What appeared to be the most brilliant move in hockey lore turns out to be the only hope we had.
In hindsight, this was dejavu all over again. Patrick Roy ended his career losing a 7th game to the Minnesota Wild and once again the Wild take out the Av's in 7. The method to their madness was clear and consistent: put people in front of the net and pepper Semyon Varlamov with as many shots as you can, and chase the puck into the zone when you do. In other words, the Wild beat us with a heavy dose of dump and chase.
To the credit of the Avalanche, they understood what was happening to them, and felt confident that they had the ability to do the same thing to Wild. The Wild almost doubled the number of shots that the Av's took. In the end, what we hoped would become a dump and chase approach never got out of the penetrate and kick mode. The Av's might have been too young to know better, but they also might have been too good for their own good.
The return of Matt Duchene appeared to be the key to victory. The Av's simply possessed too much fire speed to be denied shots and found themselves up a goal with minutes left on the clock. Unfortunately, those minutes proved to be way too long for a young team that didn't understand the importance of keeping the pressure on Minnesota instead of milking their lead to victory. It wasn't a matter of needing to score again as it was needing to keep the action in the Wild zone.
Overtime is such a roll of the dice, but it typically favors the team who fought to create the overtime. The Wild created their chance and good fortune took care of the rest.
In hindsight, Av's nation was hoping for an immense level of talent to overcome a huge amount of deficiencies. It's not hard to see why Matt Cook went after Tyson Barrie. Defensive scoring was the one area Minnesota could not account for with their neutral zone trap defense. If Denver sports fans have a beef with the Barrie injury I would encourage them to remember the Wes Welker rub play on Aqib Talib that allowed us to get massacred in the Superbowl two weeks later.
In sports, stuff happens, including injury and a healthy Avalanche roster should be overjoyed with the prospects for next year, even if disappointed with what could have been. In the end Minnesota played better and it would have taken 3 miracle overtime victories for the Av's to advance. You might be able to win a series on a lucky bounce, but no team wins the Stanley Cup on luck alone. In the end, this team was simply too young to understand the intensity of a chase for the Cup.
POSTSCRIPT: Much like the Av's of Patrick Roy's era, the Av's have now established a core of players that are now household names even to casual fans. Nathan MacKinnon, Gabriel Landiskog, Matt Duchene, Ryan O'Reilly and Semyon Varlamov (maybe even P.A. Parenteau) are mainstays for years to come. Even the Great One, Wayne Gretzky had to acknowledge that he see's the exploits of Nathan MacKinnon.
POST-POSTSCRIPT: Joey Hishon?..........WOW!
POST-POST-POSTSCRIPT: Boy do we need a great year from the Colorado Rockies.
Showing posts with label #Colorado Avalanche. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #Colorado Avalanche. Show all posts
Thursday, May 1, 2014
Tuesday, March 18, 2014
Montreal Beats Avalanche, McKinnon Steals Show

We expected Matt Duchene to get the heroes welcome as well as Canadian born JS Giguere who got the call in goal. We even expected the love and admiration that this team would bestow on the goalie who last captured the Stanley Cup for Montreal (1993), the team with the most of them all. Patrick Roy has a storied career that began with Montreal. With so many years removed, the rift that caused him to go is all but healed. Today, Roy is nothing but beloved in Montreal...as he should be.
What was not expected tonight by anyone except those in Canada and from Canada, was the warm reception given to the NHL's front running Rookie of the Year, Nathan McKinnon.
These Canadians are serious about their hockey as the recent Olympic victories suggested. After being dead in the water in the semi-final game against the USA, Canada women's team rallied late to push the game to OT and won it in the extra period. The men's team followed that feat a few days later by winning the gold as well. Winning hockey in Canada is about as important as basketball is to the USA. They simply expect to win.
Thanks to their blind passion for hockey, the Canadiens proceeded to piss off Patrick (who was struggling at the time), forcing Roy to demand a release. When the breakup was over, Avalanche had a Hall of Fame goalie and would gain two Stanley Cup victories with him in net.
Montreal was glad to see the return of Roy, but hardly ready to hand over a much needed victory. The respectful applause for McKinnon appeared to inspire something special into his legs. Everything they admired in McKinnon as expert hockey fans was on display in this game. McKinnon would eventually take #2 star of the game even though the Avalanche lost 6-3.
Losing teams are not awarded #1 stars as a matter of form, but McKinnon was clearly the best player on the ice. Thomas Vanek of Montreal got the #1 star with an ugly hat trick that didn't even draw one hat from his home crowd, who remained mesmerized as McKinnon skated circles around their team. Undoubtedly, Canadien fans walked from the arena happy with a win, but exuberant over the show McKinnon gave them as well.
There is admiration, and then there is admiration from fan's who really know what they are watching. If you didn't realize what the rest of the league thought of Colorado's super rookie, you do now. Canadiens tested....Canadiens approved.
POST SCRIPT: Avalanche forward John Mitchell lost his skates while rushing up ice, slid into the boards and bounced off so violently he went airborne from the ricochet. Mitchell, who skated off on his own power, was transported to a local hospital for precautionary x-rays. (No injury report was available at publishing).
Saturday, March 15, 2014
Ducks Beats Av's With 6 Goals In One Period. Avalanche Looking Forward To Season Finale
Tonight was a difficult sports viewing night for a Nugget/Avalanche fan such as myself.
Lured late in the evening by the Colorado sunshine, I got stuck playing the back nine (instead of stopping after nine) and finished in the darkest of functional dusk. By the time I made it home, the Nuggets were late in the game against Miami, and the Colorado Avalanche were getting plastered with pucks by the Anaheim Ducks.
The Avs have recently beaten some of the best teams in the NHL. The Ducks are among the top in the league, but not seen as playoff worthy like the Chicago Blackhawks or the St. Louis Blues, two teams that the Avs dismantled in recent games.
The last time these two teams faced off, it was the glass partition between the benches that became dismantled in a heated opening night match up that, if not for the partition, might of ended in a fist fight between the coaches of these two teams. The Avs won that game 6-1.
Two things to remember. The Ducks left that first game mad as hell over the outcome and the Ducks are the best team in the league at winning a game when giving up the first goal. After peppering Avs goalie Semyon Varlamov with several shots on goal early, John Mitchell scored for the Avs to take a 1-0 lead into the second period. .
This has become the nature of this team. Even when they do not appear to be dominating play, they are dominating goal tending and grit. True to their name, the Avalanche can come out of nowhere with ferocious impact, and they did again tonight against the Ducks.
Content that the Avs could find a way to do what they've done to others recently, I decided beating the Heat was a much for significant challenge for this Colorado sports fan and switched over to see the Nuggets close out Miami. When I turned back, the Av's scored a goal in the second period to take a 2-1 lead over the Ducks.
That would be the last lead they saw in this game that ended 6-4 in favor of the Ducks who blew the game wide open in the second period with all 6 goals (the most goals against the Avs in one period this year) and made the Avs chase the rest of the way, as they chased away the Avs goalie who did not finish the game.
The Av's have the benefit of fighting with the Ducks and a few other teams for the best record in the Western conference and will likely finish the season jockeying for playoff positioning. Since the last game of the season will be in Anaheim against these Ducks, hockey fans in both cities are crossing their fingers for a meaningful game and a grande finale.
For the Denver Nuggets, the night would end more joyfully. (read more)
Postscript: The Av's got the score as close as 5-4 in that second period with a magical play from the captain Gabriel Landiskog. After making a move to get free in front of the net, Landiskog nearly held the puck till the window to score had fully closed and then unleashed an odd angled blast past a goalie frozen by the move. Peter Forsberg type stuff if I do say so myself.
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The Nug's, the Av's or Golf? So many decisions....so little time. |
The Avs have recently beaten some of the best teams in the NHL. The Ducks are among the top in the league, but not seen as playoff worthy like the Chicago Blackhawks or the St. Louis Blues, two teams that the Avs dismantled in recent games.
The last time these two teams faced off, it was the glass partition between the benches that became dismantled in a heated opening night match up that, if not for the partition, might of ended in a fist fight between the coaches of these two teams. The Avs won that game 6-1.
This has become the nature of this team. Even when they do not appear to be dominating play, they are dominating goal tending and grit. True to their name, the Avalanche can come out of nowhere with ferocious impact, and they did again tonight against the Ducks.
Content that the Avs could find a way to do what they've done to others recently, I decided beating the Heat was a much for significant challenge for this Colorado sports fan and switched over to see the Nuggets close out Miami. When I turned back, the Av's scored a goal in the second period to take a 2-1 lead over the Ducks.
That would be the last lead they saw in this game that ended 6-4 in favor of the Ducks who blew the game wide open in the second period with all 6 goals (the most goals against the Avs in one period this year) and made the Avs chase the rest of the way, as they chased away the Avs goalie who did not finish the game.
The Av's have the benefit of fighting with the Ducks and a few other teams for the best record in the Western conference and will likely finish the season jockeying for playoff positioning. Since the last game of the season will be in Anaheim against these Ducks, hockey fans in both cities are crossing their fingers for a meaningful game and a grande finale.
For the Denver Nuggets, the night would end more joyfully. (read more)
Postscript: The Av's got the score as close as 5-4 in that second period with a magical play from the captain Gabriel Landiskog. After making a move to get free in front of the net, Landiskog nearly held the puck till the window to score had fully closed and then unleashed an odd angled blast past a goalie frozen by the move. Peter Forsberg type stuff if I do say so myself.
Thursday, March 6, 2014
Mackinnon Surpasses "The Great One". Is He Gretzky (or Is Joe Sakic More Accurate?)

Especially since that magical 18 year old plays for my team, I celebrate whatever system allowed for that to happen. Nathan Mackinnon is a player for the ages. Earlier in the season I wrote a post about the best Avalanche player from a big list of options, and decided that Semyon Varlamov is clearly the best of the best. Mackinnon is making me question myself.
Not that Mackinnon is really at THAT level yet, but the upside potential is absolutely scary with even a little bit of growth as a player. Considering his age, physical stature as a result of age, and impending growth from both a physical and mental perspective, McKinnon is on a path to take over the entire NHL.....no really. His point streak, that is equal only to Gretzky, does not appear to be a freak coincidence. This kid does things that boggles the mind. It feels like he is so advanced that he could be doing more hot dog type plays, which he sort of does, but with an obvious restraint.
If he was a 10 year veteran this would simply be impressive. As an 18 year old rookie we are seeing amazing stuff coming from the stick and skates of this kid. If comparisons to Gretzky are high praise, then we are at least seeing the reincarnation of Joe Sakic for sure. We'll make him earn that Gretzky stuff later.
Understanding that comparison's are the most unfair thing that we fans love to do, my praise of Mackinnon seems to discount the fact that Gabriel Landiskog is the captain of this team or that Matt Duchene is the most magical scorer we've got.
Mackinnon is something special. I watched the Avalanche/ Detroit Red Wings game in Detroit as I wrote this piece, and the record that Mackinnon had tied with Gretzky is now Mackinnon's alone (13 games in a row for an 18 year old player). With a pass from behind the net that looked like he threw it with his hand, Mackinnon found Andre Benoit in overtime to beat the hated Red Wings in their own house. A similar late assist from Mackinnon was the difference in beating the back to back champion Chicago Blackhawks two nights ago.
It was actually amazing goaltending that gave this team a chance to win. Detroit was smothering in their defensive approach, so it took a patient Avalanche team to overcome the Red Wing D and capture the overtime win. Much bigger than the Mackinnon scoring streak was the maturity of this win. Detroit may not make the playoffs this year for the first time in years, but they are a hated rival who gives us their best shot whenever we play them.
Coach Patrick Roy made the wise decision to start goalie J.S. Giguere in net. Giguere dislodged the net and broke a stick (old veteran tricks to slow down an aggressive team) as needed in order to overcome the initial attack from Detroit. It is likely that starting Semyon Varlamov in goal would not have provided the calming effect that Giguere brought to this victory.
In the end, Mackinnon finished the game in a fashion that not only reminded us of Sakic (not Gretzky), but reminds us that all legends, even Gretzky, will someday be surpassed.
Not to be forgotten was the spinning pass that Erik Johnson made to Mackinnon when the puck was moving out of the zone. That was a pretty special play as well.
Monday, February 24, 2014
Coach Roy Must Motivate And Inspire Olympians
The good part about making it to the Olympics is the prestige and honor of playing for your country. It also goes a long way towards helping a player to stack rack themselves against the forces of international competition. Since the final rounds of international hockey look a whole lot like the NHL playoffs, mainly the young players gain a great deal from such competition.
The rest of Olympic hockey is all bad. Players who have never done it have no way of knowing what to expect from their legs as the season progresses. They may hit two or three walls that they will have to fight through before the season is over. By the time playoffs arrive, only the veterans understand what to expect from the post Olympic playoff grind.
The Colorado Avalanche are blessed with several young players who swam in the deepest of waters by the end of this tournament. Russia is the only team with an Avalanche player that did not play in the last few days, but he (goalie Semyon Varlamov) may have lost some confidence with the peppering he took on goal. Gabriel Landiskog played Matt Duchene in the final game and Paul Stastny played, but lost the bronze medal match. Each will be challenged to maintain their legs if the Av's are to have any real chance at Sir Stanley's Cup.
If you were making a list of likely Stanley Cup champions, the Avalanche might not be in your top 3 list, but they would be #1 in the likely long shot bet. No one really expects the Av's to win it all, even if they've all noticed that we have the kind of team that could. Winning is about more than ability, it speaks to vulnerability even more. No matter how bad Roy wants to return a title to Denver, he can not motivate any team to achieve it. Inspiration must do that
When Patrick Roy started this season, he was loaded with fire for the job and plenty of experience with coaching young athletes since he recently coached in the junior hockey leagues. The word fire is often associated with the world of coaching but it can apply to any competitive endeavor. Fire is the stuff that fuels success, but at times it comes in the fashion of heat from beneath the feet of uninspired teammates.
Fire is another word for motivation when you are a coach, and it is your fire or motivation of your players that can propel them to focus on the task at hand, but motivation is much like an exposed fire, it demands a constant source of fuel. Motivation eventually burns up the people you prop up for so long or you'll burn out yourself from playing with fire day in and day out.
Furnace fire is highly effective because it is not exposed to the impact of the elements. It is well contained and focused on the mission at hand. The fire that burns inside of each of us is a similar fuel that drives our success. In order for the Avalanche to overcome the impact of the Olympic journey, it will take a huge dose of inspiration from guys who felt like they emptied it all on Olympic ice.
Now the balancing act becomes resting the Olympic Av's at the risk of losing games and a high seeding, or playing them at the risk of a lackluster playoff due to a lack of energy. Roy understand the grind that his players shall endure better than most, but some lessons must be experienced first hand.
Near death fatigue is one of them.

The Colorado Avalanche are blessed with several young players who swam in the deepest of waters by the end of this tournament. Russia is the only team with an Avalanche player that did not play in the last few days, but he (goalie Semyon Varlamov) may have lost some confidence with the peppering he took on goal. Gabriel Landiskog played Matt Duchene in the final game and Paul Stastny played, but lost the bronze medal match. Each will be challenged to maintain their legs if the Av's are to have any real chance at Sir Stanley's Cup.
If you were making a list of likely Stanley Cup champions, the Avalanche might not be in your top 3 list, but they would be #1 in the likely long shot bet. No one really expects the Av's to win it all, even if they've all noticed that we have the kind of team that could. Winning is about more than ability, it speaks to vulnerability even more. No matter how bad Roy wants to return a title to Denver, he can not motivate any team to achieve it. Inspiration must do that
When Patrick Roy started this season, he was loaded with fire for the job and plenty of experience with coaching young athletes since he recently coached in the junior hockey leagues. The word fire is often associated with the world of coaching but it can apply to any competitive endeavor. Fire is the stuff that fuels success, but at times it comes in the fashion of heat from beneath the feet of uninspired teammates.
Fire is another word for motivation when you are a coach, and it is your fire or motivation of your players that can propel them to focus on the task at hand, but motivation is much like an exposed fire, it demands a constant source of fuel. Motivation eventually burns up the people you prop up for so long or you'll burn out yourself from playing with fire day in and day out.
Furnace fire is highly effective because it is not exposed to the impact of the elements. It is well contained and focused on the mission at hand. The fire that burns inside of each of us is a similar fuel that drives our success. In order for the Avalanche to overcome the impact of the Olympic journey, it will take a huge dose of inspiration from guys who felt like they emptied it all on Olympic ice.
Now the balancing act becomes resting the Olympic Av's at the risk of losing games and a high seeding, or playing them at the risk of a lackluster playoff due to a lack of energy. Roy understand the grind that his players shall endure better than most, but some lessons must be experienced first hand.
Near death fatigue is one of them.
Tuesday, February 11, 2014
Winter Olympics In Sochi Get An Avalanche From Colorado
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The Avalanche have sent four players to the Olympics in Sochi |
First of all, why would the NHL risk injury to their most valuable players by sending them to the Olympics in the middle of a season? The mere privilege of playing for your own country is incentive enough to risk a lot. I realize that this has been the Olympic standard forever, but my team hasn't had such a likelihood of littering Olympic lineups in a while.
This year we have 4 players that did make it. Matt Duchene, Semyon Varlamov, Gabriel Landiskog and Paul Stasny. If you are watching the Avs, it should be clear that the rookie, Nathan McKinnon could soon become an Olympian as well as Ryan O'Reilly. But what about P.A. Parenteau, or Jan Hejda? What about Erik Johnson. These guys could help any team win games, and when America gets to know all of these Av's, we will lose a few to free agency. Those that remain will join this years group of Olympians four years from now. It is possible that the Av's will bum rush the league with a deep run in the playoffs this year. They will certainly do it before the next winter Olympics return.
That is good from the standpoint of prestige, but bad when you consider the physical demand a long run in the Olympics will require, and the physical risk that you incur while doing it. The most difficult part of being or having young players is the adjustment to such a long season. Those who make the adjustment with lots of rest and proper diet can overcome the mental walls that challenge young players. Typically, you won't know what you don't know.
I am excited and concerned for all of our Olympians. They are deserving of the honor they've received. A couple of them have teams that could win the whole thing, so Av's fans might have a rooting stake late into this tournament. I will also find myself watching to see if they make it through safely, and if they return to the team with the inspiration of an Olympian, or the legs of a noodle.
Labels:
#Colorado,
#Colorado Avalanche,
#Gabriel Landiskog,
#Matt Duchene,
#Nathan McKinnon,
#NHL,
#Olympics,
#Patrick Roy,
#Paul Stasny,
#Putin,
#Semyon Varlamov,
#snowmageddon2014,
#Sochi,
#TeamUsa,
#Winter Olympics
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