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Video: Rene Bourque really wanted to elbow Nicklas Backstrom

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Two weeks ago, Rene Bourque of the Calgary Flames was suspended two games for a questionable hit on Brent Seatbook of the Chicago Blackhawks; a Shanaban on a check that had a significant amount of gray area.

Slightly less gray area on this hit against Nicklas Backstrom of the Washington Capitals on Tuesday night -- an elbow to the head for which Bourque seemed to go out of his way to complete:

Slo-mo:

Bourque was given a two-minute minor for elbowing. Backstrom had one more shift on the power play after the hit, and then was being evaluated by medical staff after the game.

The Flames forward has played with an edge for years. You can argue whether or not he crossed it with Seabrook, but he's now "in the system" for the Dept. of Player Safety. Hard to imagine, if Backstrom's injured, they're not acting on this.

s/t Danny for the clip.


Tuesday’s Three Stars: Lupul’s 4-pointer; shootout beauties

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Tuesday’s Three Stars: Lupul’s 4-pointer; shootout beauties

No. 1 Star: Joffrey Lupul, Toronto Maple Leafs

Lupul's second 4-point night of the season helped propel the Leafs to a 7-3 victory over the Tampa Bay Lightning. Lupul answered Vinny Lecavalier's goal in the first period with his 18th of the season. He then assisted on goals by Carl Gunnarsson, Mikhail Grabrovski and Phil Kessel. Darryl Boyce had the game-winner with his first of the season.

No. 2 Star: Drew Stafford, Buffalo Sabres

The Sabres forward scored a tie-breaking goal at 14:34 of the third period and then assisted on Nathan Gerbe's insurance goal that ended up the game-winner in Buffalo's 4-3 victory over the Edmonton Oilers. Stafford added a primary assist on Jordan Leopold's second-period goal. Stafford was a plus-3.

No. 3 Star: Jaroslav Halak, St. Louis Blues

The Blues keeper stopped 34 of 35 shots in a 4-1 victory over the Phoenix Coyotes. Halak made 16 saves in the second period alone. Chris Stewart, Jamie Langenbrunner, T.J. Oshie and Patrik Berglund had the goals.

Honorable mention: Nicklas Backstrom assisted on all three Washington Capitals goals, two of them on the power play, as the Caps defeated the Calgary Flames, 3-1, and prevented Jarome Iginla's 500th goal. Alex Ovechkin score his 17th, his seventh goal in seven games. Tomas Vokoun stopped 18 shots. …  Jiri Hudler scored twice, Valtteri Filppula and Henrik Zetterberg had three points, and Johan Franzen scored the eventual game-winner in the Detroit Red Wings' 5-4 victory over the Dallas Stars. Michael Ryder scored two goals and added an assist in the loss. … Taylor Hall scored his 12th. … Radim Vrbata scored his 19th. … Steven Stamkos scored his NHL-leading 27th goal. … Special mention to the Leafs' penalty kill, as the worst-in-the-League group killed all four power plays it faced. … Finally, the New York Islanders defeated the Carolina Hurricanes in the shootout, 4-3, as Kyle Okposo sent the game into overtime with a goal at 18:30 of the third period. Matt Moulson opened the scoring with this 18th. The shootout featured two moves that goalies really should know are coming at this point: Frans Nielsen's backhander ...

And Jussi Jokinen with the Forsberg move:

Did you know? There was only one penalty called in the Detroit/Dallas game: Todd Bertuzzi for holding the stick 15 seconds in the game.

Dishonorable mention: Mathieu Garon was pulled after giving up four goals on 21 shots; Dwayne Roloson gave up three on 21 shots after replacing him. … Steve Downie earned 20 minutes in penalties with five minors and a 10-minute misconduct. … Josh Green, called up to replace the injured Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, was a minus-4 for Edmonton. ... This elbow on Backstrom by Rene Bourque should get the NHL's attention.

Puck Daddy’s 2012 NHL Winter Classic Photo Expedition

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Puck Daddy’s 2012 NHL Winter Classic Photo Expedition

PHILADELPHIA — The 2012 NHL Winter Classic is an orgy of commerce, fanaticism and excess that writhes around a fairly important regular season hockey game. And we really wouldn't have it any other way.

These fans were standing on line to enter Citizens Bank Park on Jan. 2, making one last call for Coach Peter Laviolette to correct his "huMANgous big mistake" and play Ilya Bryzgalov in the Classic. Alas, there was a better chance Bryz's Siberian Husky is still single than there was him getting start (and we hear she has quite a following).

Coming up, some more sights from around the Winter Classic between the New York Rangers and Philadelphia Flyers.

And here … we … go.

Puck Daddy’s 2012 NHL Winter Classic Photo Expedition

Outside the ballpark there's a village of sponsorship tents, as there has been for most of the outdoor games.

The majority of them involve the handing over of swag or the chance to perform some type of task to win swag. But the Molson House tent was a place to stand shoulder-to-shoulder and down suds before the game. As you can see, it was quite popular.

Puck Daddy’s 2012 NHL Winter Classic Photo Expedition

This Winter Classic medallion was one of the most popular giveaway items in the village. You had to hand over your information to the ladies of GEICO in order to procure one.

I said, "I'll make you a deal: I'll give you my information in exchange for (a) a medallion and (b) never having to see your terrible Cavemen commercials on my television again."

She wasn't in a position to broker said deal, so I just ended up flashing my moobs at her and she tossed me a necklace …

Puck Daddy’s 2012 NHL Winter Classic Photo Expedition

This was, by far, the coolest fan interactive game: Reebok offered a chance to hit either the Broad Street or the Broadway street signs with a shot. A welcome change from the norm; and by that we mean they're usually being shot with bullets.

Puck Daddy’s 2012 NHL Winter Classic Photo Expedition

Jersey Fouls aplenty from the Classic, including this one.

First off, it wasn't a great trade, unless you missed the part where Peter Forsberg won multiple Stanley Cups. Second off, the other trade wasn't a great one either; Pavel Brendl, anyone?

Unless this was a cynical Protest Jersey, in which case all is forgiven.

Puck Daddy’s 2012 NHL Winter Classic Photo Expedition

We know this is going to come as a shock to you, but this man was performing a Smashmouth song.

Puck Daddy’s 2012 NHL Winter Classic Photo Expedition

More than a few fans had this cheap, pirated, entirely inaccurate Flyers "Winter Classic" jersey that was being sold months before the real ones were. And honestly, they're really not that bad looking in public …

Puck Daddy’s 2012 NHL Winter Classic Photo Expedition

From our bar hopping travels on Sunday night with the Kurtenbloggers, Bourne and Pizzo. Leahy was saddened to discover this store name didn't mean what he hoped it'd mean.

Puck Daddy’s 2012 NHL Winter Classic Photo Expedition

Wayne Gretzky didn't play in the Winter Classic alumni game, but he was there in spirit. The spirit of capitalism!

Puck Daddy’s 2012 NHL Winter Classic Photo Expedition

From the bowels of the ballpark near the dressing rooms. We chuckled.

Puck Daddy’s 2012 NHL Winter Classic Photo Expedition

Bryzgalov, as the Flyers made their way onto the ice for the Jan. 1 practice. It's just hockey, you know? (And good lord that mask is gorgeous in person.)

Puck Daddy’s 2012 NHL Winter Classic Photo Expedition

Scottie Hartnell was uncle of the year during practice, bringing his nieces and nephews onto the ice and, during one moment, spinning around like a figure skater with them.

Alas, he fell short of medaling in this event because #HartnellDown.

Puck Daddy’s 2012 NHL Winter Classic Photo Expedition

If you watched the Classic on TV, you no doubt noticed the snow. Not the stuff in the air, which was dropped from the NBC plane on command from Gary Bettman. ("Give me something between Buffalo in '08 and what flies in Jimmy Howard's face during the playoffs …")

No, we mean the stuff on the ground. The fake stuff.

Truth be told, it looked incredibly real from the upper deck. But we wouldn't advise eating it. OK, those paramedics advised us not to eat any more of it, and we're imparting that knowledge to you.

And finally …

Puck Daddy’s 2012 NHL Winter Classic Photo Expedition

The most surreal moment of the Winter Classic.

As the Rangers got dressed and packed up their gear, rolling in comes 10-year-old Liam, a New York fan with cerebral palsy who became a sensation after he was featured on Ep. 2 of "HBO 24/7".

Coach John Tortorella grabbed a seat next to him, talking about the game and the quality of the family's seat. He pointed out a few Rangers, like Brian Boyle, who were still mulling around the room. Liam complained about the officiating. It was all very sweet.

It was also like watching a theatrical production of the HBO series, which speaks to the essence of this game: It's a grand stage for the players to do what they will with the opportunity, and for the fans to revel in it.

The five most bafflingly successful teams in the NHL

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The five most bafflingly successful teams in the NHL

Last summer, the Florida Panthers added 11 veteran players and a head coach. They crammed a long table for an introductory press conference, looking very much like a fantasy team come to life, albeit one with lousy fantasy draft position. Some expected, at best, they'd be competitive. Others expected this to be Tallon's Folly.

Instead, they turned out to be the third best team in the Eastern Conference at the moment. Which is sort of baffling.

But they're not the only team that's playing above its head right now, rather inexplicably. Here are five NHL teams that are bafflingly successful this season. (Note: The St. Louis Blues aren't listed here. There's nothing baffling about the right coach coming in and making a talented, playoff-caliber roster bend to his will.)

Florida Panthers

This really shouldn't have worked.

There's no precedent for what GM Dale Tallon did here: Spend copious amounts of money on a disparate collection of veteran players, some of whom won a Stanley Cup together with the Chicago Blackhawks and others that were significant role players on other teams. Combine them with holdovers from a lottery team last season, shake and pour out a division leader with 47 points in 39 games.

What we all underestimated what the Blackhawks Factor. Kris Versteeg leads the team with 38 points, acting as the major offensive cog for their top line. Brian Campbell has 31 points in 39 games, acting as the offensive engine Tallon sold him as when he traded for him (18 power-play assists!).

Then you have a guy like Jason Garrison who comes out of nowhere to score seven power-play goals like he's the Anton Babchuk of White Rock, BC.

Their goaltending has been better than expected. They play with some edge. Kevin Dineen's pushing the right buttons.

The notion that this mercenary group would exhibit some of the best chemistry in the NHL is one of the season's greatest surprises. And now they add John Madden, one of the most well-liked players in the room you can find, to that mix.

Colorado Avalanche

Here's the baffling part: This team looked like it was headed for a massive rebuild no less than two months ago. Like, in a "clear out the front office" sort of way.

Instead, they're eighth in the West with a 22-18-1 record and on a 9-2 streak.

Offensively, the story hasn't been about Duchene (now injured) or Paul Stastny. It's been about Ryan O'Reilly, who has skated with Gabriel Landeskog and Milan Hejduk to form a dependable line, much in the way Versteeg's line with Stephen Weiss gave the Panhers something to build on. They also match up with opponents' power lines and outplay them.

The hidden MVP for this team has been Jean-Sebastien Giguere, who went 5-2-0 in December and really steadied things for the Avs when they needed it. Semyon Varlamov is still Tretiak one night and Cloutier the next, but he's won three straight.

They're also 7-0 in shootouts, which the New Jersey Devils will tell you is a nice crutch to carry …

Joe Sacco survived the heat and now his team's in playoff contention. Would you have believed as much back in October?

Ottawa Senators

That the Ottawa Senators have 45 points in 40 games and are currently in a playoff position is rather baffling. Their PP is around 18th in the League at 17.7 percent. Their PK is below average at 79.5-percent. Their defense and goaltending has been horrific: 3.32 GAA as a team, trumped only by the porous defense in Tampa Bay.

So what's the trick? Their offense has been much better than expected, and rather clutch. From the Ottawa Citizen:

They rank eighth in the 30-team NHL in goals per game (2.97), a lofty jump from 2010-11, when they were 29th with only 2.32 goals per game.

The scoring hasn't been overly top-heavy, with Jason Spezza, Milan Michalek and Alfredsson being asked to carry the team offensively every night. Michalek leads the way with 19 goals, but hasn't scored since returning from a concussion on Dec. 27. Spezza has 13, followed by Alfredsson, Nick Foligno and Zack Smith (11 each), Colin Greening (eight), Erik Condra (six), then Erik Karlsson and Chris Neil (five each).

Just to dial it back for a moment: Milan Michalek has 19 goals.

The job Paul MacLean has done here is underrated and under-appreciated. Maybe he can ask Mike Babcock what that's like.

Minnesota Wild

Travel and injuries kicked their asses a bit on the last month, but the Wild remain sixth in the West with 48 points in 40 games. The credit goes to Coach Mike Yeo. He worked them hard in the preseason, demanded effort, demanded they play his system. The earned positive results early in the season which made the sell job easier.

From Tom Powers back on Dec. 17:

Yeo is a different coach than I thought he'd be. When I met him last summer, my first impression was he was going to be more volatile, more heavy-handed in dealing with a core group of players that never completely bought into their previous coach's system.

Instead, he has been even-keeled. He seems subdued at times. He keeps the team's business in the dressing room, making corrections or critical remarks behind closed doors. Most important, he has created that one-for-all attitude that has resulted in numerous improbable comebacks.

The baffling part of this team's success is that it doesn't necessarily correlate with the changes they made last offseason. Dany Heatley as 12 goals, which leads the team but isn't exactly pushing for the Richard Trophy. Devin Setoguchi, limited by injury, as eight. They're middle of the pack 5-on-5 and on the power play, but they're eighth in the League on the PK (84.6 percent).

The five most bafflingly successful teams in the NHLEveryone's been waiting for the bottom to fall it, and there have been times in which it's felt close to happening. But it hasn't.

Winnipeg Jets

Finally, a team that's just outside the playoff picture … but closing in.

The predictions were that the former Thrashers would be lauded by local fans but, ultimately, fall short of playoff contention. Instead, they're hanging tough: 43 points in 38 games, one point out of a playoff seed. And they have their rabid fans to thank for it: 14-6-1 at home, one of only five teams to have 14 or more wins on home ice.

They're finding a away to win games, maturing as a team under Claude Noel. From QMI:

The team defensive play is a source of pride and it's the primary reason why the Jets are challenging for a playoff spot as the season nears the midway point. "I'm really happy with the way we've defended, from our goaltender on out," coach Claude Noel said. "Our team is becoming a really good checking team against heavy opponents."

While starting goaltender Ondrej Pavelec has been the Jets' best player (and backup Chris Mason has been just as good) his season is a reflection of the team's defensive evolution.

When the Jets were scrambling, turning pucks over and sacrificing defence for offensive opportunities, Pavelec had terrible numbers, largely through no fault of his own. Today, he's one of the hottest goalies in the NHL and he's improved his goals against average to 2.82, his save percentage to .911.

Then there are the 18 goals from Evander Kane, who has blossomed into a star this season and, frankly, might actually creep into the Hart Trophy conversation if he keeps up this pace and the Jets make the playoffs.

Which, bafflingly, they might just do.

Puck Daddy Hockey Rumors Live Chat!

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The clock is ticking down to the trade deadline. Will someone make a panicky move? And by that we mean, "Hey, Yzerman, how 'bout that goaltending?"

Please join us beginning at NOON ET/9 a.m. PT today for our weekly chat that includes a revolving door of panelists like Lyle (Spector) Richardson of Spector's Hockey; David "Dave" Pagnotta of The Fourth Period Magazine; as well as your friendly neighborhood knuckleheads from Yahoo! Sports, Puck Daddy and Buzzing The Net.

You bring the funny; we bring the abrupt changes in tone and Hamburger Women. That's how it works:

Alex Ovechkin denies firing Russian loogie into Dorsett’s face

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Derek Dorsett is an agitator for the Columbus Blue Jackets, and a good one. But against the Washington Capitals on New Year's Eve, it was Alex Ovechkin that got under his skin — with, according to Dorsett, saliva on his face.

From the Columbus Dispatch, when asked why he was so physical and preoccupied by Ovechkin:

"I haven't told many people this but he spit in my face," Dorsett said. "That got me a little more mad."

Dorsett said Ovechkin spit on him when they were face-to-face during a fracas in which both were given 2-minute minors (cross-checking for Dorsett, roughing for Ovechkin) at 2:38 of the second period.

"That's why I was yelling at the ref so much and yelling at him in the penalty box," Dorsett said. "I find that pretty disrespectful. That's probably one of the most disrespectful things someone can do, especially a guy who is the best player in the league. It's classless. He's supposed to be a role model for the game. It's unbelievable."

Hey, maybe he's not a role model. Because if declare you're not a role model, you can spit on people, even fans!

Deadspin had the video of the incident this morning and spit-balled this analysis:

Watching video of the play, there's no smoking gun. Ovechkin gives Dorsett a shot, then it's mostly jawing. Dorsett never reacts like he got a glob in the grill, though at the end he does reach to his face. To remove a mouthguard or wipe himself off, it's not clear.

As SpitGate unfolded this morning, Ovechkin was asked about it after Washington Capitals practice. From Katie Carerra of the Washington Post:

After some confusion over what the word "spit" meant, Ovechkin denied Dorsett's claim: "No, no, no. I don't know. Show me that moment, I want to see it. No."

So there you go. Not that we're predisposed to believe Ovechkin (despite the accusations in the comments), you have to admit Dorsett's story is a little farfetched.

"According to his story, Ovechkin passes him and starts skating up the ice. Then Rick Nash says he was struck on the right temple. The spit then proceeds to ricochet off the temple, striking Derek Dorsett between the third and the forth rib. The spit then came off the rib, made a right turn, hitting Dorsett in the right wrist... causing him to drop his baseball cap. The spit then splashed off the wrist, pauses -- in mid-air, mind you -- makes a left turn and lands on Dorsett's left thigh."

That is one magic Russian loogie ...

(And no, Rick Nash wasn't involved. But we needed another name to make the reference work. Also, Semin is the second spitter.)

How you can support Jack Jablonski, paralyzed prep hockey star

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As you may have read on Prep Rally, Benilde-St. Margaret's (Minn.) High junior varsity star Jack Jablonski was paralyzed after he was accidentally checked from behind into the end boards during a Holiday Hockey Classic Tournament on Friday.

From the Pioneer Press:

Benilde-St Margaret's sophomore hockey player Jack Jablonski is having surgery this morning at Hennepin County Medical Center to fuse the damaged vertebrae he sustained in a junior-varsity game Friday that left him unable to move his legs.

A posting on his CaringBridge website by his parents, Mike and Leslie, said a magnetic resonance imaging test Tuesday revealed the severity of his injuries, including a severed spinal cord near his neck. He also had a procedure Tuesday afternoon to prevent clotting in a blood vessel. The journal also reports a CT scan revealed the alignment of his vertebrae was "very good.''

Beyond prayers for Jack and his family, you can support Jablonski through the Caring Bridge page set up in his name; this is the donation page to help his family with services, expenses and everything else related to this tragedy. Every little bit helps; if nothing else, leave a message of support for him. There's also a Support Jack Jablonski Facebook page to check out as well.

Check out more about how NHL players have reacted to Jablonski's injury on Hockey Wilderness.

Marek Vs. Wyshynski Radio: Angela Ruggiero and Canadian fans

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Marek Vs. Wyshynski Radio: Angela Ruggiero and Canadian fans

It's a special time Wednesday edition of Marek vs. Wyshynski beginning at 3 p.m. ET/12 a.m. PT, and we're talking about the following and more:

Special Guest Stars: Angela Ruggiero, U.S. women's hockey icon, on her career and legacy.

• In which Marek and Wysh discuss the world juniors fallout.

Rene Bourque's big elbow.

• The Krys Barch defense.

• Cheering in the press box.

• Puck Headlines and Talking Points

Question of the Day: "What are the best + worst things about Canadian hockey fans?"

Email your answers to puckdaddyblog@yahoo.com or tweet them with the hashtag #MvsW to either @jeffmarek or @wyshynski.

"Marek vs. Wyshynski" is a daily hockey radio program featuring Jeff Marek, on-air personality and columnist for Sportsnet, and Greg Wyshynski, your humble editor from Yahoo! Sports' Puck Daddy blog. We'll be speaking to the most interesting people in hockey, from Hall of Famers to beat writers to bloggers. We'll be debating the hottest topics in the NHL and beyond.

It's all about interaction, too: Email your thoughts to puckdaddyblog@yahoo.com or tweet them with the hashtag #MvsW to either @jeffmarek or @wyshynski.

Click here for the Sportsnet live stream or click the play button above!

Click here to download podcasts from the show each day Subscribe to the podcast via iTunes or Feedburner.


Puck Headlines: Orr on waivers; DiPietro injured while injured

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Here are your Puck Headlines: a glorious collection of news and views collected from the greatest blogosphere in sports and the few, the proud, the mainstream hockey media.

Puck Headlines: Orr on waivers; DiPietro injured while injured

• I don't think Mikael Granlund's latest stamp is going to sell out.

Tampa Bay Lightning coach Guy Boucher, after learning Ryan Malone will miss time with a lower-body injury: "Again with the injuries. Happy New Year! It's been that way since Day One this year, so we are not going to cry about it. We are going to move forward and continue to find ways like we've been doing.'' [The Tampa Tribune]

• Hilarious but unsurprising headline: Rick DiPietro gets injured while on injured reserve. [Deadspin]

• Speaking of injuries, the Wild have less than the last time they faced the Canucks. [Minneapolis Star-Tribune]

• The daily concussion goes to... Chris Phillips. [London Free Press]

• Here's a disgusting, shameful, embarrassing scene, as three Flyers fan beat up on a Rangers fan. (NSFW: Language) [Broad Street Hockey]

• Why Nathan MacKinnon could be hockey's big thing. [Toronto Star]

• The Toronto Maple Leafs place Colton Orr, the embodiment of truculence itself, on waivers. [The Globe & Mail]

• Bad news for Senators' fans: Erik Karlsson is getting Norris trophy buzz... in a contract year. [Silver Seven Sens]

• Tom Gaglardi is showing himself to be the owner the Dallas Stars needed. He's the Dark Knight of NHL owners. [Defending Big D]

• I don't think Eric Francis likes Evgeni Kuznetsov. That's just the vibe I'm getting. I could be wrong. I don't know. [Canoe]

• "NHL officials seized the opportunity given them when a United Airlines 737 passed over Citizen's Park Bank during the opening festivities of Monday's Winter Classic, attempting to convince the 46,967 fans in attendance that flight 2734 to Fort Lauderdale was in fact the game's ceremonial flyover." [The Onion Sports]

• A quick look at the New Jersey Devils' attendance numbers so far this season. [In Lou We Trust]

Dwayne Roloson for Nikolai Khabibulin. Thoughts? Here's mine: if it's an old goaltender you're looking for, you can get 'em for nothing by scouting alumni games. [Kukla's Korner]

• The top 11 saves of 2011. [Backhand Shelf]

• The Canucks are 28th in the NHL in blocked shots, which is either a good thing or a bad thing, depending on how you look at it. [PITB]

• And finally, here's a parody of LMFAO's "Party Rock Anthem" title "Everyday I'm Scheifeling", which manages to do the unthinkable: convince me the guys from LMFAO are both great singers and great rappers:

Why I like the Sedin Twins, and why you don’t

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Why I like the Sedin Twins, and why you don’t

(Ed. Note: The following was written by a Canucks fan.)

I'm consistently amazed by the lengths people will go to dismiss Henrik and Daniel Sedin.

In the last two years, both have won an Art Ross Trophy and an MVP award, led the Vancouver Canucks to the Presidents' Trophy and taken them to a Stanley Cup Final. Now, for the third straight year, both are at the top of the NHL scoring race, and the possibility that they could finish 1 and 2 in points this season is very real.

And yet, to hear many hockey fans tell it, they're simply not in the same class as the players they outscore on an annual basis.

It's weird.

The reasons people give for discounting their superstardom are downright silly. The most common one, of course, is that they're sissy divers, a falsehood based on the fact that (a) they're European and a lot of North American hockey fans are really, really ethnocentric; and, (b) they don't act like power plays are something to accept begrudgingly.

Heck, they're so dedicated to their pursuit of the man advantage that they'll happily get speedbagged if it means they see power-play time. People used this as evidence of their weakness, but a willingness to take a punch for what you believe in doesn't seem all that sissy to me. But maybe that's just because I have a fear of gettin' punched.

Sure, they've embellished an infraction in their day, but to hear others tell it, they're the only players in the league that have ever done so. Truth is, every team has plenty of guys who make sure the refs notice when they've been interfered with, and the Sedins are no worse than most.

By the way, the Sedins' scoring rate increases with hits. They don't shy away from physical play in the slightest. That's a myth.

The other common exception, which I've heard from many, is that, far from being among the best players in the NHL, neither is even the best player on their team because Ryan Kesler plays a more complete game.

This is silly. While it's true that Kesler is a better defensive player, and probably a better emotional catalyst since the guy would literally cut off a finger to win, he doesn't have the raw offensive skill of the Sedins. Not even close. Few in the NHL do.

And maybe top-flight two-way players should indeed be more lauded than pure scorers, but you're only hearing that argument in regards to the Sedins. If you have to be flawless defensively as well as brilliant offensively to be considered an elite talent, then, well, a lot of elite players aren't elite.

And furthermore, as of this writing, only three players in the top 30 in NHL scoring had higher plus/minus ratings than they do. They backcheck just fine.

Truth is, the Sedins get a bad rep because people don't want to like them, and so they turn minor criticisms into major flaws. There are a number of reasons for that.

First, they're a completely unique package, primarily because they're a package. The great irony of the hockey world is that, while pundits will tell you hockey is the teamest of team games, when it comes time to bestow praise and accolades, everything suddenly becomes very individualistic. Considering the Sedins play a dualistic game, they're never going to get the respect they deserve. Both have won MVPs in consecutive years - Henrik the Hart in 2010 and Daniel the Pearson last June - but the argument against them each time they were nominated was that they play with one another, as though this disqualifies them from greatness.

Why I like the Sedin Twins, and why you don’tSecond, they're exceedingly weird. If the fact that they're creepy, identical twins didn't do it for you, then the bright orange, 1970s beards don't help. When you see a bearded ginger, you don't think: NHL superstar. You ask yourself why a man with red hair would grow more of it than he absolutely had to.

Third, the Sedins are the Goodnight, Moon of the NHL: brilliant, but sleep-inducing. They're a completely unique player type: unsexy, forgettable superstars.

In a league where streaking is sexy (unless you're this guy), they're consistent. While the rest of the league's top scorers will drift in and out of the top five all year based on their highs and lows, the Sedins will habitually inhabit the un-Icarian middle, simply generating their one to two goals a game like no big thing. They're the only guys for whom the point per game stat is essential, because 1.3 points is almost literally what you can expect from them on any given night.

The expected is boring. So are the other basic tenets of the Sedin game: teamwork, focus, passing, consistency, fundamentals. They're the John Stocktons of the NHL. (And if they could wear shorty-shorts, they probably would.)

Recently, we counted down the top 10 goals of 2011 here on PD, and the fact that there were no Sedin goals on the list was a travesty. That said, like the most recent Adam Sandler movie, it was an expected travesty: The Sedins make amazing things look kind of dull.

They're like positionally sound goaltenders. There's no need for acrobatics when you've got the angles and the positioning down to a science. (And how boring is science unless Mr. Wizard is teaching it?)

But that's what makes them so good. These guys are clutch players, but every time they score, it seems less like a clutch effort and more like the inevitable collection of their average 1.3 points per game. It's not just amazing: it's amazingly humdrum.

Take a look at these two goals from last year.

First, this one versus the Nashville Predators.

In about one second, the Sedins and Alex Burrows combine for a tic-tac-toe goal that features, in this order, a no-look bank pass into a blind backhand saucer chip pass into a mid-air one-timer. No one else in the NHL is scoring this goal. And it was hardly talked about.

Second, this one versus the San Jose Sharks.

It's a 1-on-1, until Daniel Sedin decides that, instead of going at his man, he'll cut straight across the blue line away from him. Meanwhile, Henrik Sedin dashes through the middle of the zone, and suddenly Daniel hits him with a perfect saucer pass to send him in alone. Then Henrik beats Antti Niemi with the classic Forsberg shootout move. How often have you seen this move done in-game?

And these might not even be the prettiest goals the Sedins scored last year.

OK, so I'm a fan of the Canucks, but more than that, I'm a fan of the Sedins, and you don't have to be the former to be the latter. These guys are once-in-a-lifetime talents.

Let me clarify that statement: They're not at the level of a Gretzky, Lemieux, or even a Crosby, but do you honestly expect that the NHL will yield another pair of identical twins that have more chemistry than a biography of Robert Boyle because they've never played apart in their lives? Seriously, once in a lifetime.

If you're smart, you'll appreciate them while they're here, because the Sedins won't be around forever, and guys like them may never come around again.

Puck Previews: Bruins visit Devils; Tortorella apologizes

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Here are your Puck Previews: Spotlighting the key games in NHL action, news and views as well as general frivolity. Make sure to stop back here for the nightly Three Stars when the games are finished.

Puck Previews: Bruins visit Devils; Tortorella apologizes

Preview

: Boston Bruins at New Jersey Devils, 7:30 p.m. ET. No Anton Volchenkov or Travis Zajac for the Devils as they sit with injuries. Zajac has some soreness in his ACL, which he had operated on over the summer. The Devils are 9-3-1 in their last 13 games and being five points behind the Bruins entering tonight, tonight's matchup can be looked at as a measuring stick. It'll be a tough task in next for New Jersey as they're scheduled to face Tim Thomas who's won four straight against the Devils.

Preview: Winnipeg Jets at Montreal Canadiens, 7:30 p.m. ET. If the Habs are going to make any ground as they try to move up the Eastern Conference standings, they need to begin by winning at Bell Centre. Montreal has an NHL-low five wins at home and welcome a Winnipeg team that is just as poor on the road with five wins away from MTS Centre. Now that (hopefully) the Randy Cunneyworth/language debate has cooled, Montreal can focus on their six of next seven games at home, while the Jets have surged of late winning 10 of their previous 14 games.

Preview: San Jose Sharks at Anaheim Ducks, 10 p.m. ET. Jason Blake returns to the Ducks' lineup after missing 34 skates with a wrist injury. Despite the 18-point difference in the standings between the teams, Anaheim has had San Jose's number this year winning all three matchups so far -- all one-goal affairs -- and going back to last season have won five in a row against the Sharks. The Ducks are still struggling under new head coach Bruce Boudreau and are losers of seven of their last eight. The natives are getting restless and trade talks have begun from the media, with the starting point being captain Ryan Getzlaf.

Preview: Minnesota Wild at Vancouver Canucks, 10 p.m. ET. The Wild enter this game with one win in 10 games, but their injury list is getting shorter and shorter. Devin Setoguchi and Casey Wellman are expected to return to the lineup as Josh Harding gets the nod in goal. This has the potential to be a trap game for the Canucks with their Stanley Cup rematch against the Boston Bruins on Saturday, but their not looking past the Wild, whom they beat 4-0 last month. Roberto Luongo will be in net tonight and according to the AP he hasn't allowed a goal in his last 135:23 against Minnesota and has posted and 8-0-1 record with a 1.66 goals-against average and three shutouts against the Wild since the 2008-09 season.

Check out previews and updated scores for all of today's games on the Y! Sports NHL scores and scheds page. For tonight's starting goalies, check out Left Wing Lock.

Evening Reading

Puck Previews: Bruins visit Devils; Tortorella apologizes

• The Missouri Mavericks of the CHL are allowing fans to vote on which jersey the team should wear for St. Patrick's Day on March 17. At the moment, No. 4 in plaid is your leader. [Mavericks] s/t Jason B.

New York Rangers head coach John Tortorella apologized today for his comments after the Winter Classic about the officiating in the third period, including the decision to award Danny Briere a penalty shot with 19.6 seconds remaining in the game. [Ranger Rants]

• Ildar Isangulov of Russia and Boone Jenner of Canada have been suspended one game for separate incidents in last night's World Junior semifinal. Isangulov laid a shoulder to the head of Jenner, who moments later speared the Russian forward on his way off the ice. [IIHF]

• In hopes of raising more than 20,000 British pounds for the charity Crimestoppers, an English man plans to run the 26.2 mile London Marathon in hockey gear. [Surrey Today] s/t Rhys Griffiths

• Here are your 2012 AHL All-Star Game rosters. No, Sean Avery did not make the cut. [AHL]

• Finally, episode 10 of Fake Henrik Zetterberg where our hero comes oh so close to, uh, scoring:

Puck Daddy Reader Comment of the Day:"John" on the Ovechkin spitting allegation:

"I was ready to believe this...then I watched the video. It doesn't seem like there is an opportunity to get a loogie in there, unless its delivered simultaneously with one of the shove/jabbing motions or whatever. The official is in there right away - seems bogus."

Bold Prediction: Anaheim's recent dominance of San Jose comes to an end as the Sharks shoot them down 4-1.

Reckless elbow on Backstrom earns Rene Bourque 5-game ban

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Calgary Flames forward Rene Bourque was barely out of the NHL supplementary discipline spotlight before he found himself in hot water again.

After delivering an elbow to the head of Nicklas Backstrom of the Washington Capitals on Tuesday night, the NHL handed down a 5-game suspension for Bourque.

Here is Brendan Shanahan's explanation:

From the NHL:

Calgary Flames forward Rene Bourque has been suspended for five games and will forfeit $203,252.05 in salary for delivering an elbow to the head of Washington Capitals forward  Nicklas Backstrom during NHL Game #563 in Washington on Tuesday, Jan. 3, the National Hockey League's Department of Player Safety announced today.

Bourque, who was suspended last month, is classified as a repeat offender under the terms of the Collective Bargaining Agreement. Accordingly, he forfeits his salary based on the number of games in the season (82), rather than the number of days (185). The money goes to the Players' Emergency Assistance Fund.

The incident occurred at 10:06 of the third period. A minor penalty for elbowing was assessed on the play.

Bourque will miss games Jan. 5 at Boston, Jan. 7 vs. Minnesota, Jan. 10 vs. New Jersey,  Jan. 12 vs. Anaheim and Jan. 14 vs. Los Angeles. He will be eligible to return Jan. 17 at San Jose.

Backstrom is currently day-to-day and it's not been revealed whether or not he suffered a concussion on the play.

What's worrisome here is according to Shanahan, Bourque explained that the elbow was "an instinctive reflex". It's one thing to lay a shoulder hit on Backstrom, late or not, but it's another to raise your elbow towards another player's head.

Bourque was given a 2-game ban last month for a reckless hit on Brent Seabrook of the Chicago Blackhawks. His elbow on Backstrom was just as reckless and unnecessary, and the 5-game suspension is hopefully enough of a message from the Department of Player Safety for Bourque that he'll change his approach.

John Tortorella fined $30K for Winter Classic conspiracy theory

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John Tortorella fined $30K for Winter Classic conspiracy theory

After many NHL games, coaches criticize referees in postgame comments without any recourse from the League.

But when that game is the 2012 Winter Classic, there's more scrutiny. When that criticism is theorizing about a conspiracy between the on-ice officials and the NBC to extend the game into overtime with favorable calls for the losing side … well, then the League really takes notice.

Even if his criticisms were valid and his accusation was intentional exaggeration, New York Rangers Coach John Tortorella was still fined $30,000 by the NHL on Wednesday for his post-Winter Classic conspiracy theory -- despite a rather robust apology.

In the press conference room at Citizens Bank Stadium in Philadelphia, after the Rangers' Winter Classic victory over the Philadelphia Flyers, Tortorella blasted the officiating in the third period with hyperbolic aplomb, wondering if referees Ian Walsh and Dennis LaRue were working in concert with NBC to orchestrate an overtime while calling their work in the game "disgusting."

It wasn't exactly a joke. There was no wink, no grin. But it wasn't exactly serious either. It was an attention-getting tactic to draw attention to injustice.

It was also directly linked to an earlier question given to Rangers goalie Henrik Lundqvist about the penalty shot the Flyers received late in the third period:

Q. Henrik, a lot of people who watched this game nationally don't watch a lot of hockey. You mentioned before you were surprised they called the penalty shot; do you think part of that might have been to add to the drama so people who don't watch this game will have something more to talk about it?

LUNDQVIST: Maybe … that's the only reason why he called it.

That led to this from Tortorella:

Q. Hank said that, especially the penalty shot, that they could have been made for the event.

TORTORELLA: "I'm not sure if NBC got together with the refs to turn this into an overtime game ..."

"It started with the non-call [when] Gabby was pitch-forked in the stomach, and then everything starts going against us. They're two good referees; I thought the game was refereed horribly. So I'm not sure what happened there. Maybe they wanted to get it to an overtime. I'm not sure if they have meetings about that or what. But we stood in there. They're good guys. But in that third period, it was disgusting."

On Wednesday, Tortorella was in full apology mode:

From that apology:

"Because I knew it was tongue in cheek in my mind, and the people that were there, at least, I thought they felt the same thing, no, I regret it but I don't think it was going to turn into something like this. But it bothers me that I'm using the word 'disgusting' with the two guys because I really thought they reffed a good game. I had frustrations at the end and that's what came out there.

"I've talked to everybody I can, including Paul Holmgren with the Flyers. That was a first-class operation, that Winter Classic and I screwed up with my mouth at the end and I regret and I apologized to the people all involved with that."

The apology, of course, was unnecessary. The officiating in the Winter Classic was sub-par in the third period. His "conspiracy theory" about NBC was for shock value and deadpan humor; his theorizing about the referees' officiating was sarcastic.

But criticism of officials and the League's broadcast partners on a grand stage like the Winter Classic just will not stand, so Torts is out $30K large.

(Wonder if Steve Yzerman even received a phone call when he said VERSUS criticized the Tampa Bay Lightning in their game against the Flyers because both are owned by Comcast?)

From the NHL:

"There is no acceptable explanation or excuse for commentary challenging the integrity of the League, its officials or its broadcast partners," said NHL Senior Executive Vice President of Hockey Operations Colin Campbell. "People can disagree with calls by officials on the ice, but even in instances of the utmost frustration there is no justification for speaking as inappropriately and irresponsibly as Mr. Tortorella did."

Yes, how could anyone possibly believe the officiating in the NHL was agenda driven or infected with favoritism?

Unless, of course, they've read Campbell's emails.

Blackhawks’ Dan Carcillo suspended 7 games for Gilbert hit

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It was a busy day at NHL HQ as after Calgary Flames forward Rene Bourque was given five games for elbowing Nicklas Backstrom of the Washington Capitals and New York Rangers Head Coach John Tortorella was fined $30,00o for his post-Winter Classic comments about the officiating in the third period.

To end the day, Chicago Blackhawks forward Dan Carcillo was given a 7-game suspension for his hit on Tom Gilbert of the Edmonton Oilers on Monday night.

Brendan Shanahan explains the decision:

From the NHL:

Chicago Blackhawks forward Daniel Carcillo has been suspended for seven games and will forfeit $66,158.54 in salary for boarding Edmonton Oilers defenseman Tom Gilbert during NHL Game #571 in Chicago on Monday, Jan. 2, the National Hockey League's Department of Player Safety announced today.

Carcillo, who was suspended on Nov. 28, 2011, is classified as a repeat offender under the terms of the Collective Bargaining Agreement. Accordingly, he forfeits his salary based on the number of games in the season (82), rather than the number of days (185). The money goes to the Players' Emergency Assistance Fund.

The incident occurred at 7:23 of the second period. A major penalty for boarding and a game misconduct were assessed on the play.

Carcillo will miss games Jan. 5 at Philadelphia, Jan. 6 vs. Colorado, Jan. 8 vs. Detroit, Jan. 10 vs. Columbus, Jan. 12 vs. Minnesota, Jan. 14 at Detroit and Jan. 15 vs. San Jose. He will be eligible to return Jan. 18 vs. Buffalo.

As the video explained, Carcillo was suspended back in October, one of the now-nine times he's been fined or banned in his career.

This suspension was expected to be a lengthy one after Carcillo waived his right to an in-person hearing -- typically meaning at least five games are coming.

Carcillo suffered a knee injury during the hit and it's currently unknown when he'll return to the Blackhawks. Couple that with Marcus Kruger's concussion and Head Coach Joel Quenneville will have some lineup maneuvering to do as the Blackhawks prepare for the Philadelphia Flyers on Thursday night.

Ducks GM puts ‘for sale’ signs on everyone but Selanne, Koivu

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Ducks GM puts ‘for sale’ signs on everyone but Selanne, KoivuMaybe it's a motivation technique. Maybe he really doesn't mean everyone save for two players are available.

Or, perhaps, Anaheim Ducks GM Bob Murray has actually placed nearly his entire roster on the auction block this season.

Helene Elliott of the LA Times spoke with Murray on Wednesday night ahead of the Ducks' game against the San Jose Sharks and gleaned the following via Twitter:

"Murray says he has two untouchables-- Teemu Selanne and Saku Koivu-- but anyone else is in play. Says he's not rebuilding and seeking draft picks. if he trades a core player, it would be for another core-type player."

The money Murray quote, via Elliott: "I still believe we have some core players. Now, whether we have to change a few core players, so be it. They're deciding who's staying and who's not staying at this point."

Murray labeled Selanne and Koivu untouchable because they both have no-movement clauses; in essence, they're the ones that decide if they're "touchable." According to Cap Geek, Lubomir Visnovsky has a full no-move clause until this summer, when it becomes modified; and Francois Beauchemin has a modified no-trade clause.

So maybe Jeff Miller gets his wish and Ryan Getzlaf gets dealt. Maybe the Bobby Ryan rumor mill gets cranking again for teams like the Buffalo Sabres. Maybe someone antes up a top three forward for reigning MVP Corey Perry. Maybe Brian Burke's already hit speed dial on his office line to see what else he can cherry-pick from his old franchise and trading partner.

The Ducks have virtually no shot at the playoffs. In a parity-filled league, there aren't a ton of sellers at this point in the season. But Anaheim, as signaled by their GM tonight, is certainly one of them.


Someone celebrated Lars Eller’s hat trick with a sex toy

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Have you ever wondered who would think, "Boy, I'd so much rather be the guy who picks up the dead duck thrown from the stands during a hockey game?" The answer, we imagine, is the guy who has to pick up the rubber phallus thrown on the ice in celebration of a hat trick.

Someone celebrated Lars Eller’s hat trick with a sex toy

According to Gerard Yee on Twitter, somebody at the Montreal Canadiens' 7-3 home victory over the Winnipeg Jets (a) brought a dildo to the game and (b) was compelled to throw it on the ice after Lars Eller tallied his third of four goals on the night. Huh, usually you see those things when you have trouble scoring …

Fans were confused at first, mistaking something red, stiff, immobile and deep in the zone for Hal Gill.

Soon after, Brian Gionta was then seen frantically fleeing the ice, screaming something about a sandworm from "Dune" attacking him. (Yes, that was a height joke. Moving on…)

Whether or not it was a sex toy doesn't really matter. They never said "Play It Again, Sam" in "Casablanca" either. Lars Eller is now irreversibly linked to a red pleasure pole landing on the ice during his 5-point night, as he no doubt found out when the hats and other items collected from his trick were presented to him after the game. I

t's nothing to be ashamed of; well, until the Photoshops start rolling in.

An impressive moment from the Canadiens fan base. But you have ways to go to catch the Great Swedish Dildo Shower of '08, friends.

s/t Geeyee17

Someone celebrated Lars Eller’s hat trick with a sex toy

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Have you ever wondered who would think, "Boy, I'd so much rather be the guy who picks up the dead duck thrown from the stands during a hockey game?" The answer, we imagine, is the guy who has to pick up the rubber phallus thrown on the ice in celebration of a hat trick.

According to Gerard Yee on Twitter, somebody at the Montreal Canadiens' 7-3 home victory over the Winnipeg Jets (a) brought a dildo to the game and (b) was compelled to throw it on the ice after Lars Eller tallied his third of four goals on the night. Huh, usually you see those things when you have trouble scoring …

Fans were confused at first, mistaking something red, stiff, immobile and deep in the zone for Hal Gill.

Soon after, Brian Gionta was then seen frantically fleeing the ice, screaming something about a sandworm from "Dune" attacking him. (Yes, that was a height joke. Moving on…)

Whether or not it was a sex toy doesn't really matter. They never said "Play It Again, Sam" in "Casablanca" either. Lars Eller is now irreversibly linked to a red pleasure pole landing on the ice during his 5-point night, as he no doubt found out when the hats and other items collected from his trick were presented to him after the game.

It's nothing to be ashamed of; well, until the Photoshops start rolling in.

An impressive moment from the Canadiens fan base. But you have ways to go to catch the Great Swedish Dildo Shower of '08, friends.

s/t Geeyee17

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Wednesday’s Three Stars: Eller scores four; Luongo blanks Wild again

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Wednesday’s Three Stars: Eller scores four; Luongo blanks Wild again

No. 1 Star: Lars Eller, Montreal Canadiens

In the first 51 minutes of Montreal's 7-3 win over the Winnipeg Jets, Eller doubled his season output of goals. With one goal in the opening period and three in the final frame, Eller's 4-goal night (he added an assist for five points) was the first by a Canadiens player since Jan Bulis (!) in 2006. To punctuate a special night, Eller's fourth came in creative fashion with this spin-o-rama penalty shot (his hat trick was celebrated by a unique item tossed to the ice):

No. 2 Star: Roberto Luongo, Vancouver Canucks

In his 700th NHL game, Luongo posted his 57th career shutout with 28 saves during a 3-0 blanking of the Minnesota Wild. Both of Luongo's shutouts this season have come against the Wild. The Sedins combined for four points and Alex Burrows scored his 15th of the year in the win that puts Vancouver No. 1 overall in the NHL with 53 points.

No. 3 Star: Patrice Bergeron, Boston Bruins

After allowing the first goal early, the Bruins stormed back and answered with six straight as they defeated the New Jersey Devils 6-1 to move to within a point of the New York Rangers atop the Eastern Conference standings. Bergeron scored his eighth and ninth goals of the year as the Bruins took control of the game in the second and third periods. David Krejci chipped in two points and Tim Thomas made 30 saves for his 15th win in 17 starts.

Honorable mention: Brad Winchester and Benn Ferriero gave the San Jose Sharks a 2-0 lead with goals 27 seconds apart in the second period and Joe Pavelski added his 16th in the third period during a 3-1 win over the Anaheim Ducks. Antti Niemi made 26 saves as the Sharks beat the Ducks for the first time in five games ... Cam Janssen was involved in another lengthy bout, this time with Shawn Thornton:

Did you know? Aleksandro Salei, the son of late former Anaheim defenseman Ruslan Salei, joined the Ducks on the ice before the game with fellow players from a junior hockey program in Aliso Viejo. Ruslan Salei was killed in September in the Lokomotiv Yaroslavl plane crash in Russia. (AP)

Dishonorable mention: Martin Brodeur was in net for all six Boston goals. It was the third time this season he's allowed more than five in a game ... Adam Larsson and Henrik Tallinder were each a minus-4 ... Ryan Getzlaf has not recorded a point in six games, the longest streak of his career ... Minnesota's loss is their 10th in 11 games.

Photo credit: AP

Wednesday’s Three Stars: Eller scores four; Luongo blanks Wild again

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No. 1 Star: Lars Eller, Montreal Canadiens

In the first 51 minutes of Montreal's 7-3 win over the Winnipeg Jets, Eller doubled his season output of goals. With one goal in the opening period and three in the final frame, Eller's 4-goal night (he added an assist for five points) was the first by a Canadiens player since Jan Bulis (!) in 2006. To punctuate a special night, Eller's fourth came in creative fashion with this spin-o-rama penalty shot (his hat trick was celebrated by a unique item tossed to the ice):

No. 2 Star: Roberto Luongo, Vancouver Canucks

In his 700th NHL game, Luongo posted his 57th career shutout with 28 saves during a 3-0 blanking of the Minnesota Wild. Both of Luongo's shutouts this season have come against the Wild. The Sedins combined for four points and Alex Burrows scored his 15th of the year in the win that puts Vancouver No. 1 overall in the NHL with 53 points.

No. 3 Star: Patrice Bergeron, Boston Bruins

After allowing the first goal early, the Bruins stormed back and answered with six straight as they defeated the New Jersey Devils 6-1 to move to within a point of the New York Rangers atop the Eastern Conference standings. Bergeron scored his eighth and ninth goals of the year as the Bruins took control of the game in the second and third periods. David Krejci chipped in two points and Tim Thomas made 30 saves for his 15th win in 17 starts.

Honorable mention: Brad Winchester and Benn Ferriero gave the San Jose Sharks a 2-0 lead with goals 27 seconds apart in the second period and Joe Pavelski added his 16th in the third period during a 3-1 win over the Anaheim Ducks. Antti Niemi made 26 saves as the Sharks beat the Ducks for the first time in five games ... Cam Janssen was involved in another lengthy bout, this time with Shawn Thornton:

Did you know? Aleksandro Salei, the son of late former Anaheim defenseman Ruslan Salei, joined the Ducks on the ice before the game with fellow players from a junior hockey program in Aliso Viejo. Ruslan Salei was killed in September in the Lokomotiv Yaroslavl plane crash in Russia. (AP)

Dishonorable mention: Martin Brodeur was in net for all six Boston goals. It was the third time this season he's allowed more than five in a game ... Adam Larsson and Henrik Tallinder were each a minus-4 ... Ryan Getzlaf has not recorded a point in six games, the longest streak of his career ... Minnesota's loss is their 10th in 11 games.

Photo credit: AP

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Uncertain future for ‘HBO 24/7: Road to NHL Winter Classic’

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Dave Harmon had worked on uncensored sports documentary programming for years. He knew what "HBO 24/7: The Road To The Winter Classic" was going to sound like. So before Season 1 aired, he cautioned unsuspecting hockey fans about the content.

"I told everyone that Boudreau was going to curse in a way that would make Rex Ryan blush," recalled Harmon, vice president of sports production and the senior producer for HBO Sports.

"While we don't usually talk about things that aren't on the air yet, it did prepare people that the show was going to be different."

It was different; hell, it was revolutionary. From the language to the candor to the cameras in places where fans and media can't go, "HBO 24/7" has presented two seasons of addictive, appointment television. The season finale of Season 2, featuring the New York Rangers and Philadelphia Flyers battling in the 2012 NHL Winter Classic, airs at 10 p.m. EST on Thursday night.

"One of the reasons it's successful is that it doesn't do what everyone else does. For hockey, we didn't even know we were going to be an hour. When we first started Penguins/Caps, we were thinking 35-40 minutes, maybe. We did what we felt was right for the show in the end," said Harmon.

"We thought going into this season that our challenges might be access," he said. "But both teams had a chance to watch the Penguins and Capitals. We thought they'd pick and choose what they'd do. Our biggest worry was them; but our worries are over. They gave us the access we wanted."

This season provided its own challenges, happy accidents and unforeseen drama. What next season will provide is a mystery — including whether there will be a third season.

To the weekly viewer, the main contrast between this season and last is that the Penguins and Capitals had a clearer narrative arc that carried through their series; the Rangers and Flyers episodes seem more "character driven" than having one plotline, beyond the preparation for the Winter Classic.

"Last year, with one team on a losing streak and one team on a winning streak, things become self-fulfilling. Alex Ovechkin is not going to go out and partying and having us follow him if they're on a losing streak," said Harmon.

This season, Harmon said the producers didn't have any preconceived notions about which stories and players would break out.

"When the Flyers win some and lose some, and some of that seems like it can be based on injuries, that becomes a story. But then you put a microphone in front of Mr. Universe …"

Ah, yes, Mr. Bryzgalov. The Flyers goaltender's "universe" speech in Episode 1, his comparing his dog to a "hot blonde" in Episode 2 and his "5 faces" speech in Episode 3 made him the most compelling, and quotable, player on the show.

"It was like magic. We didn't know we were going to be in a pregame meal and he was going to talk about his Siberian Husky," said Harmon.

Which is to say that Bryzgalov is unpredictable; which is a good thing for a show that's developed its share of familiar beats from season to season: The Christmas parties, the charity skates with kids, the Big Important Game in Episode 3 followed by the Winter Classic in Episode 4.

"We attempt, within every episode, to say we don't want to do the same thing," said Harmon. "However, if the series is always going to lead to the Winter Classic — I would love to do the Playoffs, but we're talking about what we have and not what we wish we had — then this is what the players did.

"They went to Christmas parties. They had New Years. Short of showing 60 minutes of the Winter Classic itself, it's still a reality series. We have to show what they did and not create something that wasn't there."

Which brings us to where this series is going once Season 2 is in the books. Could "24/7" shift its focus from the Winter Classic to another segment of the NHL season? "No idea," said Harmon. "There's a lot of things that have to happen. We're focused on this year."

Will there even be an "HBO 24/7" series with the NHL next season?

It's a sensitive subject for those involved in the production. The viewership numbers were down this season, at least on the night when the show premiered, yet the buzz is still palpable among sports fans.

But it's not about the ratings with HBO; in this case, it's about the leadership.

Former HBO Sports president Ross Greenburg was the guiding light for the network's sports reality programming. He's now set up at his own shop, working with the NHL in "24/7"-like series like "NHL 36" on NBC Sports Network.

Former Showtime executive Ken Hershman is the new head of HBO Sports, and nothing has been determined for a third season of "24/7". The Associated Press speculated that "he could decide to keep the show, and possibly expand it from its four-week run, or move in a different direction."

NHL COO John Collins was also non-committal for next season, although he clearly hopes to renew for a third season.

"We've been doing it on a year to year basis. They have a new management team coming in now," he told Nick Cotsonika of Yahoo! Sports. "But I think it's been great for us, I think, and I think it's been great for them, too. So hopefully we'll be able to figure it out because we'd like to go forward."

If Hershman and the new management team at HBO bring back "24/7" and keep it focused on the Winter Classic, it will likely feature the Detroit Red Wings next season against an undetermined opponent.

But here's an interesting revelation: While fans have often weighed the "24/7" aspect heavily into the Winter Classic invitation process, Harmon says HBO doesn't have final cut on this decision.

"I think I'm safe to say that we have no input," he said. "The NHL is in charge of the Winter Classic, which is a bigger thing than '24/7'. They tell us and then we make our decisions based on the teams playing in the Classic."

After 2013's game, the Winter Classic could be headed to Washington, DC … which would mean a return engagement for the Washington Capitals in Season 4 of "24/7". Would Harmon be down for that?

"We have done 'Hard Knocks' with the Dallas Cowboys twice. Jerry Jones was the same, but a lot of other things change in sports. If we had the Washington Capitals back, we wouldn't be complaining. If it's different, it's different. If they're the same, then it's 'how did they change?'"

As Season 2 wraps up, Harmon said his favorite moment came courtesy of Peter Laviolette's fiery pregame speech at the start of Episode 3.

"I feel like I knew what John Tortorella was like. But when we started Episode 3 with Laviolette in the locker room … my field producers said 'we gotta use this!' When I got into the edit room, even after it was built up, it was still unbelievable," he said.

"It was a guy who had completely forgotten the cameras were there."

It was raw, it was real, it was unexpected and it was insightful. It was everything Dave Harmon and his battalion of producers, cameramen and editors strive to bring to viewers each week; it was everything that keeps the viewers coming back.

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