Tag Archives: #arronasham

Game 36; The Battle of New York continues tonight!

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New York Islanders (9-19-7) @ New York Rangers (16-17-2)

The Rangers will host the New York Islanders tonight at Madison Square Garden – and they don’t wanna lose this one. The Islanders are 4-13-0 on the road this year and they have won only 2 games out of their last 14. The fact is that the rivalry matches aren’t like normal ones – the worst team in the league can easily beat their biggest rival. The Rangers are coming off from shootout loss against the Pittsburgh Penguins and they wanna end their 9-game home stand with a few W’s. After tonight’s game, the Rangers will host the Minnesota Wild on Sunday night and the Toronto Maple Leafs on Monday night.

NYI:

The last year was like a miracle for the Islanders. They made the playoffs, first time since 2007, and they played very well against the Pittsburgh Penguins. It seemed that the long dark time on Long Island was about to become to it’s end – unfortunately it isn’t. The Isles have won only 9 games this year (worst in the league) and they have been absolutely terrible on the road. Evgeni Nabokov and Kevin Poulin have both played in 16 games this year but they don’t have a clear number one goalie. John Tavares is a great hockey player but he can’t do everything on his own and that’s the biggest problem for the Islanders.

NYR:

This team has heart and they have showed that in the last two games. The biggest question is, can they play for 60 minutes every night? For now, they have started playing in the 3rd period, scored a couple big goals but got upset in the shootout. The Rangers sent Arron Asham and Dylan McIlrath back to Hartford and they called up JT Miller. Henrik Lundqvist will continue in the net as he gets his 8th consecutive start. Miller, who scored his first two NHL goals against the Isles, will skate with Brad Richards and Benoit Pouliot.

The Rangers will have two more games before the Christmas break and they desperately need the points to the standings. Like many players have said, .500% hockey just isn’t enough. They gotta find a way to get more wins – and more points.

Let’s Go Rangers!

Follow me on Twitter; @VilleLampinen

Game 32; Asham returns to the line-up as the #NYR host the Preds!

RichiePreds

Nashville Predators (13-14-3) @ New York Rangers (15-15-1)

After a horrendous performance against the Capitals, the Rangers are back in the action tonight when they host the Nashville Predators at Madison Square Garden. The Rangers have lost the last two games and they desperately need to win this one. Getting just 1 point out of the 4 in back-to-back wasn’t the Rangers only lost. Marc Staal left the game against the Devils and he sat out the next game due to concussion. Staal, who injured his eye during last year, already has had a serious concussion previously so the Rangers really have to be careful with this one. The home stand continues on Thursday night when the Rangers host the Columbus Blue Jackets.

NSH:

The Predators are playing without their best player and you can see that from the standings. Pekka Rinne, who’s close to return, has been one of the best goaltendersa< in the whole league and with no offense, Marek Mazanec and Carter Hutton aren’t top-5 goalies in the league. They got Shea Weber back in the line-up and they could really use some points from him. The Predators are 4-5-1 in their last 10 and 0-4-1 in their last 5. They have scored only 67 goals this year and Weber is their top-scorer with 7 goals. Barry Trotz really hopes that he will get Rinne back in the net and the team starts to win some games – before it’s too late.

NYR:

Another night of sloppy defense, missed scoring chances and frustration. The Rangers weren’t able to beat Philip Grunbauer until a minute left in the third period when Benoit Pouliot finally scored his first goal in the last 14 games. Henrik Lundqvist’s shutout streak against the Caps came to it’s end when Jason Chimera found the loose puck in front of the net and soon after that Steve Oleksy made it 2-0 from the blue line.

Tonight the Rangers wanna get tougher, they wanna skate hard and create quality scoring chances. They sent JT Miller back to the Hartford and recalled forward Arron Asham. Derek Dorsett is ready to go and Dominic Moore will return to the line-up. Benoit Pouliot and Taylor Pyatt will be the healthy-scratches. Henrik Lundqvist will get his 4th consecutive start tonight.

Let’s Go Rangers!

Follow me on Twitter; @VilleLampinen 

Game 6; Time for some Wednesday night rivalry against the Caps!

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New York Rangers (1-4-0) @ Washington Capitals (2-4-0)

The Rangers are back in action tonight when they will visit the DC and the Washington Capitals. Tonight’s game is teams first meeting since the Game 7 of the last years playoffs. At that time the Rangers rallied to 5-0 win and advanced to the 2nd round of the playoffs. But that’s enough with the past – tonight is the only night that matters now. Henrik Lundqvist will have a chance to make it three consecutives shutouts (including Game 6 and 7 of the 2013 playoffs) against the Caps tonight. One thing the Rangers should avoid tonight is the penalties – as they’re facing the best power play of the league. Stay out of the box, use your chances well and hopefully the King will take care of the rest.

WSH:

The years roll and the times they are changing but truth is that if you’re playing against the Caps and you keep Alex Ovetchkin out of the scoreboards – you’ll be fine. They added Mikhail Grabovski during the offseason but lost Mathieu Perreault just a week before the start of the season to the Anaheim Ducks. Braden Holtby is still their number one goaltender even though Michal Neuvirth had a few chances to push him to the back up spot. The Caps defense is still carried by three players; Mike Green, John Carlson and Karl Alzner.

The Caps have started the season a little bit better than the Rangers but they don’t have much to smile about either. They dropped their season opener to the Blackhawks 6-4 but beat the Flames in their second game. After that they lost three in-a-row but returned to winning on Monday night when they beat the Oilers 4-2.

NYR:

The Rangers returned to the East Coast and hopefully they left losing also behind them. After the game against the Blues, the Rangers put G Martin Biron and F Arron Asham to waiwers and called-up F JT Miller and G Cam Talbot from the Hartford. Both, Biron and Asham, cleared the waiwers but Biron told that he will take a few days to think about the situation (retirement?). Rick Nash was put in IR and Michael Del Zotto has a flu (didn’t travel to the DC with the team), so Justin Falk will presumably be in the tonight’s line-up.

Henrik Lundqvist almost single-handedly beat the Caps last year and he will be between the pipes tonight. The Rangers defense has been bad but Hank knows he needs to be better and if you know him – he will be. The team now has a chance to show what they got in these following three games. Caps, Devils and Flyers, all winnable games and what matters the most, all of them are rivalries. If Saturday night with Rangers – Devils doesn’t spark the boys, I guess nothing will. Rivalry matches are exactly what this team needs at the moment. A few scraps, big hits and wins over the biggest rivals, bring it on!

Let’s Go Rangers!

Follow me on Twitter; @VilleLampinen

Game 4; Now it’s time to #Believe! The historical comeback starts tonight at the Garden?

BELIEVE

Boston Bruins @ New York Rangers, Game of 4 of the EC Semifinals

Tonight it’s the “do or die” day for the Rangers as they host the Boston Bruins in the Game 4 of the Eastern Conference Semifinals. Only three teams in the NHL history have made a comeback from a 3-0 deficit in the playoffs. The Maple Leafs in 1942, the Islanders 1975 and recently the Philadelphia Flyers – against the Boston Bruins in 2010. Without a doubt a comeback in this series would be a miracle but stranger things have happened, right? It all starts from little things, one shift, one period and one game at the time. You can’t win four games tonight. Cause if you don’t believe then what the hell are you doing?

BOS:

The Bruins were lucky in the last game but they truly deserved it. Johnny Boychuk tied the game in the 3rd period and Daniel Paille got the game winner after a crazy bounce. The Bruins outshooted the Rangers 34-to-24 and most of the time the game was played in the Rangers end. The Bruins defense just keeps scoring and putting up some points. Boychuk’s goal was his 4th of the playoffs. The Bruins did lost a 3-0 lead in the 2010 playoffs but it’s hard to believe that they would do that again this year. Tuukka Rask has been very solid in the net and they have received offense from almost every player in this series.

NYR:

Play one shift and one period at the time, that’s all the Rangers can do right now. Comeback from 3-0 deficit is so uncommon thing that it has happened only three times in the history. What is the good for the Rangers? They have two players in their roster who have done that. Darrol Powe and Arron Asham were part of the 2010 Flyers team. The Rangers need extra effort from every player on the ice. Henrik Lundqvist was brilliant in the Game 3 but he can’t score the goals and with the one goal – it’s tough to win the games.

But if somebody has done it, why can’t we do it. Yes, it’s highly unlikely but is it impossible? No. The human mind is an interesting thing. You usually play your best games under the biggest pressure and that’s what the Rangers have here. Boys, do it!

Key players and stats:

The Rangers power play is now 2-for-38 in the playoffs. You wanna believe that your big players will step up tonight. Nash, Callahan, Stepan… Richards? Henrik Lundqvist will give them a chance to win. Anton Stralman is questionable and probably will be a game time decision. Can Marc Staal or Darrol Powe return to the line-up tonight? That’s a question we don’t have answer yet. For the Rangers the thing is simple. Leave everything on the ice tonight. If you win, that’s great and you have another chance to continue the historical comeback. If you lose you know that you did everything for it. Can’t ask anything more.

For the Bruins, you don’t have to play like it’s your last game. And that can be a good or a bad thing for the team. Old saying goes that the elimination game is always the most difficult one. But they have a good group and most of all they believe in themselves. Nevertheless about that, are you ready to #BeatTheBruins!?!

Let’s Go Rangers!

Follow me on Twitter; @VilleLampinen

#BELIEVE!

Game 1; We’re shipping up to Boston! 2nd round opens in Boston!

STEPAN

New York Rangers @ Boston Bruins, Game 1 of the EC Semifinals

After a tremendous 5-0 win in the Game 7 against the Washington Capitals, the Rangers are back in business tonight when they open up their 2nd round series against the Boston Bruins at TD Garden. This is the first time since 1973 when the Rangers and the Bruins meet in the post-season. After couple of days off, the both teams are ready to start the series. Lundqvist vs. Rask, Nash and Callahan vs. Seguin and Marchand, you name it. This series will feature hard hitting, excellent goaltending and probably a low scoring games. Are you ready New York?

BOS:

The Bruins were 0:50 seconds away from loss in the Game 7 against the Maple Leafs on Monday night. They didn’t lost that game. Patrice Bergeron tied the game and eventually got the game winning goal in the overtime. The Bruins are a tough team. The guys like Brad Marchand and Milan Lucic will drive you crazy – if you let them. Zdeno Chara is backbone of their defence but they’re battling with some serious injuries in the defence. Andrew Ference is out with Dennis Seidenberg. Douggie Hamilton and Matt Bartkowski are young defence mans and now they will have a chance to show what they can do in the playoffs.

NYR:

Henrik Lundqvist got back to back shutouts in the Game 6 and the 7 against the Caps. If you need to describe his performance in this series; Incredible! And like in the last minute, the Rangers found their offense and they got it from every line. Especially in the Game 7, the line-up looked very balanced and solid. Derick Brassard got 9 points in the 7 games against the Caps and he leads the Rangers in the points. As weird as it sounds, Arron Asham scored more goals than Brad Richards and Rick Nash combined in the series. But as long as your teams scorers – it doesn’t matter who scores!

Checking-line; Pyatt-Boyle-Dorsett is working very well and even the 4th line with Kreider-Richards-Asham is creating scoring chances (and is scoring goals!). The Rangers need to stay patient, play discipline and use their scoring chances well.

Key players and stats:

Henrik Lundqvist is 21-7-2 with 1.67 GAA and .943 save% in his career against the Bruins. Truth is that the Rangers need to get Nash, Callahan and Richards going in this series. They have received a huge offensive boost from Derick Brassard and Mats Zuccarello but they need strong effort from everybody else. Taylor Pyatt and Arron Asham really made a difference in the series against the Caps and if they can continue doing that, the Rangers will be fine. For the Bruins, you always wanna talk about Zdeno Chara. Slovakian giant played over 29 minutes in the Game 7 against the Maple Leafs and with injuries to Dennis Seidenberg and Andrew Ference, he needs to do that every night. Milan Lucic and Brad Marchand will do the dirty work but they’re also scoring goals. Tuukka Rask is very good young Finnish goaltender and he will give the Bruins a chance to win every game.

Let’s GO RANGERS!

#BELIEVE

Follow me on Twitter; @VilleLampinen

Game 4; Do you Believe? Rangers trying to even the series at the Garden!

DoYOUBELIEVE

Washington Capitals @ New York Rangers, Game 4 of the EC Quarterfinals

The Rangers are back in action tonight when they host the Washington Capitals in the Game 4 of the series at the Garden. After two losses in DC, the Rangers rallied to 4-3 in the Game 3. They finally found their offense and Henrik Lundqvist guaranteed the win with some big saves. Now they are facing another challenge. Going to DC trailing 3-1 in the series doesn’t sound very good. Win tonight and the series is tied and then it’s best of 3 series. Another playoff night at the Garden !

WSH:

The Rangers finally were able to beat Braden Holtby – actually four times. After allowing just 1 goal in the first two games, Monday wasn’t Holtby’s best. The Caps took 6 penalties and eventually the Rangers made them pay – once. They had three power play chances but they could’t score with man advantage. Two out of three Capitals goals were deflected into the net and the third one was high rising shot by Mike Green who now has 2 goals in the series. The Rangers kept Alex Ovetchkin out of the scoreboard (offset he spent 4 minutes in the box) and also slowed down Mike Ribeiro who had a marvelous chance in the 2nd period but was denied by Lundqvist.

NYR:

Brian Boyle and Arron Asham both scored in the playoff game. Yeah, you read it right. In addition to that, they also got goals from Derick Brassard (PP Goal!) and Derek Stepan. The Caps started the game well and just after 4 minutes, Nicklas Bäckström deflected one past Lundqvist to make it 1-0. After that the Rangers finally got their offense going. Boyle beat Holtby on the short side, Brassard got one on the power play, Asham scored after perfect pass by Brassard and Stepan’s GWG was absolute thing of beauty.

Marc Staal returned to the line-up after missing 29 consecutive games due eye injury. He played almost 18 minutes and overall he played a good game. Of course he looked a little bit slow, his timing wasn’t perfect but after a long break that’s understandable. On the other side, the Rangers also received some bad news. Darrol Powe (who suffered a concussion earlier this season) was injured and left the game after being hit by Joel Ward’s elbow. Ryan Clowe skated again this morning and remains to be seen if he plays in the Game 4 with Powe out in the line-up.

Key players and stats:

Believe it or not but Aaron Asham has more playoff goals this year than Ryan Callahan, Rick Nash and Brad Richards combined. As long as the teams wins, nobody cares who scores the goals. (You gotta admit that Asham’s goal celebration was just awesome!) The Rangers only took 3 minor penalties and they didn’t surrended any power play goals. The thing that impresses me most is that this a comeback win. The Caps early lead could have been beginning of the end for the Rangers. But they fought back and rallied to vital win. With 4 goals scored for Holtby and one power play goal, hopefully the Rangers found their confidence. Monday’s win means nothing if we can’t get the same result tonight.

Anyway, I believe.

Let’s GO RANGERS!

Follow me on Twitter; @VilleLampinen

A Tale of Two Units

Tampa Bay Lightning v New York Rangers

“It was the best of times, it was the worst of times…”  Pretty sure we don’t need Charles Dickens to tell the difference between the Rangers penalty kill and power play units.  One ranks at the bottom of the NHL, the other is one of the major reasons the Blueshirts have started playing more consistently.

Let’s talk power play first.  Being a puck addict, I watch as many games as time permits.  Lately, I have been watching the power play of top units, particularly the Pens, Blues and the Bolts.  What popped out at me wasn’t necessarily these teams’ power plays, but how other teams defended it.

Coach Torts’ mentioned after the New Jersey Devils’ loss, “”We have some guys playing tentative…careful…we don’t play careful hockey.”  This is exactly what I witnessed on how teams play the top three power plays in the league.  Tentative.  Teams sit back, guard lanes and don’t press.  They are almost afraid to get up on contact.

Now, watch how teams play the New York Rangers’ power play.  Opponents press, throw bodies, cause errant passes and scoring opportunities.  It is as if the shorthanded team is so NOT concerned with the Rangers scoring with a man advantage, their entire focus is causing an odd man rush up ice for a shorty.  Why?  Tentative.  There’s that word again.  Watching the Rangers power play, how many fans aren’t sitting on the edge of their seats HOPING the other team doesn’t score?  Pretty sure the opposition scouting has the same observation.

So what to do?  Back to the top three teams.  They all do unconventional things down low.  I’ll exemplify the Pens as living in Pittsburgh, I’m forced fed Root homer broadcasts and dole out a generous portion of Sindy love with every puck drop.  No one will ever convince me Bob Errey isn’t wearing #87 underoors under his well-tailored suits.  I digress.  One thing the Pens do is rotate Crosby and Malkin netfront.  Yes, their most effective set up is putting two of their snipers right in front of the net and rotate it from left to right, depending on which side of the ice the puck is cycling.  The free man who is leaving the net front moves behind the net and inverts the point, vintage Wayne Gretzky back in the early Edmonton Oilers days.  The point defenseman then collapses into the slot.  What does the PK do when this happens?  They become TENTATIVE as their assignments have all just scrambled and they can’t press.  They are forced to stay home and try to figure out where the shooting lanes are now as the entire set has now changed.

Since game one, I’ve been hoping to see what kind of opportunities would blow up if Rick Nash took the net front and drifted in and out with Cally in a similar rotation.  Especially with offensive zone control and consistent cycling getting the opposition penalty kill moving, goalie moving and unable to get fresh legs on the ice.  Puck on the net not to score, but to set up a quality scoring opportunity down low or yielding a nice juicy rebound.

I know, I yell “shoot the effing puck” as much as anyone.  Why if I am such a proponent of patience for the quality shot then?  Simple – the Rangers are tentative.  Again, that word.   Not only do they NOT pull the trigger on the shot, they hesitate when cycling as well – that is in the rare event they can get the puck back into the zone after a clear.  The results?  The opposition presses on the penalty kill, turnovers, and on a few shifts, more short-handed scoring opportunities yielded than shots on goal.  That will earn 29th place in the league with a 5/49 earning a 10.2% on the power play.

Now to the best of times: The Penalty Kill.  The addition of Darroll Powe has strengthened the unit as the guy simply hustles all over the zone.  As King Henrik seems to be settling back in to his Vezina form, the last line of defense on the kill just keeps getting better and better.  The shot blocking has returned to Rangers hockey.  Now if the Blueshirts can get that “too many men on the ice” thing worked out, we won’t be as reliant on the PK and can enjoy more of that stretch pass offense that is exciting to watch.

Finally, catching up from the past week, congrats to JT Miller for his first two NHL goals, Gabby for 2 Birthday points and Arron Asham for his first goal as a Ranger. That goal earned AA a pretty cool achievement of scoring a goal for every Atlantic Division team in his 14 seasons.  Speaking of Double A, who doesn’t love that Forth Line of Jeff Halpern, Arron Asham and Darroll Powe?  I’m sure someone wiser, with more wit than I, will come up with a cooler name for them, but I offer up: The Journeymen.

Remember: Hockey Day in America, Sunday, February 17th.

Go Rangers!

2013 Rangers Season Preview

After a 113 day owner imposed lockout, the New York Rangers are itching to get back on the ice to prove last year’s surprise performance that netted them their first 50 win season and first division title in 18 years was not a fluke.  Analysts predicted the 2011-12 Rangers to finish somewhere between the middle of the pack in the Eastern Conference to outside of the top eight after a disappointing exit out of the 2011 playoffs at the hands of Alex Ovechkin and their hated rivals the Washington Capitals.  But from day one of last season, Coach John Tortorella preached hard work and dedication to his defensive system and the results far exceeded anyone’s expectations.  The Rangers shocked us all by not only winning the Atlantic Division but coming within one point of winning the President’s Trophy. And in the playoffs the club won two playoff rounds in the same postseason for the first time in 15 years.

Simply put, the 2012-13 Rangers will not be able to sneak up on anybody.  They made headlines last April and May by winning two gritty seven game series against the Ottawa Senators and the Washington Capitals before succumbing to their cross river rivals, the New Jersey Devils, in another hard fought six games.  The Rangers seemed to run out of gas by the end of the Devils series but it was not in the Rangers nature to use fatigue as an excuse.  Coach Tortorella refused to believe that the loss to the Devils was due to his players being beaten and sometimes broken over the 20 games that they played in the playoffs.  But it was hard to believe that the Rangers were not affected by the fact that they had gone the max in the first two rounds in two very tough series.  A playoff record of 10-10 left the entire organization wanting for more in 2013.

The Rangers continued to make headlines in the offseason as Henrik Lundqvist won the Vezina Trophy, awarded to the league’s best goaltender.  He was the first Ranger to win the award since John Vanbiesbrouck won it in 1985-86.  Lundqvist’s career best 39 wins were second most in Rangers history to Mike Richter’s 42.  King Henrik was also nominated for the Hart Trophy and the Lester B. Pearson Award, two trophies that honor the league’s Most Valuable Player.  However, to no one’s surprise those trophies went to Evgeny Malkin, who led the Penguins to the playoffs in Sidney Crosby’s absence last season. 

In July, the Rangers said goodbye to key role players Ruslan Fedotenko, Brandon Prust and John Mitchell and welcomed Taylor Pyatt, Arron Asham and Jeff Halpern via free agency to New York.  Then on July 24th, the Rangers pulled the trigger on their biggest trade since Glen Sather acquired Jaromir Jagr in February, 2004.  After a six month flirtation with Columbus, the Rangers finally added former 40 goal scorer and All Star Rick Nash to the club in return for homegrown Ranger centers Brandon Dubinsky and Artem Anisimov, top defense prospect Tim Erixon and a first round pick in 2013.  The Rangers also received a conditional third round pick and minor league defenseman Steve Delisle in the deal. 

The Rangers feel with the addition of Nash and the full recovery from shoulder labrum surgery by Marion Gaborik they possess two of the top five goal scorers in the league.  There is hope that the goal scoring drought that plagued the Rangers throughout the postseason should now be solved.  There is also hope that Chris Kreider will also contribute greatly to the Rangers offense as he will be with the Rangers in the regular season for the first time.

Coaching – Tortorella returns behind the Rangers bench to start his fourth full season at Madison Square Garden.  He was originally hired to replace Tom Renney in February, 2008 and has won 145 of the 267 games he has coached for the Blueshirts.  Those 145 wins are good for fifth all-time in Rangers history.  Tortorella has won a Stanley Cup with the Tampa Bay Lightning in the 2003-04 and has also coached an AHL team, the Rochester Americans, to the Calder Cup back in 1995-96.  The coach is known as an abrasive coach but his style suits the Rangers at this time.  They are a tough, blue collar group that blocks a lot of shots and forechecks opponents relentlessly.  In fact, the forecheck and counterattack were the keys to the Rangers success in 2011-12.  And opponents should expect more of the same from a more talented Rangers squad in 2013.  Tortorella will again be assisted by bench coach Mike Sullivan and goaltending coach Benoit Allaire.

Forwards – The addition of Rick Nash will change the dynamic of the Eastern Conference’s best team for the upcoming season.  Nash should immediately make the Rangers a more dangerous team on the power play as well as at even strength.  Teams will no longer be able to throw a checking line out against a Gaborik line or a Callahan line when the Rangers could roll three lines with three different right wingers capable of scoring 30-plus goals.  Chances are either Gaborik or Nash will move over to the left side but the Rangers now have more scoring depth than they have had in a very long time.  Most seem to think that Nash will immediately be paired with Brad Richards to start the season.  But with Gaborik having fully healed from shoulder surgery the Rangers have options on the wings for the top two lines.  The top six forwards should be Nash, Richards, Gaborik, Kreider, center Derek Stepan and winger Ryan Callahan.  Throw in winger Carl Hagelin and the Rangers have seven forwards capable of playing on the top two lines at any time.  Any combination of those seven will be difficult to defend. 

On the checking line, the Rangers hope that Hagelin continues to develop as a defensive forward and penalty killer as well as a scorer.  There is also hope that center Brian Boyle will rediscover the scoring touch that netted him 20 goals in 2010-11.  Last year’s offensive slump did not affect Boyle’s ability to make plays and check opponents’ best lines.  Boyle did a great job all year long as the Rangers primary checking center.  Boyle and Hagelin will most likely be joined by Taylor Pyatt, who arrives from Phoenix with a lot of size and ability. 

On primarily what will be a fourth line, the Rangers expect more out of Mike Rupp, who was hampered by a knee injury that lingered throughout the season last year.  They also added Halpern, a well respected faceoff specialist, as well as Asham for grit and toughness.  Asham is the type of player that most fans of opposing teams hate but love when he is a member of their team.  The Rangers are hoping he becomes a fan favorite as quickly as former Ranger Brandon Prust did when he first arrived on the scene. 

Providing depth for the forwards are new additions Michael Haley and Brandon Segal, who have seen a lot of ice time down with the AHL’s Connecticut Whale, as well as rookies J.T. Miller, Christian Thomas and Marek Hrivik, who have yet to take the ice at the NHL level. 

Defensemen – This unit became one of the NHL’s best in 2011-12 when Ryan McDonagh and All-Star selection Dan Girardi really stepped up to become one of the league’s best pairings.  While former first round pick Marc Staal was recovering from post-concussion syndrome McDonagh and Girardi stepped up their game and became the Rangers their best pairing since Brian Leetch and Jeff Beukeboom patrolled the Garden ice in the mid-1990s.  Staal returned in January to play in last year’s Winter Classic and regained his form within a couple of weeks.  He was joined by Anton Stralman and formed a solid second pairing from early spring through the playoffs. 

Another first round pick, Michael Del Zotto, rebounded from an underachieving sophomore season to find a new dimension to his game and really was one of the better players on the Rangers for long stretches of last season.  Del Zotto’s skating and puck moving abilities were key assets for the Rangers as he limited turnovers in the defensive zone.  His game has transitioned from more of an offensive minded defenseman to a very solid two-way blueliner.  Armed with a new two year contract, the hope is that Del Zotto continues to grow both offensively and defensively. 

Also returning to the Rangers are free agent defensemen Stu Bickel, Mike Eminger and Matt Gilroy. Both Bickel and Eminger played in over 40 games for the Rangers last year and performed well enough to crack the lineup as sixth defensemen.  However, you have to question how much Coach Tortorella trusts either player as Bickel averaged only 5:10 per game in the postseason and Eminger only 6:49 of ice time.  Gilroy rejoins the Rangers after a 2011-12 season split between Tampa Bay and Ottawa.  He has been playing in Hartford and had six goals and nine assists but was a terrible -16 in 34 games for the Whale since October. The defense seemed to wear down as the playoffs went on because of the large amounts of ice time that the top four were getting each night.  This may be an area that the Rangers want to look at to get better. 

Unfortunately it has recently been announced that defenseman Mike Sauer will miss the entire 2012-13 season because he is still suffering from symptoms of post concussion syndrome.  Sauer was injured in December, 2011 and missed the remainder of the 2011-12 season with those same symptoms.  The Rangers will hold out hope that he will make a full recovery and be part of the club for the 2013-14 season. 

Providing depth in Hartford are veterans Sean Collins and Mike Vernace as well as rookie defenseman Dylan McIlrath, who was a first round pick in 2010.  A lot of is expected of McIlrath as he enters his first season as a pro.  His presence has been immediately felt on the AHL level and he could join the big club by late April if his defensive game is as sound as the Rangers would like it to be by then.

Goaltenders – You can make the argument that the Rangers have not had a better goaltender tandem than they have now since the stretch of 1994-97 when Mike Richter and Glenn Healy patrolled the crease at MSG for the Rangers.  Henrik Lundqvist was the team Most Valuable Player last season for the sixth consecutive season.  It is the first time in Rangers history that the award, that is voted on by the Professional Hockey Writers Association, has been given to a player for six seasons in a row.  Very few outside of Los Angeles would argue that King Henrik was the best goaltender in the regular season last year.  His numbers were staggering.  39 wins, 8 shutouts, a 1.97 goals against average and a .930 save percentage were all among league leaders in 2011-12.  Only LA’s Jonathan Quick could be talked about in the same breath as Lundqvist in 2011-12.  And Quick was the one holding the Cup at end of the season last year.

Backing Hank up is the very capable Martin Biron, who re-signed with the Rangers in the offseason for two more years.  His 20 wins over the last two years are the most by a Rangers backup since Healy posted 22 in 1995-97.  Biron will again be relied up to play about 20-25% of the games this season to keep Henrik fresh for what the Rangers hope is a very deep run into the playoffs in 2013.

Intangibles – The Rangers special teams were both a help and a hindrance during the 2011-12 season.  The fifth ranked penalty kill was very effective and helped the team rank third overall in goals against during the season.  The strong penalty kill led by Captain Ryan Callahan also had 8 shorthanded goals which ranked sixth in the NHL.  But for as good as the penalty kill was the power play was equally as bad.  This area has been the club’s achillies heel the last few years.  The Rangers have gotten progressively worse dropping from 13th in the league in 2009-10 to 18th in 2010-11  to 23rd last year.    The decline was inexplicable really with the addition of Brad Richards, who has always excelled throughout his career with the man advantage, the finishing abilities of Gaborik and Callahan and the passing abilities of Stepan and Del Zotto. 

In 2012-13, the expectation will be that the power play will be much better with the addition of Nash.   Surprisingly, Nash has not been a superstar on the power play but he also has not been playing with the talented group of players that the Rangers have at their disposal.  Nash has only had 10, 6 and 6 goals the last three years on the PP.  The Rangers hope that the power play unit will gel quickly because they will need to score more goals with the man advantage in order to have success in 2013.

The fear in trading away Brandon Dubinsky and Artem Anisimov while allowing Ruslan Fedotenko and Brandon Prust to leave as free agents is that the penalty kill will take a step backwards.  However, with Callahan, Stepan, Boyle, Pyatt and Hagelin to go along with Richards, Nash and Kreider who can all kill penalties, the Rangers should not lose much in the way of defense when they are a man down.

Expectations – It appears that the pieces are in place for the Rangers to make a long run into the playoffs and win their first Stanley Cup in 19 years.  They have added scoring and grit at forward and more playoff experience to the lineup.  They will have Rick Nash and Chris Kreider for the full 48 game schedule learning and playing in Coach Tortorella’s system.  I believe the only question marks for the team will be: Will Nash be as good as advertised? Will Gaborik regain the form he had before shoulder surgery? Will the penalty kill hold up with new personnel?  And can the Rangers stay healthy enough during this short sprint of a season to overcome their quality of depth issues at forward and defense? 

The Rangers will have heavy competition for the division and conference titles from Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, Boston, and Washington.  I also think Florida, Carolina and Buffalo will be improved as well.  They will be tested by a road leaning schedule in March and April that has them playing 17 of their last 29 games on the road.  On more than one occasion, the schedule has the Rangers travelling to play four games in four different cities in 8 days.  Even though the travel in the East is typically shorter, that is a lot of travel in a short period of time for the hockey club.

I am not one to make predictions for fear of jinxing the team but I do believe this is the best Rangers team in a long while and I do believe they match up well with every team in the East.  However,  I still feel like they may be one defensive forward, one stabilizing defenseman away from making another long run into the playoffs.  Something just feels missing from this set of forwards and defensemen, especially with the subtraction of Dubinsky, Anisimov and Prust.  They also have not really answered the question of who to play with Del Zotto.  If the Rangers can make a couple of additions or a couple of players emerge to fill those roles and the team feels comfortable rolling at least three, if not, all four lines and all six defensemen consistently, the sky is the limit for this hockey club in 2013.