Caps Blue Line » Luongo R.

8/23, 2:12 PM - Ten NHL Players who deserve better

After a significant hiatus of sorts (primarily brought on by the utter lack of NHL news in August), Caps Blue Line is back with the one foil-proof article idea for when there’s absolutely nothing of substance to write about (thanks for the idea, VH1). In addition to this list I plan to post division previews and a summaries of the most intriguing Capitals and NHL storylines for the 2008-09 season. For today, we’ll be taking a look at ten great NHL players stuck in bad situations and who, for their skill level and work ethic, deserve better.

10. Jarome Iginla (Right Wing, Calgary Flames). The Flames aren’t a bad team but, truthfully, they’re not that good of a team either. Calgary relies heavily on the core of Iginla, Dion Phaneuf and Miika Kiprusoff. While that’s about as good a core as any team in the NHL, the supporting cast isn’t good enough to make Calgary a serious Cup contender and the organization’s average farm system means there won’t be a ton of help on the way in the next couple seasons. The issue here isn’t as much with the Flames as it is with Iginla: for the talent and passion Iginla posseses he deserve to play on a contender every season.

9. Dan Boyle (Defenseman, San Jose Sharks). Okay, I admit it: a portion of why Boyle is on this list is just to fill it out. After all, the guy went from the team with the NHL’s worst record in 2007-08 to the team with the second best and is slated to make forty million dollars over the next six years. Nonetheless Boyle had committed to the Lightning by signing that six year deal and was forced to waive his no trade clause by being told he would be waived otherwise (apparently the threat of having to play in Atlanta for the next six years was enough to sway Boyle), a classless act that significantly hurt the credibility of Tampa’s ownership group.

8. Anze Kopitar (Center, Los Angeles Kings). Kopitar’s inclusion in this list has more to do with his talent level than the state of the Kings organization. Though the team hasn’t been to the playoffs since 2002, the system is stacked with young talent like Drew Doughty, Jonathan Bernier and Thomas Hickey. Additionally, young quality players like Alexander Frolov, Jack Johnson and Dustin Brown provide Kopitar with decent support at the NHL level. Nevertheless, Kopitar is an elite talent who deserves to be playing for a playoff team, which he may well do in 2008 or 2009.

7. Tomas Kaberle (Defenseman, Toronto Maple Leafs). As is the case with most of players on this list, Kaberle plays for a team that is not only a mess on the ice but a mess in the front office as well. The three-time all-star has 178 post-lockout points, but hasn’t seen the playoffs since before the work stoppage.

6. Rick Nash (Left Wing, Columbus Blue Jackets). 363 regular season games, 154 goals, and Nash still hasn’t come close to the playoffs in the five seasons he’s spent in the NHL. Luckily for him Columbus looks like a team on the rise and Nash should get some postseason hockey in the next couple of years.

5. Roberto Luongo (Goalie, Vancouver Canucks). First Luongo was unceremoniously dismissed from Long Island to make room for Rick DiPietro. Then he spent five seasons in Florida, never making the playoffs. The move the Vancouver set Luongo up with a better team, a better organization and a larger fan base. That being said, Vancouver isn’t exactly the best run team in the league and after Luongo and the Sedin twins, there isn’t a whole lot of depth. Luongo has played in 490 regular season games but has only played 12 playoff games, all in 2007, and has a 5-7 postseason record despite a 1.77 goals against average and a .941 save percentage.

4. Olaf Kolzig (Goalie, Tampa Bay Lightning). Let’s be clear: this is not to say it was acceptable for Kolzig to speak out in the media the way he did or to skip the mandatory team meeting after the Capitals were eliminated by the Flyers in the first round of the playoffs. It’s not to say the Capitals should have retained Kolzig for the 2008-09 season even if it meant accommodating all his wishes. It’s definitely not to say the team should have traded for, and leaned on, Cristobal Huet last season. Kolzig may not be perfect but he helped the Capitals both on and off the ice for more than ten years, was willing to stick it out with the organization during their dismantling and rebuilding, and in some ways remained a class act until the bitter end. The harsh reality of the NHL means the Capitals don’t necessarily owe Kolzig anything at the moment bit in a cosmic, karmic, universe-in-harmony sense, Kolzig deserves to end his career playing meaningful hockey, not as the backup for a lottery pick team with the most insane ownership group in the NHL.

3. Olli Jokinen (Center, Phoenix Coyotes). At 723 regular season games without ever having played in the playoffs, Jokinen is only thirteen off the NHL’s all-time record. Though he’s now with an up-and-coming group in Phoenix, odds are that Jokinen will the one holding the record come April of 2009, an unfair distinction for a player who’s averaged over a point per game since the lockout while playing with a defense-first and shallow-talented club in Miami.

2. Jay Bouwmeester (Defenseman, Florida Panthers). Bouwmeester is an annual contender for the Best Player You’ve Never Heard Of award, languishing in a playoff-less purgatory in South Florida. A true two-way defender with the talent to by the top defenseman for almost any team in the league, Bouwmeester has played 389 NHL games but never in the playoffs.

1. Ilya Kovalchuk (Left Wing, Atlanta Thrashers). You’d be hard pressed to find a current NHL player who posses so much talent yet has had so little around him for such an extended period of time. Excluding the traded-away Marian Hossa, Kovalchuk led his team in goals by 35 (52-17), points by 42 (87-45) and assists (albeit only by two, 35-33), and things don’t look much better for the 2008-09 season. While the drafting of Zack Bogosian and the signing of Ron Hainsey are steps in the right direction, the Thrashers will be picking in the top five in 2009 and Kovalchuk will have to suffer through another playoff-less season.

6/18, 6:00 AM - Building the Prototypical Team Part VIII: Goaltenders

Number One Goalie: Roberto Luongo (Vancouver Canucks)

If you were to build an NHL goaltender from scratch, odds are he would very closely resemble Roberto Luongo: big, quick, technically sound and smart, with the ability to log heavy minutes and steal games for his team. Luongo isn’t perfect – he doesn’t handle the puck all that well and struggled down the stretch for the Canucks this season, a part of the reason they wound up missing the playoffs. Despite that, Luongo is still NHL netminder who most resembles the perfect goalie.

Others considered: Martin Brodeur, Miika Kiprusoff, Kari Lehtonen, Marc-Andre Fleury, Rick DiPietro, Ryan Miller, Evgeni Nabokov

Backup Goalie: Johan Hedberg (Atlanta Thrashers)

There are plenty of guys in professional hockey who could do an adequate job filling in for a starting goalie in a pinch, and there are plenty of guys who are happy to fill the role of reserve netminder and are willing to work towards the team’s success, no matter what their role in it. What is rare is to find these two qualities in the same player. Hedberg is such a player, filling in well for the oft-injured Kari Lehtonen, but willing to give up the spotlight once the team’s number one was ready to go.