Friday, December 31, 2010

Yeah... but was it legal?

It was one of those nights for the Habs.

Not only did they spend a good part of the night beating themselves, but they were also the victim of a Steven Stamkos penalty shot. And not just any old penalty shot, but one of those schmancy-fancy kinds of penalty shots that the Lightning got all persnippity about when the same thing done to them by one of the Oiler's young hotshots not all that long ago.

To be fair, Centre Hice doesn't have a problem with spin-o-ramas on penalty shots. Or back flips, for that matter. As long as the move doesn't break any of the cardinal sins as laid out in the NHL rule book, it should be fair game. And good goal or not, the Habs didn't play well enough to win. But the Stamkos goal would seem to flaunt the letter of the law on a number of fronts.

In case you haven't seen it, let's go to the video...




And for clarification, here's the paragraph from the NHL rule book dealing with penalty shots. The pertinent bits:

"24.2 Procedure - The Referee shall ask to have announced over the public address system the name of the player designated by him or selected by the team entitled to take the shot (as appropriate). He shall then place the puck on the center face-off spot and the player taking the shot will, on the instruction of the Referee (by blowing his whistle), play the puck from there and shall attempt to score on the goalkeeper. The puck must be kept in motion towards the opponent’s goal line and once it is shot, the play shall be considered complete. No goal can be scored on a rebound of any kind (an exception being the puck off the goal post or crossbar, then the goalkeeper and then directly into the goal), and any time the puck crosses the goal line or comes to a complete stop, the shot shall be considered complete.

The spin-o-rama type move where the player completes a 360° turn as he approaches the goal, shall be permitted as this involves continuous motion." 


According to the rules, the Stamkos goal could be questioned on a number of points.

  1. Continuous motion of the player toward the goal--by the NHL's definition, a spin-o-rama move involves the a continuous motion of the player toward the goal, and thus is allowed. However, Stamkos' skates enter the crease, stop, then move back out of the crease, further away from the goal, and thus shouldn't be considered a continuous motion of approaching the goal. 
  2. Motion of the puck--the rules state that if the puck comes to a stop, the shot shall be considered complete. Stamkos stops the puck before propelling it into the net 
  3. Interfering with the goaltender's ability to make a save--Stamkos skated into Price, making contact with his pad while in the crease, thus not allowing him freedom of movement to attempt a save.

Point number three is what bothers me most with the goal. The whole reason that a penalty shot is awarded in the first place is because the shooter is deemed to have not been given a fair shot at scoring on the original attempt; the penalty shot is meant to address this. But it then seems ironic that on the penalty shot a goal can be scored while preventing the goaltender from having a fair shot at making a save. 

Interestingly, concerning penalty shots, the rulebook only covers possible fouls by the goaltender (leaving his crease early, throwing his stick, etc); it doesn't specifically address actions by the shooter which in the normal flow of the game could be considered a penalty. 

In the grand scheme of things, the Stamkos goal had no affect on the outcome of the game; the Canadiens had already self-destructed to the point where, goal or no goal, they weren't going to win. But to cover future instances where a similar play could affect the outcome of a game, shouldn't an addendum to the penalty shot rule, or at the very least a more detailed clarification of the rule be considered?
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Thursday, December 30, 2010

Time to stop the bleeding

Visual repesentation fo the Habs' recent road trip

Anybody got a tourniquet?

I don't remember much of what I had to learn to get my boy scout first aid badge, but I do remember that to stop the bleeding you've got to elevate the wound. Elevating their game would probably be the best thing that they could do to turn around their recent road trip. 

If the Habs can play the stingy kind of defense in front of Carey Price that gave them their early-season success, they could very well skate out of Tampa Bay with two points. On the season, the Canadiens are third overall in goals against (86), while the Lightning have had troubles keeping the puck out of their own net; they've allowed 120, good for 29th in the league.

The Habs will be down two defensemen for tonight's game with the usually-reliable Josh Gorges joining Andrei Markov on the sidelines as he gives some rest to a nagging injury. The Lighting have fared better in avoiding the injury bug, as 10 of their players have been able to suit up for every game this season; only five Habs (Gill, Spacek, Gionta, Halpern and Lapierre) have perfect attendance.

Oh, and the Canadiens have that pesky Steven Stamkos to worry about. He's already potted 29 goals. Brian Gionta and Mike Cammalleri lead the Habs with just 12 each.

Defenseman James Wisniewski, aquired a couple of days ago from the Islanders for a couple of contitional draft picks, makes his Hab debut tonight. Hopefully he brought his first-aid kit.


2010-2011 Regular Season, Game 38: Montreal at Tampa Bay

FIRST PERIOD:
  • Lots of Hab fans in Tampa tonight, as usual. Ex-Hab goalie prospect Cedrick Desjardins gets his first NHL start tonight
  • And lots for them to cheer about right off the bat. Pacioretty cuts in from the left side and centres a pass for Gionta that goes in off the defenseman's skate. Wisniewski, with the assist gets his first point with the team. 1-0 Habs!
  • Wisniewski wearing #20
  • On the powerplay, the new guy clangs one off the post from the point. Hopefully he'll give shooting lessons to Subban
  • 10 minutes in, and the Habs have already taken two minor penalties. My dog has more discipline in front of the food dish
  • Not a fan of watching games form this arena. The rink lighting sucks for TV
  • Boo! They've taken the assist on the goal away from Wisniewski and have given it to Gomez

Well, whattaya know? A good first period from the Habs, which is great, considering that they've yet to win a game when trailing after either the first or second period. Aside from being up by 1 on the scoreboard, the Habs also lead in the faceoff circle 11-9 and on the shot clock 8-6. 

SECOND PERIOD:
  • Is it wrong for me to hope that it rains in Pittsburgh on New Year's Day? It would serve the NHL right for shoving Crosby and the Penguins down our throats--again--in the Winter Classic game. The forecast? 11 Celsius with rain
  • A too many men penalty isn't a great way to start the period
  • And they take a SECOND too many men penalty to go down by 2 men. The Lightning don't take long to take advantage, Martin St. Louis sniping the goal from the right circle. Tied at 1
  • After a decent first period, the Habs are playing some pretty jittery hockey
  • Huh? A 4-on-1, and Lapierre decides to shoot from the goal line?
  • Strange play... Spacek was going to be called for tripping, but the puck deflects off of the falling player to negate the delayed penalty. 2-1 Tampa.
  • For my money, Pleks is the best player on the team not named Carey Price or Andrei Markov
  • Looked to me like the Habs just got away with what could have been another too many men penalty

Some horrible indiscipline and a bit of bad luck conspired to take the Habs' one-goal lead into a one-goal deficit in the span of 20 minutes. They've yet to come back to win a game this season, so they'll have their hands full... but they've got no one but themselves to blame. Shots were 8-5 for Tampa that period; faceoffs are split down the middle at 15 apiece.

THIRD PERIOD:
  • Hopefully they have their heads in the game for this period
  • That was pretty weak to award a penalty shot. And Stamkos pulls a move that by the rulebook shouldn't be allowed, but it'll make it onto all of the highlight packages tonight anyway. 3-1 Lightning
  • Spacek pins Price up against the post, allowing Stamkos to circle behind the net and dump it into the yawning cage. 4-1 Lightning. Ugly
  • I've got to look up the penalty shot rules. I don't think that Stamkos' attempt should have been counted, and Price doesn't, either
  • The poor little Hab fan behind the bench looks like he's had his Christmas stolen
  • Price given the rest of the night off as Auld comes in
  • That should do it. Hamrlik with another Hab penalty, their 7th, with under 2 minutes to play

Another horrible road game for the Habs, as Cedrick Desjardins earns his first victory in his first NHL start, though he didn't have to face many quality scoring chances. Final shots were 38-28 for the Habs. Hey, at least the Leafs lost, too.

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James Wisneiwski played 21:48 in his debut for the Habs

Where to start? The Canadiens' road trip from hell continues with another loss, this time by a 4-1 margin to the Lightning. Discipline--or rather, the lack of it--cost the Habs big time as the took another seven penalties, which Tampa Bay used to blow the game open.

A too many men penalty is the sign of a team whose heads aren't collectively into the game, and usually serves as a wakeup call to get their acts together. That wasn't the case tonight for the Habs, who while they were killing off that penalty apparently forgot that they were supposed to be playing shorthanded and got caught for ANOTHER too many men penalty. Down by two men, they gave up the first of four unanswered goals and after that point were never really in the game.

Florida tomorrow night. Will it be more of the same?
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Wednesday, December 29, 2010

It's kind of like taking a knife to a gun fight

Not to be confused with the Habs' offence

David got it done with his slingshot; maybe the Habs could sign him to play on the second line. 

Then again, if he were wearing a Canadiens uniform I'm not sure that even the accuracy of his shot could help him slay Goliath... or the Flyers... or the Capitals... or even the Leafs. 

To put it simply, if the Habs don't score, then they don't win. To anyone who's familiar with the game of hockey, that seems like an obvious enough statement. But the Habs have taken the art of turning weak offensive outputs into losses to another level. To this point in the season (after 37 games) the Habs have suffered fifteen regulation-time losses, games where they don't earn a point in the standings. The offensive output in those losses are as follows:

2 goals, October 7 vs. Toronto
0 goals, October 21 vs. New Jersey
1 goal, October 30 vs. Florida
0 goals, November 2 vs. Columbus
2 goals, November 6 vs. Ottawa
0 goals, November 18 vs. Nashville
2 goals, November 22 vs. Philadelphia
0 goals, November 26 vs. Atlanta
2 goals, December 10 vs. Detroit
1 goal, December 11 vs. Toronto
3 goals, December 15 vs. Philadelphia
2 goals, December 19 vs. Colorado
2 goals, December 21 vs. Dallas
1 goals, December 26 vs. New York Islanders
0 goals, December 28 vs. Washington

Add it up, and in 15 regulation-time losses they have scored a paltry total of 18 goals... or a less-than-scintillating clip of 1.2 goals per game. Contrast that with the average of 3.45 goals per game that they've scored in their 20 wins.

Being shutout 5 times is bad enough, but toss in three 1-goal performances, and there's 8 games where Montreal goaltending would have had to have shutout the opposition to even have a hope of earning a point in those games.

The good news: only once has the team lost in regulation when scoring more than 2 goals. 


Even with a less-than stellar defensive effort in front of him on many nights, Carey Price's goals-against average is a very good 2.27, which means that  they're getting the kind of steady goaltending, game in and game out, that they need to have a chance to win. The guys between the pipes have been saving their bacon, as 12 of their 20 wins has seen the team has score 3 or fewer goals.  

Unfortunately, the trend is that this team's offense leans towards all-or-nothing, needing to pump three past the opposition's goaltender to keep from losing. They're not getting blown-out, but they're not winning games that , even if they were to muster a mediocre offense, they should be winning.

1.2 isn't going to cut it.
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Friday, December 24, 2010

Centre Hice's top-10 worst Hab nicknames


She doesn't like Centre Hice's number 1 choice, either.

What's in a nickname?

The best nicknames in hockey speak to an attribute that a player has that separates him from everybody else; The Rocket, The Great One, Mr. Hockey, Boom-Boom, and The Stratford Streak quickly come to mind. Yet there are just as many prevalent nicknames that leave a lot to be desired, or don't fully or accurately represent the player to which they're attached. After many minutes of calculated discussion, number crunching and blindfolded dart-tossing, these Canadiens' nicknames topped Centre Hice's ten most unwanted list.

Note that these choices don't include nicknames that a player received before his hockey career, ie: Hector "Toe" Blake. And yeah, I know that you may very well like some of these, or even consider them classic, but it isn't your list, now is it?


Centre Hice's Ten Worst Hab Nicknames, counting down from number 10:
 
10. “Pocket Rocket”—Henri Richard
Playing in the shadow of the greatest Hab of all time—who’s your older brother, no less—is hard enough without being saddled with a nickname that will forever rank you as second-best in the family, regardless of your accomplishments. Henri won eleven Stanley Cups and played more games then any other Hab, but will still unfairly be known to many as nothing more than Rocket’s little brother.
 
9. “Komisarus”—Mike Komisarek
Up until he got pussified in that fight with Milan Lucic and Andrei Markov stopped hauling his ass all over the ice, Komisarek came close to living up to his dinosaurian nickname. But since his defection to the Maple Leafs and his subsequent ineffectiveness, he’s been giving Tyrannosaurs Rex a bad name.
 
8. “Cube”—Francis Bouillon
What guy wants to go around being equated with a food product that’s used to make very weak soup? The unfortunate play on Frankie’s last name doesn't do his style of play any justice, unlike his other nickname: Frankie the Bull.
 
7. “Jake The Snake”—Jacques Plante
Snakes have a reputation (deserved or not) of being slimy, untrustworthy, cold-blooded killers. There’s no evidence that Jacques was any of these. Besides, snakes have no arms and legs, and thus make crummy goaltenders.
 
6. “Little Bird”—Moe Robinson
Could Larry Robinson’s younger brother have been pegged with a less-flattering nickname? Here you are, finally in the NHL with the best team in the league, and when you hit the bars of Crescent Street looking to pick up, you’re introduced as “Little Bird”.
 
5. “Jesus Price”—Carey Price
Talk about unreasonable expectations! The kid is good—really, really good—but Jesus himself probably couldn’t meet the expectations in goal of the most unrealistic of Montreal’s fans.
 
4. “Mickey Ribs”—Mike Ribeiro
I really wish that someone would kickey Mickey in the ribs. A floating underachiever during his stint with the Habs, he embarrassed not only himself, but the whole team when he faked that injury against the Bruins. “Mickey Ribs” sounds like a nickname that belongs to a snotty, whiny, skinny-assed punk. On second thought, it suits him perfectly.
 
3. “The Flower”—Guy Lafleur
The second-best pure goal scorer in the history of the team deserves at least the second-best nickname, too. And he has it with "Demon Blond". Unfortunately, English speaking fans better know him as "The Flower". Yeah, I guess that it could speak to his grace, elegance and beauty as he hit full-stride, but what would you rather take into combat against the Bruins: a demon or a flower?
 
2. “Red Light”—Andre Racicot
Imagine if your nickname essentially shouted "you suck!". Unfortunately, Racicot's mean-spirited moniker that refers to the goal light behind him getting a workout isn't wholly deserved. As a backup from 1989-94, he posted a winning record of 26-23-8, including an excellent 17-5-1 in 1992-93, with a goals-against average of 3.39; a decent number for a period when goal-scoring was a lot higher than it is now.
 
1. “The Urologist”—Marc-Andre Bergeron
It's easily the most juvenile Hab nickname that came to mind, and thus tops the list. Why "The Urologist", you may ask? Well, Bergeron's point shot made him a powerplay specialist... or in hockey-slang, a PP specialist. Or if you prefer, pee-pee specialist. Pee-pee specialist... urologist... get it? An 8 year old would, and I bet that even he wouldn't think that it would be worth more than a quick snicker. And I'm sure that Bergeron doesn't find it flattering, either.

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Don't agree with any or all of the selections? Have a better suggestion for an all-time bad Hab nickname that you think should be on the list? Leave it in a comment, and it could end up on an updated "reader-approved" list here on Centre Hice. 
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Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Yesterday didn't happen


One of the many missed opportunities that didn't happen for the Habs last night. Photo: Reuters

"Hey, you haven't updated the mood and loss-severity indicators."

The above line started an email from Jessica that I received earlier today. Normally, I'd adjust the Centre Hice Mood Indicator and the Loss-Severity Indicator after a Canadiens game, but from what I saw last night, the Habs didn't play a game; therefore no adjustments need to be made.

Jessica, you must be mistaken about there having been a game last night. The Habs didn't get their asses handed to them by Dallas, even though they dominated the shot clock with perimeter attempts that Jerry Falwell could have saved.

You did not witness their fifth loss in six games, nor did you see what could possibly turn into the annual December Meltdown (tm). Last night, you did not see the kind of effort from most of the skaters that you'd expect to see from a local pee-wee team. You were mistaken if you though that you viewed Hab shooters with less finish than a 400lb guy in a marathon. Nor did you see an alarming continuation of turnovers ending up in the back of the net courtesy of swiss cheese defensive plays.

None of that happened. None of it. Move along. Nothing to see here.
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Monday, December 20, 2010

The official 2010 Montreal Canadiens Christmas card




As they say, 'tis better to give than to receive.

Recently, the Habs have been taking that advice to heart.

And also in the spirit of this holiday season, Centre Hice is into the eggnog and in the giving mood. We've managed to track down the official 2010 Montreal Canadiens Christmas card, and present it to you, our faithful reader(s), in all its cockles-of-your-heart-warming glory.

Merry Christmas.
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Wednesday, December 15, 2010

An impossible task?

Do the Habs have what it takes to get the job done? 

The Philadelphia Flyers are looking like the beasts of the east.

Fresh of of their 3-2 victory last night over the Penguins, the Flyers have now gained top spot in the Eastern Conference; and in the process, they ended the Pens 12-game winning streak.

The Flyers are now off to their best start since 1986. The have a goal differential of +30, the best in the league. They've been exceptional on the road, posting a 9-2-3 record, and are riding a 3-game win streak. Their biggest asset is probably their team confidence, which has undoubtedly held over from last year's great playoff run. Being one goal away from elimination and turning it around to being one goal away from winning it all has to lead them to believe that they can beat any team on any night.

The Habs, on the other hand, have lost their last two. They've been off since Saturday, which doesn't bode well; they have yet to win a game after having 3+ days off between games (0-1-2). Their bright spots are their penalty killing, which is at 1st in the league at an 89.3 efficiency, home record (11-2-3, second in the league) and the ability to bounce back after a loss, going 7-2-0 after a defeat. 

Good news for the Habs: they'll have the experience of Scott Gomez and Jaro Spacek in the lineup, both of them returning from injuries. Max Pacioretty gets his first call this season for the Habs, having been called up from Hamilton after the Bulldogs' win on this past Sunday.


2010-2011 Regular Season, Game 31: Philadelphia at Montreal


FIRST PERIOD:
  • Subban disrespects the Flyers on his first shift by throwing his weight around. Call the NHL!
  • How does a puck cleared over the glass not be a Flyer penalty? Does that mean that the Habs get a gimme for their next puck over the glass?
  • Hey! Subban didn't wind up for a point shot!
  • Price has had to be sharp so far, coming up big on a couple of in-close attempts
  • Damn! Cammy takes a feed from AK46 and comes REALLY close. They need to cash one of these early attempts before they get used to not scoring
  • Ten days out form Christmas, and I'm already tired of the commercials
  • I've liked what I've seen from Pacioretty so far. A line with Pouliot and Eller might be something to watch for
  • That all started from a WEAK clearing attempt by Subban, and Jeff Carter is able to blow by Picard to go in alone in the last minute of the period against Price. 1-0 Flyers

It was a pretty evenly-matched period, with the Habs leading the shot clock by 12-10, and in the faceoff circle 13-11. But P.K. Subban is the goat of the first 20 minutes when he turned a simple zone-clearance into a primo scoring attempt for Jeff Carter, who was able to bury it for the 1-goal lead.


SECOND PERIOD:

  • Subban on to start the period. A vote of confidence, perhaps?
  • If it wasn't for bad luck... a harmless looking pass into the slot deflects off of Hal Gill and over Price. 2-0 Flyers
  • To their credit, Habs are coming on strong after the Flyer goal. Gionta rings one off the post to come close
  • Gionta gets another chance in close, and his stick breaks. Is anything going to go right for them today?
  • Habs are 0-7-0 when giving up the first goal. Well, that doesn't bode well...
  • Price has to stop a 3-on-1
  • More push-back from the Habs, but nothing to show for it
  • Philly assessed a penalty? Must be a mistake
  • There you go, PK! A one-timer on a 5-on-3 powerplay brings the Habs within one. 2-1 Flyers

Just what the Habs ordered: aside from a fluke Flyer goal, the Habs played a great bounce-back period to pull within a goal, outshooting the Flyers 15-8 (27-18) in the process. And Subban learned that getting his shot past the first wave of defenders pays dividends. Habs are also leading the battle in the faceoff circle 22-19.


THIRD PERIOD:
  • Habs start the period with the same kind of energy that they used to end the second period
  • Well, they didn't need that. Zherdev walks through all defenders, cricles behind the net, and banks it in off of Price. 3-1 Flyers
  • How about Pleks! A great rush by Pouliot never gets cleared from the zone, leading to an in-close goal for #14. 3-2 Flyers
  • THERE'S the lucky break that they needed! Gomez passes to Gionta in the slot, which manages to find it's way through Bobrovsky's 5-hole. Tied at 3! The place is going nuts
  • Wow... the Capitals have now lost seven in a row. Is this 1977? 
  • Spacek pulls a Subban, and gets caught with a turnover at centre ice. Pleks with the penalty to foil the scoring chance
  • Damn... van Reimsdyk with a powerplay goal, off a rebound, to retake the lead 4-3 Flyers
  • Aaand Subban with another turnover to put the game out of reach. Another turnover sends Giroux in all alone against Price. 5-3 Flyers
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Sorry, Hal. No credit for goals scored on your own net. Photo: John Kenney/Gazette

'Tis The season, eh? The Habs led the way against the Flyers in most categories, including mental mistakes. Credit to the Flyers, who were able to cash in on three of their gift-wrapped chances, plus the Zherdev goal that Price would like back.

For the first time this season, the Habs have lost three in-a-row, and gave up more than three regulation goals in a game, minus empty-netters. They were the last team in the NHL to do so, taking until their 31st game for both of those to happen. That's a credit to a sound defensive style that's being preached by Coach Martin.

P.K. Subban. What else is there to say? Moments of brilliance, followed by plays that would be frowned on in a Saturday night beer league game. And too often, those turnovers are turning into the kind of prime scoring chances for the opposition that are ending up in the back of the net. Why is this kid not learning from his mistakes? Take the last Flyer goal: without a passing option, he turned the puck over with a bad pass to the blue line. It then comes back to him, and he makes the EXACT same mistake, 4 seconds later. That time the Flyers make no mistake with the possession, and are able to spring Claude Giroux in all alone for their 5th goal. Get the kid some Ritalin. Geez.

That said, there was plenty of brain-mush to go around this evening; P.K. was only one of the guys that needed their head screwed on a little tighter. It's games like this where they REALLY miss the calming effect of Andrei Markov.

The plus: they're mistakes which are completely fixable. Play smart defensive hockey, and the Habs can beat any team in the league. You couldn't say that about Hab teams from as little as three or for years ago.

Final shots: Montreal 41, Flyers 30. They also led the way in the faceoff circle, 33-28.

At least the Habs will get a chance to bounce back tomorrow night against a strong rival, the Bruins, who also lost tonight.
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Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Sainte-Flanelle: illustrated history; 1935-36

The 1935-36 Canadiens pose outside of the Forum

Twenty-seven seasons into their existence, the future of the Canadiens was very much in doubt.


Caught in the teeth of the ongoing depression, the team was hemorrhaging money to the point where owners Leo Dandurand and Joseph Cattarinich sought permission from the NHL to suspend operations for a year in a bid to get costs under control. The league denied the request, citing that although the Canadiens weren’t drawing particularly well at the Forum, they were still good for a boost in attendance at other rinks around the league.

The fact was that the NHL couldn’t afford to lose two teams prior to the season. The owners of the St. Louis Eagles, formerly the Ottawa Senators, had also sought permission to suspend operations for a season in preparation for a move back to Canada’s capital. Instead, the league purchased the franchise and player contracts on October 15th for $40,000 and the Eagles were no more, their players dispersed amongst the remaining teams.

Faced with having to endure mounting losses, Dandurand and Cattarinich sold the Canadiens to the Canadian Arena Company, who already owned Montreal’s other NHL team, the Maroons. Unbeknownst to their rivals, a mid-season trade, one of the most lop-sided in Hab history, would set the Canadiens up for success for many years to come.

Goalie Lorne Chabot, who had previously played 47 games for the Canadiens in 1933-34 before moving on to the Chicago Black Hawks and winning the Vezina trophy the following season, was suspended by the Hawks for refusing a demotion to the minors. Luckily for the Habs, they picked up Chabot’s contract and flipped it to the Maroons for a talented young winger named Hector Blake, who had played 8 games the previous season with the Maroons, winning the Stanley Cup in the process. As a Canadien, he would go on to win 10 more Stanley Cups, including 8 as head coach, a Hart Trophy, a Lady Byng Trophy, a scoring title, and 4 All-Star selections. Getting centre Bill Miller along with Blake was just icing on the cake.

As for Chabot, he went on to play a further 22 games in the NHL, winning 10.


Jean Bourcier, who with his brother Conrad played just one season, 1935-36, with the Canadiens

Success, however, was still a ways off for the Habs. The 1935-35 season saw the team go 3-2 in their first 5 games, but a string of 11 winless games to round out December 1935 plus a steak of 3-14-5 to end the season was good (or if you prefer, bad) enough to land the Habs the worst record in the 8-team league.

If the Canadiens of 1935-36 were superstitious, perhaps their lack of success on the ice had something to do with their sweaters. No one knows why (perhaps it was from Dandurand and Cattarinich trying to save money by using a blind seamstress) but the CH logos were stitched upside-down onto the sweaters. That’s right… with the serif on the ‘C’ facing downward. Oops!

One other major change in the Sainte-Flanelle was the omission of the secondary logo that had adorned the left sleeve the previous season, centered on the arm stripe. Another cost-saving measure, perhaps? Also of note, the extra-wide shoulder yoke encompassed a solid-white collar. The sleeves and the hem of the sweater were cuffed, and interestingly, the team photo from outside the Forum also appears to show a single white stripe on the waist, instead of the now-traditional one white above one blue.
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Saturday, December 11, 2010

Leaf fans in a giving mood


"Some maple (leaf) syrup for your waffles, sir?"

'Tis the season for giving. 

And Leafs fans really gave it to their team on Thursday night at the Air Canada Centre, following a weak, 4-1 loss to the Philadelphia Flyers, in the form of waffles being tossed onto the ice to show their displeasure with the performance of the Blue and White.

Why waffles? Beats me. Maybe they were out of raspberries, but it probably came about in a conversation something like this: "Honey, I'm going to the game tonight with the guys. In the probable event that the Leafs suck, do we have anything that I could toss onto the ice? Toe rubbers went out of fashion soooo long ago." 

Alternatively: "I hate the Leafs. They're waffle."

The Habs' opponent for tonight's game at the A.C.C. hasn't been having a great season, but one of their few victories came in the season opener against the Habs. For that game the Habs were without the services of Andrei Markov and Mike Cammalleri. Tonight they'll be missing an ailing Scott Gomez and... Andrei Markov. Add to that the fact that the Habs played a tough game last night in Detroit coupled with the Leafs having been idle, and it adds up to what will probably be a tough night, win or lose, for the Canadiens. Or they'll kick the Leafs' asses and put Leaf coach Ron Wilson one step closer to the ledge. What the hell do I know?

Look for the Habs to try to use their speed to force the Leafs to take penalties. The Leafs' penalty-killing "efficiency" sits at only 76%, and they've allowed almost a goal per game more than the Canadiens. Hab-castoff Mikhail Grabovski has scored in each of the last three games.

David Desharnais has been recalled from the Bulldogs, though it remains to be seen if he'll be in the lineup for the Habs. On a down note, Mike Komisarek will miss the game for the Leafs, which means that Mike Cammalleri will have one fewer players feeding him tape-to-tape passes in the slot for easy goals.

Tonight's game is, for the first time, being broadcast in 3-D on Hockey Night in Canada. Let's hope that 3-D doesn't stand for Dreadful, Dire and Disheartening.


2010-2011 Regular Season, Game 30: Canadiens at Maple Leafs

PREGAME:
  • The John Lennon tribute on Hockey Night In Canada was nice, but wouldn't it have been better to air it the week before the anniversary? Feels like they forgot about it and are trying to catch up.
  • Leafs are having a "Homecoming Night". Lots of ex-Leafs being introduced. They shouldn't do this. It just reminds viewers of how many medioce players they've had over the years.
  • Leaf ceremonies always look awkward, like a bunch of high school boys standing around the edge of the gym waiting for a girl to ask them to dance. That said, Johnny Bower was one the the true greats. I would have taken Sittler and Clark on my team, too. But Todd Warriner being touted as an immortal? Yikes!

FIRST PERIOD:
  • Cool! The Habs are in red tonight, for game 705 between these teams
  • Cammy misses the net on a breakaway. Not a good omen
  • At this rate, the Habs will end up with more icings than shots on goal
  • Not good. Auld looses sight of a puck in the crease for an easy tap-in by Kessel. 1-0 Leafs
  • Halfway through the 1st, and the Habs have yet to register a shot
  • CA-REY!!! Auld whiffs on Kaberle's 1st goal of the season. 2-0 Leafs. And now Spacek is off with an injured hand
  • Man, CBC's picture is jittery
  • Grabovski high-sticks, Subban, no call
  • Picard and Subban both -2 this period

Just about everything that could go wrong that period, did. The Habs followed up one of their best periods of the season in Detroit last night with one of the worst in Toronto Last night. Outshot 11-4, beat on faceoffs 12-7, down by 2 goals and a defenseman.

SECOND PERIOD:
  • Well, at least they're showing a little more jump at the start of this period
  • Darche takes a spear in front of the Leaf net, no call. Refereeing hasn't been the greatest over the last couple of games
  • Shots 5-1 for Montreal so far this period, but all from the outside and ineffective
  • Kessel hadn't scored in 11 games, Kaberle in 36. You just know that Kadri will score his 1st tonight
  • Best part of the game: lots of AC/DC being blasted over the Air Canada Centre P.A.
  • That makes up for missing on the breakaway in the first. Cammy with a wrist shot from the slot. Pleks and AK46 with the assists. 2-1 Leafs

The Habs skated a lot better in that period, catching the Leafs back on their heels for a number of rushes. Spacek gone for the game with an "upper body" (read: hand) injury. Shots: Montreal 12 (14) and Toronto 3 (14). Leafs lead in faceoffs, 32-18.

THIRD PERIOD:
  • So many empty seasts at the beginning of a period in Torono tooks AWFUL on TV. You'd think that we were watching a game in Atlanta or Long Island
  • WEAK penalty call against Hamrlik; a one-handed crosscheck, apparently
  • A pretty uneventful period so far
  • Hey... the Habs get a powerplay!
  • But they do nothing with it
  • There's been a serious lack of speed from both teams. Boring... I feel sorry for anyone who paid to be at this game
  • A little life, but is it too little too late?
  • Yeah, it was too late. And to top it off, and empty-net goal to finish it. 3-1 Leafs.

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Spacek executes the 'game plan'; shoot from bad angles and a long way out. Photo: Dave Sanford/Getty Images

What a difference 24 hours makes. Last night, between the Habs and Red Wings, we were treated to playoff-calibre hockey, and the third period was one of the best periods of hockey that the Habs had played all season. That's followed up with an extremely flat performance against a low talent team, making for a very unentertaining game to watch.

Quite simply, the Habs have a knack for playing up, or as in the case of tonight, down to the level of their opponents. As a fan it may be frustrating, especially because the Leafs didn't play a great game, but considering that they wouldn't play any bad teams in the playoffs it's a habit that I can deal with in (very) small doses.

Alex Auld might have sucked on the first two Leaf goals, but the rest of the team wasn't great, either, and didn't give him a lot of support. Still, it's tough to be down by two early while having to did yourself out of a hole. Kudos, to Alex, though, for getting sharp and holding the team in it for the rest of the game. Final shots were 23-22 for Montreal, with Toronto holding the edge in faceoffs, 35-30.

Never mind the final score, the biggest loss tonight might be that of Jaroslav Spacek. With Andrei Markov already out for the season, Spacek has been teaming up with Roman Hamrlik on the team's first defensive pairing. There's no word yet on the severity of his "upper body" injury, but if he's out long-term, the Habs are really going to miss his veteran play, especially with a tough couple of games coming up against Philadelphia and Boston.
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Net result: Leafs cheating?

The first game of the season, with the Habs at the Air Canada Centre in Toronto, something didn't look quite right.

I couldn't put my finger on it, but earlier this week I was looking at some photos from earlier this season, and it struck me: the nets in Toronto's rink looked different.

I searched for archival photos on NHL.com that would show the offending net and a version from a previous year at the A.C.C. from the same angle, then using my world-class Photoshop skills, overlapped the photos to check the result. What was apparent was that the net from this season showed a much larger radius curve in the elbow that connects the crossbar to the posts.

The NHL rulebook outlines that the dimensions of the elbow are to be the same width as the crossbar and post and the curve is to have an outside diameter of 2 3/8 inches. Here's the diagram:

Approved NHL net dimensions. Source: NHL rulebook, nhl.com


 
Instead, a net from the A.C.C. this season appears different from a previous version. Here's a photo from a game from this year (against the Panthers) overlapped with one from a couple of years ago, again from the A.C.C., with Carey Price in goal:


As you can see, the elbow photographed this season (the one on the right) has a much  larger radius to the curve. The net result? a reduced opening between the pipes and crossbar, leaving a smaller area for opposing shooters to aim for, especially if they're trying to snipe the corner. Here's another look, with the two nets directly overlapped. I colour-adjusted his year's version to have a blue tint to make it easier to differentiate the two: 

direct comparison of the two nets

As you can see, the light blue area is the difference in area at which a shooter has to aim. It doesn't seem like much, but for a shot to that corner it could be the difference between a goal and a shot off of the iron.

Of course the Leafs would have to shoot at the same net, but if your team is having trouble scoring goals would it not be easier to find a way to possibly lower the number of goals scored by the visiting team, even if by a small amount?

Instead of a willful skirting of the rules, a simple explanation for the discrepancy could be that the manufacturer of the goals misread the dimensions, or that they used the wrong-sized elbows by mistake during assembly. But whatever the case, the Leafs would be required to inspect all aspects of the playing surface, nets included, to ensure that they adhere to the strict tolerances of league regulations. Surely someone in the organization would know of the change.

The question is, why are the Leafs allowing undersized nets to be used at the A.C.C.?
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Sadly, they don't award points for moral victories


Hands up, who thinks the Habs could have won?

Could've, would've, should've.

They could've won, had they played the first two periods like they did the third.

They would've won, had they played the first two periods like they did the third.

They should've won, but they didn't play the first two periods like they did the third.

Unfortunately, after a good start to the first period which included a Travis Moen goal banked off of Wing goalie Jimmy Howard from behind the net, the Habs got into penalty trouble (not all their own doing) which took all of the flow out of their game. And against a veteran, skilled team like the Red Wings, that's lethal.

Six straight penalties, including an almost full 5-on-3 to end the period, was just what the doctor order ordered for the Wings to swing the momentum in their favour. 

The refereeing was inconsistent at best. A call against Tomas Plekanec that led to the 5-on-3 and the Wings' first goal was a prime example: called for holding, Plek's biggest offence was what would have more appropriately been deemed a slash, and a light one at that. Rafalski went down easy, and the ensuing penalty being called a hold would lead you to believe that the referee didn't see the initial infraction and instead ruled on the result of the play. The guys in stripes simply need to be better than that.

To the Habs credit, they didn't give up. Faced with a 2-goal deficit going into the third period and playing a divisional rival the following evening, it would have been easy for them to mail in the final 20 minutes and look forward to Saturday's game against the Leafs. But then a funny thing happened: they kicked the Wing's asses.

Montreal dominated one of the strongest teams in the league for long stretches of the final frame, outshooting the Wings by an 18-2 margin... and one of those two shots was an empty net goal by Detroit. To their credit, the Habs served noticed that this isn't the same team that might have (read: would have) packed it in under the same scenario just a couple of seasons ago.

It's tough to feel bad about a loss like this one. Could they have played more responsibly to help keep the Wings from grabbing momentum, and a 3-1 lead? Yes, but as a Hab fan I still have to feel good about what transpired over the final 20 minutes.

On the strength of their third period, and the overall level of their play to this point in the season, we'll leave the mood-indicator at "fist pump", and bump the loss-severity indicator to just "rickrolled".
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Thursday, December 9, 2010

My final Canadiens game at the Forum





I will never forget Saturday, November 29, 1980.

It was that night that I walked through the front doors of the world's most famous arena (screw you, Madison Square garden) to take in my final Habs game at the Montreal Forum. It was always a treat to get to visit Montreal, but going to a hockey game was something else. At a much younger age, I had been treated to two games by a friend of my dad who had grown up playing in the same junior leagues and against Maurice Richard—the Flyers and Bruins were visitors those nights—but the circumstances around the third game are what stick in my memory.

At the time, our family simply didn’t have the disposable income to spend on hockey games, so when our group of Cub Scouts and Boy Scouts had the opportunity to pick up discounted group seats from a promotion with the Canadiens, I pleaded with my parents to spring for a ticket for me. As it was, I had to pay for half out of my allowance. I remember my dad mumbling something about learning a lesson in financial responsibility as he forked over the remainder. Three years later and out of work, my dad packed up the family and headed for the other side of Greater Toronto. It would be almost another sixteen years before I got back to the Forum, but that’s another story.

It was a cold and blustery night in Montreal when our bus pulled up alongside the plain, yet imposing building at the corner of Ste. Catherine and Atwater Street and discharged its load of wide-eyed Cub and Boy Scouts that had made the trip to the city from various small towns in the Eastern Townships, east of Montreal. That night the Canadiens were playing the Minnesota North Stars, the team that a season earlier had ended the Habs' quest for a 5th straight Stanley Cup; none of our group had seen a game live at the Forum since then, so that night we were hoping for a victory to fuel our own personal revenge against the team in the ‘snot-green and pee-yellow’ uniforms.

After making our way through the front doors and a ride up those legendary hockey stick escalators, the first order of business of our Cub and Scout leaders was to get us up to section 419 without losing anyone, which considering the wide-eyed wonder of a large number of 10-12 year olds—many of whom who had never seen an NHL game or who had never been to the Forum—was a rather daunting task. Once we were all seated, smaller groups could then be escorted to the concession stands, washrooms, souvenir stands, or head off for a bit of general sightseeing.


Our seats for my final game at the Forum: section 419, next to the blues and under the Coca-Cola sign

Section 419 was about as far away from the action as you could get and still be able to tell your friends that you were 'at the Forum'. As a reference point, there were roughly the same number of rows in the reds and whites as there are in the lower bowl of the Bell Centre; sitting in the Forum blues was similar in height to the Bell Centre's club level. Yet in the intimate confines of that building, the view from that high perch was spectacular. We gazed in wonder at the white ice, glowing under the extra illumination of the TV lights, the row of 22 Stanley Cup banners that were hung down the centre line of the rink, and watched as the seats around us filled up with fans of all description and the players skated through their warm-ups. We were disappointed when it was announced that the great Guy Lafleur would not be in the lineup, and thought the folks in the standing room section below us were the luckiest people in the arena.

We stood, caps off, and saluted our two and three-finger Cub and Scout salutes as the incomparable Roger Doucet boomed through the national anthems. And then… game time!

In hindsight, the game must have been fairly unnteresting; 30 years later it seems strange that I remember so little of the actual game action, considering that’s why we were at the Forum in the first place… though I do remember a scuffle involving Chris Nilan, and our Cub and Scout leaders reminding us that resorting to violence to solve a problem shows a lack of good character.





After the first period we made our way up to the concession stand to get steamies and Cokes. We should have listened to the adults about loading up on the serviettes, because no sooner than we got back to our seats did my buddy Dean take a bite of his hot dog and drop mustard all over his Scout uniform. I laughed hard enough to have Coke come out my nose. Ouch!

The second intermission was saved for souvenir hunting. Before we got on the bus that afternoon, my mom gave me $20 (she probably didn’t tell my dad) and told me to spend it wisely. In mom-speak, than meant to return home with at least $10 change. I bought a Montreal Canadiens pennant, which I still have packed away in a box somewhere. I also picked up a cool set of Canadiens signature photo postcards. Unfortunately, I no longer have any of those; they were traded over the following period of hockey and the following years for various hockey and baseball cards, most of which ended up not being worth the cardboard on which they were printed.

Sadly, our Habs came out on the short-end of the score, the game ending 4-2. After the final siren we bundled up in our hats and coats, but the Forum ushers allowed us to hang out in our seats until most of the crowd dispersed. They told us that it was to give us a little more time to soak up the Forum atmosphere. In hindsight, it was probably less-difficult to lose a kid by not trying to steer them through the departing crowd.





After we made our way outside, we noticed that there was a) a lot more snow on the ground, and b) a lot less bus in the spot where we were supposed to meet it. There was, however, a large road coach idling next to the arena. As it turns out, it was also being loaded with Montreal Canadiens equipment bags.

With some time on our hands while a couple of the adults went to hunt down our transportation, we decided to investigate. There was a rather large gentleman in a long grey overcoat standing next to the door of the bus. As it turned out, it was Bob Gainey, who dutifully set about autographing a number of the souvenirs that our group had just purchased. I only remember him uttering one word, “Buffalo”, in response to our questions about where the team was headed to on the bus. Before long he was joined by a REALLY big guy with a shock of curly, reddish hair: Larry Robinson.

I’m not sure what, if any, connection Robinson had with the Boy Scouts, but upon seeing our hats and berets he seemed to take a real interest in us. Or maybe he just felt sorry for a bunch of kids stranded on a cold, snowy street outside of the Forum. Whatever the case, as Gainey continued to sign, Larry disappeared around the bus, only to return moments later with a Canadien puck for each of us. To this day, that puck is one of my favourite Hab-related collectibles. It’s not autographed, but it has Montreal Canadiens class written all over it.

It wasn’t long before our school bus turned the corner onto Atwater Street (it had mistakenly been waiting for us on the other side of the building) and we said our thanks to Gainey and Robinson and piled into its warmth, each of us comparing our the autographs that we’d just received and our haul from the souvenir stands from earlier in the evening.

Soon we were headed back across the Champlain Bridge, all the way home none of us talking about a Hab loss that night.



 



A special thanks to the unknown individual(s) who posted these photos of the Forum online. If one of them is yours, drop me a line so that I can credit you accordingly.
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