Mostly Quiet on the Sabres front...
Team is reportedly close to signing prospect Felix Schutz whom they drafted in the 4th round of the 2006 draft. Shutz has apparently decided against resigning with his German league club and will join the Sabres. Schutz is a speedy, shifty centerman that measures in at 5'11 190 pounds.
Talk has heated up regarding talk of Ales Kotalik being moved for help in another area. I think it is more likely that Clarke Macarthur or Jochen Hecht will get the first opportunity to win the 3rd line center job and then moving Kotalik would be considered. This is unless an offer for a quality young blueliner comes around and Kotalik is as good as gone.
Rumours were abound that Sabres were about to sign Tim Kennedy from Michigan State. Kennedy was picked up after the Capitals had selected him in a quiet draft day trade in 2006 and has blossomed with the Spartans. He is a local Buffalo kid and has shown tremendous finishing touch.
Don't be surprised in Andrei Sekera comes in and takes a job from either Dmitri Kalinin or Jaro Spacek. Unfortunately it could result in one of those two (or both) being cast off for relatively nothing.
The more I think of it the more I like the Jocelyn Thibault signing. The man can play and seems to thrive in the backup role. I especially like it that this should allow Buffalo to rest Ryan Miller far more often than they did late last season.
13 August 2007
Sabre Notes
Goal scored by Patrick S. Law at 12:26 PM 0 fanatics have replied
Tape colour: Buffalo Sabres, defenseman, Kennedy, NHL Prospects, Schutz
30 June 2007
Wild deal Fernandez to Boston as Tkachuk signs pact with Blues
I'll get more up on this later, just wrote a huge post on Briere and Drury, so I'm kinda pooped, but here's the basic:
The Boston Bruins have finally got their no.1 goalie, and no, it's not Evgeni Nabokov like many fans might've hoped but the well-rested Manny Fernandez, who after a breakout 2005-2006 season in which he stole the starting role from now Oilers goalie, Dwayne Roloson, missed a huge chunk of 2006-2007 to multiple injuries and eventually lost his starting role to the emerged and fully loaded Niklas Backstrom.
This deal per the St. Paul Pioneer Press.
Fernandez was expendable from the Wild's point of view, with their new no.1 man in Backstrom and Josh Harding itching to finally get playing time, there was no more room for him.
His $4 million salary is also a hefty addition to the Bruins' payroll, and should hinder them from targeting any major players on this summer's UFA market.
The Wild received top prosepct Peter Kalus, who had an awesome end-of-season stint with the Bruins last year and impressed many many people.
I guess Minnesota fans can consider Kalus a replacement for Patrick O'Sullivan, another top prospect, who was dealt to the LA Kings at last year's draft for Pavol Demitra.
They got O'Sullivan back, but now his name's Kalus.
The Blues have also signed forward Keith Tkachuk to a 2-year deal worth $4 million per season.
Tkachuk's a valuable asset to any lineup and his return to St. Louis is heroic and I hope they seriously turn it around next year, they have the tools, all they gotta do is bring in a big name tomorrow.
--BBR
Goal scored by Bleu, Blanc et Rouge at 8:21 PM 0 fanatics have replied
Tape colour: Boston Bruins, Manny Fernandez, Minnesota Wild, NHL Prospects, offseason, Peter Kalus, trades
03 June 2007
NHL Draft
Alright so I was talking to Drew at End of the Bench. He and Michael are planning a blogger get together at the Draft. For any information you need on the draft please go here. They are planning on having the get together on the afternoon of June 22 somewhere close by the arena. If you are interested in going please leave a comment on Michael's mega draft post. I will post more information up on here once it becomes available. I really hope to see you all there!! Also, if you need tickets, I do have extra so feel free to e-mail me
BethanyM85(at)gmail(dot)com
Goal scored by Bethany at 7:56 PM 4 fanatics have replied
Tape colour: Get Together, NHL, NHL Draft, NHL Prospects
02 June 2007
What the prospects go through
I know for me I am always interested in what these kids go through on their way to getting the big contract and playing in the big leagues. So, finally Aaron Portzline at The Columbus Disptch put something together.
NHL combine: Prospects well-done after steady grilling
Some do 20 interviews with team officials
Saturday, June 2, 2007 3:32 AM
By Aaron Portzline
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
TORONTO -- The 18-year-old hockey player walks into the room wearing the best suit he owns.
After shaking hands and exchanging hellos, the kid sits at the end of a long table, under bright lights and under the watchful eye of up to eight NHL scouts and front-office decision-makers.
Then the questions come, rapid-fire, for a 20-minute span that must seem like two hours to the kid.
"More like two days," one said.
Welcome to the National Hockey League's scouting combine, an annual event staged in the Park Plaza Hotel near the Toronto Airport, always a few weeks before the NHL entry draft.
"I feel like I need to take a shower," said defenseman Thomas Hickey, whose 11th and final interview Thursday was with the Blue Jackets.
Hickey is like the 100-plus other kids who were invited here by the NHL's central scouting service. The prospects will be put through a 90-minute workout in front of scouts at some point during the three days. But wrapped around the workout is a seemingly endless string of interviews.
Some prospects have more than 20 interviews; each player keeps a printed schedule in his suit pocket so he doesn't blow off an NHL team.
"It's a job interview," said defenseman Karl Alzner, who is expected to be one of the first 10 players taken later this month when the NHL entry draft is held in Nationwide Arena. "That's how I look at it. It's my first job interview.
"We're prepared (by our agents) pretty good for what they're going to ask. But each team tries to get you to reveal your true character, and they have different ways of doing that. They try to make you mad, make you laugh -- all kinds of things. They want to see how you respond."
The Blue Jackets allowed The Dispatch access to a handful of their interviews Thursday and yesterday.
The scouts sit around the table, their laptops drawn, a supply of Diet Coke on ice at the ready.
Don Boyd, the director of player personnel, sits closest to the players, and Paul Castron, the director of amateur scouting, is at the other end.
Between them are scouts Denis LeBlanc, Sam McMaster, John Williams, Brian Bates and Andrew Shaw. Jim Clark, the interim general manager, sits in on a few interviews.
Most of the interviews are conversational, even lighthearted and breezy. There is give and take.
But a few seemed more like a lawyer challenging a witness -- an interrogation of sorts -- as the scouts tried to get to the bottom of the player's shortcomings on and off the ice.
In some cases, players bring X-rays or other medical reports to prove that their injuries aren't career-threatening.
Standard questions include:
Who's your agent?
What's your family like?
What kind of style do you like to play?
What are your strengths and weaknesses?
How soon do you think you can play in the NHL?
How often do you work out in the off-season?
Are you surprised to be invited to this?
But then, a few minutes in, the interview always takes a turn, one way or the other.
I watched you play a lot this season. You got any meanness in you?
A lot of your teammates don't like you at all. Nobody really has a good thing to say about you off the ice. Why is that?
Are you a member of the conservative party?
You said you want to go in the first round. Will you be disappointed if we draft you in the second?
Have you ever had any adversity in your life?
You don't have a very good shot. You didn't break many sticks this season, did you?
Your mom is a dog breeder? Does that mean the team that drafts you gets a bargain price?
Are you ever going to score?
The players seem to handle it pretty well.
"The strangest question I've been asked so far is whether or not I like drinking," Alzner said. "That was their way of asking if I was a big party guy or not."
So?
"I was honest. It's not something I'm really into, but I told them that after a big game, yeah, I'll have a little booze."
The Blue Jackets will interview roughly 75 prospects this weekend.
Boyd, an NHL scout since 1989, has sat through maybe a thousand of these encounters.
"What does it reveal?" Boyd said. "It doesn't always reveal anything, but it gives you a chance -- even if it's only 20 minutes or so -- to sit with the kid and see what kind of attitude he possesses, what kind of body language he puts off.
"If you're torn between two kids and both are on the board on draft day, sometimes it can set one kid apart and it can set the other kid back a bit."
Williams, who has been a scout with the Blue Jackets since they joined the NHL in 2000, has a singular goal.
"There are some kids you go after pretty hard, just to see if their personality matches who they are on the ice," Williams said. "If you ask the right question, sometimes they'll reveal a different side. And that can be good or bad."
McMaster, a member of the Blue Jackets staff since 1999, asks the toughest questions at the table.
"These are big decisions you make on draft day," he said. "None of it is done to be mean to the kid. But we have to know as much about him as we can before we call his name out at the draft."
Goal scored by Bethany at 12:44 PM 2 fanatics have replied
Tape colour: NHL Prospects
© 2007 Bleu, Blanc et Rouge.
All Rights Reserved. The content of this blog is the sole opinion of these bloggers and does not represent an opinion of any kind of a professional NHL hockey team mentioned.