Thursday, May 27, 2010

Magic Top Celtics 113-92, Extend Series to Six

The Orlando Magic took care of business for the second consecutive game winning 113-92. The victory extends the Eastern Conference Finals to a game-six this Friday in Boston. The Celtics will try and close out a series they led three games to nothing heading into game-four.


The past two contests the Magic have received great production from Dwight Howard, Jameer Nelson, and J.J. Redick. Rashard Lewis is beginning to look more comfortable after suffering through a viral infection earlier in the series.

Only four teams of the top professional sports leagues (NHL, NBA, NFL, MLB) have ever battled back from a 3-0 series deficit. Boston fans should be worried because they recently saw the Bruins lose grip of a 3-0 series lead to the Philadelphia Flyers in the NHL Eastern Conference Finals.

The city of Boston was also on the winning side of being down three games to none. The Red Sox came back to beat the New York Yankees in the 2004 AL championship series.


To add insult to injury Glen Davis suffered a concussion after being struck indecently by a Dwight Howard elbow early in the third quarter. Just before Davis was injured, Celtic starting center Kendrick Perkins was given two technical fouls that were both questionable. If the technical fouls are not overturned by the league, Perkins will have to sit out game-six.

The momentum has moved in favor of the Orlando Magic. Be sure to tune this Friday, May 28, 2010 at 8:30 P.M. to catch more of this great playoff action.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

The Orlando Magic Try to Hold off Elimination

Recent news trickling out of Orlando is small forward Rashard Lewis has had a viral infection and could be to blame for his recent struggles this series against the Boston Celtics. He is expected to start game-five in Orlando but had said he’s not sure how it will affect his play.

"Overall it effects you," he said after Orlando's shootaround Wednesday. "I've been throwing up. I haven't been at full strength. I've been feeling weak, my legs been feeling weak. I find myself getting tired very fast in the first quarter. You know, when you can't hold food down you have no energy in your body to go out there and perform."

Magic point guard Jameer Nelson and company finally decided to show up in game-four on Monday night winning the contest 96-92 in OT. Orlando staved off elimination making the series 3-1 in favor of the Celtics. Nelson finished with 23 points and made two key three pointers in overtime to help the magic to their first victory of the series. Magic center Dwight Howard had a double-double with 36 points and 17 rebounds but went a dreadful 6-14 from the charity stripe.


The Magic will have to start game-five with the high pace tempo they previously displayed in game-four. The Boston Celtics and have made the Magic’s three-point shooters uncomfortable this whole series.

Both teams’ benches will play a major role in how this game will be decided tonight. If J.J. Redick and Mickael Pietrus play well off the bench the Magic they will be in position to win. However, if Tony Allen and Glen Davis play well for the Celtics off the bench it could be the final home game at the Amway Arena for the Orlando Magic and fans.

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Leighton blanks Canadiens again as Flyers take 3-1 lead

Michael Leighton doesn't have time to reflect on his latest shutout. He is focused on a much bigger objective now that the Philadelphia Flyers are one win from the Stanley Cup Finals.

Much like his team, Leighton bounced back from his worst performance this postseason. He stopped all 17 shots he faced in a 3-0 win over the Montreal Canadiens in Game 4 of the Eastern Conference finals on Saturday.

For Leighton, the journeyman who was claimed by the Flyers on waivers in December, it was his third shutout in this series. He is 5-1 since taking over after Brian Boucher was hurt in the second round.


The Flyers, who have won seven of eight since falling behind Boston 3-0 in the previous round, lead the Canadiens 3-1 and can advance to the finals for the first time since 1997 with a win at home in Game 5 on Monday.

"I'm not really concerned about shutouts right now, I'm concerned about winning," Leighton said. "That's not really on my mind. If we would've won 5-1, I would have been just as happy."

The smiles were back on the Flyers' faces as they bounced back from a 5-1 loss in Montreal on Thursday. They delivered on a vow to channel their frustrations and disappointment into one of their most dominant defensive outings of the playoffs.
"I can tell you that we didn't play a very good game last game, and it was a kick in the teeth," coach Peter Laviolette said. "Our guys responded with a better effort."

Laviolette's understated response didn't reflect how dominating the Flyers were, particularly in the second period when they outshot the Canadiens 13-1. Philadelphia grabbed the lead when Claude Giroux and Ville Leino scored on breakaway goals nine minutes apart. Giroux then sealed the win with an empty-netter.

"We've been a team that's been able to recover from tough defeats like that all season long," defenseman Chris Pronger said. "A quick look in the mirror and understand what you need to do, and we were all able to rally together and play well as a team."

Now the question is whether the eighth-seeded Canadiens can engineer another comeback from a 3-1 series deficit to get to the finals for the first time since 1993. Montreal dug out of such a hole in the first round and knocked out Presidents' Trophy-winning Washington.

"Confident? I mean, it's a familiar feeling for us," leading scorer Mike Cammalleri said. "We seem to play our best hockey in this situation. Here we go again."

They'll have to play much better because the Flyers beat them in most puck battles and flustered Montreal. That prevented the Canadiens from generating many rushes through the neutral zone.

"We just didn't execute. We got impatient and got away from doing that," forward Brian Gionta said. "I think the second period is where we got away from our game. We tried pressing a little too hard and that's when you get away from your game plan."

The second period proved to be the difference.

Giroux opened the scoring 5:41 into it by streaking past defender Josh Gorges at the left circle, driving to the net, and lifting a shot to beat goalie Jaroslav Halak on the short side. Gorges was caught flat-footed and slowed because he was having trouble with his skate. A piece of equipment hung off it.

Leino made it 2-0 by sneaking in behind the Canadiens' defense on the transition. Flyers defenseman Chris Pronger broke up a play at his blue line and hit Leino on the fly up the left wing, while Canadiens defenseman P.K. Subban was caught up ice. Leino cruised in, faked going wide, and then slipped the puck just inside the near post.

The Canadiens mustered nothing. Their only shot came 13:34 into the frame on Maxim Lapierre's snap shot from the left boards, which Leighton blocked.

The Canadiens' one shot in the second period matched a playoff franchise low done twice before, most recently in a 5-2 win over Boston in April 1994. The Pittsburgh Penguins were the last team to do it, during their Game 7 win over Detroit in last year's Stanley Cup Finals, according to STATS LLC.

"I thought we had to be better as far as our execution," Cammalleri said. "I don't know exactly what the reason is for it but our execution wasn't there in the second period."

Leighton had a relatively easy day after allowing five goals on 38 shots on Thursday. He opened the series by stopping 58 shots in 6-0 and 3-0 wins at Philadelphia. He became the 13th NHL goalie to have three shutouts in one series, and the first since Toronto's Ed Belfour and Tampa Bay's Nikolai Khabibulin did it in the first round of the 2004 postseason.

Leighton's best string of saves came during a scramble with 2:25 left. After stopping Marc-Andre Bergeron's hard shot from the right circle, Leighton kicked out his left pad to foil Lapierre, who had two chances to stuff in the rebound. Travis Moen also got off a shot, but a sprawling Leighton somehow prevented the puck from crossing the line.

"For quite some time now this team has always answered a challenge, and they've always answered a bell," Laviolette said. "But, again, before we leave this rink we need to dismiss it, get rid of it, and start focusing and getting ready because there's just too much at stake."

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Caps and Backstrom Agree to 10-Yr Deal

First Alex Ovechkin, now Nicklas Backstrom. The Washington Capitals have their two best players locked into big money contracts for a decade.

So, who buys lunch?

"Maybe we'll have to do rock, paper, scissors," said Backstrom with a smile.
The 22-year-old Swede signed a 10-year, $67 million deal Monday, a major investment in a player who has rapidly developed into one of the best centers in the NHL. He and two-time league MVP Ovechkin have developed a partnership that accounted for 210 points this season, making them the top-scoring teammate duo in the league.
"We now have two of maybe the top five players in the world playing on our team for many years to come," coach Bruce Boudreau said.


Ovechkin is about to enter the third year of a $124 million, 13-year deal. Knowing that Ovechkin isn't going anywhere played a part in Backstrom's desire to commit to Washington for the long haul.

"I was thinking that I wanted to play with him," Backstrom said. "Hopefully he'll want to play with me, too. I wanted 10 years; I wanted long term. I think it's good that we're together."

The No. 4 overall pick in the 2006 draft, Backstrom set career highs with 33 goals and 68 assists this season, and his 101 points ranked fourth in the league. He has yet to miss a game over three NHL seasons.

Backstrom's contract pays him $6 million for the next four seasons, with the amount gradually increasing to $8 million by decade's end. He had been scheduled to become a restricted free agent in July.

General manager George McPhee expressed no qualms about having so much time and money tied up in just two players.

"The risks are that the player doesn't meet expectation with the contract, but I never for one minute with Alex Ovechkin or Nicklas Backstrom think that they won't compete all the way through," McPhee said. "It sends the right message to our fans and to this franchise that we have outstanding young players who are ready to commit for the rest of their career. You win championships with these kinds of players."
Not yet, though.

The Capitals flamed out in the first round of the playoffs this year despite having the NHL's best record. Asked if the contract puts more pressure on him to perform, Backstrom said it's no different than the pressure to win the Stanley Cup.
"I don't think it is going to be anything different," Backstrom said. "We want to win the Cup."

Backstrom wasn't the only Swede putting his name to a contract Monday. The Capitals also signed 2009 first-round draft pick Marcus Johansson to a three-year entry level deal for $2.7 million. McPhee said the 19-year-old center will be ready to compete for a roster spot next season, with Backstrom as a mentor.
"Our two Vikings," McPhee said. "It's always good to have Vikings."

Monday, May 10, 2010

Shaft Report: Hockey Players Face Battle Off The Ice

Hockey is arguably one of the most physical professional sports. Hockey players are constantly getting body checked, slammed into boards, falling to the ice, slapped by a stick, hit by a dense, speeding puck or getting punched during a fight. If that isn’t bad enough, hockey players take part in one of the longest regular seasons of any sport, effectively taking on harsher pain for a longer amount of time throughout the year. Risk of injury couldn’t be clearer as you all too commonly see hockey players missing their front two teeth. With all of the injuries that can occur, one of the most dangerous is a traumatic brain injury (TBI). A TBI is a silent injury that can cause harm to the mind and body of an individual. An injury to the head or brain can alter someone’s life and can even require long-term rehabilitation and care from a skilled nursing facility. These injuries are often far too common in the sport of hockey it could affect the players performance and the course of the teams which is a big concern for the online betting fan; plus if not properly treated can permanently leave a hockey player's life challenging than the game they play.



TBI is an injury that Philadelphia Flyers player Ian Laperriere knows all too well. In game 5 of an NHL playoff game with the New Jersey Devils, Laperriere took a slap shot to the face that immediately caused him to bleed excessively from the wound above his eye and lose sight. Laperriere was diagnosed with a brain contusion after having a MRI a few days later. While Laperriere may have originally thought that losing sight in one of his eyes was the worst of the two injuries, in reality the bigger concern could wind up being the long-term effects of the brain injury.



Concussions have been dismissed as minor injuries because the physical nature of most sports causes them to occur regularly, but, frequently occurring or not, they are still head injuries where the brain is forced to move violently within the skull and the way it functions could change permanently. When the brain moves in such a manner, it can bruise, bleed, and even tear, which can cause irreversible damage to the victim. For a sport like hockey, this type of injury is very common and unfortunately at times ignored. Many hockey players don't take into account the possible effects of the injury and because it might not seem like a serious problem exists at first, they keep on skating as if nothing occurred. Their unawareness of the injury makes the it so much more dangerous because a mild brain injury can turn into a life threatening injury in a very short period of time without seeking immediate medical treatment.

Studies by the National Academy of Neuropsychology's Sports Concussion Symposium in New York have shown that since 1997, 759 NHL players have been diagnosed with a concussion. Broken down, that averages out to 76 players per season and 31 concussions per 1,000 games of hockey. That is far too frequent of an occurrence for such a serious injury. It's a frightening statistic that should send up a red flag to hockey officials that actions need to be taken to further prevent this type of injury from occurring.

The best, and sometimes only, treatment for TBI is prevention. For the National Hockey League new rules are being considered that preserve the game but also help protect the players. Rule changes concerning blindside hits, rink size (which effects players space from each other and their proximity to walls), and stronger helmet requirements all have been considered to help curb TBI and its effects. This demonstrates that the NHL is aware of the seriousness of the injury and is taking proactive steps to help prevent it from happening.

Hockey is one of the most popular sports in North America and has millions of people participating in it every year. Unfortunately, the sport comes with the risk of a TBI. With the right awareness of the injury and the necessary precautions in place, the game should be able to continue with players excited to lace up their skates and enjoy it.

Author Bio:
Chelsea Travers is an outreach representative forCareMeridian, a subacute care facility located throughout the Western United States for patients suffering from traumatic brain injury, spinal cord injury or medical complexities, such as neuromuscular or congenital anomalies.

Saturday, May 8, 2010

"The Promise" Tim Tebow's Legacy

To fully appreciate the significance of former University of Florida’s quarterback Tim Tebow speech on September 27, 2008 significant background knowledge must be presented prior to evaluating “The Promise.” The 2007 Heisman Trophy winner and Denver Broncos 2010 first round pick was in the midst of his junior year at the University of Florida, and at the time, the Florida Gators were 3-0 and ranked #4 in the college football polls.



With hopes of a second National Championship in three years and the first undefeated season in school history, the Gators went up against the Mississippi Rebels a lowly unranked opponent with a 1-2 record and were thought to be overmatched by the Gators size, speed, and playmaking ability.

The Rebels went on to shock the Gator Nation that day with a 31-30 upset victory, capped by a three-turnover performance from the Gators offense, which led to ten easy points for the Rebels. The most memorable moment for most fans was that Mississippi was able to stop Tim Tebow on fourth and one on his patented quarterback draw that has been so effective for him throughout his college career.

Tebow then made “The Promise” and four months later, the Florida Gators won the National Title despite the heartbreaking loss to Mississippi.



The theories throughout this paper will touch on invention, inartistic proof, ethos, pathos, and logos. Tim Tebow displayed all these abilities in his emotional speech that lasted just a little over two minutes. He does not deny the fact that they lost the game and should have won by saying, “to the fans and everybody of Gator Nation, I’m sorry. Extremely Sorry,”

This display of invention on behalf of Tebow would be the stopping point or stasis. Not only does he disagree with the fact that they had lost, but he also feels so proudly about the University of Florida and their fans. That is why Tebow was ashamed of himself for the nature of how he lost the game. He could have easily blamed his teammates or coaches for losing but Tebow decided to shoulder the blame and come back the rest of the season like a man on a mission.

He fought back tears as he continued in his speech and showed his humanity and the actuality that football was more than a game to him, it was life.



Inartisitic proof is provided throughout the whole football game such as statistics. Tebow cannot dispute the score in his speech because everyone knows it cannot be changed after the game has been played. Tebow easily constructs a view of himself as a leader when he said, “you will never see another player push his team as hard as I will push everybody the rest of the season.”

He uses ethos in this quote because the audience judged not only what he said, but also how emotional, influential, and sincere he was while constructing his speech on the podium.
The great philosopher Aristotle once said, “It is necessary not only to look to the argument, that it may be demonstrative and persuasive but also [for the speaker] to construct a view of himself as a certain kind of person.”

I find it virtually impossible to think after Tebow said he would push his team as hard as himself, that he is not viewed as being persuasive and demonstrative much like Aristotle said.

Many look at Tebow as a Godly figure. They view him as this because it is one thing to say a speech and try to rally his teammates, but it is another thing to deliver on a promise and win the National Championship.

Three qualities of ethos Tebow evoked were practical wisdom, virtue, and goodwill. These traits are extremely powerful for one person to possess. When a person can say something and after you read it or hear it, it gives you goose bumps. This helps the audience know the rhetor is honest and has the best interest for the community in mind. It is an incredibly dominant tool.

Tebow said, “We wanted an undefeated season. That was my goal, something Florida has never done here. I promise you one thing; a lot of good will come out of this.” After reading this you can tell, he has the University of Florida’s best interest in mind. He chooses such deliberate words to use such as “Promise” and “good.”

Those words make you feel optimistic and have trust in the individual. He shows his identity by making himself vulnerable to the media and to the fans, after delivering such a powerful speech. His speech had lofty goals that people thought he would not be able to accomplish but he and his teammates eventually did.


Tim Tebow arguably uses pathos most effectively in his speech by the way he appealed to the emotions of the audience. He understands how it feels to be a fan of a sports team after an emotional loss.



He said the right things to convince people that the Gators season was not over yet. Tebow says, “You will never see any player in the entire country play as hard as I will the rest of the season.” This brought optisism and hope to every fan of the University of Florida. They know Tebow is so passionate about the game and seeing him cry after the loss touched their hearts, even if they blamed him for the loss. Tebow knew the state of mind the fans were in.

He knew where to direct his emotions, and most of all, he knew the reasons why the fans were feeling the way they did.

Tebow knew the Gators fans were tremendously displeased with the loss. They were emotionally drained and shocked. Tebow used one interesting phrase at the end of his speech. He said “God Bless”, he is a devout Christian and many people that are Gator fans respect the fact he has done many inspiring things off the football field.

This gave Tebow some advantages when people attempted to badmouth him. If they did, they are in a sense speaking out against Christian morals. Everyone would disapprove of someone talking about the character of Tebow. He is involved with routine mission trips, visiting hospitals, and helping anyone he has an opportunity to.

I applaud Tebow because he knew where to direct his emotions. He could have blamed anyone for the loss, he could have come off as being arrogant, he could have acted like he didn’t care about one game like other players do, but he didn’t.

It was evident that he decided to do the right thing. He took the team on his back, and carried them the rest of the season. He didn’t want to make up any excuses as to why they lost, he wanted to show that he and his teammates could overcome the loss and still be National Champions.

He states in his speech that he knew why the University of Florida fans were upset. One of which was obvious, he even says in his speech, “We were hoping for an undefeated season. That was my goal, something the University of Florida has never done before.” He knows how it feels to lose a big game because he grew up a fan of the University of Florida. U.F. has had many heartbreaking losses.

Without knowing the three questions of the audience, it would be impossible to connect emotionally with the audience. Anger, calmness, friendliness, fear, confidence, shamelessness, kindliness, pity, indignation, envy, confidence, and shame are all qualities Tebow understood and that helped him persuade his audience.

He knew everyone felt a different way after a loss. He extended himself in a way that each individual could empathize instead of easily being a fair-weather fan.

The third and final proof Tebow uses throughout his speech are logos. He knew he was the reasoning with people that were passionate about the game. He realized he had to be valid or they would have disproved him. Tebow knew that not all fans of the Gators are from Florida and not all fans are as passionate or as knowledgeable about the game as others. Therefore, it would be silly to jump to conclusions hat would not make sense.

Former Gators linebacker Brandon Spikes said, “I respect him as a man, a guy like that, that gives a speech like that is just something else.” People look at Tebow as more of a leader, a mentor, a genuinely great person, teammate, motivator, and player. It would be difficult to prove a claim that he would make because there is no substantial evidence to back it up.

Tebow does not really apply deduction to any part of his speech. He used generalizations to get his point across. He also didn’t use a single syllogism throughout the speech. He spoke more of a tightly articulated argument.

He did not lead people on; he spoke what he meant and did not imply any other ideas as to what he said. I also believe when it comes to style with Tebow, the usage is obvious. He uses a simple style which sounds like everyday speech. Again, going back to the part in the speech where he says, “You will never see a team play harder than we will the rest of the season.”

The speech lacks ornamentation and smoothness but it gets the point across to the individuals and audience he was trying to reach. He was not trying to be pretty with his words, he was trying more to make everyone understand what he was going to try and do to overcome the situation they put themselves up against.

The arrangement of the speech was structured in a way that allows Tebow to communicate effectively. He highlighted the important parts of his proof. Aristotle claimed there were really only two necessary parts to a speech. “State the subject and [then] to demonstrate it.”

I believe Tebow did exactly that by saying what the obvious subject was and then demonstrating what he was going to do to fix it. Even though his speech is only about 19 lines long, he displays each part of a speech because he makes his point quick and precise.

He cuts right to the chase when he explained how he wanted an undefeated season and knew everyone else wanted one as well. He provides background information about the topic by apologizing and telling the media and fans that “a lot of good will come out of this.” He outlines his main points by saying he will push himself and his teammates harder than anyone ever has. He supports the claims he made in the speech because he has the character to back it up. He attempted to overcome potential disagreements by stating his conclusions when he motivated the team the rest of the year to win the National Title.

Here is the speech so you can fully appreciate it.


“To the fans and everyone in the Gator Nation, I’m sorry. I’m extremely sorry. We were hoping for an undefeated season. That was my goal, something Florida has never done before.”

“I promise you one thing, a lot of good will come out of this. You will never see any player in the entire country play as hard as I will play the rest of the season. You will never see someone push the team as hard as I will push everybody the rest of the season.”

“You will never see a team player harder than we will the rest of the season”

“God Bless”

Friday, May 7, 2010

Professional Athletes are NOT Role Models

During the last 48 hours, I’ve noticed a disturbing trend within the sports industry. It has nothing to do with the game itself, and has all to do with who’s playing and spectating. Professional athletes are regarded as role models and influential figures to the younger generations that have their posters and pictures tacked all over their walls.



I’m confident countless adolescents in the greater New York area grew up idolizing Lawrence Taylor during the 1980’s. Thirty years later, he’s charged with raping a 16-year-old runaway. To put this in perspective, if you were 10-years old during Taylor’s MVP season in 1986, you’d be about 34-years old today. Let’s say you had a kid when you were 22, your son or daughter would be within the age range (12-16) as the girl Taylor was accused of having unwanted sexual relations with.

If the player you grew up idolizing was accused of such a heinous crime, what would you do? Better yet if you have or plan on having children, how do you explain to them that their favorite football player is a criminal?

Many of us can just say, “yeah but Lawrence Taylor is just an isolated incident”

And I say “oh really?”



Remember former Carolina Panthers receiver Rae Carruth? He was a conspirator in his pregnant girlfriend’s murder and was later found guilty of conspiracy to commit murder, shooting into an occupied vehicle, and using an instrument to destroy an unborn child in 1999. Carruth is now serving a sentence of at least 18 years and 11 months at Nash Correctional Institution near Rocky Mount, North Carolina.


What about JaMarcus Russell? He isn’t a criminal by any means, but what he did do was steal time from the Oakland Raiders. They got an employee who lacked a work ethic, didn’t care about the organizations success, and failed to learn tactics (playbook) that were obligations in his contract. In the real world Russell would have been a dead beat and fired significantly sooner then he was.


I’m sure somewhere in Raider Nation or even in LSU Country someone has a JaMarcus Russell jersey. I’m also fairly certain a large percentage is children. When Russell doesn’t show a hard working attitude or fails to learn the playbook, this subliminally tells kids who look up to JaMarcus Russell that it’s ok. It’s ok to be lazy and it’s ok to skip homework because at the end of the day, if you have superior talent it will always out-rule hard work and determination.

A research study done by the San Diego Union-Tribune reveled that NFL players are theoretically better behaved then the American population. The NFL roughly has one arrest per 47 players per year since 2000, including injured reserve lists, according to the database. Where as the American population has one arrest per 21 people per year (around 4,800 arrests per 100,000 inhabitants) and one arrest per 25 people age 18 and over, according to the FBI.

I just want to make this 100% clear, I’m not a parent but one thing I do know, is what is right and what is wrong. I’m also not preaching a boycott of professional sports, all I ask is one thing: To inform these younger generations that when their favorite player “messes up” that they know these players are just people like themselves; people with exceptional athletic ability.

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Ten Years of Failure; Florida Panthers Need Guidance

It was not long ago when the Florida Panthers organization was the model expansion franchise for the NHL. They had a first-class foundation for success during their inaugural season. General Manager Bill “Bowtie” Torrey helped build the New York Islanders dynasty team of the early 1980’s, and was given the opportunity of building the Panthers from infancy. Torrey and his staff obtained several key players who had vital roles in the team’s early success.

Those players included John Vanbiesbrouck, Scott Mellanby, Brian Skrudland, Tom Fitzgerald and Bill Lindsay.

Three years later, during the 1995-96 season the Panthers were the Cinderella story of the playoffs, advancing to the Stanley Cup Finals in just three seasons of existence. Florida won series they were not favored to win including victories over Ray Bourque and the Boston Bruins, Eric Lindros and the #1 seed Philadelphia Flyers, and the Pittsburgh Penguins duo of Mario Lemieux and Jaromir Jagr.


They were eventually swept by 2006 Hall-of-Fame inductee Patrick Roy and the Colorado Avalanche, this was a pivotal point in history for the Florida Panthers franchise that set off a chain reaction of events that left the team in the state they are today.

The Panthers never returned to the kind of success they had early on. In fact Florida has only qualified for the playoffs twice (96-97 and 99-00) in the 14 years it has been since advancing to the Stanley Cup Finals.

They have been plagued by mismanagement from top to bottom regardless of who is in charge. This began during the 1997-98 season as then owner Wayne Huizenga tried to make the franchise more attractive to potential buyers by cutting costs. This process included questionable transactions, poor player development, and the undermining of hockey executives by non-hockey personnel.


The inability to attract a stable ownership group interested in success on and off the ice has been a major problem in the last decade. Poor ownership decisions included handing the reins of General Manager over to the likes of Bryan Murray (who was given credit for the 96 playoff run), followed by Chuck Fletcher, Rick Dudley, and finally Mike Keenan. Each GM made questionable trades and free agent signings that made it impossible to actually rebuild the roster after each respective party parted ways with the organization.


One of the worst trades happened in the 1997-98 season as the Panthers made a trade for a former first round pick of the San Jose Sharks named Viktor Kozlov. In exchange for Kozlov the Panthers sent Dave Lowry and a first round selection in the 1998 draft to the Sharks, the pick was later traded to the Tampa Bay Lightning and they selected their future Captain and 50-goal scorer Vincent Lecavalier. Kozlov’s most productive season was during 1999-00 campaign as he was line-mates with Maurice "Rocket" Richard Trophy winner Pavel Bure. Kozlov still only managed to score 17 goals and while adding 53 assists during that season.


Couple poor trades with boneheaded free agent signings such as Esa Tikkanen’s retirement contract and Ray Sheppard’s second go-round as a Panther and league circles begin to take notice.


The Panthers have missed badly during the draft in the past ten seasons. Using first round selections on players like Marcus Neilson, Denis Shvidki, Petr Taticek, Anthony Stewart, and Kenndal McArdle. When they did select players who with the ability to play major minutes like Jay Bouwmeester they bolt for free agency when they have the opportunity.

With this season much like ones of seasons of past, the Florida Panthers have the third overall selection in 2010 NHL Draft. The front office did a better job last season in the selection process taking defenseman Dmitri Kulikov. He appeared in 68 games during his rookie season scoring three goals and 13 assists. The Panthers needs to make sure they don’t rush players into service too soon, or they could potentially stunt that prospects growth as many of the Florida players have had done to them in the past.

Here's to hopes of a better next season and improved management of players.

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Magic Route Hawks by 43 points in game 1

Orlando Magic center Dwight Howard stayed out of foul trouble and delivered in an immense way throughout game one of the Eastern Conference Semifinals. Howard contributed his first double-double of the postseason, scoring 21-points on eight of ten shooting and adding twelve assists during the Orlando Magic’s 114-71 victory over the Atlanta Hawks.

Vince Carter played his most complete game of the playoffs for the Magic chipped in 20-points and Jameer Nelson continued his stellar play scoring 19-points on eight of twelve shooting, including three of five shooting from behind the 3-point line.

The Hawks came out strong in the first quarter only trailing Orlando 25-23 before the Magic began hitting their stride from 3-point land. They stroked 39.1% of their 3-point shots where as Atlanta shot a dreadful 15.4%. The Hawks starting five collectively shot 17 of 47 from the field and early foul trouble from swingman Josh Smith led to the Hawks second most lopsided playoff loss in franchise history.

Atlanta will have to regroup and forget about this game if they have any chance at winning game two this Thursday in Orlando. "It was an ugly game for us," Hawks coach Mike Woodson said.

Atlanta needs Al Horford to control rebounds and contain second chance opportunities created by the Magic’s ability to get points in the paint.

If this game is any indication of how the series will be played out, look for Dwight Howard and the Orlando Magic to advance to the Eastern Conference Finals for the second consecutive season.

Monday, May 3, 2010

Sharks and Pavelski Perfect Match

When opponents of the San Jose Sharks mention the name “Joe” they usually are referring to 2005 Hart Trophy recipient Joe Thornton. I mean who wouldn’t? He finished the regular season second in assists with 69 and helped Canada win the Gold Medal during the 2010 Olympics.

The Joe I’m talking about also played in the Vancouver Olympics, taking home a Silver Medal for the United States. He was a seventh round selection by the Sharks in 2003 and has posted consecutive 25-goal campaigns. During his last three games of playoff action he’s strung together nine points and propelled his team to a 2-0 series lead over the Detroit Red Wings.


His name is Joe Pavelski and he has arguably has the best playoff performance during this post season. He currently leads the post season in goals with nine, and is second in points with 14, two behind Pittsburgh’s Sidney Crosby.

"Whatever planet he's on, I think everyone wants to get on it with him," Thornton said about Pavelski, the former Wisconsin star in his fourth NHL season. "He's just been so consistent -- he's been awesome. He really has been."

Wherever Pavelski goes winning seems to find him. The Plover, Wis., native captained Stevens Point Area Senior High to the 2002 Wisconsin state championship, captained Team USA to a silver medal at the 2004 Viking Cup, captained the Waterloo Blackhawks to the USHL championships later in 2003-04 (and named the USA Hockey Junior Hockey Player of the Year), and then helped the University of Wisconsin win the 2006 NCAA National Championship.

"It's good to see pucks go in the net," Pavelski said. "It's good to work hard and get rewarded. It always feels good to chip in. There's a lot more to go though."

The Sharks will travel to the Motor City for the next two games in hopes of closing out the series. They know with Pavelski’s help (three game winning goals) this could be a special season.

Below is Pavelski at his finest.