Tag Archives: NHL

Bruins coach Julien will ‘absolutely’ return next season

Claude Julien isn't going anywhere.

Despite missing the playoffs for the second straight season, the Boston Bruins have decided to retain the services of the winningest head coach in club history, general manager Don Sweeney announced Wednesday.

Assistant coach Doug Houda, however, will not be returning.

Sweeney said he and Julien met extensively over the past few days, both privately and with the players. The goal was always to work together to figure out what went wrong down the stretch and how to get back on track next season.

"I emphatically believe that Claude can take us through what has been a bumpy transition period," Sweeney said. "I have work to do."

"I want to be here," Julien added when asked if he considered moving on. "I want to bring this team back to where we had it."

The coach also believes the team was good enough to make the playoffs this season, but, as evidenced in a season-ending loss to Ottawa, the foot was taken off the gas too often.

"It’s pretty obvious we failed on numerous occasions with some big games (mentioned Winter Classic)," he said. "Our consistency wasn't there."

It's on the defensive end that the Bruins struggled the most. Despite boasting a fifth-ranked offense with 240 goals scored, the Bruins allowed 230 goals, slotting them 19th among all teams. The only team to boast a positive goal differential and miss the playoffs, the defensive lapses that caused the team to drop points along the way ultimately pushed them down the standings.

Sweeney added he will not contemplate a major overhaul of the roster, focusing instead on organizational depth and integrating young players into the everyday lineup.

GM and coach will spend the summer working together in hope of ending the two-year playoff drought. Team CEO Charlie Jacobs and president Cam Neely are scheduled to hold their annual season-end press conference April 20.

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Stepan: Rangers ‘didn’t get the job done’ against Penguins’ top line

A 5-2 loss in the playoffs simply isn't good enough for New York Rangers center Derek Stepan.

Despite scoring both goals for New York, Stepan was disappointed by his and his linemates' efforts to shut down Pittsburgh's top trio of Sidney Crosby, Patric Hornqvist, and Chris Kunitz.

"What stings is we talked about doing a job on their top line and we didn't get the job done against them," Stepan said, according to Pat Leonard of the New York Daily News. "We can't give up five goals and expect to win a playoff game."

Hornqvist netted a hat trick and an assist, while Crosby had three points of his own.

Stepan, along with wingers Chris Kreider and Rick Nash, will need to regroup in time for Game 2 to avoid a massive deficit before heading back to New York.

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Updates on the Canucks and Oilers – April 14, 2016

Latest on notable Canucks such as Dan Hamhuis and Ryan Miller plus more speculation on how the Oilers will address their blueline needs.  What next for the Canucks? VANCOUVER SUN: Iain MacIntyre reported there was little actual news to come out of the Canucks’ recent post-mortem press conference. Of the 11 Canucks eligible for some […]

NHL players tweet about Kobe’s 60-point finale

Attentions were divided as the Stanley Cup Playoffs began Wednesday.

Los Angeles Lakers guard Kobe Bryant hung up his sneakers with a 60-point performance, much to the delight and amazement of several NHL players.

Chris Stewart of the Anaheim Ducks made the drive to watch the game in person.

A couple players also gave some love to the Golden State Warriors after they broke the NBA's single-season wins record.

And Andreas Athanasiou of the Detroit Red Wings wasn't going to let a Game 1 loss to Tampa Bay spoil this great sports moment.

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NHL Morning Coffee Headlines – April 14, 2016

Game recaps, Leafs re-sign Rielly and Kadri, update on Claude Julien & more in today’s collection of notable NHL headlines.  NHL Playoff Scores POST-GAZETTE/NEW YORK DAILY NEWS: Third-string goalie Jeff Zatkoff made 35 saves and Patric Hornqvist collected his first career NHL playoff hat trick to lead the Pittsburgh Penguins to a 5-2 victory over […]

3 improbable stars from opening night of the Stanley Cup Playoffs

David Backes

After missing the last three regular-season games with injury, Backes wasn't a lock to make the lineup for Wednesday's Game 1. So, the Blues should feel especially fortunate after stealing Wednesday's opener - a game in which they were outshot nearly 2-1.

Backes was culpable in the Blues being hemmed in throughout, but came through with the most important moment of the night, banking an overtime winner off the skate of Trevor van Riemsdyk and through the legs of Corey Crawford.

Important and improbable, geometry aside. Backes' banker was his first career overtime playoff goal, and he has just two in 727 career regular-season games.

Jeff Zatkoff

Penguins fans broke into a collective hyperventilation when Marc-Andre Fleury failed to emerge out of the tunnel for warmup in Game 1, and, after connecting the dots, it was determined that journeyman Zatkoff would be making his Stanley Cup playoff debut.

Alarmists quickly concluded that for the Penguins, several months worth of being one of, if not, the best team in the NHL had gone to waste. And even the team itself looked jumpy, having been on their heels for several shifts off the opening draw.

But then Zatkoff (who knew he was playing the night before) settled in, and the Penguins followed suit. Sidney Crosby and Patric Hornqvist led a five-goal surge in support of their emergency starter, who made 35 saves in the face of 37 shots for a comfortable Game 1 win.

Ben Lovejoy/Tom Kuhnhackl

Pittsburgh's win wasn't without nervy moments, of course.

After Derek Stepan cut Pittsburgh's lead to one on a 5-on-3 advantage, Zatkoff dropped down a pad to stop a point shot, in the process freeing up Dan Boyle for what appeared to be a tap-in into an empty net.

But Lovejoy was there, swinging around fast enough to chop the puck away from Boyle's blade. And when the Rangers failed to recoup possession, Kris Letang sent Nick Bonino and Kuhnhackl away on a 2-on-1.

There, it was Bonino to Kuhnhackl and into the back of the net shorthanded - a massive two-goal swing in favor of Pittsburgh.

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Backes’ bank shot lifts Blues to OT win over Blackhawks in Game 1

By a toe.

The St. Louis Blues earned an all-important Game 1 win over the defending champion Chicago Blackhawks after captain David Backes scored his first career playoff overtime winner off the skate of Trevor van Riemsdyk.

Backes got the postgame interview, but the plaudits belong to Brian Elliott. The Blues netminder - who quietly finished with the league's best save rate - made 35 saves to register his first career playoff shutout.

He bailed out a Blues team that was being outshot 2-to-1 through 69 minutes before Backes' banker, and went more than 20 minutes without firing rubber on Corey Crawford for a stretch that spilled into overtime.

Any win, of course, is quite meaningful in a seven-game series, but this victory was particularly important. Duncan Keith will return from suspension in Game 2 and aid a blue line stretched thin in his absence.

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