Blue Jackets Week In Review

What a memorable week this has been for the Columbus Blue Jackets. In the span of just seven days, the Blue Jackets participated in the NHL Draft, held their prospects’…

Marcus Foligno Setting Career Highs

While they’re not a playoff team, the Buffalo Sabres have plenty of emerging talent that should help the club change their fortunes in the near future. The difficult realities of…

Blue Jackets Quarter Report

Welcome to Thanksgiving Week. Where in the world did the season go? In a flash, we are over a quarter of the way through the 2015-16 NHL season. For the…

The Tortorella Effect Taking Shape

It was one game, but you could tell something was different. From the drop of the puck on during the Columbus Blue Jackets 2-1 win over the Pittsburgh Penguins, there…

Columbus Is Still A Playoff Team

Don’t write the Columbus Blue Jackets off just yet. Even though they enter Tuesday dead last in the NHL standings, the Blue Jackets are a confident bunch. Just back from…

Blue Jackets Understand Task At Hand

The Columbus Blue Jackets know what they need to do. Now they have to let their play do the talking.

It’s not often that a team’s fifth game of the season is a virtual must-win. But tonight’s game against the Toronto Maple Leafs is just that for the Blue Jackets; a virtual must-win.

Very little has gone right for the Blue Jackets to this point. At 0-4, they are off to the worst start in franchise history. For a team in the midst of a bad start, their locker room today was upbeat.

They know the task at hand, and it begins with tonight’s game against the Toronto Maple Leafs.

I got the chance to talk with captain Nick Foligno, Gregory Campbell and David Savard about how important tonight’s game is, how close they think they are to a breakthrough, and whether there is some chemistry issues that still need to work themselves out.

There is a confidence in the room. They know that the season has a long way to go. They know what they need to do. It starts by simplifying the game and taking care of their end of the ice. The team spent most of their practice by working on drills in their own end. The rest will work itself out.

You can hear my conversations below.

Nick Foligno

Gregory Campbell

David Savard