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Sunday, September 27, 2009

Mooseheads Still Winless


The Recap

This past Friday on Haligonia Sports, John Moore, the voice of the Halifax Mooseheads, boldly predicted the Moose would beat the Victoriaville Tigres today at the Metro Centre to garner their first victory of the season.
It didn’t happen.
Certainly Moore’s prediction was a good one. The Mooseheads were 0-5 heading into the game, playing at home versus an average team. Everyone knew the Moose would come out flying, trying to secure that first win of the season for the 4400 faithful in attendance eager to celebrate a victory.
But the Tigres scored on a painfully poor clearing attempt by the Mooseheads defence at the 12:33 mark of the third period to break a 2-2 tie, and then added an empty netter with 7 seconds left to seal the Mooseheads fate and send them to their sixth consecutive loss to begin the season.
The Tigres outshot the Mooseheads 33-20 in a game that became a battle of power play versus penalty kill, a game that the Moose would show a great deal of heart and grit, but come up empty once again.
Charles Bety and Garrett Clarke set the tone early for Halifax. Bety held his own in an entertaining scrap with Victoriaville’s Joel Chouinard, a match-up of two welterweights both listed at 191 pounds on the roster. Bety got a 2 minute roughing call for getting the fight started.
Clarke laid out a Victoriaville player at centre ice leaving him woozy, shaken and requiring immediate attention from the Tigres trainer. Clarke was given a 5 minute major and a game misconduct on the play.
Down to 6 defencemen, Steve Gillard found himself pressed into service as Cam Russell paired him up with Pascal Amyot. Gillard would go on to a play a steady, solid game in Clarke’s absence.
Travis McIsaac would score the game’s first goal on the power play for Victoriaville.
The captain, Thomas Knotek, would answer with a howitzer from the left wing. At the end of the first period the game was tied 1-1.
After killing off a penalty to begin the second period, the Mooseheads went down 2-1 when the Tigres Phillippe Maillet found the back of the net at the 3 minute mark of the period.
After several squandered power plays, the Moose would cash in 14 minutes later with Carl Gelina’s first goal of the season. The fourth liner tied the game 2-2 and energized the diehards in attendance heading into the third period.
The teams would exchange power plays and missed opportunities for the first 12 minutes of the 3rd period, before Victoriaville would score the game winning goal as a result of a poorly timed sequence of events from the Moose.
Travis Randall failed on a back handed move that left him with a difficult angle to best Tigres goaltender Antonio Mastropietro (probably the best name in the Q). About two seconds after the collective roar from the crowd, the Tigres gained control of the puck and found themselves blessed with an odd man rush into the Mooseheads zone.
Mooseheads goalie Joel Grondin would make the initial save and render an easy rebound for the Halifax defence to handle in front of the net, but Alexandre Brunet, or Abeltshauser, or both, backhanded the puck listlessly to Tomas Kubalik, who one timed the ill fated clearing attempt past Grondin for his first goal of the season.
The Mooseheads would push hard for the equalizer, sending Grondin to the bench for a sixth attacker with 1 minute to play.
Randall would bring the Mooseheads crowd to their feet once again with a one timer chance in front of the Tigres goal, but fanned on an opportunity which would prove to be the last of the night for the Moose.
Brent Andrews misfired on a crisp pass from Abeltshauser in the attacking zone, which led to a bouncing puck that found a Tigres stick and led to an easy empty netter for Yannick Dube, his first goal of the young season.
As the fans headed to the aisles, the Moose were left to ponder what could have been, and to come to grips with being the only team in the QMJHL that has yet to obtain at least 1 point in the standings.
Next up for the Mooseheads is the Rimouski Oceanic, Thursday, October 1 at the Metro Centre.

Opinions

Brent Andrews was the 2nd Star. Controversial choice as I saw it. Andrews had multiple chances to score the game winning or game tying goal during the second and third period. It was enough that he fanned on a one timer in the last minute, but then he completely gave up on the ensuing Tigres rush which led to the empty netter.......most disappointing Forward line of the night; Charles Bety, Gabriel Desjardins, and Alex Lemieux. Uninspired play by the #2 line on a night the Moose were desperate for a win.......Bobby Mac was solid as always on the MC. The guy from the Bounce was a little loud, shrill, and over the top......Captain Thomas Knotek loves to pass the puck, perhaps to his detriment.....You have to question Cam Russell’s decision to go with his #2 goalie, this was a game the Mooseheads really needed..... Konrad Abeltshauser is the real deal. I’ve had Chris Tremblay and John Moore, the voices of the Mooseheads, on Haligonia Sports and they have both raved about the big German. He’s big (6’3” 200 pds), smart, steady, and has excellent offensive skills. Combined with 6’4” Pascal Amyot, they make a very imposing first defensive line.

Studs n’ Duds
Studs- Thomas Knotek, Joel Grondin, Konrad Abeltshauser, Linden Bahm.

Duds- Garrett Clark, Alexandre Brunet, Brent Andrews

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

AUS Football Power Rankings





Welcome to the first edition of the Atlantic University Sport Power Rankings for Football. This will be the first of several occasions in which I rank the teams of the AUS conference, as they stand on that given day. Presently, we are 13 days in to the 2009 season and each team has played 2 games. The Saint Francis Xavier X-Men are in first place with 2 wins and 0 losses. The Saint Mary’s Huskies and Acadia Axemen are tied for second with one win and one loss apiece. The Mount Allison Mounties stand in last place, having lost 2 consecutive games to begin the season.
1. ST FX X-Men
As Coach John Macneil mentioned in an interview on CKDU Sports last weekend, the X-Men are playing excellent defensive football, but have yet to find themselves on offence.
However, for an offence trying to find itself, they did put up 500 yards against the Mounties.
Defensively, the Blue and White forced SMU quarterback Jack Creighton into 4 costly interceptions in the opening week, and then held a spirited Mount Allison team to 21 points in week 2 in Sackvile on homecoming.
St FX has shown vulnerability in the secondary, allowing Creighton to throw for 300 yards, and Mounties quarterback Jason Bertrand to throw for 235 yards.
Senior Dave Skillen, a senior defensive end, registered 3 tackles, 1 sack, and an interception en route to garnering CIS defensive player of the week in their victory over the Huskies.

The X-Men are ranked #7 in the country and are playing with renewed vigour after an off season coaching change which saw Gary Waterman take over for John Bloomfield, who was never able to get the team over the top of “Huskie’s Mountain”.

They have arguably the most feared three headed monster in the conference. Fifth year seniors Steve Snyder and All Canadian James Green bring talent and experience in the backfield, while Wide Receiver Akeem Foster may be the most CFL ready player in the conference.

The lords of the ring will face a stern test this weekend, when they travel to Montreal to play Concordia. The Stingers seem to be down from recent years, but remain a tough Quebec team that are always hard to beat on their home turf.

2. Saint Mary’s Huskies
The Huskies rebounded from a tough loss in Antigonish to roll over the Acadia Axemen last week in Wolfville.

Head Coach, Steve Sumarah, always brutally honest, admitted that his players and coaches may have been reading too many headlines before their first game, and looking forward to the Uteck Bowl in November.


The X-Men delivered a stern wake up call, and the Huskies responded with a dominating performance versus the Axemen on Saturday night.

The Huskies shook off a spectacular 122 yard touchdown by Acadia’s Devon Jones following a missed field goal, to slowly but surely build an insurmountable lead on Acadia.


Sophomore QB Jack Creighton looked like the second coming of Steve Panella, while Devon Jones ran over and through Axemen defenders for 108 yards on 14 carries.

AUS Special Teams player of the week, Justin Palardy, made good on 5 of 6 field goal attempts, while the vaunted Huskies defence held Acadia to 106 total yards.

It was Huskies football.

The Huskies have homecoming this weekend at the Stadium versus Sherbrooke, a Tier 2 Quebec team at best.

3. Acadia Axemen
The Axemen are definitely the early favourite for the Jekyll and Hyde award in the AUS.

After absolutely whipping Mount Allison 58-15 in Wolfville in week 1, the Axemen were outplayed in every conceivable way on their home turf in week 2 by SMU. SMU put up 500 yards of offence compared to Acadia’s 106.

Versus the Mounties, the Axe ran up 640 yards of offence and QB Keith Lockwood was named AUS offensive player of the week.

These 2 games indicate a dreaded two tier conference that is the worst nightmare of AUS officials as they try to persuade Quebec to extend the interlock contract; SMU and X are really good. The Axe and the Mounties are really bad.

We’ll know more about Acadia after this weekend. They play Montreal in the city of the same name. Montreal has been one of the top teams in Quebec over the last few seasons.

At this point, the Axemen are looking like a lock to travel to the AUS Semi final in November where they will meet their eventual demise.

4. Mount Allison Mounties
Many AUS football observers believe the Mountie’s season was a losing battle before it even began.

Shortly before the 2009 campaign was to start, Mount Allison discovered they would be without the services of stud Quarterback Kelly Hughes.

It was fun the last several seasons watching Hughes and dynamic receiver Gary Ross valiantly lead the plucky Mounties, slowly but surely establishing Mount Allison as a force to be reckoned with, restoring faith in the Sackville that meaningful football games would be played on campus once again.

Not anymore.

The Mounties always play with a great deal of pride, and they will be tough to beat at home. They may very well get a win this weekend versus perennial Quebec bottom feeders, the Mcgill Redmen.

However with 2 games left versus SMU, a game at X, and what should be a merciless thrashing at Laval, there is no reason to believe the Mounties will win more than 2 games this season.

With that said, if they can beat Acadia at home on October 24th, 2 wins may be enough to get them in the playoffs for a second straight year.

Notes
The Eastlink game this weekend is the Huskies homecoming game vs. Sherbrooke. Game time is 2:00 on Saturday......John Moore will be the feature guest on Haligonia Sports this Friday. Mr. Moore is the play by play announcer of the Halifax Mooseheads on 95.7 FM. He also has an excellent new website chronicling his travels and observations with the Moose on a daily basis. Check it out at http://www.sportsandmoore.com/

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Role Reversal:Strength of 2009 Schedule Will Hurt Miami Dolphins Playoff Chances




If the NFL considered strength of schedule when rewarding teams with playoff spots, the Miami Dolphins could be in contention this year.


But sadly, this is not college football or college basketball, this is the NFL. The only thing that matters is “dubbyas”, or as Al Davis once proudly said, “Just win baby.”


Last season the Dolphins rode one of the easiest schedules in the league to an 11-5 season, and a home game in the First round of the AFC playoffs.


The fish benefitted from 6 games versus a weakened AFC East, with Buffalo falling apart by mid October, the Jets crumbling down the stretch, and the Patriots having the uneasy task of being the first team to face Miami’s wildcat offence in week 3.


The AFC East was matched up with the two worst divisions in football, the NFC and AFC West, giving the Dolphins 8 games versus teams with a combined 2008 record of 45 wins and 73 losses.


The Dolphins 2 open games were actually fairly tough; at Houston, versus a Texans team that has one of the best home records in football over the last several years; home to the Baltimore Ravens who finished the season 11-5 and played in the AFC championship game. The Dolphins lost both.


In total, Dolphins opponents in 2008 won 91 games, while losing 117. That’s a far cry from the Super Bowl champion Pittsburg Steelers, who faced the toughest schedule since the 1976 New York Giants en route to their NFL championship.


Even with the watered down schedule, the Dolphins barely beat weak sisters like Seattle, 21-19 at home, Kansas City 38-31 at Arrowhead, the woeful Oakland Raiders 17-15 in Miami, and the hapless Rams 16-12 in St.Louis.


Give credit where credit is due however. The Dolphins did win, and they also beat legitimate teams like San Diego and New England, while taking care of business against lame ducks like the Jets and Bills.


This season, however, making the playoffs will be no small task.


The Dolphins are now 0-2 after losing one the most bizarre games in the history of the NFL on




Monday night to the Colts. Despite having possession of the football for 45 minutes, Miami still lost to Peyton Manning, Pierre Garcon (as a Canadian, I love that name), and an exhausted Indy defence.


Next up for the Dolphins is a cleverly planned game by the NFL scheduling committee, making the Dolphins travel coast to coast to play a Chargers team that has yet to play a game of good football but still has a bevy of talent for embattled Head Coach Norv Turner to work with (or not screw up). The Chargers will be fired up to gain a measure of revenge for the Dolphins beating them in San Diego last season.


Then three home games in a row beginning with the improved Buffalo Bills, followed by the new attitude New York Jets, and finishing with the New Orleans Saints who look like they could put up 40 points on the 1975 Steelers.


The fish then go on the road to play at New England, and finish up their home and home with the Jets.


It is conceivable that the defending AFC East Champions will have anywhere from zero to two wins at the midway point of the 2009 season.


After that it does not get much better, with road games at Buffalo and Tennessee, and a season finishing match up with the Super Bowl champion Steelers in Miami.


The good news; the AFC East is matched up with the NFC and AFC south, giving the Dolphins 3 games versus teams that would appear to be on the downside or rebuilding, and a home game versus Houston which many pundits believe are ready to take the next step, despite their unimpressive loss to the Jets in week 1.


The combined 2008 record of Miami opponents in 2009 is 125 wins and 83 losses. That is a 34 game win/loss differential when compared to opponents in 2008, (remember the combined record of Dolphins foes in ’08 was 91-117).


So before Dolphins fans get too excited about the rest of the season, they need to ask themselves if the Dolphins are actually a better team than last year, or is it the same wildcat based smoke and mirrors show that couldn’t put away the Colts on Monday night.


We should have our answer by the end of October.

Sunday, September 20, 2009

News and Notes



This just in; Winnipeg Blue Bombers Head Coach Mike Kelly is bad at his job, and is dangerously unstable. Kelly’s recent gotcha moment came at the end of today’s embarrassing loss to the Montreal Alouettes, when the embattled coach compared his quarterbacks to a box of Russell Stover’s Chocolates. Kelly said that his team believes in everything he is teaching. However, QB Michael Bishop said that the opponent`s defence can easily read what the Bombers are running before the snap. Even the Alouettes admitted they knew all the plays Winnipeg were about to run. Could be the final days of the strange and dismal era of Mike Kelly.........Chicago Cubs outfielder Milton Bradley has been suspended for the rest of the season by the team for conduct detrimental to the Cubs. This is the most recent episode in Bradley`s highly turbulent and bizarre career (http://live.haligonia.ca/halifax-ns/sports/1907-most-recent-milton-bradley-gaffe-his-best-yet.html), which has been highlighted by a string of curious and comical incidents..........Good guy Kurt Warner had a great game on Sunday. The Arizona Cardinals quarterback completed 24 of 26 passes with 2 touchdowns and a QB rating of 131..........Ladies and gentleman meet the New York Giants. With all the talk of the NFC North, the Philadelphia Eagles, and the powerhouse AFC teams, we forgot about that group of Super Bowl champs from 2 seasons ago. The Giants have one of the best qbs in football in Peyton Manning; Manning has a bumper crop of gifted backs and receivers; the backs and receivers play behind one of the best offensive lines in the NFL. Oh by the way, the defence is pretty good too. The only thing holding back the GMEN is a lack of production in the red zone, which nearly cost them a game tonight at Dallas (did you see Cowboys Stadium?) If they can’t start scoring touchdowns instead of kicking field goals, they will not win another Super Bowl this season.........We may actually have a pennant race to watch the next two weeks as MLB comes down the stretch. The Minnesota Twins have climbed to 3 games back of Detroit in the American League Central. The Twins also have 6 games remaining vs the hapless Kansas City Royals. The race will probably come down to a 4 game series next weekend in Detroit.......Coach John Macneil was on CKDU sports this Sunday morning. The Coach thinks next weekend could be a big one for the AUS Football conference as they prepare for a weekend of interlock action with Quebec. Macneil thinks the AUS could win up to 3 of the 4 games being played in Montreal, Sackville NB, and Halifax. The games are seen as a big test for the AUS as the Quebec conference broaches the decision of extending the interlock schedule after this season. Many AUS observers are afraid Quebec will bail out now that their conference has 6 teams, and given the lopsided nature of the games with the AUS teams, more often than not in Quebec’s favour. For the full interview, click here. http://ckdu.dal.ca/20090920.11.37-11.47.mp3

Thursday, September 10, 2009

AUS Football Preview This Week on Haligonia Sports


Check out Haligonia Sports Friday at noon for a special AUS Football Preview show. Saint Mary's Huskies Quarterback Jack Creighton gets the show started at Noon, followed by Eastlink football analyst John Macneil! Haligonia Sports, live at noon and on replay throughout the weekend! This friday at noon on haligonia.ca!!

Monday, September 7, 2009

Chris Tremblay on CKDU Sports talkin Mooseheads


Halifax Mooseheads colour commentator Chris Tremblay on CKDU Sports gives a preview of the upcoming Moose season. CKDU Sports on 88.1 FM and ckdu.ca!


Wednesday, September 2, 2009

CKDU Sports from August 31- Anna Stammberger


Interview with Anna Stammberger, the Head Coach of Women's Basketball at Dalhousie.

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Tribute to the US Open


As summer winds down and the nights get cooler, we eagerly await football to begin and baseball’s pennant races to come to their climatic finish.

In the meantime, we are treated to an annual ritual provided by the boys and girls of Tennis. It’s time for the sound of ball on racquet, and rubber on hardcourt to permeate around Flushing Meadows in New York City.

For the next two weeks, Queen’s will play host to the greatest professional tennis grand slam tournament in the world.

That’s right; the greatest.

You can have Wimbledon. With the standard white dress, grass courts and strawberries n’ cream. The serve and volley game complete with polite applause and constant rain delays.

Rolland Garros certainly rolls off the tongue nicely and there’s much to be said about playing on clay. But the French Open lacks inspiration and is played at a time when our thoughts are with playoff hockey and basketball.

The US Open comes at a time when it is truly needed. Were still about 2 weeks away from being interested in baseball’s wildcard races. The NFL season is starting ridiculously late, with our first Sunday not until September 13. We have College Football beginning this week but there are only 2-3 games worth our undivided attention.

For the next two weeks we can tune in and watch Tennis on its biggest stage, played late into the night at Arthur Ashe Stadium, the “Big House” of professional tennis courts.

The crowds make the US Open special. Raucous, loud, undignified, and boisterous, fans at Arthur Ashe stadium act like us if we had the chance to have seats to Federer and Roddick.

Tennis announcers tell us that the British fans at Wimbledon are exceptional, but they just don’t seem to be that interested. US Open fans cheer and boo and gasp from start to finish. And they don’t hide their preferences. When a player has a US Open crowd on his side, he can feel likes he’s playing in front of 23,000 friends and family.

The US Open is played in good old Eastern Time. You don’t have to wake up Sunday morning at 9:00 to catch the final. Or worse, set the alarm for 5 AM to catch Federer and Nadal in the Australian Open final (which, sadly, I’ve done).

The matches are played on good old hardcourt. No sliding around on clay, no service game dominance on grass. There are rallies and lots of them. You have to be a complete player to win it. You need a full package of skills to survive. Clay and grass specialists need not apply.

Finally, the US Open has “Super Saturday”. The men’s semi finals sandwiched around the women’s final. Nearly 12 hours of tennis played at the highest level. I’ve spent many a great US Open Saturday lying on the couch surfing between baseball, college football, and championship tennis. It’s great.

So put down that Globe and Mail, and raise your Heineken to the US Open all you tennis loving sophisticates. It’s the working man’s tournament. The annual classic where Connors, Sampras, and Lendl became legendary. It is the season’s last hurrah, filling our late summer nights with outstanding athletic feats, and tennis matches we’ll never forget.