MMS Friends

Saturday, December 14, 2002

Pengrowth Sadledome - Calgary Flames

Trip Notes: T, Cyn, and I took our second trip to Canada. This time to Banff, Edmonton, and Calgary. After flying into Calgary, we hopped into our rental car and headed up to Banff where we’d be spending the next couple days. Went snowboarding one day. Unfortunately the snow wasn’t very good yet. Went up to the Fairmont hotel to get pictures, did a little shopping, and went to the hot springs. On our way to Edmonton we stopped by Lake Louise. Some people were playing hockey on the lake. I was jealous. Not much to do once we got to Edmonton. Checked out the West Mall. That’s all we had heard of that we should visit. Nice. Tons of stuff to do there. Rides, pools, games, and much more. Went to the game that night. Headed back to Calgary the next morning. Saw many commercials for mini kegs with hockey jerseys on them. Was determined to find one. Finally on the way to Calgary, I found one. That made me happy. Ice skated in Olympic park, then headed out to the game. Left town the next morning.


Arena Notes: The arena is close to downtown Calgary. Close to restaurants and bars, it's located in a good part of town. It was easy to find and park. The fan base was good even with their team not being that good. The Pengrowth Saddledome was opened in 1983. It houses 17,104 hockey fans. Their mascot is Harvey the Hound. Retired numbers are 9 - Lanny McDonald, 99 - Wayne Gretzky.

Game Notes: With Colorado Avalanche stars Joe Sakic and Peter Forsberg out with injuries, two former Calgary Flames stepped up to beat their old team.
Morris
Second-period goals by former Flames players Dean McAmmond and Derek Morris helped the Avalanche to a 3-1 victory over Calgary on Saturday night. Morris, who played five seasons in Calgary, was jeered each time he touched the puck.
"It was funny to hear the boos because I liked playing in Calgary, but that's a part of the game and a fun part of the game,'' Morris said. "I don't know if the fans do it out of spite or what, but we were just out there having fun.''
After a scoreless opening period, McAmmond put Colorado ahead at 8:40 when Adam Foote's shot was stopped by Roman Turek but McAmmond was there to slip the puck just inside the goal post.
About five minutes later, with Colorado on a power play, Morris scored his third of the season on a high slap shot from the blue line.
"It's always great to score to when you come home,'' Morris said with a smile.
Morris, McAmmond, and Jeff Shantz were acquired by Colorado before the start of the season in a trade that sent Chris Drury and Stephane Yelle to the Flames.
Vaclav Nedorost scored the other goal for Colorado, which beat a division opponent for just the second time in 12 tries.
Impressively, they did so with Sakic and Forsberg both missing after being injured Friday night in Colorado's 4-3 overtime loss in Edmonton.
Sakic sprained his right ankle in a collision with McAmmond, and Forsberg was elbowed in the head by Mike Comrie and was left with a sore neck.
Yelle scored his first goal in 18 games for Calgary.
After earning two wins and a tie in his first three games, Flames interim coach Al MacNeil has lost two in a row.
"There haven't been many games here where we've been outplayed, it just seems that either we can't get a goal, or the other team gets a bounce,'' Flames defenseman Bob Boughner said. "The effort is there on most nights.''
Since firing coach Greg Gilbert on Dec. 3, the Flames and general manager Craig Button have been seeking a replacement. A portion of the crowd broke into chants of "We want Nolan!'' late in the game.
Ted Nolan, former Buffalo Sabres coach and one-time NHL coach of the year, is considered one of the leading candidates for the opening. He was in Calgary interviewing for the position on Friday.
Colorado goalie David Aebischer made 27 saves and narrowly missed his third career shutout in Calgary.
"I like it here, it's been a fun building for me to play in,'' Aebischer said. It took until 7:36 of the third period when Yelle scored on a power play for the Flames to finally get a puck past the 24-year-old Swiss goalie.
The Avalanche regained their two-goal cushion shortly after when Nedorost whipped a shot into the top corner, Colorado's second power-play goal of the night.
"It was important to finish this road trip with a win, especially after we were a bit unlucky last night,'' Aebischer said. "You see the character in this team when with our best two players missing, we battled hard and played probably our best game on this road trip.''
More Game notes: Rob Shick was the game's lone referee. Brad Meier was also supposed to work Saturday, but he was injured during a game Friday night. ... Rookie Calgary D Jordan Leopold returned from a shoulder injury that sidelined him for six games. ... The Flames have outshot the opposition 14 times but have won just two of those games (2-8-3). ... Colorado LW Alex Tanguay hasn't scored in 15 games. ... The last time the Flames scored more than three goals in a game was a 4-2 victory over the New York Islanders on Nov. 4.

Friday, December 13, 2002

SkyReach Centre - Edmonton Oilers

Box Score

Trip Notes: T, Cyn, and I took our second trip to Canada. This time to Banff, Edmonton, and Calgary. After flying into Calgary, we hopped into our rental car and headed up to Banff where we’d be spending the next couple days. Went snowboarding one day. Unfortunately the snow wasn’t very good yet. Went up to the Fairmont hotel to get pictures, did a little shopping, and went to the hot springs. On our way to Edmonton we stopped by Lake Louise. Some people were playing hockey on the lake. I was jealous. Not much to do once we got to Edmonton. Checked out the West Mall. That’s all we had heard of that we should visit. Nice. Tons of stuff to do there. Rides, pools, games, and much more. Went to the game that night. Headed back to Calgary the next morning. Saw many commercials for mini kegs with hockey jerseys on them. Was determined to find one. Finally on the way to Calgary, I found one. That made me happy. Ice skated in Olympic park, then headed out to the game. Left town the next morning.

Arena Notes: From what I remember, the arena was out in the middle of no where. That may have only been because it was dark when we got there, or it may be true. There's a big statue of Gretzky holding the cup outside the arena. We sat on the 3rd level near the corner. Good seats. SkyReach Centre now Rexall Place was built in 1974. It holds 17,100 hockey fans. I don't believe they have a mascot. Retired numbers are 3 - Al Hamilton, 7 - Paul Coffey, 17 - Jari Kurri, 31 - Grant Fuhr, and 99 - Gretzky.


Game Notes: -- Jason Chimera assisted on the tying goal 8:44 into the third period and scored the game-winner with 99 seconds left in overtime as the Edmonton Oilers rallied three times for a 4-3 triumph over the Colorado Avalanche.

Chimera set up the tying goal for George Laraque, who netted his second of the season in his first game back after suffering a lacerated left elbow on November 30 against Colorado.

Edmonton's Todd Marchant contributed two assists. He recorded his 300th NHL point with an assist on Anson Carter's team-leading 14th goal in the second. Then, he fired a centering pass into the crease in overtime and the puck found its way through traffic and on to Chimera's stick for the tap-in.

"Todd got it behind the net and made a great play to feed it out front," Chimera said. "It landed right on my stick and I had an open cage. It's one of the best feelings I've ever had in my life. You dream of that when you're growing up, to score an overtime goal at Skyreach and for it to come in a big game against a guy named Patrick Roy is unbelievable."

The Oilers erased one-goal deficits in each period of regulation and improved to 12-2-1 in their last 15 games.

"We're just playing with such confidence," Laraque said. "We refuse to quit and we refuse to lose. The city is supporting us and everything is just going as well as it could right now."

The Avalanche lost Joe Sakic, their captain and scoring leader, midway through the second period with a left ankle injury. They fell to 1-4-1 in their last six games.

"He's not just an offensive threat, I think he's one of the five best defensive players in the game," Avalanche defenseman Adam Foote said. "He's all over the ice. With him out, we needed other guys to step up and (Dean) McAmmond's line with (Steven) Reinprecht really gave us some good chances and created a lot. And I felt that was the positive we can take from this one."

Sakic, who scored his 500th career goal on Wednesday at Vancouver, collided with teammate McAmmond in the second, limped to the dressing room and did not return.

"I really don't remember," McAmmond said. "We were coming towards each other and just tried to get out of each other's way and he got tangled up a little and twisted his ankle."

But the Oilers had to make do without second-leading scorer Mike Comrie for most of the contest. Just 75 seconds into the contest, Comrie was issued debatable five-minute major and game misconduct penalties for elbowing superstar Peter Forsberg.

"I passed the puck to Anson and Forsberg kept coming at me," Comrie said. "So I put my hands up to protect myself so he wouldn't run me over. You could say I got my elbow up, but I didn't think it was worthy of an ejection."

This contest marked the fourth time this season the Oilers have earned at least one point after trailing in the third. Their last such comeback came on October 28, when they rallied from a 3-1 deficit before recording a 4-3 overtime loss against Dallas.

That was Edmonton's lone overtime loss so far during the 2002-03 campaign. The Oilers are 3-1-4 in eight overtime games.

Meanwhile, the Avalanche fell to a disappointing 1-4-8 in overtime games this season.

"If we had made the most of our opportunities in overtime, this might be a different season than where we're at," McAmmond said.
"We've given away more than our share of points, that's for sure.

"We've had some good games against them (the Oilers) this year, they've beaten us twice at home and now once here in Edmonton. But I still think we beat ourselves tonight. If I get the puck off the glass on the play where they tied it up, we win 3-2."

Edmonton climbed to within two points of first-place Minnesota in the Northwest Division.

After falling to 1-5-4-1 against Northwest Division foes this season, Colorado is nine points off the pace. The Avalanche are trying to extend their streak of consecutive division titles to nine.

One reason for Colorado's struggles has been its poor penalty killing. The Avalanche entered the contest with the league's 30th-ranked penalty killing unit with a 77.6 percentage (30-for-134). On Friday, they allowed goals during two of the Oilers' six power-play opportunities.