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NHL

Not to Be Unfair to Cam Ward...

Not to be unfair to Carolina Hurricanes goalie Cam Ward, but any goalie tonight would’ve stopped 37 of 38 shots against the Rangers tonight.

I think the Shot Clock Man has a bad angle of the ice. At one point, a puck was passed parallel to the goal line. He took his stick, reached out, and pushed it towards the blue line. I took a glance at the shot clock and it went from “11″ to “12″.

Brandon Dubinsky rifled a shot – absolutely blasted this puck – that was caught by Ward. The only hitch? It was going high if Ward didn’t touch it. He actually had to move out of net to catch it. Shot clock increase.

I’m not saying most of those 38 shots never actually were shots. In fact, most of them were. However, how many really tested Ward? Three? Four? The Rangers had a couple of good chances, but at least 29 of those shots were crappy, low-angle, easily-saved shots.

The Rangers do that; they have been for years. They make goalies look amazing. Remember when Rick DiPietro made over 50 saves one day in March ‘07 and everyone said how incredible he was? Guess what? Most of those shots were right to his chest – they would’ve hit the Gordon’s Fisherman right in the head.

Tonight, the Rangers must’ve seen the logo on the Ward’s jersey as a bulls-eye. Because they kept aiming for it.

NHL

The Greatest Text Message I've Ever Received

October 5, 2006 was a pretty big night in my life. It was a hectic time – my wife and I had just been married for five months and were getting ready to move into a new apartment – but that night stands out. My mom came through with a quality birthday present (a brand new X-Box 360) and my brother came over to our box-filled place to watch Game 2 of the Mets-Dodgers NLDS, which the Mets won. At that moment, all was well.

However, unbeknownst to me, all was *NOT* well. Because Fox airs their baseball games ridiculously late even on weeknights, I was forced to miss the start of the Islanders’ first game of the season. Since it was in Phoenix, I was able to join the game in progress. When I turned the game on, my jaw dropped. 5-1 Coyotes in the second. Phoenix would go on to win 6-3. Saddest of all, in the first game of his 15-year contract, Rick DiPietro was pulled after two periods.

I thought that was the end of it until the next day, when I received a text from Zach, the esteemed Rangers writer of this great site. His paraphrased text:

“6 goals per game… for 82 games… for 15 years… equals 7380 goals… that’s DP!”

Zach’s number-crunching made me cringe, but made me laugh even more. Unfortunately, Zach made one erroneous assumption – that DiPietro would even come close to playing in every game of his contract.

Welcome back, DP.

NHL

The Return of the Franchise

To say that Rick DiPietro was the most important New York Islander in the 2000s would be an extreme understatement. Outside of possibly Charles Wang, nobody has been as central a figure to the Islanders – and their current state – as DiPietro. Here’s a look at the influence Rick DiPietro has had on the Islanders organization over the past decade.

- 2000: Islanders GM Mike Milbury trades Roberto Luongo, clearing the path for the Islanders to draft Rick DiPietro. Luongo goes on to become a star, as do Marian Gaborik and Dany Heatley, both of whom the Islanders passed on in favor of DiPietro. In exchange for Luongo, the Isles acquire Mark Parrish, who would become the team’s most consistent forward for the first half of the decade and a key part of the 2001-02 team.

– 2001-02: DiPietro leads the Bridgeport Sound Tigers to the Calder Cup Final. While the Sound Tigers don’t win the championship, future Islanders Trent Hunter, Eric Godard and Raffi Torres gain valuable big-game experience.

– 2003: DiPietro is called up to the NHL for good. This forces the Islanders to trade starting goalie Chris Osgood to St. Louis for prospect Justin Papineau. Papineau goes on to become a typical Islanders prospect – a “can’t miss” guy who misses horribly.

– 2004: DiPietro takes over the starting load for the Islanders, who are eliminated in the first round of the playoffs by Tampa Bay. DiPietro earns his first playoff win, which is a shutout. DiPietro later appears in one game for the U.S. team in the World Cup of Hockey.

– 2006: DiPietro is named to the U.S. Olympic team. After the team loses its first game, DiPietro is named starter, a position he holds for all but one game until the U.S. is eliminated from the tournament.

– 2006: Having gone on record stating he would like to finish his career on Long Island, DiPietro signs a 15-year deal with the Islanders. The deal ensures that DiPietro’s prime years will be spent with the Islanders at well below market value, while his later years will cost the Islanders well above market value. Word is that new general manager Garth Snow and DiPietro’s agent are barred from the negotiations so that Charles Wang can negotiate with DiPietro one-on-one.

– 2007: DiPietro suffers a concussion while charging for a puck well before it reaches the goal crease. The hot play of Wade Dubielewicz allows the Islanders to make a miracle run to the playoffs, where DiPietro returns and goes 1-3 in four games.

– 2007-08: DiPietro has the best three-month stretch of his career, resulting in a selection to the 2008 All-Star Game. Due to an injury to Martin Brodeur, DiPietro starts the game. He lets in one goal over the entirety of All-Star Weekend and is considered for MVP honors. He also “f***s up” his hip during the Skills Competition.

– 2008: As DiPietro leaves the team to mourn the loss of his grandmother, the Islanders win the first game of a home-and-home against the Rangers, thanks in large part to the efforts of Wade Dubielewicz. DiPietro returns for the second game, but coach Ted Nolan starts Dubielewicz instead of DiPietro. The Islanders lose the game as well as the next five, knocking the Islanders out of playoff contention and, if you believe what you hear, costing Nolan his job.

– 2008-09: DiPietro has knee surgery over the summer. Both the Islanders and DiPietro claim a clean bill of health has been given. However, DiPietro only plays five games all season, forcing the Islanders to juggle the craptastic duo of Joey MacDonald and Yann Danis for the duration of the season, which for all intents and purposes is over by Christmas.

– 2009: Concern about DiPietro’s short-term and long-term health force the Islanders to sign both Dwayne Roloson and Martin Biron. Many fans are convinced that DiPietro will never return to the NHL. Rumors persist that Biron’s contract includes a clause stating that Biron is to be traded if/when DiPietro returns.

– 2009-10: Roloson’s play keeps the Islanders within breathing distance of the playoffs as 2009 ends. DiPietro plays rehab games for the Bridgeport Sound Tigers and is called up to the Islanders roster in January. DiPietro joins the team on a West Coast trip, where he is to play his first game in over twelve months.

>So yeah… it’s been a busy decade.

As Rick DiPietro returns to his place as Islanders goalie – not to mention the face of the franchise – it will be interesting to see how people will react. Many fans have completely turned on DiPietro, to the extent that they don’t even want him back.

In the eyes of this writer, this attitude towards DiPietro is juvenile at best and reprehensible at worst. In all of struggles Rick DiPietro has gone through over the past four years, the person who is least to blame is Rick DiPietro. He has worked harder than any of us would have just to get back to the Islanders, and for what? To play in front of a half-full arena of people who hate him? Please.

When Rick DiPietro signed his 15-year contract, there wasn’t a John Tavares to get people excited about the team. The Islanders were coming off a non-playoff year in which the only two players who even qualified as decent were Miroslav Satan and Alexei Yashin. The signing came after the Islanders were also exposed as the laughingstock of the NHL after the hiring and subsequent firing of Neil Smith. Furthermore, the year after DiPietro signed his contract, Islanders fans watched Jason Blake, Ryan Smyth, Tom Poti and Viktor Kozlov sign with other teams on the first day of free agency. Instead of following the money like most players, DiPietro pledged loyalty to an Islanders team that, quite honestly, had no hope whatsoever for the future.

What is the reward for Rick DiPietro’s loyalty? An angry fanbase who doesn’t want him back? I would certainly hope not. I understand that many Islanders fans are skeptical that DiPietro can stay healthy over the long haul. But DiPietro is as much an Islander as anyone who has ever worn the uniform, and we should be proud that he would fight so hard just to wear the Islanders crest again. Remember, this is a team that nobody wanted to be associated with us… and yet, Rick DiPietro chose us at a time when he could have commanded more money on the open market. It’s time we, as Islanders fans, repay DiPietro for his commitment to the Islanders and Long Island in general.

It works out well that DiPietro will make his debut on the road. This will give Islanders fans a chance to see DiPietro in action from a distance and evaluate his performance in an unemotional setting. However, when Rick DiPietro makes his return to Coliseum ice, anything less than a standing ovation would be a disappointment.

NHL

Islanders Sign Martin Biron

Those who were worried about the Islanders’ goaltending situation can now begin worrying even more about the health of Rick DiPietro. The Islanders signed former Philadelphia Flyer and Buffalo Sabres goaltender Martin Biron to a one-year contract today. Terms of the deal were not disclosed; they also don’t really matter. I’ll assume it’s a one-way contract worth at least the $2.5 million the Islanders are already paying Dwayne Roloson.

So here we are. The Islanders are paying Rick DiPietro $4.5 million this year. They’re paying Roloson $2.5 million this year. They’re now paying Biron upwards of $2 million a year. NHL teams only carry two goaltenders. In other words, there will be a high-priced goaltender in the Islanders’ press box for 82 nights next year. Unless, of course, Rick DiPietro is more injured than the team is letting on.

None of this should be constituted as a knock on Biron. He was considered the heir apparent to Dominik Hasek in Buffalo and played well until Ryan Miller emerged after the lockout. Biron then headed to Philadelphia, where he was the key figure in the Flyers’ 2008 run to the conference finals. Because the Flyers organization is apparently required to have a chaotic goaltending situation, Biron wasn’t offered a new contract, though he was linked with teams such as Detroit and San Jose as a sort of “super back-up”.

When I texted the news to Zach a few moments ago, his response was, “Wow, I guess DP is really done.” This will be the sentiment all across Islanders country. Frankly, there’s no reason to think anything else, just as there’s no reason to sign two #1 goalies if your current starter is healthy and capable. While we all welcome Martin Biron to the New York Islanders organization, we can’t help but distractedly wonder what’s really going on with Rick DiPietro.

EDIT: As per Darren Dreger, the deal is worth $1.4 million. Not a bad price. Still doesn’t make sense. Clearly, the 2009-10 season doesn’t end with all three of these guys on the Island.

NHL

At The Risk Of Sounding Over Dramatic

Today is the most important day in New York Islanders history.

Why? Because its the day where the Islanders could take a major step toward becoming relevant in the NHL. It’s also the day they could fall on their face and essentially starting packing their bags for Kansas City.

With all the hoopla of the NBA draft this week (and the general fact that only a precious few care about hockey and even less about the Islanders), the NHL Draft has been lost in the shuffle. Oh yeah, its tonight if you didn’t catch on.

Here’s the situation: Their are two players in the draft that are both predicted to be future all-stars. John Tavares and Victor Hedman. Tavares is a center man who is being touted as the next Sidney Crosby. He’s a dynamic scorer with all the skills to be the next great player in this league. He has, in addition to Crosby, drawn comparisons to Wayne Gretzky. In fact, Tavares broke Gretzky’s OHL record for goals in a season . This guy not only has the chance to be great. He has the chance to be….. wait for it…. legendary. (Kudos to anyone who got that reference)

Although Headman is arguably just as good as Tavares, I am not of the belief that you build a hockey team around a defensemen. You win with scoring and goaltending. Defensemen are great, but if you have a chance to get a “league changing” scorer like Tavares, you don’ pass that up.

Tavares is the type of player who can build around for 15 years. The Isles thought that they had that with Rick Dipietro (ironically also a number 1 pick), but now are seeing that building a team against an oft-injured, super inconsistant goaltender might not be the best idea in the world. Charles Wang and company can not afford to let the disaster that has been and might continue to be the Rick Dipietro contract affect their decision tonight. Money being the issue is no excuse. Although it may be hard to swing, they have to come up with a way to pay Tavares, At this point, I think one could make an argument that finding a way to pay Tavares is more important then anything having to do with Rick Dipietro. This issue is bigger then money. It’s about a team that has one more chance to save itself from, well, itself. That chance is tonight.

That chance is John Tavares.

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