Saturday night's game gave us a taste of what the Pens are in for in this series: they won't be shut out in every game, but they will have to work for every inch of ice and every scoring chance, game after game. We knew that the Bruins were no joke, and now we've seen how hard it will be to play against them. It's not likely to be a very fun series, but let's not jump to conclusions and liken this to Pens-Flyers last year, as I heard a few people do. The Bruins weren't in the Penguins' heads, and the Pens didn't unravel; they were outplayed by an elite team, showed some frustration, and tonight we'll see how they respond. Some notes and observations from Game 1 after the jump.
Monday, June 3, 2013
Saturday, June 1, 2013
Previewing Pens-Bruins: It's About Time
Gee, it seems like only a month ago that the Penguins were dispatching the Ottawa Senators. I hope you all made as good use of your eight-day layoff as I did - I got engaged, so you probably didn't, but that's okay - and are well-rested headed into the Conference Finals. The only thing standing between the Pens and a shot at the Cup are the Boston Bruins, a match up that just seems right. You've got Jarome Iginla facing the team he spurned at the trade deadline, and you've got Jaromir Jagr hoping to torment his former team, but - beyond the tale of two Jaroms - you've got the cream of the Eastern Conference going head to head. There will be no Cinderella story this year (like last year's Devils), only two heavyweights sizing the other up.
After the jump, my three questions and three statements for the Pens-Bruins series, and my predictions for the series.
Labels:
Boston Bruins,
Brad Marchand,
Brooks Orpik,
David Krejci,
Jarome Iginla,
Jaromir Jagr,
Kris Letang,
NHL playoffs,
Pittsburgh Penguins,
series preview,
Tomas Vokoun,
Tuukka Rask,
Zdeno Chara
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