Ben Eager of Oilers charged with assault after Toronto pub fight

21 Oct
2012

The most disturbing thing about Edmonton Oilers winger Ben Eager getting charged with assault early Saturday morning in Toronto? The repeated use of "doorman" in the media coverage.

While technically correct, the preferred nomenclature is likely "bouncer" or "entrance manager." In fact, Leslie Mann used "doorman" as a pejorative in "Knocked Up" after Craig Robinson refused her entry into a club. ("I can't let you in cause you're old … for this club, not, you know, for the Earth.")

OK, perhaps the above is the second most-disturbing thing, ranking right behind a professional athlete getting himself (and his brother) charged in a bar-related altercation.

From the Edmonton Journal:

According to CityTV in Toronto, a fight broke out inside The Quail Pub in the Rosedale area and carried on outside, where Eager and his brother were charged with assault, assault causing bodily harm, and assault with a weapon against a doorman at the bar.

The doorman suffered cuts to his face and was taken to hospital in an ambulance.

"Assault with a weapon"? Oh dear, please tell us Eager didn't mistake the bouncer for an HD camera:

Details on the incident are rolling in ...

More details from City News:

Jennine Lombardo, general manager at The Quail and Firkin Pub, told CityNews the fight began inside the bar and then moved outdoors. The doorman allegedly had to hold up a patio chair to shield himself from the attack.

"We are used to dealing with young professionals. Last night stopped staff dead in their tracks and is not typical of what happens at our establishment. Once the fight started, service ended immediately. Our staff was in shock. And we are concerned for our door man who was brutally attacked and hurt," said Lombardo.

Eager signed a 3-year deal with the Oilers last summer, playing 63 games of truculent hockey with them last season. He joins such luminaries as Joe Thornton in the 'NHLers involved in bar fights' club. (Although not Eric Lindros; thanks, Snopes!)

No word on any possible jail time for Eager; although we might know someone that wouldn't mind being face-to-face with only a pane of glass separating them on visitation day ...

Tags: assault causing bodily harm, Ben Eager, bouncer, Craig Robinson, , , Leslie Mann, , , , , pub, ,
No Comments Share Read More
UNIONDALE, N.Y. (AP) -- The New York Islanders and left winger Matt Martin agreed to a four-year contract Saturday night.
No Comments Share Read More

Predators sign Bourque to contract extension (Yahoo! Sports)

14 Sep
2012
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -- The Nashville Predators signed left winger Gabriel Bourque to a two-year, $1.55 million contract extension Friday.
No Comments Share Read More

Shane Doan, Phoenix addict, signs four-year, $21.2 million deal to stay with Coyotes

14 Sep
2012

"... and make it so I never have to leave Phoenix. Amen."

The Shane Doan saga has finally come to its merciful end, as the Phoenix Coyotes' winger and captain has decided... to remain the Phoenix Coyotes' winger and captain.

According to John Gambadoro in Phoenix, Doan has re-signed with the only franchise he's ever known for four years at $21.2 million.

It's worth noting that this is a $300,000 decrease on the $21.5 million extension Gambadoro reported that Doan had agreed to last Friday. Now, it's possible that Gambadoro just had the numbers wrong, but considering the showing of loyalty we're witnessing here, it certainly seems more likely that Doan just gave a little money back.

His willingness to endure with this franchise knows no bounds. I mean, heck, according to Darren Dreger, the contract comes with a $2 million signing bonus deferred until after the contract expires.

With a lockout looming, most guys would want it now. But not Doan. The man is loyal to a fault. Seriously, if Coyotes fans ever criticize him again, they should have to turn in their fan cards.

There were rumblings Thursday night that, if Doan was leaving town, he would be headed to the Vancouver Canucks, a team whose ownership situation was as steady as any team in the league's, was situated in a place he and his wife are familiar with, might give him a better opportunity to win now and, according to agent Terry Bross, blew him away with their presentation. Bross said he loved the Canucks' front office, and that he called them 1st class.

What this tells us: Doan was tempted, and this is to say nothing of that ridiculous 4-year, $30 million offer from the Buffalo Sabres. He looked around and he chose where he would move if necessary, but in the end, when you don't want to go, you'll find a reason to stay.

Tags: , Coyotes, , heck, John Gambadoro, , , phoenix coyotes, saga, shane doan, vancouver canucks, willingness,
No Comments Share Read More

Shane Doan, Phoenix addict, signs four-year, $21.2 million deal to stay with Coyotes

14 Sep
2012

"... and make it so I never have to leave Phoenix. Amen."

The Shane Doan saga has finally come to its merciful end, as the Phoenix Coyotes' winger and captain has decided... to remain the Phoenix Coyotes' winger and captain.

According to John Gambadoro in Phoenix, Doan has re-signed with the only franchise he's ever known for four years at $21.2 million.

It's worth noting that this is a $300,000 decrease on the $21.5 million extension Gambadoro reported that Doan had agreed to last Friday. Now, it's possible that Gambadoro just had the numbers wrong, but considering the showing of loyalty we're witnessing here, it certainly seems more likely that Doan just gave a little money back.

His willingness to endure with this franchise knows no bounds. I mean, heck, according to Darren Dreger, the contract comes with a $2 million signing bonus deferred until after the contract expires.

With a lockout looming, most guys would want it now. But not Doan. The man is loyal to a fault. Seriously, if Coyotes fans ever criticize him again, they should have to turn in their fan cards.

There were rumblings Thursday night that, if Doan was leaving town, he would be headed to the Vancouver Canucks, a team whose ownership situation was as steady as any team in the league's, was situated in a place he and his wife are familiar with, might give him a better opportunity to win now and, according to agent Terry Bross, blew him away with their presentation. Bross said he loved the Canucks' front office, and that he called them 1st class.

What this tells us: Doan was tempted, and this is to say nothing of that ridiculous 4-year, $30 million offer from the Buffalo Sabres. He looked around and he chose where he would move if necessary, but in the end, when you don't want to go, you'll find a reason to stay.

Tags: , Coyotes, , heck, John Gambadoro, , , phoenix coyotes, saga, shane doan, vancouver canucks, willingness,
No Comments Share Read More

NHL 2012-13 Campaign Preview: Calgary Flames

13 Sep
2012

Yes, indeed, despite the promise of impending labor Armageddon and a prolonged work-stoppage, your friends at Puck Daddy are previewing the 2012-13 NHL season (whenever the heck it starts). Why? Because this is the most important election in the history of all-time ever, and you need to know the candidates — starting with the Calgary Flames.

The Flames 2011-12 was a lot like their 2010-11. In contention right up until the final week of the season, they just couldn't get over the hump, and found themselves outside looking in. In 2010-11, when the playoffs began, they were three points back of 8th-place Chicago. In 2011-12, they finished five points behind the 8th-place LA Kings. Fans renewed their calls for a rebuild.

But hey man, the Kings went on to win the Stanley Cup. Why would you rebuild when you were only five points behind them? Why not just hire a coach whose last period of success was pre-lockout and let the championships roll in like they did?

Thus, GM Jay Feaster entered year two of his stubborn refusal to burn it down. Instead, he put some new vinyl siding on it. That's expensive, of course. The Flames continue to boast one of the league's highest payrolls.

Rather than planning for the future, Feaster reached into the past, bringing Michael Cammalleri back from Montreal. Then, in the summer, he brought 2001 Stanley Cup-winning coach Bob Hartley back from Zurich.

Fans are getting restless for some high draft picks that would help Calgary load up for the future, but that restlessness can be cured by instant winning. At this point, it has to be. Will the Flames' insistence on winning now garner the immediate payoff it needs?

"Shut up your Mom is rebuilding"

Gone is Olli Jokinen, whose second stint in Calgary was better than his first, and resulted in a friendly deal with the Winnipeg Jets. Also departing are forwards Tom Kostopoulos, David Moss, who took a deal with the Phoenix Coyotes, and enforcers Raitis Ivanans and Pierre-Luc Letourneau-Leblond (who spent the bulk of the season in the AHL anyway).

Blueliner Scott Hannan was allowed to walk as well.

But you don't want to hear about who left. Far more interesting is who the Flames brought in, and how much they paid do so. In comes Dennis Wideman, for five years at $5.25 per, to help a Flames' powerplay that was middle of the pack last year. Anton Babchuk will probably help with that as well, and at $2.5 million with a no-trade clause, he'd better.

Up front, Feaster grabbed Jiri Hudler for $16 million over four years, as well as centre Roman Cervenka, the KHL's 2010-11 leading scorer.

At forward … Jarome Iginla continues to lead the corps, and if the last 11 years are any indication, he should be good for 30 goals.

The Flames' real issue will be at centre, where their top two guys come packaged with some serious questions. Michael Cammalleri has spent most of his NHL career as a winger, but he finished last season at centre, and will likely begin this season as Iginla's pivot. Behind Cammalleri, the Flames are counting on Roman Cervenka centring line two. As mentioned, he was the KHL's leading scorer two years ago, but he was converted to center that year for the first to play with Jaromir Jagr.

In effect, unless Michael Backlund takes the step forward everyone's been waiting for, it's a converted winger and an NHL rookie who's also a converted winger playing the middle on the top two lines. Granted, they'll have some help, as Alex Tanguay will do most of the passing on line 1 and Jiri Hudler should be able to help Cervenka transition to the National on line 2, but still -- that's a tenuous situation, and there is no room for error.

Curtis Glencross and rookie Sven Baertschi will likely compete for that final wing spot in the top six.

On defense … Jay Bouwmeester continues to get paid like the guy without truly being the guy. He's an excellent shutdown defenceman, and if he weren't being paid like a 50-point player, people might notice, but he'll continue to get criticized for not being the player Flames fans thought they were getting.

Luckily, he won't be relied on to provide as much offense from the back end this year. He'll likely continue to anchor a shutdown pairing with Chris Butler.

The scoring will come from the second pairing of Mark Giordano and Dennis Wideman, or at least, considering they're being paid just over $9 million combined, it had better. Both have had a 40-point season in the last two years. If they can both have another, the Flames will be doing cartwheels.

The big concern the Flames have on their back end: it's not very tough. Bouwmeester and Anton Babchuk are big, but they don't play big. Neither do Wideman and Giordano. The only real sandpaper on that blueline might come from Cory Sarich, and he'll only be on the ice about 16 minutes a game.

Prospect T.J. Brodie is a wild card back there as well.

In goal … Miikka Kiprusoff. And only Miikka Kiprusoff. This guy has played over 70 games for 7 straight seasons, and it looks like the only thing that might save him another one is a lockout-shortened season. He might be the only guy totally down with missing a few months.

Behind him, Henrik Karlsson and Leland Irving will battle it out for the job, and Irving will most likely win. He won the job halfway through the season last year, but the Flames didn't want to lose Karlsson to waivers in case Kiprusoff got hurt, so they shuttled a waiver-exempt Irving up and down for his spot-starts. This year, he's waiver-eligible and Calgary already has two goalies in Abbotsford, so unless Irving fizzles in training camp, expect the Flames to find a way to shed Karlsson's contract in Europe.

Nothing says living in the past like "Those Red Hot Flames", which comes complete with 80s synth, brass, moustaches and white polo shirts tucked into jeans.

Perhaps the biggest change of all is behind the bench, where Bob Hartley returns to the NHL after spending some time abroad in the Swiss league. He's had his successes, most notably as the coach of the Colorado Avalanche at the beginning of the last decade, but he's also had his flops, such as the four-year stint in Atlanta that chased him from the NHL. He's perfect for a team insistent in coasting on the glory days of the early oughts. But can he adjust for the modern NHL?

Up in the box, Jay Feaster continues to be large and in charge.

Michael Cammalleri is the key.

Yes, yes, Jarome Iginla is the star on this team. He's the captain, he's a consistent 30-goal guy, and he'll give the Flames the same thing he always gives them: leadership, scoring, toughness, et cetera, et cetera. But that hasn't been enough to get them into the playoffs for two years now, and he's not driving play like he used to. Unless Michael Cammalleri can settle in as Iginla's running mate and push the top line and the powerplay to the next level, it likely won't be again.

Either Cammalleri returns to something near point a game, game-breaker status or the Flames don't have the success they're hoping for.

Called up on an emergency basis during the Flames' rash of injuries late last season, 19-year-old winger Sven Baertschi won hearts with three goals in five games during a crucial stretch drive. Sure, it's a tiny sample size, but he's the best forward prospect the Flames have had since Iginla in the mid-90s, and his brief showing was enough for Flames fans and management to get excited about having the CHL's top points per game guy in their lineup full-time. That should happen this year, and a big rookie campaign is expected.

Dennis Wideman is paid a whole lot of money and if he doesn't do well out of the gate, people will start to remember that, but I'd be more concerned about Jiri Hudler. He'll be expected to produce at least 50 points, like he did twice in Detroit (and also once in the KHL in between), but he's not playing with the same calibre of centres in Calgary. There is no Henrik Zetterberg on this team. There may not even be a Valteri Filppula.

Even more concerning, Hudler might wind up the only NHL veteran on a line with Cervenka and Baertschi. Can he carry a line for the first time in his NHL career?

Jarome Iginla *says* he was born in Canada. But have you ever seen his birth certificate? Why not? What's he hiding?

The Flames are a much different team last year, and if everything goes well, they could be better too. But I'd wager that, despite spending heavily in the summer, they find themselves in about the same position in the spring: fighting for a playoff spot as the schedule winds down.

Tags: Calgary Flames, centre, , , Hudler, Michael Cammalleri, , The Flames,
No Comments Share Read More

Watch an opponent go ballistic on Jarkko Ruutu, leading to cheapshot, Finnish league chaos (VIDEO)

03 Sep
2012

Hey, remember Jaarkko Ruutu? Before he left the NHL after the 2010-11 season, signing with Jokerit in the SM-Liiga, the Finnish pest was one of those guys that could get under a man's skin like no other, drawing penalties and throwing opponents off their game.

He hasn't changed a bit. Here's a video in which Ilari Melart of HIFK just snaps on him. And, since Ruutu won't fight him, Melart decides to just go ballistic, punching Ruutu in the back of the head over and over, even going so far as to throw officials off of him to continue wailing away.

This occurs about two minutes into the game, because Ruutu is efficient.

But wait, there's more!

Unsatisfied with the way the situation was handled, Jokerit winger Semir Ben-Amor decides to take revenge into his own hands about eight minutes later. The winger, who averages about 100 penalty minutes a season, goes after star Ville Peltonen, first drilling the 39-year-old from behind, then taking him down along the near wall and wailing away.

This kicked off an intense brawl because, seriously, you don't hit Ville Peltonen.

Peltonen is a legend in Finland, with 13 medals in 19 international tournaments between 1994 and 2010, including a gold medal at the 1995 World Championships. In 2003 and again in 2011, he was awarded the Raimo Kilpiö trophy, the Finnish Elite League's version of the Lady Byng for most gentlemanly player.

But wait, there's more!

Return to the end of the top video and you'll see HIFK's revenge for going after Peltonen, as defender Jussi Salmi tackles Jokerit's Ilari Filppula near the end of the period and punches him in the neck until another Jokerit player steps in to fight. This starts a third brawl.

Anyway. Lucky for everyone, the first period ended shortly thereafter and everybody took a deep breath during the intermission.

s/t to Reddit.

Tags: brawl, Finnish league, Ilari Melart, Jaarkko Ruutu, Jarkko Ruutu, Jokerit, , , revenge, Ruutu, Ville Peltonen,
No Comments Share Read More

Where in the world is Shane Doan?

01 Aug
2012

According to Vancouver's News 1130, Shane Doan was spotted in Vancouver last night, eating dinner with Francesco Aquilini, Mike Gillis and Laurence Gilman -- the owner, general manager, and assistant general manager of the Vancouver Canucks, respectively. Was it a sign that the Shane Doan derby is coming to an end?

Probably not. Just another sign that it's in full swing.

That didn't stop the Province from going into full-blown detective mode, mind you. They can even tell you where and what the dinner party ate:

In their latest attempt to woo Doan to the west coast, Canucks management and ownership broke bread with the highly-coveted unrestricted free agent Tuesday night at the Italian Kitchen in downtown Vancouver. While owner Francesco Aquilini, general manager Mike Gillis and assistant general manager Laurence Gilman didn't have to sell the 35-year-old winger on the merits of a cosmopolitan city to raise his four children, a competitive club and close proximity to Kamloops where Doan honed his junior hockey skills and met wife, Andrea, they had to sell him on the concept of dollars and sense. Regardless of what they receive in return for Roberto Luongo in an eventual trade, the Canucks are mindful of their salary structure and it's hard to imagine they would go north of the $6.1 million US cap hit for Henrik and Daniel Sedin.

Maybe that's why the dinner fare featured an antipasto rustico platter of cured meats and marinated olives, carne and pesce piatto of veal, trout, prawns and penne followed by desserts.

With word that Greg Jamison is $20 million short on his bid to buy the Coyotes (which doesn't include the racks on racks it'll cost to, you know, pay Doan) you can understand why Doan and agent Terry Bross have begun investigating other suitors, and why they might not mind being seen investigating them in public.

The winger remains the best free agent available by a landslide, and when you add the thin market to the high demand for guys that do what he does, he's going to be highly sought. When his private meetings with teams all over the continent keep getting out, it can only stoke the market. Lucky for Doan and Bross this keeps happening!

Thanks to someone's loose lips, we know Doan left Phoenix a week and a half ago and visited with the Rangers while he was in New York on Friday, July 20. Two days later, it was reported that Doan was in Philadelphia to speak with the Flyers. His next stop was apparently Montreal, and now, Vancouver.

Basically, keeping track of Doan as he uses the interest of NHL franchises to tour the country on their dime is like playing "Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego?" at this point.

That in mind, it's possible that we can get one step ahead of Doan the same way we captured Carmen Sandiego: by plotting his movement using an ACME Crimenet detective kit and, hopefully, spotting a pattern:

My findings: I have no idea where Shane Doan is headed next, but if he still plans to stop by cities with a reported interest in his services such as Buffalo, Winnipeg, Detroit, or Pitsburgh, he's not taking a very efficient route.

That's all I've got. Whatever. I'm sure Bross will surreptitiously let Doan's next destination slip sometime soon anyway.

Sing us out, Rockapella.

Tags: , dinner, Francesco Aquilini, , , , shane doan, , Vancouver, vancouver canucks,
No Comments Share Read More

The top 7 remaining NHL free agents on the market

31 Jul
2012

"How come no one wants me, man? I'm nice."

The NHL free agent market may have come to a screeching halt, but that doesn't mean it's completely bone dry. There are still a handful of guys that could help your team, and considering they've gone a full month without a contract now, it's entirely possible that they'd be willing to give your team the Tomas Vokoun sweetheart deal (except for Shane Doan).

Let's take a look at 7 guys still looking for a place to play in 2012-13.

They may not be sexy pick-ups, but they won't cost anything but money to acquire, and they could very well turn out to be excellent acquisitions. You never know.

***

7 | Dominic Moore, C

Like a puppy at the SPCA, this journeyman centre is still looking for his forever home. Moore has played for 9 NHL teams in the last 8 years. Don't you want to be number 10? At this point, all it might take is a no-trade clause on a league minimum salary.

Moore may not have been deemed indispensable by an NHL franchise, but he continues to find work because he's a good skater, a good checker, and he can occasionally contributes to the scoresheet. He's the sort of player teams are always looking for come playoff time, so he'd fit well on a team that has designs on still playing when the postseason comes around. He'll come cheaper now than he will then.

6 | Carlo Colaiacovo, D

Colaiacovo appears to have become superfluous in St. Louis (which, by the way, is a great advice column signature -- signed, Superfluous in St. Louis). But that doesn't mean he can't help someone else, especially since he's certainly a top-six defenceman, and capable of eating up 20 minutes. There are plenty of teams that don't have six guys like that.

It's still possible he could re-sign with the Blues if they can't find the upgrade they're looking for, and considering they're hardly the only team after a top-four upgrade (the Flyers come to mind), they may be bringing him back. But it might not take all that much to pry him away, especially since he can't possibly be bound to a franchise that will only turn to him if something goes wrong elsewhere, i.e. the hockey equivalent of "The friend zone."

5 | Kristian Huselius, LW

Huselius probably isn't on anybody's radar after missing most of the last two seasons with injuries, but if he can get healthy, the flashy winger is a potential 20-goal scorer -- he averaged 26 goals over the four seasons prior -- and he could come cheap.

And really, isn't it possible that his bad luck is a symptom of playing in Columbus? That franchise is cursed. I bet the moment he gets out of Ohio, he rubs his eyes, remembers who he is, and immediately returns to form.

4 | Jason Arnott, C

Leadership: Jason Arnott haz it.

At 37 years old, the veteran centre could bring a wealth of experience and maturity to a locker-room, but it's not like he'd only be there for the pep talks. I've got to believe that someone out there could use a 6'5, 220-lb veteran centre that scored 17 goals last year with the St. Louis Blues.

For teams looking for a third-line centre, he'd be a steal.

3 | Tomas Holmstrom, LW

He may be 39, so he's not as quick as he used to be, but mobility has never been what kept Holmstrom employed. His best asset remains his ability to stand still. Unfortunately, he's a free agent in the technical sense only. He's unsigned, but his heart is forever in Detroit. From Sportsnet:

"It's playing in Detroit, or nowhere else," the unrestricted free agent told the Detroit News, putting rumours to rest.

Although uncertain if he'll be ready for the grind of a 16th NHL season, the 39-year-old Holmstrom is training, as usual, in preparation to play a full an NHL schedule.

In short, the Red Wings' only competition for Holmstrom's services is old age. That's good news, although considering the summer they're having, they still might lose out.

2 | Petr Sykora, RW

After a year in Europe, Sykora made the New Jersey Devils out of training camp and spent the year proving he still had his NHL scoring touch. He proved it 21 times in 2011-12. He's not exactly a formidable defensive player, but Sykora could be a good stopgap option in a team's top six.

With Zach Parise bolting from Jersey for Minnesota, the Devils are reportedly a little more interested in retaining Sykora than they initially seemed, but a multi-year deal might be enough to convince the winger to look elsewhere.

1 | Shane Doan, RW

You probably know full well that Shane Doan is still available, since his agent probably called you personally and told you. But, aggressive pitches, Doan seems pretty hellbent on re-signing in Phoenix, especially since he continues to wait on Greg Jamison, who is reportedly $20 million short of finalizing his purchase of the Phoenix Coyotes. From the Globe and Mail:

Doan has been seeking reassurance from Jamison that he can complete the purchase of the team before making a decision on his future. He spoke to Jamison on Saturday but Doan's agent, Terry Bross, did not respond to requests for comment.

[...] However, Jamison and the NHL may have bigger problems since he has been silent as speculation mounted he cannot raise the money to buy the team. NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly said in response to the Phoenix Business Journal report nothing has changed in the sale situation.

Oh great, Jamison's gone into hiding. He may be heading south. If you're a Mexican border patrol guard, I'd caution you to be on the lookout for a suspiciously moustachioed Mr. G. Nosimaj.

Jamison should ask Doan's agent Terry Bross to help him out. If the reported bidding war for top remaining free agent Doan is to be believed, Bross can raise an obscene and undeserved sum of money in just a few days.

Bonus | Dan Ellis, G

I'm not saying either way, but he may have called and asked to be on here. He'll do that.

Tags: , centre, , free agent, , , shane doan, Tomas Holmstrom,
No Comments Share Read More

Alex Semin shoots down to Carolina on 1-year deal for $7 million

26 Jul
2012

When Carolina Hurricanes GM Jim Rutherford publicly bowed out of the Rick Nash sweepstakes, he mentioned former Washington Capitals winger Alex Semin as a player whose offensive skills he coveted.

"We would look at Semin on a short-term basis," he told the News & Observer. "We wouldn't want to get locked in to anything, because we've all heard the stories about him. We do like his skill level. It could be that we could bring him in for a year, get to know him and go from there in terms of considering something longer term."

Well, get to know him: Semin and the Hurricanes agreed on a 1-year, $7-million deal on Thursday. That's a $300,000 raise over the $6.7 million he made on a 1-year deal with the Capitals last season, no doubt compensation for Semin agreeing to a short-term contract.

Said Rutherford of Semin:

"We have done a lot of research about Alexander, and discussions about his fit with our team have included people at many different levels of our organization, including players, coaches and staff," said Rutherford. "What's been clear throughout this process was his commitment to wanting to play in the NHL, and compete against the world's best players.

"Alexander's elite skill level and ability to score from the wing fill an important need on the ice, and we hope that a fresh start in Carolina will serve both Alexander and our team well."

Was this the right move for the Hurricanes?

Semin scored 40 goals in 2009-10, but has been under 30 (28 and 21) in his last two seasons. Criticism of his attitude and work ethic — he's occasionally been a player who needs to feel 110-percent to hit the ice — have been levied for years. He's pulled disappearing acts in the playoffs; then again, who hasn't on Washington?

With the Hurricanes, it's a cleaner slate and a new set of forwards with whom to find chemistry. Just spit-ballin' here, but if Jordan Staal plays center, and Eric Staal shifts to left wing, and Alex Semin's a right wing … The Triple S Line?

Semin is the ultimate battlefront for the advanced stats community vs. the observational analysis crew. His numbers add up to a star talent in the NHL; the diminishing returns, however, can't be denied, and anyone that watched Semin on the regular looks beyond the stats.

That said, getting of D.C. helps him. It's a great 1-year investment for the Hurricanes; wonder if the Detroit Red Wings and Pittsburgh Penguins made their bids for him as well?

Ah, wonder no more on the Red Wings front. From Ansur Khan of MLive:

Semin's agent, Todd Diamond, told M-Live.com that he had only one conversation with the Detroit Red Wings.

"It never got serious with them,'' Diamond said.

As for the Capitals, a lot of offense just officially walked out the door. They're strong down the middle, but who's putting the puck in the net?

Tags: Alex Semin, basis, Carolina, , , , , sweepstakes, , When Carolina Hurricanes GM Jim Rutherford, Wing,
No Comments Share Read More
1 2 Next »

Recent Posts

  • Eubanks: Opposites Watson, Simpson attract (PGA)
    Eubanks: Opposites Watson, Simpson attra...
    October 22, 2012No Comments
  • Pineda will not be healed by spring training – Michael Pineda | NYY
    Pineda will not be healed by spring trai...
    October 22, 2012No Comments
  • TNT, PGA.com to present live coverage of PGA Grand Slam of Golf (PGA)
    TNT, PGA.com to present live coverage of...
    October 22, 2012No Comments
  • Felix Jones dealt with a bruised knee Sunday – Felix Jones | DAL
    Felix Jones dealt with a bruised knee Su...
    October 22, 2012No Comments
  • NHL fans: Lock out your Halloween pumpkins (PHOTOS)
    NHL fans: Lock out your Halloween pumpki...
    October 22, 2012No Comments