par RedWings » Mer Oct 9, 2013 21:36
Bon les gars en bref, pour moi ce soir c'était Zagreb-8, Partizan-15, Bonn-9, Bayern-7, Brose-22 en plus j'ai combiné Montréal et St louis
Montréal équipe que j'aime peu mais je vais leurs faire confiance ce soir, y jouent chez des voisins Canadiens donc bon aprés y iront boire le sirop d'érable ensemble
Bref Calgary met Joey MacDonald au cage, y s'est pris 4 buts hors prolong sur une 20aine de tirs contre Vancouver, comme absent a déploré j'ai Stajan et d'autre douteux. Bref Montréal rejoue le lendemain en B2B plus compliqué selon moi et les Flames le 12 contre Edmonton at home
Montréal eux titularise Carey Price au cage ce soir, il a recu 23 shoot pour 1 but encaissé seulement
Pas trop le temps de poffiner
Je vous lache un petit article qui peut montrer la motivation de Montréal
Lars Eller and the Montreal Canadiens were feeling good after posting their first victory over the weekend.
The mood could become more somber in Calgary, where they haven't won in almost 12 years.
The Canadiens try to snap a seven-game winless stretch at Scotiabank Saddledome when they begin a four-game road trip against the Flames on Wednesday night.
After suffering a 4-3 season-opening loss to Toronto, Montreal (1-1-0) bounced back Saturday with a 4-1 win over Philadelphia. Eller was one of four players to tally a goal and an assist and Alex Galchenyuk added two helpers.
"I think that's the strength of our team, the depth of our scoring," captain Brian Gionta told the team's official website. "You look up and down the lineup, we have three lines that can score goals and that's a huge key for us."
On the verge of a possible breakout campaign, the 24-year-old Eller has already notched three goals and two assists.
"I got off on the right foot," he said. "The whole line has been playing great. We're creating space for each other. If you create chances, the goals are going to come."
The Canadiens now hit the road, where they went 15-7-2 last season to finish with 32 points, tied for fourth-most in the NHL. Montreal, however, is 0-6-0 with one tie in its last seven road games against the Flames, losing the last six by a combined 24-12 score.
The Canadiens, who have also dropped three straight and six of seven in the series overall, haven't won in Calgary since a 4-2 victory Jan. 5, 2002.
"We've got to focus on Calgary first," defenseman Josh Gorges said. "You can't worry about what the outcome is going to be at the end of four games. It's too far ahead to think that way.
"I think that moving forward on this road trip, we need to keep on building on what we did here and keep getting better."
The Flames (1-0-2) have compiled at least one point in each of their first three contests after falling 5-4 to Vancouver in overtime Sunday. Joey MacDonald stopped just 23 shots for Calgary, which went 0 for 3 on the power play for the second straight game.
The Flames are 1 for 11 on the man advantage and have allowed 12 goals.
"We have some kinks to work out of our system," coach Bob Hartley told the Flames' official website. "We have to learn to kick the other teams rather than kicking ourselves at the wrong time of the game, but if it would be by a lack of commitment or a lack of work, I'd be very worried.
"It's either a lack of experience or right now, a lack of execution and that's my part. I'll take the responsibilities. We need to keep moving forward with those players, keep pushing them, keep motivating them."
Former Flames forward Rene Bourque, who was sent to Montreal in January 2012, will play his 500th career game in his second trip back since the trade.
"I think I was a little nervous last time just because it was my first game against them. I'm pretty relaxed coming back here now," he said. "It's nothing like it was the first game back."
Montreal's Carey Price, who made 22 saves Saturday, has compiled a 4.37 goals-against average in losing each of his three starts against Calgary.
Canadiens left wing Max Pacioretty is likely to return after sitting out against the Flyers with an arm injury.
Concernant mon autre match j'ai pris St louis équipe qui m'a très souvent réussis notamment à domicile où ils sont très bon, ils sortent d'une win 4-2 et 7-0 et les hawks d'une défaite surprenante face a une equipe modeste de TB
Alors que Halak est déja confirmé dans les cages des Blues, Crawford toujours incertain coté Hawks + 2 OUT
De plus les Blues se sont fait sortir l'année derniere par cette meme equipe de Chicago je m'attend donc à un certain orgueil de vengeance
Un petit article si vous avez le temps
The St. Louis Blues have done their best in past meetings to counter Chicago's explosive offense with a physical brand of hockey, and that likely won't change when they host the Blackhawks on Wednesday night.
St. Louis, though, has proved through its first two contests that it can light up the scoreboard as well.
A popular pick to win the first Stanley Cup in franchise history, the Blues (2-0-0) are on the verge of winning their first three games for the first time since 1993 while scoring goals in bunches.
They netted the game's first three goals within 10 minutes in a 4-2 win over Nashville on Thursday before scoring four in the second period of Saturday's 7-0 win over Florida.
Brenden Morrow and Derek Roy, signed in the offseason to help upgrade an offense that finished near the middle of the league in scoring last season, each scored Saturday, while Jaroslav Halak recorded his franchise-record 17th shutout with 19 saves.
"We knew all along that we probably don't have that superstar talent, but we're a grinding team that's solid throughout,'' said Morrow, whose goal was the 250th of his career. "Anyone can be the hero any given night.''
Jaden Schwartz added a goal and two assists, and he scored twice as the Blues won the most recent meeting with Chicago 3-1 on April 27 in another physical battle between the teams that has become the norm in recent years.
The Blackhawks mostly have withstood those tests, having won five of the last seven matchups overall, and Patrick Kane said the defending Stanley Cup champions know what to expect Wednesday.
"We know they're going to try and bring that physical element to the game," Kane said. "That's fine with us, we'll play that way and try to capitalize on power plays and scoring chances, whatever it may be."
Those battles have added intensity to a rivalry sure to pick up even more steam now that Chicago's historic rival, Detroit, is playing in the Eastern Conference.
"We feel they're our new rivalry now with Detroit leaving the division," forward Bryan Bickell said. "It's going to be a like a playoff atmosphere for sure because they're physical and a hard team to play against in their building."
The league's realignment has put more emphasis on divisional play, and the Blackhawks and Blues are expected to battle for the top spot in the revamped Central.
"You're looking at St. Louis thinking this could be a very important game the way things set up over the course of the season," coach Joel Quenneville said. "I'm sure they're excited about playing us as well."
Chicago (1-0-1) will be looking to bounce back after falling 3-2 in a shootout to Tampa Bay on Saturday despite outshooting the Lightning 39-16 and not allowing a shot on goal in the first period.
Kane and Brandon Saad each scored their second goal of the season.
"It was pretty near a perfect game for us,'' said goaltender Corey Crawford, who made 14 saves. "I had to find a way to come up with one save at the end to shut it down, and I didn't.''
Crawford is 6-0-1 with a 1.44 goals-against average in his last six appearances against the Blues, while Halak is 3-1-3 with a 2.08 GAA in seven career starts against Chicago.
En bref St louis & Montréal pour moi GL