Game 40: Rangers at Hurricanes

Happy New Years, Rangers fans! I hope 2010 is a healthy, happy and prosperous year for you and yours. But, there is one last matter to take care of, and that is a hockey game. Rangers are coming off a bad loss. One of the worst. It can only go up from here, right?

OPPONENT: Hurricanes

RECORD: 10-22-7

LEADING SCORER: Eric Staal, 8-18-26

GOALIE: Cam Ward, 3.17 GAA and a .900 save percentage.

RANGERS LINES:

After last night, I have no idea. But, here’s my guess:

Avery-Dubinsky-Gaborik

Callahan-Drury-Higgins

Kotalik-Anisimov-Brashear

Voros-Brashear-Boyle

Same D-pairs. Hank in net. Again, that was just a guess, really.

STATE OF THE RANGERS: Not good. After 4 straight wins and an OT loss, the Rangers played one of their worst games yesterday, losing 6-0 to the Flyers. There was no effort at all. Hank was pulled (I didn’t agree with the move. Those goals were not his fault). D was absolutely awful. Will there be changes? Well, nothing so far. We can only hope that the last game of the decade will spark the Rangers. This team is not good enough to give bad efforts. They need to give great efforts all the time.

CRAZY THOUGHT: Aaron Voros plays and scores.

ON THE iPOD: Sarah, by Ray LaMontagne

FINAL PREDICTION: I just can’t see the Rangers winning, especially with that awful effort yesterday. Final Score: ‘Canes 3, Rangers 1

Hope everyone enjoys their New Year’s festivities. If you drink, make sure you get someone sober to drive/walk you home. It’s only right. Be safe, have fun. LET’S GO RANGERS!!! And Happy New Year!!!

Quote of the Night

This quote comes courtesy of my friend, who I was at the game with:

“We should get a refund for this game. If the Rangers don’t show up, there’s no reason why we should pay.”

Yup, that sums up last night.

Game 39: Rangers vs Flyers

Well, this is the first Prospal-less game the Rangers have played. How will they respond? We’ll find out tonight at 7. Game is on MSG2.

OPPONENT: Flyers

RECORD: 18-18-2

LEADING SCORER: Mike Richards, 16-15-31

GOALIE: I’m assuming it will be Michael Leighton, with Brian Boucher starting the Winter Classic. Leighton has a 2.15 GAA and a .930 save percentage.. Just for kicks, Boucher has a 2.66 GAA and a .900 save percentage.

RANGERS LINES:

I’m assuming that Chris Drury will play. If not, Aaron Voros will step in.

Higgins-Dubinsky-Gaborik

Lisin-Anisimov-Kotalik

Avery-Drury-Callahan

Boyle-Christensen-Brashear

D-pairs are the same. Hank in net.

If Drury is out, Christensen will center Avery and Callahan, and Voros will be the 4th line wing.

STATE OF THE RANGERS: All in all, pretty good. Sure, the Prospal injury really hurts. He’s been one of their best players. But, the Rangers have gotten 9 out of the last 10 points. Lundqvist has been absolutely terrific. Callahan has picked up his game. So has Drury. So has Dubinsky. So things are beginning to look up. The Rangers need to close out the year strong, and a win against Philly (who may be looking ahead to the Winter Classic) would be great.

CRAZY THOUGHT: Higgins scores

ON THE iPOD: Roses, by Outkast

FINAL PREDICTION: Rangers 3, Flyers 1

So, watch, discuss, have fun. LET’S GO RANGERS!

Drury Maybe, Christensen In

As per Andrew Gross, Erik Christensen will be in tonight for the injured Vinny Prospal. Chris Higgins will be on the top line with Brandon Dubinsky and Marian Gaborik. Hopefully it will help him get some bounces to go his way.

Chris Drury may or may not play tonight, so Aaron Voros will partake in the warmups, and will play if Drury cannot go tonight.

Jagr Makes Czech Team, Staal Left Off Team Canada

In another unsurprising Olympic roster move, ex-Ranger and current Avengard Omsk forward Jaromir Jagr has been named to the Czech national team for the 2010 Olympics in Vancouver. The roster is filled with NHLers and Czech elite league players. You can check the full roster at Puck Central.

In current Ranger news, Marc Staal was left off the Canadian roster. This is relatively unsurprising, I didn’t really expect him to make the roster to begin with. There are too many older, more experienced players to choose from. You can bet that Staal will be on the 2014 roster though.

Where Sather Went Right: The Rebuild

In the past week, I wrote three pieces on where GM Glen Sather went wrong during his stay in New York, post-lockout. I received a few emails and some comments about being biased and not pointing out where Sather went right, so let’s consider the next three posts to be spin-offs: Where Sather went right. It is obvious that Slats’ weakness is reading markets and finding comparable market value for free agents, and sometimes this overshadows his other moves that turned the Rangers from laughing stock into playoff contender.

Before the lockout, the Rangers were stockpiled with terrible contracts and a barren farm system. This was attributable to ownership of the Rangers forcing Slats to sign and trade for high priced, over the hill free agents. As the 2004 trade deadline approached, Sather usurped power from James Dolan, and started making his moves. The 2004 fire sale will be widely remembered for the trade of Brian Leetch. What is overshadowed is the Rangers had eight picks in the first two rounds, and stockpiled on some decent prospects from these trades. The keepers from this draft? Second-round pick Brandon Dubinsky and fourth-round pick Ryan Callahan. The jury is still out on a few other picks (Dane Byers, Lauri Korpikoski / Enver Lisin, Roman Psurny).

Another aspect of the 2004 draft that cannot be overlooked is the selection of Al Montoya sixth overall. At the time, the Rangers had a revolving door of goalies that just couldn’t get the job done. Dan Blackburn was the one with the most promise, but the Rangers couldn’t bank on him becoming an elite goaltender. Montoya fell to the Rangers at #6 overall, and the Rangers had to take him. Although Montoya wound up not only being a bust, but being relatively useless with the emergence of Henrik Lundqvist, the Rangers needed to make this selection.

Following the fire sale and the 2004 draft, the Rangers started their selection of defensemen in the first round for three drafts in the next four years. From these picks came Marc Staal, Michael Del Zotto, and Bobby Sanguinetti. Two are regulars on the blue line and will be with the Rangers for years to come. The jury is still out on Sanguinetti, who has tremendous upside and is still just 21 years old.

The 2005 draft also saw Marc-Andre Cliche taken in the second round. For those who have short memories, Cliche was the main piece sent to the Kings for Sean Avery. The 2006 draft gave the Rangers Artem Anisimov.

Jumping ahead to the 2008 draft, this is where the Rangers really started to stock up on high end prospects. Following the Del Zotto selection, the Rangers took Derek Stepan and Evgeny Grachev in the second and third rounds, respectively. That’s one hell of a haul for the 2008 draft.

The 2007 draft was one that will be met with tragedy, as Rangers first round pick Alexei Cherepanov died suddenly at just 19 years old. The Rangers would receive a compensatory second-round pick in the 2009 draft. In that 2009 draft, the Rangers took Chris Kreider, Ethan Werek and Ryan Bourque in the first three rounds.

Retaining draft picks was the biggest part of rebuilding the Rangers, but was not the only part. Another huge success the Rangers have had in the past few years is signing undrafted free agents. The most notable is Dan Girardi, who is now a staple on the Rangers defense. You can’t overlook the signings of Matt Gilroy, Ilkka Heikkinen, Sam Klassen, or Tysen Dowzak. Gilroy and Heikkinen have spent time with the Rangers, to mixed results, but are young and will have time to adjust to the speed of the NHL. Klassen is playing fantastic shut down defensive hockey in Canadian Juniors, and Dowzak is a leader of his juniors team that went to the Memorial Cup finals last year.

One final aspect of the rebuild is the collection of prospects and picks via trades. The 2004 fire sale was the most notable, as Sather stockpiled picks and prospects, which included Blair Betts, Josef Balej, Jarkko Immonen, and Maxim Kondratiev. Betts would be the only prospect to stay with the Rangers for an extended period, but the latter three were the high end prospects that the Rangers needed to start the rebuild. The key with these trades is that the Rangers were picking up high ceiling players and game changers.

Sather would also make trades for Chad Johnson, Alex Bourret (giving up nothing in the process) and Ryan McDonagh. Bourret didn’t work out, but McDonagh looks to be the real deal, and will hopefully fill that hole of physical defenseman on the Rangers blue line for years to come. Johnson provides some depth in net, and hopefully a trade chip.

The key to a rebuild is building from the net out. The Rangers had their piece in net in Lundqvist, and have built a very solid, very young core on defense that includes Staal, Girardi, Del Zotto, Sanguinetti, McDonagh, Gilroy and Heikkinen. Not all of these players will remain with the Rangers, but defensive prospect depth can be used as bait to fill other holes. The most impressive part of this is that the Rangers have managed to stay competitive, mostly due to Lundqvist and Jaromir Jagr, throughout the rebuild.

Bear in mind the Rangers are still in a rebuild. Players like McDonagh, Stepan, Werek, Kreider and Bourque need time in the AHL before they will be ready to make the NHL leap. They will also need some time in the NHL to adjust. If all works out perfectly, the Rangers should have a young, Cup contending team by the 2012-2013 season. Of course that is a very, very big IF.

Slats has done an excellent job in rebuilding the Rangers farm system from barren to the #3 system in the league, as per Hockey’s Future. Whether you like him or not, that’s an impressive feat.

Rangers Prospects Dominate, USA 3-0

The USA U20 World Junior Team, sporting Rangers prospects Chris Kreider, Derek Stepan, and Ryan Bourque, absolutely dominated Latvia last night, winning 12-1. The three Rangers prospects combined for eight points in the rout. Stepan, captain of Team USA, chipped in two goals and two assists, Kreider had a hat trick, and Bourque added an assist.

It is great to see that Stepan is not only dominating play, but the team captain as well. This pick may very well be one of the greatest steals of the 2008 draft. Who else came from the 2008 draft? Michael Del Zotto. I say management did a good job thus far with that draft.

When the Rangers selected Kreider, it was met with mixed reaction. There was no denying the skill, but Kreider hadn’t played with tough competition at that point. Now, with Kreider scoring at the World Junior level, some of those doubters (including myself) have been silenced for now.

Gaborik Named to Slovakian Olympic Team

In another surprising move, Ranger forward Marian Gaborik has been named to Team Slovakia for the 2010 Olympics. Joining him on the Slovak national team will be Marian Hossa, Zdeno Chara, and former Ranger great Marcel Hossa.

Schneider Placed On Waivers

Dave mentioned that Mathieu Schneider was being shopped. Well, he was placed on waivers today. Schneider is not the physical defenseman the Rangers need. But, he’s a good puck mover, and a much better option for the point than Kotalik on the Power Play. It’s worth taking a look at. In addition, the Predators placed Dave Scatchard on waivers. With the Prospal injury, Scatchard might be a nice alternative. He’s 6-3, 210. Go to the net, maybe he can score some goals.

Garrioch: Higgins/Kotalik on the Block

According the Bruce “Malkin to the Kings” Garrioch, the Rangers are actively trying to move underachieving forwards Christopher Higgins and Ales Kotalik.

NY RANGERS: New York has been trying to move potential UFA W Chris Higgins, who only has four goals and six assists in 36 games this season. The Rangers don’t have any complaints about his effort, but he’s just not scoring. He is making $2.25 million (all terms US) this season. The club is also trying to move RW Ales Kotalik, who has been a healthy scratch for four straight games.

“All these guys can be had pretty easily,” said a league executive. “But there’s a reason they’re available: They make too much money and aren’t playing well.”

The bottom portion of the quote says it all. The Rangers are in a bit of a hole when it comes to Kotalik, as he still has two years left of that awful deal. I believe now is the time to say I told you so.

Higgins is the more likely to be dealt, as he is a UFA at the end of the year, and it’s very likely that he finds his scoring touch with a change of scenery. The effort is there, he’s just very unlucky right now. Considering the timing of the Olympic roster freeze and the trade deadline, you may see more deals made prior to the Olympic break than normal.