Written by Alex Carrollin NHL
29 Sep 2009
This week, the Florida Panthers lost to Swiss club Tampere in a shootout, 3-2, while the Blackhawks lost to the Zurich Lions, 2-1, in the Victoria Cup.
So should the NHL be worried about these losses to (lesser) European clubs? No.
These games in Europe are exhibition games for NHL clubs who are still trying to pare down their rosters in time for opening night. Meanwhile, the European clubs are well into their season. Also, the European-sized rinks are much larger than those in the NHL, which can be difficult for some players, especially defensemen and goaltenders who are used to cutting down smaller angles.
The Zurich Lions shocked the European hockey world last season by defeating Metallurg Magnitogorsk to win the European hockey championship. The team that beat the Blackhawks Tuesday is practically the same as the one that won the title in January. Plus, Lions’ coach Sean Simpson was a 7th round draft pick by the Blackhawks in 1980 and spent several years in the Chicago organization before heading over to Europe.
These close losses to European clubs in exhibition play shouldn’t be a real cause for concern, but it certainly is a sign that European clubs are getting stronger as more and more NHLers become victims of the salary cap and head to Europe.
Written by Alex Carrollin NHL
9 Aug 2009For the Chicago Blackhawks, this summer has been filled with scandals, firings, investigations, and now, an arrest.
NHL 10 cover boy Patrick Kane, 20, was reportedly arrested in Buffalo with his cousin after assaulting a cab driver over a fare dispute. The Buffalo News reports the following:
The pair allegedly punched the cab driver and grabbed money they had handed him after he told them he didn’t have twenty cents in coins to give them their change, the report said.
Their fare was $13.80 and they handed the driver $15, according to a report.
The cab driver told police he was punched in the face and head, grabbed by the throat and had his glasses broken during the incident.
Both men were charged with second-degree robbery, fourth-degree criminal mischief, and theft of services.
This arrest continues the Blackhawks’ quick off the ice descent that started shortly after losing to Detroit in the Western Conference Finals. With a solid young foundation on the ice, will the Blackhawks be able to overcome these off-season distractions to make another Cup run next season?
Kane and his cousin have pleaded not guilty, so more information will probably come out as to what really happened, but this arrest will undoubtedly be a distraction with training camp about a month away.
Written by Alex Carrollin NHL
13 Jul 2009
Make no mistake about it. Dale Tallon made some keen decisions, especially in the draft, since he was named Blackhawks general manager on June 21, 2005. But he also made some questionable free agent signings that put the team in a serious tight spot to sign Jonathan Toews and Patrick Kane to long-term deals next off-season.
The Blackhawks’ qualifying offer ‘debacle’ was just the final straw for upper management, which has already replaced him with Stan Bowman.
Tallon’s biggest mistakes happened last summer when he signed free agent defenseman Brian Campbell to a seven-year deal worth $7.14 million annually and goaltender Cristobal Huet to a five-year deal worth $5.625 million per year. Campbell struggled at times while still putting up 52 points, the second best total of his career. Meanwhile, Huet lost the starting job at the end of the season to Nikolai Khabibulin, who then took the team to the Western Conference Final.
This offseason, he let Khabibulin and Martin Havlat leave for nothing, while signing Marian Hossa to a 12-year deal. The thinking was that Hossa doesn’t have the injury history that Havlat does, but as Erik Duhatschek points out, the two players aren’t that different.
Last year, Havlat actually played seven more games, and each averaged 0.95 points per game. Objectively, it is hard to argue that Chicago is any better with Hossa than Havlat, just different.
Then there were the qualifying offers. By scrambling to sign all of his RFAs before the matter was investigated by the NHLPA, it should be debated whether or not Tallon overpaid his players in order to get them signed quickly. Kris Versteeg and Cam Barker both signed three year deals worth over $9 million each.
Now the Blackhawks are in a tight spot. They have $42.5 million tied up in 12 players for the 2010-2011 season in which the salary cap may fall to around $54 million. The Hawks will have around $11.5 million to fill out their roster, which will include signing RFAs Kane, Toews, Duncan Keith, and Andrew Ladd, among others. Unless they sign 20-year contracts with a low cap hit, Kane and Toews should each expect to make at least $6 or 7 million per season. The math doesn’t work for Chicago.
So now they have to dump some salary, most likely by trying to move Campbell and his huge salary. But in this economy, how many teams are able to take on a long-term contract worth over $7 million a year? Just look at the Dany Heatley situation.
Tallon was responsible for drafting Kane and Toews, but now because of him, the team’s ability to re-sign the two superstars is in doubt.
Hockey news, rumors, and insight from
a college student and lifelong hockey fan.
A Pittsburgh native, Alex attends the
University of South
Carolina where he majors in Visual Communications with a minor in Sport
and Entertainment Management. He has interned for the
Columbia Inferno of the ECHL and the Penn Enforcers of the NAJHL.
Contact: shbreakaway@gmail.com
