My two week "All-Star Break" has ended, and I'm back in the States after a great, long vacation with Mrs. DBJ, the Dark Blue Toddler and DBT's grandparents. As you can see, the CBJ ball cap (with a stylishly pre-weathered bill) has seen a little bit of fading from the sun at 20° 37' 0" N / 87° 4' 0" W. It was great, however, to see the many other hockey fans down so close to the equator. There were tons of Canadians out there, worshiping the sun during the day and watching CBC and TSN hockey of their favorite teams all night long at the open-air sports bars under palapa roofs.
Two week vacations are a gift from God. If you ever can figure out a way to combine both the money and vacation time from your jobs, I highly recommend such a break. It's soul-cleansing. On a one-week vacation, you're travelling for two days and don't really start mentally "unpacking" from The Real World for a couple of days, so that means you only really get two - perhaps three - days of true relaxation. In a two-week vacation, you can add a whole seven days to the decompressed time. And it's really good...I find that you don't dread returning home after a two-week vacation like you do after a one-week vacation.
But enough of this self-indulgent crap. You come here to read about the Columbus Blue Jackets, not my ruminations on how long one needs to air out the mental dirty laundry. So let's catch up on what happened while I was away...
Showing posts with label Kyle Wilson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kyle Wilson. Show all posts
Sunday, January 30, 2011
Thursday, January 6, 2011
An early spring cleaning
First, let's sort through the chatter out of Nationwide Boulevard for the day:
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Never thought I'd be using THIS graphic again... |
- Center Kyle Wilson has cleared waivers.
- Defenseman Mike Commodore was waived and, barring something entirely unforeseen, will clear. He carries a pretty high price tag.
- Winger and Alternate Captain Ethan Moreau has been placed on injured reserve retroactive to January 4.
- Forward Matt Calvert has been called up from the AHL Springfield Falcons. Coach Scott Arniel says that Calvert will play on Friday night against Anaheim.
- Both Wilson and Commodore are skating with the CBJ in California today.
- Other bits and pieces - This blog entry by Jeff Little perhaps does the best job I've seen in tying up the loose ends.
Wednesday, January 5, 2011
Kyle Wilson waived - What's going on?
What in the wide wide world of sports is going on over on Nationwide Boulevard?
I'm not talking about the Mike Commodore trade request. That apparently happened last week (though we only found out about it today). Plus, that's a player-initiated move.
No, what I'm talking about is the waiving of Kyle Wilson as part of his demotion to Springfield, this after being told by team management that he was going to stick around for the season. This one's on the team - on Scott Howson and presumably Scott Arniel. As such, it's much more significant to the Columbus Blue Jackets.
I'm not talking about the Mike Commodore trade request. That apparently happened last week (though we only found out about it today). Plus, that's a player-initiated move.
No, what I'm talking about is the waiving of Kyle Wilson as part of his demotion to Springfield, this after being told by team management that he was going to stick around for the season. This one's on the team - on Scott Howson and presumably Scott Arniel. As such, it's much more significant to the Columbus Blue Jackets.
Wednesday, December 8, 2010
Who stays? Who goes?
Interesting little tidbit from the Dispatch guys today on Twitter:
Pleasantries aside, let's get to the heart of the matter. Why is the front office telling these two guys to plan on sticking around for the season at this specific moment?
[The Columbus Blue Jackets] said the magic words to MacKenzie and Wilson: "Get a place." On 2-way contracts, but told they'll be staying w #CBJ.First, and let's not minimize this, let's congratulate Derek Mackenzie and Kyle Wilson. Both guys are former AHL lifers who have busted their tails off to stick in the NHL and, for both guys, it's the first times in their careers that they will actually do so. I waxed (reasonably) eloquent about Wilson after his shootout winner on Monday night, and my "Time to Step Up" piece on MacKenzie says all I need to say on him. Presuming that the two guys perform at an NHL level, more power to them. It's great to see merit getting rewarded, something that both Scott Arniel and Scott Howson are doing despite the strange world of the NHL collective bargaining agreement, with issues involving waivers, one-way/two-way contracts, salary caps, etc.
Pleasantries aside, let's get to the heart of the matter. Why is the front office telling these two guys to plan on sticking around for the season at this specific moment?
Tuesday, December 7, 2010
Game 26/Dallas: My Take
The slumping Columbus Blue Jackets welcomed the streaking Dallas Stars into Nationwide Arena on Monday night and overcame the Stars, 3-2, in a post-overtime shootout.
This was my second regular season game in my ticket package, so my review of the night's events will take on a different tone from having actually been in attendance. As much as I'd like you to think that a recap based off of TV is the same as one based off the in-arena experience, it isn't. So enjoy it when you can!
Mrs. DBJ and I bundled up and headed down to Nationwide very mindful of the Buffalo and Pittsburgh debacles. Our mood heading in was, "Please, don't let it be that bad." Yeah, the Kool-Aid is back in the fridge and likely will stay there for a while.
This was my second regular season game in my ticket package, so my review of the night's events will take on a different tone from having actually been in attendance. As much as I'd like you to think that a recap based off of TV is the same as one based off the in-arena experience, it isn't. So enjoy it when you can!
Mrs. DBJ and I bundled up and headed down to Nationwide very mindful of the Buffalo and Pittsburgh debacles. Our mood heading in was, "Please, don't let it be that bad." Yeah, the Kool-Aid is back in the fridge and likely will stay there for a while.
Sunday, November 7, 2010
Game 13/Minnesota: My Take
The Columbus Blue Jackets hosted the somewhat-tired Minnesota Wild at Nationwide Arena on Saturday night, carried the play for a good portion of the game, let the Wild hang around and lost, 3-2.
Color me mildly disappointed.
Sure, the Blue Jackets had their moments. In fact, the first line combined for yet another eye-popping goal:
4th liner Kyle Wilson also had a great goal as well. And the Jackets are setting up on 5-on-5 like they were on a power play - something that I still shake my head and can't believe is happening, here, in Columbus.
Color me mildly disappointed.
Sure, the Blue Jackets had their moments. In fact, the first line combined for yet another eye-popping goal:
4th liner Kyle Wilson also had a great goal as well. And the Jackets are setting up on 5-on-5 like they were on a power play - something that I still shake my head and can't believe is happening, here, in Columbus.
Thursday, October 28, 2010
Game 9/Edmonton: My take
The Columbus Blue Jackets fended off the Edmonton Oilers and a handful of squirrelly referees to take the game, 3-2, in an overtime shootout.
Rick Nash and Nikita Filatov scored on the only two shots needed in the shootout (Steve Mason turned aside the first Edmonton shot, and the second shot pinged off the side-bar.) Nash coming up big in the shootout is something that CBJ fans are accustomed to, but the Filatov game-winner is special.
Just yesterday, DBT and I watched Filatov cleaning up pucks after practice. It seemed humiliating, watching him schlepping a five-gallon bucket around the ice. He was not looking chipper. Surely, it was not the highlight of his time in professional hockey. So to see him put in a position to win the game, and then win it - you could see the stress melt away for just a moment. Good for him. It's a needed confidence boost for a talented young player. Let's hope he keeps building momentum, both on the ice and in his head.
Rick Nash and Nikita Filatov scored on the only two shots needed in the shootout (Steve Mason turned aside the first Edmonton shot, and the second shot pinged off the side-bar.) Nash coming up big in the shootout is something that CBJ fans are accustomed to, but the Filatov game-winner is special.
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Nikita Filatov must be able to feel like he can smile again - for the first time in a while. (Flickr photo by OhioFamily) |
Monday, October 4, 2010
Time to step up: End of training camp
After the Columbus Blue Jackets' 4-3 win over the (hapless) Atlanta Thrashers on Saturday night, the team boarded a 757-200 at Port Columbus airport and made the flight to Stockholm, Sweden to open the 2010-2011 National Hockey League regular season against the San Jose Sharks. And with that, training camp and the pre-season functionally ended.
Sure, the CBJ will play an exhibition game on Tuesday at 1PM EST against the Malmo Redhawks, but it's hard to consider that game as an NHL-caliber pre-season game and thus won't be counted in my statistical analysis. The game could have merit related to individual performances, player injuries (getting hurt, coming back from injury) or chemistry developments, not to mention the rumored yellow and red jerseys. But let's keep it in perspective - it's not NHL competition, and it's not an NHL game.
I did a mid-preseason review after the first four games, and let's continue it with the last 4. It's a mixed bag, to be sure, but I think I can offer some spots for optimism.
OFFENSE
The obvious area for excitement is the conversion percentage - the percentage of shots that become goals. The Columbus Blue Jackets started the preseason with a conversion rate that, while not horrible, wasn't going to set the hockey world's hair on fire. In the back half of the preseason, however, the conversion percentage hopped up a few points and rivaled the percentage of the most prolific scoring team in the NHL last season, the Washington Capitals.
Sure, the CBJ will play an exhibition game on Tuesday at 1PM EST against the Malmo Redhawks, but it's hard to consider that game as an NHL-caliber pre-season game and thus won't be counted in my statistical analysis. The game could have merit related to individual performances, player injuries (getting hurt, coming back from injury) or chemistry developments, not to mention the rumored yellow and red jerseys. But let's keep it in perspective - it's not NHL competition, and it's not an NHL game.
I did a mid-preseason review after the first four games, and let's continue it with the last 4. It's a mixed bag, to be sure, but I think I can offer some spots for optimism.
OFFENSE
Team | Total Shots | Total Goals | Conversion % | Shots/Game | Goals/Game |
10-11 CBJ - Full Preseason | 247 | 25 | 10.12% | 30.88 | 3.13 |
10-11 CBJ - Preseason games 5-8 | 112 | 13 | 11.61% | 28.00 | 3.25 |
10-11 CBJ - Preseason games 1-4 | 135 | 12 | 8.89% | 33.75 | 3.00 |
09-10 CBJ | 2,338 | 214 | 9.15% | 28.51 | 2.61 |
08-09 CBJ | 2,490 | 217 | 8.71% | 30.37 | 2.65 |
09-10 Washington Capitals | 2,693 | 313 | 11.62% | 32.84 | 3.82 |
09-10 Pittsburgh Penguins | 2,688 | 249 | 9.26% | 32.78 | 3.04 |
09-10 Phoenix Coyotes | 2,502 | 211 | 8.43% | 30.51 | 2.57 |
The obvious area for excitement is the conversion percentage - the percentage of shots that become goals. The Columbus Blue Jackets started the preseason with a conversion rate that, while not horrible, wasn't going to set the hockey world's hair on fire. In the back half of the preseason, however, the conversion percentage hopped up a few points and rivaled the percentage of the most prolific scoring team in the NHL last season, the Washington Capitals.
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