Thursday, June 23, 2011

June 23, 2011, Philadelphia Flyers trades of Jeff Carter and Mike Richards to Columbus and Los Angeles for HockeyPrimeTime.com






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Flyers ship Carter, Richards in separate trades Print
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Written by Denis Gorman
Thursday, June 23, 2011 22:23


On the same day Ilya Bryzgalov signs, the Flyers lose their captain and a former 50 goal-scorer in trades with Los Angeles, Columbus.


The beginning of the end occurred May 6 in Boston, where the 2010-11 Philadelphia Flyers' season ended with a humiliating 5-1 loss to the Bruins.


Forty-eight days later, Flyers general manager Paul Holmgren traded winger Jeff Carter and center Mike Richards in separate deals with Columbus and Los Angeles, a transformational day in franchise history. Philadelphia acquired Jakub Voracek and a first- and third-round pick in the 2011 draft from Columbus, and a second round pick, prospect Brayden Schenn and Wayne Simmonds from Los Angeles. Holmgren signed goaltender Ilya Bryzgalov to a nine-year, $51 million contract later in the afternoon.


Philadelphia now has $7.5 million in cap room to sign Voracek, Simmonds, Daniel Carcillo, Andreas Nodl, Darroll Powe, Ville Leino, Nikolai Zherdev, Nick Boynton and Sean O’Donnell.


“Yeah, I was,” Richards said in a conference call when asked if he was surprised by the trade. “I was very shocked when I got a call early this afternoon from my agent (Pat Morris). He gave me the rundown of what he knew. I started hearing a little bit more and more. I was reading it on the internet before I was able to talk, get the confirmation from my agent about it. At first I was shocked, then excited.”


Richards and the Kings will visit Philadelphia on Oct. 15. The Flyers will host Carter and the Blue Jackets on Nov. 5.


Carter and Richards were selected in the first round of the 2003 NHL Draft. Carter was the 11th pick and Richards was selected 24th overall. Carter recorded 181 goals and 343 points in 461 games for Philadelphia while Richards totaled 133 goals and 349 points in 453 games. Richards signed a 12-year, $69 million contract during the 2008-09 season, the same year he was named the 17th captain in Flyers history.


“I talked to (Carter) right after the first phone call from Pat, my agent. I think it was right around the time he got traded to Columbus. We weren’t sure what was going on with the team and with each other,” Richards said. “It’s disappointment. Really, over the last 10 years, really my best friend, a guy we’ve come up with together, had success together, really envisioned playing our careers together. We wanted to be in Philadelphia. We both loved it there. That’s one of the hardest parts of this day was just not being able to go through it with a guy you’ve had success with and really thought was going to win with at some point.”


Philadelphia finished second in the Eastern Conference standings with 103 points but struggled after the All-Star Break, only winning 14 of 32 games. The Flyers were pushed to seven games in their first-round series against seventh-seeded Buffalo before being swept by Boston in the second round.


Flyers coach Peter Laviolette was forced to rotate goaltenders Sergei Bobrovsky, Brian Boucher and Michael Leighton over 11 postseason games. Unlike the 2010 playoffs, which the Flyers qualified for on the last day of the regular season and reached the Stanley Cup Final with the tandem of Leighton and Boucher in net, Laviolette often rolled snake eyes with his goaltenders this playoff season.


“I’m not exactly sure," Richards said when asked to explain what went wrong. "I wish I could tell you. When you underachieve as a team, there’s a lot of fingers getting pointed. I didn’t have a problem with them being pointed at me. I was unhappy how it ended.


“I wanted to stay in Philly for the rest of my career. That’s what I envisioned until about one o’clock, two o’clock (Thursday) afternoon. I love the city of Philadelphia and I love the organization. It’s tough to leave. I guess you don’t understand it’s a business until you’re traded.”


On Twitter: @HockeyPrimeTime and @DenisGorman


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June 23, 2011, NHL Board of Governors meeting story for Metro NYC Newspaper

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NHL approves Winnipeg, amends roughing rules on defenseless players


NEW YORK
DENIS GORMAN

Published:
June 22, 2011 12:11 a.m.
Last modified: June 22, 2011 3:16 a.m.
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It has been 5,588 days since Winnipeg could last claim a NHL franchise as its own.


The day was April 28, 1996, and the Winnipeg Jets lost a playoff game and series to the Detroit Red Wings.


Come October, the drought will be lifted as the NHL Board of Governors unanimously voted to approve the sale and relocation to Winnipeg at the New York Westin yesterday afternoon. The executives met for six hours to vote on an expansion of Rules 41 and 48, a proposed increasing of the salary cap and the sale among myriad topics.


The Thrashers will be the fifth NHL franchise to relocate under Gary Bettman’s stewardship, and the first since the Hartford Whalers became the Carolina Hurricanes after the 1996-97 season. It is also the first NHL franchise since the Atlanta Flames moved to Calgary in 1980 to move from the United States to Canada.


It will start without any executives and coaches from the franchise’s tenure in Atlanta. Don Waddell, who represented the Thrashers yesterday, told reporters in a conference call last month that he will not relocate to Winnipeg. Rick Dudley was recently replaced as general manager by Kevin Cheveldayoff, and Craig Ramsey learned Monday that True North, the Winnipeg ownership group, would not retain him as head coach. Reports state that Blackhawks assistant Mike Haviland and former Columbus coach Claude Noel are the front runners for the job.


“Those guys are good hockey men and they’ll get other jobs,” said Waddell of Dudley and Ramsey. “(True North) has reasons they’re doing things. I can appreciate that. There [are] a lot of good hockey people out there and they hired a good one in Kevin Cheveldayoff.”


Gary Bettman praised the response to the Winnipeg franchise from the public and private sectors. 13,000 season tickets were purchased the first hours after season tickets were made available to the public.


“People have noticed very clearly what Winnipeg has accomplished in a very short period of time; selling out 13,000 season tickets in record time and having somewhere in the vicinity of a quarter of a million expressions in interest in having season tickets for a franchise,” said Bettman. “The initial response by the corporate community has been outstanding as well. Sometimes it’s not just the size of the market. Sometimes it’s the function of the intensity of the market.”


Newly appointed NHL czar of discipline Brendan Shanahan announced a change in the language to Rule 48 along with the creation of a two-minute minor on-ice penalty. The impetus to implement Rule 48 was to eliminate blind side hits on defenseless players while Rule 41 penalizes boarding.. Rule 48 was passed late in the 2009-10 regular season following Matt Cooke’s hit on Marc Savard and was employed during the 2010 playoffs.


There were criticisms that the league did not employ stringent punishments for those who violated the rule. The criticisms came to the forefront following Vancouver Canucks’ defenseman Aaron Rome’s hit on Boston Bruins right wing Nathan Horton in Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Final. Rome, who was ejected for interference, was suspended for the remainder of the series. Horton did not play in the final four games, although he was in the TD Banknorth Boston Garden for Games Four and Six, traveled with the team to Vancouver for Game 7 and participated in the Bruins Championship parade.


Shanahan said that the Rome hit and Zdeno Chara’s hit on Max Pacioretty were not factored in when modifying the rules as neither “fell under Rule 48.” He stated that he had heard pleas from players and management to increase penalties for offenders.


Executives confirmed that a cap increase will happen, pending acceptance from the players association, which seems likely. TSN reported Monday that the salary cap would increase next season to $64 million and the cap floor would be raised to $48 million. It was $59.4 million this past season. Bettman said the reported number “was in the ballpark” but “would have to finalize it with the players.”


Glen Sather and Scott O’Neil were in attendance for the Rangers, while the tandems of Charles Wang and Garth Snow and Jeff Vanderbeek and Lou Lamoriello represented the Islanders and Devils, respectively.


“Sorry boys, have to go to the office to catch a plane,” Sather said when asked for comment.



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Tuesday, June 21, 2011

June 21, 2011, NHL Board of Governors news story for HockeyPrimeTime.com

Board of Governors tweaks Rule 48 Print
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Written by Denis Gorman
Tuesday, June 21, 2011 20:18


The rulebook will be expanded to protect "defenseless" players from hits to the head – from anywhere, not just a player's blind side.


The NHL took “a step forward” in eliminating head shots from the game Tuesday during its Board of Governors meeting in New York.


Among the principal topics addressed Tuesday were the modification of language and creation of penalties for Rules 41 and 48, the vote to authorize the sale of the Atlanta Thrashers and relocation of the franchise to Winnipeg, and an expected raise of the salary cap.


The adaption of Rule 41 now calls for a boarding penalty on any player who “checks or pushes a defenseless opponent in such a manner that causes the opponent to hit or impact the boards violently or dangerously.” Referees will have the option to consider whether the checked player “put himself in a vulnerable position immediately prior to or simultaneously with the check, or whether the check was unavoidable.”


Rule 48 was established toward the end of the 2009-10 season, and was first employed during that spring’s playoffs, following a number of devastating hits to defenseless players. The initial wording of Rule 48 stated that “a lateral or blindside hit to an opponent where the head is targeted and/or the principle point of contact is not permitted.”


The rule now states that “A hit resulting in contact with an opponent's head where the head is targeted and the principal point of contact is not permitted. However, in determining whether such a hit should have been permitted, the circumstances of the hit, including whether the opponent put himself in a vulnerable position immediately prior to or simultaneously with the hit or the head contact on an otherwise legal body check was unavoidable, can be considered.” Moreover, there is now a two-minute minor that can be assessed for those hits.


The league’s disciplinary measures for players who commit head shots have been publicly condemned. Canadiens left wing Max Pacioretty expressed disappointment in the NHL’s liquid guidelines regarding head shots in a recent conference call with Montreal reporters. Pacioretty was limited to 37 games following a violent check by Boston Bruins defenseman Zdeno Chara in a 4-1 win at the Bell Centre in March. Pacioretty suffered a severe concussion and a fractured vertebrae on the play and missed the remainder of the season.


Shanahan was adamant that the Chara and Aaron Rome hits were not examples of Rule 48, and as such were not considered with the language changes and the establishment of the two-minute minor.


“I wouldn’t say those two hits fell under Rule 48. This is really something that we’ve been looking at,” Shanahan said. “We took a step to put in Rule 48 this year. As the season was going along we felt the players were responding well to it, and that the game could handle another step forward. With the union, we’re going to take that step.”


The governors expressed their agreement with the changes.


“I think it’s the right thing to do,” Leafs GM Brian Burke said. “We’re stuck with the instigator rule [46.11]. We take the instigator rule out and we’re back to three-hour games. Nobody wants that. I don’t think it’s a realistic option toward addressing it. There’s no question that if players could self-police, there might be fewer of these incidents but I’m not sure that’s a sensible way to get there.”


Also:


• The sale of the Thrashers to True North Sports & Entertainment and the franchise’s move to Winnipeg was unanimously passed.


• It’s believed that the cap ceiling will be $64 million and $48 million will be the floor.


•NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman was seconded by Colin Campbell and Brendan Shanahan. The 30 franchises were represented by owners and executives.

Last Updated on Tuesday, June 21, 2011 20:49

http://www.hockeyprimetime.com/news/headlines/board-of-governors-tweaks-rule-48

June 21, 2011, Oakland A's-New York Mets advance for Metro NYC Newspaper

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Confident Collins gunning for NL East


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DENIS GORMAN
NEW YORK

Published:
June 20, 2011 10:09 p.m.
Last modified: June 21, 2011 8:04 a.m.
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The Mets are in a fascinating position near the midpoint of the season.


At 35-37, they were tied with the Nationals for third in the National League East entering last night’s late games and trailed division leader Philadelphia by 91⁄2 games. But manager Terry Collins does not view the wild card as a playoff life raft, even though the Mets are only 4 1/2 back of leaders Atlanta, Milwaukee and St. Louis. Not with 89 games remaining in the schedule.


“In our division, even though the Phillies are up there pretty far, they haven’t gone through a real slide yet. When they do, I think this division could bunch up,” Collins said before Sunday’s 7-3 loss to the Angels. “There are [89] games left to play. It’s a little early.”


It’s more than a little impressive for the Mets to even be in the NL playoff pack despite the losses of Johan Santana, David Wright and Ike Davis. It is a testament to a team that appears to have a grind-it-out mentality along with an aggressiveness on the base paths that has seen them steal a major-league best 22 bags this month.


Still, it would certainly help the Mets cause if Jason Bay joined in on the fun. The high-priced left fielder is only hitting .222 with two home runs and 13 RBIs this season. Bay, though, entered Sunday’s finale versus L.A. 7 for his last 17 before going hitless in four at-bats.


“His pitch selection has been much better. When he was really struggling, he was up there trying to hit everything. I think he’s backed off that and he’s a lot more selective. Therefore, he’s gotten some pitches to hit. He has not expanded the strike zone; he’s made them come to him,” Collins said. “When he begins to really feel good, feel comfortable, he’ll drive some balls. I don’t know if I want him to lift balls. I don’t want that swing to change; I want him to create some backspin, that’s for sure. As the summer goes along and he continues to swing the bat well, I think we’ll start to see him drive more balls.”


Bay agreed with Collins’ assessment about seeing the ball better before noting that he had made a mechanical change to his swing.


“I’m using my legs a little bit bet better and that’s allowing me to reach pitches; use my legs to get there instead of flailing with my arms. You kind of feel that way allows you to see the ball better. I agree with that I’m hitting better balls but I think it’s a result of using my legs more, staying in my crouch a little bit longer and allowing myself to do that rather than flying open,” said Bay.


This is the fourth time in history that the two franchises will play. The Mets have an 4-2 record in two regular season series while Oakland beat the Mets in seven games to win the 1973 World Series.


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June 21, 2011, Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim-New York Mets game story for Metro NYC Newspaper



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Mets trying to hit elusive .500 mark


DENIS GORMAN
NEW YORK

Published:
June 19, 2011 7:55 p.m.
Last modified: June 20, 2011 1:07 p.m.
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The “Quest For .500” will begin anew tomorrow.


The Mets had a chance to reach the break-even point yesterday against the L.A. Angels, but decided to sleepwalk through a 7-3 loss at Citi Field.


Jon Niese (6-6, 3.70 ERA) was knocked around for five runs -- four earned -- in four-plus innings, and his teammates couldn’t muster much offensively.



“Just a bad day. It just seemed like they were on every pitch I threw. That triple down the line kind of hurt,” Niese said


Jose Reyes and Carlos Beltran sandwiched RBI singles around Justin Turner’s RBI groundout in the ninth. But with Beltran on first, and two outs, Scott Hairston grounded out to end it.


The Mets (35-37) have lost three of four, and are 5-5 in their last 10 games. They are off today and will begin a three-game series Tuesday night against the AL West cellar dweller A’s.


“It was one of those days where nothing really went in our favor; got down early and that kind of sucked the air out of the balloon,” Jason Bay said. “It’s always disappointing (to lose). Right now we’re focused on winning a series. A lot has been said about .500 and this and that (but) right now it’s more about winning a series. Obviously we didn’t do that.”


Terry Collins pointed to Niese’s improved command before the game that as key to the left-hander going 3-1 with 1.60 ERA against in his previous four starts. But that command was noticeably lacking yesterday.


Maicer Itzuris led off the game with a bloop single to center and scored on Vernon Wells’ two-out RBI single. Erick Aybar increased the Angels’ advantage to 4-0 in the second with a two out triple that scored Mark Trumbo, Peter Bourjos and Itzuris. Wells would end Niese’s outing with a RBI single in the fifth. Jeff Mathis and Vernon Wells added solo homers off of Manny Acosta in the sixth and seventh for the Angels.


“Just a bad day. It just seemed like they were on every pitch I threw. That triple down the line kind of hurt,” Niese said of his outing.


“They came out a-hacking,” Josh Thole analyzed. “Sometimes there’s not much you can do. You kind of paint yourself into a corner when they get guys on.”


Factor in an offense that could not figure out Tyler Chatwood (4-4, 3.84) in his 14th Major League start and it is a formula for a loss. The Mets only recorded four hits in seven innings off of the 2008 second round pick. He walked four and struck out four while throwing 117 pitches.


“You’ll find this a lot of times in the big leagues. When you face guys that you’ve never seen before, it’s an uncomfortable at-bat. This kid, he threw fastball after fastball after fastball. We just did not put very good swings on it. We did not get balls centered, a lot of routine fly balls. I thought our at-bats weren’t like what we normally have,” Collins said. “It’s one of those situations where we’d like to see him again.


“When you don’t pitch, and especially when you don’t pitch and hit at the same time, it’s going to get ugly. And it got ugly.”



What went wrong ...



1 Learning curve



Jon Niese didn’t possess good stuff and instead of pitching, he attempted to throw his fastball through the L.A. lineup. But he was toasted for eight hits, five runs (four earned) in four innings.


2 Reyes for MVP?



With every at-bat, Jose Reyes makes Fred Wilpon’s statement to New Yorker magazine look foolish. He leads the NL with a .343 average. His 53 runs scored and 26 steals are second in NL.


3 Rest for the weary



It’s nice to have a day off after a long work stretch. Just ask the Mets, who are relaxing after 13 games in 13 days before hosting the A’s


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Thursday, June 16, 2011

June 16, 2011, what does the future hold for Vancouver Canucks and Roberto Luongo for HockeyPrimeTime.com

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What's next for Canucks, Luongo? Print
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Written by Denis Gorman
Thursday, June 16, 2011 11:56


The goaltender's underwhelming performance in the Stanley Cup Finals will lead to plenty of second-guessing in Vancouver. After the Canucks' Game 7 loss, is it harder to trade or keep Luongo?

Denis Gorman
The look on Roberto Luongo’s face was one that has become all too familiar to Vancouver Canucks fans.


His head was tilted back, eyes focused skyward, crouching as a puck lay behind him in the net. It was countenance of confusion, despair and defeat shared by 18,860 worshipers and an organization of supporters.


It was 7:47 into the second period and a Boston Bruins rookie named Brad Marchand had skated behind Luongo’s net, right to left, before throwing a backhand shot that pinballed off the netminder’s body. Boston doubled its lead as Vancouver’s anguish deepened.


The Stanley Cup will not vacation in Vancouver for the 40th straight summer after the Canucks were shut out by Conn Smythe winner Tim Thomas in Game 7, 4-0, to give the Bruins their first championship since Johnny Bucyk skated the silver chalice around Madison Square Garden on May 11, 1972.


Vancouver entered the season as the odds-on favorite to win the Cup and save for two-and-a-half weeks in June, they were the NHL’s best team. Their 117 regular season points earned Vancouver the Presidents’ Trophy and home-ice advantage throughout the playoffs. The Canucks’ 27-9-5 home mark and 27-10-4 road record led the league in both categories, as did their 262 goals scored and 185 goals against.


The Bruins finished third in the Eastern Conference with 103 points and had beaten the Canucks in the only regular-season meeting between the teams, 3-1, on Feb. 26 at Rogers Arena. Yet the Bruins were viewed as a young team on the ascent; one that had to learn yet a painful playoff lesson. It was Vancouver’s time. They had absorbed the lessons after years of playoff defeats.


What the hockey world witnessed over seven games was a Vancouver team that still needs to mature, a group whose stars were either unwilling or incapable of making the physical, mental and statistical sacrifices Cup-winning teams make. Like the Dallas Mavericks in the NBA Finals, the Bruins did not back down from the star-laden and, presumably, more formidable opponent throughout the course of the series.


And, as the criticism will surely go, the goaltender was not the spine for a team that was falling apart. Luongo finished the series with 12 goals allowed on 181 shots. That comes out to a great 1.71 goals-against average, and a not-so-hot .884 save percentage.


Luongo was not the only underperformer wearing blue, white and green. The Sedin twins were rendered invisible by Boston’s top defense pair of Zdeno Chara and Dennis Seidenberg. Hart Trophy candidate Daniel Sedin recorded one goal, three assists, four points, were minus-5 and took 24 minutes worth of penalties. Reigning Hart Trophy winner Henrik Sedin had a goal, a point, six penalty minutes and was minus-7. Selke Trophy finalist Ryan Kesler finished the series with an assist, a point, a minus-6 rating and 35 penalty minutes.


The skaters were just as culpable as the goaltender, but the franchise will spend a summer embroiled in painful introspection. Management, coaches, players, and, yes, the goaltender, will all come under scrutiny.


Luongo’s play was schizophrenic over the course of the seven games. He yielded two goals on 97 shots in Vancouver’s three wins. But he was also perforated 10 times on 84 shots in the four losses, and had to be pulled for backup Cory Schneider in Games 4 and 6.


It was not the first time this playoff season that Alain Vigneault determined that the Canucks would be better off without Luongo. Schneider started Game 6 of the first-round series against Chicago; Luongo replaced Schneider in the 4-3 overtime loss when the backup left due to injury.


It was a damning statement. For Vancouver, the key questions are where do the organization and the goaltender go from here? Luongo has 11 years and $54 million remaining on his contract. It will be a challenge to move him in a deal – there is no chance that the Canucks could receive equal value in the short term – but could a permanent divorce be best for player and franchise?

Luongo is a lynchpin for praise and criticism as the public face of the franchise. The same fans who cheered his shutouts in Games 1 and 5 also celebrated when Vigneault pulled him in Game 4.


He is a lynchpin for praise and criticism as the public face of the franchise. Those Canucks fans who cheered him wildly for his shutouts in Games 1 and 5 also celebrated when Vigneault pulled him in Game 4.


Moreover, his words are dissected and psychoanalyzed for meaning. Luongo raised eyebrows after offering the following critique of Thomas’ play after the Canucks’ 1-0 win in Game 5: “It's not hard if you're playing in the paint. It's an easy save for me, but if you're wandering out and aggressive like he does, that's going to happen. He might make some saves that I won't, but in a case like that, we want to take advantage of a bounce like that and make sure we're in a good position to bury those.” He later complained that Thomas had not said anything “nice” about his play.


Were his words a glimpse into a tortured psyche? An admission that he needs public acknowledgement of his greatness? Why would he need a rival to praise him? His resume is comparable to any in the sport. Luongo is a former No. 1 overall pick. He has won 308 games in 672 regular-season games, including 55 shutouts. He has backstopped Canada to World Cup and World Championship titles. Oh, there was that little matter of having replaced Martin Brodeur as Team Canada’s No.1 goaltender during the 2010 Winter Olympics and winning the gold medal on home ice.


Meanwhile, his counterpart Thomas was a ninth-round draft pick by the Quebec Nordiques in 1994 before plying his trade in the East Coast Hockey League, International Hockey League, Finnish League, American Hockey League and Swedish Elite League before signing with the Bruins. He backed up Ryan Miller on Team USA last February, although it could have been argued that he made the team based on his Vezina-winning 2008-09 campaign (36-11-4, .933 save percentage, 2.10 goals against average, five shutouts) instead of what he accomplished in 2009-10 (17-18-0, .915, 2.56, five shutouts). Thomas played less than one period in goal for the silver-medal winning Team USA in those Vancouver Games.


It is historical fact. As is the actuality that while Luongo is a gold medalist, Thomas’ name is etched on the Cup.


On Twitter: @HockeyPrimeTime and @DenisGorman


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