GOOD: Stars
At this point, we have a pretty good sense of what we can expect from our top guys. Crosby continues to heat up, and he now sits one point behind Steven Stamkos on the leaderboard after the two went blow-for-blow last night. The scary thing is, it seems like he still has another gear. We've seen him pass up shots all season looking for the perfect pass, but with Malkin sidelined, he'll need to start calling his own number, like he did a minute the first period last night, when he froze Anders Lindback before depositing the puck above his right shoulder.
Before going down on Friday night, Malkin was likewise playing well, and he and Neal have become one of the most dangerous tandems in the lead, particularly on the power play, where both use the one-timer threat to keep the defense honest. Neal is showing that last year was not a fluke, once again pacing the leauge in power play goals and near the top in total goals.
Chris Kunitz has earned the right to be counted among the Penguins' star players. He's scoring more than a point a game, he's one of the best two or three forecheckers on the team, and he always seems to come up with timely goals from his spot in front of the net.
Letang continues to do things every game that stand out, whether with his stick, his skates, or his glove. Last night, he chased down a puck at the blue line to keep alive a 5-on-3 power play, which seems like a standard enough play, but in person it was breathtaking.
With the puck's momentum driving it out of the zone, and a Lightning penalty killer in close pursuit, the math (which I didn't do) is against Letang arriving in time to keep the puck in, much less doing anything with it. But he crosses the ice in two strides and meets the puck just as it touches the blue. He gathers the puck and, in one motion, turns away from the Lightning net and launches a blind cross-ice pass onto the tape of Crosby's stick, leading moments thereafter to Beau Bennett's first career (and game-winning) goal. Watch the play in real time and name me three other defensemen who can make this play:
BAD: Injuries to the Stars
As mentioned above, Geno was injured in an ugly spill in Friday's game against the Panthers and was ruled out of yesterday's game, as well as this week's road trip. We first were told that Malkin was suffering from severe headaches and concussion-like symptoms, then that he was not, and now that he did indeed suffer a concussion. According to Bylsma:
"After the hit Evgeni suffered some short-term memory loss and therefore was diagnosed with a concussion...He’s had no other symptoms. He’s feeling fine and his memory is returning."
This is obviously terrible news for the team, but more terrible because Geno is a wonderful guy and I don't want him losing his short term memory. I hope he'll recover soon and start making new memories.
News from the Penguins is that Geno has been placed on Injured Reserve retroactive to Feb. 22, when the injury occurred, which mean we won't see him again until March at the earliest. Losing a player of Malkin's caliber is always a crushing blow, but even more so in a shortened season. It will be crucial for Crosby nd co. to step up in Geno's absence if he misses a considerable amount of time (which this season means "any time at all").
GOOD: The New Guys
The newest additions to the roster have overcome some growing pains to fill their roles on the team. Mr. Glass, after a slow start, has started to show his talent as a big hitter and a good penalty killer, as well as our default secondary enforcer. He's shown good chemistry with Joe Vitale and Craig Adams on a defensive-minded, pesky fourth line. Mr. Glass, as his name suggests does not have soft hands, and we're still waiting for his first point. His closest call came last night on a redirection off a feed from Joe Vitale, which Garon was able to get in front of. You keep at it, Mr. Glass!
Brandon Sutter has stepped up admirably in the void left by Jordan Staal. Sutter also had a quiet start to his tenure here, but has come on strong of late, most notably with his spectacular tying goal in the final minutes of the Flyers game last Wednesday. He's a good skater and stickhandler, and his game is deceptively laid-back; he doesn't waste a lot of energy skating all over the ice, but he tends to get to the right place in all three zones.
Sadly, just as the Legend of Sutter was born with his goal against Philly, Vokoun put it back to bed by letting in a terrible goal - the sixth of the game - moments later, turning an inspiring comeback into an crappy crapfest. As I left the CEC that night, I heard a fan proclaim, to no one in particular, "Vokoun is done. He is DONE!" Which is hard to argue with because, hey, Vokoun knew the deal when he signed here: NO BAD GAMES, or you are done. Seriously, though, Vokoun has done everything we've asked of him, and I really believe he's helped keep Fleury as sharp as he's been.
As for the rooks, congrats to Beau Bennett for scoring his first NHL goal last night, and also congratulations on being very adorable. He and Despres and Bortuzzo are works in progress, so let's exercise some patience and let them grow up.
BAD: The Malkin-Neal Winger
To date, Bylsma has experimented with, by my count, SEVEN different wingers to join Geno and Neal on the first/second line: Eric Tangradi (traded), Mr. Glass (haha), Dustin Jeffrey (couldn't stick), Tyler Kennedy (seems to be stuck in a Speed-meets-Sudden Death scenario where if his shot hits the net, the arena will explode), Zach Boychuk (remember him?), Matt Cooke (sigh), and Beau Bennett (no pressure, kid). It's getting embarrassing. There's no point in lingering on this, but I am already looking forward to April, by which time I can only assume Ray Shero will have traded for a legit top-6 winger (IGGY) or figured out a way to clone Kunitz.
GOOD: Special Teams
The Pens power play ranks third in the league at an impressive 28 percent, and they've scored PP goals in eleven straight games, which is very good. Although Bylsma continues to tinker with the first unit, it's clear that the top guys are clicking. There's a lot of movement, generating a lot of good scoring chances. With Malkin shelved, I imagine we're going to see Martin-Letang-Neal-Crosby-Kunitz out there every time, which is not so shabby. I'd say I want to see the second unit create more goals, but they are basically never out there for more than 20 seconds. Sorry, guys.
The penalty kill has slipped from years past, and the Pens sit at an ugly 17th, killing 82.2 percent of the penalties they take. I considered putting this in the BAD section, but I think that the PK has looked pretty good so far. Adams has been solid as a rock all year, and Matt Cooke is getting better with each game, while Dupuis, Sutter, Glass, and even Crosby are putting in good minutes on the kill. I'm hopeful that their percentage will improve as the newcomers get more comfortable, and more importantly as the team starts showing more discipline. The refs are calling absolutely everything this year, and the Pens have put themselves in a lot of holes by ignoring the tighter interpretation of the boarding and interference rules.
BAD: Home-Ice (Dis)Advantage
Have a look at the Pens' home/away splits so far this year: 5-4 at CEC, 8-2 on the road. I'm not going to go on a screed about how Consol has priced out "real fans" and created an atmosphere more appropriate for a museum (or a mausoleum), because the team has been very good at home the past couple years. But so far, the home-cooking doesn't seem to be doing much good; they've suffered some embarrassing losses, getting whupped by the Leafs and the Isles in their first two home stands, and given up a lot of leads (not that that's anything new). Granted, it's early yet, and we just won two in a row at CEC, but the Pens will host 10(!) games in March alone, and they need to take advantage of those games. Also, it's quiet in there.
GOOD: Paul effing MARTIN!!
P-Mart has been written up all over the internet, but DAMN GINA! it is worth repeating. Martin's been incredible on both ends of the ice - and even in those instances where he's been caught standing around in his own (and, make no mistake, there have been a few), he's made up for it with huge offense. He's fourth in the league in D-man scoring, and his goal last night against the Lightning, where he led a 3-on-1 break, made a smart pass to Cooke, and then drove to the net to put in the rebound was something we've never seen before from him. Hell, we wouldn't have even known how to process that play last season, he was so bad. There's going to be some semi-serious discussion of Martin as a Norris trophy candidate, which is nice but not very likely, but I will say this: it's a damn shame that the lockout cancelled the All-Star Game this year, because Martin would have to be on the team, right? We would have been happy with an average campaign from him, a Mark Eaton (welcome back, Eats!) type season, and we're getting All-Star level play. Let's celebrate!
BAD: Tyler Kennedy
As you can see in the photo above, Kennedy's instinct is to close his eyes and whip the puck in the direction of the net, as far as he can guess. TK's inability to hit the net has gone from a quaint shortcoming that he's bound to overcome to a congenital defect. How he managed to score 21 goals two years ago is a mystery, and it's one that the organization paying for to the tune of $2 million a season. And his crappiness is put into relief by the strong play of Joe Vitale, who is the same size as Kennedy and whose number (46) looks exactly like Kennedy's (48). So every time I see Kennedy do something good, it turns out to be Joe Vitale, which makes sense, because Kennedy doesn't do much good. Last night, Dustin Jeffrey fought in the corner against two Lightning, came out with the puck, and dished it to Kennedy, who was all alone in front of Lindback. So excited to have the puck with no one in front of him (not that that would stop him), Kennedy immediately stepped into his hardest snap shot, which he aimed in the vicinity of the top shelf, but which of course was destined for 3-5 inches wide of the net. Lindback got a blocker on it, so it looked like a good save, but it happened right in front of me, and there is no chance of that puck going in the net. Such is the way of Tyler Kennedy. Here's the play, which is hard to really see because CORNER CAM!
Of course, as soon as you criticize Kennedy, he scores some clutch goal to make you look stupid, like at the end of the Flyer game, when I wondered aloud, "Why is Kennedy out there on Crosby's line?" moments before he scored the goal that got us back in the game. So...prove me wrong, Pig Boy. Prove me wrong.
Kennedy, like all pig-man hybrids, is degenerating at an exponentially faster rate than "regular" players because of the pork glutting up his DNA strands.
ReplyDeleteHaha, that's good to know. I knew there had to be a scientific explanation.
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