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Vancouver Canucks
vs
St. Louis Blues
Today's Featured Sports Pick

Game Date:
03/25/2016
8:05pm EST

Lines:
Vancouver +1.5
St. Louis -1.5

Total:
Over 5 (-111)
Under 5 (+101)

Community Picks: Vancouver Canucks 0% vs St. Louis Blues 0%

Vancouver Canucks and St. Louis Blues Thread

Team Tweets & News Articles
St. Louis Blues
By Jason Chen It's a particularly light slate Friday with just three games on tap, each of which features a heavy favorite. The Capitals, Blues and Lightning should be able to win their games, and those are the teams DFS players should load up on. The Blues are a very attractive option because the Canucks will be playing their second game in two nights, and in their previous matchup the Blues were outshot 50-19 in a 3-0 loss.  Defending against speedy teams has always been a problem for the Canucks, and now more than ever with a decimated defense. Vladimir Tarasenko and Jaden Schwartz don't have eye-popping career stats against Vancouver, but they're two of the Blues' best wingers and will get the most chances to score.  The Islanders and Devils have a chance to upset, but a lot has to go right. For the Islanders, defending against a balanced Lightning attack and trying to solve Ben Bishop will be a tough task, especially given their poor play of late. The Devils are feisty and should give the Caps some fits, but the Caps are so much better and deeper. They'll have to be the ones making mistakes if the Devils want to come out on top. [ Join a Yahoo Daily Fantasy Hockey contest today ] GOALIE   Braden Holtby, WAS at NJ ($36) -  Picking a winning goalie shouldn't be difficult with a light schedule and three teams that are clear favorites, but the NHL's wins leader is the cheapest of the bunch. The Devils won't go quietly, but really the only way they should win is if the Caps fail to show up. Holtby is 9-3-1 in 13 career appearances against the Devils with a 2.15 goals-against average and .922 save percentage.   Goalie to Avoid:   Thomas Greiss, NYI at TB ($30) -  He may have a slightly better chance of winning than Jacob Markstrom ($29) or Keith Kinkaid ($25), but he's just not worth the pick. Other than a 3-1 win against the Sens, the Isles just haven't looked very good of late and are quickly losing ground in the playoff race. The Lightning have also won 22 of 36 games at home, best in the Atlantic Division. Markstrom's an interesting option; he's playing well and he'll be seeing a lot of pucks, which means lots of saves, but the Canucks are one of the worst teams in the league right now and haven't scored a goal in three games. CENTER Nicklas Backstrom, WAS at NJ ($18) -  There's no real logic talking up Backstrom because he's already one of the league's top centers, but at that price he's a bargain. Of the top five centers based on fantasy points per game, he is the cheapest option. Kinkaid has allowed 13 goals in his past three games, and even if he puts in his best effort, the Caps shouldn't have a problem beating him. The Devils' defense isn't deep enough to lock down both Backstrom and Evgeny Kuznetsov ($21), and Backstrom gets more ice time, which means more opportunities.  Center to Avoid: Henrik Sedin, VAN at STL ($13) -  The former Hart Trophy and Art Ross Trophy winner seems like a real bargain, but the truth is, he hasn't played that well this season. Though he's battled injuries and remains one of the Canucks' top scorers, he hasn't been very effective in other aspects of the game, particularly in the faceoff circle (45.9 percent), and faces a tough 1-2 punch with David Backes (51.7 percent) and Paul Stastny (56.8 percent). He's also been guilty of trying to do too much recently, sometimes resulting in turnovers, and the Sedins just aren't fast enough on the back check to bail themselves out.  WING Devante Smith-Pelly, NJ vs. WAS ($18) -  The crash and bang winger had a minor hiccup in the first game of a home-and-home series against Columbus with zero points and a minus-1 rating, but he then bounced back in a big way with a goal and four shots on net in the second game. He's been a spark plug for the Devils, and the Caps will be a tough opponent, but DSP doesn't back down from anybody and should be one of the Devils' best players.  Andre Burakovsky, WAS at NJ ($14) -  The talented forward has 26 points in his past 30 games, putting him at the same scoring pace as Backstrom and Kuznetsov. He was one of the few Caps who were productive in a 6-2 loss to the Penguins, and though he gets limited ice time and didn't score in his previous game against the Senators, he's an absolute bargain.  Wings to Avoid: Daniel Sedin, VAN at STL ($18) -  He's been the Canucks' best forward all season and is four goals shy of hitting 30, but the rest of his team just isn't at the same level. He accounted for seven of the team's 19 shots in their previous game against St. Louis, but he can't do it all himself with brother Henrik struggling offensively and the entire team going through a cold streak during which they were shut out three straight games before losing 3-2 on Thursday. He's just not a sure thing anymore. Kyle Okposo, NYI at TB ($23) -  The Lightning have allowed two goals in their past two games and should be able to keep Okposo at bay despite his recent hot streak with three goals in six games. The Islanders are struggling at the worst time, though through no fault of their own with No. 1 goalie Jaroslav Halak out at least until the playoffs. Among wingers priced at least $20, Okposo is the riskiest bet.  DEFENSE Kevin Shattenkirk, STL vs. VAN ($25) -  He'll be the best offensive defenseman of the night even if Alex Pietrangelo ($24) plays more minutes. The Blues outshot the Canucks heavily in their last meeting and if anyone from the Blues' blue line is going to score, Shattenkirk is the best bet. The Canucks don't take many dumb penalties, which hurts Shattenkirk's power-play opportunities, but if the game is anything like their previous matchup, the Blues are going to dominate anyway. John Carlson, WAS at NJ ($15) -  His status for Friday is questionable, but there's a chance he plays, and if he does, he will be the best bargain. He may be rusty because he hasn't played in a month, but the Devils shouldn't be a particularly tough test.  Defensemen to Avoid: Anton Stralman, TB vs. NYI ($21) -  Stralman isn't flashy and doesn't possess any kind of elite offensive skill, but he's steady and consistently makes good plays. That makes him a coach's favorite but a non-entity in fantasy. Avoid the hefty price tag and choose someone who is a little more dynamic, even if they can be hit-or-miss. Brooks Orpik, WAS at NJ ($14) -  Orpik's another one of those guys who's invaluable in real-life hockey but a near non-factor in fantasy, especially DFS. He doesn't score very often - just nine points this season - despite logging lots of ice time for the Caps. Matt Niskanen ($14) and Dmitry Orlov ($13) are much better options if a Caps defenseman is preferable, but Nick Leddy($13) or even Ben Hutton ($12) are better plays. MORE FROM YAHOO HOCKEY Continue to Article
March 25, 2016 11:55:am EST
Vancouver Canucks
Craig Smith had the decisive goal in the shootout after the Nashville Predators scored twice to tie in the third period in a 3-2 victory over the Vancouver Canucks on Thursday night. James Neal and Filip Forsberg scored 1:12 apart to even the score with about 7 minutes remaining in regulation for the Predators. Ryan Johansen also scored in the tiebreaker before Smith won it in the fourth round. Continue to Article
March 24, 2016 11:36:pm EST
Vancouver Canucks
Here are your Puck Headlines: A glorious collection of news and views collected from the greatest blogosphere in sports and the few, the proud, the mainstream hockey media. Have a link you want to submit? Email us at puckdaddyblog@yahoo.com . Great having @Ruleyork at tonight's game! #Isles pic.twitter.com/pR4ArQp3FT — New York Islanders (@NYIslanders) March 24, 2016 • If you’ve been wondering where JaRule was last night, he was in Brooklyn. • It’s expected that Auston Matthews will be on the Team USA roster for this spring’s World Championships. [ TSN ]  • How do we spice up a potential expansion draft? Down Goes Brown has some ideas. [ Sportsnet ]  • These Anaheim Ducks are different than what we've been used to. [ Eye on Hockey ] • Alex Kovalev is back in hockey as the sporting director of Swiss side EHC Visp, where he played in 2013-14. [ Swiss Hockey News ] • Is it time for Barry Trotz to reunite Alex Ovechkin and Evgeny Kuznetsov? [ Japers’ Rink ] • Remember when the Ottawa Senators were part of the NHL’s elite? Now? Not so much. [ Ottawa Citizen ] • Ohio State is more interested in a collegiate outdoor game at their stadium than one involving the Columbus Blue Jackets. [ Post-Dispatch ] • The Penguins-Flyers outdoor game next season has been moved back a week and into primetime. [ Post-Gazette ] • Going from Buffalo to Anaheim and the playoffs has been a nice turn of events for Jamie McGinn. [ Orange County Register ] • As things go down in flames, now’s the time to hop aboard the Vancouver Canucks bandwagon. [ Pass it to Bulis ] • The Washington Capitals are set to celebrate the career of Mike Marson, the NHL’s second black player. [ Color of Hockey ] • Is an aggressive approach the right one for a successful penalty kill? [ Hockey Graphs ] • A look at what potential expansion could do to the Buffalo Beauts’ roster. [ Today’s Slapshot ] • What injuries are affecting fantasy hockey league playoffs? [ Dobber Hockey ] • Who are the contenders and pretenders in the QMJHL playoffs? [ Buzzing the Net ] • A decade ago today, Holy Cross pulled off the biggest upset in college hockey. [ SBN College Hockey ] • This week’s look at the top prospects in the LA Kings’ system. [ Mayor’s Manor ] • Former NHLers Nigel Dawes, Brandon Bochenski and Dustin Boyd have been given the green light to represent Kazakhstan in international play. [ Euro Hockey ] • Finally, get to know Vladimir Tarasenko, a rising superstar: MORE FROM YAHOO HOCKEY : Continue to Article
March 24, 2016 1:06:pm EST
Vancouver Canucks
The Los Angeles Kings' latest defeat didn't cost them any ground in the Pacific Division, and they now get a shot at extending their lead with games against the two worst teams in the Western Conference. A stop in Winnipeg on Thursday night could extend the Kings' division lead to six points, while the Jets try for consecutive home wins for the first time in 2016. The Kings (44-24-5), who follow this game with a visit from Edmonton on Saturday, are hoping to avoid losing three straight in regulation for the first time since the first three games of the season. Continue to Article
March 23, 2016 6:58:pm EST
Vancouver Canucks
(Ed. Note: The column formerly known as the Puck Daddy Power Rankings. Ryan Lambert takes a look at some of the biggest issues and stories in the NHL, and counts them down.) 7. Not getting it “I’m looking at all of it. It’s right across the board. There’s nobody safe when you have a year like we just did. No way. The status quo will just get us (back here) next year.” That's Ottawa Senators owner Eugene Melnyk on Tuesday , basically telling the assembled media that there will be big changes to this team's roster and perhaps even management because of how bad the club was this year.  But saying he's “looking at all of it” is probably not the correct characterization, because one thing you can be almost certain he will not do is “look at how much money he spends.” That most likely will not enter into the conversation. The Senators are routinely near the bottom of the league in spending, and as long as that happens, they're not going to be all that good .  [ Join a Yahoo Daily Fantasy Hockey contest today ] Oh but someone obviously brought that up to him. His response? “That’s baloney. Absolute baloney. We throw $68 million U.S. at this. That’s our payroll. Let’s get that straight. Which puts us way up there. Way over budget. You can’t just throw money at these things. We all know other teams that throw money at these things for decades, and they’ve gotten nowhere. So we need to do it a different way, and I think we are.” Well, first of all, payroll is one thing, but $68 million is actual cash (and that has to include coaching or something, because General Fanager also has them at $64.1 million in salary obligations). In terms of cap obligations, the Senators are still at a little more than $64.9 million , 23rd in the league. There's something to be said, of course, for spending smarter than they have, but would it surprise you to learn that basically everyone in the league spending more than $70 million is a playoff team? Sure, the Detroit Red Wings are starting to look like they're going to miss, and they're third in cap obligations. The Vancouver Canucks are sixth. The Minnesota Wild, Toronto Maple Leafs, and Montreal Canadiens all top $70 million as well. There's no explaining away Vancouver or Minnesota's spending for their returns the last few years, but everyone else can be dismissed as circumstantial.  The Wings have been a playoff team for decades and they're finally going younger, but still carry a lot of dead weight. The Leafs were chronically mismanaged for years and the current leadership has to eat money to make some of their problems go away. Montreal wouldn't be in this position if they'd had Carey Price for more than a handful of games. Meanwhile, Ottawa has missed the playoffs as often as it's made them in the last six seasons, and advanced out of the first round a whopping one time (in the lockout-shortened season). If you think a new coach or a new GM or even a few new players fix that, I have an ailing franchise in the Canadian capitol to sell you. Frankly if the Sens are spending $68 million for this roster then Melnyk is long overdue for a look at the books. But to not recognize that the self-imposed budget — and what a nice guy to go over it for this rotten club — is a major reason this team can't be competitive is bananas. One guy I really hope isn't safe in this examination, by the way, is Erik Karlsson. Let's stop wasting a generational talent's prime years with this trash club. Trade him to Edmonton or something. Let him anchor a Cup run behind Connor McDavid in three years. Just let him get the hell out of Ottawa while he can still play as the best defenseman in the league. 6. “Parity” Everybody has between nine and 11 games left in their seasons at this point, meaning that the battle for playoff spots is heating up. Or it would be if there was any sort of real mystery about who is going to make the playoffs. There are, at best, five teams competing for two playoff spots, and that's if you think the New York Islanders are at any risk of crashing out of the top Wild Card in the East (I don't). Therefore, there's no real point of interest to anyone outside Detroit, Philadelphia, Denver, or the Twin Cities. This is about as low-stakes as it gets. And not even the divisional races are all that interesting, unless you have a particular amount of curiosity about who gets home ice in the 2-3 matchup in the Pacific or Atlantic. The league has developed a pretty clear division between “haves” and “have-nots” this year, and it's difficult to see that changing any time soon. The bottom 10 or 12 teams in this league are getting left behind. But the occasional fluky PDO run from a trash team, and hundreds of three-point games per year, make it sometimes seem as though this is not the case. What a league. 5. Important injuries Tyler Seguin out a month , David Perron week-to-week , Michal Neuvirth out three weeks , MacKinnon day-to-day, Crawford day-to-day. Not a great week in the world of hockey if you're a team hoping to lock down a playoff position in earnest.  4. Discord Speaking of which, the Canucks are finally starting to figure out they're awful, but here's Daniel Sedin drawing the wrong conclusions from this awfulness: “The only thing I worry about is effort,” he said. “And I think from some guys right now, the effort is not there. It’s not good enough. I think those guys know who they are. I think it’s embarrassing if you’re not giving the effort every night. Shift in and shift out, game in and game out, it has to be there otherwise it’s going to look like this.” “I think it’s been an issue most nights. Early on, we won some games because we had enough guys battling. We’re there right now, trying to battle. But we’re not winning them. That’s a big difference. You’ve got to go in there demanding the puck. We have too many instances where that’s not the case." Look, I get it. Losing is no fun. And the Canucks have six different losing streaks of at least four games this season. That seems like it would be impossible but it's not. They've only won seven games since the start of February. The list of grievances stretches to the horizon. But effort is not the problem. Roster construction is the problem. Who looks at this group of players and says, “This is a team that can compete every night?” Well, sure, Jim Benning and Trevor Linden. But besides them? No rational hockey-watcher thinks this. There's too much AHL talent on that blue line. There's not enough legitimate NHL talent in the top-six. Or the bottom-six for that matter. And in net, well, Ryan Miller and Jacob Markstrom are just about average. Which doesn't get you anywhere meaningful. Maybe it's good that the Sedins are finally calling somebody out, but you can't expect, like, Radim Vrbata to do any more than he has. Jannik Hansen is the team's third-best scorer this year, and he has 32 points in 57 games. Bo Horvat's behind him with 31 in 71. That's not an effort problem. This is Melnyk-like thinking, if we're being honest. How do you reasonably conclude that the things that need to be fixed are what carries out the process, not the demonstrably broken process itself? 3. Maybe figuring out why the NHL is so awful at giving people good peripheral entertainment? Our own Josh Cooper spoke with Steve Mayer, the relatively new NHL executive vice president and executive producer for programming and creative development. What that means is he's in charge of a lot of the non-hockey entertainment stuff you're going to see on NHL programming going forward. We can only hope he's better than the last guy. The All-Star Weekend Friday night show was a pretty solid encapsulation of everything that was wrong with it. It was a boring, bad show that was difficult to watch by any stretch of the imagination. The NHL Awards are, annually, even more unwatchable. The vast majority of musical performances at outdoor games fall into this category as well (eternal shout out to John Fogerty at Levi's Stadium, though). If Mayer, who has lots of connections to the entertainment industry, can make those shows in some way watchable, that will truly be the greatest accomplishment in our game in decades. 2. Anti-tanking Let's not all look at once, but the Leafs have points in six of their last eight games, all of them since they started calling up kids from their stellar AHL team en masse. In particular, William Nylander seems to have been worth the hype, piling up five points in his last two games alone (okay, they were against Buffalo and Calgary). It's gotten to the point that some Leafs fans actually think there's reason to be optimistic about this team as it rebuilds with a bunch of good players under the age of 25. But hey, not so fast. Because here comes Dustin Nielson from TSN 1260 in Edmonton: Favourite thing on twitter right now is folks from Toronto being excited about their rookies & claiming the rebuild is working. Have fun! — Dustin Nielson (@nielsonTSN1260) March 22, 2016 You watch a decade's worth of failed rebuilds (what are the Oilers on? Iteration 6 of this one?) and maybe you don't see where any team has reason to be hopeful because the team was chronically mismanaged every step up the ladder. How could anyone do it right? Is it too early to call the Leafs rebuild a success? Of course. Is it more than reasonable to say that Toronto is already clearly better-run than Edmonton has been at any point in the last decade? Obviously. This Leafs group hasn't had a lot of run time but things are going right so far. It might cost them Auston Matthews, of course. But hey, he might end up in Edmonton and be ready by the time Rebuild No. 7 is under way. 1. Amanda Kessel After missing all of 2013-14 for the Olympics, then all of 2014-15 and a good chunk of this year as well with concussion symptoms, The Best Kessel made her return to the University of Minnesota lineup in early February, and played in the Gophers' final 13 games. She went 11-6-17 in those 13 games, and the Gophers won all but two of them. She was held off the scoresheet just three times. That run included the team's second national title in a row, and Kessel's third in a four-season career.  Kessel also scored the game-winner on Sunday, finishing her career with 248 points in 127 career games. What a player, and what a way to go out.  (Not ranked this week: Chicago. The morally bad organization that didn't even think about suspending a star player embroiled in a sexual assault case and took more about eight months to suspend a prospect who allegedly posted revenge porn ? No way to see that one coming. [ UPDATE : The Blackhawks announced on Wednesday they did not learn of the investigation until this past weekend.]) Ryan Lambert is a Puck Daddy columnist. His email is here and his Twitter is here . (All statistics via War On Ice unless otherwise noted.) MORE FROM YAHOO HOCKEY : Continue to Article
March 23, 2016 4:26:pm EST
 
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