Posts Tagged ‘Niklas Hjalmarsson’

Brian Campbell returns to blue line in NY

Defenseman Brian Campbell will make his season debut Monday night in New York. The red-headed defender missed the first four weeks of the year with a sprained knee he injured in a pre-season game against Pittsburgh. Campbell will wear a knee brace for the rest of the season.

His return couldn’t come at a better time. The Blackhawks lost star forward Marian Hossa last week to an upper-body injury, and the Hawks’ blue line has left a lot to be desired in Campbell’s absence. He will add some depth to the position, resulting in less playing time for fellow defenseman Jassen Cullimore, Nick Boynton and John Scott down the road. Yay.

In hindsight, it was too early for me to deem Boynton as this year’s Brent Sopel. I made the comparison based on Boynton’s willingness to sacrifice his body in order to block a shot – currently leads the league with 37 – but his play has been atrocious in the defensive zone otherwise. Coach Quenneville hasn’t been pleased with his efforts either, as Boynton is a scratch against the Rangers. Scott will line up as a fourth-line forward, and Cullimore will fill out the third defensive paring alongside Jordan Hendry.

Campbell isn’t known for his defensive prowess, but his speed is an asset other defenders on the roster lack on the back-check. Niklas Hjalmarsson has to be the happiest Hawk after hearing the news of Campbell’s return. He can go back to playing the defensive role he excelled in last year, as there is some level of comfort/familiarity he’ll get being paired with Campbell once again.

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Niklas Hjalmarsson gets two games for Pominville hit

Pominville carried out on a stretcher (AP Photo/David Duprey)

The Blackhawks came from behind to defeat the Sabres 4-3 for their first win of the season. The story of the game isn’t Marian Hossa’s two goal performance, but rather Niklas Hjalmarsson’s hit on Jason Pominville in the first period. Hjalmarsson received a five-minute major for boarding and a game misconduct for the hit. Pominville was carted off the ice and diagnosed with a concussion. For the hit, judge, jury and executioner Colin Campbell suspended the Swedish defenseman two games.

In my opinion, Hjalmarsson’s suspension is a game or two too long. Remember Alexander Ovechkin’s hit on Brian Campbell last year? Ovechkin was suspended two games for shoving Campbell into the boards. Hjalmarsson came in hard from the blue line with the intention of knocking Pominville off the puck. It was a shoulder-to-shoulder hit, and the Sabre didn’t brace himself for the amount of force and awkwardly banged his head against the glass.

Aside from the outcome, the same sort anyone can find in every other game without any level of discipline. There was no intent to injure and Hjalmarsson is not a repeat offender, but the only reason he will miss two games is because Pominville was concussed. The only questionable aspect of the hit was whether the puck got to Pominville in time, which is always up to interpretation.

In his first game back from serving the two game suspension, Hjalmarsson and company will face the Sabres at home on Saturday. This may be an understatement, but things should get interesting in the rematch. There have been a few threats coming out of Buffalo already.

A thin blue line

The season isn’t even a week old, and Hawks’ blue line depth has been thoroughly tested. Campbell was knocked out for four-to-five weeks in the pre-season with an knee injury, Nick Boynton was suspended for his throat slash gesture and now Hjalmarsson will be watching the game from the press box. For the next two games, the Blackhawks will be without their second defensive pairing.

I’ve been one of Nick Leddy’s harshest critics, but I’ll admit that the 19-year-old has shown signs of improvement. I just wish he wasn’t learning on the job. Giving substantial minutes to Leddy, Boynton and John Scott is worrisome. The Blackhawks shots against total (34.0) needs to come down in order for the Blackhawks to win consistently this season.

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Doug Wilson’s master plan comes full circle

Hockey player turned hockey analyst Nick Kypreos broke the news this afternoon that Antti Niemi will sign with the San Jose Sharks as soon as tomorrow. Early reports have Niemi signed to a one-year deal worth $2 million. More details will come out soon enough regarding his contract, but my initial reaction to the numbers at hand is Niemi could have had a similar deal in Chicago.

He can’t be too pleased with the job his agent Bill Zito did this off-season. He failed to acknowledge the 2010 goaltending market. It was oversaturated, and goalies made far from top dollar. Zito postured and claimed to have his client’s best interest all summer, but went into the arbitration hearing with an asking price well upward of $3 million. When Niemi was awarded $2.75 million by the arbitrator, it was easy for Stan Bowman to walk away knowing he had Marty Turco locked up as Plan B.

Niemi leaves a familiar setting behind with the organization that brought him into the NHL, as well as a good situation for any goaltender. He would start over 60 games for the Blackhawks, with one of the best defensive teams in the league playing in front of him every night. In San Jose, Niemi will split time in net with Antero Niittymaki – who also has a $2 million salary-cap hit – for a team built around scoring. His open market value as an unrestricted free agent in 2011 would have been higher if he stayed in Chicago.

Once again, I digress. Doug Wilson’s latest act as general manager of the Sharks was the second part of hopefully a two part plan to screw over the reigning Stanley Cup Champions. First was the $3.5 million offer-sheet to Niklas Hjalmarsson, and now this. His master plan came full circle. Wilson has a Stanley Cup winning goaltender at a reasonable price tag.

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With Jordan Hendry signed, blue line filling out

As expected, Jordan Hendry re-signed with the Hawks to a one-year deal worth $600,000, which is a $25,000 pay-cut from his salary last season. Getting Hendry inked to a lower cap-hit was possible because the Blackhawks didn’t tender him to a qualifying offer as a restricted free agent, and became an unrestricted free agent as a result. If they didn’t take the roundabout process to re-sign the 26-year-old defenseman, he would have been owed a 10% raise.

The blue line picture is starting to come together. The top-four defensemen were locked up when Stan Bowman opted to match Niklas Hjalmarsson’s offer sheet from San Jose. Hendry will play upward of 60 games on the third pairing. John Scott will be a healthy scratch on most nights, but will intimidate opponents when he is in the lineup.

Seabrook – Keith
Campbell – Hjalmarsson
??? – Hendry
Scott

Bowman will either hit up the free agent market for the final spot on defense, or let a few prospects duke it out at training camp. Jay McKee’s name has been thrown around as a possible target, but I would rather see Ivan Vishnevskiy (acquired in the Ladd trade) get a shot.

Changes have been reflected on our In the Organization page above.

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Doug Wilson is a very very bad man!

The decision was made yesterday to match San Jose’s four-year $14 million offer sheet to Niklas Hjalmarsson. That will be a $3.5 million cap hit. I still think it’s a little much for the 23-year old Swede, but the Blackhawks do have a couple over valued contracts on the books that overshadow this one. If you do compare it to other deals signed by free agent defensemen this summer, Hjalmarsson’s contract doesn’t look so bad.

As expected, the Hawks are in a tough spot (again) in regards to the salary cap. With fifteen players under contract next season, the organization has only $113,410 (source: cap geek) to spend on five to seven more players to fill out the roster. Teams do have the luxury to go up to 10% over the cap ceiling in the off-season. Antti Niemi’s arbitration hearing is July 29, and it appears as though the Hawks will need to use the extra space this summer until Cristobal Huet’s contract is removed from the mix. If that were done today, the Blackhawks would have $5,738,410 salary-cap space to work with.

Signing Hjalmarsson to an offer sheet, and forcing Bowman’s hand was a tactic that is Machiavellian in nature. The Blackhawks’ cap issues are well known around the league, and San Jose general manager Doug Wilson did all he could to screw the reigning Stanley Cup Champions the best he could within the parameters of the collective bargaining agreement. It’s an evil, yet brilliant strategy. Wilson was able to set Hjalmarsson’s price tag, and now Bowman and company will find it hard to keep Niemi around as a result.

If the Blackhawks opted not to match San Jose’s offer, the Sharks would have added a solid, smart and young defenseman to their roster for relatively little. It was a win-win situation for Wilson.

Coaching staff set

The void left by John Torchetti was filled yesterday by Mike Kitchen, and Mike Haviland signed a contract extension to remain with the Blackhawks as an assistant coach. Kitchen was on Joel Quenneville’s coaching staff when he was in St. Louis years ago.

Changes have been reflected on our In the Organization page above.

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Clock ticking on Hjalmarsson

This pic always cracks me up

Doug Wilson, Sharks general manager and Blackhawks legend, made an already difficult situation harder for Stan Bowman when he signed Niklas Hjalmarsson to an offer sheet. They signed the 23-year old Sweded a four-year deal worth $14 million – a cap hit of $3.5 million per season. If Bowman’s balls weren’t already in a vice, they are now. As of today, the Hawks have four more days to match the offer sheet before Hjalmarsson becomes Sharks’ property.

If the Blackhawks decide not to match they will be compensated with San Jose’s first and third round draft picks in 2011. Since the lockout five years ago, there were only a total of five offer sheets signed before Friday. Only the Oilers offer to Dustin Penner in 2007 wasn’t matched.

No matter how you look at it, the situation Doug Wilson put the Blackhawks in isn’t good. With roughly $3.6 million cap space to work with and 14 players singed, the organization might be forced to choose between Antti Niemi and Niklas Hjalmarsson as to which restricted free agent to re-sign. (Semi-random note: Niemi’s arbitration hearing is scheduled for July 29.)

It’s hard to say what direction the Hawks will go, as they are currently at a crossroads. Personally, I think what the Sharks are offering is a little steep for Hjalmarsson. But if he’s gone by the end of the week, the Blackhawks blue line is going to look mighty thin. There isn’t much out there in the way of desirable free agent defensemen, and the Blackhawks won’t want to tap into their system to fill out three spots on defense. Hjalmarsson was a great complament to Brian Campbell, and was important on the penalty kill.

I went down to Johnny’s Icehouse on Friday for the first day of prospect camp, and was lucky enough have a seat in the section next to management and scouting. By the time I learned of the offer sheet, the section cleared out. Instead of watching the second group’s scrimmage, the Blackhawks’ brass must have entered the war-room as their focus was on the Hjalmarsson situation. Bowman is expected to address the offer sheet today at prospect camp.

Hawks bring back veteran defenseman

Jassen Cullimore, who was an unrestricted free agent, was brought back into the fold when he signed a one-year deal worth $500,000. The deal was struck before the news of Hjalmarsson’s offer sheet from the Sharks, so I’m a little surprised the Blackhawks re-signed the 37-year old defenseman. He won’t make his way off the IceHogs roster next season. Cullimore played 59 games with Rockford last year, and scored two goals with six assists.

Changes have been reflected on our In the Organization page above.

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Dale moves on, legacy alive and well in Chicago

It was July 14, 2009 when Dale Tallon was removed as the Blackhawks general manager in favor of Stan Bowman. Tallon quietly served as a senior adviser of hockey operations to the Blackhawks this year. Yesterday, Tallon was hired as general manager of the Florida Panthers. With the way his tenure as general manager ended in Chicago, I’m pleased to see him get another gig with the Panthers. As the Blackhawks play Game #2 of the Western Conference Finals in San Jose tonight, we should remember that Dale is the true architect of this team. Not John McDonough or little Stan Bowman, and the guys in the locker room know this.

Jonathan Toews said this of Dale Tallon yesterday:

“…when I talk to him I always remind him we’re in here thinking about him and we don’t forget the contributions he’s made to this team and this locker room.”

Before Tallon became the general manager in 2005, he spent over twenty years in the organization as a player, in the booth as a broadcaster (radio and television) and in other front office duties. The legacy he will most will remembered for is drafting Jonathan Toews third overall in 2006 and Patrick Kane first overall in 2007. I’ll remember Tallon for his keen eye for talent. Great examples of this ability can be seen in the trades to bring in Patrick Sharp (from Philadelphia for Matt Ellison and 3rd round draft pick) and Kris Versteeg (from Boston for Brandon Bochenski), selected Niklas Hjalmarsson in the 4th round (108th overall) of the 2005 draft and brought in Antti Niemi from Finland in 2008..

The Chicago Blackhawks became a desired location for players because of Dale Tallon. The free agent acquisition of Marian Hossa last summer is a terrific example of the turnaround the franchise experienced four years after Tallon became general manager. Four years ago, a player with the caliber of Hossa would never think about signing with the Blackhawks. Back then the Blackhawks were arguably the worst organization in the NHL, but last November Forbes rated them as the seventh most valuable team in the league. Tallon built a team worth watching in Chicago. A team John McDonough could sell to the masses.

Before the 2008-09-season, McDonough brought hockey legend Scotty Bowman into the fold. Scotty was the father of then assistant general manager Stan Bowman. It was a matter of time before Tallon was shown the door, and management patiently waited for the chance to remove Dale as general manager. That opportunity came last summer when qualifying offers to restricted free agents (Versteeg, Barker, Brouwer, etc.) were improperly filled. It’s a job that general managers don’t carry out, but it happened under Dale’s watch. He took the blame, cleaned up the mess and was removed as general manager days later. Little Stan Bowman was promoted.

There were reports stating that McDonough and Tallon butt heads often regarding who was really steering the ship, and that McDonough resented the attention Tallon received for building a team that made it to the Western Conference Finals last year. Through it all, Dale Tallon was nothing less than a class act. Although it isn’t entirely his fault, Tallon will get most of the blame for the impending off-season salary-cap issues.

Good luck in Florida, Dale.

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The Penalty Kill (Remastered)

The one constant through the year, Ray, has been the penalty kill. The Blackhawks have won games like an army of steamrollers. The have constantly had problems with their power play, their goaltending and their defense. Each facet of their game has been rebuilt, erased and rebuilt again. But the penalty kill has marked the time. This ability to stymie opponents and score down a man is part of the Blackhawks’ present, Ray. It reminds of us of all that once was good and it could be again.

- Terrence Mannakov

A little over two months ago I wrote a post about the successful penalty kill of the Blackhawks.  It has been one of the consistently good areas of play from this team all seaosn. If some other facet of their game is on the fritz, the boys have always had the penalty kill to hang their jock straps on. On January 28th (when I wrote the first post), they were fourth in the league at keeping opponents scoreless with the man-advantage at 85.6-percent. Today, the Blackhawks are fifth in the league at 84.8-percent – they haven’t allowed a goal in four-on-five situations in their last five games.

One of the most overused hockey clichés is that the goalie a team’s best penalty killer. Yea, they do have a heightened level of importance in shorthanded situations, but if the defense is anemic, a goalie has no chance of success on kill.  In the case of the Blackhawks, the skaters are a big reason their penalty kill is fifth in the league.  At the time this post was written -  compared to their peers around the league with ten or more games playedCristobal Huet had a goals-against average of 4.58 (eighth) while shorthanded  and Antti Niemi with a goals-against average of 5.37 (twenty-second).  Those numbers don’t support the cliché for the 2009-10 version of the Blackhawks.

When I think about the penalty kill, my mind automatically goes to the team’s defense. Coach Quenneville has the luxury of a roster full of capable defensemen and two-way forwards that are affective in their own zone and the back-check. On the blue line, Quenneville has consistently relied on a core of guys that haven’t been afraid to put their bodies on the line and block shots. Duncan Keith and Brent Seabrook get all the press, but you cant overlook the contributions of Brent Sopel and Niklas Hjalmarsson on the kill. When it comes to blocked shots, Sopel leads the team with 5.6 per sixty minutes and Hjalmarsson is third with 4.6 (trailing Seabrook by 0.1). The Swede also brings a calm, smart defensive style that thrives in four-on-five situations.

I alluded to Quenneville’s use of two-way forwards on the kill earlier, and Jonathan Toews, Marian Hossa and Patrick Sharp are staples on the penalty-killing unit because of their offensive ability. They are effective at clearing their zone of the puck and taking the action to the other end of the ice. As it stands today, the Blackhawks lead the league in shorthanded goals with eleven (Maria Hossa 5, Patrick Sharp 2, Kris Versteeg 2, Duncan Keith 1 and Troy Brouwer 1). Although Toews hasn’t scored on the kill, he has three shorthanded assists this season, and the captain’s value doesn’t always show up on the scoresheet. For example, when the Coyotes visited the UC a few weeks ago, Toews skated the puck into the defensive zone alone, and drew a cross-checking penalty from Lee Stempniak while the other ‘Hawks were executing a line change.

The fact that the Blackhawks don’t spend much time in the box helps as well. Currently, they have the second fewest shorthanded situations in the league with 250, and have played total of three games this season where they didn’t have to field the penalty kill. Fewer instances of four-on-five hockey is obviously key, and it means that the defense feels less stress and won’t break as easily if they weren’t so effective at staying out of the penalty box. With the way this team’s defense and goaltending has fared this season, that’s a good thing.

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Blackhawks 5, Oilers 2

Together again

It’s always great when the Blackhawks are able to follow a horrible team performance with a dominating one. The 5-2 victory over the Oilers make it easier to forget last night’s loss to the Islanders. To give you an idea how dominating the ‘Hawks were this game just look at the shot totals. The Blackhawks out shot the Oilers by thirty-three shots on goal (47 to 14). Each period, they were able to hold their opponent to a lower shot total then the period before – six in the first, five in the second and just three in the third.

As the match progressed, the Blackhawks picked up their play. Any sight of rust vanished. Neither team scored in the first period, but Marian Hossa put the ‘Hawks on the scoreboard first just three minutes into the second. The Oilers tied it up with one questionable goal, and took the lead 2-1 with a goal that shouldn’t have happened after the obvious slash of Niklas Hjalmarsson by Gilbert Brule was missed. How the refs didn’t see Hjalmarsson’s stick break in half as a result of the slash is beyond me. The Blackhawks didn’t’ let the man keep them down. They scored four unanswered goals to put this game away for the good guys.

It was an overall dominating team performance, but there are always individuals that stand out above the rest. This isn’t communist Russia. Players get their kudos when they deserve their kudos. Hossa finished with a goal and an assist – so did Jonathan Toews and Dave Bolland. Hopefully tonight’s game is an indication that Bolland is back in game shape. Duncan Keith and Patrick Kane had two helpers each. Hjalmarsson added a rare goal on a heavy slap shot from the point on a four on four.

In net, Cristobal Huet was good enough to get the win. He did have a few tough saves on the night. No matter to the fact that both goals could have been negated with better officiating, but when the team in front of the goalie can limit an opponent to fourteen shots, the chance for a win is great. That is how this team has won many games this season, and their going to get more wins playing that way going forward. That is why the Stan Bowman stood pat at the trade deadline, and opted to go with the tandem of Huet and Antti Niemi.

Next up, the Blackhawks will host the Vancouver Canucks and the lovely Ryan Kesler at the United Center this Friday. Let the blood flow.

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Blackhawks 4, Oilers 2

Seeing Jeff Deslauriers on the other end of the ice last night had the Blackhawks licking their chops. They could smell the blood in the water, but weren’t ravenous enough. The ‘Hawks didn’t have to play their best game to beat the Oilers, and they didn’t. Still, they had their way in Edmonton and took this game 4-2. It was that apparent this game was theirs to lose when Jonathan Toews scored the first goal of the game just forty-four seconds into the game.

After Toews’ goal the Blackhawks rattled off three more in the second period to extend their lead to 4-0. All night the Blackhawks were deep in the offensive zone with little resistance from the Oilers’ defense. Patrick Kane’s second assist of the night – he set up Toews’ goal as well – happened because he was left untouched as he skated around the offensive zone at will to set up Troy Brouwer. Dustin Byfuglien was credited with a goal after redirect a Duncan Keith shot/pass. Keith had two assists on the night, and Marian Hossa caped off the scoring with his power play goal.

It seems as though Hossa has made playing high in the offensive zone part of his game. Whether it is with the man-advantage or at even-strength Hossa stations himself just shy of the defenseman in the opponent’s zone. His goal last night was a product of that. He watched Patrick Sharp and Andrew Ladd battle down low, and pounced on the opportunity to put the puck on twine. In that spot he can watch the play develop, keep the puck in the offensive zone and get a great jump on the back check if need be.

Anyway, with the big lead the Blackhawks started to ease the offensive pressure, and the Oilers were able to cut the lead in half. Late in the second period Fernando Pisani scored the Oilers’ first goal, and in the third period Ryan Potulny scored off a Niklas Hjalmarsson turnover in the defensive zone. Luckily the ‘Hawks were able to stave off any more offense from Edmonton due to good goaltending from Cristobal Huet. He kept this one from turning into the January 9th game in Minnesota part deux.

The victory over the Oilers gave the Blackhawks their fourth win on the eight game road trip. They are 4-2 on the trip and have two more games to go before returning home. Next are the San Jose Sharks, then on to Carolina.

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