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Friday, March 14 Rest of West may grow wary of Red Wings By Mike Heika Special to ESPN.com |
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So when is one player worth four? When you're loaded with prospects and want to take a run at the Stanley Cup, that's when.
Now, to make that plan work, the Red Wings had to give up a first-round draft pick, a second-round draft pick, gritty forward Sean Avery and big defenseman Maxim Kuznetsov -- and that seemed like a mighty high price at the time. But the way the Wings see it is they have plenty of forward grit that is young enough with Kris Draper (31), Kirk Maltby (31) and Tomas Holmstrom (30) and didn't want to give up any of their young skill. So in their eyes, they have added a top-notch puck-moving defenseman and kept Henrik Zetterberg, Pavel Datsyuk, and Igor Grigorenko -- and that's a win-win proposition. Which, basically, is what the Red Wings have come to expect these last few years. Need a goalie? Get Dominik Hasek. Lose a legendary coach? Hand the reins over to Dave Lewis. Need another goalie? Get Curtis Joseph. Want a defenseman? Get Mathieu Schneider. It's funny, but if you look at some of the deals that GM Ken Holland has made, there is room for criticism. How could he get nothing for Chris Osgood? Have the free-agent signings of Luc Robitaille and Boyd Devereaux been disappointments? Did he give up too much for Schneider? But the thing is, Holland has allowed himself the room to take a few chances because the organization has such depth and such calm. It trickles down to the players and allows them to handle a nervous fan base, which was panicking earlier in the season when the Red Wings seemed to be falling behind the Stars, Canucks and Blues. But just as Holland calmly waited on Numminen and aligned Plans B, C and D, the Red Wings calmly waited out the transitions of Lewis and Joseph, as well as injuries to Steve Yzerman and Jiri Fischer. Now, Lewis has the complete confidence of the team, Joseph seems to have found a groove, and Yzerman and Fischer are working their way back to playoff health. That's one reason the Red Wings have been able to take 27 of the last 30 points and come storming up on the Stars and Canucks for first place in the Western Conference. Detroit can make a huge statement this weekend when it plays host to Colorado on Saturday and Ottawa on Sunday. If the Red Wings win both, the West will once again have to be wary. Yes, there are still questions about whether Yzerman or Fischer or Chris Chelios will be healthy. Yes, there are still questions about whether Joseph can handle the pressure. Yes, there is still the lingering question of whether or not the team will be able to sign Sergei Fedorov before July 1. Yet nobody seems worried. The team has a way of making things work out. Consider this: Before last August, the Red Wings didn't have Brett Hull and didn't know what to expect from Datsyuk or Zetterberg. Now those three make up Detroit's best line. That's the way it is in the self-proclaimed burg of Hockeytown. Things have a way of working out.
Escape from Chitown "I wish them all the best, but I'm pretty happy where I am," he said after a trade to the Mighty Ducks. Thomas said the Blackhawks' inner problems created an environment that made it tough to concentrate on winning. "It's just one of those stretches where you can't get over that hump," Thomas told the Daily Herald. "Whenever something happens, it's usually negative. When I was there, I didn't know what to do either. Everything was said. It was just a matter of trying to build a wall separating yourself from the bad and going on from the good. We couldn't find the bricks to build that wall."
Cure-all from Carolina? OK, so there's no catchy way to highlight Bates Battaglia's new line, but that doesn't mean it won't be better than the BBC line he played on in Carolina. Put on a line with Joe Sakic and Steve Reinprecht, Battaglia watched Sakic put on a clinic Thursday, scoring three goals in a 5-1 win over Columbus. Battaglia had an assist and was plus-3, but more importantly, he gives Sakic a linemate who isn't named Hejduk, Tanguay or Forsberg. If the BSR line can keep humming, then Colorado doesn't have to disrupt what has been the hottest line in hockey. "It's only one game, but it's going to be great," Sakic said of his new linemates. "The three of us will cycle the puck."
Depth chart
Mike Heika of the Dallas Morning News is a regular contributor to ESPN.com. |
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