Puck I'm Thirstday

Aces High

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record
1 - 1 - 1

+ 100


wholly chalkboard

leans

habs/sens [Horns + sens = $$$]

isle/craps - shoulda played ny last nite, big drop

buff/flyers - more on this gem later :rolleyes:

la/det - roman vs the dominator, check off. where's dubbs ?

colm/atl - 2 much emotion in this game

car/fla - yuck

ana/nash - quacks b2b on road

sj/edm - sharks ???? who is on that team ??

calg/knucks - knucks - 1 1/2 + 140 :brows:

gotta see if Korn will b at the game. over too ???


more later
 

Aces High

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Thursday, October 9th (All times eastern)
MONTREAL CANADIENS (0-0-0-0) AT OTTAWA SENATORS (0-0-0-0)

(Sports Network) - The Ottawa Senators, last season's Presidents' Trophy winners, begin their Stanley Cup quest tonight when they invite the Montreal Canadiens to Corel Centre.

Ottawa topped the National Hockey League with 113 points in 2002-03, but its dreams of drinking from the chalice were dashed with a seven-game loss to New Jersey in the Eastern Conference finals.

The highlight of the ensuing offseason was the sale of the team to billionaire Eugene Melnyk, whose purchase was finalized in August. The transfer of ownership came on the heels of the Sens filing for bankruptcy back in January.

There was, however, also a sad note this summer, as Ottawa assistant coach Roger Neilson succumbed to his battle with cancer and passed away in late June. Neilson had spent the last three years as an assistant on Jacques Martin's staff with the Senators.

As far as player movement goes in Ottawa, the club was rather inactive in terms of significant additions, but there is a glaring absence from the roster. Young, and still blossoming winger Martin Havlat remains an unsigned Group II free agent and there's no sign of an agreement in sight. General manager John Muckler went as far as to say that if Havlat, who scored 24 goals with 35 assists last season, is not inked by tonight he won't play for the club in 03-04.

Without Havlat, the Senators still feature a potent offensive core in Marian Hossa, Daniel Alfredsson and Radek Bonk. As a team they led the Eastern Conference with 263 goals scored. Defensively, Ottawa allowed the third-fewest amount of scores (182) in the conference, and its blueline will again be anchored by re-signed Wade Redden and the mammoth Zdeno Chara.

Goaltender Patrick Lalime enters his fourth season as the Sens' starting netminder, and he's coming off a career effort. He went 39-20-7 with a 2.16 goals-against average and .911 save percentage in 67 contests for the Northeast Division champions.

Ottawa will host Detroit Saturday in an early-season test, before heading out West for road games in Los Angeles, Anaheim and San Jose.

Montreal, meanwhile, fell out of the postseason field with a 10th-place finish in the Eastern Conference last campaign. That makes four times in five years Montreal has not contended for the Stanley Cup come spring.

Summing up the Canadiens' woes was the performance of goaltender Jose Theodore, the Hart and Vezina winner in 2002. After dazzling the NHL, Theodore watched his goals-against average balloon nearly to 3.00, and things continued to get worse in the offseason. During the summer Theodore's father and half brothers were arrested for alleged involvement in a loan- sharking scheme.

The controversy aside, the Canadiens' offseason as a team was relatively quiet, with the exception of the hiring of Bob Gainey as general manager. The former Habs captain built the Dallas Stars into a Western Conference power and eventual Stanley Cup champion as their GM, but to do the same in Montreal he'll have his work cut out.

The Canadiens' quest to get back to the playoffs will begin without captain Saku Koivu, the team's leading scorer. Koivu, who paced things with 50 assists and 71 points, is sidelined with a sprained right knee.

Koivu's absence hampers an already impotent attack that accounted for a meager 206 goals last season.

Montreal will visit Toronto on Saturday before opening a six-game homestand three nights later versus Washington.

Ottawa went 3-2 against Montreal last season, but the Habs have won four of the last seven clashes.


BUFFALO SABRES (0-0-0-0) AT PHILADELPHIA FLYERS (0-0-0-0)

(Sports Network) - The Ken Hitchcock era in Philadelphia enters its second season tonight when his Flyers welcome the Buffalo Sabres to the Wachovia Center in the opener for both clubs.

Hitchcock's first year in the City of Brotherly Love resulted in a second- place finish in the Atlantic Division and an opening-round win over Toronto in the playoffs. However, the club was then brought to submission in six games by the Ottawa Senators in the second round. And while the ensuing tone in Philly was appreciative disappointment rather than the usual disdain, it was clear that some changes needed to be made.

First and foremost on that list was in net, where the duo of Jeff Hackett and Robert Esche will replace the enigmatic Roman Cechmanek, who was shipped to Los Angeles weeks after the Flyers were eliminated. Esche is whom those in power would like to see eventually take over as the starter, but in the meantime Clarke signed the 35-year-old Hackett, who hasn't carried a No. 1's workload in three years -- mostly due to being injured. Hackett will get first crack at things, as he'll start tonight.

In addition to netminding, another issue was the rising age of Philadelphia's core group of players. Jeremy Roenick, Mark Recchi, Tony Amonte, Keith Primeau, John LeClair and Eric Desjardins are all in their 30s and closing in on the downside. Recognizing this as a problem, both Clarke and coach Ken Hitchcock went on record saying that we will likely see at least a few of these older players -- Recchi and LeClair for instance -- take diminishing roles while fresher legs like Simon Gagne, Justin Williams, Kim Johnsson and Radovan Somik see more ice time.

One youngster the team is especially excited about is defenseman Joni Pitkanen, the fourth overall pick in the 2002 NHL Entry Draft. The Finnish blueliner, whose style has been compared to that of Brian Leetch, enjoyed a terrific preseason and is being heralded as a prospective Calder candidate.

On the injury front, the Flyers will be without LeClair for two-to-four weeks due to a broken bone in his left foot. LeClair, who missed a good portion of last season with a shoulder injury, suffered the break Sunday when the team was training at West Point.

Philadelphia will host Pittsburgh on Saturday before embarking on a four-game Western trip that opens October 16 in San Jose.

Buffalo, meanwhile, enters a new era under the ownership of Rochester billionaire Tom Golisano, who purchased the club in the wake of the Adelphia Communications debacle. Golisano retained both general manager Darcy Regier and head coach Lindy Ruff when he took over, but at the press conference to announce the moves it was made clear that the playoffs should be in the Sabres' near future.

Regier began the improvement process this summer by pulling off what amounted to a three-team trade -- with Calgary and Colorado -- back in July. Forwards Chris Drury and Steve Begin were obtained in exchange for defensemen Rhett Warrener and Keith Ballard.

Drury, a winner since before he was a teenager, has scored at least 20 goals in each of his five seasons and should be a terrific addition to a blossoming forward corps. Warrener's absence will be compensated by the presence of the one-dimensional Andy Delmore, who was acquired from Nashville after finishing tied for the league lead among defensemen with 18 goals. The team hopes Drury and Delmore can add punch to an offensive attack that finished 25th in the NHL with 190 goals.

Miroslav Satan, re-signed to a new contract last month, will lead the improved offense after scoring 26 goals and 49 assists. He has averaged 33 tallies over a five-year span.

Buffalo and Philly split four games last season, but the Sabres have won six of the last eight meetings.
 

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NEW YORK ISLANDERS (0-0-0-0) AT WASHINGTON CAPITALS (0-0-0-0)
(Sports Network) - The Washington Capitals try to keep their hold on the New York Islanders tonight when the teams meet at the MCI Center in the opener for both clubs.

Washington is 23-1-3 in the last 27 contests against New York, including a 4-0 mark last season. The Caps are 12-0-2 in the last 14 meetings played in our Nation's Capital.

The Capitals are coming off a season in which they returned to the postseason only to fall in the first round to Southeast Division champion Tampa Bay. Washington, under rookie coach Bruce Cassidy, went up 2-0 on the Lightning before dropping four straight.

Washington owner Ted Leonsis, sick of seeing little return on his investment, sliced the team's budget this summer after spending big money on players like Jaromir Jagr and Robert Lang in recent years. The club even, without success, tried to move both players.

Jagr, Peter Bondra, Lang and the like return to form a very solid nucleus of forwards, and Olaf Kolzig is a given in net so long as he is healthy. The defense, however, is what has been most affected by Leonsis' frugal ways. With the offseason departures of Calle Johansson (retired) and Ken Klee (free agency), the Caps are left with only two blueliners with more than a year's worth of NHL experience -- Sergei Gonchar and Brendan Witt.

Below the veteran duo on the depth chart are names like Jason Doig, Steve Eminger and Josef Boumedienne. Eminger, the 12th overall pick last year, is the most notable of the bunch. The Ontario native appeared in 17 games for the Capitals last season before being returned to his Junior team in Kitchener (WHL) for more seasoning. Eminger could be an offensive threat to complement Gonchar, but he is also physical and responsible in his own end.

New York, meanwhile, enters the regular campaign after a 7-0 march through the preseason under new head coach Steve Stirling. Stirling, who has installed a trap system on the Island, entered the mix when Peter Laviolette was fired this past offseason and has been a member of the Isles organization since 1997. His last job was as the team's AHL coach in Bridgeport.

A large key to the Isles' success will be their goaltending situation, which will open the season as a platoon. Both veteran Garth Snow and former No. 1 pick Rick DiPietro will see time in net, with Snow receiving the nod tonight.

In front of the crease New York has the luxury of one of the premier defense corps in the NHL, especially the top four. With the exception of the quartet in Detroit, it's tough to find a better and harder-working foursome than Adrian Aucoin, Kenny Jonsson, Roman Hamrlik and Janne Niinimaa.

Offensively the Islanders' tone is set by captain Michael Peca and center Alexei Yashin, who both seek rebound seasons. Peca, who returned on a regular basis in the middle of November, was coming back from a major knee surgery and a shoulder operation. He scored just 13 goals and had 42 points in his 66 games, wearing down at the end as a result of rushing his rehab and return to the lineup.

Yashin, meanwhile, scored 26 goals with 39 assists to give him his lowest career point total during a healthy season.

The Islanders have not defeated the Capitals in DC since March 2, 1997.

COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS (0-0-0-0) AT ATLANTA THRASHERS (0-0-0-0), 7:30 p.m.
(Sports Network) - A day before the funeral for teammate Dan Snyder, the Atlanta Thrashers will open their season with heavy hearts when they host the Columbus Blue Jackets at Philips Arena.

Snyder passed away Sunday night due to brain injuries that resulted from an automobile accident involving he and Thrasher forward Dany Heatley six days earlier. Heatley's Ferrari struck a wall on September 29 after traveling at roughly 80 m.p.h in a suburban Atlanta neighborhood.

A memorial service for Snyder, who was 25, will be held in his hometown of Elmira, Ontario on Friday afternoon. After considering cancellation of this evening's contest, the Thrashers decided to play at the urging of Snyder's family. There will be a moment of silence and video highlights of Snyder, and the club will wear a patch of his No. 37.

As for Heatley, he suffered a broken jaw, minor concussion, contusion on his lung, bruised kidney and torn ACL and MCL in his right knee. He has also been charged with vehicular homicide, which could carry a sentence of three to 15 years if he's convicted.

While it's most important to recognize the accident involving Snyder and Heatley as a human tragedy before mentioning its on-ice effect, as the season begins we'll soon learn how much this will impact the Thrashers physically and mentally. This team, while still a ways away from legit contention, was heading in the right direction with a solid foundation. Now the future, both immediate and distant, is loaded with questions.

Snyder was a promising young forward, while Heatley led the team in scoring a season ago and was on his way to becoming a superstar. The latter is one half of the Thrashers' dynamic young duo, with the other being Russian Ilya Kovalchuk. Kovalchuk, still a raw talent in some ways, scored 38 goals in his sophomore season.

With Heatley's absence, and a still-suspect defense, the one thing the Thrashers can hang their hat on is head coach Bob Hartley. Hartley, a Stanley Cup winner in 2001, was fired by Colorado last December after the Avs limped out to a less-than-stellar start. When Atlanta decided to cut ties with Curt Fraser, Hartley was the obvious replacement, and the benefits were immediate.

The Thrashers went a respectable 19-14-5-1 after Hartley came aboard January 14, including a 9-4-1-1 mark down the stretch. The result of the second-half spurt was an overall record of 31-39-7-5 and a club-record 74 points.

Columbus, meanwhile, watched its expansion brother, Minnesota, advance to the Western Conference finals and felt it needed to catch up with the times. The Jackets had a 12-point improvement last season, but after posting a miserable 57 points in 2001-02 they could really not have done much worse. However its 29-42-8-3 record was still the worst in the West.

Head coach/general manager Doug MacLean took over the reins from a fired Dave King in January after a stretch that saw the Jackets lose six of nine games. Columbus was 14-20-4-2 before the change and 15-22-4-1 afterward, ending with 69 points in 82 games.

MacLean jumped head-first into the free agent market this offseason, signing centers Todd Marchant and Trevor Letowski as well as backup goalie Fred Brathwaite. MacLean also took care of business in his own house, re-signing Andrew Cassels and Geoff Sanderson. He obtained defenseman Darryl Sydor from Dallas in a three-team trade as well.

Add the above to a growing young roster headed by forward Rick Nash, the top pick in the 2002 draft, and you have promise. Nash was a finalist for the Calder Trophy after netting 17 goals and 22 assists in 74 games.

Goaltender Marc Denis established an NHL record with 4,511 minutes and tied the NHL mark for the second most games played by a goaltender by appearing in 77 contests last season. He led the league in shots faced (2,404) and saves (2,172), finishing just 34 shots and 42 saves shy of the most chances faced by an NHL goaltender since the 1976-77 season.

The Montreal native finished the year 27-41-8 with a 3.09 GAA and a .903 save-percentage. His 27 wins set a team-record, as did his eight ties and five shutouts. He was tied for ninth in the NHL in blankings and 13th in victories.

On the injury front, Columbus is expected to be without Sanderson tonight due to a shoulder injury. Sanderson, who led the team with 34 goals a season ago, was placed on the injured list Tuesday.

Atlanta went 2-0 against Columbus last campaign and has won three of the five all-time clashes. However, four of the five meetings have been decided by one goal.
 

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CAROLINA HURRICANES (0-0-0-0) AT FLORIDA PANTHERS (0-0-0-0), 7:30 p.m.

(Sports Network) - Two Southeast Division clubs who hope to trek up in the standings clash tonight when the Carolina Hurricanes visit the Florida Panthers at the Office Depot Center.

After a shocking run to the Stanley Cup Finals in 2002, the Hurricanes finished with the worst record in the NHL at 61 points a season ago. Injuries took their toll early and often, the goaltending that carried it through three playoff rounds was horribly inconsistent.

After licking its wounds, Carolina began the ensuing offseason in promising fashion by cashing in on the high draft pick that came with a last-place finish. The Canes selected Eric Staal with the second-overall choice, and also pulled off a draft-day trade for Phoenix defenseman Danny Markov.

Staal was terrific during the preseason and led all NHL players with seven goals in exhibition play. The teenager, whose style has been compared to that of Canes captain Ron Francis, will center a line with Francis and sniper Jeff O'Neill.

Francis is back for his yet another season and hopes to bounce back from an injury-hampered effort that limited him to 22 goals and 35 assists in 82 games. The warrior he is, Francis did not miss a match last season despite tearing a muscle in his back last fall. O'Neill, meanwhile, is coming off his third consecutive 30+ goal showing.

Rod Brind'Amour, after a tremendous playoff run in '02, missed 34 games with a hand injury but was still able to post 14 goals and 23 assists in 48 contests. His absence was immeasurable, though, because he provides so much in every aspect of a game, from timely scoring to penalty killing.

After the drafting of Staal and acquiring of Markov, the summer continued with an "upgrade the defense" theme, including the re-acquisition of Glen Wesley, as well as the addition of the rock-steady Bob Boughner.

Goalie Kevin Weekes will enter the season as a clear-cut No. 1 netminder in Raleigh, and the hope is that consistent playing time will equal consistent performance. Weekes posted a 2.55 goals-against average and .912 save percentage in 51 appearances last year, but he had his season irritated by two separate stretches of injury.

Florida, meanwhile, has not made the playoffs in three years but is heading in the right direction with a solid crew of prospects. One of those youngsters is center Nathan Horton, who was selected right after Staal in the June Draft. The pair played on rival clubs in the Ontario Hockey League last season and share the same agent. Horton, more of a power forward, scored three goals in four preseason games.

Horton will be part of a legitimate offensive nucleus that began to develop last year, as new captain Olli Jokinen, Viktor Kozlov and Kristian Huselius all broke out with career seasons. The team's previous high draft pick, defenseman Jay Bouwmeester, gained invaluable experience as a teenager in 02-03.

Last season we got to see Bouwmeester play anchor minutes, as he logged an average of 19:46 per match. His ice time especially rose after All-Star Sandis Ozolinsh was traded to Anaheim at the break. Bouwmeester stepped to the challenge and, although he made some typical rookie errors, looked like a veteran at times. The 6-4, 210-pounder played well enough to make the NHL All- Rookie Team and has folks salivating over his potential.

Goaltender Roberto Luongo posted a career high with 20 wins last season, and also set personal records and Panthers' marks for shots against (2,011), saves (1,847), minutes (3,627), games played (65) and shutouts (6). In addition, he became the Panthers' all-time shutout leader (15), passing by John Vanbiesbrouck's 13.

Florida went 4-1 against Carolina last season and has won three straight home meetings.

LOS ANGELES KINGS (0-0-0-0) AT DETROIT RED WINGS (0-0-0-0), 7:30 p.m. ---------------------------------------------------------------------

(Sports Network) - The Detroit Red Wings start the post-Sergei Fedorov era this evening, as they kick off the 2003-04 campaign against the Los Angeles Kings at Joe Louis Arena.

Detroit captured its third straight Central Divison title last season after picking up 110 points (48-20-10-4) on its way to its 13th straight postseason appearance.

However, things did not go as planned in the playoffs, as the Red Wings were upended in four games by the eventual Western Conference champion Mighty Ducks of Anaheim.

Following their stunning loss at the hands of the Ducks, it was clear that the steadily aging Wings needed some freshening up as they tried to squeeze one more championship out of a lemon that had already produced three.

Fedorov sgined a free agent deal in Anaheim, while the team brought in stud defenseman Derian Hatcher. Also back in Motown is six-time Vezina Trophy and two-time Hart Trophy winner goaltender Dominik Hasek, who returns after a brief one-year retirement.

In Hatcher, GM Ken Holland added a Norris Trophy finalist who is the standard for bruising, stay-at-home defenseman in the National Hockey League. The former Dallas Stars captain joins a corps already anchored by Nick Lidstrom and Chris Chelios, both Norris finalists in 2002. Lidstrom, of course, has won the award the past three seasons.

Of course, the one lingering question surrounding the Wings is their advanced age, even with the departure of Fedorov, 33. Steve Yzerman is back at 38, while Chelios is still plugging away 41. Lidstrom seems like a kid at 33.

At the same time, though, sophomore coach Dave Lewis has a fine stable of youngsters who should get their chance at ice time. Pavel Datsyuk and Henrik Zetterberg, runner-up in the '03 Calder voting, are two of the most promising forwards in the league, while defenseman Jiri Fischer was on his way to becoming a top-two rearguard before a knee injury wasted most of last season.

Another question that remains is what will the team do with goaltender Curtis Joseph, who was signed to a lucrative free agent deal last year after Hasek's retirement. Joseph struggled at times for the Wings, who exposed him in last weeks waiver draft. No one claimed him, so he will start the year as Hasek's understudy.

Los Angeles, meanwhile, will try and erase the memory of an injury-plagued 2003-03 campaign. Goaltender Felix Potvin, now with Boston, was placed on injured reserve midway through the season and never returned. Key forwards Adam Deadmarsh, Brian Smolinski, Jason Allison and Steve Heinze all missed significant time due to various injuries. Promising youngster Eric Belanger was hindered for most of the year with back spasms, while defenseman Aaron Miller was absent for nearly half the season. Smolinski and Heinz are no longer with the team.

Allison and Deadmarsh are still sidelined while recovering from concussion- related injuries and will miss tonight's opener.

Despite the health issues, the Kings scratched and clawed for 78 points (33-37-6-6) and finished in a tie with the Phoenix Coyotes for third place in the Pacific Division.

For the most part, general manager Dave Taylor kept this team together in the offseason. One major move, though, was the addition of former Philadelphia backstop Roman Cechmanek. The 32-year-old played three outstanding seasons with the Flyers, but wore out his welcome with a reputation of allowing soft goals and, despite reports to the contrary, never truly getting along with his teammates.

Luc Robitaille is back in Tinseltown for the third time in his Hall-of-Fame career. After averaging an astonishing 49 goals through his first eight NHL seasons with the Kings, Lucky Luc returned for the 1997-98 season and skated for Los Angeles through the 2000-01 campaign. All the Montreal native has done throughout 17 seasons is total the quietest 631 goals in league history. Last year, though, the 37-year-old left wing totaled just 11 markers in 81 games for the Red Wings.

Los Angeles begins the season with three road games in four nights. Its home opener is October 15 against Ottawa.

The Red Wings are 32-31-14 in their 77 season-openers, while Los Angeles has posted a 16-11-9 mark on Opening Night.

Detroit, which was 2-1-1 last season against the Kings, is unbeaten in its last five against LA in the Motor City (4-0-1) and is 6-1-2 in the previous nine matchups at Joe Louis Arena.

The home team is 8-1-2 in the last 11 meetings.
 

Aces High

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MIGHTY DUCKS OF ANAHEIM (0-1-0-0) AT NASHVILLE PREDATORS (0-0-0-0]
(Sports Network) - The Mighty Ducks of Anaheim try for their first win of the season tonight, as they head to Nashville to face off with the Predators at the Gaylord Entertainment Center.

In thier season-opener on Wednesday, the Ducks found themselves on the wrong end of a 4-1 decision against the Dallas Stars. Rob Niedermayer scored the lone goal for Anaheim, while Jean-Sebastien Giguere stopped 18 shots in the losing effort.

Niedermayer's score came on the power-play, where the Ducks were 1-for-4 on the night. Newcomer Sergei Fedorov got 24 minutes of ice time in the setback and finished minus-3 on the evening.

Nashville, meanwhile, enters the 2003-04 season on the heels of a disapointing campaign a year ago. The Preds missed the playoffs for the fifth time in five years of existence, and their 27 victories were a franchise low. A 9-2 stretch in February teased the folks in the Music City with playoff dreams, but the season was summed up with a closing 0-10-3-2 skid.

The Predators finished 13th in the Western Conference with 74 points (27-35-13-7), 18 points out of a playoff spot.

Gone from last year's squad are defensemen Bill Houlder, Cale Hulse, Karlis Skrastins and Andy Delmore, who led the league with 14 power-play goals last season. Youngsters Marek Zidlicky, Mark Eaton, Robert Schnabel and Tomas Kloucek will now be called upon to man the blue line.

David Legwand, the team's first-ever draft pick, finally delivered on hope last season, leading the team in scoring with 48 points (17g, 31a) in 64 games. He will again be asked to carry the scoring burden.

Scott Walker and Andreas Johansson join Legwand on the first line, but both will have to stay healthy if Nashville has any chance. The Preds also hope Scott Hartnell has the kind of breakout season that Legwand had last season.

Tomas Vokoun carried the load in net after Mike Dunham was dealt to New York in December and finished with a 2.20 goals-against average and .918 save percentage in 69 games. He proved he can manage a starter's workload, manning the net in 57 of the Preds' last 58 contests.

There will also be a bit of history made tonight when Nashville forward Jordin Tootoo takes the ice, becoming the first Inuit to skate in a regular-season NHL game.

Anaheim won three of the four meetings between the two teams this season and has won five of six and seven of the last nine matchups.

The Ducks, who have won two of their last three in Nashville, are 13-4-2 in their last 19 against the Predators.

Nashville could have the advantage tonight, as the home team has won seven of the last nine meetings in this series.

The Predators are just 1-4 in their five season-openers.



SAN JOSE SHARKS (0-0-0-0) AT EDMONTON OILERS (0-0-0-0(Sports Network) - The Edmonton Oilers and San Jose Sharks kick off their 2003-04 campaigns this evening at Skyreach Centre.

Edmonton earned the eighth seed in the West last season with 92 points (36-26-11-9), while San Jose was one of the league's most disappointing teams.

After winning the Pacific Division in 2001-02, the Sharks stumbled to a 14th place finish in the Western Conference with 73 points (28-37-9-8). San Jose's troubles ultimately led to the dismissals of head coach Darryl Sutter and general manager Dean Lombardi.

Contract disputes with goaltender Evgeni Nabokov and defenseman Brad Stuart led to both players holding out and contributed to the Sharks poor beginning to the season.

When Nabokov, the 2001 Calder Trophy winner, finally did return he struggled and wound up just 19-28-8 with a 2.72 GAA and a .906 save percentage in 55 contests. He was even worse on the road, recording an 8-17-3 mark to go along with a 2.98 GAA and a .899 save percentage. This year he will have the benefit of a full training camp.

Head coach Ron Wilson begins his first full campaign with the Sharks and new general manager Doug Wilson is determined to make sure last season was an aberration.

To help his head coach the GM made sure there would be no contract problems to start camp this season and worked diligently over the summer to come to terms with young stars Patrick Marleau, Alyn McCauley, Marco Sturm, Scott Hannan, Mark Smith and Miikka Kiprusoff.

One player who will not be back, though, is leading scorer from a year ago Teemu Selanne (28g, 64a), who inked a deal with the Colorado Avalanche.

Edmonton, meanwhile, put a scare into the top-seeded Dallas Stars in the 2003 playoffs, taking a 2-1 advantage in the series before falling in six games. Unfortunately for the Oilers, a playoff exit at the hands of the Stars is becoming an annual occurrence. Edmonton has lost to Dallas in the playoffs in five of the last six seasons, with the last four series losses coming in the first round.

Assuming Comrie doesn't return, Mike York, Marty Reasoner and Sean Horcoff line up behind Ryan Smyth at center. All three are 26-years-old or younger, and only York didn't register a career-high in points last season, falling 10 short of the 61 he recorded in 2001-02.

While Edmonton is fairly shaky on defense, team captain Jason Smith and 24- year-old Eric Brewer are two good reasons for Edmonton fans to smile.

There is no question mark between the pipes for the Oilers, who have had 32- year old Tommy Salo in net since he came to the team in a 1999 trade with the New York Islanders. Salo, however, posted his worst numbers -- a 2.71 GAA to go along with an .899 save percentage -- since the 1996-97 season.

The two teams split the season series a year ago (1-1-2). Edmonton, though, is unbeaten (1-0-2) in the last three meetings and 2-1-2 over the previous five matchups.

San Jose is winless in its last three (0-2-1) three trips to Edmonton after going unbeaten in its last five trips to the Skyreach Centre.

Edmonton is 11-9-4 on Opening Night, while the Sharks have posted just a 2-8-2 mark in their season openers.


CALGARY FLAMES (0-0-0-0) AT VANCOUVER CANUCKS (0-0-0-0), 10:30 p.m.
(Sports Network) - The Vancouver Canucks try an build upon the best season in the history of their franchise when they kick off the 2003-04 campaign against the Calgary Flames at GM Place.

Vancouver finished with 104 points (45-23-13-1), good enough for second place in the Northwest Division and fourth in the Western Conference. After beating the St. Louis Blues in the opening round of the playoffs. the Canucks were stunned by the upstart Minnesota Wild in seven games in round two.

The Canucks boasted the second highest-scoring offense in the NHL last season, thanks mainly to a top line that was the envy of most teams. Marcus Naslund leads the attack, after a season that saw him finish second in the league in scoring and goals (48-56-104), garner a Hart Trophy nomination and make the NHL's First All-Star Team.

His star will continue to rise as long as he plays with Todd Bertuzzi and Brendan Morrison. Last year the trio combined for 119 goals and 272 points

The loss of one of last year's alternate captains, Murray Baron, will no doubt hurt the team of defensemen, but stalwarts like Ed Jovanovski, Mattias Ohlund and Sami Salo, and the return of Jiri Slegr, should help soften the blow.

Dan Cloutier will be back between the pipes for the Canucks, as he tries to erase the memory of a disastrous postseason. Cloutier had a solid regular season, recording a career-high 33 wins with a 2.42 goals-against average. A 3.24 goals-against average with a brutal .868 save percentage during Vancouver's playoff run hurt his team's postseason chances, though.

Up 3-1 in the series with Minnesota, Cloutier and the Canucks allowed seven, five and four goals in the next three games to end their season.

Should Cloutier have difficulty, Vancouver brought in 30-year-old Johan Hedberg from Pittsburgh in exchange for a 2004 second-round draft pick.

Calgary, meanwhile, was home for the playoffs for a seventh consecutive season following a 74 point (29-36-13-4) campaign. No other NHL team has a current streak of futility that lengthy.

But entering this year there is somewhat of a promising vibe surrounding the Flames. Darryl Sutter, after being fired as coach of the Sharks, was hired to lead Calgary in late December and then handed the title of general manager following the conclusion of the regular season.

Sutter immediately got to work and pulled off what amounted to a three-team trade early in the summer, obtaining center Steve Reinprecht and defenseman Rhett Warrener for forwards Chris Drury and Steve Begin.

Even with the trade, though, the most glaring weakness of the Flames roster remains its lack of firepower. Six Calgary skaters scored 10 goals or more in 02-03, but after that there was a significant drop-off in terms of production. As a team, the Flames placed 27th in the league with a mere 186 tallies.

The Flames are hoping Jerome Iginla bounces back from last year's disappointing campaign. After breaking out for 52 goals and 96 points to win the 2002 scoring title, the 26-year-old forward tallied just 35 goals and 67 points last season.

Iginla, who was named the league's first black captain on Wednesday, joins Craig Conroy and Dean McAmmond on the team's top line.

If Calgary wants to succeed it also needs goaltender Roman Turek to turn things around. Turek, who was acquired by the Flames in 2001, went 27-29-9 last year with four shutouts and a 2.57 goals against average.

Calgary is unbeaten in its last four against Vancouver (2-0-2) after losing the previous two meetings. That trend could continue tonight, as the road team is unbeaten (7-0-2) in the last nine meetings.

The Flames are also 3-0-1 in their last four at Vancouver.

Vancouver has posted a 17-13-3 mark on opening night, while the Flames are 11-10-10 in openers dating back to their days in Atlanta.
 

Aces High

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2 nites card


sens - 280 {3x}

under 5 mnt/ott + 110 {1x}

craps - 150 {2x}

sabres + 1/2 + 130 {1x} see devils last nite

red wings - 1 1/2 + 140 {1x}

under 5 car/fla - 120 {2x}

preds - 115 {2x}

over 5 sj/edm - 120 {2x}


still looking at the knuckleheads game

back later
 

Aces High

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Jun 9, 2001
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adding

over 5 1/2 calg/vanc + 100 {2x}


no play on the side. strong lean to the flames, but Korn is at the game. :shrug:

here's to an empty netter for the over :toast: :weed:


hello to all, been busy with all the action going on now, only posting in pucks though.

its good to see everyone back from last year.


Tony Amonte cant score to save his ass.
 

Aces High

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just showed Hacketts mask.

across the top of the mask are Bernie Parent, Ron Hextall, and Pelle Lindbergh.

nice way to show props, and gain some points with the fans.

flyers 2 - 0 final
 

Aces High

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so far

5 - 3
+ 800

whatta third period in edmonton. had the over down as a loss, 6 goals in the third. :eek: :clap:

need the over in the knucks game for the nitecap

vanc 2 - 1 4 min left in the 2nd.
 

kickserv

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nice job so far Ace.......I had Edmonton...nice of them to explode in the third...good for both of us :D
 
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