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Tuesday, 31 October 2006

Stevens' start a success


When he played for the Springfield Indians and Falcons, John Stevens learned a lot from his coaches, Jimmy Roberts and Kevin McCarthy.

An eye injury shortened his career and led him to coaching. One year after losing out to be head coach of the Anaheim Mighty Ducks (now just the Ducks), Stevens has what eluded him during his playing career - a regular gig in the NHL.

Stevens, at the helm in Philadelphia, won his NHL coaching debut Thursday against Atlanta.

He became the 18th former AHL head coach in the current NHL head coaching ranks when he was promoted to lead the Flyers. Phantoms head coach Craig Berube moved up to be Stevens' assistant, a position he held on the Phantoms' 2005 Calder Cup championship team.

Kjell Samuelsson, a seven-year assistant with the Phantoms, has been named the AHL club's fourth head coach.

Stevens was returning home from his son's hockey game last weekend when the call came from Flyers interim general manager Paul Holmgren, who coached him when both were with the Hartford Whalers. Holmgren gave Stevens, an assistant under Ken Hitchcock, the Flyers' head coaching job.

While he was coaching the Phantoms, Stevens did an outstanding job developing young players. Now Stevens and the Flyers will rebuild with prospects such as Mike Richards, Jeff Carter, R.J. Umberger and goalie Antero Niittymaki, all who played for the Stevens-coached Phantoms. It doesn't stop there - 11 current Flyers played for Stevens.

Stevens knows coaches are hired to be fired. He knows his job won't be easy, but given his success and history with the core group he will guide, he is the right man for the job.

When he played with the Indians and Falcons, Stevens was affectionately called "Cat," as in musician Cat Stevens.

Here's hoping this Cat has nine lives.

GAJDA MAKES GOOD: Torry Gajda of Westfield scored the game-winner as the Cincinnati Cyclones of the ECHL defeated the Toledo Storm last weekend. He had three points for the weekend including a short-handed goal and was named first star in his team's Oct. 20 game.

MINOR MATTERS: Chicago Wolves right wing Darren Haydar has been named the AHL Player of the Week. In two games last week, Haydar scored two goals and added three assists for five points in a pair of Wolves victories ... Nine of Houston's first 17 goals this season have come from rookies Benoit Pouliot (four), Danny Irmen (two), Alex Leavitt, Ben Thomson and Ryan Hamilton (one each) ... Norfolk scored the final eight goals of its two-game weekend series with Philadelphia last weekend, rallying from 5-2 down for a 6-5 overtime win on Friday and posting a 4-0 shutout on Saturday... Peoria had allowed three power-play goals in 53 chances over its first seven games (94.7 percent) before Toronto went 3-for-7 in a 4-3 win over the Rivermen last Sunday... At 6-0-0-1, Portland is off to the best seven-game start in team history; the 1994-95 Pirates, who set an AHL record by going unbeaten in their first 17 games (14-0-3), were 5-0-2 ... Wilbraham resident and AHL President and CEO David Andrews, a Nova Scotia native and former general manager of the AHL's Cape Breton Oilers, was inducted into the Nova Scotia Sport Hall of Fame in Halifax ... The Hartford Wolf Pack's home game Dec. 30 against the Manchester Monarchs (7 p.m. faceoff) will include an in-game concert featuring the Jonas Brothers, the Truth Squad and Nothing but Strings. The concert is sponsored by Radio Disney ... Condolences to Falcons president and general manager Bruce Landon on the loss of his mother.

AROUND THE NHL: The Phoenix Coyotes recalled former Falcons goalie David LeNeveu from San Antonio Thursday, one day after waiving backup goaltender Mike Morrison. The 23-year-old LeNeveu played in 13 games for Phoenix last season with a 3-8-2 record and 3.24 goals against average. He will be the new backup to starter Curtis Joseph. Morrison cleared waivers and was assigned to the San Antonio Rampage. ... Goalie J.S. Giguere compiled a 3-0-0 record this week against the Red Wings (4-1), Minnesota Wild (2-1) and the Los Angeles Kings (3-2). He stopped 77 of 81 shots (.951 save percentage) and posted a 1.30 goals against average for the week ... At 6-1-1, the Thrashers got off to the best start of their history in terms of victories and points (13) through eight games ... In their first 10 games last season, Atlanta used five goalies; this year, the Thrashers have ridden Kari Lehtonen (6-1-1, .934 save percentage, 1.83 GAA) to the top of the Southeast Division and have given up the fewest goals in the Eastern Conference (16) ... Marc Savard notched three assists on six team goals in two games, extending his point streak to a season-high four games before it was stopped by Montreal Thursday ... With defenseman Brad Stuart leaving the ice due to an injury, Wade Brookbank played both forward and defense and scored the Bruins' first goal last week against Buffalo ... Sergei Samsonov returned to Boston as a fourth line wing for Montreal and did not score in the Canadiens' 3-2 win Thursday ... Zdeno Chara met with his old team, the Ottawa Senators, for the first time yesterday. Thomas Vanek scored nine points (4 goals, 5 assists) and was a +9 in three games last week ... Maxim Afinogenov picked up 10 points (3 goals, 7 assists) in three games, including a career-high five point night in the 9-1 win against Philadelphia in a game where ex-Falcon goalie Robert Esche allowed all nine goals ... The line of Afinogenov, Derek Roy and Vanek combined for 24 points in the three games last week.

posted by: MightyDuck at 16:08 | link | comments |

Friday, 06 October 2006

Mighty Ducks 3 Avalanche 0 - Mighty Ducks lead series 2-0


Goalie Ilya Bryzgalov (IHL'-yuh brihs-GAH'-lahf) led Anaheim to a 3-to-nothing win over Colorado in Game Two of their best-of-seven Stanley Cup playoff series. The Ducks lead two games to none with Game Three taking place Tuesday in Denver.

In getting his third straight playoff shutout, Brzygalov tied a 61-year old N-H-L rookie record. The 25-year old Russian hasn't allowed a goal in 229 minutes, 42 seconds.Ryan Getzlaf opened the scoring in the first period while Ruslan Salei (ROOZ'-lahn suh-LAY') and Joffrey Lupul added goals in the second stanza.Sharks 2 Oilers 1 - Sharks lead series 1-0SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) _ Patrick Marleau (MAR'-loh) and the San Jose Sharks are off to another speedy playoff start afer beating Edmonton 2-to-1 in the opener of their Western Conference semifinal.The San Jose captain scored his eighth goal of the postseason and added an assist on Christian Ehrhoff's go-ahead goal.Sharks rookie Milan Michalek had two assists. Vesa Toskala (VEH'-suh TAHZ'-kuh-luh) stopped 15 shots in his fifth consecutive victory for the Sharks.Dwayne Roloson made 28 saves for the Oilers, who went scoreless in the final 57 and a-half minutes after Jaroslav Spacek's early power-play goal in the opening two and a-half minutes.These teams won't have much time to dwell on this one. They're back in action for Game Two on Monday night in the best-of-seven series. Game Three is in Edmonton on Wednesday night.

posted by: MightyDuck at 14:43 | link | comments |

Tuesday, 13 June 2006

New Freeway Marquee Lights the Anaheim Sky Anaheim, CA – The construction is done and the testing is complete, and today marks the official lighting of Anaheim’s newest landmark. City officials and Arrowhead Pond executives “flipped the switch” on the 95-foot-tall, state-of-the-art marquee sitting alongside the Orange (57) Freeway, one of the busiest freeways in Orange County. The marquee will promote upcoming events at the arena, such as Mighty Ducks games, concerts and sporting events. “I am thrilled at this announcement; this has been a project in the making for 14 years, and we couldn’t have done it without the support of the City of Anaheim,” said Tim Ryan, president and chief executive officer for the Arrowhead Pond and executive vice president and chief operating officer for the Mighty Ducks. “This new marquee continues the rich tradition of showcasing first-class sports and entertainment in Anaheim and Southern California.” Among its many features, the marquee has a Pro-Star® double-faced LED color display 24 feet high by 35 feet wide, showcasing vibrant images and more than 1 billion color shades. To coincide with the victories at the Arrowhead Pond, a victory icon will illuminate following wins for the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim and other teams wishing to call the Arrowhead Pond home. A glowing white ring will outline the trademarked globe atop the marquee. "This marquee is a testament to the outstanding partnership between the City of Anaheim and the Anaheim Arena Management team," said Anaheim Mayor Pro Tem Richard Chavez. "Millions of Southern California drivers each year will learn about the events happening at one of our City's most recognizable and noteworthy facilities." Four partners are featured on the new marquee: Orange County Register and Miller Brewing Company face northbound traffic and Children’s Hospital of Orange County (CHOC) and Toyota of Southern California face southbound traffic. From start to finish, the marquee took eight months to construct, and an average of 64 millions cars are expected to see it driving northbound and southbound along the 57 Freeway per year (Source: CalTrans). About the Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim The Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim, opened in 1993, is owned by the City of Anaheim and managed by Anaheim Arena Management, LLC. Home to the NHL’s Mighty Ducks of Anaheim and a host of major sporting events, top-name concerts and renowned family shows, the Arrowhead Pond stands as one of the premier entertainment and sports venues in the country. For more information on events at the Arrowhead Pond visit arrowheadpond.com. About the City of Anaheim Founded in 1857, the City of Anaheim is one of the nation's premier municipalities and California's 10th most populous city. As the oldest and largest city in Orange County, Anaheim covers 50 square miles, with more than 345,000 residents and 2,077 employees. The municipal corporation's annual budget is $1.298 billion. The city boasts world-class organizations such as the Anaheim Angels, Boeing, CKE Restaurants, Inc., L-3 Communications, the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim, Pacific Sunwear and The Walt Disney Company. Annually, Anaheim also welcomes millions of visitors to the city, truly making it where the world comes to live, work and play.

posted by: MightyDuck at 13:29 | link | comments |

Monday, 05 June 2006

Ducks Sign Left Wing Melin

The Mighty Ducks of Anaheim announced today that the National Hockey League (NHL) club has signed left wing Bjorn Melin to a one-year entry level contract. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

Melin, 24 (7/4/81), competed most recently with the gold medal-winning Swedish team at the 2006 World Hockey Championships in Riga, Latvia. The 6-2, 209-pound forward earned 0-2=2 points in six tournament games. Melin played in 49 games with HV-71 during the 2005-2006 regular season, earning 17-19=36 points, a career-high in the Swedish Elite League.

A native of Jonkoping, Sweden, Melin has appeared in 261 career Swedish Elite League games, earning 52-59=111 points.

Melin was acquired by Anaheim with Ben Guite in exchange for Dave Roche on March 19, 2002. He was originally drafted by the New York Islanders in the sixth round (163rd overall) of the 1999 NHL Entry Draft. He will join the Ducks at training camp in September.

posted by: MightyDuck at 15:25 | link | comments |

Tuesday, 30 May 2006

Oilers send Ducks packing
Oilers 2 Ducks 1 | Edmonton heads to first Stanley Cup final since 1990
Sixteen years between last time and this time.

 

But the Oilers — a team that very much lives in the past, its own glorious past — are back where they believe they rightfully belong: The Stanley Cup final.

 

It's the first time since 1990, when they took out Boston in five games.

 

Spare a thought for the poor Anaheim Mighty Ducks, though. They really did deserve a fate kinder than this, ushered out the door of the post-season 2-1 in their home rink, a four-games-to-one denouement in the Western Conference final.

 

Gutsy thing Anaheim did before fading to black, though, yanking Jean-Sebastien Giguere with more than two minutes left in regulation time and a brace of Oilers in the penalty box, all of which resulted in six skaters on three for a good chunk.

 

Didn't change a thing, though: Not the score, not the series outcome.

 

For Edmonton, however implausibly, it amounted to a Clarence Campbell Trophy — like anybody wants to touch that thing —and a ticket to the ball, though they hardly be belles.

 

Sitting in his corner of the visitor dressing room, Mike Peca looked downright cadaverous, face sunken in more on one side than the other, left eye darkly swollen. "All along, we've tried to prove to people that we're a team that was good enough for the Stanley Cup final. There were times we showed it and times we were laughed at for even saying it.''

 

Ryan Smyth — Captain Canada through all those other years when, long before this point on the calendar, he'd be out of the playoffs and toiling for the national squad at the worlds instead — was sweetly savouring success.

 

"Stanley Cup final has a great ring to it. We'll cherish this for a bit and then get ready for whoever we're going to meet.''

 

A little bewildering, Dwayne Roloson acknowledged, since he only arrived in Edmonton at the trade deadline, with absolutely no one expecting this kind of sustained excellence from the journeyman goalie.

 

"Edmonton was the last place I thought I'd end up. But I was elated. I knew we had a chance to do something special as long as I played half-decent and gave them a chance to win.''

 

That he did, and then some. Goaltending was, as coach Craig MacTavish said last night, the one area where Edmonton has dominated through the post-season. Of Roloson, he said admiringly: "Bent when he could bend and didn't when he couldn't.''

 

Lousy bottom line for Teemu Selanne and the Ducks, however.

 

It was the fourth time this spring that Anaheim had played a potential elimination game, twice staving off Calgary in the first round and then shoving back Edmonton on Thursday, at a celebration-poised Rexall Place.

 

Funny thing for a 2-1 game, though — neither goalie was a critical factor.

 

Although Giguere, once-and-again No. 1 Anaheim netminder, kept Edmonton off the scoreboard through the opening period, he hardly looked assured between the pipes. More juggly than jiggy, actually, providing all manner of delectable rebounds.

 

Weird bounces further afforded ripe opportunities for the visitors while the home side was getting no such luck for their efforts, for all the miles they skated, and for the dumb penalties that Edmonton insisted on taking through the opening 20 minutes, including the first of two too-many-men-on-the-ice.

 

Yet Anaheim could beat an altogether unscary, on this evening, Roloson just the once, Francois Beauchemin leaning into a corker from just inside the blueline.

 

Ethan Moreau knotted the score 1-1 early in the second, on a wraparound. Less than five minutes later, Raffi Torres somehow managed to get his stick on the puck for a waist-high deflection on a shot from Marc-Andre Bergeron. It proved to be the winner.

posted by: MightyDuck at 16:09 | link | comments |

Monday, 22 May 2006

 Edmonton Oilers at Anaheim Mighty Ducks

The Edmonton Oilers and Anaheim Mighty Ducks have been two of the surprise teams of the Stanley Cup playoffs, reaching the Western Conference finals behind goaltenders who didn't figure prominently in either team's plans at the start of the season.

Yet, Edmonton's Dwayne Roloson and Anaheim's Ilya Bryzgalov are key reasons why their respective teams are one series win away from the Stanley Cup finals when they face off in Game 1 at Arrowhead Pond.

Anaheim is back in the conference finals for the second time in three seasons. In 2003, the Ducks relied heavily on goalie Jean-Sebastien Giguere, who led them to within one victory of winning the Stanley Cup and claimed playoff MVP honors.

Giguere suffered a lower-body injury before Anaheim's playoff opener on April 21, and Bryzgalov has stepped in and performed brilliantly. The 25-year-old rookie lost the opener to Calgary, but has been in net for all contests of the Ducks' current six-game winning streak.

Bryzgalov became the first rookie to post three consecutive shutouts in the postseason since Toronto's Frank McCool in 1945. He blanked the Flames in Game 7 of the quarterfinals, then held Colorado scoreless in the first two contests of the Ducks' four-game sweep in the semifinals.

Bryzgalov has a 0.87 goals-against average and .967 save percentage in the playoffs.

Joffrey Lupul scored all four goals in Anaheim's 4-3 win in Game 3 against the Avalanche, and Teemu Selanne put the Ducks up for good with a second-period goal in a 4-1 Game 4 victory.

Selanne leads the Ducks with 10 points in 11 postseason games, and has 39 goals and 72 points in 58 games against the Oilers.

Anaheim has dominated opponents during the win streak, outscoring Calgary and Colorado 21-5 while posting three shutouts, but the eight-day layoff following the sweep of the Avalanche may be a concern.

"I hope not," Selanne said. "It might take one or two periods, but after that it's going to be a big advantage to have healthy bodies and a lot of energy."

Edmonton gets only one day off before facing the Ducks.

After losing the first two games of their semifinal series with San Jose, the Oilers won four straight and eliminated the Sharks with a 2-0 victory Wednesday night. Roloson stopped 24 shots for his first playoff shutout in 27 postseason games.

Eighth-seeded Edmonton continued a surge that began with a first-round upset of top-seeded Detroit in six games. Roloson faced an average of 39.7 shots a game in that series and repeatedly denied Detroit's shooters.

Roloson then outperformed red-hot Sharks goalie Vesa Toskala to help send the Oilers to the conference finals for the first time in 14 years.

The season didn't start well for Roloson, whose playing time diminished in Minnesota. The 36-year-old veteran came over in a March 8 trade for a first-round draft pick, and now heads to the conference finals for the first time since 2003, when he also faced the Ducks.

"We want to go down to Anaheim and give ourselves another chance," Edmonton forward Ryan Smyth said. "It starts from your defense up, and we seem to play solid defensive hockey."

The Oilers have advanced with a potent and balanced attack, as four players have recorded at least 10 points in 12 playoff games.

Edmonton swept the season series from Anaheim this season, and has won 16 of the last 20 meetings between the teams since the start of the 2000-01 campaign.

Game 2 is Sunday night.

posted by: MightyDuck at 14:45 | link | comments |

Wednesday, 17 May 2006

And a Child Shall Lead Them

By Mike Brody

WagerWeb.com Contributing Writer

 

Rookie goaltenders have had success in the Stanley Cup Playoffs before – most notably with Ken Dryden in 1971 and Patrick Roy in 1986, both leading the Montreal Canadiens to the Cup – but never before has a crop of  rookie goalies dominated the playoffs like they have this season.

 

Of the five remaining teams in this year’s playoffs, three are led by rookie goalies and another by a first-year starter.  Carolina’s Cam Ward, Buffalo’s Ryan Miller, Anaheim’s Ilya Bryzgalov, and San Jose’s Vesa Toskala have all enjoyed incredible playoff success thus far.

 

Seven-year veteran Dwayne Roloson of the Edmonton Oilers, who was acquired in a mid-season trade with the Minnesota Wild, is the only experienced goaltender left.  I don’t think anyone would have predicted that, especially with the presence of such big-name goalies as Martin Brodeur and Miikka Kiprusoff, and other veteran backstops or  NHL powerhouses like Detroit’s Manny Legace, Dallas’s Marty Turco, and Colorado’s Jose Theodore, among the contenders. 

 

The New Favorite

 

Thanks to a surprisingly easy 4 games to 1 victory over the New Jersey Devils, and a dominating performance winning four straight games over Montreal after losing the first two in Round 1, the Carolina Hurricanes have emerged as the new favorite to win Lord Stanley’s Cup.  Despite finishing the regular season with 112 points, just 1 behind Eastern Conference leader Ottawa, the Hurricanes’ odds of winning the Cup entering the playoffs were posted at 10-1.  That was before the oddsmakers had seen Ward turn away almost every shot he’s faced.

 

In 10 playoff games, the 22-year-old rookie has allowed just 17 goals while posting a 1.77 goals against average (GAA).  Ward let in just five goals in Carolina’s four victories over New Jersey as he outplayed his boyhood idol Brodeur.  With his stellar play, and the Hurricanes’ opportunistic offense, led by 100-point scorer Eric Staal, Carolina will be tough to beat.

 

The Upstart Challenger

 

The Sabres’ Miller is the only U.S.-born goalie among the Fab Four.  He hopes to duplicate the feat of another rookie American goalie, Ron Hextall, who led the Philadelphia Flyers to the Stanley Cup Finals in 1987.  After a shaky start in Game 1 against Ottawa, Buffalo’s defense and Miller shut down the Senators the rest of the way, allowing two or fewer goals in each of the last four games.  The Michigan native has a 2.25 GAA and a .921 save percentage in the first two rounds of the playoffs.

 

Buffalo’s defense has been stellar in front of Miller. Defensemen Toni Lydman and Henrik Tallinder lead all playoff performers in plus/minus at plus-13.  The Sabres’ offense has been scoring in bunches.  Buffalo has a team-leading 43 goals scored in 11 games and is riding high after winger Jason Pominville’s shorthanded, overtime goal clinched the series against Ottawa.

 

Mr. Perfect – Almost

 

Anaheim’s Bryzgalov has been the most surprising and impressive of all the rookies.  Bryzgalov didn’t even enter the playoffs as the Ducks’ No. 1 goalie.  That honor went to Jean-Sebastian Giguere, who led Anaheim to the Stanley Cup Finals in 2003, his second year in the league, and was named the Conn Smythe winner as the MVP of the playoffs that season. 

 

After splitting their first four games against Calgary in Round 1, the Ducks made the switch to Bryzgalov and they haven’t regretted it.  The 24-year-old Russian has practically stood on his head as he is sporting a ridiculous 0.87 GAA and .967 save percentage.  He recorded three straight shutouts, including Game 7 at Calgary to clinch that series.  In doing so, Bryzgalov set a rookie playoff record, holding opponents scoreless for 249 minutes, 15 seconds.  Only Montreal’s George Hainsworth, 270:08 in 1930, has had a longer playoff scoreless streak.

 

The Final Four

 

San Jose’s Toskala is hoping to join his fellow first-year netminders in the conference finals.  After an excellent series against Nashville in Round 1, including a shutout in Game 2, and two 2-1 victories to open the Edmonton series, Toskala and the Sharks find themselves on the ropes as the Oilers have stormed back to take a 3-2 series lead.  Edmonton will try to close it out at home on Wednesday night.

 

San Jose’s offense is led by Patrick Marleau, who leads all playoff goal scorers with nine.  The Sharks will need to get an early lead and help Toskala protect it to force a Game 7 at home on Friday.

 

The Finals

 

The matchup between Ward and Miller should be as entertaining as it gets.  Both are capable of stealing a game or two for their respective teams.  Carolina is the favorite, but Buffalo has a lot of momentum and Miller has shown he can win the close games with four one-goal victories against Ottawa.  Look for the Sabres to get to the Finals.

 

The Ducks have had a long time off after unexpectedly sweeping the Avalanche.  Anaheim may be a little rusty to start the conference finals, but the Ducks have good veteran leadership in Scott Niedermayer and Teemu Selanne and will ride the stellar play of Bryzgalov past either the Oilers or the Sharks to advance to the Stanley Cup Finals.

posted by: MightyDuck at 18:54 | link | comments |

Anaheim Mighty Ducks rest, wait for next opponent in the NHL playoffs
While the San Jose Sharks and Edmonton Oilers battle in the Western Conference semifinals, the Anaheim Mighty Ducks rest and wait.

After dispatching Colorado in a four-game sweep Thursday, the Ducks have the luxury of time on their hands as they anticipate the start of the conference finals.

The Ducks had off-ice training Saturday and will take Sunday off. They will skate Monday and focus on defence and conditioning.

"It's a long time to practise day and day out, so we might do something a little different in between," coach Randy Carlyle said.

The San Jose-Edmonton series is tied 2-2. The earliest it could end is Wednesday, or it could stretch out until Friday.

"It's a little weird that you have to wait one week," Teemu Selanne said.

The down time will allow the Ducks to heal their bumps and bruises from playing every other day for more than three weeks.

"We'll take this rest and hopefully guys can get healed up," Scott Niedermayer said.

The downside is the possibility of losing their focus with nothing but practice scheduled.

"I hope not," Selanne said. "It might take one or two periods, but after that it's going to be a big advantage to have healthy bodies and a lot of energy."

Selanne was still smiling a day after shooting an 85 on the golf course. But he said he'll put his clubs away the rest of the week.

"You got to get your mind off hockey a little bit, but when it's getting closer to the end of the week, you have to be more focused and get ready again," Selanne said.

Some of the Ducks plan to spend extra time with their families this week. Todd Marchant and Todd Fedoruk weren't with the team Saturday. Marchant's daughter had her first communion, while Fedoruk was visiting his newborn child.

Carlyle hasn't put any restrictions on how the players spend their off-time, joking, "I don't want them to go water-skiing or skydiving."

Several of the Ducks said they're tuning into the Sharks-Oilers series, but claimed no preference about who they'll play next.

If San Jose advances, the conference final would pit Northern and Southern California, leaving less travel for both teams.

If Edmonton moves on, the Ducks would have home-ice advantage, meaning they'd make two, rather than three, trips to Canada during a seven-game series.

"There's positive and negative there," Ruslan Salei said. "They're both great teams, they both play a really physical game, and we just have to match their intensity."

Selanne admitted he was surprised the Ducks swept Colorado, but he liked what he saw in the dressing room afterward.

"It wasn't a big deal. We were not celebrating," he said. "It's a good sign that the goal is higher."

The Ducks are halfway to reaching the Stanley Cup final for the first time since 2003, when they lost in seven games to the New Jersey Devils.

Their immediate priorities are rest and keeping the focus that allowed them to get this far.

"Our mental approach from day one has been unbelievable, and that's something we can't lose in this break," Jeff Friesen said. "It's really mental this time of year."

posted by: MightyDuck at 18:23 | link | comments |

Thursday, 11 May 2006

Anaheim Mighty Ducks vs. Colorado Avalanche

Everybody thought the series between the Avalanche and Anaheim would be very tight, well it hasn’t, Anaheim is already 3-0 in the playoff semifinals and waiting to win the fourth game and make it a sweep in Colorado.

Anaheim got there by beating the Calgary Flames in a 7 game series that was very intense. The Flames simply wore themselves out playing seven games at breakneck intensity. Credit the Mighty Ducks with the smarts to be patient, which they were; but Anaheim was also very good defensively and took advantage of Calgary's trouble generating offense.

If Anaheim keeps playing like they have in the first three games, the fourth game will be rather easy for the Ducks. They are a very fast and quick team and if they can take advantage of those strengths they will win the series and advance to the conference finals.

Recent Transactions
5/4 Signed Drew Miller to two-year contract. 4/27 Recalled Dustin Penner from Portland of the AHL. 4/22 Recalled Nathan Marsters from Portland of the AHL. 4/21 Recalled G Nathan Marsters from Portland of the AHL.

The Avalanche got to this series by defeating Dallas in a 5 game series. The start of the first game of that series wasn’t very promising for Colorado, but they manage to get back in the game and win the series due to their powerful offense and a disciplined defense.

They have lots of great leadership and playoff experience and a pretty good offense that is tough to counter when the defensemen jump in well. They are in trouble now as they loss the first 3 games against the Ducks. The fourth game will be very important, if they want to get back and have a chance of going to the next round; they desperately need to win the next game or they’re out of the competition.

They need to work on the tendency to have turnovers at the wrong time and place that often left them in disadvantage and with goals against.

Most of the sports books will have them as favorites since they are playing at home and they really need to win, so if you like sports betting do some homework and take a pick n this exciting series.

Recent Transactions
3/9 Acquired F Jim Dowd from Chicago for a 2006 fourth-round draft pick. 1/9 Recalled F Brad Richardson from Lowell of the AHL.1/7 Assigned F Frantisek Skladeny to Lowell of the AHL. 1/2 Placed F Brad May on injured reserve. Recalled F Frantisek Skladany from Lowell of the AHL.

posted by: MightyDuck at 20:11 | link | comments |

Monday, 08 May 2006

Mighty Bryzgalov carries Ducks past Avalanche

 

There's no goaltending controversy any longer in Orange County, where Russian import Ilya Bryzgalov gets white towels waved in appreciation with practically every save he makes for the Anaheim Mighty Ducks.

Bryzgalov, 25, regularly hears appreciative chants of BRYZ-GAL-OV from admiring fans at the Arrowhead Pond as he shuts the door on opponents with almost casual ease.

He posted his third consecutive shutout yesterday in a convincing 3-0 victory over the Colorado Avalanche, giving Anaheim a 2-0 lead in their National Hockey League Western Conference semi-final series. Game 3 will be tomorrow in Denver.

Bryzgalov now has the longest streak by an NHL rookie in the playoffs, going 229 minutes 42 seconds without allowing a goal.

Since taking over from Jean-Sébastien Giguère, Bryzgalov has led Anaheim to four successive wins.

Ducks coach Randy Carlyle rolled the dice when he replaced No. 1 netminder Giguère with the less experienced Bryzgalov during the first round of the playoffs.

"I just tell him to continue to play, come to practice, stop the puck, smile, have a good day," Carlyle said jokingly when asked how he handles an inexperienced postseason player now fourth overall in shutout time in the Stanley Cup playoffs. (George Hainsworth of the Montreal Canadiens is on top at 270 minutes 8 seconds in 1930.)

"I don't think he realizes [what he's doing]," Ducks veteran Teemu Selanne said of his goalie. "He's just a guy who goes out there and has fun and doesn't take any extra pressure or anything. So don't tell him [what he's doing]."

Bryzgalov has had shutout streaks before, he claimed, like three in a row he posted with the Russian national junior team before the world championship a few years ago.

"It's not a big deal for me," he said. "I don't think about it. Right now I feel confident because our team is playing well and they're giving me confidence."

Anaheim has controlled this series.

The Ducks have done it by being more physical than the Avalanche and winning most of the puck-possession battles, often leading to scoring chances.

The Ducks have scored 13 unanswered goals over the past four games and have successfully killed off 23 consecutive penalties.

Yesterday, Anaheim got a power-play goal from rookie Ryan Getzlaf on a deflected shot at 18 minutes 17 seconds of the first period to establish momentum.

Ruslan Salei scored with a blistering point shot at 4:41 of the second that gave Avs netminder Jose Theodore no chance. Joffrey Lupul added another later in the second with a brilliant move at the net after a between-the-legs pass from linemate Dustin Penner.

"Our goaltender's confident, we're confident in him," Lupul said. "It makes it a lot easier to play when you know a guy's back there and he's hot."

The Ducks seem to shoot from every conceivable angle, while the Avs want to make the perfect play, often being checked at the last moment, or having Bryzgalov flash his catching glove or get his leg pad on a shot.

Bryzgalov preserved his third shutout with saves against Milan Hejduk, Ian Laperriere and Joe Sakic on clear-cut chances in the last period. He finished with 22 saves, many of them on the spectacular side.

"Ilya and [Giguère] have been unbelievable the whole year and now it's Ilya's turn to be hot," Selanne said. "What a great feeling when you have a goalie that gives you a chance to win."

The Avs are frustrated to the point that they've got away from the slick passing game that carried them past the Dallas Stars last round. Sakic managed only one shot on goal each period in Game 2.

"Nobody knew him, now everybody knows him," Laperriere said of Bryzgalov. "He was really good against Calgary in Game 7 and he's been really good against us for two games. We know we've got to beat him sooner or later."

Bryzgalov has stopped 92 consecutive shots and Anaheim has scored 13 consecutive goals without being scored against, going back to Game 6 on May 1 against Calgary.

posted by: MightyDuck at 16:40 | link | comments |