Tuesday night's game against
Vancouver might as well have been Kids Night Out at Nationwide. When do
you know that long-suffering fans of the Columbus Blue Jackets have
packed it in for the season? When you look around Nationwide Arena and
all you see is cotton candy, Dippin' Dots and Starbust. When the lines
to rent beer (and return it) are non-existent. When the loudest mouth
in section 120 is a 5 year old girl who is yelling at the top of her
precious little lungs, "Come on Jackets! You can do it! Just score one
more time so we can go home!" God bless her.
In February of 2009, the Blue Jackets were a young team
with a veteran coach who was leading the franchise to the playoffs for
the first time in their nine year history. One year later they are an
enigma, a team many expected to finish in the top 4 or 6 in the Western
Conference, now guided by an interim coach, fighting to figure out where
things went wrong and trying re-establish themselves. As the trade
deadline arrived today, the Blue Jackets found themselves in the
familiar role of selling off excess inventory, open box items and "B"
stock in a year-end clearance event. What a difference a year makes.
After watching Ryan Miller put a less-than-star-studded
Team USA lineup on his back in the Olympics, and recalling the way Steve
Mason did much the same thing for the Blue Jackets last season, it
would be easy to say that Mason's personal reversal of fortunes this
season is to blame. The problem a lot of people have calling what has
happened to Mase a "sophomore slump" is that "slump" is too soft a word
to describe it. Maybe "sophomore dump" is more accurate. But there is
more to it than that. Coaching. Conditioning. The lack of a true center
on the top line, or at least one that can unlock the handcuffs on Rick
Nash., etc., etc. Who knows what caused the collapse? Raffi Torres,
who was shipped to the Buffalo Sabres at the deadline, doesn't.
"It's
tough to win in this league on a consistent basis," he said. "It's tough to pinpoint one thing (that went wrong). At the
end of the day, we just didn't get the job done."
Based on what Scott Howson did (or didn't do) at
the trade deadline, it doesn't look like he is completely sure what went
wrong either. Howson played it safe. Trading three unrestricted free
agents and two journeymen for three draft picks, a prospect and two
different journeymen is not going to shake things up, one way or the
other. Until he names his coach for next season, it really doesn't make
sense for Howson to make any kind of definitive diagnosis or implement a
treatment plan.
And so the 2009-2010 Blue Jackets limp
to the finish line with a lot of questions needing to be answered. Will
Claude Noel win Howson over and get the "interim" tag lifted from his
title? If not, to whom will Howson turn to coach this team up next
year? Will Nikita Filatov see the departure of Ken Hitchcock as
something akin to the parting of the Red Sea and return to Columbus
ready to fulfill his potential? Will the citizens of Franklin County
embrace the concept of a public/private partnership and do what they
need to do to keep the NHL in Columbus? What a difference a year makes. Or at least Blue Jacket fans sure hope so.