Weird. He got off the ice on his own. Knee related?
I was hoping by how fine he looked coming off and walking down the tunnel that it wasn't serious or lower body...
Weird. He got off the ice on his own. Knee related?
Is it the annual groin injury for Bob?
Dang it. Dang it....dang it!!
Currency means nothin' if you still ain't free.
Hopefully Clarkson can play without nagging injuries from this point on. Something that the team is missing now is conquering physical presence and there is only one battering ram that can take over whole games that way. Upgrade over Lucic.
Lucic is on second line with Carter and Toffoli... He has 10 goals and 18 points this season. Clarkson is an upgrade over Lucic? Surely you're being sarcastic (I hope).
Like I said, im holding judgement on clarkson until he gets some real time under Torts.
About time for the afternoon update on Bob, no? Sheesh, the wait in agony.. :
Blue Jackets players had homework to do on the long flight Wednesday from Columbus to Winnipeg, Manitoba.
Among many barks and shouts during practice, Blue Jackets coach John Tortorella — still seething over a 3-2 overtime loss to Los Angeles on Tuesday — told his players to write down their answer to a simple question:
Why?
Tortorella, less than two months on the job, has been confounded by this team’s sporadic highs and stunning lows.
Why can’t the Blue Jackets bottle Saturday’s performance at Philadelphia, a 4-1 win?
Why do the Blue Jackets turn in such listless performances as the home losses on Friday to Florida and Tuesday to Los Angeles?
Why does it so often look like the players don’t care?
Why does a team up against the NHL’s salary cap sit near the bottom of the NHL standings?
“We certainly are searching for information,” Tortorella said. “It’s still a work in progress as far as understanding what it is to play as a team, what it is to be a good teammate. It’s a work in progress.”
Tortorella delivered the homework assignment, players said, at the end of a practice in which he shouted often about their pace and attention to detail.
General manager Jarmo Kekalainen said his club’s wild inconsistencies are an issue that management has been trying to figure out “every day for a while now.”
“We see the glimpses of good and then we see the bad,” Kekalainen said. “Every day we’re trying to figure out why we can’t play on a consistently high level.
“Here’s a team (Los Angeles) that we outplayed in LA and won the game (3-2 on Nov. 5). And (Tuesday) wasn’t even a contest. I can’t honestly say that we deserved even one point out of that game.”
Winner, Winner, Chicken Dinner....Hmm. Maybe these guys aren't as close knit as once believed.
Winner, Winner, Chicken Dinner....
I predict you'll find naming Foligno as captain split the room.
No way Brandon Saad envisioned this when he signed a long-term contract with the Blue Jackets after his trade from the Chicago Blackhawks in June.
Saad won two Stanley Cups in three seasons with the Blackhawks. Now he’s on a Blue Jackets’ club that has -- once again -- played its way out of the playoff picture before the first measurable snowfall in central Ohio.
“Nah, no regrets,” Saad told The Dispatch earlier this week. “I've never been through this ... anything like this. Right from the start of the season. It’s been a tough season in here so far for everybody, but it’s a learning curve.
“A lot of players go through this at some point during their careers. You can learn from it. You know there are going to rough patches in your career if you play the game long enough. I’m trying to learn from it, get better and help us get out of it.”
The Blue Jackets (11-17-2) have lost five of their last six games, including a 6-4 loss in Winnipeg on Thursday. Thursday’s loss put the Jackets in last place in the NHL heading into tonight’s game vs. the New York Islanders in Nationwide Arena.
A little perspective: The Blackhawks didn’t suffer their 17th regulation loss last season until Jan. 31. One year earlier, the Blackhawks didn't lose No. 17 until March 27. In 2012-13, the 48-game season when Saad was a rookie, they lost seven times in regulation the whole campaign.
Asked if something was missing in the Blue Jackets' dressing room -- could he feel a big difference from the room in Chicago? -- Saad gave a honest, reasoned answer.
“The whole (Blackhawks’) dressing room – not just (captain Jonathan Toews) – is so experienced,” Saad said. “They’ve seen it all, and they do the right things every day. It’s almost a self-sustaining room because of all those guys, and Tazer is a huge example for everybody.”
On a personal level, Saad – mostly a top-six fixture in Chicago in the previous two seasons with the Blackhawks – has played on all four lines in Columbus, including a recent spell on the fourth line. In a few games, he’s been off the power play unit, too.
“It’s tough,” Saad said. “(The losing) … it’s still new to me.
“We have to stay positive and we have to keep working. We have to bring it every night and start closing off games. We’ve let some games and points slip away lately, and that’s so frustrating.”
Thursday’s loss put the Jackets in last place in the NHL heading into tonight’s game vs. the New York Islanders in Nationwide Arena.
From above quote
Huh?
Horn Chen, a Chicago businessman who founded the Columbus Chill and helped spark the rebirth of pro and recreation hockey in central Ohio in the early 1990s, died on Monday in Illinois. He was 83.
Chen also was a minority owner of the Blue Jackets.
Check updated NHL standings we are in last place (points). Not sure PPG or games in hand but in points we're in our usual spot at this time of the year.