Showing posts with label Andrei Vasilevskiy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Andrei Vasilevskiy. Show all posts

Saturday, 1 April 2017

Game 78: Habs vs. Bolts

Montreal 2, Tampa Bay 1 (OT):

FIRST PERIOD:

- Desperate Bolts team, you'd have to figure they'll come flying out of the gate. Habs will likely try to grind their way through this 1st period.

- Decent enough start for the Habs, Tampa with a surprising caution start, with Dwight King generating a turnover at the blue line to get a breakaway. King fails, as expected, but still, so far so good early for the Canadiens.

- 4th line has some mo' going early - Julien giving that line regular shifts. So it's now clear the gameplan is one emphasize physicality, likely under the assumption that Tamps would come out aggressively. That, however, still hasn't happened.

- Danault line continuing to look dangerous, Radulov who had a mini-slump through early March, seems to be skating faster (making me wonder if he's been dealing with an injury). 

- Galchenyuk struggling with the puck, specifically passing. Haven't seen very many signs of chemistry on that 3rd line, especially between himself and Andrew Shaw. 

- Did Beaulieu just dirty check (knee) Vermin? The Lightening bench certainly seems to think he did. 

- Both teams doing a good job defensively collapsing to protect the middle of the ice - not a lot of room for passing towards the front of the net. Scoring chances have been limited both ends this period.

- Habs will take that 1st period - physical, close checking, typical road game stuff. Especially against a team that's desperate for victory. Danault line looked good, breakouts had lots of speed, passing was sharp. Point and Palat look like the most dangerous forwards for the Lightening. Slight edge to Montreal for the period, seemed like they had more puck pressure. 

SECOND PERIOD:

- You can see from the heat map how both teams were very intensely covering the slot area. Shots weren't particularly dangerous, slight edge to Tampa. But only just.


- Julien using Shaw 1st powerplay rotation. Hmmm...

- Galchenyuk/Gallagher/Lehkonen 2nd rotation looked good. Really, really good. Maybe Julien should think about trying these 3 out for some 5v5 shifts??

- Habs 4th line, which started out the 1st period looking half-decent, has devolved into a defensive mess. Dwight King to the box, a result of that unit being pinned in their own zone.

- A 4th line analogy. Habs can't reasonably expect to play very deep in the post-season with 3 decent lines, and 1 awful one. The playoffs are a marathon - if you're attempting to run a long distance race missing a limb, you're going to lose. 

- Not a great game up the middle for either side. Com'on Claude, lets get Galchenyuk off that wing. It ain't working. Try something else.

- Plekaenc line continues to pile up the good shifts, Gallagher is the spark plug, as per usual. That line might be the most likely to get the Habs on the scoreboard.

- Canadiens have dominated since the 10 minute mark of the period, and finally Danault breaks the ice pushing a loose puck behind Vasilevskiy. This is a really impressive Habs effort against a team that simply can't afford to lose. 

- Andrei Markov and, I assume, Jaromir Jagr are the only ones who know where the fountain of youth is. Good on both of them for keeping it under tabs. Another stellar evening for the Habs version of an ageless wonder.

- Habs powerpaly looks as organized tonight as I've seen them all season. Maybe it's their opponent, but Canadiens have made great strides gaining the zone.

- Carey Price makes the big saves when required. Above the big Sv% improvements since Julien arrived on scene, this is the area where's he really excelled and been a huge difference maker:

- Habs 4th line, again, overwhelmed, and again, take a powerplay because they can't handle the speed of an NHL game. Martinsen and King are ... awful.

- Habs barely survive the Tampa powerplay (because of that 4th line penalty). Still, that aside, Habs have exceeded my expectations tonight, with Gallagher, Markov, Pacioretty and Radulov with excellent efforts. Galchenyuk is working hard, but continues to be stifled by the lack of opportunity that comes with being relegated to the 3rd line. But still, aside from the black hole representing the 4th line, by quibbles are minor. An impressive effort through 40 minutes.


THIRD PERIOD:

- Habs extending their good play through the 2nd period, SA CF at even strength through two periods just one 57%, which is really impressive on the road.


- Here you can see how the Habs were much better generating shots around Vasilevskiy in that 2nd period, likely because Tampa started to move away from their gameplan (keeping the slot guarded) as Price frustrated their scoring attempts:


- Beaulieu has been much more physical and assertive winning the puck in his zone the past couple of weeks. Not saying Julien's rotation strategy has anything to do with it, but at this point, it's hard to conceive of him being shuffled out anytime soon (just watch, he'll sit Monday night).

- Kucherov looking dangerous - he's come agonizingly close a couple of times tonight. A very good candidate to get Tampa on the board.

- Great rush by Galchenyuk, a sweet feed on Lehkonen's stick forcing Vasilevskiy to make his best save of the night. Rebound goes right to Shaw with a wide open net. He misses. Of course.

- Galchenyuk. Lehkonen. Gallagher. Com'on. Just give this a few tries. Com'on, Claude.

- Tampa hasn't had a very good night getting pucks on Price, the trouble mostly because of how they start from their own zone. Defence hasn't done a good job moving the puck forward, Habs forechecking success has really stifled Tampa's attack. 

- Shot blocking has also helped, Radulov hurt stopping the puck ... seemed to favour his arm/wrist area. On the bench getting looked at. Fingers crossed.

- Radulov to the dressing room. Apparently puck hit in in the ribs. There is no padding there. Hopefully just a bruise.

- Radulov is on the bench. Scratch that, he's on the damn ice for a shift. Whew.

- Ack, Hedman point shot, deflected in by Gourde to tie the game. Up to that point, Tampa didn't show any sign of threatening to tie this game - just one of those plays.

- Odd deployment choices, Tampa with mo' from that goal, and Julien sends out the dreaded 4th line, which only helps the Lightening to gain more ground. Price forced to make a couple of tough saves with the Canadiens again hemmed in their zone.

- Turning point looking like Andrew Shaw unable to bury the puck into the open net. 2-0 and Tampa might have packed it in. Now they're looking for the kill.

- 5 minutes left, good shift by the Danault line has calmed the storm a little. More or less a coin flip to decide the winner.

- Martinsen makes another contribution to the Habs 4th line blues, mini-slew on Vasilevskiy that sends him down, and takes a go-ahead goal by Petry off the board. Sigh.

- Kucherov is totally gonna win this game for Tampa. Book it.

- Well, Kucherov will have to end this in OT. I'm still sticking to my prediction.


OVERTIME:

- No more Martisen or King, okay Claude??

- Kucherov somehow misses a totally wide open net one end, just a tap-in play, and seconds later, Radulov, he with the ribs broken or not, ends the night in favour of the Habs. Devastating extra point loss for Tampa, but truth be told, the Canadiens were heads above the better team tonight, in large part because their big-named players came to the front, in part because it looks like Tampa simply doesn't have the horses left to compete. 



TURNS OUT TAMPA'S SEASON ALSO GOT RUINED LOSING THEIR BEST PLAYER

Can Habs fans relate? Last season, the Canadiens' season was ruined (as the powers that be insisted), when Carey Price went down to a season-ending knee injury in November. Before Price's injury, the Habs were riding high in the standings, and seemed a sure-fire bet to (at the very least) be an easy qualifier for the 2016 Stanley Cup Playoffs.

Habs fans know the story - the Canadiens didn't even come close.

This season, it was the Tampa Bay Lightening's turn to suffer the debilitating loss of an irreplaceable player, that being, of course Steven Stamkos. Tampa's star centre, the centrepiece to the franchise's competitive revival this decade. In retrospect, the coincidences are eerie: Like Price, Stamkos suffered a knee injury in November. That injury, which was later diagnosed as thoracic outlet syndrome (for the layman, it's a nasty muscle tear) has kept Stamkos out of the lineup the past 4-and-a-half-months.

One more incredible Price/Stamkos conscience? If Stamkos plays tomorrow night, it means he'll have missed 59 consecutive regular season games.

The number of consecutive regular season games Carey Price missed after he went down to injury in New York in November, 2015?

59.

There had been speculation that past few days that Stamkos, who has been practicing with the team the past couple of weeks, could make his return tonight. However, the Bolts announced earlier today that he'd miss tonight's game, but may play tomorrow night against Dallas.

That return likely is too little, too late - at least as far as Tampa's hopes of making the playoffs this season.

The Lightening, headed into tonight's game, are 5 points behind the Boston Bruins for that 2nd and final wild card spot in the Eastern Conference. While Tampa still holds 2 games in hand over Boston, a loss tonight against the Canadiens will likely spell the end of any realistic hopes.

Tampa's injury woes extend beyond Stamkos. The losses of centres Tyler Johnson, and Cedric Maquette, as well as defensemen Jason Garrison, have hampered Tampa's ability to put together a winning streak needed to make the post-season.

That said, Tampa is riding a 4-game winning run headed into tonight's game, their last being a narrow win over the (very bad) Red Wings. So hopes are still measured.

Here's Tampa's lineup tonight:

Palat/Point/Kucherov
Killorn/Namestnikov/Drouin
Erne/Gourde/Vermin
Dumont/McKegg/Brown

Hedman/Dotchin
Stralman/Witkowski
Coburn/Sustr

Meanwhile, the Habs are maintaining status-quo, which means no changes to the top 3 lines, while the 4th line will continue to rotate bad players. Fortunately tonight, the Habs are starting someone who's actually qualified to play in the NHL, as Mike McCarron will centre the 4th line, while Steve Ott, who really should be the guy in charge of taping the sticks, will stay back at the hotel.

Pacioretty/Danault/Radulov
Byron/Plekanec/Gallagher
Lehkonen/Shaw/Galchenyuk
Martinsen/McCarron/King

Weber/Markov
Petry/Emelin
Davidson/Beaulieu

Starting goaltenders - it's Andrei Vasilevskiy (2.68/.915) against Carey Price (2.23/.924).

Puck drops at 7:10 EST.


Wednesday, 28 December 2016

Game 35: Habs vs. Bolts

Tampa Bay 4, Montreal 3 (OT)

FIRST PERIOD LIVE GAME BLOG:

- So Flippula is a healthy scratch for Tampa tonight, a result of him missing a team meeting. Tsk, tsk. 

- Bryon with an outstanding forecheck after dumping the puck in, combination of speed and tenacity pays off, as he feeds Radulov to give Habs 1-0 lead. Play started with Radulov making nice transition pass from his blue line on Bryon's tape. That's how you manufacture goals in the NHL.

- Bryon and Radulov definitely clicking tonight, Vasilevskiy looking uncertain at times with the puck. Early signs are not entirely positive for Tampa.

- Johnson evens the score, as Weber makes a poor play with the puck, turning it over at his line, two passes later, Johnson finishes the play. Weber's struggles aren't just with goal-scoring lately.
- And of course, as I tweet all about how terrible Weber has been of late, he scores on the powerplay. So there's that. Also, the Tampa penalty kill is pretty much a disaster this year - so the Habs might not been done scoring on the man advantage tonight.

- Should we also mention that Paul Byron has been a monster this period? We should probably mention that.

- 5 minutes left, Plekanec/Flynn/Lehkonen line with a nice shift - they've also played a strong 1st period warrant keeping an eye on rest of this game.

- That's a good period for the Habs, one little defensive mistake costing a goal, but except for that, Tampa's scoring chances basically contained to nil. Bryon, Radulov and Lehkonen looking good again for the Canadiens - Tampa's offence, most of the time, looks lost - certainly not very efficient in how they gain the Habs zone.


SECOND PERIOD LIVE GAME BLOG:

- Habs with a 52.2 SA CF (5v5) after 1 period. 



- This Carey Price guy is kinda hard to score on.
- Habs depth paying off dividends, not to mention getting them through this period of injury. It's Chris Terry finishing off a very smooth three way passing play, Carr and McCarron the setups. Tampa's defence has these occasional lapses in concentration that seem to be opening up some passing lanes. I know Tampa has injury troubles, but even that considered, this doesn't look like a team that's playing the fundamentals very well.

- Tampa's defence has gotten away with a bunch of plays that on most nights with most crews, would be called. It's keeping the Lightening in a game where for the most part, they're being outplayed.

- Gallagher, who's with Danault tonight, looks totally lost. It's kind of sad and very worrying to see how far he's regressed this season. Surely there's an unstated injury issue?

- That said, if it isn't working with Danault (it clearly isn't), why not give Gallagher some shifts with Plekanec and Lehkonen? Brian Flynn, who's only playing up the depth chart because of the injuries, has zero prospect for top 6 play (or for that matter, top 9), could be moved aside. 

- It's 3-1, but Habs defence hasn't been very tight around Price tonight - really playing low in front of him, lots of panic plays and scrambles for pucks, passing lanes have been pretty open too. 

THIRD PERIOD LIVE GAME BLOG:

- Habs receding a fair amount as the 2nd period progressed - their defensive play remains a concern - although Price looks very good tonight, Habs are just begging for trouble even with a 2 goal lead (but for how long?)


- Decent start to the period for the Habs, seem to be a little more aggressive with th forecheck, maybe hoping to stunt Tampa's ability to set up the play and carry speed into the Habs zone.

- Strong shifts by Gallagher and Pacioretty to start the period - Therrien recognizing their strong forecheck, giving them extra shifts.

- Shea Weber with a massive hit along the boards on Namestnikov, totally clean. Namestnikov slightly turning away from the play, his head down, never saw Weber coming. Devastating.

- Radulov with an error in judgement, a little too aggressive with his stick, nailed for an avoidable slash. Door opens up for Tampa here.

- Nathan Beaulieu with a strong PK shift, possibly saved a goal with a neat poke check in front of Price. Canadiens wise to return to some aggressive forecheck to regain some momentum. 

- Habs sloppy in their own zone again, and this time it costs them. Gallagher with a bad turnover along the boards, and Emelin does a weak job covering in front of price, Hedman tipping home a Kucherov shot, and it's 3-2.

- Shea Weber. More poor decision making. Tampa back to the powerplay with tons of momentum on its side. Not looking favourable for the Habs right now.

- Too many turkey dinners. Habs have lost their legs as this period winds down. Practically crawling in their zone.

- And there it is. Palat. Powerplay off Weber's dumb penalty. Game is tied.

- Game takes crazy turn, as Tampa gets nailed (rightly) for sneak change to set up a breakaway ... set play, but the officials were smart enough to spot it and call the Lightening for too many men. Habs powerplay mostly a mess, with Shea Weber somehow avoiding getting called for clear-cut trip in his own zone. Semi-disastrous period for the Habs, but then we mostly saw it coming because the Canadiens were playing so poorly in their zone 2nd half of the 2nd period, continuing into the 3rd. 


OVERTIME LIVE BLOG:

- Therrien starts Pacioretty/Byron/Weber. Two of those players has, for the most part, not played very well tonight.

- Radulov. Golden opportunity. Ideal shot. Passes to Pacioretty. No shot. Oy.

- And Johnson beats Price top corner. Game. Set. Match. We saw it coming, hoped it wouldn't come, it came and Montreal only gets a loser point. Frustrating.





THIS JUST IN: I'M TOO STUFFED TO WRITE ABOUT HOCKEY ANYMORE

Happy post-Christmas everyone!! Did you survive the weekend spent passively liking your relatives and faking grateful appreciation for the crappy useless junk you found under the dying spruce tree which you haven't watered in three week and is now a giant piece of kindling ready to create a blazing inferno of death in the middle your living room? NICE.

I've been spending the past few days stuffing my fat face and drinking my brother's 66 of scotch. Rolling out of a bed is now officially the hardest part of my day, usurping the process of looking myself in the mirror each morning and wondering where it all went so horribly wrong.

So ... I guess I'll still write about hockey. SIGHS. Tonight the Habs get back into action as they start their holiday week in sunny south Florida, where they'll take on the Tampa Bay Lightening.

So, Tampa. Where do we start? Disappointing? I supposed that's a good word to describe their 2016-17 season so far. The Lightening were reckoned to be an elite team in the Eastern Conference, but this season, they've strung together a downright mediocre 17 wins in 35 games, which, if the trend continues, likely won't be a good enough pace to qualify for the playoffs.

In fairness, Tampa has endured some pretty bad injuries to some very good players. First and foremost is Steven Stamkos, who's out until March with lateral meniscus tear. The Lightening haven't only lost their elite number 1 centre - they're also out Ben Bishop, who's gone for a month with a LBI, and then you toss in the names of other wounded skaters like Andrej Palat, Cedric Maquette, Ryan Callahan, each of whom are out of the lineup indefinitely, and it's been a rough year.

The loss of Stamkos, though, seems to have hit the Lightening particularly hard. Check out Tampa's stat line from last year to this year:

                      2015-16      NHL RANK      2016-17     NHL RANK
CF% (5v5)          52.5                6th                50.0               16th
GF60                 2.31                7th                2.22               12th

Interestingly, Tampa has maintained the line with shot production levels:

                        2015-16      NHL RANK      2016-17     NHL RANK
SF60                   29.3               14th                29.1              13th

So this year Tampa is still getting pucks on goal, but again, the lack of Stamkos weighs heavily, because, well, this:


That's Stamkos's career shooting percentages, which have consistently ranked in the League's top 10 among players with 60+ games/season, and among the top 5 among NHL centers.

In short, this Lightening team isn't nearly the same without him. Team shooting percentages are down, and with that, goals produced. You just can't replace elite.

The good news for Tampa is that Stamkos is due for return this season, although exactly when is unknown. If Tampa can scrape their way through the next three months and stay in the hunt for a playoff birth, his return might be all they need to get over the hump and into the post-season.

But until then, winning is going to be a tough battle.

Normally I'd say Tampa's task won't get much easier tonight as they take on the Habs, but as Canadiens' fans know (and can relate to), Montreal is dealing with their own stream of injuries, including the long-term loss of its number one centre, Alex Galchenyuk. Also on the not-playing list, David Desharnais, Andrew Shaw, Andrei Markov, and Greg Pateryn. Still, the Habbies are coming off two impressive loses at the hands of the two very tough opponents, the Minnesota Wild and Columbus Blue Jackets, where the Canadiens, even with all their injuries, outplayed and outshot their opposition, but came up just short on the scoresheets.

So break's over!! It's time to get back to hockey that matters. Carey Price vs. Andrei Vasilevskiy. Puck drops at 7:10 EST.