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Lee Stempniak Signs Two-Year Deal With Phoenix

August 30, 2010 –Adam Steevens

The Coyotes have finally agreed to terms with forward Lee Stempniak, signing the 28 goal scorer to a two year deal.

“The Phoenix Coyotes have re-signed unrestricted free agent Lee Stempniak to a two-year contract, the Arizona Republic reported on its website late Sunday.

A league source told the newspaper the deal is expected to be officially announced Monday.

The 27-year-old Stempniak joined the Coyotes at the trade deadline last season in a deal with the Toronto Maple Leafs. In 18 regular-season games with Phoenix, the right-winger had 14 goals and four assists. He added two assists in seven playoff games.

Before getting dealt to the Coyotes, Stempniak had 14 goals and 16 assists in 62 games with the Maple Leafs.

A fifth-round draft pick of St. Louis in 2003, Stempniak has recorded 96 goals and 113 assists in 374 career games with the Blues, Maple Leafs and Coyotes.” {THN}

Stempniak was an unbelievable help to a surging Coyotes team – he scored 14 goals over 18 games, flourishing after the trade that took him out of Toronto. It’s a great signing for the ‘Yotes, but Stempniak represents a bit a risk. Which player will show up night in and night out? Will Phoenix see the return of the slightly-better-than-mediocre forward that Toronto and St.Louis loathed, or the dynamic forward that was almost at a goal-a-game pace towards the end of last season?

The ‘Bulin Wall’ Convicted on DUI Charge

August 28, 2010 –Adam Steevens

Nikolai Khabibulin will see at least 30 days of jail time for the DUI he picked up in Arizona last year, as reported by Sarah McLellan of the Arizona Republic:

“Edmonton Oilers goaltender Nikolai Khabibulin has been found guilty today of driving under the influence, according to Sarah McLellan of the Arizona Republic, who provided live updates from the Scottsdale courthouse where Friday’s trial occurred.

The official charges Khabibulin has been convicted of today:

- driving under the influence with a blood-alcohol content above 0.08.

- extreme DUI

- excessive speed

A charge of “DUI with impairment to the slightest degree” was thrown out during the proceedings, according to McLellan.

As reported earlier this year, the “extreme DUI” charge, which means he operated a vehicle with a BAC between 0.15 and 0.20, comes with a minimum sentence of 30 days in jail.

The Copper & Blue had those details in February, via the Arizona Revised Statutes:

D. A person who is convicted of a violation of this section:

1. Shall be sentenced to serve not less than thirty consecutive days in jail

2. Shall pay a fine of not less than two hundred fifty dollars,

3. Shall pay an additional assessment of two hundred fifty dollars.

4. May be ordered by a court to perform community restitution.

5. Shall be required by the department, on receipt of the report of conviction, to equip any motor vehicle the person operates with a certified ignition interlock device pursuant to section 28-3319. In addition, the court may order the person to equip any motor vehicle the person operates with a certified ignition interlock device for more than twelve months beginning on the date of reinstatement of the person’s driving privilege following a suspension or revocation or on the date of the department’s receipt of the report of conviction, whichever occurs later.

6. Shall pay an additional assessment of one thousand dollars

7. Shall pay an additional assessment of one thousand dollars

At least 30 days in jail, hefty fines, possible community service, an interlock device on his car. A sentencing date has not been set just yet, but Khabibulin is going to jail.” {SBN}

I’m willing to bet the Oilers front office saw this ruling coming, and that’s why they picked up Martin Gerber. In retrospect, it definitely looks like an insurance move, in case this scenario played out with Khabibulin.

Why Your Team Isn’t Making the Playoffs

August 26, 2010 –Adam Steevens

With NHL training camps just around the corner, hockey pundits everywhere are firing up their own 2011 predictions, and The Hockey News just published their pre-season power-rankings, and they’re predicting that a handful of playoff teams last season will miss the dance next year.

In the East, they’ve pegged the Panthers, Islanders, Rangers, Leafs, Thrashers, Senators, and the Hurricanes as non-playoff teams, while in the West, the Oilers, Blue Jackets, Wild, Stars, Ducks, Predators and the Avalanche carry the similar distinction.

THN has the Colorado Avalanche just missing the playoffs at ninth place, and with their second-half performance last season, it’s a surprise to see them miss the cut.

“The young Avs didn’t make any franchise-altering moves, but lost shot-block specialist Brett Clark to free agency. Colorado is relying on the same players it did last year when the team surprised everyone with a playoff appearance: Matt Duchene, THN cover boy Chris Stewart, T.J. Galiardi, Peter Mueller and more brought this team along last year and will be counted on to do the same. Craig Anderson had a terrific 2009-10, but in this volatile goalie age can he live up to expectations he didn’t have a year ago? After we saw another young team – the St. Louis Blues – burst onto the playoff scene only to fall back a little the year after, we’re anticipating much of the same from the Avalanche.”

They seem much like the Blues team in 2009 – a young team got hot at just the right time, and they got incredible goaltending from Craig Anderson, but can the 29 year old repeat his performance in 2011? The loss of Wojtek Wolski is significant as well, as he’s flirted with the 20 goal mark consistently since breaking into the league.

THN has also placed the Ottawa Senators on the no-playoff list, burying them at 10th place in the East:

“Unrestricted free agency cost the Senators a tough-as-nails defensive defenseman, but they gained one of the best, albeit aging, puckmoving blueliners in the game. Sergei Gonchar was brought in to help out the league’s 21st-ranked power play next to youngster Erik Karlsson. Without any other off-season moves to address a shaky situation in goal, however, it will be a touch-and-go year in Canada’s capital. Without an extravagant 11-game winning streak in 2009-10, the Sens wouldn’t have finished as high as they did and a run like that can’t be expected again.”

The addition of Gonchar will help the Senators immensely, and while I also think they won’t repeat their second-half streak next year, I think Ottawa will definitely find themselves in the playoffs again, although at a lower seed. The Senators have a situation in net, but it’s nothing a deadline deal (maybe with Spezza?) couldn’t fix.

Huet Heading to Switzerland

August 24, 2010 –Adam Steevens

The Chicago Blackhawks have finally found a home for ridiculously overpaid backup, Christobal Huet, as he has signed a one-year deal with C Fribourg-Gotteron of the Swiss National League A.

“Chicago goaltender Cristobal Huet has signed a one-year deal with HC Fribourg-Gotteron of the Swiss National League A, and the Blackhawks have agreed to loan his services, according to RDS. One issue that still remains, however, is determining the date Huet can be re-assigned. Chicago is working on that now.

The move would clear cap space for the Blackhawks, who signed veteran netminder Marty Turco to a one-year, $1.3 million contract earlier this month.

In 48 games with Chicago last season, Huet posted a 26-14-4 record with a 2.50 goals-against-average and a .895 save percentage.

He has two years left on a deal with Chicago that pays him an average of $5.625 million per season.

Huet played four seasons in the Swiss league before joining the Los Angeles Kings in 2002. {TSN.ca}

This move probably most benefits the Hawks. There was absolutely no way Huet would see any time at all with Chicago, and this move helps the Blackhawks deal with their cap problems without having to prawn off Huet’s huge contract in a trade. There’s been some rumors about Niemi following suit, but he’s come out on record saying that he wants to stay in the NHL, so I’d expect a club to pick him up before training camps begin.

Clear Tops to Hockey Nets?

August 20, 2010 –Adam Steevens

I was hoping some video would surface from the NHL’s R&D camp, and lo and behold, a handful of clips have been published, showcasing some of the changes the NHL was toying around with. Re-arranged faceoff dots, hybrid icing calls, life-guard style referees, and even clear nets all made an appearance.

The NHL infamously botched a decent amount of goal calls last season, partially because of obstructed camera angles, leaving the goal judges unable to correctly observe the position of the puck – this was one of the changes implemented to remedy this, evidently:

It’s an interesting concept (although I would like to see a couple shots hit that top shelf to see how it bounces), but it doesn’t address the biggest problem with traffic goals – being able to see the puck underneath all of the players. A digital rendering, or ‘chip’ inside the puck would be able to reveal the location of the puck, regardless of who’s on top of it. I doubt this will ever see an NHL game, just because it doesn’t solve the root problem of the problematic garbage goal.

The League was also testing alternate positioning for their on-ice officials. The three-ref system has drawn a decent amount of criticism, and the NHL tested the idea of placing an official in a perch just above the plexiglass above the penalty box.

“I think there is good and bad to it,” he said. “It’s good in regard that when (Lewis) isdown at the net I can see what is going on behind him. Say we have a scrum at the net and the D-men come in, I can always communicate with him. I can watch the changes on the bench so if we have a too-many-men-on-the-ice situation, I can see that. But you don’t feel the game. You don’t feel when the intensity starts to rise and that was the tough part about it.”

He also said he didn’t think he had a better look at the game from his elevated post, and he did not see the far end of the ice well.

“Certain angles you could see better, like, say, along the boards. But I would say definitely you could not see better as being on the ice,” Ferguson said.

However, Ferguson was able to make five penalty calls, and he said after one period he was able to find his bearings and establish a mode of communication with Lewis.

“I could know he was there; he was communicating with me the entire time throughout the game,” Lewis said. “Not even just on penalties, but situations like a player coming out of the box or something going on in front of the net. He just let me know what was going on.”

“You’re more like a fan, but you had to react to it and once you started to react it came a lot easier,” said Ferguson. “Then Dave and I got our communication down. If something happened, he would say, ‘Put your hand up,’ and then he’d react to it and call it. It worked out pretty well.” {NHL.com}

Yeah, that’s not gonna fly. The perch official was even complaining about how the sight lines weren’t totally right, and the separation from the game on the ice level kills the ‘intensity’. Not something we should expect from the NHL anytime soon. All that being said, there were some great new rules I’d like to see implemented. The R&D used bluelines that were twice the size of regulation bluelines in the NHL, and this seems like an absolute no-brainer to me. It would preserve the much coveted ‘flow’ of the game, by greatly reducing offside calls. I definitely wouldn’t mind if the League threw that rule into this upcoming season.

NHL Test Driving New Rule Changes

August 17, 2010 –Adam Steevens

The League is implementing some off the wall changes to their rule book in the NHL research and development camp this Wednesday and Thursday. A selected group of NHL prospects will play a handful of scrimmages with the proposed rule changes, while the League higher-ups document the results.

“Everyone’s excited to see how it turns out,” Hitchcock said. “It’s like anything else new. You’re curious and you’re not sure what the end product is going to look like, but you want to give it a go.”

Hitchcock said he’s most looking forward to the overtime alterations. Included is a nine-minute OT with three minutes of 4-on-4, three minutes of 3-on-3 and three minutes of 2-on-2. Some of the OT play will also mandate long line changes, as teams experience in second periods of games – a period in which gaffes are more frequent.

“Will all of a sudden the thing just get wild and wacky and kind of fun?” Hitchcock said. “Especially 3-on-3. Strategy plays a large role in 3-on-3 and I’m curious to see if the game really starts to open up.

“I’m a real proponent of as much continuous play as you can have. That’s when a lot of mistakes happen. With more continuous play, the game goes back into the players’ hands more.”

Shanahan, meantime, said he has received a lot of feedback from GMs about faceoff cheating. One potential solution: a draw controlled by a whistle, in which the linesman places the puck on the middle of the dot and the two combatants battle for it at the tweet of the whistle.

In another scrimmage, they’ll go back to the traditional faceoff, but after a violation, the opposing center can pick his new faceoff rival.

“If you get to choose the other team’s defenseman to take the draw,” Shanahan said, “not only are you getting a player who isn’t used to taking them, but you change a team’s structure off the faceoff.”

In still another scrimmage, faceoff dots in attacking zones will be moved from the corners of the rink to the slot in an attempt to make offenses more dangerous.

“It’s going to make a defending team awful nervous,” Hitchcock said. “It’s a little like a penalty kick – they’re right on top of you.”

Shanahan said there are several other modifications he’s keen to witness, but couldn’t this week either because time doesn’t permit or they couldn’t get the technology together for mid-August. Some, such as livelier kick-boards that would produce more active and less predictable bounces, may surface at future camps – assuming this one is a success.

“Whether or not we do it every year, I don’t know,” Shanahan said. “I know the players we’ve invited have all enthusiastically responded with a ‘yes’. ”

“The thought of this camp was to be more progressive. I don’t want anyone to think we’re doing this because we think there’s something wrong with the game. We think the game is great. They did one in 2005…and we want to keep doing them.” {THN.com}

It’s all pretty interesting stuff, and here’s a complete list of what the NHL has planned for this R&D camp:

“10:00 a.m. – Noon
* Hybrid icing rule;
* No line change for team committing an offside;
* Crease reset rule;
* Face-off variation (face-off controlled by whistle in place of traditional puck drop);
* Overtime: three minutes of 4-on-4; three minutes of 3-on-3; three minutes of 2-on- 2 followed by shootout (5 players per team).

2:30 p.m. – 4:30 p.m.
* Bigger crease;
* Verification goal line (additional line situated behind the goal line);
* Wider blue lines;
* Line changes zone in front of each bench;
* Face-off variations (infringement results in the offending player moving back further, three face-off dots down the middle of the ice);
* No icing the puck while shorthanded;
* OT – three minutes of 4-on-4; three minutes of 3-on-3; three minutes of 2-on-2 with long line changes; followed by three shooters per team shootout (if tied after three shots then players who have shot previously can shoot again).

Thursday August 19 (all times ET; subject to change)

9:30 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
* No touch icing;
* Team that commits an offside infraction cannot make a line change and face-off is in offending team zone;
* Face-off variation: after a face-off violation, opposition center may choose his face-off opponent;
* Second referee located off the playing surface;
* Delayed penalty rule
* No icing the puck while shorthanded;
* OT – 4-on-4 (with long line change) followed by a shootout with five players.

1:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m.
* Variations of special teams play;
* OT – 4-on-4 (with long line change)”

Seems like there’s a big focus on the faceoff, but I’m interested to see what changes new and more unpredictable boards would have on the game. Thickening the bluelines seems like the best idea out of all of them – there’d be less offside calls, and the game would flow much more seamlessly. I’m actually kind of hoping some video of the scrimmages gets out, so we can see exactly what kinds of changing the NHL is looking into, and how it would look on the big stage.

**Update** – We now have footage from the NHL R&D Camp, check it out here.

Kaberle Stays in Toronto

August 16, 2010 –Adam Steevens

Despite Brian Burke’s best efforts, veteran defenseman Tomas Kaberle has not been dealt, and his NTC kicked in at midnight last evening.

“The NHL club confirmed early Monday that its longest-tenured player is still with the team. The Maple Leafs were listening to offers from other teams for the veteran defenceman before his no-trade clause kicked in at 12:01 a.m. ET Monday morning.
“The hockey club confirms that Tomas Kaberle remains a Leaf,” general manager Brian Burke said in a statement. “While a number of clubs made offers to trade for Tomas, none of them reflected Tomas’s value to our team.

“I understand a period like this is stressful to the player, and we are pleased that there is a resolution, and we can all continue to prepare for the coming season.”
The 32-year-old has spent his entire career with the Maple Leafs and is the only player remaining from the team’s last playoff season in 2004.

The smooth-skating defenceman has appeared in 820 career games for the Maple Leafs—stretching all the way back to when the team still skated at Maple Leaf Gardens.
Selected in the eighth round of the 1996 draft by Toronto, Kaberle appeared in just two American Hockey League games before making the jump to the NHL. He’s represented the Czech Republic in three Olympics—winning bronze in 2006.
He is the franchise’s second-highest scoring defenceman in history. His 482 points (80-402) trail only the 762 registered by Borje Salming.” {TSN.ca}

Kaberle’s $4.25 million a year contract is not totally unmanageable, and while I’m sure Burke got some decent offers, he opted not to pull the trigger on a trade. All things considered, the Leafs really don’t have a terrible blueline. Komisarek, Phanuef, Lebda, and Luke Schen round out an above-average defense, but the Leafs are definitely hurting up front. Even a second or third line forward with some picks might have been an improvement over retaining Kaberle, but at this point, it’s all water under the bridge. Burke saw the offers coming in, and felt like Kaberle was worth much more.

Worst Shootout Attempt Ever?

August 16, 2010 –Adam Steevens

Red Wings forward Patrick Eaves might have given us the worst shootout attempt in 2010. If you didn’t catch it during the season, watch it now:

Pretty terrible, but I don’t think it’s the worst ever. Unfortunately, I think Dennis Wideman claimed that title while playing for the St. Louis Blues. Wideman would eventually get dealt to the Boston Bruins, but this video will likely haunt him the rest of his career.

Wideman’s hilariously awful shootout failure has gained almost half a million views on Youtube, and I think it’s safe to say that he’ll hold the title for ‘worst shootout attempt ever’ for quite some time, despite Patrick Eaves best efforts.

Nothin’ Runs Like a Deere [PIC]

August 15, 2010 –Adam Steevens

Canadian hockey players have such an advantage over most American players in the winter months – ponds and lakes routinely freeze over for safe and easy access to limitless ice time. Speaking as an American, I have never had the opportunity to play outdoors (a problem I’m hoping to fix with a trip up north this year or the next), and I’ve always been extremely jealous of all you Canucks who can just roll out to a lake and play as long as you’d like. Some are lucky enough to not have to go anywhere to play, like this guy, who not only fabricated a home rink, but a lawn-mower-zamboni to clean the ice.

Awesome. It’s a little small for my tastes, but who wouldn’t want to play a quick pick up game on that surface? It’s too bad they’re mostly Oiler fans, though. Nothing but pain with that club lately.

Top Ten Goaltender Gaffes

August 11, 2010 –Adam Steevens

Any good hockey fan can tell you about that sinking feeling in the pit of their stomach when their goaltender strays from the crease to play an errant puck. Most of the time, the play doesn’t do any damage, but every once in a while, we get to watch a goalie whiff on an easy save. Thankfully, TSN.comhas complied a list of these cringe-inducing moments for all of us to enjoy.

The Vesa Toskala 198-footer is particularly bad, but the Ty Conklin goof in the Stanley Cup final could be the worst out of the bunch. Patrick Roy’s costly showboating in the Detroit-Colorado series was legendary, but he more than made up for his gaffe by leading the Avs to a Stanley Cup championship. Recently, there’s been some discussion about the trapezoid behind the net that the NHL implemented a few seasons ago. The NHL believed it would limit the ‘dump and chase’ style of play that was, well, boring, but some contend that it took the puckhandling goaltender completely out of the game. One thing is for sure – if the league got rid of the trapezoid, we’d have a lot more moments like this.

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