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FROM SHARKS MEDIA RELEASES    

 

Joe Thornton: Too Little,
Too Late…Again

by Gann Matsuda
Hockeytalk.biz

Joe Thornton
San Jose Sharks

APRIL 29, 2009 -- LOS ANGELES --  When San Jose Sharks superstar center Joe Thornton dropped the gloves with Anaheim Ducks center Ryan Getzlaf just two seconds into Game 6 of their Western Conference quarterfinal playoff series, it was too little, too late.

SHARKS CENTER JEREMY ROENICK ANNOUNCES HIS RETIREMENT

Legend Leaves the Game 36th on the NHL’s All-Time Goals List, 3rd Among U.S. Born Players

AUGUST 6, 2009 -- SAN JOSE – San Jose Sharks forward Jeremy Roenick today formally announced his retirement from the game of hockey, following 20 remarkable seasons in the National Hockey League.

Roenick, 39, crafted a legacy as not only one of the best U.S.-born players to skate in the NHL but one of the all-time top players to ever play the game. He leaves ranked 36th on the NHL’s all-time goals list with 513, 48th on the all-time assist list (703) and tied for 39th on the NHL’s all-time points list (1,216). Among U.S.-born players, he’s third in goals, points and sixth in assists. He also ranks fourth in all-time games played by a U.S.-born player.

“I am not only happy but proud of the 20-year career that I have had in the National Hockey League,” said Roenick. “To end my career on my terms was very important to me and I must thank Doug Wilson and the San Jose Sharks organization for providing me that opportunity.

“I also want to thank all of the teams and players that I have been associated with for making my career much more exciting than I could have ever dreamt.”

In his two seasons as a member of the San Jose Sharks organization, Roenick notched some of the most memorable milestones of his NHL career, including his unforgettable 500th NHL goal on Nov. 10, 2007 vs. Phoenix. He also skated in his 1,300th NHL game on Feb. 9, 2008 at Nashville, posted his 1,200th career point on March 28, 2008 at Anaheim and collected his 700th NHL assist on Feb. 21, 2009 vs. Atlanta.

In 2007-08, Roenick finished eighth on the team with 33 points (14-19=33) in 69 games. His 10 game-winning goals (2nd-NHL) and three shootout winners led the team and his combined 12 game-deciding goals led the League. He also authored a “Cinderella story”-like performance in Game Seven of the Western Conference Quarterfinals against the Calgary Flames. After sitting out Game Six, he dominated in the deciding game at HP Pavilion, netting four points (2-2=4) in one of the most inspiring performances in Sharks franchise history.

In 2008-09, Roenick suffered two separate shoulder injuries, allowing him to play in only 42 games on the Presidents’ Trophy winning club, posting 13 points (4-9=13).

“Jeremy Roenick will be remembered as one of the most dynamic players to ever play in the NHL,” said Sharks Executive Vice President and General Manager Doug Wilson. “The level of passion he brought to the ice in his final game was just as high as the first time he laced up his skates over 20 years ago. We thank him for his contributions to the San Jose Sharks organization on- and off-the-ice over the last two seasons and for all he has given to the game of hockey. I know he will be successful in whatever ventures he pursues in the future and am sure those ventures will be numerous.”

The former first round selection of the Chicago Blackhawks in 1988 (8th overall) played in 1,363 NHL games with Chicago, Phoenix, Philadelphia, Los Angeles and San Jose, ranking 39th all-time on the NHL’s games played list.

The nine-time NHL All-Star is the only player in League history to lead his team in goals, assists, points and penalty minutes in two different seasons (1999-00, 2000-01 with Phoenix).

Indeed, Thornton, who scored just one goal and contributed four assists in the six-game series, failed to show any fight in his game until it was too late, helping lead his team down the drain, losing the series in six games.

The Sharks have a reputation of being playoff busts, failing to get out of the second round in four straight seasons. This is also a team that reached the Western Conference Finals in 2003-04 and has been among the elite teams in the conference since then.

This season, the Sharks won the President’s Trophy, leading the National Hockey League with a 53-18-11 record, good for 117 points.

Indeed, the regular season has been kind to the Sharks.

The Sharks were led this season by Thornton, who scored 25 goals and added 61 assists for 86 points. He was followed by team captain Patrick Marleau, who scored 38 goals and contributed 33 assists for 71 points.

After the two veteran leaders, three younger players, right wing Devin Setoguchi, center Joe Pavelski and left wing Milan Michalek, contributed much of the Sharks’ offense.

Setoguchi, in just his first full season in the NHL, ranked third on the team in scoring with 31 goals and 34 assists, good for 65 points in 81 games. He was followed by Pavelski’s 25 goals and 34 assists for 59 points and Michalek’s 23 goals and 34 assists for 57 points.

But the Sharks coasted down the stretch, struggling with a mediocre 10-9-4 record over their final 23 games, losing three of their final five, including two straight losses to the lowly Los Angeles Kings and Phoenix Coyotes.

Without momentum heading into the playoffs and given their poor playoff history, the Sharks were a prime target for an upset. The Ducks took advantage by pounding on the Sharks from the outset of the series while the Sharks’ response was feeble at best.

And it wasn’t that the Ducks were playing dirty. Rather, they took every opportunity to hit the Sharks’ top offensive threats who failed to show the heart and emotion needed to respond.

But there was one player who failed to respond the most. That player was none other than Joe Thornton.

To be sure, it is easy to pick on Thornton. After all, he stands out at 6-4, 235 pounds. More significant, the Boston Bruins gave up on him because of his inability to carry his team in the post-season.

But that’s just it....Thornton has the size and strength to take a beating and even dish it out and he certainly has the skill to take over a game—he is the Sharks’ best player. Nevertheless, he failed to muster up much of anything in response to the punishment he took from Getzlaf, that is, until the :02 mark of the first period of Game 6 when his frustration and anger boiled over in his fight with the Ducks’ top center at the opening faceoff.

But the fight was likely motivated by Thornton’s frustration and anger as opposed to him trying to inspire and lead his team after Getzlaf had frustrated him at virtually every turn in the series.

At 6-4, 221 pounds, Getzlaf is no slouch. But Thornton paled in comparison when push came to shove in the corners, along the boards and in front of either net. To be sure, he led his team by example, but in the wrong direction. His teammates followed his lead, losing the majority of the physical battles in the trenches—exactly where the Ducks won the series.

Without question, Marleau, Setoguchi, Pavelski and Michalek seemed to follow Thornton’s lead and they too contributed little in the series, also displaying little in terms of heart or emotion.

Meanwhile, Ducks goaltender Jonas Hiller was outstanding, outplaying his counterpart, San Jose’s Evgeni Nabokov. However, Hiller got a lot of help from the Sharks who played way too soft in this series, making Hiller’s job a lot easier.

Hiller should thank his buddy, Thornton, his teammate at HC Davos in the Swiss League during the 2004-05 lockout year, for helping him out.

Thornton’s best playoff years were in 2006-07 and 2007-08, both with San Jose, when he scored a goal with ten assists in eleven games in 2006-07, and two goals with eight assists for ten points in 13 games in 2007-08.

Nevertheless, the superstar center has never been able to lead his teams out of the second round and in five out of the nine times his teams qualified for post-season play, they were eliminated in the first round.

Four of those five came while Thornton was with Boston, and certainly influenced the Bruins to trade him to the Sharks in the 2005-06 season.

Fast forward to 2009 and Thornton continues to sputter in the playoffs. Given his inability to lead his team to a stronger response against Anaheim and with the Sharks having to endure yet another early exit from the post-season, especially after winning the President’s Trophy, Thornton will be labeled as a playoff bust for another season.

The question now is whether or not he can ever lose that reputation.

It certainly seems that the answer is no.

 

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