Tag Archive | "Penguins"

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Pens Down Bruins 2-1

Posted on 04 February 2012 by Jeff Jackson

Evgeni Malkin (28) and Matt Cooke (9) scored a goal each and Marc-Andre Fleury stopped 28 of 29 shots to secure a 2-1 victory over the second seeded Bruins this after noon.  Orpik added punctuation to a physical game by sending Bruin Daniel Paille flying some 20 feet across center ice with a crushing check late in the second period.  The Penguins simply out physicalled a strugling Boston squad which coming into the game was just 5-4-1 in their last 10 matches.

Pittsburgh did not register the kinds of shot totals they have been, putting just 28 shots on net for the game and Fleury was strong down the stretch with several key saves on scoring chances with the Briuns looking to tie the game late.  James Neal led the way for the Penguins with six shots.  Newcommer Cal O’Reilly had just one shot and a prime scoring chance that he failed to convert on.  Pittsburgh has to do a quick turnaround and face off against New Jersey at 1:00 PM tomorrow.

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NHL Realignment Thoughts

Posted on 09 December 2011 by Jeff Jackson

It is being deemed “radical” what the NHL has done in terms of realignment for the 2012 season.  I personally don’t think anything “radical” needed to be done.  The NHL could have just moved Winnipeg to the Western Conference’s Central Division and Columbus to the East, maybe, and I emphasize the maybe, shifting around some of the East’s teams so that Columbus wasn’t in the South East, which would have been a little silly.

But instead they decided to be “radical”.  Starting in 2012, the NHL will play with four yet to be named conferences as follows:

Conference D:
New Jersey, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, New York Rangers, New York Islanders, Washington and Carolina

Conference C:
Boston, Montreal, Toronto, Ottawa, Buffalo, Florida and Tampa Bay

Conference B:
Detroit, Columbus, Nashville, St. Louis, Chicago, Minnesota, Dallas and Winnipeg

Conference A:
Los Angeles, Anaheim, Phoenix, San Jose, Vancouver, Calgary, Edmonton, Colorado

Each conference will send its top four teams into the playoffs with the playoffs starting out with games among the top four teams in each conference.  After that the teams will be reseeded leading to the very real potential for an all Western or all Eastern Stanley Cup Final.  It think that is bad but hey, what do I know right?  I thought this could have been solved by moving just two teams.

Anyway, the Penguins are now in what I would call potentially the toughest of all the conferences based on the teams as they currently are.  They will have to contend with Washington, New Jersey, Philadelphia and Carolina for one of the top four places in that conference.  And let us not forget the New York Rangers too.  Year in and year out that is six quality teams vying for four spots and you know the Penguins are going to get shut out at least once in the near future from the playoffs based on that.

Once good thing about this realignment is that the regular season now means a lot more than it has in the past.  You don’t have 15 teams competing for eight spots.  You have seven or eight teams competing for just four.  You don’t have to just be better than the bottom half of the Eastern or Western Conference but better than the bottom half of your, essentially, division.  Yes, I know they are calling them conferences, but they are more like divisions to me.

Really, ok, that is fine.  No more coasting in to eighth place on the last day of the season.  Now play hard all season or be left behind.  Although the loser in this could be the teams that are not perennially good and the New York Islanders look to not be making any playoff appearances any time soon based on their lot in “Conference D”.  I think that hurts the game if you ask me.  I mean, we are not talking about a conference with only one or two perennial powers but, again, a conference with the Penguins, Flyers, Rangers, Captials, Hurricanes and Devils in in.  Seriously?  If I were an Islanders fan, and I am not because I actually know a thing or two about hockey, I would be screaming bloody murder.

It is what it is though.  I liked the current set up and didn’t think, again other than two moves, that it needed changing.  But hockey seems to be a sport with fickle women in charge of it.  They realign more that a car with a bad front end.

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Report: Crosby to play Monday

Posted on 20 November 2011 by Jeff Jackson

Sources with the Penguins say that the team will announce later today that Sidney Crosby will be in the lineup Monday when the Penguins host the New York Islanders.

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The Walking Wounded Begin To Return – Orpik To Play Tonight

Posted on 20 October 2011 by Jeff Jackson

Looks like Brooks Orpik will be in the lineup for the Penguins tonight when they take on Montreal.  Two days after the Penguins put forth a spirited effort with a depleted line-up to defeat the Minnesota Wild, Orpik’s return certainly helps.  Especially with Kris Letang serving the second game of his two game suspension for a boarding penalty that the rules clearly dictated should not have been called.

According to the rules, if a player puts himself in a vulnerable position, such as turning his back on a checking player, there is no penalty for boarding.  But the refs apparently forgot this and the NHL’s new “Dean of Discipline”, Brendan Shanahan, felt compelled to release a Zapruder like film to explain the suspension he levied because it was so much of a stretch.

Orpik as much needed stability in Letang’s absence.

Montreal is struggling early this season at 1-3-1 but always seem to play the Penguins rough.  We will see if they can win and improve their 4-2-2 record.

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Asham Put Beagle Down … No Apology Warranted

Posted on 15 October 2011 by Jeff Jackson

A lot is being made about Asham’s actions following his fight with Beagle during the Capital’s game.  Beagle had roughed fellow Penguins Kris Letang a few moments earlier.  Asham did not go looking fora a fight.  But Beagle pushed the issues when Asham was near him on the ice and decided to drop the gloves.  Asham’s responded.

What happened next was that Beagle started wailing on Asham.  After a few wild blows Asham got his hands free.  He punched Beagle once and then landed a blow under his visor, square on his jaw and put Beagle down like a sick dog.  Asham held on to Beagle as he fell rather than letting him flop directly to the ice.  Asham then skated promptly away to let the medical personnel attend to the downed Capital.

Then the stupid controversy began.  As he skated away, Asham made two gestures.  The first was to put his hands together and then pull them apart like a boxing referee would signaling a knockout.  The next gesture was him putting his hands together and laying his head down on them signifying sleep.

Nothing he did was unwarranted considering how the situation unfolded.  After all, Beagle was the one who started the fight.

But Ove-rated barked as Asham.  After the game the Capital’s man-child of a captain called Asham’s acts unsporting.  Please, give me a break.  This coming from a man who for years has taken marginally legal hits at players all over the ice?  This coming from Mr. Where Is A Player’s Knee A Can Try And Take Out?  Spare me the faux outrage.

Asham himself even got in on the act quickly apologizing for what he did after the game.  He said it wasn’t right.

I say grow a pair!  The man came after you.  You defended yourself and did what was right.  Afterwards you made sure that anyone watching knew that you had bested the little punk.  No apology was warranted.  None should have been given.  When you drop the gloves, you take your chances.

Asham did not disrespect Beagle.  He did not stand over him and keep hitting him like some people in the NHL have done.  He did not run off and find someone else to beat on, again as some others in the NHL have done.  Asham merely celebrated his successful bout with a punk who should have looked before he leapt.

If that is so wrong then the NHL is going to go down hill fast.

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Pens Drop OT Loss To Caps

Posted on 14 October 2011 by Jeff Jackson

James Neal (3, 4) scored two goals, one with time running down in he third to tie the game, but in the end the Penguins lost last nights match against the Washington Capitals 3-2 in overtime.  Neal has been proving that last year’s poor numbers after being obtained by the Penguins in a trade were perhaps just a fluke.  Neal had been a 20 goal scorer for Dallas but put up only 2 goal in over 20 games for the Penguins last year.  He has four goals in five games to start the 2011-12 campaign.

The Penguins avoided taking a penalty that lead to a Capital’s power play until the overtime frame.  At that time it was Jordan Staal who got caught for tripping which lead to the winning goal for Washington.  The Penguins with 41 shots on net for the game could not get any more than two pucks behind Vokoun.  Then Penguins held the Capitals to just 19 shots and Brent Johnson made 16 saves.

The OT loss pushes the Penguins to 3-0-2 on the season headed into Saturday’s matchup with Buffalo.

 

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