Saturday, April 11, 2009

Datsyuk is top choice for Player of the Year

By Dan Rosen - NHL.com Staff Writer

He was our pick for Player of the Year in the midseason, and Datsyuk has done nothing to sway our thinking. He has been simply remarkable this season for the Wings and is a likely finalist for the Hart Trophy.

The Wings' superlative center leads everyone on the team in scoring by 25 points entering the final weekend. He has 32 goals and 65 assists for 97 points, which is fourth in the NHL. He had 47 points at the 41-game mark.

Also a defensive wizard, Datsyuk has 89 takeaways and a plus-37 rating, making him a likely finalist for the Selke Trophy as well. And since he has only 22 penalty minutes, he is once again in line for the Lady Byng Trophy, which he's won three straight years.

Friday, April 10, 2009

Osgood knows repeat pressure rests on his shoulders

By Dan Rosen - NHL.com Staff Writer

Ask Ken Holland about the Detroit Red Wings' goaltending, and you'll get a 287-word answer. At least, that's what he gave to NHL.com when we approached the Wings' long-time general manager and asked him if he's concerned about Chris Osgood.Holland took us all the way back to Tim Cheveldae, Detroit's goalie from 1988 until 1994. He mentioned Bob Essensa and then Mike Vernon, Osgood, Dominik Hasek, Curtis Joseph and Manny Legace before going back to Hasek and then Osgood.

Here is what Detroit GM Ken Holland had to say to NHL.com when asked if he's worried about the Red Wings' goaltending situation entering the playoffs:"That has been an age-old question for us. People were wondering about our goaltending when Tim Cheveldae was in net. Then we went to Bob Essensa and it wasn't good enough, so we made a trade for Mike Vernon and they thought he was the answer. But, we lost to New Jersey (in the 1995 Stanley Cup Final) so they weren't sure if Mike Vernon was the answer. Two years later we won the Stanley Cup, so they felt that Mike Vernon is the answer. Then I traded Mike Vernon away and turned it over to Chris Osgood and they weren't sure if Chris Osgood was the answer. Then we won in '98 and they all thought, 'OK, your goaltending was good enough.' Then we lost early in the playoffs a couple of years in a row and they thought Osgood wasn't the answer. So, I made a trade and brought in Dominik Hasek and he was the answer. He retired after the year and I brought in Curtis Joseph, so people thought we were OK; but, after a few disappointing years, they thought our goaltending wasn't good enough. So, we went into the work stoppage and I let Curtis Joseph go and I brought back Chris Osgood and people thought our goaltending wasn't good enough. We lost to Edmonton and I traded away Manny Legace and brought in Dominik Hasek and people weren't sure of our goaltending again, but we went to the final four in 2007; so they thought our goaltending was adequate. And, then we won the Stanley Cup last year so they thought our goaltending was good enough. Five months later our goaltending isn't good enough? I've lived with it for 15 years."

The gist of it:There's only one Martin Brodeur, one Patrick Roy, one Roberto Luongo. The Wings haven't had anyone like that on a long-term basis since Terry Sawchuk, but they've still won the Stanley Cup four times in 11 years with guys like Vernon, Hasek and Osgood. Yet, every single season Holland gets asked if his team's goaltending is good enough?

This season, though, the question has some real validity to it as the Wings enter the playoffs with Osgood slated to be the starter in Game 1.Statistically speaking, Osgood has put together his worst regular season in his 15-year career with a 3.10 goals-against average and .887 save percentage entering Thursday. Osgood struggled so mightily at times that Detroit gave him a 12-day break between starts in February to find his game.In his second game back from the sabbatical, he gave up four goals on 14 shots to Nashville. He shut out the Blues on March 3 with 22 saves, but, four days later, Columbus scored seven goals on him."This year has really tested me more than any other because I always felt I have been on the verge of turning things around and then something else would happen and something else would happen," Osgood told NHL.com. "I would get on a big roll again, and then something else would happen."Through it all, Osgood said he's learned how to be tougher, how to compete harder. The competition from backup Ty Conklin brought about a lot of his motivation."If he wouldn't have played like he was, it would have been real tough on me this year," Osgood said of Conklin.Fortunately, the Wings were still winning at a decent clip, even when Osgood was stumbling this season. But all of that's old news now.The Stanley Cup Playoffs are almost here, and it's time for Osgood -- a three-time Cup champion, including twice as the starter -- to prove himself again. First, Osgood needs to get through a home-and-home series against Chicago, including Sunday's NHL on NBC curtian closer.

Bring on the playoffs, says Osgood."I'm not kidding myself, I haven't played well this year," Osgood said. "This is one of those years where things haven't gone right; but the one thing that it has taught me is to keep working, dig down deep and keep believing in the same thing you do everyday. If anything, it has made me work harder and it's going to make me better in the long run."To be totally sincere, I really feel I'm going in the right direction heading into the playoffs. I feel that is going to be my time."Osgood can believe that because he thinks he knows where he went wrong this season."One of the biggest mistakes I made is I started the year thinking I had to play exactly the same way as I did in the playoffs last year and I really didn't have to," he said. "I just had to play when I was told to play and practice hard when I didn't play. That's what I did when I came back after the lockout and that worked out for the best." He said that same philosophy is why he was so good in the playoffs last season. Babcock went to Osgood during the second period of Game 4 against Nashville in the Western Conference Quarterfinals. Hasek was struggling, and the Predators were on the verge of evening the series at two games apiece, which they eventually did.However, Osgood got the start in Game 5 and never gave the net back to Hasek. He won his first nine starts of the playoffs and finished with a 14-4 record and a 1.55 GAA, backstopping the Wings to the Cup for the second time in his career."When I went in in Nashville, people would ask me, 'What were you thinking?'" Osgood said. "Well, I really wasn't thinking anything because I was confident that I had done what I needed to do to get ready and I didn't put any extra pressure on myself. "I did (put on extra pressure) this year," he continued. "I was thinking, 'Oh my God, I have to play exactly the same way I did in the playoffs last year and if I don't do it people are going to think I'm not as good as that or maybe it was fluky.'" Osgood compared the feeling to a guy that signs his first lucrative long-term contract.

"A guy that never made a ton of money before is now on a huge contract and he's trying to play up to that contract," he said. "It's impossible. I put too much pressure on myself. I don't have to do that. I just have to be solid, make the saves I need to and control myself back there."That's all the Red Wings have ever asked for from Osgood -- or really any of the 20-something goalies that have inhabited the Detroit crease since 1990-91, when the aforementioned Cheveldae became the No. 1."We won the Stanley Cup last year and our goaltending was solid, just solid," Holland said. "We didn't give up a lot of chances and when we needed the key save we got the key saves. That's the way we're built. That's why we have $20 million or so on defense. It depends on how your team is built."The Red Wings are still built around their defense, and the questions about their goaltending won't go away. It bothers Osgood because he says he has fought so hard to change the perception; but, at this point, it may be a lost cause. It's not something he's too worried about, either.Osgood knows he has to bounce back from a sub-par regular season. To do so, he regularly thinks about Games 5 and 6 of last year's Stanley Cup Final against Pittsburgh.

With the Stanley Cup polished and ready to be brought out to the Joe Louis Arena ice, Osgood gave up a game-tying goal to Max Talbot with 34.3 seconds to go in regulation of Game 5. The Penguins won the game on Petr Sykora's goal in the third overtime.Two days later in Pittsburgh, with questions swirling around him, Osgood rebounded by stopping 20 of 22 shots as the Wings won the Cup with a 3-2 victory in Game 6."People ask me, 'How are you going to bounce back?'" Osgood said. "Well, I don't believe there is a harder game to bounce back from (than Game 5). I don't feed off of what happens in the regular season. I feed off of that."You have to be honest with yourself," he later added. "I know I have to play like I did last year in the playoffs. If I don't, the chances of us winning aren't very good."

Playoff openings are down to two

By John Kreiser - NHL.com Columnist

With three days remaining in the regular season, there are still two playoff berths to be decided. Montreal and the New York Rangers completed the Eastern Conference postseason octet Thursday. The Canadiens needed one point -- and got it in a 5-4 overtime loss at Boston. The Rangers held off Philadelphia 2-1, ending the playoff hopes of Florida and Buffalo. Boston, Washington and New Jersey will finish 1-2-3; the rest of the placements are still to be determined.Four teams are still jockeying for the final two spots in the West. All four play Friday night. Here's a look at how the races shape up:

Eastern Conference:

Boston (Northeast) has long since wrapped up its division title and first place in the East. The Bruins have 114 points after beating Montreal 5-4 in overtime; they visit Buffalo on Saturday and the Islanders on Sunday and can win the Presidents' Trophy by winning both games if San Jose doesn't win its season finale.

Washington (Southeast) has clinched its division and wrapped up second in the conference with a 4-2 win at Tampa Bay.

New Jersey won the Atlantic Division title and third in the East with a 3-2 shootout win at Ottawa. The Capitals finish Saturday at Florida. The Devils host Carolina on Saturday afternoon.

Philadelphia (97 points after a 2-1 loss to the New York Rangers) holds fourth ahead of Carolina and Pittsburgh because it has played one fewer game. The Flyers visit the Islanders on Saturday before finishing against the Rangers at home Sunday. They need three points to assure themselves of fourth place and the home-ice edge in the opening round.

Carolina (97 points after a 5-1 home loss to Buffalo) saw its nine-game overall winning streak and 12-game home streak end when the Sabres won at RBC Center. The 'Canes end their season Saturday at New Jersey; a win means they can finish no lower than fifth.

Pittsburgh (97 points after a 6-1 win against the Islanders) is 17-3-4 since Dan Bylsma replaced Michel Therrien behind the bench. The Penguins end their season Saturday at Montreal and need a win and some help to finish fourth or fifth. They can end up no lower than sixth.

The New York Rangers (93 points after a 2-1 home win against Philadelphia) did what they had to do -- win both of their home games this week. The Rangers have the tie-breaker with Montreal because they've won one more game. New York ends its season Sunday at Philadelphia.

Montreal (93 points after a 5-4 overtime loss at Boston) got a big boost when defenseman Mathieu Schneider was able to play Thursday after being ruled out for the season with injuries earlier this week. The Canadiens close Saturday at home against Pittsburgh -- capping a season-ending stretch of four games in six nights. They need a victory and a non-win by the Rangers to finish seventh.

Florida (91 points after a 3-2 win at Atlanta) did what it had to do by beating the Thrashers, only to see the Rangers win and the Canadiens get a single point in their OT loss at Boston. The Panthers have now missed the playoffs in eight consecutive seasons.

Buffalo (89 points after Thursday's 5-1 win at Carolina) won its game but was closed out when the Rangers beat the Flyers.


Western Conference:Already in:

San Jose (Pacific) and Detroit (Central) have long since wrapped up their divisions. The Sharks will finish first in the West and can clinch the Presidents' Trophy with a win Saturday at Los Angeles or a non-victory by Boston in one of its two remaining games.

Detroit, a 4-3 shootout loser at home to Nashville, will finish second in the West.

Vancouver (98 points after a 1-0 win against Los Angeles) is two points ahead of Calgary (96 points) for first in the Northwest Division. But the Flames have two games left -- Friday at Edmonton and Saturday at home against the Oilers. If the Flames win both, they'll capture the division because they'll have more wins. The Canucks close Saturday at Colorado.

Chicago (100 points) will face the Northwest runner-up. The Hawks have a four-point lead in the race for fourth place and need one more point to wrap up the last home-ice berth in the opening round. They visit Detroit on Saturday and host the Wings on Sunday.

Columbus (92 points) is going to the playoffs for the first time since entering the NHL in 2000. The Jackets visit St. Louis on Friday before returning home Saturday to face Minnesota; one point in those games will assure Columbus of a sixth-place finish and a series against the Northwest Division winner.

Still to be decided:Anaheim (88 points) last played Sunday and has spent four days watching other teams get points. The Ducks finally hit the ice again Friday night, when Dallas comes to the Honda Center, then finish Saturday at Phoenix. Anaheim is seventh, ahead of St. Louis and Nashville, because it has won two more games than the Blues and played fewer games than the Predators.

St. Louis (88 points) has been off since Tuesday's 5-1 win at Phoenix, which put them into eighth place -- they've played one fewer game than Nashville. The Blues host Columbus on Friday and finish the season Sunday at Colorado, the last-place team in the West.

Nashville (88 points after a 4-3 shootout win at Detroit) stayed alive with a gritty, come-from-behind win in one of the NHL's toughest buildings. The Predators are the first team in the League to finish their season, and must win Friday at Minnesota -- then hope St. Louis and/or Anaheim cooperate.

Minnesota (85 points) is alive -- but barely. The Wild have to win both of their remaining games -- at home Friday against Nashville and Saturday at Columbus -- and hope for losses by the teams in front of them.