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    Monday, January 29th, 2007
    6:55 pm
    Craig Conroy back with the Calgary Flames!
    THIS IS HUGE NEWS!
    The Flames acquired Conroy from the Los Angeles Kings on Monday in exchange for Jamie Lundmark, a fourth-round draft choice in the 2007 NHL Entry Draft and a second-round draft choice in the 2008 NHL Entry Draft.

    Conroy returns to Calgary where he played in four seasons between 2001 and 2004. He was a member of the Flames' Western Conference championship team during the 2003-04 season and captained the club during the 2002-03 campaign. In 237 regular season games with the Flames he recorded 188 points with 60 goals and 128 assists. During the 03-04 playoffs he added another 17 points including 6 goals in 26 games.
    I won't lie, I'm pretty excited. Craig Conroy was Jerome Iginla's feeder and we've been trying to replace him ever since he left to LA after the 2004 playoff run. We brought in Amonte and Tanguay - neither of them did the job that Conroy did. This is great news for Flames fans.

    Welcome back to Calgary Craig!
    Thursday, November 2nd, 2006
    1:19 pm
    Here We Go Again
    Well, here we go: 1 of 82? Nope. This is the Spurs. In our house. You beat them down here.

    And the words have begun …


    There's a basic dislike, if not hatred, that has replaced the respect factor.
    "And that's good," Stackhouse said. "That means the feeling's mutual."

    What the Mavericks hope is that this era in the NBA won't remember them as the Phil Mickelsons of the hardwood. In golf, Tiger Woods has no equal in this generation. Mickelson is one of the best players ever. But because the prime of his career has hit squarely during Woods' wheelhouse, Mickelson will never be acknowledged as the
    best of his time.

    In this era of basketball, the Mavericks are loaded and have had a terrific decade of success. They own the second-best record in the NBA since the start of the 1999-2000 season, but are well shy of the Spurs' total. And the scoreboard that counts reads: Spurs 3, Mavs 0. That's the number of championships won since the 1998-99 season.

    The Mavericks won the West last season but fell short of the NBA championship. In that respect, they are still fighting to gain equal footing with the Spurs.

    "We just don't like them," owner Mark Cuban said. "They had what we wanted for so many years. And we took it from them last year. They have had former Mavs, and Avery [Johnson] is a former Spur, which has raised the intensity. Plus, we feel like one of their players is more than a little dirty."

    But enough about Bruce Bowen.

    "There's not a lot of love between these two teams," Stackhouse said. "Obviously, they got some factors – us putting them out of the playoffs – and they're going to be ready to go. And we got to find a way to deal with this new so-called bull's-eye on our back. But we feel we can deal with it."


    Cowlishaw wonders if the Mavs are really better than the Spurs …


    But better than the Spurs? That's a tough one.

    Was last season a changing of the guard or more a case of the Spurs as defending champions being a bit run down? A team that's already been together for two titles (Duncan has been part of three) is going to take a year off now and then.

    And surely the Manu Ginobili that we saw last year was nothing like the player we had seen in those championship years.

    Not winning last year will make the Spurs a more formidable foe this year. How do the Mavericks counter?

    Winning no longer will be a novelty for this team. The doubters from around the nation that remembered the Mavericks from the years of Nellie and No Defense understand that this team does play at both ends of the floor now.

    The core of a team that should have beaten Miami but didn't returns. The good news is that Nowitzki, Josh Howard and Jason Terry, the team's three premier players, are locked into long-term contracts.

    The bad news is that Nowitzki, Howard and Terry are locked into long-term contracts.
    A year ago, these players were doing more than taking a franchise where it had never been. They were playing for contracts that they have now received.

    It's always good for a team to have a star or two with that contract carrot still dangling out there, but Johnson said he's not worried about satisfaction settling in.

    "Jason Terry has made good money in this league before," he said. "Dirk has made good money before. Josh Howard is so young that he would play this game for free. What I'm saying is I don't think it's going to change the way we work."

    But winning changes things, even if they fell short of the ultimate goal.

    "You've really got about six teams capable of winning the championship," Jerry Stackhouse said. "The other teams are trying to figure out where they are. And they figure out where they are by beating Dallas or beating San Antonio."

    It's a new journey for the Mavericks, different from anything they have encountered in the past. In that way, tonight begins another opportunity to make history.



    Robert Horry slaps back …despite having very little in his bag right now, when it comes to rings he knows a little something about it…


    Horry attributed Stackhouse's comments and Cuban's conduct to "a little bit of jealousy."

    "They're the only team in Texas," Horry said, "that doesn't have a championship."
    By advancing to the Finals last season, the Mavericks have become, in Finley's words, "the team to beat" in the Western Conference. Duncan even expects tonight to feel "more like 50 games into the season than an opening night."

    But the Spurs also realize that one game against Dallas signifies nothing more than the start to another season. Regardless of the outcome, each team will have another 81 games to play.

    "We just know there's a team in our way to try to win the championship," Horry said. "They have nothing we want. The only people that have something we want are the Miami Heat.

    "All these other banners ... Western Conference champions ... that don't mean nothing. That's just like winning a medium battle in a big-ass war."



    Bill Simmons with a great season preview column …but, he puzzles me with his following paragraph:


    THE FAVORITE

    San Antonio: Because Dallas would have lost to the Spurs if Ginobili didn't stupidly foul Dirk on that three-point play in Game 7. And that wasn't a great Spurs team -- poor Duncan was hobbling around on one foot. Now he's healthy, he's in great shape, and he's ticked off. And that's all I need to know.


    Now, I would certainly not offer debate to someone who thinks the Spurs will win it all. That is still the smart choice I would assume. But, let’s not revise history. Sure, the Mavs may have benefited by the Stupidity of Manu. Hey, guys make poor decisions on every possession of the season. But, if we are going to say the Mavs would have lost the series there, shouldn’t we also point out that if Jason Terry hits a 15 footer at the end of Game 5 or Dirk puts the rebound home at the buzzer the series is over in 5 games? That’s right. Dirk had the ball under the hoop at the end of Game 5 down 1 point and it didn’t work out. But IF it did, the series is over 4 games to 1. So IF we can use the word IF as in “IF Ginobili didn’t stupidly foul Dirk” then we should look at a few other IF situations. OK?

    I hate the Spurs. Really.

    In case you forgot, My Review of Game 5 from May …

    more of Bill Simmons season preview genius …


    At the Nuggets-Clippers preseason game on Friday night, there was a level of serenity that I hadn't remembered. Both teams were just playing ball. So I'm watching and watching and thinking to myself, "All right, what's different about this game?"

    Then I figured it out: Thanks to the new "Rasheed Wallace" rule, players weren't bitching and moaning after every foul call.

    By coming up with this wrinkle, was David Stern hoping to divert attention away from the fallout from last season's playoffs, when the brutal officiating brought back memories of the Allies-Nazis game in "Victory"? Yeah, probably. Still, you have to admit, players were whining and fussing in epidemic proportions. Nobody believed he could actually commit a foul. Even some of the better character guys (like Tim Duncan and Tayshaun Prince, to name two) were reacting after fouls like somebody had just stuck a parking ticket on their car. It was a disgrace. It seemed like they felt obligated to protest every call, like the one moment during the Spurs-Mavs series when Brent Barry was whistled for a foul and ran a few steps in disbelief, but you could tell his heart wasn't really in it, like he was doing it on autopilot.
    Watching old games on NBA TV this summer, well before this rule was announced, I found myself admiring a random Portland-Philly game from the '77 Finals: Not the quality of play as much as its businesslike nature. Players were just playing hard and doing their jobs. It was a revelation. So that got me thinking, "When did this crap start? Who's to blame?"

    For the rest of the summer, I kept an eye on the player-referee interactions as much as the old games. Rick Barry and Dave Cowens were famous for complaining about calls in the '70s, but much to my horror, two members of my beloved Celtics made bitching an art form in the mid-'80s: Danny Ainge and Kevin McHale. If you want to blame anyone, blame them. Barkley took it to another level, followed by Chuck Daly and the Bad Boy Pistons, Gary Payton and Sam Cassell and, ultimately, Rasheed and Antoine Walker in the mid-'90s (the Pacino and DeNiro of this discussion). By the middle of this decade, thanks to everyone in this paragraph, everyone felt obligated to protest every whistle. The incessant complaining looked bad on TV and even worse in person -- just play after play of guys getting called for fouls, hopping around like little kids, then debating with the referees like an attorney haggling with a judge. Like everyone else, I hated watching it.

    Now? The refs have been given authority to whistle technicals on anyone who pulls that crap. The league will be better for it. You will see. Maybe the level of officiating will even be better for it. If last season's performance was a collective D-plus -- and that's being kind -- we might end up with a C-plus this season simply because the refs won't have to worry about being shown up every other play. And if that's not enough, watching 'Sheed and 'Toine internalizing their emotions could end up being the funniest ongoing subplot of the 2006-07 season.
    Well, other than the Knicks.




    In quite a tussle, the Stars beat the Blues with Big E involved…


    Eric Lindros wasn't exactly lighting up the goal column.

    It's not like he wasn't trying; entering Wednesday's game, he was averaging about four shots on goal per game. But while his assist tally continued to grow, the goals weren't coming.

    Against St. Louis, however, Lindros hit paydirt. Then hit it again.

    Lindros scored two goals, giving him 370 for his career, and the Stars looked as if they had regained their moxie in a 4-1 victory over the Blues at American Airlines Center. The Stars improved to 10-2-0, their best record in team history after 12 games.

    And no one exemplified that recharged effort more than Lindros. He took five shots, dished out four hits and threw in a fracas with Dan Hinote late in the third period for good measure.

    "He was physically involved in the game and taking shots on the net," Stars coach Dave Tippett said. "[If] he does that for us, he'll be a very good player for us."




    Evgeni Malkin rules the world …


    It was a record-setting night for Penguins rookie Evgeni Malkin, whose second goal of the night punctuated a 4-3 overtime win against the Los Angeles Kings.

    Malkin got a rebound of defenseman Sergie Gonchar's shot on a power play and swept it past goaltender Dan Cloutier from the bottom of the right circle at 2:45 of overtime.

    Malkin's goal in the first period gave him one in each of his first six NHL games, setting the modern-day mark.

    The win pushed the Penguins into first place in the Atlantic Division, a point ahead of New Jersey and two ahead of the New York Islanders.

    The Penguins won their first four road games in a season for the first time since 1994-95 and their first four in a row away from home at any point in a season since Nov. 15-Dec. 10, 1997.

    ---

    Malkin, fresh out of the penalty box after being called for tripping, put the
    Penguins ahead, 2-1, with his record-tying goal at 8:29.

    Malkin's forehand from the left hash marks beat Cloutier on the far side.
    Malkin had been tied since Saturday with Boston's Dmitri Kvartalnov, who got his goals in each of his first five games in 1992-93.

    The all-time record was set in 1917 -- the first year of the NHL and the year of the Russian Revolution in Malkin's home country.

    On this side of the world that winter, Montreal's Joe Malone had a goal in each of his first 14 games, Ottawa's Cy Denneny scored in each of his first 12 games, and Montreal's Newsy Lalonde's streak was eight games.


    Catching up with the Chase for the Nextel Cup …As it comes to town, my dad’s favorite, Matt Kenseth is in the “driver’s seat”. Rock me.

    Click For Unintentional Comedy …Told you.

    Mavs – Spurs 2006



    Robot Dance of Excellence

    Friday, August 18th, 2006
    11:44 am
    What The Puck? Los Angeles Times Latest Paper To Freeze Hockey ...
    Lord Stanley Spinning As Number-Four Sport Falls Off The California Coast
    The latest cost-cutting at The Los Angeles Times has put the sports section there in the penalty box. LAObserved.com reports writers assigned to The Los Angeles Kings and Anaheim Mighty Ducks will not go on most road trips. Also, hockey columnist Helene Elliott becomes a general columnist and won't write her weekly league roundup.
    Instead, the AP and stringers will get to shoulder the hockey burden. So, when the nation's fourth-largest newspaper decides to curtail coverage of a still-major sport, what hope is there for smaller newspapers? Actually, little or none, as they don't make road trips either.
    Hey, at least the Tribune gang in Hollywood is actually covering the teams when they're home. The New York Times has cut back to one hockey writer who covers the Rangers, although even that team was subject to road wire coverage occasionally.
    As for the New York Islanders and New Jersey Devils, who between them have won seven Stanley Cups, they might as well have not even existed. Rare was a reporter sent even to a home game. That the Times relied instead on the AP was apparently viewed with little embarrassment on West 43rd St.
    And with word that the Times will shrink in size by 2008, cutting the newshole by 5 percent, expect a lot more of the same.
    Friday, August 11th, 2006
    11:05 am
    Recent OHL News
    As I said, there is a lot to catch up on, so I will do my best over the next few days.

    Late in July, the OHL announced that 2 United States players have decided to forego college and play for the Owen Sound Attack. Trevor Lewis (6'1", 192), who was selected in the first round of the 2006 NHL Entry Draft (17th overall) by the Los Angeles Kings was committed to attend the University of Michigan for the 2006-2007 season, but will play in the OHL instead. Lewis, a center, played 56 regular season games for Des Moines of the USHL last season, recording 75 points (35 goals, 40 assists) with 69 PIM and a plus/minus of +25. He was also one of the league leaders on the penalty kill with 6 short handed goals. Lewis has already signed a 3-year entry level contract with the Kings.

    Also joining the Owen Sound Attack this fall will be David Kolomatis (6'0", 175), who spent the 2005-06 season as a member of the US U17 NTDP. A defenseman who will be eligible for the NHL draft next June, Kolomatis had previously committed to the University of New Hampshire.

    A third new member of the Attack has been acquired via trade. Early this month, Owen Sound announced that it traded the team's 12th round selection in the 2007 OHL Priority Draft to the Ottawa 67s in exchange for 18 year old defenseman Pat Campbell. Campbell appeared in 19 games for the 67s last season.

    In other news around Owen Sound, one of the team's top forwards, Scott Tregunna (6'2", 192) has been invited to participate in next month's Traverse City, Michigan prospects tournament. Tregunna, who be skating with the Atlanta Thrasher prospects, had 23 points in 66 games last season for the Attack.

    On the first of August, the Guelph Storm Hockey Club announced that it signed a purchase agreement to sell the team pending approval by the league to G.S. Sport Enterprises led by Elliott Kerr. According to the press releases, the new ownership is committed to keeping the team in Guelph (no comment here yet). The league's Board of Governors will vote on the sale mid-month. Stay tuned.

    Also on the first of this month, the London Knights announced that the team had completed a trade with the Sudbury Wolves, which sent the Knights' 12th round draft pick in the 2008 OHL Priority Draft to Sudbury in exchange for the rights to goaltender Chris Abbey. In the 10 games that the 18-year old Abbey (6'4", 208) played for Sudbury last season, he had a 4.51 GAA and a .867 save percentage.

    To round out today's OHL news, last week the Windsor Spitfires announced that the team signed its 2nd round pick (29 overall) in this year'’s OHL Priority Draft, defenseman Mark Cundari. Cundari, who will be playing for the OHL team this fall, played with the OMHA Minor Midget Vaughan Kings in 2005-06, registering 41 points (16 goals, 25 assists) in 52 games. Earlier, the team had announced that it signed its first round import draft pick, defenseman Marek Biro.
    Thursday, August 3rd, 2006
    6:03 pm
    Starting up again in twelve weeks.
    Hard to believe, but in just three months (83 days to be exact), the 2006-2007 NHL regular season kicks off on Wednesday, October 4th with a three-game slate highlighted by an Eastern Conference finals rematch between the Buffalo Sabres and Stanley Cup champion Carolina Hurricanes in Raleigh. One day later on Thursday, October 5th, the San Jose Sharks dive into the pool, kicking off their 16th season with a home match against the revamped St. Louis Blues.

    The full 2006-2007 schedule for the Sharks, home games in caps:

    OCTOBER
    THU 5 ST. LOUIS BLUES 7:30 P.M.
    SAT 7 NEW YORK ISLANDERS 7:30 P.M.
    Mon 9 @ Calgary Flames 5:00 p.m.
    Thu 12 @ Edmonton Oilers 6:00 p.m. (Still pissed off)
    Fri 13 @ Vancouver Canucks 7:00 p.m. (Early look at Luongo)
    TUE 17 DALLAS STARS 7:30 P.M.
    THU 19 DETROIT RED WINGS 7:30 P.M. (LMAO Belfour)
    SAT 21 MINNESOTA WILD 7:30 P.M.
    Mon 23 @ Columbus Blue Jackets 4:00 p.m.
    Wed 25 @ Detroit Red Wings 4:30 p.m.
    Thu 26 @ Nashville Predators 5:00 p.m. (Playoff rematch!)
    Sun 29 @ Tampa Bay Lightning 2:00 p.m.
    Tue 31 @ Florida Panthers 4:30 p.m. (Bertuzzi's new home)

    NOVEMBER
    THU 2 NEW YORK RANGERS, 7:30 P.M. (Jagr vs. Thornton)
    SAT 4 PITTSBURGH PENGUINS, 7:30 P.M. (Crosby in town, Malkin too?)
    TUE 7 MINNESOTA WILD 7:30 P.M.
    Thu 9 @ Los Angeles Kings 7:30 p.m. (Sharks connections everywhere)
    Sat 11 @ Phoenix Coyotes 6:00 p.m.
    Mon 13 @ Los Angeles Kings 7:30 p.m. (Lombardi, McCauley, Thornton)
    Wed 15 @ Colorado Avalanche 6:00 p.m.
    SAT 18 PHILADELPHIA FLYERS 7:30 P.M.
    Tue 21 @ Anaheim Ducks 7:00 p.m. (No longer Mighty)
    WED 22 LOS ANGELES KINGS 7:30 P.M.
    SAT 25 NEW JERSEY DEVILS 7:30 P.M.
    Tue 28 @ St. Louis Blues 5:00 p.m.
    Wed 29 @ Minnesota Wild 5:00 p.m.

    DECEMBER
    Sat 2 @ Detroit Red Wings 4:00 p.m.
    Mon 4 @ Dallas Stars 6:00 p.m.
    THU 7 COLORADO AVALANCHE 7:30 P.M.
    SAT 9 NASHVILLE PREDATORS 7:30 P.M.
    MON 11 PHOENIX COYOTES 7:00 P.M.
    Tue 12 @ Los Angeles Kings 7:30 p.m.
    THU 14 LOS ANGELES KINGS 7:30 P.M.
    SAT 16 ANAHEIM DUCKS 7:30 P.M. (More chances to boo Pronger!)
    THU 21 DALLAS STARS 7:30 P.M.
    SAT 23 CALGARY FLAMES 7:00 P.M.
    TUE 26 ANAHEIM DUCKS 7:30 P.M. (4 times a year!)
    THU 28 PHOENIX COYOTES 7:30 P.M.
    Sat 30 @ Phoenix Coyotes 6:00 p.m.
    Sun 31 @ Dallas Stars 5:00 p.m.

    JANUARY
    THU 4 DETROIT RED WINGS 7:30 P.M.
    SAT 6 COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS 7:30 P.M.
    WED 10 EDMONTON OILERS 7:00 P.M.
    Thu 11 @ Los Angeles Kings 7:30 p.m.
    Sat 13 @ Phoenix Coyotes 6:00 p.m.
    MON 15 COLORADO AVALANCHE 7:00 P.M.
    THU 18 PHOENIX COYOTES 7:30 P.M.
    SAT 20 ST. LOUIS BLUES 7:30 P.M.
    Tu/W 23-24 All-Star Celebration @ Dallas (Mid-week? I guess)
    Fri 26 @ Edmonton Oilers 6:00 p.m.
    Sun 28 @ Vancouver Canucks 7:00 p.m.
    TUE 30 DALLAS STARS 7:30 P.M.

    FEBRUARY
    THU 1 DALLAS STARS 7:30 P.M.
    SAT 3 CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS 1:00 P.M.
    TUE 6 ANAHEIM DUCKS 7:30 P.M. (Up from twice-yearly!)
    Wed 7 @ Anaheim Ducks 7:00 p.m.
    Tue 13 @ St. Louis Blues 5:00 p.m.
    Wed 14 @ Nashville Predators 5:00 p.m.
    Fri 16 @ Columbus Blue Jackets 4:00 p.m.
    Sun 18 @ Dallas Stars 12:30 p.m.
    Wed 21 @ Washington Capitals 4:00 p.m. (Ovechkin ownage)
    Thu 22 @ Chicago Blackhawks 5:30 p.m.
    Sat 24 @ Calgary Flames 7:00 p.m.
    MON 26 ANAHEIM DUCKS 7:00 P.M.
    WED 28 NASHVILLE PREDATORS 7:30 P.M.

    MARCH
    Fri 2 @ Anaheim Ducks 7:00 p.m.
    Sun 4 @ Dallas Stars 12:30 p.m.
    Tue 6 @ Minnesota Wild 5:00 p.m.
    FRI 9 VANCOUVER CANUCKS 7:30 P.M.
    SUN 11 EDMONTON OILERS 5:00 P.M.
    TUE 13 CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS 7:30 P.M.
    Thu 15 @ Phoenix Coyotes 7:00 p.m.
    FRI 16 COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS 7:30 P.M.
    Sun 18 @ Colorado Avalanche 5:00 p.m.
    Wed 21 @ Chicago Blackhawks 5:30 p.m.
    Thu 22 @ Atlanta Thrashers 4:00 p.m.
    Sat 24 @ Carolina Hurricanes 4:00 p.m. (Defending champions)
    TUE 27 LOS ANGELES KINGS 7:30 P.M.
    FRI 30 PHOENIX COYOTES 7:30 P.M.

    APRIL
    SUN 1 LOS ANGELES KINGS 3:00 P.M.
    Wed 4 @ Anaheim Ducks 7:00 p.m.
    THU 5 CALGARY FLAMES 7:30 P.M.
    SAT 7 VANCOUVER CANUCKS 1:00 P.M

    I do dig them having five of their last six games at home.

    Bell-Thornton-Cheechoo!
    Michalek-Marleau-Bernier!
    Ekman-Goc-Grier!
    Brown-Smith-Nieminen!
    Hannan-Gorges!
    McLaren-Carle!
    Ehrhoff-Murray! (or Davison!)
    Toskala!
    Hopefully Nabokov is traded sooner than later!
    Monday, July 31st, 2006
    10:02 pm
    Kings Acquire Goalie
    Image hosted by Photobucket.comImage hosted by Photobucket.comToday, the Los Angeles Kings got a little stronger adding former starting goaltender, Dan Cloutier, from the Canucks for a couple of moderate draft picks.

    Cloutier, a 30-game winner three times with the Canucks is a strong regular season goaltender who can earn you all sorts of wins, will more than likely prove to be a strong character for the Kings in their run for a Pacific Division title.

    An injury-riddled season kept Cloutier from the Canucks' crease in 2005/'06, but some solid rehab all year and the summer should make him a healthy candidate for the starting job in LA, in front of Mathieu Garon. He should be a second-round to high third-round pick in any pool still. A small cry from his first-round potential, but there is no reason why he couldn't be there again in the regular season.

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    Thursday, July 27th, 2006
    10:53 am
    Ron Hextall Assisstant GM of Kings

    Los Angeles, CA (Sports Network) - The Los Angeles Kings have named Ron Hextall as assistant general manager and general manager for their AHL affiliate Manchester Monarchs.

    "I am honored and extremely excited to be a part of the Los Angeles Kings organization," said Hextall. "I look forward to working closely with Dean Lombardi and the entire Kings staff toward the ultimate goal of bringing a Stanley Cup to Los Angeles. It was a difficult decision considering my history with the Flyers organization, but moving forward with my career I thought it was the best move for myself and my family."

    He spent the last four seasons as director of pro hockey personnel for the Philadelphia Flyers.

    Hextall, 42, was a goaltender for the Flyers, New York Islanders and Quebec Nordiques in his 13-year career. He won the Vezina Trophy as the NHL's best netminder and the Conn Smythe Trophy for the Stanley Cup MVP, despite losing to Edmonton in seven games, in his rookie season of 1986-87.

    He played in 608 regular season contests, compiling a 296-214-69 record with 23 shutouts, a 2.97 goals-against average and an .895 save percentage. In the playoffs, Hextall went 47-43 with a pair of shutouts in 93 games.

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