Prudential Center. According to reports, Kovalchuk had participated in the Devils’ early skate at the Prudential Center Saturday morning and was on the ice during the pregame warm-up.

AROUND THE ATLANTIC

MacLean decided to sit Kovalchuk around “mid-day,” but at first would not go into detail why. The newspaper reported Sunday that MacLean may have scratched Kovalchuk, signed by the organization to a 15-year, $100 million contract in September, for being late to a team meeting Saturday morning. The New York Post reported in Wednesday's edition that Kovalchuk was 10 minutes late for the team meeting.


On Saturday night, MacLean wouldn't say whether or not Kovalchuk would play the next night against the Rangers in Manhattan. Kovalchuk was not available to reporters after the loss.

It was with this backdrop, with more questions than answers, that the Devils crossed the river from New Jersey into New York City. Two hours before the rivals met for the first time this season, Kovalchuk and MacLean individually met a swarm of reporters outside the Devils’ dressing room. Both announced that Kovalchuk was in the lineup, then did their best to quell the uncomfortable inquiries.


“It was his decision to give me a little rest and that’s it,” Kovalchuk said Sunday afternoon. “It’s his decision and it’s going to stay between me and him. I’m just going to show up and play.


“I like to play but it’s his decision and I have no comments.”


After Kovalchuk spoke, MacLean told the assembled media that “the issue is over” and that it was “a new day.” Down the hallway, the Rangers were feeling good after consecutive road wins over Toronto and Boston, and the individual players were steadfast in their belief that they were coming together as a group.


Historically, it was the Rangers that were embroiled in soap operas while the Devils were concerned about nothing but hockey and how to win championships. The irony was not lost on anyone outside the visitors’ dressing room questioning Kovalchuk and MacLean.


The Devils then went out and spent most of the evening being dominated in a 3-1 defeat. A loss in San Jose on Wednesday dropped them to 2-7-1 – the worst start in franchise history since 1983-84 – and dropped them dead last in the Atlantic Division and Eastern Conference. No team through Thursday had fewer points in the standings than the Devils' 5.


Ten games does not make an entire season. The 2009-10 New York Rangers started last season 7-1-0 and missed the playoffs by one point while Carolina never recovered from a 2-5-2 mark in its first 10 games of last year. A better benchmark would be to examine where the Devils are, both in the standings and more importantly, as a team, after 20 games.


What can be said with certainty is that the sun hasn't yet cracked the horizon of the dawn of a new Devils era. Blogs on Yahoo! Sports and The Hockey News separately asked if the benching was the first act of a morality play that concludes with John MacLean losing his job, while a Yahoo! Sports NHL columnist wondered what prompted MacLean’s decision and how Kovalchuk’s virtually unmovable contract portends for the Devils' future.


Devils GM and President Lou Lamoriello told ESPN.com columnist Pierre LeBrun that “there's no thought whatsoever” about firing MacLean.

“John has done an exceptional job. I have no issue with him. Our record certainly isn't what any of us like, but it has nothing to do with coaching,” Lamoriello said, adding that he was “totally supportive” of MacLean’s decision to scratch Kovalchuk.


Coaches have very little power in professional sports outside limiting the amount of playing time granted an athlete. Some athletes accept the message, while others fight for what they believe in.


When Washington Capitals coach Bruce Boudreau took over for Glen Hanlon in 2007, one of his defining moments was loudly criticizing Alex Ovechkin for not performing a drill properly in a practice. Ovechkin listened to the criticism and then performed the drill to Boudreau’s satisfaction. The two have had a strong relationship since and Washington is among the NHL’s elite franchises.

Contrast that with the negative working relationship Mark Messier and Roger Neilson had during the New York Rangers’ 34-39-11 playoff-less season of 1992-93, one seasonafter the Rangers won the Presidents’ Trophy but lost to Pittsburgh in the second round of the playoffs. Messier did not agree with Neilson’s style of play and would not support it. The coach retaliated by telling his teammates that Messier was not a leader. The war of wills left then-GM Neil Smith with no alternative but to fire Neilson on Jan. 4, 1993. Eighteen months and 11 nights later, the Rangers – captained by Messier – won their first Stanley Cup Championship since 1940.


Whether MacLean keeps or loses his job will be determined by Kovalchuk’s long term reaction to the benching. Will he and MacLean build the kind of relationship that Boudreau and Ovechkin enjoy? Or will they be another Messier and Nielson?


Notes


Following their 3-1 win over the Devils Sunday night, Brandon Prust and Brandon Dubinsky separately touched on the themes of team support and hard work paying off for the Rangers. Prust told Metro Newspaper in New York City that “we’ve been sticking up for each other. It shows what kind of group this is. We’re a pretty tight-knit group. We don’t let anybody take knocks on any of our players. No matter who it is, we going to be there to back the guy up,” while Dubinsky said “hard work is contagious. When you see one of your teammates put his body on the line and doing the things necessary to win games, it makes you want to do it – whether it is a fight, a blocked shot, a hit or a goal. You just have to take those positive things and repeat them. Right now, to a man, that’s what we’ve been doing.” … A blog entry Tuesday on ESPNNewYork.com examining whether the Islanders would send rookie RW Nino Niederreiter back to WHL Portland after Wednesday’s match against Montreal. Niederreiter had a goal, an assist and eight penalty minutes in the eight games prior to game in Montreal. … With grinding right wing Arron Asham and center Jordan Staal soon to return to the lineup, the Penguins sent C Eric Tangradi and D Andrew Hutchinson to AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, the Associated Press reported Tuesday. Tangradi totaled two points in nine games, while Hutchinson had a point in five games. … Peter Laviolette ripped his team after the Flyers’ 2-1 loss in Columbus Monday night. “It's completely frustrating. We got exactly what we deserved. If you don't show up and compete, if you don't execute and play the game with energy and emotion, you're going to lose. All the time. That's what happened tonight,” the coach told the Philadelphia Inquirer. “There was no jam to our game. We played mindless hockey, without any energy, without any passion.”

Twitter: @DenisGorman


Photos by Getty Images


http://www.hockeyprimetime.com/news/atlantic/maclean-kovy-spat-puts-devils-to-the-test

Thursday, October 28, 2010

October 28, 2010, Atlanta Thrashers-New York Rangers game story for Metro NYC Newspaper

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Attacking Atlanta too much for Biron




NEW YORK

DENIS GORMAN

Published:
October 27, 2010 10:19 p.m.
Last modified: October 28, 2010 9:12 a.m.
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Thrashers 6, Rangers 4


Much like in their previous three matches, the Rangers got exactly what they deserved last night in the Garden.


Unlike what transpired against Toronto, Boston and the Devils, the Rangers were unintelligent with the puck, did not take the body and were a travesty in all three zones.


It was a formula for failure, which was exactly what the Rangers did in their 6-4 loss to Atlanta. And their collective failure left John Tortorella fuming.


“We started making lateral passes, turnovers in the neutral zone and we allowed them to play at 140 feet. Obviously we had some breakdowns throughout the game,” Tortorella assessed after the game. “We weren’t playing hard enough. They were outworking us in a lot of different areas. We didn’t play the way we needed to play throughout the 60 (minutes). We played in spurts and they capitalized.”


Later, when a television reporter questioned Tortorella about why the coach said the team did not deserve to win, his response was firm and pointed. “We lost and we deserved to lose. We shouldn’t put ourselves in that kind of spot, allowing five goals,” Tortorella said as his anger rose. “We didn’t stay within ourselves and play the way we needed to. We shouldn’t have let it get out of hand.”


The Rangers jumped out to a 1-0 lead 38 seconds into the match when Ryan Callahan converted a behind-the-net feed from Artem Anisimov—who did not play the third period after being hit in the right ankle with a shot. Tortorella announced the second-year Russian center will go for a MRI today. The coach also noted that defenseman Michal Rozsival suffered a hyper-extended knee —by slipping the puck under Chris Mason. The Rangers built on their quick start by allowing a hard working but hardly talented Thrashers team to outscore them 5-1 in a span of 45:08.


“It’s just tough,” Callahan said. “It seemed like after the (first) goal we let up a bit, not getting pucks deep and try to fool around with it at their blueline and they were getting turnovers on us.”


The self-immolation was as thorough as it was quick. Eleven Thrashers recorded at least one point. Nine were plus-one or better. Seven players had at least one assist. Bryan Little, Evander Kane, Nic Bergfors, Eric Boulton, Dustin Byfuglien and Andrew Ladd scored goals for the Thrashers. Chris Mason stopped 24 shots.


Tortorella announced before the game that he was going to start Marty Biron because the organizational decision-makers have determined that by playing the backup four times a month would keep Henrik Lundqvist fresh for the critical games in March and April and perhaps beyond.


Atlanta pierced Biron for five goals on 25 shots last night. Afterwards both said Biron needed to make vital saves to keep the team in the game.


The Rangers began to forecheck after Byfuglien’s power-play goal 5:01 into the third increased the Thrashers lead to 5-2. Todd White, who replaced Anisimov at center on the Callahan and Dubinsky line, beat Mason stickside at 7:56. Brian Boyle cut the deficit to 5-4 with his third of the season at 10:07. But that would be all the Rangers would get. Matt Gilroy’s slapshot hit the crossbar late in the period before Ladd ended any pretence of a comeback with his empty-netter with at 19:36.


Three things we saw:

1 Dominated— The Rangers jumped out to a 1-0 lead 38 seconds in when Ryan Callahan jammed a behind-the-net feed from Artem Anisimov under Chris Mason. Instead of collapsing, Atlanta dominated the Rangers from there. Eric Boulton gave Atlanta some breathing room just 49 seconds into the third, then Dustin Byfuglien scored five minutes later to make it 5-2.

2 Long night for Biron — John Tortorella made the decision to start Martin Biron because having the backup play four games a month would “benefit [Henrik Lundqvist] in the last month of the season.” Atlanta pierced Biron five times — he gave up just one goal in his other appearance this season — but that was mostly due to ineffective play by the Rangers on both ends.


3 F-bombs flying — Tortorella had not been as volatile as he was this time last year. That ended after Evander Kane’s snap shot goal at 10:17 in the second period that put the Thrashers up 2-1. Tortorella called timeout and screamed at his charges. The Rangers tallied two goals in the third, but it wasn’t enough.


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Monday, October 25, 2010

October 25, 2010, New Jersey Devils-New York Rangers NHL regular season game story and Ilya Kovalchuk sidebar for METRO NYC Newspaper

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Lundqvist bests Brodeur at MSG

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The Rangers (4-2-1) won their third straight game and host Atlanta on Wednesday.



NEW YORK
DENIS GORMAN

Published:
October 24, 2010 10:13 p.m.
Last modified: October 25, 2010 12:54 p.m.
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Rangers 3, Devils 1




Defining moments are often, initially, incidental in nature. Only after a passage of time are they revealed to be something significant.


This was no different.


The second period horn had sounded a split second before Adam Mair threw a shoulder into Michael Del Zotto. Instantly, four of the second-year defenseman’s skated over to protect their defenseman and to stand up for the diagonal Rangers crest.


For a franchise that has been often ridiculed for being a collection of individuals rather than a team, that scene of collective unity was heartening. It could also signify the beginning of a special year on Broadway.


“We’ve been sticking up for each other. It shows what kind of group this is. We’re a pretty tight-knit group. We don’t let anybody take any knocks on any of our players. No matter who it is, we’re going to be there to back the guy up,” Brandon Prust said after the Rangers’ 3-1 win over the Devils last night at the Garden. It was the Rangers third win in as many games and their first win at MSG this season.


In every facet of the game, the Rangers proved to be superior against a Devils team that appears to be in disarray. The Rangers outshot New Jersey (34-24), blocked more shots (21-12), and seemingly won every battle along the boards and got to every loose puck.


Basically, the Rangers out-Deviled the Devils.


“The first two periods, I thought for most of our team concept we were good, aggressive. I thought we handled the neutral zone well. Our power play had some good looks. Again, we don’t finish there to get the next goal but we still score the winning goal on the power play,” John Tortorella said.


Ryan Callahan and Brandon Dubinsky were among the multitude of Rangers who played strong games. Callahan scored the game-winning goal—a power play tip of a Dubinsky feed in the second period—and assisted on Dubinsky’s empty-net goal with one second left along with leading all skaters with seven hits. Along with his two point night, Dubinsky threw three hits, had three takeaways and won seven-of-17 face offs. Michal Rozsival opened the scoring with a slapshot 1:26 into the second period while playing a strong game in the defensive zone. Henrik Lundqvist stopped 27 of 28 shots.


“Hard work is contagious. When you see one of your teammates put his body on the line and doing the things necessary to win games, it makes you want to do it, whether it is a fight, a blocked shot, a hit or a goal. You just have to take those positive things and repeat them. Right now, to a man, that’s what we’ve been doing,” Dubinsky said. “Winning is always fun. It’s fun because of the way we’re playing and the way everyone’s contributing. It’s not like we have one line that’s scoring five goals and we’re just hanging on. Each and every line is contributed, defense, goalies, all the way through the lineup. That’s been the biggest part of our success and that’s what makes it fun.”


Ilya Kovalchuk, who was in the lineup after being scratched in Saturday’s 6-1 loss to Buffalo, scored the Devils lone goal. Martin Brodeur made 31 saves.



Three things we saw last night:

1 Henrik wins this one — Devils versus Rangers has been a compelling rivalry for 20 years. The Martin Brodeur-Henrik Lundqvist goaltending duels have been appointment television and last night didn’t disappoint. Both goaltenders spent the night having pucks leveled at them, but second-period tallies by Michal Rozsival and Ryan Callahan gave the Blueshirts a 2-0 lead.

2 Slow start — The Devils (2-6-1) have been a disaster in the early season as they attempt to apply John MacLean’s up-tempo offensive game to their traditionally defense-first system. The struggle to adapt to the new philosophy continued at the Garden, as they failed on three straight power plays at one point. The Rangers won nearly all the key battles along the boards and behind the net. The Devils have now been outscored 30-15 this season.

3 Kovy’s back — The $100 million man Ilya Kovalchuk scored a goal with five minutes left, took six shots and committed a penalty in 22:11 after being benched for undisclosed reasons in the Devils’ 6-1 loss to Buffalo on Saturday night.

“It’s over. The issue is over,” MacLean said before the game. “We [have] a new game. It’s a new day. The most important game is the one you’re playing.”


More about
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http://www.metro.us/newyork/sports/article/671848--lundqvist-bests-brodeur-at-msg