Wednesday, December 31, 2008

The Ten Best Sports Moments of the Year

by Ryan

Always end on a high note, right? This probably won't be our last post of the year, but we wanted to at least give the impression that 2008 was an enjoyable sports year. I mean, at least 4 teams wind up happy per year, right?

10. Sabres trade for Craig Rivet.

You knew something was up when the Bernier jerseys went on the clearance rack early. Getting Rivet hasn't paid off just yet, but the Sabres did go out and get a captain. Too bad it took them a year to do it.

9. Sabres/Lightning, 3/19/08

The "cone of silence" game where the Sabres came back from a huge deficit at home. A 7-4 final was a complete surprise, and Vanek got two more in the win. You will be seeing a lot of these involving Thomas Vanek.

8. Red Sox Home Opener, 4/7/08

This one's just for Rich and I, but it's always special to see banners get raised.

7. Manny's catch in Baltimore

This was the catch/high five double play that MLB appears to have destroyed all video of. It's probably on the league's video portal somewhere, but you don't need to see another e-trade ad, do you?

6. Buffalo is awarded World Juniors, 10/27/08

It may not seem like a big deal now, but it will be a big, big deal in a few short years.

5. ALCS Game Five, 10/16/08

This game was absolutely ridiculous, and set up a Game Six road trip that Rich still isn't prepared to talk about. This year's ALCS was a very interesting one for Red Sox fans, but the implausibility of winning that game still stands the test of time despite the end result.

4. UB Wins the MAC

A great moment for college sports in Buffalo, and even more fun because it was pretty unexpected. The Bulls beat an previously unbeaten Ball State and won their first (accepted) bowl bid in one of the best seasons in their D-I history.

3. Sabres/Lightning, 2/20/08

This is the "Vanek Scores a Natural Hat Trick" game.

2. Giants win the Super Bowl.



Ah, schadenfreude. You were good to me this year, old friend.

1. Winter Classic



After January 1st it was all downhill from there. Probably the greatest sporting event of my life, and just the fact that it actually happened still blows my mind. I have a feeling we will talk about this a bit more tomorrow.

A View from the Roost: The Smoking Gun

by Ryan

I've been examining the work of Bill Wippert for hours, searching for photographic evidence of the train wreck I saw tonight. There are many ways in which to look back at a hockey game, and oftentimes the most effective method is a picture. While your memory may shift and fade over time, and a final score can be deceiving, a photograph gives indisputable evidence of what actually happened. Pure, unaltered, professional; pictures tell the story in a way only the most vivid of writers can replicate.

The problem is that I keep looking for the smoking gun in all these and I've yet to find it. Sure there's one where Derek Roy looks lazy, and one where Teppo is outworked in another; but where is the concrete proof that a 4-2 final score is completely deceiving? Where is the picture with the "I don't give a crap" look on someone's face?

These pictures don't exist, and unless Derek Roy snuck in a break for tea somewhere I'm not going to find them. What I do know is that what we saw tonight was laughable, and no matter what frame of mind you watched this in we all saw the same thing: the Sabres didn't come to play hockey, and the scoreboard didn't reflect the performance at all. It was much worse.

The closest representation of tonight's game is not a smoking gun but rather a simple comparison.



Alexander Ovechkin and Adam Mair. Is that really what we want to see? I know Ovechkin didn't put one in tonight, but who actually disrupted what he was trying to do? Mair and Gaustad. When the Capitals did score, what line was relied upon as the counter-punch? Mair and Gaustad. Lindy's right, when Mair, Gaustad, and Ellis are your best forwards you will not win hockey games.

The truth is that there is no smoking gun that encapsulates everything that went wrong tonight. No picture, no recap, and no single highlight is going to capture the problems the Sabres have. In a season that has given us the same results over and over again, the Sabres dropped the ball once again. Another home loss, and another set of excuses for the same problem.

There was no smoking gun tonight, but I think we all know better.


A few other things while you ponder where those 33 shots were hidden last night:

- If I ever get a press pass I'm going to ask Teppo what the dinosaurs were like. I'm only half kidding.

- A note to the gameday production people: no one cares what Matt Ellis' favorite movie is. Nor do we care what Patrick Kaleta's favorite movie is, or Derek Roy's favorite food, or even Ryan Miller's favorite hooded sweatshirt. These things do not matter and never will.

- Alexander Ovechkin absolutely owns Hank Tallinder at this point. The poor guy is going to have nightmares of red bald eagles with little eights chasing after him for weeks.

- The NHL video portal is annoying, but I just want to show you the difference between how Paul Gaustad and Jason Pominville reacted to the loss. Here's Goose:



And here's Jason:



Is it just me or is the difference between the two absolutely phenomenal? I mean at least Gaustad has a vague idea of what the problem is. Even Vanek used the term "embarrassing" and put blame on himself. Is Jason's inner dialogue only filled with thoughts of rainbows and getting pucks deep, or does he actually realize that Clarke MacArthur is winning the scoring race between the two?

- Are any of our defenseman aware that contracts expire? Like, when is the last time we've gotten the obligatory contract year out of a defenseman? Even Campbell struggled for an extended period. Kalinin was terrible last season, and this year Jaro and Teppo have been freaking awful.

I mean, what the hell was Spacek doing on the second goal? I know Miller's not supposed to give up a ten foot rebound, but I'm pretty sure Jaro shouldn't be circumambulating Chris Bourque like a Buddhist stupa. It would be really nice if he even pretended to care about picking up the extra guy, no matter how bad a save Miller made.

- For the record, the "Goose's Roost" sign that was up in section 315 was not us. Our sign is all but retired at this point, so feel free to take up the cause. Just do us justice, that's all we ask.

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

The Company Line

By Jon



The word of the day: continuity. Ralph Wilson wants continuity. Chris Kelsay wants continuity. Duke Preston wants continuity. What do the fans want? Definitely not continuity.

In other news, Lindy Ruff says the Sabres need to stick to the system.

Hey... at least we get another year's use of the "We got Dick for less..." tag.

UPDATE: Try reading a few of these without vomiting. I dare you.

The AO Show

by Ryan



A note to Sabres fans: please don't boo Alexander Ovechkin tonight. He doesn't need the extra motivation to score, and unlike Miroslav Satan he actually can.

Should be an interesting night down at the Arena, with Goose and Gerbe back in action. Maybe this means there will be some semblance of a forecheck, which will be a nice belated Christmas gift. Miller looks to get the start, and tonight looks like the perfect time to start the climb out of the bottom half of the conference. With Toronto coming up on New Year's Day and just five points between the two, it would be nice to get a little more breathing room before they go and think the playoffs are realistic.

7:00 pm from the Arena. I'll be there hoping Hank can redeem himself, and Atlas can get back to business.

The Ten Worst Sports Moments of the Year

by Ryan

Everyone releases a top ten list of some sort around this time of year. Why not do two? Tomorrow I will run down the best, but we should get the worst out of the way, I suppose. These may not be in any particular order, but they all weren't very good times for me.

10. Eight Bells dies.



If only because I saw this at Target and decided I needed to fit it in.

9. Sabres/Panthers, 2/10/08

The Richard Zednik game. The Sabres won, but I've never heard a crowd at HSBC Arena so quiet. Scary stuff, and if not for some fantastic response time by medical staff it could have been a tragedy unfolding right before out eyes.

8. Sabres/Sens, 1/4/08

This was the first game after the Winter Classic, and the Sabres laid an egg on home ice. It continued a ten game winless stretch for the team that pretty much killed the season and any chance for the playoffs. Ah, memories.

7. Brett Favre retires, second guesses himself, comes back, then murders Rachel Nichols in self defense.

Boy I can't wait for the next episode of "Brett Favre Retires". Check local listings in 2009!

6. Sabres/Bruins, 2/8/08

Sabres completely gave this one away, with Phil Kessel sneezing the puck past Ryan Miller it the shootout. An absolute meltdown in a season littered with similar performances.

5. Sabres/Flyers, 2/25/08

See above, plus Danny Briere and the words "poetic justice".

4. Bills/Jets, 12/14/08

Also known as the J.P. Losman Bowl. This was a completely winable game that was blown by a questionable play call and a quarterback's inability to feel pressure coming from behind. Apparently he couldn't hear me scream "GET RID OF IT" from my couch, but he probably should have heard the collective yell coming from Western New York. The cloud of smug emitting from his postgame press conference is floating out over the Atlantic as we speak and will one day destroy a small village in Africa.

3. Boston Red Sox trade Manny

Losing the ALCS to the Rays was tough, but I was more proud of how hard the team fought than anything. Trading one of my favorite players was brutal, and I still haven't really come to grips with it as a sports fan. There's a lot of questionable things that Manny Ramirez did, but I'll never hate him as a player no matter where he goes.

2. Bills vs. Browns, Monday Night Football



Do we even need to talk about it?

1. Bills vs. Dolphins @ Toronto

As much as the Monday Night game hurt, I've never been physically sick after a football game until this one. Everything about what took place in Toronto will bother a part of me that sports never get to. We will never be sure what happens to this team until it already comes to pass, but we will always know where it started. This game will be the fulcrum point, for better or worse.

Great Moments in Anonymity

by Ryan

There is always a downside to showing up in Google searches. When people are actually looking for your site it is a positive, but sometimes people are just looking for trouble. Most of these come from searches such as "game use russian penguin" or "mike ryan quarterback shirtless". You know, practical stuff like that. The result of such inquiries most often result in everyone's favorite internet hobby: anonymous commenting.

Here's a good one from Sunday:

Once again you Bills fans have this perception that your team has some ability. 2nd rate coaches 3 back-up QB's and no Lynch. You will be worse next year. Let them go to toronto. JP will find a betterteam with better play calling and will be a reliable QB. Trent will be a backup again when you draft some young gun. The fans in Buffalo are the most bandwagon fans in the NFL. Sad place. Good luck losers.


There's a lot to talk about with this one, but I think it's better to just leave it alone and let it fester. We always seem to get one or two trolls following a Patriots game. Good thing this one only stuck around for one post.

Here's my favorite of all time. From the J.P. Losman post following the Jets game:

glad I don't live in a town that has some really sick people. You all have lived in that hellhole Buffalo way too long. It's football, a game you frozen idiots. I've known JP since he was 5 yrs old. You people do not know him and believe me he cannot stand Buffalo. He may not be a starter anywhere, but anywhere is better than where you live. No NFL player ever wants to go to Buffalo, remember that. You will always have 2nd rate layers and coaches.


Plenty to love here, especially the "I'm J.P. Losman's lifelong friend" angle and the forgotten "p" on "players". You would think someone would proofread before they post faceless, nameless comments on sports blogs, but maybe that's asking too much. I do enjoy the theme developing here. Buffalo is an awful town and obviously this argument has some merit when discussing football.

Still, the timestamp is the best part about this one: December 25, 2008 2:51 PM. I mean, that's all kinds of awesome. Forget spending time with family or playing with presents, let's go Google search J.P. Losman and look for derogatory comments about him. This is the best kind of commenter, the one who literally has nothing better to do, even on Christmas. Either he's J.P. Losman's Muslim friend or one sad, sad individual.



Either way, he wins commenter of the year. We've had some really great, insightful comments over the past twelve months; but no one's claimed to know a backup quarterback. Totally dropped the ball there, guys.

Monday, December 29, 2008

Sort of Says it All



I feel like we are in a holding pattern of some sort until news of Dick Jauron's future is disclosed. Already we've seen some coaches get the axe today, so maybe it's not that far away. You could argue that some coaches better than him have been let go, including Eric Mangini. Say what you want about the guy, but at least he managed a winning record once or twice. Plus you can't blame him for his quarterback leading the league in idiotic (and total) interceptions.

Looking back on the season it's hard to properly describe what a letdown it was. A lot of us were wrong about this team, and I'll be the first to admit I am in that category. Five weeks into the season there wasn't much to hate about the Bills, and based on the odds the team had of making the postseason I still don't think there was anything wrong with the excitement most people felt. I will never apologize for hoping this team can turn the corner, but there is a point in which that hope is pointless.

There is reason to hope for Trent Edwards, and plenty of reason to get excited about Marshawn Lynch and Fred Jackson. There are question marks on the defense once again, and a lot of worry about the durability of some players. Where there is no hope is the head coaching position, and having any hope that Dick Jauron can suddenly morph into a better football coach is absurd. We know what we are getting in him, and it's simply not good enough.

I know I'm restating what I said yesterday, and honestly Kevin says it better over at Bfloblog. The conclusion we are all coming to is that something needs to change, and we can only hope the brain trust at One Bills Drive notices as well. Until then we can only watch the postseason and notice what these teams have that the Bills do not. The have-nots watching the haves once again.

About Saturday Night

by Ryan



FACT: Clarke MacArthur has the same amount of goals (10) as Jason Pominville.

FACT: The Sabres gave up two goals in the final 1:34 of play.

FACT: The Sabres got two points.

Which fact is most important to you? That third one should be most important. That's the one that really matters, I suppose. Still, it really feels like there isn't much positive to take out of the Islanders game because of how long it went on. When Clarke MacArthur wrists it home it should be over. A 3-1 game on home ice is money, right?



All of a sudden you're in overtime wondering what the hell happened. It should have been over at least four times, but that's how the Sabres have been playing this season. Rich and I kept saying "This is one of those games that slips away," and sure enough it's tied up with two seconds left.

Maybe it's not a major sign of weakness to give up a two goal lead that quickly, but this was the freaking Islanders. They looked terrible all night and scored once on a Miller brain fart. Where did that suddenly firepower come from? Chris Campoli and Mike Comrie, with five goals between them before Saturday night. (Speaking of that... Mike Comrie is making four freaking million dollars this year to score three goals? He's the Canadian Maxim Afinogenov. Jesus.) Not exactly a murderer's row that did the job on Saturday.



Thank God for the fact that Joey MacDonald was in net for the Isles, who looked completely lost in the shootout. I think he was the only person in the building who didn't know Kotalik was going backhand, and Stafford barely put the deke on him before it was in. Getting past the overtime period pretty much locked up that second point, but it should have never gotten to that point in the first place.

I want someone to invent a stat that calculates how many points a team gives away per year. It isn't an exact science, but it's safe to say the Sabres are already in the double digits in this hypothetical stat category. We aren't chasing the Islanders these days, but you aren't supposed to leave the door open for teams below you, either.

A good team takes care of New York with ease. The Sabres were about six minutes away from doing just that. The question remains, are the Sabres just a few minutes away from being a "good" team, or is something more truly necessary? It's an honest question, one they may not know themselves and may take the entire season to answer.

Sunday, December 28, 2008

One Last Time

by Ryan

Your Dick Jauron Losing Face for the last time this season. It's been fun watching it progress from... actually, it's always the same.



I would hope this would be the last time we ever have to post something like this, but I'm not taking anything for granted. If Ralph Wilson is satisfied with another three 7-9 seasons then so be it. For me the biggest reason Jauron should go is this: there was never a doubt in my mind that he would get flatly outcoached today, but what actually went on was flat out ridiculous.

Looking back on the season there were only a handful of times in which Dick looked relatively in control: against Kansas City and against Oakland. Oakland fired their coach mid season, and Kansas City should have cut ties with Herm weeks ago. Dick couldn't even out coach the Browns, who haven't scored an offensive touchdown since.

As a fan we always seem to jump on head coaches quickly, but the complete collapse we saw this year and the consistent failure to win games within the division puts a whole lot of pressure on the front office to make changes. When you are watching on your couch you couldn't care less if the players like a guy. The consistent mediocrity his efforts have given you is reason enough to try something different. This was three years of opportunities and missed chances, with the same mistakes being made over and over again.

It will be interesting to watch what happens over the next few weeks with head coaching positions throughout the league. At times it seems like half the league has a coach on the chopping block, and Buffalo's decision will probably rank low on the totem pole no matter what route they take. The Bills will never go out and get that big name head coach, but if Ralph and company see progress being made I can't find it. To so many people it's apparent that a fresh start is in order. Settling on Jauron would look like a claim of indifference to so many people, and I'm not so sure the Bills can afford more bad PR after what we've seen this year.



I'm sure this guy is acting on behalf of a lot of Bills fans. Fred Jackson came to play today, and you can't say that about everyone on the Bills roster. Changes have to be made all around, that's for sure. Bills fans deserve better than 7-9 no matter what anyone else says. In a league full of parody and drastic changes from season to season the Bills have been stuck in the lower half for years.

Something has to change.

Gameday Prep: Bills vs. Patriots

by Ryan

Here are the games we get today, and here are the playoff scenarios. However,we're doing the gameday prep a bit different today. Do you remember the last time the Bills beat New England? It looked a little something like this:



I think that's all you need to know. Forget all the talk about saving Dick Jauron's job, or the notion of players quitting or whatever. Consider this: the Bills have the chance to knock New England out of the playoffs. I think that's reason enough to play, and motivation enough to win.

I'm not saying they will, but it's six in the morning and I just watched The Shawshank Redemption. If that movie doesn't call for hope I don't know what does. I will have much more to say about all this later, but for now let's try to enjoy one more Bills game this year.



Go Bills.

Saturday, December 27, 2008

Flat

by Ryan

This picture sums pretty much everything about last night:



Well okay, this one does too.



I think it's pretty clear the differences between the two teams. The Washington Capitals pinned their hopes on a superstar making a spectacular play, while the Sabres had theirs riding on an utter disappointment getting really, really lucky. Is that really where the Sabres are right now? I know injuries have taken a toll and the backup was in last night, but can Maxim Afinogenov really be the hero of this team?

What we saw last night was a flat hockey team after a holiday that's supposed to refresh. Single digit shot totals all night, and a lackluster performance that even the final score overstates. The Sabres were given a chance to score on a bad turnover and put it in. The Max goal late was a complete surprise to everyone, and a mistake to begin with. (Either Max isn't supposed to leap out of the way of that, or it was supposed to hit the net. Either or.)

But that was it. Not many chances, not much of a forecheck, and sloppy play in their own end. Again. It feels like the same old story over and over again, this time with a different all-world player ending it. Alexander Ovechkin played another fantastic hockey game, and showed why he is the best goal scoring talent in the league. He probably should have had two last night, but the completely inconsistent goaltender interference penalty calling took one away. Give credit to the officials for making the right call last night, but how many times is that not called this year?

What was so disheartening about last night was that there really wasn't much effort to get excited about. The two previous games were theirs for the taking but slipped away, last night was never in doubt. You knew after the first that there was no way the Sabres were coming out of there with two points. That's not good, and that's not even something we can "build" on. That was losing a game you need with a complete disinterest in playing hockey. What, did Jason Pominville get Animal Crossing for Christmas? Did he have other things to do?

He wasn't the only one. There was no forecheck at all last night; only Adam Mair looked like he gave a crap. That's not a good sign when guys like Kaleta and Gaustad are still missing time. I've said it before, but the more and more I watch this team the more obvious it becomes that something needs to change. The Sabres have gone to the farm once again, but when that injection of fresh rookie excitement fades what will be left?

Tonight the Sabres come home to face a team much worse than they are. It's two points they absolutely should take, but I feel like we've heard this story before. A home game with your starting goalie in net against a team just as "tired" as you are should be a win, and a convincing one at that. Then again that's quite a mouthful, and last night the Sabres showed they can't focus on much.

Let's hope the up and down play continues, and this one will be an up.

Ladies and Gentlemen...Tim Kennedy!

From Sabres.com:

Buffalo Sabres GM Darcy Regier announced today the Sabres have recalled LW Tim Kennedy from Portland (AHL). The 22-year-old Kennedy was born and raised in Buffalo, NY.

Currently in his first pro season, Kennedy (4/30/1986, 5’10”, 176 lbs.) is second on the Pirates in scoring with 27 points (5+22) in 29 games. Kennedy’s 22 assists lead all rookies, and his 27 points are second behind the 33 scored by Philadelphia’s Claude Giroux.


Let's see what the kid can do on, literally, home ice.

Faceoff against the Islanders is at 7 p.m.

Pray For Henrik Tallinder

by Ryan

Vanek may have blocked an Ovechkin shot, but at least he didn't get his knees broken by the guy.



Yikes. Another all around poor effort from the defense tonight, and another one for the highlight reel for Alex Ovechkin.

Friday, December 26, 2008

Refresh

by Ryan

Is it just me or do we play the Caps every December 26th? I know we played (and lost) against Ottawa last year, but doesn't the last Sabres/Caps game on December 26th feel a little significant?

To recap: it was their first meeting after the Ovechkin hit on Briere. The Sabres scored six in the first period to chase Brent Johnson, who didn't take it well and smashed his stick and helmet on the way off the ice. Ovechkin scored a goal and taunted the Buffalo crowd, which was actually pretty cool. Oh yeah and this happened, which was only the first spearing incident for Danny Briere that year. Yeah, that was a fun one.

The last time Buffalo played Washington, Ovechkin was out of the lineup and the Sabres put on a show. Since then Buffalo has settled into the bottom tier of the Conference while Washington has risen to the top. Once again it looks like the Southeast is theirs for the taking, and the three seed looks like a safe bet for number eight's men in red. Yes, I am looking at the conference standings this early, because before you know it the trade deadline will pass and the postseason will be upon us. The Sabres can't let the playoffs pass them by, so they better start looking at that board as well.

The Sabres will pick up right where they left off, giving up two leads late in very winable games. Despite that and the controversy over certain goals, the Sabres did put themselves in a good place as far as the playoffs are concerned. After a fast start and a bit of a tailspin they sit directly in the middle of the pack. Tonight is a great time to start climbing up the ladder, and after a long break they need to to get some points out of a busy weekend.

Oh, did I mention the Caps have a 13-1-1 record at home? Yeah, this will be a fun one. 7:00 pm faceoff from the Phone Booth. Let's hope the boys aren't afraid of red.

Boxing Day Taro

by Ryan

If somehow you are still shopping, you really need to get on this sooner. However, we saved this for when there wasn't much going on and you can finally buy things for yourself. Our photoshopping friend 289 has been working on a new shirt for quite some time, and it's a good one.



Clearly that is not a Sabres logo, but the crest of the Tokyo Katanas, which Taro Tsujimoto played for prior to being drafted by the Sabres in 1974. Wiki has the full story, but it makes for a pretty cool shirt and a good story if you pick one up. I've always wanted a shirt with a water buffalo on it, so I think I'm going with this.

Back a bit later with some thoughts on the Caps.

Thursday, December 25, 2008

1:19 Seconds of A Christmas Story

by Ryan



Because you probably need the other 23 hours and 58 minutes to play NHL09 or something...

Merry Christmas everyone. You might see something from us later on, but seriously, go play with something cool you just got. If you got only clothes or something, find a smaller cousin or sibling and play with their cool stuff. They probably got some legos or video games, and both sound like good ideas to me.

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Everything and Nothing

by Ryan

Three years ago today I was sitting at a funeral questioning a lot of things about my life.

Why was I here on Christmas Eve? How did this even happen? Why was my sister's best friend being lowered into the ground on such a happy day? How could it be that December 22nd, 2005 was both one of the best and worst day of my life? What does it mean when a teenager dies three days before Christmas?

---

It wasn't like we were best friends, but it wasn't hard finding things to talk about. His name was Ryan. He liked cartoons. He wanted to be a writer. These are things that mesh well with someone like me, and it didn't hurt that he liked sports. It was a casual interest at best, but compared to me it seemed like everyone was merely a "causal" fan.

Most importantly, my sister had fun when he was around. They are both two very quiet, nice people who only wanted to have a friend. There are many things I will never understand about my sister, but I will always understand why they were best friends. They liked the same things, carried themselves the same way, and struggled with the same things growing up. They were perfect for each other, expect for one thing: Ryan was born with a heart problem.

---

I got the phone call while I was at school. I don't usually talk about my personal life around here, but I was in high school, and my sister is two years older than me. She and Ryan were the same age. My father has never been at a loss for words while on the phone, but this call was different. Something had happened, and I'd never heard him sound so sad.

Everything that was happening around me fell apart. It was the last day of school before break, and it seemed like everyone was having a party of some sort. When I heard what happened, everything melted away. No secret santa, no brownies or pizza, nothing. Just dead air on a cell phone and the two of us trying not to cry. There is no proper analogy to describe the shift in emotion I felt just then. Nothing in sports or anything else can describe it. The world I had lived in just completely shattered, and I haven't even talked to Joelle yet.

---

There was a Sabres game that night, but I couldn't tell you anything about it. They lost, I guess, but none of that really mattered to me. I remember watching it and wondering if sports would ever mean anything to me. There were so many more important things going on in the world; who could possibly put so much into such a novelty?

---

The funeral was set for Christmas Eve, a Saturday. His family didn't want to spend Christmas thinking about burying their son, and I don't blame them. My family celebrates with extended family on Christmas Eve following 4pm mass, which made for another roller coaster of emotions. The day between was a blur of shopping and complete depression, which felt like a waste at time and would be to talk about now.

---

This was an odd day for football fans as well, as the majority of teams played their games on that Saturday because of Christmas falling on a Sunday. That meant the Bills game was at one, just after a funeral and just before I was supposed to be packed into a church with 400 other people. This was going to be the worst Christmas of my life, and I knew football should have no place in my day given the circumstances.

But there I was on the couch at one with my dad, both of us wearing dress shirts with ties askew. We had no real reason to watch, the Bills weren't making the playoffs and the Kelly Holcomb Experiment was in full swing. They hadn't won on the road all year. Cincinnati was going to win big, so what's the point in getting more depressed?

Still, my Dad had taught me growing up to always give it a chance, and so we watched. The Bills kept it surprisingly close, and even led for a good part of the game. It stayed close enough that when 3:30 rolled around and we had to leave for church we suddenly didn't want to. We decided to tape the game and watch the end when we got back home, just before leaving for dinner at my uncle's.

---

We listened in the car as the Bills drove down the field. While my mom and sister went inside to find a place to stand, my father and I looked for a place to park. We found a space but didn't leave the car for another ten minutes. Just one more play, we kept saying. One more play to see if they can get that field goal. We left with about three minutes left. There were more important things to attend to, and no matter what doubts I had in my head about things, there was someone who needed a few extra prayers.

It was the worst mass I had ever been to.

---

When we got home we immediately put the game on. The Bills proceeded to kick a field goal, giving them the lead with less than a minute left. Here they were, about to win another meaningless game. Still, this was a playoff team they had in Cincinnati, and they got the ball back with time. We all know how the Bills will lay down for some teams, and it looked like another opportunity to do just that. Three plays later Terence McGee jumps a route, catches the ball as he's spinning, and returns it for a touchdown. The Bills were going to win.

It was a meaningless game in every sense of the word. The Bills weren't going anywhere, their coach would leave that off season, and none of us really should have cared about that game. For some reason, though, we did. I think in a way that's the most important Bills game I've ever watched, and I'll never forget watching that interception over an hour after it happened.

During that entire period, the only time I saw my family smile was when McGee hit the end zone. For as hard as I took Ryan's death my sister and mother took it that much harder. When that 37-27 score went final I saw both of them smile, if only for a second or two, but I think it made all the difference in the world.

There are a lot of times in which I question what I do with my life. I care about the wrong things and sometimes I forget that there are more important things than box scores and ticket stubs. But ever since that Christmas I began to value sports a bit differently. I think that game helped my family more than any condolence or prayer could have. After three days of hell we needed something, anything to smile about, and Terence Mcgee gave it to us. That may sound sad and pathetic but I don't care, I never will, and I'll never apologize for the role sports plays in my life.

That game meant nothing. Sports mean nothing. But sometimes it means absolutely everything.

---

My intention was not to depress, so please don't let this get you down. The fact of the matter is that this is the first time I've ever written about what happened. For months afterwords I couldn't write anything at all, I just felt like I had nothing to say. Things are different now, and for the first time I felt like there was something worth talking about. It will never be fair, but I don't think anyone is expected to have all the answers. Maybe someday it will make sense.

When you see your family today or maybe tomorrow, don't think about Ryan. He's remembered quite well, and every time Robot Chicken comes on or I sit down here to write I will think about him. Instead, think about your family and friends and what they mean to you. Think about your children or your brothers and sisters. Think about the things that matter in your life, and remember why they matter to you in the first place. I promise you'll find a reason for it.

Merry Christmas, everyone. Make it your best one yet.

Buffalo Sports Fan's Christmas List IX

by Ryan

Last year we did a sarcastic Secret Santa series around the holiday season, but this year we thought it would be nice to actually help you out. Every day until Christmas we will give you something to give the Buffalo Sports fan in your life. Think of it as the gift guide for the depressed guy/girl who has everything nothing. Some will be useful, some will be pointless, and all will be accepted if you want to give us a present.

At this point if you're still shopping you may be in panic mode. No time for shipping anything anywhere, and very little time to go out and get it. Because of the circumstances we thought we'd give you some last minute gift ideas and the places to get them.

- Bills Helmet Hoodie- That's pretty awesome in itself, but I've seen the throwback version around town as well. I've seen it a Champs and you can always hit up the Bills Store, too.

- NHL 09- It's a great game, we're a hockey blog. What more do you want to know?

- Sabres Putter- They actually have this in the Sabres store. There's probably no real use for this, but I know where it is and it's sports related, right?

- I'll be honest, if you're still buying gifts right now, just go with Sabres tickets and be done with it. Pick a game and move on. It's quick and dirty, and you can probably print them out for cheaper than if they were mailed to you. Plus it looks like you really care, which is all that really matters to people shopping this late.

If you are reading this I hope you are done shopping. If you aren't, well, you shouldn't be reading this.

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Just a Reminder...

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Click here
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We're looking for new ways to expand the blogosphere and this looks like the next step towards, well, expansion.

Why I'm Done With Major League Baseball:

By Chris


Sources: Teixeira, Yanks agree to 8-year deal


Free-agent first baseman Mark Teixeira has reached agreement with the New York Yankees on an eight-year contract worth more than $170 million, two sources involved in the negotiations tell ESPN The Magazine's Buster Olney.

The Yankees swooped in on Teixeira on Tuesday when it was believed the Boston Red Sox or the Washington Nationals were the likeliest to be his future employer. The Red Sox's offer was believed to be in the range of $170 million, and the Nationals reached out with an offer perhaps greater than that of Boston.

[...]

The Yankees have spent more than $400 million in salary in the last month, with $171 million going to left-handed pitcher CC Sabathia and $82.5 million on right-hander A.J. Burnett.

The agreement with Teixeira gives New York the four highest-paid players in baseball -- third baseman Alex Rodriguez, shortstop Derek Jeter, Sabathia and Teixeira.


Now I consider myself a Yankees fan. And there's nothing wrong with what the Yankees are doing. They're playing within the economic system fair and square.

It's the economic system that's screwed up. Cash-strapped teams like Minnesota need to sell their best players just to survive while juggernauts like the Yankees and Boston can buy up players at will (The Red Sox had the money to spend).

I'm going to find it very difficult to cheer for the Yankees this year (what fun is having a team that's supposed to win 120 games and a world championship--you're just setting yourself up for a major disappointment). And I'm going to have a harder time defending anything that happens in MLB for a long time.

Good for the players...make as much money as you can (careers are short). But the owners and Bud Selig need to realize that this free-spending mentality doesn't help the game. I'm more disgusted with the whole system than anything else and I hope I'm not alone.

UPDATE: Now it's apparently a $180 million deal. Good Lord.

Ugh

by Ryan

Twenty minutes ago I was staring at this:



I literally had to take a shower and try convincing myself I didn't want to spend $500 on tickets to a hockey game I had no way of getting to. Needless to say, it was a long shower.

We will have some late Christmas gift ideas for you in a bit, but if you want Winter Classic seats they are available. It's going to cost you, though.

A View From The Roost: Choking Away Critical Points

By Chris

So did Sidney Crosby knock the puck out of the air with his stick above the crossbar last night? Sure looked that way.

But neither the officials in Buffalo nor Toronto saw the puck hit the shaft above the crossbar and that's all that matters.

Sure it's Crosby. On national television. In overtime. On a month-long goal drought.

Do those circumstances make it even harder to overturn the initial call? Absolutely. But none of that matters. It was a goal and the Sabres missed out on the opportunity to collect two points.

The Pensblog tries to break it down here but I really can't tell what the hell's going on in that picture. It looks like the screenshot was taken from a TV with rabbit ears.


If the Flyers, Caps, and Rangers weren't around, there wouldn't be a bigger waste of an organization and their fans than the Buffalo Sabres.

And to think I'm Facebook friends with Pensblog Charlie...

More importantly, however, the Sabres gave Pittsburgh two points on a night where the Penguins probably shouldn't have even gotten one.

The Sabres took Pittsburgh into the third period with the lead and gave it away in the blink of an eye. Daniel Paille takes a roughing penalty, a mental lapse for sure, giving the Pens the only powerplay they needed.

As soon as the ref's arm went up to signal the penalty I got a text message from Ryan with the words "Tie game" in it.

Next thing you know, Crosby, Evgeni Malkin, Jordan Staal, Petr Sykora and Alex Goligoski are doing fist bumps down their bench. Tie game.

Should goaltender interference been called on Crosby during that powerplay? Maybe. But those are the breaks of the game. A floater from the point gets through, over Ryan Miller's shoulder and the Sabres give away a point to a team they're chasing in the standings.

It happened in Montreal on Saturday and it's another opportunity wasted last night against Pittsburgh.

-Jochen Hecht left the ice in the second period and left the Sabres extremely thin at center. Adam Mair did an adequate job matching up against Malkin (until Crosby and Malkin were paired together mid-way through the third). I'm not sure when it exactly happened, but Mair has become a reliable top eight player. He's put together a solid season of hard work and while he's not lighting up the scoreboard, he's generating a boatload of opportunities. The first and second Sabre goals were results of Mair's grinding (the screen on the Paille goal and the strong neutral zone play on the Ales Kotalik goal).

Lindy Ruff also decided to put Matt Ellis out there with Vanek for a few shifts and while it didn't produce much (Ellis and Vanek were also both out there on the penalty kill for the tying goal), it showed confidence in Ellis' play. Ellis has been much better in this most recent stint with the big club. He plays a very similar style to Mair and Paul Gaustad and as long as he puts in an honest effort I don't have a problem with him filling in while guys are recovering from injuries.


Losing Hecht certainly hurt the Sabres' chances of winning last night. Sure it gave MacArthur a chance to step up (he would have even been on the bench for his goal if Hecht wasn't in the locker room) but the lack of skill centerman is taking its toll on the team. According to Ruff, Hecht should be fine for Friday's game in Washington but another injury (and they tend to come in waves for this team) and you could be looking at Mair as a No. 1 centerman. I don't care how well Mair's played--that's a scary thought.

-Speaking of Vanek, he made some nice plays tonight but it was disappointing to not see him get one in the clutch. He's had a dream season so far and played very well last night (especially early on you could tell he was frustrating Malkin on the backcheck) but this was one of those games where you would expect him to turn it up another notch and go into full-blown Atlas mode.

-Was anyone else a little surprised at the amount of powerplay time Maxim Afinogenov got last night?

And with the powerplay, as soon as they didn't score on the one opportunity with about six minutes to go, the sense of impending doom swept over the crowd (or at least it felt that way). The team needed a special teams goal there and couldn't get it done.

-I've been impressed with Toni Lydman's play every time I've watched him play live this season and he made some strong plays (stopping Crosby from cutting in front of the net late in the third) and looked comfortable being reunited with Henrik Tallinder. But that is supposed to be the Sabres top defensive pairing and they each finished with a -3 on the night. That's just not good enough--especially Lydman's weak play on Crosby on the winning goal.

-Watching Malkin and Crosby play in person is electrifying, especially when both are on their game. Like Ryan says, it's not fair that they get to have two of them...maybe the Sabres should just tank for five or six years to collect top three draft picks every season.

-Miller was OK tonight. He came up big at times but the tying goal is one he needs to at least get a piece of.

-This was the last meeting of the regular season between the Sabres and Penguins. The scoresheets show they split the series but both Penguins wins came in third period rallies in games the Sabres were perfectly capable of winning.

If the Penguins are considered NHL elite, then the Sabres shouldn't be far behind--they just have to find ways to be more consistent.

And that's been the story of the last two-and-a-half years.

Monday, December 22, 2008

Kaleta overkill and other news and notes

By Jon

I was all ready to write an extended, several hundred word post defending Kaleta's play and how he's been handling things, and then dave in rocha goes and sums up everything I wanted to say in a couple of sentences:

"I still have not heard anyone adequately explain to me WHY he needs to fight, drop the gloves, or "stand up for himself" just because he hits hard. He's throwing body checks at guys who have the puck (or just got rid of it). His hits are clean (95 times out of 100). He's not doing douchey cheap stunts like Avery standing in front of Brodeur. He's not aiming at guys' heads like Neil. And he's not driving guys into the boards headfirst like Downney and Hollweg. THOSE GUYS should look over their shoulders. THOSE GUYS should get a beatdown. I equate Pat to someone like Dustin Brown. You don't see people talking about how he's not dropping the gloves too."

Kaleta is the classic "guy you hate to play against but love to have on your team," but for whatever reason, some Sabres fans are complaining. Dave is right -- there is no sensical and justifiable reason that Kaleta should drop the gloves or change any part of his game right now.

If Kaleta pisses off an opponent, drops the gloves and takes a beating, he sits in the box and watches for the next five minutes. If he pisses off an oppenent, takes a beating and then hangs on to his gloves, the Sabres get a power play. Why would anyone want the first option? Lets face it, he's taking a beating either way (I can't imagine he would win too many fights,) and I would much rather have a power play than have the antagonist from Angola sit in the box for five.

I don't care if sticking up for himself is "part of the game", Kaleta should turtle until other teams smarten up -- and I'm not convinced that his enemies are all that smart.

*****

I'm convinced that the collective IQ of all of humanity drops 20 to 30 points in the week leading up to Christmas. Compared to nearly everywhere else in the country, WNYers are generally pretty good drivers in the snow (by necessity), but anyone that drove on Niagara Falls Boulevard at any point over the last few days can attest that the idiot drivers were out in full force.

One of my biggest pet peeves is the vulture that will circle a parking lot twenty times until they see someone leave a store, follow them to their car, and wait until they back out to take their parking space. Save yourself ten minutes and park in the back. It will add less than one minute to your walk, I promise.

*****

Memo to Ralph: Nothing will surprise us anymore. Come clean about Dick. Did he get an extension? Didn't he? We're going to find out soon enough, and frankly I'm not sure how much I care anymore.

The Titan, the Saivior, and the Communist

by Ryan

For being so loaded offensively, there the Penguins sit just two points above the meddling Sabres. That scrappy little team with its cheap grinding goals and role players outworking all those all stars. What a disgrace to hockey to have a team like that actually sport a decent record against the reigning Eastern Conference Champions. Ryan Miller is obviously terrible, and Lindy Ruff couldn't out-coach Michel Therrien if he were handed two all-world players and a 1st overall pick in net. What a joke.

Okay, now that I got that out of my system we can talk about tonight's game. I'm really excited to go tonight because Penguins games always seem to be fun, and there's always something special about games played around the holidays. It's hard to describe, but it really does feel more important around Christmas, and inside the Arena is a festive mood for sure.

What I'm excited about tonight is what usually gets me excited: the chance to follow star players around the ice. Sometimes what makes elite players special is not necessarily what they do when they have the puck but what they do without it. Positioning, back checking, communication, foot speed; all of these things make great players but are hard to notice when watching on TV.

Crosby, Ovechkin, and Malkin all get praises raised to the high heavens from pundits and announcers alike, but sometimes it's hard to believe if you don't see it for yourself. Tonight, that's what I'm going to enjoy watching. In the stands there's no annoying voice talking at me about how spectacular Crosby and Malkin are. Nor will there be one pointing me towards Vanek or Miller. What I want to do tonight is forget everything people say and just watch the stars put on a show.

It sounds like a simple thing to do, but you just can't always watch and hear what you want to on TV.

Kaleta, Trimesters, Silver and Gould

by Ryan

I'm glad some people have been discussing the Gauthier Incident from Friday night. It's nice to see some conversation about this, but whenever the topic of Pat Kaleta comes up I feel like I give the wrong impression of my feelings towards him. I don't hate Pat Kaleta. In fact, I like him a lot. However, I disagree with the way he is being used by the coaching staff, and I think that unless that implementation changes he could have a very short hockey career.

Put it this way: in his current role, it is Pat Kaleta's job to take that punch to the face. The same goes with the beating he took in his last meeting with Montreal. Both games he came away from with significant injuries, and we all know what a concussion can do to an athlete. Pat Kaleta can be more than just a guy who hits hard and draws penalties. We've seen flashes of it, but if this keeps up we will never get to see more.

On a sidenote, what happened to the defensive aspect of his game? His CORSI is terrible, his +/- is forgettable, and we haven't seen him on those token penalty kills in months. I've understand the theory that the coaches will know when his style should change, but it doesn't mean I don't actively worry about his career direction and impact down the road. I may be wrong about all this, but I'd rather see it get discussed then have it forgotten.

- That said, I really enjoyed Saturday night's game, and only the final score keeps me from saying I loved it. It really is a shame poor officiating determined the end result. I'm not saying it was biased or one-sided *coughcough*, but it completely killed the flow of the game in the second period and outright ended overtime. I was going to post a montage of officials screwing up on Saturday night but I resisted. Now I kind of regret it.

- As far as the Sabres' play on Saturday... it was pretty solid. Miller was quite good once again, and the defense wasn't all that fantastic either, but it was one of those rare games in which Buffalo had more than one or two players skating extremely well. Roy and Stafford have been great these past few games, but Pominville and MacArthur were very good as well. Even Vanek had his usual five shots. Atlas has carried the load all year, but this team craves balanced scoring and it's starting to get it.

- I've been asked by two different readers about my due date, so I should probably clarify that I'm not pregnant. In fact, I'm a boy. A real boy. It's not even that "Ryan can be a girl's name, too" kind of thing. I suppose my thoughts on games over the past few weeks has been up and down, but that's the kind of hockey we've seen. This is also a rough time of year, but I'll explain that later.

- At first glance, Silver pricing on a Monday night game is rough, but given the opponent and the proximity to Christmas it does feel right. There are single seats left for tonight, so I guess they did get this one right. By the way, on Friday did you see the graphic that showed how many tickets were left for the next three home games? I wish they showed that all the time. I like knowing these things.

- Pray for Robbie Gould tonight. Don't ask why, just do it.

Buffalo Sports Fan's Christmas List VIII

by Ryan

Last year we did a sarcastic Secret Santa series around the holiday season, but this year we thought it would be nice to actually help you out. Every day until Christmas we will give you something to give the Buffalo Sports fan in your life. Think of it as the gift guide for the depressed guy/girl who has everything nothing. Some will be useful, some will be pointless, and all will be accepted if you want to give us a present.

Today we go with some DVDs that could still get here in time if you need them that bad. First off is Chris' recommendation, Sports Night.



I didn't watch Sports Night that much, so maybe Chris can convince you in the comments. However, if you know someone that did and need to drop $60 bucks on them fast, I'd do this. Here's my pick:



The Mighty Ducks.

The great thing about this movie is that half of it is completely absurd, but if you're seven years old it's probably the most magical sports movie of all time. Watching it years later makes you remember how ridiculous it really is, but that gives it a charm you rarely get out of youth hockey. Most times it just looks plain ridiculous. If you have a twenty-something hockey fan on the list or maybe a squirt or two, this might do the trick.

Is anyone still Christmas Shopping today? Because, well... I am.

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Correlation Station

by Ryan

During the Panthers/Giants game NBC had a graphic that showed how Jake Delhomme performed throughout the Panthers season. The announcers seemed mildly surprised to find out that Jake played very well in the Panthers wins and struggled during their brief losing streak. The crazy thing is that I've seen this graphic at least a half dozen times this year, and every time the announcers seem to find this a complete coincidence.

I mean, really? You're telling me that the idea of quarterback play correlating directly with a team's win percentage has never occurred to you before? That's borderline amazing, because even the most casual of football fans understand how important a quarterback is. Most good teams start with a good quarterback, and every elite team has a great one.

Is it any wonder, then, that the Buffalo Bills are a completely different team when their quarterback is Trent Edwards? Of course the proper implementation of a solid run game and some timely defense is a part of it, but the fact of the matter is that the Bills look and feel like a completely different football team when he's at the helm.



If there was anything we can take from the last two games this year it would be that Trent Edwards isn't completely broken. What we saw in the second half today was Trent Edwards pre-Arizona, and that's exactly what we wanted. It wasn't perfect, but a 17/25 193, 1TD line looks downright stellar after the last few weeks of Losman.

This wasn't the most fantastic of victories, and its only real significance will involve draft picks, but you have to be satisfied by the effort. Denver did a lot of things wrong today but they didn't drive the Bills down the field, and they sure didn't lay an egg in the numbers department. Looking at the boxscore it's almost amazingly one sided, yet it was the Bills getting that final touchdown to keep the champagne on ice at Mile High.

There isn't much to play for these days but the usual cliches of pride and maybe contract incentives, but the Bills took care of business against a "playoff bound" team. I have no idea if it means anything, and maybe they go out next week and get killed in order to keep that 7-9 streak going strong. Still, it was nice to see Trent looking like a promising quarterback once again.

This season may be a complete failure, but hey, there's always the next one.

Gameday Prep: Bills @ Broncos

by Ryan



It may be all over but the crying, but are you really going to stop watching now? Didn't think so. We're all in this pathetic display of football together. Consider this your Gameday Prep.

Announcers: Ian Eagle, Solomon Wilcots (Courtesy of Awful Announcing)

Game Distribution Maps: Courtesy of the506.

Depth Charts: Broncos, Bills

Stats: NFL.com, ESPN, or Yahoo Sports all do a good job. If you have fantasy teams through Yahoo, you're better off paying the ten bucks for "stattracker", it's a lifesaver.

Things They've Been Saying:
- Did Roscoe get snubbed for the Pro Bowl?

- Simmons on the Jauron extension:

Put it this way: If the Bills' fans were Ralph Wilson's children, and Wilson did the everyday-life equivalent of giving Jauron a three-year extension after that Jets game -- whether it was giving a Buffalo real estate developer $30 million for a condo project downtown, backing Vincent Gallo for "Buffalo 66 II: Electric Boogaloo," spending $10 million on a backyard stage so the Goo Goo Dolls could come over and rehearse, or announcing at dinner, "Good news, I just bought eight courtside seats for the Buffalo Braves!" -- the Bills' fans would be scouting nursing homes for him right now. It's true.

- Here's the game preview from NFL.com

- Unless two quarterbacks get maulled by bears, J.P. probably isn't playing, so I won't be writing explitive-laden posts this evening. That's probably for the best.

Song that Makes Sense to Listen to Today: "Rocky Mountain High", John Denver





Fun Facts:

- Once again the Bills play against a big player on my fantasy team, which is in the championship game this week. This time it's Brandon Marshall. This could be... interesting.

- Hey there was a football game on last night. I was going to write about all that yesterday but then the Gauthier thing happened. Maybe sometime this week I'll get back to a few points on the Thursday/Saturday night games.

- Here's the current playoff picture

- KSK finally gets around to talking about Dick. No, not that kind.

Okay, that's it. Game time. I'll be around all day, so if you have a thought drop a line. Comments, email, or our AIM: GoosesRoost28.



Go Bills.

Buffalo Sports Fan's Christmas List VII

by Ryan

Last year we did a sarcastic Secret Santa series around the holiday season, but this year we thought it would be nice to actually help you out. Every day until Christmas we will give you something to give the Buffalo Sports fan in your life. Think of it as the gift guide for the depressed guy/girl who has everything nothing. Some will be useful, some will be pointless, and all will be accepted if you want to give us a present.

Today we go with another Bills-inspired gift, and a much happier one at that. The Greatest Comeback of All Time DVD.



If you've ever seen this show before on ESPN or maybe NFL Network then you know what I'm talking about. It's a very interesting take on the game that not only shows you the highlights but gets interviews from both sides.

Everyone from Bills and Oilers players to their play by play men are given camera time, and it's fun to look back on such an amazing game. Sometimes you need a pick me up during a bad football season, and this just might be it for some.

We will have a gameday post up in a bit as well as some reaction to last night's Sabres game.

Saturday, December 20, 2008

The Gauthier Incident

by Ryan

Before we get started, let's watch this again.



My first thought when I saw this live was that there had to be more to it. Hockey players aren't crazy, and there is a reason for the way things develop on the ice. This wasn't a witch hunt in search of incriminating evidence against Patrick Kaleta, just a desire to figure out why one player looks completely shocked while the other lies in a heap on the ground.

First of all, Denis Gauthier has no real reason to go after Pat Kaleta. The hit was clean, it wasn't charging, and it was a completely reasonable forecheck. That's the kind of hockey player Kaleta is, and we've seen far more questionable hits in his short career here in Buffalo.

But here's where it all starts: after Gauthier tries to hit Pat in retaliation, Kaleta skates towards Denis instead of following the play back up ice. This is the universal symbol for "You want to make something of this?" Obviously Gauthier does, and he gets a bit overzealous because of it. He drops and hits Kaleta with a very quick punch, and he's on the ground before the Kings hit the blue line.

Now... Gauthier punched Kaleta too quickly. This is quite obvious. However, I understand where he's coming from and why he's so surprised afterwards. Conventional wisdom says that Patrick Kaleta is willing to fight in this situation, and so Gauthier tries to get an early edge by throwing the first punch. It was premature, it was obviously misguided, but under the circumstances it seems completely logical. I will punch you, you will drop your gloves in return, and we will fight. We obviously know better, and down goes Kaleta.

Again, I'm not saying this is a bad thing. This is what Kaleta does, and I'm not necessarily saying there's anything wrong with it. He's not willing to fight, the coaches probably told him not to, and it's his "role" to skate over there and draw in a penalty. The Sabres went on a four minute power play and he's immediately played a good game.

However, this won't be the last time something like this happens this season. There aren't many teams from the Western Conference who know what Pat Kaleta is all about, and as the Sabres make that initial trip through the conference with Kaleta on the roster there will be misunderstandings such as these. Teams don't know his tendencies, they don't know his physical style, and they don't know his unwillingness to "justify" or "defend" his actions, however you'd like to characterize it.

After this season, though, I think it will end. Teams will know he's not going to throw the gloves down and fight, and so they won't go after him as such. This isn't a criticism as much as it is stating a fact: after this season Patrick Kaleta will be less useful to the Sabres because other teams' inexperience with him will disapear.* The Gauthier Incident was based purely on inexperience with the beast that is Pat Kaleta, and after everyone gets a taste there will be a disclaimer that goes along with playing the Sabres. "Watch out for 36. 36 doesn't throw."**

Think about the last time the Sabres played Montreal. From what I saw the Habs figured out how to beat Pat Kaleta: beat the hell out of him. He's not going to fight, but you play him just as physical as he plays you and he will break down. Do you think this hit was a coincidence? Montreal has seen Pat Kaleta in action and they know his number.

That Canadiens game was also the game Kaleta was hurt in. If I'm a Habs fan that's exactly how I want to play an opponent's instigator. How many times have you wanted someone to run Chris Neil or Sean Avery through the boards so hard he can't skate for a week. That's how Montreal played ours, and to me that's textbook hockey.

Again, and I feel like I really need to stress this, I'm not saying what Kaleta did was wrong, nor am I saying what Gauthier did was right. Gauthier should have known better and at the very least should have waited for the mutual glove drop. He should and will get suspended, probably for two games or so. But when you really look it all this it makes sense in a weird, twisted way. This wasn't a Bertuzzi or McSorley thing, this was a misunderstanding mixed with a little bit of poor decision making.

The strange thing is that if you're not going to call Gauthier a cheap shot artist you should probably call Kaleta a turtle in this situation. However, I'm not sure I'd pick either. In a game that moves so fast, the split second decisions made by two different players in a unique situation combined to make something that looked pretty ugly. Maybe I'm wrong, but I don't think the reality is as ugly as it appears.

Maybe I need to watch it a few more times, but I definitely want to hear what you have to say.

*The other argument I'm ignoring here is that teams like the Rangers continue to do stupid things with Kaleta because of the Mara hit. That's something that may happen with other teams, but common sense says teams get past the antics of one player in the long run. The number, length, and frequency of major penalties because of Kaleta will go down over time. Not a positive or negative, just logic.

**Unless he eventually changes his game and adapts to how teams play him. I feel this will happen in time but I'm afraid it will be a reactionary move that may be made too late. We've seen that Kaleta has the ability to be a complete player, and I think he has to do more of that before he is pigeonholed into his current role.

Watch Homefield Advantage Disappear!



Sometimes I wonder what it would look like if they blew up the Ralph. Then I remember that we're never getting a new stadium. Ever.

Stealing Home

by Ryan

Did Ryan Miller really make 40 saves last night? Really? And on 40 shots? Not like, 43 or 45?



If you saw the first period you would have thought for sure Miller was letting in at least a couple. His positioning looked a bit off, and he seemed to have a tendency to completely overpursue the shooter a few times. He made 13 saves in the first, but it looked like eventually he would slip up a bit and at least give up the usual cheapie. The Sabres were lucky to get out of the period with the lead based on the play in front of him, too.

The thing about Miller is that he just doesn't seem to "steal" games like some elite goalies do. This is difficult to adjust to when you've seen Dominik Hasek in net for your hockey team. Hasek was the kind of goalie who could absolutely rob the opposition of two points on any given night, and it's hard to remember how special he was when comparing players. No matter how much we wish it, Ryan Miller will never play like Dominik Hasek. He just can't, and our subliminal expectations of that are just as unfair as our subconscious hope that every Bills quarterback is the next Jim Kelly.

When I look back on last nights game I don't think Miller "stole" it, but that's mostly because the Sabres scored five times. However, stopping 40 shots against a team with talent such as Frolov, Kopitar, Brown, and O'Sullivan is no easy task, and although it didn't look like it at times Miller did play quite well. He settled down, played the shooter well, and controlled his rebounds; something which certainly needed improvement from Wednesday night.

The thing about Ryan is that sometimes he just seems to lose focus and give up that ridiculously soft goal you never think he would let in. He's been characterized as a little league outfielder chasing butterflies or staring up into the sky, and I think that's a perfect way to put it. Sometimes he will put together an excellent 58 minutes of hockey, but that two minutes where he was thinking about fedoras he lets in two. We all know the defense hasn't been there for him this year, but there are very high expectations there for Ryan Miller after his performance in the playoffs and the big contract. Lindy Ruff says it about any number of players, but he's been right about this: Ryan Miller needs to be better.

Last night Miller was much, much better. James Patrick is right, closing out games with a four goal lead should be pretty easy, but that's what Miller had to do. It is important that he didn't give up that goal, though. We need to know that Ryan can come up with games like this down the stretch. We know what we have with the defense and hopefully it can improve, but Ryan Miller needs to be there when this team decides to chase butterflies itself.

That said, it would appear the Sabres also need to play more teams that have zero goaltending. The Roy goal is on the defenseman (next time gently slide it into his pads, don't try to clear the zone from the goal line...), but LaBarbera needs to stop the puck clean on Butler's initial shot (Mair's goal) and not be out to lunch on the MacArthur goal. Give credit to the Sabres for actually crashing the net for once, but the Kings' lack of goaltending gave this game away before their forwards had the chance to take it.



Other than Miller's play there wasn't a whole lot to like from the Sabres, really. All five goals were the result of forwards going to the net, which is good to see, but the defense was shaky again and Dustin Brown made them look bad every other shift. Butler played very well for a guy who admitted he was terrified, and Ellis played his part well, too. The only thing you can ask from your callups is that they minimize mistakes and skate hard, and both did that last night.

The Sabres need to win games like these, plain and simple. We've already seen a few Friday night home games against mediocre teams slip away. They did their job last night and took the help LaBarbera offered. That's all you can ask.

A few other things before we start talking about the Habs:

- Give credit to the crowd for coming out even though most people had a foot of snow in their driveways. Even when there are travel bans in the area Buffalo puts more people in the seats than all of the South on a good night. Heck, take a look at this:



Okay, so it's Jersey. Imagine twelve more people in the crowd and you have a usual home game. The point is those twelve people show up in Buffalo, while in other places they decide they'd rather sit at home and cry about all the shopping they didn't get to do.

- I like this photo because it looks like Derek Roy is giving John Zeiler a seizure.



Roy did have a good game, and was the best forward on the ice for the Sabres. It's good to see him start to heat up, although I have no idea who his linemates are anymore. The past two games I think Lindy is just throwing people on the ice just to see what happens. I mean it sort of worked last night, but I don't think that's really the best policy.

- I think the Gauthier sucker punch is really interesting, and I've watched it at least 20 times today. I'm going to turn that into the gameday post for Montreal, so check back later for that.