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Coyotes Pick Up Valuable Points Against Islanders

The Phoenix Coyotes scored five goals last night against the New York Islanders and they needed all five of them to win the game as the Islanders fought back with four goals; the last two coming in the third period.

Pretty significant for an Islanders’ hockey club that has not found a way to score goals in the third period.

I heard that the Coyotes started off the first ten minutes flying and Viktor Tikhonov scored the first one. However, I could not pick up the radio broadcast locally or via NHL.com. Next, I remember reading (and possibly writing) that the Phoenix Coyotes lifted the blackout restrictions for games delivered through NHL Center Ice, but not televised by our local affiliates. My screen was black for the first period.

Then, after sending e-mail to NHL.com to fix the radio broadcast (which they finally did), the Islanders scored to tie the game at one and they were absolutely flying around the ice, forcing the Coyotes to play in their zone during the second half of the period.

I’m glad I missed that then.

The game appeared through NHL Center Ice starting in the second period, and for the rest of the game, with my simulcast of our local radio voices Bob Heethuis and Tyson Nash calling the game, we saw:

* Zbynek Michalek, Shane Doan, and Olli Jokinen score goals attempting to put the game away.
* Tim Jackman cross check Ed Jovanovski and Jackman’s stick hit the goalie mask of Mikael Tellqvist which caused him to fall to the ice. After getting repairs to his mask, Tellqvist would be okay, but I loved hearing the crowd boo Jackman every time he touched the puck or hit one of the Coyotes.
* After Josh Bailey scored his first goal of his NHL career, Joakim Lindstrom scores an unassisted goal, his fourth of the season.
* In the third period Doug Weight scores his 1000th and 1001st point of his long NHL career. I’m glad that the Public Address announcer alerted everyone in the building of his accomplishment and according to Billy Jaffe, half of the arena stood to pay respect to a great NHL player.
* As the score is 5-3, Richard Park scores his second of the third period making it 5-4 with around 30 seconds remaining in the game. For a team that struggles in the third period, they were doing everything possible to win this game.

The Coyotes made it a touch more difficult than they needed to, but gaining those two points were extremely important. With the Colorado Avalance losing to the Columbus Blue Jackets, it put some distance between the Coyotes and the Avalance. Plus, with the Philadelphia Flyers shootout, the Anaheim Ducks give away a point to the Eastern Conference.
Playing the Anaheim Ducks always has significance, but now, it’s even more intense. The Ducks and the Coyotes are tied for the sixth playoff spot with 39 points apiece and with equal records of 19-15-5.
It’s a playoff on Sunday and it should be a whale of a game.

Ridiculous

While it is true that the Chicago Blackhawks have the Phoenix Coyotes’ number, it’s not the score that bothers me as much as the action of the Blackhawks’ hockey club.  It is clear that as a group, there is no honor.

And there is no code.

With the last 7- 1 buttkicking that the Blackhawks enacted on the Coyotes, young rookie Versteeg decides to get in a melee with Kyle Turris and say that “he wanted to go.”

Whatever.  I can’t see how that would work, but fine.

I thought it was over.  I thought it was done – especially with a 6-0 blowout tonight.

Unfortunately, we saw Ed Jovanovksi get tuned up by Matt Walker.

Two punches, to the side of the head which opened up Jovanvoski pretty good.  There is a slight problem though.

Jovanovski still had his gloves on and his hands on his stick.

Clearly, a sucker punch.  YouTube will have it soon – I’m sure our friends over at Hockeyfights.com will have it available shortly, and like all blogs in the area, I’ll embed it here too.

It didn’t help that Todd Fedoruk seeing that justice was not done by the officials (four minute double minor for roughing?  I didn’t know that roughing equals two punches to the side of the head), decided to run the goaltender.  He put his teammates in a difficult spot considering he would have to take on the entire Blackhawks squad since Martin Hanzal doesn’t fight well and Daniel Carcillo is still healing from his high stick received from an Anaheim Duck player the other night.

But Carcillo still tried to go – however, Fedoruk got the five minute major penalty for his hit on the goalie.

What I don’t understand here that the score was 6-0…last game of the season between these two franchises…what are they trying to prove?  Considering the fact that Jovanovksi can hold his own, but didn’t get the respect the code offers him on the ice.

Because the Blackhawks didn’t follow it – plain and simple.

It made me sick to be a hockey fan tonight, and it’s not because we lost 6-0.

We lost to a bunch of punks.  All the good feelings I had for them visiting Mr. Tallon during their time off on their long road swing has pretty much evaporated.  I’ll even root for the Red Wings over the Blackhawks any night of the season.

And that’s saying a lot.

Anaheim Ducks Face Off Against Phoenix Coyotes

These two teams, the Anaheim Ducks and the Phoenix Coyotes, have the exact same record 19-15-5.  They are tied for the sixth playoff spot in the Western Conference.  However, the similarities pretty much end there.

In their last ten, the Coyotes have gone 5-2-3 and posted a 13-5-2 record at home.  The Ducks are a better team on the road than the Coyotes have been with a 9-7-2 performance.

The Ducks are better than the Coyotes in specialty teams and are better in the first period with a plus-8 goal differential.  However, the Coyotes get much stronger as the game wears on with a plus-8 goal differential in the third period.

The Coyotes are ranked sixth in the NHL with a plus/minus rating of plus-17, just ahead of the Detroit Red Wings.  They are much better as a five-on-five hockey team than they are if they have to kill off penalties.  In the last outing against the New York Islanders, the Coyotes were charged with only one penalty; it makes a huge difference in strategy if the team is not on the Penalty Kill all game long.

Anaheim though is not far behind in 10th in the same category with a plus-8 rating.

This will be a fantastic game with future playoff implications on the line and it seems right now, after years of domination by the Ducks, the Coyotes have their number.  In the last nine outings, the Coyotes have a 5-2-2 record against the Ducks.

And they still gave us Ilya Bryzgalov, who will be back in the net for tonight’s contest.

Anaheim Ducks Corey Perry will not be joining us this evening due to a suspension because of this elbow.

Anaheim Duck Blogger SK eleven is not happy about it either as she compares the sitauation to the Alex Ovechkin hit to Jamie Heward in the Washington Capitals last tilt with the Tampa Bay Lightning.

I see a deliberate elbow to the head of Flyers’s forward Claude Giroux. Giroux was skating through and Perry had a chance to hit him in the chest. It was penalized and an immediate play. However, Ovechkin didn’t ram Heward’s head into the glass, his elbow was low, Heward turned his back at the precise moment Ovechkin was going to hit him.

SK eleven though does not dispute the Perry hit warrants a suspension, it’s just the length that is a concern.

Other reactions to the game include:

From the Orange County Register:

Ducks’ Perry Suspended Four Games