Merrick Thomson leads Toronto with seven goals, named game MVP

May 20, 2009

By Terri Workman… The Toronto Nationals played their first-ever game to open the 2009 Major League Lacrosse (MLL) season with a 17-16 win over the Washington Bayhawks at Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium in Annapolis, MD.

Andrew Combs of the Washington Bayhawks opened scoring two minutes into the first quarter.  Last year’s Steinfeld Cup MVP Joe Walters followed up with a goal for Toronto but the Bayhawks answered back with another. Brodie Merrill continued the back-and-forth scoring, evening the game at two-all less than three minutes into the game.

Washington pulled ahead with back-to-back goals from Combs and Justin Smith till Merrick Thomson and Geoff Snider put their own pair past Bayhawks netminder Chris Garrity, tying the game at 4-4.

The Bayhawks sunk two more past Toronto’s goaltender, Rob Scherr, and then a third by Kevin Huntley on a two-man advantage before Toronto’s midfielder Jordan Levine scored his first of the night bringing the score to 7-5 ending the first quarter in favour of the Bayhawks.

Jeff Zywicki opened scoring in second quarter for Toronto. Jake Byrne from Washington drained his second past Scherr, but Thomson answered back with his second of the night. Despite some solid opportunities, Toronto was unable to score again before Bayhwaks attackman Scott Urick and midfielder Kyle Dixon extended Washington’s lead. The last three minutes of play remained scoreless, sending the Nationals into the dressing room at halftime down 10-7.

Thomson scored back-to-back goals for Toronto to open the second half bringing the score within one early on. Brett Queener, who replaced Scherr in net for the Nationals in the third quarter stopped many shots and went on a couple of runs before Billy Glading put one past him with just over five minutes off the clock.

Zywicki netted his second off a stellar pass from Dan Dawson to close up the gap again.  Washington’s Dixon tried to hang onto the lead beating Queener in net but a solid pass from Colin Doyle to Thomson resulted in another point for Toronto.  Thomson followed up with another past Garrity, his sixth of the night to tie the game at 12. Urick and Walters continued the scoring battle to end the quarter with Toronto and Washington tied at 13-13.

Seventeen seconds into the fourth, Kevin Buchanan put the Bayhawks in the lead. Walters and Zywicki drained their third each giving Toronto their first lead of the game.  With just over seven minutes left on the clock, Washington tied it just before Thomson scored his seventh goal.  Huntley tied it up again but Levine recorded the game winning goal for Toronto scoring with 2:21 left in the game.

The Toronto Nationals (1-0) win their first-ever game by a score of 17-16.

Top goal scorer for Toronto was Merrick Thomson, with seven. Thomson, last year’s Warrior Most Improved Player of the Year, was named the Bud Light game MVP.  Rob Scherr and Brett Queener shared the duties in net for Toronto turning away 15 of 25, and 13 of 19 shots on net, respectively. Queener recorded the win for the Nationals.

Washington was led by Andrew Combs with four points from two goals and two assists. Chris Garrity played all 60 minutes in net for the Bayhawks, stopping 18 of Toronto’s 35 shots on goal.

For all game statistics please visit the Point Streak Website at: Toronto at Washington Boxscore

The Nationals return home to open their home series of six games on Friday, May 22 when they host the Chicago Machine. Game time is set for 7:30 p.m. at BMO Field.

Is Martin Brodeur Exempt from Criticism? This Integral to Devils Failures?

May 20, 2009

By Jack Vallon… Is Martin Brodeur somehow exempt from criticism? The answer is as obvious as the Devil’s shortcomings.

The last time I criticized Lou Lamoriello I received what amounted to e-hate. One fellow Devil fan sent me an email, telling me that in his opinion I was “no Devils fan” because I’d defamed the great Lamoriello.  Or should I say “dissed” the “Greatest GM in history.”

Another went as far as to call me a son of a b^%$h, for daring to criticize the “Big Lou.” And advised me “to be careful what I write if I ever wanted to set foot in Jersey again.” I felt I’d just insulted Tony Soprano, and my days as a writer and able bodied human were numbered at best.

But has any of this nonsense stopped me? Certainly not! I want my team to do well, and feel that the organization needs a bit of a wake-up call.

After the completion of this article, do I expect to have the numbers 3, 557, and 101 hurled in my direction? Sure. And I welcome it.

Those numbers will remind me of how many cups my Devils have taken over the past 14 season, how many games Martin Brodeur has won for all of us, and just how many times Scott Stevens, Scotty Niedermayer, Ken Daneyko and co. have slammed the proverbial door down on the likes of the Rangers, Flyers, Pens, Leafs, Sens, Stars, Ducks, and Wings.

I welcome the numbers as well as the criticism, and expect a healthy dose of it to be launched in my direction-preferably in the form of comments though!

However, as a loyal Devils fan, one who truly cares about his team, I must certainly not let this criticism stop me from expressing my opinions. My love, not feelings of hurt, for the New Jersey Devils is what’s driving me to write this article. Nothing more, nothing less.

Although the play of Martin Brodeur was instrumental in each of the Devils successful playoff campaigns, it has been just as integral to our recent failures. Make no bones about it, Martin Brodeur has been key to each of last two post season demises. There I said it.

Sure we need a center, Mottau should’ve hit the ice to block that pass to Jokinen, White should have played the puck instead of throwing that silly check on Eric Staal; there also should have even been an interference penalty called against the aforementioned Staal before the Jokinen goal ever happened.

And yes we need a top defenseman and power play specialist to play the point. We also need to lower our ticket prices, add a third jersey, for the purpose of marketing the team to the newest generation of fans and our inevitable future winter classic battle against the blue shits.

I’d also like to see more segments on MSG featuring Chico Resch and his gloriously healthy appetite!

But what we need first is a solution; a solution to a problem that’s only going to grow.

Brodeur’s painfully obvious decline accompanied with the media, the Devil’s GM and coaching staffs overt fear of being critical of him is a big part of what’s killing the Devil’s chances of success in the post lockout NHL.

Reminds me of how fearful we were when it came to questioning Bush and his desire to take us into a war that would inevitably cost us over a trillion dollars! Look where that landed us. Will this media gag order on criticism of Brodeur dismantle the Devils as well?

Although I’m being a bit too sarcastic for my own good, I believe that there is a very good chance it will.

I’ve already predicted the inevitability of Zach Parise’s departure if the losing does not cease asap, in an earlier article.

Let’s take a look back at the last two Stanley Cup Playoffs. Everyone was quick to condemn Sean Avery for his behaviour in ‘08. I can not tell you how many times I personally climbed out of my seat and screamed at the television set at the deplorable officiating that allowed the coward to abuse Brodeur!

Avery’s behavior was shocking and abhorrent to say the least, however that doesn’t take a away from the fact that Brodeur let in soft goal after soft goal against the Blue Shirts—a good chunk of which were scored when Avery wasn’t even on the ice.

But still, for arguments sake, let’s attribute his poor play in 2008 playoffs to nerves. Brodeur was rattled, and he is human after all.

Then what about his performance during this playoff campaign? Was Avery playing dress up again? This time not as a stocky runway model, but as a Finn? More specifically as Jussi Jokinen?

No Sean Avery was most certainly not involved in this years series against the Canes. He was too busy punching Simeon Varlamov in the face to be in Raleigh or Newark. Yet this series had a similar outcome to last years debacle against the Rangers, with Brodeur crying foul (Game Four antics), and our Devs sent packing.

This series saw the Great Martin Bordeur thoroughly outplayed by Carolina’s Cam Ward; as he was last year by the Rangers, Henrik Lundqvist.

While Brodeur wasn’t awful, with the exception of games one and five when he performed well, he most certainly did not do his team any major favors. One just needs to think back to game seven for proof of his overall performance.

The Rutuu goal, giving the Canes the early lead, was as soft as they come. To let that kind of shot in, that early on in a game seven, is inexcusable. Although it seems to have been forgotten, due to just how quickly the Devs equalized the contest, and more importantly how shockingly the series ended, one should not dismiss the importance of that goal.

The Devils thoroughly outplayed the Canes over the first 55 minutes of the contest yet found themselves only ahead by the one tally.

If Brodeur had made the saves he gets paid to, he’s expected to; one needs to recall that Brodeur takes in a cool 5.2 mill a campaign, the Devs would have been up 3-1, and quite possibly clear of any late game Cardiac Cane heroics.

With that said I honestly feel a top goalie, a goalie of Brodeur’s supposed calibre, should be able to stop at least one of those last two shots.

The Devils certainly didn’t lose the series solely because of Brodeur’s game seven blunder and overall shoddy play, however I think its fair to admit that if Martin had performed even remotely close to Cam Ward, we’d have been watching the Ovechkin-Parise show, not the Ovechkin-Crosby one.

So what’s the solution? Or should I say, how should things have been done?

There is no easy answer. When you’ve played as long as Brodeur has, achieved as much success as the great man has, there’s no easy way to transition between goalies, however after the events surrounding this season, one need not have looked any farther than Scott Clemmensen, and his performance as a backup.

Brodeur’s selfishness and obsession with statistics and personal numbers, and Lou Lamoriello’s unwavering support has hurt us for the second straight year. Instead of bringing in Brodeur slowly, he played out the season as if the injury had never happened, and Clemmensen didn’t exist.

The purpose of a backup in hockey is not only to fill in when the “star” is injured, but to offer an option and some form of competition to a number one down on their game.

The backup should be brought in when the goalie performs poorly for a stretch, as Brodeur has each of these past seasons. It’s good for competition. When longterm Devils, Pandolfo, Madden, and Holik performed poorly they were scratched. When Brodeur played badly he was excused.

And it’s not as if we didn’t have a capable substitute. Clemmensen only finished the season with a higher winning percentage, six more wins compared to only two more losses, a better Goals Against, and a higher Save Percentage than Brodeur, yet he was dismissed like yesterdays news the second Brodeur returned.

I know it sounds completely insane to suggest playing Clemmensen over Brodeur however when you look at it objectively its not all that outlandish.

Why didn’t the Devil’s even consider playing Clemmensen when Brodeur started looking shaky? With Brodeur’s position in hockey lore cemented as tightly as Lou Lamoriello’s wallet, there was no way anyone in the Devils organization would have let that happen.

Besides Brodeur would most likely have thrown a tantrum or thrown his stick at Sutter or poor Clemmer if he didn’t get his way. Sources tell me that Sutter was actually against bringing Brodeur back in the manner he was reintroduced into the line-up.

After all the Devils had really rallied around Clemmensen. That all ended once Brodeur reached his milestone and reality of the situation set in.

When the Devs lost seven of eight, back in late March, only two short weeks before the start of the payoffs, I knew we were in for a quick demise in this year’s postseason.

I had a sinking feeling that without some sort of a shakeup, it was simply a matter of time till Devils fans would be watching Rounds Two and Three, like the Devs themselves, as outsiders looking in.

Although Clemmensen was far from perfect, he certainly earned the right to have a shot at playing. When Brodeur’s play was spotty, he earned the right to have a chance at filling in. He earned the right to have that glimmer of hope.

Yet what did Lou do? For the sake of saving a bit of cash he sent Clemmensen back to Lowell, and let the Devils morale part with it.

Some will say, but Jack, “Forget the stats. Clemmensen’s a hack. He’s not a number one goalie! He’s over thirty and still in the minors.” I’m going to be told I am a moron for even suggesting Clemmensen be given an opportunity in the playoffs.

My response? Jonas Hiller! Look no farther than the Anaheim Ducks and the

Jean-Sébastien Giguère, Jonas Hiller story for your answer.

Giguère’s play, like the Ducks, was spotty at best this year, and he was been replaced by Jonas Hiller, after slightly injuring his groin. He went 9-2-2 to finish the season and the Ducks have never looked back.

I’m going to hear, “But Giguere’s no Brodeur!”

Although Giguère’s not what one would call a household name, he’s certainly no hack either. This guy only won the Conn Smythe in 2003, finishing ahead of Brodeur in the vote, and helped guide his squad to a Stanley Cup victory but two years ago. That’s more than I can say for Brodeur’s accomplishments of late.

Yet Bob Murray and co. felt they need to make the switch. Even if it were originally just to get

Giguère’s juices flowing, the move has paid massive dividends. I wonder what would have happened if the Devs had given Clemmer the same opportunity; the opportunity to at least at pushing Brodeur a bit.

Ritters Rant

May 20, 2009

By: Mark “The Hard Hitter” Ritter…

Hate to burst your bubble Chicago Blackhawk fans, it’s been a nice ride, but the Detroit Red Wings are poised to wipe the floor with you. I watched the game Sunday afternoon and one thing I noticed right away was the Red Wings had neutralized the Hawks speed, and in many ways it was the Red Wings that looked quick , not the youthful Hawks. There was also a belief that the hawks would have an advantage in the nets, not so. Chris Osgood has kept his team in the position to win every game, he is not perfect by any means, but what he lacks in technique he more than makes up for with experience, kudos to you Mr. Osgood, everyone doubted you except yourself, good on ya!

I came across an interesting statistic the other day. Did you know of the 700+ NHL players there are only 36 Russians? True story! Well, sometimes it’s not “Quantity” it’s “Quality” that sets your nation apart, and in this case, with three Russians- Alexander Ovechkin, Pavol Datsyuk, Evgeni Malkin,  leading the way for consideration as the NHL’s best player (Hart Trophy), it seems as if what little talent the Russians are sending over to the NHL is considerably talented. The Russians are all Killer, no Filler….

There are a ton of NHL icons that may retire this off-season. The list includes Brendan Shannahan, Joe Sakic, Chris Chelios, Mattias Ohlund, Mats Sundin, Sergei Fedorov, Marcus Naslund (Already retired), Rod Brind’Amour, Jeremy Roenick, Rob Blake, Claude Lemieux (Again), Mike Peca, Mark Recchi and Keith Tkachuk. The list represents a who’s-who of 1990’s hockey, to all of them, thanks for the memories!

The Carolina Hurricanes are every hockey poolies worst nightmare. The ‘Canes have knocked off two favorites on their way to the Eastern Conference Championships, destroying many a poolies dreams of taking the money. It says here the ride will end with the Pittsburgh Penguins knocking the ‘Canes off in 6, sure the ‘Canes have Eric Stall and Cam Ward, but the Penguino’s have Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin and underrated goaltender Marc-Andre Fluery, which, in my mind anyways, should be enough to crush the Caniac’s hearts.

Daniel Cleary, playoff MVP, discuss amongst yourselves…….

If Toronto Maple Leafs General Manager Brian Burke does pull off a miracle and does land the second overall pick from the Tampa Bay Lightening, do they take Swedish defenseman Victor Hedman or will they go with Matt Duchesne? The Leafs have tons of depth at defense, not so much at forward, so the thought of taking Duchesne must have come up, right? What would you do? Duchesne or Hedman????

Not sure what to do with those late round selections in the 2009/10 draft Mr. Burke? Why not take a chance on Luke Curadi of the Hartford Jr. Wolfpack? At 6’5 250 pounds this kid is going to be a monster! Let’s face it, the kid is a “Project”, but one thing is for sure, you can’t teach size, and this kid has tons of that. In the 4-5th round, you can do a lot worse than Curadi, here’s hoping you make it happen.

Until next time,

Peace!

Ah Knuckleballs!

May 20, 2009

By Brady Rynyk… After bringing out their brooms in a four game sweep of the Chicago White Sox, the Blue Jays travelled to Fenway Park to take on division rival Boston in hopes of building on their 3 ½ game lead in the American League East. Despite the series of echoing murmurs from around the league that Toronto’s surprising start of the 2009 season has been nothing shy of a fluke, the Blue Jays kept the game close, coming up one run shy of tying up the game late in the 8th inning.

After struggling early on and allowing 2 runs in the second, Jays starter Brian Tallet settled down, recording 5 K’s, only 2 walks and four hits in 6 innings of play. It was another solid outing from the relief pitcher turned starter that was unfortunately overshadowed by his Boston counterpart.

Veteran knuckleballer Tim Wakefield lobbed his routine arsenal of off-speed junk through 8 innings of work tossing in the odd fastball that topped out at roughly 75 mph/hr.  Of the 97 sneaky cheese pitches Wakefield threw, over 80 of them had to have been floating knuckle balls that frustrated the Jays all night long.

In what seemed like an endless series of pop-up’s and shallow fly balls, none of the Toronto’s big bats were able to put a significant dent in the Red Sox aging 42-yr old hurler.  Apart from the 5th inning when ex-Red Sox Kevin Millar went yard, crushing a ball over the green monster, the Blue Jays were unable to capitalize at home plate.  In almost déjà vu fashion from last season, the Jays were unable to cash in runs in the 3rd when they had two runners on base and again in the 8th – leaving a total of 13 runners on base and going only 1 for 5 with runners in scoring position.  After a costly error by Dustin Pedroia off yet another infield pop-up, the Red Sox put 2 runners on base with only 1 out as Alex Rios approached the batters box, while Vernon Wells patiently waited on-deck. But unable able to make any solid contact on the wafting 64 mph/hr pitches, the Jays big guns flyed out and popped-out to quickly end any chance of Toronto taking the lead.  By the time the Red Sox closer, Jonathan Papelbon took the mound to continue his perfect 10-0 save record, any threat of a comeback seemed futile, and in twelve quick pitches the game was over.

Although the Jays walked off the field with a loss, they had to be happy with their defensive efforts considering the Red Sox play did not dominate the current AL leaders.  Apart from the 2nd inning, and only 2 extra base hits by Canadian Jason Bay and speedster Jacoby Ellbury (who extended his hitting streak to 14 games), the Sox  did not man handle Toronto in any category, contrary to what many Blue Jay non-believers had boldly predicted, and the teams seemed evenly matched.

Toronto’s true test will come in the next two days where they hope to steal one or two games from the creeping Red Sox. The Jays will be sending rookies Brett Cecil and Robert Ray to the mound to face-off against Brad Penny and struggling Jon Lester.  If the young pitchers can keep the Sox British Columbia native at bay, and hopes that the teams offence can spring back from Tuesday nights unproductive appearance  at the plate, there is no reason why Toronto still can’t win the series and pull 5 ½ games on Boston.