Per sah67 in the Novemeber thread, Moulson got sent down to Manchester today.
[quote KeithK]Per sah67 in the Novemeber thread, Moulson got sent down to Manchester today.[/quote]
After a strong start, his last few games for the Kings were not very good. The Kings are in a serious struggle and trying to find both offense and defense, so I'm guessing he won't be back too soon. If Frolov comes off of IR soon, he would have to wait for 2 injuries.
O'Byrne got called up by the habs.
My source is Team 990 in Montreal. I'm listening online.
[quote Ronald '09]O'Byrne got called up by the habs.
My source is Team 990 in Montreal. I'm listening online.[/quote]Canadiens call up Lapierre, O'Byrne (http://canadiens.nhl.com/team/app/?service=page&page=NewsPage&articleid=345496)
Dan Glover has been traded from Fresno Falcons (ECHL) to Columbia (South Carolina) Inferno (ECHL).
Are these ECHL teams affiliated with NHL clubs, and if so, what happens when a player gets traded?
[quote Jordan 04]Are these ECHL teams affiliated with NHL clubs, and if so, what happens when a player gets traded?[/quote]
ECHL teams are affiliated with NHL teams, but all of the players on them are not. I assume people getting traded in the ECHL are not actually under contract with the NHL affiliate at all so it makes no difference.
[quote Beeeej]Dan Glover has been traded from Fresno Falcons (ECHL) to Columbia (South Carolina) Inferno (ECHL).[/quote]
It must be annoying to get traded across the country in the ECHL. I hope his landlord doesn't bust his chops about breaking the lease.
[quote Jacob '06][quote Jordan 04]Are these ECHL teams affiliated with NHL clubs, and if so, what happens when a player gets traded?[/quote]
ECHL teams are affiliated with NHL teams, but all of the players on them are not. I assume people getting traded in the ECHL are not actually under contract with the NHL affiliate at all so it makes no difference.[/quote]
Apparently Fresno is one of 3 ECHL teams that has no affiliation:
http://www.echl.com/upload_images/Affiliates.jpg
What you said is still absolutely true, but interesting to note.
Teams pay for housing, so I am sure he will be switching apartments with whoever is coming the other way.
Anyone notice that Dougy Murray is 4th in the NHL in +/-!
[quote nyiballs]Teams pay for housing, so I am sure he will be switching apartments with whoever is coming the other way.
Anyone notice that Dougy Murray is 4th in the NHL in +/-![/quote]
Please... it's now Douglasy Murray. Thanks.
Nice article here about the call up...gives a shout out to Cornell.
http://www.canada.com/topics/sports/hockey/canadiens/story.html?id=b3c79c2a-bbf1-447e-bf69-92bb356e3e7d&k=43659
O'Byrne wearing #3 and playing with Hamrlick. Drew the games first penalty (which MTL scored on) and has two nice checks so far. He had NESN's Jack Edwards talking about his literal and figurative impact on the game so far in his debut.
If I watched that play correctly, I think he got an assist but not a plus. I could've been wrong though, but I think he made a pass, got on the bench, and then the second goal scored.
O'Byrne gets his first NFL assist on a goal by Chipchura.
As stated above he jumped on the bench for a change so is still even for the night.
First Cornell mention of the night, along with the 208 penalty minutes in 92 ECAC games ("uncivilized for an Ivy Leaguer")
[quote oceanst41]O'Byrne gets his first NFL assist on a goal by Chipchura.
As stated above he jumped on the bench for a change so is still even for the night.[/quote]
I didn't know they had assists in the NFL. Is that like when you hand off the ball and the RB throws for a TD? :)
[quote Jacob '06][quote oceanst41]O'Byrne gets his first NFL assist on a goal by Chipchura.
As stated above he jumped on the bench for a change so is still even for the night.[/quote]
I didn't know they had assists in the NFL. Is that like when you hand off the ball and the RB throws for a TD? :)[/quote]
Clearly I'm just distressed my Bruins are down 3-0...check that 3-1 ;-)
Although the NFL does give out assists on tackles, not that makes up for my gaff.
O'Byrne is taking regular shifts and seems to be playing well. I will be interested to hear what they say on the Team 990 out of Montreal tomorrow. I listen to that station a lot when I am driving in far northern Vermont 2 days/week for my job. They spend about 90% of the time talking hockey.
I do hope the Bruins' 2nd period rally continues, though. ;-)
Anyone know how much Leneveu will be affected (hopefully helped) by the trade of Auld from Phoenix to Boston?
[quote oceanst41]O'Byrne wearing #3 and playing with Hamrlick. Drew the games first penalty (which MTL scored on) and has two nice checks so far. He had NESN's Jack Edwards talking about his literal and figurative impact on the game so far in his debut.[/quote]
I am intrigued by this "figurative impact" of which you speak...
O'Byrne picks up his second assist of the game.
(Still even for the game since he was on the ice for Axelsson's goal in the second)
[quote Jordan 04][quote oceanst41]O'Byrne wearing #3 and playing with Hamrlick. Drew the games first penalty (which MTL scored on) and has two nice checks so far. He had NESN's Jack Edwards talking about his literal and figurative impact on the game so far in his debut.[/quote]
I am intrigued by this "figurative impact" of which you speak...[/quote]
I think Jack Edwards was trying to accentuate the fact that he'd been throwing his weight around in addition to playing a solid game to that point.
[quote cth95]Anyone know how much Leneveu will be affected (hopefully helped) by the trade of Auld from Phoenix to Boston?[/quote]
I'm going to guess not at all. Gretzky is really down on him, and he can't get out of that organization fast enough at the end of this season when his contract runs out. I guess between Aebeschir(sp?) going to Europe and the trade for Auld he is the 3rd/4th goalie option but I doubt he'll see NHL ice this year.
Hate to say it, but I think Lenny's days as a bonafide NHL prospect are over. I don't think any team is going to pick up on an aging career AHLer who hasn't shown once that he can handle the NHL game, even given many opportunities.
[quote oceanst41][quote Jordan 04][quote oceanst41]O'Byrne wearing #3 and playing with Hamrlick. Drew the games first penalty (which MTL scored on) and has two nice checks so far. He had NESN's Jack Edwards talking about his literal and figurative impact on the game so far in his debut.[/quote]
I am intrigued by this "figurative impact" of which you speak...[/quote]
I think Jack Edwards was trying to accentuate the fact that he'd been throwing his weight around in addition to playing a solid game to that point.[/quote]
Gotcha.
Sounds like he had a solid game. Great to see!
[quote nyiballs]Hate to say it, but I think Lenny's days as a bonafide NHL prospect are over. I don't think any team is going to pick up on an aging career AHLer who hasn't shown once that he can handle the NHL game, even given many opportunities.[/quote]
I think that's a bit premature. Look how Tim Thomas has flourished after years of seemingly going nowhere.
[quote scoop85][quote nyiballs]Hate to say it, but I think Lenny's days as a bonafide NHL prospect are over. I don't think any team is going to pick up on an aging career AHLer who hasn't shown once that he can handle the NHL game, even given many opportunities.[/quote]
I think that's a bit premature. Look how Tim Thomas has flourished after years of seemingly going nowhere.[/quote]
When Ryan Miller was 25 he was just getting his first real shot in the NHL. He'd played well in a few games, and then put up terrible numbers in his second stint before getting the better part of a season in as Buffalo's primary netminder. Of course, his AHL numbers were better than LeNeveu's.
LeNeveu will be 25 at the end of this season. I have a much better sense of what constitutes old in baseball, but I'm pretty sure 25 is still considered a young goaltender.
[quote Jordan 04][quote oceanst41][quote Jordan 04][quote oceanst41]O'Byrne wearing #3 and playing with Hamrlick. Drew the games first penalty (which MTL scored on) and has two nice checks so far. He had NESN's Jack Edwards talking about his literal and figurative impact on the game so far in his debut.[/quote]
I am intrigued by this "figurative impact" of which you speak...[/quote]
I think Jack Edwards was trying to accentuate the fact that he'd been throwing his weight around in addition to playing a solid game to that point.[/quote]
Gotcha.
Sounds like he had a solid game. Great to see![/quote]
What is the likelihood that Ryan will stay up? My impression is he was a replacement for a punishment demotion.
[quote Trotsky]
What is the likelihood that Ryan will stay up? My impression is he was a replacement for a punishment demotion.[/quote]
Not sure, though if I had to guess I'd say a much better chance than Moulson had. Either way, he is an NHL defenseman in the making based on his size and speed alone.
[quote redhair34][quote Trotsky]
What is the likelihood that Ryan will stay up? My impression is he was a replacement for a punishment demotion.[/quote]Not sure, though if I had to guess I'd say a much better chance than Moulson had. Either way, he is an NHL defenseman in the making based on his size and speed alone.[/quote]The impression I have is that the Canadiens definitely think of him as a real prospect, so if he continues playing well and demonstrating that he's ready then I don't see why they'd send him down.
How is it that they keep track to the second of all the ice-time in box scores? On Yahoo, they just list total ice time, but on ESPN they list everything, PP, SH, and even. I think someone posted some kind of graph on here a while back. Seems like a lot of stats keeping.
The NHL keeps track of an obscene amount of stats. Most of them just don't make it into the average box score. Here's a sample:
http://www.nhl.com/scores/htmlreports/20072008/PL020407.HTM
[quote Chris 02]How is it that they keep track to the second of all the ice-time in box scores? On Yahoo, they just list total ice time, but on ESPN they list everything, PP, SH, and even. I think someone posted some kind of graph on here a while back. Seems like a lot of stats keeping.[/quote]
From what I've seen on forums online, this should be pretty easy using software that the NHL uses. I assume it is something straightforward like having a screen with every roster number on it and just clicking the player's number as they go off/on the ice.
[quote Chris 02]How is it that they keep track to the second of all the ice-time in box scores? On Yahoo, they just list total ice time, but on ESPN they list everything, PP, SH, and even. I think someone posted some kind of graph on here a while back. Seems like a lot of stats keeping.[/quote]
I'm slightly confused by your question. What do you mean by "how is it"?
In any case, I think I might be the one who posted the chart you were talking about (maybe). From the scores pages at NHL.com (for instance, yesterday's O'B game is on this list http://www.nhl.com/nhl/app?date=12%2F06%2F2007&page=Scoreboard&service=page ) you can get time on ice information (TOI) and also the event summary. There's also a game number at the top of both of those (0406).
If you then go to www.timeonice.com and tell it that this was game number "20406" (I don't know why you have to add the 2 to the front of the game number) you can see the shift charts lined up against power plays and goals. Is that what you were looking for?
Chris
LGR!
25... It depends. Look and Lunqvist and DiPietro. DP is 26 and Lundqvist is 25.
As for Tim Thomas... he was never a prospect. He got a change though and ran with it. Ryan Miller... he was still looked favorably by his management and got chances with the same organization.
Lenny will have to find another franchise willing to invest in him and take a chance. That won't be easy. With the experienced tenders out there and the never-ending stream of prospects, it just won't happen.
Look at Yann Danis... his AHL numbers have been outstanding. He got a shutout in his first NHL game, and he is still below Carey Price and others on Montreal's depth chart. (and to be fair, I think Danis' numbers were more impressive than Lenny's in college. He played on a MUCH weaker team).
It's a tough prospect getting into and stayin in the NHL as a goaltender. There are only 60 spots for the entire world to fill.
[quote nyiballs]It's a tough prospect getting into and stayin in the NHL as a goaltender. There are only 60 spots for the entire world to fill.[/quote]
No argument with that, but I don't think LeNeveu is out based on age or past performance at this point. He's done well enough in the AHL, and played well in some of his 21 NHL games (although he was awful in some of them). His NHL time seems more like a few cups of coffee than "many opportunities" to me, but maybe NHL GMs see the world differently than I do.
His AHL/NHL career trajectory over the first 4 years isn't *that* much different from guys like Miller and DiPietro. If you look at the numbers, Miller and DiPietro weren't any better than LeNeveu during their first 20-30 games at the NHL level than he was (in fact, they may have been worse). Like you say, the big difference is that those guys had teams committed to their development, instead of Phoenix, which doesn't seem committed to developing ANY goaltending talent.
After a little more digging, I see Ilya Bryzgalov actually has an almost identical career pattern to LeNeveu, just with fewer NHL games early in his career - second round draft pick, several seasons in the minors with a few cups of coffee in the pros, and then a season or two as a back up starting at age 25. At 27, he's Phoenix's starter, and is essentially an average NHL goalie stats-wise.
Bad luck for LeNeveu ending up in Phoenix. It may be that he's not good enough, too, but he may never really find out. However, some other team might well be willing to take a chance on him, given his numbers, his size, his technique, and the fact that he really *hasn't* gotten time at the NHL level but *has* spent a few seasons developing in the AHL.
In two seasons, if he's still flailing around posting a .910 save % in the AHL, then I'd agree that he's beyond a long shot for the NHL. At this point, I think he still qualifies as a legitimate prospect, just not the can't miss, A-list prospect he was when he first signed with Phoenix. He'll need a few breaks to make it to the NHL, just like any AHL goaltending prospect, but he's not done yet.
[quote CowbellGuy]The NHL keeps track of an obscene amount of stats. Most of them just don't make it into the average box score. Here's a sample:
http://www.nhl.com/scores/htmlreports/20072008/PL020407.HTM[/quote]Ugh, did you have to pick the report from THAT game? ::bang::
>>> Bad luck for LeNeveu ending up in Phoenix. It may be that he's not good enough, too, but he may never really find out.
Nice summary of Leneveu's chances.
[quote Josh '99][quote CowbellGuy]The NHL keeps track of an obscene amount of stats. Most of them just don't make it into the average box score. Here's a sample:
http://www.nhl.com/scores/htmlreports/20072008/PL020407.HTM[/quote]Ugh, did you have to pick the report from THAT game? ::bang::[/quote]
Would you have preferred this game? I should would.
http://www.nhl.com/scores/htmlreports/20052006/PL030132.HTM
[quote scoop85][quote nyiballs]Hate to say it, but I think Lenny's days as a bonafide NHL prospect are over. I don't think any team is going to pick up on an aging career AHLer who hasn't shown once that he can handle the NHL game, even given many opportunities.[/quote]
I think that's a bit premature. Look how Tim Thomas has flourished after years of seemingly going nowhere.[/quote]
Not to mention Manny Legace:
http://www.hockeydb.com/ihdb/stats/pdisplay.php3?pid=3081
Murray +1 after one period as SJ leads Phoenix 1-0. At the beginning of the season, who would have thought Douglas would be getting a regular shift, while Matt Carle has been relegated to spot duty? ::crazy::
Check out the line for the Manchester/Worcester game last night. The first player in the shoot out for each team was a Cornell alum and they both scored! Swweeeett!
[quote Brian]Check out the line for the Manchester/Worcester game last night. The first player in the shoot out for each team was a Cornell alum and they both scored! Swweeeett![/quote]
Feel free to, y'know, tell us who they were or provide a link to the aforementioned line for the game.
[quote Beeeej][quote Brian]Check out the line for the Manchester/Worcester game last night. The first player in the shoot out for each team was a Cornell alum and they both scored! Swweeeett![/quote]
Feel free to, y'know, tell us who they were or provide a link to the aforementioned line for the game.[/quote]
Yeah, seriously. So I went and did the work:
http://stats.theahl.com/stats/game-summary.php?game_id=1003850
Moulson and Iggulden. Moulson is wearing an "A" for Manchester and Iggulden had an assist in the game.
You don't have the AHL and NHL pages bookmarked or added to your favorites? I'm disappointed. Quit your complaining atleast I let you know it was out there for your reading enjoyment!:`-(
O'byrne started for the Habs tonight, but picked up a minus on his 2nd shift.
[quote Brian]You don't have the AHL and NHL pages bookmarked or added to your favorites? I'm disappointed. Quit your complaining atleast I let you know it was out there for your reading enjoyment!:`-([/quote]
Nicely played. The only thing funnier than this post is the very real possibility that you might actually be serious.
[quote Jacob '06]O'byrne started for the Habs tonight, but picked up a minus on his 2nd shift.[/quote]Not a good night for our alumni defensemen. The Habs lost 5-1 at home against Carolina, and O'Byrne was -2 in 19:18 of ice time; the Sharks lost 7-1 at home against Buffalo, and Murray was -1 (which I guess isn't so bad when your team loses 7-1) in 19:23 of ice time.
Tony Marinaro on the Team 990 thought the Canadiens nead to keep O'Byrne and Lapierre in the line up if they are going to turn their season around. He said he knew it was only one game, but Tony spoke very highly of O'Byrne's performance.
I saw one of the highlights. His D-partner gave up a 2 on 1. O'B was the man back and played it well, but couldn't stop the pass.
How does O'Byrne's decision making and speed look at the NHL level? Has anyone seen both of his games? I may be in Montreal over the holidays and try to see a game. I hope he sticks but it often seems that for your d-men they're often sent back down at least once.....even if they're good prospects (as Ryan is), particularly if they have other prospects that they want to see in NHL game action.
Regarding Murray versus Carle, how about that contract Carle signed (4 years, $13.75mm)? I haven't heard of any injuries, seems like a protracted sophomore slump.
Here is a link to the Canadiens Fan Forum. The few I read were all positive and pretty excited about O'Byrne.
http://forum.canadiens.com/index.php?showtopic=15793
[quote cth95]Here is a link to the Canadiens Fan Forum. The few I read were all positive and pretty excited about O'Byrne.
http://forum.canadiens.com/index.php?showtopic=15793[/quote]
That one's archived. The current O'Byrne thread is here:
http://forum.canadiens.com/index.php?showtopic=17274
Hopefully OB has outgrown the "mishandle-and-turnover-the-puck-2-feet-in-front-of-his-own-net" move or the Canadiens fans will not be as satisfied in a few weeks
I watched the whole game of SJ vs Buffalo on Sat night on the tube - and thought Doug was a shade slow, but made up for it in general with good positioning. The Sabres were all over the Sharks for most of the game, team hustle and speed made the difference.
Doug had a couple of good checks and played OK but the Sharks as a team were a step slow and leaving folks open in red zone too much.
Ryan Miller was really impressive in net also.
[quote sah67][quote cth95]Here is a link to the Canadiens Fan Forum. The few I read were all positive and pretty excited about O'Byrne.
http://forum.canadiens.com/index.php?showtopic=15793[/quote]
That one's archived. The current O'Byrne thread is here:
http://forum.canadiens.com/index.php?showtopic=17274[/quote]
I went to your link and it was also archived. Maybe we have to surf to the right page of the links we posted. When I copied the link in originally, it was current.
From today's Ithaca Journal- San Jose Security (http://theithacajournal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071211/NEWS01/712110326/1002)
"The San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara area of northern California is the most secure large metropolitan area (population 500,000 or more), while the most secure mid-size city (population between 150,000 - 500,000) is Olympia, Wash"
I guess Douglas' enforcer reputation reaches beyond the hockey arenas. ;-)
MCKEE IN CONTROL: In his last three starts, goalie Dave McKee has stopped 143 of 151 shots, including a career-high and RoadRunners' ECHL record 57 last Tuesday, to post a 2.59 goals against average and a sizzling .947% save percentage since Nov. 29. The 57 saves were two shy of a personal-best for McKee who turned aside 59 shots in a 1-0 triple overtime loss while playing for Cornell University on March 26, 2006 against Wisconsin in the NCAA Midwest Regional Final.
from: phxroadrunners.com (http://www.phxroadrunners.com/news/recentheadlines/index.html?article_id=603)
much improvement from the beginning of the season.
From today's Ithaca Journal: (http://theithacajournal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071211/SPORTS/712110319)
"There happens to be Big Red connection to goalie goals, as former Cornell keeper Jean-Marc Pelletier was credited with scoring a goal this season with Hamburg in Germany's premier pro hockey league, the Deutsche Eishockey Liga.
But unlike Hextall, who fired a puck directly at an empty net, Pelletier was merely a bystander to hockey's version of an own goal. With a delayed penalty signaled against Hamburg, Berlin pulled its goalie in favor of an extra attacker. Former NHL defenseman Deron Quint then sent a wayward pass into his own net, and since Pelletier was the last member of the Freezers to touch the puck, he was awarded credit for the goal."
[quote redice]From today's Ithaca Journal: "There happens to be Big Red connection to goalie goals, as former Cornell keeper Jean-Marc Pelletier was credited with scoring a goal this season with Hamburg in Germany's premier pro hockey league, the Deutsche Eishockey Liga.
But unlike Hextall, who fired a puck directly at an empty net, Pelletier was merely a bystander to hockey's version of an own goal. With a delayed penalty signaled against Hamburg, Berlin pulled its goalie in favor of an extra attacker. Former NHL defenseman Deron Quint then sent a wayward pass into his own net, and since Pelletier was the last member of the Freezers to touch the puck, he was awarded credit for the goal."[/quote]
This situation almost played out in a San Jose game last week. I think it was vs. Phoenix, but my memory is failing. I do remember that it was Craig Rivet (and not Murray) that sent the pass back into his own zone. Unfortunately, the announcers didn't want to go back and see who would have gotten credit for the goal had the puck gone in the net.
From the NCAA rulebook:
QuoteDuring a delayed penalty, a goal may not be scored by the penalized team as a result of a deflection off of a penalized team player.
But I guess it's still ok to stuff it in your own net. More randomness. Marty Brodeur is the only (NHL, anyway) goalie with a game-winning goal. Chew on that. Makes me vomit a little.
[quote redice]From today's Ithaca Journal: (http://theithacajournal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071211/SPORTS/712110319)
"There happens to be Big Red connection to goalie goals, as former Cornell keeper Jean-Marc Pelletier was credited with scoring a goal this season with Hamburg in Germany's premier pro hockey league, the Deutsche Eishockey Liga.
But unlike Hextall, who fired a puck directly at an empty net, Pelletier was merely a bystander to hockey's version of an own goal. With a delayed penalty signaled against Hamburg, Berlin pulled its goalie in favor of an extra attacker. Former NHL defenseman Deron Quint then sent a wayward pass into his own net, and since Pelletier was the last member of the Freezers to touch the puck, he was awarded credit for the goal."[/quote]
This happened during a CU game years ago. I don't remember the player or team, but a penalty was called and then the opposition dropped the puck into their own net. The penalized player got credit for the goal. Anyone with a better memory?
[quote Jim Hyla][quote redice]From today's Ithaca Journal: (http://theithacajournal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071211/SPORTS/712110319)
"There happens to be Big Red connection to goalie goals, as former Cornell keeper Jean-Marc Pelletier was credited with scoring a goal this season with Hamburg in Germany's premier pro hockey league, the Deutsche Eishockey Liga.
But unlike Hextall, who fired a puck directly at an empty net, Pelletier was merely a bystander to hockey's version of an own goal. With a delayed penalty signaled against Hamburg, Berlin pulled its goalie in favor of an extra attacker. Former NHL defenseman Deron Quint then sent a wayward pass into his own net, and since Pelletier was the last member of the Freezers to touch the puck, he was awarded credit for the goal."[/quote]
This happened during a CU game years ago. I don't remember the player or team, but a penalty was called and then the opposition dropped the puck into their own net. The penalized player got credit for the goal. Anyone with a better memory?[/quote]
I forget the player's name or details at the moment, but as I recall the penalized Cornellian called it the prettiest goal he'd ever scored.
[quote RichH]Moulson is wearing an "A" for Manchester[/quote]
Speaking of Moulson, I saw that the Kings just sent Gabe Gauthier back down after three games and called up Jeff Giuliano, who has played in 1 game so far. According to the NHL game rosters, all of three them were at left wing -- are the Kings looking for a permanent one or just brewing coffee for all the AHL left wingers in their system? It sure seems like they're searching for something.
This article just lists the Gauthier and Giuliano transactions (not worth clicking): http://www.concordmonitor.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071211/SPORTS/712110346
[quote crodger1][quote RichH]Moulson is wearing an "A" for Manchester[/quote]
Speaking of Moulson, I saw that the Kings just sent Gabe Gauthier back down after three games and called up Jeff Giuliano, who has played in 1 game so far. According to the NHL game rosters, all of three them were at left wing -- are the Kings looking for a permanent one or just brewing coffee for all the AHL left wingers in their system? It sure seems like they're searching for something.
This article just lists the Gauthier and Giuliano transactions (not worth clicking): http://www.concordmonitor.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071211/SPORTS/712110346[/quote]
They are actually looking for a 4th line center, but injuries have pretty much shuffled everything around. Once Frolov and Nagy come back in on the 2nd line, I think Giuliano will be a good fit for 4th line center and there won't be any more transactions. I think Frolov and Nagy are both due back next week.The Kings have finally been getting a little bit of secondary scoring from a few of their guys, so Moulson's chances of getting back up are getting slimmer. If they get in to another secondary scoring slump he may get called up to play 2nd or 3rd line winger.
[quote KeithK]
I forget the player's name or details at the moment, but as I recall the penalized Cornellian called it the prettiest goal he'd ever scored.[/quote]
Dave Crombeen.
It was in the final game of the 1986 RS, at Houston Field House. Cornell fell behind by 2-3 goals, but Crombeen's goal helped Cornell come all the way back to win in overtime, 7-6.
Crombeen was a very hard checking forward -- he would have been at home on the '03 team. He had 7 goals that season, which is frankly amazing to me. But then again, Dan Nichols is on the same pace.
O'byrne had a pretty bad turnover with the puck hopping over his stick which lead to a goal, and he has only gotten one shift since. The coach seems to be messing with the defense pairings to keep him off the ice, but it is intermission now so we'll see what happens in the third.
[quote Trotsky][quote KeithK]
I forget the player's name or details at the moment, but as I recall the penalized Cornellian called it the prettiest goal he'd ever scored.[/quote]
Dave Crombeen.
It was in the final game of the 1986 RS, at Houston Field House. Cornell fell behind by 2-3 goals, but Crombeen's goal helped Cornell come all the way back to win in overtime, 7-6.
Crombeen was a very hard checking forward -- he would have been at home on the '03 team. He had 7 goals that season, which is frankly amazing to me. But then again, Dan Nichols is on the same pace.[/quote]
Thanks, I thought RPI, but, as you get senile, you never know.
[quote Jacob '06]O'byrne had a pretty bad turnover with the puck hopping over his stick which lead to a goal, and he has only gotten one shift since. The coach seems to be messing with the defense pairings to keep him off the ice, but it is intermission now so we'll see what happens in the third.[/quote]
Only 2 shifts in the third period.
pretty bad is an understatement...that was an awful turnover. had a nice replay of it.
I really wish I hadn't posted this...
Don't be too hard on yourself. It could have happened to any of us. In any event, the Habs fans seem a lot more forgiving of his youthful indiscretions than eLF ever was.
Also, they are calling him "Rhino" - how did we not think of that?
[quote ugarte]Also, they are calling him "Rhino" - how did we not think of that?[/quote]
It's not because he's fat, not because he's got birds on his back, but because he's horny.
With all the injuries hitting San Jose, I'm surprised Iggulden hasn't been called up yet. I suppose they're just scraping by as is though.
The never forgotten Robby Schremp was named the first star of the night in the AHL with two goals, an assist, and +2 for the Springfield Falcons on Tuesday.
For those of you who look at this stuff too...the paid attendance for that game (against the Binghamton Senators) was 1602.
Schremp is having a good season though. In 26 games he is 8+21.
O'Byrne playing for MTL tonight again. Not getting a lot of ice time or at least I'm not seeing him or hearing his name much on the Flyers TV coverage. But he made a nice defensive play on Joffrey Lupul in a 1 on 1 rush.
Edit: O'B in the box (2:00 for hooking) for the Flyers first goal. Fortunately for him, Montreal is up 4-1.
Also, in some more random alumni news Brian McCutcheon gets a mention by Marty Biron on "Coatsey's Corner" between periods.
Well (I'm assuming you already know this) that's because Biron was coached by McCutcheon in Rochester from 1997-2000 and is responsible for most of his pro-development, and then continued with Biron into Buffalo up until Biron's trade to the Flyers.
Biron really shined with McCutcheon in the AHL. He had a great season in 1998-1999 going 36-13-3 with 6 SO's and a 2.07 GAA. He won the Aldege Bastien (AHL version of the Vezina) and was a first-team all-star. Rochester lost to Providence in 5 games in the Calder Cup Finals. I was at all the games in Rochester, real heart breaker.
[quote amerks127]The never forgotten Robby Schremp....[/quote]
Someone want to tell me who in the hell that is?
I have no idea...But according to the Internet Hockey Database, I shouldn't really feel bad about knowing who that is.
http://www.hockeydb.com/ihdb/stats/pdisplay.php3?pid=71793
The Hockey DB is a great website. They're Cornell records are remarkably up to date.
He never played for Cornell, but he's from Syracuse and his name has surfaced a few times on this board.
[quote amerks127]He never played for Cornell, but he's from Syracuse and his name has surfaced a few times on this board.[/quote]
Apparently, he's fond of the "lacrosse" style goals in shootouts:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S8VvEM1-9I0
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CgLmH4PuR-I
[quote LaJollaRed]I have no idea...But according to the Internet Hockey Database, I shouldn't really feel bad about knowing who that is.
http://www.hockeydb.com/ihdb/stats/pdisplay.php3?pid=71793[/quote]
Quote from: Robbie Schremp's insane stat sheet2005-06 London Knights OHL 57GP 57G 88A 145Pts
Yowza. I'm surprised that I had never heard of him.
[quote LaJollaRed]The Hockey DB is a great website. They're Cornell records are remarkably up to date.[/quote]More precisely, HockeyDB has tremendously good information and tremendously poor site performance because of ads and popups.
[quote amerks127]Well (I'm assuming you already know this) that's because Biron was coached by McCutcheon in Rochester from 1997-2000 and is responsible for most of his pro-development, and then continued with Biron into Buffalo up until Biron's trade to the Flyers.
Biron really shined with McCutcheon in the AHL. He had a great season in 1998-1999 going 36-13-3 with 6 SO's and a 2.07 GAA. He won the Aldege Bastien (AHL version of the Vezina) and was a first-team all-star. Rochester lost to Providence in 5 games in the Calder Cup Finals. I was at all the games in Rochester, real heart breaker.[/quote]
Yes, but what I didn't know was that McCutcheon and Coatsey were apparently roommates in the pros.
For what that's worth ::rolleyes::
Not a bad Tuesday night for Cornell alums in the AHL:
Matt Moulson had a goal and two assists in a 6-2 Manchester victory over Portland, while Iggulden had two goals and an assist in a 5-3 win for Worcester over Lowell.
This link should stay current.
http://forum.canadiens.com/index.php?showtopic=17274
Not a Cornell alumnus, but Lee Stempniak just scored his 100th NHL point against the Bruins.
This prompted Jack Edwards to say, "Well Lee must love big time winter weather, seeing as he spent four years at Dartmouth. As far as those Ivy League guys are concerned, there is only one place colder than Hanover, New Hampshire, and that's Ithaca, New York."
[quote oceanst41]This prompted Jack Edwards to say, "Well Lee must love big time winter weather, seeing as he spent four years at Dartmouth. As far as those Ivy League guys are concerned, there is only one place colder than Hanover, New Hampshire, and that's Ithaca, New York."[/quote]
And, that, of course, is not true.
Average high/low temps in Ithaca: Jan (31/10); Feb (37/16); Mar (49/27)
Average high/low temps in Hanover: Jan (29/9); Feb (34/12); Mar (43/22)
The NHL Network is carrying an ECHL game tonight (Sat, 12/22) at 7 PM EST - Wheeling vs. Cincinnati. If you have Comcast and a sports pack, check because it might have been added in the past few weeks (Comcast owns the network) - other providers have been picking it up too, after it launched in October or so.
Of local interest, on Cincinnati, Cornell alum John Gleed. Also in the game, Nathan Marsters (RPI - Wheeling) and Dov Hyphen-hyphen (Sucks - Cincinnati).
[quote Al DeFlorio][quote oceanst41]This prompted Jack Edwards to say, "Well Lee must love big time winter weather, seeing as he spent four years at Dartmouth. As far as those Ivy League guys are concerned, there is only one place colder than Hanover, New Hampshire, and that's Ithaca, New York."[/quote]
And, that, of course, is not true.
Average high/low temps in Ithaca: Jan (31/10); Feb (37/16); Mar (49/27)
Average high/low temps in Hanover: Jan (29/9); Feb (34/12); Mar (43/22)[/quote]
It's the clouds, if wasn't for the fact that Ithaca is always cloudy (disclaimer: unless it's the summer time or Cornell Days), we'd win the cold battle hands down. Sitting on top of East Hill in a stiff breeze in January though I'd have no arguments about Ithaca being the coldest. ;-)
[quote oceanst41][quote Al DeFlorio][quote oceanst41]This prompted Jack Edwards to say, "Well Lee must love big time winter weather, seeing as he spent four years at Dartmouth. As far as those Ivy League guys are concerned, there is only one place colder than Hanover, New Hampshire, and that's Ithaca, New York."[/quote]
And, that, of course, is not true.
Average high/low temps in Ithaca: Jan (31/10); Feb (37/16); Mar (49/27)
Average high/low temps in Hanover: Jan (29/9); Feb (34/12); Mar (43/22)[/quote]
It's the clouds, if wasn't for the fact that Ithaca is always cloudy (disclaimer: unless it's the summer time or Cornell Days), we'd win the cold battle hands down. Sitting on top of East Hill in a stiff breeze in January though I'd have no arguments about Ithaca being the coldest. ;-)[/quote]
I guess you've never been to Hanover in the winter.;-)
[quote DeltaOne81]The NHL Network is carrying an ECHL game tonight (Sat, 12/22) at 7 PM EST - Wheeling vs. Cincinnati. If you have Comcast and a sports pack, check because it might have been added in the past few weeks (Comcast owns the network) - other providers have been picking it up too, after it launched in October or so.
Of local interest, on Cincinnati, Cornell alum John Gleed. Also in the game, Nathan Marsters (RPI - Wheeling) and Dov Hyphen-hyphen (Sucks - Cincinnati).[/quote]
To clarify, Wheeling is not playing Cincinnati tonight (12/22/07). Wheeling is playing Elmira tonight. So, the game on NHLN must be an old one. I'm too lazy to figure out the date that this game was originally played. In the limited time that I spent watching the game, I didn't hear/see Jon Gleed's name. Marsters had 50 saves and I don't think hyphen played.
[quote Al DeFlorio]
I guess you've never been to Hanover in the winter.;-)[/quote]
ever been to Potsdam in late January or early February? frostbite is just a part of life for some...
[quote Dpperk29][quote Al DeFlorio]
I guess you've never been to Hanover in the winter.;-)[/quote]
ever been to Potsdam in late January or early February? frostbite is just a part of life for some...[/quote]
Yes, we all know Potsdam is a frozen wasteland comparable to the eighth circle of hell. But we were talking about Ivy League schools here, you green and gold traitor. :-P
[quote Al DeFlorio][quote oceanst41]This prompted Jack Edwards to say, "Well Lee must love big time winter weather, seeing as he spent four years at Dartmouth. As far as those Ivy League guys are concerned, there is only one place colder than Hanover, New Hampshire, and that's Ithaca, New York."[/quote]
And, that, of course, is not true.
Average high/low temps in Ithaca: Jan (31/10); Feb (37/16); Mar (49/27)
Average high/low temps in Hanover: Jan (29/9); Feb (34/12); Mar (43/22)[/quote]
If Ithaca were colder we would be the ones with the serious drinking problems and keg for a mascot. Or maybe their tradition of drinking stems from not admitting women until 1972.
[quote Al DeFlorio][quote oceanst41]This prompted Jack Edwards to say, "Well Lee must love big time winter weather, seeing as he spent four years at Dartmouth. As far as those Ivy League guys are concerned, there is only one place colder than Hanover, New Hampshire, and that's Ithaca, New York."[/quote]
And, that, of course, is not true.
Average high/low temps in Ithaca: Jan (31/10); Feb (37/16); Mar (49/27)
Average high/low temps in Hanover: Jan (29/9); Feb (34/12); Mar (43/22)[/quote]Considering Jack Edwards went to UNH, you'd think he'd have a better understanding of the winter weather in New Hampshire.
O'Byrne and the Canadians are playing the Panthers on NHL Network right now. Canadians up 3-0 in the first 5 minutes.
Panthers started a scrum by going after Higgins and O'Byrne came to the rescue (taking 2 for roughing), and the TSN announcers were very happy about the additional size O'Byrne brings to lineup for the Canadians.
O'Byrne's first shift after the penalty his D partner puts the puck in the middle stranding O'Byrne who was forced to take a penalty. O'Byrne looks good in what I've seen so far.
Also, the electronic boards the Panthers have are kinda crazy.
------
Update: O'Byrne had two fighting majors. He hit Campbell with a perfect hip-check and the Panthers took exception. The first fight (Kreps) was immediately after the hit (not much of a fight, but both got 5 mins). Ryan's first shift back from that major he gets attacked by Glass who came directly off the Panthers bench at O'Byrne. More punches in the second fight, and all the TSN commentators could say was "Wow, the Panthers are really upset about that clean hit." O'Byrne finished +2 on the night and had a pretty good game.
[quote JDeafv]O'Byrne had two fighting majors. He hit Campbell with a perfect hip-check and the Panthers took exception. The first fight (Kreps) was immediately after the hit (not much of a fight, but both got 5 mins). Ryan's first shift back from that major he gets attacked by Glass who came directly off the Panthers bench at O'Byrne. More punches in the second fight, and all the TSN commentators could say was "Wow, the Panthers are really upset about that clean hit." O'Byrne finished +2 on the night and had a pretty good game.[/quote]
Bill Bestwick would be proud. Ryan O'Byrne and Tanner Glass were teammates with the Nanaimo Clippers late in the 2002-03 season.
EDIT: Ignore my redundancy below. I somehow missed mention of the fights in the post I replied to. ::uhoh:: At any rate, here are O'Byrne's two fights last night: http://hockeyfights.com/players/4579/fightcard/reg2008
O'Byrne's Canadiens scored on their first THREE shots last night. O'B contributed with 18 PIM including two third period fights. The second fight was against Tanner Glass (Dartmouth '07), who apparently plays in the NHL these days...
Probably video floating around somewhere. Maybe it will show up on hockeyfights.com or youtube. A huge O'Byrne hit led to the first fight. You can see it by clicking on the video here: http://canadiens.nhl.com/team/app?gameNumber=557&gameType=2&page=Recap&season=20072008&service=page
Forget the Patriots 16-0 season...Mark McCutcheon had a double minor for roughing and then a 5-minute fighting major in his game tonight. Did not see that one coming.
[quote amerks127]Forget the Patriots 16-0 season...Mark McCutcheon had a double minor for roughing and then a 5-minute fighting major in his game tonight. Did not see that one coming.[/quote]
Fruuu-strated?? How is he doing?
Don't know if it happened in yesterday's fight that was mentioned above, but O'Byrne is out tonight vs the Rangers. TV announcers (MSG) just mentioned that he broke a finger last night.
More specifically, his thumb, in the fight.
http://www.hamiltonbulldogs.com/index.php?module=newser&func=display&topicnum=&nid=692&writer=0
QuoteSunday, December 30, 2007 - 02:18PM
HAMILTON, ON – Montreal Canadiens General Manager Bob Gainey announced today that the Club has recalled forward Corey Locke from the Hamilton Bulldogs of the American Hockey League. The Bulldogs have also recalled defenceman Jon Gleed from the Cincinnati Cyclones of the ECHL. Locke will join the Canadiens in New York and should be available for tonight's game against the Rangers, while Gleed will join the Bulldogs in Grand Rapids for tomorrow night's tilt with the Griffins.
...
Gleed, a 23-year-old native of Milton, Ontario, has played 13 games with the Bulldogs this season, collecting two assists and two penalty minutes. The 6-foot-2, 205-pound blueliner has also picked up four assists, a plus-4 rating and 22 penalty minutes in 11 games with the Cyclones.
After missing four games with an ankle injury, Murray picked up an assist on Cheechoo's winning goal and was +2 in last night's Sharks game.
http://www.nhl.com/nhl/app?service=page&page=Recap&gameNumber=579&season=20072008&gameType=2