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December 8th, 2010, 7:58 am
The Dudes may be better than ever, but you can’t say that about the Sharks- they lose bad in Montreal, and have a horrible first period against the Wings. Mike and Doug weigh that against their very good play against the Sens and the same Wings, and pick apart their lineup, looking for bright spots. A few rookies and a goalie are in that category.
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December 6th, 2010, 11:22 pm
I wasn”t aware the Sharks’ new goal was not to reduce the inconsistency, but to decrease its period. The Sharks went from their worst performance of the year to their best during an intermission. What I would give to have been a fly on the wall for that ‘Rudy’ speech. Whatever was said, it worked. I imagine it was this:
T-Mac : Hey guys, just a thought. TRY PLAYING HARD.
Joe Thornton : <takes shirt off> hmm yeah.
Patrick Marleau : Oh yes. Absolutely. Try hard. Uh huh.
Dan Boyle : Jeez, we suck. We can play better than this.
Ryane Clowe : Dude, I gotta shave this mustache off. It’s getting ridiculous.
Niclas Wallin : Hamburgers.
Trent Yawney : THAT’S IT! YOU WIN, YOU ALL GET HAMBURGERS!
Sharks : YEAAAAHHHHHH!
Podcast tomorrow.
December 3rd, 2010, 9:00 am
The win-loss-win-loss train rolls on, this time the Sharks posting their first shutout of the season on Dany Heatley Princess Night in Ottawa. Best game of the season for several players, Antti Niemi and Justin Braun among them. I know I’ve been critical of T-Mac for his choices of when to play Niemi in the past, but last night was the right time. Ottawa has had a bad stretch lately, and you probably want Niitty to play against Montreal on Saturday. One thing that did amuse me last night was the ‘storyline’ that Niemi has just gotten ‘better and better this season’ (according to Drew Remenda). I’m a Drew fan, but he got this one way wrong. Here’s the string of Niemi’s save percentages in his last five games: .903, .878, .938, .813, 1.000. That’s not ‘better and better’. That’s up and down, just like the Sharks have been.
The Sharks were utterly dominant at times last night, which is encouraging for Sharks fans, but also frustrating in a way. It’s the same or less stacked lineup than we’ve seen against recent losses against Columbus, Dallas, and Colorado, yet it was night and day the way they played. I know I thought the Sharks might reel off some good wins after the performance at home against Chicago- I’m not nearly as confident this time. Maybe we can get Joe Pavelski or somebody to bash Montreal as a hick town or say that poutine tastes like barf. Then the fans will boo that player every time he takes the ice, throw flaming jerseys in effigy, and the Sharks roll to another win on the backs of the charged atmosphere. Maybe the Sharks should plan a 30-city Disparagement Tour, finding a systematic way to infuriate the fans in every arena in order to light the fire they apparently need.
One down, 29 to go. Although if they keep going hot and cold this way, San Jose may be added to that list without even trying.
Comments Off on Off Again, On Again
November 25th, 2010, 11:32 am
Not only did the Sharks win, but Doug and I both were flawless in our hockey picks. Check out DOH 125 for all the ‘rules’. Doug mentioned in that episode how much we missed Douglas Murray, and it certainly was apparent last night. He hit everything, he jumped into the play, he made good defensive stops. The guy was an animal, and clearly itching to get back in the lineup, especially against the Sharks’ playoff ouster. Helluva game. If only the Sharks could play with that energy and urgency on a consistent basis, we might just have something here.
Yesterday, when I heard Niemi was going to start, I though that was a pretty wacky move. Ok, a dumb move. Now that McLellan’s gamble paid off, I still don’t understand it. If Niemi starts this weekend against Vancouver and gets shelled, I’m not sure if anything was really gained. Chicago is a rival team- to me, it’s straightforward. You start the guy who is the better goalie at the time, and Niitymaki is clearly that. Niemi seemed like a good candidate to start against EDM on Saturday, second half of a back-to-back. Let him build some confidence after a few good starts. I guess last night’s win kickstarted the recovery, but it still seems like a needless gamble.
Here I am, bitching after the Sharks finally get a win after three atrocious games, and against a tough team. I should be thankful. I am thankful.
Happy Thanksgiving.
November 24th, 2010, 8:57 am
After a good week last week, the Sharks respond by losing all three games to Colorado, Dallas, and Columbus. The Dudes try not to get too down on the whole thing, and explore why fans may be not as enthusiastic this season as much as past seasons. After some listener emails, the Dudes detail their new picking games contest, and address some fantasy issues.
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November 17th, 2010, 8:26 am
The Sharks have strung together some good wins, including one against the Pacific division leaders, the Los Angeles Kings. The Dudes try and pinpoint what caused the turnaround, and where they go from here.
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November 12th, 2010, 8:56 am
Hard to feel good when your team can barely beat the second worst team in the NHL. Maybe I’m overselling it- the Isles are now the third worst since they got a point last night. Sorry. Anyway you slice it, it’s clear the Sharks’ doldrums continue, again not scoring even strength, with the only goal coming 5-on-3. Even the 5-on-4 power plays didn’t look that great. Pavelski took his schnide to another level, this time actually putting the puck in the net, before Stephane Auger (not my favorite ref, to put it lightly) waved it off due to Logan Couture impeding the goalie in the crease. I think the next step is Pavs scoring, then God (or Chuck Norris, or a reasonable facsimile) actually turning back time to negate it.
I suppose beggars can’t be choosers, and you got to take two points on a night when you had outshot the opposition by a 2-to-1 margin for most of the night. Calgary will not be as forgiving, the beatdown we suffered last month at their hands is still pretty fresh in my mind. Here’s hoping the boys will use that as extra motivation. Did y’all watch James Wisniewski last night? I sure did. Leave your impressions in the comments, or email us (questions at dudesonhockey dot com) so we can talk about it next week. This weekend’s assignment- Ian White.
November 10th, 2010, 4:56 pm
The Dudes talk about the big news of the week and a genuine NHL controversy- the suspension of Joe Thornton because of a blindside hit on David Perron. Of course, there are Sharks games to discuss, and the worry starts to creep in…
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November 5th, 2010, 3:32 pm
So Joe gets two games for the hit on David Perron last night, let’s take a look:
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vJr33aaE_MM[/youtube]
To me, this hit looks fairly similar to the one Mike Richards put on David Booth, probably not as bad. Richards knocked Booth out for an extended period of time, and got no suspension. Joe got two games. Truly, the NHL justice system is probably a bunch of monkeys throwing darts, or perhaps typings stories (“It was the best of times, it was the blurst of times?! Stupid monkey!”). I predicted to Doug yesterday that Joe would get at least a game, and maybe two. Whee, I was right.
Despite the public outcry about the hit, either for or against the suspension, I think there’s a more serious issue in play. Take a look at Perron after the hit. He’s facedown on the ice, not moving. The trainer comes out, Perron’s on one knee, then slowly back to the bench. It’s not disputed that Perron was in fact hit in the head, and that he lay motionless on the ice. After that, Perron takes his next shift only one minute later in game time (probably 5-10 minutes later in real time). I’m no health care professional, but I’ve read enough about concussions to know that the symptoms can be widely varied, and the severity of the initial symptoms don’t always correlate to the severity of the concussion. Most importantly, the incidence and severity of future concussions is greatly increased if a person hasn’t fully recovered from a previous one.
That being said, one of the following two statements has to be true:
- The Blues’ training staff played very fast and loose with David Perron’s health. Seems difficult to believe that a thorough neurological exam could take place in the space of 5 minutes.
- David Perron faked his injury.
Either one of these is a serious problem for the NHL. Jamie Baker said in his post (he’s certainly on the side that Perron faked it) that this is becoming a trend- to fake injuries to draw penalties. All I know is, if the league is going to come out and say there will be stiff penalties for these types of hits, they have to know players will take advantage of that. Whether Perron did or didn’t here, there’s no way to know for sure. But I got my eye on you, Mike Ribero.
November 2nd, 2010, 8:39 am
It’s been a great week for Bay Area sports- the Giants win the World Series, and the Sharks win two games (against admittedly inferior opponents). The Dudes revel in the victories, and read some listener email.
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