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Inside Game

In the Crease

Click here for more on this story

Posted: Tuesday March 16, 1999 04:59 PM

By Pierre McGuire

Sports Illustrated

Blackhawks coach Lorne Molleken should be ashamed of the bush-league move he made in the waning moments of last Friday's 5-3 loss to the Predators. After Nashville scored an empty-net goal, Molleken sent out his fiercest players -- Bob Probert , Brad Brown , Reid Simpson and Dave Manson -- for the ensuing face-off in an obvious attempt to instigate a fight. Give Predators coach Barry Trotz credit for keeping his tough guys on the bench and thus avoiding an ugly brawl. Molleken's Dark Ages mentality doesn't belong in the NHL anymore ...

Bigger, faster players combined with the seamless glass that came with most arenas built in the 1990s has caused an increase in the number of head, neck and shoulder injuries suffered along the boards. (The seamless glass doesn't give nearly as much as the old-fashioned sectioned pieces, which occasionally popped out or shattered.) In fact, the NHL board of governors is so concerned about the injuries that at its last meeting it discussed requiring all teams to install the CheckFlex system of boards and glass by next season. CheckFlex, which three teams (the Canadiens, the Flames and the Islanders) have already switched to, uses spring-loaded end boards that compress as much as three inches on impact ...

Speaking of injuries, a number of NHL trainers feel that some knee and leg injuries can be traced to skates that are too sharp. Because of the soft ice at many venues, players with very sharp blades have a better chance of cutting deeply into the ice and having their blades become embedded in ruts ...

Three of the best foot soldiers in the NHL this season are Patrick Poulin of the Canadiens, Magnus Arvedson of the Senators and Scott Pellerin of the Blues. While these players don't make big money, they're as valuable to their teams as the top scorers on those clubs are ...

St. Louis, which, at week's end, had the league's worst save percentage (.882), is one of only three teams to use five or more goalies this season. The Blues' latest netminder, Jim Carey , who signed after he was released by the Bruins three weeks ago, bombed in his first three games (4.65 goals-against average, .788 save percentage), and some observers are wondering whether he'll ever regain the form that earned him the 1996 Vezina Trophy.

Issue date: March 22, 1999

 
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