Game 78: Avalanche 6, Canucks 3
Sometimes it's okay to change up an offensive line combination. When one player is clearly having a very bad game (Ryan Smyth), and another looks really good (Peter Forsberg), it's okay to switch them up. This shouldn't become habit, of course, but sometimes it's an effective way to jump start the offense.
Last night was one of those times. After struggling early on---and then pretty much throughout the rest of the game---Ryan Smyth was pulled from his usual spot on the second line with Paul Stastny and Milan Hejduk. He was replaced by Forsberg, who, despite playing less than 15 minutes, went on to tally three assists. Hejduk had two goals and an assist, while Son of Stastny had a goal and two assists.
Those nine total points drove the Avalanche to a dominant 6-3 win over the Canucks, who pulled ace goalie Roberto Luongo in the middle of the second period.
Unfortunately, knowing Coach Q, two things will probably happen. Either Ryan Smyth will never get to play with Hejduk and Stastny again (even though, on most nights, that combination is money), or one or two bad shifts by Forsberg will see him back on the third line with Tyler Arnason. Coach Q's whip is long and painful.
Speaking of Arnason, I have to commend him. He won eight of eleven faceoffs last night. Great work, T-Dog, just try to keep it up for a while and we'll all stop ragging on you. Maybe.
Jose Theodore didn't have a great game, but when your offense scores six goals in the Western Conference, you really don't have to be all that great. Theodore made the stops he needed to make in the third period and the Avs had few scary moments. A win is a win.
In the playoff race, the Avs move into seventh place, switching spots with Vancouver who have lost their last three games. Colorado is just one point behind once-dominant Dallas and only two points behind division rival Calgary. Believe it or not, the Avs are still in the bizarre position that they could either win the division title and earn the three seed or miss the playoffs entirely. What a world.
Finally, on the injury front, Adam Foote missed another game with his geriatric hip, but is supposedly seconds away from returning to the lineup. Jordan Leopold, however, just can't get a break. Well, he's gotten lots of breaks, but you know what I mean. He left the game early with what the team initially reported as a "minor hip injury." How minor? Adam Foote's injury was supposed to be minor, too, so you be the judge. More details are supposed to come today.
Next game: those stupid Oilers on Friday, the last home game before April 6th. Again, losing is not an option at this point.
Stars of the Game:
- Milan Hejduk (2g, 1a)
- Peter Forsberg (0g, 3a)
- Paul Stastny (1g, 2a)
Kittens Killed:
Just one!
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12 comments
Comments
stuff
Considering how the Avs controled the puck in the 1st it could've been alot worse than 6-3. Nice to see Hedjuk on the score sheet again, he really seems to turn his game on when Forsbergs around. Wolksi had a great game as well, the puck just seemed to be finding his stick.
Ryan Smyth looked like he was on roller skates for last night. Sometimes reminds me of a flamingo on skates. I'm thinking of painting him pink and sticking him on the lawn. Good for him sticking up for himself tho, that was a funny funny sort-of-fight.
by jd21 on Mar 27, 2008 8:18 AM MDT reply actions 0 recs
Re: stuff
It was funny, but he can't let a pest like Burrows get him off his game. And besides, if Burrows is that annoying, have Lappy take him out. The risk of extended penalty time and/or injury is just too great.
Smyth is a disciplined hockey player when he wants to be. Last night he didn't seem to want it.
by Joe Dunman on Mar 27, 2008 8:29 AM MDT up reply actions 0 recs
hey everyone saying Hejduk was done:
he's not. he's just streaky and dependent on his linemates. right situation and boom, this is what you get.
by thedoctor on Mar 27, 2008 10:57 AM MDT reply actions 0 recs
Re: hey everyone
No argument there. But inconsistency is not a good thing this time of the year. Let's just hope he keeps this up.
by Joe Dunman on Mar 27, 2008 11:06 AM MDT up reply actions 0 recs
defense
At least Hejduk plays well in all 3 zones even when he isn't scoring. He can PK and play good D. Can't say that about all 'goal scorers'.
by Hardshell_Taco_del_Lowayne on Mar 27, 2008 11:11 AM MDT up reply actions 0 recs
Re: defense
Again, you won't get an argument from me. Luckily, Marek Svatos stepped up his defensive game considerably before he got hurt, which makes him the likely successor to Hejduk (at least, in the "effective two-way goal scorer" role) if he manages to stay on the team for a few more seasons.
by Joe Dunman on Mar 27, 2008 11:42 AM MDT up reply actions 0 recs
Re: hey everyone saying Hejduk was done:
What I saw in Hejduk starting with the 7-5 loss to Edmonton is that he's decieded to initiate contact. He actually layed a heavy check on a guy in the Calgary game. I had to "rewind" the DVR to see it again. It wasn't the typical Hejduk check where he runs in to a guy and then starts looking at the ice for the puck. He actually followed through and layed some wood on him.
I'm not saying that Hejduk needs to lay big checks to be a good player but I think just like Svatos it helps him get in the game. He's now getting to the puck first instead of making steals. He's not stick handleing that puck back and forth and getting rid of it at the last second when a defender gets body contact on him. Even Sakic holds the puck when somone leans on him.
With some players it just takes something in their game to get them back on track. I don't care what you say about Roy, but he had to play the puck. I don't care how bad it was because if that's what he needed to be in the game, well then that's what he needed. I think Hejduk not only needs to not shy away from contact, but initiate it. This is the same guy who broke his collar bone battling for a puck. I don't want Hejduk to get hurt but I'm telling you the Hejduk of the last year and until four games ago would never be remotely in danger of being in the same situation. We shall have to see if he keeps it up or he's reverts back to his old habits.
by Dario on Mar 27, 2008 4:39 PM MDT up reply actions 0 recs
eh
i think you're reading into it a bit much. he's just streaky.
and it's not like his overall numbers are that bad, he's tied for the team lead in goals with 26. not his best year, but i bet he still ends the season with 30 or so. fine by me for a 3.5 a year player.
by thedoctor on Mar 27, 2008 4:52 PM MDT up reply actions 0 recs
I could be wrong
I'll never be one to claim I'm all knowing. I'm wrong all the time. However, that's just what I see from Hejduk and why he dissapears. He's at 49 total points for the year after that three point night. He's been on every powerplay and played every game. He's been on the top line in every situation. He was a ghost when the injuries hit this team the hardest. I think he's played better recently and I don't think it's just because Forsberg was on his line last night. He's approaching the game in a totally different mind set if you ask me. Then again I could be wrong.
by Dario on Mar 27, 2008 5:10 PM MDT up reply actions 0 recs
well, hopefully
you're right and he'll keep playing like this. Hejduk scoring ridiculous goals all the time bodes well for the Avs in the playoffs.
by thedoctor on Mar 28, 2008 8:56 AM MDT up reply actions 0 recs
Frei article about Jack Adams candidates
http://sports.espn.go.com/nhl/columns/story?columnist=frei_terry&id=3311049
by jd21 on Mar 27, 2008 11:10 AM MDT reply actions 0 recs
Re: Frei
Frei has been watching the Avalanche all season. That's why Q isn't mentioned.
Frei never drank the "Q Should Get The Adams" Kool Aid like Burnside and a few others. And kudos to him for it.
by Joe Dunman on Mar 27, 2008 11:40 AM MDT up reply actions 0 recs
































