Showing posts with label Tomas Vokoun. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tomas Vokoun. Show all posts

Friday, March 22, 2013

Goal Assessment: Game 32 - Pens 4 Isles 2

Link for Game 32 Thoughts:  The PensNation



+/- Assessment

1st Goal Against (Streit): - for
  • Jeffrey – clean faceoff loss
  • (everyone goes where they are supposed to go, Vokoun looks off of his angle a bit)
1st Goal For (Vitale): + for
  • Adams – takeaway at the offensive blue line
  • Glass – makes it a 2 on 1 with Vitale and pulls Hamonic a little bit out of position away from Vitale
  • Vitale – snipes the corner on Nabokov
2nd Goal Against (Bailey): - for
  • Dupuis – failed clear with the puck sitting in front of him
  • Crosby – failed clear, then doesn’t skate out to Hamonic at the point OR shadow Bailey (lack of attention to what Kunitz is doing)
  • Kunitz – gets caught wandering in the zone, too far away from Hamonic at the point OR Bailey skating to the crease (lack of attention to what Crosby is doing)
2nd Goal For (Kunitz): + for
  • Crosby – wins puck battle in the defensive zone to Dupuis, eventually sets up Kunitz
  • Dupuis – takes puck from defensive zone and passes it along to Crosby, then drives to the net causing a 3 player screen on Nabokov
  • Kunitz – beats Nabokov 5 hole as the screen clears away
3rd Goal For (Sutter): + for
  • Orpik – retrieves puck in the defensive zone and clears it out to Neal
  • Neal – passes the puck from the neutral zone up to Cooke heading into the offensive zone
  • Cooke – patiently waits for Carkner to go down and end up out of position before passing the puck across the crease to Sutter
  • Sutter – beats Nabokov from point blank
4th Goal For (Dupuis): + for
  • (Vokoun – clears the puck to the blue line)
  • Crosby – knocks the puck to the offensive blue line where Dupuis picks it up
  • Dupuis – smacks the puck into an empty net

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Losing Like It's April 2012, Flyers Defeat Pens 6-5


Sorry for the delay on the recap – had to wait until the replay on NHL Network this afternoon to assess the goals.

Main Storylines:
  • Tomas Vokoun gets the start in net after Fleury won 3 straight (2.01 GAA, .932 save %)
  • Jeffrey, Boychuk, and Despres are the scratches for the 2nd straight game

Result:
Flyers 6  Pens 5
Goals:  Niskanen (2) from Letang
            Malkin (4) (PP) from Martin, Neal
            Kennedy (2) from Martin, Orpik
            Neal (12) (PP) from Malkin, Crosby
            Sutter (4) from Martin, Cooke    

Stats:
  • Sidney Crosby went 21 for 28 in faceoffs.  Malkin was 7 for 10 and Vitale was 5 for 6 .
  • Special teams skewed TOI a lot – Crosby (27:00 with 7:32 on PP), Cooke (18:46 with 5:56 SH), Adams (7:35 with 4:06 SH)
  • More TOI – Vitale (6:19), Kennedy (7:48), Glass (6:37), Engelland (9:00), Bortuzzo (8:59), Bennett (8:03)
  • Brooks Orpik led the team with 5 blocks (team total was only 9)
  • Brandon Sutter and Evgeni Malkin led the team with 5 shots each (Crosby next with 4)

The Good:
Hope Sutter enjoyed this moment that lasted half a second.
  • Brandon Sutter:  It could have been a defining moment and defining game for Sutter.  He followed the game plan perfectly, stopped with the puck behind Bryzgalov’s net, and wrapped it around to tie the game at 5 late in the 3rd period.  However, the sour result of a loss just a minute later will forever tarnish Sutter’s moment.  Even without the goal, he played well all night and was well-positioned in both ends.
  • Pascal Dupuis:  Duper caught my attention with his poise and maturity more than anything against the Flyers.  He generally played well but looked like a saint compared to the rest of both teams.  At two different points, Dupuis took cross-checks to the back into the boards.  They could have been called boarding or cross-checking and no one would have blinked (but they weren't).  Both times, Dupuis got himself back up, got back into the play, and went on with his business.  No talking, no looking to the ref, no retaliation – he just continued to do his job.  Even if no one followed it, he put on a great display of leadership by example.

Noteworthy:
Geno shouldn't have been near Couturier as this happened.
  • Tyler Kennedy:  It was nice to see TK put a puck in the net, but that was the only thing that kept him from being a section or two lower.  After demonstrating some improvement in puck management in the previous two games, Kennedy was a turnover machine in the neutral zone (3 giveaways in 2 shifts at one point).  He only played 7:48 (less than Bennett) and has been called out by the organization a couple of times now.  Kennedy needs to play smarter asap if he thinks his career will continue in Pittsburgh.
  • Evgeni Malkin:  Geno improved on faceoffs, dealt with the Flyers well for MOST of the game, and added a nice PP goal.  However, he also had multiple giveaways on the PP (one leading to a shorthanded breakaway), and got into that ugly mess with Sean Couturier.  The one thing that frustrates me more than anything about Geno is his inability to skate away. I understand he was getting hit during the play, I’ll even accept the retaliation during the play, but he has to learn to skate away from players after the whistle.  There is nothing to gain by lingering with players who generally get in your head already, especially for a superstar.
  • Matt Niskanen:  Niskanen had shifts ranging from perfect to abysmal much like the rest of the team. His goal was a perfect shot from the point and he generally did a good job of stepping up in the defensive end.  His transition game left a lot to be desired though as he had a couple blatant giveaways and tried to take the body at the wrong times against Flyers forwards.  The 5th goal against was completely on him with a bad decision to step up in the neutral zone, a poor play on the puck, and a bad bounce for the goal.
  • Consol Atmosphere:  Consol was a madhouse in the 1st and 3rd and dead silent in the 2nd period.  It was generally a very impressive crowd for the building; the atmosphere was playoff-like at important times.  That being said, it’s very clear that what happens on the ice determines how loud the crowd is going to be.  Be it the fans, arena, or whatever other sources you can think of, the crowd does not feed off of itself, it feeds off of gameplay.  Had that been a gut-wrenching, entertaining 1-0 victory, it probably would have been a quiet night.

The Bad:
  • Deryk Engelland:  Engelland only played 9 minutes and wasn’t at fault for any goals against, so why is he in this section? - Because his focus was horrible. Engelland looked frequently distracted by the Flyers grit guys and put himself out of position a few times chasing after them.  He let himself get goaded into a penalty by Rinaldo, and was lucky he didn’t get called for another one when he retaliated after Bortuzzo was boarded.  If he wants to be a tough guy and fight, that’s fine, but it needs to start and end there.  I was very glad he only played 9 minutes.
  • 4th Line:  The 4th line struggled to get the puck out of the defensive zone a few times, got stuck on that mess of a 1st goal by the Flyers, and didn’t add much to the game in their limited time.  Most games, the Pens 4th line will outplay any other team’s 4th line (and 3rd line).  This wasn’t one of those games.
  • Officiating:  The officials seemed to alternate between calling a very tight game and letting everything go, leading to no consistency on the ice.  Honestly, I think both teams got screwed out of calls (Neal was high-sticked twice, Niskanen deserved an interference call, Engelland deserved a roughing call, etc.)  The one that hurt the worst on the scoreboard was the Adams elbowing call at the end of the 2nd period though (which wasn’t an elbow, just a horrible call).  It was also interesting how patient these refs were with whistling plays dead.  Give credit to the Flyers for playing until the whistle, but I imagine many officiating crews would have blown at least one of the eventual goals dead just for losing sight of the puck.

The Ugly:
Errrr, what?
  • Tomas Vokoun:  I mentioned it during the day and unfortunately the result didn’t help.  I did not understand why Vokoun was starting this game when Fleury came in with fantastic numbers as of late.  Going back to last week, I fully expected Vokoun to start Fri @ Wpg, Fleury vs. Buf on Sun, and Fleury again vs. Philly before getting Vokoun back in vs Florida.  Vokoun just had an awful game as I assessed 2 of the 6 goals against as completely on him.  He will bounce back fine, but it was certainly a questionable decision to begin with and I'm sure he's taking the loss harder than any of us are.
  • “Composure”:  Someone needs to teach the Penguins’ most valuable players how valuable they are.  There were 4 instances when the Pens and Flyers both had guys sent to the box at the same time.  1st: Cooke and Voracek. That’s a win for Pittsburgh for 2 minutes.  2nd: Glass-Simmonds fight, another win for the Pens for 5 minutes.  3rd: Letang-Rinaldo, huge win for the Flyers for 2 minutes.  4th:  Couturier-Malkin, huge win for the Flyers for 2 minutes, PLUS a powerplay as Malkin took an extra 2.  The Penguins’ stars need to learn to skate away and sometimes let their role players do the dirty work for them.  Lack of composure leads to some awful tradeoffs on the ice (not even including most powerplays and penalty kills) and it’s clearly something the Penguins didn’t learn from last April.
  • Puck Decisions:  This was a problem right off the start even though it didn’t cost the Penguins until later.  In the first two shifts of the game, Crosby, Malkin, and Neal all turned the puck over in the offensive zone.  Crosby especially had problems with forcing passes (think of that wasted 2 on 1) and the team as a whole was too careless with the puck.  As soon as the Penguins lose focus, this is where the mistakes pop up and it’s usually very costly.
  • First Goal Against:  After about 12 replays of the first goal against, I was still shocked that no one blew a whistle for losing sight of the puck.  However, that’s at the refs discretion so it’s nothing to complain about.  I fully expected Letang to get penalized for covering his hand on the puck (leading to a penalty shot), but the Flyers scored on the play anyways.  Looking through the replays, the only player that didn’t make himself useless in some way was Glass.  I was also less than impressed with how Vokoun stood up looking back at the crease before trying to get back into it.  Dive in Tomas, you have pads and can obstruct everyone’s view the best.

+/- Assessment:
Crosby runs huddles better than Roethlisberger.
  • 1st GF (Niskanen): + for Letang (pinches in to keep puck), Sutter (screen in front), Bennett (screen in front), Niskanen (point shot, goal)
  • 2nd GF (Malkin): + for Neal (digs for puck in the corner, throws it to the point), Martin (takes wideshot that bounces off boards), Malkin (goal)
  • 1st GA (Grossmann): - for Letang (loses Couturier out of the corner), Niskanen (loses a step on Knuble going to the crease), Adams (doesn’t get stick on Talbot), Vitale (does nothing in the whole scrum)
  • 2nd GA (Simmonds): - for Dupuis (doesn’t support Martin on clear), Crosby (out of position trying to leave zone early), Martin (overcompensates on coverage of Briere), Orpik (goal goes in off his stick)
  • 3rd GA (Voracek): - for Adams (penalty, bad call but still in the box), Orpik (unaware/not covering his area where Voracek is)
  • 4th GA (Voracek): - for no one, whole sequence caused by Vokoun’s indecision with the puck, players scramble/cover as best as can be expected
  • 3rd GF (Kennedy): + for Crosby (gives TK outlet down low, banks puck up to Martin at point), Orpik (pass to Martin), Martin (shot to the front of the net), Kennedy (corrals puck and scores)
  • 5th GA (Simmonds): - for Niskanen (bad step up in neutral zone, has puck go in off of his stick as he tries to recover)
  • 4th GF (Neal): + for Crosby (puck retrieval, pass to Malkin), Malkin (pass to Neal), Neal (one-timer goal)
  • 5th GF (Sutter): + for Cooke (helps with faceoff win), Martin (sends puck down to Sutter), Sutter (wraparound goal)
  • 6th GA (Voracek): - for no one, completely on Vokoun not covering the post as everyone had their guy covered well
  • Season +/-:  Click here for the Season +/- Spreadsheet
  • **In an effort to make this a more valuable statistic, I’m going to work in TOI in the next couple games for the season totals**

Thoughts:
When he's not passing to the other team,
Crosby is a quiet hockey genius.
  • Use of Bennett:  Bennett only played 8:03 in the game and while I won’t rail on Bylsma for keeping him on the bench in a chaotic game, I do think it was a mistake.  Bennett has impressed me with his hockey sense and awareness through his NHL stint so far.  He’s very smart without the puck and clearly knows what to do with the puck.  His puck handling hasn’t come up to speed at the NHL game yet, but I’ll take a player who can handle himself positionally and defensively any day.  The way the Pens were turning the puck over and getting out of position, he may have had a nice calming effect.  I think we will see his first big NHL moment very soon.  As for playing him on the 3rd line…get TK off that line and put Jeffrey on there and then I’m okay with it.  I would love to see him on the 2nd line wing, but he looks comfortable and good on the 3rd line so no complaints yet.  I would rather see him start like this than watch him get 3 games on the 2nd line and then thrown into Bylsma’s doghouse for not keeping up.
  • Despres Scratched:  I’ve made it clear I think Despres should be in the lineup over Engelland and I’ve seen nothing to discourage me from that.  He has a higher ceiling, and while he is certainly inconsistent, his average play gives more to this team both offensively and defensively than Engelland does.  Also, sitting Despres for multiple games at a time could turn into a huge mismanagement or waste of a prospect.  I’d rather send him down than have him sitting in the press box.  That being said, Engelland is the 7th best defenseman on this roster to me.
  • Observations:  Two little observations that I thought were cool/interesting during the game:  1) When Crosby broke his stick on the powerplay, he made a little nifty decision on how to get a new stick that affected the breakout and setup.  Instead of making a beeline straight to the bench, he skated back to the center of the defensive zone, turned towards the bench and picked up speed as he grabbed a stick that was held out.  It allowed him to take his place on the left side and jump into the rush at full speed without taking up anyone’s open ice.  Just a little thing that Crosby does right.  2) The 2nd line got caught for 2 icings in a row on a long shift in the 2nd period.  Here’s how they bought rest: First Engelland went to the bench with an “injury” to his face that the linesman allowed.  It slowed the teams lining up and also got a new man out there (Orpik).  Orpik went to the center (Cooke) and winger (Malkin) to say something, which bought more time.  Once he lined up, Cooke got himself kicked out of the draw because that was the point of him lining up at center.  Finally, Malkin wins the faceoff with the extra rest and puts it directly to Vokoun so he can cover it for a line change.  It was all just beautifully done.


Pens Record: 11-6-0, 22 pts
Next Game:  2/22 vs Fla, 7pm

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Podcast: Both Pens Goalies Are Awesome!

Edit: **Ben Lovejoy has been traded to the Anaheim Ducks for a 5th round pick in 2014**  Unfortunately, it was after the podcast was recorded.  Thanks for nothing, Shero.

Start Fleury, start Vokoun, start them both!  Meesh and Adam delve into the Pittsburgh Penguins' wonderful 4 game winning streak, filled with nice goals, solid defense, and a luxurious "goaltending controversy."  There is a quick recap of news around the NHL and a look back at each win over the streak for the Pens.  Additional time is spent on praising Tanner Glass, applauding the return of a competent powerplay, acknowledging Dan Bylsma's adjustments, and looking at future roster moves.

Subscribe to the podcast on iTunes or listen below(like us on facebook too!):




Podcast Powered By Podbean

Suggested Reading:

(I will have a rebuttal written tomorrow, either on THW or this blog.)

The Penguins and Europeans from the Pensblog.

Suggested Video:

Pens Get Revenge on Isles, Push Winning Streak to 4


Main Storylines:
  • A week ago, the Isles made the Pens look like were in serious trouble early this season.  After putting together 3 straight wins, the Pens have a chance to show something different to the Isles.
  • No lineup changes despite rumors of Lovejoy playing.  Fleury gets the start.

Result:
Pens 4  Islanders 2
Goals:  Neal (6) (PP) from Crosby
            Despres (2) from Kunitz, Letang
            Sutter (2) from Cooke
            Dupuis (3) (EN) from Martin


Stats:
  • Brooks Orpik led the team with 5 blocked shots
  • Evgeni Malkin had 3 recorded giveaways (a very high number for how the NHL records giveaways)
  • Joe Vitale was the only center to win more than 50% of his faceoffs (5/7)
  • Paul Martin and Brooks Orpik each had 8:36 on the penalty kill, they played 25:13 and 22:43 respectively
  • No forward played more than 17:15 (Malkin was the leader) or less than 10:18 (Kennedy at the low end)

The Good:
This, all day.
  • Penalty Kill:  After getting torched twice by the Isles PP a week ago, the Penguins MADE ADJUSTMENTS and switched to a more aggressive style.  Over the past week it has been pretty successful and was perfect last night.  The key to the Pens PK now is aggressive forwards covering the points and then everyone collapsing in the slot when the puck is deep in the zone.  There were numerous scrambles last night in front of the crease and the Pens outmanned and outworked the Isles every single time (with help from Fleury) to stay perfect on the night.
  • Brandon Sutter:  Sutter played his best game of the year by far in my opinion.  His penalty killing and defensive coverage were better than most of the actual defensemen, he drew a penalty in the defensive zone, and he added a goal to boot.  The third line is starting to come around as they get more time together and Sutter is beginning to show some chemistry with Cooke.  Sutter is trending up big time right now.
  • Marc-Andre Fleury:  “Start Vokoun!” “Start Fleury!” Who cares who starts if they both play as well as they have the last 4 games.  Fleury was the main reason the PK was a huge success last night and he made a ridiculous glove save on Matt Martin point blank.  He didn’t allow a bad goal and he did a fantastic job of staying patient/calm when there were puck scrambles in the slot and on the edge of the crease. 
  • Tanner Glass:  Not only was his penalty kill work great, but he drew yet another penalty in the offensive zone by cycling the puck in the corner with Vitale and Adams.  Glass has done a great job of using his big frame to his advantage to protect the puck in the offensive zone and really does put his limited TOI to use.  This was a fantastic signing by Shero that isn't getting enough attention.  I also like how he tried to fight Colin McDonald (who declined) and still took on Matt Martin without question.

The Bad:
Sid? Want borscht to fix face?
  • Evgeni Malkin:  Through this young season, every time Malkin improves one aspect of his game, another part suffers.  His defensive play was strong and he did a great job backchecking throughout the night.  However, his offensive zone puck possession took a dive and he turned the puck over far too much going up the ice.  Malkin was also limited to only 4 faceoffs last night (going 2 for 4).  I’m not sure whether that was planned by Bylsma or just due to the flow of the game.
  • Kris Letang:  The only reason Letang ended up in this section is because he had to deal with Michael Grabner.  Yes, I realize Grabner is fast and can blow by pretty much any defenseman in the league.  However, every defenseman should know that and be prepared for it.  On Grabner’s goal, Letang was not only burned by Grabner, but was also out of position to begin with as he gave Grabner the inside lane instead of pushing him to the outside.  If he’s going to be an elite defenseman, that can’t happen.  Getting burned by Grabner will happen from time to time, but exacerbating it with bad positioning is careless.

The Ugly:
Don't look at me, I'm hideous.
  • Sidney Crosby’s Face:  Raise your hand if you had a panic attack when Crosby took that puck to the face.  Luckily he came back just minutes later and appears to be fine, but that may have been the scariest point of the season for the Pens.  With the puck coming off of Brian Strait’s stick, who was of course waived by the Penguins earlier this season, #BlameShero.

+/- Assessment:
  • 1st GF (Neal): + for Crosby (intercepts clear, pass), Neal (changes angle, shoots)
  • 2nd GF (Despres): + for Letang (opens Despres for breakout, passes to Kunitz), Kunitz (pass to Despres), Despres (goal)
  • 3rd GF (Sutter): + for Cooke (backcheck, steals puck, pass to Sutter), Sutter (goal)
  • 1st GA (Grabner): – for Letang (gives Grabner the middle, loses him, then doesn’t cover him in front)
  • 2nd GA (Boyes): – for Orpik (fans on bouncing puck), Dupuis (loses man on man coverage)
  • 4th GF (Dupuis): + for Martin (knocks puck up), Dupuis (goal)
  • Season +/-: http://www.crosbyftw.com/p/plusminus-spreadsheet.html

Thoughts:
Obligatory "Bortuzzo is awesome" pic.
  • 3rd Line:  The third line as a whole had their best game since opening weekend.  Kennedy wasn’t fantastic but was much better than his previous 3 games and actually held onto the puck for once.  Cooke was great on the penalty kill and he looked energized by the additional playing time.  One thing with Cooke though, he seems to be having a lot of problems with backhanded clears this year.  Sutter was mentioned above and looked great last night.
  • 2nd Line Wing:  Boychuk was okay but may have played himself out of the lineup for a game with a couple missed shots and a giveaway.  His speed is an incredible asset but I wouldn’t be surprised to see Bylsma go back to Jeffrey for the Washington game.  The Pens can afford to be fickle with that winger spot since Malkin and Neal take care of themselves and I imagine it will all depend on how much a player adds each game.  Boychuk is going to have to eventually add more than just speed to stay in the lineup.
  • 3 Goal Leads:  The Penguins had another little 3rd period collapse last night.  This is the 3rd game where they have blatantly relaxed after taking a 3 goal lead (1st NYR game, Caps game, last night).  Yet again, things went awry as they looked up the middle more, tried lower percentage passes, and backed off of their aggressive nature.  Luckily with a 3 goal lead, it won’t bite them too much, but it’s a very bad habit in the long run.
  • Roster Moves:  Despres had a nice bounce back game to re-solidify his spot in the lineup and neither Bortuzzo nor Engelland has done anything to jeopardize their spots.  Niskanen’s return will force a very interesting decision but I still lean towards sitting Engelland.  Hopefully with Despres bouncing back, the organization is preparing to move Lovejoy, whether it is via trade or on waivers.
  • Who Starts Thursday:  Do you start Vokoun or Fleury against the Caps? Vokoun has played *better* than Fleury this season and had a strong game against the Caps on Sunday.  Fleury is coming off of a strong start and is the *#1* starter on this team.  The Pens do have upcoming back to back games this weekend.  I personally say start Fleury, then split the weekend games, and work from there.

Pens Record: 7-3-0, 14 pts
Next Game:  2/7 vs Was, 7pm

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Pens Player Power Rankings - Week 3

Coming off of a 3-1 week that started with an ugly loss to the Isles and ended with Chris Kunitz being a superhero, here are your player rankings for Week 3.  If you're curious about the season averages or previous rankings, I've posted them here.

Rank
Player (Last Rank)
Last Week's Performance
1
Tomas Vokoun (10)
It's hard to argue 5 out of 7 periods of shutout hockey and 2 wins.  (2-0-0, 1.29 GAA, .949 Save %, 1 SO)
2
Sidney Crosby (4)
His passing and skating look up to speed finally and his turnovers are tailing off. (1g, 7a, 56/101 faceoffs)
3
Chris Kunitz (18)
Hopefully Kunitz spreads whatever disease he had to the rest of the team.  Set a career high with 4 goals on Sun. (5g, 3a, 6 hits)
4
Paul Martin (2)
Continues to quietly provide solid defense and has also been  poised and smart with the puck on offense. (2a, 3 hits, 8 blocks)
5
Brooks Orpik (1)
For the most part, Orpik has sacrified the big hit numbers for proper positioning. It's working. (3 hits, 7 blocks)
6
Evgeni Malkin (7)
Geno is returning back to offensive form despite having 30 linemates a game. Faceoffs are an issue. (1g, 5a, 21/46 faceoffs)
7
James Neal (5)
A rise in his defensive and physical efforts have cost him on the stat sheet, but we'll take defensive wins any day. (1g, 1a, 8 hits)
8
Kris Letang (6)
Showing a brand new patience with the puck on offense, but certainly misses Niskanen on defense. (2g, 2a, 6 hits, 7 blocks)
9
Pascal Dupuis (12)
Has complemented Crosby and Kunitz nicely while taking care of the defensive end for the top line. (1g, 3a)
10
Robert Bortuzzo (23)
Finally made his season debut and has shown no signs of rust from sitting out. (1g, 1a, 2 PIM, 4 hits, 5 blocks)
11
Deryk Engelland (11)
Has seen more playing time since Niskanen's injury and has been sericeable. (1a, 5 hits, 6 blocks)
12
Marc-Andre Fleury (3)
Had a rough outing with little help against NYI but came back better against limited shots vs NJ. (1-1-0, 3.00 GAA, .848 Save %)
13
Simon Despres (21)
Showing the inconsistencies of a normal rookie NHL defensemen, but improving. (1g, 1a, 6 PIM, 11 hits, 2 blocks)
14
Joe Vitale (16)
Has been putting on a forechecking clinic and has also done a wonderful job on faceoffs, especially in D zone. (28/42 faceoffs)
15
Tanner Glass (13)
Put together a strong week on the PK and even drew penalties as well.  Fits nicely supporting Vitale's speed. (11 hits)
16
Brandon Sutter (14)
First goal as a Penguin and was good defensively. Linemates aren't helping him though. (1g, 1a, 28/56 faceoffs, 6 blocks)
17
Craig Adams (17)
Knows his role and played most situations safely.  Had some turnover issues towards the end of the week. (1a, 7 hits)
18
Zach Boychuk (NA)
Showed great speed and potential to be the 2nd line winger, but needs more games first. (4 shots, 4 hits)
19
Matt Cooke (15)
Finally scored this weekend but was usually invisible on the ice. (1g, 1a, 8 hits)
20
Tyler Kennedy (9)
Rotated between invisible on the ice, missed shot, and turnover. Fell off greatly over the past week. (10 shots, 2 PIM)
21
Dustin Jeffrey (22)
Looked alright in the lineup but has returned to healthy scratch world. (3 shots, 1 hit)
22
Ben Lovejoy (20)
Did not look alright in the lineup and was healthy scratched for Bortuzzo. (3 blocks)
23
Eric Tangradi (19)
Is falling further on the depth chart with the addition of Boychuk. (Did Not Play)
Inj
Matt Niskanen (8)
Still out another week or more with an ankle injury. (Injured)


Let me hear it, what would you change?

Friday, February 1, 2013

Penguins Shut Out Rangers, Fans Back Away from Ledges


Main Storylines:
  • The Penguins claimed Zach Boychuk (will wear #17) off of waivers from Carolina.  Boychuk has 18 points in 73 games.  They also placed Matt Niskanen on IR to make room for the move.
  • Robert Bortuzzo will get into the lineup for the first time this season.  Ben Lovejoy is a healthy scratch.
  • Tomas Vokoun starts in net.
  • The Pens will be using an old new look on the powerplay, shifting Evgeni Malkin back to the point and James Neal up to the slot.
  • Former Penguin watch: The Rangers will have Rupp, Asham, and, though you never saw him in Pittsburgh, Benn Ferriero in the lineup
  • The 3rd line of Cooke-Sutter-Kennedy is reunited and Dustin Jeffrey joins Malkin’s wing.

Result:
Pens 3  Rangers 0
Goals:  Malkin (2) from Despres, Letang
            Neal (5) (PP) from Crosby, Malkin
            Despres (1) from Dupuis, Adams


Stats:
Vokoun says no for 1 of 28 times.
  • Tomas Vokoun recorded his 49th career shutout, recording 28 saves.  Per ESPN, Vokoun is the only goalie entering this season with at least 4 shutouts in every season since the ’05-’06 season
  • Sidney Crosby led the team with 6 shots
  • Robert Bortuzzo played 12:11 in his debut.  Paul Martin was the leader at 26:23, Craig Adams had only 9:33 (6:57 at even strength, the rest on PK)
  • Evgeni Malkin continued his faceoff problems by going 2 for 8.  Meanwhile, Crosby went 16 for 28.

The Good:
Hard work and pure effort from Glass
  • Tomas Vokoun:  The number one star of the night made his 28 saves look easy as he recorded his 49th career shutout.  Anyone watching Vokoun through 3 starts has to admit he brings about a calming veteran presence and poise to the crease.  Just as in his previous 2 starts, Vokoun demonstrated perfect positioning and simply dealt with the game as it came to him.  Can’t argue with perfection on the night!
  • Tanner Glass:  Glass only played roughly 10 minutes, with 3 of that on the penalty kill, but his limited TOI was quite possibly the most productive minutes of the night for the Penguins.  Glass was a force on the PK as he pressured the Rangers blue liners and he also managed to draw two penalties as well.  It was a perfect 4th liner game for Glass and then some.
  • Simon Despres:  Despres certainly suffered through some growing pains in this game with a hooking penalty, a couple turnovers, and some weak clears, but he made up for it with offensive poise that left everyone’s jaw dropping.  It began with his set up of Malkin on the 1st goal of the game and ended with a beautiful backhand goal on a breakaway to ice the game at 3-0.  Overall Despres was still a little inconsistent but showed tremendous change as the game continued on.  He became a completely different player as his confidence grew with each shift and demonstrated significant potential to handle the puck and also separate opposing forwards from the puck.
  • James Neal:  Aside from the beautiful deflection Neal had for a powerplay goal, he really earned this spot through superb backchecking and forechecking.  I didn’t have Neal marked for a single negative thing all game as he simply skated hard at both ends of the ice and was careful with the puck.  The interference penalty he drew didn’t hurt his cause either.  One thing to note is that Neal played 18:41 in the game, with 8:14 of that on the powerplay to help his case.
  • Penalty Kill:  The PK went 4 for 4 and looked much more active and aggressive than they did against the Islanders.  Orpik and Engelland worked to clear out the crease and the forwards chased the Rangers to the blue line…and by that I mean the Rangers’ blue line.  Puck pursuit and support was excellent as the Rangers never had a chance to fully set up their powerplay. 

The Bad:
  • Kris Letang:  Letang played a solid defensive game in his own end.  However, that’s not his only talent on the ice and he was quite disappointing on the offensive side of the rink.  He had multiple turnovers on the powerplay and seemed to struggle with pass/shoot decision in general.  Two of his giveaways occurred when he had an open shooting lane but opted to pass.  Meanwhile, two of his shots were blocked easily by Rangers.  Letang’s pass/shoot decisions will have to improve for the powerplay to truly improve.

The Ugly:
  • Boarding Penalties:  There is still much confusion on what is considered boarding this year and Crosby getting hit directly in the numbers did not help matters.  We have seen boarding called for everything from clean shoulder hits to players actually drilling someone in the back into the boards.  If the NHL is serious about making this a safer game, they may want to get everyone on the same page.
  • Powerplay:  It was nice to see the powerplay get a goal but the unit still struggled as a whole, mostly with puck management and decision making.  A change in personnel setup is not going to be enough to erase turnovers at the points and forced passes.  Even Neal’s PP goal wasn’t a true setup of the powerplay – it was great awareness and skill from Malkin, Crosby, and Neal.  The Pens looked ripe for a shorthanded goal against vs the Rangers and I can’t say I was impressed with Malkin at the point.  As usual, the team needs to just simplify and get the puck on net to get this unit going.

+/- Assessment:
Pictured: Joy, confidence, and the rising stock
of Simon Despres
  • 1st GF (Malkin): + for Letang (puck retrieval, pass), Despres (pass), Malkin (goal)
  • 2nd GF (Neal): + for Malkin (carried puck up, pass to Sid), Crosby (pass), Neal (deflection goal)
  • 3rd GF (Despres): + for Adams (flicks puck up), Dupuis (races to puck, pass), Despres (goal)
  • Season +/-: http://www.crosbyftw.com/p/plusminus-spreadsheet.html

Thoughts:
Bortuzzo survived his season debut with flying colors
  • Powerplay:  The PP went 1 for 6 but I’m not sold on this setup still.  If there is one man at the point, it should be Letang instead of Geno.  If there are two players on the blue line, make it Martin and Letang with Crosby, Neal, and Malkin up front.  Is there anything Kunitz can do that Crosby can’t?  Martin has shown fantastic puck movement so far this season and might be a much safer and steadying option on the powerplay.
  • Lines:  Dustin Jeffrey looked much better than anyone else has on the 2nd line and even had some nifty passing plays with Malkin.  The two clearly had more chemistry than Tangradi or Kennedy had on that line.  The third line remained quiet, though much better defensively with TK on the line and there were a couple offensive chances for them.  The 4th line was pretty much perfect all around with Glass, Vitale, and Adams.  There is really no reason to change the lineup for Saturday, but it will be interesting to see when newcomer Boychuk gets his chance.
  • Defensive Pairings:  Orpik-Martin was solid as usual (as of this season) and Letang provided great support for Despres.  The third pair of Engelland - Bortuzzo had some issues clearing the puck at times but received enough support from the forwards to succeed.  Bortuzzo looked more comfortable than I was expecting after sitting the first 6 games and certainly played well enough for another game.  It appeared that the Rangers were targeting him heavily with their physical game, but he stayed the course and never looked rattled throughout.
  • Goalie “Controversy”:  There is no goalie controversy.  Vokoun is a superb backup and will start at least a third of the games.  He’s a great calming influence and I imagine he will also mentor Fleury quite well.  Make no mistake though, Fleury has more potential, more talent, and is the unquestioned starter of this team.  Vokoun may play more right now since he’s hot, but this is still Fleury’s team, as it should be.  If Fleury learns a bit of Vokoun’s poise and positioning, his athleticism will put him over the top to be a Top 5 goalie in the league. (That is still a big if though.)
  • Difference from the Isles Game:  The biggest difference I noticed immediately was the amount of support the forwards gave the defensemen to clear the puck and for breakouts.  Instead of having one forward lingering at the blue line and two further into the neutral zone, there was usually 1 forward in the D zone, 1 at the blue line, and 1 at the red line.  This gave the defense additional help in their zone and also provided for a natural progression of chipping the puck up to get to the offensive zone.  When puck management is a problem, additional forward support can be the rescue option.  This theory worked to perfection against the Rangers.  As you noticed, once the giveaways and turnovers decrease, this team is very difficult to play against.  Credit to Bylsma and the coaching staff for making that adjustment, even if it’s temporary.


Pens Record: 4-3-0, 8 pts
Next Game:  2/2 vs NJ, 1pm