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NHL West
Friday, November 3
Lack of scoring
part of Avs problem




They've got captain Joe. They've got Peter. They've got Saint Patrick. They've got Sandis.

They've got Milan Hejduk, Chris Drury, Alex Tanguay, Martin Skoula, too.

And they've got trouble. Big, big trouble.

Oh yes, there's trouble right there in Mile High City. Trouble with a capital T. Actually, a capital P for production -- or lack thereof.

Patrick Roy
Patrick Roy needs four victories to become the NHL's leader in career victories.

For the Avalanche, the injury-bitten Joe Sakic has accounted for a mere 12 goals and is on pace for 17 -- his lowest snipe total ever, including the abreviated lockout season. He snapped a seven-game drought against the Oilers on Tuesday night. That's the good news. The bad is that nobody else could locate the back of the net behind Tommy Salo, so the Avs lost (another) one-goal game, sliding even further down into the Western Conference playoff quagmire.

"Everybody's down right now," said Sakic. "We're pretty frustrated."

Peter Forsberg, another injury-plagued star, has no goals in his last six games. The power play is in a 5-for-55 tailspin. They're 4-10-5 since Jan. 19.

Want more?

The Avs were winless in five (0-4-1) following the Edmonton disappointment and had dropped four in succession at the Pepsi Center -- or as the team goes flatter than a two-day-old, open can of Coke, the Big Fizz. Right now, the Avalanche are just good enough to lose, an M.O. that better fits clubs with less talent.

As yet, there are no signs of outward panic, no one in Denver -- this is, after all, still a football town, Elway or no Elway -- parading to the service entrance of the arena armed with tar and feathers, demanding accountability.

"Everybody feels the pressure," admits Forsberg. "We have to get some wins here. These are big games, and it's time to show we're a good team."

Okay. GET ON WITH IT! Everyone's still waiting. Expecting.

It's hard to imagine -- unthinkable, really -- the Stanley Cup playoffs with the Colorado Avalanche on the outside peering in. Hockey's crunch time minus all those superb individual talents? But there they sit, wavering on the cusp of calamity, a target not too far in the distance for all the riff-raff such as the Flames, Canucks and Ducks to shoot at.

Typical of Colorado's travails of late was that 3-1 loss at home to the Oilers. The Avalanche outshot Edmonton 38-16 on the night and were outscored 1-0 by the Oilers in the second despite a 19-3 shot advantage.

The Avs' scoring problems mirror their captain's. Sakic's assist total is fine, at 37 in 43 starts, but there is obvious concern that he isn't scoring goals at his accustomed rate.

"This is something," mutters goaltender Patrick Roy, alluding to the offensive outage, "that I haven't seen around here before, that's for sure." Colorado isn't really awful in any area -- fourth on the power play despite the recent woes; 13th in penalty killing; 13th in team defense.

They just can't score goals.

Those on the scene don't believe the Avs have packed it in on coach Bob Hartley. Nor does there seem to be a strong belief that should they fail to qualify for the post-season that he would necessarily be hung in effigy. The thinking behind such rationale, of course, is that Hartley was GM Pierre Lacroix's hand-picked choice, and Lacroix isn't going anywhere after agreeing to a five-year extention on his contract.

Still, Hartley has only one year remaining on his deal. At around $400,000, he isn't a top-end coaching earner, which would make it easier to do the dirty deed.

And, well, as Bogart told Mary Astor in the final frames of the Maltese Falcon, somebody always has to take the fall.

At the moment, however, nobody's playing 'what if ...?' looking ahead to what might happen in late spring if this doesn't get turned around. The focus is on working their way out of this perplexing rut.

"Maybe," said Hartley, hopefully, "we have to play a perfect game." Perfect, schmerfect. A sloppy, lucky one will do, providing they wind up with a few goals and at least one more than the other team.

"The attitude seems to be very good from what I've seen," contends the much-travelled Dave Reid. "A lot of times, with other teams, there's the attitude when you fall off a cliff, you think you're going into a funeral when you walk into the room. We don't have that feeling here. The puck isn't going in. Sometimes one's got to go in off two skates for the game winner to turn something like this around."

It had better happen. Soon.

Rest of the West
  • The two major questions in Dallas as the trade deadline approaches are:

    1. How strong will Jere Lehtinen rebound from the fractured right ankle that required the insertion of screws?

    2. What about Brett Hull?

    The Stars believe Lehtinen, one of the most important yet unheralded components in their quest for successive Cups, should be back with three or four games left in the regular season. That, of course, is a best-case scenario. And how close to full throttle could Lehtinen be with only a brief trial period before playoffs?

    Acquiring Sylvain Cote and Dave Manson from Chicago provided an already defense-deep team with a glut of blueliners. The obvious move would be to deal a veteran blueliner to bulk up their forward lines, but the Stars might be more willing to surrender a younger commodity -- say, a Richard Jackman, chosen fifth overall his draft year, who can't crack the Dallas defense -- that would fetch more in return.

    Why take the gamble on giving up youth? Well, it hasn't hurt them so far, relinquishing, among others, Jarome Iginla, Petr Buzek, Todd Harvey and Roman Turek.

    Hull's situation is, naturally, a delicate one. Coach Ken Hitchcock doesn't seem the least bit interested in reuniting the Golden Brett with his favorite centerman, Mike Modano -- except on the powerplay. Hull and Joe Nieuwendyk (currently sidelined with a dislocated shoulder) have never really displayed the intrinsic chemistry Modano-Hull did.

    So if Hull isn't on either of the top two units, how much ice time is he going to receive and how ornery is that going to make him? More and more, it appears the Stars view him now as a power play home-run hitter, a specialist. He's held his tongue in uncharacteristic fashion thus far, but he won't remain silent forever, which could cause an unecessary distraction heading into the playoffs.

    Quick hits
  • Alexander Selivanov's game-winner at Colorado, a 3-1 Edmonton victory, on Tuesday night was his 20th goal of the season and first since Dec. 1st. On that night, he also scored the winner in a 3-1 win over, you guessed it, the Avalanche. Selivanov had been confined to the press box for seven games before getting the call at the Pepsi Center.

  • Trade rumour de jour: Selivanov and a minor-leaguer to the Habs in exchange for Shayne Corson. With Corson set to make $4 million next year, his reincarnation as an Oiler would be for strictly the playoffs, naturally.

  • Calgary's Jarome Iginla is riding a 14-game point-scoring streak (10 goals, 13 assists), just two shy of the franchise record established in the '87-88 season by defenseman Gary Suter.

    Quote of the week
    "Are the Penguins going to miss him? Damn rights. Is the game going to miss him? You bet. Am I going to miss him? Not tomorrow night, I'm not. I may be a lot of things, but crazy isn't one of them," -- Flames' coach Brian Sutter, on the prospect of facing the Jaromir Jagr-less Pittsburgh Penguins.

    George Johnson covers the NHL for the Calgary Sun. His Western Conference column appears every week during the season on ESPN.com.


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