Goaltender Rick DiPietro, the most valuable Islander of all, was not in net when the second period began against Toronto tonight at Nassau Coliseum. The club announced that DiPietro suffered a knee injury in the first period and would not return. He will be re-evaluated tomorrow.
Although DiPietro gave up two goals on the first four shots he faced, there was no obvious play on which he might have been injured. The Isles came back to lead 3-2 at the end of the first period.
DiPietro was replaced in goal by backup Wade Dubielewicz, who was the victim of an 8-1 mugging Oct. 11 in his first start of the season in Toronto. This marks only the fifth appearance this season for Dubielewicz, and it’s his first since starting a 4-0 loss to Atlanta on Dec. 1 at the Coliseum. The Atlanta game was his only appearance in the past 54 days.
BLOG MALFUNCTION: In case anyone is interested, I posted the following blog earlier this afternoon, but due to a technical malfunction, it never appeared. Here it is:
“The need for Jason Blake’s speed”
Walking out the tunnel from the locker room area to watch Toronto’s pregame skate today at Nassau Coliseum, a familiar figure whizzed past the glass on his way to the net. Of course, it was Jason Blake. There was no mistaking his compact, high-speed, low-to-the-ice stride and the all-business look on his face.
It was just a morning skate, but it was hard not to reflect back to the trade deadline last February and the emotion Blake played with that night. He was relieved to still be an Islander, and he exploded with a hat trick in a win over Philadelphia. It appeared he will have that same intensity tonight in his first game at the Coliseum since signing a five-year contract worth $20 million with the Maple Leafs.
My Newsday colleague, Mark Herrmann, is working on a Blake column for tomorrow’s print edition, so, I won’t repeat here everything that was said this morning. But seeing Blake’s speed was a vivid reminder of the quality he brought over the previous six-plus seasons that the Islanders lack by comparison now.
Before he was diagnosed in training camp with chronic mylogenous leukemia, Blake complained of feeling sluggish. But based on appearances, the medication must be working.
Asked if Blake is back up to speed, Toronto coach Paul Maurice laughed and said, “If he’s not, he may be the fastest guy in the league.” Recognizing Blake’s excitement for this game, Maurice added, “I can’t imagine he’ll be able to skate any faster than he has, but he’ll be able to find another gear. Good for him. It’s special the first time home. Coming into the building is always a different reaction. He’s given the fans here a lot to cheer about. He was a player to watch, so, I’m sure they’ll appreciate that.”
It’s hard to believe that Blake has only five goals on 150 shots. Asked about facing old buddy Rick DiPietro, who sat out when the Islanders lost in Toronto, 8-1, on Oct. 11, Blake joked that he might know DiPietro’s tendencies but wouldn’t be picking any corners. “For me right now,” Blake said, “it’s just closing my eyes and shooting and hoping to God they go in.”
That got a laugh. At the same time, Blake admitted his frustration with his lack of production. He began the season on the top line with Mats Sundin but now is on the third line with Kyle Wellwood and Jiri Tlusty. He received the benefit of the doubt earlier in the season because of his illness, but still, there’s an adjustment period to playing under far greater scrutiny in Toronto.
“I don’t think his game has changed a whole lot,” Maurice said. “He’s still trying to find some chemistry with other people on the ice. At the same time, he’s had some chances, and he’s had some things that haven’t gone for him around the net. We don’t feel he’s too far off.”
ISLES FILES: I didn’t cover the Isles’ 3-2 overtime win against Washington before the Christmas break, but from my seat in front of the television, the play Richard Park made to score the overtime goal absolutely is the play of the season so far, especially coming as it did after giving up a weak goal to Alexander Ovechkin in the final minute of regulation.
Park’s mental toughness and ability under pressure came to the fore when he pushed the puck ahead to himself after winning a faceoff in the Capitals’ zone, then shrugged off a hit behind the net to maintain control before passing to teammate Radek Martinek and scoring off the return pass.
Although he was hoping to score, Park’s primary objective was just to keep the puck away from the dangerous Ovechkin and Michael Nylander to prevent an OT loss. “That was my thinking,” Park said today. “There was nothing magical about it. It was just keep the puck away from those guys.”
When it was suggested that play was the best of this season, Park said, “Hopefully, there will be bigger plays than that. Preferably not in the last game, like last year.” Of course, it was Park, who scored both regulation goals in the shootout victory over the Devils that sent the Isles to the playoffs instead of Toronto.
The Islanders face a brutal schedule from here to the All-Star break. After playing Blake and the Leafs, their next three come against the three division leaders in the Eastern Conference at Ottawa tomorrow, home against the Devils on Saturday and at Carolina on New Year’s Eve. After a home game against Florida, they begin a five-game Western Conference road trip starting with division leading Colorado and ending in Ottawa. After one day off, they get a back-to-back at home against Montreal and then at the Devils. By the time they reach the All-Star break a week later, the Isles will have played 16 games, including 14 against teams with winning records and eight against teams currently leading their divisions.
Asked if this is the make-or-break portion of the schedule, Islanders coach Ted Nolan said: “We talked to our players this morning and said, ‘Usually, the real players show up after Christmas time. They forget what you did in November and October, but they certainly don’t forget what you did in February, March and April.”
Good news for the Islanders today from the World Junior championships in Czech Republic, where the U.S. beat Kazakhstan, 5-1. Isles prospects Kyle Okposo and Rhett Rakhshani, who are linemates, each scored a goal. Okposo also assisted on Rakhshani’s score, which was the gamewinner.