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cptrs · 2 years
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otogariado · 1 year
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hauntedppgpaints · 2 months
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Hottest Alternate on Each Team Poll Results!!
GOOOOOOOOOD EVENING HOCKEYBLR!
I've got the piping hot results of the poll I posted this week, served fresh and ready to be read! The final count was 623 votes!
TOP 10 ACROSS THE LEAGUE:
Leon Draisaitl, 537
Ryan O'Reilly, 521
Travis Konecny, 520
Claude Giroux, 519
Brendan Gallagher, 504
Nick Schmaltz, 496
Kris Letang & Victor Hedman, 464
Mark Scheifele, 461
Marcus Foligno, 445
Matthew Tkachuk, 443
BOTTOM 10 ACROSS THE LEAGUE:
Corey Perry, 7
John Carlson, 11
Jakob Silfverberg, 14
Lawson Crouse, 19
Sam Reinhart, 22
Jaden Schwartz, 28
Darnell Nurse, 29
Connor Murphy, 31
Cam Fowler, 37
Jonathan Huberdeau & MacKenzie Weegar , 40
Detailed tallies, pie charts, and fun facts are below the cut! Sorry about how the teams are paired together, there's a 30 image limit on posts :(
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Ducks:
Adam Henrique, 338
Troy Terry, 130
Mason McTavish, 104
Cam Fowler, 37
Jakob Silfverberg, 14
Coyotes:
Nick Schmaltz, 496
Clayton Keller, 108
Lawson Crouse, 19
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Bruins:
David Pastrnak, 398
Charlie McAvoy, 225
Sabres:
Rasmus Dahlin, 390
Zemgus Girgensons, 233
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Flames:
Elias Lindholm, 300
Rasmus Andersson, 138
Chris Tanev, 105
Jonathan Huberdeau, 40
MacKenzie Weegar, 40
Hurricanes:
Sebastian Aho, 310
Jordan Martinook, 170
Jaccob Slavin, 143
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Blackhawks:
Seth Jones, 268
Jason Dickinson, 173
Nick Foligno, 144
Connor Murphy, 31
Corey Perry, 7
Avalanche:
Mikko Rantanen, 292
Nathan MacKinnon, 231
Cale Makar, 100
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Blue Jackets:
Zach Werenski, 376
Sean Kuraly, 182
Erik Gudbranson, 65
Stars:
Tyler Seguin, 426
Miro Heiskanen, 100
Joe Pavelski, 56
Esa Lindell, 41
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Red Wings:
Ben Chiarot, 324
Andrew Copp, 199
David Perron, 100
Oilers:
Leon Draisaitl, 537
Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, 57
Darnell Nurse, 29
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Panthers:
Matthew Tkachuk, 443
Aaron Ekblad, 158
Sam Reinhart, 22
Kings:
Phillip Danault, 433
Drew Doughty, 190
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Wild:
Marcus Foligno, 445
Kirill Kaprizov, 114
Joel Eriksson Ek, 64
Canadiens:
Brendan Gallagher, 504
Mike Matheson, 119
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Predators:
Ryan O'Reilly, 521
Ryan McDonagh, 102
Devils:
Jack Hughes, 327
Erik Haula, 171
Ondrej Palat, 81
Jesper Bratt, 44
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Islanders:
Cal Clutterbuck, 329
Scott Mayfield, 120
Brock Nelson, 105
Jean-Gabriel Pageau, 69
Rangers:
Mika Zibanejad, 240
Adam Fox, 207
Chris Kreider, 71
Artemi Panarin, 59
Barclay Goodrow, 46
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Senators:
Claude Giroux, 519
Thomas Chabot, 104
Flyers:
Travis Konecny, 520
Scott Laughton, 103
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Penguins:
Kris Letang, 464
Evgeni Malkin, 159
Sharks:
Luke Kunin, 288
Mario Ferraro, 188
Mikael Granlund, 88
Tomas Hertl, 59
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Kraken:
Jordan Eberle, 258
Adam Larsson, 201
Yanni Gourde, 136
Jaden Schwartz, 28
Blues:
Colton Parayko, 225
Justin Faulk, 202
Robert Thomas, 196
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Lightning:
Victor Hedman, 464
Nikita Kucherov, 159
Maple Leafs:
Mitch Marner, 310
Auston Matthews, 188
Morgan Rielly, 125
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Canucks:
J. T. Miller, 407
Elias Pettersson, 216
Golden Knights:
William Karlsson, 235
Jonathan Marchessault, 168
Alex Pietrangelo, 118
Jack Eichel, 102
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Capitals:
Tom Wilson, 289
T. J. Oshie, 240
Nicklas Backstrom, 83
John Carlson, 11
Jets:
Mark Scheifele, 461
Josh Morrissey, 162
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lesserknownhusbands · 6 years
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Conversation
Sean Monahan: Why is Johnny on the table?
Elias Lindholm: He likes to be tall.
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hockeybabestars · 5 years
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lindy is even more fine in person wow
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calszonee · 6 years
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Anyways, I bought Brigittes skin immediately
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samgirard · 5 years
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scrum: alexander kerfoot vs. elias lindholm | round one, game four: cal @ col | 4.17.19
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boxscorehockey · 2 years
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2021-22 Alphabetical Directory Defensemen
D
Addison Calen Alexeyev Alexander Andersson Rasmus Andrae Emil Bar Jack Barrie Tyson Barron Justin Bean Jake Bear Ethan Beaudin Nicolas Behrens Sean Bernard- Docker Jacob Bjornfot Tobias Boqvist Adam Bouchard Evan Brannstrom Erik Broberg Philip Brodin Jonas Brook Josh Buium Shai Burns Brent Butcher Will Byram Bowen Carlson John Carlsson Lucas Ceulemans Corson Chabot Thomas Cholowski Dennis Chychrun Jakub Clarke Brandt Clifton Connor Coghlan Dylan Cormier Lukas Dahlin Rasmus DeAngelo Tony Dineen Cam Dobson Noah Doughty Drew Drysdale Jamie Dumba Mathew Dunn Vince Durzi Sean Edler Alex Edvinsson Simon Ekblad Aaron Ekholm Mattias Ekman- Larsson Oliver Ellis Ryan Evans Ryker Fabbro Dante Faber Brock Faulk Justin Foote Cal Forsling Gustav Fowler Cam Fox Adam Gavrikov Vladislav Giordano Mark Girard Samuel Goligoski Alex Gostisbehere Shayne Grans Helge Graves Ryan Grushnikov Artem Grzelcyzk Matt Guhle Brendan Guhle Kaiden Gustafsson Erik Hague Nicolas Hamilton Dougie Hanifin Noah Harley Thomas Hedman Victor Heimosalmi Aleksi Heinola Ville Heiskanen Miro Helleson Drew Hicketts Joe Honka Anttoni Hreschuk Aidan Hronek Filip Hughes Luke Hughes Quinn Johansson Albert Johnson Brent Johnson Erik Johnson Ryan Jokiharju Henri Jones Seth Jones Zac Joseph Pierre-Olivier Josi Roman Jurmo Joni Karlsson Erik Kirsanov Kirill Klefbom Oscar Klingberg John Krug Torey Kylington Oliver LaCombe Jackson Lajoie Maxime Lambos Carson Leddy Nick Leddy Nick Letang Kris Liljegren Timothy Lindell Esa Lindholm Hampus Lundkvist Nils Mahura Josh Mailloux Logan Makar Cale Marino John Matheson Michael McAvoy Charlie McIsac Jared Merkley Ryan Miller Colin Miller K’Andre Mitchell Ian Montour Brandon Morrisey Josh Morrow Scott Moser Janis Mukhamadullin Shakir Muzzin Jake Myers Tyler Nause Evan Niemela Topi Nurse Darnell O'Rourke Ryan Orlov Dmitry Parayko Colton Peart Jack Perunovich Scott Pietrangelo Alex Pionk Neal Poirier Jeremie Power Owen Provorov Ivan Pulock Ryan Pysyk Mark Rathbone Jack Rielly Morgan Romanov Alexander Salo Robin Samuelsson Mattias Sanderson Jake Sandin Rasmus Sanheim Travis Schmidt Nate Schneider Braden Schultz Justin Seider Moritz Sergachev Mikhail Severson Damon Slavin Jaccob Smith Ty Soderstrom Victor Soucy Carson Spurgeon Jared Stanley Logan Struble Jayden Subban PK Suter Ryan Svozil Stanislav Theodore Shea Thompson Jack Thompson Lassi Timmins Conor Toews Devon Trouba Jacob Tuomisto Antti Wallinder William Weber Shea Weegar Mackenzie Werenski Zach Whitecloud Zach Wilde Bode Yandle Keith York Cam Zamula Egor Zboril Jakub Zellweger Olen
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x75-productions · 3 years
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NHL Stars of the Week - Lindholm Heats Up for Top Honors
NHL Stars of the Week - Lindholm Heats Up for Top Honors Elias Lindholm of the #Flames would heat up the #NHL to take First Star honors. Aaron Ekblad (#TimeToHunt) and Jake Oettinger (#TexasHockey) would round out the 3 Stars. #NHLStats
Today the National Hockey League announced their Three Stars of the Week for the week of February 14th through 20th. First Star – Elias Lindholm (C – CAL) Lindholm would pace the league with four goals and four assists for eight points in three games played for the Calgary Flames. To open up the week Lindholm would record a goal and two assists in a 6-2 victory over Columbus on Feb. 15th, and…
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axiomsofice · 4 years
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NHL 2021 Prediction: West
1. Colorado: Tampa Bay West. Stacked everywhere. Goalie is the biggest question mark but Grubauer is solid and Francouz can steal the job. In a condensed schedule rotating both will be strong, and might be a bigger problem in the post season. Remember, even a stacked Tampa took a decade of being a top tier team talent wise before they won the Cup, but there’s no reason to expect they won’t run away with the 1 seed. 
2. Vegas: Maybe Centre is an issue, but honestly Stephenson is effective in their system, and Glass could easily be ready for a role in between Stone and Pacioretty. Along with a slighty upgraded D corps thanks to the incoming Pietrangelo (keeping Schmidt would’ve been nice) and a top level tandem in net with Lehner and Fleury that should really pay off in the tight schedule.
3. St. Louis: The questions in net are really the only thing keeping the Blues behind the Golden Knights. Who knows how Binnington will do, let alone expected backup Ville Husso. Ultimately the rest of this team is quite strong, despite the aforementioned departure of Pietrangelo and a long term injury to Tarasenko, there’s enough to offset these losses. Hoffman and Krug are a big part of that, but progress for Thomas or Kyrou, or heck even some more icetime for Dunn could also propel them. A crash course for a playoff series between them and Vegas is very spicy, but at least in the regular season I’m giving the edge to Vegas.
4. Minnesota: After a pretty clear top 3, the West Division’s final playoff spot is tough to decide, but the Wild are the fourth best team in my opinion. They have the one of the strongest defensive team, and well as the best defence corps of the league. Kahkonen and Talbot will have a good chance to excel behind the stingy group. The emergence of Fiala as a dynamic offensive threat, as well as the signing as Kaprizov give a new flair that is much needed. Sure, the centre position leaves a lot to be desired, although Bonino and Eriksson-Ek are solid and Bjugstad is an interesting bet, but thats all that’s really holding this team back from the upper teir of the league. Luckily they have a lot of interesting prospects coming, from Rossi to Beckman, and from Khovanov, to Khusnutdinov.
5. Arizona: Another strong defensive team, I have the the Coyotes just behind the Wild. I think their defence is not quite as good as Minnesota’s, and their forwards have a bit less of an offensive threat. They need Hayton to step up into a very effective top 6 role to take them to the next level and maybe Jan Jenik as well. Given the off ice situation it wouldn’t be surprising to see more players shipped out for prospects and draft picks. 
6. Anaheim: The Ducks could be in line for a quick turn around. Gibson is one of the best goalies in the league, despite how many people want to forget he exists. There’s definitely young players that can step up, from Drysdale and Zegras, to Steel and Comtois, and if a few can have a big impact the Ducks have enough to challenge for a playoff spot. There’s enough there with Lindholm, Getzlaf, Henrique, Rackell, and Silferberg to do some damage. 
7. Los Angeles: The Kings are loaded with prospects, and it’s exciting to imagine how they will all fit together. Turcotte and Byfield might find their way onto the roster this year, but the centre ice position is crowded considering Kopitar, Vilardi, Lizotte, and Andersson are present. This almost insures players like Kupari and Thomas will only have a shot on the wing. The biggest organizational hole is on the blueline. Doughty needs to bounce back, and maybe he will on a more competitive team. Considering he is supposed to be their top option, there’s probably still too many maybes on this roster to expect the group to be strong, although Walker, Roy, and Mikey Anderson are options and Bjornfot looks promising. Cal Peterson looks good and the tandem of he and Quick shouldn’t weigh down the team too much.
8. San Jose: Another tough year is imminent for the Sharks, hopefully they hold on to their 1st round pick this time. They do have some solid forwards in the quartet of Hertl, Couture, Meier, and Kane. Donato and Lebanc are decent options alongside, but there’s not too much outside of this. Karlson and Burns are really good and the defence should be alright, but the true shortcomings of this team is in net. Jones hasn’t been good in a few years, and Dubnyk struggled behind the Wild, so it’s tough to see how this will go well. Goalies are voodoo, some would say, so it’s not impossible they turn it around, but they really deserve this 8th place ranking. 
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thrashermaxey · 5 years
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Ramblings: Injury Updates; Larkin; Doughty; Aho; Ekblad – April 19
  As when all teams get eliminated from playoffs, we find out about all the injuries players were going through. Pittsburgh’s locker clean out brought us that as Jared McCann told us he was playing through a separated shoulder. Also, Brian Dumoulin was playing through a torn posterior cruciate ligament (PCL) in his knee.
When we have more information on the injuries, it will be passed along.
We also got more rumours that Evgeni Malkin will be traded, which seems to be almost a rite of passage whenever the Penguins don’t win the Cup. That always overlooks the fact that even if the Penguins wanted to trade Malkin, he has a no-move clause. Honestly, these types of rumours exhaust me because there is never is a kernel of truth and people are just looking for clicks. I guess that’s just the online world we live in now.
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Tampa Bay also told us that Victor Hedman was not medically cleared for Games 3 and 4 after being cleared earlier in the series. It’s pretty obvious Hedman was nowhere near himself for the playoff series. GM Julien Brisebois also said there will be changes, but as I stated in my Ramblings yesterday, it’s just a reality of their cap situation rather than blowing up the roster.
Again, this roster is loaded top to bottom. It seems Brisebois understands that making significant changes would not be in the team’s best interest. It’s nice to see him take a measured approach.
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Alex Killorn had a slight tear in his left knee’s MCL but will not require surgery.
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Andrei Svechnikov went through a one-hour skate on his own on Thursday, wearing a full cage while doing so. I always worry about players returning so quickly after an injury such as his but it still warms the heart to see him on the ice. He did not suit up for Thursday night’s game, obviously, but it doesn’t seem as if returning before the end of the series is completely out of the question.
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Boston’s bottom-6 has been getting throttled most of their series against Toronto but there may be reinforcements coming as Sean Kuraly is a game-time decision for Game 5. He’s been out with a broken hand for nearly a month now but he probably can’t do much worse than most of Boston’s bottom two lines have performed thus far these playoffs.
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Here are your 2019 Lady Byng finalists:
  Your 2019 Byng Finalists: Barkov (FLA), Monahan (CAL) & O’Reilly (STL)
— Elliotte Friedman (@FriedgeHNIC) April 18, 2019
  I have no particular feelings about this award in any sense.
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Carolina tied their series with Washington 2-2 thanks to a 2-1 win on Thursday night. Warren Foegele scored his third goal in two games just seconds into the game, with Teuvo Teravainen and Alex Ovechkin trading goals in the second period.
Petr Mrazek saved 30 of 31 shots in an excellent effort in net.
The story coming out of the contest was a hit by Foegele on TJ Oshie late in the third period that resulted in an injury to Oshie and penalty to Foegele. This was the play:
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="nl" dir="ltr">TJ Oshie is hurt <a href="https://t.co/YIK2JjeICQ">pic.twitter.com/YIK2JjeICQ</a></p>— Pete Blackburn (@PeteBlackburn) <a href="https://twitter.com/PeteBlackburn/status/1119048747403685888?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">April 19, 2019</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
I’m wondering if Foegele doesn’t hear from the Department of Player Safety on that one. It’s a pretty dangerous hit. Todd Reirden doesn't think Oshie will be back anytime soon. 
Jordan Staal’s line did a pretty good job at limiting Ovechkin at five-on-five, holding the winger to one shot. Ovechkin’s goal was a power play tally from his usual spot.
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Update on the late games in the morning.  
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Those who read my Ramblings know I focus as much of my work producing evidence-based analysis as I possibly can. That evidence informs my opinions, and like everyone, these opinions can often be wrong. Such is the nature of predicting the future.
But with better tools, we can hopefully make better decisions and more informed opinions.
There was a website re-launched recently called Puck IQ and without diving into everything the site offers – just go visit and fidget around, it’s the best way to learn – one interesting aspect is that it has the ability to break down ice time by quality of competition (you can read the methodology for breaking down competition here). Now, I firmly believe that a player’s line mates are more important than who a player faces, but it’s also interesting to see which players are most often tasked with the best of the opposition.
One name that stood out: Dylan Larkin. Among all forwards in the NHL, he faced the opponent’s top competition more often than all but four forwards: Aleksander Barkov, John Tavares, Mitch Marner, and Sean Couturier. As a percentage of ice time, he was just outside the top-10. Larkin faced elite competition in over 575 minutes of his even strength ice time  while no other Detroit forward cracked 440 minutes. Larkin, as many would have assumed, was quite often tasked with shutting down the top competition from their opponent.
The importance of this isn’t that Larkin faced elite competition so often; we kind of figured that. It’s that he absolutely crushed that role: by general shot share, Larkin’s percentage was situated between Brad Marchand and Sean Couturier. By shot share relative to his teammates when they faced elite competition, Larkin was second in the league behind only Ryan Johansen. That may speak more to the quality (or lack thereof) of Detroit’s depth, but the fact that his raw shot share was still close to someone like Marchand, who plays for a team that doesn’t have the same lack of depth, speaks to just how good of a season Larkin had.
With Detroit’s rebuild starting to come into focus, the team is starting to build itself up around Larkin. In the fantasy game, Larkin’s across-the-board production is proving very valuable and that should only improve as the team keeps improving. All the same, Larkin had a spectacular year and defensive improvements were a big part. That aspect of his game will only get better, and we are watching a player develop into a superstar in real time. It’s fun to watch.
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Just as a small side: Sebastian Aho absolutely crushed his minutes against elite competition in 2018-19. My assumption before the season was that Jordan Staal would take all those minutes but because of significant time missed due to injury, that often fell on Aho’s shoulders and he was fantastic. That should allay any concerns the coaching staff or fans had about Aho and how he’d fare in a role where he was counted on to be The Guy. He’s another superstar in the making.
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When looking at the defencemen on Puck IQ sorted by top competition, I couldn’t help but see that it was Aaron Ekblad’s name at the top of the list for most ice time vs. elite opposition. Not only was it the most ice time overall, it was the highest share of ice time as well, just ahead of Zdeno Chara and Nate Schmidt. And not only was he most often used against the best the opponent had to offer, he crushed the role, as his shot share relative to his teammates was +3.7 percent. For a frame of reference, Hampus Lindholm, widely considered one of the best and most underappreciated defensive defencemen for years, was at +4 percent, while Kris Letang was a +3 percent. Now, Ekblad’s offensive generation suffered in this role but he was excellent defensively.
It makes me wonder about Ekblad’s future as a fantasy asset. He is undoubtedly going to be used in this role moving forward and at the least, that should lead to a lot of ice time. He reminds me of a young Drew Doughty in that sense (not their actual skill, just their age and role). But unlike Doughty, with Keith Yandle signed for four more years, does Ekblad ever take over the top power-play role? He’s averaged fewer than 10 PPPs over the last four seasons because of how much Yandle has cut into that production time. It’s very possible we see Ekblad put up very good multi-cat numbers because of his role and ice time, but he never puts up great point totals because of that same role.
At this point, Ekblad is established as a ~10-goal, ~40-point defenceman with solid peripherals. Maybe that’s the most we can expect from him for the next few years. That’s just fine, by the way, we just need to be honest about expectations.
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Speaking of Doughty, the metrics from Puck IQ don’t paint a very flattering picture of his 2018-19 season, and that’s just when compared to his teammates when they were put in similar roles. Was it his defence partner? That’s very possible, considering how much better Doughty has fared over the last two years when not playing with Derek Forbort. Was it the coaching staff and their systems? It may be, and we’ll have a better idea of this now that Todd McLellan is behind the bench. Was it just an off year? I don’t want to dismiss that, either.
I’m pretty comfortable saying that Doughty going from playing with Jake Muzzin to playing with Forbort had a massive impact on his performance. But does he have a better partner next year? We’ll see.
from All About Sports https://dobberhockey.com/hockey-rambling/ramblings-injury-updates-larkin-doughty-aho-ekblad-april-19/
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pabo-reactions · 6 years
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GAMEDAY: Maple Leafs at Los Angeles Kings
New Post has been published on https://nhlrumormill.com/gameday-maple-leafs-at-los-angeles-kings-2/
GAMEDAY: Maple Leafs at Los Angeles Kings
10:30 P.M. Staples Center
TV: ROGERS SPORTSNET ONTARIO,  RADIO: SPORTSNET 590 THE FAN
  THE BIG MATCHUP
Kasperi Kapanen vs. Anze Kopitar
Kapanen opened and closed the scoring for the Leafs a month ago when the sluggish-looking Kings were beaten 4-1 at SBA. That’s when Kapanen was still playing with a healthy Auston Matthews, but his speed should still cause the Kings fits. Kopitar, the Selke Trophy winner, will likely see time against Kapanen’s centre Nazem Kadri and John Tavares.
  KEYS TO THE GAME
Discord in the Kingdom
Toronto can take advantage of a last-place team still finding its way after firing coach John Stevens and replacing him with Willie Desjardins. L.A. is ending a seven-game home stand in which it hoped to kick-start things under the new bench boss, but has scored just five goals in its past three games. The Leafs haven’t won here in their past four tries.
2. No soup for you
First Jonathan Quick was hurt, now Jack Campbell — with a .923 save percentage — will be out four-to-six weeks with a knee injury. Little-used veteran Peter Budaj is in the spotlight, while Cal Petersen, a free agent from Notre Dame, has been called up from the farm. Meanwhile, former Anaheim Duck Frederik Andersen improved his record against the Kings to 7-1-0-2 with last month’s win.
3. First things first
A heavy first-period shot barrage in Boston to open this road trip did not result in a goal, and the resulting frustration seeped into the Leafs locker room the rest of the night. An early goal — Kapanen leads the team with three in the first frame this year — would help.
4. Don’t doubt Doughty
Defenceman Drew Doughty came into the October meeting in Toronto with all kinds of publicity as the would-be Leaf who elected to stay in L.A. — then had what he called a miserable evening. He’s dedicating himself to a better showing on Tuesday, no matter what the rest of the Kings do.
5. Circle the wagons
Desjardins talked about sacrificing the Kings’ reliable defence for offence after the 1-0 loss to Calgary, but had to backtrack on Monday as he expects Toronto to come hard after Budaj.
LEAFS GAME DAY LINES
LW C RW
Zach Hyman John Tavares Mitch Marner
Patrick Marleau Nazem Kadri Kasperi Kapanen
Andreas Johnsson Par Lindholm Connor Brown
Tyler Ennis Frederick Gauthier Josh Leivo
DEFENCE PAIRINGS
Morgan Rielly Ron Hainsey
Jake Gardiner Nikita Zaitsev
Travis Dermott I. Ozhiganov/M. Marincin
GOALIES
Frederik Andersen
Garret Sparks
SICK BAY
C Auston Matthews (shoulder)
KINGS GAMEDAY LINES
LW C RW
Alex Iafallo Anze Kopitar Dustin Brown
Ilya Kovalchuk Jeff Carter Tyler Toffoli
Tanner Pearson Adrian Kempe Michael Amadio
Kyle Clifford Nate Thompson Trevor Lewis
DEFENCE PAIRINGS
Dion Phaneuf Drew Doughty
Jake Muzzin Alec Martinez
Derek Forbort Oscar Fantenberg
GOALIES
Peter Budaj
Cal Petersen
SICK BAY
G Jonathan Quick (lower body)
G Jack Campbell (knee)
C Gabriel Vilardi (back)
RW Jonny Brodzinski (shoulder)
SPECIAL TEAMS
POWER PLAY
Toronto 25.5% (6th)
Los Angeles 14.8%  (26th)
PENALTY KILLING
Toronto 82.0% (11th)
Los Angeles 82.2% (10th)
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bettercallsaulquotes · 10 years
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Cal Lindholm: Nice boat. Jimmy McGill: Yeah, discreet, like a stripper pole in a mosque.
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