Archive for April 23rd, 2006

Even

Sunday, April 23rd, 2006

If anything can be said about Sunday Evening’s matchup between the Senators and the Lightning, the word to use is electric.

You got the same antics that you’ve seen all season from the Senators — Martin Havlat, Jason Spezza, Dany Heatly and co. jumping around and giving you fits… But there was an element that was out on ice that cannot be denied:

The 2003-04 Stanley Cup Champions.

After a long, tiring and disappointing season — after a single playoff game where the Lightning looked nothing of what they were capable of… A switch was flipped. You’ve heard all about the Lightning needing to heighten their game, and for one evening they did in unmistakable fashion.

The game went back and forth, but the contributions by Martin St. Louis and Dan Boyle cannot be denied. St. Louis scored the Lightning’s first goal late in the 1st period, but his second goal — the game winner — was absolute electricity. Dmitry Afanasenkov rushed into the Ottawa zone and put a shot on Ray Emery. St. Louis had also been rushing into the zone at the same time at the top boards… He swooped in front of Emery and shot in the rebound. The play was pure electric and seemed a fitting followup to Dan Boyle’s all-leverage-left shot-while-diving goal that had been scored less than a minute previously.

John Grahame faced 24 shots, stopped 21 of them — often unbelievably.

But — and this goes out to both Senator fans and Lightning fans alike — I had a huge problem with this game. It’s a problem I’ve had with playoff hockey in general for years and I feel the need to rant about it because both teams were robbed with thanks to indolence and incompetence by the NHL and these “referees” that they employ.

Now, despite what the traditionalist will hearken — that refs shouldn’t be the deciding factor in games — rules are made to be enforced. This is both for the good of the game and for the safety of the players involved. This afternoon was a demonstration of officiating at it’s worst — because there were no rules enforced whatsoever. Players were not being held accountable for their actions (and I want to make this clear — it’s both teams. This is not a sore-winner or sore-loser complaint going on) and what ensued was anarchy on ice. Continuity? Yes. But anarchic? Undoubtedly.

The playoffs are supposed to be a time where you draw in new fans through the glitz and glamour of the leagues best teams squaring off. Why is it that the National Hockey League allows for officials not to enforce the rules? This helps make it impossible to tell what is a rule to begin with and what isn’t. Any new fan (and those who had followed the game all season and saw various infractions over and over again) could not tell in the Tampa Bay/Ottawa matchup what was hooking, holding, interference, cross checking, roughing or anything else because the definition of these infractions were thrown out.

Is this “free reign hockey” allowed because of the idiotic “not trying to influence the outcome” crap? If players weren’t committing infractions to begin with — there would be no need to call them for penalties and “influence the outcome”. The players on ice are the ones influencing the outcome, by their actions or infractions. Rules are supposed to help maintain sanity and one shred of semblance of a game on ice.

The lack of calls this evening was a joke and an example of how Colin Campbell has been an out and out failure at his job. Tonights game was a grand example of how Gary Bettman’s threat of rule enforcement was empty, as hollow as his heart.

4-3 the final in Socitabank Place. The Lightning head home with the series all tied up at 1. Game 3 will be Tuesday at 7 PM.

E.C.Q. — Tampa Bay Lightning at Ottawa Senators (game 2) open thread

Sunday, April 23rd, 2006

No words left except for live discussion during pre game and the game itself.

Fans of both teams are welcome to comment, but keep it civil. Flaming, trolling or other disruptive behavior will not be tolerated.

The floor is yours.

It never ends

Sunday, April 23rd, 2006

I got used to this with Vincent Lecavalier on… oh, just about every road trip the Tampa Bay Lightning took to Canada during the regular season from 1998 until 2004. Someone would kick shit up and the trade rumors would fly.

But having Brad Richards have to deflect off-season speculation now is a drag on the roster. It goes beyond Richards… Brad may re-iterate quotes from Jay Feaster, vowwing his re-signing, and other UFA’s and RFA’s-to-be have to wonder if the Lightning will have the same kind of urgency to re-sign them.

Do you want Ruslan Fedotenko thinking about contract negotiations during the playoffs? How about Freddie Modin? Cory Sarich? Pavel Kubina? Dmitry Afanasenkov? John Grahame?

Brad says it best:

“I have no idea,” he said. “(That’s the) furthest thing from my mind right now. I don’t think it’s fair to my teammates or this organization to start commenting on anything like that. That’s way too far out.”

Umberger knocked back to Pre-school

Sunday, April 23rd, 2006

It’s a rare event you get something as grisely as this in the playoffs. It was a clean hit — and another lesson why you do not skate with your head down. Both Eric Lindros and Scott Stevens should have given this nickel’s worth of free advice to R.J. Umberger…

Condolences to Wade Redden and his family

Sunday, April 23rd, 2006

It’s tough to find words for this…

Wade Redden — defenceman for the Ottawa Senators — has left the Senators to be with his family after the passing of his mother, Pat Redden.

If I could put off game 2 until Wade returns, I would. Best wishes go out to Wade and his extended family during this trying time.

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