HOCKEY

End of NHL lockout sent minor leagues into turmoil

Written by Vincent D. Scebbi | | vscebbi@toledofreepress.com

With the puck dropping Jan. 19 in Los Angeles in front of a sold-out Staples Center, it was official – NHL hockey is back.

The beginning of the 48-game season closed the book on the 120-day lockout between team owners and the National Hockey League Players Association.

The heart of the issues debated between the two sides involved topics such as the length of player contracts and negotiating the salary cap.

“I just thought common sense would prevail and they would get it done,” said Detroit Red Wings head coach Mike Babcok on the final settlement. “It was interesting because both sides were battling as hard as they could for the betterment of the game, in their mind.”

The shortened schedule has no inter-conference games and will end April 27. The Stanley Cup is expected to be awarded to the playoff champion by the end of June.

‘A sweet sigh of relief’

Columbus Blue Jackets head coach Todd Richards said it was a “sweet sigh of relief, but then it was back to work,” once he heard a compromise was made.

“The agreement was done, but we still couldn’t work; that was probably the worst part about it, trying to figure out how many days we were going to have and the schedule,” he said.

Blue Jackets defenseman and assistant captain Jack Johnson said things did not become a reality for him until the team was leaving to face the Nashville Predators for their season opener.

“It was a little surreal, actually, because you’re kind of sitting there like, ‘Is this for real?’ because you’ve been waiting so long,” Johnson said. “Even when we got to camp, it was kind of like ‘Are we really doing this?’ I don’t think it became a reality until we actually got on the plane to Nashville.”

Babcock said the accelerated schedule has put some pressure on his team, as they opened their season playing three games in four nights.

“I think if you’ve been playing, then your fitness is good,” he said following a 4-3 shootout win at Columbus on Jan. 21.

Richards said he expects conditioning to be a factor as the season progresses and injuries could be an issue for every team, as the demanding schedule takes its toll.

“One thing is that fine line as a coach and when do you need to teach, when do you need to work and when do you need to rest,” Richards said. “Combined with the travel and the demands on these guys, there’s a great demand on these guys on a playing standpoint and to find what’s best for your team at this moment.

“It’s going to be a day-by-day process; everyone’s got to deal with it. There’s no one team that’s in a different situation. We’re all going to have tough travel, we’re all going to have these back-to-back games; it’s going to be hard on everyone.”

Throughout the NHL, fans have been packing the arenas as they look to fill the void in their lives caused by the lockout.

The Blue Jackets’ home opener against the Red Wings on Jan. 21 saw Nationwide Arena sell out at 19,202, the largest attendance in the building’s history.

The next night, Detroit lived up to its nickname of Hockeytown as Joe Louis Arena sold out for the 72nd consecutive NHL game.

“The bottom line is the game’s in a great situation,” Babcock said. “We’re going to show our fans in Detroit that our fans have stuck with us that we’re so thankful of that”

Richards said with some of the negativity surrounding the league, he was concerned attendance would be low, but after watching opening day and hearing early reports Nationwide would be sold out, those concerns disappeared.

“I think the fans got a great treat tonight as far as the game and there have been some great games throughout the league,” Richards said.

Turmoil in the minors

For the Toledo Walleye, the end of the lockout came at possibly the worst time. Just as the announcement of a deal was made, the team was preparing to leave for a week-long road trip to Florida to face the defending Kelly Cup champion Florida Everblades.

At the exact halfway point of the season, Toledo was in a first-place tie in their division with the Cincinnati Cyclones.

Then following their Jan. 6 matchup against the Kalamazoo Wings, the Walleye roster was cleaned out as five players were to immediately report to Grand Rapids or Rockford, the team’s two American Hockey League affiliates.

That night, Terry Broadhurst, Ben Youds, Max Nicastro, Byron Froese and Brandon Svendson were sent up as AHL players were being called up to NHL camps.

While in Florida, the Walleye picked up defensemen Dean Moore and Tyler Miller as well as forward Patrick Knowlton of the Southern Professional Hockey League to help fill the space.

It seemed, however, that the Walleye took one step forward and two backward when Wes O’Neill signed a professional tryout contract (PTO) with the Providence Bruins of the AHL on Jan. 12 and left mid-trip.

The Walleye were also without defenseman Cody Lampl who stayed home because his wife gave birth to his daughter.

“We were in disarray defensively,” Vitucci said.

Toledo dropped all three games that week against the Everblades, letting early leads slip away in the final two.

“We could have won all three of them,” said Walleye head coach Nick Vitucci. “With the team we had down there, leaving there with three losses, sure you’re upset about that, but leaving there and honestly going, ‘Wow, we really could’ve won all three with this team that we have right now.’ I wasn’t that upset about that because of how hard we played.”

Of the three signed that week, Knowlton stayed with the team, Miller was dealt to the Everblades and Moore was released from the team.

As soon as the team returned to Ohio, forward Joey Martin signed a PTO with the Texas Stars, who played in Illinois from Jan. 16-21.

Players started to come in, however, as Erik Spady and forward Nino Musitelli signed contracts with Toledo and Tyler Brenner was sent down from the AHL Toronto Marlies.

The Walleye also signed defenseman Ben Woodley, a 6-foot 6-inch defenseman from the British Columbia Hockey League.

Martin also returned to the team on Jan. 22.

“We’re getting the pieces and if any one of these guys don’t do the job, we’re going to try to replace him with someone who will,” Vitucci said. “It’s great when your team is stable like how we were for the first half of the year. But now there’s a lot of moving parts and if any of them break, we’re going to look to try to improve on them.”

Vitucci said the team had a nice change in fortune the following week, as they had a full week of practice to prepare for two road games in Fort Wayne and Evansville, Ind., on Jan 18-19.

He said the week of practice was spent reviewing all of their systems, which helped the new players learn while refreshing the rest of the team.

“It gave us five days to get people in, get immigration done for them, get them in the housing, but also to give us four-to-five good days where we can review things and get everybody going,” Vitucci said.

The full week of practice and review helped the team as they swept both of their road games versus the Komets and IceMen.

Musitelli is already off to an early hot streak, picking up four points in his first two games as a Walleye, including a game-winning goal on Jan. 19 in Evansville.

No lockout, no sweat

Erik Ibsen, general manager of ticket sales for the Walleye and Toledo Mud Hens, said during the first half of the hockey season, ticket sales increased slightly.

He added that should the lockout have continued and the NHL season were postponed or canceled, he was expecting ticket sales to increase more.

“We think we probably got some benefit  from them not playing so far; at the same time, we weren’t expecting to get any real benefits until this time of the year if the lockout did indeed continue,” Ibsen said. “We figured by now people would be missing their hockey fix and it would be getting into the homestretch of our season and we were going to see the potential for more fans due to the fact that the NHL wasn’t playing.”

Despite the fact ticket sales increased, Ibsen said there is no direct way to tell if it was because hockey fans were looking for a cure for the itch or other factors such as Toledo’s success on the ice.

Ibsen said he does not expect attendance to curb now that the lockout is over and, at the current rate, the Walleye are prepared to set the best attendance record in team history.

Team owner and general manager Joe Napoli said while there could be an increase in attendance due to the lockout, it is better for the sport when the NHL is in session.

“It always helps when they are playing; it increases awareness across the country and across the world,” Napoli said. “There is some short-term gain, but the short-term gains are not worth the long-term damage of a lockout.”

Napoli said one of the greatest dangers to the sport during any sport’s lockout is the possibility fans will “find other things to do and forget about hockey.”

While there may have been some fans getting their hockey fix, Ibsen said he saw more people at the Huntington Center who may not have been hockey fans.

“It was completely obvious if you spent an evening in the box office that all these people were coming that haven’t come before,” he said. “Most of the people who attended that hadn’t come before were people who maybe aren’t necessarily hockey fans, but they haven’t given the Walleye a try and it was a night out with friends, or a date night or part of a group outing.”

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Shag on Sports

Culbreath: Blue over lack of Blue Jackets coverage

Written by Matt 'Shaggy' Culbreath | | shaggy@wspd.com

After four months of “Will they? Won’t they?” the NHL owners and players finally came to a new collective bargaining agreement, and the league launched its 48-game regular season last week. So begins a breakneck sprint to the playoffs, with every win meaning twice as much as it did the year before. Last year, the lowest-ranked team only had 65 points. This year, 50 will be plenty to get you in.

With the start of the new season began my annual tradition. I get off the air at 1370 WSPD, race home and turn on the TV. I find Fox Sports Ohio and pray that this is the year the Columbus Blue Jackets are shown in Toledo. And every year, I’m greeted with the same disappointment: poker on TV.

“Columbus?” I hear you all ask. Allow me to explain.

A few years back, I decided I wanted to follow hockey more closely, and in order to accomplish that, you need to follow a team. It’s easy to watch a star play — I’m not the biggest basketball fan, but I could watch LeBron James or Kobe Bryant highlight reels all day. To really understand a sport, however, you need to get to know the role players. The sixth man. The trench guys. The enforcer.

How do you pick a favorite team when you’re in your mid-20s, though? Particularly when a pro-level team isn’t in your town, and nobody in your family was a fan of the sport before you? Jumping on to follow the Detroit Red Wings felt disingenuous, simply because they’ve been so good for so long. There was no suffering required to get into that fanbase, you just hop on and enjoy the winning!

No, I needed a little more at stake. So my eyes drifted south, toward the upstart Blue Jackets. Only a few years old, the team had just drafted this slick Russian named Nikolai Zherdev in the draft, and this Rick Nash kid was pretty good, too. It wasn’t the best team, but it had the foundation to build a contender. Yes, I’ll suffer now, but it will pay off in success in a few years.

That was 2003. I’m still suffering.

I’m not worried about the quality of the team. The Blue Jackets hired John Davidson in the front office, and he’ll turn the team around just like he turned around St. Louis. It traded Rick Nash for building blocks to finally lay that foundation it supposedly had in 2003. I really do believe in this team, or else I wouldn’t have worn my jersey in the headshot that’s attached to this column. What I’m worried about is how it’s still nigh impossible for me to watch this team on television. The NHL has decided Toledo is a Red Wings market, and there will be no others. In fact, as far as I can tell, Lucas County is the only market that won’t carry the Jackets —friends in Wood County report that the CBJ play on their television sets.

I guess I’m just a bit flustered because Toledo is a battleground in nearly every other sport. Buckeyes and Wolverines. Tigers and Indians. Lions and Browns. Pistons and Cavaliers (at least, during the LeBron years). Since when has distance or success dictated anything when it comes to rooting interests in this town? The only thing that’s keeping Columbus out of the market is that it is an expansion team of only 11 years. Its fanbase has struggled through some terrible years. Why cut off one of Ohio’s big cities simply because of old allegiances?

I know this might be a pipe dream for me. I know the fanbase is miniscule in the 419, and it’s not about to get any bigger unless the team starts winning. I still think this team is poised to make some noise in the near future, and the NHL is missing out on a real opportunity. Nobody is going to stop rooting for a successful franchise like the Wings, even if it’s stumbled out of the gate this season. You can only make more fans out of those who want to check out the youngest team in the league. At the very least, you’re serving us Glass City Gunners — we who turned away from the easy path, because it will make success that much more sweet.

Matt “Shaggy” Culbreath is sports director at 1370 WSPD. Email him at shaggy@wspd.com.

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NHL

Red Wings edge Blue Jackets in shootout

Written by Vincent D. Scebbi | | vscebbi@toledofreepress.com

COLUMBUS — The Columbus Blue Jackets overcame a two-goal deficit, but could not close out as the Detroit Red Wings spoiled their home opener by winning 4-3 in a shootout on Jan. 21.

In a game that saw a total of 20 penalties, the Blue Jackets (1-0-1) capitalized on two power play goals in the final period to take their first and only lead for a short while.

A defensive breakdown, however, helped set up a back-door goal by Pavel Datsyuk with 6:04 left in regulation to tie the game.

“It was ours to win it at the end, so losing it in a shootout was a tough pill to swallow,” said Blue Jackets defenseman Jack Johnson. “At the very least, we got a point out of it and every point is crucial in a 48-game schedule.”

Detroit’s special teams went 0-for-7 on the power play while the Blue Jackets scored twice on six chances.

“We need that in an 82-game season; special teams can win or lose you in playoffs, but we’re really going to need that now,” Johnson said.

The Red Wings (1-1-0) dominated puck control in the opening period, outshooting Columbus 13-5, but netminder Sergei Bobrovsky stopped every puck fired at him.

“If he’s not good in the first period, with their power play opportunities, we would have been in a very big hole,” said Blue Jackets head coach Todd Richards. “In the first period, we were too sloppy. Some of the credit has to go to Detroit and how they played, but we’ve got to play better than how we played tonight.”

Columbus struggled to get the puck on net early on, getting its first shot on Jimmy Howard eight minutes into the game.

“You see your team compete and it makes you want to compete even harder out there for them and make saves,” Howard said. “We did a good job of getting on them quick but we took our foot off the gas a little bit, got into penalty trouble and you can’t do that in this league because they’ll make you pay.”

The Red Wings got on the board first early in the second on a goal by Brian Lashoff with assists from Mikael Samuelsson and Niklas Kronwall.

Detroit made it 2-0 with 5:54 left in the middle period after Ian White fired a one-timer set up by Johan Franzen to light the lamp. Datsyuk also helped set up the goal.

Columbus responded just 1:14 later when Cam Atkinson broke away and beat Howard to cut the deficit to one. The goal was Atkinson’s first of the year and Ryan Johansen and Derek Dorsett assisted the play.

The goal was a turning point for the Blue Jackets as momentum began to shift their way. With an energized crowd, Columbus began outhustling a stout Red Wings defense and started winning more of the battles for loose pucks.

“It was really big because at the time, there was no energy from the crowd,” Richards said. “We really didn’t give them many opportunities to stand up and cheer and Cam scored that goal and it kind of energized our guys.”

The final period saw eight penalties committed, five of them by Detroit, within a 14-minute span.

“It seemed like both teams were going into the box one right after the other, after the other,” said Detroit head coach Mike Babcock. “I don’t know what to say, but they’re penalties because [the referees] called them.”

The Blue Jackets scored their first power play goal of the night just 3:24 into the third period when defenseman James Wisniewski ripped a slap shot from in front of the blue line to tie the game. Derick Brassard and RJ Umberger assisted the goal.

Columbus took the lead a little over five minutes later on its second power play goal.

Vinny Prospal found a loose puck in front of the net and beat Howard after Nikita Nikitin sent a shot over the net that bounced off the glass. Fedor Tyutin also assisted the goal.

The Red Wings scored the equalizer a little over five minutes later when Datsyuk took a pass from Kronwall and saw nothing but twine as he lit the lamp. Henrik Zetterberg also set up the goal.

Columbus had a chance to win the game in overtime with 3:17 left. The Blue Jackets had a 3-on-2 advantage, but Howard read the puck and made the save to end the scoring threat.

Detroit came close to scoring later in the overtime period when center Valtteri Filppula, in front of the net, tried to bury a puck past Bobrovsky, but the Blue Jackets defense cleared the puck away.

Atkinson went first for the Blue Jackets in the shootout and his shot was originally called a goal, but after officials reviewed the goal, it was overturned.

Damien Brunner was the fourth and final shooter for the Red Wings and his shot snuck behind Bobrovsky to end the game.

The Red Wings play their home opener on Jan. 22, hosting the Dallas Stars. The puck is scheduled to drop at Joe Louis Arena at 7:30 p.m.

Columbus plays again Jan. 23, heading to Phoenix to face off against the Coyotes. The action is scheduled to begin at 10 p.m.

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