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"To you from flailing hands we throw The torch; be yours to hold it high."
After a disastrous road trip out West that will end on the East coast on Thursday, GM Bob Gainey has decided to make some changes. And for the usually quiet GM, these changes were big.

First, the Canadiens confirmed the acquisition of veteran defenseman Mathieu Schneider from the Atlanta Thrashers in exchange for a couple of picks. Schneider's huge salary - $5.625 million this year, he becomes a UFA this summer – will be absorbed by Robert Lang's season-ending injury which allowed the Canadiens to put the center in the injured reserve list. His salary will thus not count against the cap, leaving space for Schneider's. With nine defensemen on the roster after the new addition, Ryan O'Byrne was sent back to Hamilton since he's the only blueliner eligible for a return to the minors. As for Schneider's potential contribution to the team, here's what McKeen's Hockey Yearbook says about him:


Stabilized the Ducks upon returning from a fractured ankle and was a model of consistency going 32 games (Dec-to-Mar) without recording a negative plus-minus, the longest streak in the NHL ... a quick, mobile rearguard with a howitzer slapshot ... plays much tougher than his size and has steadily matured into one of the league's more reliable puckmovers and decisive powerplay quarterbacks ... unntamed and erratic early in his career, yet now plays very much in control ... poised under pressure and a savvy defender, patient in his positional play and wisely picking safe times to join the attack ...
In other words, he will mainly help on the PP which success rate is still in the basement of the league. Schneider will also bring some veteran presence on the blueline. Josh Gorges and Mike Komisarek's workload should diminish a bit with Schneider's presence. The only thing I'm worried about is that with Brisebois, Hamrlik, and now Schneider on defense; Lang and Kovalev in attack, the Canadiens are looking more and more like a retirement home for washed up players (though Lang is still pretty good).


Gainey's second move was to send the younger Kostitsyn brother to the Bulldogs along with O'Byrne. Since his reputation as a player who's partying hard and not doing enough on the ice has recently started to cement itself among Montreal fans, the timing for this move is simply perfect. In Hamilton, he will go back to riding the bus, no late-night clubs over there (as far as I know) to distract him away from the game. I hope that the demotion will light a fire under his ass like it did for Maxime Lapierre last season.

Finally, the big move that has become front-page news on every hockey-related website is Gainey's decision to keep Kovalev in Montreal instead of traveling with the team tomorrow (today now). The Russian is currently having a terrible season in Montreal punctuated by his apparent lack of effort during games. Gainey said that the rest should give him the opportunity to clear his head, but you have to wonder if it's not a test to see how the team will play without him. When Koivu is out of the line-up and Kovalev in, the team usually wins or at least plays better. Now we'll know what kind of team Montreal has without the enigmatic winger. But then again, two games is not enough to judge how the team will fare. The team will probably play better because players will be afraid to get benched now that everyone knows that no one is really untouchable, but they might drop off their production next week. So, the real test here will be to see how Kovalev reacts when he rejoins his teammates; that is if he isn't traded before then.

Meanwhile, there are two games reviews that I haven't posted yet (last Friday and Sunday). I thought this post deserved priority, so I'll put up the reviews as soon as I can.
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Alex Kovalev Montreal Canadiens Habs Tricolore Kovy

When talking about an All-Star Game, most people know what to expect: a no-contact confrontation where defense is almost, if not completely, inexistent, and a final score that looks more like a NFL result than a regular hockey game. Old-timers find the game boring due to its lack of intensity and meaning. There's nothing at stake, players play just for the heck the it to keep both the fans and advertisers happy. This year, for 55 minutes, fans were treated to the usual passionless goal-fest until professional pride emerged as the minutes ran out in a 11-11 tied game.

As is often the case in Montreal, the pre-game festivities were neat. A flying violinist from Cirque Eloize made her way down to the ice as extras pulled the stage down from the rafters. Both national anthems were beautifully sung – the Star Spangled Banner by Alan Prater, and O Canada by the Montreal Jubilation Gospel Choir. The players' introduction gave a nice scale for fans' appreciation of each player. After getting booed on Saturday, Boston Bruins' Tim Thomas, Zdeno Chara, and Marc Savard were reluctantly applauded while the Toronto Maple Leafs' Thomas Kaberle was booed. The biggest ovations went to French-Canadian players (Roberto Luongo, Stephane Robidas, and Jean-Sebastian Giguere for the West; Martin St. Louis and Vincent Lecavalier for the East) and ex-Canadiens (Sheldon Souray, Stephane Robidas, Mark Streit, and coach Claude Julien); and of course Montreal's own participants (coach Guy Carbonneau, Carey Price, Mike Komisarek, Andrei Markov, and Alex Kovalev) who received huge applause.

At the beginning of the game, Lecavalier centered Kovalev and Malkin, but he was quickly paired up with teammate St. Louis while the Flyers' Jeff Carter moved up between the Russians forwards. Carey Price surrendered the first goal early in the game, but the East quickly got up to a 4-1 lead with goals by Ovechkin, Staal, Kovalev (with a weird slowed-down shot), and Markov. The West reduced the score to 4-2 via Patrick Marleau with twelve seconds left to go in the first period.

The goal-fest continued in the second period with ten goals scored in twenty minutes, four by the East and six by the West. Defenseman Sheldon Souray scored two goals in that period, while Kovalev added in another with his signature backhand move, and Malkin scored a complete beauty that you will rarely see in a regular game. After forty minutes of play, the score was 8-8 with the West coming back from a 7-4 deficit in the span of three minutes.

Ovechkin caught on camera admiring Montreal ladies



Shane Doan gave the West their second lead of the game less than a minute into the the third period but Dany Heatley replied two minutes later. Right off the ensuing face-off, Jonathan Toews once again gave the lead to the West, and it took eleven minutes for the East to equalize. By the time Patrick Kane scored the West's 11th goal, the players had started to play better defensively, not wanting to lose. Jay Bouwmeester equalized the mark with four minutes left to go, and the intensity suddenly rose up as the minutes went down.

Chants of “Kovy, Kovy, Kovy” introduced the overtime period as Montreal fans wanted Kovalev to bag the winner in OT since 4-on-4 play is his perfect element. The Artist hit the post twice in overtime in one long shift during which his teammates kept shouting at him to shoot. After having Carey Price surrendering the least goals of all six netminders, Markov scoring the East's fourth goal, Kovalev simply being on fire, it was Komisarek's turn to have a role in the game as he was penalized for hooking Ryan Getzlaf on a breakaway. It was the first penalty in an All-Star Game since the 2000 edition, and it brought more suspense to the game's final minutes. Through shouts of “DE-FENCE, DE-FENCE,” the Eastern Conference players did their best to run out the clock as Tim Thomas made one miraculous save after another to the delight of the Montreal fans who mockingly chanted his name at the beginning of the third. How things change, huh? Komisarek almost had a breakaway when getting out of the box but Carter's pass was painfully too long for the defenseman to get to the puck in time. On to the shootout.

During the selection of players for the shootout, Guy Carbonneau joked to the commentators that he and Julien were looking for three good guys to shoot but couldn't find any. Finally, Lecavalier, Kovalev, and Ovechkin were assigned for the East while the West went with Shane Doan (who had won the Elimination Shootout on Saturday), Rick Nash, and... well I don't remember who was supposed to be the West's third shooter. Anyways, Lecavalier fired straight a Luongo while Shane Doan was easily stopped by Thomas. When Kovalev's shot went past Luongo's glove, the place erupted in cheers as if Kovy had scored a game-winning playoffs goal. Nash's shot went over the net, hitting the glass behind Thomas. Finally, Ovechkin put the puck past Luongo to give the Eastern Conference their second consecutive All-Star Game victory.

In the end, Kovalev was voted MVP of the game and truly deserved it. And it's not just because he's a Montreal Canadiens playing in Montreal that he won. The candidates for me would be Souray, St. Louis, and Thomas, but Kovalev was the true entertainer that night with nice shots, goals, and stickhandling skill. Malkin was also entertaining but took awhile to get into the game. Kovalev was ready from start to finish, and Montreal fans can only hope that his performance will springboard him to a great second half. Oh, and Montreal can go back to hating Sarvard, Chara, and Thomas now.



Full Shootout

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The fan-voting process was also denounced in the Western Conference where the Anaheim Ducks' fans and the Chicago Blackhawks' fans battled it out for the six spots on the starting line-up. Although the total number of votes for the starting line-up were far lower than the Eastern Conference's votes, there are still question marks over the presence of several players who haven't achieved much this season or last season. It goes to show that fan-voting in the NHL, like in American Idol, is nothing more than a popularity contest. Here is the composition of the Western team.

Starting Line-up

Goaltender:
#35 Jean-Sebastien Giguere (Anaheim Ducks)
The Montreal native is probably happy to be back home despite Quebec's cold winter. It's a perfect opportunity for him to hang out with friends and family especially after the death of his father last December.

Defensemen:
#51 Brian Campbell (Chicago Blackhawks)
#27 Scott Niedermayer (Anaheim Ducks)

Forwards:
#88 Patrick Kane (Chicago Blackhawks)
#19 Jonathan Toews (Chicago Blackhawks)
#15 Ryan Getzlaf (Anaheim Ducks)

Other Players

Goaltenders:
#32 Nicklas Backstrom (Minnesota Wild)
#1 Roberto Luongo (Vancouver Canucks)

Defensemen:
#22 Dan Boyle (San Jose Sharks)
#5 Nicklas Lidstrom (Detroit Red Wings) (will not play)
#44 Sheldon Souray (Edmonton Oilers)
#6 Shea Weber (Nashville Predators)
#3 Stephane Robidas (Dallas Stars) (will replace Lidstrom)

Forwards:
#23 Dustin Brown (Los Angeles Kings)
#13 Pavel Datsyuk (Detroit Red Wings) (will not play)
#19 Shane Doan (Phoenix Coyotes)
#23 Milan Hejduk (Colorado Avalanche)
#12 Jarome Iginla (Calgary Flames)
#9 Mike Modano (Dallas Stars)
#61 Rick Nash (Columbus Blue Jackets)
#19 Joe Thornton (San Jose Sharks)
#7 Keith Tkachuk (St. Louis Blues)
#12 Patrick Marleau (San Jose Sharks) (will replace Datsyuk)

Head Coach: Mike Babcock (Detroit Red Wings)
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Ah, Montreal. The City of Hockey. The City is Hockey as we like to say over here. Knowing that, is it surprising that when the NHL let the fans vote for the starting line-up, four Montreal Canadiens found their way on top? When the voting began, six Canadiens players were projected to make the game: goalie Carey Price, defensemen Andrei Markov and Mike Komisarek, and forwards Alex Kovalev, Saku Koivu and Alex Tanguay (for a while, Habs fans also voted for the Detroit Red Wings players to make a Canadiens-Wings All-Star game). After much scrutiny from the NHL, it was discovered that bots were used to inflate the ballots, 15 to 20% of the votes were consequently shaved off. Penguins fans then took over, putting both Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin in the starting line-up while Ryan Whitney and Sergei Gonchar (who hadn't played a single game in the season yet, and we were in November) trailed Markov and Komisarek. Although Penguins fans also used bots, no action were taken against them since in Gary Bettman's league, Crosby is the face of the NHL and should be in every major event (it's ironic that he's going to miss the All-Star Game for the second time in a row). Since the Penguins fans didn't have a third forward to vote in, Kovalev or any other Canadiens forward was guaranteed to make it. The competition between Carey Price and Marc-Andre Fleury was fierce as both goalies shared the top position in the final hours of the voting process. Finally, Price narrowly beat Fleury to participate in his first All-Star game.

The voting made a big scandal in the NHL as no Canadiens player were worthy of being in the All-Star game (in the interest of full disclosure, I didn't vote at all because I don't really care who gets to play). But can you blame Habs fans for being loyal? Instead of whining why didn't Boston fans or Washington fans vote more? Penguins fans didn't whine. They saw what was going on and found a way. It's as simple as that. Without further ado, here is the roster of the Eastern Conference


[ Click here to read more ]
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2009 NHL All-Star Game Commercial

January 23rd 2009 05:05
NHL All-Star Game Montreal
This year's NHL All-Star Game is only two days away, so I thought I'd share with you guys the commercial for the event. It's a nice video where French expressions are used to express hockey moments. Check it out below...


[ Click here to read more ]
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