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  • #76
    Rangers seek 2-0 series lead over Devils


    2012 STANLEY CUP PLAYOFFS
    No. 6 NEW JERSEY DEVILS

    at No. 1 NEW YORK RANGERS


    Eastern Conference Finals
    Game 2 - New York leads series 1-0
    Puck Drops: Wednesday, 8:05 p.m. ET
    Line: New York -130, New Jersey +110, Total: 4½


    The Devils look to even up the series with the Rangers before heading back to Jersey in Game 2 of the Eastern Conference Finals at Madison Square Garden on Wednesday night.

    The Rangers turned in a dominant performance in Game 1, blanking the Devils 3-0. This game was much closer than the score indicated though, as New Jersey had some terrific scoring chances that it just couldn’t cash in on. Certainly, with a week off, the Devils looked a bit rusty at times, but the Rangers are now 3-0 in Game 1s in this postseason. Conversely, the Rangers are 0-2 in Game 2s. Expect the Devils to simplify their game and work harder to create traffic in front of Henrik Lundqvist on Wednesday. Eventually, the aggressive New Jersey forecheck will force the Rangers’ d-men into some costly turnovers. NEW JERSEY is the pick to even up the series.

    This three-star FoxSheets trend also likes the Devils to prevail:

    NEW JERSEY is 18-7 ATS (72.0%, +25.3 Units) revenging a loss where team scored 1 or less goals this season. The average score was NEW JERSEY 3.2, OPPONENT 2.4 - (Rating = 3*).

    After both teams battled through the first two periods scoreless, New York defenseman Dan Girardi found the back of the net just 53 seconds into the third. Rookie Chris Kreider, who set up Girardi’s goal on a beautiful pass from the circle, added an insurance marker later in the frame and Artem Anisimov poked home the empty netter to seal the victory for the Blueshirts. It was a vintage performance for the Rangers, who were once again led by the sensational goaltending of Henrik Lundqvist (21 saves). New York won the only way it knows how—using a strong commitment to physical play and clogging all of the opposition’s shooting lanes. The Rangers out-hit the Devils 35-21 and out-blocked them 26-15.

    The Devils looked overwhelmed by the Rangers collapsing defense, allowing New York's forwards to outmuscle them along the boards. New Jersey must do a better job of winning the 50-50 puck battles to maintain possession and generate better zone time on offense. The Devs might have been shut out in Game 1, but their big guns still generated some scoring chances -- wingers Zach Parise and Ilya Kovalchuk lead the team with five and three shots on goal, respectively.

    The Rangers got precisely what they needed offensively in Game 1: depth scoring. Top line center Brad Richards was held without a goal for the first time in four home games, and linemate Marian Gaborik was held scoreless after registering at least one point in six of the seven games last round. The fact New York was able to win without these two showing up in the box score is extremely good news for Rangers fans, and if the Blueshirts continue to get production from their other forwards, it could shorten the series significantly.
    Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

    Comment


    • #77
      Wednesday, May 16

      Game Score Status Pick Amount

      New Jersey - 8:00 PM ET New Jersey +116 500

      NY Rangers - Under 5 500
      Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

      Comment


      • #78
        Thursday, May 17

        Game Score Status Pick Amount

        Phoenix - 9:00 PM ET Los Angeles -190 500

        Los Angeles - Over 4.5 500
        Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

        Comment


        • #79
          Kings aim for 3-0 series lead Thursday night

          2012 STANLEY CUP PLAYOFFS
          No. 3 PHOENIX COYOTES


          at No. 8 LOS ANGELES KINGS



          Western Conference Finals
          Game 3 - Los Angeles leads series 2-0
          Puck Drops: Thursday, 9:05 p.m. ET
          Line: Los Angeles -200, Phoenix +170, Total: 4½


          The Kings go for the jugular Thursday night, looking to take a commanding 3-0 series lead against the Coyotes as the Western Conference Finals series shifts back to Los Angeles.

          L.A. dominated Game 2 with a 4-0 win over Phoenix, improving its playoff road record to a perfect 7-0 this season—tying an NHL record. The Kings are now 10-1 in the 2012 postseason, outscoring opponents 35 to 16, and the club is on pace for the most dominant postseason since the 1988 Edmonton Oilers went 16-2 en route to the Stanley Cup. After scoring two fluky goals in Game 1, the Coyotes generated no offense in Game 2 with Los Angeles goaltender Jonathan Quick turning aside 24 shots in his second shutout of the postseason. After scoring nine goals in the first two games of their series with Nashville, the Coyotes have scored just five goals in the five subsequent games. Phoenix’s best scorers have been absent for much of the playoffs, and if they remain silent this series will be over in four games—especially with the NHL’s hottest goaltender between the pipes at the other end. If these first two games taught us anything, it’s that Phoenix has no answer for the Kings’ size, speed and physicality. It’s a crazy mismatch. Don’t fear the heavy juice in this situation, LOS ANGELES will cruise to victory again.

          This four-star FoxSheets trend also likes the Kings to win again:

          LOS ANGELES is 10-2 ATS (83.3%, +7.8 Units) against good power play killing teams - opp score on <14.5% of chances in the 2nd half of the year this season. The average score was LOS ANGELES 3.1, OPPONENT 1.6 - (Rating = 4*).

          After tallying just one goal all postseason long, L.A. trade deadline acquisition Jeff Carter finally made his presence felt in Game 2 with a hat trick. Carter was brought in to be a goal scoring force, and he finally delivered in a big road game.

          All four lines have played well for the Kings during this postseason, but the top line of Dustin Brown, Anze Kopitar and Justin Williams have 13 goals and 23 assists in the 2012 playoffs. Rookie LW Dwight King scored the opening goal of Game 2 after tallying twice in Game 1.

          It’s tough to win hockey games when your best players are not playing their best. The Coyotes were able to get by in the first two rounds thanks to some surprise offense from forwards like Mikkel Boedker (four goals, four assists) and Antoine Vermette (five goals, four assists), but Radim Vrbata (two goals, two assists) has been inexplicably silent despite leading the team in goals in the regular season (35). If he and RW Ray Whitney (team-high 77 points in regular season) can’t find a way to get going, this series won’t make it back to Phoenix for a Game 5.

          The Coyotes will be without C Martin Hanzal (three goals, two assists) in this game, as he serves a one-game suspension for an illegal hit on Los Angeles captain Dustin Brown. Hanzal was a key defensive forward tasked with defending the Kings’ top line, and given the trouble the Yotes have had stopping L.A. in this series, this can only make matters worse.
          Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

          Comment


          • #80
            NHL
            Dunkel

            NY Rangers at New Jersey
            The Devils look to take advantage of a Rangers team that is 2-8 in its last 10 playoff games as an underdog. New Jersey is the pick (-130) according to Dunkel, which has the Devils favored by 1. Dunkel Pick: New Jersey (-130). Here are all of today's picks.

            SATURDAY, MAY 19

            Game 11-12: NY Rangers at New Jersey (1:00 p.m. EST)
            Dunkel Ratings: NY Rangers 12.203; New Jersey 13.426
            Dunkel Line & Total: New Jersey by 1; 4
            Vegas Line & Total: New Jersey (-130); 4 1/2
            Dunkel Pick: New Jersey (-130); Under




            NHL
            Long Sheet

            Saturday, May 19

            --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

            NY RANGERS (60-29-0-9, 129 pts.) at NEW JERSEY (57-32-0-7, 121 pts.) - 5/19/2012, 1:05 PM
            Top Trends for this game.
            NEW JERSEY is 57-38 ATS (+12.0 Units) in all games this season.
            NEW JERSEY is 36-23 ATS (+5.7 Units) second half of the season this season.
            NEW JERSEY is 18-13 ATS (+3.5 Units) vs. division opponents this season.
            NEW JERSEY is 20-10 ATS (+30.5 Units) after a division game this season.
            NEW JERSEY is 56-22 ATS (+15.7 Units) in home games after playing 3 consecutive road games since 1996.
            NEW JERSEY is 28-21 ATS (+2.1 Units) when playing against a team with a winning record this season.
            NEW JERSEY is 17-12 ATS (+30.9 Units) when playing against a team with a winning record in the second half of the season this season.
            NY RANGERS are 60-37 ATS (+8.0 Units) in all games this season.
            NY RANGERS are 19-7 ATS (+10.7 Units) after playing 3 consecutive home games over the last 3 seasons.

            Head-to-Head Series History
            NY RANGERS is 11-9 (+0.5 Units) against the spread versus NEW JERSEY over the last 3 seasons
            NY RANGERS is 11-9-0 straight up against NEW JERSEY over the last 3 seasons
            10 of 17 games in this series have gone UNDER THE TOTAL over the last 3 seasons . (Under=+2.8 Units)

            --------------------------------------------------------------------------------




            NHL
            Short Sheet

            Saturday, May 19, 2012

            EC Finals, Game Three (Series Tied, 1-1)
            New Jersey at NY Rangers, 1:05 ET NBC
            NY Rangers: 11-5 SU as an underdog
            New Jersey: 10-3 Over off a road win by 1 goal




            NHL
            Armadillo's Write-Up

            Saturday, May 19

            Rangers (1-1) @ Devils-- New Jersey won five of last six games since losing in OT at Philly in Game 1 of last series; they've won four in row at home since its Game 3 loss in first round. Advantage in this series is total lack of travel that will serve survivor well in Finals. Rangers are now 4-4 vs New Jersey this year, with home side winning seven of last ten games overall. Rangers have allowed four goals in last three games; under is 8-2-6 in their postseason games this year. Three of five New York goals in series have come on power play (3-8); Devils are 1-7 with man advantage. Rangers have blocked 42 shots in first two games, New Jersey 22.




            NHL

            Saturday, May 19

            ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            Trend Report
            ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

            1:00 PM
            NY RANGERS vs. NEW JERSEY
            No trends available
            New Jersey is 5-1 SU in its last 6 games
            New Jersey is 8-1 SU in its last 9 games at home


            ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------




            NHL

            Saturday, May 19

            ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            Hockey Night In Canada: Rangers at Devils
            ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

            New York Rangers at New Jersey Devils (-123, 4.5)

            Series tied 1-1

            “The Battle on the Hudson” shifts across the river to the Jersey side, as the Devils look to build some momentum off their Game 2 comeback at Madison Square Garden Wednesday night.

            This is the only game of the series that features an extra day of preparation. Both teams took Thursday off and from now on, all games will be played with just one day in between.

            The cycle continues

            Admittedly, the Rangers don’t make it easy on themselves. This time of year, the only thing that matters is that you’re still playing and you win more than you lose. But it’s alarming, to say the least, how consistently inconsistent New York really is.

            While the base of this team is young and the legs appear to have plenty of jump in them, the volume of games has to become a concern. The Rangers head into this game having already played 16 in the postseason. While a team like Los Angeles is sitting pretty with only 12 games played, featuring 11 wins and a 3-0 lead on Phoenix in the Western Finals, the Rangers continue to plod right along.

            The Rangers’ competition this postseason has been the easiest possible road the East could offer: The No. 8, 7, and 6 seeds. The first two - Ottawa and Washington - took them to seven games. And New Jersey has shown plenty of scrap and probably played well enough to win Game 1 for at least 43 minutes. All told, New York is just 9-7 against the three weakest postseason seeds in the East.

            Perhaps that’s why coach John Tortorella has been so short with the media. He’s too busy trying to figure out how to get his team going and, more importantly, stay going. The Rangers still need seven more wins to snare the ultimate prize. That’s a long way to go for a team that already has seven losses.

            David the Devil

            No one knew quite what to expect from New Jersey forward David Clarkson in the postseason. A grinder for most of his career, and a player that truly fits the Devils' type of mold, Clarkson blossomed as a scorer in coach Peter DeBoer's system during the regular season.

            A year after scoring 12 goals, Clarkson netted 30 this season and remained unafraid to mix it up and defend his team in the corners. The postseason has not seen a dropoff, either. Clarkson has made his typical impact physically and when he scores, his team wins.

            In fact, all three of his postseason goals have been game winners, including the final tally in New Jersey's 3-2 win in New York Wednesday. It shouldn't come as a surprise. After all, Clarkson's game is in front of the net, altering the view of the goaltender and drawing defensemen to his perch.

            He enters Game 3 with 31 shots on goal, 43 hits, five blocks and a plus-6 rating. He also leads the team with 20 minutes in penalties, so without question, his game has remained consistent throughout.

            Young and the restless

            If it concludes with a Stanley Cup in a few weeks, the tale of Chris Kreider will make for quite the feel-good story. The Rangers rookie forward is on a run to remember. Just last month, he was in class taking exams and busy winning a national championship at Boston College.

            Now, he's in the middle of the Eastern Conference final and has developed into one of the more steady offensive players on the league's highest remaining seed. In 14 games - he was called up for Game 3 versus Ottawa in Round 1 - Kreider has four goals and six points. Two of those goals were game winners. With a regular shift in Tortorella's system, he has 21 shots on net this postseason - and he’s only 21 years old.

            Few changes expected

            The Rangers have made few personnel changes throughout the postseason, and it’s unlikely to change for Game 3. Tortorella, instead, chooses to shift things during games, like he did in Game 2 when he sat sniper Marian Gaborik for a decent stretch because he wasn’t pulling his weight in the Rangers’ shot-blocking gameplan.

            DeBoer, on the other hand, has juggled defensemen and has rotated between 19-year-old rookie Adam Larsson - a first-round pick last June - and versatile veteran Peter Harrold, who can step in and play forward as well. The latter got the call in Game 2 and had two shots on goal in the win. He has 11 shots in his last five games and has four points in the postseason. He’ll likely play again in Game 3.

            History

            The Devils have won their last four home games and five of six overall. But the Rangers have won 10 of the last 13 when playing on two-days rest. The home team has won four of the last five meetings in this rivalry and in this series, an over has yet to be cashed (0-1-1).
            Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

            Comment


            • #81
              Saturday, May 19

              Game Score Status Pick Amount

              NY Rangers - 1:00 PM ET NY Rangers +107 500

              New Jersey - Under 4.5 500
              Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

              Comment


              • #82
                Preview: Rangers (51-24) at Devils (48-28)

                Date: May 21, 2012 8:00 PM EDT

                NEW YORK (AP) - John Tortorella stood out again at a playoff news conference. Only this time it was because of his feistiness toward the New Jersey Devils and not for his brevity and contentiousness with the media.

                The New York coach defended Rangers forward Brandon Prust, who was given a one-game suspension Sunday because of an elbow to the head of New Jersey defenseman Anton Volchenkov, and accused the Devils of embellishing to draw penalties in the Eastern Conference finals.

                ``We tell our players, `Don't stay down on the ice. Get up,'' Tortorella said Sunday. ``I'll leave it at that. If we want to start discussing officials with the media, I have a long list here.'

                He then began to air it.

                Tortorella said the Devils set picks during power plays to set up shots for Ilya Kovalchuk and prevent the Rangers from getting into position to block them. He added that forward Dainius Zubrus elbowed New York defenseman Anton Stralman on Saturday, and said top New Jersey forward Zach Parise launched himself into another defenseman, Michael Del Zotto.

                Neither of those players, nor Prust, was penalized for their hits during the Rangers' 3-0 win that gave New York a 2-1 lead in the East finals.

                Kovalchuk scored a power-play goal in Game 2 that the Rangers say was made possible by a pick.

                ``We're trying not to get picked,' Rangers forward Brad Richards said. ``Sometimes you get picked. We're trying to let the refs know and have them look at it.'

                Prust had a chance to present his version of the hit during a telephone hearing with NHL disciplinarian Brendan Shanahan on Sunday morning. It wasn't enough for him to avoid having to sit out Game 4 on Monday night in New Jersey.

                ``I was able to talk quite a bit and explain where I was coming from,' Prust said. ``I was just trying to get into that check, I was at the end of a shift, just skating over for a routine check, I just wanted to rub him out and get off the ice.

                ``He bailed out of it and turned and kind of went low. It's just kind of a reaction. When you're off-balance, your arms go up, I didn't want to do a face plant into the boards. It was just kind of a reaction, I had no intent to hit him in the head there. There was nothing vicious about it.'

                Prust's elbow connected with the back of Volchenkov's helmet near the boards at 2:38 of the second period. Volchenkov stayed down for a bit, but remained in the game and didn't miss a shift.

                Prust has received only two elbowing penalties in his career.

                ``I know I've played a lot of professional hockey games and never been suspended before,' he said. ``I don't even think I had an elbowing penalty this year. I didn't even really feel that elbow. I went to the bench and thought maybe I caught him with my knee, maybe charley-horsed him.

                ``I didn't hit him that hard, I think I just kind of grazed his helmet a little bit, and it stood up. For sure he's trying to get a penalty when your helmet comes up. It's just natural to try to sell it for a power play.'

                Not surprisingly, Devils coach Peter DeBoer saw it quite differently.

                ``Head hunting. Plain and simple,' he said Saturday.

                Prust wasn't fazed a bit by DeBoer's characterization.

                ``I'm not really too worried about what he has to say,' Prust said. ``He's not my coach.'

                Prust's suspension was the 13th handed out by Shanahan during this postseason, and the second to a Rangers player. Rookie forward Carl Hagelin was given a three-game ban in the first round for an elbow to the head of Daniel Alfredsson that gave the Ottawa Senators captain a concussion.

                This is just the latest banter between the Devils and Rangers and their respective head coaches.

                Tensions erupted on March 19 in the final regular-season meeting between the Atlantic Division rivals, when DeBoer had enforcers Cam Janssen, Eric Boulton and Ryan Carter in the starting lineup, and Tortorella countered with a physical lineup of Prust, Mike Rupp and Stu Bickel.

                The game began with those six players engaging in fights.

                DeBoer said Tortorella's remarks on Sunday were, ``comical.'

                ``Calling Prust a head hunter is unnecessary,' Rangers defenseman Marc Staal said. ``He has been a pretty honest player his whole career.'

                Tortorella backed up Prust on Sunday, saying he didn't feel the hit warranted a suspension. He also noted that Prust has never faced disciplinary action in his five NHL seasons.

                ``Prust has played probably 300-plus games without any hearing, anything going on with him,' he said. ``He's probably one of the most honest players.

                ``Maybe if our players stayed down on the ice, we'll get something.'

                Without Prust, the Rangers could turn to Brandon Dubinsky to replace him. Dubinsky hasn't played since Game 7 of the first-round series against Ottawa, when he injured his right foot or ankle. Dubinsky skated with his teammates while wearing a contact jersey during Sunday's optional practice.

                Another possibility is Mats Zuccarello, who has been sidelined since March 23 with a broken wrist.

                ``I don't know what I'm going to do with the lineup,' Tortorella said. ``I don't think he should be suspended, so I really haven't gone that far.'

                Whether Tortorella's comments were fueled by anger or gamesmanship, the fiery coach wasn't about to sit back and have one of his players attacked at this critical juncture of the playoffs.

                ``We pride ourselves on playing hard between the whistles,' Staal said. ``We don't have guys on our team that dive and try to embellish.'

                New York is looking to grab its first two-game lead in the playoffs. The Rangers were forced to seven games in the first two rounds by Ottawa and Washington, and would like to bring a 3-1 edge home to Madison Square Garden for Game 5 on Wednesday night.

                The Devils could have a few new looks on Monday night, too. New Jersey is on the verge of getting forward Jacob Josefson into the lineup for the first time in the playoffs. Josefson, who practiced on a line with Alexei Ponikarovsky and David Clarkson on Sunday, has been out since he broke his left wrist on April 3.

                ``Coach told me I'm playing, and I'm very ready to go,' Josefson said. ``It feels great. My body feels great. It may be a little tough stepping in, but I'm a little more excited than anything. I've been getting better every day and I felt I could play in this series. It's just a matter of when. I just hope I do well.'

                Josefson's return will likely force out struggling veteran Petr Sykora, who practiced with the extra players on Sunday.

                ``He finished the season very strong,' DeBoer said of Josefson. ``The last three, four weeks of the season he was great. Fresh legs this time of year, you're 15 games into a playoff run, can never hurt. He's been an effective guy for us, and we missed him while he was out.'

                DeBoer also tinkered with his lines and split up the high-powered duo of Kovalchuk and Parise.

                ``I was everywhere today,' Kovalchuk said.

                Zubrus took Kovalchuk's place at right wing alongside Parise and Travis Zajac. Kovalchuk, who has played right wing since Nov. 2 against Toronto, went back to left wing on a line with Adam Henrique and Patrik Elias.

                ``We got shut out and we're trying to generate some offense,' DeBoer said. ``It's been a general procedure for us to move some people around. The easy thing would be to stick with what we had, but we decided to shuffle some things around and hopefully we'll get results from it. Zubrus with Parise and Kovalchuk, they've had some chemistry in the past, prior to me even getting here. I hope that can translate to some chances.'
                Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                Comment


                • #83
                  Devils look to tie up East Finals at 2-2 on Monday

                  2012 STANLEY CUP PLAYOFFS
                  No. 1 NEW YORK RANGERS

                  at No. 6 NEW JERSEY DEVILS


                  Eastern Conference Finals
                  Game 4 – New York leads series 2-1
                  Puck Drops: Monday, 8:05 p.m. ET
                  Line: New Jersey -120, New York +100, Total: 4½


                  The Devils look to even up the series for a second time when they take on the Rangers in a pivotal Game 4 in New Jersey on Monday night in the Eastern Conference Finals.

                  The Devils were unable to capitalize on the momentum from their Game 2 win in New York, squandering home ice in a 3-0 loss on Saturday. Game 3 was a mirror image of Game 1—where both teams played even hockey through the first 40 minutes before the Rangers took over in the third period for two goals and an empty netter. Once again, Henrik Lundqvist stole the show for the Blueshirts, stopping all 36 shots he faced for his NHL-best third shutout of the postseason. With a win on Monday night, New York would take a commanding 3-1 series lead with a chance to close it out on home ice on Wednesday, but to do it, the Rangers will need to buck a troubling trend. Since winning Games 6 and 7 against the Senators in the first round, New York has not won back-to-back games in a series. Starting with Game 1 of the Washington series, the Rangers have zigzagged back and forth, following up each win with a loss in the next game. Perhaps it’s a byproduct of their defensive style of play, but the Rangers seem to take their foot off the gas after wins. The Blueshirts are 0-2 in Game 4s in the playoffs this year, and expect New Jersey to play its best game of the series to prevent blowing both games at home. The Devils played very well for the first two periods on Saturday and had multiple quality scoring chance, but simply could not get anything past Lundqvist. If the Devs stick to their game and continue their aggressive forecheck, NEW JERSEY will eventually get some pucks in the back of the net and even up the series.

                  This three-star FoxSheets trend also likes the Devils to win:

                  N.Y. RANGERS are 0-6 ATS (-7.8 Units) when leading in a playoff series this season. The average score was NY RANGERS 1.8, OPPONENT 2.8 - (Rating = 3*).

                  New York broke a scoreless tie 3:19 into the third period of Game 3 on a wrister from defenseman Dan Girardi (three goals, eight assists in 2012 playoffs). The Rangers have now gotten a goal from a d-man in five of their past six games, and Girardi’s 11 playoff points are second only to C Brad Richards who has 13 (six goals, seven assists).

                  Rookie LW Chris Kreider (five goals, two assists in 2012 playoffs) stayed red hot for the Rangers in Game 3, scoring his third goal of the series. The 21-year-old Boston College product leads the Rangers in points in this series with four.

                  The Devils shouldn’t be too concerned after Game 3—sometimes a world-class goaltender like Lundqvist is going to steal a game. The Devils had a ton of great scoring chances—outshooting the Rangers 36-22—but the bounces just didn’t go their way. New Jersey’s top line of Zach Parise, Travis Zajac and Ilya Kovalchuk had an especially rough game with each player posting a -2 rating. Kovalchuk’s lazy defensive zone coverage led to Kreider’s goal, which came off a tip-in from a Ryan McDonagh point blast.

                  Look for Devils’ head coach Peter DeBoer to switch up the lines in Game 4, moving Kovalchuk down to play LW on the second line with Adam Henrique and Patrik Elias and bringing Dainius Zubrus up to play on the right side with Zajac and Parise.
                  Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                  Comment


                  • #84
                    NHL
                    Long Sheet

                    Monday, May 21

                    Update

                    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                    NY RANGERS (61-29-0-9, 131 pts.) at NEW JERSEY (57-33-0-7, 121 pts.) - 5/21/2012, 8:05 PM
                    Top Trends for this game.
                    NY RANGERS are 0-6 ATS (-7.8 Units) when leading in a playoff series this season.
                    NY RANGERS are 8-15 ATS (-10.3 Units) after shutting out their opponent in their previous game over the last 2 seasons.
                    NEW JERSEY is 57-39 ATS (+10.9 Units) in all games this season.
                    NEW JERSEY is 36-24 ATS (+4.4 Units) second half of the season this season.
                    NEW JERSEY is 20-11 ATS (+31.5 Units) after a division game this season.
                    NEW JERSEY is 27-16 ATS (+44.0 Units) revenging a loss versus opponent this season.
                    NEW JERSEY is 28-22 ATS (+1.7 Units) when playing against a team with a winning record this season.
                    NEW JERSEY is 29-21 ATS (+51.3 Units) when playing against a team with a winning record in the second half of the season over the last 2 seasons.
                    NY RANGERS are 61-37 ATS (+9.1 Units) in all games this season.
                    NY RANGERS are 30-21 ATS (+51.1 Units) in a road game where where the total is 5 or less over the last 2 seasons.

                    Head-to-Head Series History
                    NY RANGERS is 12-9 (+1.5 Units) against the spread versus NEW JERSEY over the last 3 seasons
                    NY RANGERS is 12-9-0 straight up against NEW JERSEY over the last 3 seasons
                    11 of 18 games in this series have gone UNDER THE TOTAL over the last 3 seasons . (Under=+3.9 Units)
                    Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                    Comment


                    • #85
                      NHL

                      Monday, May 21

                      Game Score Status Pick Amount

                      NY Rangers - 8:00 PM ET New Jersey -122 500

                      New Jersey - Under 5 500
                      Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                      Comment


                      • #86
                        NHL

                        Tuesday, May 22

                        Game Score Status Pick Amount

                        Los Angeles - 9:00 PM ET Phoenix +113 500

                        Phoenix - Under 4.5 500
                        Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                        Comment


                        • #87
                          Rangers And Devils Return To MSG All-Even

                          The contentious Eastern Conference Finals between the New York Rangers and New Jersey Devils returns to Madison Square Garden at 8:00 p.m. (ET) on Wednesday night.

                          A look out west at the Los Angeles Kings and Phoenix Coyotes series is first on the agenda. This is a Game 5 and the Kings can end the series for a second time after failing to get the job done on Sunday (2-0 home loss). Savvy veteran Shane Doan had both goals and Mike Smith was great between the pipes with 36 saves.

                          The Kings went 0-for-6 on the power play and are just 6-for-70 (8.6 percent) for the playoffs. They’ve been able to win despite this so far, but it is something to keep an eye on.

                          The Tuesday night affair at 9:00 p.m. (ET) has Los Angeles as 130 road favorites and a total of 4½, shaded to the ‘over.’ It’s no surprise the Kings are favored as they’ve been playing great hockey overall and have incredibly won all seven road playoff games this year. The two this series were by a combined margin of 8-2.

                          Don Best Sports analyst Brian Blessing has loved the Kings since before the playoffs, but couldn’t help but be impressed by Phoenix last game. The Coyotes showed a lot of guts to stave off elimination and play at least one more game in front of the home fans. If Smith stands on his head again, this series will go back to L.A. with the pressure squarely on the home team.

                          Getting back to the Rangers and Devils, the series is tied 2-2 and has alternated winners each game. New Jersey got a crucial 4-1 home win on Monday and this is really getting ugly after a punch on goalie Marty Brodeur by Mike Rupp and a screaming match between coaches John Tortorella and Peter DeBoer.

                          This is down to a best-of-three and the Rangers are 130 favorites on Wednesday with a total of 4 ½, shaded to the ‘over.’

                          This is the third time in these playoffs that the Rangers have returned home tied 2-2. Against Ottawa in the first round, they lost 2-0 in Game 5 before winning in seven. Against Washington last round, they won Game 5 in overtime 3-2 before also winning in seven.

                          The Devils were tied 2-2 in games in the first round against the Panthers They lost Game 5 in Florida 3-0 before winning the next two (both in OT) and the series.

                          Blessing believes the Devils have been the better team, with Rangers goalie Henrik Lundqvist the reason the series is even tied. The atmosphere is going to be electric in the Big Apple, so don’t miss this one
                          Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

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                          • #88
                            2012 STANLEY CUP PLAYOFFS

                            No. 6 NEW JERSEY DEVILS

                            at No. 1 NEW YORK RANGERS


                            Eastern Conference Finals
                            Game 5 – Series tied 2-2
                            Puck Drops: Wednesday, 8:05 p.m. ET
                            Line: New York -130, New Jersey +110, Total: 4½


                            The Hudson River Rivalry shifts back to Madison Square Garden for Game 5 on Wednesday as the Eastern Conference Finals become a best-of-three series.

                            True to their postseason zigzag trend, the Rangers dropped Game 4 by a 4-1 score on Monday in New Jersey. The Blueshirts have now failed to notch back-to-back wins in a series in 11 straight games, and New York fell to 0-3 in Game 4’s in these playoffs. The Devils played like the hungrier team, and head coach Peter DeBoer’s line shifting had a positive effect on the New Jersey lineup, as the Devils became the first team to score more than three goals on the Rangers in the postseason. After four games, it’s clear that the Devils hold an advantage at the forward position when they show a commitment to creating traffic in front of Rangers’ goaltender Henrik Lundqvist. If the Devs continue to forecheck aggressively, they have enough team speed to bury a Rangers team that continues to struggle to generate consistent offense. The way this series has gone though, it would be difficult to pick against the Rangers at home coming off a loss. Instead, look to the total: in the Rangers’ seven games immediately following a loss in the 2012 playoffs, the under is 5-0-2. New York might not win, but you can be sure that John Tortorella’s club will play with a renewed sense of vigor and discipline, making for a hard-fought, low scoring battle. The UNDER is the play.

                            This three-star FoxSheets trend also likes the total to go Under 4.5 (+100):

                            Play Under - Home teams against the total (N.Y. RANGERS) - revenging a road blowout loss versus opponent by 3 goals or more, a good team (60% to 70%) playing a marginal winning team (51% to 60%) in the 2nd half of the season. (44-17 since 1996.) (72.1%, +26.9 units. Rating = 3*).

                            The Devils set the tone right from the opening faceoff on Monday, and like Game 2, were able to get the first goal of the contest to set the tone. New Jersey plays such a high-pressure system, constantly applying pressure to keep the puck in the offensive zone, that you can start to see some of fatigue on the Rangers blueline. Tortorella opts to play four defensemen regularly while using two sparingly, and for a team that has already played in two seven-game series, you have to believe the New York defensive corps is starting to tire.

                            In Game 3, DeBoer shifted Kovalchuk down to play LW on the second line with Adam Henrique and Patrik Elias and brought Dainius Zubrus up to play on the right side with Travis Zajac and Zach Parise—and the switch proved to be a genius move. Parise had two goals and an assist—a beautiful cross-ice saucer pass to Zajac on a 2-on-1—to lead New Jersey. Henrique and Kovalchuk chipped in assists on Parise’s third-period power play tally, which put the game out of reach. Martin Brodeur also had a strong showing in between the pipes, turning away 28-of-29 shots to increase his SV Pct. to a robust .931 for the series.

                            It’s no secret that scoring the first goal is important in the NHL, but for the Rangers, it is imperative. In the 2012 playoffs, the Blueshirts are 9-2 when they score first, and 1-6 when they don’t. Make no mistake, this glaring statistic is a direct byproduct of New York’s defensive style, and don’t expect that to change against an aggressive offensive team like the Devils. The Rangers are an excellent hockey club, but they simply do not play a style conducive to playing from behind. Look for Henrik Lundqvist (1.65 GAA, .939 SV Pct. in 2012 playoffs) to have a big bounce-back game on Wednesday after allowing a soft goal to open up the scoring in Game 4.
                            Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

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                            • #89
                              Wednesday, May 23

                              Game Score Status Pick Amount

                              New Jersey - 8:00 PM ET NY Rangers -124 500

                              NY Rangers - Over 5 500
                              Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                              Comment


                              • #90
                                Friday, May 25

                                Game Score Status Pick Amount

                                NY Rangers - 8:00 PM ET New Jersey -118 500

                                New Jersey - Over 4.5 500
                                Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                                Comment

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