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jeudi 24 octobre 2013

Martin Brodeur: Cory Schneider No. 1



Source : Espn 

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Cory Schneider is scheduled to make his third straight start Thursday when the New Jersey Devils host the Vancouver Canucks, which begs the question: Has the NHL's all-time winningest goaltender become the backup?

The answer is yes if you ask Martin Brodeur.
Bruce Fedyck/USA TODAY SportsMartin

Brodeur (left) still covets the starting goaltender job held by Cory Schneider (35). "I want to play every game," Brodeur told The Star-Ledger. "... You don't play hockey, especially at the age I am, to just sit on the bench and hang out."

"I think so. I think he's in the net now to stay," Brodeur said Wednesday, according to The Star-Ledger of Newark. "I don't see that's going to change any time soon. I'll be ready if it does. We have to try and win some games somehow.

"This is what [coach Pete DeBoer] feels is the best opportunity to be successful, having him in the net. That's fine. If we win, everybody is happy. Even though I don't play, it's more enjoyable to be around."

Schneider has a 2.21 goals-against average, a .917 save percentage and was in net for the Devils' only win of the season. Brodeur has a 3.40 GAA and a .865 save percentage in four games.

While New Jersey is in desperate need of wins, the fact that the Devils are facing Schneider's old team seems to have been a contributing factor in DeBoer's decision to start the 27-year-old.

"It's Vancouver. I'm sure if it was a different team it could have been different, but I don't know that for sure, either. That's a question you have to ask the man who makes the decisions," Brodeur told The Star-Ledger.

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"There are a lot of factors that go into the decision. That's the decision," the coach answered when asked.

No stranger to being part of goaltending drama, Schneider seems to be getting along well with Brodeur, who was quick to deny that his affable attitude toward the situation means he's losing his desire to play.

"I haven't changed. I want to play every game. It's not fun to sit," Brodeur said, according to the paper. "The body feels good. That's about it. It's hard when you're used to being the guy that is counted on to play and all of a sudden you're not asked to. It makes it a little hard, but it's part of the process of getting older.

"Over the last three years I haven't played as many games, either. It's somewhat of a transition, but definitely it's not fun. You don't play hockey, especially at the age I am, to just sit on the bench and hang out. It was fun [in practice] today, though. I had a blast. But ask me that in two months. I don't know if I'll say the same thing."

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dimanche 12 mai 2013

Canadiens : Changement de culture



Source : Tvasports.ca



L’heure était au bilan samedi, pour les joueurs du Canadien de Montréal.

Malgré une élimination rapide en cinq matchs contre les Sénateurs d’Ottawa, au premier tour des séries éliminatoires, ils ont retenu beaucoup de positif de cette première saison sous les ordres de Michel Therrien.

À VOIR : Le bilan complet de la saison 2013 du Canadien | Tous les vidéos de la journée

À LIRE AUSSI : Entorse à un genou pour Price | Kaberle aurait aimé être échangé | Galchenyuk et Plekanec en Scandinavie

«C’est un pas dans la bonne direction, a indiqué le défenseur Josh Gorges. Il y a eu un changement de mentalité, un changement de culture au sein de notre groupe.»

«Il y avait plusieurs habitudes que nous devions changer. C’est sûr que ça craint de perdre de la sorte, mais c’est un processus d’apprentissage et c’est prometteur pour le futur.»

Tomas Plekanec était du même avis.

«Même si nous avons perdu contre les Sénateurs, nous avons bien joué, a dit le Tchèque. Plusieurs jeunes joueurs se sont illustrés cette saison et c’est encourageant.»

«Notre élimination n’est aucunement liée à la grosseur de nos joueurs. Ça fait 10 ans que vous me demandez cela. Quand nous jouons notre match, nous sommes difficiles à battre.»

Pas d'excuses pour Subban

Le meilleur joueur du Canadien cette saison, P.K. Subban, a quant à lui été plutôt direct dans ses propos.
«Nous n’avons pas assez bien joué pour poursuivre notre chemin en séries, a-t-il admis sans détour. Cela dit, nous nous sommes qualifiés pour la période la plus importante de l’année et ça, c’est positif.»

«Nous devons maintenant tous travailler très fort pendant la saison estivale et revenir encore meilleurs l’an prochain. Aucun joueur ne doit s’attendre à simplement retrouver son poste en septembre, moi le premier.»
Sans contrat au début de la campagne, Subban a raté les six premiers matchs de l’équipe. N’ayant qu’une autre année à écouler à son entente, négociera-t-il une prolongation de contrat cet été?

«Je ne peux pas croire que vous me parlez déjà de contrat, a-t-il déclaré en riant. J’ai 23 ans, bientôt 24 et je joue pour le Canadien. C’est difficile de faire mieux.»

Price et la coupe Stanley

Le gardien de but du Tricolore Carey Price a aimé ce qu’il a vu devant lui cette année et a même parlé de… coupe Stanley.

«J’ai vraiment aimé l’attitude de nos joueurs cette saison, a-t-il confié. Malgré l’élimination, c’était plaisant comme campagne. Nous savions que les Sénateurs avaient une bonne formation. Nous sommes tout de même passés près de créer l’égalité (2-2).»

«Je crois sincèrement que je peux gagner une coupe Stanley à Montréal. Je crois avoir les habiletés et la force mentale pour le faire.»

«Tout le monde croit en Carey, a ajouté l'attaquant Max Pacioretty. Nous devons lui donner beaucoup de crédit pour tout ce qu'il a accompli jusqu'ici.»

Bouillon satisfait

À la lumière des progrès réalisés par la formation montréalaise cette année, le Québécois Francis Bouillon
s'est dit emballé pour le futur.

«J'ai aimé tous les moments vécus cette saison, a-t-il avoué d'emblée. Je suis vraiment satisfait et heureux malgré tout. Nous avons prouvé que nous étions une équipe de tête.»

«Nous avons toujours su nous relever dans l'adversité. Vous pouvez dire que nous sommes petits, mais ce n'est pas un problème pour nous.»

Le message est clair. Malgré l'élimination, l'adversité et les blessures, cette équipe est unie et le futur est encourageant.



samedi 11 mai 2013

Canadiens : « No excuses »



Source : Rds.ca



Depuis le début de la campagne, on nous dit que cette équipe n'accepterait pas les excuses. Donc n'utilisons pas ces excuses pour expliquer la défaite du CH aux mains des Sénateurs d’Ottawa.

J'ai bien aimé entendre les joueurs mentionner, après leur dernier match, que les blessures n'étaient pas la raison de leur défaite. En tant qu'athlète, lorsqu'on se cherche des béquilles pour expliquer les échecs, on en cherchera toujours. Certes, ces blessures ont été un facteur déterminant dans le résultat de cette série, mais les Sens méritent ce triomphe grâce à leur jeu efficace et inspiré.

Le Canadien a dominé le premier duel et il a malheureusement perdu. Par la suite, à part le troisième, la plupart des matchs étaient relativement équilibrés malgré un léger avantage au Tricolore. Malheureusement pour les partisans du CH, les Sénateurs ont été plus opportunistes et ont eu ce «
killer instinct » qui leur a permis de remporter ces matchs.

À lire également

Craig Anderson a été excellent quand il avait besoin de l'être. Il a volé le premier match et par la suite, il a fait les gros arrêts aux bons moments, ce qui a permis à son équipe de soutenir les poussées des Montréalais. De plus, comme à l'habitude, Daniel Alfredsson a fait énormément mal au Canadien.

Il semble prendre un plaisir fou à produire contre Montréal.

Malgré tous ses facteurs, je crois que l'avantage numérique, l'arme de prédilection du CH, n'a pas livré la marchandise aux moments opportuns et son infériorité numérique a connu des ratés. L'équipe semble s'être laissé déconcentrer par les propos de Paul MacLean. On a vu des joueurs, tel Brandon Prust, et leur entraineur s'en faire et réagir aux paroles de l'entraîneur des Sens. C'est exactement ce que MacLean voulait; aucun de ses joueurs ne se faisait déranger et il a mis toute l'attention sur lui. Il trouvait même le moyen de paraître sympathique malgré ce théâtre.

La façon dont les blessures ont affecté le CH lors du dernier match démontre à quel point la saison des Sénateurs fut impressionnante. Comme je le mentionnais dans ma chronique précédente, le nombre et la qualité des joueurs qui ont manqué à l'appel durant la saison auraient dû signer l'arrêt de mort des Sens, mais ils se sont néanmoins qualifiés pour les séries. De plus, il leur manque encore leur meilleur attaquant en Jason Spezza. Son retour potentiel lors des prochaines rondes jumelé aux prouesses d’Anderson pourraient rendre les Sens de sérieux candidats à atteindre la finale.

Somme toute, le Canadien a connu une très belle progression cette saison et l'avenir s'annonce très heureux pour les partisans. L'équipe est dans la bonne direction et dès l'an prochain, je m'attends encore à une progression. Pas nécessairement par rapport à sa position au classement en saison régulière, mais sur ses performances en séries.

Brendan Gallagher et Alex Galchyenuk prendront du galon et deviendront des rouages importants. David Desharnais redeviendra le centre productif qu'il est accompagné de Max Pacioretty et P.K. Subban sera régulièrement candidat au trophée Norris. De plus, j'ai entièrement confiance que Carey Price deviendra le gardien dominant qu'il peut être et deviendra même candidat au trophée Vézina au cours des prochaines saisons! Probablement trop ambitieux pour plusieurs d'entre vous, mais j'y crois puisque je connais le caractère et la fierté de l'homme ainsi que son talent indéniable.

Je suis convaincu que l'équipe de gestion améliora l'équipe encore et entre-temps, donnons la chance au coureur et permettons à l'équipe de progresser au cours des prochaines saisons.

vendredi 10 mai 2013

Habs : Canadiens are headed in the right direction



Source : montrealgazette.com

Two hundred and 20 days of despair, anger, joy, anticipation, delight, disappointment, fear, resignation, despair once more — and finally, an encouraging look at a bright future.

After a 113-day National Hockey League lockout, a six-day, hurry-up training camp, a 100-day regular season — as irregular as it was — and a seven-day Eastern Conference quarter-final series, the improbable campaign of the Canadiens came to a shuddering halt Thursday at 9:45 p.m.

No, that’s not entirely accurate.

The Habs season ended an hour or so earlier, when the Ottawa Senators buried a short-handed goal midway through the second period in Game 5.

If that dampened any idea of a home-team comeback, making the score 3-1 for the visitors, three third-period power-play goals drowned it, swamping the Canadiens and their crestfallen, crest-wearing fans.

(To the spectator who disgustedly threw his jersey on the ice as Ottawa ran up the score: any charity in town would have dearly loved to put that on the back of a real fan.)

Fifty-three games, over and out.

Montreal awoke to a hockey hangover Friday, not unlike the dry mouth and puffy eyes of the morning after a party that’s been long in the preparation and is over, save returning the empties, just like that.

There was no shame in the Canadiens’ five-game loss to the Ottawa Senators, who now move on to the Eastern semifinals against an opponent yet unknown.

The “No Excuses” slogan that was tattooed to the Habs this year, plain to the eye and anchoring every management move, was subscribed to right to Thursday’s bitter if inevitable end. Not head coach Michel Therrien nor any of the players leaned on multiple injuries to key players as a reason for their hasty exit.

Every team still breathing this postseason, and many that didn’t make the playoff cut, are walking wounded, beaten up by a compressed, physically demanding schedule that took on a dramatic per-game urgency.

In his series-ended briefing Thursday, Therrien spoke of his team having had “a lot of bad luck the past two weeks.”

No excuses, but this is reality: six Canadiens regulars could not answer the bell for all or part of the playoffs. They were injured from head — Lars Eller’s concussion and, in teammate Brandon Prust’s clinical description, “broken face” — to the April-torn anterior cruciate ligament of defenceman Alexei Emelin and Game 4 knee injury suffered by goalie Carey Price.

Also out: captain Brian Gionta, with a torn biceps tendon, and Prust and Ryan White, with upper-body injuries.

Forward Max Pacioretty soldiered through the final three games of the series with a separated shoulder, while centre Tomas Plekanec said he’d played the final month of the season with a tender groin.

Gionta was scheduled to be on an operating table Friday, for the second consecutive year undergoing surgical repair of a torn biceps — but the left arm this time.

For the second straight year, both Gionta and Price were on the sidelines for the season’s final game, Price shelved at the end of 2011-12 with a concussion and spine compression. Gionta was dealing then with an injury that cost him the final 40 games of that season.

The Canadiens’ inspirational 34-year-old leader suffered the latest injury midway through Game 1 of the Senators series, actually hearing the tendon pop when he was muscled along the boards and had his arm twisted. He was scratched from Game 2, returned for the madness of Game 3 with the biceps heavily taped, then sat out Game 4 before it was determined his season was done.

That Gionta even dressed for Game 3 was astonishing, given that the tendon is responsible for bending the elbow and rotating the forearm. Yet he played 18:10 over 25 shifts, took three shots, had three hits and earned an assist on the Canadiens goal in a 6-1 loss.

This should, but of course won’t, erase all shred of doubt any of the captain’s critics have about the size of his heart.

Against Ottawa, the Canadiens ran into a sizzling goaltender in Craig Anderson, who finished with a .950 save percentage and 1.80 goals-against average. Not once could the Habs beat him in the third period, the Senators scoring nine in the third on Price (.894, 3.26 total) and Budaj (.774, 6.67).

The Canadiens outshot Ottawa 180-154 and had the 52-48 per cent edge in faceoffs, the Senators outhitting their opponent 182-173.

Ottawa scored on six of 25 power-play opportunities for a 24-per-cent success rate, compared to Montreal’s 3-for-19, 15.4 per cent. On the penalty kill, Ottawa was 84.2 per cent, the Habs 76 per cent.

Canadiens defenceman P.K. Subban and centre Plekanec led Montreal scorers with four points apiece, Subban on two goals and two assists, Plekanec on four assists. Only six Canadiens could solve Anderson, who clearly was the player of the series.

There were disappointments:

Centre David Desharnais managed only three shots on goal the entire series, while Michael Ryder, acquired with a draft pick in a trade with Dallas for Erik Cole, had a goal and an assist, his eight total shots not the output needed from a sniper.

Invisible for long stretches, Ryder hit the post-season in a funk, with only one assist to show for his final seven regular-season games.

General manager Marc Bergevin is apt to lay out some of the changes he has in mind when he holds his first season-over media debriefing on Monday. The players will say their goodbyes Saturday afternoon in Brossard, picking up their summer fitness programs and scattering out of town.

The Canadiens spent much of last off-season rebuilding the front office and coaching staff before it ran headfirst into a lockout.

This summer, those pieces are in place and a normal 82-game schedule will follow what should be a fascinating entry draft, NHL awards that feature Calder Trophy nominee Brendan Gallagher and Norris nominee Subban, and period of free agency.

For Habs fans, the pain of elimination should be tempered by the promising future for this organization. In one short year, it has taken several bold, impressive steps in the right direction.

jeudi 2 mai 2013

Habs : No pressure on Canadiens, Michel Therrien insists



Source : montrealgazette.com



Michel Therrien says his team isn’t feeling any pressure as the favourite going into its first-round Stanley Cup playoff series against the Ottawa Senators.

And the coach doesn’t think there’s any pressure on the five Canadiens who will be experiencing NHL playoff action for the first time.

“We don’t feel pressure, we want to apply pressure,” Therrien said after his team wrapped up three days of practice in preparation for the opening game in the best-of-seven series Thursday at the Bell Centre (7 p.m., CBC, RDS, TSN-690 Radio).

Therrien predicted a long and arduous series and was careful to avoid any inflammatory comments that would find their way to a bulletin board in the Senators’ locker room.

He dismissed Ottawa coach Paul MacLean’s suggestion that there was pressure on the Canadiens as the favourite in the series and then he went on to praise MacLean’s work in getting to the playoffs despite a string of injuries.

When he was asked whether the bad blood between Brandon Prust and Chris Neil might spill over into the post-season, he ducked the question and praised Neil for his competitive spirit.

Inexperience could be a concern for both teams going into Game 1. The Canadiens have three rookies — Brendan Gallagher, Alex Galchenyuk and recall Jarred Tinordi — while Max Pacioretty and 
Raphael Diaz are seeing playoff action for the first time.

Ottawa will have at least five rookies in the lineup, including Cory Conacher, Jakob Silfverberg and Mika Zibanejad.

Therrien said he has talked to his young players and he believes that they are ready for their first taste of the playoffs.

Tinordi, who could be a factor in the post-season, appeared calm after practice Wednesday. He has been soaking in the playoff atmosphere since being recalled from Hamilton last week and has been getting tips from his father Mark, a former NHL defenceman with 70 playoff games under his belt.

“It’s exciting,” said Tinordi, whose NHL experience is limited to eight games. “I remember my first game, I didn’t sleep much the night before. I was pretty jittery. I’m taking a different approach this time. I want to play my game and not get too ramped up. I’m sure all the emotions will be there on the day of the game, but right now I’m just focused on Ottawa.”

Tinordi said he expected the atmosphere at the Bell Centre would be crazy, “but we have to use that in a positive way.”

The 6-foot-6 Tinordi is important because he gives the Canadiens some size and his physical play helps fill the void left by Alex Emelin’s season-ending knee injury.

The Canadiens have spent a good part of the past three days working on special teams, particularly the penalty-kill, which has struggled for most of the season. The addition of Tinordi and the return of Prust and Raphael Diaz from injuries can help the Canadiens turn this area of the game around.

“We’re ready,” said Diaz, who is back to playing 20 minutes a game after missing 25 games with a concussion. “It’s about blocking shots and getting in the shooting lanes. One of the biggest parts of the PK is to be in the lanes and you have to know when to force and when to stay back. You don’t want to force a player when he has good control because then he can make a pass and you’re out of position.

“The PK is about work, it’s about heart and it’s about four guys working together,” added Diaz. “The last couple of games, we’ve been good and I think we’ll take that into the playoffs.”

Therrien will start the playoffs with almost the same lineup he employed last Saturday in Toronto. The one exception will be in goal with Carey Price replacing Peter Budaj.

Ryan White, who returned Saturday from a five-game suspension, gets another shot at centre on the fourth line with Prust and Travis Moen. Jeff Halpern is better than White in the faceoff circle, but White is the more physical player and the line may be designed to keep Neil’s competitive spirit in check.

Game 2 in the series is scheduled for the Bell Centre Friday night, with the series moving to Scotiabank Place in Kanata for games Sunday and Tuesday.