Tuesday, October 04, 2005

The Peerless brings you . . . A SOOPER ULTRA EXCLUSIVE SPECIAL EDITION of The Prognostication. Player previews!

A sooper-dooper special exclusive insider look at this year's opening night roster . . .

Goaltenders:

Olaf Kolzig – popular nickname: “Olie the Goalie” . . . sooper cool nickname: “Kolzy-Wolzy.”

Kolzig is a big goaltender who promises to lead the league this season in size and broken sticks. A long-time favorite of Caps fans who lovingly call him such things as, “Slowlaf Moldzig,” “Slow-lie the Goalie,” and “Mr. Five-hole,” he is primed for a return to greatness . . . unfortunately, that is likely to be with another club as he is frequently mentioned as prime trade bait . . . and I wish George would knock that off. Projected finish . . . 21-40-5, 3.11, .904, househunting in Vancouver by March.


Maxime Ouellet – popular nickname: “Mad Max” . . . sooper cool nickname: “McPhee’s Folly.”

Ouellet was the prize in the Adam Oates trade a few years back, which is sort of like saying the decoder ring is the prize for getting to the bottom of the box of Cracker Jack . . . nice, but ultimately, now useful is it? I think we’re going to find out. Projected finish: 5-14-2, 3.22, .898, inspiring people to ask, “what ever happened to Bill Ranford?”


Brent Johnson – popular nickname: “Brenner” . . . sooper cool nickname: “who the $#@& is that?”

Johnson was picked up (scraped up?) on waivers on cut down day, begging the question, “gee, can he play defense, because THAT’S WHAT WE $@&ING NEED!!!!” He played some quality minutes in St. Louis, once actually winning 34 games in a season for the Blues. He won’t win 34 games with the Caps unless he’s here until, oh . . . 2008.


Defensemen:

Brendan Witt – popular nickname: “Witter” . . . sooper cool nickname: “Schwab” (it’s a trading thing)

Witt has played 568 games in the NHL. The rest of the defense might not have 568 minutes. He’s the dean, the gray beard, the old man, the nagging pain the $#@& who wants a trade. Fans think he’ll bring back a high draft pick in trade. If he brings back a “555” deal from Dominos, Caps fans should color themselves lucky. Projected finish: 1-10-11, -134 (no, that’s not a misprint . . . he’ll get a lot of ice time, and the Caps, well . . . suck).


Steve Eminger – popular nickname: “Emmer” . . . sooper cool nickname: “Stever”

Eminger is often compared to the Caps’ renowned two-way defenseman Calle Johansson. Some fans balk at the notion. But hey, it beats comparing him to Darren Veitch. Projected finish: 8-18-26, -a gazillion.


Shaone Morrisonn – popular nickname: “Shoney” . . . sooper cool nickname: “Stuckey”

Morrrrisssonnonnn came over in trade from the Boston Bruins. He’s a lanky sort (hockeyspeak for “better put on some weight, kid, or you’ll get killed out there) who can skate (hockeyspeak for “will not make open ice hits that are to be confused with Scott Stevens”) and has a high upside (hockeyspeak for “please let this work out”). Projected finish: early April.


Mathieu Biron – popular nickname: “Matty” . . .sooper cool nickname: “Bironey!” (he said in his best Japanese accent)

This guy was once a first round draft pick . . . then he was part of deals that brought in return such players as Ziggy Palffy, Bryan Smolinski, and Adrian Aucoin . . . then he was picked up on waivers . . . later traded for someone named Petr Tenkrat (who sounds like a minor character on a Cartoon Network show) . . . then the Caps got him as a UFA. This is not generally thought of as an upward career path . . . and he’s projected as a top-four defenseman for this team . . . mmmm-kay. Projected finish: Hershey.


Jamie Heward – popular nickname: “Huey” . . . sooper cool nickname: “Geezer”

He’ll be the oldest defenseman on the opening night roster (34) . . . in Detroit, he’d be a “prospect.” Here’s the deal . . . he hasn’t played in an NHL game since the 2001-2002 season. He’s here to help teach the youngsters how to play defense and survive in the NHL . . . this despite parts of six seasons in the NHL and 239 games. If he succeeds, he oughtta get tenure at Harvard. Projected finish: 6-12-18, -24


Bryan Muir – popular nickname: “Muirie” . . . sooper cool nickname: “Travelocity”

Last year, during the lockout, he played for Blues Espoo and MoDo . . . I think this is in the Forest Moon Endor League. Before that, he played for Los Angeles, Colorado, Tampa Bay, Chicago, New Jersey, and Edmonton. This is his seventh team in his ninth season. Airlines refuse to grant this guy frequent flyer miles. Projected finish: somewhere else.


Nolan Yonkman – popular nickname: “Yonkie” . . . sooper cool nickname: “Injured Reserve”

Injuries of note . . . knee, knee, face, arm, and a few bones that medical researchers have yet to actually name. He’s even a carrier (read: Michael Nylander). Success this year will be measured in “consecutive minutes in a vertical position.” Projected finish: Sibley Hospital


Ivan Majesky – popular nickname: “Magic” . . . sooper cool nickname: “who?”

He is described at tsn.ca as, “Has great size. Moves the puck swiftly out of danger. Doesn't get rattled in the defensive zone and always displays a refreshing attitude on the ice.” That attitude comes in handy, because he “owns a very limited offensive arsenal. Needs to avoid serious injury, especially to his fragile knees.” Maybe he does shadow animal acts in the locker room during intermissions? Projected finish: we’ve already been there, kids.


Forwards:

Alexander Ovechkin – popular nickname: “Ovey” . . . sooper cool nickname: “George’s last hope”

The number one, the franchise, the ne plus ultra (go look it up). Consensus pick to be a franchise player, an elite set up man, a feared goal scorer, and early candidate for canonization to replace St. Jude as the patron saint of desperate cases (Caps fan version). He can’t possibly end up being an “Alexandre Volchkov” . . . for one thing, he spells “Alexander” right. Projected finish: ahead of Sidney Crosby in the Calder voting.


Matt Bradley – popular nickname: “Matty . . . no, not that one, the other one” . . . sooper cool nickname: none…what can you possible do with “Matt Bradley?”

Another in a long line of former Penguins making their way to Washington. When folks here are asked if they’ve seen him play, they respond, “no, but I was wondering what he was doing after he left the Senate.” This is a company town. Projected finish: sitting in section 202 on most game nights.


Andrew Cassels – popular nickname: “Casser” . . . sooper cool nickname: “the guy who passes to Ovechkin”

Fun Andy Cassels fact . . . he once played in Hartford . . . with Bobby Holik. Trouble is, he also played in Hartford with Mark Hunter, and Hunter’s been out of the NHL since the Korean War. Seasoned? . . . or just old? Projected finish: leading the team in AARP mailings.


Chris Clark – popular nickname: “Clarkie” . . . sooper cool nickname: “Oh C . . . CC Rider”

CC brings Stanley Cup finals experience to the club, which will come in handy, oh . . . about 2010. To his credit, he seems like a stand up guy, which really comes in handy, because a lot of Caps are going to be spending a lot of time on their keisters this year. He starts the year on IR . . . not the most promising harbingers of success this year. Projected finish: making life hard for Vinny Lecavalier in the season finale.


Ben Clymer – popular nickname: “Clymer-er” . . . sooper cool nickname: “Rings”

If he serves no other purpose this year, he should bring his ring to the rink every day and remind folks what they’re there for. Peerless off-subject thought: why is it when I sound out his last name, it sounds like he should be a recurring character on “The Addams Family?” Projected finish: helping Clark make Vinny wish he was golfing in the finale.


Jeff Friesen – popular nickname: “Freezer” . . . sooper cool nickname: “Freezy-Weezy-P00peneezy”

Part of a salary dump in New Jersey, and if it’s one thing they know about in Jersey, it’s dumps (bada-bing!). Friesen is said to skate really, really fast. Wasn’t fast enough to get away from the guy who said, “Jeff, Lou wants to see you,” was he? This is, for Friesen, what they call a “walk year” . . . the year before free agency. Players usually put up big numbers in that situation. Of course, for players on this club whose names don’t end in “vechkin,” a big year would be double-digits in goals. Projected finish: praying he’s traded back to New Jersey for that conditional pick the Caps gave up to get him.


Boyd Gordon – popular nickname: “Gordo” . . . sooper cool nickname: “Boydo”

Another of the legendary 2002 draft class, five of the first rounders from which reside in the Caps system. Unfortunately, he’s the second of only two that made the opening night roster. The Peerless will bet that there aren’t five Caps fans who realize he actually made the squad. Projected finish: hopefully, making people forget Steve Konowalchuk.


Jeff Halpern – popular nickname: “Halpie” . . . sooper cool nickname: “Oh Captain, My Captain”

The local boy makes good hero, now the captain. What did he do in a past life to get that sort of punishment? He’s already taking one for the team, moving to right wing (not exactly an Alex Rodriguez moving from shortstop to third base for the Yankees, but still . . .). Among players who finished with the club, he led the team in scoring last year. I don’t think there is a Caps fan who hopes he repeats, because that will mean Ovechkin was spirited away by aliens. Projected finish: giving the same effort in the last game of the year as in the first.


Stephen Peat – popular nickname: “Peatie” . . . sooper cool nickname: uh . . . there isn’t one . . . honest . . . I’d never presume . . .

OK . . . he was once the 32nd overall pick as a defenseman . . . he was converted to wing . . . he had some nasty injuries coming up . . . he only had a total of 41 games of experience in the minors to polish his game and learn a new position. Surely, he’s not just the designated pugilist, is he? Is there really a harder job in team sports than that? Projected finish: hopefully, somewhere other than serving five minutes in the penalty box.


Matt Pettinger – popular nickname: “Petter” . . . sooper cool nickname: “double runners”

Sometimes, the young fellow just seems to have a devil of a time staying up on his skates. But he’s always in motion, hitting anything that moves (The Peerless wishes he’d train his talents on Slapshot, but that’s just me). He seems to be a bit of the forgotten fellow in the Caps rebuild. Might not be a bad thing to be kind of out of sight this year. Projected finish: hitting someone, falling down, getting up, and going after them to hit ‘em again.


Brian Sutherby – popular nickname: “Suts” . . . sooper cool nickname: “you’re still here?”

Doesn’t it seem like he’s been with this club since Yvon Labre was here? And still, he’s only 23. His trouble is he’s had his groin pulled more often than salt water taffy. The Future Captain thing and the “next Michael Peca” seem to have faded. Hey, let’s just have a whole season of a Brian Sutherby, hockey player, eh? Projected finish: in the starting lineup in the finale (he said, crossing his fingers).


Petr Sykora – popular nickname: “Syk” . . . sooper cool nickname: “visa”

Well, what? Three years in the making? Botched faxes, delayed visas, miscommunications . . . and he’s finally here. Why, oh why, do I see “Petr Sykora” and read, “Jiri Dopita?” or (when The Peerless has been drinking) “Viktor Navorski?” Projected finish: baggage claim


Brian Willsie – popular nickname: "Willsie . . . ie” . . . sooper cool nickname: “The Amazing Hulk” (ok, I made that up)

Whenever I see Willsie, I’m of a mind of the kid who used to stay after class clapping erasers . . . an earnest, diligent sort. Except he has a little better offensive upside. On this club, that makes him a Hart Trophy finalist. Projected finish: a few goals, a few assists, a couple o’ penalties . . . what would be a nights work for a, say . . . Mark Messier (once upon a time).


Dainius Zubrus – popular nickname: “Zubie” . . . sooper cool nickname: “Zubie Doo-Wop She-Bang”

The focus of what surely is the most talked about, analyzed, poured-over trade in Caps history. Less has been written about World War II than about the Zubrus-Linden for Zednik-Bulis trade. At issue is the eternal question . . . is THIS . . . finally, absolutely, positively, we-really-mean-it-this-time, cross-my-heart-and-hope-to-get-cross-checked the year Zubrus breaks out and fulfills his potential and scores 25-30 goals? . . . no, it’s not. Projected finish: more goals off body parts than off sticks.


So there you have it . . . the player-by-player breakdown for this year’s roster. It makes me think happy thoughts . . . only about 130 days to spring training.

Just remember, we kid because we love . . . good luck, boys.

-- The Peerless

The Peerless Prognosticator is BACK ON THE AIR!

"We’re li-i-i-i-i-i-ve in a bunker somewhere in Colorado with The Peerless Prognosticator . . . Peerless, how does it feel to be back after a year without hockey?"

Well, Brent, it feels . . . how the #@%& do you THINK it feels, you fetid tub of steaming goo?!?!? It feels GRRRRRRRRRREAT!

“So, Peerless . . . what’s on tap for this year?”

Hockey, you wrinkled goober!!!!! Geez, just give me the mic . . . I’ll take it from here.

Fans of the swooping eagle, it’s time to kick this pig and get this year started. Now I know, you’ve been wondering all summer about the Caps chances this year, but rest your weary selves . . . The Peerless is here to sort it all out. Let me just gaze into my magic crystal 8-ball and see what the spirits have to say about the season ahead . . .

October . . . the Caps open with what has to be the funniest lookin’ team on the planet . . . the Columbus Blue Jackets. But against Rick “I skate like a 1946” Nash and Nikolai “Schwervin’” Zherdev, the Caps send the home faithful happy with a big win. From there, they move through an October in which they actually play six . . . SIX!! home games. In a clever bit of GMery and coachin’-uppery, George McPhee and Glen Hanlon conspire to put the horses from that goofy horse show on the ice (one is conspicuous, though . . . the “Reekie” jersey gives it away) and actually play better defense than what was last seen in these parts. The Caps gallop off to a quick start outta the gate (in keeping with the equine theme) and race to the top of the Southeast Division. Ovechkin watch – a new statistic is born – number of penalties drawn in a game. He draws six in a game against the Rangers, and as Marek Malik is given two minutes for “desperate lunge as player with skill flies by,” John Davidson pronounces, “Ovechkin just had ‘an Alexander.’”

November . . . Scandal rocks the club in the first days of the new month as it is found that Screech, the mascot of the cross-town Nationals baseball club, is NOT the offspring of Slapshot. Seems Youppi was conoodling with another (rumored to be Ben Affleck . . . the real reason he’s been looking at settling in Virginia . . . Benouppi?). But nothing is slowing this club down as they swipe three unexpected road wins in Philadelphia, Toronto, and the Meadowlands. The titanic kickoff of the Ovechkin-Crosby smash-mouth smack-down death-match of doom takes place in Pittsburgh in an arena that looks for all the world like a zit on the face of southwestern Pennsylvania. We won’t divulge the details of that contest, but if you’ve read this space, you can probably guess whether there will be a happy ending. The month provides a happy ending as the Caps twist the groinage of their former big bucks star into a lump of angel hair pasta in a home and home twin killing. Ovechkin watch – In response to a groundswell of interest from fans, Ovechkin makes a statement, “I prefer pumpkin to apple pie for Thanksgiving.”

December . . . Merry Freakin’ Doo-dah Christmas! The Caps are the talk of the town! Hail to the Red-what? They’ve even pushed LaVar to page 2 of the Post! As the burgundy and gold slide once more into the ooze of an 8-8 season, it’s the bleu-blanc-et-bronze that is capturing the hearts and minds of the city. Alexander Ovechkin (The Peerless will not sully the dignity of the young fellow by addressing him as “Alex”) is raising eyebrows, which makes for a lot of startled looking people. But, on the other end of the spectrum, Olaf Kolzig is reawakening chants of “O-lie, O-lie, O-lie” with his play. Even Brendan Witt can be heard to remark . . . “trade? . . . I wanna stay here forever . . . I want to stay here so bad, I’ll have Cristian Guzman’s baby!” Brendan seems a bit over-excited over the Caps hot start. Ovechkin watch – New world record . . . even strength, power play, shorthanded, penalty shot, empty net . . . and shootout. Mario who?

January . . . we’re into the dog days of the season, but it’s the Caps treating the opposition like dogs . . . Atlanta…woof! . . . Ottawa…arf! . . . Philadelphia . . . “bah-roooooooooooooo!!!” Ovechkin leads the league in scoring, Kolzig in GAA . . . and what’s this? The first murmurings of Brendan Witt for the Norris? Pinch me, The Peerless is dreaming (you got THAT right, bub…). Even the second installment of Bird-Magic . . . uh, Ovechkin-Crosby is a lopsided affair . . . whosyerdaddywhosyerdaddywhosyerdaddy . . . Ovechkin watch – Calder voting is closed, Ovechkin declared winner by acclamation.

February . . . The Caps give their fans a great big, wet, R-rated Valentine kiss by heading into the Olympic break with a stompization of the Penguins on home ice. Sidney has a new nickname . . . “dead meat.” Kwame Brown is quoted in the Los Angeles Times that he wants to come back to DC to play power forward for the Caps. When the Caps return from the break, they pick up right where they left off by topping Toronto to finish the month while in . . .

March . . . they overwhelm Ottawa, and . . . and . . . something something Atlanta, all on the road. Things are so good, even John Buccigross dedicates a song in his ESPN column to the Caps . . . and it’s actually one that people have heard of! At the trade deadline, Caps have to install banks of telephones to handle calls from agents trying to finagle a deal for their clients to the surprise team of the season (“George! . . . if I can get the club to bite on the rights to Nepriayev, I get deliver Iginla to you!”). Ovechkin watch – Wayne Gretzky offers Ovechkin chance to wear ‘99’ . . . Ovechkin declines, “I want to retire number ‘8’.”

April . . . the regular season winds to a close, the Caps have long since clinched the number one seed in the East, Ted is contemplating getting Abe to add another balcony to MCI to handle the crowds for 2006-2007 (Dan Snyder has some ideas for “obstructed view” seats), even Bill Clement has nice words for the Caps (“ . . . they don’t suck”). Ted’s made so much money on attendance and merchandise (‘8’ sweaters are the biggest selling sports apparel item in the world), he declares that playoff tickets will be free (Snyder busts a blood vessel at the news). Ovechkin watch – the youngster declares, “I’ll do better in the playoffs.”

Rumors spread of teams in a panic, thinking of mass forfeits . . .

The playoffs . . . ah, but we get ahead of ourselves. Stay tuned.

-- The Peerless

Friday, September 23, 2005

To a hockey game, I went . . .

Caps hockey returned to the Nation’s Capital on Wednesday night. Some folks – not many -- even showed up to watch it . . . So, what did it look like? Here’s your Peerless Prognosticator’s review . . . with grades!

Goaltending: Olaf Kolzig . . . it was one game, and early, but the volcanic temper was held in check. I thought he played a solid, if unspectacular game. But Buffalo is also offense-challenged, and despite having what seemed a dozen 5-on-3's, had trouble converting. Kolzig seemed not to suffer from the smaller pads and glove, but he did seem to have a problem with the lap dances he was given as defensemen got pushed into him. Grade: B

Forwards . . . a very uneven performance. The new rules clearly presented problems for this group – five minors for hooking or holding. As for the good points . . . Jared Aulin looked to be further along than most of the others in terms of having a clue where the play was going . . . Chris Bourque plays with a high motor, and his feisty streak emerged as the game progressed; much is being made of his perhaps earning a roster spot, but I think he’d be better off in Hershey . . . Chris Clark -- for my money, the best Cap on the ice tonight. He played like a guy trying to earn a job. A lot of hustle; I think fans are going to like this guy if tonight was representative of the effort he brings. Taking on the puffed up Andrew Peters after Peters boarded Miroslav Zalesak was a plus . . . Boyd Gordon -- almost invisible out there, and I don't know if that was a bad thing. If his game is to be "responsibility," then I don't suppose you want him to be conspicuous; a solid, workmanlike effort . . . Alexander Ovechkin -- no RoboVisor tonight, for those interested in fashion, he made two superb moves to draw a defenseman to the inside, then went wide, eventually getting in deep alone on Miller. His shootout goal was matter-of-fact efficient. Glide in, pull the puck from the forehand to the backhand, lift backhander over Miller's stick . . . Dave Steckel -- I get the feeling this is a guy who plays better than his skill level. I have to give him props for effort. He gave an honest one on every shift I saw. . . . Overall grade for the forwards: C-

Defense . . . Steve Eminger -- my goodness, did he really play tonight? The stat sheet says 15 minutes, but they were the quietest 15 minutes imaginable. Maybe that's a good thing; C. Johansson used to have a lot of games like that, but let's not yet confuse the two . . . Mike Green -- by the end of the game was probably the best defenseman on the ice for the Caps; just a solid looking guy out there . . . Jamie Heward -- another guy who I think will occasionally bring a smile to a fan's face for his effort, if tonight is an indication. He led the club in ice time and blocked shots . . . Jeff Schultz -- some folks will look at his performance and say, "passive;" I thought he acquitted himself quite well . . . Overall grade for the defense: C-

Other observations . . .

-- Hey, it wasn't as bad as it could have been, and it certainly wasn't as bad as the final score indicated. There was some decent effort out there, and you can see where down the road there might be something to smile about -- Ovechkin (of course), Green, Bourque. The whole was definitely less than the sum of its parts tonight, which I think is entirely to be expected at this stage.

-- For most of the night, the Caps were no legitimate threat to score when Ovechkin didn't have the puck. But there was a 5-minute or so stretch in the second period when Ryan Miller really bailed the Sabres out from some bad defense. I've seen Miller a few times in person, and this time was different. He seems to "get it." He was very economical in his movements and anticipated the play very well (that might be a reason the buffalo head on his jersey has bruises tonight). I compare that to the "frisky puppy" school of goaltending now played by Marc-Andre Fleury in Pittsburgh, who no doubt will learn his lesson down the road.

-- And whatta crowd! I've never seen so many purple seats attend a game in my life. You could have put the entire crowd into sections 121, 100, and 101. They were loud, though, when Ovechkin schooled Miller in the shootout. As the Post reports: "The team announced a crowd of 10,129, but the actual attendance was likely less than half that." . . . Maybe 25 percent of it, and that included the ushers and concessioneers.

-- Speaking of shootouts, it was every bit as lame and contrived as I remembered from watching it in the AHL. Guess it will give me an opportunity to get to the train early on some nights.

-- And where in heaven's name did the neutral zone go? It's tiny! My unscientific Peerless Measurement Standard (PMS) gave it about three Zamboni's wide. I think I can see pretty clearly what this means, and it ain't good. The effort to decrease the size of the neutral zone by moving both the goal line and blue line away from the boards will appear to provide more room in the offensive zone on power plays . . . but that seems to me a cheap (and ultimately ineffective) way to increase scoring. It's going to reduce the NHL to a "half-court" offense (with all that does for the NBA to slow the game down). Teams will gain the zone, then pass the puck around the perimeter looking for the "entry pass" . . . it really IS the Bettmanization/NBAification of the NHL. I think this is going to be a disaster. Hockey is skating, too, not just two guys in a tape-to-tape passing drill at the perimeter of the offensive zone.

OK . . .there's my windy take on things tonight. Aren't you glad you read this far?

-- The Peerless

Sunday, September 18, 2005

First Cuts, Last Cuts

This weekend saw the Caps pare back their training camp roster by 20 players who were sent to Hershey. Some were expected – goaltenders Frederic Cassivi and Kirk Daubenspeck, forwards Owen Fussey and Graham Mink, for example. A couple make sense – Tomas Fleischmann and Jonas Johansson, who have not been pros for very long and can benefit from the greater ice time they’ll see in Hershey. But one seems to stand out – Jean-Francois Fortin. In the view of some (including none other than head coach Glen Hanlon), J.F. has been at times the best defenseman on the ice. But, Fortin has had a reputation for a lack of consistency and focus, of disappearing in games and failing to give an honest effort.

Why, then, the demotion? Is he really behind on the depth chart such others as Bryan Muir, or Lawrence Nycholat, or Jamie Heward, who are still on the camp roster?

I wonder if something else isn’t taking place. I wonder if this isn’t an effort on the part of the Caps brain trust to find out one last time just what Fortin’s level of dedication is – whether he will work hard in Hershey to make his way back to the big club, or whether he will now go through the motions and make good on his statement that if he didn’t make the big club, he’d be in Europe next year. It’ll be one of the many subplots to the Caps season.

***

So, Alexander Ovechkin is making his debut as a Cap in Washington on Wednesday. Hmm . . . the Caps will be competing against the Nats, who will host the Giants and Barry Bonds at RFK (hopefully, the Nats still will be in the wild card chase). Wonder what the attendance will be at MCI . . . I’ll guess 6,500.

***

And, the Caps already lead the NHL in one category . . . most Jakub’s (2 – Cutta and Klepis). We take it where we can get it this year.

– The Peerless

Tuesday, September 13, 2005

You can't go home again . . . and sometimes, you don't want to

From what I read in the last chapter of the "Will Bondra Return to Washington" saga, Peter Bondra was more enthusiastic about the prospects of playing for Atlanta than Washington. Of course, that might just be PR for the faithful in Atlanta.

But, it does put the period at the end of the sentence -- you can't go home again. Sometimes, you don't want to. In any case, it might have been a bad idea had Bondra been resigned. Why? I think a number of elements were coming together that made the veteran winger a bad fit for a team where half the guys can't buy a drink legally in the U.S.:

1. He's 37 years old (he'll be 38 in February). Frankly, I think spending seven figures for a player on the far side of 35 at this point of the new NHL era is nuts. Not all of the ramifications of the new agreement are known -- how it will play out over the next year or two. I don't think teams, especially teams like the Caps, can afford "sick money" -- high salary paid to players who aren't productive (and this pertains more to older players).

2. The Caps have a lot of wingers or guys who can play the position they need to find out about. Not all will make the team, but among Ovechkin, Semin, Sykora, Fehr, Sutherby, Gordon, Zalesak, Fleischmann, and Johansson, they might fill the wings on the top two lines and get valuable development time, which leaves Bondra . . . where?

3. The Caps are already several million over their payroll target, according to reports down here. A $1.5 million deal, plus incentives, might push the Caps closer to $30 million than they want at this stage of their rebuild, especially if the cap is lower next year.

4. In his last four full seasons, his goal scoring went 45-39-30-26. The new rules might open things up for him . . . then again, maybe not. At 37, it a considerable risk to take.

Bondra will have more developed offensive talent in Atlanta than he would have had in Washington -- Hossa and Kovalchuk foremost among them, and Bondra has for most of his career been the type who requires someone to feed him the puck. He's not as adept a creator on his own. In Washington, he'd have had to do a lot of that this year.

It's time to move on, Caps fans.

-- The Peerless

Monday, September 12, 2005

Time to move on

Well, by all indications, it’s over. Peter Bondra is reported to have signed a one-year deal with Atlanta. Given that the Caps have a number of forwards they want to get quality ice time – Alexander Ovechkin, Alexander Semin, Petr Sykora, Brian Sutherby, Dainius Zubrus, Jeff Halpern, and Boyd Gordon, with perhaps Jakub Klepis, Jared Aulin, Eric Fehr and Chris Bourque fighting for roster spots – it was hard to figure just where Bondra was going to fit in. If anything, he was going to have to fit in on an economic basis, which is where the $1.5 million contract came into play. But, when the Caps secured Sykora and then found themselves several million in payroll where they wanted to be, the idea of bringing back Bondra probably lost much of its luster. Add to that the greater need yet to bring in a veteran defenseman (which is itself an iffy proposition, given the current state of payroll), bringing back Bondra almost become a bad idea.

But, all that hypothesizing aside, it’s over. And it’s time to get on with the rebuilding. That process began in earnest today with the opening of training camp. Hopefully, there will be one or more of the kids who break out and justify the idea that youth must be served.


-- The Peerless

Monday, September 05, 2005

Caps-siers

“Hoosiers” is a great sports flick. There is one scene in it that comes to mind as message boards hum and crackle with ideas for trades and complaints of inactivity in the free agent market.

The scene is one of Coach Norman Dale and his meager squad being introduced to the students and supporters before the start of the Hickory High basketball season. As Coach Dale and the boys are standing at the center of the gym, a chant goes up, “we want Jimmy,” referring to the prodigy Jimmy Chitwood, who had chosen not to play.

Coach Dale steps to the microphone and defiantly tells those in the stands. “this is your team.” It is a team, he says, that demands the respect that their going out night after night through the winter deserves.

Well, so it is with the Caps . . . the forlorn collection of the not good enough, the not old enough, or just the “not enough” enough to compete for a playoff spot. And fans are burning message boards with demands that the Caps sign Peter Bondra to a contract.

Well, folks, this is your team . . .

Olaf Kolzig, the best goalie in Caps history, one who single-handedly carried the club on his broad shoulders to its only Stanley Cup final, but who now is being kicked to the curb like the week’s trash. I suspect he’ll be traded before the end of the season, but it should not diminish one bit from what he’s meant to this franchise on and off the ice since arriving in Washington.

Maxime Ouellet . . . the goalie in waiting, about whom whispers of “gee, is he really that good?” are lurking under the surface. It’s getting to be his time, and it’s time he gets that chance . . . so folks, give the kid a chance.

Brian Sutherby . . . there are folks who are prepared to give up on him, and he’s only 23. It’s true, it’s coming to be his time to see if he can really be “a bigger, faster, more skilled version of Michael Peca,” but here’s a kid with barely a full season of NHL experience behind him.

Alexander Semin . . . now he’s showing up in some fans’ trade ideas. He’s immature, he’s a defensive liability, he this, he’s that. Well, he’s also 21 years old.

Steve Eminger . . . another of that class of 2002 that the club needs to have step up. He won’t turn 22 until the season begins, playing one of the hardest positions in all team sports to master, and he’s expected to be a top-pair defenseman to boot. Except mumblings of “not tough enough” can be heard, he didn’t have a good season at Portland last year, etc. Well, in the 1988-89 season, when Calle Johansson was 22 years old (and was traded to Washington), he was 3-18-21, -6, in 59 games. Sounds about where Eminger might end up.

There is a whole squad of these guys at the doorstep of their careers, either on their way in or on their way out. Regardless, it is a club that commands the respect that going out 82 nights through the winter in the hardest of team sports deserves.

-- The Peerless

Wednesday, August 31, 2005

Popcorn

Caps sign Jeff Schultz and Alexander Ovechkin . . . Ovechkin to be introduced at a press conference tomorrow . . . training camp opening announced by the club . . . Peter Bondra about to make a decision.

My my . . . you can almost hear the skates cutting into the ice, can’t you?

It’s driving people nuts! . . . Silly rumors are popping up like a tub of Orville Redenbacher.

Kolzig for Luongo . . . Witt for Orpik and Beech.

I’m waiting for the Crosby watch . . . perhaps for Dainius Zubrus, now that those Zubrus for Jan Hrdina rumors have finally been laid to rest . . .

. . . or have they?





Cue the X-Files music.

– The Peerless

Sunday, August 28, 2005

It's not THAT the wind is blowin'

It's WHAT the wind is blowin' . . .

With apologies to comedian Ron White, we're now into the silly season of personnel moves, or more accurately, "rumors."

Today's goofy rumor comes courtesy of the Toronto Sun, which offers up a helping of Nik Antropov for Brendan Witt. "Moving Antropov" might be the title of a long running stage play in Ontario for as often as it seems to get attention.

As much help as the Caps could use at center, I suspect the Caps' brain trust will wait on this one. Antropov has a desirable set of physical attributes (6'6", 220) and plays a position in which the Caps are thin -- center. But, Antropov can have the disturbingly frequent brain-lock and often does not use that super-size body to greatest benefit. The price tag ($1.1 million) is attractive in trade (compared to Witt's $1.7 million), but one suspects the Caps will be patient in moving Witt.

The Peerless doesn't this deal is going anywhere, at least for the time being.

In other Caps news . . . there really isn't any. The Bondra Watch is still underway, and one suspects that this week a decision will be made. It can't come soon enough. Things have gotten quite boring as we begin to count the days to training camp.

-- The Peerless

Tuesday, August 23, 2005

It might be bad, but it could be worse.

It isn't a secret, not many folks think the Caps will be much more than a middling AHL-quality team this year. But how bad, in the context of major pro teams since World War II, or even compared with the Caps' 8-67-5 weeping sore of an inaugural season in 1974-75 might they be?

There's bad, as in amusingly bad . . . there's bad, as in "do you believe this?" . . . and there's bad, but we'll get better. If you want to make the top of the list, you not only have to be bad, you need to give your following the impression that like a desert stretching to the horizon, your chances of any success in the foreseeable future will be as likely as finding a waterfall in the Sahara.

So, where do the Caps to be fit in? Not nearly as bad as one might think, in my Peerlessian opinion. Let's take a look at some of the epic disasters . . .

1949 St. Louis Browns. Geez, they stunk. True, at 53-101, they didn't have the worst record in the American League (that dishonor fell to, who else, the Washington Senators), but they left little in the way of hope for their fans. They were last in hitting and last in pitching, but here is the scariest statistic . . . 3,519 fans per game. The next worse team in the AL (yup, the Senators) managed to draw 10,101 a game. And, as if that wasn't bad enough, that year was the first of seven in which they averaged 98 losses a year (in the days of the 154-game schedule). By the time it was over, the Browns were the Orioles and playing in Baltimore. Now that, my friends, is bad.

1962 New York Mets. If there is a potential parallel with the 2005-2006 Caps, it's this team. So bad as to be a constant source of entertainment (they finished 40-120 in this, their inaugural year), but in seven years would be winning a World Series. They had Roger Craig, up until then a serviceable major league pitcher, finish 10-24 (sort of like finishing with a -50 plus-minus in the contemporary era of hockey) . . . and he'd be even worse the next year. Don Zimmer (Pedro Martinez' future sparring partner) batted .077 . . . no, he wasn't a pitcher. They did have a pitcher going by the name of "Vinegar Bend" (Mizell, for those keeping score). They finished 60.5 games out of first . . . guess they were figuring out the "magic number" for elimination, oh . . . about April 15th that year.

1976 Tampa Bay Buccaneers. A donut hole for the year . . . oh-for-1976 . . . 14 games, 14 L's . . . the gold standard of "suck." The most entertaining part of their entire season was the post-game press conferences of head coach John McKay, whose coaching strategy appeared to take a strange, abrupt turn to the "George Burns" school of coaching very early on. Only four times that year did they finish within two touchdowns of their opponent. Four times, they were shutout. How bad were they? Steve Spurrier was their quarterback. No run, no gun, no fun. He’s been trying to make up for it ever since.

1980-81 Winnipeg Jets. You could make a case that this club was worse than the 1974-75 Caps . . . well, almost as bad. They set a record among major pro sports in North America for consecutive winless games - 30 (it still stands). They won nine games. But, unlike the 1974-75 Caps, who followed up their disastrous inaugural season with a 11-59-10 record, the Jets made the playoffs in 1981-82 with the third best record in the Campbell Conference, 33-33-14 . . . did I say that except for Edmonton, the Campbell pretty much sucked that year?

1972-73 Philadelphia 76ers. 9-73 . . . 59 games behind the Boston Celtics. How could they be that bad? Only twice all year did they win consecutive games (making them 5-73 for the other 78 games . . . something truly hideous to think about). But, three years later they were in the playoffs, kicking off a run of 15 years in 16 in which they made the playoffs, winning an NBA title and on two other occasions losing in the NBA final.

The Caps might have a bleak prospect for this year, but The Peerless foresees better times ahead than might have been the case for these sad examples of decrepitude.

Right? . . . Right??

-- The Peerless


Sunday, August 21, 2005

The Class of 2002

If folks want to get an indication of where the Caps stand with their rebuild, then look not to Alexander Ovechkin, but to their class of 2002 prospects. For those who need reminding, these are the top prospects of that class:

Steve Eminger (1st round/12th overall)
Alexander Semin (1/13)
Jakub Klepis (1/16)
Boyd Gordon (1/17)
Jonas Johansson (1/28)
Maxime Daigneault (2/59)
Tomas Fleischmann (2/63)

When people speak of the core of prospects, this is much of it. I would think Eminger, Semin, and Gordon are all but locks to make the parent club out of camp. Klepis would not be all that much of a surprise. The others, I think, are long shots to make the squad out of camp.

But in a sense, this could be a watershed year for this class. If these players don’t show promise – in the fourth season after their selection – then one would have to wonder if the Caps’ rebuild won’t be delayed even further. Particularly for Eminger (thought to be a top-four defenseman when selected), Semin (a first line scoring winger), and Gordon (a checking center with perhaps some scoring upside), this is a year to establish a footprint.

I’m not arguing that these players will be fully-functional NHLers out of the box. In the case of Eminger, Semin, and Gordon, we’re talking about guys with only about 150 games of experience among them. For the rest, none. But this could – and frankly should – be a “leap year” for them. More than Ovechkin, more than the players picked up on the free agency wire, these will be the players to watch . . . and to watch grow.

-- The Peerless

Friday, August 19, 2005

The Magic 8-Ball

So . . . the Washington Times reports today that a return to the Caps by Peter Bondra is up to the player. The current thinking is that his choice is down to Atlanta and Washington.

What to make of this . . . I suspect this is a matter of money and place. I’m guessing Atlanta offered more money or more years, or both, but Washington offered a competitive amount while offering the intangible of coming back to where he built his career.

Just another wrinkle in the new free agency/salary cap era.

Atlanta might be a playoff team this year and has some decent up-and-coming players. The thought of playing along side of Ilya Kovalchuk and Dany Heatley has its charms. Then again, the possibility of playing with Alexander Ovechkin and tutoring Alexander Semin and Eric Fehr (at least in training camp) in the finer points of the sniping art must pique his interest as well.

So, will Bondra sign with Washington? After asking the magic 8-ball, and having it tell me to “concentrate and ask again,” it told me . . . “yes definitely.”

---

Dainius Zubrus has been signed. A big, skates-like-the-wind guy who can play any forward position and has a propensity for scoring goals off various body parts. And, he’s still only 27. He could very well center the Alexanders – Ovechkin and Semin – this year. If ever there was a year for a break-out season . . .

So, is THIS the year he breaks out and fulfills his (once upon a time) vast potential? The magic 8-ball says . . .”it is decidedly so”

Yeah, I’ll believe it when I see it.

---

Continuing a long and proud tradition, the Caps signed another former Penguin – Matt Bradley being this year’s pick-up. Bradley is somewhat typical of what the Caps are doing, at least in the short term. He’s relatively young (27), has some size, but most importantly, he can skate and he’s cheap. So, the question for the magic 8-ball is . . .

Can a line of Matt Bradley, Brian Sutherby, and Matt Pettinger be a decent checking line?

“Yes, definitely.”

....hmm.

---

But back to Alexander Semin . . . last year, he failed to report to Portland and was subsequently suspended by the club. Now, there is an issue about his military status. It raises the question . . . will Semin even be in Washington this year?

Magic 8-ball, you’re up . . .

. . . “outlook good"

---

One last question . . . "is this #@%& ball broken?"

"yes"


-- The Peerless

Wednesday, August 17, 2005

Some Early Thoughts on What Awaits

OK . . . so what lies in store for the Caps this year? Although there are roster spots to fill, and line combinations and defensive pairings to iron out, it is clear – as if hit over the head with a mallet – that the Caps are going with youth. So, we know who should be skating with the big club this season as far as the core is concerned . . . at least to start.

Given all that, it’s reasonable to assume that the Caps are unlikely to be a successful club in the standings. But what can we look forward to? What would constitute success, give our meager expectations for this year and hope for the years to come?

Standings . . . I’m a big proponent of breaking a season down into manageable pieces – ten game slices. I think this will be particularly helpful in gauging the Caps’ progress over the course of the season. Usually, I’d be looking to see if the Caps average 12 standings points per 10 game stretch. That can be a formula for reaching a 100-point season. This year, I’ll be looking to see if one ten game stretch improves on the last. If, for instance, the Caps earn only six points in the first slice of ten games, but earn ten points in the fifth and 12 in the sixth, I would regard that as progress, even if the Caps are lagging in the standings. It would be evidence that the kids are getting it.

Team . . . once upon a time, the Caps had a reputation as being a real hard team to play against. They were a “lunch-pail” group that brought their best effort every night. The “Plumbers Line” represented what Caps hockey was all about – relentless pursuit and in-your-face hockey all over the ice. It wasn’t a reflection of pugilistic prowess, but a high-octane approach to checking and hard work. Even as recently as the line of Jeff Halpern, Ulf Dahlen, and Steve Konowalchuk you could see elements of such an approach to the game. Their ability to control the puck and dominate the corners and end boards frustrated opponents endlessly. The Caps need to return to a similar theme – they need to re-establish a team philosophy, a sense of what it means to play “Caps Hockey.” If kids like Brian Sutherby and Boyd Gordon and Matt Pettinger can set the tone, the comparisons to hard-working, if less-than-glamorous guys from the past like Gaetan Duchesne, Alan Haworth, or Greg Adams would be appropriate. Even in a new, offensively-oriented NHL, I think there is an important place for this kind of ethic.

Individuals . . . for some players, the time has come to show that they deserve major minutes in the NHL. We’re not talking competing for scoring championships or Norris Trophy candidacies, but for guys like Brian Sutherby, Steve Eminger, Boyd Gordon, and others, the club needs some indication that they will be contributing members of the club for years to come. Here, the ten game slice idea also is apt. Some of the plus-minus statistics for these guys will be brutal early on. But after the all-star break, with several dozen games behind them, we might expect to see improvement. If any of these guys are struggling, see their minutes cut back, or worse – get sent to Hershey – the club will have problems, and the rebuild will suffer. That’s a lot of pressure to put on 20-something young men, but that’s also the nature of professional sports.

Winners don’t get built from kits. The failures of the New York Rangers and the Caps, as well as the successes of the New Jersey Devils and, more recently, the Tampa Bay Lightning show that rather clearly. Even in the Oklahoma Land Rush of free agency that we’ve been in over the past few weeks, I think “building” a team will result in a sustainable success that “shopping” for a team will not.

Monday, August 15, 2005

Today's subject . . . history

Today, we take a look back at yesteryear and into another sport . . . football. Folks in River City will remember not-too-fondly the days leading up to the 2000 season when the Redskins went on quite the binge. They brought in Bruce Smith, Deion Sanders, Mark Carrier, and Jeff George, Adrian Murrell, Andre Reed, and Irving Fryar to jump start the return to Redskin glory. With each new signing, confidence grew. Oh, what a year it would be. You'd have thought the engravers were already eyeing the Lombardi Trophy to etch the Redskins' name in it.

And the club went . . . splat.

After starting 6-2, they went 2-6 to finish 8-8. A disappointing season by any measure, but the predictable result when trying to build a team from a kit. It is something the Redskins have paid for ever since.

Which brings me to . . . the Pittsburgh Penguins. My, what a couple of weeks this has been for the Caps' long time nemesis. Today, they signed John LeClair to a deal, adding him to recent acquisitions: Jocelyn Thibault, Zigmund Palffy, Sergei Gonchar, and Andre Roy. Average age on opening night? . . . 33. To this add Mark Recchi (37) and Mario Lemieux (40 on opening night). Not what one would call a youth movement, unless the "movement" is limited to the big three of Sidney Crosby, Marc-Andre Fleury (who seems destined for another year in Wilkes-Barre), and Evgeni Malkin (who seems ticketed for another year in Russia).

On paper, this is a formidable offensive team. On paper, they could score 300 goals. On paper, they might give up a similar number.

But then, folks here saw to what "on paper" often translates . . . a nice fantasy team, emphasis on the word, "fantasy."

-- The Peerless

Sunday, August 14, 2005

As if there wasn't enough to think about

Well, fellow fans of the black, blue, and bronze . . . we’re less than two months to opening night, and Caps fans are in a panic.

We haven’t signed Bondra!

Folks aren’t this attached to the family pet.

But hey, why stop there? We could have a whole theme park amount of nostalgia . . .

Bring back Bobby Gould! . . . if only to take another swipe at that geeky owner in Pittsburgh.

Bring back Jim Carey! . . . just don’t let him play against Pittsburgh.

Bring back Dennis Maruk! . . . hey, since the NHL is emphasizing offense, why not the only 60-goal scorer in Caps history?

Bring back Rod Langway! . . . can’t . . . gotta wear a helmet (or is he still grandfathered in?)

Bring back Richard Zednik! . . . sadly, there are many who would.

Bring back Trevor Linden! . . . he can’t be as bad as he was in his short stint here.

Bring back Michel Belhumeur! . . . please, just get the guy one win.

Bring back Bengt Gustafsson! . . . ok, that’s mine.

Bring back the Murrays! . . . hey, they made the playoffs regularly.

Bring back Winger! . . . uh, don’t.

Bring back Craig Laughlin! . . . anything to get him out of the booth.

Bring back Mike Fornes! . . . “a shot, and a goal!”

Bring back the white pants! . . . boxers or briefs?

Right now, I’m just happy they’re bringing back hockey.

-- The Peerless

Saturday, August 13, 2005

The Ghost and Mr. Muir

Among other signings, the Caps obtained another defenseman -- Bryan Muir -- on Thursday. Seems the club is now looking to fill out the Hershey roster. Of course, this is another six-foot-plus-plus defenseman.

But amid all these undercard signings, I'm wondering about that lonely spot out on the right point on the power play and whether Peter Bondra will be returned to the fold. He's still out there. The club is a little light at right wing, assuming Eric Fehr will spend the year in Hershey. Of course, they might be light at left wing, too, if Alexander Semin remains in Russia.

Who knew filling a roster could be so hard.

Thursday, August 11, 2005

I knew Ted wanted an NBA team . . .

. . . but his lack of patience is stunning. With the signings of Mathieu Biron and Ivan Majesky, Ted (or rather, George, presumably with Ted's blessing) has assembled a defense squad that likely would rebound better than the Wizards . . . let's recap.

Returning, we have:

Shaone Morrisonn: 6'3"
Steve Eminger: 6'2"
Nolan Yonkman: 6'6"

Waiting in the wings, there is Jeff Schultz: 6'6"

The Caps just got finished drafting:

Sasha Pokulok: 6'5"
Joe Finley: 6'7"

And now . . . Biron at 6'6" and Majesky at 6'5"

The Caps have to find a way to sign Zdeno Chara as a free agent next year.

The club's new motto . . . "We might not be good, but we'll be tall."

-- The Peerless

Wednesday, August 10, 2005

Cap-alanche

Andrew Cassels and Lawrence Nycholat? Well, they have to get to 23 somehow. Cassels' best days are, as they say, behind him, but given what appears to be the Caps' plan, this is not a bad pickup. He'll give them a year, maybe two, of decent two way play and will be able to impart some wisdom in the process -- hopefully. He's not, and is not intended to be, a long-term solution to the center problem.

Nycholat serves more in my mind to underline the lingering problem on the blue line -- a lack of physical defensemen (and please, no "Yonkman" references until he stays vertical for a dozen or so games). Even if they are not in the team's long term plans, they're needed to take away opponents' incentive to take liberties with the kids.

On balance, not a bad day for the Caps, but nothing here to convince me that a 50+ point season is on its way.

Monday, August 08, 2005

C'mon in . . . the water's . . . well, wet

So, I'm away for a couple of days, and the Caps sign not one, but two free agents.

Ben Clymer seems to be the prototypical candidate for the Caps right now. Nothing leaps out at you about his game, but he's a decent two-way guy who can skate. He won't put up much in the way of statistics, but he won't embarrass himself out there, either. This is the kind of player -- not too old, not too expensive, not a high-end talent -- with which I thought the Caps would try to fill in the roster.

The signing of Miroslav Zalesak confounds me. He's pretty much one-dimensional, and not the dimension the Caps need. He's scored some in the AHL but hasn't had a lot of NHL experience (12 games). He's said to be less than physically imposing and lacking on the defensive end. I would have thought that the strategy was to draft for skill (even the just-drafted, outsized Sasha Pokulok is more of a skill defenseman) then fill in the holes in physical, two-way, grinder-type players via free agency or trades. This signing, I just don't get.

But hey, the Caps are new to this . . . hopefully, they'll get better.


-- The Peerless

Thursday, August 04, 2005

Day 4 . . .

Well, here we are in Day 4 of the new era of hockey (looks a lot like fantasy hockey so far, doesn't it?). INactivity on the part of the Caps raises the questions...what are they looking for, and why?

If you look at the Flyers, they're assembling a team to win a Cup in the next couple of years, after which guys like Roenick (if he's still around), Forsberg, Primeau, and some others will be gone or a good distance past their prime.

Now, what are the Caps doing? They're not competitive. It is unlikely, unless they had spent right to the cap, that they'd be competitive in the next couple of years. Their time horizon is further out (rebuilding, when you're doing it from scratch, is not a 1-2 year thing) . . . 3-4 years.

So, what are they looking for, and why?

1. I would think the Caps are not offering any FA any deal past 2 years, maybe three. What would be the point? To tie up payroll just when you're becoming competitive? When you would then not have any payroll flexibility to fill holes?

2. This probably means older FAs looking for perhaps one more payday. Look at the list, draw your own conclusions.

3. It will mean looking carefully for guys who have an understanding of the game, even if their skills have diminshed. In all likelihood, they will not contribute a lot to the score sheet, but if they can impart some wisdom on what is now a young team, that 3-4 year time frame looks better.

4. There is a whole secondary market that hasn't yet been established (think "Ron Francis" or "Mark Messier," although I think neither of these guys would entertain an offer from the Caps) . . . older guys with an excellent career body of work who would be precisely that kind of player to contribute wisdom, if not statistics. That's the market in which the Caps will be a player . . . so, dear Caps fan, turn off sportsnet.ca and thefourthperiod.com and tsn.ca and wait a few days.

-- The Peerless

Tuesday, August 02, 2005

We're Doomed

Well, that's the consensus, it seems, in Caps Land. The Caps didn't sign a free agent today -- well, as of this writing.

And that signifies . . . what, exactly?

After a year of no hockey and fan polls indicating that players are overpaid and should get back to work, the last couple of days have treated us to wails of despair over the fact that Washington didn't sign (fill in the blank) to a three-year, 14.5 million deal.

Well, fans are called that for a reason . . . there is no requirement to be logical.

So, what do we make of today's silence on the part of the Caps? Heck, if I knew, I wouldn't be here, I'd be picking winning Powerball numbers. It seems to me that the Caps have the intention of spending at or near the $21.5 million floor. Given the players to whom they have commitments and the RFAs they are likely to re-sign, they'll be a few players short of a roster and $4-5 million short of the floor. That doesn't suggest any splashy signings in the early period. It suggests a few mid-range, $1 million per (max) kinds of free agents.

It also suggests the Caps will intensely suck this year. At best, they will be a team that competes every night, will be a nuisance to play against, but one lacking the talent to win more than one game in four.

Sunday, July 31, 2005

The Great Race

Well, tomorrow the great race for free agents begins, and Caps fans are no doubt wondering who from among the dozens of available unrestricted free agents they will pursue. Too many fans will be thinking of a high-profile free agent, or two . . . or three.

Bad move.

Why tie up payroll with one or two (or three) high profile free agents who will not be there when the Caps -- hopefully -- return to respectability?

Better to go for mid-range guys -- guys who can lead by example, guys with a work ethic, guys who can pass along the little things it takes to play hockey well. It isn't sexy, and it won't get the Caps to the playoffs this year, but it will put the team in better position to pursue free agents next year (in what promises to be a better class), and it will make the youngsters on whom the club is relying in the years to come better players.

-- The Peerless

Saturday, July 30, 2005

Well . . . the draft is over, and the Wizards . . . oops, the Caps, drafted 13 feet of defensemen in the first two rounds. One looks for all the world like a turbo version of Sergei Gonchar (a 6'5" "puck moving defenseman" with questions in his own end) and another who looks like a bulked up version of Nolan Yonkman . . . hopefully without the injury issues.

After going for five defensemen in their first eight picks last year, then using their first four picks on defensemen in this draft, one gets the feeling that the Caps are looking to address a specific need. But in the new NHL, which seems to want to place a premium on offense, will the Caps have enough?