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Adam Burke

stanley-cupStrap in for some NHL (and AHL) playoff action. Year in and year out, the NHL playoffs provide off the charts excitement for even the most casual of hockey fans. Deciding game sevens, multiple overtime thrillers, and raucous atmospheres are just some of the many things that you can expect from this, and every, NHL postseason.

This is your TCF NHL Playoff Primer!

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Michael Kramer

Indians_Mariners3How great is this? Last week I started off the glance by declaring my optimism regarding the Indians, despite the thorough butt-kicking administered to them on opening day. I talked about how Carmona didn't look too bad to me despite the ridiculous amount of runs he gave up. I mentioned the offense scoring a boatload of runs and Travis Hafner looking more like Pronk than he has in a long time.

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Brian McPeek

ocabI’m not going to do this. I don't care how strong the fan-centric gravitational pull of Carlos Carrasco and Justin Masterson’s recent performances was. As Eddie Murphy famously stated in ‘Beverly Hills Cop’, “I’m not falling for the old banana in the tailpipe trick”  that maybe Masterson can keep his 6'6" and 250lbs all heading the same way on every delivery and that Carrasco may be developing as a legitimate major league pitcher and innings-eater right in front of our eyes. Good God people, did you see Masterson living and thriving down in the strike zone all night on Saturday night until he went above and beyond 100 pitches?

Did you see him ring up nine strikeouts and completely dominate the Mariners lineup (even if it is a Quadruple-A lineup)? Those have been two awfully impressive starts this year for Masterson thus far and for Carrasco as well, really, but for the 2nd inning last Saturday against Chicago.

No. You're not going to make me do it. I’m too old and too smart to fall for this early season success (well, I’m too old anyway).

I'm not getting excited about a 12-3 Friday night offensive explosion followed up by a 2-1 ‘take-advantage-of-every-slice-of-light-Milton Bradley-gives-you’ pitcher’s duel Saturday night.

Good Lord, I expected them to win Sunday. I expected the Indians to sweep the Mariners Sunday and they did so in a boring, old 6-4 win. It's getting dangerous now.


No!! I refuse to get sucked in and hope that the ball Travis Hafner nearly hit into Puget Sound on Friday night was as much a hopeful glance ahead at what a healthy Pronk can bring as it was a look back at what he once was.

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Mitch Cyrus

Schwartzel

Another major, another unknown international player garnering the win.  26 year old South African Charl Schwartzel put together a closing string of four consecutive birdies on the last four holes to win the 2011 Masters by two strokes over Australians Adam Scott and Jason Day in one of the most exciting finishes seen in Augusta.

The old adage is that the Masters doesn’t begin until the back nine on Sunday.  That saying was never more true than for the 2011 version, as the start of the back nine was the end of the day for 56 hole leader Rory McIlroy as he butchered the tenth hole for a triple bogey, leaving a four way tie for the lead between Adam Scott, Angel Cabrera, K.J. Choi, and Charl Schwartzel with Tiger Woods one stroke back and McIlroy, Jason Day, and Geoff Ogilvy two behind and Luke Donald and Bo Van Pelt coming on strong on the back nine to get back into contention.  The race was on, with ten men having a shot at winning it all, including McIlroy, who was still only two strokes back.

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Adam Burke

umbergerThe Columbus Blue Jackets have been eliminated from playoff contention for a while. But, in the world of professional sports, the evaluation is never done. Some players on the Jackets have been thrust in to elevated roles with Rick Nash missing a bulk of the last week and Jan Hejda being suspended for a questionable hit.

The team has won just three games since February 25. They have come against Carolina, a possible playoff team, Minnesota, and Florida, two teams who really had no shot at making the postseason. The Jackets have just two players with 20 goals and just two players with 50 points. Even though the season has been over, the Jackets roster as it is currently constructed gets a failing grade in both the heart and talent department.

Jake Voracek and Derick Brassard have underachieved. Kristian Huselius remains a bust, though he was injured for most of the season. These three players were supposed to provide scoring help for Rick Nash. They have not done that. The question now is what do the Jackets do with them? Derick Brassard makes $3.2M per season. Jake Voracek is up for contract this offseason. Voracek still has plenty of untapped potential, but the Blue Jackets have free agent needs.

Sami Lepisto will be on his way out. That trade now looks like a good salary dump for the Blue Jackets. Scottie Upshall has been mediocre for the team, while Lepisto has struggled. The money saved from trading Klesla will likely go to re-signing Jan Hejda and perhaps adding a bargain bin, physical defenseman in free agency.

In terms of players signed for next season, Samuel Pahlsson is an interesting name. Pahlsson is due to make $2.625M next season in the final year of his contract. He has underachieved in his role as a shutdown center and good faceoff guy. There are always markets for players like Pahlsson. The Jackets may look to trade him, hoping to acquire a third round draft pick or a minor league prospect.

Next year may be a make or break year for Nikita Filatov. It is the last year of his entry-level contract and he reaches restricted free agency in the offseason. Would anybody be willing to sacrifice draft picks to offer Filatov a contract? I would say no. Therefore, either Filatov gets traded or becomes a never-was in the NHL and goes back to Russia to play.

Nobody will take Kristian Huselius’s large price tag unless the Jackets eat a bad contract in return. It could be a possibility, but Huselius will likely just play out his final year in Columbus and then take a severe pay cut in the offseason.

On defense, only three defensemen are signed for next year- Mike Commodore, Kris Russell, and the final year of Fedor Tyutin’s contract. Clitsome, Stralman, and Methot are restricted free agents. John Moore is signed, but no certainty that he breaks camp with next year’s team.

Basically, in summation, the offseason will be very interesting for the Jackets. They’ll be picking in the top ten again with a chance to take another impact player. Ryan Johansen, their first round pick from last year’s draft, will make the team in October. The goal will be to find another almost NHL-ready player such as Johansen at this year’s draft.

Other news from around the NHL:

Look for my 2011 Playoff Primer next Wednesday, in lieu of the regular Thursday article. I was going to write it up for this week, but too many playoff matchups are undecided.

That said, there are ten teams locked in so far. Six from the East and just four from the West. The biggest storyline for me entering the playoffs is how Vancouver will respond to not having to play any big pressure games for a while now. They locked up the President’s Trophy for most points a week ago and have been on cruise control. Look no further than the Washington Capitals for what happens to teams on cruise control when they hit the playoffs.

For all the parity in the NHL over the last few years, the same group of teams is bottom feeders this year. Columbus, Edmonton, Colorado, Atlanta, and Florida. Sprinkle in New Jersey who got off to a horrendous start and Ottawa whose core group has just aged and their glory years are behind them.

A minor league update on the Lake Erie Monsters:

With a full playoff preview next week, I’d rather take the time to look at what the Monsters have done this season. They clinched their first playoff berth in franchise history thanks to Hamilton’s 2-1 win over Abbotsford on Tuesday night.

What they have done since January is nothing short of incredible. With all the player movement and continuity issues that minor league teams face, the Monsters have gone 28-12-1 since January 1. A remarkable feat to win essentially 70% of their games in the second half of the year.

They control their own destiny in the North Division. With three games remaining this weekend, they can win out and win the Division. They hold the tiebreaker over both teams in the event that the Monsters tie with one of Manitoba or Hamilton in points.

The Monsters will either play Manitoba, Hamilton, or the fifth-place team from the West Division.

Upcoming schedules

Columbus: 4/9 @ NSH, 4/10 v. BUF

Lake Erie: 4/8 @ Rockford, 4/9 v. Abbotsford, 4/10 @ Rochester

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