Showing posts with label Tyler Kennedy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tyler Kennedy. Show all posts

Monday, April 22, 2013

Goal Assessment: Game 45 - Pens 3 Sens 1

Link to Game 45 Thoughts:  The PensNation



+/- Assessment
1st Goal For (Jeffrey): + for
  • Murray – breaks up a play in the defensive end, skates the puck up through the neutral zone and passes it to Dupuis in stride
  • Dupuis – passes to the left to Morrow and draws 2 defensmen towards the net as he crashes the crease
  • Morrow – passes the puck to Jeffrey who is trailing in the wake of the area Dupuis opened up
  • Jeffrey – one-times a shot past Anderson
2nd Goal For (Iginla): + for
  • Vokoun – stopped the puck behind the net and passed it up the boards to Iginla
  • Jeffrey – takes the puck into the corner and pushes it along for Morrow to retrieve
  • Morrow – chases the puck behind the net and then quickly turns and passes it to Iginla at the goal line
  • Iginla – passed the puck to Jeffrey who took it into the zone, then goes to the goal line to accept Morrow’s pass and beat Anderson
1st Goal Against (Wiercioch): - for
  • Morrow – in the penalty box for tripping
  • Murray – screens Vokoun, causing a late reaction by the goalie
3rd Goal For (Kennedy): + for
  • Cooke – dumps the puck into the corner and then wins a puck battle and passes it out to Kennedy on the goal line
  • Kennedy – won a puck battle off the faceoff in the defensive zone and passed it to Cooke, then made his way to the goal line to tap Cooke’s pass in past Anderson 
Season +/-:  Click here for the Season +/- Spreadsheet

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Goal Assessment: Game 43 - Pens 6 Canadiens 4

Link to Game 43 Thoughts: The PensNation



+/- Assessment
1st Goal For (Sutter): + for
  • Letang – sets up play in defensive zone, passes up to Niskanen
  • Niskanen – one-time passes the puck to Sutter skating up the middle
  • Sutter – enters the zone and backs Subban off before just beating Budaj with a wrist shot
2nd Goal For (Morrow): + for
  • Murray – backchecks and pokes the puck to Despres
  • Despres – moves the puck over to Adams to head into the offensive zone
  • Adams – skates the puck into the offensive zone and passes it to Dupuis
  • Dupuis – draws 3 Canadiens and slides the puck into open space where it ends up on Morrow’s stick
  • Morrow – beats Budaj with a quick wrist shot
3rd Goal For (Iginla): + for
  • Letang – brings puck into the zone and throws it back to Bennett at the point, eventually passes the puck down to Kunitz on the goal line as well, then drives to the crease to create a passing lane
  • Bennett – raced to the point to keep the puck in and passes over to Kennedy
  • Kennedy – drew a defensemen over and passed the puck to Letang
  • Kunitz – waits and passes the puck across the crease to Iginla
  • Iginla – settles down the rolling puck and beats Budaj
4th Goal For (Morrow): + for
  • Niskanen – throws a long stretch pass off the boards to Bennett entering the zone
  • Bennett – beats his man at the blue line and takes the puck in on a 2 on 1, passes to Morrow
  • Morrow – slides the puck in past Price
1st Goal Against (Gionta): - for
  • Dupuis – released on coverage on Eller when no other defenseman was in position to take him
  • Letang – didn’t get Gionta tied up quickly enough
5th Goal For (Sutter): + for
  • Letang – brings the puck out from the defensive zone and passes to Morrow
  • Morrow – skates down the left wing and fires a wrist shot that Price can’t handle
  • Sutter – skates to the crease and taps in the rebound
2nd Goal Against (Galchenyuk): - for
  • Sutter – loses his guy at the offensive blue line when he tries to stop the puck and misses
  • Despres – shows no awareness that there is an odd-man against him and misses on a poke check to throw him completely out of position
3rd Goal Against (Dumont): - for
  • Glass – loses Desharnais in the corner and misses the puck
  • Kennedy – lets Dumont skate right past him without any thought to following him
  • Cooke – lazily glides to Dumont and thus doesn’t get there in time
  • Orpik – is slow to leave the crease to try and block Dumont’s shot, ends up having the puck go off of his stick and in
6th Goal For (Murray): + for
  • Iginla – wins faceoff back to Murray
  • Murray – shoots the puck and has it deflect off of Plekanec and in past Price
4th Goal Against (Markov): - for
  • Kennedy – drifts off of Markov and misses a pass interception attempt
Season +/-:  Click here for the Season +/- Spreadsheet

Saturday, March 30, 2013

Goal Assessment: Game 36 - Pens 2 Isles 0

Link to Game 36 Thoughts: The PensNation



+/- Assessment
1st Goal For (Cooke): + for
  • Kennedy – wins the faceoff back to Engelland
  • Engelland – takes a shot that goes off of Nabokov and gets tangled up in Cooke’s jersey
  • Cooke – shoots the puck past Nabokov after it drops at his skates
2nd Goal For (Neal): + for
  • Murray – digs the puck out of the defensive corner and chips it to Malkin
  • Malkin – makes a pass to Neal in the neutral zone so he can skate up with it
  • Niskanen – jumps into the play on the other side of the offensive zone, causing the defenseman (Streit) to watch the pass and give Neal room to get a better shooting angle
  • Neal – rips a shot past Nabokov
Season +/-:  Click here for the Season +/- Spreadsheet

Sunday, March 24, 2013

Goal Assessment: Game 33 - Pens 2 Flyers 1 (OT)

Link for Game 33 Thoughts:  The PensNation



+/- Assessment
1st Goal Against (Giroux): - for
  • Martin – in the penalty box for a retaliatory slashing penalty
  • (no one else – bad bounce off of Glass, who had his stick in the right spot)
1st Goal For (Crosby): + for
  • Bennett – keeps puck in the zone, eventually passes up to Martin
  • Neal – gives Crosby an opening and then feeds the puck to back down to Bennett
  • Martin – takes the pass from Bennett and sets up Crosby
  • Crosby – passes the puck to Neal and then gets into a shooting position, one-times Martin’s pass to tie the game
2nd Goal For (Kennedy): + for
  • Niskanen – feeds Kennedy from the point
  • Kennedy – recovered his own rebound, passed it to Niskanen, moved into open space, ripped a shot past Bryzgalov for the winner
Season +/-:  Click here for the Season +/- Spreadsheet

Monday, March 18, 2013

Goal Assessment: Game 30 - Pens 2 Bruins 1

Link for Game 30 Thoughts:  The PensNation



+/- Assessment
1st Goal For (Crosby): + for
  • Dupuis – beats Chara to the puck behind the net and spins away from him, passing to Kunitz
  • Kunitz – makes a quick pass across the slot to Crosby
  • Crosby – shoots the puck past Rask, who was sprawling out of position
1st Goal Against (Seguin): - for
  • Eaton – extended sequence begins when Eaton clears it up the middle directly to Boston so everyone starts scrambling in coverage, eventually covers the same guy as Sutter leaving Seguin by himself
  • Cooke – not playing anywhere near the points for defensive coverage
  • Kennedy – not playing anywhere near the points for defensive coverage
  • Sutter – slides towards Eaton’s position where neither one of them adjusts
2nd Goal For (Vitale): + for
  • Orpik – makes the lead pass from the defensive zone up to Vitale
  • Adams – takes a shot that Rask can’t handle with his glove that leads to a rebound
  • Vitale – drops puck off for Adams, skates in for the rebound and puts it over Rask

Goal Assessment: Game 29 - Pens 3 Rangers 0

Link for Game 29 Thoughts:  The PensNation




+/- Assessment
1st Goal For (Bennett): + for
  • Kennedy – passes the puck up the right boards from the defensive blue line
  • Jeffrey – chips it along to Bennett into the offensive zone
  • Bennett – takes a quick shot that beats Lundqvist on the far side
2nd Goal For (Kennedy): + for
  • Letang – good keep on the powerplay when the Rangers almost block the puck out, passes around with Martin and Bennett
  • Martin – quarterbacks the powerplay and keeps passing from the point
  • Bennett – rotates around with Martin and Letang at the points to keep the Rangers back
  • Sutter – draws two defenders next to him at the crease
  • Kennedy – one-times a pass from Letang past Lundqvist on the far side
3rd Goal For (Dupuis): + for
  • Orpik – stands up Richards with the puck to force a turnover
  • Cooke – retrieves the loose puck and passes it up to Jeffrey
  • Jeffrey – passes across to Dupuis on a 2 on 1
  • Dupuis – waits til Lundqvist goes down, takes the puck to his backhand, and scores
Season +/-:  Click here for the Season +/- Spreadsheet

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Game 27 - Penguins 3 Bruins 2: Goal Assessment

Link for Game 27 Thoughts:  The PensNation



+/- Assessment

1st Goal Against (Chara): - for
  • Crosby – too many men penalty: he was the 6th man and easily could have / should have seen Kunitz go on a couple steps before him
  • Martin – fails to retrieve the puck in the corner and then shifts a little high, leaving 2 guys on the crease for Orpik
  • Orpik – doesn’t even attempt to keep Bergeron from screening Fleury

2nd Goal Against (Seguin): - for
  • Cooke – has Bergeron on the crease and releases on his coverage as Bergeron skates behind the net to open himself up for a pass
  • Letang – has Seguin on the crease and releases on his coverage as Seguin goes to provide an outlet for Marchand, then leaves the crease area to go after Bergeron once he receives the pass behind the net
  • Kennedy – is left with coverage on Seguin due to above abandonments by Cooke and Letang, but doesn’t follow Seguin closely or try to tie up his stick

1st Goal For (Kunitz): + for
  • Engelland – gives Letang a passing option and feeds the puck back to him
  • Letang – gives Kunitz a perfect pass to one-time
  • Dupuis – skates the opposite direction of Kunitz to pull Chara completely out of position with him
  • Kunitz – does the forechecking job to retrieve the puck and pass it back to Letang on the point, then gets into shooting position on the other side of the ice and scores on a one-timer

2nd Goal For (Sutter): + for
  • Bennett – carries the puck into the offensive zone and passes it to the left to Neal
  • Neal – pulls the puck to the right to move a defender towards him and then passes it to the left to Sutter with an open shooting lane
  • Sutter – made the initial pass off the boards in the neutral zone to spring Bennett and then took Neal’s pass and shot it past Khudobin

3rd Goal For (Sutter): + for
  • Crosby – forces the defender to drop to the ground to cover a pass on the 2 on 1
  • Sutter – intercepts the puck inside the offensive zone and rips it past Khudobin


Get the full season +/- here:  Season +/- Spreadsheet

Saturday, February 23, 2013

Pens Beat Panthers; Malkin Has Concussion-Like Symptoms


Main Storylines:
  • Marc-Andre Fleury is back in net. Joe Vitale and Robert Bortuzzo are healthy scratches.  Dustin Jeffrey and Simon Despres take their places respectively.
  • Florida goalie Jacob Markstrom is making his first start of the year after being called up this week
  • Alexei Kovalev returns to the lineup for Florida after being a healthy scratch last game
  • The starting lineup is Beau Bennett with Malkin and Neal

Pens 3  Panthers 1
Goals:  Kunitz (7) (PP) from Neal, Malkin
            Niskanen (3) from Letang
            Jeffrey (1) from Cooke, Kennedy

Stats:
  • Though I have my issues with how the stat is recorded, the Pens had 11 giveaways to the Panthers’ 1.
  • Pascal Dupuis led the team in shots (5) and blocked shots (4). Malkin also had 5 shots.
  • Chris Kunitz led in hits (4).
  • Only 3 players didn’t reach the 10 minute mark for TOI: Jeffrey (9:23), Glass (9:01), Kennedy (8:56)
  • Brandon Sutter was the only good faceoff man, going 14 for 18.  Crosby was 8 for 17, Malkin 1 for 6, Jeffrey 2 for 8.

The Good:
Keep that stache you goal scoring creeper.
  • Marc-Andre Fleury:  MAF continued his good string of starts, stopping 22 of 23 shots to earn the win.  He certainly wasn’t tested frequently, only facing 3 shots in the 1st period to begin with, but he did make all the tough saves he needed to.  The only goal he allowed was through some screens; it was definitely an acceptable goal against.  Keep it up Flower.
  • Matt Niskanen:  Nisky had a great night in the offensive zone, accumulating 3 great shots from the point with 1 resulting in the game winning goal.  He also played well in his own end, mixing in a variety of poke checks and stepping up for hits to separate opposing forwards from the puck.  Add in his team-leading two takeaways and it was a top-notch game for Niskanen.  Also, from my power rankings at the start of this week: "Appears to be improving each game since his return and will likely challenge 7 and 44 for top Dman this week."  It looks like he'll take it with ease right now.
  • Brandon Sutter:  Sutter quietly played a strong game in winning 14 of 18 faceoffs and clogging up the neutral zone for the Panthers.  He continues to make his mark defensively (though it largely goes unseen) as he gets in passing lanes and positions himself perfectly to neutralize opposing breakouts.  He’s not very flashy in the defensive zone, but his defensive awareness is off the charts.

Noteworthy:
This goal celebration is not G rated.
  • Sidney Crosby:  Crosby and the first line continue to be the most creative and most consistent line the Penguins have.  Crosby himself though is still in the mindset of forcing passes and giving the puck away, especially on the powerplay.  It’s the only complaint anyone can have about Sid’s game right now, but it’s a big momentum neutralizer that needs to stop.
  • Dustin Jeffrey:  We saw two sides to Dustin Jeffrey against the Panthers.  One side was his 4th line center version, where he did nothing noticeable and was pretty much invisible on the ice.  The other side was his 3rd line center version, where he looked adept with the puck and confident going to the net.  Jeffrey is not an energy forechecker and does not look great in that role.  Give him the chance to be a skill guy, and there’s an immediate improvement in his game, which was rewarded with a goal.
  • Tyler Kennedy: Kennedy barely stays out of the bottom two sections because of his last 10 minutes of play.  He was downright awful in the first period with neutral zone turnover after turnover.  His second period didn’t improve, so Bylsma benched him for the 2nd half of the period.  In the 3rd period, he took an unnecessary slashing penalty on his 1st shift.  Kennedy had 6 negative points in my little rating system in just a period and a half (no one else on the team finished with more than 2).  HOWEVER, his final 10 minutes were strong.  They were strong enough that he forechecked his way into helping out with the Penguins’ final two goals.  If getting benched doesn’t wake him up and get him to continue that last 10 minutes into the next game (if he even gets that opportunity), he needs to be a healthy scratch.

The Bad:
  • Turnovers:  Pointed out by Michael Barron (@mdjbarron), the Penguins had an awful lot of turnovers in the neutral zone (beyond the “11 giveaways”).  It was hidden during the game thanks to great puck support and a relatively sluggish Florida team playing their 2nd game in as many nights.  That’s the problem that plagues the team against faster, up-tempo rosters (see: Toronto, NYI).  It’s something to watch for as the season continues on.

The Ugly:
:-(
  • Malkin Injury:  Now to the worst part of the game.  I won’t post the video because I’m sure no one wants to see it again, but Malkin is currently out with “concussion-like symptoms” according to Rossi and Yohe at the Trib.  He’s already listed as out for Sunday’s game against Tampa Bay and the Penguins are being extremely cautious to check his neck and back as well (lesson learned).  The hit by Erik Gudbranson was clean; it was just unfortunate with how Malkin slammed into the boards and slammed his head into the boards.  Hope for the best.

+/- Assessment:
  • 1st GA (Weaver): - for Martin (fails to clear the puck twice)
  • 1st GF (Kunitz): + for Malkin (brings puck into the zone, drops to Neal, passes to Neal again later), Neal (passes to Martin, puts puck on net), Martin (passes to Letang), Letang (passes back down to Malkin), Kunitz (crashes the crease for a goal)
  • 2nd GF (Niskanen): + for Bennett (pressure on the puck), Kennedy (pressure on the puck), Letang (keeps puck in, pass to Niskanen), Niskanen (goal from the point)
  • 3rd GF (Jeffrey): + for Kennedy (prevents Panthers clear), Cooke (pass to Jeffrey), Jeffrey (goal)
  • 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 days for the season totals**

Thoughts:
Kunitz scores before being violently attacked.
  • Weaver Elbow:  Pointed out by Eric Majeski (@LGP_Netwolf), Kunitz took a VICIOUS elbow after he scored for the Pens to tie it up.  Upon watching the replay, Mike Weaver takes a second to look at Kunitz, then winds up and goes full elbow with a follow through on Kunitz’s face.  It’s looked very deliberate and intentional and should have been penalized after the goal.  I doubt it would lead to any supplemental discipline, but it’s something the league should at least look at because that crap needs to get out of the game.
  • Malkin Aftermath:  With Malkin missing time, Bylsma has already stated that the 2nd line will likely be Bennett-Sutter-Neal and Jeffrey will be the 3rd line center.  Vitale certainly gets back into the lineup as the 4th line center.  It will be interesting to see if Boychuk is given a chance to take Kennedy’s spot on the 3rd line wing (or potentially 2nd line wing with Sutter) for a game or not.  Sutter has been brilliant defensively but hasn’t added a ton offensively yet.  It will be interesting to see how he deals with the bump up and if he can get his offensive game going next to Neal.  At least the 2nd line at even strength has already been quiet so there won’t be a massive drop off there.  I would imagine the top powerplay becomes Kunitz-Crosby-Neal-Letang-Martin which is more than serviceable for a while.  I daresay that based on the 2nd line performance so far, the Pens will survive Malkin’s injury just fine in the short term.
  • Gudbranson’s Comments:  If you happened to see what Erik Gudbranson said about the hit, it was a little interesting.  He stated, “I finished my check. You never want to see a guy go down.  He’s in a vulnerable position but you can’t pass up a hit like that.  It’s unfortunate that he got hurt on the play but it’s one that I’d take every time.” (Quote from @emptynetters).  I’ll be honest, I love the quote.  He was honest and it was a clean hit, he really did nothing wrong.  If Orpik or Kunitz were in the same situation, I would want them to finish the hit and I would love it if they were candid about it.  Same goes for the opponent.


Pens Record: 12-6-0, 24 pts
Next Game:  2/24 vs TB, 7:30pm

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

Monday, February 18, 2013

Paul Martin is America, Pens Win

It was a happy Hockey Day in America!

Result:
Pens 4  Sabres 3
Goals:  Dupuis (6) from Orpik, Kunitz
            Crosby (7) (PP) unassisted
            Dupuis (7) from Letang, Kunitz
            Martin (2) from Crosby, Dupuis

Positives:
America cheers for Paul Martin.
  • Marc-Andre Fleury:  Even with 3 goals allowed, Fleury was marvelous in a 30 save effort.  He was especially on his game in the 3rd period when he made 16 saves and was a major factor in killing off the only penalty of the period.  None of the 3 goals can be blamed on him as they came on 1) a defensive breakdown on the crease, 2) a ridiculous deflection on the powerplay, and 3) a bad bounce directly back to Buffalo.  It was another strong effort from Flower.
  • First Line: The 1st line (when kept intact), easily had the best day against Buffalo as Kunitz, Crosby, and Dupuis combined for 14 shots and scored 2 goals as a line.  They had a strong forecheck going most of the game and played an incredible shift (eventually scoring) after Ott gave the Sabres the lead early in the 3rd period.
  • Matt Niskanen:  Niskanen looked completely healthy again and played possibly his best game of the season in a very quiet and dependable performance.  He was especially adept at each blue line, keeping pucks in at the offensive zone and poke-checking pucks away in the defensive zone.  He also led the team with 4 blocked shots.
  • Paul Martin:  Martin only played 22 minutes but his production remained strong with the game-winning goal and 2 blocked shots.  He has been incredibly useful to the powerplay at the point and has demonstrated the ability to decide between pass, shoot, or carry the puck very well.  Much like Niskanen, his poke-checks short-circuited quite a few Buffalo chances too.

Noteworthy:
Crosby goal...scored by Weber.
  • Evgeni Malkin:  Geno had 3 shots, 3 missed shots, a slashing penalty, and was 3 for 9 in the faceoff circle.  His overall puck rushing ability and defensive support has been great the last few games, but he still can’t seem to put a complete game together.  It probably doesn’t help that he has new linemates every other shift at this point.
  • Sidney Crosby:  Crosby had a solid offensive day with 3 points but was a complete moron on his cross-checking penalty and was also credited with 3 giveaways.  While racking up points will cure everything, Sid should be leading by example instead of cross-checking players in the back away from the play. 
  • Tyler Kennedy:  While everyone wants to hate TK, and he did put himself offside twice in the game, he actually played a very well-rounded game.  Kennedy had 3 shots (0 missed) and 5 hits in 13:20 of ice time.  He returned to that quick, gritty style of game that got him to the NHL and propelled the 3rd line to some strong shifts, especially the first shift after Ott’s goal.  His defensive work was above average as well against Buffalo.  Hopefully things are turning up for TK.

Negatives:
  • Stupid Penalties:  Malkin’s slash, Neal’s interference, Crosby’s cross-check, and Kunitz’s slash…they were all incredibly stupid, needless, and mindless penalties.  The four best forwards on this team took 3 penalties in the offensive zone and 1 in the neutral zone.  That performance has to be unacceptable in Bylsma’s eyes and that discipline is pathetic.  This group still has some maturing to do.
  • Line Combinations:  The line combinations were downright ugly yesterday.  At one point, Malkin had 3 different left wingers over 3 shifts (Cooke, Bennett, Glass).  Crosby found himself on a shift with Vitale and Adams at one point.  Dupuis-Sutter-Neal came out as a line.  Even if the Pens need a jumpstart to their game at times, there is something to be said for consistency and chemistry for lines.  This certainly can’t be helping with the 2nd line’s lack of production so far.  Watching the 1st goal against over again, the forward line was Cooke-Vitale-Dupuis.  All 3 forwards failed to support each other beginning with Cooke’s attempt to clear the puck and all of them were out of position in the end.  That isn’t a shocking result for 3 players not used to each other, even if they are all strong defensively.

+/- Assessment:
Don't blame Flower for any of these.
  • 1st GF (Dupuis): + for Kunitz (forecheck, pass to Orpik), Orpik (shot towards net), Dupuis (forecheck, goal)
  • 2nd GF (Crosby): + for Martin (lead pass up), Kunitz (pass to Malkin), Malkin (shot on net), Crosby (tap in goal)
  • 1st GA (Hodgson): - for Cooke (can’t clear puck), Bortuzzo (releases on Hodgson), Vitale (over-pursues into zone), Dupuis (doesn’t provide outlet support for Cooke)
  • 2nd GA (Vanek): - for Crosby (penalty), Glass (penalty)
  • 3rd GA (Ott): - for no one (unfortunate bounce)
  • 3rd GF (Dupuis): + for Niskanen (forces turnover at blue line), Letang (backhand pass to Dupuis), Dupuis (won earlier puck battle and goal)
  • 4th GF (Martin): + for Niskanen (moves puck up to Crosby), Dupuis (rotates puck to Crosby), Crosby (drives puck towards center of the zone), Martin (slapshot goal)
  • Season +/-:  Click here for the Season +/- Spreadsheet

Thoughts:
Where'd he go?
  • 2nd Line Wing:  At this point, I hope whoever is the starting 2nd line wing stays there for the whole game.  There have been flashes of good and flashes of bad from Cooke, Glass, Bennett, Kennedy, and Boychuk at this point.  Give someone two full games there and work from there.  (I realize this will never happen, but it needs to.)
  • Scratching Despres:  Bylsma opted to scratch Despres to add some toughness and grit into the lineup in the form of Bortuzzo.  While that reasoning makes it silly to remove Engelland from the lineup, I would still have rather seen Despres than Engelland.  That being said, Bortuzzo was on for a goal against that was partially his fault (and only received 2:09 of playing time in the first period because of it).  Based on the move to sit Bortuzzo for a while after that goal, I would imagine Despres returns in place of Bortuzzo vs Philadelphia.  I’m not sure anything takes Engelland out of the lineup at this point.
  • Glass Fight:  A game after Adams stood up for Niskanen, Glass took his turn and stood up for Sutter by fighting Cody McCormick.  Glass earns a stick tap for that.  On top of it, McCormick was a gentleman and did not pound Glass when his jersey was over his head.  McCormick waited until Glass could see again before the fight continued.  Stick tap for that.  Finally, Glass gave McCormick a big slap on the back after the fight was over to thank him.  Stick taps all around.  It was just a classy fight if there ever was one.
  • Responding to Adversity:  After Ott scored to make it 3-2 Buffalo, the Pens were at a fork in the road.  They had taken each direction before – either get frustrated and fall apart or show resiliency and attack.  This time they chose the mature route and the 3rd line followed up Ott’s goal with a dominant shift in the offensive zone.  After their work was done, the first line came out and completed the task with the tying goal.  Give tons of credit to Bylsma, the staff, and the team for responding like they did after a bad bounce and stunning goal against.  That’s the type of composure we need to see from the team (even if the forwards couldn’t act like that all game).

Pens Record: 11-5-0, 22 pts
Next Game:  2/20 vs Phi, 7:30pm