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Adam Burke

nhlThe NHL Entry Draft, which has become a de facto Christmas Day for Blue Jackets fans, is less than a month away and many of the junior team seasons are over so there’s nothing left to do but watch a lot of tape, talk to coaches, and interview potential draft picks. Twenty-seven teams are in the same boat as the Blue Jackets as their seasons have ended and preparations are being made to make the next prospect’s dream come true.

One of those teams, the Phoenix Coyotes, now get to focus their energies on the draft and player contracts after losing in overtime to the Los Angeles Kings on Tuesday night. The Kings are now 12-2 in the playoffs and will appear in the Stanley Cup Finals for the first time since 1993, when they lost to the Montreal Canadiens in five games. That season, the Kings went 12-7 over the first three rounds while the Canadiens went 12-3. If that’s the recipe for success, the Kings are in good shape since the Rangers or Devils will have several more losses over the first three rounds, since both teams played a seven-game series in round one and are poised for a long Conference Finals series.

The Kings will now have a week’s worth of rest before the Stanley Cup Finals start, since the Rangers and Devils are guaranteed to play at least two more games in this round, with Game Seven, if necessary, slated for Sunday evening. Whichever team wins that Eastern Conference Final will have home ice for the Stanley Cup Finals as the Kings were the #8 seed in the Western Conference.

What the Kings have done over the last month-plus is nothing short of remarkable. It took them until November 28, a span of 24 games, to pick up their 12th win of the regular season. Jonathan Quick has been stellar this postseason, allowing just 24 goals in 14 games. If the Kings were to win the Cup, Quick would have to play pretty poorly in the series to have the Conn Smythe Trophy for postseason MVP to be taken away from him.

In the Eastern Conference, the Rangers and Devils have renewed their rivalry by splitting the first four games of the series and added a new dimension to the series with a Game Four fracas that included Martin Brodeur being shoved by the Rangers’ Mike Rupp. As the incident raged on, both Devils coach Peter DeBoer and Rangers coach John Tortorella began yelling at each other from their respective benches. Needless to say, there is a lot of bad blood between these teams which will be decided by a best-of-three series.

 

As I mentioned last week, I’ll be spending the weeks leading up to NHL Entry Draft Week profiling one of the players expected to be taken around the Blue Jackets second overall selection. For the purposes of this exercise, I’m leaving out Nail Yakupov, the consensus number one pick. Last week, I profiled the only defenseman likely to go in the top five, Everett Silvertips defenseman Ryan Murray. This week, we’ll look at talented Russian-born center Mikhail Grigorenko.

Mikhail-GrigorenkoName: Mikhail Grigorenko

Position: Center

NHL Central Scouting Bureau Rank: #3 North America, #1 North American center

Birthdate & place: May 16, 1994; Khabarovsk, Russia

Height, weight: 6’3”, 200 lbs.

Shoots: Left

Mikhail Grigorenko played for the world-renowned Russian junior team CSKA Moscow before making the jump to North America to play in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League. NHL teams are sometimes wary of drafting Russian forwards because of their propensity for getting homesick, desire to return home to play in the recently-formed Kontinental Hockey League, and the time it takes them to transition to the North American rink dimensions and style of play. None of those should be concerns with Grigorenko.

Grigorenko thrived in the high-octane QMJHL with the Quebec Remparts, leading the all rookies in scoring with 85 points, 40 goals and 45 assists, in just 59 games. He was the second overall pick in the 2011 CHL Import Draft, selected by Quebec.

Like many of the highly-touted prospects in the NHL Entry Draft, Grigorenko has had success playing for his country in international tournaments. With the Russian Under-20 team in the 2011-12 World Junior Hockey Championships, Grigorenko had five points in six games helping Russia to a silver medal. In the 2011 Under-18 World Championships, Grigorenko had a great tournament with 18 points, including 14 assists, in seven games.

What sets Grigorenko apart from many of the talented Russians is his size. At 6’3”, 200 lbs, and with a frame to grow into, he won’t be at a competitive disadvantage with the physical game. With most of his game dependent on puck possession and time to find the open guy to pass to, that’s very important for a player like Grigorenko.

Analysis: Grigorenko would be a very nice player for the Blue Jackets to pick up. The thought process in the NHL is to build from the middle out, so starting with a goaltender, then defensemen, and then a centerman. One has to wonder how Grigorenko fares defensively, but his vision and skill set are world-class. A potential stumbling block for the Blue Jackets is that they lack dynamic goal scorers, both on the team and in the prospect ranks. Grigorenko would need to be surrounded with complementary talent to utilize his great passing ability.

Just a reminder that the NHL Entry Draft’s first round will take place June 22 in Pittsburgh, PA.

Lars Hancock

Hugs not drugsSo I’m currently training my wife in a fitness contest she will enter next month. I know what you’re thinking, this is a lot like hiring Cory Snyder as your batting coach, or Derek Anderson as your QB coach, or hiring Lebron James and Maverick Carter’s band of idiots to do, well, anything. And you’re probably right.

But I’ve always been good with theory, a living embodiment of the maxim “those who can’t do teach”. On a side note, don’t ever spout that statement off around a teacher, because I’ve done that on accident before, and boy howdy that didn’t turn out well for me. Professional teachers are a completely different thing, and are people I respect immeasurably. Here, I’m talking about sports and sports alone.

One session, I decide on an exercise with a medicine ball. She is to do a situp with it, toss it to me, and then I toss it back and she does another one. Well, my first throw back is just a bit outside, slips through her fingers and hits her square in the mouth. A look of horror comes over her, and she runs to the ladies room with her hand over her mouth. Oh shit.

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Jonathan Knight

Nationwide ArenaI’d always thought getting a professional sports team these days was an incredibly complicated process that required years of strategic thinking and planning coinciding with perfect timing and more than a little good luck.

Apparently not in our state capital.

Last week, Columbus Mayor Michael Coleman rose up confidently and declared, “Excuse me...yes, we’d like a National Basketball Association team, please,” as if asking for another round of breadsticks at the Olive Garden.

See? It’s easy.

For as silly and self-destructive as the NBA may be these days, you can’t visualize David Stern ordering in Chinese and working late into the night to make this happen. This idea, after all, is not really what a league that is gradually migrating into a five-or-six-team, big-media-market confederacy is looking for: the opportunity to put a franchise in a city where Bob Evans is considered a fancy restaurant.

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Thomas Moore

2012 05 blue jacketsColumbus Mayor Michael B. Coleman made headlines over the weekend by going public with his desire to bring an NBA team to Ohio’s capital city.

That’s all well and good and understandable. Franklin County recently purchased Nationwide Arena and the county needs people in the building, especially since the main tenant, the NHL’s Columbus Blue Jackets, are an afterthought in the town.

The question is where would this team come from? According to The Plain Dealer, NBA vice president of communications Tim Frank wrote in an e-mail that the league has no plans to expand the 30-team league and none of its members have applied for relocation.

We normally wouldn’t care about this – we don’t live in Columbus after all - but then we saw some chatter over the weekend on Twitter about an idea for the Blue Jackets to play 10 games a year in Cleveland and the Cavaliers to play a like number of games in Columbus.

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Adam Burke

toddrichardsAs the final four teams slug it out for NHL immortality, work continues in Columbus in preparation for the 2012-2013 season. A major step in the process was finalized this week as the Blue Jackets removed the interim tag from Todd Richards’s title and officially named him the sixth head coach in franchise history. Richards has just 205 games of NHL head coaching experience under his belt and will, presumably, grow alongside a young group of players.

One would assume that the Blue Jackets were exploring every other available name for the next head coach since Richards sat in limbo for over a month before being definitively named as the bench boss. With no real good candidates to shop for, the Blue Jackets seem to have picked Richards by default. For his part, Richards did do a great job with the Blue Jackets in 2012 following the firing of Scott Arniel, leading the team to an 18-21-2 record despite a lot of injuries and roster turnover.

Richards, like his predecessor Arniel, has experienced the plenty of success at the AHL level, including a Calder Cup victory with the Milwaukee Admirals as an assistant coach in 2004. Richards then moved to Wilkes-Barre as the head coach of the Penguins’ AHL affiliate before serving as an assistant in San Jose. He got his first head coaching position with the Minnesota Wild in 2009, lasting two seasons before being let go.

Richards inherits a job that nobody wants. General Manager Scott Howson was able to handpick Scott Arniel and spent most of their relationship butting heads with his second-prize, as Guy Boucher was thought to be Howson’s number one choice. When Boucher decided to go to Tampa Bay, Arniel was the Jackets’ consolation prize. The Jackets are in shambles, with a potential trade of their franchise player on the horizon and years of epic failure.

Now, Richards can focus on preparing for next season. The first step in that process will be to help the scouting staff finalize a decision on who the Blue Jackets will draft with the second overall pick in the June 22 NHL Entry Draft first round. With six weekly columns between now and draft day, I will preview one draft pick for each of the next five weeks, along with my playoff update and any other Jackets news that comes along. In the week before the draft, I’ll look closely at the rumors circulating about and preview the first round in its entirety. For now, here’s a look at defenseman Ryan Murray.

ryanmurrayName: Ryan Murray

Position: Defenseman

NHL Central Scouting Bureau Rank: #2 overall, #1 defenseman

Birthdate & place: September 27, 1993; Regina, Saskatchewan

Height, weight: 6’, 201 lbs

Shoots: Left

Ryan Murray bumped up one spot from his #3 mid-term ranking in the NHL Central Scouting Bureau end-of-season final rankings. Murray is viewed as one of the most NHL-ready prospects in the 2012 NHL Entry Draft and many scouts consider him a leader and future NHL captain.

Murray is probably the “safest” pick in the top five. He’s the most polished defenseman and one of the steadiest players in the draft class. In 168 games with the Everett Silvertips of the Western Hockey League, Murray racked up 20 goals and 84 assists. He missed the first part of the 2011-2012 season with an ankle injury, but returned in time to play in the Canadian Hockey League “Top Prospects” Game, where he finished second in the hardest shot competition at the accompanying skills competition with a shot of 94.3 mph.

Murray was the captain of the 2011 Canadian Under-18 team and was one of two draft-eligible players to make the 2012 Canadian Under-20 World Junior Hockey Championships team.

Murray has been compared to Scott Niedermayer, who was an extremely solid defenseman for nearly 20 years, a long-time captain, and four-time Stanley Cup winner.

Analysis: If the Blue Jackets go defenseman, this is probably the player that they will look at. He doesn’t have the upside that some of the other players have, but he is an extremely solid player who will continue to get better and has the skating ability and strength to play in the NHL from Day One. He won’t put up gaudy stat totals, but he has a hard, accurate shot that can play on the powerplay and would be the best defensive defenseman the Blue Jackets have seen in quite some time.

 

As for an update on the Stanley Cup Playoffs, the Rangers got past the Washington Capitals and then won Game One of their series against the New Jersey Devils after a very quick turnaround where they only had one full day of rest. Henrik Lundqvist posted a shutout and the Rangers were able to score twice on Martin Brodeur and then add an empty netter.

Out West, the Los Angeles Kings took Game One in their series with the Phoenix Coyotes in impressive fashion, firing 47 shots on Coyotes’ goaltender Mike Smith. The Kings also jumped on Phoenix early in Game Two, opening up a 3-0 lead after two periods and rolling to a 2-0 series lead.

It has really been an incredible run for the LA Kings. With a 2-0 series lead, they’re poised to knock off each of the top three seeds in the Western Conference en route to the Stanley Cup finals as a #8 seed. They’re making it look easy as they took well over 40 shots on goal in Game Two and dominated a solid defensive team in the Phoenix Coyotes. If they can finish off the ‘Yotes and hoist the Stanley Cup, it will easily be one of the most impressive runs in Stanley Cup Playoff history.

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