Tag Archive: San Jose Sharks


PHILADELPHIA (AP)—The Philadelphia Flyers have signed defenseman Braydon Coburn to a contract extension and acquired defenseman Andrej Meszaros from Tampa Bay.

Flyers general manager Paul Holmgren announced the trade and Coburn’s two-year contract extension Thursday.

Coburn tallied five goals and 14 assists last year for the Flyers, while Meszaros had six goals and 11 assists with the Lightning.

The Flyers gave up a second-round pick in the 2012 draft for Meszaros, who has 33 points in two NHL seasons. Holmgren says Meszaros is durable and can play in all situations.

Philadelphia also announced the signings of veteran defenseman Sean O’Donnell, who appeared in 78 games with the Los Angeles Kings last season, to a one-year contract, and veteran forward Jody Shelley, who split the last season between the San Jose Sharks and the New York Rangers, to a three-year deal.

SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP)—The San Jose Sharks signed two more of their potential free agents Saturday before they hit the open market, agreeing to one-year deals with forward Scott Nichol and defenseman Niclas Wallin.

General manager Doug Wilson wanted to lock up both players before they were eligible to become unrestricted free agents on July 1. The Sharks signed star forwards Patrick Marleau and Joe Pavelski to four-year deals earlier in the week. The team would still like to sign forward Manny Malhotra before he can become a free agent next week.

The Sharks have decided to let one key free agent leave. Wilson announced earlier in the week that the team would not offer longtime goaltender Evgeni Nabokov a contract.
Nichol quickly became a fan favorite in his one season in San Jose, playing a physical, gritty game that the Sharks had been lacking.

He set career highs in points (19), assists (15) and games played (79) last season and finished first in the NHL by winning 60.6 percent of his faceoffs. He was also 12th in the League with 226 hits.

“We knew when we brought Scott in last season that he was ultra-competitive,” Wilson said. “Not only did he meet that expectation, but he also brought a very businesslike mentality to the rink each night, stepping up as a leader and an important centerman for us.”

Nichol, 35, had previously played with Nashville, Chicago, Calgary and Buffalo in his 10-year career.

Wallin was acquired just before the Olympic break in a trade from Carolina to bolster the blue line for the postseason. Wallin sustained a lower body injury late in the regular season and was severely limited in the playoffs.

He played just one game in each of the first two rounds before playing all four games in the Western Conference finals against Chicago. The Blackhawks swept the series and went on to win the Stanley Cup.

With defenseman Rob Blake announcing his retirement earlier this month, the Sharks wanted to keep Wallin to make sure they had another physical defenseman next season.

“Niclas is a physical veteran presence and will help solidify our blue line,” Wilson said. “We were proud of the way he battled through a tough injury during the playoffs and are looking forward to having him at full health.”

Wallin, 35, had two assists in 23 regular season games with the Sharks and didn’t score in the postseason. He helped Carolina win the Stanley Cup in 2006.

San Jose also re-signed minor league center Andrew Desjardins to a one-year deal. Desjardins, 23, set career highs in goals (19) and assists (27) while appearing in 80 games for Worcester in the American Hockey League.

DENVER (AP)—After hitting the jackpot with two high picks in the draft last June, the Colorado Avalanche feel the pressure to replicate that this summer.

Hardly easy.

Those two players they selected weren’t your typical teenagers.

From now on, every Colorado draft pick will be measured against Matt Duchene (third overall) and Ryan O’Reilly (No. 33).
Hardly fair.

The performances Colorado received last season from Duchene and O’Reilly were far from the standard. The talented twosome became a crucial component in the team’s turnaround, lifting the organization back into the playoffs a year after finishing in the basement.

“That instant success tells us we’re on the right path,” said Avalanche director of scouting Rick Pracey, whose team has seven total picks—including the 17th overall—during the two-day draft that begins Friday night. “But I think the hockey fan base is knowledgeable enough to realize it’s more of a wait and see thing.”

Wait and see didn’t really apply to these two.

Duchene and O’Reilly made the team out of camp as the Avalanche became the first NHL squad to boast two 18-year-olds in the season opener since the Winnipeg Jets suited up Shane Doan and Jason Doig in 1995.

The youngsters held their ground quite nicely, too, the ever-elusive Duchene leading all NHL rookies with 55 points and O’Reilly contributing in less glamorous areas such as faceoffs and blocked shots.

And to think these two were almost sent to their major-junior squads for one more year of maturing.

Instead, Duchene moved into captain Adam Foote’s basement to help advance his hockey education while O’Reilly took up residence with veteran Darcy Tucker.

With the duo’s rapid rise, expectations have gone up.

“There is pressure on us,” Pracey said of uncovering that next draft gem. “But I think it’s more that there is pressure for us to find a player than it is that plays next year.”

Going into this summer’s draft, the Avalanche aren’t really targeting a certain position.

Rather, they’re taking a similar approach as last time—scouring for the best player available. That’s how O’Reilly wound up in Colorado.

The team had him pegged as a top-15 prospect. So when O’Reilly began to tumble down the board, the Avalanche attempted to move up to snare him.

A trade partner couldn’t be found, yet O’Reilly still fell to Colorado.

“We’re confident that depending on how the board shakes out, we’re looking at a group of players in our area that we’d be happy to get our hands on,” Pracey said. “But I would like to hit it out (of the park) every year.”

Colorado has actually had a string of bountiful drafts in recent years.

In fact, the 2010 playoff roster against the veteran-laden San Jose Sharks contained 16 players who were drafted by the franchise. That included another first-rounder in Chris Stewart (2006) and second-rounders such as T.J. Galiardi (2007), Paul Stastny (2005) and Ryan Stoa (2005).

Buoyed by a group of fledglings, no one really expected Colorado to accomplish much of anything last season.

Clearly, the prognosticators concluded, another last-place finish awaited.

The young players developed an us-against-the-hockey-world mindset, serving them well all season long. Colorado regrouped from a late-season slide to make the postseason for a 12th time in 14 seasons in Denver.

In the playoffs, Colorado had 12 different members make their debut in a loss to the Sharks, including coach Joe Sacco, who was hired soon after last season’s meltdown and groomed this core of kids into a cohesive unit.

He relied heavily on the leadership of Foote, who recently signed on for one more season of mentoring despite turning 39 in July.

“Having a young group like we did last year come together and compete at a high level was very special,” Foote recently said. “We’re looking to carry that momentum into next season.”

Another draft class like last season certainly would help. But striking gold twice is a difficult proposition.

“We are obviously very pleased with the way things worked out last year,” Pracey said. “But I think it’s important to keep in mind that having two 18-year-olds play in the National Hockey League certainly isn’t the norm. So we have to remind ourselves that this is a process.

“The best way to stay the course is to stay with the plan and not get ahead of ourselves—keep in mind what has been successful in the past.”

NEW YORK (AP)—The Pittsburgh Penguins will open a new arena, and the Chicago Blackhawks will unfurl a long-awaited championship banner in the first week of the 2010-11 NHL season.

The league said Tuesday the Blackhawks will mark their first Stanley Cup title since 1961 on Oct. 9 when they host Detroit, a fellow Original Six member.

Pittsburgh, the 2009 Cup winner, will play its first game in the CONSOL Energy Center two nights earlier on NHL opening night against defending Eastern Conference champion Philadelphia. The Penguins had played at Mellon Arena since joining the NHL in 1967.

On New Year’s Day, the Penguins host the Winter Classic against Alex Ovechkin and the Washington Capitals at Heinz Field—home of the NFL’s Steelers.

For the fourth consecutive season, the NHL also will begin with games in Europe—this time with six teams. The Carolina Hurricanes will play two games against the Minnesota Wild in Helsinki, Finland; the Columbus Blue Jackets and San Jose Sharks will have a two-game set at Stockholm, Sweden; and the Boston Bruins and Phoenix Coyotes will play a pair in Prague, Czech Republic.

Those six games will be spread over the first four days of the season.

Once those clubs return to North America they will all play on Oct. 30 when 28 of the NHL’s 30 teams will be in action on the busiest day of the season. Only Vancouver and Edmonton will be off.

The Blackhawks will host the Philadelphia Flyers on Jan. 23 in the lone rematch of this year’s Stanley Cup finals. Just one week later, the NHL All-Star game will return after a one-year break because of the Vancouver Olympics. The Carolina Hurricanes will host the 58th edition of the midseason exhibition for the first time.

The regular season will end on April 10, and the Stanley Cup playoffs will begin three days later.

LOS ANGELES (AP)—The Los Angeles Kings signed general manager Dean Lombardi and coach Terry Murray to two-year contract extensions through the 2012-13 season on Wednesday, solidifying their leadership after the club’s first playoff appearance in eight years.

The Kings also gave two-year extensions to assistant general manager Ron Hextall and hockey operations vice president Jeff Solomon, senior director of communications Jeff Moeller said.

Los Angeles also hired John Stevens as an assistant coach, signing the former Philadelphia Flyers head coach to a three-year contract to replace Mark Hardy.

Lombardi, Murray, Hextall and Solomon each had one year remaining on their contracts, but the Kings’ owners clearly are pleased with the franchise’s direction. Los Angeles made the playoffs this spring for the first time since 2002, tying the franchise record with 46 victories while finishing sixth in the Western Conference. The Kings lost a six-game series to the Vancouver Canucks.

Lombardi, the San Jose Sharks’ GM for seven seasons, took over a struggling franchise in April 2006 and steadily built it into a contender with enviable top-line talent and a solid farm system. He drafted defenseman Drew Doughty, already a Norris Trophy finalist at 20, and acquired veteran Ryan Smyth, who played a major role in the Kings’ playoff return last season.

He also hired Murray, who will turn 60 next month, to develop his young roster in 2008. The former head coach in Washington, Philadelphia and Florida is 80-64-20 in two seasons with the Kings, leading them to 101 points last season— third-most in franchise history.

Stevens spent parts of the past four seasons running the Flyers, going 120-109-34 and taking Philadelphia from the NHL’s worst record in 2006-07 to the Eastern Conference finals in 2007-08. He was fired last Dec. 4 after a slow start and replaced by Peter Laviolette, who led Philadelphia to the Stanley Cup finals.

Stevens played for the AHL’s Philadelphia Phantoms during the 1996-97 season while Murray was the Flyers’ head coach.

With their leadership structure secure, the Kings can focus on hosting the NHL draft for the first time this weekend. Los Angeles also could be a player in the free-agent market, with fans clamoring for the club to take a run at impending free agents Ilya Kovalchuk or Patrick Marleau.

SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP)—San Jose Sharks captain Rob Blake is retiring from the NHL after a 20-year career as one of the league’s top defensemen.

Blake will make the retirement official at a news conference on Friday, a person with knowledge of his plans told The Associated Press on Monday. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the announcement has not been made. Comcast SportsNet Bay Area first reported Blake’s retirement plans.

Blake’s decision is not a surprise as he hinted at it after the Sharks were swept in the Western Conference finals by the Chicago Blackhawks last month. He said at the time he had decided his future plans but wanted to wait a few weeks before announcing it.
His departure is the first of what could be many key changes on the Sharks before next season. Leading goal scorer Patrick Marleau and starting goaltender Evgeni Nabokov are both eligible to become unrestricted free agents on July 1.

Blake, 40, was one of the league’s best defensemen over his career with Los Angeles, Colorado and San Jose, making seven All-Star teams and winning the Norris Trophy as the NHL’s top defenseman for Los Angeles in 1998.

He is 10th on the career list with 240 goals as a defenseman, went to the Stanley Cup finals in 1993 with Los Angeles, won it all in 2001 with Colorado, won a gold medal for Canada the following year and helped the Sharks post the best regular-season record in the Western Conference in each of his two seasons in San Jose.

But he was unable to lead the Sharks to a long-awaited trip to the Stanley Cup finals. San Jose was eliminated in the first round by Anaheim in Blake’s first season in 2009. San Jose coach Todd McLellan made Blake the captain this year, and Blake helped lead the team to the No. 1 seed and a trip to the conference finals.

Teaming with Marc-Edouard Vlasic, Blake showed he had plenty left at the end of his career. He had seven goals and 23 assists in 70 games and was one of the team’s most reliable defenders. He added a goal and an assist in the playoffs.

Blake, who played college hockey at Bowling Green, was a fourth-round pick by Los Angeles in 1988. He came up late in the 1989-90 season after finishing his college career. His first goal as an NHL player came in the playoffs against Calgary.

Blake was a key cog for a Kings team led by Wayne Gretzky. He had two goals and two assists to help the Kings eliminate Toronto in the Western Conference finals in 1993 to go to the Stanley Cup round. Los Angeles lost that finals series in five games to Montreal.

Blake replaced Gretzky as captain in Los Angeles in 1996 and was traded in February 2001 to Colorado. He had six goals and 13 assists that postseason for the Avalanche, leading them past New Jersey in seven games for the Stanley Cup championship.

He returned to Los Angeles in 2006 as a free agent and then left to join the Sharks in 2008.

Blake finished his career with 537 assists and 777 points. His 136 power-play goals are the third most by an NHL defenseman, trailing only Hockey Hall of Famers Ray Bourque (173) and Al MacInnis (166).

NHL Western Conference Finals Capsule

A look at the NHL Western Conference finals, which begins Sunday (with regular season and playoff records):

WESTERN CONFERENCE

^No. 1 SAN JOSE SHARKS (51-20-11) vs. No. 2 CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS (52-22-8) ^How they got here: San Jose beat No. 8 Colorado 4-2 and No. 5 Detroit 4-1. Chicago beat No. 7 Nashville 4-2 and No. 3 Vancouver 4-2. ^2009-10 series record: Chicago 3-1 (two wins in overtime). ^Playoff History: First Meeting.

SAN JOSE: Sharks’ only other appearance in Western Conference finals was six-game loss to Calgary in 2004. … Got past Detroit in second round with four one-goal victories. … Joe Pavelski, who leads Sharks with nine goals and 15 points in playoffs, had team-high three goals in season series with Blackhawks. He tied Dany Heatley for club lead with five points against Chicago. … Joe Thornton took big step toward shedding label of poor postseason performer by leading San Jose with career-best eight points in series—including three goals. He is on a six-game point streak and has scored a goal in three of previous four games. … G Evgeni Nabokov played in all four regular-season games against Chicago, allowing 14 goals and posting 3.78 goals-against average. … Sharks 40-year-old defenseman Rob Blake has 26 goals and 73 points in 142 career NHL playoff games. He has a goal and assist in these playoffs. … GM Doug Wilson played 14 seasons with Blackhawks. He is Chicago’s highest-scoring defenseman—fifth overall—and fifth in games played with the club. After moving to San Jose, Wilson became Sharks’ first captain. … No Sharks have matched up against any Blackhawks players in playoffs.
CHICAGO: Blackhawks haven’t been to Stanley Cup finals since being swept by Pittsburgh in 1992. They have gotten that far only three times since the NHL expanded in 1967, and haven’t won the title since 1961. … Captain Jonathan Toews has nine-game point streak, posting six goals and 13 assists in the run. Has NHL-best 20 playoff points. … Blackhawks outscored Sharks 17-11 in regular-season series. D Dustin Keith led with seven points, all coming on assists. Troy Brouwer had three goals and five points—including goal and assist in overtime games. … No Blackhawks have matched up against any Sharks players in the playoffs. Starting goalie Antti Niemi has never faced the Sharks in any game. Cristobal Huet had 2.73 GAA against Sharks in the four regular-season games. He has played only one period in the postseason. … D Brian Campbell, who recently returned from injury, is in the conference finals for fourth time in five seasons. He briefly played for the Sharks after being acquired at trade deadline in 2008. … Forward Marian Hossa is in conference finals for third straight year, all with different teams. Hossa reached the Stanley Cup finals in 2008 with Pittsburgh and 2009 with Detroit, losing both times. … Blackhawks are 5-1 on the road in playoffs, with 26-14 scoring edge.

OUTLOOK: Sharks finally swim away from disappointment to reach finals

CHICAGO (AP)—The Chicago Blackhawks are one win away from reaching the Stanley Cup finals for the first time since 1992, after a 3-2 overtime win over the San Jose Sharks on Friday gave them a 3-0 lead in the NHL Western Conference finals.

Dustin Byfuglien scored his seventh goal of this postseason 12:24 into overtime Friday, meaning the Blackhawks can finish the sweep and make the finals with a victory Sunday.

Byfuglien went straight down the middle and took a nice pass from Dave Bolland, who was behind the net, to beat Evgeni Nabokov and set off a deafening roar from the crowd of 22,311.

Bolland scored on a breakaway to put Chicago ahead 2-1 in the third period, but San Jose’s Patrick Marleau answered with a rebound goal with 4:23 left in regulation to tie it and force overtime.

Marleau also scored in the second period on a power play, giving him four goals in two games. Patrick Sharp had a man-advantage goal for Chicago.

Antti Niemi had 44 saves for the Blackhawks, stopping five shots in overtime, including one on Devin Setoguchi from the right circle. Nabokov finished with 35 saves and had blocked Patrick Kane earlier in overtime.

San Jose coach Todd McLellan shifted his lines to try to shake up the Sharks’ offense that managed just three goals in the first two games at home. Setoguchi and Logan Couture were paired with star Joe Thornton to start the game, replacing Dany Heatley and Marleau.

Toews’ two assists gave him a point in 12 straight playoff games, setting a club record he had shared with Hall of Famer Stan Mikita, who had an 11-game streak in 1962. Toews has 25 points in this year’s playoffs.

CHICAGO (AP)—The Chicago Blackhawks are one win away from reaching the Stanley Cup finals for the first time since 1992, after a 3-2 overtime win over the San Jose Sharks on Friday gave them a 3-0 lead in the NHL Western Conference finals.

Dustin Byfuglien scored his seventh goal of this postseason 12:24 into overtime Friday, meaning the Blackhawks can finish the sweep and make the finals with a victory Sunday.

Byfuglien went straight down the middle and took a nice pass from Dave Bolland, who was behind the net, to beat Evgeni Nabokov and set off a deafening roar from the crowd of 22,311.

Bolland scored on a breakaway to put Chicago ahead 2-1 in the third period, but San Jose’s Patrick Marleau answered with a rebound goal with 4:23 left in regulation to tie it and force overtime.

Marleau also scored in the second period on a power play, giving him four goals in two games. Patrick Sharp had a man-advantage goal for Chicago.

Antti Niemi had 44 saves for the Blackhawks, stopping five shots in overtime, including one on Devin Setoguchi from the right circle. Nabokov finished with 35 saves and had blocked Patrick Kane earlier in overtime.

San Jose coach Todd McLellan shifted his lines to try to shake up the Sharks’ offense that managed just three goals in the first two games at home. Setoguchi and Logan Couture were paired with star Joe Thornton to start the game, replacing Dany Heatley and Marleau.

Toews’ two assists gave him a point in 12 straight playoff games, setting a club record he had shared with Hall of Famer Stan Mikita, who had an 11-game streak in 1962. Toews has 25 points in this year’s playoffs.

CHICAGO (AP)—Big Buff, as they call Dustin Byfuglien, scored the biggest goal of his career.

He sent the United Center into pandemonium and moved the Chicago Blackhawks to within one victory of the Stanley Cup finals for the first time in 18 years.
Dave Bolland’s nifty pass from behind the net found the 257-pound Byfuglien in stride as he skated hard into the slot Friday night. When the puck hit the net off Byfuglien’s stick in overtime, Chicago had a 3-2 win over the San Jose Sharks and a 3-0 series lead in the Western Conference finals.

Two assists from Jonathan Toews, a breakaway goal by Bolland in the third period and 44 saves from Antti Niemi put the Blackhawks on the cusp of their first appearance in the finals since 1992. They can wrap up the series in a sweep Sunday at home.

“I mean, you’re not going to get too high on yourself or too full of yourself like that. You got to do the right things and play the right way if you’re going to have success,” said Toews, the team’s 22-year-old captain, who has a point in 12 straight playoff games.

“We’ve done that. There’s nothing about us that says we’re unbeatable. As soon as we get away from playing our game, you know, we’re a mediocre, average team. We got to go out there, work hard, stick to our guns, stick to how we learned to play this year. That way we’re going to be tough to beat.”

And right now they Blackhawks are just that, as the talented Sharks—the regular season champions in the West—have discovered.

“The reality is we’re down 3-0. Happened a week ago with two good teams playing and Philadelphia found a way to come back, so there’s something to draw in there,” San Jose coach Todd McLellan said.

“Plus the fact that we’ve been in this series I think for every minute. That’s got to leave us feeling good. But we know we’re in a hole and we’ve got to dig our way out. “

Byfuglien has carved out a reputation for parking his big body in front of the net but this time he used his speed and good hands to score 12:24 into overtime.

“It’s great, something I’ll definitely remember,” Byfuglien said. “Bolland made a good play and just laid it out in the slot, and all I had to do was finish.”

Chicago would like to finish off the Sharks on Sunday and avoid a trip back to the West Coast.

“With San Jose, they’re such a good team, we definitely can’t, you know, let off at all. We got to keep going right to the final buzzer,” Byfuglien said.

“We want to feel like that’s the most important game we play all year. That’s the motivation and incentive. We know we have to be better than tonight,” Chicago coach Joel Quenneville said.

Bolland scored on a breakaway to put Chicago ahead 2-1 in the third period, but Patrick Marleau answered with a rebound goal with 4:23 left in regulation to tie it and force overtime.

Marleau also scored in the second period on a power play, giving him four goals in two games. Patrick Sharp had a man-advantage goal for the Blackhawks.

“We’ve just got to stick with it and stay with it longer and harder, I don’t know how many missed shots we had,” Marleau said. “If we can hit the net that much more, the better our chances.”

Bolland, whose defense was a key in the first two games, picked up a loose puck at center ice after Toews blocked a shot. He skated ahead, and at the last second maneuvered in to beat Nabokov with just under seven minutes remaining in regulation to give Chicago a 2-1 lead.

But the lead didn’t last long. About 2 1/2 minutes later, Marleau scored on a rebound with 4:23 to play.

Just as a two-man advantage was about to expire, Marleau scored his first goal on a rebound shot from the slot. The power-play goal came about four minutes into the second period to put the Sharks ahead 1-0.

The Sharks were 1 for 6 on the power play, including 0 for 3 in the third period.

“We’re running up against a good goaltender. We’ve got to keep going and persevere,” San Jose’s Joe Thornton said.

“We’ve just got to stay calm. We’re playing good hockey, but for whatever reason we’re down 3-0.”

An apparent early first-period goal by San Jose’s Joe Pavelski was disallowed following a video review.

As Pavelski battled Duncan Keith for a rebound in front of the net during a power play less than two minutes in, the puck went into the net. But after the review, officials ruled that Pavelski directed the puck in with his skate and waved it off.

NOTES: Toews’ two assists gave him a point in 12 straight playoff games, breaking a club record he had shared with Hall of Famer Stan Mikita, who had an 11-game streak in 1962. Toews has 25 points in this year’s playoffs.

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