November 28, 2014
steve laidlaw
2014-11-28
Craig Smith on the top PP unit, Joe Thornton is still elite, Eberle has no one-timer and more…
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Remember to get your lineups set early today as the Rangers-Flyers game drops at 1:00 pm Eastern. It would be a truly Black Friday if you forgot.
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Mike Fisher made his return to the Nashville lineup last night, skating 12:44 on a line with Olli Jokinen and Derek Roy. That would've been some line back in like 2007. (And yes, I made that joke about the Jarret Stoll line in yesterday's ramblings. If these teams can keep running back tired material, why can't I?)
With Fisher back, Matt Cullen took a seat in the press box. You've got to like the depth the Predators have going for them, which bodes well for Pekka Rinne who was amazeballs last night, stopping 37 shots including an overtime penalty shot for a shutout win. I never would have expected things to go this well for Rinne but I'm a believer.
I snapped up Craig Smith yesterday as an injury replacement because I've liked the run that he is on. After going scoreless last night, he has 10 points in his last 14 games, which isn't fantastic but it's an improvement on his early production.
More importantly, Smith has been skating on the top power play unit with Mike Ribeiro and Colin Wilson of late. The Shea Weber/Roman Josi pairing quarterbacks that power play unit. I wanted to take advantage of this opportunity while it lasted as it's only a matter of time before James Neal and Filip Forsberg find their way back onto the top power play unit. But right now Peter Laviolette is trying all combinations as the Predator's power play is easily their weakest link as a bottom-10 unit.
Smith did reward my pickup with a five SOG night. I'll take it.
Forsberg, by the way, could seemingly care less where he plays. Check out his slow spin around Taylor Hall to cash the OT winner:
Both Justin Schultz and Martin Marincin were scratched for last night's game with Oscar Klefbom and Keith Aulie drawing into the lineup. I won't say that these scratches were the reason why the Oilers played much better (they outshot Nashville 37-25) but I will say that Schultz had particularly earned his seat in the press box.
I actually think that on the whole Schultz has been improved this season but the past week or two have been particularly brutal. Still searching for consistency, he is. What's interesting is that Schultz had actually scored four points in six games before getting scratched but this wasn't about his offensive production. If anything, Schultz was scratched for pushing too hard to score and making boneheaded decisions. I'd say this is one of those scratches where we don't see the player return with a hot offensive start.
Besides, we won't see Schultz really scoring until the Oilers get their power play sorted. It was awful once again going 0/4 and generating little in the way of chances from what I saw.
I have grown truly tired of watching Jordan Eberle get setup for chances on a silver platter only to be handcuffed by his crippling inability to shoot a one-timer. This isn't necessarily the root of the Oilers' power play struggles. They have performed at an above-average clip with Eberle in the past but I swear teams have figured out that he can't shoot without taking a beat to cradle the puck and gear up first. If anyone can ever teach Eberle how to shoot a one-timer it'll be like the advent of the self-loading firearm – a complete game-changer.
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By the way, the Sharks players don't think Todd McLellan should get fired. Maybe not, but this team is not playing very well outside of their top players like Thornton and it wouldn't surprise to see McLellan scapegoated.
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Pro Hockey Talk makes the case for the Jets and Coyotes to give their backups more action:
The Arizona Coyotes and Winnipeg Jets should be asking themselves that question when it comes to how much they're playing their starting goalies versus their backups. Sometimes, a guy's resume and paycheck can only go so far, especially on teams that don't have the luxury to suffer through prolonged slumps.
I can see the logic, especially in Arizona where Mike Smith has been more giving than Mother Theresa but I don't necessarily agree with it. Both Devan Dubnyk (Arizona) and Micheal Hutchinson (Winnipeg) have put up great stats but have done so with just six decisions each. It's pretty easy to put up a hot stretch in such a small sample. I don't think either team would be pleased with the results if they started skating their backups more frequently especially not at the risk of alienating their starter and allowing the struggles to continue.
Smith always starts slow. I think that there's more to it than just a slow start though. I also think that the Coyotes simply aren't good. If they play Dubnyk more he'll get exposed too.
Ondrej Pavelec hasn't even played poorly so far. He is trending downward and isn't a very good starter anyway but I don't believe Hutchinson is a better option to start the bulk of the games.
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A couple of suspensions to mention though neither one is relevant to most fantasy leagues.
Ryan Garbutt got two games for his knee-on-knee hit on Taylor Hall. Thank goodness Hall was fine.
Meanwhile, Adam Lowry got one game for boarding Patrick Kaleta, who was absolutely no one feels sorry for.
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Plenty of gems in Elliotte Friedman's latest 30 Thoughts:
23. Mark Giordano leads all defencemen in scoring and stands 11th overall. You expect he'll cool down at some point, but he's averaging 1.05 points per game. No blueliner has accomplished that in 70 games since 1993-94. He's also shooting 10.9 per cent. In the 21st century, only four defenders have played 82 games and done it: Tom Gilbert (13.3 in 2008), Drew Doughty (11.3 in 2010), Andrei Markov (11 in 2008) and Mattias Ohlund (10.9 in 2004).
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Funny story on the wide array of original nicknames in the Washington Capitals' locker room.
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Have you checked out Sportnet’s documentary on the defection of Alexander Mogilny?
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You can follow me @SteveLaidlaw.