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jeudi 24 avril 2014

Habs : Playoffs at the Bell Centre ‘like a normal game times 1,000,’ Prust says




Source : Faceoff.com

The denial first: Brandon Prust was not at the Montreal poutine restaurant in the pre-dawn of Wednesday, a few hours after the Canadiens had swept the Tampa Bay Lightning from the playoffs.
“Went for some dinner, had some cocktails,” a sleepy Prust said late in the afternoon on Wednesday, having barely stirred from bed the entire day.

I was with those guys earlier, but I’ve wasn’t at the poutine spot. I’ve cut that out of my diet, which was a good decision.”

Those guys would be David Desharnais and Douglas Murray and maybe a few others, teammates photographed at the restaurant counter closer to breakfast hour than dinnertime.

“And I had to come home and kiss MP before she went to work,” Prust added brightly of his girlfriend, Maripier Morin, further strengthening his alibi.

The Canadiens enjoyed the first of two days off following their resounding dispatch of their Eastern Conference quarter-final foe. Prust figures he’ll return to the Brossard training rink Thursday for a little treatment in the clinic and maybe a sauna or dip in the hot tub.

“The next couple of days are about recovering,” he said. “I haven’t gotten out of bed too much, except to grab some food and watch some TV. I’ve slept the day away. No plans. I doubt we’ll move far from the bed today.”

What Prust will be enjoying in the near future is the beating the Boston Bruins and Detroit Red Wings will put on each other for at least two more games, with the winner next up for the Canadiens.
“We’re just watching those teams punish each other and hope that they continue to punish each other more,” he joked, or not. “The rest now will be great for a lot of guys who have bumps and bruises.

“Rest is a positive and it can be a negative — you kind of lose a little momentum and that game-feel if you’re not playing for many days. But it’s our job in the days ahead to make sure we’re really focused in practice.

“During series, practices are 20 minutes, just to get your legs moving. But in the upcoming days we’re going to need to be sharp every day at practice, making sure we’re ready and at tip-top game speed for puck-drop of the next round.

“It’s a huge positive that we get a great rest now. You hope in June that you’re looking back, saying those days off really helped us.

“It’s been a long season, plus exhibitions and training camp, and it’s taken a toll on everyone. (Tuesday) after the game, we were sitting in the dressing room all happy, but you could see the guys were exhausted. Not only do the playoffs take a physical toll, they take an emotional and mental toll, too. You saw a lot of exhausted bodies and exhausted faces (Tuesday) night.

“I’ve got to tell you this — taking our equipment off (Brendan) Gallagher says to me: ‘I wish this were like baseball, where we could just pop champagne and spray each other after every round!’ ”
Like Gallagher, Prust is a skating rainbow, bruise piled atop multi-hued bruise; he has been like this his entire playing career, at every level of the game.

The 30-year-old missed 30 games this past regular season with a shoulder separation and rib issues, sitting the last 12 games of the schedule to prepare for the physical grind of the playoffs.
Like everyone else in the room, his body is held together by head athletic therapist Graham Rynbend, assistant Nick Addey-Jibb, strength and conditioning coach Pierre Allard and a therapy crew that grows during the playoffs. That team is “a blessing” to the players, in Prust’s view and that of every player.

On a line with fellow bulldog Gallagher and centre Tomas Plekanec, Prust had an assist and was plus-1 in the four-game series vs. Tampa, averaging 15:31 on ice.

“They’re very talented players,” he said of his linemates. “As usual, I just try to get the puck to them and clear some room for them.”

And Prust got plenty of dirt under his fingernails, as you’d expect, scrapping with Lightning defenceman Radko Gudas, picking up two minors, dishing out eight hits and blocking two shots.

The impressive sweep of the Lightning was the result of contributions across the board, he said, of everyone buying into and sticking to a game plan the entire series, even if there was the occasional, brief stumble.

As for the magic of the home rink?

“My God, it’s like a normal game at the Bell Centre times 1,000,” Prust said. “It’s like the Bell Centre on steroids. Standing out there for the national anthem, being on the ice here in Montreal, was probably one of the most incredible moments and feelings I’ve ever experienced as a hockey player.

“What happens at the Bell Centre during the playoffs can’t be matched anywhere else in the world.”
Prust will enjoy more of it than he did last season, when the Canadiens were shown the door by Ottawa in a five-game quarter-final. He played Games 1 and 2 in Montreal, but didn’t suit up for the Game 5 finale in Montreal after suffering a separated rib in Game 4 that he pressed back into his rib cage in an arena corridor.

The next day, I reached Prust at a home-furnishing store in Brossard as he waited for his beloved to finish shopping for patio chairs.

“I remember the mental anguish of that being worse than the pain from a separated rib,” he joked.
Overhearing that during our Wednesday chat, and knowing that Prust had just told me, “I’m healthy now, touch wood, everything’s healed up, I’m not playing through anything,” Morin spoke aloud of the couple’s plans for the days leading to Round 2.

“I’m planning to bring him to IKEA this week,” she said triumphantly in the background.

“I don’t think that’s going to happen, that’s just wishful thinking on her part,” Prust replied, laughing.
There is that IKEA ball pit, I suggested, the giant kiddies cube filled with thousands of multicoloured balls.

“Yeah, you’ll find me passed out in there,” Prust said.

It was then that the pleasure of some well-deserved R&R became a deadly serious business.

samedi 29 mars 2014

Nhl fight (vine) : Antoine Roussel vs Brandon Bollig 25-3-14


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mercredi 22 mai 2013

Montreal Canadiens at the 2013 NHL Awards



Source : hockeywriters.com



The Montreal Canadiens jump from 15th place in the Eastern Conference and 28th overall in 2011-12 to winning the Northeast Division, securing the second seed in their Conference and finishing fourth overall was something that nobody in the hockey world saw coming. Their success in the standings was impressive, but what was equally as impressive – if not more – was having three members of the organization get nominations for hardware at the 2013 NHL awards.

Any player, coach or GM will tell you that personal acheivments mean nothing compared to finding success as a team. However, having not one or two, but three potential award winners is a sure sign that Habs GM Marc Bergevin – who is one of the candidates himself – is taking a step in the right direction with this franchise.

I’m going to take a look at the three members of the Montreal Canadiens who have been recognized by the league for their success in the shortened 2013 season as well as who they are up against to try to give you an idea as to who is likely to find themselves winners at this years NHL awards ceremony.

Calder Trophy

Brendan Gallagher could be the Canadiens first Calder Trophy Winner since Ken Dryden in 1970-71 (Kevin Hoffman-USA TODAY Sports)

Brendan Gallagher, Montreal’s fiesty rookie forward is up against Brandon Saad of the Chicago Blackhawks and Jonathan Huberdeau of the Florida Panthers for the Calder Trophy which is given to the league’s top rookie.

Gallagher finished the season third among rookie scorers with 28 points in 44 games behind Nail Yakupov of the Edmonton Oilers and Jonathan Huberdeau who each tallied 31 points. Gallagher’s 15 goals were second to only Yakupov whose hat-trick in the Oilers final game propelled him to 17. In the plus/minus category, Gallagher was fifth with a +10. Saad finished first with a +17 rating and Huberdeau was a -15.

Brandon Saad had the luxury of playing on the league’s top team with a star studded roster that included the likes of Jonathan Toewes, Patrick Kane, Patrick Sharp as well as a one two punch in goal of Corey Crawford and Ray Emery. Huberdeau didn’t have the all star support that Saad enjoyed but was given the oppurtunity to play top six minutes averaging 16:55 minutes of ice time per game, first among rookie forwards who have played at least ten games.

Gallagher on the other hand had a team that had plenty of depth but no player even remotely close to the talent that Toewes and company possess. As for time on ice, the Montreal rookie played an average of 13:51 minutes per game, placing him 13th among rookie forwards with at least ten games under their belt.

Considering the success he found with the limited time awarded to him, and the success he helped his team acheive, Gallagher should come away as the 2013 Calder trophy winner.

James Norris Memorial Trophy 

P.K. Subban is up against Ryan Suter and Kris Letang for the Norris Trophy (Eric Bolte-US PRESSWIRE)

The Norris trophy is awarded to the defenseman who demonstrates throughout the season the best all-round ability in that position. There is no surprise that P.K. Subban of the Canadiens was named as one of the three finalists along with Kris Letang of the Pittsburgh Penguins and Ryan Suter of the Minnesota wild.

Subban finished the year tied in first for points among blueliners with Kris Letang, each notching 38 points. Suter wasn’t far behind as he tallied 32 points of his own. Subban’s eleven goals were second to only Mike Green’s 12 he scored with the Washington Capitals. Seven of those goals were scored on the powerplay, ranking him second in that category behind fellow Canadien Andrei Markov.
Kris Letang’s +16 rating is tops among the three finalists followed by Subban with +12 and Suter with +2.

Suter played the toughest minutes as he averaged 27:16 minutes of ice time per game. Letang’s 25:38 minutes per game place him seventh in the league and Subban’s 23:14 minutes put him in 35th place in the NHL. The lack of minutes may be what cost Subban the Norris.

It can be viewed as more impressive that Subban put up such good numbers without being on the ice as much as his competition but many feel that his reduced time on ice implies he can’t handle the minutes of a top tier defenseman. Suter never tired and put up quality numbers on a team that failed to make it to the post season. Krist Letang played very respectable minutes and managed as many points as Subban despite playing seven less games.

P.K. Subban definitely had a great season but I would be surprised if he took home the Norris Trophy. Suter seems to be the favorite but my money would be on Kris Letang coming out on top.

Jack Adams Trophy

The Jack Adams award is given each year to the league’s top Coach. Michel Therrien lead the Canadiens to the top of the Northeast Division and second place in their Conference just one year after the Habs found themselves in the Eastern Conference and 28th overall. Therrien got the best out of Lars Eller and handled the development of rookies Brendan Gallagher (up for the Calder) and Alex Galchenyuk quite impressively.

These are just a few of the reasons that Therrien is nominated for the…..what’s that? Therrien isn’t a finalist for the Jack Adams? Really?

Bruce Boudreau and Joel Quenneville of the Anaheim Ducks and Chicago Blackhawks you say? 
hmmm… Both deserving I guess, much better teams to guide than Therrien had, but what can you do.
Winner: Paul MacLean of the Ottawa Senators

General Manager Of The Year

Marc Bergevin (right) is nominated for the GM of the year (Eric Bolte-US PRESSWIRE)
It’s pretty clear what this award is given out for. What should be just as clear is that Marc Bergevin of the Canadiens will be named the league’s top GM in 2013.

Ray Shero of the Pittsburgh Penguins did a heck of a job at the trade deadline when he acquired Jarome Iginla, Brendan Morrow and Douglas Murray without giving up a single roster player. By doing so he made a Stanley Cup competitor out of a team that beforehand was merely just a…Stanley Cup competitor.

Bob Murray of the Anaheim Ducks avoided off season stress when he re-signed forwards Corey Perry and Ryan Getzlaf. There’s no question that losing either player would impede the team’s chances of repeating their success from this season (second in the Western Conference) in the near future. Signing Swedish goaltender Viktor Fasth was a move that payed divedends as Fasth posted 15 wins and an impressive .921 save percentage. The signing of Sheldon Souray is nothing to ignore either as the 36 year old defenseman finished with a +19 rating while playing just under 21 minutes per game.

When Bergevin hired Michel Therrien as the Montreal Canadiens head coach there were many skeptics. Therrien however, made Bergevin look like a genius as he brought the Habs to the top of their division while at the same time earning a nomination for the Jack Ad….oh wait no, sorry I keep thinking that the NHL’s top coach in 2013 was nominated for the award given out to the league’s top coach. My Bad. Nevertheless, Bergevin proved to be right in his choice.

When P.K. Subban held out at the beginning of the season, Bergevin didn’t budge. After missing six games, Subban eventually gave in to Bergevin and signed a two year contract worth $5.75 million, an amount nobody expected the eventual Norris Trophy candidate would accept.

Signing Brandon Prust proved to be very beneficial to rookies Brendan Gallagher and Alex Galchenyuk as well as the whole team and he filled the team’s need for a penalty killer and good face off man by bringing Jeff Halpern back to the team late in the season.

Many were disappointed in Bergevin’s lack of action of trade deadline day, but made one of the best trades of the year earlier on when he somehow managed to talk Dallas Stars GM at the time Joe Nieuwendyk into taking Erik Cole in return for Michael Ryder and a 3rd round pick in the 2013 NHL entry draft. A straight up swap of Ryder for Cole would have already had Bergevin come out on top of that deal, pulling off a draft pick as well was just a work of art.

Having fou.. three members of the Canadiens organization named as finalists for awards this year is enough to give hope to a city that has been losing for too long. Having two out of the three who will more than likey win shows that Bergevin’s goal to return the winning culture to Montreal is one that is very reachable.

samedi 23 février 2013

Gallagher près d'un retour



Source : Tvasports.ca

Brendan Gallagher s'approche d'un retour au jeu et pourrait même être de la formation samedi, contre les Rangers de New York.

À LIRE AUSSI : Price réplique à un détracteur

Le petit attaquant s'est entraîné aux côtés de David Desharnais et de Max Pacioretty.
«J'étais incohérent après la mise en échec, mais le lendemain j'allais déjà mieux», a confié Gallagher.

«Il va jouer s'il reçoit le feu vert des médecins samedi matin, mais je suis optimiste», a déclaré l'entraîneur-chef Michel Therrien.

Brandon Prust profitait quant à lui d'une journée de congé, se soumettant à des traitements thérapeutiques. Il s'est battu avec le géant de 6 pieds 8 pouces Joe Finley jeudi soir et son cas est incertain contre les Rangers.

Si Prust est en mesure de joueur, «des décisions devront être prises», s'est contenté de dire Therrien, ne voulant pas dévoiler son jeu.

Erik Cole se retrouvait sur le troisième trio en compagnie de Lars Eller et d'Alex Galchenyuk.

«Il n'a pas les statistiques qu'il aimerait avoir, mais ce n'est pas lié à un manque d'efforts», a mentionné Pacioretty, au sujet de Cole. «Il se cherche un peu», a quant à lui admis Therrien.

Nash encore absent

Face au Canadien, les Rangers seront privés pour un troisième match de suite des services de l'attaquant Rick Nash.

La vedette canadienne n'a pas fait le voyage avec l'équipe à Montréal. L'organisation n'a pas dévoilé la nature de la blessure qui l'incommode, mais la rumeur veut qu'il soit aux prises avec les symptômes d'une commotion cérébrale ou encore avec un problème à l'aine.

Trios du Canadien à l'entraînement :

Pacioretty - Desharnais - Gallagher
Bourque - Plekanec - Gionta
Eller - Galchenyuk - Cole
Moen - White - Armstrong

dimanche 20 janvier 2013

Bonne note pour Galchenyuk et Prust



Source : Rds.ca

MONTRÉAL – Si Alex Galchenyuk était envahi d’une émotion particulière - n’importe laquelle - au terme de son premier match dans la Ligue nationale, il le cachait comme un vrai pro.

Galchenyuk, qui a officiellement complété samedi soir son saut du niveau junior à la LNH, fait jaser comme peu de recrue avant lui depuis son arrivée à Montréal. Lorsqu’il a soulevé à bout de bras le flambeau que chacun de ses coéquipiers se sont relayé au centre de la patinoire lors de la présentation des joueurs, la réaction qu’il a suscitée se comparait à celle obtenue par Carey Price et Francis Bouillon, deux autres favoris de la foule.

Difficile de quantifier l’intensité sonore que renfermait le Centre Bell à ce moment, mais on serait à l’aise de parier que Galchenyuk n’a jamais rien vécu de tel dans l’uniforme du Sting de Sarnia.

« C’était spécial, a exprimé le jeune de 18 ans, stoïque et peu bavard après son baptême de feu. Je n’avais jamais joué ici, alors je ne savais pas trop à quoi m’attendre, mais c’était fantastique. Il y avait beaucoup de choses qui me passaient par la tête à ce moment. »

Utilisé à la gauche de Tomas Plekanec sur un trio complété par Brian Gionta, Galchenyuk a dû attendre que ses coéquipiers purgent deux pénalités mineures avant de donner ses premiers coups de patins à la sixième minute. Le numéro 27 n’a pas tardé à se faire remarquer, entrant rapidement sur l’aile après avoir capté une passe de son capitaine pour décocher un bon tir des poignets qui a donné du mal à Ben Scrivens.

Modeste contributeur en première période, Galchenyuk a terminé la rencontre avec un peu plus de treize minutes de temps de jeu, dont 1:51 en avantage numérique. Il a effectué 18 présences sur la patinoire.

« Il a bien paru, a évalué l’entraîneur Michel Therrien. Il n’a pas mis l’équipe dans le trouble, il a tenté de créer quelques jeux et a lancé au but quand il devait le faire. On a aussi vu qu’il avait la vitesse pour tenir son bout. »

« Pour lui comme pour nous tous, c’était un premier match. J’ai trouvé qu’il s’est bien tiré d’affaire », a complimenté Plekanec.

« Je voulais travailler fort et éviter les erreurs. Plus le match avançait, plus je me sentais confortable. C’était une grosse étape pour moi qui arrivais du junior », a laissé tomber le jeune Américain en guise d’auto-évaluation.

Un trio d’instigateurs

Deux autres joueurs disputaient, comme Galchenyuk, leur premier match dans l’uniforme du Canadien. Flanqué du fougueux Ryan White sur la quatrième ligne d’attaque, Brandon Prust et Colby Armstrong n’ont pas attendu qu’on leur faire un dessin pour démontrer qu’ils avaient compris la raison pour laquelle ils avaient été ajoutés à l’effectif montréalais.

Envoyé dans la mêlée peu de temps après la mise en jeu initiale, le trio d’instigateurs croyait avoir généré le premier but de la saison quand Prust a poussé la rondelle derrière la ligne rouge à la 46e seconde. L’officiel positionné à proximité a toutefois coupé court aux célébrations en signifiant que White avait suffisamment gêné le travail du gardien pour mériter deux minutes de réflexion.

« Notre équipe était bien préparée. On a même marqué dès la première minute, mais nous avons touché au gardien », a rappelé Therrien sur un ton qui laissait facilement transparaître son désaccord avec la décision rendue.

Prust, plus particulièrement, a laissé une bonne impression à ses débuts dans son nouvel uniforme. Il a jeté les gants face à Mike Brown, un rude combat qui a éclaté à la septième minute, et a remporté quelques mises en jeu en territoire offensif en deuxième période. Armstrong et lui ont formé une paire en désavantage numérique et les statistiques officielles lui donnent trois mises en échec.

« Ce sont des joueurs à qui on demande d’apporter de l’énergie et ils ont bien fait leur travail ce soir », a remarqué Francis Bouillon.

« Ils ont fait du bon travail, ils ont rendu la tâche difficile à l’adversaire », a approuvé Therrien.