Thursday, July 26, 2012

July 26, 2012, New York Rangers introduce Rick Nash news story for the Associated Press



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Ranger Rick: Nash 'excited' to be a Blueshirt

 


GREENBURGH, N.Y. (AP) -- The latest New York Ranger was engulfed by two semicircles of reporters and television cameras on Wednesday.

And it's only July.

Welcome to New York, Rick Nash.

Nash, acquired from Columbus Monday in the offseason's most important trade, met with reporters at the Rangers training facility two days after the deal, as he tried to get acclimated to his new surroundings.
It won't be easy. Nash, the Blue Jackets' all-time leader in 16 categories, has been to the postseason only once in his career, and now joins a team with aspirations of the Stanley Cup.

''I don't think it's all digested just yet,'' Nash said. ''It's been a bit crazy. I'm excited. I'm excited to meet all the staff here, all the people and some of the players. Just kind of look forward to training camp.''

The Rangers were the No. 1 seed in the Eastern Conference last season, and advanced to the third round before falling to New Jersey in six games. They hope to get over the top next season, and with Nash, they have a much better chance.

Nash is a five-time All-Star and won the Rocket Richard Trophy as the NHL's leading goal scorer after the 2003-04 season, in which he scored 41 times. He is the Blue Jackets' leader in games played (674), goals (289), assists (258), points (574), power-play goals (83), short-handed goals (14) and game-winning goals (44).

Those numbers, though, came with a team that swam through mediocrity - at best - in the Western Conference. Now, he's on a club loaded with stars and expectations. And oh yeah, he's going to play for one of the league's more fiery coaches, John Tortorella, who is famous for rigorous offseason training.

''I've heard that a couple times now, so I'll definitely be practicing. I think it's important. Each coach and each team has their own little thing for training camp. I think it's great,'' Nash said. ''Guys have to be in top shape to play at the top level.''

Nash even spoke with Columbus center Vinny Prospal about playing for Tortorella. Prospal played for the coach in both Tampa Bay and New York.

''Vinny just texted me an hour ago and I talked to him before that when we were in Columbus, training together. He loved it here. He said it was one of the best parts of his career playing here and he loves (Tortorella),'' Nash said. ''My understanding is that he is very demanding and a tough guy to play for. He preaches hard work and that's what you expect from a coach. That's what you want.''

Nash spoke with Tortorella after the deal, along with some of his new teammates: goaltender Henrik Lundqvist, defenseman Marc Staal, and forwards Ryan Callahan and Brad Richards.

''He called me right after the deal went down,'' Nash said of Tortorella. ''I thought it was great. He's really intense but he seemed really helpful. He told me that if I need anything or if I had any questions to make sure to call him.''

To acquire Nash, New York packaged forwards Brandon Dubinsky and Artem Anisimov, defenseman Tim Erixon and their 2013 first-round pick. Along with Nash, the Rangers received minor league defenseman Steven Delisle and a conditional third round pick in next June's draft. New York and Columbus had been talking about a proposed Nash trade since the trade deadline last February, and finally came to a midsummer solution.

''You look at huge deals and sometimes they get done in a day and sometimes it takes months .I think it was a pretty big trade for both organizations and it had to get done right,'' Nash said. ''I respect that.''

Joe Resnick, Nash's agent, said that his discussions with Columbus general manager Scott Howson intensified after former New Jersey forward Zach Parise signed a 13-year, $98 million contract with the Minnesota Wild.

As part of his talks with Howson - Resnick estimated that the two spoke once or twice a week since the season ended - the agent pointed out that Columbus' training camp would have been a circus had Nash still been with the team.

''That was something we tried to stress,'' Resnick said. ''We've been professional but we don't want to be a distraction. All training camp would have been 'what happened,' and 'what would have happened?'''

Boston, Detroit, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and San Jose joined the Rangers on Nash's list of preferred destinations. Howson had discussions with Ottawa general manager Bryan Murray and Carolina's Jim Rutherford regarding a trade for Nash, as well. But neither Nash nor Resnick would go into detail about the other teams.

''We're happy that it was a team on the list,'' Resnick said. ''Our list was our list.''

And to be fair, it doesn't much matter anymore. From here on in, he's Ranger Rick, and that's it.

''The main thing was looking at the (Rangers), looking at what they did over the last couple of years, something that I loved to be a part of and to help them out,'' Nash said. ''Hockey is truly a passion here, where they expect a championship-caliber team.

''They've done everything they can as an organization to put that together.''


http://sports.yahoo.com/news/ranger-rick-nash-excited-blueshirt-215950802--nhl.html

July 26, 2012, New York Rangers introduce Rick Nash news story for Metro Newspaper in NYC


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Rangers introduce new acquisition Rick Nash

 

 
DENIS GORMAN
NEW YORK
 
Published: July 25, 2012 9:31 p.m.
Last modified: July 25, 2012 9:37 p.m.
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Rick Nash won’t be a checking line winger anytime soon, but on the first day of the rest of his NHL life, Nash espoused the Rangers’ party line.

 
“Any role that they ask me to play, or want me to play, I’ll try to do my best with that,” Nash said during a press conference at the Rangers’ training facility in Greenburgh Wednesday afternoon.

 
The Rangers acquired Nash in a blockbuster trade with Columbus Monday afternoon that ended a nearly five-month saga.

 
The Rangers sent Brandon Dubinsky, Artem Anisimov, Tim Erixon and the Rangers’ first-round draft pick next year to Columbus for Nash, who owns every meaningful statistical record in Blue Jackets history.

 
“It is very exciting. It’ll be fun to come to training camp and see what [line] combinations [head coach John Tortorella] goes with,” Nash said during the half-hour long scrum at his stall. “I looked at the roster. It’s amazing. You can fit anyone in at any spot and it’d be fun to play with them.”

 
Nash is the centerpiece of general manager Glen Sather’s tweaking of the reigning Eastern Conference regular season champions. The Rangers brought in Arron Asham, Taylor Pyatt, Jeff Halpern and Micheal Haley to bring depth to the forward corps, and the team is still $13.391 million under the cap ceiling. 

 
The possibility exists that the Rangers will use some of that money on Shane Doan, although defensemen Michael Del Zotto and Anton Stralman are restricted free agents, and money has to be set aside for Ryan McDonagh, Michael Sauer, Ryan Callahan, Henrik Lundqvist, Derek Stepan, Carl Hagelin, Brian Boyle and Marian Gaborik, all of whose current contracts will expire in the next two years.

 
Nash had veto power over any deal Columbus general manager Scott Howson made because the winger had submitted a list of teams where he would accept a trade, coupled with the no-movement clause in his contract. While he did not expressly state that he did not want to go to a team that would not have high-end players to play with, it was important to Nash that a potential destination give him the opportunity to win.

 
“I felt like I wanted to go to a team that could compete for a great record and could be one of the best teams in the league,” Nash said. “That’s the situation that I wanted to put myself in.”

 
With Gaborik slated to miss the first month of the season as he recuperates from surgery to repair a torn labrum in his shoulder, it seems likely that Nash will start the season on Brad Richards’ wing. Nash has played both left wing and right wing in his career.

 
“I think it is a big, fast team with some of the wingers — guys like [Mike] Rupp and [Brian] Boyle — they can kind of do it all, play fast, and I think I fit into that,” Nash said. “This is a world class team and [Richards] is a top centerman on any team in the league. It’s exciting.”

 
Nash confirmed that he spoke with Howson in the weeks leading up to the trade deadline last February. At that meeting, Nash said Howson reported to him that the Blue Jackets were going to rebuild the franchise. In response, Nash offered that Howson use him to acquire assets.

 
Howson was unable to procure the kind of return for Nash at the deadline that the executive was demanding.

 
“I was disappointed,” Nash said about not being moved at the deadline before growing philosophical about the business of hockey. “You look at huge deals and sometimes they get done in a day and sometimes it takes months. I think it was a pretty big trade for both organizations and it had to get done right. I respect that.

 
“I always wanted to get it done but I wanted to get it done in the right way,” Nash said about the trade talks continuing into the off-season. “I wanted to play somewhere where I wanted to be and my No. 1 priority was to be here. I’m just happy it worked out and if I had to wait all summer to come here, then I would have.”


Follow Rangers beat writer Denis Gorman on Twitter @DenisGorman for more offseason news.
 


http://www.metro.us/newyork/sports/article/1148519--rangers-introduce-new-acquisition-rick-nash

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

July 25, 2012, New York Mets-Washington Nationals game story for Metro Newspaper in NYC

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Mets' collapse continues in loss to Nationals

 

David Wright
  MIKE STOBE/GETTY IMAGES
David Wright walks back to the dugout after striking out in the ninth inning.

 
DENIS GORMAN
NEW YORK
 
Published: July 24, 2012 11:47 p.m.
Last modified: July 25, 2012 12:03 a.m.
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The Mets offered a collective defiant stance and brave words after dropping their fifth in a row Tuesday night.

 
“We’re just losing. We’re not beating ourselves. We’re coming back, we’re tying games, [but] we just can’t get over the edge. We’re losing baseball games but we’re not doing things that warrant meetings,” Jason Bay said after the Mets’ 5-2 loss to the Nationals. The Mets have lost 11-of-12 and fell to 47-50 this season.

 
“We’re not playing bad baseball,” Bay said. “We’re not winning. But we’re not playing bad baseball. We just hit a rut.”

 
Last night’s ruts were named Gio Gonzalez and Adam LaRoche. Gonzalez (13-5) limited the Mets to two hits in seven innings. He struck out four and walked two. LaRoche’s two-run, upper-deck home run off R.A. Dickey (13-2) in the sixth inning gave the Nationals an insurmountable 3-1 lead.

 
The Nationals roughed up Dickey, who lost his first game since April 18. Dickey surrendered five runs (four earned) on eight hits in six innings. Dickey is 1-1 in July with a 6.55 ERA in 26 1/3 innings. He has allowed 39 hits and 21 runs — 19 earned — along with five walks and three home runs.

 
“I have to make a pitch,” Dickey said of the Nationals’ four-run sixth inning that ended the game for all intents and purposes. “Two outs, the sixth inning and five straight hits. Four runs later, we’re in a hole we can’t get out of.”

 
What rankles the Mets is that they believe they are close to being the team that ended the first half in contention for the NL East division title or the NL wild card.  Bay repeated the theme that the Mets have espoused throughout the losing streak: They’re playing well, just not well enough to win.

 
“Hopefully you take what you can get from it,” Bay said of the Mets who are 5-13 in July. “‘Yeah, you lost but here’s the positive.’ [But] you can only do that for so long. You just can’t keep losing.”

 
“It’s tough when things are going on a downward spiral, the tendency is ‘woe is me.’ In order to change it we have to stand up.” Dickey said. He noted that he did not think the Mets were actively engaging in self-pity.

 
Nor are they publicly stumping for general manager Sandy Alderson to acquire a savior.

 
“The way we’ve played lately isn’t indicative of a team that is a piece or two away,” Bay said. “We played well early on. Those same guys aren’t doing well right now. I don’t think looking outside and thinking one or two guys are going to [come in] and turn [things] around. If we had been continuing to be on a roll then I think you can look and say, ‘A couple guys can really help push us above.’ The fact is it’s the same guys that we kind of [did] well with here [in the first half].

 
“These are the same guys that did it in the first half.”

 
The Mets did make two roster moves yesterday. Lucas Duda and reliever Pedro Beato were optioned to Triple-A Buffalo to make room for Matt Harvey and Manny Acosta. The Mets also announced they signed former St. John’s star reliever Craig Hansen to a deal through the 2013 season. Hansen, who has a record of 4-9 with a 6.34 ERA in 95 major league games with Boston and Pittsburgh, will be sent to Port St. Lucie in an attempt to resurrect his career.

 
Jordany Valdespin set a franchise record with his fifth pinch-hit home run. The eighth-inning leadoff solo shot off Ryan Mattheus cut the deficit to 5-2. It was Valdespin’s seventh homer of the season.


Follow Mets beat writer Denis Gorman on Twitter
@DenisGorman.
 


http://www.metro.us/newyork/sports/article/1148426--mets-collapse-continues-in-loss-to-nationals

July 25, 2012, New York Mets-Washington Nationals notebook for Metro Newspaper in NYC


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Mets Notebook: Alderson talks trade market

 

 
DENIS GORMAN
NEW YORK
 
Published: July 24, 2012 6:37 p.m.
Last modified: July 24, 2012 6:49 p.m.
                  Text size
 
The Mets are in limbo at the worst possible time.

 
One week before the trade deadline, the Mets are 47-49 and have lost 10-of-11 games. The Mets trail the Nationals by 9 1/2 games in the National League East and are 5 1/2 games back of wild card co-leaders Los Angeles and Pittsburgh.

 
The slide prompted general manager Sandy Alderson to tell reporters Monday that the Mets may not be buyers come July 31.

 
Manager Terry Collins acknowledged the obvious during his pre-game press conference at Citi Field Tuesday afternoon.

 
“We want to start winning some games,” Collins said. “I think if we put some wins on the board [it becomes easier for Alderson to add players for a potential playoff run].”

 
But Collins warned against adding just for this season.

 
“I’ve just been there too many times before. The right guy’s not there and I don’t think you sell the farm to get a guy for two months when you’re eight-and-a-half games out,” Collins said. “I would have a tough time seeing that happening.”

 
Left-field hole

 
With the demotion of Lucas Duda to Triple-A Buffalo, the Mets have a hole in right field.

 
At first glance, the two most obvious candidates to fill the void are Jordany Valdespin and Kirk Nieuwenhuis.

 
But for Collins, the determining factor will be offense.

 
“It’s going to be a combination of guys who are swinging the bat,” Collins said. “We have to go with the hot hand right now. We’re in a situation where if someone is swinging, we have to get him in the lineup.”

 
Coming up short

 
Ruben Tejada was not in the starting lineup Tuesday night after being spiked in the ankle by Nationals’ centerfielder Roger Bernadina in Monday night’s 8-2 loss. However, the Mets breathed a sigh of relief as the injury was not serious.

 
Collins reported that Tejada’s ankle was “sore.”

 
“He told me he thought he could play if I needed him. Fortunately he doesn’t have any stitches. With a day game [Wednesday], I gave him [the game] off,” said Collins, who absolved Bernadina of blame. “I watched the play over and over. I think he committed to break up the double play and when Ruben got the ball, he had his leg exposed.

 
“It all happened so fast. I don’t think Roger intentionally stuck his foot in [Tejada’s] shin. If you see it on the replay, Ruben was on the outside of the bag and that’s where [Bernadina] started his slide.”

 
Ronny Cedeno started at short.


Follow Mets beat writer Denis Gorman on Twitter @DenisGorman.
 


http://www.metro.us/newyork/sports/article/1148410--mets-notebook-alderson-talks-trade-market