Tuesday's Ruins...

the mugs

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Talk about an inconsistant group. First period they looked good. Solid at both ends and for the first time in 5 games they actually had the lead... Second period - skated in cement for 20 minutes. At one point the Canucks had a 14-1 shot advantage for the period. Now down 3-1... Third period - now they got Vancouver running around for 10 minutes and tie it up. Someone said yesterday they are like eggshells - so correct. Vancouver scores and next thing you know it's 5-3. That was a great tip/deflection by Bertuzzi.

So now it's onto Carolina...This has been a "road" series for the past couple of years. Let's hope it continues...I want the chance to go head to head with HORNS come April :rolleyes: in a 1 vs. 8 playoff series. At least the 'Canes are playing worse than the B's if that's possible...
 

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This one will be a sleeping pill for sure...

BOSTON BRUINS at CAROLINA HURRICANES
Tuesday, March 4, 2003
RBC Center; Raleigh NC
7:00 PM (ET) - Gametime
6:30 PM (ET) - Boston Globe Pre-Game Report
NESN

Tonight?s Game
The Bruins visit the Hurricanes tonight in the fourth and final game between these clubs this season and the second of two games of this season's series at the RBC Center. The Bruins are 28-26-8-3 overall and are 11-16-4-1 on the road thus far this season. The Hurricanes are 18-33-9-6 overall with a 10-12-7-3 record on home ice thus far this season. The Bruins are 7-6-3-0 vs. Southeast Division opponents this season and they are 20-20-6-1 overall vs. Eastern Conference foes. The Hurricanes are 3-7-3-0 this season vs. Northeast Division opponents and they are 12-24-8-3 overall vs. Eastern Conference foes.

Lifetime Series
The Bruins are 80-54-15-0 lifetime vs. the Hurricanes franchise (includes Hartford) with a 526-448 scoring edge in those 149 games. On the road, the Bruins are 34-31-8-0 lifetime vs. the Carolina franchise with a 253-245 scoring advantage in those 73 contests. The Bruins are 1-1-1-0 vs. Carolina in the first three games of this season's series with a 3-1 win in Boston on Nov. 21, 1 4-2 loss to Carolina on Jan. 4 and a 1-1 tie in Carolina on Feb. 19.

Recent Bruins Games
The Bruins are winless in their last nine games at 0-5-3-1 with a 5-2 loss in Tampa Bay on Feb. 15, a 5-1 setback in Nashville on Feb. 17, a 1-1 tie in Carolina on Feb. 19, a 3-2 loss in New Jersey on Feb. 21, a 4-4 tie at NY Islanders on Feb. 23, a 5-5 tie with Dallas on Feb. 25, a 4-1 loss at NY Rangers on Feb. 27, a 3-2 overtime loss to Philadelphia on Mar. 1 and a 6-4 loss to Vancouver on Mar. 3. It is their longest winless stretch since a nine-game winless streak (0-5-4-0) from Oct. 2-20, 1999. They have not gone winless in ten straight games since an 0-8-2-0 stretch from Feb. 4-24, 1997. Their last win was a 6-5 overtime victory in Florida on Feb. 14. They have taken points out of 12 of their last 20 games at 6-8-4-2.

Recent Hurricanes Games
The Hurricanes are winless in their last eight games at 0-5-3-0 with a 2-2 tie in Philadelphia on Feb. 15, a 4-3 loss in Toronto on Feb. 18, a 1-1 tie with Boston on Feb. 19, a 2-2 tie with Tampa Bay on Feb. 21, a 4-0 loss to Anaheim on Feb. 23, a 4-2 loss in Phoenix on Feb. 26, a 4-1 setback in Toronto on Mar. 1 and a 2-0 loss in Washington on Mar. 2. They are 1-10-3-2 in their last 16 games with their lone win in that span a 3-1 victory over Washington on Feb. 14, and are 2-17-4-3 in their last 26 contests.

Upcoming Bruins Games
The Bruins will next return home to host the NY Islanders on Mar. 6 (8:00 p.m.; ESPN & WBZ Radio) and the Washington Capitals on Mar. 8 (1:00 p.m.; NESN & WBZ Radio). They will then face the Blackhawks in Chicago on Mar. 9 (3:00 p.m.; ESPN & WBZ Radio) and the Senators in Ottawa on Mar. 11 (7:00 p.m.; NESN & WBZ Radio).

Upcoming Hurricanes Games
The Hurricanes will next face the Penguins in Pittsburgh on Mar. 6 before returning home to host Minnesota on Mar. 7 and Columbus on Mar. 10.

Bruins Injuries
Richard Brennan: Right ankle bruise and fractured foot suffered Jan. 28 vs. Nashville; out indefinitely.
Sergei Samsonov: Dec. 24 right wrist surgery; out indefinitely.

Bruins Recent Transactions
Feb. 17: Ivan Huml recalled from Providence/AHL.
Feb. 21: Shaone Morrisonn recalled from Providence/AHL.
Feb. 22: Zdenek Kutlak returned to Providence/AHL.
Feb. 26: Ivan Huml returned to Providence/AHL.
Feb. 26: Andy Hilbert recalled from Providence/AHL.
Feb. 28: Andy Hilbert, Shaone Morrisonn and Kris Vernarsky returned to Providence/AHL.
 

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Injuries

Injuries

Boston Injuries
Rich Brennan D Ankle day-to-day
Sergei Samsonov F Wrist Late Mar

Carolina Injuries
Niclas Wallin D Neck day-to-day
Jesse Boulerice RW Concussion I-R
Jaroslav Svoboda RW Back I-R
Jeff Heerema RW Wrist Out indefinitely
Erik Cole LW Leg Late Mar
Rod Brind'Amour C Hand I-R
 

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Recent Trends

Recent Trends

The under is 3-1 in the past four meetings.
Boston is 3-12 ATS after a loss when away.
The B's have allowed 4.4 gls/gm in last five overall.
CAR is 11-27 ATS after a loss overall.
The Canes are 6-3 ATS in the past 10 meetings.
The under is 20-7 when Carolina is home.
 

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Recent Meetings

Recent Meetings

Date Home Away Line ATS
2/19/2003 Car. 1 Bos. 1 0.5,-115/5 Car./U (02-03)
1/4/2003 Bos. 2 Car. 4 -0.5,-135/5.5 Car./O
11/21/2002 Bos. 3 Car. 1 -0.5,-120/5.5 Bos./U

3/30/2002 Bos. 0 Car. 2 0,-220/5 Car./U (01-02)
3/26/2002 Car. 2 Bos. 3 0,100/5 Bos./P
2/28/2002 Bos. 2 Car. 6 0,-220/5.5 Car./O
1/2/2002 Car. 3 Bos. 6 0,-130/5.5 Bos./O

2/18/2001 Car. 5 Bos. 4 0,-140/5.5 Car./O (00-01)
1/18/2001 Car. 4 Bos. 2 0,-135/5.5 Car./O
12/16/2000 Bos. 4 Car. 1 0,-120/5.5 Bos./U
 

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Boston Globe 3-4-03

Boston Globe 3-4-03

Bruins stay cold

Winless stretch is up to 9 games

Mr. Jekyll, or is it Mr. Hyde?

The season continues to tick away, and the Bruins for weeks have been unable to figure out how to play an entire game. One period they're very good, the next they're not, the third they are. Or, some nights, they start slowly, come roaring back, but wait too long to kick it into gear and fall short.

Last night, the team was all over the map, but the bottom line is that its winless streak has now reached nine games as a result of a 6-4 loss to the Vancouver Canucks at the FleetCenter.

The team is in an 0-5-3-1 run, which is the Bruins' longest streak without a victory since Oct. 2-20, 1999, when they went 0-5-4-0. Boston hasn't won since Feb. 14, when the club beat Florida in overtime. The Bruins haven't had a regulation win in nearly a month - since beating Montreal Feb. 6.

Even worse, the Rangers keep on coming. They rallied to tie the Islanders last night and pick up a point, which pulls them within 2 points of Boston for the last playoff spot (although the Bruins have four games in hand).

Last night was one of the more confounding contests in recent memory. The Bruins took a 1-0 lead into the first intermission, were positively horrid in the second period, and came back to tie it in the third before running out of gas.

''The strange thing was, we came out in the second period and had so many giveaways,'' said coach Robbie Ftorek, who admitted to being both frustrated and disappointed that his team has failed to put together a complete effort in ages. ''You can't do that against a team that's a transitional team and one of the most powerful offensive teams in the league. We turned it over about five times in the neutral zone and they scored on a couple of them, at least.

''We just wavered a little bit, and as has been going on, the puck was in the net. As you saw in the first, we played a great period, and the third we played a pretty darn good period, but that second one just was a dog.''

They looked very much on top of their game in the first as they took a 1-0 lead at 6:42 on the first of two Glen Murray goals. Left wing Mike Knuble, positioned to the left of Vancouver goaltender Peter Skudra, backhanded a centering pass to Murray, who one-timed a shot from the right circle for his 33d tally of the season.

It is hard to imagine the Bruins playing a worse period than the second. For some reason, they just stopped skating. They gave the Canucks everything they could possibly want, including three goals as goalie Jeff Hackett was left to fend for himself.

Vancouver tied the game at 2:33, late in a power play. With defenseman Hal Gill off for hooking, defenseman Brent Sopel dished a pass from the far edge of the right circle to Trevor Linden in the left. Linden, all alone, beat Hackett with just five seconds remaining on the man advantage to make it 1-1.

A neutral-zone turnover led to the Canucks' second goal at 6:47. The miscue created a two-on-one, with center Matt Cooke relaying a pass from the left circle to Trent Klatt in the right. With only defenseman Jonathan Girard back for Boston, Klatt beat Hackett for his 13th goal of the season.

Skudra could've gone to the bench for most of the second and not have been missed. The Bruins didn't manage a shot on goal until the 12:58 mark, by forward Marty McInnis.

The Canucks kept on coming, expanding their lead to a pair at 15:00 on the first of two goals by Cooke. At that point, they were outshooting Boston, 14-1, in the period.

The Bruins staged a furious albeit short-lived comeback in the third. They stormed the Vancouver net, scoring two goals in a span of 2:02 to tie it.

Murray tallied his second of the night when he buried a rebound from the left circle at 3:25, just one second after a power play expired. Then Girard pulled them even on a rebound at 5:27.

By the 7:16 mark, the Bruins had completely turned the tables on the visitors, outshooting them, 14-0.

The bad news, though, was that Vancouver's first shot of the period was a goal. At 8:24, Cooke potted his second to put his team back on top. Center Mats Lindgren stole the puck from defenseman Nick Boynton and backhanded a shot on Hackett. He made the save but Cooke beat him on the rebound with a backhander and the Canucks were back on top to stay.

Todd Bertuzzi made it 5-3 at 9:51 and all the enthusiasm generated by the comeback evaporated from the building.

Left wing P.J. Axelsson drew the Bruins within one when he scored on a power play with 36 seconds remaining in regulation but that's as close as they would come. Marek Malik potted an empty-netter with 20 seconds left to close it out.

''Like we've said all along these last two or three months, we can't put a full game together,'' said Murray. ''We can put a period together and play great hockey like we did in the first period, and I think we even played pretty good the third period. There are no excuses. It just can't happen this time of year.''

Except it keeps happening. Over and over again.
 
Last edited:

the mugs

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Globe 3-4

Globe 3-4

No end to fall season is in sight

The Bruins will be in Raleigh, N.C., tonight, taking on the lower-than-low, ready-for-the-knackery Hurricanes in what will be Boston's 66th game of the 2002-03 season.

But the question that surrounded the Bruins last night will be the same tonight. Will they ever win another game? The way it's looking, the question won't change through next Tuesday's trade deadline, nor will it change right on through to what now looms as the merciful end of the regular season.

In case you just tuned into the slow, painful march of Dead Men Skating, the Bruins went winless for a ninth straight game last night, a 6-4 rubout at the hands of the Vancouver Canucks that wasn't nearly as close as the score indicates. Faced by ex-Boston netminder Peter Skudra in the Vancouver net, the Bruins played one strong period, all but disappeared in the second, and then showed up like eager senior prom dates for the start of the third. But after tying it, 3-3, Jeremy Jacobs's band of discount warriors quickly gave up another pair of goals and scuffled along to their 26th loss of the season.

It appears nothing can save them now. They have been in Operation Freefall for three months. Once again last night, the Bruins played their best hockey when down by a pair of goals, perpetuating the pattern that, despite the meticulous preparedness of their head coach, Robbie Ftorek, they don't come to the rink fully prepared/focused to play from the drop of the puck. Only after taking a couple of sharp jabs to the jaw do they decide to drop their chins and get their legs moving.

''I'm not sure what explains it,'' said Ftorek, still the head coach when the club bolted the building after the loss for a 10:30 charter flight out of Hanscom Field. ''As far as it being infuriating, well, it's a little frustrating. You know it's there, but it's a question of getting everyone on the same page and cashing in. For some reason, we're not playing for 60 minutes.''

Three months into the meltdown, the only conclusion is that there is no getting out of it, or getting 60 minutes out of them. The coach can talk about playing the full 60. The players can talk the same. They just can't match effort to words.

''The breakdowns can't happen this time of year,'' said right wing Glen Murray, among the very few consistent performers over the last 90 days. ''It's just not good enough. We can't put a full game together.

''There are no excuses. It just can't happen this time of year.''

It's now up to general manager Mike O'Connell as to whether his team continues its death rattle with the same coaching crew in place. O'Connell looked disconsolate as he left the press box in the final moments - a look he has often worn these last agonizing weeks. Media outlets across the city and nation in recent days speculated that Ftorek would be fired, and goodfella Gerry Cheevers put in charge, assisted by fellow goodfella Wayne Cashman, but all remained status quo late last night as the tattered squad headed out.

About the only thing the Bruins have going for them, at the moment, is that their early-season superiority has left them with some meat on the bone as they sit in eighth place in the East. Their lead over the also-rans isn't healthy, but at least it's a lead (a term they've rarely been acquainted with of late). One can only imagine, given the way they're playing, how the mid-April Bruins would match up in a best-of-seven series with the Senators or Devils. Think dust in the path of an Oreck vacuum.

But even daydreaming of the playoffs now seems folly. Will they ever win another game? Not as long as they keep producing more turnovers than an all-night North End bakery. Reminded of their defensive responsibilities in practice after practice, they lapse into periods of performance anxiety that would keep a team of therapists on duty 24-7 at McLean. One second they're strong on the puck. A second later, they're puckphobic, full of bad passes and faux pas.

''The mental breakdowns and turnovers just can't happen,'' said Murray.

Jeff Hackett was the shooting duck of choice in the Boston net, and he let in five goals on 32 shots. Not good odds. Like most nights since he has been here, Hackett could be held responsible for roughly half of the shots that went in the net. Also not good odds.

Team Turnover is making the affable Hackett look like Byron Dafoe's separated-at-birth twin brother. Dafoe, of course, became an orphan after last year's playoffs.

''It's very, very frustrating right now,'' said Hackett, who was 0-5 in his five starts before being traded to the Hub of Hockey, and has gone 4-8 in his 12 decisions here. ''We played a good first period, a not-so-good second, and then we had some great chances in the third. I wish I had the answer.''

According to Ftorek, calling up help from Providence is not part of the answer.

''We're going with the guys we've got,'' said Ftorek. ''These are the veterans. We've just got to get it done.''

It's all beginning to sound the same. The results read that way, too, a tie here, a couple of losses there, a tie, two more losses.

Bring on the Hurricanes and issue the blindfolds. Tryouts for the Ice Girls, the latest addition to the club, will be held March 17. Just as the women's team is getting into the swing of it, the men's varsity looks like it will be folding up for the season.
 

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Hurricanes thumbnails

Compiled By Globe Staff, 3/4/2003

Where: Tonight at 7, at the RBC Center in Raleigh, N.C.

TV, radio: NESN, WBZ (1030).

Records: Carolina is 18-33-9-6, 15th (last) in the Eastern Conference. Boston is 28-25-8-3, eighth in the Eastern Conference.

Goals: Jeff O'Neill 24, Ron Francis 19, Rod Brind'Amour 14, Erik Cole 14.

Assists: O'Neill 24, Francis 24, Brind'Amour 23.

Goaltenders: Kevin Weekes (11-20-7, 2.48). Arturs Irbe (7-19-2, 3.14).

Head to head: This is the fourth and final meeting, and the series is even at 1-1-1-0.

Miscellany: After making the Stanley Cup finals for the first time in franchise history last season, the Hurricanes have the league's worst record; they have won just three of their last 31 games ... One bright spot is Weekes, who is seventh in the league in save percentage at .919 ... O'Neill has three goals vs. Boston this season ... On Feb. 24, the Hurricanes called up four players from Lowell of the AHL: Irbe, center Mike Zigomanis, left wing Tomas Kurka, and defenseman Bruno St. Jacques. Zigomanis and Kurka each scored in their NHL debut last Wednesday.
 

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Globe 3-4

Globe 3-4

Papers are just full of good stuff today...

Players accept the blame

They stand by coaching staff

The rumors have been around for a while, but the players say they haven't been at all distracted by speculation that coach Robbie Ftorek is in jeopardy of losing his job. As the Bruins' winless streak has grown longer and longer -- reaching nine games as a result of last night's 6-4 loss to the Vancouver Canucks at the FleetCenter -- the rumor mill has been working overtime.

The players say it's the last thing on their minds.

''You don't pay attention to that,'' said right wing Glen Murray, who had a pair of goals in the losing effort. ''Like I've said before, it's not the coach's fault. It's the players inside here who have to get it done. There's no blame but the players.''

Murray said the coach's status is not a topic in the dressing room.

''Never,'' he said. ''It's ignored and we don't even talk about it. It's not even thought about until [the media] brings it up.''

To a man, the players believe the coaching staff isn't to blame for their extended malaise, which is moving into its fourth month.

''Ultimately it's the players in the room who are responsible,'' said left wing Mike Knuble. ''We play the game on the ice. We're worrying about our future as a team. Now, we have 17 games left and we're worried about us.

''It's not Robbie's fault that we give up goals or play bad defensively. We can't be worrying about upper-management decisions. We have to take care of ourselves on the ice and win games. They do everything they can to prep us for the game and it's a matter of the players going out and executing.

''It just seems like we're Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde a little bit. Sometimes you don't know what you're going to get.''

Captain Joe Thornton said he doesn't believe that management is even thinking about a change.

''I think Robbie's going to be here for a long time,'' he said. ''And that's my feeling.''

=====

Empowering numbers

As the Bruins have stumbled through the last few months, they've repeatedly talked about the need for success on special teams, particularly the power play. Heading into last night, they were ranked third in the league at home on the power play. After going 1 for 4, they have now converted 29 times on 140 opportunities at home (20.7).

On the road, they aren't nearly as good, tallying just 18 power-play goals in 125 chances (14.4 percent), 21st out of 30 teams. Overall, they ranked ninth in the league.

Early in the season, when everything was going their way, the power play was inconsistent but the Bruins continued to earn victories. However, the deeper they've gone into the campaign, the more pivotal it has become.

For example, in the first 12 games in which they did not score on the man advantage, the Bruins racked up a record of 7-3-1-1. Since then, though, their fortunes have deteriorated considerably. In the last 23 contests in which they did not pot a power-play goal, they had gone 4-16-1-2.

On the flip side, when they've had at least one power-play goal, they've earned a record of 17-7-6.

''There's no question that special teams wins you games,'' said Bruins center Brian Rolston.

=====

Berard a nominee

Defenseman Bryan Berard has been nominated for the Masterton Trophy by the Boston chapter of the Professional Hockey Writers' Association. The award is given annually to the player who best exemplifies the qualities of ''perseverance, sportsmanship, and dedication to hockey.'' Nominees from each of the 30 teams will be narrowed by vote to three finalists, with the winner to be announced at the NHL awards ceremony in June. The Bruins have had three Masterton winners: Charlie Simmer in 1985-86, Gord Kluzak in 1989-90, and Cam Neely in 1993-94 . . . With an assist last night, Canucks forward Markus Naslund tied Pittsburgh's Mario Lemieux for the NHL scoring lead with 85 points. Naslund has 41 goals and 44 assists, marking the third straight season he has reached the 40-goal plateau . . . Former Bruins goaltender Peter Skudra made 37 saves to get the win for the Canucks, improving to 8-4-4. The club's No. 1 netminder, Dan Cloutier, remains sidelined with a knee injury.
 

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Boston Herald 3-4-03

Boston Herald 3-4-03

Hackett one busy guy in net

Bruins goalie Jeff Hackett looks like he's close to getting back on track, but a game like last night won't do anything for his goals-against average.

Though the Bruins wound up outshooting the Vancouver Canucks, 41-32, Hackett saw the Canucks come at him with odd-man rushes all night. When the shelling was over, he couldn't help but tip his cap to the 6-4 victors.

``They're a very disciplined team,'' Hackett said. ``There's a reason why they're in first place. They play well together as a team and they don't turn the puck over. They're a good hockey team. You can't give them much room or they're going to put it in the net.''

Asked if he thought the B's were more disorganized than usual in their end, Hackett said the opponent caused the problems.

``You have to give credit to Vancouver with the way they played. They've always got guys going to the net,'' Hackett said. ``They go to the net hard and they stop in front of the net. An example of that was the third goal when the guy passed it across, I was able to make a save, but (Matt Cooke) stopped and was able to get his rebound and put it in the net.

``They do the little things really well. They're a tough team to play against.''

As for his team, Hackett was at a loss to explain things.

``I really don't know. It's very, very frustrating,'' he said, shaking his head. ``We play a good first period, not so good in the second and we had some chances in the third. I wish I had the answer. Everyone's trying hard, but it's just not clicking right now.''

=====

No shifts for now

Coach Robbie Ftorek said that whatever is ailing his team, the cure most likely won't come from Providence, unless there's another injury.

``We're going to go with the guys we've got as far as I know. That's our plan,'' Ftorek said. ``These are the veterans, these are the guys that should be playing here at this time of the year. We've just got to get it done.''

Ftorek isn't lobbying, not publicly, for general manager Mike O'Connell to make a deal before the March 11 trading deadline.

``Michael's working to do whatever he can do that he feels can help the team,'' Ftorek said. ``It's the same process as always. If he sees something, we talk about it. But as far as me wanting something done? Whatever he feels is best for the team is what's going to happen.'' . . .

Marty McInnis has been skating better these days and more involved in the play since moving to the line with Brian Rolston and P.J. Axelsson. He broke his 20-game pointless streak with an assist on Axelsson's goal, but he missed on several excellent scoring opportunities when the game was still in question.

=====

Samsonov on mend

Sergei Samsonov (wrist) continued his light skating and off-ice conditioning and estimated that he could make a return in three weeks. He's got a doctor's visit scheduled for March 11 and he hopes to get the OK to start doing some wrist curls.

``I think at this point it's just keeping an eye on it and getting strength and motion back,'' Samsonov said. ``It's been getting better, not quite as fast as I'd like it to be, but little by little and hopefully at the end of this month I'll be able to play. But as far as the X-rays and everything else, it looks good.''
 

ND2002HORNS

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If the B's plays the Sens mugs you can come down for any of the games........well for the first 2 since it will be a sweep, just kidding ya.
Not having Samsonov is hurting them big time as it would allow the B's to put Knuble on another line and give them a little more depth.
Hackett is just not a starter and maybe a better back-up as he we would steal games for the Habs this year, mind you he has had no help up front.
If the B's lose tonight then Ftorek will be fired. Rumour today is that they want Ray Bourque coaching them. Interesting.

HORNS:D
 

the mugs

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I've heard the Bourque rumour...In all sincerety - any big name that comes here would be a fool as they are set up to loose. Especially him. He's still so popular around here that the only thing that could happen to him if he coached here is negative.
I sure wouldn't mind seeing him come back for the stretch run. He could probably suit up today and be at least a 3rd defensman.

What will probably happen is that O'Connell will come down from his GM perch and take over on the bench, bring in Gerry Cheevers as an assistant and keep Wayne Cashman as a 2nd assistant and things will continue in the "good ol' boys network".

I've said it before and I will continue to say it. As long as we the fans continue to buy tickets to the FleetCenter - that includes ice shows, concerts and Celtics games - Jeremy Jacobs will not sell the team and nothing will change for the team or it's fans. Sad but true.

Mugs

Oh yeah...If the B's do get to be the Sens first round slaughter victim, I would love to come up for a game.
 

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From the 'Canes website...

CAROLINA NOTES
Right wing Jeff O?Neill has 12 goals in the last 27 games and has earned points in five of the last nine games (Feb. 14-March 2: 4g, 2a). O?Neill leads the team with 24 goals and 48 points. Josef Vasicek has seven goals and five assists in the last 18 games. Left wing Ryan Bayda made his NHL debut on Feb. 14 against Washington, earned his first NHL point, an assist on Sean Hill?s goal. Feb. 15 at Philadelphia and scored his first NHL goal on Feb. 18 at Toronto. Bayda has totaled five points and four penalty minutes in his first nine NHL games.

CAROLINA AT HOME: 10-12-7-3
CAROLINA ON THE ROAD: 8-21-2-3
CAROLINA ON THE POWER PLAY: 51-of-341 (15.0%)
CAROLINA SHORTHANDED: 273-of-332 (82.2%)

CAROLINA INJURY UPDATE
Left wing Jan Hlavac, hand, day-to-day, missed one game (March 2)
Right wing Pavel Brendl, arthroscopic knee surgery, injured reserve, missed three games (Feb. 26-March 2)
Left wing Jaroslav Svoboda, shoulder, injured reserve, missed nine games (Feb. 14-March 2)
Right wing Jesse Boulerice, concussion, injured reserve, missed nine games (Feb. 14- March 2)
Right wing Jeff Heerema, wrist, injured reserve, missed 11 games (Feb. 9-March 2)
Left wing Erik Cole, broken leg, injured reserve, missed 13 games (Feb. 5-March 2)
Center Rod Brind?Amour, hand surgery, injured reserve, missed 18 games (Jan. 22-March 2)

CAROLINA / BOSTON NOTES
The Hurricanes and the Bruins meet for the last of four matchups this season. Boston got the best of Carolina in the teams? first meeting on Nov. 21 when Glen Murray?s two goals and Brian Rolston?s marker propelled the Bruins past the Hurricanes 3-1. The Hurricanes scored a road win on Jan. 4 at FleetCenter behind Jeff O?Neill?s two power-play goals. Most recently, the teams skated to a 1-1 tie at RBC Center on Feb. 19. The teams split the regular season series last year 2-2-0, with each team winning both of its road games. Carolina defeated Boston at FleetCenter 6-2 on Feb. 28 and 2-0 on March 30. Boston defeated Carolina 6-3 on Jan. 2 and 3-2 on March 26 in Raleigh. Ron Francis was the leading scorer in the 2002-03 season series with seven points (2g, 5a), including his 500th career NHL goal on Jan. 2 in Raleigh. The Hurricanes are 54-80-15-0 all-time against the Bruins, including a 31-34-8-0 record at home and a 23-46-7-0 record in Boston.
 

the mugs

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From Nick Douglas thread....

From Nick Douglas thread....

Thanks for your input Terryray!


Terryray said:
this from 'Canes official site

"The Canes got what passes for good news on Monday, when it turned out that defenseman Niclas Wallin was suffering from flu-like symptoms and not concussion-related symptoms. Of course, the bug threatens to keep Wallin out of tonight's lineup, as well as goalie Kevin Weekes, who is also sick and also missed Monday's practice....."


and that under is absolutely dependent on Weekes being in goal.
Irbe has been a mess.


good luck on what you take!
 

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bostonbruins.com

bostonbruins.com

Lines appear to stay the same...

Lining up

The lines did not change from last game. They are as follows:

White: Joe Thornton, Glen Murray, Mike Knuble.
Gold: Jozef Stumpel, Martin Lapointe, Rob Zamuner
Red: Brian Rolston, Marty McInnis, P.J. Axelsson
Teal: P.J. Stock, Krzysztof Oliwa, Michal Grosek.
Black (defense) ? Nick Boynton, Don Sweeney, Bryan Berard, Sean O?Donnell, Hal Gill, Jonathan Girard, Sean Brown.
 
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