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Ilya Kovalchuk Scores, New Jersey Devils Snap Losing Streak by Beating On Nashville Predators, 5-2

For the first time in a while, the New Jersey Devils were the better team on the ice and won the game.  Do you know how good it is to type that?  Do you know how good it is to feel that?   Seven days ago was the last Devils' win, a miraculous come-from-behind 4-3 win against Toronto in Ilya Kovalchuk's first game as a Devil.  And that wasn't a game where the Devils were the better team on the ice.  Not at all. I'm a little worried to wonder when was the last time the Devils won in a fashion like this.  Tonight, the Nashville Predators were the victims of a Devils' offense that was hungry for goals, a defense that wanted to hold steady all night long, and a team that just wanted to win something before the Olympic break.

Mark it on your calenders, tonight was the night Ilya Kovalchuk scored his first goal as a New Jersey Devil.  Right from the get-go, I had a feeling today would be the night Kovalchuk makes his mark in the goal column.  His first shot of the game wasn't an official shot, a blistering slapshot that beat Pekka Rinne but struck the cross-bar with a great force.  So many thought it went in, including myself, only to be shown otherwise on the replay.  But he, Patrik Elias, and Dainius Zubrus looked great together tonight.  Kovalchuk put 7 shots on net, played only 21:51, and got the game winning goal 8:24 into the third period.  

The fans were so ecstatic, many threw their free Devils baseball caps (tonight's promotion) onto the ice.  Which, really, was dumb.  Surely, the Devils will now give their free gifts at the end of games instead of before them.

Regardless, the place exploded.  Massive cheers from the many, many Devils fans when his name was announced as the goal scorer.   What better time for an elite player to make his mark, breaking a deadlock!  Even more impressive in my eyes, after scoring that goal, he upped his intensity.  He wanted to attack, he wanted to push ahead, he wanted more.  He would just "settle" for another assist, playing a big role in creating a power play goal (really, a PPG) for New Jersey.  He had a fantastic night.   The best Devil on the ice, I'd say.   In large part to his performance the many, many Devils fans left with something they haven't had on their faces: a big smile after a decisive win by New Jersey

For a standard recap and links to the official stats, NHL.com has you covered.  For a Nashville fan perspective, Chris Burton at On the Forecheck broke down the game period-by-period, attributing the loss to defensive lapses.  Read on for my further and extended thoughts on tonight's game.

Star-divide

Before continuing, here's the embedded video of tonight's highlights from NHL.com.  Feel free to savor all of the Devils' goals:

Admittedly, I cannot say the Devils were the better team for all 60 minutes or they looked good for all 60 minutes. That would be wrong.  That would be incorrect.  So let's get the criticism out of the way.

First item of criticism: the Devils' first penalty kill of the night.  For the most part, the team did quite well in repelling Nashville's attack. All period long, they struggled to do much against New Jersey.  Yet, the PK left it's guard down just before the penalty to Dainius Zubrus ended.   The vast majority of penalty killing strategies, if not all of them, is to prevent the puck from getting to the slot. The slot is a high percentage area for shots. Lots of teams on offense try to get the puck to the slot because if someone is set-up there, they have a great chance at beating the goaltender.

Cal O'Reilly was able to get in between the Devils' killers (Andy Greene, Bryce Salvador, Jamie Langenbrunner, Travis Zajac) and hang out in the slot.  OK.  Surely, the Devils would want to close off all lanes that would get the puck to O'Reilly, right?  Wrong.  When the puck got to Colin Wilson, Bryce Salvador was in position to make sure Wilson really didn't get a good angle on Brodeur.  Wilson wasn't looking for a shot, he was looking for O'Reilly.  The pass went underneath the outreached stick of Salvador.  O'Reilly was so open, he had the time to take the pass, turned, and fire in all of one motion.   That's a difficult shot for any goaltender to stop, and so it beats Brodeur.  The PK there gave up the slot and it burned them.

Moreover, the Devils were by far the better team on the ice in the first period.  That was a late power play goal given up in the first period and all it did was give the Predators something to be happy about going into the second.  A little momentum that could have cost the Devils.

Second item of criticism: the 5-on-3 power play.  The Devils were able to get a significantly long 5-on-3 power play tonight.  After Francois Bouillon got caught hooking, Dan Hamhuis was called for hooking only 34 seconds into the Bouillon penalty.  That's 1:26 of a two-man advantage.  The Devils surely should have scored there.  And I don't mean that in a "it's a two-man advantage, you should score" way; but in a "Zach Parise, you had the whole net  wide open down low and you somehow missed the shot" way.  It couldn't have been easier for Parise, yet he somehow sent it across the crease instead! 

The Devils at least kept the puck in Nashville's zone on that two-man advantage and bombed away.   They struggled on their other power plays (including the one shortened by Zubrus "interfering" with Rinne despite being so far away from him) to set themselves up for most of the power play; save for the last one, where the Devils actually scored a power play goal.  Intentionally.

Third item of criticism: the second goal against by Martin Brodeur.  Poor Andy Greene.  It was looking like a routine play, the first (or second?) by Nashville in the second period, David Legwand passed it to Jordin Tootoo high in the zone.  Greene was in front of Tootoo, and normally the puck carrier will either dump it or just throw a shot on net. Tootoo had enough space past Greene to fire a shot and Martin Brodeur misread it.  It went between his arm and his pad on his blocker side.  A good shot, yes; but that one should have been stopped by Brodeur.  Poor Greene gets dinged for not doing anything wrong.

Fourth item of criticism: most of the second period was sloppy. The Devils looked confident, strong, and energetic in the first period. So much so that perhaps a drop-off was to be expected.  Yet, despite early goals from both teams, both the Devils and the Predators struggled to make much really happen.  Neither really took full advantage, and that falls on New Jersey moreso because they really needed a win badly.  Going into the third period 2-2 didn't bode well against Philadelphia, they should have made more of an effort to avoid doing that for a third straight game.

Fifth item of criticism: two-on-ones. The Devils had a few two-on-ones where they made one too many passes instead of just putting the puck on net.  Now, I understand the concept of the second pass on a two-on-one.  The idea is to beat the goalie on his flank.  I get that.  Yet, the problem tonight was that when the Devils made that second pass, there wasn't enough space or the right angle to put a good shot on net.   Next time, just shoot it.  Even if it went into Pekka Rinne's chest, fine. At least it wasn't a totally wasted play.

Those are my main points of criticism.  Now let's heap on some praise! 

First, the penalty killers did a great job in response to that one PPG against.  The Devils got clearances regularly and Nashville got very little on net with only 3 shots on net across 4 power plays for 7:33 of time.  They tightened up in their own zone and didn't mess around when they had the puck.  The only foul-up beyond the first period was Patrik Elias and Jamie Langenbrunner passing the puck one too many times on a shorthanded scoring chance.  Bryce Salvador's work on the team's third penalty kill was excellent and redeemed his earlier error in my eyes.

Second, tonight wasn't just the Devils' first win in a week, but the first intentional power play goal in a week too.  Ilya Kovalchuk takes the puck just outside the corner on Rinne's right and sees Dainius Zubrus in the area.  Kovalchuk's pass is blocked by Shea Weber's skates. Now, just before the pass, as Zubrus goes inside; Zach Parise glided back a little bit to give him space.  Zubrus knocks the puck up closer to Parise, Parise charges up, and pounds the loose puck past Rinne.   That was the Devils' fourth goal, and important goal as it added to the lead and it was a power play goal, that's huge.  Parise missed a glorious opportunity on the 5-on-3; but he did pick up a power play goal later on.  Not bad.  Not bad at all. 

Overall, the power play went 1-for-5 with 6 shots on net; an improvement over some recent power play efforts, I think.  I'd like to see more consistency on the power play in terms of offensive possession, especially getting into the zone to set-up the offense.  That's been a weakness of the team, I think.  Once they do that better, more goals will come.

Third, after the Tootoo goal, Martin Brodeur raised his game to where it needed to be.  He allowed nothing else, an effort helped out by the Devils defense playing fairly smart hockey and the Nashville offense not doing so well.  The Predators struggled early to get consistent possession, decent shots on net. Their best effort was in the second period, but they really didn't get much going on either their power play or at even strength with only a total of 9 shots. The third period found Nashville mostly battling or chasing the Devils for the puck and got very little on Brodeur.  When Nashville did fire the puck, it was mostly Martin Erat (6 shots on goal) or Jason Arnott (4 shots on goal).  Their defense contributed little (a total of 5 shots from all of them) from the point and the team just couldn't disrupt Brodeur's positioning or vision too much. 

Fourth, the Devils looked really strong to start and end the games.  Even after O'Reilly's goal, Elias was sprung on a breakaway only to be denied by Rinne.  They put so much pressure on early, forcing Rinne to be great. They were rewarded when Jamie Langenbrunner took the puck down low, past two Predator defenders, drawing a third's attention, and fired a pass between an out-of-position Rinne and the left goalpost to find a wide open Travis Zajac (thanks to the three Preds not in position) to for an easy goal.   The top 6 - ZZ Pops and Elias-Zubrus-Kovalchuk - just looked so good just kept finding seams to get the puck in Nashville's zone to create something.  Even the bottom two lines had some good shifts attacking. No wonder they had 12 shots on net. 

The second period was where they hit a lull.  Patrik Elias responding to Tootoo's goal with a gorgeous slapshot over Rinne's left shoulder was great, but the team didn't build on it.  The passes weren't so strong into the zone, they were worse within the zone.  As a result, the team didn't get too many shots to the net.  

Yet, the team didn't get demoralized, the Devils didn't play without intensity or confidence in the third period.  They got more and more opportunities on offense, and when Kovalchuk scored his goal from the high slot, you can see the jubilation among the team.  Not just that Kovalchuk scored, but the Devils broke a deadlock themselves.  They did it because Elias drew the attention of three Predators and found an open Kovalchuk.  It was a great play that made it all happen, and you can almost sense a big weight lifted off the shoulders of the forwards.  Did the Devils let up?  Not at all, and they were rewarded with a power play goal and an empty net goal (Jamie Langenbrunner) to seal the deal.  The top 6 forwards made plays and made goals happen.   I'd argue that, next to Kovalchuk, Elias was the best forward out there in terms of making good passes, keeping good possession, and being involved in scoring chances.  Really, no one on the top 6 was bad; hopefully, they'll give Lemaire reason to keep them all together as they are.

Not that the other forwards were terrible.  Matthew Corrente returned to New Jersey and started at wing.  He didn't play much there, only 5:32, but he didn't do much wrong in his 9 shifts.  He made good passes, he got 2 shots on net, and he hustled well.  Rod Pelley also played a little, but looked good in what little time he had. Brian Rolston was caught up in the mix of the bottom 6, but still managed to get 3 shots on net and get some significant time on both special teams.  The only one who really didn't look so good was Dean McAmmond, some of his passes - especially in the second period - were poor and picked up by Nashville.  They didn't kill the team, but it's still not good.

Among them all, I feel real bad for Vladimir Zharkov.  He skated real hard, he set up a few chances only to be denied at the last second by the Nashville defense, and he had a great deflection denied by a Rinne toe save.  Zharkov hasn't scored in his 32 games with New Jersey (only 8 assists), but he's so noticeable on the ice despite his limited ice time (11:40 tonight) that you wonder when will he get a break.   He came real close on the deflection.  Maybe it'll happen soon?   (By the way, had Niclas Bergfors play like Zharkov, perhaps he wouldn't have seemed invisible in New Jersey in the past few weeks.  We will never know now.)  I would love to see Zharkov finally get his first NHL goal.

Overall, the offense wasn't tepid, it was threatening, it wasn't solely focused on one player or just one line, and it was successful.  As a result, there was a lot less pressure on the defense (helped out by Nashville's inconsistent offense, true) and so they had a fairly solid night.  Colin White's and Mike Mottau's only faults were minors that the Devils killed off with aplomb.  Mark Fraser only saw 13:24 but he looked good doing so, just simple play by the rookie and one big hit on Joel Ward (who somehow blocked a Kovalchuk slapshot on a PK with his helmet and continued to play - that man is tough).  Cory Murphy's return saw him play 14:09 - 3:50 on the power play - and he looked OK.  Salvador's made only one error, but made up for it with good play later in my book; and Greene was solid as usual.  No one on defense played ridiculous minutes, so they should all be good to go for tomorrow.

Honestly, this is such a good feeling because the Devils were the better team on the ice for a majority of the game and got the goals necessary to win the game.  That hasn't happened for a while and now I look forward to tomorrow's game wondering if they can do it again.  One final note: After being announced as the first star of the game, "The Maven" Stan Fischler did a short interview with Kovalchuk on the ice.  He asked Kovalchuk about scoring his first goal, how it felt. The first word out of Kovalchuk's mouth was "Finally."

Those are my exact words regarding this win, too: Finally.

Thank you to Steve for the GameThread and I thank you all for commenting in the GameThread as well as reading this recap.  Please leave all your thoughts, feelings, criticisms, and praise in the comments.

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Was at the game

and Kovy’s goal really changed the atmosphere of the arena.

First goal, everyone was good. Than Nashville scores, eh. They score again and it felt like there was little life in there. Equalized and it got better. Then Kovy scores, and the whole place was rocking.
After that, the Devils never looked back.
This was the first time in a while I’ve seen the Devils win in person, and it felt good.

Never assume skill at bouncing a ball makes you smarter than the guy who built the court.

When there's a WILL there's a WAY

by Willgfass on Feb 13, 2010 12:13 AM EST reply actions  

best. birthday. game. ever.

absolutely right about Kovy’s goal – you could just feel just the explosion of relief and jubilation from everyone in the arena. That was a monkey-off-the-back kind of goal; I’m excited to see what kind of game he puts together against Carolina tomorrow…

..and I kept my damn hat, btw – in case he scored two more!

by richer44 on Feb 13, 2010 12:18 AM EST reply actions  

5 - 0

I predicted a Devils’ win, because they don’t lose when I’m there. Great game. I do think though after the “hey” in Rock n’ Roll part II that instead of “hey you suck” we should now chant “Ko-val-chuk.”

If you don’t like that – I dare you to come up with a better idea.

5 – 0 baby,

I said it in previous posts and I will leave the building now . . .

I have respect for most sports fans with 2 exceptions: NY Ranger fans who grew up in New Jersey, and Dallas Cowboy fans who can't name the capital of Texas.

by Cherno77 on Feb 13, 2010 12:19 AM EST reply actions  

I envy you

I’m like 2-4 at devils game, 1-4 at giants games, and 0-1 at nets games (back in like 2002 when they were good).

The only team I have success going to games are Mets games. I’m like 3-1 at Mets games.

Never assume skill at bouncing a ball makes you smarter than the guy who built the court.

When there's a WILL there's a WAY

by Willgfass on Feb 13, 2010 12:25 AM EST up reply actions  

Could you please go to more games then? :-)

by Jezebel on Feb 13, 2010 12:45 AM EST up reply actions  

Yes you did! remember reading your prediction and why. Is there any way we can get you seasons tickets?

by eppy on Feb 13, 2010 8:13 AM EST up reply actions  

I know I'd be waaaay under .500

Too many games in the early years when they hardly won at all. Although I did have an awesome streak during the 2003 playoffs. They only lost one home game and that was the only one I had to miss.

Anyone want to buy me playoff tickets? :-)

Go Jets
Go Devils

by FrankG929 on Feb 13, 2010 9:55 PM EST up reply actions  

Yay!!!

Congrats to Kovy and the Devils! I wish I was at the Rock sooo badly. I could feel through the tv broadcast the energy shift after Kovy scored…I just wish I could be there.

Thanks for the recap…I love reliving this game! If they keep scoring like this, I think they’ll make it all the way to the Cup finals…and take some pressure off of Marty and the defense. There’s no reason why they can’t. Let’s hope this opens the floodgates for Kovy, they kick the Canes’ ass tomorrow and that they return from the break healthy and ready to dominate all the way to the Cup!

GO DEVILS!!!

by Jezebel on Feb 13, 2010 12:44 AM EST reply actions  

Recap

Great one as usual.

My $0.02:

A lot of people stepped their play up, and it showed big time on the ice. Langenbrunner played like a captain. His effort against the two Predators to free the puck and secure the empty-net goal was simply amazing. Although I fear getting struck by a bolt of lightning, I have to say this……. Mottau played a good game! Didn’t notice any defensive lapses at all by him, but rather, good offensive efforts, and a great pass to Elias for his goal.

Good to see the Devils get intentional goals again. Hopefully the Kovy curse has been lifted, as I expect a lot of games to go this way. There is absolutely no reason not to. The Devils have 2-3 STRONG lines, and there should be NO reason why they wouldn’t have balanced, and plenty of, scoring. Five Devils on the scoreboard gives me a grin that I can’t seem to wipe off my face. Though, I did notice some Devils are still suffering from Passing-to-Kovy syndrome. If it was any other skater alongside Zajac on the 2-on-1 breakaway they had, Zajac would have opted to shoot instead of find Kovy. But, I can never really complain about Zajac, because I find him to be one of the most, if not the most, underrated player in the league, and a definite contender for the Selke.

Fraser. Oh my goodness, I’m in love with him. Not only is he solid defensively, he has a special property that sets him apart from the other 99% of the Devils. He is very physical. Salvador is physical, but a big hitter like Fraser on the blueline is a must for any real cup contender. Good to see him handle the increasing minutes very well.

I actually really liked the 5-on-3. Sure, they didn’t produce anything, which was frustrating, but they had some solid chances, and some solid shots. To me, however, it just seems the Devils are trying to force things on the power play. For some reason, when they have the man advantage, their passing accuracy goes to hell, and they start making bad decisions. A definite improvement tonight though over the past few games (watching the powerplays against the Flyers almost gave me a heart attack).

To be honest though, as glad as I am that the Devils got some offense going, and overall played fairly well this game, they did catch a lot of breaks. While Langenbrunner’s pass to Zajac/Parise for the first goal was amazing, it was horrible defending from the Predators and even worse positioning from Rinne. Elias’ shot was very routine, and any team the Devils face in the playoffs will have a goalie that can stop that (unless it’s Jose Threeormore). Kovalchuk’s goal was a result of the Predators zoning in too much on Elias and leaving Kovy unmarked (did you SEE hit shot off the crossbar? My god that thing was powerful…)

To sum up, although the result was awesome and I’m very optimistic this game will propel the Devils to better results in the very near future, I’d say this game was the Predators not being on top of their game as much as the Devils playing amazing hockey. The goal? Carry this huge momentum to Hurricane country. Time to get some revenge boys.

by Jago on Feb 13, 2010 1:04 AM EST reply actions  

I only offered a penny for your thoughts

so here’s your change, $0.01.

You can’t discount the play of some of the “non-scorers” last night. Cory Murphy found good legs last night and wasn’t beaten on any shifts that I remember. In his earlier appearances
he used to try to be physical and arm check the onrushing opponent. Being too small and too slow the opponent would inevitably be by him, often leading to a goal. He positioned well on D and moved the puck on the PP. Not stellar… just solid.

Corrente didn’t look out of place like you’d expect a D-man playing wing to look. Hardly missed that Pando scoring touch.

Zharkov continues to play hard, a very smart player. He is one of our best on the forecheck. I’d hate to see him leave this team. I’m wearing a hat to every game. You’ll find it on the ice after his first goal.

by DevilsDDS on Feb 13, 2010 8:04 AM EST up reply actions  

Bergfors gets the winning goal for atlanta

Good for him, Im glad he is still doing well.

by WWZPD on Feb 13, 2010 2:23 AM EST reply actions  

This is what the Devils can do when they are properly motivated. They are a scary team, they have depth at forward now and the defense can do the job. I still can’t wait to see some of the youngsters from Lowell crack the line up on defense though. I think that would turn an adequate defense into an above average one. I have been following Alexander Urbom all season w/ the Wheat Kings and he looks NHL ready. Currently he has 10 goal to go along with 20 assists in 53 games. The most telling stat though is his +/- which currently stands at +39! This all coming from a player who was labeled as a “shut down” defenseman. Now, no one really knows if those numbers will translate to the NHL but is nice to know that he can put up some points and is quite solid in his own end.

by thatguy011071 on Feb 13, 2010 7:22 AM EST reply actions  

PP

While it was nice to get a real, honest to goodness PP goal last night, that 1:26 of 5-on-3 was terrible. We are now 2 for 17 on the 5-on-3 this season. John, when you said “the power play went 1-for-5 with 6 shots on net; an improvement over some recent power play efforts”, this is improvement over a very low standard the PP has been setting this last month.

We’ll take the goal and certainly the win, but I’m hoping the break turns the PP around. Looking forward to the Olympics and the return on March 10th.

by DevilsDDS on Feb 13, 2010 8:27 AM EST reply actions  

While it was nice to get a real, honest to goodness PP goal last night, that 1:26 of 5-on-3 was terrible. We are now 2 for 17 on the 5-on-3 this season. John, when you said "the power play went 1-for-5 with 6 shots on net; an improvement over some recent power play efforts", this is improvement over a very low standard the PP has been setting this last month.

True. But I take it as small steps. Sure, the 5-on-3 didn’t score; but you can’t say it was terrible given that the Devils two power plays between that one and final one, the Devils struggled to get the puck into the zone, much less take shots on net. The 5-on-3 saw the Devils working as something like a unit, they had the puck in Nashville’s end the entire time, and they were earnestly trying to set up a great chance, which they did and to everyone’s dismay, Parise missed the net.

Yes, the power play has been so awful that the bar of expectations has been lowered. Hence, I’m glad they scored on an intentional shot on net as opposed to the last PPG which was a fluke of Chris Pronger’s skate. I’ll agree to that; just like I would have taken any kind of win tonight since the Devils lost their last three and generally have looked inconsistent at best for most of 2010.

Devils in my heart! Devils in my mind! Devils in my eyes! Devils until I die!
In Lou We Trust - The New Jersey Devils SBN Blog

by John Fischer on Feb 13, 2010 10:32 AM EST up reply actions  

Very good to see us flying out there again,now to continue the effort. I am puzzeled why many people were down on Bergy, the times I watched him he always was driving to the net and shooting, whatever minutes he played he was always one of the top S.O.G.‘S per game and he had a gift not many players have and that is to score-do not misunderstand I’m happy with the trade and it’s not about that as it is in evaluating our talent. Ive heard at times he didn’t try always but if that was the case I don’t believe it was intentional as I would be hesitant in my game if I always scored goals and my coach was never happy with me-if there were true faults there aren’t you supposed to nuture and be patient with rookies, especially with potential? I hope this will not be a trend with our future potential rookie goal scorers.

by eppy on Feb 13, 2010 8:34 AM EST reply actions  

No One was down on Bergie

We just have better prospects with higher ceilings who play very similar games and positions to him. So he was worth parting with for a chance at the cup.

by Zelepukin on Feb 13, 2010 9:44 AM EST reply actions  

True. Once Mattias Tedenby arrives and develops, I don’t think many will be missing Bergfors then.

Devils in my heart! Devils in my mind! Devils in my eyes! Devils until I die!
In Lou We Trust - The New Jersey Devils SBN Blog

by John Fischer on Feb 13, 2010 10:36 AM EST up reply actions  

Very very big win

i had to listen on the radio

I think that was a critical confidence boosting as we are about to go into the break.

I believe the Kovy goal may open the floodgates for some significantly increased scoring.

I also think this showed some solid character. Giving up the lead yet again could have really hurt a lesser squad but they came right back and also kept up the pressure throughout the 3rd period.

Tonight will be a very interesting game, hopefully they will build on this, but regardless of tonight’s outcome I think the Preds win really settles things down as they enter a long break

by Devilssection21fan on Feb 13, 2010 10:05 AM EST reply actions  

Question about next game...

Since the Olympics is kicking off and the devils having back-to-back games should Yann Danis start? I would think it would be in the best interest for Marty because if he wants to be the starter Team Canada, they will want him to be as rested as possible … Also it’s a game against a relatively “bad” team, so wouldn’t Danis get consideration normally?

by atlantic division on Feb 13, 2010 10:31 AM EST reply actions  

Maybe. But Carolina hasn’t been playing like a bad team, winning their last 4. Whether or not Brodeur is the starter for Canada means nothing to the New Jersey Devils or their success. The Canes aren’t going to rest any of their Olympians, they want a 5th win and something to be happy about.

Honestly, if the Devils weren’t so poor for most of this month, if they were going into this game having won 4 or 5 games instead of just 2, then Danis would get consideration. Yet, given the team’s travails and struggles, I think getting a win is important – for that, it behooves Lemaire to start the better goaltender.

Devils in my heart! Devils in my mind! Devils in my eyes! Devils until I die!
In Lou We Trust - The New Jersey Devils SBN Blog

by John Fischer on Feb 13, 2010 10:35 AM EST up reply actions  

We've got some momentum

why screw with it. Jacques already said Marty’s playing tonight, so moot point anyway.

Also, as John (and Jacques) said, Carolina’s not the same team we rolled over twice this year. They’re 8-2-0 in their last ten, and have a winning record at home.

Furthermore, Parise, Langs, Kovy, and Elias are also playing in the Olympics. All four scored in last nights win. Should they all be scratched from the Devils lineup so they’re rested for Tuesday?

If Andrew Peters ever plays again it will be too soon.

by LangsForPres on Feb 13, 2010 11:42 AM EST up reply actions  

They can’t worry about the Olympics. Lemaire has intimated that some guys have been looking ahead and that it has hurt the team.

Carolina is playing better, yes, but the Devils are still the better team and need the win more. If they can’t get up for this game with all the reasons to get up for it, then I might start to question the team’s leadership.

On the plus side, Kovy is pretty familiar with the Hurricanes…

by elesias on Feb 13, 2010 11:48 AM EST up reply actions  

He does seem to like the RBC Center

4 pts in 2 games there this season, not to shabby.

If Andrew Peters ever plays again it will be too soon.

by LangsForPres on Feb 13, 2010 12:16 PM EST up reply actions  

Balanced attack

Just what we needed!

5 goals from 5 different guys. Top 6 forwards with 11 points and a +8. A bona fide PP goal.

by elesias on Feb 13, 2010 11:42 AM EST reply actions  

I was at a Lowell Devils game last weekend

and I remember thinking how much better Cory Murphy was playing there than when he was in NJ at the beginning of the season. I wasn’t sure if it was just because he was playing in the AHL, but he played well last night. Good to see him have the opportunity to show his improvement.

by brodeur on Feb 13, 2010 3:31 PM EST reply actions  

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How kovalchuk will affect the devils

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NEWARK NJ - JULY 20:  Ilya Kovalchuk of the New Jersey Devils poses for photographs following the media opportunity announcing his contract renewal at the Prudential Center on July 20 2010 in Newark New Jersey.  (Photo by Bruce Bennett/Getty Images) +9 updates

With Arbitrator And Hearing Date Set, Is Kovalchuk Contract Mess Set To End?

In this photo taken on Monday, July 19, 2010, Atlanta Thrashers forward Andrew Ladd, formerly of the Stanley Cup champion Chicago Blackhawks, spends his day with the Stanley Cup atop Crown Mountain, British Columbia., north of Vancouver. Ladd, a two-time Stanley Cup champion, was flown by helicopter to the top of Crown Mountain to watch the sunrise. (AP Photo/The Canadian Press,  Mark L. Johnson) +55 updates

NHL Free Agency: Andrew Ladd Avoids Arbitration, Signs With Thrashers

FILE - In this May 7, 2009, file photo, Milan Michalek, front left, of the Czech Republic attacks Swedish goalie Jonas Gustavsson, right, during a quarterfinal at the Ice Hockey World Championship in Bern, Switzerland. Sweden's Carl Gunnarsson is seen behind on left. The Toronto Maple Leafs landed Gustavsson with a one-year contract on Tuesday, July 7, 2009. The 24-year-old netminder, nicknamed "The Monster," was also heavily pursued by Dallas, San Jose and Colorado. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus, File) link

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