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Latest MattiasOhlund Stories

Idea of Moving Luongo Shortsighted

After watching Vancouver play stout defense in front of All-Star goalie Roberto Luongo during a sweep of St. Louis in the first round, more was expected. The Canucks looked like a team committed to playing strong in their zone, and they knew if they could keep lanes clear for Luongo and make the extra effort to get to rebounds, they could go far.

It all blew up on them in the second round. A younger, faster, exceptionally determined Chicago team took out the Canucks in six games, and they scored 21 goals to do it. It's got some in Vancouver wondering about Luongo's future, which is the last thing that should be up in the air now.

Can Blackhawks Outskate Canucks?


(Getty Images)

The NHL cranks up the conference semifinals Thursday night, as Chicago opens their series at Vancouver. With both teams off impressive opening-round victories, who has the advantage? And will we see any hair-pulling theatrics this time around?

Video: The Glass Jaw of Mattias Ohlund

It was a testy affair in Edmonton Wednesday night. The Vancouver Canucks showed off their new purchase, and while Mats Sundin was a non-factor in the scoring, his team did skate away with a 4-2 win.

I already mentioned Willie Mitchell's first-period hit on Tom Gilbert. That seemed to start the ball rolling in terms of the physicality and flaring tempers.

Another big hit, this one by Mattias Ohlund on Erik Cole in the second period, touched off a quick fight between Ohlund and Oilers defenseman Sheldon Souray.

As you can see in the video, courtesy of hockeyfights.com, it didn't take long for Souray to take Ohlund down.



I applaud Ohlund for being willing to take that fight. The hit on Cole was one of those that you can debate until you're blue in the face, but it's probably got to be considered a clean hit in the end. That said, Souray took up for his skill player, as he should, and Ohlund immediately faced the music.

Newsmakers in the NHL: Red Wings Take Winter Classic



Pavel Datsyuk's goal (shown above) was perhaps the highlight of a great day of hockey in Chicago, and we have to give a well-deserved tip of the cap to Eric McErlain for giving us all a front row seat for the festivities and excitement around Wrigley Field.

Chicago jumped out to an early 3-1 lead after the first period, looking like it was out to send a message after Tuesday night's loss in Detroit, only to have the Red Wings roar back with five consecutive goals -- including a pair from Jiri Hudler -- to take the Winter Classic, 6-4. The Wings are now 4-0 against their original six rivals this season, while improving their record to 25-7-5.

This year's version of the classic, I thought, was far better than last season's game in Buffalo, mainly because this game wasn't played in blizzard conditions. Sure, that was exciting and awesome to look at, but it definitely hurt the on-ice play, while the ice itself was in horrible condition, resulting in multiple stoppages in play to fix massive holes. No such problems this year, just exciting hockey in a historic stadium between two classic teams wearing some awesome, awesome uniforms. Not a huge fan of the rendition of take me out to the ballgame, however. The hockey song would have been a nice touch, but, really, if that's the only negative throughout the event, well, that's a great, great thing for the sport.

Ty Conklin, playing in his third outdoor game in the NHL, stopped 33 shots in the win, while Chicago's Cristobal Huet had to be lifted early in the third period after giving up six goals on 30 shots.

Guess the Suspension: Mattias Ohlund


Friday's game between the Minnesota Wild and Vancouver Canucks was a very nasty affair. Sticks and elbows were flying like planes at JFK Airport, and both clubs are whining about and threatening the other team with retaliation.

The 'highlight' of the night was Mattias Ohlund's Spartan-like chop of Mikko Koivu's ankle, as seen in the video above. Koivu caught Ohlund with an elbow, and the otherwise mild-mannered defenseman went a bit nutso.

The NHL will be reviewing the incident, get an injury report from the Wild, and may hand out a suspension to the Swedish defenseman.
He [Ohlund] knows he made an awful mistake when he wheeled around late in Friday's game, held his stick like a baseball bat and then swung it like an axe, slashing Mikko Koivu on the back of his left leg, near his ankle.

"Obviously, I reacted in a bad way," Ohlund said. "It was a bad reaction."

The word from the Wild was that Koivu will be fine. But that shouldn't stop the league from giving Ohlund a suspension that could, be as high as five games.

The league simply cannot allow players to use sticks as weapons, and the swing Ohlund took was big enough, and hard enough to cause some serious damage.

Fully agreed. Sticks are potential deadly weapons, and such slashes should not be tolerated, injury or not. As much as Ohlund was 'provoked', the NHL could do well by setting an example and letting players know that sticks are never to be used as weapons.

That said, I don't think the NHL will do much of anything to Ohlund. I'm guessing 1-2 games at most.

Canucks Dish Out Dough for 'D'

With the Vancouver Canucks struggling to score more than two goals per game last season, GM Dave Nonis decides to go out and spend big bucks on ... defensemen?

Yes, Nonis was busy giving out contracts yesterday to veteran Aaron Miller (1 year/$1.5mil), and Kevin Bieksa (3-year extension for $11.25mil).

With the signings, the Canucks have an extremely strong and deep defensive corps.

Ohlund-Mitchell
Bieksa-Salo
Miller-Krajicek
Edler-Bourdon

Now, with the Canucks left with only about $3-4mil to sign a couple of wingers, many folks have begun speculating that a trade is in the works. The Canucks are either going to go into next season with a team that is based solely on winning 2-1 games, or somebody is going to be dealt.

Sami Salo? He just signed an extension.
Kevin Bieksa? Ditto.
Lukas Krajicek? Extension, and he's cheap.
Willie Mitchell? He's got a no-trade clause.

This leaves, of course, 30-year old Mattias Ohlund, the veteran who makes $3.5mil a season.

Ohlund has seen a slight decline in play since the lockout, and his value will only continue to decrease. His lack of quickness is noticeable some nights, and he seems to be the best trade bait available for the Canucks to relieve salary pressure AND secure a good scoring winger.

Of course, I won't claim any insider knowledge. Nonis might very well be happy to stick Bourdon in the AHL and go into the season with the defense as it stands right now.

As an aside, don't pick Miller in your office pool. He hasn't scored a goal since BEFORE the lockout (138 games!).

Luongo and Linden Push the Dallas Stars to the Brink

Another Stars/Canucks game, and another 2-1 Canucks victory. This isn't a recording!

The newly formed line of Taylor Pyatt-Bryan Smolinski-Trevor Linden accounted for Game 3's OT winner, and also both of the Canucks' goals tonight as the Canucks took a commanding 3-1 series lead by sweeping the two games in Dallas.

It would almost a tale of two separate games as the first two periods were full of weak penalty calls, misfiring Power Plays (15 penalties in all) and many disjointed offensive efforts that lead to nary a goal.

The third period featured just one penalty, called at the end of regular to Roberto Luongo, and plenty of intense forechecking with quality chances at both ends. It's as if the NHL's head office called the refs during the intermission and told them to smarten up.

To open the offensive festivities, Mattias Ohlund potted his second of the playoffs as he wired a rebound, from a Smolinski shot bouncing off of the back boards, passed a flopping Marty Turco. The Stars answered back quickly, with a tally by Darryl Sydor (an uncredited assist to Markus Naslund on a bad giveaway). Just two minutes later, Linden put the Canucks back up for good with his first of the playoffs, banging in the puck in his usual blue-collar millionaire style.

Not all great plays produce goals, however. Willie Mitchell (pictured), not an offensive powerhouse, did his best work by saving a would-be Mike Ribeiro goal that would have made it 2-2.

When the replay slowed down on the overhead scoreboard and the Dallas Stars' home fans loudly registered their opinion, everyone on the Vancouver Canucks' bench paid no attention.

Defenseman Willie Mitchell said it didn't go in. And his word was good enough for them.

Officials agreed, too, ruling that Mitchell swept a trickling puck off the goal line with 2:33 left, preserving a 2-1 Vancouver victory Tuesday night and a 3-1 lead in this first-round series.

"Willie came to the bench and said it wasn't in," Canucks center Trevor Linden said. "You always ask the guy who made the play. He's not going to lie to you."

"He's a pretty honest guy," added Vancouver coach Alain Vigneault. "So I believed him."


Yeah, as if Mitchell would have just said, "Yeah, it went in. Don't even bother checking the video replay!"

Luongo, of course, was excellent stopping 26 of 27 shots. Suffice it to say, this game was quite similar to most Canucks games this year, save for the offensive struggles of the cycling Sedins.

Of note was the continued invisibility of Mike Modano and Brendan Morrow, who were shut off of the score-sheet yet again. Modano has just one lone assist in the series and has not looked dangerous in the last three contests. Morrow has not been his usual pesky self, either, and seems to have acquired Alexei Yashin disease along with Modano.

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