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Friday, December 19, 2008

Lineup Juggling



MAP drives one of these. MacT has put him back on the 2nd line and perhaps if he stays there, this car will be a distant memory from his entry level contract days.

Why is MacT juggling Reddox and Strudwick? Did he find the "mould" that he wanted to play in during the 3-0 win against Vancouver, or has it become apparent that he was just fooling himself to think that was our "best game of the season?"

Here's how the lineup looks right now.

Cogliano-Nilsson-Hemsky
Horcoff-Pouliot-Cole
Gagner-Moreau-Penner
Brodziak-Reddox-Stortini

I think MacT should stick to what works and let chemistry develop elsewhere or on a per needs basis. Let's see if the revamped 1st, 2nd, or 3rd lines work. If we are looking at a 4 or 5 game losing streak a few games from now, let's go back to the Horpensky line and work elsewhere.

I'm glad to see Pouliot and Cole get a chance at a more offensive role, whereas placing Gagner and Penner on the 3rd line spreads out the offense a bit more throughout the lineup.

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Thursday, November 20, 2008

Too Little Too Late - Red Wings Hold Off Oilers in Win



This is an image from this website which sells sports merchandise. It's Bobby Orr's famous "DIVE." Kris Draper dives too, but that's because knows a thing about drawing penalties dishonestly. Bobby Orr would frown on you, Draper.

The exaggeration from Samuelsson and Draper, combined with the officiating at tonight's game whioch was plain atrocious, made for a gong-show, phantom penalty filled afair. Most of the Oilers actually played really well tonight except for M.A. Pouliot. Best Oilers tonight were Souray, Hemsky and Staios. I was at the game courtesy of Suneil Parmar of Addicted to Oil. David Staples was there, and so was Danny On, Jermine Paglicauan, and Travis Yano (alphabetically).

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Suneil Parmar, David Staples, and myself all agreed right before the game that Roloson would not play well and it was Garon's turn in net. It took a while, but our prediction came true. The long-established rules of (1) don't give the same team two consecutive looks at the same goalie and (2) don't play Roloson more than 3 or 4 games in a row were not dutily followed by MacTavish. Not that we doubt Roli or anything. But common sense would indicate that Garon should've got the start.

The story of the game was that the officiating was horrendous. Phantom calls were made everywhere and calls that should've been made weren't. And don't tell me there were 7 penalties for each team - just because the numbers are even doesn't make the officiating fair. Save that for the NFL.

Here's a quick summary of the officiating B.S. tonight:

  • Stuart cross-checking on the back of someone's head NOT CALLED

  • Detroit D-man boarding on Hemsky NOT CALLED

  • Penner's "slash" on the Detroit D-man's hockey stick nowhere near his hands, gloves, or body, which resulted in Penner's stick exploding and not the opponents CALLED SLASHING

  • Draper holding the stick on Reddox CALLED HOOKING

  • Draper interfering with Moreau and holding him down away from the play CALLED ROUGHING


  • Not to mention the Oilers had bad luck tonight. Dump-ins were hitting linesmen. The puck had two bad careems off the boards - one that barely missed the Detroit net and one that ended up right on an open Hudler's stick for a goal.

    Roloson had 7 saves and despite the poor save percentage had no chance on some of the goals. Not to mention the wicked glove save he made through traffic despite being screened.

    The Oilers need to MOVE GUYS OUT FROM IN FRONT OF THE NET. Yes, I'm talking to you Strudwick. First the Samuelsson goal on Monday and now the Kopecky goals tonight.

    The Oilers have a bad habit of being too nonexistant on penalty kills. I know MacT and Huddy have the "let them pass it around the perimeter" strategy going strong on most nights, but it's simple hockey to get into passing lanes and to not let guys get set up in front of your net. Even if you let them stand there, it should just be the illusion of a passing lane.

    Watch the Detroit PK and learn.

    Another thing is that Detroit is really good at staying on-side. It's not something that involved great skill to do. After you pass it to a guy trailing the play (because you're getting forechecked in the neutral zone) skate laterally and stay behind the blue line until the puck crosses the line. The little twirl the Oilers do near the blue line actually puts us off-side more often than not.

    Ryan Smyth was good at this: he'd pass it off, skate parallel to the blue line, then turn and crash the net hard after the puck gained the zone. This way, he could keep his speed but stay on-side at the same time.

    It was a particularly good perforance from Hemsky and Souray, but they too had some bad plays during the game.

    Souray lets too many guys skate around him on icing plays and without communication to Gilbert allowed an icing call to be beat by a forechecking Detroit player. He needs to be aware of the guys coming down the wing behind him and communicate with Gilbert.

    Hemsky, during the extended powerplay late in the third, had a chance to dump it deep and make a safe play. I understand that the Oilers had come storming back and he was feeling it, I suppose. But that was a poor decision trying to dangle the puck through 3 Detroit Red Wing sweaters. He did make Niklas Lidstrom look foolish a couple of times though.

    Another thing: turnovers. The Oilers need to simplify their game. For a team that can barely get out of their own zone the last thing they need to do is make cute passes to nobody and turn it over to the Detroit Red Wings - of all teams.

    Simple rules for dumping the puck into the opposition zone not being carried out by the team:
    (1) no puck support: dump it into an empty corner where there aren't any players
    (2) with puck support: dump it into an area where your supporting man can fight for the puck and then support him back the way he supported your puck dump by getting open or trailing him along the boards

    In neither case should the puck go straight to the opposition D-man. This happened several times tonight. And when we dump and chase, there is little to no puck support. How is a cycle supposed to start up with everyone along the same half boards? We need the team to start helping their fellow teammates out.

    When the puck goes straight to the opposition D the puck comes back the other way instantly and your man gets caught chasing a puck dump that doesn't exist.

    Simple rules for dumping the puck out of the defensive zone not being carried out by the team:
    (1) do not ram it around the boards with a man pinching on the point (Reddox is particularly good at following this rule)
    (2) do not pass it up the middle in front of the net out of your zone
    (3) do not make a cute backhand pass towards the middle high slot when on the half boards

    These simple turnovers can kill any team's momentum, especially in your own zone.

    Simple rules for playing on powerplays not being carried out by the team:
    (1) cycling the puck down low works - cycling the puck when there are opposition guys along the boards doesn't
    (2) do not pass it back to the point when the D-man is getting hounded by a backchecker (Penner needs to be aware of this)
    (3) (if you're not Souray or Visnovsky) shoot the puck low so that there are more rebounds

    These are all simple things that I thought everyone who watched hockey knew. But Horcoff, Gagner and Nilsson, though they played decent games, did not execute simple plays when the opportunity presented itself. They choose to do little spins and cycle it forever until the Red Wings cleared their zone.

    The Red Wings are so fearless of the Oilers forecheck and backcheck that even Hossa tried to lay a big hit on Brodziak. They are that unconcerned about their defensive zone coverage.

    Props to the Oilers for making it close against the defending cup champs. But "too little too late" is a tune that gets old fast. It's time to start coming through on games where you need to make a statement as a team.

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    Pictured above are Suneil Parmar and David Staples. I was surprised too when I found out in real life they were really Zdeno Chara and Chuck Norris, respectively. Who woulda thought.

    Keep it a secret between you and me, though.

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    Wednesday, October 15, 2008

    Game 2 - Oilers @ Ducks : 3-2 Win


    This is the bottom half of the net. It belongs to a man named Mathieu Garon. Seen here in this photo, Mathieu Garon is sending the message: B^^ch please, MY NET!

    I got home just in time to watch the 3rd period, and apparently I was just in time to watch the Oilers turn it on. Great goal by Visnovsky.

    A couple of thoughts tonight:

    1) Robert Nilsson - pretty dandy, showing that he can play on almost any line and surprised me with his versatility; also very useful on the back-check, breaking up some Ducks chances in the final minutes

    2) Marc Pouliot - proved my guess right that he would be more than capable of playing the more physical game required against the Ducks

    3) Mathieu Garon - somebody deserves a contract extension...

    4) Jeff DesLauriers - is MacT taking turns dressing the backups, or is this a positive nod in JDD's direciton?

    5) Denis Grebeshkov - continues to look better and better, if he keeps going at this rate, Ladislav Smid could very well be dealt for a bag of pucks

    And remember hockey fans...

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    Monday, September 22, 2008

    Oilers drop pre-season tilt to Canucks by score of 4-3 (SO)

    This is Cory Schneider.

    He played tonight, and with the exception of looking confused after a few Sheldon Souray point shots, or out to lunch on Sam Gagner's moves on the breakway/shootout, was very calm and composed, and played his angles very well.

    On some occasions, he was the only thing going for the Canucks. He probably is the best reason why the Canucks stuck around 'til OT where they won it in the shootout.

    One day (if he isn't traded before then), he could be the reason the Canucks can afford to trade Bobby Lu the Saviour.

    Quote me on this.

    Post-game thoughts:

    It looks as if the Oilers won't be relying as much on the shootout this year for wins. It could be that Garon was just warming up after a long summer... or it's an indication that the Oilers have moved beyond reliance on the shootout as a means to win games.

    The powerplay looked deadly tonight even though they scored only one goal. The penalty kill also looked deadly - in the sense that it had trouble keeping the Canucks from driving the net. For the first time this training camp, Peckham looked a step behind, perhaps the sign that he is still a bit away from being ready for the NHL. Chorney, however, looked very smart, despite the questionable call at the end of overtime.

    It always seems to me that Visnovsky is in the right place at the right time to one-time the puck. When the season rolls around I will be expecting to see all kinds of goals resulting from his shot or a rebound resulting from his wicked shot.

    Last but not least, who is Dan Gendur and why is he scoring goals on us? We need to put the Hans Benson radar on this guy. Seek and destroy.

    A few points I would like to make:

    (1) Shooting tendencies: Since the shootout was instated, it always seems that Hemsky often shoots over the net wide on the right side.
    (2) The wizard without a wand: Robbie Schremp looked very nervous on the shootout. If he gets another chance before (a) getting assigned to Springfield, (b) getting traded, or (c) making the team, look for him to be more controlled in what many rightfully attribute to be Robbie's domain.
    (3) Comfortability in the lineup: Gagner looks even better than he did last year at the end of the season. Whether it is making Cory Schneider look foolish or little dangle plays that prevent plays from going offside, Gagner has shown that he can play on any of the top 3 lines with any combination of forwards and feel comfortable. Cole, on the other hand, has looked good but not in any way in-sync with the other Oilers forwards. Hopefully, that happens sooner than later.
    (4) Watch out for that tree!: Is it just me, or did the Canucks get a lot bigger over the off season? We're gonna have to dress guys like Strudwick in those games.
    (5) Like winning the lottery: The Canucks gambled on a castaway and signed a guy with major AHL success in Wellwood and Krog respectively, and it looks good now. Whether it translates to regular season success is yet to be seen.
    (6) Heat seaking missiles: At least that's what the point shots on the Oilers PP looked and sounded like - things going really fast and exploding off of stuff. Somebody gonna get a hurt real bad. Thank you Russell Peters and Kevin Lowe.

    New Oilers' nicknames:

    Jason Strudwick - STUDwick
    Rob Schremp - Lowetide calls him Sugartits, I think Wizard or Bubba Gump would be more befitting
    Marc-Antoine Pouliot - Friendly Fire (he needs to stop running into his own team mates)
    Lubomir Visnovsky - Mr. Lube

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