Tag Archives: jean-sebastien giguere

Does the NHL Trade Deadline Matter Anymore?

The National Hockey League trade deadline is Feb. 28 (2 p.m. CST). Here’s our question of the day: Does it matter?

I love watching the annual trade deadline shows on TSN, SportsNet and the Score. It used to be that no matter when they started or when they finished, the panelists would always have plenty to talk about. In fact, there used to be huge trades, trades that could change an entire division and sometimes a conference.

But since the NHL salary cap was instituted in 2005, the entire concept of the annual NHL trade deadline has changed dramatically. Unless a team is significantly under the cap, there is very little chance that it will add a number of high-priced players at the deadline. And while a team or two might consider adding some big money talent, they can’t unless they rid themselves of their own high-priced talent. And that’s why I like watching the trade deadline shows so much.

It’s painful, but it’s really entertaining. For six-to-eight hours (depending on the network), these highly-paid, well-coiffed TV stars and ex-players talk endlessly about who’s buying and selling and then they wait. And then they start talking about buying and selling again and then they wait some more. And then somebody trades a fifth round draft pick for a winger in Hershey and then they talk about buying and selling again. And then they wait.

With the salary cap, blockbuster trades on deadline day are unlikely.

Sure, there will be deals with veteran rent-a-players changing teams in the final year of a contract, so one team can take a run at the playoffs and the other can either dump salary or acquire a prospect. You can wager that Buffalo gets into that kind of scenario a few times.

However, if you think there will be a huge six-player deal involving the game’s biggest names on deadline day, don’t hold your breath. I can tell you, not even the poor guys who are going to be stuck in front of a national audience hoping and praying for a big trade, actually believe they’re going to see one. They’re too smart for that.

After all, take a look at last year. Here is an example of a big deal: Carolina sent Joe Corvo to the Washington Capitals in exchange for Brian Pothier, Oskar Osala and a second round draft pick in 2011.

Here’s another: Vancouver sent Mathieu Schneider to the Phoenix Coyotes for Dean Zimmerman and a sixth-round pick in 2010.

Want a third? Try this. This is what passes for a blockbuster these days and it’s the deal that kept the panels on Canada’s three sports networks on the edges of their seats for hours: Colorado sent Wojtek Wolski to the Phoenix Coyotes in exchange for Peter Mueller and Kevin Porter.

As we mentioned two weeks ago, there were only two big trade deadline deals last year and neither one took place at the deadline. On Jan. 31, the Toronto Maple Leafs sent Matt Stajan, Niklas Hagman, Jamal Mayers and Ian White to Calgary in exchange for Dion Phaneuf, Fredrik Sjostrom and Keith Aulie and on Feb. 4, a full month before the deadline, Atlanta sent Ilya Kovalchuk and Anssi Salmela to New Jersey in exchange for Jonny Oduya, Niclas Bergfors, Patrice Cormier and a 2010 first-round draft pick (which was eventually dealt to Chicago in the Dustin Byfuglien trade).

So perhaps, in the next few days, there might be a decent trade or two. But on deadline day? Not likely.

In the meantime, let’s look at 10 players who could be moved before or on the deadline. These guys might keep our national TV stars busy for eight hours:

1) Jean-Sebastien Giguere, Toronto Maple Leafs: James Reimer has to start playing regularly at some point and Giguere is grossly overpaid. However, he might help a team like Montreal down the stretch. He’s in the last year of his contract and I’d be surprised if any team wanted him, but if one did, it’s pretty certain, that team could get him. He has waived his no-trade clause.

2) Craig Rivet, Buffalo Sabres: The Sabres are falling out of contention so the veteran captain, whose contract runs out at the end of the season is likely to be the first to go. He’ll help a playoff contender. He’s done helping the Sabres. I wouldn’t be surprised if Rivet is moved any day.

3) Chris Phillips, Ottawa Senators: He’s 32 and in the final year of his contract playing for a bad team. He’s garner a draft pick or a couple of prospects from a contending team. Bryan Murray will move him if he can.

4) Thomas Kaberle, Toronto Maple Leafs: Brian Burke has been dying to move Kaberle for awhile. Now would be as good a time as any. He’s a free-agent at the end of the season and his $4.25 million will come off the Leafs’ cap anyway, but Burke’s a smart guy and he’d like to get something in return for a player like Kaberle, who could be a good player in the right situation. Kaberle says he will waive his no-trade clause.

5) Dustin Penner, Edmonton Oilers: He’s not as good as his $4.5 million salary this year would suggest, but he is a Top 6 forward for a number of teams and the non-stop rumours seem to suggest that L.A. is interested. However, the cap will be an issue.

6) Jason Arnott, New Jersey Devils: The Devils are playing better under Jacques Lemaire and so Lou Lamoriello might not move anybdy, but if he can get a draft pick for the 35-year-old Arnott, he’ll pull the cord.

7) Keith Ballard, Vancouver Canucks: He makes $4 million a year and he’s a decent rearguard, but the Canucks are loaded on defense and they wouldn’t mind acquiring draft picks or a young centre. Ballard’s been a healthy scratch far too often this season to make the kind of money he makes.

icon cool Does the NHL Trade Deadline Matter Anymore? Alex Kovalev, Ottawa Senators: The Senators want to get younger and they’de love to be able to move Kovalev. He’s playing well —  three goals and five points in his past three games — but the Sens are going nowhere and they’ll take draft picks to move him. Word out of Pittsburgh is that his old team, the Penguins, might be interested after losing Evgeni Malkin tore up his knee and is done for the season.

9) Alexei Ponikarovsky, Los Angeles Kings: He makes $3.2 million a year, but he hasn’t been as good as hoped (he has four goals and four assists in 36 games). If the Kings could move Ponikarovsky, it would allow GM Dean Lombardi to improve in other areas. It might also allow Lombardi to acquire a big forward like Penner. Trouble is, Ponikarovsky is not worth the financial burden. Who else would want him?

10) Tim Connolly, Buffalo Sabres: The Sabres might not want to try to sign this first-line forward because he makes a load of dough and is probably going to want more next year. Trouble is, he has only eight goals and 16 assists in 40 games and has been a terrific underachiever. Fact is, the Sabres are going to try and cut salaries at the deadline and Connolly’s is the first one they’d love to eject.

Another Week of Crazy Stuff. Some of This is as Sad as it is Funny.

There are weeks that go by when you just have to shake your head, turn off the sports networks and watch Hawaii 5-0.

Sometimes sports is just too goofy to understand. Sometimes things happen that just make you say, “Really? Seriously?” Here we go:

1) James Reimer had a great run as the Toronto Maple Leafs goaltender, won three straight then lost once and was demoted to the American Hockey League’s Toronto Marlies. That’s because the No. 1 goalie in Toronto, Jean-Sebastien Giguere (8-7-2, .894 save percentage and a 2.80 goals against average), will make $7 million this season, the No. 2 goaltender in Toronto, Jonas Gustavsson (6-12-2, .896 save percentage and 3.13 goals against average) makes $1.3 million and Reimer ($555,000 in the NHL) has a two-way contract.

In fairness, it’s the way of the NHL, but you can see why the Leafs never make the playoffs. When they have a chance to give a young goalie they drafted a chance to play at the NHL level, they can’t, because they feel it necessary to play the overpaid guys.

Of course, maybe they’re playing Giguere so they can trade him. If that’s the case, they should be praised.

2) The voting for the Baseball Hall of Fame came and went and the donkeys in the Baseball Writers Association of America have again shut the door on the players who performed remarkably during the steroids era (back when Major League Baseball was fun and interesting).

It’s frightening when baseball writers have been given the power to become the conscience of the game. A large collection of beer bellies who have never faced a curve ball in their lives will cheapen a players career just because they can.

In the 1990s and early 2000s just about everybody in the game was on the juice. That’s because steroid use wasn’t really against the rules until 2003. OK, some guys want to suggest that a memo from commissioner Fay Vincent in 1991 warned players against using banned substances, but if there is no testing, there are no banned substances. The commissioner might have wanted the juice banned, but the Players Association would have no part of testing and without testing, banning any substance is a moot point.

In the meantime, sportswriters are in charge of who or who doesn’t get into Cooperstown. Meanwhile, Ozzie Smith and Bert Blyleven are IN the Hall and Alan Trammell and Jack Morris aren’t. What a joke.

3) The made up Hershey Bears jersey controversy. You know, the jerseys with the Manitoba Moose and Texas Stars logos on the shoulders to recognize the two teams the Bears beat to win back-to-back American Hockey League titles? The jerseys the team wore once, then auctioned off for charity? Made a load of dough, too, I’m told.

It was a controversy that was started with newspaper outrage, picked up by a whole load of bloggers and then debunked by people in Hershey who actually knew that it was a tribute to two great opponents, not a shot at anybody.

4) Ahh, the things that deadspin.com notices. In a nine-minute news conference this week, New England Patriots wide receiver Wes Welker made 11 references to feet, a not-so-subtle shot at New York Jets head coach Rex Ryan, who apparently has a foot fetish. Apparently. Or maybe. Or something.

This Pats-Jets playoff game has certainly generated a lot of talk. Hope tomorrow’s actual game has half as much action.

Is Reimer the Next Bower?

Could he be the next Johnny Bower? The Toronto Maple Leafs have been dying to find a good goaltender, let alone a great goaltender, since the days of Curtis Joseph, but they might have him right now. And he’s from Winnipeg, no less.

22-year-old James Reimer, the Leafs fourth pick in the 2006 NHL entry draft out of the WHL’s Red Deer Rebels has helped the Leafs put together a four-game winning streak and has Leafs Nation thinking it might have actually found the next Bower … or even Felix Potvin.

Reimer is 6-foot-22, 208 pounds and is a pretty imposing figure between the pipes for the opposition’s shooters. American Hockey League scouts said that when he played for the Marlies he developed a style that has been described as “coming out to challenge the shooters.” A big guy who skates well, Reimer has average puckhandling skills but doesn’t give up many bad goals. He handles his angles well and he uses his frame to make himself bigger when he’s down in the butterfly.

Tuesday night, Reimer improved to 4-1-0 this season as he made 40 saves in a 4-2 road win over the San Jose Sharks. He’s won his last three games and made 111 saves in the process. He could make Jean-Sebastien Giguere trade bait at the deadline if he keeps up his astounding play.

Who knows? James Reimer from Winnipeg could be the next great Leafs goalie.

Of course, if he keeps winning for the next month or so, it’s likely he’ll be anointed the next great goalie long before this season ends.

Leafs Change Course. Team Barely Recognizable.

Toronto Maple Leafs general manager Brian Burke did not mince words yesterday.

After cutting two huge deals, one with the Calgary Flames and the other with the Anaheim Ducks, Burke quipped: ”We’re still open for business. We’re not done.”

Obviously, Burke has decided that his lousy Leafs were indeed really, really lousy, so it’s time to overhaul the franchise.

On Sunday, Burke shipped out six players and got four in return.

First, the Leafs sent their best player so far this year, Steinbach’s Ian White, along with Matt Stajan, Nicklas Hagman and Jamal Mayers to the Calgary Flames in exchange for defensemen Dion Phaneuf and Keith Aulie and winger Fredrik Sjostrom. Then, the Leafs dealt goalie Vesa Toskala and forward Jason Blake to Anaheim in exchange for goaltender Jean-Sebastien Giguere.

Wow! At 17-28-11, the Leafs were desperate. Now they’re younger. But are they better?

“It was definitely a shock, but I’m very excited about going to Toronto and being a Maple Leaf,” Phaneuf told TSN.

“It’s a cliche. If Wayne Gretzky can get traded, anyone can get traded. I was very surprised, but on the other hand I’m very excited to be going to the biggest hockey market in the world.”

I understand that when a player is traded he has to say nice things about his new team. And I also understand that Canadian-born hockey players always say the right thing. I get all that. But in this case Phaneuf is lying through his mouthguard.

Saturday he was playing defence on a team in a big slump, but a team that will still make the playoffs. Sunday, he finds himself playing for a team that won’t finish .500.

The Leafs, after all, are tied with Carolina for last-place overall in the Eastern Conference.

In the end yesterday, the Leafs gave up White (a plus-one on a minus-48 team who was having a career year and always said he was “honoured” to be a Toronto Maple Leaf), Stajan, Hagman, Mayers, Toskala and Blake — six NHL-caliber players — and got Phaneuf, Aulie, Sjostrom and Giguere — three NHLers and a Marlie — in return.

Does that make them better? One can’t imagine.

After all, the Leafs were 11 games under .500 after a loss to Vancouver on Saturday. One day later they’re barely recognizable.

Three things rattling around in my brain…

I have a few more things rattling around in my cranium other than this, but after crunchy peanut butter and last night’s Power Ball numbers, these are the only things that would likely matter to anyone else…

1) NHL commissioner Gary Bettman gets more hypocritical every day. He says he wants to do whatever he can for his owners, but when one gets in serious trouble — like Jerry Moyes in Phoenix — Bettman throws him under the bus.

Here is the latest response by Jim Balsillie to a court filing by the National Hockey League:

HAMILTON, ON, May 14 /CNW/ – Jim Balsillie today issued the following statement with regard to NHL motions filed in a Phoenix bankruptcy court: 

   … “I can tell you this. I made a generous good faith offer to buy the Coyotes from Jerry Moyes, who I understand is the owner of the Coyotes. Who owns or controls the team is a distinction without a difference. The team itself is still bankrupt, voluntarily or not. The owner of the team has a fiduciary obligation towards the creditors.

       “My offer, which goes the furthest in satisfying creditors’ claims, is still the same. It’s $212 million to buy the Coyotes and bring them to the best un-served hockey market in the world in Southern Ontario. We look forward to discussing this no matter what the outcome on May 19th.

    “At the end of the day, this is about the passion Canadians feel for the game of hockey and a chance to provide those fans with the opportunity to support a seventh NHL team. That’s what this is all about, great hockey fans in a great hockey market.”

Sadly, Gary Bettman wouldn’t know a good hockey market or a good hockey fan if one tripped and fell over his throat.

Why Bettman hates Canada and, for the most part, hates the game of hockey, is a mystery.

2) Remember Jean-Sebastien Giguere? In case you don’t, he led the Anaheim Ducks to the Stanley Cup in 2007.

Giguere is still in Anaheim, but he doesn’t play much anymore. the hero in Anaheim is now Jonas Hiller, a guy who already has three rings — for the championship of the Swiss League, in 2002, 2005 and 2007. He’s also won two Spengler Cups with Davos.

Of course, if the Ducks win Game 7 against Detroit tonight, he just could win another ring this year. Along with a Conn Smythe Trophy as the playoff MVP.

Or, he could lose and join Roberto Luongo and Simeon Varlamov in 2009 post-season infamy.

It should be a great game tonight. 

3) Finally, in the CFL, the league announced four rule changes that were suggested by the fans in an online poll:

          a) The league’s board of governors approved moving the kickoff back 10 yards to the 25-yard line following a safety.

          b) Allowing coaches to use “wildcat” formations that would move the quarterback around, instead of requiring him to stand behind or under centre.

          c) Requiring a team that makes a field goal to kick off rather than give the receiving the team the option of taking the ball at its 35-yard-line.

         d) Giving a team a third instant replay challenge if its first two are successful.

I have no problem with any of those rules changes. I guess I’m just like a lot of fans. I didn’t think the quarterback was stuck behind centre anyway, didn’t care if a team kicked from the 35 or 25 after a safety and didn’t realize that taking the ball at the 35 or kicking off mattered that much.

My rule change remains the same: If a CFL team uses a Canadian (non-import) as its No. 3 quarterback, it can use an extra import in the starting line-up. At some point, we must — in our own league — make it worth the coaches’ while to develop Canadian  quarterbacks, just like they develop U.S. college rookies.