Blues, Pietrangelo go down in game one.
Highlights:
A place where St. Louis Blues fans can come to get news & views about their team. Lets go Blues!
Monday, April 30, 2012
Friday, April 27, 2012
How's This For Parity?
The following list represents the seed number of all eight teams headed to the semifinals:
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8.
That's right. The winners from both the Eastern and Western Conference Quarterfinals have no duplicates, that is, every seed is represented in the next round:
#1 New York (East)
#2 St. Louis (West)
#3 Phoenix (West)
#4 Nashville (West)
#5 Philadelphia (East)
#6 New Jersey (East)
#7 Washington (East)
#8 Los Angeles (West)
This is a shining tribute to the level of competition and parody in the NHL. There are no more favorites and anyone can win once they are in the playoffs.
Not only are the series tight, but the games themselves have been so far as well. The NHL set a first round record with 16 overtime games.
Nothing but fun and excitement left ahead in the playoffs!
Thursday, April 26, 2012
No Tomorrow.

Reading a forum on stltoday.com entitled "What do you consider a successful season for the Blues?", many suggested simply winning a playoff series was the goal and anything else is considered gravy.
I hope the players think like myself.
I believe, when you make the playoffs, anything else than raising the Stanley Cup is a failure.
With the Western Conference so wide open, why should the Blues not expect to reach hockey's holy grail? I'll be damned if I am going to watch Phoenix, Arizona or Nashville, Tennessee have a cup parade before us.
Not one team in the Western Conference has ever won the cup. In my opinion, the West is far and away the stronger conference even if the "experts" don't agree (Of course they picked the Pens and Canucks to win it all).
Looking at the East, not one team is strong defensively. There are no stand-out goalies like the West contains. Come Thursday, seeds five through eight could be all that are left. In my honest opinion, most of the Eastern Conference's elite would have struggled to even make the playoffs in the West.
Let's not get ahead of ourselves. The West is were the Blues will really be tested. Nashville and St. Louis have to be the favorites to come out of their conference. Both have strong goaltending, play well defensively, and can score as needed.
Once again, let's not jump over Los Angeles, which will be a real test for the Blues. The number eight seed just took down Vancouver in a physical series where Jonathan Quick was lights-out.
Everyone around town is saying that Los Angeles and Nashville are scary match-ups for the Blues. I have news for you, they are all going to be scary from here on out, it's the Stanley Cup playoffs!
And why should the Blues be scared? To me, if I was another team, I would be afraid to face the Note:
- a red-hot power play.
- a red-hot McDonald (who has a history of being a red-hot playoff scorer on a cup-winner).
- red-hot goaltending.
- Great leadership, from the Captain to Vets like Langenbrunner, Arnott, and McDonald.
- we've been good all season long, never faultering under Hitchcock.
- Oh yeah, experienced coaching, who put in a system that has worked wonders and put belief in some underachieving players (See Oshie, Berglund). And...he's won a cup before.
I know I am looking through biased eyes while writing this, but to me, the Blues have to be favorites, especially if they can get out of the extremely tough Western Conference.
These opportunities are fleeting, fellow Blues fans, and our mantra does not need to be "We'll be good years to come, it's been a success, let's win it next year when we'll be even better." Look how tough the league is, look how tough the West is, and look how tough the Central is. You can bet that early exits by Detroit and Chicago are going to spark change in those organizations to make them competitive next season. Nashville will be back with virtual the same team, and Columbus will be on the rise someday.
The parody in the NHL is remarkable. A cup contender one year can miss the playoffs the next. There has not been a repeat cup winner since 1998 (Detroit). The Blues were poised in 2009 to break out and be a perennial playoff team. They missed the playoffs for the next two seasons.
There are no guarantees to make it to the playoffs, and once you're there the goal is to win the cup.
"Think how good we'll be next year" is a phrase Blues fans need to lose. The time is now. The opportunity is right in front of this team, and it is time they seize it and not hope for a better tomorrow. There should be no tomorrow in the locker room or the expectations.
The parody in the NHL is remarkable. A cup contender one year can miss the playoffs the next. There has not been a repeat cup winner since 1998 (Detroit). The Blues were poised in 2009 to break out and be a perennial playoff team. They missed the playoffs for the next two seasons.
There are no guarantees to make it to the playoffs, and once you're there the goal is to win the cup.
"Think how good we'll be next year" is a phrase Blues fans need to lose. The time is now. The opportunity is right in front of this team, and it is time they seize it and not hope for a better tomorrow. There should be no tomorrow in the locker room or the expectations.
Monday, April 23, 2012
July 6, 2011: The Day the Blues Became Contenders

Jason Arnott.
When the Blues needed a leader to provide energy and edge, who was there?
Jamie Langenbrunner.
When the Blues needed a big shift after giving up a goal, or just some good solid two-way hockey, who went on the ice?
Arnott and Langenbrunner.
When the Blues signed veterans Jason Arnott and Jamie Langenbrunner in the off-season, they put the pieces in place to be successful in the postseason.

But along came Langenbrunner, scoring a huge goal that set off a 45 second rally and propelled the Blues to the Western Conference Semifinals.
Langenbrunner has a history of scoring big goals in the playoffs, he is the active leader in playoff overtime goals and ranks third in playoff game-winning goals.
And Arnott? He only scored the game-winning overtime goal clinching the Stanley Cup for New Jersey in 2000.
For years the Blues have been a "bubble" team, poised to make the post season and take that next step. But lack of leadership and inexperience seemed to trump their talent, hard work, and potential season after season.
This off-season, Armstrong added Langenbrunner and Arnott on the same day with identical contracts. Both had been captains. Both had won the Stanley Cup.
Darren Pang Tweeted at the time: "These two signings are going to be significant for the development of players ready to take that next step."
It was not just significant for the development of players, but the development of a team as a contender.
Sunday, April 22, 2012
Saturday, April 21, 2012
"Smile You Son of a ..." Time to Finish off the Sharks
I've heard the golf courses in San Jose are nice. The Blues need to let the Sharks enjoy them next week.
This is the hardest one to win; the forth one. The Blues look to eliminate the Sharks tonight in front of a home crowd that will be rocking. With the series 3-1 in the Blues favor, Coach Hitchcock knows the importance of clinching as soon as possible. He talked before game four about wrapping up the series and not prolonging it for the players or extending travel time.
"I was in a lot of these [series] coming in and out of Dallas and they were not easy series. When it got to Game 5, 6, and 7 they were not easy for players, for coaches, for sleep patterns and they really impacted the next series."
Not to jump too far ahead, but Nashville has already clinched, and the other two Western Conference series stand at 3-1, with the Kings and Coyotes ready to move on as well. The Blues clinching in five will do wonders for rest and preparation for the next round.
Still, the Blues are not looking ahead and know that tonight's game will not be easy.
"We need to realize this next game is going to be the toughest one," Andy McDonald told stltoday.com. "If we don't play our best hockey, they're going to beat us."

"I was in a lot of these [series] coming in and out of Dallas and they were not easy series. When it got to Game 5, 6, and 7 they were not easy for players, for coaches, for sleep patterns and they really impacted the next series."
Not to jump too far ahead, but Nashville has already clinched, and the other two Western Conference series stand at 3-1, with the Kings and Coyotes ready to move on as well. The Blues clinching in five will do wonders for rest and preparation for the next round.
Still, the Blues are not looking ahead and know that tonight's game will not be easy.
"We need to realize this next game is going to be the toughest one," Andy McDonald told stltoday.com. "If we don't play our best hockey, they're going to beat us."
Hitchcock added that the Blues are going to get the Sharks' "A-game. We know it. We just have to have an A-plus game."
There's blood in the water. Time for the Blues to clinch their first playoff series in ten years.
Friday, April 20, 2012
Thursday, April 19, 2012
Monday, April 16, 2012
Won't Back Down
The Blues showed their fortitude with a win Saturday night.
Some talking points about the series so far:
Game 2 Highlights:
Some talking points about the series so far:
- The Blues have been the better team in the first two games, but are tied 1-1 in the series. Will San Jose's experience help them or will the Blues learn fast and rely on veterans like Langs, Arnott, McDonald, and Jacks to show the way?
- Elliot will play game three. Not sure of the extent of Halak's injury but what a job by Hitchcock keeping both netminders on their game late in the season. The Blues are one of the few teams that can put in their "backup" and not skip a beat. (Need I argue...improve?)
- Look for game three to get fights out early, or late, or not at all. My guess, things will calm down due to both team's fear of going down by one in the series. I don't expect much carry over from game two.
- Will the Blues win on the road in the playoffs?
- Blues are easily winning the top two lines battle. (Backes V Thornton)
- Look for T.J. Oshie to emerge as a playoff star. (Followed by Perron)
Let's Go Blues!
Game 2 Highlights:
Sunday, April 8, 2012
Bring on the Sharks! But Who Will Hold the Net?

The NHL network will reveal the schedule live at noon today.
The Blues were 4-0 against the Sharks this season and have dominated them in recent years. But this is the post season and the Blues have not been at the top of their game of late while the Sharks have been on fire.
The Pacific division came down to the wire. The Coyotes won on the last game of the season (defeating the Blues a night before) to clinch the division and making the final game between the Kings and Sharks a battle for seventh and eighth place.
The Blues' final opponent, Dallas, was in first place in that division five games ago. Now their season is over, sitting in ninth place.
The Sharks had to battle to get into the playoffs and the Blues stumbled on their way in. A few days off should give them time to regroup, rest, and get back to the style that made them an elite team this year.
The time off will also give Hitchcock a chance to think about the roster. The forth line could be made of any number of players. The goaltending situation is a good thing, but no easy task to pick a starter for game one.
Could the NHL leader in GA and Save % be sitting the first game of the playoffs? It certainly appears so. Elliott did not get much support in his 4-1 loss against Phoenix, and his entire miraculous, best season by a goalie from start to finish that I have ever seen by a Blues goalie may be unfairly summed up by that loss.
On the other hand, Halak does have more playoff experience which includes that amazing run with Montreal two years ago. Of course, when he did that, he was a back-up goalie that out-shined the starter (sound familiar?)
Wednesday, April 4, 2012
Monday, April 2, 2012
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)