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Ice Chips: Heart-Shaped Bruise Edition

February 15, 2008 | By Steven Ovadia | comment on this post
Dan Cleary will be out for the next couple of months.
Fantasy owners will be without Dan Cleary for the next few weeks as he eats his meals through a straw.

Yesterday may have been Valentine’s Day, but there’s not a lot of hugs and kisses being given around the league this time of year. In fact, as the race to grab a playoff spot intensifies, players get downright mean with each other.

Over in Edmonton, Sheldon Souray, the offensive defenseman who’s struggled with his offense, is out for the season following arthroscopic surgery on his shoulder. If you still had Souray on your roster, thinking he was ready to build on his three goals and seven assists, now is the time to admit to yourself that he wasn’t the best choice you ever made.

Over in Detroit, Dan Cleary is out six-to-eight weeks with a broken jaw. His 20 goals and 20 assists were a quiet, steady support for many fantasy rosters. And how can you not love the symmetry of his stats?

Detroit has other problems, too. Goalie Dominik Hasek is temporarily on the shelf with hip flexor pain. He isn’t expected to be out for very long, but unless these types of injuries have a chance to fully heal, they often come back, haunting a goalie like an angry ex-girlfriend. In the meantime, Chris Osgood, Hasek’s other, if not better, half, should see the bulk of the goaltending action.

Hasek isn’t the only goalie feeling some pain. Blackhawks goalie Nikolai Khabibulin is expected to be out up to six weeks with a sprained knee. He hurt it Friday night against the Wild. Not only is it sad for Khabibulin, it’s sad for fantasy owners who were counting on Chicago moving him to a more competitive team. Imagine what his .902 save percentage and 2.74 goals against average would look like behind a defensively experienced team.

Of course, not all NHL news was bad news this week. There were actually some incidents that didn’t involve injuries. For instance, you might have heard Ottawa traded forward Patrick Eaves and defenseman Joe Corvo to Carolina for forward Cory Stillman and defenseman Mike Commodore. In terms of the forwards, Carolina gives up a 21-goal, 26-assist winger for a four-goal, six-assist one. In terms of the blueliners, Carolina gets a six-goal, 22-point defenseman and surrenders a solid, stay-at-home defender, who’s not going to put up a lot of points.

Stillman will probably spend some time bouncing around Ottawa’s top line as coach John Paddock looks to get scoring out of at least one of his now bottom three lines. Carolina might regret trading Stillman now that leading scorer Rod Brind’Amour is out for the season with a torn knee ligament.

The Week Ahead

  • Friday, the Stars take on the Ducks. Stars’ fans love to ask if their team has what it takes to beat the Ducks. Unless the Stars make some dramatic moves before Friday, I’m going to go ahead and guess the Stars don’t have what it takes.
  • Sunday, the Sharks take on the Rangers, leaving fans to wonder how the NHL could have ever thought it was a good idea for East/West matchups like this to occur only once every three years.
  • Monday, the Wings take on the Avalanche. How serious is this rivalry? Peter Forsberg, a former Av, told the Wings he wouldn’t sign with them because it would be like a Blood joining the Crips. I might be paraphrasing a bit.

The Hockey Blog

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