The quarter pole. A valuable measuring stick? You bet.
Some skeptics look at the NHL season as more of a marathon than a race, but I'd beg to differ. While the quarter pole -- which will be reached by most teams Monday -- won't show you who the winners are, it will definitely show the teams that have found a good chemistry after an offseason of acquiring talent, as well as working developmental players into the organization's mix.
New faces. New places. Yes, and in this world keeping up with the Joneses, teams use the offseason to write a check and throw money at free agents. But in the past few seasons, that idea hasn't always worked. It was like pouring gasoline on an economic fire.
Suddenly, however, in this world where stockbrokers are being urged to be more cautious in their spending, teams are thinking twice about how they spend their money too. And it's clear that the
San Jose Sharks -- with new offensive defensemen
Dan Boyle and
Rob Blake and new coach
Todd McLellan -- plus the New York Rangers -- with
Nikolai Zherdev and
Markus Naslund up front and
Wade Redden and
Dmitri Kalinin on defense -- are two of the best examples, as they bolted to the top of the standings early.
What is even more interesting is that while critics like to poke fun at all of the money spent by teams in the offseason -- especially when it hasn't worked in a lot of instances -- that a week ago, six of the 30 teams, or 20 percent, had a player who changed teams at the top of its scoring list.
NHL.COM COLUMNS
Keith grows into an elite defenseman
Larry Wigge - NHL.com Columnist
Duncan Keith never doubted his ability to be a first-class player. So he ignored doubts about his size and has blossomed into one of the NHL's impressive, young defensemen.
READ MORE ›
Marian Hossa in Detroit,
Alex Tanguay in Montreal,
Doug Weight with the Islanders,
Nikolai Zherdev with the Rangers,
Keith Ballard, a defenseman no less, with Florida and
Olli Jokinen in Phoenix were atop the points lists in their new cities.
"It can be tricky to go from one team and try to fit in right away," Hossa said. "I just knew -- after playing against Detroit in the Stanley Cup Final -- that I wanted to be pushed, I wanted a chance to win a Stanley Cup and the way the Red Wings play was best for me."
But there was no guarantee that Hossa, a free-agent signing, would do that, especially with all-world centers
Henrik Zetterberg and
Pavel Datsyuk returning for the champions. The chemistry. The work ethic. The standards of a champion. It all fit for Hossa and his new Red Wings linemates -- Datsyuk and
Tomas Holmstrom.
Actually, Datsyuk says having Hossa on his line makes his job easier.
"I can shoot more ... and I can be faster, because Hossa is faster," Datsyuk smiled. "And he backchecks, so I can pick my spots to try to make a big play."
Adds Holmstrom, "Marian's a strong guy. Hard to get the puck from him for the opposition. Most important, for us, he's been a good guy off the ice -- a perfect fit."
Montreal center
Saku Koivu made a similar point about his new linemate -- Tanguay, acquired in a draft-day trade in June from Calgary.
"He skates well and has great hands," Koivu said. "But the bottom line here is that sometimes you just feel confident with certain players. I don't know how else to describe it."
Now, look at Calgary, where
Mike Cammalleri and
Todd Bertuzzi have made great contributions. In Pittsburgh,
Miroslav Satan and
Ruslan Fedotenko have written a few headlines. In Columbus,
Kristian Huselius and
R.J. Umberger have been big-time producers. In Minnesota,
Antti Miettinen and Andrew Brunette are off to Wild starts. In Toronto,
Mikhail Grabovski,
Niklas Hagman and
Jeff Finger have been terrific. And what about that feel-good story line in Vancouver with
Kyle Wellwood?
Clearly, chemical reactions have been quick to work around the entire NHL. And that's a sign that this season will be great to watch from start to finish.
DEFENSE WINS CHAMPIONSHIPS
Hockey's all about flow and transition from defense to offense -- plus watching those defensemen step up and get involved in the offense without jeopardizing their responsibilities on defense.
St. Louis Blues coach Andy Murray is always quick to point out how of the top eight teams in defenseman scoring in the Western Conference, seven have made the playoffs each of the last two seasons (Minnesota was the team without the point-producing defense to make the playoffs each year). It's just another measuring stick to see where your team is in the scheme of things. Unfortunately for Murray, his team was near the bottom in points by defensemen, and things don't look much different this season.
A quick check shows how San Jose, which had an amazing 13-point game from its defense a week or so ago, Nashville, Detroit, Chicago, Anaheim, Edmonton, Vancouver and Columbus are all challenging for the West lead at the quarter pole. Toronto isn't off to a surprise start if you look at these numbers. Plus, acquiring Redden and Kalinin and re-signing free agent
Michal Rozsival has cemented the Rangers' defense to offense flow that is essential in championship teams.
Also, the bottom of this points ladder may be even more telling, when you consider the struggles St. Louis, Phoenix, Dallas, Tampa Bay and Ottawa have had. The only real irregularity is that Pittsburgh is succeeding -- though not in points by its defense -- minus key contributors
Sergei Gonchar and
Ryan Whitney. But then they have
Sidney Crosby and
Evgeni Malkin up front and
Marc-Andre Fleury in goal, don't they?
Following are the points-leading defenses in the NHL through games of Nov. 17 -- the statistics provided by the numbers-crunching experts at Elias Sports Bureau:
| TEAM |
G |
A |
PTS |
| Sharks |
11 |
50 |
61 |
| Maple Leafs |
12 |
39 |
51 |
| Rangers |
8 |
40 |
48 |
| Predators |
16 |
31 |
47 |
| Hurricanes |
8 |
37 |
45 |
| Red Wings |
7 |
37 |
44 |
| Blackhawks |
15 |
27 |
42 |
| Ducks |
14 |
27 |
41 |
| Oilers |
10 |
31 |
41 |
| Sabres |
3 |
37 |
40 |
| Canucks |
8 |
32 |
40 |
| Blue Jackets |
7 |
28 |
35 |
| Panthers |
8 |
26 |
34 |
| Flyers |
4 |
30 |
34 |
| Flames |
6 |
27 |
33 |
| Canadiens |
7 |
25 |
32 |
| Kings |
7 |
24 |
31 |
| Capitals |
10 |
21 |
31 |
| Devils |
2 |
28 |
30 |
| Thrashers |
5 |
24 |
39 |
| Bruins |
9 |
20 |
29 |
| Wild |
9 |
20 |
29 |
| Islanders |
8 |
21 |
29 |
| Senators |
6 |
23 |
29 |
| Penguins |
7 |
20 |
27 |
| Lightning |
3 |
21 |
24 |
| Stars |
4 |
19 |
23 |
| Coyotes |
3 |
19 |
22 |
| Avalanche |
6 |
15 |
21 |
| Blues |
5 |
8 |
13 |
--
Larry Wigge - NHL.com Columnist
Don't confuse him with Jarkko -- It was just a couple of years ago that I remember writing that
Tuomo Ruutu was the best player not in the NHL before the former first-round pick, No. 9 in the 2001 Entry Draft came over to Chicago. But he never seemed to be able to stay healthy after he played in every game as a rookie and had 23 goals and 21 assists in 2003-04. After being traded to Carolina for Andrew Ladd, Ruutu has once again found his game. In his first 16 games this season, he had 6 goals, plus a game-winning shootout goal Nov. 16. Said Hurricanes coach
Peter Laviolette, "He's hard to play against. Nasty. And he's got world-class skill." ... Boston center
Marc Savard is fast becoming the king of the four-point games. In a 7-4 triumph against Buffalo Nov. 19, Savard had 1 goal and 3 assists -- marking the sixth time that Savard scored at least 4 points in a game in his three seasons with the Bruins. Since the start of the 2006-07 season, the only NHL players with more games of four-plus points than Savard are
Sidney Crosby and
Jarome Iginla (seven each).
Ilya Kovalchuk,
Evgeni Malkin,
Alex Ovechkin and
Joe Thornton also have four such games during the last three seasons. ... Montreal's Andre Kostitsyn is starting to show that physical edge he displayed last season when he had 26 goals. That's good news for the Canadiens, who are trying to figure out what happened to their power play that was No. 1 last season and isn't close to that this season. ... Looking for production? Look no further than Pittsburgh's third line of
Jordan Staal, Matt Cook and
Tyler Kennedy. A third line with 22 points in a stretch of seven games. Nice, eh? ...
Cal Clutterbuck won't knock your eyes out with his offense, but the Minnesota wing, who was taken in the third round, No. 72, in the 2006 Entry Draft, is an impact player for the Wild nonetheless. He hits everything -- and he hits hard. ... Willie Mitchell has never been mistaken for anything but a big, tough shutdown defenseman. But this season he's adding a touch of offense in Vancouver with 1 goal and 6 assists in his first 18 games. The most points Mitchell has had in his previous six NHL seasons was 14 (he did that twice). ... Columbus wing
Kristian Huselius is playing more effectively since he was moved from the right side to left wing, saying he feels better on that side. ... Boston coach
Claude Julien says nothing has changed with
Patrice Bergeron's compete level after missing all but 10 games last season with post-concussion syndrome. "All he needs is time before the points will start coming again like they used to," Julien said of Bergeron's 10 points in his first 18 games. ...
Simon Gagne suffered from the same concussion problems and he's showing off those skills again in Philadelphia, with 11 goals and 22 points in his first 16 games, including two shorthanded goals in one period -- the first time that had been done by a member of the Flyers since
Brian Propp did it back in 1985. ... Florida rookie coach
Peter DeBoer loves those kids who can create excitement on the forecheck. Recently, he raved about the play of former 2006 first-round pick (No. 10)
Michael Frolik for his ability to use his speed to make things happen on the forecheck. ...
Mikhail Grabovski had only 3 goals in 27 career games with Montreal before this season and one more in 10 games in October in Toronto this season. But with his speed, it was only a matter of time before he broke out. That happened when he scored 7 goals in his first eight games in November. ... Here's one of those chemistry situations, where a player seems to have a better feel with a certain player: Dallas center
Brad Richards seems more comfortable when
Loui Eriksson is on his wing. ... Take six? A few weeks ago we counted the many players Vancouver has tried on left wing with Henrik and
Daniel Sedin to try to jump-start their terrific twins this season. The list is too numerous to mention again. Well,
Pavol Demitra joined that list Nov. 17 on Long Island -- and just 49 seconds into the game he found the net. Next game, another goal by Pavol -- this time against the Rangers. Said Daniel, "I felt a little magic. Pavol likes to cycle down low like we do. Hopefully, we can get some chemistry going."
No Ducking the obvious -- Stanley Cup champions two years ago. Out in the first round last season. Struggling to find their identity now.
"The success we've had here the last three years, our main focus was to shut down the goals-against," said Anaheim's usual goal-scoring leader
Teemu Selanne. "We could always find a way to score three or four goals. Right now, our mentality seems to be to try to more goals than them -- and that has to change."
Identity? It's becoming a little more difficult when you consider that the Ducks always had
Chris Pronger and
Scott Niedermayer on one defensive unit with
Sean O'Donnell joining Pronger and
Francois Beauchemin with Niedermayer. And last season, Anaheim added
Mathieu Schneider to the defensive mix.
This season? O'Donnell's in Los Angeles, Schneider's in Atlanta and Beauchemin is lost for the next six months with an ACL injury to his left knee.
Selanne and his fellow forwards won't be able to duck their defensive responsibilities, will they?
Winging it better this time -- Remember all the success
Brent Burns had last season on defense for Minnesota? With newcomer
Marek Zidlicky now showing off his offensive skills and
Marc-Andre Bergeron combining to provide offense from the defense, the Wild now have Zidlicky, Bergeron,
Nick Schultz,
Kim Johnsson,
Martin Skoula and rookie Eric Reitz playing well on defense. A pretty good six-some. That has enabled coach
Jacques Lemaire to move Burns' big body up front when he chooses to from night to night.
Always the professor, Lemaire was seen blowing his whistle a lot at a recent practice, before he took Burns aside.
"Burnsie, you've got a great shot, whether you're playing defense or the wing," Lemaire told Brent.
With that the 63-year-old coach took two pucks. With one shot he hit one post and then he hit the other post with the second puck to show Burns how easy it is to hit your target if you practice and have confidence in your shot.
Look out for Burns when he gets that same confidence -- on the wing, or back on defense.
New/old D for the Stars -- Dallas wanted the cool head on defense that Daryl Sydor gives them in his third tour of duty with the Stars. The Penguins wanted a right-handed defenseman with a shot to man the power play for the Penguins. They got that guy in
Philippe Boucher. Just look at how important a right-handed center like
Mike Zigomanis has been for the Penguins. Same thing could happen for the Pens with this deal. ... The first job of Tampa Bay coach
Rick Tocchet is to find out what ails
Radim Vrbata. A 27-goal scorer for Phoenix last season, Vrbata was still looking for his first goal after signing a big free-agent contract (three years, $9 million) with the Lightning in the offseason. He finally got that elusive goal Nov. 17 in Tocchet's second game as coach. ... We all know how good
Ryan Smyth is in front of the net, but did you see the end of the Colorado's game against Edmonton on Nov. 15, when Oilers goalie
Dwayne Roloson not only had to worry about Smyth blocking his sightline but another crease-crasher extraordinaire,
Darcy Tucker, on a 5-on-3 in the final minute to deflect a game-tying goal. Then, Tucker beat Roloson in the shootout as well. ... Phoenix always hoped that winger Fredrik Sjostrom, who was the Coyotes' first-round pick (No. 11) in the 2001 Entry Draft, would be able to score around 20 goals with his great speed. He wound up with just 32 goals in parts of four seasons before he was dealt to the
New York Rangers late last season. Former Coyotes GM Michael Barnett always compared Sjostrom's skating stride to the powerful
Pavel Bure. Now, in New York, Sjostrom is using that stride to make a different kind of impact on the penalty-killing unit of the Rangers with
Blair Betts -- my favorite PK unit in the NHL. ... Next time you watch a Buffalo game, take a moment to watch the work of
Andrej Sekera, a third-round pick by the Sabres in 2004, who is being mentored by veteran
Jaroslav Spacek. First it was language and being comfortable in the North American lifestyle. Now, it's the technical stuff it takes to be a solid defenseman in the NHL -- and Andrej is getting better and better. ... Earlier this season, Chicago was looking at veteran
Kyle McLaren, the veteran who was sent to the minors by San Jose, to give the Blackhawks a physical defenseman. His contract, even on waivers, was too much for the Hawks to fit under the salary cap. Since
Joel Quenneville became coach,
Aaron Johnson was put into that role -- and he's been exactly what Chicago fans wanted. ... The
New Jersey Devils may still be trying to figure out who to put between the pipes in
Martin Brodeur's absence. Not so on Long Island, where
Rick DiPietro's injury has given
Joey MacDonald the chance of a lifetime in goal. The 28-year-old, undrafted netminder, who had a 5-12-4 career record in 24 previous NHL games for Detroit, Boston and the Islanders before November, posted an impressive 5-2-1 record in his first eight games this month. ... We're always hearing about the soft ice in the warm-weather cities. Put a great skater like defenseman
Bret Hedican in Anaheim and, well, you get a good example of the problems the NHL has with ice in certain arenas. Signed as a free agent Oct. 23, Hedican went nine games with no production. Finally, he scored a goal in Game No. 10 that helped the Ducks beat Los Angeles 2-0. Afterward he talked about the cause and effect, saying, "I felt like I was skating in quicksand. The ice in California is a lot softer than I'm used to, so the equipment folks here helped me completely change the hollow of my skates to make things feel right."
TY GETS TWO WINS
Ty Conklin, who played 60 games in Edmonton in three seasons, earned his first shutout against his original NHL team when he led Detroit to a 4-0 win against the Oilers on Nov. 17. Conklin is only the third goaltender to play for the Oilers and then post a shutout against them -- the others were
Curtis Joseph (twice) and Andy Moog.
The victory ran Conklin's record to 5-1-0 with Detroit with his second-straight shutout (he blanked Florida in his last game) and ended a wonderfully wild weekend in which his wife, Erika, gave birth to their third child. They named him Nash.
Not win? Or Wynn?
"My wife has all the say on those sort of things," cracked Conklin.
--
Larry Wigge - NHL.com Columnist
A developing Predator -- In most seasons, we find the names of
Nicklas Lidstrom,
Scott Niedermayer,
Chris Pronger,
Zdeno Chara,
Sergei Gonchar and
Brian Rafalski right at the top of the point producers among defensemen. This year, Nashville's
Shea Weber has really come into his own and is atop that list. Said Predators goalie
Dan Ellis, "I hate practicing against him. Every single shot hurts." ... Continuing our offense-from-defense theme, Florida's
Bryan McCabe had 2 goals in a 4-3 triumph against Tampa Bay on Nov. 17. It was the ninth time in McCabe's career that he has had multiple goals in a game. The only other defensemen with nine or more multiple-goal games since the start of the 2001-02 season are
Sergei Gonchar (11) and
Dan Boyle (9). ... One of Ottawa's woes this season is in the transition game. The puck is in the Senators' end too much. Plus, the defense isn't getting the flow that can spark the offense at the other end.
Wade Redden was pretty good at that over the years. Now he's in New York. Rumors persistent Sens GM Bryan Murray is trying to find a puck-moving defenseman. He may have that weapon in
Brendan Bell, Toronto's third-round pick in the 2001 Entry Draft. Bell has gone from the Toronto organization to Phoenix before the late bloomer broke through for 7 goals and 24 assists for San Antonio of the American Hockey League last season. Still overlooked, Bell was signed as a free agent by Ottawa last summer. In his first few games with the Senators since being called up from Binghamton, Brendan quickly moves the puck out of his zone. The real delicious tidbit here is that the 6-foot-1, 205-pound defenseman's skills also include a record of 13-of-15 in shootout opportunities at the AHL level, including 3-for-3 this season. ...
Robert Lang has been a pretty good setup guy for a lot of years. But that talent can help him set the stage for some important goals as well -- like the ones in St. Louis on Nov. 16 and in Carolina two nights later. Over the last 50 years, only four other Montreal players have scored in back-to-back games at 37 or older -- Rocket Richard,
Jean Beliveau,
Henri Richard and Doug Gilmour. ... We often talk about how hockey players are always on the fly. Quick changes. Over the boards and into action. Well, no one in recent times seems more ready for action that Washington's
Alex Ovechkin. While some were wondering about the readiness of the reigning NHL Most Valuable Player because he didn't fly out of the gate this season. Never fear. After getting only 8 points in his first 11 games, Ovie broke loose for 6 goals and 8 assists in his next five games -- with at least 1 goal and 2 points in each game. That stretch enabled Alex to match a team record of five straight multi-point games set by
Dennis Maruk was back in the 1980-81 season.
Not as good as it gets -- The
Washington Capitals' start has been fabulous -- with 10 wins in the team's first 16 games, which ranks as its second-fastest to 10 wins -- three behind the 1991-92 Caps. Still, with all the headlines by
Alexander Semin and
Alex Ovechkin, coach
Bruce Boudreau wants more -- and that can be seen up front on the T-shirts each Washington player is wearing that says, "Good is not good enough." ... Earlier this year, Atlanta's Slava Kozlov credited new Hockey Hall of Fame inductee
Igor Larionov with showing him how you could be successful offensively without being selfish when the two won a pair of Stanley Cups in Detroit in 1997 and '98. But on an offensively challenged team like the Thrashers, there are also unselfish chances to score goals. Kozlov had just 17 goals all of last season. But he's already got 10 this season. ... With Andy McDonald out for two months with a broken ankle, the
St. Louis Blues will move
Keith Tkachuk from wing back to center on the team's top line with
Paul Kariya and
Brad Boyes. But a spot up front on the team's No. 1 power play will go to rookie center
Patrik Berglund. He had 5 goals and 5 assists in his first 13 games in the NHL. What's more impressive about the big center is that he was a minus in only one of his first 15 games. ... With Detroit throwing Datsyuk-Hossa-Holmstrom and Zetterberg-
Johan Franzen-
Mikael Samuelsson lines out there against opponents,
Jiri Hudler is getting quality minutes on the Red Wings' third line -- and he's making the most of it, with 4 goals and 10 assists in his last 13 games. ... Coaching decision? Benching high-priced
Dustin Penner for two straight games for ineffective play? Well, Penner obviously got the message when coach
Craig MacTavish put him back in the lineup after Edmonton lost
Fernando Pisani with a broken ankle. Penner had three shots, three hits and one goal. But he was around the net with his 6-4, 245-pound body on goals by teammates
Sheldon Souray,
Tom Gilbert and Sean Horcoff in a 7-2 victory against Columbus. ... Proving that goalies don't go to die in San Jose,
Brian Boucher, who was toiling in the minors last season before the Sharks signed him to a free-agent contract at the trading deadline in late February, has taken the job as backup to
Evgeni Nabokov and run with it. In fact, following two shutouts to start the season, Boucher, with a few pointers from Sharks VP and Assistant GM
Wayne Thomas, has parlayed an opportunity with Nabokov on the sideline with an injury to run his record to 6-1-1 with a 1.87 goals-against average and a .930 save percentage. ... Until recently there was never really an argument about which of the Michalek brothers was more valuable. San Jose's
Milan Michalek's speed and skills won out. But the more older brother
Zbynek Michalek plays on defense in Phoenix the more raves he's getting about his value, particularly in shot-blocking, where he went into this weekend first in the NHL with 59 blocked shots -- four better than Nashville's
Greg Zanon and five better than Carolina's
Dennis Seidenberg. Reigning shot-block champion
Anton Volchenkov of Ottawa was next, tied at 50 with Montreal's
Mike Komisarek and Pittsburgh's
Rob Scuderi.
Sense of humor -- Some post-surgery levity from
New Jersey Devils goaltender
Martin Brodeur after having a torn tendon in his left biceps re-attached: "I asked them to squeeze it to stop my slice in golf. Just a little bit this way. We'll see in June."