Commenting and reporting on the NHL, specifically the Tampa Bay Lightning, along with entertainment.
Sunday, March 4, 2018
The Worst Movies of 2017
By Mark Pukalo
It would seem there were more bad movies in 2016 than 2017 if you compare my two lists.
Not really.
I just punished myself by renting anything I could in 2016 and saw many awful films. Throughout 2017, I stopped myself from doing that. I’m sure there are some others that could be added to this list, but there was no need to spend the extra $1.61 to see how bad “Everything, Everything,” “Ghost in the Shell,” “The Mountain Between Us,” “The Dark Tower,” “The Layover,” or “The Mummy,” was. So, ultimately, even some of the movies at the bottom of my list of the worst of 2017 have some redeeming value if you want to see them.
Here's my list of the worst of 2017:
15. Snatched - Amy Schumer and Goldie Hawn provide a few laughs, but it kinda goes off the rails at times.
14. It - Just didn't find anything particularly fascinating about this thriller. Don't really get IT I guess.
13. The House - Will Ferrell is always a little fun to watch, but he does not have a whole lot to work with here.
12. Just Getting Started - The Tommy Lee Jones and Morgan Freeman senior caper movie just never draws your interest. Bet they both made some good money though.
11. Fist Fight - Has some funny moments, but the ultimate story line is sort of preposterous.
10. The Circle - How can Tom Hanks make a bad movie about a subject that could be interesting like a society that goes overboard with social media? A really, really bad script.
9. Life - Let's say the ending shocked me and made me feel an ounce better about the film, but it was still boring and head scratching before we got there.
8. American Assassin - The counter-terrorism film thinks it's smarter than it is. Pick better movies Michael Keaton.
7. The Foreigner - Jackie Chan sleep walks through this baffling crime drama, with an evil Pierce Brosnan, that is hard to follow.
6. Kidnap - Calm down and think Halle Berry. Sheesh. Just a series of crazy car chases that does not seem to end.
5. Suburbicon - A violent, strange, ugly, maddening film from the Coen Brothers that leaves you wondering why you rented it. The concept isn't awful. The execution is.
4. Beatriz at Dinner - Kept waiting for something thoughtful and interesting out of this film about race and class structure, but it just seemed like a mess that made me angry in the end. Even adorable Salma Hayek couldn't save it.
3. The Dinner - A good cast with Richard Gere, Laura Linney and Rebecca Hall and an idiotic script that centers around two wealthy families trying to decide what to do about their children's crime. It's bad from start to finish.
2. Rough Night - The only one of these 15 that I spent money on at the theater. It's crass, not funny at all and the trailer actually made it look like it could be good. I got fooled. Could have been No. 1, but Scarlett Johansson looked really, really good in short hair.
1. Mother! - Love you, but shame on you Jennifer Lawrence. Director Darren Aronofsky has made some good films like "The Fighter" and "The Wrestler," but this strange mystical thriller is gross, mindless and just so crazy you want to turn it off 20-30 minutes in. I'm not sure what positives anyone can take out of this mess. Some critics say Aronofsky made the film to get a reaction - either way. Well, here's mine. IT SUCKED! I want my $1.61 back!
OSCAR PICKS/HOPES
BEST ORIGINAL SCREEN PLAY - The Big Sick (hope), Lady Bird (pick)
BEST ADAPTED SCREEN PLAY - Molly's Game (hope), Call Me By Your Name (pick)
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS - Allison Janney, I Tonya (hope, pick), although Laurie Metcalf was great in Lady Bird
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR - Christopher Plummer, All the Money in the World (hope), Woody Harrelson, Three Billboards, Outside Ebbing, Missouri (pick). All five are very worthy.
BEST ACTRESS - Margot Robbie, I Tonya (hope), Sally Jenkins, The Shape of Water (pick)
BEST ACTOR - Gary Oldham, Darkest Hour (hope, pick)
BEST DIRECTOR - Christopher Nolan, Dunkirk (hope), Greta Gerwig, Lady Bird (pick)
BEST FILM - The Post (hope), The Shape of Water (pick)
Tuesday, July 18, 2017
Let's Debate Lightning Moves, Not Drink the Kool-Aid
By Mark Pukalo
There is a certain phrase that I had never used before last month, when describing more than a minor issue, since Steve Yzerman took over as general
manager for the Tampa Bay Lightning in 2010.
“I totally disagree with that decision.”
Trading a young, successful goalie
(Dustin Tokarski) for a journeyman (Cedrick Desjardins) annoyed me and allowing
Richard Panik to be lost for nothing on waivers when there were other options was also
disappointing. Re-signing B.J. Crombeen and giving Erik Condra three years
didn’t seem worth it to me either. There have been a few decisions in the first round of the draft you could question and I might have tried to figure out a way to keep Guy Boucher as well, but that would have been difficult.
Those moves are all relatively insignificant, though. We
don’t always get what we want as fans and, with all the decisions a GM has to
make, he can’t be perfect. Yzerman has made some absolutely amazing deals to
build the Lightning into a Stanley Cup contender. He gets an A through the end
of the 2016-17 season.
The Lightning GM has built quite a lot
of room for error. It is easy to just say “he knows what he is doing” and go
along with everything he does - like many are right now. It’s logical, because
there’s little evidence to show where he has damaged the team. He knows what good
hockey looks like. The Lightning will be competitive and, if a particular
19-year-old Russian defenseman becomes a star, they will probably be better
than that.
That doesn’t mean a loyal Bolts fan can’t be
concerned. While people sometimes go overboard with emotional exaggerated responses
on twitter - me included - the basic fact is we all have our opinions. That means one thing. We care. Some are more informed than others. Some include a lot of thought and
guard against personal leanings most of the time. There shouldn't be anything wrong with
that.
Few have seriously come out publicly against
the decisions made by Yzerman during this offseason, for a number of reasons. Some truly believe he is on
the right track and needed to make some of the moves while others are just
going along with them lazily without looking at the big picture. We have a good hockey market in Tampa Bay, with intelligent fans - except for the few out there that
still don’t appreciate the talent of Victor Hedman. There should be a lot of
different opinions. Aside from bashing a current or traded player unfairly like
we have seen lately, all sides should be heard. We may not want to become
Toronto or Montreal, but debate is good.
Differing opinions about the GM’s
moves should be embraced and talked about honestly. There shouldn’t be one
narrative. ... or else. That’s what the best hockey markets look like.
It’s no surprise I was against the
Jonathan Drouin trade. It wasn't because Mikhail Sergachev can’t be a good
defenseman. You just don’t trade a player with Drouin’s special talent at
22 years old. But I’m more surprised at the direction Yzerman has taken the team in
the last month with many other moves. While Sergachev could cure some ills if
he develops quickly, in my opinion the Lightning have gotten a little older and slower
over the last month. If healthy and many things fall into a place, they can
still be a playoff team. But I’m not sure they are better, unless many of their
young players make a major leap forward.
The Drouin trade was not about the
cap. It wasn’t about the expansion draft. It was a choice. I have worked on a
scenario that would have kept him around and makes the Lightning a better team going
forward, in my opinion. You can judge.
The trade to assure Vegas took Jason
Garrison in the expansion draft was strong and I’m not sure the Golden Knights
would have asked for more if Drouin had to be protected over Vladislav
Namestnikov. If another pick was needed, fine. If Vegas wanted Vladdy, another
deal could be made to send him to Sin City.
I would
not have qualified defenseman Andrej Sustr. If the big Czech wanted to stay
around as a seventh or eighth defenseman for a season to try and move up, I may have offered $1
million and he would likely walk. Sustr has had plenty of time to show he is worth almost $2 million. In my opinion, he hasn't come close.
Once that move was made, I would work
the phones to see what the interest was in Tyler Johnson and Namestnikov. Brayden
Point is a better bet long term as a No. 2 center. Plenty of groundwork was
likely done to see what young defensemen were available. I’m not sure Winnipeg was willing to trade Jacob Trouba anymore and they are probably looking for
defense help in return anyway. The focus had to be on Anaheim (Sami Vatenen, Brandon
Montour), Minnesota (Matt Dumba) and Vancouver (Chris Tanev).
There’s no doubt in my mind Minnesota
wanted Drouin. But I’m not sure a deal couldn’t have been made without him. Anaheim
certainly could use some speed up front and Vancouver as well. In my model, I
trade Johnson near his home in Spokane to the Canucks for a couple future picks and a prospect - perhaps forward Jake Virtanen. Then, I overpay for Matt Dumba
from Minnesota - perhaps dishing the Wild the versatile but inconsistent
Namestnikov (who could replace Erik Haula) and their choice of young forwards Adam Erne, Mathieu Joseph,
Dennis Yan or Mitchell Stephens along with a high pick or a defense prospect (Matt Spencer?). I can’t imagine that
deal not being better for Minnesota than the one they worked with Buffalo for
Marco Scandella. You have to make it worth their while, if Drouin is not part
of the deal. There is some talk about Dumba not being a great listener, but
he’s young. You work with him. You could also offer a similar deal to Anaheim
with Johnson instead of Vladdy for Vatanen.
My defense would now include combos of
Hedman-Jake Dotchin, Slater Koekkoek-Anton Stralman, Braydon Coburn-Dumba.
Bringing in a veteran seventh defenseman, perhaps to push Koekkoek on the left side (John-Michael Liles, Fedor Tyutin, Jyrki Jokipakka, Eric Gelinas, someone else?), wouldn’t cost all that much and there will be about $4 million in cap space left at the end to adjust if one of the top six guys get hurt.
You have Erik Cernak, Dominik Masin, Libor Hajek and Ben Thomas coming and the solid draft pick of versatile Callan Foote gives you even more depth on the blue line.
When I first heard that the Lightning were interested in Daniel Girardi, I thought it sounded great. They could sign the bought-out righty D man for about $1 million or so to replace Sustr. Then, soon after, Sustr was re-signed. I like Girardi. I covered the Hartford Wolf Pack a little when he broke in. I just don’t like him at $3 million per for two years. You wonder how many teams in the league were offering anywhere near that much, but there are some defense-starved organizations in the league. I have to ask, though, when has the signing of a discarded, bought-out player for more than $1 million or so ever worked out?
When I first heard that the Lightning were interested in Daniel Girardi, I thought it sounded great. They could sign the bought-out righty D man for about $1 million or so to replace Sustr. Then, soon after, Sustr was re-signed. I like Girardi. I covered the Hartford Wolf Pack a little when he broke in. I just don’t like him at $3 million per for two years. You wonder how many teams in the league were offering anywhere near that much, but there are some defense-starved organizations in the league. I have to ask, though, when has the signing of a discarded, bought-out player for more than $1 million or so ever worked out?
The Bolts have depth up front, but I
will need to find a few short-term fixes to allow the young players to develop
in my model. The big swing could have been to take a chance at catching Lightning in a bottle with Nial Yakupov or convincing Vegas to trade Jonathan Marchessault back to the Bay, but I’m fine with Chris Kunitz for
one year. I’m not wild about him because he seems to be declining after scoring just
nine goals last season and two in the playoffs, but if Drouin is there (at six
years, $5.5 million or a little more) he may work as a heady left wing with Steven Stamkos and the former Halifax Moosehead. With
Namestnikov and Johnson gone, I need someone to fill the hole as third-line
center and it is an obvious choice - Brian Boyle. New Jersey did not have to go
three years to sign Boyle to a reasonable $2.75 million deal and that fits for me. Boyle loved it here and I’d find it hard to believe if he
wouldn’t have come back for slightly less than what Ray Shero offered. It’s
interesting that Boyle was one of the main supporters of Drouin, isn't it?
Yzerman seems to have an affinity for
Namestnikov, who has had chance after chance. Vladdy is not without talent and he flashes it brightly at times, but
anyone who watched him last season would be lying if they did not see a drop off in his play when he scored 12 goals fewer than Panik (22) and struggled defensively. You can argue that coach Jon Cooper moved him around too much, but
his effort was lacking many nights. The same with Johnson, who was great
some games and invisible a lot of others. Matt Carle may end up being
Yzerman’s worst contract - although it would be hard to be against it at the time - but giving Johnson a seven-year deal with what he has done the last two
injury-prone seasons (33 goals combined) baffles me. Johnson is a talented
player. No doubt. I just don’t think he is a long-term answer. The argument that the structure of his contract makes Johnny tradeable after four years or something is laughable at best. Ondrej Palat does
more and you can project he is going to be just as valuable five years (or seven) down the
road. That was a good contract.
With Kunitz, Boyle and perhaps Erne if
he survives the trades, you have some flexibility up front in my model. You
have also allowed room for future center candidates Anthony Cirelli and Brett
Howden to develop and then jump in for Boyle in a year or two. If Boyle’s
cranky back acts up you have Yanni Gourde, Cedric Paquette, Matt Peca and others to sub
in the short term and if a third-line center is needed for the playoffs there will
be cap room available. I originally thought about a four-year, $16.4 million
contract for third-line center Nick Bonino, but you wouldn't want to block top-notch prospects like Cirelli and Howden.
Here would be my lines to start the
season: Kunitz-Stamkos-Drouin, Palat-Brayden Point-Nikita Kucherov, Alex
Killorn-Boyle-Ryan Callahan, Gourde-Paquette-J.T. Brown. You could also put Gourde at center and move Boyle to the wing or the fourth line at times. Erne or another reasonably-priced free agent could push for time or sub for Callahan, if he does not come back 100 percent.
Ultimately, I would have chosen Drouin over Johnson and subbed Gourde into Namestnikov's No. 1 swing role, then added veteran leadership like Kunitz and Boyle. I am going for a quicker fix on defense with Dumba (or Vatanen, Tanev) over Sergachev, which is a slight risk. I might also be losing a prime prospect like Joseph or Stephens, but you have to give up something good to improve now.
Ultimately, I would have chosen Drouin over Johnson and subbed Gourde into Namestnikov's No. 1 swing role, then added veteran leadership like Kunitz and Boyle. I am going for a quicker fix on defense with Dumba (or Vatanen, Tanev) over Sergachev, which is a slight risk. I might also be losing a prime prospect like Joseph or Stephens, but you have to give up something good to improve now.
The debate on my model is how much
would be needed for the new contracts of Dumba in 2018-19 and Kucherov, along with Point, in
19-20. But Kunitz perhaps moves out after next season in favor of a younger, cheaper
player while Coburn and Boyle are out after two years with Callahan moving
toward the end or a possible buyout. Things change, you adjust. You would have
Stamkos, Hedman, Drouin and Palat, along with Killorn, wrapped up long term as
your core. Killorn deserves another column, because I think fans and talk-show
hosts have been very unfair to him for a few disappointing months to end his
career-high season (19 goals) in 2016-17.
I could be totally wrong. In some
ways, I hope I am. Sergachev could become a superstar quickly and make everyone forget how good and entertaining Drouin is. But, until then, we can debate whether my roster is better than the one
the Lightning will start 2017-18 with.
Let’s discuss. Let’s disagree,
respectfully. Let’s talk pucks all summer. Please, though, let’s not always
just drink the Kool-Aid.
Tuesday, June 27, 2017
The Case for Drouin II
By Mark Pukalo
Those who traveled to Brandon Ice Sports
Forum for the first practice of training camp in 2015 may have thought they
were finally witnessing the true start of the Jonathan Drouin era with the
Tampa Bay Lightning.
There was the former Halifax Moosehead
and third-overall pick in the 2013 draft skating on the left side of captain
Steven Stamkos with veteran banger Ryan Callahan on the right in the opening
drills.
Little did we know, less than two years later despite a strong 2015-16 postseason performance and a solid 2016-17 campaign (21 goals, 53 points) filled with highlight-reel plays, he would be traded to Atlantic Division-rival Montreal. The road to that result was filled with drama.
Little did we know, less than two years later despite a strong 2015-16 postseason performance and a solid 2016-17 campaign (21 goals, 53 points) filled with highlight-reel plays, he would be traded to Atlantic Division-rival Montreal. The road to that result was filled with drama.
Drouin was the only one of the top six picks in 2013 to be sent back to juniors. It was different, but the decision had merit with the Lightning's situation at the time.
His rookie year in the NHL showed some
promise as he was near the top of the league in assists per minute while mostly
playing on the fourth line and getting very little power-play time. However, that season
ended with him sitting out all but six playoff games. He was even demoted to the black aces at one point with other unproven and unproductive players put ahead of him.
The easy question after that campaign was why didn’t he play more during the
regular season when the Bolts were rolling toward the playoffs - especially on
the power play - to prepare him for a more prominent postseason role?
But all that seemed to be part of the
past as he began the 2015-16 season on one of the top two lines and posted six
points in the first five games with Stamkos and Callahan - also seemingly
screwed out of an assist in Buffalo when his strong forecheck helped set up a
tally for the trio. At some point after that fast start, coach Jon Cooper
seemed to lose interest in the development of the trio after a few somewhat unproductive
games. It wasn’t strange for Cooper, who changes lines like socks.
From there, Drouin could never find a
prominent place in the top-six consistently for Cooper. He was injured, came
back and had two brilliant games in Anaheim and Los Angeles, then was hurt
again. When he came back he played sparingly against the New York Rangers and
the decision was made to send him down to the minors to get some playing time. It
seemed logical at the time - go down and play a few games to get back up to
speed after the injuries. But it wasn’t really stated that way. The Lightning
had a glut of healthy forwards and there was no telling when he would return.
He had seemingly lost his spot for no good reason.
There wasn’t a place for a player who
started the season with six points (should have been seven) in five games?
Every other player picked in the top
six of the 2013 draft was placed in the lineup immediately, allowed to learn
from their mistakes and grow with minutes, except for Drouin. Nathan MacKinnon
(1), Sasha Barkov (2), Seth Jones (4), Elias Lindholm (5), Sean Monahan (6) all
had things to learn and they progressed. Only Lindholm is not All-Star caliber
now, but he has slowly improved.
This was a special talent. The team
needed Drouin. They needed him to push forward his development and help a
failing power play. They needed him in Tampa Bay after a few practice games.
Then, all hell broke loose. Drouin
decided to make his trade request public and, after a deal did not happen
quickly, he left Syracuse. He made a very poor decision. He was 20. My bet is
he was getting really bad advice and he went with it. Perhaps those convincing
him to walk away wanted him to out of Tampa Bay and closer to home. Funny how
that eventually happened.
Drouin has no excuses for leaving the
team. I said so at the time. I say so now. But he came back before the end of
the season and seemed to mend fences. Drouin was outstanding in the 2015-16
playoffs, on both ends of the ice. He was hitting, playing gritty defense,
making simple plays when needed and putting up points (14 in 17 games) while
igniting the power play.
Surely, this would be the start of the
Drouin era in Tampa. All seemed forgiven from the fans as the 2016-17 season
began. Drouin sweaters were everywhere. But there were times during the first
half of last season when he still didn’t get consistent playing time with top
players. You wondered at the time if he would have even played much with
Stamkos if the captain wasn’t injured. While the trio of Drouin, Brian Boyle
and Val Filppula had a little success for a period of time, it was basically a
third line. Drouin even played on a pseudo third line with Cedric Paquette and
Joel Vermin for a few games and set up a pair of goals in St. Louis.
Was Drouin perfect? Absolutely not. He
was 21 until late March. He is still developing, learning. There needed to be
more production at even strength and Drouin was inconsistent other than a
red-hot stretch in the middle of the season. Cooper never seemed to have faith
in him, though. His playing time went up when the Lightning were behind in the
third period. That raised his average time on ice, especially when the team was
struggling. There was also the game against Boston when the
Filppula-Boyle-Drouin line was benched for the start of the third period after
they were on the ice for a late goal by the Bruins in the second. But
defensemen Jason Garrison and Andrej Sustr were mostly at fault.
We should have known at the time.
Drouin was not part of the team’s future. He was traded for a prospect about three months later.
I can understand part of it. GM Steve
Yzerman is a hockey lifer. He is mostly a traditionalist. His style is to stay
out of things - let the coaches coach and players play - with communication at
a minimum with the athletes. He played under Scotty Bowman and won two Cups
that way.
Yzerman had to be thinking after the
season, how can I give a player that deserted his team for two months $5-6
million per year long term? What would it look like if I did? I just gave
Nikita Kucherov three years and $4.7 million per. I have to sign Drouin to a
bridge deal just under that or trade him.
Cooper wasn’t going to change his
mind. Drouin is not his kind of player. He didn’t coach him in the minors. He
isn’t a gritty grinder. Drouin is all about creativity. You have to accept a
few risky passes that go array per game to get all the good stuff he can
provide.
Whether it was Yzerman’s style or the
coaching staff putting him over the edge, it appears the decision was that
Drouin was the one to be dealt. He was ultimately never forgiven for his youthful
mistake.
No doubt, Drouin could bring in the
best prize in the trade market. But I believe it was more than that.
I have been around hockey locker rooms
long enough to understand players. Drouin was not disliked in the room. No way.
He is confident. He plays with a swagger. You can even call him cocky. But
don’t you want that in your best players?
Drouin was never going to win a Selke.
But his defensive prowess had nothing to do with his minus-13 last season and
my head explodes when people say on the radio that he wasn’t responsible
defensively. Watch the 2015-16 playoffs again. The plus/minus statistic can be
deceiving at times. Most of his total last season was a minus-7 in January when
the whole team stunk.
All of this contributed to a bad
decision, in my opinion. It had nothing to do with the cap. I could think of
two players - if discarded - that could provide almost $4 million of additional
cap room right now. The Lightning have plenty of space to take him at $5.5 for six
years - what he signed for in Montreal after the trade. Perhaps he would have
asked for more in Tampa? Who knows? But if $33-36 mil was waved in his face by
Yzerman, I doubt Drouin would have turned it down.
It could have worked here. I can’t
imagine Kucherov being upset for making a little less for a few years to get
20-25 nifty saucer passes from Drouin on the power play.
But I just don’t think Cooper wanted
it to work and Yzerman’s plan probably wouldn’t allow a six-year deal for him.
I find it hard to believe that the
Lightning could not have improved the defense by trading Tyler Johnson or a
first-round pick or by putting together a creative package with prospects.
Drouin is a special talent. He is a
future All-Star if he keeps his head on straight. He can be a top-10 scorer in
the league. In my opinion, you don’t trade players with that type of potential
when they are 22 for a maybe. This has nothing to do with Mikhail Sergachev.
He’ll probably turn out to be a nice player. But we don’t know for sure. We
know how good Drouin is. We saw a glimpse this season and you can only imagine
what he could have been with Stamkos and Callahan in the lineup. But we never
got to see that on a consistent basis, even when they were all healthy.
Cooper has done a lot of good things
since he came to the Lightning organization. Yzerman has done just about
everything right since taking over the Lightning. But the decisions made in the
development of Drouin led to a poor outcome, something that could have been
avoided.
Yzerman may pick up the pieces and
turn the Lightning back into a Cup contender. He’s that good. But it is hard to
lose a player that creates goals like Drouin. Whether he becomes a superstar is
up to him, and fate.
It could have been done another way.
Drouin could have fit into the plan. They should have made it work.
Tuesday, June 6, 2017
Don't Trade Drouin - Vegas Projection
By Mark Pukalo
Steven Stamkos and Victor Hedman were
signed long term. Important ground work was also completed before the last trade
deadline. Now, the heavy lifting will be done to remodel the Tampa Bay
Lightning.
The next month will be an interesting
period for the NHL with the expansion draft, and Bolts fans should be in for a
roller coaster ride of emotions. The way GM Steve Yzerman plugs all the leaks
with the media, we never seem to know what he is going to do next. That often
leads to wild rumors and speculation, which adds fear to the equation.
Still, Yzerman has yet to make a major
mistake in his tenure that will hurt the team long term. He often pulls rabbits
out of top hats with skill and a little luck. He has earned the fans’
confidence.
At the last trade deadline, Yzerman
waved his lightsaber and Valtteri Filppula’s $5 million cap hit was gone to
Philadelphia. He also received a big right-handed defense prospect (Erik
Cernak) and a second-round pick by trading a pair of unrestricted free agents.
The next month to six weeks may offer
the most difficult decisions for the Hall of Famer, though. Despite the fact
the Lightning did not make the playoffs last season, there’s not an expert that
doesn’t think they are close to being a Cup contender in 2017-18. The final
pieces to the puzzle could come in the next few months, but at what cost?
Yzerman has always found a way. But
there is one major mistake he could make this time around and a few other
decisions that may create issues.
While there are many minor things that
he can do to remake the roster, the two key issues are finding a top-three
defenseman to add to the mix with the duo of Hedman and Anton Stralman, and
deciding what to do up the middle behind Stamkos.
Yzerman must decide whether to go all
in on getting a top-notch defenseman or acquire a young emerging player - someone
like Brandon Montour from Anaheim - that may come a little cheaper. I have no
doubt the Lightning brass has looked at every angle to what it would take to
get Jacob Trouba from Winnipeg or Jake Muzzin from Los Angeles or Matthew
Dumba from Minnesota, and even Sami Vatanen from Anaheim - despite his
injury.
The Bolts have a strong corps of
prospects and extra draft choices to deal. They also have a few young
productive players like Tyler Johnson that can be moved.
The one thing they should not do?
Trade Jonathan Drouin.
You just don't deal someone with special talent at this age. You are really tempting fate if you do.
You just don't deal someone with special talent at this age. You are really tempting fate if you do.
There’s plenty of rumors out there
that have the Lightning dealing Drouin to various teams for defense help.
Normally, it doesn’t faze you because most of it is just uninformed speculation.
But when Bob McKenzie reports the possibility, it has more credence. The only
hope for Drouin fans is that 95 percent of the interest is coming from teams
asking about him rather than the Lightning offering the talented wing around.
Even if the Lightning must shell out
$5.5-6 million per for six years to keep Drouin, that may be a steal in a few
seasons when he’s putting up 80 points.
Meanwhile, the most volatile issue for
the Lightning faithful is who to protect before the expansion draft. For some reason,
Alex Killorn has become a whipping boy for many Bolts fans after a rough second
half in 2016-17.
Yzerman signed the power forward to a
seven-year deal last offseason and Killorn went out and put up career highs of
19 goals, 176 shots, four power-play tallies and 10 power-play points in
2016-17. Sure, he takes the odd bad penalty. Sure, his second half was disappointing
after a very fast start. But it seems very strange to me that fans have turned
on him so quickly.
I’m willing to give Nikita Kucherov
the benefit of the doubt that he was frustrated and did not expect his comments
to find their way to Tampa Bay from Russia a few months ago. It appears he was questioning
Killorn’s work ethic and I find that ridiculous. I’ve watched Killorn since he
was in high school and one thing that has never crossed my mind is that he
doesn’t work hard enough. My thought is that Kucherov wasn’t happy with who
coach Jon Cooper put him with at times and took it out on Killorn because the
left wing didn’t capitalize on a few of his passes. The one thing about
Kucherov is that sometimes he overpasses and surprises players who are heading to the net for a possible rebound. Once he started
to shoot more, the Russian sniper was outstanding last season. Kucherov and
Killorn may just not work as linemates. That’s fine. But Kooch was out of line.
Killorn is needed.
The argument that many are making is
to keep Vladislav Namestnikov and expose Killorn to Vegas in the expansion
draft, perhaps ridding the team of his $4.45 million cap hit for the next six
seasons.
I’ve been hard on Namestnikov. Maybe
too hard. But I’m not the only one who has been disappointed in his progress -
especially last season. Vladdy produced when he was put with Stamkos and
Kucherov for a few games, but then often cooled off and was dropped. There’s no doubt
he has some offensive skills and can make a play, but I was most disappointed
in his defensive intensity, consistency and the ability to accept passes
cleanly. There were too many games when he was just invisible.
I’m not against Namestnikov getting
the first chance to be a third-line center behind Stamkos and Brayden Point -
if Johnson is dealt for defense help and Vegas decides to pass on him - but
protecting the former London Knight and possibly losing a glue player like
Killorn would be a mistake in my opinion. While I like Adam Erne more than some,
I’m not sure he can immediately fill Killorn’s role as well. There are also potential
third-line center candidates on the way in Brett Howden and Anthony Cirelli. If I were GM, I’d try to find a veteran third-line center with size to fill
the gap for now and deal Namestnikov or let him go to Nevada.
It will be interesting to see what
Yzerman comes up with. You can expect at least one major move. Trouba or Dumba would
be solid additions. Vancouver’s Chris Tanev and Montour could work as well.
Muzzin, although he is a lefty, is also interesting. More than likely, Yzerman
will surprise us - and not overpay.
Ready or not, changes will come. Let’s
just hope No. 27 is not one of them.
Vegas Baby
The more and more you hear out of
Vegas, GM George McPhee will likely make many choices in the expansion draft to use in deals afterward. The Golden Knights are open for business and have probably
gotten inquiries from all 30 teams.
Much will happen before the protected
list is out, but here are my most recent projections from the Capfriendly.com expansion
draft tool.
Forwards – Vladislav Namestnikov
(Tampa Bay), Hunter Shinkaruk (Calgary), Phillip Di Giuseppe (Carolina), Lukas
Sedlak (Columbus), Andreas Athanasiou (Detroit), Andrew Copp (Winnipeg), Trevor
Lewis (Los Angeles), Jacob de la Rose (Montreal), Colton Sissons (Nashville),
Devante Smith-Pelley (New Jersey), Michael Grabner (NY Rangers), Alan Quine (NY
Islanders), Joel Ward (San Jose), Jori Lehtera (St. Louis), Kerby Rychel
(Toronto).
Defensemen – Josh Manson (Anaheim),
Adam McQuaid (Boston), Trevor van Riemsdyk (Chicago), Mark Barberio (Colorado),
Jamie Oleksiak (Dallas), Griffin Reinhart (Edmonton), Alex Petrovic (Florida),
Jonas Brodin (Minnesota), Fredrik Claesson (Ottawa), Ian Cole (Pittsburgh),
Alex Biega (Vancouver).
Goalies – Philipp Grubauer
(Washington), Linus Ullmark (Buffalo), Louis Domingue (Arizona), Michal
Neuvirth (Philadelphia).
Tuesday, April 18, 2017
A Step Backward Could Move Lightning Forward
By Mark
Pukalo
One simple thing was very clear about this Tampa Bay Lightning season. Every contest counts the same amount.
The Bolts opened the season a respectable 12-6-1 despite showing some troubling
signs. Those problems were realized when they went 10-18-5 during the fateful middle
of the season, including putrid performances against Vancouver (two) and
Arizona. The 20-6-4 finish was good, but not good enough.
Even with
all that - though some circumstances might have changed - if the Bolts had held
on to a one-goal lead at home against Arizona on March 21 they could have
finished with 96 points and in third place in the Atlantic Division.
Ultimately,
you knew it wasn’t going to happen for the Lightning after that collapse
against Arizona as Ottawa, Boston and Toronto continued to collect points.
There was just not enough room for error.
But in some
ways, it’s not the worst thing that could have happened to the Lightning for a
number of reasons. Rest - physical and mental - is one, after playing way more
games than any other team the previous two seasons. A one or two-round trip
through the playoffs this season might also have meant keeping Valtteri
Filppula, Ben Bishop and Brian Boyle around while not giving long looks to some
of the young players. Filppula’s cap number and no-move clause would have hurt
next season while they needed to get something for unrestricted free agents
Bishop and Boyle. The veteran duo brought back a second-round pick and a big
right-handed defenseman (Erik Cernak). They also were able to deal Filppula
without retaining salary. In some ways, it was also a plus that captain Steven Stamkos did not play at the end of the season to give his knee more time to get stronger.
This season
provided some answers and showed kinks in the armor for everyone at different
times. Ondrej Palat had a disappointing first half and was one of the best
players in the second while Alex Killorn was the exact opposite. Jonathan
Drouin clearly showed he should be an untouchable, but you still would like a little
more consistency and a few more even-strength points from him. Tyler Johnson
continued to be inconsistent, but had some great nights. Cedric Paquette had a
good stretch, but once again was injured. J.T. Brown was gritty and active, but
went backward offensively this season. Vladislav Namestnikov has not shown any
progress, especially on defense where Drouin is a Selke candidate compared to
him. Adam Erne and Yanni Gourde certainly showed they are NHL players while heady
Brayden Point may have established himself as the team’s second-line center
moving forward. Let’s also hope Ryan Callahan comes back healthy, because he is
way more important than some fans think.
Nikita
Kucherov was the team’s MVP and it was amazing he put up the
numbers he did after being a bit lost during the team’s bad stretch in January.
The only criticism on Kooch, except for the odd no-look pass in his own zone
(see Drouin), is his attitude after games. He needs to take a few extra seconds
of his time to give more than one or two-word answers to the media, who laud
him game after game. It was funny at first. It looks bad on him now.
Victor
Hedman had a poor game here or there, but it will be a crime if he’s not a
Norris Trophy finalist, and Anton Stralman was tremendous in the final 30 games.
After that, it’s still a work in progress on defense. Jason Garrison had a
rough first half and only improved when placed beside Stralman. Braydon Coburn
was solid enough most nights, but is more of a No. 5 than anything. Andrej Sustr
showed a bit more progress than Namestnikov, but he doesn’t produce nearly
enough good performances and gets lost in key situations too much. Jake Dotchin
was the biggest surprise after being recalled and may just be the third
defenseman protected in the expansion draft while Slater Koekkoek - perhaps
unfairly - has lost his momentum.
So, what
happens in the offseason?
The big
question, in my opinion, is what to do with Johnson? Palat and Drouin must be
signed. But should the Lightning really go down the middle with Stamkos,
Point and Johnson? That’s a bit too small in my mind and Point seems to be more
productive at center. Can Johnson alone, or in a package, get the Lightning a
top-four defenseman?
Many have
talked about trading Killorn and, while it’s not out of the question, if you
deal the Harvard graduate you get smaller again. With all his faults - like too many penalties - Killorn is a winner and a glue player. I think you try
to trade Johnson and bring in a veteran third-line center (way cheaper than
Filppula’s deal would have been) for a year or two to give promising middle men
Anthony Cirelli and Brett Howden more time to develop. It certainly wouldn’t be
a bad thing if Boyle came back on a two-year deal and started as the third-line
pivot. But I bet a team offers him a longer-term deal he cannot turn down.
Teams such
as St. Louis, Minnesota and Anaheim - if they don’t go far in the playoffs -
may need some more offense and Johnson could fit in there. Minnesota is in
expansion draft jail. You wonder if the Lightning could deal Johnson to the
Wild (with picks, Brown, a prospect?) in a package for center Charlie Coyle and
defenseman Jonas Brodin - then send Brodin and Koekkoek to Winnipeg in a deal
for Jacob Trouba. Problem solved with Coyle as your physical third-line center
and Trouba makes your top four D formidable. The Wild can only protect three out
of the fivesome of Marco Scandella, Jared Spurgeon, Ryan Suter, Matt Dumba and
Brodin for the expansion draft. The only good news for Minnesota is it can only
lose one player. There is also Anaheim’s dilemma with righty D man Sami Vatanen
if they can’t get Kevin Bieksa to waive his no-move clause. If it means
exposing Dotchin to get a true No. 3 blue liner, it’s probably worth it.
Imagine if
the Lightning could keep both Koekkoek and Dotchin somehow and add Trouba. You
could have a top six of Hedman-Dotchin, Koekkoek-Stralman and Coburn-Trouba. Even
if you must deal Koekkoek or expose him, you can use Garrison for one more
rebound season. Pipe dream, maybe. I’m sure Andrei Vasilevskiy would love to
play in back of that group, though. The Russian’s only poor stretch last season
was playing behind a defense that was just brutal in front of him. He had
little chance. Seems like Peter Budaj would be the perfect backup, but it’s up
to the unrestricted free agent whether he tries to be a starter somewhere or
not.
The
expansion draft will be very interesting at every level. Vegas should be able
to put together a solid team for coach Gerard Gallant, but it could be very
random what they are looking for from each team. The Golden Knights will need
some veterans to lead the way and provide enough cap cash to reach the floor.
They could pick the best young player on your team or a veteran that fills a
role. GM George McPhee could come to the Lightning’s list and take a veteran D man
like Coburn and Garrison or he could think young and pick Koekkoek (if there),
Namestnikov or even Paquette. Heck, he could see Brown as a nice third-line
player who can fight.
It seems
pretty obvious who the Lightning will protect up front - Stamkos, Callahan,
Drouin, Kucherov, Palat, Johnson and Killorn. After Hedman and Stralman, the
big choice comes on defense. It likely has to be either Dotchin or Koekkoek,
but the Lightning may value Coburn more. Dotchin has probably passed Koekkoek
on the depth chart and he’s a righty, but Vegas might look at it another way.
Don’t forget Dotchin played with Hedman, which probably makes him look a little
better. Ultimately, the Lightning probably protect Dotchin and cross their
fingers that McPhee chooses Namestnikov or Garrison. I tried some inception with
McPhee when he was in the Amalie Arena press box in March. But I don’t think he
will pick Erik Condra.
You can
expect Lightning GM Steve Yzerman will wrap up contracts for Drouin, Palat and
perhaps Dotchin in the next month. If Johnson is not signed by late June it may
be a signal he is being shopped. There’s no doubt his new team would want to do
his next contract.
The end of
June and early July will be very interesting times for the Lightning. When it’s
over, the pain of what fans endured this season might just be worth it.
Vegas Baby
There are
teams that will have very difficult decisions on who to protect for the
expansion draft in June. That will likely lead to some moves in the final
week before the Golden Knights make their selections and teams with cap
space may get a few bargains because of it.
San Jose,
Detroit, Minnesota and Anaheim seem to the teams with the most difficult
decisions. Teams that could go with eight protected skaters rather than seven
forwards and three defensemen could be – San Jose, Colorado, Los Angeles, New
Jersey, Pittsburgh and Nashville.
If the draft
were this week, here’s what the first Golden Knights roster could look like.
Forwards -
Colin Wilson (Nashville), Darren Helm (Detroit), Reilly Smith (Florida), Tyler
Ennis (Buffalo), Charlie Coyle (Minnesota), Jannik Hansen (San Jose), Blake
Comeau (Colorado), Kevin Hayes (Rangers), Michael Raffl (Philadelphia), Andrew
Copp (Winnipeg), Trevor Lewis (Los Angeles), Ryan Reaves (St. Louis), Josh
Anderson (Columbus), Curtis Lazar (Calgary), Ryan Strome (Islanders),
Jean-Gabriel Pageau (Ottawa)
Defense -
Adam McQuaid (Boston), Ian Cole (Pittsburgh), Sami Vatanen (Anaheim), Slater
Koekkoek (Tampa Bay), Martin Marincin (Toronto), Trevor van Riemsdyk (Chicago),
Brandon Davidson (Montreal), Griffin Reinhart (Edmonton), Stephen Johns
(Dallas), Alex Biega (Vancouver)
Goalies -
Philipp Grubauer (Washington), Eddie Lack (Carolina), Louis Domingue (Arizona),
Scott Wedgewood (New Jersey)
Wednesday, April 12, 2017
Remembering the Whale - 23 years later
By Mark
Pukalo
I made it to
my seat behind the goal at the Civic Center on April 23, 1992 for the pre-game
skate, just trying to squeeze the last bit of enjoyment out of another
disappointing season for the Hartford Whalers.
It was a
little over a year after Hall of Famer Ron Francis was shockingly traded and
the only reason the Whalers made the playoffs was that the Quebec Nordiques
were more dreadful in a five-team division. Hartford won 15 games fewer than
they lost in the 1991-92 regular season and were no threat to the mighty
Montreal Canadiens in the first two games of the postseason.
The Civic
Center looked about half full for Game 3, with only the diehard fans in the
seats - even the most hopeful expecting to see two more games before moving on
to the offseason.
A funny
thing happened though. The Whalers came at the Canadiens in waves that night.
They hit - even Andrew Cassels. They created. They used their speed. Whether
Montreal had assumed the Whale would just roll over or not, the Habs could not get
a handle on the game. Murray Craven scored twice while Patrick Poulin, Zarley
Zalapski and John Cullen also got the puck past Patrick Roy.
I had always
enjoyed hockey and especially liked going to games with my group of friends.
But I wasn’t totally invested. Basketball was still my favorite sport and
soccer was probably second.
When I
walked out of the building that night after a 5-2 victory, I was a true hockey
fan. I had never seen a more exciting sporting event. Hockey was No. 1. It has
been for almost 28 years since.
I remembered days like that this week with the 20th anniversary of the Whalers’
final game upon us. It’s hard to believe it’s been two decades since political
stupidity and greed took the team away from the community and its loyal fans.
You think
about the sorrow and the joy of the 20 years. Unfortunately, many of the
memories are painful. One playoff series victory. Many tough days on and off
the ice. But there is still something that makes you smile when you hear Brass
Bonanza.
I was in the
Civic Center for the college basketball game the day before the roof collapsed,
but there would be many more close calls for the Whalers when they reached the
NHL.
I laid on
the floor listening to the radio for Game 7 of the 1986 second-round series
with Montreal when Claude Lemieux went high to the glove side on Mike Liut in
overtime. The Whalers were probably a better team that season and could have
won it all if they had gotten past that game. How much would a Stanley Cup have
changed their fortunes?
Hartford won
the Adams Division the following season - the only time they finished better
than fourth - and lost in the first round, but the most gut-wrenching defeat
came in 1990.
The Whalers
led the hated Boston Bruins two games to one and owned a 5-2 lead after two
periods in a raucous Civic Center. Ray Bourque wasn't skating onto that ice. He was injured. But mistake after
mistake led to goals against. Bob Beers scored. Yes, Bobby Beers. Randy
Ladouceur was minus-4. Dave Poulin’s shot on the winning goal was traveling so
slow it barely got over the line, but somehow it eluded Peter Sidorkiewicz. At
least that’s how I remember it. Bruins 6, Whalers 5. Final.
I’ve never
been more crushed walking out of a sporting event. It took every ounce of restraint
to not punch one of the many disgusting Bruins fans in our face as we left the Civic Center. This night came about a month after Christian Laettner
beat UConn at the buzzer in the Eastern Regional final. Crazy.
The Whalers
would take that series to seven games, but lose. Same thing happened in 1992.
Yvon Corriveau missed the net on a breakaway in overtime and Russ Courtnall
scored from the slot to win the last playoff game in franchise history. Whether
it was a joke or not, I heard second hand later on that Whalers goalie Frank
Pietrangelo told reporters he thought the shot went under the ice to beat him.
It was the Montreal Forum. So, who knows?
The team
could never win the big game. It was frustrating. But they were the lovable
losers. When people went to games, they were hooked. The city would have gone
nuts over a long playoff run.
Like any
smaller market professional teams, the stands were full when they were winning
and attendance went down when they hit tailspins. No offense to the amazing UConn
women’s basketball program, but Connecticut doesn’t love that sport. It loves
winners.
For most of
us, though, the Whalers became a big part of our lives. We got season tickets
as a group, sometimes scalped when we didn’t pick that game in our preseason draft,
got together before games, got together after, and often cried in our beer.
You remember
the great wins like in 1992 and some of the crazy moments, the time freezing
rain prevented me from going to a game against Minnesota on a Sunday night after
I did a 360 on the highway. Somehow, I got home driving 2 mph with one wheel on
the side of the road that night. I wasn’t around for some of the great moments
in the mid-80s with Bill, Doug, Chip, Bob and others, when they would talk to
players as they walked by at the Chuck’s Steak House bar after games. I was
told the story about Ray Ferraro, who would always acknowledge the group in the
glory days at Chucks. One night Bill Calhoun, my good friend who passed away
suddenly in 2010 and I miss every day, was not at the game. Ferraro, I was
told, walked by that night and turned back to say, “Hey, where’s Billy?”
It was that
kind of a relationship with the fans. It could have continued.
I remember
hearing the story of the group seeing Claude Lemieux at a bar in the late 80s
and, after the hockey villain took some verbal abuse from Whalers fans, he
simply showed them his 1986 Stanley Cup ring. His brother Jocelyn Lemieux later
played for Hartford and became a crowd favorite for a short time. We told him
the story of his brother one day and he laughed. We urged him to help get the team to win one
for us in Boston late in a lost season. They went out and won the game. Lemieux
was quoted afterward that they wanted to win this one for the loyal fans.
One night the
players and officials stood for the national anthem and there was a bit of a
delay before the singer started. Frenchy, standing five seats or so to the left
of us behind the goal wearing his green Whalers jacket and looking disheveled
as ever, took the opportunity to send a message to referee Denis Morel - often
noticeable for puzzling calls - who was facing us from the red line. “Hey
Morel,” Frenchy wailed for everyone to hear. “What are you looking at?” There
was also time that the Whaler mascot made an unintended obscene gesture
while riding the Zamboni, but we won’t go too deeply into that.
Those were
the days. You thought they’d go on forever. But Eddie Johnston, with the
approval of coach Rick Ley apparently, traded Ronnie “Franchise” and Ulfie
Samuelsson for Cullen, Zalapski and some guy named Jeff Parker. It was the
beginning of the end. They missed the playoffs the final five seasons.
Owner
Richard Gordon didn’t know what he was doing. They were always flailing. The
Whalers drafted a superstar defenseman named Chris Pronger. But, although you
could see his great talent, you remember the day when he put his coat over his
head to hide who he was (like no one could figure it out) after several players
were arrested in Buffalo. Pronger didn’t want to be in Hartford after a while. When
Peter Karmanos bought the team, GM Jim Rutherford dealt him to St. Louis for
Brendan Shanahan. Shanny said all the right things at first. But after one of
the quietest 40-goal seasons (44) in NHL history, he wanted out.
I went from being
a fan to one of the beat writers for the Hartford Courant in the Whalers final
two seasons. I learned a lot. It took me to some great or interesting places
that I will always remember - Barrie and Kitchener, Ontario, Ottawa, Los
Angeles, St. Louis, the pond in Anaheim, Dallas, Toronto, Landover, Mary. and
Tampa.
I should
have known something was going on when I saw the look on Shanahan’s face in the
locker room after the final contest of the 1995-96 season. It was the last game
for the Sabres at the old barn called "the Aud" in Buffalo and the teams settled
scores with brawl after brawl. There were 156 penalty minutes and eight 10-minute
misconducts. Shanahan and goalie Jason Muzzatti were ejected. Shanahan was
probably thinking - the Whalers are never going to get any breaks.
“I don’t get
it,” Shanahan said to me that night. “Someone has to have more (power plays),
but nine to two? I kind of thought the Sabres were just as willing as we were.
That’s a pattern that’s developed with us and it doesn’t look like it’s going
to stop.”
Hmm.
On came
another embarrassment when he asked for a trade. The easy excuse was the
“uncertainty” of the franchise’s future. He was dealt to Detroit for Keith
Primeau, who was a true pro and one of the most genuine athletes I had met at
that point. But future Hall of Famer Paul Coffey also came in the deal. That created
more drama. Coffey didn’t want to be in Hartford, either. He asked for a trade.
I remember
standing outside the visitor’s locker room in Tampa after Coffey’s admission
and asking Kevin Dineen about the situation. Dineen simply said, “I don’t want
to talk about anyone that doesn’t want to be on this team.”
This only would happen to the Whalers - Shanahan opposed Coffey (Philadelphia) in the 1997
Stanley Cup finals.
Dineen’s
return for parts of the final two seasons made those last days more tolerable.
He was John Wayne on skates, blowing around Hall of Famer Larry Robinson for a big
goal in the 1986 playoffs and decking Mike Milbury - who I heard would need
smelling salts to be awoken. But, most of all, he was blood and guts. He was a
leader - the kind of player who was easy to root for and gave the media time
when it was needed.
Those last
few seasons didn’t seem like they would be the last. We all thought they would
figure something out. Heck, they almost made the playoffs as a lame duck. State
and city officials had to know this was going to be the only chance Hartford had
to house a major-league franchise, right?
There is
plenty of blame to go around. Karmanos was likely asking for too much. The
State wanted to be stingy with the deal and didn’t value the team. Gary Bettman
didn’t try hard enough to help broker a deal.
Isn’t it
funny how Bettman has spent years and years trying to keep the Coyotes in
Arizona and hardly lifted a finger for the Whalers? Heck, he’d probably lay
down on the road to stop the Yotes from leaving. In Hartford, he virtually
loaded the trucks for Karmanos.
Yes,
Karmanos is a very unlikable figure and he deserves it. He didn’t deserve a
spot in the Hall of Fame. But, all things considered, he was just a
businessman. The Whalers were his business and he wanted to get the best deal
possible. If he really planned to move the team to some great spot, why did he
chose Raleigh? It was just the best of a lot of bad options.
One local
sports host once said to me he was told state officials opened the vault for Karmanos,
and pesky Pete did not want to stay. It depends who you believe or want to
believe. I can’t imagine that was true.
The main
culprits for the demise of the Whalers - after Gordon, Ley and Johnston took
out their heart away - were the politicians. Governor John Rowland, who later went
to jail as I proudly predicted, did not grasp the fact that the Whalers were
going to be the only major franchise a city like Hartford could have.
Rowland and
the others were easily played by Robert Kraft, who threatened to move the New England
Patriots to Hartford if he didn’t get a better deal in Foxboro. Just move the
Whalers out, clear the decks and Patriots are coming. Simple, right?
The
politicians all fell for it. Kraft was never coming to Hartford. Not then. Not
ever. Rowland and the state legislature could not have been more stupid and own less foresight. Democrats, Republicans, all of them. Joe Leiberman couldn’t
be bothered. One of his advisers once told me, there was “no clear advantage to
the state to have the Whalers in Hartford.” That’s total crap. The tax money alone
would have made them viable. But Rowland’s advisers and some politicians
apparently clapped when he announced the Whalers were leaving. What were they
cheering for? Did they want to rub more dirt in the wounds of loyal Whalers
fans?
Just
thinking about the way the state mishandled the situation still infuriates me.
Time doesn’t heal wounds. Just think about what it would have been like if the
Hurricanes had won the Cup in Hartford instead of Raleigh. All of the state’s
“petty fiefdoms” would have been just as in love with the Whalers as the epic
UConn women’s basketball team.
Connecticut
is a great hockey state. Just look at the NHL rosters. Jonathan Quick, Nick
Bonino, Cam Atkinson, Kevin Shattenkirk, Max Pacioretty, Ron Hainsey, Adam
Erne, Ben Smith are all from the Nutmeg State. I once had to pick the high
school player of the year between future NHLers Bonino and Mark Arcobello. UConn
has a Hockey East team now. If the Whalers ever came back, they would thrive
with a new state of art arena that could also house UConn sports.
But it will
almost certainly never happen. The only way is if an ultra-rich person who
loves the Hartford area and the state of Connecticut wants to put together a
project. Someone like Lightning owner Jeff Vinik, who knows what he is doing
and embraces the situation like he did here in Tampa. Someone who could convince Bettman he
is wrong about Hartford.
But Whalers
fans shouldn’t give up their dreams. This week they should remember the good
times. They should smile when major hockey pundits talk about how they miss the
Whale.
I will
remember high fives with Bill, Doug, Mary, Bob, Chip, Alison, Dave and many others
after big goals. I will remember sitting in Maple Leaf Garden peering down on
the fabled ice covering the team and driving through the snow to Kanata,
Ontario. I will remember interviewing great people like Dineen, Adam Burt,
Geoff Sanderson, Stu Grimson, Glen Wesley, Jeff O’Neill, Sean Burke, Primeau, Jason
Muzzatti, Sami Kapanen, Skip Cunningham, Paul Maurice and many, many others. I will
remember getting on the team charter the day the team announced it was moving
from Hartford and not knowing what to do except glare at Rutherford (I later
apologized). Of course, we were headed to Tampa Bay that day. That’s where my
hockey soul ended up. And I remember the last game on April 13, 1997 when tears
fell freely, when Dineen scored the winning goal - against the Lightning.
We still
bleed green. Never forget. It’s been 20 years. But the Whalers will forever
live in our hearts.
Friday, March 31, 2017
The King of A Year in Movies - 2016
Somewhere toward the end of 2015, I took the 40-minute ride to AMC Veterans 24 out past the Tampa airport to see a movie that was only showing there at the time. It gave me a chance to see the most amazing performance by an actor under 10-years-old I had ever seen.
His name was Jacob Tremblay and he could not have been better in the emotional movie "Room." About a year later, I made my way to the same theater for the same reason and a young boy from India named Sunny Pawar somehow topped Tremblay.
Pawar dominated the screen throughout the first hour of 2016's best movie "Lion," as a lost child named Saroo trying to find his way through the dangers of Calcutta (now Kolkata) - thousands of miles from his home. Pawar's triumphant performance led you into an equally-emotional second half of the movie where the older Saroo (Dev Patel) searches for his home through Google Maps.
There were many solid films in 2016, but none came close to moving me like "Lion." It is based on a true story and it was told with grace and wonderful pacing. It is about the power of family, love, home and the human spirit. Nicole Kidman is outstanding as Saroo's adoptive Australian mother and the beautiful Rooney Mara plays his girlfriend, who is actually a composite of his female friends. Patel starred in my pick for the worst of 2015 (Chappie) and one year later he provides a strong performance in the best.
Have some tissues available if you are going to see Lion. You will need them - unless you do not have a heart.
I wondered if 2016 was going to be a dud of a year for movies in late summer - after 2015 was the best in my lifetime - but it ended up producing a number of entertaining films in the fall and winter with a variety of subject lines. Some were fun, others had deep, thought-provoking story lines and a few were quite unique. It ended up being a pretty good year, with some of the best performances including Pawar, Ruth Negga (Loving), Bryan Cranston (The Infiltrator), Andrew Garfield (Silence), Mila Kunis (Bad Moms), Octavia Spencer (Hidden Figures), Natalie Portman (Jackie), Miles Teller (Bleed for This), Emma Stone (La La Land), Jeff Bridges (Hell of High Water), Jessica Chastain (Miss Sloane), Casey Affleck (Manchester by the Sea), Emilia Clarke (Me Before You), Viola Davis (Fences), Colin Farrell (The Lobster) and Marvin the dog (Paterson).
Here's my annual look at the year in movies:
Did not get to see: Queen of Katwe, Elle, A Man Called Ove, Moana, Rules Don't Apply.
Worst: 13 Hours (see the entire list on my worst of the year blog)
Not great, but these films have something redeemable - Demolition, The Purge: Election Day, Get a Job (Bryan Cranston and Anna Kendrick get it over the line), Captain America, Equals, Race, Independence Day- Resurgence (only because the first one was good), The Lobster (so weird it almost became compelling), Mother's Day (great cast), The Accountant (mostly blah, but a few decent moments), The Girl on the Train (glad I didn't spend money at the theater), Cafe Society, Love & Friendship (Kate Beckinsale is great as usual), Bridget Jones' Baby, Sausage Party (not a kids cartoon, adult cringe-worthy laughs), The Legend of Tarzan, The Birth of a Nation, Allegiant (worst of a great series), Keeping up with the Joneses, Masterminds (goofy, stupid, but a few laughs), Doctor Strange, The Founder (Michael Keaton plays Ray Kroc, who started McDonald's), Paterson (interesting, but not real exciting), Yoga Hosers (funny and Johnny Depp's daughter is adorable).
Honorable Mention - Jason Bourne (underwhelming, but fits in the series. Alicia Vikander is great as usual), Denial (interesting movie on the trial of a Holocaust denier), Deepwater Horizon (nothing special, but it was better than expected), Eight Days a Week (Beatles doc), Where do we Invade Next? (interesting Michael Moore documentary everyone should see, but won't), Free State of Jones (good Civil War story, but dragged a little), Finding Dory (cute cartoon that held my interest), Star Trek Beyond (first half is confusing, second half pretty good), Allied, Hacksaw Ridge, 20th Century Women, Bleed For This (Vinny Paz story was better than expected), War Dogs, Money Monster (Clooney and Roberts are good, but just didn't hit a home run with me), Me Before You (tearjerker), 13th (Documentary on Racism), Pop Star: Never Stop Never Stopping (funny stuff)
Joe Lunardi's first five out: Collateral Beauty (somewhat hokey and hard to believe, but enjoyable), Bad Moms (more laughs than expected), Nocturnal Animals (strange, strange movie, but keeps your interest), Loving (strong, important story), Patriots Day (well-done movie on the Boston Marathon bombing)
TOP 25
25. Captain Fantastic - Viggo Mortensen shines as the father of a family which lived outside of civilization for years before making a trip to their mother's funeral.
24. Eddie the Eagle - The interesting and likable story of Eddie Edwards, the unusual and inexperienced ski jumper from England who made a splash at the 1988 Winter Olympics
23. Fences - Denzel Washington and Viola Davis provide amazing performances as complicated characters in this film adapted from a play. The strong ending helps get it over the top.
22. Zootopia - Enjoyable cartoon with an underlying racial theme that educates about the advantages of diversity and the problems with stereotyping.
21. Arrival - Amy Adams stars in the science fiction story about a race of aliens who arrive with a message that only she can uncover. It is a powerful movie about seeing the future, but I wasn't as blown away as most people.
20. Everybody Wants Some!! - It's Animal House with a bunch of college baseball players instead of Bluto and Flounder. Director Richard Linklater (Boyhood) does a good job keeping it fun.
19. Moonlight - The Academy Award winner follows a young African American boy struggling with a mother hooked on drugs and confusion about his sexuality. I would have liked to see more of Mahershala Ali's character. Thought it was a good film, just not a great one.
18, Deadpool - Ryan Reynolds is terrific as a superhero with a wild sense of humor. Thought it was a lot of fun, although it got a bit too cartoonish at the end.
17. Jackie - Natalie Portman hits it out of the park with her portrayal of Jackie Kennedy in the aftermath of her husband's assassination. I was in my first year of life while this was going on, so it was educational for me.
16. Silence - Two young Jesuit priests from Portugal in the 17th century go in search of their mentor in Japan, which had outlawed Christianity. Martin Scorsese directs the long (2 hours, 40 minutes), but emotional film and Andrew Garfield is terrific as one of the padres.
15. Sully - Tom Hanks plays hero Chesley Sullenberger, who miraculously saved every passenger by landing a damaged airplane on the Hudson River but ends up facing serious questions about his decision.
14. Manchester by the Sea - The second time watching the film made me understand its power a bit more. The acting from Casey Affleck and Michelle Williams, among others, is outstanding. But it is still a bit too depressing for a top 10 pick.
13. O.J. Made in America - You would need a truck load of popcorn to watch this in a theater but since the Academy made it Best Documentary, why not include it here? Ezra Edelman did an amazing job putting this all together. It is fascinating and sad.
12. The Edge of Seventeen - Hailee Steinfeld, a terrific actress, plays a high school student trying to weave her way through life's problems in a one-parent family. Woody Harrelson is great as her sarcastic, but helpful teacher.
11. Miss Sloane - Jessica Chastain is a win-at-all-costs lobbyist who finds herself in the middle of a political fight over a new gun-control bill. Chastain should have been nominated for Best Actress for her powerful performance.
10. Hell or High Water - Brothers Chris Pine and Ben Foster go on a bank robbery spree to help save the family farm, which they are in jeopardy of losing because of the same financial institutions. Jeff Bridges is outstanding as the local sheriff.
9. Passengers - It may be a stretch to put this film here ahead of other more meaningful movies. But I enjoyed the heck out of it. What would you do if you were alone and had a chance to wake up someone else in suspended animation to keep you company? Yes, I'd wake up Jennifer Lawrence. Sorry Jen.
8. Eye in the Sky - An interesting film starring Aaron Paul (Breaking Bad) and Helen Mirren that makes you think about the military's use of drones. It was the great Alan Rickman's last action film before he passed away.
7. Rogue One: A Star Wars Story - Low expectations turned into high praise for this film that works as a prequel to "A New Hope" - the first of the saga released - and a follow to "Revenge of the Sith." Everything fits and it's fun.
6. Snowden - Joseph Gordon-Levitt does an outstanding job playing the enigmatic Edward Snowden, who becomes disillusioned and releases classified information about illegal mass surveillance programs in the United States. Director Oliver Stone does not overdo it this time.
5. Hidden Figures - Tells the untold story of a group of African-American women mathematicians who aided NASA in the 1960s - in racially-divided Virginia. Janelle Monae, Octavia Spencer, Taraji Henson are terrific in the educational and entertaining movie.
4. La La Land - Emma Stone and Ryan Gosling make this musical drama go as an aspiring actress and musician, respectively, trying to make it in Hollywood. It was more of a story than a musical, which made me enjoy it much better.
3. Sing Street - Director John Carney provides another enjoyable movie with music as the theme. A young Irish lad (Ferdia Walsh-Peelo) puts a band together starting from scratch to impress a complicated, beautiful girl (Lucy Boynton). Mark McKenna is brilliant in a supporting role. It is fun, smart and heartwarming. Line of the movie - "No woman can truly love a man that listens to Phil Collins." LOL.
2. The Infiltrator - Bryan Cranston plays US Customs agent Robert Mazur, who goes deep undercover to end Pablo Escobar's money-laundering operation. How Cranston did not get nominated for Best Actor, I will never know. Beautiful Diane Kruger and former Law and Order star Benjamin Bratt are great, too.
1. Lion - An amazing story and an amazing movie about Saroo Brierly's incredible journey. It was Director Garth Davis' first feature film and he makes it all work without adding any fluff. It should have won something at the Academy Awards, but anyone who saw it knows this was by far the best of 2016.
Previous picks for Best of the Year
2015 - Spotlight
2014 – Birdman
2013 -- Nebraska
2012 – Silver Linings Playbook
2011 – The Descendants
2010 – The Social Network
2009 – Inglourious Basterds
2008 – Frost/Nixon-The Wrestler (tie)
2007 – Once
Best of Decade 2000-2009 – Almost Famous
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