NHL Playoff Preview: Eastern Conference

The First round matchups are finally set and the playoffs are officially upon us. It was a wild finish to the regular season that saw Washington earn the 7th seed on the very last day, thus avoiding a matchup with the powerful Rangers. We also saw Sniper Steven Stamkos join an elite group of scorers when he potted his 60th goal of the season while only further solidifying himself as the games top pure goal scorer (it also doesn’t hurt to have the gifted Martin St. Louis dishing the puck to you). Now that the regular season is over, let’s wipe the slates clean and take a look at each matchup and try to determine a favorite for each.

#1 NY Rangers vs. #8 Ottawa Senators

No team benefited more through the seeding change that took place on the last day of the season than New York. With Washington finishing seventh the Rangers truly dodged a bullet. Although the Rangers are considered to be one of the top 3 teams league wide, having to play against a skilled team like the Capitals is always dangerous and I’m sure the Blue shirts are happy their getting Ottawa. However, that’s not to say Ottawa will be a pushover, because this team can score goals. Their 249 goals puts them just above that threshold of 3 goals per game, making them an offensively capable bunch. The key to this series will be Henrik Lundqvist, and that should come as no surprise. The Vezina Trophy favorite has been stellar all season and this could be his time to carry his team to that next level. A dominant series by King Henrik could set the tone for these playoffs and make New York the favorites for the cup.

Prediction: Rangers 4 Senators 1

#2 Boston Bruins vs. #7 Washington Capitals

The defending champs may be in for an early test as they face the Capitals. The veteran Bruins are a team that wins games because of two things; their physicality and their depth. No other team in the NHL gets as much out of every line as this team, and come playoff time that makes a huge difference. Also having a former Vezina Trophy winner in net (Tim Thomas) doesn’t hurt. I look for Washington to come out with passion, because just a few weeks back they looked destined to be on the golf course by now. I also look for Alexander Ovechkin to really take over and play his type of hockey. If he can set the tone for his team by scoring goals and laying some big checks he can be the X-factor. That being said the Capitals as a whole may lack the depth and firepower to beat the sturdy Bruins, but this series should bring a lot of excitement for fans.

Prediction: Bruins 4 Capitals 2

#3 Florida Panthers vs. # 6 New Jersey Devils

The story of two teams going in opposite directions is evident here and the upset alert is on. Florida stumbled to the finish and needed a win in their last game, which they got, to cling to the #3 seed. That win got them a matchup with the red hot Devils. Riding a 6 game win streak the Devils have looked strong down the stretch and are showing that they may have a team ready to make a deep playoff run. The two teams split the season series 2 a piece, but I think all the momentum here lies with the Devils. However as I said before, playoff hockey is like a fresh start, records don’t matter anymore. The key in this series will be Ilya Kovalchuk and his ability to create as well as score. Kovalchuk was a point per game player this season and if he can continue that pace he will be pacing the Devils to a route of the Panthers in this series.

Prediction: Devils 4 Panthers 1

#4 Pittsburgh Penguins vs. #5 Philadelphia Flyers

And here lies the gem of all the matchups in the Eastern conference. Put quite frankly, these are 2 of the top 5 teams in the NHL and this series will be a heavily contested bloodbath. The last time these teams met over 100 penalty minutes were served up, as well as some key injuries to both teams. I look for that aggression and snarl to be key parts of this series, in addition to the enormous skill that both teams have in abundance. The key in this series, to the surprise of some, will be goaltending play. We know guys like Claude Giroux, Evgeni Malkin and Sidney Crosby are going to score, but what we don’t know is how much. If Pittsburgh’s Marc-Andre Fleury or Philadelphia’s Ilya Bryzgalov can step up and be dominant they will win their team the series. The team that does win this series has a great chance at winning the cup, because I believe this matchup is comparable to a great semifinal where the winner gains that confidence needed to go all the way. I give the slightest of edges to The Flyers because I believe their Goalie Bryzgalov will earn his keep through a dominant performance in a big series.

Prediction: Flyers 4 Penguins 3

Agree? Disagree? Let me hear what you’re thinking!

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The Red Wings Incredible Run

The Red Wings have won 20 straight games at home.  Just reading it doesn’t really show just how difficult that is.  Home ice, in general, isn’t really that much of advantage.  It means something, but there’s nobody at the free throw line, staring into an opponent’s jumping, shirtless, and fat pseudo-mascot while his hands shake because of the home crowd.  There’s no third down play gone awry because the road QB can’t communicate with his offensive linemen over the deafening crowd noise.  There’s no standing ovation on a 3-2 count that forces just the slightest bit of sweat on the pitchers hand, forcing the ball out of the zone.  The nature of hockey makes its home ice advantage the least important of all the sports.

Remember last year’s Stanley Cup?  The Bruins won on the road, in another country, in a game 7 that determined it all.  Sure, you’d rather be home than on the road, and certain teams are just unbeatable in their city.  The Red Wings, even after their incredible streak, don’t have the best home record this season, the St. Louis Blues do.  But the Red Wings twenty game streak represents the potential for history.  They’re tied for the record, and a home game vs. the Stars could put them alone in the NHL record books.  This means more than just a streak.  The Red Wings are one point behind the Rangers for the league lead, and without those home wins, they would be nowhere close.  The Red Wings feel like a college basketball team, unbeatable at home but completely vulnerable on the road.  Maybe it’s a testimony to the city of Detroit’s devotion to hockey, but rarely has a team been this dominant at home, and if the Red Wings can lock up home ice for the playoffs, they’ll be awfully tough to beat.

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Dealing With a Devastating Loss: Understand Perspective

This is my first article in a long time.  As an avid Pats fan, I didn’t want to jinx anything before the Super Bowl, and immediately after, I was afraid any sort of penmanship would transform mid-sentence into a suicide note.  Before the game, I imagined every losing scenario possible; preparing myself for the inevitable colonoscopy-like violation that is a Super Bowl loss in person.  Now that it’s over, the pain lingers, but I try to remind myself that I’m blessed with a healthy family, a great education, and loyal friends (some of whom revealed there true classless colors with post-game texts and will be receiving excessive hate mail when the Knicks flop and realize that Jeremy Lin isn’t Pete Maravich.)  But here I am, bitter and heartbroken, taking shots at the Knicks in a blog not even half way through the season to appease my own anger.  The astonishing part is just how angry I really am.  The next person that tells me I’m lucky to at least have been at the game because “it was a great game,” will get punched in his/her face while I blast the “Cape Fear” soundtrack.

If my father or any of his brothers read this, they’d slap me in my smug face.  I’ve lived a privileged sports life.  More than privileged.  The Red Sox, Bruins, Celtics and Patriots all have won in my lifetime.  Not just in my lifetime, but late enough that I can vividly remember every championship.  The truth is, I’m luckier than any New York sports fan, and I’m not just saying that out of the venomous hatred I have for everything New York (except bagels and lox, that’s a universal win).  No city has experienced the glory that Boston has recently, but that’s just my problem.  I fear, deep down, that we’ve peaked.  Like Darius Miles or 50 Cent, my best days are behind me.  I’ve settled with the fact that the Celtics, though always dangerous, are at the end of a run I’ll always be grateful for.  The Patriots, well they have as good of a chance as any next year, but there’s just a lingering sensation that my football happiness left with Mike Vrabel.  Even though I love Bobby Valentine, the Red Sox are in disarray to the point that I might have to borrow a couple of their beers for my sorrows.  As much as I care about the Bruins, I can’t claim them of equal importance to me as the other major sports.

I’ll miss the days when the Patriots were underdogs, and seemingly mandated from up above to win Super Bowls.  I’ll miss that unforgettable moment of KG hugging Bill Russell after beating the pretty boy Lakers.  But when I think about missing these things, I think about the Red Sox 2004 run.  I think of watching my dad’s face, vulnerable and vivacious like I’ve never seen before, embracing me while we watched Keith Foulke underhand toss the ball to Doug Mientkiewicz, fearful of fumbling a city’s history.  His dad died when he was 15, and he never got to see the Boston Red Sox win a World Series.  That’s a moment that will always trump a Welker dropped ball, or a David Tyree flash of brilliance.   Perspective is important for us Boston fans, now more than ever, and watching a grown man I’ve always admired jump in glee because he was able to share something with me he never could with his father is as humbling as it gets.  Knowing that it’s been a historic decade for Boston sports has helped/helps console the vicious loss.  Plus, somebody outside the stadium bought my used Super Bowl ticket after the game for $20.  Generic, cheap liquor it is.

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Boston Bruins Continue To Dominate

Rarely has a team been as dominant with so many solid fantasy hockey contributors as the Boston Bruins have recently.  The Stanley Cup champions started slow.  They lost 7 of their first 10 games, and it appeared they had the infamous hangover that so many defending champions have.  As a Boston fan, we settled with our one championship and thought there was a return to normalcy.  Yet in their last 27 games the Bruins have lost 4 games.  That incredible statistic is just the tip of the iceberg.  Only 5 wins out of those 23 have been by one goal.  Their most recent 2 games, against the Devils and Flames, were brutal beat downs.  The Bruins won by a combined score of 15-1.  Tim Thomas has a .940 save percentage.  They’re 1st in goals for and 1st in goals against (keep that in mind while picking your daily fantasy hockey teams).  The difference between this year’s successes is youth is being served.  Center Tyler Seguin is the point’s leader for the team and racking up fantasy points for fantasy owners.  Backup goalie Tukka Rask has nearly matched Thomas’ heroic performances with 1.49 GAA this season.  A dominant regular season, in any sport, doesn’t guarantee a championship.  The Miami Heat are living proof of that.  But the Bruins have post-season experience and great goalie play, and if they can continue there sweeping momentum into the playoffs, they’re going to be awfully hard to beat.

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