Thursday, July 3, 2008

Damn It, Kings!

Out with the old, in with who?

Yet another King has left the kingdom as captain and defensive badass Rob Blake is taking a trip up the coast to join rivals San Jose for the upcoming season. No Lubo, no Brad Stuart, no Blake - exactly who is playing the blue line with any real experience? Sez Yahoo! Sports:

The veteran defenseman signed a one-year, $5 million contract with the Sharks on Friday, leaving Pacific Division rival Los Angeles for a more immediate chance at playoff success.

Blake is the longtime face and soul of the Kings, spending 13 1/2 of his 18 NHL seasons with Los Angeles, including the past two campaigns. Just last month, Blake said he expected to re-sign with the club—but when the Kings didn’t contact Blake in the first few days of free agency, the Sharks quickly grabbed their rivals’ captain to mentor their young defensemen while easing the impact of Brian Campbell’s departure.

“San Jose is something I’ve always admired,” said Blake, a seven-time All-Star. “They have a ton of potential, and they’re always right there every year. The excitement is in moving up the road a little and playing for a championship again.”

The 38-year-old Blake is one of the NHL’s most respected blueliners, and he showed no signs of slowing down last season, according to Sharks general manager Doug Wilson, a longtime admirer. Blake has 702 career points, tied for fourth among active players at his position, and a Stanley Cup championship from his time with the Colorado Avalanche in 2001.

He leaves the losing Kings for the division champion Sharks, whose defensive shortcomings played a role in their playoff struggles over the past few years. San Jose has been eliminated from the second round in each of the past three postseasons, leading to coach Ron Wilson’s firing this summer.

He’ll get significant responsibility from new coach Todd McLellan in the Sharks’ six-man defensive rotation, which looks solid despite Campbell’s defection to Chicago.

“He’s a player that we’ve identified for a long period of time as someone that would fit into our club,” said Wilson, who chased Blake at each of the past two trade deadlines. “He’ll play a lot of minutes, and players like this, great players, need to have the ability to win to really thrive.

“I think he enjoys mentoring young players and all that, but you do need to be able to win to bring out the best in you,” Wilson added. “He can still skate. He can still play. In fact, maybe the last half of last season was among the best I’ve seen him play.”

The signing is San Jose’s first move on the summer free agent market. The Sharks lost Campbell this week to the Blackhawks, who lavished San Jose’s late-season trade acquisition with an eight-year contract worth nearly $57 million.

Blake, who won the Norris Trophy in 1998, has been remarkably durable late in his career, playing at least 71 games in every season since 2001. Blake had nine goals and 22 assists last season while logging big minutes, and his right-handed shot is badly needed on the Sharks’ power play.

Blake didn’t know why Kings GM Dean Lombardi didn’t return his calls after free agency opened Tuesday, but Wilson made his first call to Blake, who said he wasn’t sure he would be up for yet another year of rebuilding in Los Angeles anyway.

“I’m not really sure what happened down the line there,” Blake said. “The team is going to keep growing. I wish them all the best, and years down the road, I’m sure I’ll be watching them.”


Blake also is a three-time Canadian Olympian, teaming with Sharks star Joe Thornton.

“I’ve gotten to play with Rob at several international tournaments, and we’ve built a friendship over the years,” Thornton said. “He’ll fit right into our group, and more importantly will help us win.”

So we didn't pull the trigger on Blake? Lombardi, what the shit, man (listen to him defend his direction from a few days ago)? The Kings didn't move him before the trade deadline and got nothing in return, and now all they've done is clear salary cap space - which they've yet to use. In all the signings over the last few days of free agency, there is yet to be a splash for the Kings, landing a big name player on offense or defense. I understand holding to some money for resigning young studs Kopitar and Johnson after this campaign, but where are the impact players with experience to help guide these youngsters? And granted, ESPN analysts are not haranguing the Kings too much, grading it as a decent but not terrific acquisition by the Sharks, but with another solid veteran gone from the D, where does that leave the Kings other than younger and still rebuilding?

With a coach yet to be named and half our defensive core gone, I worry that this "rebuilding" that the Kings have been doing is going to see delays in any real construction of a winning team. Yes, Pittsburgh was the Cinderella story of success over the last few years, but I don't know that the Kings are going to have the success of the Penguins going from worst-to-first. There are signs of promise in the goal, but a lacking D-line is only going to make matters worse (where's the signing of a franchise goaltender?). And the pressure is on the forwards to score now more than ever to cushion the possible soft backline. With Blake the second captain gone in as many years, who is going to wear the "C" on their sweater? I don't see any player with the leadership and experience to do it, but maybe Dustin Brown, fresh off his best season and landing a six year deal is ripe to head this upstart core of players.

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