Monday 30 April 2012

[cactuswings 1835] ex-Lion Air at Goodyear

Seen yesterday at GYR:  MD-90 PK-LIM

TL
Tobias Lutterodt

"We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security." - Dwight Eisenhower


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Sunday 29 April 2012

{coyotes} Coyotes beat Predators 5-3 to go up 2-0 in series

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GLENDALE, Ariz. (AP) The Phoenix Coyotes didn't need any overtime theatrics or miracle saves from Mike Smith.

With five players scoring in a balanced, dominant performance Sunday night, the Coyotes beat the Nashville Predators 5-3 to take a 2-0 lead in the Western Conference semifinal series.

Shane Doan, Radim Vrbata, Antoine Vermette and Martin Hanzal each had a goal and an assist, and Taylor Pyatt also scored.

''This is the best 60 minutes we've played in the playoffs, for sure,'' Coyotes coach Dave Tippett said. ''Just solid throughout.''

Ryan Suter, Patric Hornqvist and Andrei Kostitsyn scored for the Predators.

Phoenix scored three times on 19 second-period shots. The Coyotes built a two-goal lead early in the second period. Nashville twice cut it to one only to see Phoenix quickly respond.

The Coyotes avoided overtime for only the second time in eight playoff games.

''Tonight was more Coyotes-style hockey, the way we are capable of playing,'' Smith said. ''We just raised the bar for ourselves.''

The best-of-seven series shifts to Nashville for Game 3 on Wednesday night.

Keith Yandle had two assists for Phoenix. Ray Whitney, who scored in overtime in Phoenix's 4-3 victory in Game 1 on Friday night, had one.

Nashville coach Barry Trotz said his team has been outscored 8-3 in 5-on-5 situations.

''Look at a lot of the goals, there's people staring at the puck and not taking anybody,'' he said, ''and that's not going to win you anything.''

After being outshot 42-24 in Game 1, the Coyotes had a playoff-high 39 shots to Nashville's 33 in Game 2. The Coyotes knew how fortunate they were to escape with that Game 1 victory and weren't about to have a repeat performance.

''This is the way we want to play,'' Vrbata said. ''This is the way we think we will be successful.''

With its offensive production, Phoenix didn't need to lean on Smith's heroics quite so much.

''Tonight we didn't count on him completely,'' Doan said. ''We actually made it so he had a little bit of breathing room instead of having to be perfect.''

Smith had 30 saves to 34 for Predators goalie Pekka Rinne.

''I have to be better, no question, but also we have to be better as a team,'' Rinne said. ''That always goes hand and hand. We just have to bear down. We have scored enough goals to win hockey games and we're just giving up too many goals right now.''

Trotz said Rinne has ''been OK. The team in front of him hasn't.''

The Coyotes, in the second round of the playoffs for the first time since the franchise moved from Winnipeg in 1996, built a 3-1 lead with goals by Hanzal and Vrbata early in the second period.

The Predators cut it to 3-2 when Hornqvist redirected Suter's shot into the net with 5 seconds left on a power play with 8:40 left in the second.

Thirty seconds later, Rinne deflected Doan's shot, but the puck bounced right to Pyatt, who scored to make it 4-2.

Again, Nashville came back.

The Predators took advantage of a 4-on-3 situation to score on Suter's shot from the left circle 53 seconds into the third period to cut the Coyotes' lead to 4-3.

Just 2:43 later, Phoenix responded. The Coyotes won a faceoff in the Nashville end, Vermette took a shot and Doan deflected it in to make it 5-3 with 16:24 remaining.

For the start, Phoenix mounted offensive pressure, breaking through with Vermette's goal with 11:28 left in the opening period. Mikkel Boedker controlled the puck, then got it to Yandle, who fired a pass from the right circle in front of the net, where Vermette tapped it in for his team-high fifth goal of the playoffs.

Nashville tied it late in the period after a brilliant assist from Kevin Klein, who, as he was knocked to the ice by Adrian Aucoin, extended his stick to flip the puck to Kostitsyn on a breakaway. Kostitsyn slipped the puck past Smith's right into the net with 2:47 remaining.

Phoenix took the lead for good at lead 2-1 3:47 into the second period with another nice assist. This time, Vrbata brought the puck down the center of the ice, and took it behind the Nashville net. From there, he passed it into the crease where Hanzal got a stick on it and the puck slipped between Rinne's legs for the score.

Vrbata, Phoenix's leading goal scorer in the regular season, got his second of the playoffs, scoring after Whitney's shot was deflected far in front of the net to make it 3-1 7:05 into the second period.

''We didn't have as many guys I thought bring their A game tonight,'' Trotz said, ''and you can't have that this time of year.''

Notes: Nashville had two penalty kills. ... The Coyotes acquired Vermette from Columbus on Feb. 22 for a pair of draft picks and a minor league goaltender. ... Phoenix D Rostislav Klesla took a puck to the face 33 seconds into the game and was bleeding profusely as he left the ice. He returned wearing a jaw guard late in the second period. ... The Arizona Republic reports that former San Jose Sharks President Greg Jamison continues in talks with the city of Glendale over a lease agreement to pave the way for his purchase of the Coyotes, but stumbling blocks remain. .... The crowd was announced as a sellout of 17,217. ... Nashville was 2-0 on the road in its first-round victory over Detroit.

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Read More :- "{coyotes} Coyotes beat Predators 5-3 to go up 2-0 in series"

Saturday 28 April 2012

{coyotes} Predators-Coyotes Preview - Game 2

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GLENDALE, Ariz. (AP) Phoenix goalie Mike Smith stretched out to block a shot from a charging Nashville player and watched as his stick sailed to the backboards.

No way to reach his waffleboard, Smith slid back and forth across the crease, trying to stay low, throwing up his gloves whenever the puck came his direction. His teammates cleared the puck after about 30 seconds and Smith let off a sigh of relief.

''We practice that ... but I'm not real comfortable with it,'' Smith said.

His team should be feeling a little uneasy, too.

Despite pulling out a 4-3 win over the Predators in Game 1 of the Western Conference semifinals Friday night, the Coyotes know they have a lot of work to do to have a shot at winning the series.

That's right. The winning team may have more adjustments to make than the losers.

The Coyotes have been playing this tightrope game to near perfection throughout the playoffs, leaning heavily on Smith and coming through with the big shot, usually in overtime.

It's worked so far; Phoenix won its first-round series over Chicago and the opener against Nashville, becoming the first team in NHL history to go to overtime in six of its first seven playoff games.

The Coyotes know it can't continue against the Predators, a team that plays the same kind of close-to-the-vest style and has a superb goalie of their own in Pekka Rinne.

''We've got to be better because sooner or later it's going to cost us,'' Coyotes forward Daymond Langkow said Saturday after practice at Jobing.com Arena. ''We sit back in the third, we've had leads, we just need to be more aggressive. We just sat back and you can't do that against a good team like that.''

A series that was expected to be low scoring got off to a surprising start with seven goals in the first game.

After the Predators shook off a sluggish start - they had a week off after beating Detroit in the first round - both teams played crisply in the first two periods, snapping passes, trading goals, each goalie throwing in some big saves.

Once the third period starts, Nashville picked up the pressure and dominated, spending what felt like 19 of the 20 minutes in Phoenix's zone.

The Predators had the Coyotes chasing the entire period, outshooting them 16-1 while forcing three power plays. Martin Erat scored on the third one, with 4:42 left in regulation, and Nashville appeared to be in control headed into overtime.

But the Predators, who've been known to steal a game or two when they were outplayed, ended up on the short end this time, losing in overtime when Ray Whitney took a pass from Martin Hanzal and flipped it past Rinne for the game-winner and a 1-0 series lead.

''They're opportunistic, they've got a great goaltender - they're a lot like us,'' Predators center Mike Fisher. ''We got some of those wins against Detroit, so we've seen it and know what to expect, but it was just a matter of coming up a bit short.''

In a series that was billed as a showdown between two of the NHL's best goaltenders, Smith won round 1.

Coming off a superb regular season in his first run as a no-doubt No. 1 goalie, Smith has been spectacular during the playoffs, practically willing the Coyotes over the Blackhawks in the first round.

He had his first career playoff shutout in the clincher over Chicago in Game 6 and again was stellar against the Predators while facing nearly twice as many shots at Rinne.

Smith was at his best after Erat's goal, flipping and flopping, stretching and splitting to reach every shot Nashville sent at him.

No stick? No problem. Smith survived the dicey stick-losing seconds in overtime and finished with 39 saves while Rinne had 20.

''He's a good goalie, you can't deny that,'' Predators captain Shea Weber said. ''He had a good series against Chicago and he was good yesterday.''

The worry for the Coyotes is that they're relying on Smith a little too much.

Good as Smith has been, Phoenix can't keep falling back into protection mode whenever they have a lead. Four times in the playoffs the Coyotes have allowed tying goals in the third period, in part because they've sat back and stopped attacking, spending far too much time in their own zone and giving up way too many good chances.

Smith has been good after giving up the late goals, leading Phoenix to four overtime victories, but the Coyotes know they're playing with fire, particularly against an equally-opportunistic team like the Predators.

''It's not the prettiest hockey, and people can say what they want about it, but we've just got to find a way to win,'' Coyotes captain Shane Doan said. ''We pride ourselves as a group in doing that. Obviously, we're pretty thankful that Smith has been as good as he's been. At the same time, we have to be better as a group, as a whole.''

So do the Predators, who did just about everything right except the most important thing: win.

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Read More :- "{coyotes} Predators-Coyotes Preview - Game 2"

{coyotes} Klesla showing off his offensive skills

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GLENDALE, Ariz. -- With his new helmet visor protecting an eye that met up with the butt end of a stick in Chicago six days ago and a sudden explosion of offensive prowess, Coyotes defenseman Rostislav Klesla has picked up a new nickname among his three Czech teammates and friends.

"Oh, you mean 'Nicklas Klesla' over there?" Phoenix sniper Radim Vrbata said, talking loud enough for the next three locker stalls in "Czech Corner" to hear. "Did you see the goal celebration he has? I remember that from when we were in juniors when he used to score 50 points a year. Don't let him fool you. He knows what do to with that puck."

It's been more than a decade since Klesla was the fourth player taken in the 2000 NHL Draft, as much for the offense he could deliver than his ability to be physical and defend against skilled players. He's never lived up to those offensive projections. But during these playoffs, the 6-foot-3, 225-pound shot blocker and crease-clearer has enjoyed a flashback to the old days when goals were a surprise and points were expected.

Klesla had a big second period Friday with a goal – on a scoring chance he created – and an assist for starting a transition break that led to Mikkel Boedker's goal as the Coyotes started the Western Conference Semifinals with a 4-3 overtime win against Nashville.

And while Ray Whitney goal celebration in overtime was played again and again on replay, The Coyotes were talking about Lidstr … um, Klesla dropping to one knee and delivering a few fist pumps after putting his own blocked pass attempt by Nashville goalie Pekka Rinne on the backhand.

"Rusty is hot. I'm serious," said fellow Czech Martin Hanzal, who couldn't wait to chime in on the subject. "He's going to stay hot too. When he got that first goal in Chicago (during a three-point night in Game 3) he got more confidence and it's been working for him."

That three-point night in Chicago was only the second three-point night of his NHL career – and the first in more than six years. The Coyotes won 3-2 in overtime and Klesla had a hand in each goal. He played only nine minutes in Game 6 – wearing a full face cage to protect the gash on his eye – but the three-day break after eliminating the Blackhawks gave him time to heal, and fire up the offense again.

When you look at the Phoenix scoring leaders so far in the postseason there is Klesla, tied with Antoine Vermette with six points (two goals, four assists) and among the leaders with 16 shots on goal. While he's doing the job in the offensive zone, Klesla still leads the team in hits (six), blocked shots (three) and logged nearly 25 minutes of ice time.

This from a guy who had three goals and 13 points in 65 games during the regular season and has just 10 goals in his last 186 games. But go back before 2008-09 and you will find a player who scored 21 times for Columbus over three seasons (2005-08) and collected 59 points over that span.

"I had so many chances early in the year, I just couldn't bury them," Klesla said. "Now you get a couple of lucky bounces and you're getting points. I know my job, to play good defense and frustrate people and not give them any free nights. Only the top-top defenseman can put up offensive numbers and still be part of a shutdown pair.

"But the fun of the game is playing both end of the ice. When there are opportunities, I'm going to jump up in it and try to create something. When you can have a chance to pinch, the forwards love it they don't have to come back every time."

The forwards also love it when a player who sacrifices so much for the team is rewarded by lighting the lamp.

"That's what the playoffs are all about, different heroes on different nights and our team gets contributions like that all year. They just aren't as noticed," captain Shane Doan said. "You look at (fourth-liners) Daymond Langkow (four postseason points), Gilbert (Brule; two goals, three points) and (Kyle) Chipchura (one goal, two points) -- that line is as good as we had Friday."

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Read More :- "{coyotes} Klesla showing off his offensive skills"

AW: [cactuswings 1834] Storage News

Dave, some Small correction

 

Mojave

 

ABX46                  B763      departed Apr 27 to Wilmington Air Park = N317CM

 

Some addition

 

Marana

 

DAL9932              B752      departed Apr 27 to San Antonio N690DL

 

Skyliner Chris

 

 

 

Von: cactus-wings@googlegroups.com [mailto:cactus-wings@googlegroups.com] Im Auftrag von Dave Richardson
Gesendet: Samstag, 28. April 2012 14:18
An: cactus wings
Betreff: [cactuswings 1833] Storage News

 

Hi all

 

This weeks moves.

 

Victorville

 

QFA6027         B734    arrived Apr 27 from Honolulu = VH-TJU

 

QFA6021         B744    arrived Apr 26 from Los Angeles = VH-OJB

 

CJC2372          DH8D  arrived Apr 23 fromTucson

 

CJC5719          DH8C   arrived Apr 23 from Tucson

 

ANA9432         B763    arrived Apr 22 from Anchorage, flew Tokyo HND – Anchorage Apr 21 = JA8257

 

Mojave

 

ABX46             B763    departed Apr 27 to Wilmington Air Park = N316CM

 

Marana

 

BOE779           B744    arrived Apr 25 from Gimpo = N779BA

 

DAL9932         B752    departed Apr 27 to San Antonio

 

TUA3212         B717    departed Apr 26 to Goose Bay via Dayton = EZ-A107

 

DAL9931         MD90  departed Apr 25 to Cecil Field = N953DN

 

N250MY          B762    departed Apr 24 to Phoenix

 

Goodyear

 

SXA917            MD11  arrived Apr 26 from Miami = N277WA

 

UAL9925         B735    departed Apr 26 to Tupelo

 

Roswell

 

AAL9624         B752    is planned to arrive from Dallas DFW Apr 28

 

AAL9608         MD82  arrived Apr 26 from Dallas DFW

 

AAL9676         B752    arrived Apr 25 from Dallas DFW

 

AAL9664         B752    arrived Apr 23 from Dallas DFW

 

AAL9652         B752    arrived Apr 22 from Dallas DFW

 

Rome RME

 

N262AV           A320    departed Apr 27 to Medellin

 

BRgds

 

Dave

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Read More :- "AW: [cactuswings 1834] Storage News"

[cactuswings 1833] Storage News

Hi all

 

This weeks moves.

 

Victorville

 

QFA6027         B734    arrived Apr 27 from Honolulu = VH-TJU

 

QFA6021         B744    arrived Apr 26 from Los Angeles = VH-OJB

 

CJC2372          DH8D   arrived Apr 23 fromTucson

 

CJC5719          DH8C   arrived Apr 23 from Tucson

 

ANA9432         B763    arrived Apr 22 from Anchorage, flew Tokyo HND – Anchorage Apr 21 = JA8257

 

Mojave

 

ABX46              B763    departed Apr 27 to Wilmington Air Park = N316CM

 

Marana

 

BOE779           B744    arrived Apr 25 from Gimpo = N779BA

 

DAL9932          B752    departed Apr 27 to San Antonio

 

TUA3212         B717    departed Apr 26 to Goose Bay via Dayton = EZ-A107

 

DAL9931          MD90  departed Apr 25 to Cecil Field = N953DN

 

N250MY          B762    departed Apr 24 to Phoenix

 

Goodyear

 

SXA917            MD11  arrived Apr 26 from Miami = N277WA

 

UAL9925          B735    departed Apr 26 to Tupelo

 

Roswell

 

AAL9624          B752    is planned to arrive from Dallas DFW Apr 28

 

AAL9608          MD82  arrived Apr 26 from Dallas DFW

 

AAL9676          B752    arrived Apr 25 from Dallas DFW

 

AAL9664          B752    arrived Apr 23 from Dallas DFW

 

AAL9652          B752    arrived Apr 22 from Dallas DFW

 

Rome RME

 

N262AV           A320    departed Apr 27 to Medellin

 

BRgds

 

Dave

Read More :- "[cactuswings 1833] Storage News"

Friday 27 April 2012

{coyotes} Coyotes pull out 4-3 overtime win over Predators

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GLENDALE, Ariz. (AP) The Phoenix Coyotes have had a knack for withstanding nearly everything their opponent throws at them before landing the big blow.

They know it can't keep going like this.

Ray Whitney scored 14:04 into overtime and the Coyotes survived another late goal in regulation to open the Western Conference semifinals with a 4-3 victory over the Nashville Predators on Friday night.

''The third period they cranked it up and we didn't respond,'' said Phoenix's Dave Tippett, who looked more like the losing coach than the winner. ''We're fortunate to get the first one under our belt, but if we expect to have a chance to win this series, we're going to have to be far better than we were tonight.''

It's been like this pretty much throughout the playoffs for the cardiac Coyotes.

Phoenix was 33-1 when leading after two periods during the regular season, but has struggled to close out playoff games. The Coyotes allowed four tying third-period goals against Chicago in the first round and did it again against the Predators, giving up one to Martin Erat on a power play with 4:42 left.

Even with the Predators dominating the third period and overtime, the Coyotes wouldn't let them score, getting big saves from goalie Mike Smith and shuttling the puck out of their zone when they got tired - which was a lot.

With a rare faceoff in Nashville's end in overtime, Phoenix won its first second-round playoff game as an NHL franchise when Whitney flipped a backhander between Pekka Rinne's pads after Martin Hanzal slipped a pass to him just outside the crease.

Smith made 39 saves, Rostislav Klesla had a goal and an assist, and Phoenix won despite being outshot 25-7 after the second period. Radim Vrbata and Mikkel Boedker also scored for the Coyotes, the first team in NHL history to have six of their first seven playoff games go to overtime.

Game 2 is Sunday in the desert.

''When we are up by a goal we seem to sit back and let teams come at us,'' said Whitney, who also had an assist on Vrbata's goal. ''It is frustrating. It is something we discussed and tried to fix, tried to change.''

Nashville started slow, fought back every time Phoenix scored and mostly controlled the game after the second period.

The Predators couldn't finish it off, though, unable to beat Smith after Erat's goal to lose a game they probably should have won.

Brandon Yip had his first goal of the playoffs and Andrei Kostitsyn also scored for Nashville, which had a 42-24 advantage in shots.

''We had lots of chances,'' Predators coach Barry Trotz said. ''We just didn't have that one extra puck that went in.''

This mirror-image matchup was expected to come down to which team could play the same style best.

Both teams have superb goaltenders, smart coaches and a defense-first style - attributes they used to get by more-skilled opponents in the first round.

After winning their first division title as an NHL franchise, the Coyotes survived a rash of injuries and five overtime games to beat the Chicago Blackhawks and advance in the playoffs for the first time since 1987, when the team was still in Winnipeg.

Nashville finished six wins and seven points ahead of Phoenix, but was the Western Conference's fourth seed because the Coyotes won the Pacific Division.

The Predators beat nemesis Detroit in a surprisingly easy five games in the first round behind Rinne, a finalist for the Vezina Trophy for the second straight year. That gave Nashville a week off, plenty of time to heal and rest up - and gather some rust, apparently.

Sluggish and out of synch, Nashville was on its heels early, leading to a power play midway through the first period. Vrbata capitalized, flipping a wrister from the left circle that skipped off Rinne's mask and over his stick shoulder.

The Predators seemed to snap out of their funk after that and had better puck control, tying it late in the period thanks to an awkward bounce.

Looking for nothing more than a dump-in, Francis Bouillon sent a pass along the left boards that shot almost 90 degrees to the right. With Smith in back anticipating the pass, Yip had it easy, flipping into an empty net.

Phoenix went back up early in the second period on a good bounce of its own. This one came off the back of Predators defenseman Roman Josi, who dove to block a pass and knocked it down right in front of Klesla at the edge of the crease.

Nashville again had an answer, using a turnover in Phoenix's zone midway through to set up a goal by Kostitsyn, who poked the puck under a sprawled out Smith after he couldn't cover a rebound.

Boedker scored his goal late in the period, waiting and waiting on a 2-on-1 before ripping a wrister past Rinne, who had a spectacular save on Whitney about a minute earlier.

That made it 3-2 - not quite what was expected between two of the NHL's best defensive teams.

''With these two goalies, that is probably higher than anyone would expect, but who knows, those might be the only goals we see the rest of the series,'' Whitney said.

Nashville turned up the pressure in the third period, outshooting Phoenix 16-1 to leave the Coyotes tired and floundering. The flurry led to Erat's tying goal on a rebound, sending Phoenix to yet another overtime game in the playoffs.

The Predators kept up the pressure in overtime, getting numerous good chances while allowing the Coyotes a few meager counterattacks.

The Coyotes have seemingly needed only one chance all playoffs and Smith made sure they got it, making numerous difficult saves, including one on Bouillon that sent his stick flying. Whitney cashed in on one of Phoenix's few good opportunities after the second period, taking a pass from Hanzal off a faceoff and slipping it past Rinne in overtime to help Phoenix steal Game 1.

''When we took over the game and started playing in their end, we did a lot of good things,'' Predators defenseman Shea Weber said. ''Obviously, that ended up biting us in the end - they got one chance and put it in, in overtime.''

Notes: Nashville D Hal Gill returned after missing the Detroit series with a lower-body injury. ... Phoenix killed off 18 straight penalties before Erat's goal. ... The Predators, the NHL's best power-play team during the regular season, were 2 for 26 in the playoffs before Erat scored with the man advantage.

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Read More :- "{coyotes} Coyotes pull out 4-3 overtime win over Predators"

{coyotes} Coyotes and Predators are mirror images

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GLENDALE, Ariz. -- They have flirted with financial troubles and been rumored to be headed for relocation. They have relied on a strong work ethic, a shrewd front office, smart coaching and tremendous goaltending to fight and succeed against established organizations with high-priced skilled players.

They have tried to make their sport work in areas where frozen ponds only exist indoors and hockey talk often is a foreign language.

The Phoenix Coyotes? The Nashville Predators? Try both.

Pekka Rinne and Mike Smith, Dave Tippett and Barry Trotz, the Grand Ole Opry and the Grand Canyon. Even the team logos are similar -- both feature a fierce and hungry mammal. And now two teams with so much in common can add Western Conference semifinalists to the list.

Their series opens Friday at Jobing.com Arena (9 p.m. ET, NBCSN, TSN).

If Nashville GM David Poile and the Predators patterned their success after the Detroit Red Wings, Coyotes GM Don Maloney readily admits that Nashville provided the blueprint for his path when he arrived in Phoenix in 2007.

"Since I've been here, I've looked at them as a model for us," Maloney said. "Nashville managed their payroll well, they have a great coach much like ours, great goaltending and they got the most out of what they had.

"We really are mirror images of each other, quite frankly, when it comes to style, commitment and work ethic. You don't get a free night when you play Nashville, and we feel the same is true with the Coyotes. This should be a very interesting series."

Stable ownership and a profitable bottom line have allowed the Predators to take the next step this season. Instead of watching players like Tomas Vokoun, Scott Hartnell and Dan Hamhuis walk away as free agents, they now are able to keep their home-grown talent and add high-end players, as well.

They locked up Rinne with a seven-year, $49 million extension deal in November and hope to sign star defensemen Shea Weber and Ryan Suter to new contracts, as well. The Predators were buyers at the trade deadline, adding forwards Andrei Kostitsyn and Paul Gaustad and defenseman Hal Gill to an already deep roster. The topper came in late March when dynamic Russian Alexander Radulov returned to Nashville after spending four seasons in the KHL.

The Coyotes aren't at that level yet. They can't afford the hired guns that would allow them to match up with the marquee teams. But with impressive young players like defensemen Keith Yandle and Oliver Ekman-Larsson, forwards Mikkel Boedker and Martin Hanzal and a productive farm system promising more on the way, the foundation is being laid.

"They have hard-working talent, they are four lines deep, they have two of the best defensemen in the League on the blue line and they have a world-class goaltender," Maloney said of the Predators. "I think it will be a quick [paced} series, I think it will be a hard-played series and it will be a test of will."

The Coyotes had good success limiting the time and space of Chicago stars Patrick Kane, Patrick Sharp and Jonathan Toews in a six-game victory against the Blackhawks in the first round. They'll try to lead in puck possession against the Predators, but still will rely on their system and Smith -- the star of the opening round -- to keep the ice from tilting in Nashville's favor.

"We don't have the luxury of having those highly talented players," Smith said. "But we have a good group of players and everyone is on board with what we're being taught, what we're being coached. I think the biggest thing about winning in the playoffs is playing as a group and believing in what we're doing to get us through hockey games. I think that's what's made us successful all season."

After coming off a six-game series with Chicago that featured five overtime games, the Coyotes are expecting more nip-and-tuck hockey against Nashville.

"I think they're pretty much a similar team to us," Hanzal said. "I think it's going to be a long series and it's going to be a tough one. It's going to be one-goal games, I think. We're going to do everything to win it."

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{coyotes} Coyotes will be rested for Game 1

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Not only did the Phoenix Coyotes win their first playoff series since 1987 when they eliminated the Chicago Blackhawks on Monday night, they earned themselves some much-needed rest.

After beating the Hawks in a grueling six-game series that saw the first five go into overtime, Phoenix got a welcome three-day break before the Nashville Predators come to the desert to open their Western Conference Semifinal series on Friday night.

Instead of practicing on Wednesday, the Coyotes held a team meeting instead. A few players took the ice while others received treatment or worked out. Coach Dave Tippett put his team through a practice on Thursday in preparation for the series opener on Friday night. He anticipates having everyone available for Game 1 except suspended forward Raffi Torres.

The four remaining teams in the West have a combined total of four appearances in the Stanley Cup Final -- three by St. Louis from 1968-70 and one by Los Angeles in 1993. Neither the Coyotes nor the Predators have gotten past the second round.

But both Phoenix and Nashville are here after eliminating Original Six teams -- Chicago and Detroit. The Predators have been off since beating the Wings in five games last Friday.

"It helps the grassroots. You get excitement," Tippett said of the turnover on top of the conference. "New blood in there, the more teams we can get to that element, I think that's great for the League."

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Thursday 26 April 2012

{coyotes} Phoenix Coyotes-Nashville Predators preview

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Five keys to the series:

1. Net presence: Nashville's Pekka Rinne is a Vezina Trophy finalist and is capable of controlling a series. But Phoenix's Mike Smith had better stats this regular season. He had more shutouts (eight) and a better goals-against average (2.21) and save percentage (.930).

2. Alexander the Great: Nashville's Alexander Radulov should be the most dangerous forward in the series. He sniffs out scoring chances like your best hunting dog. A play looks like nothing is happening, and then suddenly Radulov seems to slide in an open door.

3. Quiet, geniuses at work: Phoenix's Dave Tippett and Nashville's Barry Trotz are among the league's more respected coaches. Under Trotz, the Predators have always been a competitive team. Since Tippett came to Phoenix, the Coyotes have been one of the NHL's most thorough defensive squads. This could be a series decided by coaching adjustments.

4. New day, new hero: The Coyotes seem to score by committee, and Antoine Vermette is a candidate to win the Chris Kontos award for most goals (four) from an unexpected source. Keep an eye on Oliver Ekman-Larsson, who is developing into one of the league's better defensemen. Defenseman Keith Yandle's ability to move the puck is crucial to Phoenix's offensive thrust. Not blessed with overwhelming skill up front, they need help from their defense.

5. Defensive gems: The Coyotes have a great defensive system, but the Predators have two great defensive players in Shea Weber and Ryan Suter. Weber is a Norris Trophy finalist, and Suter is among the league's top six defensemen. Kevin Klein also happens to be playing like an elite defenseman for Nashville.

Forecast: Predators vs. Coyotes sounds like a movie in which the Predators devour the desert dogs in five games.

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{coyotes} Predators, Coyotes have defense, aspirations in common

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Neither the Nashville Predators nor the Phoenix Coyotes play in traditional hockey markets.

Their playoff series, which begins Friday in Phoenix, could even be seen as some kind of novelty, considering the NHL postseason mainstays — Detroit, Chicago, Vancouver and Boston — that will be watching this round from home.

But in Nashville and Phoenix, the series is huge. Both teams are trying to give their cities a conference finals appearance for the first time.

"You've got teams that have grown, you're seeing Game 7s, you're seeing highlights," Predators coach Barry Trotz said of the second-round playoff teams. "I think that's great for the game and great for different markets.

"From our standpoint, every year with the salary cap the way it is, it's going to be like this going forward. Once you get in, it's going to be anybody's ballgame, if you will."

The Predators began play with the 1998-99 season. The Coyotes moved from Winnipeg to Phoenix in 1996.

"It helps the grassroots. You get excitement," said Coyotes coach Dave Tippett, who led the Dallas Stars to a conference final in 2008. "New blood in there, the more teams we can get to that element, I think that's great for the league."

The Predators and Coyotes are similar beyond aspirations. Both have stellar defense and standout goaltenders.

Predators goalie Pekka Rinne finished the regular season with an impressive 2.39 goals-against average and .923 save percentage, and continued to look strong in the five-game series win over Detroit.

Against Chicago in his first-round series, Coyotes goalie Mike Smith stopped 229 of 241 shots, the most faced by any goaltender, after coming on strong late in the regular season. At times he seemed to will Phoenix past Chicago.

"I try to say I don't really care about another goalie that much, but you always try to be better than the other guy on the other end of the ice," Rinne said. "(Smith)'s been doing a great, great job. It's important to know what kind of goalie you're facing.

"They're strong defensively. They create a lot of offense from the points. Just a solid team with a really strong goalie."

While most analysts expect a low-scoring series, players said it's hard to predict what might happen at this stage of the playoffs.

"We never know until we play it, that's the thing," said Predators defenseman Hal Gill, a veteran of 105 playoff games. "I didn't think there would be a lot of penalties in the Detroit series but there ended up being a lot. We have to wait and see how it goes. We have to play a solid game. We know that they have good goaltending and a lot of skill. They have a good mix of everything, I guess."

The Predators stayed loose after clinching against the Red Wings last Friday and waited patiently to learn their Round 2 opponent. The potential for rust after a longer layoff isn't a major concern, Rinne said.

"We've been practicing kind of long but it's been a good tempo and everybody's been sharp," he said.

The Predators split the regular season series with the Coyotes 2-2, but those games could be considered misleading. Three of the meetings were in 2011, well before the Predators made several late-season roster additions, including Gill and forwards Alexander Radulov, Andrei Kostitsyn and Paul Gaustad.

"Definitely helped them," Coyotes forward Martin Hanzal said. "I think Radulov is a pretty good player; he's got some skill, he's got some speed. Kostitsyn as well, he's a skilled player. So, it's helped them for sure, but yeah, we want to beat them so it's going to be fun."

Hanzal also acknowledged the similarities between the two teams.

"They have a good defense and kind of play a defensive style just like we do," he said. "So, I think it's going to be a long series and it's going to be a tough one, it's going to be one-goal games."

While the Predators finished with the better regular season points-wise (104-97), the Coyotes get home ice because they won their division. Games 3 and 4 will be in Nashville next week.

Beginning the series in Phoenix may actually work better for the Predators given his team's long layoff, Trotz said.

"I'm really happy that we're starting on the road. I think it's needed for our team. I think it'll be a good way to get back into the swing of things, by going into the other team's den right off the bat," Trotz said.

"We're ready. You can tell the guys are ready to play. … They're excited about it. We're going to head to Phoenix and get this thing started."

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