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Panthers Join Slapstick Circus; Ballard Gives Vokoun Some Stick

December 1st, 2009 Comments off

As if this Florida team didn’t have problems enough with injuries; goalie Tomas Vokoun suffered a sickening hit to the head from his own teammate in yesterday’s game in Atlanta.

To add salt to the wounds, the Thrashers won the game with five seconds remaining on the clock; to put the Panthers firmly out of their misery.

Yet, it is not the 4-3 loss to Atlanta that boggles the mind on this particular next day of scratching-the-head-time. It is rather: What the hell was Keith Ballard thinking?

How is it possible to miss the goalpost, which he was obviously aiming at, and hit his own goaltender over the head instead—with a vicious whack of the stick?

Yes, we can understand why a player might get frustrated after Atlanta’s star sniper Ilya Kovalchuk had just put the home side 2-1 up in the first period. But, what happened next defies logic: Keith Ballard wildly swings his stick at the goalpost and knocks the poor unsuspecting Vokoun cold.

Bizarre, brainless, reckless, or right on dumb; call it what you want, but it will no doubt be lighting up the blooper reels for years to come.

Personally I’m going to settle for the adjective slapdash; meaning careless, hasty, and unskillful. I think that adequately sums up that moment of madness from Ballard.

The fact that the word slapdash reminds me of slapstick (which now takes on a whole new meaning, doesn’t it?) and, somehow as a consequence, of hockey—makes it all the more appropriate.

Indeed, as tragic as that hit to Vokoun’s head was—Tomas was stretchered off the ice with a lacerated ear, although he’s now back in South Florida without any apparent long term consequences—the sequence does make for some absurd chuckles.

One can merely—with an acquiescent sneer—scoff at the bad luck that is declawing the Cats one paw at a time.

Keith Ballard’s unfortunate foray into the world of baseball reminds me of what the English, a breed of people always able to see a laugh in any amount of calamity, would jokingly say about this particular play: Vokoun got some stick from his teammate’s.

In English-English, giving someone some “stick” would translate as; taunting, profanity, and snide remarks in general toward a person—not uncommon to be an athlete of an opposing team. Of course, in this case it was more than words—and from a teammate to another—and the whole double-meaning joviality would almost certainly seem a lot more amusing if I didn’t have to explain it.

Nevertheless, as inexplicable as this incident is, and my attempted wittiness not even mentioned; fact is that the Panthers have had some bad luck of late—even if some of it was their own doing.

 



 

The injuries are mounting…

David Booth is not looking like he’ll return for a long time, with his concussion showing no signs of receding. Cory Stillman is also expected to be out for a while with a knee injury. Nick Tarnasky meanwhile, is yet to make an appearance this season. And finally; Kenndal McArdle injured his shoulder last Saturday in Nashville—in a mistimed brawl.

Hopefully Tomas Vokoun won’t join that growing list of casualties.

The Florida Panthers are not blessed with limitless talents on the roster and so the injuries to Booth and Stillman have especially had a crippling effect on the team’s offense in general—and power-play in particular.

Only the defensive corps has avoided the injury bug to this point, knock on wood.

Considering the thinning ranks of the forwards, it is no wonder the Panthers are finding it hard to find the back of the net and are regularly being outshot by opponents.

Unfortunately the Cats have also a nasty habit of making ill-timed turnovers in their own zone and at times becoming hemmed in by the opponents in their defensive third.

After having not lost a game in regulation for eight straight games, the tables have now turned firmly in the other direction and Florida has lost five straight games to bookend the month of November.

It is a scenario that the fans are well acquainted with.

After another horrendous start to the season, the Cats clawed their way back in to contention—only to start losing again and drifting behind the playoff pack.

It is hard to imagine that the end product will be any different this time either; another near escape from the playoff specter seems on the cards once again.

I know that is a contradiction in itself, but then how else to explain this club if not with a paradox?

It seems there is little else for Panthers fans to do than grin at the irony of fate and keep on dreaming.

Dream of better days, and, hopingly hallucinate of a post-season on ice in South Florida.

A paradox, you say?

You get my gist.

Matt Richards Dirty Hit Knocks Panthers’ David Booth Cold as Flyers Get Nasty

October 24th, 2009 Comments off

The Florida Panthers suffered two injuries in Philadelphia as a grimy Flyers team knocked out both Radek Dvorak and David Booth from the game.

Radek left the game with a lower body injury early in the second period. That injury didn’t look like a dirty hit, but the one that came later that same period definitely did have that appearance.

Mike Richards of the Flyers, known as a hard-hitting but not necessarily a dirty player, left his shoulder in and appeared to lift his skates from the ice when he slammed in to Booth’s head; flinging David around in mid-air and knocking him cold to the ice.

Booth didn’t see the hit coming until it was too late. The play was upheld for several minutes as trainers and doctors flooded the ice to help the wounded player. Blood was seen underneath his head as he lay motionless, face down, on the ice.

David looked unconscious for several minutes but had regained consciousness by the time he was lifted upon a stretcher and wheeled off and out of the arena to the sound of a standing ovation from the home crowd at the Wachovia Center in Philadelphia.

Latest news is that Booth has been taken to the Methodist Hospital in Philadelphia. We can only hope the injury won’t be as nasty as the hit looked like.

Latest news is that David is “alert and moving”. Florida’s General Manager Randy Sexton said that ”they are doing a whole host of tests just to make sure everything is OK”.

Randy Sexton also commented about the injury, saying amongst other things that “those types of hits have no place in the game” and that he’s “sure the league will do a full review”.

The verdict on Richards’ hit and subsequent suspension could come as soon as tomorrow. He was ejected from the game because the referee’s adjudged the hit to be done with “intent to injure”.

Mike Richards has stated after the game: “I was not trying to hurt him but separate him from the puck. He turned, everything happened so quickly”.

Hits and checks have an important role in the game and we should not look to limit this in hockey. However, dirty hits to the head cannot be tolerated. The NHL must make a statement here and take a long hard look at this instance.

The loss of David Booth will constitute a major loss for the Florida Panthers.

But for now we can only hope it is not too severe and that he won’t suffer any permanent damage.

Other Panthers that felt the malicious side of the Flyers team was Dominic Moore that was hit in the face in the first period and 18-year old defenseman rookie Dmitry Kulikov who got banged up in the corner. Apart from these hits however, most Philly checks were legal and the Panthers simply didn’t have it in them to answer back.

What this game highlights for the Cats is the need to have a real fighter on the team.

Someone who will make opponents pay for such reckless play as was seen tonight. Maybe if someone had stepped up in the first period and made an example, Mike would have thought twice about injuring Florida’s starlet winger who scored the visitors only goal.

The Panthers were too tame and, after the hit to Booth, they looked uninterested with the game as the Flyers flew away with a 5-1 win.

And who can blame them. The dirty knock to David reminds us all that there are more important things in life than winning or losing a hockey game.

In fact, there are 82 of them in the regular season alone and Florida sure could have needed Booth for the remaining 73…

Eastern Misfortunes

March 10th, 2009 1 comment

David Booth came alive on Saturday and scored his second hattrick of the season; helping Florida to a much needed 5-3 home success over the St. Louis Blues. Due to the teams around us in the playoff race continually winning their respective games, the match against the Blues suddenly had become a must-win contest. And what do you know; despite that victory we again face a similar situation and will need to leave Pittsburgh with at least a point – if we are not to drop out of the top eight of the Eastern Conference!

The Panthers will face a Pittsburgh side that is finally starting to look like the team that won the Eastern Playoff last year and gave Detroit a run for their money in the Stanley Cup Final. The despondent, emotionally uninvolved Penguins have gone and with new Coach Dan Bylsma it is a reinvigorated side that looks playoff bound. And as they return from a record winning trip, six consecutive victories, the Pens will be a formidable foe for the Cats tonight.

 

Many battles for the puck in round #3 of the Penguins vs. Cats match-up, will be expected tonight.

Many battles for the puck in round #3 of the Penguins vs. Cats match-up, will be expected tonight.

 

Life doesn’t get any easier at this time of year, in that hectic playoff race, either. The teams around us not only strengthened their squads at the trade deadline (except Montreal, but most noticeably in New York with the Rangers), but have also have found their own winning concepts and are hitting a confident stride.

Meanwhile in Montreal, the centennial celebrations took a sour turn as Head Coach Guy Carbonneaux got the sack. General Manager Bob Gainey thinks he can do a better job and has taken over the reins. This may come as a shock to most of us, but you have to admire Bob’s arrogant sense of self-belief, don’t you…

The Panthers on the other hand are coming off a very difficult February schedule and need to get out of the .500 mire quickly and start hitting higher notes if they want to stay in the thick of things. Winning one and then losing one is not good enough (yet, that doesn’t mean I think Pete DeBoer should get the sack, so Jacques, just because they do that in Montreal – doesn’t mean you can do the same… ok?)

Having had a long road trip in the February-March divide, Florida returned to Sunrise for two games; the first one a 1-4 defeat to the Penguins and the other a 5-3 win against St. Louis. Now follows a short road trip where we face two rivals in the form of Pittsburgh tonight (again) and then Buffalo on Thursday. These two games could decide the Panthers season. With race being so tight, it is these match-ups between playoff rivals that become crucial.

On the one hand you could say that winning against Atlanta or Pittsburgh equally will only give you two points for the effort, but on the other hand – when defeating a playoff rival you are not only gaining two points – but also taking two points away from the opposition. Hence, these games essentially become four point contests.

So, if Florida wins both these games we’ll only get four points for the effort, but we’ll also be taking away vital points from Pittsburgh and Buffalo. And at the end of the season this may very well be the decider. Furthermore, if we win these games we’ll finally be breaking out of that .500 jog and getting the necessary sprint in the Panthers legs; to make the post-season.

However, if we lose these two games we’ll be in a very tough spot indeed; we’ll quickly find ourselves on the outside looking in. It won’t be impossible, but certainly very difficult to squeeze back in. Then again, we win one and lose one – and we’ll be back in current limbo at the end of the week too.

 

The Floridian Injury Bug

This task ahead of the Cats is a momentous one and it doesn’t get any easier when two key players go down with injury in the Blues game and can’t accompany the team on this crucial trip.

Bryan McCabe was hit by a puck in the face and fractured his orbital bone and underwent surgery on Monday. Despite this injury McCabe played some 20+ minutes in the game after the accident, which goes a long way in showing the immense character of the man. He’s the leader on the team and the crucial veteran presence we’d love to have for these two upcoming match-ups.

There is no news as of yet how long the injury will keep Bryan out of the line-up, except that he’ll miss the next two games.

 

Bryan McCabe is an inspirational veteran in defense and quarterback in the power-play. He'll be out with injury for the crucial two game road trip.

Bryan McCabe is an inspirational veteran in defense and quarterback in the power-play. He'll be out with injury for the crucial two game road trip.

 

The good news is that we have a very good defender that’s ready to jump in on McCabe’s spot; Nick Boynton. After his disciplinary problems, he’s been a healthy scratch of late, but before that Nick’s been a very solid defenseman on the Panthers team. McCabe will of course be missed on the power-play that he usually quarterbacks, but it will probably give new signing Steve Eminger a bit more of a chance to show what he can do in those situations.

Nathan Horton, who after a slow start in his new position as a centerman has really worked hard as of late, will now also be out through injury.

Apparently Nathan suffered a severed tendon on his left ring finger in the St. Louis game and had an operation to repair the injury. Reports say he’ll be out between 2 to 4 weeks; which could pretty much be the rest of the pre-playoff stretch, in a worst case scenario. But as coach Peter DeBoer said: “I’d think at this time of year it’s closer to two weeks, but it depends on complications.”

 

Nathan Horton will miss 2 to 4 weeks after surgery and his points will be sorely missed by the Panthers down the stretch.

Nathan Horton will miss 2 to 4 weeks after surgery and his points (38 so far) will be sorely missed by the Panthers down the stretch.

 

Horton will be sorely missed. He is third on the team with 38 points and has been centering the first line for most of the season. He also scored against St. Louis and looked like he was in good form. Anthony Stewart will be the player entering the line-up in his place, after having been a healthy scratch in the previous match, but it will be Brett McLean that’ll be moving up to center the line with Booth and Zednik on the wings. If McLean doesn’t work out in that position, coach Pete DeBoer could always try Kamil Kreps or Gregory Campbell in that spot, but it is expected that Brett will be given the chance first anyway.

 

Penguins vs. Cats, Round #3

The first two games between Pittsburgh and Florida have both been rather lopsided match-ups; although the first one was arguably more of a beating than the second one…

Back on January the 3rd, the Panthers travelled to the steel city on the heels of a disappointing loss to the NY Islanders. They left Pittsburgh with an inspiring 5-0 win and started the impressive January run that put the Cats in a favorable position now in midst of the March madness of playoff-race hockey.

Pittsburgh at that time looked like a punch-drunk fighter reeling on the ropes. It may very well have started the countdown on former Head Coach Michael Therrien’s job. He made some badly masked comments upon Sidney Crosby’s leadership ability prior to the game and things just got worse from that moment on for the Penguins. However, they managed to somehow stay in contention and with a new face behind the bench – they are now one of the hottest teams in the NHL once again.

With the appointment of Dan Bylsma as Head Coach, Pittsburgh travelled to South Florida the day after the trade deadline, and with new wingers Chris Kunitz and veteran Bill Guerin on either side of Crosby, they ran riot in the third period in Sunrise. It was 1-1 going in to that third, but then the Floridian wall fell in and the Penguins merrily tip-toed around on the ice and won the game, 4-1 (see below post for details).

Now the third round in this contest is set to follow tonight – with another game in Pittsburgh.

Hopefully the visitors-advantage will continue in to this game, but unfortunately the Cats probably can’t hope for any more gifts from the Penguins this year. It will be a tough game for sure and we’ll probably need some luck to get away with a couple of points; but with hard work and determination it is definitely possible.

Either way, this will essentially be playoff hockey – already – and a game to look forward to with equal measures of hope and anxiety for Panther fans.

Some Florida Updates in Georgia

March 3rd, 2009 Comments off

Having been bit by the injury bug of late, the Florida Panthers are starting to experience some hardship along the winding path of playoff hockey. As the teams get more desperate in that race, the checks get harder and the injuries more prone to occur. Now is when a team’s depth is usually challenged. That has been the case for the Panthers on this latest five game road trip, which will be closed out tonight in Atlanta, Georgia.

Two players that are definitely out of the line-up are: David Booth and Nick Boynton.

David was hit hard a couple of time by Washington’s defenseman Mike Green, in the previous game, and will be out with an upper-body injury. He’ll then be listed day-to-day and might be back for the pivotal Pittsburgh game on Thursday.

Boynton will perhaps also be back in the fold for that game. He was sent home after an alleged breach of discipline, after the NY Rangers fixture. Quite what happened has not been fully revealed, but it seems Nick may have confronted Head Coach Pete DeBoer as to why he was sat out in the second half of the game. Whatever was said, and how it was said, it was enough for DeBoer and GM Jacques Martin to discipline Boynton by sending him home to South Florida. Pete has said the Panthers will meet with Nick tomorrow and “go from there”.

Cory Stillman and Tomas Vokoun however, may be ready to return today, already.

Stillman who has been out since the morning skate at Madison Square Garden on Feb 26th with a bruised foot, looks like he might be ready to return: “If Cory makes as much progress today to (Tuesday) as he did from (Sunday) to today, I’m pretty sure he’ll play. We still have to give him another 24 hours to make sure,” Pete DeBoer said yesterday. With Booth definitely sidelined it seems like a sure thing that Cory will be starting the game tonight.

Vokoun meanwhile is doing better after an ear infection had sidelined him for the previous four games on the road trip. He joined the team yesterday, after driving from Washington to Atlanta. Coach Pete DeBoer said: “I want to see how Tomas feels after the skate today. […] When he wakes up tomorrow morning we’ll make a decision.”

At time of writing, no decision has yet been made, but with Craig Anderson rebounding well against Washington (after the big loss to New Jersey), I wouldn’t be surprised if he’s in goal today too. There’s no point in rushing Tomas unless he’s fully fit to play. Craig is a capable back-up goalie who’ll be ready to play if needed.

Whoever is in goal, he’ll have an active night tonight, as he’ll face the hottest player in the NHL at the moment: Ilya Kovalchuk. Kovalchuk was named the NHL’s No. 1 star of February; after scoring 13 goals and getting a total of 21 points during that previous month. Atlanta will however be without veteran puck-moving defenseman Niclas Hävelid, who was dealt to the New Jersey Devils yesterday. Rookie defenseman Anssi Salmela went in the other direction.

Rostislav Olesz under the Surgeon’s Knife

January 30th, 2009 4 comments

The Florida Panthers official website has announced that F Rostislav Olesz has undergone a sports hernia surgery. The procedure took place in Philadelphia on the 28th of January. According to Panthers GM Jacques Martin the operation was successful and the player has now returned to South Florida for rehabilitation; which in turn is expected to take at least six weeks.

Rostislav Olesz signed a long term contract before this season, but his time has been hampered by poor form and niggling injuries. He was on the sidelines on IR for an extended period of time; before surgery was deemed necessary.

Olesz played in 23 games earlier this season, scoring two goals and providing 3 assists, whilst going -4 in the plus/minus statistics.

Now that the operation has been touted a success, fans will be hoping Rosti will be back – unhindered by injury – for a run; which might propel the Panthers to a first playoff appearance in several years.