NHL Trade Tracker: Jan. 22-29

Crescenzi during his time with the Toronto Marlies in the AHL. Photo Courtesy of Crescenzi’s Twitter @acrescenzi92.

To be honest, I was expecting much more for the first week of the NHL Trade Tracker, but we only have one this week. Let’s take a look:

The Toronto Maple Leafs and the Los Angeles Kings interacted in their second trade of the season Jan. 22 in an exchange of AHL forwards. 21-year old center Andrew Crescenzi will now be dressing in a Manchester Monarchs uniform under the Kings organization after being a member of the Leafs’ farm system since 2010.

Crescenzi will be swapped for right winger Brandon Kozun, who was drafted 179th overall by the Kings in 2009 from the Calgary Hitmen of the Western Hockey League. He reported for the Leafs’ AHL Affiliate, the Toronto Marlies, for their game Jan. 25 against the Chicago Wolves (StL).

Goon Squad: League Officials Mug John Tortorella

I am the first person to tell you I’m not an avid hockey fan.

More than 50% of the teams in the NHL make the playoffs (a gripe for another post) so I don’t pay attention until the postseason, because my local team, the Boston Bruins, have done well in the past few years. I enjoy the sport of hockey, just not NHL regular season. (I love attending and following collegiate games on ice, so I feel as if I know enough about the sport to establish a semblance of ethos.)

So for regular-season hockey to catch my attention, something must be important.

And it is.

Vancouver Canucks Coach John Tortorella received a 15-day (6-game) suspension Tuesday for his part in a massive altercation between his club and the Calgary Flames, played last Saturday. The penalty was a result mainly of Tortorella’s attempt to enter the Calgary locker room after the first period, which was caught by cameras.

The incident began when Calgary Coach Bob Hartley submitted his lineup with his rugged fourth-liners penciled for starting. Tortorella, sensing what Hartley was up to, went tit-for-tat, playing his rugged line. Essentially, two Defenseman faced-off for the opening puck drop and you can guess what happened from there.

BOOM! 142 penalty minutes in the first two seconds of a hockey game, WOW! Needless to say, there was more real fighting in that two seconds than there is at a 90-minute WWE wrestling event.

Furthermore, I embrace fighting in the NHL and even wrote an article about it in my own blog, here. Anyway, I think the fighting aspect of hockey is fantastic. It’s the retaliatory brush back pitch in baseball, the extra-physical body on a rebound for basketball, it ensures that the players police themselves. Players self-regulation is key to the NHL because it avoids cheap-shots that make names like Sean Avery famous. Fighting stops a vengeful check into the boards, or a slash with the stick, or any other unnecessarily bodily harm done by a skate or stick for an offense committed seasons ago.

A few seasons ago is what seemed to cause this brawl, as Hartley and Totorella have a history of dislike longer – and more extensive than – criminals and police officers.

And criminal is exactly how the suspension felt when it was handed down to Tortorella. 15 days/6 games? Really? Now Hartley did not get off Scot-tape-free, but he only incurred a $25,000 penalty. He can talk to his team for the next week. As Tortorella only set his lineup as such AFTER seeing Hartley’s – how is this fair? Okay, Torty, I see where they’re coming from in suspending you for trying to break up the block party which is the first intermission in the Calgary locker room, but at the same time: really? If Tortorella leaves his best guys out there (the Sedin brothers), then they get clobbered. He puts the players – and therefore the organization – at risk if he leaves his stars out there with Kimbo Slices skating around, nary a skilled stick, but deft fists flying. Wait, you’re saying Tortorella protected the organization who employs him rather than let his stars get beat to a pulp? Unbelievable. The nerve.

In a USA Today article, NHL senior executive vice president of hockey operations Colin Campbell said, “Mr. Tortorella’s actions in attempting to enter the Calgary Flames locker room after the first period were both dangerous and an embarrassment to the League.”

An embarrassment to the League?! (First off, Calgary – at 16-27, good for 13th out of 14 teams in the Western Conference – is an embarrassment.) The league has quite the bit of intestinal fortitude to say that, because the last time I checked, they were stressing player safety and trying to avoid concussions. (Thanks, NFL.) And so they’re telling me that the Calgary Flames sticking Mr. Goon Squad Fisticuffs on the ice presents less of a threat for things they supposedly desire to eliminate than a coach trying to push through heavily padded bodies to get to a locker room? I’m not condoning what Tortorella did, but c’mon, one incident was more dangerous than the other. Think logically. Oh man. If Tortorella doesn’t stick his fighters on the ice, that’s what would’ve happened! Defenseless skill guys would get pummeled and get hurt!

Gary Bettman has seen three work stoppages in his tenure, but this gross misappropriation of fines goes beyond normal levels for him. To say in an extensive review of the evidence that Hartley’s actions vastly underwhelmed what Tortorella did is pointedly untrue. This far more of an an embarrassment for NHL brass  than it is for Coach John Tortorella. At least his actions are understandable, if not reasonable.

Sam Fortier is a contributor to Sports Compass, but is more well-known as an Alex Flum antagonist. This upcoming summer he will intern at WEEI (Boston, MA) for the Dennis and Callahan Show. He doesn’t know how to feel about the recent Sox decision to sign Grady Sizemore, but is sure that he loves warning tracks.

ADAM UNGER: DEL ZOTTO DEALT TO THE PREDS

Michael Del Zotto (right, #4) takes a shot against the New York Islanders Dec. 26, 2009. (Photo by Jim McIsaac/Getty Images)
Michael Del Zotto (right, #4) takes a shot against the New York Islanders Dec. 26, 2009. (Photo courtesy of blueseatblogs.com)

There’s nothing a fan can do about an NHL coach not particularly liking an NHL player. With the amount of players a coach sends onto the ice on a game-in, game-out basis being between 15 and 20, there should be plenty of room for players that haven’t reached their full potential, right?

Wrong. That’s where the AHL comes in. For those of you that are reading this and aren’t familiar with hockey, the AHL is like the AAA Minors in baseball, or the NBA D-League (where young guys, prospects, and injured players within the franchise play). Below that is the ECHL. To an NHL hopeful, that’s like the elephant graveyard in the Lion King. But now, we’re getting off track.

New York Rangers head coach Alain Vigneault never really took a liking to defenseman Michael Del Zotto, the Rangers’ 2008 first-round pick. Through 42 games played, the offensive defenseman scored two goals and had nine assists, with a plus-minus of negative five. Those aren’t ideal numbers for an offensive defenseman, and this season is the final season on his contract. Instead of letting him walk, he was traded to the Nashville Predators for defenseman Kevin Klein Jan. 22.

Klein, age 29, a second-round pick in 2003, is the opposite of Del Zotto. He can bring some much-needed experience and wisdom to young defensemen in the Big Apple such as Ryan McDonagh (24), John Moore (23), and prospect Dylan McIlrath (21). Despite being listed at 6’1” and 199 pounds, Klein can also bring pain and block shots, making him a great penalty killer.

Kevin Klein (left, #8) takes a shot during his tenure with the Nashville Predators. (Photo Courtesy of www.theoilersrig.com)
Klein (left, #8) takes a shot during his tenure with the Nashville Predators. (Photo Courtesy of http://www.theoilersrig.com)

Another Dan Girardi-esque defenseman is exactly what the Rangers need to put in front of Henrik Lundqvist, who has picked up his game since earning the biggest extension a goalie has ever seen. You can read more about Lundqvist’s extension and his struggles earlier this season here.

In the Central Time Zone, Del Zotto will fare much better in Nashville. The Predators are sitting exactly at .500 with a 22-22-7 record as of Jan. 22. At 6th in the Central Division, more goals need to be scored in the Music City, especially after star goaltender Pekka Rinne went down with a hip injury. When Devan Dubnyk is your goaltender, you can ALWAYS score more goals.

Didn’t I just say Del Zotto wasn’t playing up to his potential? Yeah, I did, and it kills me to say it since I wore his jersey on the Sports Compass NHL Preview. In Del Zotto’s defense, how many players have we seen elevate their game after a change of scenery? Jamie Langenbruner, Marian Hossa, and David Perron are just a few players that have found success on new teams in the past ten years.

On top of the importance of a change of scenery, Predators head coach Barry Trotz has been in Nashville for the Preds’ entire 16-season existence as an NHL team. He is the second-longest tenured head coach in major North American sports, second only to Gregg Popovich, who has led the NBA’s San Antonio Spurs dynasty since 1996. Trotz has been in Nashville for that long for a reason. He will know how to get the best out of Del Zotto.

In short, unlike most NHL trades, both teams should reap benefits from their acquisitions, and no future draft picks were involved. According to espn.com, Klein will start his career as a Ranger on the third line with John Moore, but replacing Anton Stralman on the second line is not out of reach.

With the NHL trade deadline fast-approaching on March 5, expect a weekly 2013-14 NHL Trade Tracker from yours truly.