
Injuries are quickly becoming a sub-plot in the story of this year's Buffalo Sabres, well, injuries and
massively unbalanced scoring, as Captain Craig Rivet is not playing tonight against the Nashville Predators. The news out of Erie County is pretty ugly. In addition to Rivet's unnamed injury, agitator extraordinaire Patrick Kaleta is out with a neck injury after he was boarded by Andre Kostityn during Saturday's 3-2 loss to the Habs. Tim Connolly is, well, Tim Connolly and is still out with a broken rib and Max Afinogenov is out of the lineup because of a number of short-circuits between his ears. To my mind, Rivet has been pretty ordinary since returning from his knee surgery last month, a step slower.
On the good news front, Ales Kotalik is playing this evening, after missing the last 7 games with a bad hamstring. Al's size will be welcome on the RW, given the chippy (and that's putting it generously) nature of the Preds. The Sabres need him to return to score-sheet where he was to start the season, but Lindy Ruff has him skating right now with Peters and Mair on the 4th line. This suggests to me he's being rushed back to the lineup a little early to get him out on the point for the power play. Any shifts he gets 5 on 5 have to be considered gravy.
This brings me back to the link above to Mike Harrington's article today in the Buffalo News about the top-heavy nature of the Sabres offense.
So Vanek has 18, meaning the Sabres have gotten 38 of their 65 goals from just four players - Vanek, Jason Pominville (eight), Derek Roy and Clarke MacArthur (six each). That's 58.5 percent of the offense, making the Sabres one of the most unbalanced attacks in the league heading into tonight's visit by Nashville.
The rash of injuries down the middle to start the season didn't hurt the offense much as Clarke MacArthur stepped up while others, namely Stafford and Roy, were struggling to find the net. But, as the team returned to relative health the lines got shuffled and with it any chemistry between players. The question I have is, if Connolly is consistently injured and there's no one with whom Afinogenov can play with successfully, why would anyone think the Sabres are much more than a one-line team when one looks at the lower half of the lineup?
Mix in the fact that not one of the defense men are capable of getting a shot through from the point or rushing the puck up the ice to create havoc and there's no threat from the blueline. This has quickly become a predictable team offensively, if not a bit thin.
Ta,