Thursday, December 2, 2010

Wednesday NHL recap

There were seven games being played in hockey last night. Also, in this afternoon is a trade rumor involving Marco Sturm to the Kings. Details on that will come tomorrow if anything surfaces. Meanwhile, Sturm's current team, the Boston Bruins were in...

The City of Brotherly Love, playing guest to the Philadelphia Flyers. Tim Thomas was in front of the Bruins cage, while rookie goalie sensation Sergei Bobrovsky was in goal for the Flyers. Patrice Bergeron's fourth of the year opened up the scoring, giving the Bruins a 1-0 lead with his power play goal that went unassisted. Tyler Seguin added his fifth of the year later in the first, assisted by Michael Ryder and Brad Marchand. After a scoreless second period and relatively quiet majority of the third frame, Milan Lucic put his eleventh of the year in an empty net. David Krejci got the lone assist on the game's last goal, good for a 3-0 Bruins win. Tim Thomas' 41 save shutout was first star, while Patrice Bergeron's one goal was good for second star, and Zdeno Chara received the third star. Dropping the mitts were Jody Shelley for the Flyers and Shawn Thornton for the Bruins, who had a dance in the first period.

Into Ohio, where the Columbus Blue Jackets hosted the Nashville Predators. Steve Mason was the Columbus goalkeeper, while Pekka Rinne received another start for the Predators. Colin Wilson's fourth of the year opened the scoring late in the first period, with assists by Cal O'Reilly and Martin Erat to give the Predators a 1-0 lead. Antoine Vermette evened the score in the second period with sixth of the year coming from Jan Hejda and R.J. Umberger. Nashville responded with Sergei Kostitsyn's third of the year, assisted by Erat and Marcel Goc. Kris Russell re-tied it for Columbus with his first of the year, with assists by Vermette and the goalie Steve Mason. Vermette added his seventh of the season and second of the night to give Columbus a lead, assisted by Rick Nash and Umberger. Kevin Klein tied it again for the Predators, with his second of the year, unassisted. This lasted through to a shootout, where Nashville's Steve Sullivan was the determining factor, giving the Predators a 4-3 shootout win. Vermette was first star in a losing effort with two goals, while Kevin Klein was good for second star with a goal. Umberger, also of the losing Blue Jackets, received the third star, with two assists.

Up to Montreal, where the Canadiens hosted the Edmonton Oilers. Devyn Dubnyk tended the visiting twine, while Carey Price was in front of the Montreal net. Scott Gomez and Kurtis Foster both got first period power play goals, their third of the year, with Gomez being assisted by Michael Cammalleri and Mathieu Darche, and Foster's responding tally getting help from Sam Gagner and Ales Hemsky. Darche got his fourth of the year in the second period from Cammalleri and Roman Hamrlik on the power play. Hamrlik later added his own, the second for him this year, comnig from Benoit Pouliot and Lars Eller. Hemsky and Gagner added their seventh of the year each, to re-tie the game at three. Hemsky got his help from Magnus Paajarvi and Jim Vandermeer, while Gagner's shorthanded tally came from Hemsky. In overtime, Dustin Penner added his eighth of the year to win the game for Edmonton, 4-3. The game winner went unassisted. Penner received the first star for his goal, while Darche and Hamrlik received second and third star for their goal and assist in a losing effort.

Moving to the Gateway to the west, where St. Louis hosted the Washington Capitals. Semyon Varlamov started for the Capitals, as did Jaroslav Halak for the Blues. The Capitals opened the scoring with Brooks Laich's seventh of the year, coming on the power play with helpers by Nicklas Backstrom and Alexander Semin. Boyd Gordon extended the lead to 2-0 with his first of the year, assisted by Tom Poti and D.J. King. Alex Steen scored late in the second period for the Blues, his fifth of the year coming from B.J. Crombeen and Erik Johnson. Backstrom did all the scoring in the third period with two goals, his tenth and eleventh of the year. The first of the night was assisted by Mike Knuble and John Carlson, while the second was an empty netter from Alex Ovechkin and John Erskine. Semyon Varlamov was the first star with a 37 for 38 save performance, while Backstrom's two goals and an assist was second star and the third star went to Alex Steen's goal in a losing effort.

Into Minnesota, where the Wild hosted the Phoenix Coyotes. Jason LaBarbera was the goaltender for the Coyotes, while Jose Theodore was in the home team's crease. Ed Jovanovski opened the scoring for Phoenix with his fourth of the year from Adrian Aucoin and Scottie Upshall. Upshall scored his seventh of the year in the second period, with helpers from Shane Doan and Kyle Turris. Matt Cullen gave the Wild life with his sixth of the year in the third period, coming from Patrick O'Sullivan and Marek Zidlicky. Upshall added another goal, seocnd of the night and eighth of the season to restore the two goal lead, with assists this time going to Eric Belanger and Adrian Aucoin. Mikko Koivu's fifth of the year put Minnesota in striking distance, down 3-2 because of assists from Martin Havlat and Brent Burns. Phoenix killed the hopes of a comeback, with an empty net goal, unassisted, from Lauri Korpikoski. Jason LaBarbera was the first star with his 33 for 35 save performance, while second star honors went to Scottie Upshall for two goals and an assist, and the thrid star was given to Martin Havlat's one assist in the losing effort for his Wild.

Up to Alberta, where the Calgary Flames hosted divisional rivals from Vancouver, the Canucks. Studly goalies Miikka Kiprusoff of the Flames and Roberto Luongo of the Canucks were the twinetenders. Mason Raymond scored early for Vancouver, his fifth goal of the season, coming from Andrew Alberts and Ryan Kesler. Jeff Tambellini also scored for the Canucks, his fourth of the year from Alexander Edler and Mason Raymond. Tim Jackman added his third of the year for the Flames, cutting the lead to 2-1. Assists came from Mark Giordano and Cory Sarich. Daniel Sedin notched a power play goal, his 14th tally of the season, from Ryan Kesler, and playmaking twin brother Henrik. Alex Tanguay responded for the Flames with his seventh of the season from Matt Stajan and Jarome Iginla. Vancouver responded in the third with Mason Raymond's sixth of the year, and second of the night, a shorthanded goal from Manny Malhotra. Alexandre Burrows extended the lead with his fourth of the year, assisted by Henrik Sedin. Mason Raymond completed his hat trick on the power play, assisted by Mikael Samuelsson. Dan Hamhuis put it out of reach with his third of the year, also on the power play, with assists by Jeff Tambellini and Raffi Torres. Mason Raymond was the obvious first star, with a hat trick and an assist, with second star status going to Ryan Kesler with two assists and the third star was given to Daniel Sedin, who had one goal. Tanner Glass of the Canucks and Tim Jackman of the Flames also had a first period fight.

Onto Anaheim, where the Ducks hosted the Florida Panthers in the last game of the evening. Jonas Hiller was in net for the Ducks, while Tomas Vokoun was in between the pipes for Florida. George Parros opened the scoring with his second of the year, assisted by Kyle Chipchura. Getzlaf extended the Ducks lead with his eighth of the year, assisted by Toni Lydman and Corey Perry. Anaheim's lead extended even farther with Parros' second of the night and third of the year, again from Chipchura. Florida finally responded with Mike Santorelli's seventh of the year, with assists coming from Steve Bernier and Dmitry Kulikov. Bernier added his own goal in the third to cut the lead to 3-2, a power play goal from Stephen Weiss and Dennis Wideman. Anaheim answered with Corey Perry's 12th of the season, from Ryan Getzlaf. Florida attempted to rally back again, behind Bernier's third of the season and second of the night from Bryan McCabe and Santorelli, but Bobby Ryan's 13th of the year into an empty net squashed those hopes. Ryan's goal was unasssisted. The Ducks beat the Panthers 5-3, with first star honors going to George Parros for his two goals. Ryan Getzlaf and Corey Perry were second and third stars, each with a goal and an assist. Parros also dropped the gloves with Darcy Hordichuk in the first period, leaving him one assist away from the Gordie Howe hat trick.

There are eight games that will be recapped tomorrow from tonight's action. Also, the trade rumors mentioned in the introduction will be confirmed or denied in tomorrow's post as well. Have a great night, and I'll catch you tomorrow.

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

NHL Tuesday recap

Another five-game night on Tuesday, so it's not a large load of games. There were some high scoring ones, but before I spoil it any farther, we start the recaps in...

Toronto, where the Maple Leafs hosted the Tampa Bay Lightning. Jonas Gustavsson was handling the goaltending duties for the Maple Leafs, while Dan Ellis was placed in front of the twine for the Lightning. Kris Versteeg potted his seventh of the year to open the scoring, giving Toronto an early lead. Assists came from Tyler Bozak and Carl Gunnarsson. Ryan Malone tied it for the Lightning, when his sixth of the year went in. It was a power play goal, assisted by Simon Gagne. The Leafs responded with Nikolai Kulemin's eighth of the year, also on the power play, with assists by Tomas Kaberle and Kris Versteeg. Kulemin added another, good for his ninth of the year, in the third, coming from Joey Crabb and Mike Komisarek. Martin St. Louis added two goals for the Lightning, his ninth and tenth of the year. The first one of the night came off of Steve Downie, with the second one, a game tying goal with nine seconds left in the third, came from Steven Stamkos and Dominic Moore. Simon Gagne scored the winner in overtime, his first of an injury-plagued season, with an assist from Brett Clark. Gagne got the first star with his game winning goal and earlier assist, while teammate Martin St. Louis got second star with two goals. Toronto's Nikolai Kulemin got third star with his two goals in the losing effort.

Into the Windy City, where Chicago's Blackhawks hosted the Blues from St. Louis. Ty Conklin was in front of the visitor's net, while Corey Crawford was allowed to start for the 'Hawks. Chicago was on the board first with Tomas Kopecky's third of the year, coming from Patrick Sharp. Patrik Berglund got the Blues on the board with his sixth of the season from Vladimir Sobotka and David Backes, but Chicago responded quickly with Patrick Sharp's 16th of the year from Kopecky and Brian Campbell. Troy Brouwer kept Chicago going strong in the second, with his fifth of the year, a power play goal from Jeremy Morin and Brian Campbell. Jonathan Toews also notched a power play tally, his tenth goal of the year, coming from Patrick Kane and Brent Seabrook. Kane got his tenth of the year as well, coming from Viktor Stalberg and Toews. St. Louis started digging into the Blackhawks 5-1 lead with Eric Brewer's third of the year, from Backes and Sobotka, who also picked up assists on Alex Pietrangelo's second of the year. The Blues kept rolling with Brad Boyes' sixth of the year, assisted by Alex Steen and Erik Johnson. The Blackhawks came in and squashed this comeback attempt with Kane's eleventh of the year from Stalberg and Kopecky, and Toews also notched another goal, a power play strike from Kopecky and Duncan Keith. David Backes tried to get the Blues a late comeback, with his fourth of the year coming from Pietrangelo, but it was too little too late as the Blackhawks beat the Blues 7-5. Patrick Kane was the first star with two goals and an assist, while Patrick Sharp was the second star with a goal and an assist. Tomas Kopecky grabbed the third star with his sock trick and goal. There was a fight in every period, with John Scott of the Blackhawks fighting Cam Janssen of the Blues, Nick Boynton and B.J. Crombeen having a dance, and Jeremy Morin tangling with Chris Porter. These two rivals had quite the bitter evening.

Into Nashville, where the Predators hosted the Phoenix Coyotes. Ilya Bryzgalov got the nod for the Desert Dogs, while Pekka Rinne served the Predators in the blue paint. Shea Weber opened the scoring, notching one for the Predators, his third of the year coming off of Patric Hornqvist and Steve Sullivan on the power play. Cal O'Reilly added on with his fifth of the year, also on the power play and coming from Sullivan and Ryan Suter. Jordin Tootoo finished it off with his empty netter, good for his third of the year. The lone assist on his goal was from Jerred Smithson. Nashville defeated Phoenix 3-0. Pekka Rinne was the first star for his 33 save shutout, with goal scorers Weber and O'Reilly taking the second and third stars in that order.

Going upward a bit, to Denver where the Colorado Avalanche hosted the Atlanta Thrashers. Peter Budaj was the masked man for the Avalanche, whereas Ondrej Pavelec protected the net for the Thrashers. Rich Peverley's sixth of the season got Atlanta going, with assists coming from Andrew Ladd and Zach Bogosian. After a scoreless second period, Colorado tied it with Matt Duchene's unassisted seventh goal of the year. The Avalanche took the lead with David Jones eleventh tally of the year, this one being a power play goal with assists by Kevin Shattenkirk and Milan Hejduk. Dustin Byfuglien tied the game again for Atlanta, with his tenth of the year from Tobias Enstrom and Alex Burmistov. In the overtime period that followed, Atlanta prevailed riding on Anthony Stewart's seventh of the season, with Byfuglien and Ron Hainsey grabbing the helpers for the winning goal. Stewart's goal was good enough for the first star, while Colorado's Matt Duchene got the second star with his goal. Byfuglien was third star with his goal and assist.

Finally, at the HP Pavilion in San Jose, where the Sharks hosted Western Conference rivals from Detroit, the Red Wings. Jimmy Howard was playing goal for the Winged Wheel, while Antero Niittymaki got the start for the Sharks. The first goal in the game was a power play tally by Danny Cleary, his eleventh goal of the year, with assists by Henrik Zetterberg and Valtteri Filppula. Pavel Datsyuk extended the Red Wings lead with his eighth goal of the year, assisted by Brian Rafalski and Zetterberg. Dany Heatley's 12th of the year trimmed the lead down to 2-1, with assists on the power play goal coming from Joe Thornton and Joe Pavelski. Zetterberg scored his own goal, his eighth of the year in the second period, with assists by Rafalski and Datsyuk, but was answered by Benn Ferriero's second of the year for the Sharks, assisted by Jamie McGinn and Derek Joslin. Detroit struck late in the third with Patrick Eaves' fourth of the year, from Cleary and Niklas Kronwall. Zetterberg added another goal, his ninth of the season and second of the night in the third period to run the lead up to 5-2. Datsyuk provided the assist for the goal. Ryan Clowe attempted to mount a comeback for the Sharks with his fifth of the season, assisted by Justin Braun and Torrey Mitchell. The Red Wings won, 5-3 over the Sharks. Zetterberg's four point night of two goals and assists was good enough for the first star, with Datsyuk earning the second for his goal and two assists. Ryan Clowe was the third star with his goal.

That's Tuesday's hockey action. Wednesday night features seven games, so about half the NHL is playing tonight. Recaps will be tomorrow at the same time, same place, along with a Thursday Night Football recap, time permitting. Thank you again for reading, and I'll see you tomorrow.

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

NHL recap for Monday

Two trades to report, with the Boston Bruins trading Matt Hunwick to Colorado for Colby Cohen, to free up cap space for Marc Savard's return. The Avalanche subsequently traded Scott Hannan to the Washington Capitals for Tomas Fleischmann. On another note, there were five games played on Monday, and they looked something like this starting in...

Madison Square Garden, where the New York Rangers hosted the red-hot Pittsburgh Penguins. Henrik Lundqvist was in between the pipes for the Rangers, and Marc-Andre Fleury was playing goal for the Penguins. Max Talbot opened the scoring early in the first, scoring his fifth of the year from Pascal Dupuis. Kris Letang added his fifth of the year in the second period with assists from Sidney Crosby and Dupuis, and shortly after, Chris Connor notched his second of the year with helpers by Tyler Kennedy and Alex Goligoski. Marian Gaborik tried to spark the Rangers to life with his fifth of the year from Michal Rozsival, but they couldn't muster anything in the third period and lost 3-1 to their guests. Pascal Dupuis took first star honors with his two assists, followed by Marc-Andre Fleury's 25 for 26 saves, and Sidney Crosby's one assist. Two fights in the first two periods featured Brandon Prust of the Rangers and Michael Rupp of the Penguins, followed by Sean Avery and Tyler Kennedy's bout.

Moving along to the site of the 2011 All-Star Game, in Carolina where the Hurricanes hosted the Dallas Stars. Cam Ward was in the paint for Carolina, and Kari Lethonen got the nod for the Stars. James Neal lit the lamp first for the Stars, with assists from Loui Eriksson and Jeff Woywitka. The goal was his ninth of the year. Steve Ott added his own tally for the Stars, his fifth of the year, from Jamie Benn and Trevor Daley, followed by James Neal's tenth of the year and second of the night to put the Stars up 3-0. Neal got an assist from Nicklas Grossman on this goal. Eric Staal got the Hurricanes on the board with his 12th of the year, an unassisted tally. Jamie Benn notched a goal, his sixth of the year in the third period, with assists from Brenden Morrow and Mike Ribeiro, and this proved to be the last of the scoring, as the Stars won 4-1. James Neal was the first star with his two goal, and Jamie Benn got the second star for a goal and an assist. Kari Lehtonen received the third star for a 27 for 28 save performance.

Going north of the border, where the Ottawa Senators hosted their cross-country rival, the Edmonton Oilers. Martin Gerber took on his former team, while Brian Elliot tended the twine for the Senators. Nick Foligno scored his first of the year from Chris Neil early to give the Senators an early 1-0 lead. Tom Gilbert registered his fourth of the year in the second to even the score, with an assist from Sam Gagner on the power play. Andrew Cogliano scored his third of the year from Gilbert Brule and Dustin Penner to give the Oilers the lead. Brule also scored, his fourth of the year for Edmonton, with assists from linemates Cogliano and Penner. Taylor Hall finished it off with his sixth of the year into an empty net. He got help from Shawn Horcoff and Jordan Eberle. Cogliano took the first star with a goal and assist, and Brule got the second star for the same. Martin Gerber's 22 for 23 save night was good for a third star.

Going cross-country to the Scotiabank Saddledome, where the Calgary Flames hosted their division rivals from Minnesota, the Wild. Jose Theodore was in net for the Wild, whereas Miikka Kiprusoff backstopped for the Flames. After a scoreless first period, Jay Bouwmeester scored his third of the year from Jarome Iginla and Alex Tanguay. Iginla notched his tenth of the year just 18 seconds later, with assists from Tanguay and Mark Giordano. Niklas Hagman scored his seventh of the year later in the third, which was a power play goal. Olli Jokinen and Rene Bourque assisted on that goal, which was the last game as the Flames shut out the Wild, 3-0. Miikka Kiprusoff was the first star for his 32 save shutout, while Bouwmeester received second star status for his goal, and Iginla was the third star with a goal and an assist.

Moving into California, where the Anaheim Ducks hosted their I-5 rivals, the Los Angeles Kings. Jonas Hiller was in net for the host Ducks, while Jonathan Quick was starting for the Kings. The first period went scoreless, and in the second period, Cam Fowler scored his second of the year for the Ducks, a power play goal from Lubomir Visnovsky and Teemu Selanne. The Ducks added an insurance goal late in the third with Jason Blake's fifth of the year, from Selanne and Visnovsky. They went on to win 2-0, with Jonas Hiller being the first star for his 27 save shutout. The goal scorers Blake and Fowler received the second and third stars.  Kyle Clifford of the Kings and Aaron Voros of the Ducks also dropped the mitts in the first period.

There are another 5 games for Tuesday (the night of this post) which will be recapped tomorrow. Until then, enjoy the games.

Week 12 Football All-Stars

These are the all-stars of the week for football, at the four major offensive positions and kicker.

Quarterback: Tom Brady
Running Back: Peyton Hillis
Wide Receiver: Dwayne Bowe
Tight End: Billy Bajema
Kicker: Nate Kaeding

That's all the football for now, and I'll have posts about the Thursday night game on Thursday night, so enjoy the days off (as much as you can, depending on how much you'll miss football).

Monday, November 29, 2010

Monday Night Football

Tonight's game, aired in primetime for ESPN is the underwhelming matchup of the two worst teams in the NFC West, the 49ers and the Cardinals. This post comes at the conclusion of the game, being played in the desert.

San Francisco @ Arizona: San Francisco opened the scoring just over 5 minutes into the first quarter with a Troy Smith touchdown to Michael Crabtree, which was good for 38 yards. Shane Andrus added the extra point for the 49ers. Jay Feely got the Cardinals on the board with his 31 yard field goal. Anthony Dixon had a 1 yard touchdown run to extend the 49ers lead to 14-3 with the Andrus extra point. Brian Westbrook added his own touchdown run of 8 yards, and San Francisco took a 21-3 lead with another Andrus extra point. Jay Feely ended the scoring for the first half with a 39 yard field goal, trimming the lead to 21-6 San Francisco at the half. Andrus added a 38 yard field goal for the 49ers in the third quarter, and added a 26 yard kick in the fourth as well. This concluded the scoring, and San Francisco won 27-6.

Fantasy Hockey All-Stars, week 7 (of the season)

This is a new weekly feature that will show the best player at every position in the game. Football will be conducted similarly, but only for Quarterbacks, Running Backs, Wide Receivers, and Tight Ends. Football all-stars will be posted on Tuesdays throughout the rest on the season, with hockey's all-stars being posted on Mondays. Baseball, when it rolls around, will be conducted like hockey. Here's your stars:

Center: Sidney Crosby: 4 goals, 3 assists, +2, 0 penalty minutes, 3 power play points, 16 shots on goal
Left Wing: Alex Ovechkin: 0 goals, 6 assists, +4, 4 penalty minutes, 3 power play points, 23 shots on goal
Right Wing: Alexander Semin: 4 goals, 0 assists, +2, 4 penalty minutes, 2 power play points, 21 shots on goal
Defense: Dustin Byfuglien: 2 goals, 4 assists, +4, 0 penalty minutes, 3 power play points, 17 shots on goal
Goaltender: Ondrej Pavelec: 3 wins, 0.67 goals against average, 97 saves, .980 save percentage, 1 shutout

Those are your best players for the week in hockey. Check back next week for more!

Song of the Week I

Song of the Week is a feature that will be weekly and aims to turn my readers on to some music that I like. For this week, the song is Whatever's Left by Snow Patrol, which is the fourth track from the Final Straw album. It is 2:41 seconds long, and the album was released in 2004. Snow Patrol is a band from Glasgow, over in the United Kingdom, and they are commonly referred to as a Britpop band, with the official Windows classification being Alternative. Final Straw was their third album, the first two being the duds Songs for Polarbears and When It's All Over We Still Have To Clear Up. Happy listening!