NHL Stanley Cup Playoff podcast with Matt Harrington: Vegas-San Jose match on hold feels like a vacation; waiting for completion of five playoff series

@SanJoseSharks photo: San Jose Sharks Eric Fehr speaks with the media after the morning skate on Fri Apr 20th at SAP Center in preparation of the second round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs against the Vegas Golden Knights. The Knights have the home ice through the second round.

NHL Stanley Cup Playoff podcast with Matt Harrington:

#1 The San Jose Sharks and Vegas Golden Knights are awaiting the completion of the first round teams as five series four in the Eastern Conference and one in the Western Conference are still going as of Saturday morning. The Knights and Sharks had swept each of their series.

#2 Nashville and Colorado their series is still alive with Nashville still in the lead at 3-2. Colorado got a huge win on Friday edging out the Predators 2-1 to stay alive in the series

#3 Tampa Bay looks like they have a pretty good grip in their series with New Jersey up 3-1. They face off against each other today in Tampa Bay for game five and the Lighting could very well put it away today.

#4 The Boston Bruins a team your all too familiar with has a shot at finishing their first round of the playoffs they face off against the Toronto Maple Leafs. The Bruins up 3-1.

#5 Washington and the Columbus Blue Jackets are all knotted up 2-2 and looking at the scores in this series three of the four games had a one goal difference.

#6 The Pittsburgh Penguins and the Philadelphia Flyers have been going back and forth in this series with the Pens winning game one, Flyers win game two, Pens win games three and four and the Flyers keeping alive with a win in game five.

Matt Harrington does the NHL Stanley Cup Playoff podcast each Saturday for http://www.sportsradioservice.com

 

NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs podcast with Joe Lami: Bruins go up 3-1 with win over Leafs; Caps tie series with CBJs; Who will be the favorite between Vegas and San Jose?

Photo credit: @NHLBruins

On the NHL podcast with Joe:

#1 The Boston Bruins go up three games to one over the Toronto Maple Leages with a 3-1 win Thursday night at Air Canada Centre in Toronto. The Bruins goals were scored by Jake DeBrusk, Tony Krug, Brad Machand

#2 Washington and Columbus series is tied at two as the Caps got a convincing win past the CBJs 4-1 Thursday night. The Caps got goals from Evgeny Kurznetsov, Alex Ovechkin, Tom Wilson, and TJ Oshie.

#3 The Western Conference playoff matchup says Minnesota is at Winnipeg for Game 5 as the Jets have a 3-1 lead over the Wild.

#4 The Nashville Predators lead the Colorado Avalanche 3-1 in their series’ Game 5 is tonight in Nashville. The Predators could advance tonight.

#5 The San Jose Sharks and Las Vegas Golden Knights are both coming off sweeps and face each other once the NHL first round games are decided. Joe tells who he likes in this match.

Joe Lami does the NHL Stanley Cup Playoff podcast each Friday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

 

Headline Sports with Tony Renteria: Popovich in mourning over wife’s death will miss tonight’s game against Golden State; How tragedy will effect Spurs; plus more sports headlines

On the Sports Headlines podcast with Tony:’

#1 San Antonio Spurs head coach Gregg Popovich’s wife Erin 67 had passed away on Wednesday. Popovich will not be coaching tonight’s game in San Antonio. Assistant coach Ettore Messina is scheduled to coach tonight’s game three for San Antonio. Popovich and the Spurs were headed to San Antonio to prepare to face the Golden State Warriors down in the first round of the playoffs 2-0. Popovich had been married to Erin for over four decades. Spurs and Warriors front office, coaches, players and fans all feel his pain. The Warriors Kevin Durant said, “The whole NBA family is supporting him, got his back through it all,” Durant said. “Feel so bad for Pop.”

#2 During Game 2 on Monday night Kevin Durant and Klay Thompson for Golden State have been the Warriors’ one-two punch with Durant scoring 32 and Thompson 31 to lead the Warriors to their second win in the series.

#3 Cleveland Cavaliers star LeBron James was a real show stopper with 46 points and 12 rebounds as the Cavs defeated the Indiana Pacers 100-97. The Cavs, who lost Game 1 of the series, felt the pressure of getting the win after the Pacers pretty much controlled the first game and LeBron got fired up and carried most of the load.

#4 If the Oakland A’s can’t get a new stadium built in at either Howard Terminal or the Coliseum, would the A’s consider selling to Portland? A Portland group is interested in buying the A’s.

Tony Renteria does the Sports Headlines each Thursday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

 

All Grown Up from 2014: Sharks far more business-like, focused in Game 4–up 3-0–this time

By Morris Phillips

SAN JOSE–On the April 2014 night that the Sharks were supposed to send their old nemesis from La La land packing, a substantial project that was accomplished in 2011, but didn’t get finished in 2013–when the Kings escaped in Game 7 of the conference-semis–they were all over the place, hardly focused enough for the task at hand.

Most obviously, Antti Niemi’s goaltending wasn’t where it needed to be. Even as the Sharks raced to three wins in the first three games of the series, Coach Todd McLellan’s chirping about the goaltending could be heard loud and clear. But he wasn’t all that happy with his team’s penalty killing and physicality either.

Team leaders Joe Thornton and Patrick Marleau butted heads with their coach frequently in then his sixth year of seven coaching the team, and they weren’t helping their individual causes by tearing up the Kings. While Thornton and Marleau weren’t no shows, both were on the ice too frequently for too many of the opponent’s goals in that series.

Dan Boyle was well on his way to a contentious, undignified end to his San Jose career. Younger stars Joe Pavelski and Logan Couture were in the midst of breakout years. Who’s team was it that season? With the new wave ascending, and the old guard aging, it was often hard to tell.

In Game 4 at Staples Center, the Sharks committed four of their whopping 10 penalties in the first period. But they survived, tied 1-1. But in the second, a couple more trips to the penalty box ignited the Kings who scored three goals, and then a fourth just 34 seconds into the final period. Down 5-2, McLellan pulled Niemi, and both teams tried to send messages with a couple of well-intentioned fights. The Sharks were still in control, up 3-1, but the Kings were well on their way to getting back into the series.

We all know what transpired next.  The Sharks shriveled, got shut out in Game 5, then scored just one goal each in Games 6 and 7. Jonathan Quick took over the series, and the Kings became just the fourth team in league history to brush aside a 3-0 deficit.

“When I look at it, I look at it as they fixed their problems, we didn’t,” McLellan admitted. “Our problems got progressively worse as we went along,”

Only six Sharks remain from Game 4 of that series four years ago. A seventh, Thornton, is injured, didn’t face the Ducks, and isn’t expected back for the start of the series to come with the Vegas Golden Knights. Couture, Pavelski, Thomas Hertl, Justin Braun, Marc-Edouard Vlasic and Brent Burns all have that 2014 series in their memory banks, and that seemed to fuel them on Wednesday. Pavelski took the lead, and put the mindset into words.

“The biggest lesson you can learn in the playoffs: the commitment level and what you have to sacrifice. Whether you win or lose, it has to be there on a nightly basis to give yourself the best chance,” Pavelski said.

“We asked them to come into this series and play with composure,” Coach Peter DeBoer said. “We knew what we were going to get, they were going to try to push us out of the series physically. We stood in there and did it without taking penalties and with discipline.”

In winning 2-1 to wrap up the series, and earn at least a week of recuperation and time to prepare for the Knights, the Sharks showed how they’re in a much better place.

Martin Jones, ironically the backup goaltender for the Kings four years ago, is standing on his ear.  Not only did he rack up the saves versus Anaheim, he came up with the biggest when the momentum could have shifted. On Wednesday, he came up big at the end of the second period, and then again, early in the third.  Jones had 30 saves in all.

The Ducks managed just four goals in the series, further illustrating Jones’ dominance.

Hertl came up with the game-winning goal–on an assist from Vlasic–less than 90 seconds after the Ducks broke through to tie it.  The goal helped illustrate how the Sharks are getting contributions from four lines, which DeBoer highlighted after the game.

Evander Kane is playing his part as the high-profile, late season acquisition. Pavelski and Couture are the leaders on and off the ice, and DeBoer isn’t a wearing voice.

In fact, he’s an occasionally funny voice.

“I know we’re going to be heavy, heavy underdogs (against the Pacific Division champion Knights). So hopefully, you guys will write that , and we’ll go from there,” he said.

 

Sharks Sweep Ducks With 2-1 Win, Golden Knights Await in Round Two

Photo credit: @sliccardo

By Jerry Feitelberg

SAN JOSE — The San Jose Sharks swept the Anaheim Ducks, winning 2-1 Wednesday night to advance to the second round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs. Team Teal draws the Pacific Division champions, the expansion Vegas Golden Knights, who capped a shocking regular season run with a sweep of the Los Angeles Kings to open their first postseason foray.

Tomas Hertl responded to an Anaheim third period goal with the game-winner just 1:16 later. Marcus Sorensen also scored his third goal of the playoffs for San Jose. Premature Conn Smythe candidate Martin Jones made 30 saves for his 19th career playoff win, allowing four goals over the four-game masterpiece.

Jones needed to be stingy, thanks to four Anaheim power plays but the North Vancouver native was locked in. The lone blemish on the netminder’s ledger came 7:53 into the final period as a result of lax defense.

Brent Burns failed to stop a zone entry from the Ducks that saw the Puck skitter down the boards into the corner to Jones’ left. Ryan Kesler dug the Puck free, catching Burns sagged too far off to prevent a centering pass from behind the net. Kesler connected with Andrew Cogliano just a few feet out in the slot for a jam shot past Jones.

Hertl responded, stymieing a momentum shift before it could take hold. His shot through traffic beat netminder John Gibson to give the Sharks a 2-1 lead with just under 11 minutes left.

The final moments of play proved tense, with the Sharks producing a number of near-misses with Gibson pulled for the extra attacker. Ultimately though, San Jose bled the clock out to wrap up a date with Vegas.

Coach Peter DeBoer’s Sharks weren’t expected to handily dispatch the Ducks after stumbling out of home ice in the first round with a 1-4-1 record over the final six games of the first round. The strengths that made the Sharks look a near-lock to host in the first round in Mid-March were on display throughout the first series of the playoffs, chiefly good goaltending and scoring depth.

Look no further than the Sharks first scorer Wednesday day. Marcus Sorensen appeared in just 32 games with the Sharks, scoring seven points. In the Stanley Cup Playoffs, he’s a point-per-game player. The winger scored his third goal of the series 5:43 into the game, given San Jose its eighth point from the fourth line alone this series. Joe Pavelski, Evander Kane, Tomas Hertl and Logan Couture also are all on a point-per-game or better run.

The Sharks will need all the team speed and scoring depth they can muster against a stingy Golden Knights team. Vegas allowed just three goals in its dismissal of the Kings, with Marc-Andre Fleury collecting a pair of shutouts to add to his already polished postseason resume. Both teams will be well rested as both teams need to wait for the other six series to wrap up before beginning play.

NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs/San Jose Sharks podcast with Mary Lisa Walsh: Sharks ready to put the finishing touches on Anaheim; Teams face off tonight at SAP for Game 4

Photo credit: @SanJoseSharks

On the Sharks podcast with Mary Lisa:

#1 The Sharks are on the brink of advancing to the second round. All they need is Game 4 to advance and sweep the Ducks.

#2 Was it that easy for the Sharks to win the first three games in Game 3? It wasn’t even a contest with a 8-1 win.

#3 You can pick anyone of the Sharks who could be the number one star. It seems like a total team effort for them to go up 3-0.

#4 The Ducks stars, in particular Richard Rakell, whose the Ducks’ leading scorer has pretty much been mesmerized by the Sharks’ optical illusion of defense.

#5 So here it is Game 4 tonight at SAP and this could be the Sharks chance to advance to the next round. Mary Lisa tells us how they will do.

Mary Lisa is a beat writer for the San Jose Sharks and does the Sharks podcasts each Wednesday for http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Sharks Shell Ducks 8-1, Look to Sweep Anaheim

nhl.com photo: The San Jose Sharks left winger Marcus Sorenson (20) gets hugged up from teammates center Eric Fehr (16) and center Melker Karlsson (68) as Sorenson scored against the Anaheim Ducks at SAP Center on Monday night in game three

By Matthew Harrington

SAN JOSE–The San Jose Sharks have been the faster, stronger, more composed team through three games of the opening round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs, and now they sit just one game away from a sweep of the Anaheim Ducks. San Jose dominated Anaheim 8-1 to win their first home game of the playoffs and put their SoCal rivals on the brink of elimination while setting a franchise record in goals scored in a playoff contest.

Eight different players scored for the Sharks and Martin Jones made and astounding 45 saves in the throttling of the Anaheim Ducks. San Jose used its speed to keep the Ducks on their heels, scoring four of their goals on rushes. Likewise, four goals were scored by San Jose’s power play unit, a group that went four for seven as a whole against an undisciplined Anaheim squad.

Logan Couture opened the scoring 3:44 into the first period after Mikkel Boedker skated the puck up the ice to Gibson’s left. The Dane drew the Ducks defenders to him, allowing for a pass across the crease to Couture. Couture buried the one-timer for his second goal of the series.

Rickard Rakell, the Ducks leading scoring in the regular season, finally found his way onto the score sheet with 6:20 left in the first period to tie the game on the power play.
San Jose ripped off four consecutive goals in the middle frame for the decisive edge. Evander Kane and Joonas Donskoi played give-and-go against the Ducks, with Donskoi finishing off the play to Gibson’s left 1:15 into the frame for his first of the series. Marcus Sorensen scored in a near-mirror image of Couture’s game for a goal and Evander Kane’s first career playoff goal in game 1, outwaiting an impatient Gibson before pulling the puck to the backhand in the crease for a 3-1 lead 3:41 into the second. Sorensen now has two goals in the series.

Eric Fehr scored his first Sharks playoff goal with 6:17 left in the second period after the Ducks took a lax approach to him on the rush. Fehr worked from the left wall in, firing a puck between Francois Beauchemin’s legs and under Gibson’s armpit for a 4-1 lead.

The Ducks showed their identity following the Sharks fourth goal, completing falling apart and trying to initiate extracurriculars following the whistle on a frozen puck by Jones. The Sharks drew a power play out of it, then went up a man after Beauchemin slashed Tomas Hertl on the man-advantage. The Sharks converted up a man, with Hertl beating Gibson for his second goal of the postseason.

San Jose lit the lamp three times in the final frame, with all goals in the final stanza coming on the power play. Joe Pavelski scored his first of the playoffs, Evander Kane kicked the extra point for his third goal in as many career playoff games and 21 year-old Timo Meier scored his first career Stanley Cup playoff goal. Anaheim committed a total of six penalties for 20 minutes in the final 20 minutes.

‘San Jose has a chance to eliminate the Ducks in game four of the series at the SAP Center Wednesday night. Other than Joe Thornton, the team enters the game relatively healthy after escaping Monday night unscathed. They’ll look to continue to receive strong play from netminder Jones who is 3-0 with a .970 save percentage this postseason and just locked down his 18th playoff victory.

NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs/San Jose Sharks podcast with Len Shapiro: Sharks roll into the tank with lots of momentum; Could this kettle of fish sweep the Ducks?

@ SanJoseSharks photo: Jubilant even in practice the San Jose Sharks celebrate a practice goal at Sharks Ice in San Jose on Monday morning

On the Sharks podcast with Len:

#1 Can the San Jose Sharks win tonight pushing the visiting Anaheim Ducks to the brink of being swept out of the first round of the NHL Stanley Cup playoffs?

#2 What attributes to the Sharks success as some of the key elements of getting off to such a great start

#3 The NHL playoffs are always a different season from the regular season. The Sharks who lost five of their last six games of the regular season certainly regrouped at the top of this first round.

#4 The Sharks Evander Kane scored twice during game one has meant so much to this team

Len Shapiro does the Sharks podcasts each Monday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs: Sharks Take 2-0 Series Lead, Beat Ducks 3-2

Photo credit: @SanJoseSharks

By Mary Walsh

The San Jose Sharks took a 2-0 series lead over the Anaheim Ducks in the NHL Playoff quarterfinals with a 3-2 win Saturday. Tomas Hertl, Logan Couture and Marcus Sorensen scored for the Sharks, while Martin Jones made 28 saves. For Anaheim, goals came from Jakob Silfverberg and Hampus Lindholm, with 32 saves from goalie John Gibson. It was the first time that Anaheim lost two home games in a row since November 24.

The Ducks started the scoring just 40 seconds in. Jakob Silfverberg had just carried the puck over the line when he took a long shot that must have surprised Jones, as it went right by him. Hampus Lindholm got an assist.

The first penalties went to Evander Kane and Jakob Silfverberg, matching roughing penalties at 6:12. Each team added a shot to their total but neither team scored four on four.

The Sharks tied the game up at 9:41 when Brenden Dillon’s blue line shot came off the boards behind the net and went right to Marcus Sorensen next to the goal mouth. He tapped it in for his first playoff goal.

Near the 15 minute mark, the Sharks were trapped in their own zone for long time, including two icing calls. Mikkel Boedker finally got the puck out and seconds after the much needed change, Melker Karlsson drew a hooking penalty from Brandon Montour at 13:37.

The Sharks took the lead at 14:41 with a goal from Logan Couture on the ensuing power play. Kevin Labanc caught Couture with a pass across the slot as Couture was skating hard for the net. Couture pulled the puck across the crease and away from Gibson’s poke-check before putting it away with a backhand. Assists went to Labanc and Joe Pavelski.

At the end of the period, the Ducks mustered sustained pressure against the Sharks, almost catching up on the shot clock. That count was 9-8 Sharks after the first.

That late-period pressure from the Ducks did not phase the Sharks as they jumped into the second period. Tomas Hertl scored with a back hand after skating by a couple of Ducks from the blue line to the net. Mikkel Boedker gave him the puck as he came fast through the neutral zone, earning the first assist on the 1:11 goal. Logan Couture got the secondary assist.

Shortly after the goal, Ryan Getzlaf caught a deflected puck to the face. He left the ice only briefly and returned with an ice pack for use between shifts.

Paul Martin was called for slashing at 6:30, giving the Ducks their first 5 on 4 power play of the game. Hampus Lindholm took advantage of Martin Jones being pulled off balance by Brenden Dillon’s skate as Dillon tried to get in front of the net to defend. Jones was helpless to stop the shot. Assists went to Ryan Getzlaf and Ryan Kesler.

The Ducks were back on the power play at 6:12 of the third period after Evander Kane’s clearing attempt went over the glass. The Sharks killed that off and got their own power play at 9:17 after Nick Ritchie tripped Marcus Sorensen in the neutral zone. Despite a number of good chances, the score remained 3-2 Sharks.

At 16:17, Corey Perry hit Melker Karlsson while he did not seem to have the puck, knocking his helmet off and spinning him around. He went to the box for interference. The Ducks started their penalty kill with a short-handed opportunity, but the Sharks pushed back and held the zone after that.

The Ducks pulled John Gibson with under two minutes left but the Sharks held them off for the win.

The Sharks finished with 35 shots on goal to the Ducks’ 30.

Game three will be Monday in San Jose at 7:30 pm PT.

NHL Stanley Cup playoffs/San Jose Sharks podcast with Matt Harrington: Sharks look like a different team at the start of postseason play

@SanJoseSharks photo: Game one stats the power play was in effect for the Sharks at the Honda Center on Thursday night as the Ducks look to even the score and the Sharks hope to take two back to San Jose tonight

On the NHL Stanley Cup/SJ Sharks podcast with Matt:

#1 How different do the Sharks look coming out of the gate during Game 1 of the playoffs in Anaheim as opposed to the way they finished up the regular season?

#2 How much has Evander Kane got this team fired up? He had them fired up when he first got to San Jose and he’s got them fired in his very first career playoff game.

#3 Scoring two goals in a game one on Anaheim ice in a series where the Ducks have home ice, Kane didn’t look intimidated whatsoever.

#4 If San Jose can come away with a win on Saturday night’s game two, do you see them finishing the job in games three and four?

#5 The Sharks really have many weapons on this team besides Kane with Brent Burns, Logan Couture and Joe Pavelski.

Matt Harrington is covering the NHL Stanley Cup playoffs and is the beat writer for the San Jose Sharks listen to his podcasts each Saturday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com