WASH/TOR tonight

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TOR currently -.5 at +125 ML -120. WASH +.5 at -145 ML +100


I am laying off this but thought I would provide some info from around the net.


From the Washington Post...


Friday, January 11, 2002; Page D07

Washington Capitals Coach Ron Wilson said yesterday that he expects offensive stars Peter Bondra and Jaromir Jagr to play tonight against the Eastern Conference-leading Toronto Maple Leafs, though both wingers are nursing minor ailments.

Jagr left Wednesday's game against Columbus a few minutes early with a groin/upper hamstring injury and did not practice yesterday. Bondra, tied for third in the NHL with 24 goals, missed Wednesday's 6-3 victory and yesterday's practice because of the flu. Wilson said both will be in his lineup tonight and the team does not plan to recall a forward from its minor league affiliate in Portland, Maine.

"I'm positive [Jagr] is playing," Wilson said. "And Peter is dealing with the flu and he's riding the bike at home, and I'm positive he'll be ready."

Jagr said he suffered the injury while chasing a loose puck Wednesday and may seek anacupuncture treatment he often received from a therapist in Pittsburgh who uses electronic needles to penetrate deep within muscles for rapid relief.

"I felt something snap, kind of like, in my hamstring, and I didn't want to play again," said Jagr, who hopes to find a local acupuncturist to administer the special technique. "It was five minutes left, we had a three-goal lead, and I knew if I skated it would get a lot worse. That's why I left the game and hopefully it's going to be good. But I knew if I would finish the game something bad would happen."

The Capitals are optimistic two other important players could return to the lineup shortly as well. Winger Ulf Dahlen (bruised foot) will miss his ninth game tonight, but said he expects to begin skating and practicing with the team by Sunday. Dahlen had originally hoped to begin skating this past Sunday. Defenseman Brendan Witt missed the last two games with a sprained thumb, but returned to practice yesterday and believes there is an outside chance he could play Saturday at Florida.

"I've still got a lot of swelling in it," Witt said. "It's a tough area to get the swelling out. [Wednesday] I skated for the first time and it was really sore. It's a little bit better today -- it was really sore Wednesday -- so it takes time. But hopefully, it will come along."

Jagr has been hampered by several injuries this season -- sprained knee, lost tooth/facial lacerations and now a groin problem -- but is becoming a game-altering force on a consistent basis. He is assertive, challenging defensemen, and unselfish, drawing attention and then setting up teammates around the net. Jagr, acquired from Pittsburgh in July, brings a seven-game point streak into tonight's game, scoring 11 points over seven games after netting just five points in the previous nine contests.

"I think he's coming to terms with what he has to do in our lineup to be successful," Wilson said, "how to play off his teammates and what we're trying to accomplish. He's worked hard and he's been ready to play in all the games recently."

Jagr, who has cracked the league's top 20 in scoring and is third in the NHL in points per game, said he feels comfortable and confident after battling self-doubt and learning to adapt to his new teammates and surroundings. Two weeks ago Jagr met with Adam Oates, his regular center, to speak candidly about the adjustments necessary to mesh as a tandem, and both players have led the attack since.

"I think some people thought [the transition to a new team] was going to be a lot quicker," Jagr said. "But I knew it was going to take long because everything is just different. I still think I am a good player and I don't mind people putting pressure on me, because I should play good, it's my job to do that. The reason why we played bad, that's just me.

"I know if I'm going to play good -- if I play the way I am able to play -- we're going to win a lot of games. That's the way it is; that's the way it's got to be. I should be the guy to be able to change the game, and most of the nights I wasn't that guy. But the last 10 games I feel a lot better. I start working a lot harder than I ever did, and hopefully it's going to get better and better."

Capitals Notes: Washington's maligned defense will be challenged by Toronto, the second-highest scoring team in the conference.

"They're the top team in the East, they're big, they've got some great offensive skill," Wilson said. "And obviously, with the people we have missing from our lineup, it's going to be a great test. We need a great game from [goalie Olaf Kolzig] and our special teams are going to have to kick in and get the job done as well."



From faceoff.com...

The Washington Capitals made some moves earlier this week. Trying to address their problems with speed and defense, they brought in three new players who helped greatly in the team's 6-3 victory over Columbus Wednesday.

The question now is -- what can they do from here?

Washington signed forward Colin Forbes to a one-year contract and called him up from Portland of the AHL. The Caps also called up defensemen Todd Rohloff and Jean-Francois Fortin from Portland hoping to get some kind of spark at both ends of the ice. All three helped in the win, which leads them to a bigger test Friday against the powerful Toronto Maple Leafs.

"I was happy with the three players tonight," Washington GM George McPhee said. "We needed it."

Forbes displayed the speed he's shown through 257 other NHL games by scoring a late goal. Rohloff got an assist on the team's first goal and, although Fortin saw a puck bounce off his skate and into the Washington goal, he played well.

Washington coach Ron Wilson said he hopes the trio can continue to play well as the Caps enter into a tough stretch of games leading to the February Olympic break where they'll need depth.

"They did a great job," Wilson said. "The guys on defense moved the puck quickly and their skating ability got them out of trouble is there was any trouble, and Colin Forbes...has played [257] games in the league so that wasn't a surprise."

Defense has been what Wilson always has built this team around and it's fallen this season, mainly due to injuries. But this trio helped with the defense.

"We got the job done on defense," Wilson said.

Rohloff and Fortin made their NHL debuts and both fought off some early nerves to play well. They'll both need to be at their best Friday when the Maple Leafs come to town.

"It was a pretty exciting experience," Rohloff said. "The biggest difference is the speed and the size of the players and as far as getting experience and stuff, it's just keeping it simple and moving the puck quick."

Washington officials have been deeply concerned about the speed problem Teams have been skating rings around the Caps this season and coming up with numerous odd-man rushes.

If the Caps want to make any type of late-season run, they need the speed and the defense to improve together.

DON'T WORRY, HE'S FINE: The Washington Capitals received a scare during Wednesday's win over Columbus when Jaromir Jagr pulled himself off the ice in the final minutes, but team officials said Thursday that he'll play in Friday's game with Toronto.

Jagr strained his groin after scoring a goal in Washington's 6-3 victory over the Blue Jackets and left the game. He came to practice Thursday and received treatment but left before the session ended without going on the ice.

"He'll play [Friday]," Wilson said.

Jagr scored one of his most spectacular goals of the season against Columbus, flying down the right wing, stopping quickly and pushing the puck between the legs of a Blue Jackets player before moving the middle and scoring. It brought the MCI Center crowd to its feet, roaring its approval.

THIS 'N THAT: Jeff Halpern has been finding more scoring chances lately. He came up with two assists in the Columbus game...Sergei Gonchar continued to help the Washington offense with two goals against the Blue Jackets, one of which came on a brutal shot from the point. Wilson said Gonchar has one of the NHL's best shots from the blue line. "He's got a bomb," Wilson said....The coach also gave Dainius Zubrus some credit for the Jagr goal. The speedy Zubrus drove towards the goal as Jagr raced up-ice, pulling two Columbus defenders with him -- which opened up the ice for the former Pittsburgh star...Goalie Olaf Kolzig's sore ankle is getting better, and Wilson said they'll need a big game from him against the Leafs...The Caps remain nine points behind Carolina and are four points out of a playoff spot...Enforcer Stephen Peat scored his second goal in two weeks, again showing a good shot.

Jeff Seidel covers the Washington Capitals on a freelance basis.


...more to follow...
 

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Caps website Game Day Preview...

GAME NOTES

Toronto Maple Leafs (25-13-3-3)
Washington Capitals (17-20-7-0)

They haven?t won a Stanley Cup since the end of the Original Six era in 1967 but the Toronto Maple Leafs are back among the NHL?s elite. Toronto tops the Eastern Conference Standings with 56 points, heading into Thursday night?s action. The Leafs blow into town on Friday to take on the Capitals at MCI Center. This is Toronto?s first trip to DC this season; the two clubs met in Canada on November 6 with the Leafs prevailing, 4-2.

The Leafs last played on Tuesday night when they authored a come-from-behind victory over the Nashville Predators at Air Canada Centre. Leafs captain Mats Sundin engineered that comeback with a pair of third period goals. Sundin now has 25 goals, one more than Washington?s Peter Bondra. Sundin is having a Hart Trophy-caliber year for the Leafs. He has been consistently solid all season and has carried the club while others have slumped. Sundin trails only Calgary?s Jarome Iginla (28 goals) in the race for the Maurice Richard Trophy.

Toronto got off to a strong start this season and has maintained a high degree of consistency throughout the campaign to date. The Leafs longest losing streak this season is three straight. They dropped three consecutive contests on the road right after Christmas in Carolina, Atlanta and Florida.

Among Eastern Conference teams, only Ottawa (139) has scored more goals than Toronto?s total of 133. The injury-ridden Capitals will need a strong game on Friday to overcome the Leafs, who are 10-8-2-3 on the road this season.

?They are the top team in the East,? says Caps coach Ron Wilson of the Leafs. ?They are big and they have some skill. Obviously, with the people we have missing from our lineup, it?s going to be a real test. We need a great game from [goaltender] Olie [Kolzig] and our special teams are going to have to kick in and get the job done as well.?

Toronto has the league?s 12th best power play outfit with an efficiency rate of 16.5 percent. The Leafs? penalty killing unit is ranked 19th in the league with a kill rate of 83.1 percent.

Through Wednesday night?s NHL action, Washington had scored 128 goals, more than all but five NHL clubs (Detroit, Ottawa, Toronto, Chicago and San Jose). But the Caps? total of 140 goals allowed is second highest in the league (Atlanta has surrendered 165).

Washington made three roster additions prior to the Columbus game on Wednesday, recalling forward Colin Forbes and defensemen Todd Rohloff and J.F. Fortin from its Portland affiliate in the AHL. All three performed well against the Blue Jackets.

?They looked fine,? said Wilson, assessing the performance of the three newest Capitals. ?All three guys can skate. That?s been a concern of ours; lack of speed. They got in and did a great job [Wednesday] night. The guys on defense moved the puck quickly and their skating ability got them out of trouble if there was any trouble. Colin Forbes has been playing center in the minors but because of Bonzai?s absence he stepped up on that line and by the end of the night he was rewarded with a goal. He has played 250 games in the league, so that wasn?t a surprise. It was nice to see the two young defensemen play as well as they did."

Both Jaromir Jagr and Adam Oates have scored at least a point in each of Washington?s last seven games. Jagr is slowly but steadily climbing the NHL scoring ladder and appears more and more at ease in the Washington lineup.

?He has played much better,? Wilson confirms. ?I think he is coming to terms with what he has to do in our lineup to be successful - how to play off his teammates and what we?re trying to accomplish. He was worked hard and he?s been ready to play in all these games recently.?

The Capitals? power play is still the NHL?s second best at 21.4 percent. Washington?s penalty killing unit now ranks 21st in the league with a kill rate of 82.6 percent. The Capitals? shorthanded unit has been stellar of late, killing off 56 of its last 62 (90.3 percent) man-disadvantage situations. That streak dates back to and includes the December 6 game in Atlanta.

?We had been using some different people and giving them opportunities but we?ve settled on some pairs,? says Wilson of the team?s recent penalty killing success. ?On some nights, we?ll just use two pairs of forwards to make sure that we get the job done. If we bruise some feelings or egos of guys who think they should be out there ? we?ve just cut it down and gone with the guys who have been successful in getting the job done. It?s just that simple.?


I will add some of the Toronto media notes and stories later.
 

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From the Leafs site

From the Leafs site

Leafs headed to Washington
January 11, 2002

WASHINGTON (Ticker) -- Locked in a tight divisional race, the Toronto Maple Leafs look to move back into first place when they visit the Washington Capitals on Friday.

Toronto enters Friday's game with 56 points, one behind the Boston Bruins for the lead in the Northeast Division and top spot in the Eastern Conference. Boston is idle Friday, and hosts the New York Islanders on Saturday.

The Maple Leafs have won four of their last five games, including Tuesday's 4-3 victory over the Nashville Predators. After a lackluster 40 minutes, captain Mats Sundin rescued Toronto with two goals less than five minutes apart in the third period.

Sundin tied the score with a power-play goal with 10:52 remaining and produced the game-winner 4:41 later. Toronto is third fourth in the NHL with 133 goals.

The Capitals are also one of the better offensive teams in the league with 128 goals, but have yielded 140. Washington is 11 points behind the first-place Carolina Hurricanes in the Southeast Division.

On Wednesday, defenseman Sergei Gonchar scored twice to lead Washington to a 6-3 victory over the Columbus Blue Jackets. Gonchar leads all defenseman with 38 points.

Jaromir Jagr and Adam Oates also scored for Washington, which is 16-5-4 when scoring at least three goals. Both players have seven-game points streaks.

Washington's leading scorer, right wing Peter Bondra, missed Wednesday's game with the flu and is listed as day-to-day. Bondra has 11 goals and nine assists in 26 career games against the Maple Leafs.

In the first meeting, Jonas Hoglund and Mikael Renberg scored third period goals to lead the Maple Leafs to a 4-2 win at the Air Canada Centre on November 6. Washington is 10-4-1-1 against Toronto since the 1996-97 season.


WHO'S HOT... Washington?s Adam Oates is on a seven game point streak; he has recorded eight points in a run that began on December 28. Oates? ability to find the open man has put him first in the league in assists with 34.

WHO'S NOT... Goaltender, Olaf Kolzig, has been hot and cold this season; his only consistency seems to be losing off home ice. He has not won an away game since December 2, contributing to his road record of 4-13-1. Kolzig ranks first in the league in goals against with 109.

INSIDE THE NUMBERS... The Capitals have dominated their opposition so far this season in the power play. They rank second in the league in power play percentage (21.4%). This stat can easily be traced back to forward Peter Bondra who leads the league in power play goals. Bondra has scored half of his 24 goals so far this season with the man advantage.
 

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Toronto Sun stories

Toronto Sun stories

Weakest link hanging on
By LANCE HORNBY -- Toronto Sun


WASHINGTON -- The Maple Leafs are formulating a plan for tonight to stop Sergei Gonchar, the highest scoring defenceman in the National Hockey League.

But it's safe to say the Washington Capitals aren't burning the midnight oil trying to negate Leafs defenceman Anders Eriksson.

On a Toronto team with few holes, Eriksson has been a weak link, burned on a number of plays culminating with a gamble that cost a win against the Ottawa Senators on Monday.

General manager/coach Pat Quinn was highly critical of him after the game, but with a lack of spare players and Quinn's forgive-and-forget mentality, Eriksson was back against the Nashville Predators the next night.

"Ottawa wasn't the best game for me, but it all works out if you stay positive," Eriksson said yesterday. "You do have lack of confidence because you'll think you'll be out of the lineup the next day. But Pat is pretty good that way. He won't judge you on one game. He gives you another chance."

Eriksson was a healthy scratch much of December, coming back in the picture when Cory Cross's hip muscle pull acted up. When Toronto newspapers handed out half-season marks, Eriksson scored the lowest.

Eriksson was signed as a free agent and picked ahead of capable farm hand Nathan Dempsey at training camp. Before joining the Leafs, the inconsistent Eriksson had worn out welcomes with the Detroit Red Wings, Chicago Blackhawks and Florida Panthers. The Panthers didn't want to re-sign him.

"There are a lot of things I like about his game, and some that I don't," Quinn said. "If he can come to a point where he can mask the (weaknesses), he does some things very well (such as puck movement).

"He's still fighting the same sorts of things he has fought since he was a first-round draft pick (22nd overall in 1993 by Detroit), a talented guy who should be good but is inconsistent."

MOODY

Jaromir Jagr is, of course, the most dangerous of the Capitals, with 35 career points in 23 games against the Leafs as a Pittsburgh Penguin. The trouble is that no one knows which Jagr will show up these days, given his health and his mood swings. Jagr had a goal and assist in a 6-3 blitzing of the Columbus Blue Jackets on Wednesday, including a awesome end to end rush.

But he also had to leave late in the game with a slight groin pull. The top line of Jagr, Adam Oates and Dainius Zubrus had six points on Wednesday, while Gonchar added three.

"(Gonchar) might be the best offensive guy in the league right now on the point," Quinn said. "He's a cut above, seeing where other people are. He's a guy who can hurt you if you give them time and don't pay attention. The great players recognize the opportunity when it's there."

Jagr missed the first meeting of the season against the Leafs, a 4-2 loss.

"He can get four or five points in one night," Leafs goaltender Curtis Joseph said.

Joseph likely will oppose Olaf Kolzig tonight. Kolzig has had a poor season, with a goals-against average of 3.00.

There is another story by Lance Hornby today but it does not add much to what the others have said other than...

The Maple Leafs roster has been cut back by injuries going into tonight's game against the Capitals. Shayne Corson (slightly separated shoulder) participated in his first two contact practices this week but said he would confer with training staff this morning before deciding whether to play.

Garry Valk is out a couple of weeks with a separated shoulder, and while defenceman Cory Cross (hip muscle pull) hasn't been on the ice in days, Leafs general manager/coach Pat Quinn won't say if he will put him on injured reserve.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Ok, that is it. Sorry for all the stuff, but I had the time and was reading about the game so figured I would cut and paste.
 

the mugs

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Junkie...You're "showing me up" with your local sports report. ;)

That's it. Now there's competition for getting the most info. LOL

Thanks for the info. Let's get 'em tonight.

Jim
 

payday

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Thanks junkie. I can always get the latest Washington info from you. As you know I hardly ever bet a game with Toronto in it but I enjoyed all the different articles. Keep up the good work!
 

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Toronto is almost as unpredictable as WASH I think. Good to hear from you, payday.

More cut and paste. You guys probably know where this is from:

Recent Trends:

TOR are 4-1 ATS in their last five overall.
The over is 5-2-1 in the Leafs last eight overall.
TOR is 2-4 ATS in their last six on the road.
WAS is 1-3 ATS in their last four games overall.
The Caps are 12-6-4 ATS at home this season.
WAS is 6-1 ATS at home following a win.

W/L ATS $$ H A O/U
Toronto 25-16-3 25-16-3 155 15-5-1 10-11-2 19-17
Washington 17-20-7 17-20-7 -590 12-6-4 5-14-3 21-16



Uh, yes it is a slow day at work. :yawn:
 

wigs

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no need to apologize sports junkie, i love the info. if people think it is too long, f em.

this is the purpose, to discuss the games and put out useful stuff..
thanks!!
 

wigs

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more TO

more TO

from slam...........

Shayne Corson was targetting tonight for his return to the lineup, although tomorrow's game against Montreal is a more probable date.

"(Club trainers) Chris Broadhurst and Brent Smith are working on me three or four hours a day," Corson said. "They've done a great job. I've had a lot of ice, heat, (ultrasound) machines and (massage)."

Toronto is also without winger Garry Valk, who has a separated shoulder, but he might be back in two weeks as opposed the early diagnosis of four.

Lineups

Toronto

LW C RW

Jonas Hoglund Mats Sundin Mikael Renberg

Darcy Tucker Robert Reichel Tie Domi

Gary Roberts Travis Green Alex Mogilny

Alexei Ponikarovsky Alyn McCauley Wade Belak

Defence

Jyrki Lumme Tomas Kaberle

Dmitry Yushkevich Aki Berg

Bryan McCabe Anders Eriksson

Goal

Curtis Joseph

Washington

Capitals' lines:

LW C RW

Dainius Zubrus Adam Oates Jaromir Jagr

Peter Bondra Andrei Nikolishin Jeff Halpern

Matt Pettinger Dmtri Khristich Chris Simon

Joe Sacco Colin Forbes Stephen Peat

Defence

Ken Klee Sergei Gonchar

Todd Rohloff Sylvain Cote

Frantisek Kucera Jean-Francois Fortin

Goal

Olaf Kolzig
 
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