Friday, February 29, 2008

CAPS GOALIE REPORT: HUET PITCHES SHUTOUT IN FIRST GAME AS CAP

The Caps got what they needed when they needed it on Friday night in New Jersey as Cristobal Huet turned aside everything that came his way. The Caps outshot the leaders in the east but the game was by no means a cakewalk for Huet. Huet shut down a number of powerplay opportunities and also foiled an open breakaway when the game was still in striking distance for the Devils.

Notes From The Post….
…….Washington's first shutout since October …."It was an ideal start, I would say," Huet said. "But we can't stop here."… …..Huet won't be in net Saturday night against the
Toronto Maple Leafs. Boudreau said Olie Kolzig will get the nod.

….."Huet made the saves he was supposed to make," Boudreau said. "But I'm going to come back with Olie because Olie was great in the 4-1 win" over
Minnesota on Tuesday...

After a scoreless first period, Huet stopped
Zach Parise on a breakaway with a brilliant pad save. Then moments later, Fedorov made his presence felt.

CAPS GOALIE REPORT: WASHINGTON POST - HUET STARTS

Huet To Start Tonight For Caps
Move Casts Doubt On Kolzig's Future


By Tarik El-Bashir
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, February 29, 2008; E01


For the past decade, in good and bad times, there's been one constant for the Washington Capitals: Olie Kolzig, the team's unquestioned No. 1 goaltender.

Kolzig's reign, however, could be ending.

Tonight, when the team resumes its pursuit of a playoff spot against the Eastern Conference-leading New Jersey Devils, Kolzig is expected to watch from the bench as Cristobal Huet makes his debut in net for the Capitals.

Coach Bruce Boudreau sidestepped a question about Kolzig's future with the organization after yesterday's practice. But the fact that Huet will oppose Devils goalie Martin Brodeur in such an important game raises serious questions about the Capitals' plans for Kolzig, who is coming off a strong 34-save effort in Tuesday's 4-1 victory over Minnesota.

"We traded for a number one goalie from Montreal," Boudreau said, "and now we have two number one goalies. [Kolzig] knows he's going to play. Cristobal Huet is not coming in here to play 18 games. Olie has been playing very good as of late. Chris will play [tonight], and we'll go from there."

What about tomorrow's game against Toronto?

"If Huet is unbelievable" against the Devils, Boudreau said, "we'll go with him on Saturday."

Yesterday, Huet, 32, joined his new teammates on the ice for the first time since being acquired for a second-round draft pick at the NHL's trade deadline Tuesday. Meantime, Kolzig, 37, manned the goal at the other end of the ice at Kettler Capitals Iceplex, while backup Brent Johnson watched from the bench. Suddenly the odd man out in the Capitals' awkward situation, Johnson faced shots from assistant coaches and a handful of stragglers at the conclusion of practice.

All three goalies have measured their words carefully since Huet's unanticipated addition.

"They didn't bring him in here to sit on the bench," said Kolzig, who has been in goal for 22 of the Capitals' 29 victories this season. "It's an opportunity to get him in right away and we'll go from there."

Said Huet, Montreal's No. 1 goaltender for much of the past two seasons: "I'm just going to do whatever they ask me to do. I'm ready for anything, and I'm just going to prepare for" tonight's game.

Johnson said he won't travel to New Jersey and isn't sure how much, if any, playing time he can expect over the season's final six weeks.

"I'm going to be in the crowd for a little while," Johnson said. "For me, the best thing I can do right now, instead of getting all up in arms about this and upset, is to be the team guy that I've been in the past. I'm still frustrated, but I'm not going to let it get the best of me."

Acquiring Huet was the first of three deals General Manager George McPhee made at the NHL's trade deadline in the hopes of sparking his injury-depleted club, which are five points out of the playoffs, where it hasn't been since the 2002-03 season. McPhee also traded for veteran center Sergei Fedorov and checking-line left wing Matt Cooke. A fourth trade made on Tuesday involved minor leaguers.

Cooke joined the team last night in New Jersey. Fedorov also practiced with the Capitals for the first time, centering a retooled second line with Alexander Semin and Brooks Laich. The 38-year-old also skated on the top power-play unit, joining Alex Ovechkin, Semin, Nicklas Backstrom and Mike Green.

But the focus tonight at Prudential Center, and possibly for the remainder of the season and perhaps into the offseason, will be on Washington's starting goaltender. Huet and Kolzig are unrestricted free agents in July; Johnson has one year remaining on his contract.

"We've got 18 games left to try to get into the playoffs and we'll see what happens after that," Kolzig said. "There's things in life and in the game of hockey that are out of your control. It's how you deal with that separates you from other people. I'm just going to continue to do my work. And like I said the other day, if it's not good enough, then there's somebody else here to do it."

Kolzig's agent, Art Breeze, said he was disappointed and confused by the Capitals' decision to bring in Huet.

"I have no idea why the Capitals chose to do what they did," Breeze said. "You will have to ask that of Capitals ownership and management. The temptation to comment further is overwhelming. I am constrained, however, from additional comments from my client's professionalism. I sincerely wish I weren't.

"Olie clearly has been, and certainly continues to be, the heart and soul of the Washington Capitals. Almost single-handedly he has carried that franchise on his broad shoulders for many years. And he has many more years playing at the highest possible level ahead of him."

Whether that will be in Washington remains to be seen.

Capitals Notes: Huet changed his mind and now will wear jersey No. 38, instead of No. 33. . . . Prospect Chris Bourque was reassigned to the minor league Hershey Bears. . . . Brodeur, who stopped 37 shots to beat the Capitals, 2-1, in overtime Sunday, is expected to start for the Devils, who have won seven of their last nine games.

Thursday, February 28, 2008

CONGRATS TO WOOTTON, MSHL CHAMPIONS

Selfless Wootton Finishes the Job This Time Around
By Jeff Nelson
Special to The Washington Post
Tuesday, February 26, 2008; E07

If Jason Burke is right, Wootton entered this season with an unenviable reputation among its peers.

"They probably thought we were the most overrated team in the state," the senior forward said.

That perception shouldn't be a problem anymore.

Wootton scored two third-period goals last night to defeat Wilde Lake, 4-2, for the program's first Maryland Scholastic Hockey League championship.

The Patriots' postseason run provided a stark contrast to the past three seasons, each of which featured 8-1-1 records and disappointment in the playoffs.

Last season was especially difficult, considering Wootton (15-2-1) was coming off its first state semifinal appearance and appeared ready to take the next step.


"Everyone on our team was so cocky last year," said Burke, whose short-handed goal sealed last night's game with three minutes remaining. "Everyone thought we were going to go in and wipe through states. And we didn't even make it past regionals.

"This year we came with a new approach: no individuals on the team."

The selfless Patriots' talent and depth flourished in postseason wins over Magruder (8-0), Bethesda-Chevy Chase (6-3), Good Counsel (9-2) and Linganore (5-2).

Even when Wootton fell behind 2-0 last night on first-period goals by Dmitry Ermakov and Anthony Basile of Wilde Lake (12-2), there was a sense among the Patriots that any of them could make a play to turn the game around.

"We don't have a superstar," Wootton Coach Dave Evans said. "We don't. Everybody on this team contributed, played team hockey and had each other's backs."

Forty-one seconds after Basile's goal, Wootton senior Jeff Rubin started the comeback on an assist from Burke.

Senior captain Scott Futrovsky tied the game in the second period and scored the go-ahead goal with 6 minutes 47 seconds remaining in the third period.

"We've always been a powerhouse, but we've never been able to finish and win the big one," Futrovsky said. "To come out here and put [that reputation] to shame is just the greatest feeling ever."

Wootton 4, Wilde Lake 2

Making Progress: Until this season, Wilde Lake had not won an MSHL postseason game this decade. It won three to make it to last night's final.

Packed (Ice) House: Paid attendance at the Gardens Ice House in Laurel last night reached 700, a record for an MSHL public league championship game.


SUPPORT WILSON H.S. - WDC HOCKEY


Wednesday, February 27, 2008

CAPS GOALIE REPORT: OLIE'S GAME RAISED

Of course the news of the day was the Capitals bringing in Cristobal Huet from Montreal, but last night as Huet was getting in from Montreal we saw a glimpse of the Olie of old in a 4-1 win. The one goal was a fluky bouncer, but other than that he shut the game down.

In the press the Caps brass have been saying that they do not know how the playing arrangement will play out, but I have to believe that the reigns will be given to Huet and Kolzig will backfill. We shall see.

Huet Vitals: age 32..............21-12-6......2.5 GAA..... .916 sv %

Kolzig Vitals: age: 37.......21-19-6.....3.03 GAA..... .888 sv %


Other Goalies Moves: Holmqvist from TB to Dallas, Smith from Dallas to TB.

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

CAPS GOALIE REPORT: HUET PICKED UP FROM MONTREAL

Here is the official press release from the Washington Capitals:

ARLINGTON – The Washington Capitals have acquired goaltender Cristobal Huet from the Montreal Canadiens in exchange for a second-round pick in the 2009 NHL Entry Draft, vice president and general manager George McPhee announced today.

Huet (KRIHZ-tuh-buhl YOO-iht), who will turn 33 on March 9, is in his fifth season in the NHL and played in the 2007 NHL All-Star Game. The 6’1”, 204-pound native of Saint-Martin-D’Heres, France, is 21-12-6 this season with a 2.55 goals-against average and a .916 save percentage. He ranks 11th in the NHL in save percentage, 19th in GAA and 19th in victories. Huet has a pair of shutouts this season, most recently a 35-save effort against the Capitals on Jan. 29.

Huet has a 72-59-11-13 record in 170 career NHL games, with a 2.49 GAA and a .917 save percentage. He has 15 career shutouts and led the league in save percentage in 2005-06 with a .929 mark. Huet was the second French-born player to play in the NHL and has represented France in two Olympics.

Huet was a seventh-round choice of the Los Angeles Kings in 2001 and made his North American debut in 2002-03 as a member of the Manchester Monarchs, where he played for Washington head coach Bruce Boudreau. Huet made his NHL debut for the Kings that season, posting a 4-4-1 record in 12 games, and played 41 games in Los Angeles in 2003-04. Montreal acquired him on June 26, 2004, with Radek Bonk in exchange for Mathieu Garon and a third-round draft choice.

The draft choice Washington sends to Montreal is Anaheim’s second-round pick in 2009, previously acquired in exchange for center Brian Sutherby.


A good-bye for a Huet...

Monday, February 25, 2008

A LOOK AT 4 DIFFERENT STANCES

I. "SQUARE AND UP"




























II. "WIDE AND UP"


































III. "SQUARE AND LOW"

























































IV. "WIDE AND LOW"






























CAPS GOALIE REPORT: 6-3 LOSS IN "MUST WIN GAME", 2-1 OTL TO DEVILS

The pressure was and is on the Olie and the Caps to claim some points against division rival Carolina but it wasn't to be. Brent Johnson shut the door yesterday but for an unfortunate goal in OT in a 2-1 loss to conference leading Devils.

Capitals @ Hurricanes 2/23 (6-3 Loss) Caps Tender: Kolzig Opponent Tender: Cam Ward



Devils @ Capitals 2/24 (2-1 OT Loss) Caps Tender: Johnson Opponent Tender: Martin Brodeur

Friday, February 22, 2008

RLH NEWS: DATE CHANGE & UPCOMING SESSIONS, MSHL AWARDS, TODAY IN HISTORY

UPCOMING RLH SESSIONS
Note - The 2/22 session has been changed to 3/28.
(1 Opening) Sun Feb 24 7:10-8:10 Ice, meet at 6:20
(1 Opening) Sun Mar 2 8:15 – 9:15 Ice, meet at 7:25
(3 Openings) Fri Mar 28 7:00 - 8:00 Ice, meet at 6:10
(FULL) Sun March 30, 5:30 - 6:30 Ice, meet at 4:40 – Bring tennis racquet if you have one


The cost of each session is $65 and will have a warmup session 50 minutes prior to the ice slot for 30 minutes with 20 minutes to get dressed. Please have ½ of payment for any given session made at least 1 week prior to a given session.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

POTENTIAL SESSIONS @ CABIN JOHN…PLEASE RESPOND IF INTERESTED IN THESE DATES (All PM)
Ice is available for the times/dates available. If I get 3 goaltenders confirmed for a date and time I will request the ice. I will be getting 1 hour blocks of ice. Half hour off-ice warm-up 50 minutes prior to start time.


Saturday March 15th 6:30 - 9:30 Available? (2 Yes)

Saturday March 22nd 5:00 - 9:30 Available? (1 Yes)
Friday March 28th 7:00 -9:30 Available? (2 Yes)
Saturday March 29th 5:00 -9:30 Available? (2 Yes)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The MSHL Coaches have chosen the following student-athletes to be members of the 2008 All-MSHL teams.

The student-athletes were nominated by their coaches and chosen by a coaches' committee:

1st Team All MSHL
Goaltender -- Ryan Haughey Bethesda - Chevy Chase

2nd Team All MSHL
Goaltender -- John Burrows Broadneck


All Conference teams.

Montgomery Conference
Goaltender -- Ryan Haughey Bethesda - Chevy Chase

Howard Conference
Goaltender -- Nate Fanzone Wilde Lake

Eastern Conference
Goaltender -- John Burrows Broadneck

Southern Conference
Goaltender -- Michael Ryan Bowie

Monocacy Valley
Goaltender -- John Weber Washington County

Capital Conference
Goaltender -- Zach Lary Mt. Saint Joseph


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

TODAY IN HISTORY: 28th ANNIVERSARY OF MIRACLE ON ICE

JIM CRAIG


Craig was the goalie for the high-school team in Easton, Mass. that routinely outscored its opponents by five goals a game. No one knew how good Craig was coming out of high school, so no one wanted to offer him a scholarship. He wound up playing for a junior college before he caught the eye of Boston U. coach Jack Parker. In net for the Terriers, Craig was named All-America once, and starred at the 1979 World Championships. Craig played all game sin 1980 Olympics.




STEVE JANASAK

Janaszak attended the University of Minnesota where he was a star goaltender for the Minnesota Gophers. He was voted most valuable player in the 1979 national championship tournament as the Gophers won the NCAA title. Steve Janaszak is best known for being the back-up goalie to Jim Craig on the Miracle On Ice 1980 U.S. Olympic hockey team that won the gold medal.

Thursday, February 21, 2008

RLH SESSIONS HAVE LIMITED OPENINGS IN COMING WEEKS AHEAD

Be sure to contact me at red-line-hockey@hotmail.com if interested in any of these sessions....

UPCOMING SESSIONS @ CABIN JOHN STUDIO RINK (All PM)….

(1 Opening) Fri Feb 22 7:30-8:30 Ice, meet at 6:40
(1 Opening) Sun Feb 24 7:10-8:10 Ice, meet at 6:20
(2 Openings) Sun Mar 2 8:15 – 9:15 Ice, meet at 7:25
(Full) Sun March 30, 5:30 - 6:30 Ice, meet at 4:40 – Bring tennis racquet if you have one

The cost of each session is $65 and will have a warmup session 50 minutes prior to the ice slot for 30 minutes with 20 minutes to get dressed.

POTENTIAL SESSIONS @ CABIN JOHN…PLEASE RESPOND IF INTERESTED IN THESE DATES (All PM)

Ice is available for the times/dates below. If I get 3 goaltenders confirmed for a date and time I will request the ice. I will be getting 1 hour blocks of ice. Half hour off-ice warm-up 50 minutes prior to start time.

Saturday March 15th 6:30 - 9:30 Available? (2 Yes)
Saturday March 22nd 5:00 - 9:30 Available? (1 Yes)
Friday March 28th 7:00 -9:30 Available? (2 Yes)
Saturday March 29th 5:00 -9:30 Available? (2 Yes)

CAPS GOALIE REPORT: STUFF HAPPENS. ISLANDERS EDGE CAPS IN S/O

The Caps had some unlucky breaks last night with numerous posts hit and an unlucky second goal on Kolzig. Kolzig did do what he had to do in the shootout stopping 2 of 3 which is about where any goalie needs to be to give his team a shot at winning it. Unfortunately Mike Comrie didn't flinch on the last shot to put the Isles over the top. See highlights and excerpts from the The Post below.



Excepts From
“Up by Two, Capitals Settle for One Point”

Washington Grabs Lead, Loses Shootout: Islanders 3, Capitals 2
By Tarik El-Bashir
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, February 21, 2008; E01


…….Instead of finishing off Rick DiPietro and the injury-depleted New York Islanders, the Capitals, as they have so often this season, let up…..The Islanders forced the game into overtime, and Mike Comrie completed the comeback in the shootout, beating Olie Kolzig with a backhander between the pads to hand the Capitals their third defeat in four games, 3-2, last night at Verizon Center….

....Comrie scored the only goal of the shootout to clinch the Islanders' fifth straight victory. Washington, meantime, dropped to 2-4 in games decided by penalty shots and remained two points behind the Carolina Hurricanes for the Southeast Division lead….

....Islanders center Josef Vasicek forced extra time with a fluky goal at 11:09 of the third period. Vasicek had chased the puck into the corner and backhanded it on net from below the goal line, just hoping to create a scoring chance….

....Vasicek's shot hit Kolzig (17 saves) on the hip before the Washington goaltender could get to the post. The puck deflected in, tying the game at 2. "They got a lucky goal there on the second one," Kolzig said. "All the players were trying to get back to the post and cover up the post and he was able to just bank it in on me."...

....It wasn't the only miscue of the night. The Islanders' first goal came midway through the second period as a Capitals power play was winding down. Several players loafed getting back on defense, allowing Bill Guerin to hop out of the penalty box, snag a pass and race in on goal. Guerin's first shot was stopped by Kolzig, but the rebound came right back to him. He gloved it down and fired a pass to Miroslav Satan, who tapped it in... Just like that, the Islanders were back in it, 2-1.

...."We had a horrible change and we stayed out too long," Boudreau said. "I feel like we lost a point, rather than gained a point. We didn't have a ton of energy."...

.....In overtime, Semin barely missed on a wraparound attempt and Ovechkin hit the post. Then in the shootout, Viktor Kozlov, Ovechkin and Semin misfired while Comrie beat Kolzig after faking a slap shot…..It probably shouldn't have gotten to that point, considering the way Washington had come out...


Wednesday, February 20, 2008

CAPS GOALIE REPORT: MEET BRENT JOHNSON @ ESPN ZONE

Brent Johnson will be going to the ESPN Zone in downtown DC on Monday, February 25th at 7pm. There will be a question and answer session with Brent first----which lasts about 30-35 minutes and then after that he’ll sign autographs for those attending----another 30-35 minutes.

1 Brent Johnson Farmington, Mich 6'3" 210 lbs Mar. 12, 1977

Sunday, February 17, 2008

CAPS GOALIE REPORT: KOLZIG TURNS IT ON

Red Line didn't get to see the game live but the word on the street is that Olie stepped up....

Caps' Kolzig Delivers In Must-Have Game
At 37, Goalie Comes Up With 39 Saves: Capitals 3, Lightning 2

By Tarik El-Bashir
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, February 17, 2008; D01

TAMPA, Feb. 16 -- During Olie Kolzig's slump last month, his slipping statistics might have led one to conclude that, at age 37, the lifelong Washington Capital was no longer an elite goaltender.

Performances like Saturday night's, though, suggest that any such conclusion was likely premature.

Kolzig kept his team in contention with 39 saves, then Alexander Semin scored with three minutes remaining to help the Capitals avoid a potentially embarrassing collapse and escape St. Pete Times Forum with an exhilarating 3-2 victory over the surging Tampa Bay Lightning.

Tomas Fleischmann and David Steckel also scored for the Capitals, who return to Washington with a 1-1-1 record on their three-game Southeast Division road trip.

"I think we could have gotten more," Coach Bruce Boudreau said. "But anytime you can go on the road, play three games in four nights, in games that all meant something to the other team, and come up .500, that's not bad."

The Capitals almost let Saturday's game slip away, however.

Vinny Prospal and Jan Hlavac scored 33 seconds apart in the final minutes of the third period to rally the Lightning from a 2-0 deficit. But 48 seconds after Hlavac's goal, Semin crashed the net and poked a rebound of Victor Kozlov's shot past Johan Holmqvist (32 saves) to restore Washington's lead.

"As I always say, 'Don't leave our games early,' " cracked Kolzig, who improved to 3-1-1 this month. "You kind of become immune to it."

Alex Ovechkin, meantime, was held without a point in consecutive games for the first time since Nov. 5-6. He took five shots in 21 minutes 52 seconds of ice time.

Last night, Ovechkin didn't need to carry the Capitals. That job belonged to Kolzig, who stopped all 24 shots he faced in the second period.

"He was very good," Boudreau said. "We got the 2-0 lead and you know what your head starts thinking. I didn't want to say the word [shutout]. Then they got the two goals back right away, but we were resilient.
"It was a great two points."

The Capitals' victory moved them into a second-place tie with Atlanta in the division, with 62 points, two behind Carolina.

"If you go on a three-game road trip and you come home with half of the points, you can't really complain," Steckel said. "It was a huge win for us."

Fleischmann added: "It's a big win and I think we deserved it. It's all coming down to the last 20 games of the season and it's going to be a great race. Every game feels like a playoff game right now."

The Capitals took a 1-0 lead on Fleischmann's first-period power-play tally, his second goal in two games. Semin set up the goal with a pretty cross-crease pass.

Kolzig kept the Lightning at bay with a brilliant second period -- the Capitals were out-shot 19-2 in the final 11:21 of the session -- before Steckel's strike at 13:52 of the third period, which extended Washington's lead to 2-0.

That's when the Capitals let down just long enough to almost blow it.

Prospal threw a puck in front, but it hit Kolzig's stick and slipped between the goalie's pads with 4:11 remaining to cut the Capitals' lead in half. Then Hlavac redirected a Filip Kuba point shot past Kolzig with 3:38 left to pull the Lightning even, 2-2.

"It's pretty devastating," Lightning defenseman Dan Boyle said. "But that was a pretty tough way to lose a game."

The defeat was the Lightning's first regulation loss in six games as it attempts to rejoin the wide-open Southeast race.

The Capitals were missing defenseman Tom Poti, their ice-time leader sidelined with a deep thigh bruise, and promoted prospect Sami Lepisto. The 23-year-old Finn made his NHL debut and looked comfortable and confident in 14:16 of ice time.

"He didn't seemed fazed at all," Boudreau said. "He was making great plays and he played within himself."

While Lepisto's performance may have come as a surprise, Kolzig's should not have. Since Boudreau began using backup goalie Brent Johnson more often, Kolzig has looked fresh in recent starts.

"He made all the big saves," Vincent Lecavalier said. "We worked very hard but didn't get it done."

Capitals Notes: Right wing Chris Clark missed his 34th game because of a groin tendon injury and defenseman Brian Pothier was sidelined for a 19th straight game because of a concussion.



Saturday, February 16, 2008

CAPS GOALIE REPORT: SLOPPINESS & MENTAL ERRORS KILL

RLH stills sees that playoff level consistency from the goal on out are lacking....from the Washington Post...

'Mental Errors' Trip Up Capitals
Panthers 4, Capitals 2

By Tarik El-Bashir
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, February 16, 2008; E01

SUNRISE, Fla., Feb. 15 -- Tomas Fleischmann scored about a minute into the third period to put the Washington Capitals ahead by one goal and seemingly in control of this critical Southeast Division matchup.

But instead of clamping down on Nathan Horton and the Florida Panthers, the Capitals let up and got careless, committing a pair of mistakes that each led to goals in Friday night's costly 4-2 loss at BankAtlantic Center.

The defeat was Washington's third in four games (1-2-1) as the Capitals dropped two points behind division leaders Carolina and Atlanta with 23 games remaining.

"We gave them four goals," Coach Bruce Boudreau said. "I thought when we were up 2-1, we looked like we were controlling the game pretty well. But I thought [defenseman Mike Green] was very lackadaisical on the second goal and the third goal was a shot from behind the net. Even the empty net, we gave it right to them."

"For the most part, we beat ourselves," he added.

Fleischmann's seventh goal of the season came 57 seconds into the third and gave the Capitals their first lead, 2-1.

It all unraveled from there.

Green's miscue deep in the Capitals' zone helped Horton tie the game at 2 exactly three minutes after Fleischmann's goal. Kamil Kreps then restored the Panthers' lead, 3-2, at 8 minutes 27 seconds thanks to another misplay deep in Washington's zone. Kreps chopped at the puck from slightly behind the net, flicking it off of goaltender Brent Johnson's leg and into the net. Johnson did not appear to be expecting a shot.

"Mental errors," Green said. "It seems that every mistake we make ends up in the back of the net."

Johnson, who was not particularly sharp, said: "They were all kind of weird plays. The third one, though, was obviously the killer."

The Capitals cannot afford to dwell on Friday's mistake-ridden defeat, or Wednesday's 3-2 shootout loss in Atlanta. Not with the third and final game of their three-game Southeast Division swing looming Saturday night against the streaking Tampa Bay Lightning.

"Tomorrow is huge," defenseman John Erskine said. "We've got to win and try to get back in first."

Alex Ovechkin, the league's leading scorer, was without a point despite taking four shots on Panthers goalie Tomas Vokoun (30 saves). He had scored at least one goal in four of the previous five games.

"He might not have played his best tonight," Boudreau said. "But I think we need to cut him a little slack when people are checking him tightly. We've come to expect so much every night. But sometimes he's not going to make every play."

It also didn't help that the Capitals also were without defenseman Tom Poti, the team's ice-time leader. He was injured in the first period of Wednesday's game and also is doubtful for Saturday's contest at St. Pete Times Forum. Washington is 3-7 this season without him.

Meantime, Boudreau shook up his forward combinations in an effort to coax more offense out his players. The first line consisted of Ovechkin, Nicklas Backstrom and Fleischmann, while the second line included Alexander Semin, Viktor Kozlov and Matt Pettinger.

The promotion seemed to spark Fleischmann, who also had an assist. But it did little to help the Capitals snap out of their offensive funk. They haven't scored more than two goals in regulation in four games.

"I felt good," Fleischmann said. "Playing with those two guys is unbelievable. I also felt pretty good [switching] to the right side."

Washington registered only six shots in the opening 20 minutes and Florida took a 1-0 lead into the first intermission on a goal by Rostislav Olesz.

Olesz directed a wrist shot on net, which Johnson stopped with his pad. But Johnson sent the rebound directly to the slot. Olesz didn't miss the second time, flipping a backhander over Johnson's glove at 5:52.

Semin scored the Capitals' other goal on the power play at 1:12 of the second period.

Capitals Notes: Prospect Sami Lepisto was recalled from Hershey of the American Hockey League and joined the team at BankAtlantic Center. The 23-year-old defenseman did not play, but could be in the lineup Saturday. . . . The Capitals have killed off 19 straight short-handed situations. . . . Right wing Chris Clark (groin tendon) and defenseman Brian Pothier (concussion) remain out indefinitely. . . .

Former Capitals coach Glen Hanlon has accepted the head coaching position with Helsinki Jokerit of the Finnish Elite League. Hanlon was fired by Washington on Nov. 22 and had one year remaining on his contract.

Youtube highlights to come...


Friday, February 15, 2008

RED LINE SUPPORTS WILSON H.S HOCKEY

Be sure to check out the upcoming event for Wilson H.S. hockey on Feb 29th. Wilson goaltender Tyler Hill is working regulary with us.

See www.onfrozenblog.com for details.

Here is the gist....For the price of a movie ticket — $10 — we would ask each and every reader of these six blogs living in or near D.C. to make Friday night, February 29 one for hockey history in Washington. At 7:00 p.m. that evening at the Clyde’s of Gallery Place we’ll gather upstairs to watch the Caps take on the Devils in New Jersey, throw back a few puck sodas, and try and raise some urgently needed money for this desperate and inspiring hockey club.

CAPS GOALIE REPORT: FROM WASHINGTON POST EXPRESS 2/15

Capitals: Olie Shrugs off Criticism

HE'S WON 316 GAMES, has been the owner of a Vezina Trophy and likely will be the next Capitals star to have his number raised to the Verizon Center roof. And that means next to nothing to the experts.

SI.com said Olaf Kolzig's performance "suggests he's well past his best-by date," while ESPN.com claimed the veteran "appears to have hit the wall."

Kolzig, 37, has heard the rumblings: "Everybody's writing me off, thinking I'm too old," he said. "Some people look at stats, and they don't look at anything else."

If true, that might explain the criticism. Kolzig's 3.01 GAA ranks 40th in the 30-team NHL, meaning he trails some backups. His .887 save percentage ranks 43rd.

But Kolzig toils behind a young defense and plays for a team that, now, under coach Bruce Boudreau, takes far more chances up the ice.

"I'm not a statistical goaltender and don't think I ever have been. For me, right now, the bottom line is getting wins," said Kolzig, who will be a free agent at season's end. "If I got concerned about my stats, I wouldn't be playing this in this league because I'd be a in a nuthouse."

Kolzig, along with his team (27-25-6), has been winning recently. Victorious in eight of his 13 starts since New Year's, the netminder has been huge in key moments, drawing praise following jaw-dropping saves in recent OT wins over Montreal and the Rangers. Boudreau is letting Kolzig rest more, and backup Brent Johnson (2.71 GAA, .907 save percentage) is starting more often. They'll likely split this weekend's games at Florida and Tampa Bay.

"Olie's never been a goalie that's relied on quickness. He stands up and makes it difficult to score. That's been his game, and he hasn't gotten smaller," Caps goaltending coach Dave Prior said. "He's a proud guy and believes he's got more to offer."

Written by Express contributor Brian Straus
Photo by Jonathan Newton/The Washington Post

Thursday, February 14, 2008

CAPS GOALIE REPORT: GA DOWN, SHOOTOUTS/BREAKAWAYS A PROBLEM

2 Goals against ain't bad in a tight checking 2-2 game but RLH continues to see the advantage go to the shooters on breakaways and penalty shots when facing Olie.

1 of the 2 goals was a breakway and the Thrashers netted their first 2 penalty shots while the Caps netted none.

The big thing for Olie is backing in way to much. The photo to the left shows it and the hightlights, when they come, will show it. He needs to dictate to the shooter a bit more where HE wants them to go rather than backing straight into the net.

Here is a great phot of Kari Lehtonen. Using the paddle down method in tight. If you would like a great article emailed to you in PDF format regarding playing with the paddle down email red-line-hockey@hotmail.com. Put "paddle down" in the subject header.

Here is Lehtonen tracking a breaway laterally. He got a bit lucky because Boyd Gordon did beat him but it hit the crossbar and fell straight down onto the line.


Wednesday, February 13, 2008

CAPS GOALIE REPORT: A SPECIAL GOALIE COACH PASSES AWAY

SAN JOSE, Calif. – Evgeni Nabokov, Miikka Kiprusoff and a handful of other goaltenders he mentored over the years had a very special gift for a dying Warren Strelow last spring.

Six players in all were represented on a colorful and artistic goalie mask, the brainchild of Nolan Schaefer, who mastered studio art for his major at Providence College when he wasn't tending net for the Friars.

This story doesn't have a happy ending, though. Despite their best intentions, the goalies weren't able to get the special gift into his hands before Strelow passed away on the day the San Jose Sharks opened the 2007 Stanley Cup playoffs.

"I never will erase him out of my mind," Nabokov said. "He always will be with me."

"I've been pretty lucky, I've had great goalie coaches at home and here," the Finnish-born Kiprusoff said. "You try to take something from everybody, but with Warren he taught me so many things. He made me work hard even when I wasn't getting much action, which was really good."

The two Strelow disciples put on a duel Tuesday night. Kiprusoff got the better of it with 40 saves for the Calgary Flames and a 4-3 win in overtime when Jarome Iginla beat Nabokov, who faced only 18 shots. It was a game Strelow would have loved to watch but would have agonized over at the same time.

Strelow is considered the godfather of all goaltending coaches, a job that didn't even exist until close friend Herb Brooks bestowed the responsibility on him to work exclusively with Jim Craig and the "Miracle On Ice" 1980 Olympic gold medal-winning United States men's hockey team.

Teams took notice, but it wasn't until 1983 that the Washington Capitals hired Strelow as the league's first full-time goaltending coach. Today, every team has either a full-time or part-time coach or a consultant working not only with the goalies at the NHL level but also throughout the organization with minor-leaguers, prospects and draft picks.

Strelow followed his seven years in Washington with a three-year stint in New Jersey where he worked with Martin Brodeur during the future Hall of Famer's early years. And he was in his 10th year with the Sharks last spring when he died at 73 following a stroke he suffered six weeks earlier.

Strelow was in declining health since 2003 when he underwent a kidney transplant and battled diabetes. The laundry list of complications and health challenges may have slowed Strelow, but it didn't stop him. He always found a way to continue to pursue his passion: hockey and improving goaltenders, both physically and mentally.

"We were on the phone all the time," said Nabokov, who dedicated his Calder Trophy as the NHL's top rookie in 2001 to Strelow. "I knew he wasn't in the best shape, but still I never was thinking about the bad part of it."

Strelow may have been confined to his suburban Minneapolis home toward the end, but that didn't prevent him from reviewing tapes of games that included every goaltending touch throughout the organization and having weekly one-on-one phone conversations with each goalie.

"I was with him when I had no language going on, nothing," said Nabokov, who reported to Lexington, Ky., and the Sharks' top minor-league affiliate in 1997 not knowing any English. "He was there; he was so patient with me, too. He always would explain stuff. That's why he will always be so special."

Kiprusoff took a similar path to San Jose. Drafted by the Sharks, he reported first to Kentucky like Nabokov with so much to learn.

"He was huge for me here," said Kiprusoff, winner of the 2006 Vezina Trophy as the league's best goalie. "When I first came over, it was different to play here than back at home. I spent a lot of time with him at his goalie camp in Minnesota. And he was staying with us in Kentucky a lot, too. He helped me so much."

Kiprusoff was traded to Calgary early in the 2003-04 season when the Sharks had a logjam in goal – Nabokov and Vesa Toskala also were on the big-league roster. Though Kiprusoff's working relationship was severed at that point with Strelow, certainly his personal relationship remained. He would try to visit Strelow when the Flames visited the Minnesota Wild.

"He was so much of a team guy he didn't want to talk," Kiprusoff said with a smile.

At one point last season he spent an extended stay in San Jose when the Sharks were enjoying a long homestand. Strelow would get around on a mechanical cart. He had four of them, two in San Jose and two others in Worcester, Mass., home of the team's top minor affiliate in the American Hockey League. He hated the carts, but they allowed him to do his job. That's what mattered most.

Strelow was a student of the position, adept at employing drill after drill to improve fundamentals. But he also was a great listener and communicator, knowing when to pump up a goalie's fragile confidence and when to keep pushing hard to get the most out of a player.

For Nabokov, a lot of Strelow's coaching was for between the ears as opposed to between the pipes.

"He would always tell me to stop thinking," Nabokov said. "And that's what it always comes down to. Just go and play well. Stop making things complicated. And it's really true."


While Kiprusoff has been away from San Jose for several seasons now and is working with Flames goalie coach David Marcoux, Nabokov is without Strelow for the first time during his 11 professional seasons. The Sharks have not filled Strelow's position with a new hire, instead relying on the expertise of ex-NHL goalie Wayne Thomas, the team's assistant GM.

"I don't have the same relationship – they had a very, very special relationship – but I still know the technical side of it that Warren used to talk about and the little keys he needs to stay on top of to be at the top of his game," Thomas said as relating to Nabokov.

"Now I guess we have to move on," Nabokov said. "What he did stays with me, and we have to make him proud. He was always proud, and we don't want to let him down. I want him to be proud for the rest of my career."


Ross McKeon is the NHL editor for Yahoo! Sports. Send Ross a question or comment for potential use in a future column or webcast.

Monday, February 11, 2008

CAPS GOALIE REPORT: KOLZIG CLUTCH, VALIQUETTE OUTDUELED

Olie the Goalie got it done for the Caps on Sunday in a 3-2 (OT) barnburner where he got the #1 star for his 30+ save performance. Most importanly was that his best play was saved for the second half of the game which has been something he has struggled with as of late letting up late and sometimes weak goals.

Goal 1 saw an off winged Sean Avery pick O.K. near side / glove side. It was the obvious choice for the shooter as they know the scouting report is that he is going to go down to cover the lower half on the net.

Goal 2 was a bit sloppy since O.K. made the first save, was not able to cover the puck in front of him, got back up and went back down to the butterfly to stop an off angle shot. Problem was the stick blade was not down. A habit that many youth goalie get into.

After goal 2 O.K. got down to business and made not only the straight on saves he usually makes but 1 or 2 to worl class post to post saves.

At the other end of the ice Steve Valiquette did some fantastic work himself but got a little complacent with details. While his own team was on the power play numerous times the Caps iced the puck hard on goal and he stayed deep within the paint of the crease to "stop" pucks that actually left bouncing rebounds rather than step out to "handle" and "play" pucks to his teammates while they had the advantage.




Saturday, February 09, 2008

CAPS GOALIE REPORT: JOHNSON CLUTCH, POWERPLAY NOT

Brent Johnson played a fine game on Friday evening. The game had playoff ramifications in that the winner takes possession of first place in the Southeast division. Both goals were in the first period and the second goal was definitely unstoppable. The first goal might have been tracked a bit better. In any case Johnson made all of the stops needed to keep his team in a position to win until the final buzzer. He also did a great job helping a lackluster power play regroup when Carolina was able to ice the puck during the man advantages..

Sunday game v. New York Rangers starter is TBA.....

Friday, February 08, 2008

CAPS GOALIE REPORT: TANDEM GOALTENDING A FIXTURE

from Capitals Move to the Head of the Class

By Tarik El-BashirWashington Post Staff Writer Friday, February 8, 2008; Page E04

.......Capitals Notes: Boudreau said he plans to start Brent Johnson in goal tonight, two days after Kolzig made 31 stops at Wachovia Center. Johnson is 6-2-0 with a 2.41 goals against average and a .918 save percentage under Boudreau. The start will be his sixth start in the team's last 12 games.

"Both have been success as of late," he said. "I don't think it will ever get to 50-50. But if I was a long-range planner, and we've got five games this week. . . I could see" Kolzig starting three and Johnson starting twice. . . .

The Capitals and Hurricanes have split four meetings this season, with each team winning twice at home.

Thursday, February 07, 2008

CAPS GOALIE REPORT: KOLZIG HANGS ON, FLYERS SCORE WITH UNDER A MINUTE REMAINING

Congrats to the Caps for hanging on after losing a 4-1 lead in the third for a 4-3 final score.

Wednesday, February 06, 2008

CAPS GOALIE REPORT: JOHNSON PULLS DOWN IMPORTANT WIN

Brent Johnson's time continues to increase under coach Boudreau and he did get an important win last night against Columbus. I was only able to see the last 4 minutes of the first period and the highlight of the 3rd goal, but that was enough to see that Rick Nash had Johnson's number 1 on 0.

Johnson was beat on goal 1 and 3 when he got caught "flat footed" in almost a dead stop and did not challenge Nash. Nash was able to get as close to Johnson as possible and get shots off at open space. Goal 2 was unstoppable as the highlights will indicate.




Monday, February 04, 2008

CAPS GOALIE REPORT: GAA FALLING, GOALS FOR FALL MORE

I didn't get to watch this game live as I was in Detroit for a tournament but here's the Post's recap and the highlights. The numbers don't match up well however. The Caps and Olie were scored upon twice on only 13 shots by the Thrashers one of which was an empty netter. Meanwhile Kari Lehtonen stopped 36 shots in the shutout. This is the Caps second time being shutout in three games. The win moved the Thrashers into a tie for the division lead with the Hurricanes.



Needing Points Against Division Rival, Caps Come Up With Nothing
Thrashers 2, Capitals 0

By Tarik El-Bashir
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, February 3, 2008; D01

If the Washington Capitals fail to qualify for the playoffs, it will be games such as last night's that are going to haunt them in the offseason.

They were facing the Atlanta Thrashers, a Southeast Division opponent they're battling for position, a team that had gone to a shootout the previous night in Atlanta, one that was minus its best player in Ilya Kovalchuk.

Yet it was Kari Lehtonen and the Thrashers who treated it like a playoff game, and they scratched out a 2-0 victory before 17,205 at Verizon Center.

Lehtonen stopped 36 shots to hand the Capitals their second shutout in three games and propel the Thrashers into a tie with the Carolina Hurricanes for first place in the division. The Capitals, meantime, remained three points back with 29 games left to play.

"I don't think we were hungry enough tonight," Capitals defenseman Mike Green said. "And it shows because we didn't score any goals. Maybe it was [Lehtonen's] night. But anytime we don't score any goals, it's because we aren't going to the net or we're not creating things around the net."

Coach Bruce Boudreau pinned the defeat on two deficiencies: the lack of consistent scoring from someone not named Alex Ovechkin and the unwillingness of his players to create havoc in front of the net.

Lehtonen "played really solid, I don't think there's any denying that," Boudreau said. "But every shot he saw, except by Alex that just hit him in the glove. It wasn't like there was such a barrage of shots that he was making unbelievable saves. He made some pretty good saves. But we have to do better.

"Some other guys have got to step up to the plate and score some goals. You can't rely on Alex every night."

Ovechkin, one game after notching four goals and an assist in a 5-4 overtime victory over the Montreal Canadiens, took a game-high seven shots on goal, including one with 51 seconds remaining that Lehtonen didn't see. But the Thrashers' goalie was in perfect position and the puck settled harmlessly in his glove as the Capitals attacked six-on-five.

Moments after that save, Marian Hossa scored an empty-net goal to clinch Atlanta's third consecutive win overall and second straight win without Kovalchuk, its leading scorer with 38 goals. Kovalchuk has a right knee injury, but could be back early next week.

The Thrashers mustered only 12 shots on Capitals goaltender Olie Kolzig, who turned away the first 10 attempts he faced. The 11th, however, came off the stick of Todd White, who stopped a pass with his skate and in one motion fired the puck past Kolzig from the circles to make it 1-0 at 11 minutes 34 seconds of the third period. White has four goals in five games against the Capitals this season.

Lehtonen took it from there, making several key saves in the final seconds, including a blocker stop on Nicklas Backstrom from point-blank range with about six minutes remaining. He also stopped Ovechkin on a rush and then wrapped things up with the timely and fortunate glove save on Ovechkin in the final minute.

"Lehtonen didn't give us any rebounds," Kolzig said. "He was solid. That's going to happen from time to time."

Kolzig also pointed out the poor ice conditions, caused, in part, by the Georgetown men's basketball team's game earlier in the day.

"The ice was absolute garbage tonight," he said. "We couldn't settle the puck down or make flat passes. But they were playing on the same ice so we can't make any excuses."<