Robin Lehner gets ejected for goalie fight, Binghamton Senators blow 5-0 lead, lose in OT (VIDEO)

20 Oct
2012

Binghamton Senators goaltender Robin Lehner is no stranger to dropping the blocker and the glove and scrapping with an opponent. His fiery temper has given us some memorable moments over the past few years.

On Saturday night, Lehner added another fight to his belt taking on Riku Helenius of the Syracuse Crunch while the Senators enjoyed a comfortable 5-0 second period lead. Here's the entire brouhaha, thanks to HockeyFights.com:

For his trouble, Lehner ended up with a game misconduct and was ejected with 10:30 left in the second period. In came Nathan Lawson, and that's when things fell apart. Syracuse would score twice in the second period, three times in the third and then Richard Panik potted home the overtime winner to complete the stunning comeback.

After the game, Senators head coach Luke Richardson hoped his netminder could keep his temper under control in the future, something that was provoked by some crease crashing by the Crunch. From the Binghamton Press & Sun Bulletin:

"I think there's always excitement when goalies fight but he's here to stop the puck and that's what he did well in the first half of the game. He's a fiery guy but he has to manage that and we have to help him manage that. We have to keep guys away from slamming into him."

The gamesheet, as you would imagine, is quite long (hey, a Hugh Jessiman sighting!) and as you'll see, the entire game was chippy with 152 penalty minutes handed out in total.

Stick-tap Raw Charge

Follow Sean Leahy on Twitter at @Sean_Leahy

Tags: Binghamton Senators, fiery temper, , , goalie, , , , Richard Panik, Riku Helenius, Robin Lehner, Senators, Syracuse Crunch,
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Blue Jackets broadcasters surprise fans at local bar with ‘opening night’ call of Xbox simulation

20 Oct
2012

On Friday, the NHL canceled the 2012-13 schedule through Nov. 1, bringing the grand total of games missed to 135. Friday was supposed to be the home opener at Nationwide Arena for the Columbus Blue Jackets as they hosted the Vancouver Canucks.

To drown their sorrows, fans gathered at R Bar, the local establishment right near Nationwide to ponder what might have happened against the defending Presidents' Trophy winners. But it wasn't just going to be a normal night at R Bar. The place had organized an event surrounding the X Box simulation of what should have been the game against the Canucks.

Then things -- in the words of Champ Kind -- jumped up a notch.

The team's anthem singer, Leo Welsh, showed up to perform the National Anthem before the "game" and later in the evening members of the Blue Jackets television and radio broadcast teams made an appearance to do some work.

From The Dark Blue Jacket:

Long about the third period, something momentous happened.  The 'boys' showed up.  That's right.  Jeff Rimer, Bill Davidge, and George Matthews all came to participate in the camaraderie of the night.  It was great having them in the bar that night.  But then the treat started.  From their well deserved perch at the bar, George Matthews and Bill Davidge proceeded to call the simulated game.  For yours truly this was a blast from the past back to old radio days.  Additionally, there are certain freedoms that happen when one is not subject to FCC regs on over the air broadcasts, and George and Bill took perfect advantage of the liberties to give an exciting and heartfelt call to the simulated game, supported by raucous cheering of the patrons.

Blue Jackets blog Arch City Army shot a quick video of the festivities:

The EA Sports game kept its realism and the Canucks were victorious in the end, but on the day when the future of the actual hockey season was put further in doubt, those Blue Jackets fans got to experience something really cool on what otherwise was going to be a normal Friday night at the bar.

Stick-tap Deadspin

Follow Sean Leahy on Twitter at @Sean_Leahy

Tags: anthem, Bill Davidge, , , , , George Matthews, , , , vancouver canucks
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NHL cancels regular-season schedule through Nov. 1; clock ticking to save Winter Classic

19 Oct
2012

After two days of meetings between the NHL and NHLPA, the two sides have yet to agree to meatier parts of a new CBA and thus the league has gone forward with postponing another chunk of the 2012-13 schedule. As of Friday all games through Nov. 1 have been canceled.

From the NHL:

The National Hockey League announced today the cancellation of the 2012-13 regular-season schedule through November 1. A total of 135 regular-season games were scheduled for Oct. 11 through Nov. 1.

The cancellation was necessary because of the absence of a Collective Bargaining Agreement between the NHL Players' Association and the NHL.

That's an additional 53 games on top of the 82 that were canceled back on Oct. 4.

Remember: Commissioner Gary Bettman said on Monday that if the NHL's proposal is accepted within 10 days, they could fit in the 82-game schedule which would begin on Nov. 2. Of course, after listening to Donald Fehr on Thursday, a Nov. 2 start isn't in the cards, but there's still the potential for a 70ish-game season beginning sometime in November if the posturing and PR battles stop and serious negotiating begins on both sides. The question now is how big is the chunk of games that will go once Bettman's 10-day deadline passes without any progress?

And as the cancellation of games keeps moving forward, we get closer and closer to the Winter Classic getting axed from the NHL's schedule. MLive.com's Ansar Khan reported that Nov. 20 is the drop-dead date to save the game and give the league enough time to prepare both Michigan Stadium and Comerica Park for the events surrounding the Winter Classic.

Follow Sean Leahy on Twitter at @Sean_Leahy

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Tags: , , chunk, clock, , Donald Fehr, , , NHL Players' Association,
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World’s oldest hockey stick; Backstrom to Dynamo; NHLPA proposal anticipation (Puck Headlines)

18 Oct
2012

Here are your Puck Headlines: a glorious collection of news and views collected from the greatest blogosphere in sports and the few, the proud, the mainstream hockey media.

• Tired of these new one-piece sticks that shatter the second you release a one-timer? Fear not because the world's oldest is up for auction! This yellow birch stick from circa 1650 is available via Classic Auctions. Bidding is currently over $3,000. [Classic Auctions]

Probably not a good sign that Nicklas Backstrom is on his way to Dynamo as the NHLPA prepares to submit their counterproposal. [Washington Post]

• The NHLPA is expected to offer their take on the NHL's proposal from Tuesday. Mirtle believes escrow will be the biggest factor in the players not accepting the offer. [Globe and Mail]

• Chris Stevenson on why the players need to negotiate instead of countering with their own proposal yet again: "The league got criticized for putting its offer out there in the public domain, but at least the NHL has crafted something the players and others can tear down. And didn't NHLPA executive director Donald Fehr once say he'd like to see negotiations televised?" [QMI via Ottawa Sun]

• Elliotte Friedman agrees: "No one's saying the players have to take the league's proposal as is. But, it is in their own best interests to sit at the table and make a serious effort at seeing where the next week or two will take them. This must be business, not personal." [CBC]

• Goal No. 1 for the Dallas Stars once the CBA gets resolved: sign Jamie Benn. [Heika]

• Things got pretty wild in the crowd at a Cape Breton high school game: "She pulled down her pants in front of the crowd and everyone. So I guess she got kicked out or something, I'm not sure." [CTV]

Don Cherry: "The lockout is just a sad thing." Like Charlie Brown or something. [Montreal Gazette]

• Reebok will have some competition for NHL jersey rights in 2016 as Bauer has stated they're prepared to get involved in the negotiations. [The Star]

• The draft pick the Washington Capitals received for Scott Stevens from the St. Louis Blues is still paying off for them. [Japers' Rink]

• Real nice story on junior hockey player Adam Restoule who's battled back from a serious kidney ailment. [Buzzing the Net]

• Kevin Bieksa's charity game last night raised $200,000 for Canuck Place, the Canucks Autism Network, and the Canucks Family Education Centre. Singer Michael Buble "wimped" out, but matched the $100,000 the game raised through ticket sales. [Pass It To Bulis]

• Speaking of charity, next Friday, members of the 2010 Stanley Cup winning Chicago Blackhawks will reunite for a game to help benefit Ronald McDonald House. [ESPN Chicago]

• While the lockout sorts itself out, Barry Trotz and David Poile of the Nashville Predators are keeping their normal schedules, except for one major thing. [Tennessean]

• Just how did Gary Bettman get so good at the lockout negotiating business? [Slew Footers]

• Peyton Manning isn't just a quarterback in Denver, he's also an 8th grade bantam hockey player. [Denver Post]

• It's Week 1 of news from a world where the NHL is actually playing. [Sports Pickle]

• Finally, here's the hit Tommy Wingels, now playing for KooKoo in Finland, laid out that earned him a 3-game suspension (per Matias Strozyk):

Tags: , , , , , NHLPA, Nicklas Backstrom, stick,
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How the Danbury Whalers are bringing the sounds on the ice to fans in the stands

18 Oct
2012

The sights and sounds of a sporting event are best captured by either having really expensive tickets close to the ice/field/court, or by watching the magic that the people from NFL Films have been doing for years.

The Federal Hockey League's Danbury Whalers are hoping to take the on- and off-the-ice atmosphere and bring it to the fans in their rink this season by partnering with Action Audio Apps. All fans who attend Whalers home game this season can purchase an access code for a downloadable app for their smart phone on a game by game basis and switch between a number of different channels to hear players and coaches during the game.

Select players and coaches from the Whalers will be mic'd up, just like you'd see on a television broadcast, and the app will also feature pre-game and in-between period interviews with players and coaches.

Sebastien Failla started tinkering with this idea in 1998, using low level broadcast over FM bandwidths. Fan would rent receivers, but now with the use of an app, anyone who owns a smart phone can experience it.

The broadcast will begin around an hour before the puck drops and that time will be filled with pre-game interviews. Once the final buzzer sounds the broadcast will end, unless it's a win for the Whalers; then there could be some postgame content with reactions from players and coaches. If there's a big speech between periods, that will be available to customers as well, but only if the team doesn't want to keep it private.

"It's a produced show, not just an open mic where you're listening to the players constantly," said Failla. "Everything comes back to our production board where we could even edit stuff if we have to, mute something or kill something, we can do that."

But the editing won't include the salty language hockey coaches players are prone to use during a game. There will be no 7-second delay in the live broadcast and fans must be 18 or older in order to purchase the $8 access code per game.

Right now Action Audio Apps is using hockey as their first event with the Whalers home opener on Oct. 25, but they hope to break into other sports. They've discussed using the app with other sports teams at various levels for regular games and special events, such as All-Star games.

YinzCam has been providing fans the ability to watch replays instantly from their seat inside the stadium, but being able to sit up in the cheap seats and hear the interaction -- and trash talk -- between players and coaches via an audio app definitely adds to the all-important in-game experience that teams have been trying to improve for years.

Follow Sean Leahy on Twitter at @Sean_Leahy

Tags: Action Audio Apps, app, Apps, broadcast, court, Danbury Whalers, Federal Hockey League, , , phone, television broadcast, Whalers
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Watch Capitals prospect Filip Forsberg score pretty goal, break glass celebrating (VIDEO)

18 Oct
2012

Leksand of Sweden's HockeyAllsvenskan (second division) fell behind to BIK Karlskoga Wednesday 2-0 by the end of the second period. It was a meeting between two of the top clubs in the league this season and it ended with a three-goal third-period comeback for Leksand, including the game-winner coming with five seconds left from former NHLer Mattias Timander.

Kicking off the comeback was Filip Forsberg, the No. 11 overall selection by the Washington Capitals in June. The 18-year-old's seventh goal of the season came off a lovely toe drag around a Karlskoga defenseman. The goal was nice, but his celebration needs a little work:

It's wasn't quite as spectacular as New Jersey high schooler Taylor Cox or even Henrik Andersen, formerly of Leksand, but at least Forsberg was spared the embarrassment of actually crashing through the glass. The pane was quickly fixed and Leksand took over first place in the league with its win.

Stick-tap SteffeG for the video

Follow Sean Leahy on Twitter at @Sean_Leahy

Tags: Filip Forsberg, HockeyAllsvenskan, Karlskoga, , Leksand, , , , , ,
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KHL suspends referees, demotes linesmen after blown call on Lokomotiv goal (VIDEO)

16 Oct
2012

Remember that time when an official made a bad call in a game that cost one team a win? Remember when you would complain that the official should be punished for making such a terrible decision that affected a game?

Well, the KHL is way ahead of you.

During Lokomotiv's 3-2 shootout victory over Traktor, their goal that made the game 2-1 in the second period should have never counted thanks to a missed "too many men" call.

Here's video of the controversial goal:

Serious shades of Penguins-Red Wings and Avalanche-Canadiens there.

Traktor complained to the KHL after the game, and the league has responded by suspending all four officials involved in the game.

From Ria Novosti:

The KHL accepted Traktor's complaint that Lokomotiv had six players on the ice when Sergei Plotnikov made it 2-1 to the visitors in the second period.

"There was a controversial episode associated with too many men on the ice for Yaroslavl in a scoring attack," the KHL said in a website statement. "There was a grave mistake made by the referees."

"The referees were required to cite too many men for Lokomotiv and call a minor violation by the team."

The two head officials will be banned for three games, while the linesmen will not work another KHL game this season and instead have been sent down to the Russian Major League.

You know, if the NHL is really looking to make in-roads in the PR battle, maybe a public announcement of referee punishments would quell some anger next time a high-stick or offside is missed?

Just think of how much shorter Stephane Auger's career would have been.

Follow Sean Leahy on Twitter at @Sean_Leahy

Tags: , , , Lokomotiv, , referees, Sergei Plotnikov, , Traktor, ,
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KHL suspends referees, demotes linesmen after blown call on Lokomotiv goal (VIDEO)

16 Oct
2012

Remember that time when an official made a bad call in a game that cost one team a win? Remember when you would complain that the official should be punished for making such a terrible decision that affected a game?

Well, the KHL is way ahead of you.

During Lokomotiv's 3-2 shootout victory over Traktor, their goal that made the game 2-1 in the second period should have never counted thanks to a missed "too many men" call.

Here's video of the controversial goal:

Serious shades of Penguins-Red Wings and Avalanche-Canadiens there.

Traktor complained to the KHL after the game, and the league has responded by suspending all four officials involved in the game.

From Ria Novosti:

The KHL accepted Traktor's complaint that Lokomotiv had six players on the ice when Sergei Plotnikov made it 2-1 to the visitors in the second period.

"There was a controversial episode associated with too many men on the ice for Yaroslavl in a scoring attack," the KHL said in a website statement. "There was a grave mistake made by the referees."

"The referees were required to cite too many men for Lokomotiv and call a minor violation by the team."

The two head officials will be banned for three games, while the linesmen will not work another KHL game this season and instead have been sent down to the Russian Major League.

You know, if the NHL is really looking to make in-roads in the PR battle, maybe a public announcement of referee punishments would quell some anger next time a high-stick or offside is missed?

Just think of how much shorter Stephane Auger's career would have been.

Follow Sean Leahy on Twitter at @Sean_Leahy

Tags: , , , Lokomotiv, , referees, Sergei Plotnikov, , Traktor, ,
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Watch Matt Duchene’s spin-o-rama feed lead to Fabian Brunnstrom’s game winner (VIDEO)

13 Oct
2012

Matt Duchene and Viktor Stalberg both made their debuts with Frolunda in the Swedish Elite League on Saturday and for the Colorado Avalanche forward it was a memorable first game.

"I haven't played a game since April, so I'm just dying to get out there with the boys,"Duchene told the Frolunda website on Friday. It showed.

Frolunda edged MODO 4-3 to remain eighth in the Elitserien standings. Stalberg scored his first goal and Duchene contributed two helpers, including this lovely spin-o-rama dish to Fabian Brunnstrom with two minutes remaining in the third period for the game winner:

Someone's been watching Patrick Kane...

Duchene and Stalberg's side might be getting stronger very soon. New York Rangers netminder Henrik Lundqvist has traveled back home to Sweden and will reportedly meet with Frolunda about the potential of signing with them for the lockout. His twin brother, Joel, is currently the team's leading scorer.

Follow Sean Leahy on Twitter at @Sean_Leahy

Tags: , Duchene, Fabian Brunnstrom, Frolunda, , game winner, , , Matt Duchene, , Viktor, Viktor Stalberg, website,
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Remembering Eric Lindros’ first game in Quebec, 20 years later

13 Oct
2012

He told them not to, but they did it anyway.

The television camera was fixed on Eric Lindros' face as Quebec Nordiques GM Pierre Page announced him as the No. 1 overall pick at the 1991 NHL draft. His fingers were squeezing his bottom lip out of anticipation and anxiety, and as soon as Page uttered, "From the Oshawa Generals..." Lindros cracked half a smile out of disbelief. It was a smile that plainly said, "I can't believe they just [expletive] did that."

Despite proclaiming leading up to the draft that he would never play for the franchise, Lindros went through the formalities that day: posing for pictures on the stage in Buffalo, shaking hands with the various Nordiques executives at their table and receiving the team jersey from Page. But instead of proudly wearing the Nordiques crest on his chest and hat on his head, advertising his commitment to the franchise, Lindros instead carried it draped over his arm.

"If you use your imagination, usually you can come up to a good ending." - Page, when asked about trying to convince Lindros to sign with the team.

We all know how the story proceeds from there. A year later, Lindros' future was determined by an arbitrator and he was sent to Philadelphia. Concussions would rob Lindros of a first ballot Hall of Fame career, but not before being a seven-time All-Star, Hart Trophy winner in 1995 and leading the Flyers to the Stanley Cup Final in 1997.

But before all of that, on Oct. 13, 1992, in the fourth game of his NHL career, Lindros had to face the people of Quebec for the first time as a member of the Flyers. While he had played an exhibition game in the Colisee for Team Canada against the Soviet Union in September 1991, there was still hope then that Lindros would end up a Nordique. It wasn't until 16 months after the 1991 draft, when the saga was finally over, that Nordiques fans were finally able to vent their frustrations.

Bitter divorces between players and teams have been a part of sports forever, but the vitriol unleashed that night in Quebec had been brewing for a long time. Lindros' refusal to play for the Nordiques was taken as an insult to both the city and culture of Quebec. It wasn't going to be a normal regular-season game for the Nordiques or the Flyers.

"I don't expect roses. I don't expect any gifts. Just regular boos. That should do it. It's just a hockey game," said Lindros, unaware of what was to come.

Jon Scher captured the atmosphere inside the Colisee in an article for Sports Illustrated two weeks later:

Mais bien sûr. It's perfectly normal for adults to wear diapers over their pants to a hockey game. Some even came shirtless, wearing bonnets and waving rattles. The presumed intent of this infantile display was to show that Lindros was a baby. A Quebec radio station even distributed pacifiers outside the Colisée to fans, who obligingly hurled them onto the ice. Play was stopped countless times to shovel away the pacifiers and other debris. "If I ever have kids, they'll have pacifiers to suck on for life," Lindros said after the game. NHL president Gil Stein, who was in attendance, was hit by a pacifier, and he was seated behind the Quebec bench. "It wasn't even my size," Stein complained.

As a result of these goings-on, one fan was injured when she was struck in the face by a golf ball, and nobody was ejected from the building. The public-address announcer even neglected to tell the crowd to cease and desist.

...

Inside, the old building was packed to the rafters. Lindros was booed when he took the ice for warmups and every time he touched the puck thereafter. "Fans in Philadelphia are kittens on the curtain compared to these people," he said afterward.

(Kittens. When have Philadelphia sports fans ever been compared to cute, cuddly creatures?)

Nothing served as to distract Lindros that night as he scored twice, but the Flyers would fall 6-3. The pent up emotion of Nordiques fans was released that night and starting the next day both sides began going their separate ways. When he officially retired in 2007, Lindros said he regretted not clearly expressing his feelings at the time, saying his refusal was more to do with Nordiques ownership than the city and people of Quebec.

Despite moving to Colorado three years later, Quebec would get the last laugh on Lindros owning a 4-1-1 record when he and the Flyers came to town. More importantly, a first-place finish in the Northeast Division in 1995, their final season in Quebec, was helped by a young Swedish player acquired in the Lindros deal: Peter Forsberg. One season later, the Nordiques traded Jocelyn Thibault -- one of the draft picks received for Lindros -- to acquire Patrick Roy. Six months later the Avalanche raised the Stanley Cup, defeating the Florida Panthers, the team that ousted Lindros and the Flyers in the second round.

Follow Sean Leahy on Twitter at @Sean_Leahy

Tags: Eric Lindros, , Nordiques, Quebec, Quebec Nordiques
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