Tag Archives: chris mason

Jets Send Scheifele Back. Take Big Step With Comeback Win.

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Jim Slater Scores for the Jets

The Winnipeg Jets took a big step on Saturday night. Besides recording their second victory of the season, of course.

This time, the Jets came back. And don’t think that isn’t huge for team morale.

After all, this is a team that blew a 3-1 lead in Toronto and lost 4-3 in a shootout and then blew a 1-0 lead after 20 minutes in Ottawa and got blitzed 4-1. This is a Jets team that has started the season blowing leads, not beating the opposition after it takes the lead.

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A Goalie Change Does the Trick

But on Saturday night, after falling behind 2-0 to the Carolina Hurricanes, the Jets switched goalies and appeared to switch gears at exactly the same time. The Hurricanes scored on Ondrej Pavelec at 4:40 (Jussi Jokinen) and 6:43 (Jeff Skinner) and appeared to be cruising, but that’s when Jets coach Claude Noel took Pavelec out, replaced him with Chris Mason and the Jets just seemed to have new life.

Alexander Burmistrov and Kyle Wellwood scored power-play goals before the end of the first period (Wellwood scored at 19:58) and the Jets proceeded to beat their intra-divisional rivals 5-3.

This was a Jets team that outhit, out-hustled, out-worked and as a result out-scored their opposition and it could be argued that it was Winnipeg’s best performance of the first two weeks of the campaign. Hard work pays off and it’s paid off twice at home for the Jets already this season. In Saturday’s game, the team’s puck pursuit and puck support was unmatched and suddenly, at 2-4-1, things don’t look so hopeless anymore.

Monday night’s game with the skilled, but under-performing New York Rangers (2-2-2) will be a nice test.

Meanwhile, on Sunday afternoon, the Jets announced that the team had returned 18-year-old draft pick Mark Scheifele to his junior team, the Barrie Colts of the Ontario Hockey League.

That shouldn’t be a surprise to anyone.

A surprise pick in the draft at No. 7 back in June, Scheifele was terrific in the pre-season. Trouble was, he was playing against AHL, ECHL and junior players. As an NHLer in regular season games, he’d make a great ECHL star.

He had a goal, no assists and no penalty minutes in his first seven games on a struggling team. He was averaging 14-15 shifts and playing about 10 minutes a game (he played only 7:21 on Saturday night). That’s a waste for a skinny 6-foot-2, 180-pound kid who is only going to get better in junior.

In fact, it’s a terrible waste of talent to have Scheifele playing on a checking line. If he’s not a Top 6 player he shouldn’t be playing in the NHL. Fact is, the only reason he made the Jets is because the team had little or no offensive punch. In their first six games, the Jets were averaging fewer than two goals per outing. It was the wrong place for a kid like Scheifele and GM Kevin Cheveldayoff made the right decision yesterday.

Scheifele needs to go back to junior, play 23 minutes a game, score 150 points, play on the World Junior Championship team and go deep in the OHL playoffs. It’s the best thing that could have happened to Scheifele.

He’s going to be a star. Just not yet.

111022 RecapFull Jets Send Scheifele Back. Take Big Step With Comeback Win.

The Stanley Cup Playoffs are Here: It’s prediction time.

Minnesota Wild assistant general manager Tom Thompson has a theory about the first round of the Stanley Cup playoffs.

It comes true most years, but somehow, this looks like a year in which it might come to pass in spades (although I don’t believe it). 

 

“The first round of the playoffs is always the most compelling round because you generally have two types of teams,” explained Thompson. 

 

“You have the teams that were successful all year and feel that if they don’t get to the final or win the Cup, their season was a failure. Then you have the teams that snuck into the playoffs and have nothing to lose. The top teams are often tight while the lesser teams have already done what they set out to do and by the opening round of the playoffs are as loose as can be. 

 

“That’s why there are so many great series and so many big upsets in the first round.”

 

He’s right, of course. The first round of the playoffs is always the most exciting. So without further adieu, let’s look at the 16 teams and eight matchups for the 2009 series which have already begun.

 

THE EASTERN CONFERENCE

 

No. 1 Boston Bruins (53-19-10) vs. No. 8 Montreal Canadiens (41-30-11).

The Habs and Bruins go at it again, a repeat of last year’s first round, in which the Canadiens outlasted Boston four games to three. But this year, things are different. Boston was the best team in the East and the second best team in the NHL and they are on a roll. It’s a team that allowed the fewest number of goals in the league (196) and has a wide-open offence to go with a stingy defence. The Habs were very fortunate to make the playoffs (they finished with the same number of points as Florida) and in six meetings this season, Boston won five of them, two in shootouts. Bruins in five.

 

No. 2 Washington Capitals (50-24-8) vs. No. 7 New York Rangers (43-30-9).

Second-place Washington with all that firepower – Alex Ovechkin and Mike Green are a good start — will face the seventh-place Rangers. The Caps have been very good this season and won the Southeast Division by 11 points over Carolina. They also won three of their four meetings with the Rangers. Capitals in five.

 

No. 3 New Jersey Devils (51-27-4) vs. No. 6 Carolina Hurricanes (45-30-7).

New Jersey, which won the Atlantic Division, will play sixth-place Carolina after beating the Hurricanes in the season finale last week. However, Carolina won its first three meetings with the Devils this season and played much better hockey down the stretch than New Jersey. Hurricanes in seven.

 

No. 4 Pittsburgh Penguins (45-28-9) vs. No. 5 Philadelphia Flyers (44-27-11).

Pittsburgh won four of the six meetings between the two teams this season, one in overtime and another in a shootout. However, all Philadelp[hia had to do to earn home ice advantage throughout this series was to win the final game of the season at home against the Rangers and they couldn’t pull it off. Pittsburgh has too much offence and is just playing better hockey at this time. Penguins in six.

 

THE WESTERN CONFERENCE

 

No. 1 San Jose Sharks (53-18-11) vs. No. 8 Anaheim Ducks (42-33-7).

Although it’s No. 1 vs. No. 8, this is a matchup that features two of the most successful teams in the NHL since the lockout. Since the start of the 2005-06 season, the Ducks have gone 180-107-41 with four playoff appearances while the Sharks have posted a 197-94-37 mark with three consecutive 100+ point seasons, four playoff appearances and two Pacific Division titles (2008 & 2009). However, the Sharks were the President’s Trophy winners as the best team in the NHL during the regular season while Randy Carlyle’s Ducks were fortunate to make the playoffs. The Sharks also won the season series, 4-2. Sharks in five.

No. 2 Detroit Red Wings (51-21-10) vs. No. 7 Columbus Blue Jackets (41-31-10).

A tale of two cities: The Red Wings are the defending Stanley Cup champions while the Blue Jackets are in the playoffs for the first time in their eight seasons of existence. During the regular season, the teams split. Detroit won the first two meetings, Columbus won the next three (including an 8-2 win at Detroit on March 7) and Detroit geat the Jackets 4-0 in a statement game on March 17. I like Ken Hitchcock as a head coach, but Detroit has way too much of everything. Red Wings in five.

 

No. 3 Vancouver Canucks (45-27-10) vs. No. 6 St. Louis Blues (41-31-10).

The remarkable, red-hot Blues clinched the No. 6 seed in the final game of the year and put a cap on an amazing finish. From Feb. 15 to the end of the season, head coach Andy Murray’s Blues went 18-6-3. It was significant because on Feb. 15, the Blues were dead last in the West. This team finished the regular season by going 9-1-1 over its last 11 games and 5-1-1 on the road. Had the Blues lost their final game, they would have finished eighth — which would have meant a series with the top-seeded San Jose Sharks. Instead, they finished with the best second-half record in the League at 25-9-7. However, they have only four players who have ever won a playoff game. Vancouver, meanwhile, came back to claim the Northwest Division title by winning their last three games and going 6-3-1 down the stretch behind the tremendous goaltending of Roberto Luongo. This will be a match-up of two of the hottest teams in the game and two red-hot goalies – Luongo and Chris Mason.. Canucks in seven.

 

No. 4 Chicago Blackhawks (46-24-12) vs. No. 5 Calgary Flames (46-30-6). 

This series screams “Blackhawks!” Chicago swept the four-game season series with the Flames, winning 6-1 and 5-2 at the United Center and 3-2 in overtime and 5-2 at the Saddledome. Add it up. Chicago has more firepower and probably equal goaltending (Huet/Khabibulin vs. Kiprusoff). Chicago oputscored Calgary 19-7 during its four wins and really, the Hawks dominated the season. In fairness to Calgary, the two teams haven’t faced each other since the Hawks’ second win at Calgary on Feb. 5, but still, Hawks in six

 

* * *

 

THE 2008-09 NHL TROPHY WINNERS

 

Pittsburgh center Evgeni Malkin captured his first career Art Ross Trophy as the League’s leading scorer with 113 points while Washington Capitals leftwinger Alexander Ovechkin won his second consecutive Maurice Richard Trophy for being the League’s top goal scorer with 56. 

 

Meanwhile, Boston Bruins goaltenders Tim Thomas and Manny Fernandez earned the William Jennings Trophy as the goaltenders on the club that allowed the fewest number of goals — 196.