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Buffalo Sabres at Carolina Hurricanes preview: Battle for the basement

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Quite possibly the two worst teams in the league face off tonight on national television. The battle for the basement begins tonight!

Game #4

Buffalo Sabres (0-3-0) at

Puck Drop: 7:30 pm EST | PNC Arena | Raleigh, NC
TV: NBCSN | Radio: WGR 550
SB Nation Anaheim Hurricanes Blog: Canes Country

Three Questions

1. How will the defensive pairs look tonight?

The Sabres defense has been mostly awful - Tyler Myers and Josh Gorges notwithstanding - and Ted Nolan will likely be shuffling things around tonight. Andrej Meszaros, Andre Benoit, and Mike Weber are all candidates to take a seat for Tyson Strachan or Nikita Zadorov.

2. Will anyone other than Tyler Ennis or Zemgus Girgensons score?

Through three games the Sabres have just four goals, and all from two of their top forwards. Matt Moulson, Drew Stafford, Brian Gionta, and the rest of the team need to step up to give Buffalo a chance to win, because so far they haven't proven they can stop anyone for more than two periods.

3. Who will take the early lead in the battle for the basement?

Whether you're behind the tank or not, you have to admit that the Sabres have looked positively awful so far this season. Carolina won't be any better this year, so the games between these two bottom-dwellers will be important in determining the 30th place team this year - the team which guarantees itself one of the top two draft picks next year.


Game Day: Hurricanes vs. Sabres 10-14-14

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For the first time in 234 games the Hurricanes will be without a Staal in the lineup.

Carolina Hurricanes vs Buffalo Sabres
October 14, 2014 - 7:30 pm ET
PNC Arena - Raleigh, NC
TV - NBC Sports
Radio - 99.9 FM The Fan
SB Nation Rival Blog - Die By The Blade

Fancy Stats


HurricanesSabres
Record0-2-00-3-0
Points00
Division Rank8th Metro8th Atlantic
Conference Rank15th EC16th EC
StreakLost 2Lost 3



Power Play %44.4%0.0%
Penalty Kill %50.0%78.6%
Goals/Game3.001.33
Goals Against/Game4.504.67
Shots/Game2419
Shots Against/Game28.543.7
ES Goals For %28.6%25.0%
ES Corsi For %44.5%33.7%
PIM/Game17.512.3



GoaltenderWardEnroth
Record0-1-00-1-0
ES Save Percentage.857.918
GAA5.084.50



Goaltender KhudobinNeuvirth
Record0-1-00-2-0
ES Save Percentage.917.882
GAA4.145.00

Game Notes

  • The good news is it's NOT a concussion, and Eric Staal's upper body concern is officially listed as day-to-day. But it's not often the team goes without seeing its captain on the ice. Staal has only missed 17 games through ten seasons, and with brother Jordan not having missed a game in his first two seasons with the team, tonight marks the first time since February 26, 2011 that there hasn't been a Staal in the Hurricanes line-up.
  • The other good news is that Patrick Dwyer, who left Saturday's game with a lower body injury, is also listed as day-to-day and should not have to miss many days of game action.
  • Perhaps the best news is that Jeff Skinner skated on his own yesterday and is scheduled to skate with the team today, indicating an optimism that his concussion recovery is proceeding smoothly, perhaps joining the team for the road trip to New York for Thursday's game.
  • Now for the bad news, an injury-depleted roster that is so threadbare that even after a Zach Boychuk call-up there currently aren't enough forwards to make up four lines. Brett Bellemore skated as a fill-in yesterday in practice, and unless there are roster changes today, the Canes will skate seven defensemen and double-shift a forward. Read 'em and weep as you glance at the line-up below, especially down the middle.
  • For the downright ugly news, the 0-2-0 Canes and 0-3-0 Buffalo Sabres, the NHL's 29th and 30th ranked teams, will face off tonight on national television. The Sabres are coming off an embarrassing 5-1 matinee loss yesterday to the Anaheim Ducks, where they were out-shot 44-12. Per head coach Ted Nolan, "It was like an NHL team playing against a pee wee team." That ought to make the Sabres players good and angry headed into Raleigh today. Meanwhile, Canes coach Bill Peters says his squad has been working hard but hasn't been working smart.
  • Line-ups are as the Canes practiced yesterday and as the Sabres played yesterday so neither is confirmed for tonight (including starting goaltenders; Ward practiced in the starter crease yesterday and Enroth is an assumption with the back-to-back). As the day progresses we'll update as new information is known.

Projected Line-ups

Hurricanes (from yesterday's practice)

Jiri Tlusty - Victor Rask - Elias Lindholm
Nathan Gerbe - Riley Nash - Alexander Semin
Brad Malone - Jay McClement - Patrick Brown
Chris Terry - Zach Boychuk - Brett Bellemore (fill-in)

Andrej Sekera - Justin Faulk
Tim Gleason - John-Michael Liles
Jay Harrison - Ryan Murphy
Ron Hainsey

Cam Ward

Injuries and Scratches: Jordan Staal (IR broken fibula), Jeff Skinner (IR concussion), Eric Staal (DTD upper body), Patrick Dwyer (DTD lower body)

Sabres (from yesterday's game)


Injuries and Scratches: Tyson Strachan, Nikita Zadorov, Marcus Foligno (DTD), Mark Pysyk (IR), Jake McCabe (IR)

Note the later start time with the national (woo hoo!) television coverage. We'll have the open game thread ready to roll by 7:00 pm. If you're headed to PNC Arena tonight, pick up a handy-dandy schedule sticker set. See you there.

Andrej Sekera injured after crashing into boards

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If it weren't for bad luck the Carolina Hurricanes would have no luck right now. At least as it relates to injuries.

Already playing without two of their best forwards, Jordan Staal and Jeff Skinner, they lost one of their best defenseman, Andrej Sekera, on Tuesday night after he had to be helped off the ice after losing his balance and flying into the end boards.

Sekera was trying to catch up back up to the play as Buffalo raced in on a two-on-one and appeared to trip over the pad of goalie Cam Ward.

Making matters even worse for Carolina, Marcus Foligno scored on the play to give the Sabres a 1-0 lead.

H/T Joe Ovies

Rangers vs. Islanders recap: Without Dan Boyle, more defensive missteps doom Rangers in loss

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The carrousel continued to find a replacement on the Rangers blue line, and so did the mistakes.

A confident Rick Nash scooped up a loose puck in the neutral zone, gliding through center ice with possession. As he hit the blue line, he dipped his shoulder, angling toward the Islanders crease with a defenseman planted firmly on his hip.

Nash descended in on Jaroslav Halak, and fired a shot on the backhand that made its way through Halak's equipment, and trickled in to give the Rangers a 1-0.

It was one of Halak's rare mistakes on the night, as the Rangers defense picked up where the new Islanders goalie left off, and continued to fumble through life without Dan Boyle.

Michael Kostka, the newest Blueshirt to get an audition on the the Rangers blue line, made too costly turnovers that shifted the tides, and the Islanders exploded for four goals in the third period to down the Rangers 6-3, as the Isles remained undefeated in their first three games.

Nash's goal, an unassisted tally, came just over six minutes into the first period to put the Rangers ahead 1-0. The Islanders would respond though after a Ryan McDonagh interference penalty, as offseason acquisition Johnny Boychuk continued his hot start, and knotted the score with his second goal of the season on the ensuing power play.

The teams would go into the intermission tied, and it was the Rangers who would strike first in the middle frame to retake the lead. After losing an offensive zone faceoff, Derick Brassard peeled out of the circle and met a clearing attempt up the boards. He worked the puck down low, and then drove to the net to find a feed from Chris Kreider that he popped over Halak's glove to put the Rangers ahead 2-1.

Enter Kostka.

It looked as if the Rangers would take their one goal lead into the third, but with just under five to go in the second period, Kostka thew a blind pass from behind the goal that led to a turnover. With the Rangers scrambling to get back, Nikolai Kulemin found a wide-open John Tavares in the slot who pumped a one-timer past Henrik Lundqvist to send the game into the final 20 minutes tied at two.

But Kostka was just getting started.

Less than a minute into the third period, Kostka, on a nearly identical play, again tried to go through the middle of the ice from behind his own goal. This time, he gave the puck right to Kyle Okposo, who snapped a shot past Lundqvist to give the Islanders their first lead of the night at 3-2.

And then the Rangers unraveled.

In a stretch reminiscent of the home-opener Sunday night against the Maple Leafs, the Rangers would allow three goals in the first 5:20 of the third period to put the game out of reach. Brock Nelson would get in on the scoring action 4:02 after Okposo's tally, as a failed Rangers clearing attempt ended with Nelson finding space in the slot and beating Ludnqvist to make it a 4-2 advantage for the Isles.

In a play rather indicative of the Rangers start to the season, Mikhail Grabovski capped that three-goal stretch for the Islanders when his cross-ice pass on a 2-on-1 deflected off Kevin Klein, and into the net as Lundqvist was gliding to the other side of his crease.

Nick Leddy would score the Islanders final goal of the night to make it a 6-2 game, as after another failed clearing attempt, Leddy fired a shot to goal from the point with Cory Conacher screening Lundqvist in front.

With 2:10 to play, Nash scored his second of the night off a nice pass from Anthony Duclair, a tally of little consequence. Nash though has six goals in the Rangers first four games, while the point was Duclair's third assist, and third point on the season.

Through the first 20 minutes of the game, play was about even, if not titled in the Rangers' favor. Halak, however, stood tall for the Islanders, keeping them in the game before that third period outburst. The former St. Louis Blues netminder stopped 40 shots in all, including a number of chances in close on three unsuccessful Rangers power play.

Another visible skater for the Blueshirts was Kevin Hayes, who despite not registering a point, looked very confident on the puck and skating with Carl Hagelin and Mats Zuccarello. Hayes came close to netting his first NHL goal when he drove in on goal in the third period, but dragged the puck just wide of the post.

The Rangers will be back in action this when they host the Carolina Hurricanes.

Sabres at Hurricanes recap: Sabres earn first win in shootout

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The Sabres now have a number other than 0 in the win column, thanks to an eight-round shootout win in Carolina.

It took four games and a contest against another injury-riddled bottom-dweller, but the Buffalo Sabres finally have their first win of the season, beating the Carolina Hurricanes 4-3 in the shootout.

The Sabres played their best game of the season, and while they still gave up a ton of shot attempts, they looked like the better team through the first 40 minutes. Marcus Foligno opened the scoring in the first period with a nice toe-drag snap shot past Cam Ward, and after 20 minutes the Sabres found themselves with a 1-0 lead and a 13-7 lead in shots. The second period saw early scoring from both teams courtesy of Riley Nash and Torrey Mitchell, and after 40 minutes, the Sabres held a rare 2-1 lead.

To no one's surprise, however, Buffalo couldn't hold the lead thanks to a panicked third period that saw the Hurricanes come back from a two-goal deficit in the final minutes. A second goal from Marcus Foligno wasn't enough to stave off tallies from Chris Terry and Zach Boychuk, and the game would eventually make its way to the shootout, where both teams would show incredible offensive ineptitude (seriously, we saw pucks roll off sticks, lazy snap shots, and Victor Rask even FORGOT THE PUCK) until Zemgus Girgensons won the game in Round 8 to give the Sabres their first victory of the season.

Tonight was a step in the right direction for the Sabres, as the effort was much better across the board. However, Carolina might be even worse than Buffalo, and were riddles with injuries to many key players, including Eric Staal, Andrej Sekera, and Jeff Skinner. Still, a win is a win, and despite the third period mini-meltdown, this game has to feel good for Ted Nolan and the boys in the locker room. How they respond on Friday against a much improved Florida team, on the other hand, will reveal more about the character and makeup of this year's squad.

Bask in the sunny glow of victory and enjoy the next few days, Sabres fans.

Three Questions

1. How will the defensive pairs look tonight?

The top pair remained the same (and had another strong game) but Mike Weber was with the newcomer Tyson Strachan, while Rasmus Ristolainen was paired with Andre Benoit. Andrej Meszaros was mercifully given the night off.

Benoit and Ristolainen were by far the team's worst possession pair, with approximately a -15 Corsi rating while they were on the ice. The much-maligned Mike Weber recorded six hits and three blocked shots, increasing his COMPETE rating by +4.5. Tyson Strachan looked competent (an improvement!) and recorded the only point among blueliners.

2. Will anyone other than Tyler Ennis or Zemgus Girgensons score?

Yes! Marcus Foligno scored twice, and Torrey Mitchell netted his first of the year to give the Sabres a season-high three goals. It should also be noted that Brian Gionta registered five shots and an assist, but Girgensons made his presence known with the shootout winner in Round 8.

3. Who will take the early lead in the battle for the basement?

The Hurricanes are currently in 15th place in the East, but the Sabres let the Canes steal a point tonight by letting them tie the game up late in the third period.

Comment of the Game

Whoawhoawhoa.

Not really. They both just look bad.

It’s like watching two apes try to put together Ikea furniture. It might happen, but at the end everything will be covered in feces.

An appropriate metaphor for the season if I ever heard one.

Highlights

Sabres 4, Hurricanes 3 - SO

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Canes come from behind in third period but come up short in shootout

The Carolina Hurricanes scored two goals in the final 10 minutes of the game to tie things up, but ended up falling short in a long shootout as they lost to the Buffalo Sabres, 4-3 in front of 14,930 on Tuesday night at the PNC Arena.

The Canes, (0-2-1), are still looking for their first win of the season.

The Sabres were a tired team in the third period and had just played the afternoon before.  They only got three shots on goal in the period and none in the final 17 minutes of regulation.

The Hurricanes fell behind 1-0 in the first period on a two-on-one break by Chris Stewart and Marcus FolignoAndrej Sekera was injured on the play when he came rushing back on defense and tripped on Cam Ward's pads, while then crashing heavily into the boards.

Bill Peters said after the game that the x-rays were negative, but he had no other news.

Riley Nash tied the score with a shot in close just 30 seconds into the second period.  Jay Harrison got the assist.

Unfortunately for Carolina, the Sabres would score again just 1:23 later to regain the lead when the home team failed to clear the puck out of their zone.  Coach Peters said after the game that might be one goal he would like to have back.

It looked like Cam Ward misjudged the angle and was beaten far post on a shot by Torrey Mitchell.

The visitors made it 3-1 early in the third on another goal by Foligno and it looked like the Sabres might coast to their first win of the season, but the home team did not give up.

Chris Terry made it 3-2 off a nice feed by Zach Boychuk, then Terry returned the favor and fed his former Checkers linemate with a pass.  Boychuk made a nice quick shot that bounced in and out of the net so quickly the refs didn't see it.

But after a break in the action, the replay showed that it was an obvious goal and the score was tied.

After a scoreless overtime, each team sent eight shooters to the ice before a winner was determined in the shootout.

Matt Moulson scored the first goal on a beauty of a move for the Sabres.  Terry tied it when he got the puck just under Jhonas Enroth.

Nathan Gerbe hit the post on his attempt but that's as close as a Hurricane got to winning it.

Finally, Zemgus Girgensons finished it with a nice backhand move to give the Sabres their first win of the season.

The Canes will practice tomorrow then fly to New York to face the Rangers on Thursday night.

Game Notes:

  • The Canes did well in the faceoff circle and won 68% of the game's faceoffs.  Once again Victor Rask led the way by winning 76%.  Nash was 68% and McClement was 63%.
  • Carolina had trouble getting the puck to the net in this one and had 17 shots blocked and missed the net 28 times.  The Sabres only missed the net five times.  The Canes blocked 10. 
  • Jay Harrison and Riley Nash each had a team high three shots on goal.  Alexander Semin had zero shots on goal but had a total of seven either blocked or missed. 
  • Justin Faulk led the way with 24:03 of ice time.  Elias Lindholm led forwards with 22:33.
  • The shootout shooters for Carolina were:  Semin, Terry, Gerbe, McClement, Rask, Boychuk, Lindholm, and Tlusty.








Buffalo Sabres at Carolina Hurricanes Complete Coverage: Game #4

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The Sabres earned their first win against a dismal Carolina team in a game between the two worst teams in the league.

Game #4

Buffalo Sabres (0-3-0) at

Puck Drop: 7:30 pm EST | PNC Arena | Raleigh, NC
TV: NBCSN | Radio: WGR 550
SB Nation Anaheim Hurricanes Blog: Canes Country

Three Questions

1. How will the defensive pairs look tonight?

The Sabres defense has been mostly awful - Tyler Myers and Josh Gorges notwithstanding - and Ted Nolan will likely be shuffling things around tonight. Andrej Meszaros, Andre Benoit, and Mike Weber are all candidates to take a seat for Tyson Strachan or Nikita Zadorov.

2. Will anyone other than Tyler Ennis or Zemgus Girgensons score?

Through three games the Sabres have just four goals, and all from two of their top forwards. Matt Moulson, Drew Stafford, Brian Gionta, and the rest of the team need to step up to give Buffalo a chance to win, because so far they haven't proven they can stop anyone for more than two periods.

3. Who will take the early lead in the battle for the basement?

Whether you're behind the tank or not, you have to admit that the Sabres have looked positively awful so far this season. Carolina won't be any better this year, so the games between these two bottom-dwellers will be important in determining the 30th place team this year - the team which guarantees itself one of the top two draft picks next year.

Carolina Hurricanes recall Brody Sutter, place Patrick Dwyer on IR

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It's the day before a game, so that means the Canes are making a call to Charlotte.

Another day, another call for reinforcements for the Carolina Hurricanes. The team on Wednesday confirmed Zach Boychuk's since-deleted Twitter prophecy and recalled Brody Sutter from the Charlotte Checkers, placing Patrick Dwyer on injured reserve retroactive to last Saturday, when he suffered a lower-body injury in the game against the Islanders.

Brody Sutter, if he suits up tomorrow night when the Canes start a five-game road trip at Madison Square Garden against the Rangers, would become the third Sutter to play for the Hurricanes, following in the footsteps of cousins Brandon and Brett. He would also be the third of something else: the third player to make his NHL debut for the Hurricanes this season, following Victor Rask and Patrick Brown.

Dwyer is, appropriately given the Rule of Threes, the third player currently taking up residence on the Canes' injured reserve list. Coach Bill Peters, however, said that Jeff Skinner, one of the Canes' other injured-reserve occupants, will be evaluated tomorrow with the possibility of drawing into the lineup. Andrej Sekera, who came out of a nasty collision with the boards last night with nothing worse than soreness and bruising, may also play, but Dwyer and Eric Staal will remain on the sidelines to start the road trip.

The release from the team is below.

HURRICANES RECALL BRODY SUTTER FROM CHARLOTTE
Patrick Dwyer placed on injured reserve

Ron Francis, Executive Vice President and General Manager of the National Hockey League’s Carolina Hurricanes, today announced that the team has recalled center Brody Sutter from the Charlotte Checkers of the American Hockey League (AHL). It was also announced today that forward Patrick Dwyer has been placed on injured reserve, retroactive to Oct. 11.

Sutter, 23, is in his third full professional season and has played in all three of Charlotte’s games thus far this year. The Viking, Alb., native played in three of Carolina’s seven exhibition games during training camp before being assigned to Charlotte on Oct. 2. Sutter (6’5", 203 lbs.) notched eight goals and earned 20 assists (28 points) in 69 games with the Checkers in 2013-14, and has scored 12 goals and earned 22 assists in 99 career AHL games with Charlotte since turning professional. The Hurricanes drafted Sutter in the seventh round, 193rd overall, of the 2011 NHL Entry Draft. He is the cousin of former Hurricanes forwards Brandon Sutter and Brett Sutter.


Sabres at Hurricanes recap: Sabres earn first win in shootout

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The Sabres now have a number other than 0 in the win column, thanks to an eight-round shootout win in Carolina.

It took four games and a contest against another injury-riddled bottom-dweller, but the Buffalo Sabres finally have their first win of the season, beating the Carolina Hurricanes 4-3 in the shootout.

The Sabres played their best game of the season, and while they still gave up a ton of shot attempts, they looked like the better team through the first 40 minutes. Marcus Foligno opened the scoring in the first period with a nice toe-drag snap shot past Cam Ward, and after 20 minutes the Sabres found themselves with a 1-0 lead and a 13-7 lead in shots. The second period saw early scoring from both teams courtesy of Riley Nash and Torrey Mitchell, and after 40 minutes, the Sabres held a rare 2-1 lead.

To no one's surprise, however, Buffalo couldn't hold the lead thanks to a panicked third period that saw the Hurricanes come back from a two-goal deficit in the final minutes. A second goal from Marcus Foligno wasn't enough to stave off tallies from Chris Terry and Zach Boychuk, and the game would eventually make its way to the shootout, where both teams would show incredible offensive ineptitude (seriously, we saw pucks roll off sticks, lazy snap shots, and Victor Rask even FORGOT THE PUCK) until Zemgus Girgensons won the game in Round 8 to give the Sabres their first victory of the season.

Tonight was a step in the right direction for the Sabres, as the effort was much better across the board. However, Carolina might be even worse than Buffalo, and were riddles with injuries to many key players, including Eric Staal, Andrej Sekera, and Jeff Skinner. Still, a win is a win, and despite the third period mini-meltdown, this game has to feel good for Ted Nolan and the boys in the locker room. How they respond on Friday against a much improved Florida team, on the other hand, will reveal more about the character and makeup of this year's squad.

Bask in the sunny glow of victory and enjoy the next few days, Sabres fans.

Three Questions

1. How will the defensive pairs look tonight?

The top pair remained the same (and had another strong game) but Mike Weber was with the newcomer Tyson Strachan, while Rasmus Ristolainen was paired with Andre Benoit. Andrej Meszaros was mercifully given the night off.

Benoit and Ristolainen were by far the team's worst possession pair, with approximately a -15 Corsi rating while they were on the ice. The much-maligned Mike Weber recorded six hits and three blocked shots, increasing his COMPETE rating by +4.5. Tyson Strachan looked competent (an improvement!) and recorded the only point among blueliners.

2. Will anyone other than Tyler Ennis or Zemgus Girgensons score?

Yes! Marcus Foligno scored twice, and Torrey Mitchell netted his first of the year to give the Sabres a season-high three goals. It should also be noted that Brian Gionta registered five shots and an assist, but Girgensons made his presence known with the shootout winner in Round 8.

3. Who will take the early lead in the battle for the basement?

The Hurricanes are currently in 15th place in the East, but the Sabres let the Canes steal a point tonight by letting them tie the game up late in the third period.

Comment of the Game

Whoawhoawhoa.

Not really. They both just look bad.

It’s like watching two apes try to put together Ikea furniture. It might happen, but at the end everything will be covered in feces.

An appropriate metaphor for the season if I ever heard one.

Highlights

Sabres 4, Hurricanes 3 - SO

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Canes come from behind in third period but come up short in shootout

The Carolina Hurricanes scored two goals in the final 10 minutes of the game to tie things up, but ended up falling short in a long shootout as they lost to the Buffalo Sabres, 4-3 in front of 14,930 on Tuesday night at the PNC Arena.

The Canes, (0-2-1), are still looking for their first win of the season.

The Sabres were a tired team in the third period and had just played the afternoon before.  They only got three shots on goal in the period and none in the final 17 minutes of regulation.

The Hurricanes fell behind 1-0 in the first period on a two-on-one break by Chris Stewart and Marcus FolignoAndrej Sekera was injured on the play when he came rushing back on defense and tripped on Cam Ward's pads, while then crashing heavily into the boards.

Bill Peters said after the game that the x-rays were negative, but he had no other news.

Riley Nash tied the score with a shot in close just 30 seconds into the second period.  Jay Harrison got the assist.

Unfortunately for Carolina, the Sabres would score again just 1:23 later to regain the lead when the home team failed to clear the puck out of their zone.  Coach Peters said after the game that might be one goal he would like to have back.

It looked like Cam Ward misjudged the angle and was beaten far post on a shot by Torrey Mitchell.

The visitors made it 3-1 early in the third on another goal by Foligno and it looked like the Sabres might coast to their first win of the season, but the home team did not give up.

Chris Terry made it 3-2 off a nice feed by Zach Boychuk, then Terry returned the favor and fed his former Checkers linemate with a pass.  Boychuk made a nice quick shot that bounced in and out of the net so quickly the refs didn't see it.

But after a break in the action, the replay showed that it was an obvious goal and the score was tied.

After a scoreless overtime, each team sent eight shooters to the ice before a winner was determined in the shootout.

Matt Moulson scored the first goal on a beauty of a move for the Sabres.  Terry tied it when he got the puck just under Jhonas Enroth.

Nathan Gerbe hit the post on his attempt but that's as close as a Hurricane got to winning it.

Finally, Zemgus Girgensons finished it with a nice backhand move to give the Sabres their first win of the season.

The Canes will practice tomorrow then fly to New York to face the Rangers on Thursday night.

Game Notes:

  • The Canes did well in the faceoff circle and won 68% of the game's faceoffs.  Once again Victor Rask led the way by winning 76%.  Nash was 68% and McClement was 63%.
  • Carolina had trouble getting the puck to the net in this one and had 17 shots blocked and missed the net 28 times.  The Sabres only missed the net five times.  The Canes blocked 10. 
  • Jay Harrison and Riley Nash each had a team high three shots on goal.  Alexander Semin had zero shots on goal but had a total of seven either blocked or missed. 
  • Justin Faulk led the way with 24:03 of ice time.  Elias Lindholm led forwards with 22:33.
  • The shootout shooters for Carolina were:  Semin, Terry, Gerbe, McClement, Rask, Boychuk, Lindholm, and Tlusty.








Buffalo Sabres at Carolina Hurricanes Complete Coverage: Game #4

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The Sabres earned their first win against a dismal Carolina team in a game between the two worst teams in the league.

Game #4

Buffalo Sabres (0-3-0) at

Puck Drop: 7:30 pm EST | PNC Arena | Raleigh, NC
TV: NBCSN | Radio: WGR 550
SB Nation Anaheim Hurricanes Blog: Canes Country

Three Questions

1. How will the defensive pairs look tonight?

The Sabres defense has been mostly awful - Tyler Myers and Josh Gorges notwithstanding - and Ted Nolan will likely be shuffling things around tonight. Andrej Meszaros, Andre Benoit, and Mike Weber are all candidates to take a seat for Tyson Strachan or Nikita Zadorov.

2. Will anyone other than Tyler Ennis or Zemgus Girgensons score?

Through three games the Sabres have just four goals, and all from two of their top forwards. Matt Moulson, Drew Stafford, Brian Gionta, and the rest of the team need to step up to give Buffalo a chance to win, because so far they haven't proven they can stop anyone for more than two periods.

3. Who will take the early lead in the battle for the basement?

Whether you're behind the tank or not, you have to admit that the Sabres have looked positively awful so far this season. Carolina won't be any better this year, so the games between these two bottom-dwellers will be important in determining the 30th place team this year - the team which guarantees itself one of the top two draft picks next year.

Game Analysis: Sabres At Hurricanes

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Carolina earned their first point of the 2014-15 season by rallying from a two-goal deficit in the third period, but Buffalo came out on top in an eight-round shootout to get their first win of the year and send the Hurricanes to 0-2-1.

The Carolina Hurricanes earned their first point of the season by taking Buffalo to overtime Tuesday, but the Sabres came out on top in the shootout to keep the Canes winless three games into the season.

Three Observations

1. Carolina needed someone — anyone — to step up with so many important players out of the lineup. Enter Chris Terry and Zach Boychuk, who teamed up for two third-period goals to tie the game. Both players have had their ups and downs throughout their career: Boychuk is a first round pick who hasn't realized his potential, while Terry has worked his way through the ranks and made the team out of camp. Boychuk had a heart-to-heart with coach Bill Peters after he was reassigned to Charlotte, but when injuries resulted in his early season recall he seemed to seize his chance and make an impression on Carolina’s new bench boss. Terry also made his mark by scoring the Hurricanes’ lone goal in the shootout.

There may not be space for both in the Hurricanes lineup once the team gets healthy, but the familiarity — and past success — Terry and Boychuk have with each other give the Hurricanes some hope in their bottom six.

2. Not only was Andrej Sekera injured and did not return to Tuesday's game, but everything about the sequence that resulted in him being hurt went sour for Carolina. First, Sekera was seemingly slashed and tripped while dancing through the offensive zone by eventual Buffalo goal scorer Marcus Foligno. Next, Justin Faulk looked lost on the ensuing slow-developing 2-on-1, committing to neither the shot nor the pass. Then after the goal, Sekera — the only player hustling to get back into the play — barely clipped Cam Ward’s right pad and flew head-first into the boards. The only positive is X-rays on Sekera (no word on what was examined, but Sekera seemed to be favoring his shouder) were negative.

3. Speaking of Ward, it wasn't his best performance. Torrey Mitchell’s goal, the Sabres’ second of the night, should have been stopped, and Ward failed to make a save on Foligno's second marker when he couldn't find the puck through a Ryan Murphy screen. But Ward looked good in the shootout, allowing only two goals on eight attempts, and deserved a better fate in the skill competition.

Number To Know

3 — Shootout goals in three attempts for Terry in his career. Terry potted both of his attempts last season with the Hurricanes and was the only Carolina player of eight to score on Jhonas Enroth Tuesday night. This isn't new for Terry: he was one of the AHL’s top shootout specialists last year, converting four of six tries.

Plus

Riley Nash— Boychuk and Terry got most of the postgame praise for combining on the two third-period goals, but Nash was Carolina’s best overall player Tuesday. Nash logged 21:20 of ice time, had the Hurricanes’ first goal, was 13 of 19 on faceoffs, and contributed in all facets on a night when Carolina was desperately thin at center.

Minus

Alexander Semin— Here's where possession stats and the eye test collide. Look at the regular boxscore and you'll see that Semin came up all zeros: no points, no shots, no nothing. But the possession numbers — which, like every opponent of the Sabres this season, were wildly in Carolina’s favor — show Semin had a monster game: a plus-21 Corsi and plus-12 Fenwick. DId Semin tilt the ice in Carolina"s favor Tuesday? Undoubtedly — he's a player Buffalo had to fear because of what he's capable of on every shift, and he was arguably the only player in the Carolina lineup that needed that kind of attention (it's worth noting that Jiri Tlusty is playing great right now, too). But there's also no doubt that Semin didn't have his A game on a night when needed when virtually all of the Hurricanes’ top players didn't play or were hurt. For one night, at least, the fancy stats didn't tell close to the full story.

Storm Tracking: Hunker Down

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If the first 3 games of the season are any indication how the rest of the year will play out, it looks like we Caniacs will be in for a very long year. Based on injuries and results, things probably couldn't have gone much worse for the Canes, but the team does appear to be giving a full effort. With a depleted roster and a new coaching staff, things will take time. As long as we can see the team continue to progress as the season moves along, I think I will be satisfied. But no matter what, I suggest we all settle in for what looks to be a long season.

Welcome to Storm Tracking for the 2014/2015 season.  This recurring article will focus on weekly statistics for the team and individual players, both current and former Hurricanes.  My "week" will start on Wednesday and conclude with the last game on Tuesday night.  The information and structure of the article will be very similar to last season's articles, but I have made a few tweaks here and there.  Since ExtraSkater.com is no longer up and running, the new website I use for advanced stats is War-On-Ice.com (in case any of you are interested in going deeper into advanced stats).  If there is anything in particular that you would like me to see added to the article, please shoot me an email and I will look into it, but remember that compiling this information takes some time.  But on the stats, here are the stats for the week of 10/8/14 through 10/14/14.

Canes Weekly Stats

Player

GP

TO/G

G

A

P

+/-

PIM

S

Hits

BkS

GvA

Tka

FO%

Jiri Tlusty

3

20:12

3

1

4

E

0

8

2

1

1

1

100

Riley Nash

3

16:04

1

2

3

3

0

3

3

3

1

3

60.6

Chris Terry

3

10:09

2

1

3

3

2

3

2

0

1

0

66.7

Andrej Sekera

3

18:05

0

2

2

-2

0

2

1

5

0

3

Eric Staal

2

18:12

1

1

2

-2

0

3

0

0

0

0

46.3

Zach Boychuk

1

9:25

1

1

2

2

0

2

3

0

0

1

Alexander Semin

3

19:05

0

2

2

-2

2

6

2

1

1

3

100

Nathan Gerbe

3

17:09

1

0

1

-2

2

6

7

1

2

1

100

Elias Lindholm

3

18:17

0

1

1

-1

0

1

6

1

1

1

63.6

Jay McClement

3

16:32

0

1

1

-2

0

6

4

2

0

2

54.8

John-Michael Liles

3

18:39

0

1

1

-1

0

4

2

1

1

0

Justin Faulk

3

23:45

0

1

1

-2

0

5

6

5

0

0

Jay Harrison

3

17:44

0

1

1

-1

19

5

4

2

1

2

Tim Gleason

3

16:32

0

0

0

E

4

0

10

3

1

0

Ryan Murphy

2

21:20

0

0

0

1

0

6

0

2

2

1

Brad Malone

3

11:39

0

0

0

-3

4

3

12

0

2

3

Patrick Brown

3

11:04

0

0

0

-1

4

4

5

1

0

0

0

Patrick Dwyer

2

12:15

0

0

0

-1

0

1

0

1

0

0

Victor Rask

3

17:10

0

0

0

-2

2

3

3

0

0

1

59.0

Ron Hainsey

2

19:34

0

0

0

-2

0

2

2

5

0

1

Goalie

GP

GS

W

L

OTL

Shots

GA

Sv

Sv %

GAA

Ev Sv %

PP Sv %

Anton Khudobin

1

1

0

1

0

31

4

27

.871

4.11

.917

.667

Cam Ward

2

2

0

1

1

52

8

44

.846

3.88

.842

.833

Weekly Advanced Stats

The chart is arranged by the highest 5 on 5 Close Corsi For Percentage.

Here is a little key to some of my abbreviations. AS – All Situations, 5C – 5 on 5 Close, CF% - Corsi For Percentage, FF% - Fenwick For Percentage, SF% - Shots For Percentage, OZst% - Offensive Zone Start Percentage, NZst% - Neutral Zone Start Percentage and DZst% - Defensive Zone Start Percentage. If you would like more advanced statistics, this information was collected from www.war-on-ice.com.

Player

GP

ASCF%

ASFF%

ASSF%

5CCF%

5CFF%

5CSF%

OZst%

NZst%

DZst%

Harrison

3

55.1

54.5

40.4

66.7

64.0

57.1

27.5

35.3

37.3

Semin

3

67.0

65.8

59.1

62.2

57.7

50.0

46.3

33.3

20.4

Murphy

2

70.8

65.2

60.9

62.1

50.0

53.3

51.2

31.7

17.1

Tlusty

3

63.6

62.5

59.6

59.0

56.7

55.0

45.5

33.3

21.2

Liles

3

60.0

58.0

57.1

57.6

58.3

60.0

45.5

36.4

18.2

Boychuk

1

64.7

66.7

62.5

54.5

55.6

40.0

50.0

41.7

8.3

Nash

3

62.2

61.1

51.4

54.2

43.8

36.4

39.0

34.1

26.8

McClement

3

38.4

41.7

34.0

53.6

54.5

45.5

14.0

30.2

55.8

Hainsey

2

49.3

47.7

46.9

52.2

41.7

55.6

43.2

40.9

15.9

E. Staal

2

60.3

61.2

59.4

50.0

46.7

40.0

38.6

34.1

27.3

Gerbe

3

53.5

49.2

42.3

48.3

39.1

35.3

37.3

35.3

27.5

Rask

3

55.4

53.2

50.0

46.9

42.3

38.9

45.1

37.3

17.6

Terry

3

68.2

71.0

69.2

46.7

45.5

40.0

43.5

39.1

17.4

Lindholm

3

56.0

56.1

53.3

46.4

43.5

41.2

47.2

35.8

17.0

Gleason

3

34.8

36.7

23.1

46.2

47.8

31.3

28.2

25.6

46.2

Malone

3

37.9

40.8

32.4

44.0

45.0

27.3

20.0

32.0

48.0

Brown

3

47.3

47.2

33.3

41.9

42.9

30.0

36.4

27.3

36.4

Faulk

3

47.5

48.8

43.9

39.6

36.1

26.1

30.4

36.2

33.3

Dwyer

2

37.2

39.5

42.3

38.5

44.4

60.0

13.0

39.1

47.8

Sekera

3

49.5

50.7

48.9

35.3

37.0

20.0

27.1

31.3

41.7

Weekly Studs

Jiri Tlusty– I was not only impressed with Tlusty’s point production, but also by the way he played.  He played smart and played with effort.  With the team short on experienced talent, more will be asked of him and he’s perfectly capable of producing.  He led the team in goals, points and shots and ranked in the top 5 in all advanced stats categories that I posted.

Chris Terry– Terry didn’t get a tremendous amount of playing time, but he sure made the most of what he got.  His 2 goals were beautiful shots and his pass to Boychuk for the game tying goal against Buffalo was damn near perfect.  Terry obviously has a size disadvantage in the NHL, but the young man has some offense in him.  He’s now has 3 goals in 17 career shots and I really would like to see him get a little more PP time and see what he can do with it.

Riley Nash– When I think of Nash, I generally shake my head and wonder how this guy is even in the NHL.But each year he works on improving his game and the results speak for themselves.His 3 points are currently tied for 2nd on the team and his 60.6% faceoffs are a dramatic improvement over last season.Nash is even clocking in at over 62% in All Situations Corsi and over 54% in 5 on 5 Close Corsi.He might not be the prettiest girl at the dance, but he gets the job done.

Weekly Duds

Alexander Semin– If you go strictly by the stats, Semin doesn’t look like he was that bad.  But if you watched the games, you’ll know why Semin is a dud.  When the team needed him the most, Alex wasn’t even able to get a shot on goal against Buffalo, despite having multiple golden opportunities.  He also continued to do his magic with the puck, which led to him losing possession.  Overall it was just not a good start for Semin and we need him to be a difference maker.  At $7 million dollars a season, I think it is perfectly reasonable to ask for more.

Cam Ward/Anton Khudobin– This team needs their goaltenders to steal some saves for it and neither of these guys have really done that through the first 3 games.  Cam is sporting a 0.846 Sv % and Dobby isn’t much better at a 0.871 Sv %.  Combined the goaltending duo with the 2nd highest cap number in the NHL has a 0.855 Sv %.  That is 27th in the league (surprisingly, the worst Sv % is owned by the most expensive goaltender in the league)!  Yes, we all know this team has defensive issues, but there were still 3 to 5 goals that should not have been through these 3 games.

Andrej Sekera– I’ll probably hear it a little on this one, but I haven’t really liked the way Sekera has started the season.  He is no doubt our best defenseman and the team is undermanned, but a couple of times I have seen him trying to do too much.  This is a team game and he needs to get back to playing that way, the way he played last year.  There are times to take over, but don’t put your teammates in a bad position.  I also need to note that Sekera & Faulk’s 5 on 5 possession numbers are the worst on the team.  While they will see the opponent’s top line more often than not, numbers in the 20s & 30s are just not acceptable.

Weekly Team Stats

Goals Per Game

Goals Against Per Game

Ranking

Team

G/PG

Ranking

Team

GA/PG

1.

Pittsburgh

5.50

1.

Minnesota

0.00

2.

NY Islanders

5.00

T2.

Nashville

1.67

3.

New Jersey

4.33

T2.

Ottawa

1.67

T4.

Chicago

4.00

T2.

San Jose

1.67

T4.

Minnesota

4.00

5.

Tampa Bay

1.75

T4.

San Jose

4.00

T6.

Chicago

2.00

T4.

Vancouver

4.00

T6.

Detroit

2.00

8.

Anaheim

3.75

T6.

New Jersey

2.00

9.

Toronto

3.50

T6.

St. Louis

2.00

T13.

Carolina

3.00

T26.

Carolina

4.00

Shots Per Game

Shots Against Per Game

Ranking

Team

S/PG

Ranking

Team

SA/PG

1.

Minnesota

41.0

1.

Detroit

21.5

2.

Pittsburgh

40.0

2.

Nashville

22.0

3.

Vancouver

38.0

3.

Minnesota

23.0

4.

Chicago

36.5

4.

Boston

23.8

5.

Tampa Bay

35.0

5.

Tampa Bay

24.3

6.

Arizona

34.0

6.

St. Louis

24.5

7.

Edmonton

33.7

7.

Washington

25.3

8.

Philadelphia

33.3

8.

Florida

26.3

T9.

Columbus

33.0

9.

Arizona

26.5

29.

Carolina

24.3

T12.

Carolina

27.7

PowerPlay Percentage

Penalty Kill Percentage

Ranking

Team

PP %

Ranking

Team

PK %

1.

Pittsburgh

44.4%

T1.

Arizona

0.00%

2.

NY Islanders

41.7%

T1.

Columbus

0.00%

T3.

Carolina

33.3%

T1.

Detroit

0.00%

T3.

Edmonton

33.3%

T1.

Minnesota

0.00%

5.

Tampa Bay

31.6%

T1.

Winnipeg

0.00%

6.

Washington

30.8%

6.

Colorado

93.8%

7.

Vancouver

30.0%

7.

Tampa Bay

92.3%

T8.

Philadelphia

29.4%

8.

Washington

91.7%

T8.

Toronto

29.4%

T9.

Chicago

90.0%

10.

Arizona

28.6%

29.

Carolina

60.0%

Hits

Blocked Shots

Ranking

Team

Hits

Ranking

Team

BkS

1.

Los Angeles

131

T1.

Montreal

73

2.

Toronto

129

T1.

Philadelphia

73

3.

Anaheim

116

3.

Buffalo

71

4.

Philadelphia

114

4.

Anaheim

67

5.

Colorado

105

5.

Calgary

58

6.

Buffalo

99

6.

Toronto

57

T7.

Calgary

92

7.

San Jose

55

T7.

Tampa Bay

92

T8.

Colorado

54

T9.

Florida

90

T8.

Dallas

54

17.

Carolina

74

19.

Carolina

34

Giveaways

Takeaways

Ranking

Team

GvA

Ranking

Team

TkA

1.

St. Louis

4

1.

Toronto

36

2.

Minnesota

8

2.

Colorado

32

T3.

Arizona

13

3.

Tampa Bay

29

T3.

Columbus

13

4.

NY Rangers

28

T5.

Carolina

14

5.

Nashville

27

T5.

Florida

14

T6.

Carolina

23

T7.

Detroit

15

T6.

Dallas

23

T7.

Ottawa

15

T6.

Ottawa

23

T7.

Vancouver

15

T6.

Washington

23

10.

New Jersey

16

T10.

Boston

22

Team Faceoff Percentage

Team Save Percentage

Ranking

Team

FO %

Ranking

Team

Sv %

1.

Carolina

56.6%

1.

Minnesota

1.000

2.

Montreal

55.4%

2.

Ottawa

0.953

3.

St. Louis

55.1%

3.

San Jose

0.949

T4.

Anaheim

55.0%

4.

New Jersey

0.937

T4.

Boston

55.0%

5.

Los Angeles

0.932

6.

San Jose

53.8%

6.

Chicago

0.930

7.

Columbus

52.6%

7.

Tampa Bay

0.928

8.

Minnesota

52.1%

8.

Nashville

0.924

9.

Arizona

52.0%

9.

Washington

0.921

10.

Toronto

51.6%

27.

Carolina

0.855

Former Canes Weekly Stats

Player

Team

GP

TOI/G

G

A

P

+/-

PIM

S

Hits

BkS

GvA

Tka

ASCF%

Vrbata

VAN

2

19:10

2

1

3

2

2

9

2

0

1

1

59.1%

Sutter

PIT

2

18:50

2

0

2

4

0

4

3

1

0

4

54.4%

Williams

LAK

4

15:17

1

0

1

-1

2

11

6

1

2

3

60.0%

Ruutu

NJD

3

8:16

1

0

1

1

4

1

12

2

0

0

38.7%

Ladd

WPG

3

18:52

0

0

0

-4

4

6

9

2

0

0

46.6%

Seidenberg

BOS

4

18:32

0

0

0

-2

6

9

6

5

1

0

38.3%

Cole

DAL

2

11:40

0

0

0

E

2

0

2

0

0

1

43.2%

Eaves

DAL

2

10:16

0

0

0

-2

0

3

2

1

0

0

54.8%

Jokinen

FLA

3

16:51

0

0

0

E

4

4

2

2

1

1

60.0%

Carter

MIN

2

9:22

0

0

0

E

8

2

4

0

0

2

56.0%

Malhotra

MTL

4

12:08

0

0

0

-3

0

1

0

4

1

0

31.5%

Adams

PIT

2

10:38

0

0

0

E

0

2

5

0

0

0

53.5%

Game Day: Hurricanes at Rangers 10-16-14

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Might we see the return of Jeff Skinner tonight?

Carolina Hurricanes at New York Rangers
October 16, 2014 - 7:00 pm ET
Madison Square Garden - New York, NY
TV - Fox Sports Carolinas
Radio - 99.9 FM The Fan
SB Nation Rival Blog - Blueshirt Banter

Fancy Stats


HurricanesRangers
Record0-2-11-3-0
Points12
Division Rank8th Metro6th Metro
Conference Rank15th EC12th EC
StreakOT 1Lost 3



Power Play %33.3%0.0%
Penalty Kill %60.0%82.4%
Goals/Game3.002.75
Goals Against/Game4.504.75
Shots/Game24.333
Shots Against/Game27.728.0
ES Goals For %38.5%44.0%
ES Corsi For %53.0%53.1%
PIM/Game13.015.0



GoaltenderKhudobinLundqvist
Record0-1-01-2-0
ES Save Percentage.917.839
GAA4.145.42



Goaltender WardTalbot
Record0-1-10-1-0
ES Save Percentage.842.867
GAA3.872.89

Game Notes

  • The State Fair is in town, which means the Hurricanes aren't. This year's State Fair road trip is a little unique in that the team starts out making a quick trip up to New York and back. They'll return home tonight, host a couple of season ticket holder events, grab some deep fried Twinx at the fair, and then set out on Monday for the full journey west.
  • Jeff Skinner "could" be making his season debut tonight after suffering a concussion during the preseason. Skinner has been making great progress with his recovery and skated with the team yesterday in a regular (not a no-contact) jersey. He will be evaluated today after the morning skate to determine if he is ready to return.
  • Is Andrej Sekera a cyborg? Miraculously, his scary tumble into the boards on Tuesday night seems to be nothing more serious than some extreme soreness. He didn't practice yesterday but wasn't ruled out for a return tonight.
  • John-Michael Liles suffered an undisclosed injury at the end of Tuesday's game and didn't practice yesterday either. He'll be a game-time decision as well, opening the door for Brett Bellemore's possible season debut on defense.
  • Brody Sutter (aka "The Butter") was called up from the Charlotte Checkers yesterday and could make his NHL debut tonight.
  • Line-ups are posted as of yesterday's practice but there will likely be adjustments at today's morning skate so updates will be forthcoming.
  • It's always cool to type the words "Madison Square Garden" in the game day article even if Canes vs. Rangers isn't often a fun experience for the players wearing the sightless eye. The last time these two teams met was on March 11th of this past season, and Canes prevailed 3-1, snapping a 10-game losing streak against the Rangers.
  • In looking at the fancy stats for the Rangers, two stand out. First, they are 0-for-11 on the man advantage through their first four games. Second, out of the four goalies in the lineup tonight, the worst GAA and save percentage belongs to Henrik Lundqvist. Don't expect either of those trends to last. While off to a disappointing start, this is a team that started last season 1-4-0 and ended up in the Stanley Cup Finals. Rick Nash leads the team in scoring with six goals and seven points.
  • The Rangers are suffering from a couple of significant injuries. Derek Stepan is out with a broken fibula, and Dan Boyle is recovering from a broken hand.

Projected Line-ups

Hurricanes (from yesterday's practice, unconfirmed for today)

Jiri Tlusty - Victor Rask - Seven Million
Chris Terry - Jay McClement - Zach Boychuk
Jeff Skinner - Brad Malone - Patrick Brown

Ron Hainsay - Justin Faulk
Jay Harrison - Brett Bellemore

Anton Khudobin
Cam Ward


Injuries: Jordan Staal (IR broken fibula), Jeff Skinner (IR concussion), Eric Staal (DTD upper body), Patrick Dwyer (IR lower body), Andrej Sekera (DTD upper body), John-Michael Liles (DTD undisclosed)


Rangers (from yesterday's practice)

Carl Hagelin - Kevin Hayes - Matt Zuccarello

John Moore - Kevin Kline

Henrik Lundqvist

Injuries and Scratches: Derek Stepan (IR), Dan Boyle (IR broken hand), Michael Kostka, Jesper Fast, J.T. Miller

Off The Post

  • Bill Peters audio from yesterday's practice [CH.com].
  • Skinner and Sekera could return to the Canes line-up [WRALSportsFan] [N&O].
  • Skinner is moving in the right direction for a return [CH.com].
  • Canes' Boychuk and Terry help make a point [N&O].
  • Apparently quite a few of the Canes players are scared of State Fair rides [CanesVision].
  • Are the Rangers (or Islanders for that matter) for real? [The Hockey News].
  • Alain Vigneault video from yesterday's practice [NYR.com].
  • A lot of pressure is on the Rangers in today's game [Ranger Rants].
  • The Rangers have problems, but the good news is they are fixable [Blueshirt Banter].

We'll have updates throughout the day and the game thread will be open and ready to roll by 6:30 pm. See you there.

Rangers Vs. Hurricanes: The Quest For 5-5

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The Rangers sure could use a win tonight.

At the beginning of the season -- especially after the fantastic road win over the St. Louis Blues -- the quest for the New York Rangers to secure 10 points in their 10 games without Derek Stepan seemed like it might actually be easy. We should have known better.

The Rangers lost their next three games, and now sit at 1-3 on the year. My goal of a 5-5 start is now a 4-2 run away. Not insurmountable; but if you've watched the past three games it doesn't exactly seem like it's going to be an easy road to walk.

The good news? The Rangers are taking on the Hurricanes tonight who are hurting pretty bad themselves. From our friends Canes Country, here are the confirmed injuries:

Injuries: Jordan Staal (IR broken fibula), Jeff Skinner (IR concussion), Eric Staal (DTD upper body), Patrick Dwyer (IR lower body), Andrej Sekera (DTD upper body), John-Michael Liles (DTD undisclosed)

And that doesn't even include Jeff Skinner who might be making his debut tonight after suffering a concussion in the preseason. Simply put: The Rangers need to take advantage of the situation. That adds pressure to tonight's game, but the Rangers should be able to handle it.

To this point, the Rangers' issues have really stemmed from their defense. Joe Micheletti brought up a good point in the final moments of the Rangers' loss to the Islanders on Tuesday: when the Rangers are scoring three goals a game they're usually winning those games.

Which historically is true, except this year those three goals of offense are met with five or six goals against. Henrik Lundqvist's GAA is over 5.00, and his save percentage is well below .900. Those numbers will regress (in a good way) as will the team's PDO which is around 93%. Luck is playing a bit of a role here, and it's shown.

That doesn't mean the Rangers don't have to be better. The defense especially needs to start to stabilize, and it starts with Ryan McDonagh and Dan Girardi who have not looked good at all. John Moore, Kevin Klein and Marc Staal haven't been much better, but the buck stops with the top pairing. That group needs to step up, and they haven't.

The Rangers sure could use a goal or two on the power play -- which to be fair has looked fantastic -- and they could use a couple of bounces to go their way, too.

Nine of the next 12 games the Rangers have are at home. This is where they need to take advantage of the schedule despite their injuries.

5-5 sounds pretty hard when a team is 1-3. It won't seem so hard if the team is 2-3. That march starts tonight.


Rangers vs. Hurricanes preview: Splitting up Brassard and Zuccarello brings good early returns

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Alain Vigneault has gone away from a pairing many assumed to stick together, while small moments have doomed the Rangers of late.

First off, apologies for the lack of notes this morning. Had all the links, and then fell asleep. Wednesdays will get ya.

Entering this season, there were many question marks surrounding how Alain Vigneault would put together his lines. With players like Brad Richards and Benoit Pouliot gone, and then Derek Stepan out an extended period with a leg injury, there were plenty of changes to be made.

Yet one combination that many assumed would remain the same was Derick Brassard and Mats Zuccarello. On a line last season with Pouliot, Brassard and Zuccarello represented tangible chemistry. Most projections included keeping them together, and then adding a player to replace their ex-linemate Pouliot.

Maybe Vigneault reads this blog, or maybe he read the writing on the wall, as the season began 16 and 36 on the same line, flanked by Carl Hagelin. It was reported Brassard even advocated to get the speedy Hagelin on his line to start the season.

But as the Rangers opened against the Blues, the line didn't work. Against St. Louis in that opener, the trio of Brassard, Zuccarello, and Hagelin combined for a -25 Corsi. The Rangers won the game, but the line was underwhelming by all accounts.

In game two of the season, Vigneault kept it status quo. The new Brassard line remained intact, and this time around, they treaded water. It wasn't a dominant, spectacular showing by any stretch, and the line came out dead even in terms of Corsi. Still, it wasn't the kind of performance Vigneault was looking for out of the group, especially considering it was in a loss.

Vigneault's hand was finally forced in game three.

Zuccarello was a late scratch with what some assumed to be a right shoulder injury. Vigneault would have no choice but to split up Brassard and Zuccarello if not only for the reason the latter wasn't available to play.

Not so fast.

Had Zuccarello been available that night, and Vigneault was still ready to pull the trigger, and split up the duo that came into the season with perhaps the most perceived chemistry on the team. In Zuccarello's place was technically J.T. Miller, who was skating on a line with Hagelin and rookie Kevin Hayes. Brassard was grouped with Chris Kreider and Lee Stempniak.

And the results were better. Brassard had one of his better possession games of the season (and that's looking at 5v5 score close, because things went south in that Toronto game, which generally obscures the broader picture), while Stempniak and Kreider both had steady numbers. The trio's 5v5 score close Corsi was a combined +12, a better number than Brassard posted with any linemates all season. Miller, Hagelin, and Hayes were also on the positive end of the spectrum, posting a combined number of +6.

So as Zuccarello returned to the lineup Tuesday night to face the Islanders, Vigneault kept him away from Brassard. Again, looking at the 5v5 score close numbers, Brassard and Zuccarello's new lines shined. (It's fair to point out the entire team posted good possession numbers except for Martin St. Louis' line, but they still had to go out and perform nonetheless.) Brassard's new unit posted a combined Corsi number of +26, while Zuccarello's battering mates along with him ran their number up to +21.

It's easy to ignore possession numbers in these small vacuums, especially as the Rangers continue to drop games. But in a long, 82-game season, these things generally have a way of evening themselves out. When the Rangers got off to a similarly sluggish start in 2013-14, it was hockey's number-crunchers who predicted the team's ineptitude wasn't sustainable, and that their ability to drive possession would eventually begin to equal wins.

What's more is, in watching these Rangers losses this season, it's small moments, which lead to bigger sequences that have been the problem. If one was to isolate the 10 minute stretch in the second period of the home-opener during which the Rangers conceded five goals, and just about every meaningful statistic would have been tilted in Toronto's favor. But again, it's just those miscues or bounces: a power play shot from Dion Phaneuf that gets blocked, but kicks out right on the stick of Phil Kessel, or a bouncing puck at the point that eludes Ryan McDonagh, and springs James van Reimsdyk on a breakaway, and leads to a goal that barely trickles over the goal line.

There's no consolation for these types of scores. The Rangers aren't given "almost" or "bad luck" points when these stretches doom them. Likewise, against the Islanders, the Rangers were well on their way to a regulation victory. A downright dominant first 38 minutes of the game, including racking up 21 shots on goal in the second period alone, and 37 overall shot attempts, had the Rangers in the driver's seat. Those gaudy totals don't accidentally happen, yet Jaroslav Halak limited the damage to one goal against, and then, one of those bad moments reared its ugly head. Michael Kostka threw a blind pass from behind his own goal into the middle, and in a blink, the Islanders erased a deficit. Kostka turned in a carbon copy of his mistake to open the third, and this time, over a stretch of 10 minutes, the Rangers conceded four goals.

By eliminating those blips, and continuing to turn in stretches of dominant possession, and things will ... gulp ... be absolutely fine. It took Vigneault until about Christmas last season to figure out what lines were the most effective. If that's something he can do quicker this go-around, and New York will already be ahead of schedule.

All stats via War on Ice and Hockey Stats

Number To Know — Oct. 16, 2014

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Today’s Number To Know looks at Elias Lindholm and his future as an NHL goal scorer.

Number To Know

1 — shot on goal this season for Elias Lindholm. For all the things there are to like about Lindholm’s game — defensive responsibility, on-ice vision, an emerging grittiness, three-zone effort — his shot totals are a concern. It would be easy to dismiss if it was an outlier — three games is hardly a big enough sample size to get concerned about anything — but Lindholm’s shot totals last year we're also low.

In 2013-14, the rookie forward had just 70 shots on goal in 58 games, an average of just 1.2 shots per game. So while Lindholm scored at a decent and near-sustainable rate (12.9 percent), the fact that he registered so few shots on goal led to just nine goals. Last season four Hurricanes registered more than 200 shots, so even a dip to 10 percent for Lindholm would be a 20-goal season with that kind of shot volume.

The question is can Lindholm ever become that kind of shot-producing forward? His one full season in the Swedish Elite League (now Swedish Hockey League) raises more red flags: Lindholm was Brynas’ No. 3 scorer with 30 points (11 goals and 19 assists) in 48 games in 2012-13, but he had just 77 shots on goal (seventh among Brynas players, just a 1.6 per game average).

In 2013-14, there were just seven NHL players who played 55-plus games and registered more than 15 goals while averaging 1.6 shots per game or less. None of them hit 20 goals, and all but one had shooting percentage higher than Lindholm’s 12.9 percent, meaning that they got a bit lucky with the number of goals that found the back of the net.

So what should be taken from all this? For one, Carolina needs Lindholm to shoot the puck more often. But there is also a place for players that don't score much but pile up assist numbers (think players like Henrik Sedin and Joe Thornton, seen here), and Lindholm does bring other things to the ice beyond just goals and assists. But if Lindholm's future is as a goal scorer, he needs to start getting the puck on net more.

Rangers 2, Hurricanes 1 - SO

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Khudobin makes 33 saves on 34 shots as Carolina earns another tough point in shootout loss

The Carolina Hurricanes continued to work hard but once again came up a bit short as they dropped their second straight shootout, this time by a score of 2-1 to the New York Rangers at Madison Square Garden on Thursday night.

Anton Khudobin was the star of the game for the Canes as the goalie made 33 saves on 34 shots in the losing effort.

After a slow start, the Canes ended up out-shooting the home team by a 13-8 margin in a scoreless first period, but Carolina looked overwhelmed at times in the second period as they were outshot by a 12-5 margin.   Although Khudobin was in midseason form and held the fort for the visitors.

The Hurricanes took their first lead of the season later in that second period when Chris Terry scored his third goal of the season as he beat Henrik Lundqvist with a nicely placed wrister from just beyond the circle.

The goal put Terry in a tie with Jiri Tlusty for most goals (3) and points (4) on the team.

In the third period, the Rangers came on strong and eventually scored when a shot from the point hit Derick Brassard and got past Khudobin, to tie things up.

Both teams battled hard the rest of the third but it ended up as a 1-1 tie at the end of regulation and also went scoreless in overtime.

The Rangers outshot the Hurricanes 3-2 in the extra period and 34-30 in the game.

Rick Nash would be the final shooter in the shootout after the previous five shooters were stopped.  He got the game-winner past the Carolina goalie with the help of a nasty fake.

The Canes penalty kill looked very good in this game as they did not allow a powerplay goal in five tries, although the Blueshirts have yet to score a powerplay goal this season.

Carolina will have a much needed few days before their next contest, which won't be until Tuesday night in Winnipeg. They will practice at noon on Friday at the PNC.

Game Notes:

  • Nathan Gerbe left the game a bit early due to a lower body injury.  There was no update on his status.
  • Chris Terry got some ice time in the overtime period, after not "earning" it against Buffalo.  Alexander Semin on the otherhand, did not see the ice in the extra period.  He did lead things off as normal in the shootout, but was stopped by Lundqvist.
  • The other shooters for Carolina were Terry and Murphy.
  • Officially, the Canes went 0-3 on the powerplay, though they did make some good zone entries on their chances.
  • Justin Faulk and Jay Harrison had team high ice time of 26:31 and  26:00.
  • Ryan Murphy had a team high six shots on goal.  Victor Rask was next with four.
  • The Canes dominated again in the faceoff circle and won 66% for the game.  Riley Nash was at 71%, Jay McClement, 68%, and Rask won 61%.  The team is first in the NHL with a 59% winning percentage.
  • Carolina's team defense helped out Khudobin by blocking 22 New York shots.  Murphy had five blocks and Faulk had four.
  • Event Summary stat sheet
  • Bill Peters post game presser

Three Snarks from the open thread:

(3) CanesHockeyFan: "I need more tv’s trying to watch 3 games. I guess life is good if that is my biggest problem."
(2) Adrian Havill: "King Henrik has given up 14 goals in three games. About to be demoted to commoner."
(1) Winter is Coming: "Gerbe in the dressing room, I’m sure it’s something good. Like cake! Maybe it’s cake!"

Three Snarks Standings:

  1. Winter is Coming - 6
  2. JustListenen - 3
  3. Flyingv2112 - 3
  4. StickCheck - 3
  5. Adrian Havill - 3
  6. Bgallen - 2
  7. Will_S13 - 2
  8. zambone - 1
  9. CanesHockeyFan - 1

Rangers snap skid against Canes; Nash still hot; Vigneault calls on defensemen

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Today's New York Rangers notes.

Can't even tell you all how close we got to not having morning notes for two straight days. But alas, my memory prevailed, and I've got fresh links for you all. So now, on the morning after a win, your morning notes.

They're not all going to be masterpieces, but first and foremost, the Rangers snapped a three-game losing streak on Thursday night with a shootout win over the Hurricanes. Some recaps. [Blueshirt Banter] [The Record] [Daily News] [Newsday] [Blueshirts United]

That Rick Nash guy? He's still on fire. [ESPN NY]

Video proof of Nash's body being engulfed in flames? This shootout winner past Anton Khudobin. [Blueshirt Banter]

Before Thursday's game, Alain Vigneault called on his veteran defensemen to be better. [NY Post] [The Record] [Newsday]

With the Rangers chasing a lead against Carolina, and then chasing two points in a late, tied game, Anthony Duclair was lost in the shuffle. [NY Post]

And when the Rangers did find that equalizer, it was when Vigneault decided to reunite Derick Brassard and Mats Zuccarello. [Newsday]

In an obviously scripted move, before the Carolina game, we explored Vigneault splitting up Brassard and Zuccarello, and how it's effected the Rangers lineup. [Blueshirt Banter]

While they still haven't connected for a goal, Ryan Malone has given the Rangers a needed net-front presence on the power play. [Newsday]

In the midst of a slump, and with some key players out with injuries, the Rangers next goal is simply to get to 5-5, and then get back Derek Stepan. [Blueshirt Banter]

Rangers Vs. Hurricanes: Don't Get Too Excited

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Notes from the Rangers win over the Hurricanes.

- Remember how after the loss to the New York Islanderswas Mr. Positive? Shining rays of hope and sunshine and all that? Yeah, uh, I felt worse after last night's win than I did after any of the three losses the Rangers had this year. Kind of funny how that works.

- It's not that I'm unhappy the Rangers won, or that those two points weren't massive -- if, for nothing else, the team's mentality -- but that was essentially an AHL team on the other side of the ice and they outplayed the Rangers for a few stretches Thursday night. Unacceptable, regardless of injuries.

- Someone said it last night, but the win on Thursday looks a lot like that gritty, ugly shootout win over the Calgary Flames last year that got the Rangers going. As much as Thursday night was about as ugly a win as you will see, the Rangers talked about how important it was to finally get two points again and feel that fresh breeze of a victory. Don't sleep on that.

- Henrik Lundqvist and Rick Nash were the two best players on the ice for the Rangers. The lone goal Lundqvist gave up was scored off a deflection from Kevin Klein. Nash was a monster all game, wreaking havoc on the forecheck and making a slew of fantastic defensive plays. He had some of the Rangers best chances until they finally scored a goal. He also won the game in the shootout with a ridiculous move.

- Derick Brassard scored the Rangers' only goal -- three goals in three games for him -- and looked much more noticeable. Maybe more important, Mats Zuccarello finally looked like he did last year with Brassard. Until Thursday, Alain Vigneault had broken up Zuccarello and Brassard -- Brassard looked OK without Zuccarello, Zuccarello didn't look as comfortable without Brassard. [Required comment about small sample size.]

- It's going to be impossible to judge this defense without Dan Boyle in the lineup. Ryan McDonagh played over 30 minutes last night. Dan Girardi played over 27 minutes. That pairing is being used any time Vigneault senses some pressure and needs the defense to strengthen itself. Eventually, players who are being ridden that hard will make mistakes. Marc Staal on the other hand is playing with Klein and Matt Hunwick. How do you judge that?

- I thought John Moore looked much, much better.

- Mini rant time: Vigneault said he benched Anthony Duclair in the third not because he did anything wrong or was punishing him, but because he moved Martin St. Louis to the wing and had to shorten his bench. I don't get it, to be honest. In the 10 minutes Duclair played he drew a power play with his speed -- on a line with Tanner Glass no less -- and creased a few chances. he's responsible in his own end and the team desperately needed offense. Hopefully this is a one time thing. But if I'm the coach -- and I'm not -- I find a place for Duclair in the third if for nothing else his speed.

- On the flip side, Kevin Hayes played a lot Thursday in Duclair's absence and looked really good.Like he belongs in the NHL good. That's not a bad thing at all. That leading stretch pass to a breaking McDonagh? My word.

- In a close game Glass played 8 minutes. Shouldn't that be an indictment that he's not an everyday player? I'd be comfortable with Jesper Fast out there late in the third. Glass? Not in this universe.

-A win is a win, right? Well, the big, bad Sharks are coming Sunday so the Rangers better straighten themselves out a bit.

Thoughts?

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