It has been an ugly start for the Colorado
Avalanche.
A perennial power, the Avalanche are 1-2-2 so far this season,
already six points behind division-leading Minnesota. They look
puzzled at times on the ice and watched an NHL-record 487-game
sellout streak come to an end on Monday night after 11 years.
It's time for a road trip. The Avalanche will face Toronto,
Ottawa and Montreal in a four-day span _ something forward Ian
Laperriere is looking forward to.
``We have a lot of new faces,'' he said. ``Maybe this road trip
is at the right time? To get on the road, have dinner together, chat
and have quality time together _ that will help build some
chemistry.''
The team doesn't seem concerned with its sluggish start. Although
the Avalanche rank 13th out of 15 teams in the Western Conference _
and sits in last place in the Northwest Division _ they're not about
to sound the alarm. And if you want to see players roll their eyes,
simply mention to them that they're struggling.
``We're five games into the season,'' defenceman John-Michael
Liles said. ``It's a long year.''
Colorado has traditionally been a slow-starting team. The
Avalanche have started with a winning record through five games just
four times over the last 10 seasons. In 1998-99, Colorado began
0-4-1 and still made it to the Western Conference final, where the
team lost to Dallas in seven games.
``It doesn't take much to get you back on track,'' goalie Jose
Theodore said. ``I want to bounce back.''
Theodore gave up the game-winning goal to Chicago's Martin
Lapointe on Monday on a shot from just outside the right circle he
felt he should've stopped.
``I expect a lot more out of myself,'' Theodore said. ``My job is
to make those big saves and last night I didn't make them.''
Theodore will face his former team, the Montreal Canadiens, on
Saturday. He was traded to the Avalanche for David Aebischer last
March.
``That's going to be special,'' he said. ``But you've got two big
games before that. I cannot cheat myself by thinking too far
ahead.''
The Avalanche knew it was going to take some time to develop as a
team. They lost veterans like Rob Blake, Dan Hinote and Alex Tanguay
over the summer thanks to a salary-cap system designed to bring more
parity to the league.
Joe Sakic is the only bona fide star the Avalanche have left on
the ice. He has two goals and a pair of assists through five games.
Colorado's leading scorer is Wojtek Wolski, who's fourth among
rookies in the league with three goals.
Colorado's other big name, Milan Hejduk, has been held to just
one goal so far this season. He had 50 during the 2002-03 season.
A hernia has kept Jordan Leopold _ acquired from Calgary in a
trade for Tanguay _ out of the lineup. His scheduled return later
this month could help bolster a defence that's given up 17 goals
through five games.
``We have a good mix of young and older players,'' Laperriere
said. ``Our older guys have been through this (early season losses).
We know it's a long season. You struggle for a couple of games and
you come back. You've got to find a way to simplify the game and
play smart.''
The Avalanche earned four points with a pair of overtime losses
to start the season, and then posted a 3-2 win over Vancouver. Any
momentum derived from that was halted by a five-day break between
games. The Avalanche have been outscored 9-6 over the last two
games.
``It seems like we lost a little bit,'' Theodore said of the time
off.
And now they're attempting to get it back.
``Every team goes through (this),'' Laperriere said. ``We'll be
fine. It's good timing to go on the road. It's always fun to have a
little road trip.''