It’s Game 7 for all the marbles, the whole enchildada, the whole shootin’ match, there is no tomorrow, it’s do or die, fish or cut bait, live or die, and for these teams, it might be all about pressure and who can handle it best. If you’re New York Rangers coach John Tortorella, you’re planting the seed today that all of the pressure is now on the Capitals, they being the favorite in this series to begin with. According to Torto—
“Ah, vutt duss he know about pressure?”
Professor?
“Dat guy, hiss name zounds like zum kind of zalad I get mitt my dinner – weinerschnitzel mitt die Tortorella on ze side.”
Still, about the pressure on these teams.
“Ja, ja…pressure. Let me tell you about pressure. Ze scientific pr-r-r-roperties of pressure are qvite zimple, really. Let me zhow you…"
“Zee? Pressure ee-qvalls vutt ve call ze ‘normal force’ divided by ze area. Now, here iss vere tings get a little more complicated for ze Rangers. Ze normal force does not apply here. Vy?”
I don’t know, Professor.
“Ach! Und you call yourzelf a pr-r-r-rognosticator! It is ze AB-normal force zat izz important here.”
And zat…I mean, that would be?
“You tell me, schmarty pents.”
Ovechkin?
“Zee? You do heff a brain!”
Well, we try.
“Don’t get carried avay…Now, you zee, ze ab-normal force applied to ze area of ze hockey rink can heff ver-r-r-r-ry interestink effects of ze outcome of the egg-shperiment.”
You mean the hockey game.
“Ja, vutt-ever…anyvay, ze ab-normal force in ziss instance is apr-r-r-roaching a constant.”
You mean the fact that he has a goal in each of his last three games.
“Ja! Ver-r-r-r-ry goot! You sure you aren’t a vizziks schtudent?”
Not since college, Prof.
“OK, now…vee contr-r-r-ol for ze Ovechkin factor, but vee heff not accounted for all ze variables on pressure. Vutt are vee missink?”
Tell us, Professor…
“Ah, you remember zat for every action, zere iss a reaction, ja?”
I seem to remember that…
“Vell, here, for vun Alex, vee heff a corresponding Alex egg-zerting force on ze hockey rink.”
You mean Semin.
“Egg-sackly!”
And he has more goals than Ovechkin in this series.
“Ja, but mit Semin, ze force is a bit more variable. He had vunn goal in Game Vun, no goals in Game Two, two goals in Game Three, did not heff vun in Game Four, had vun in Game Five, and vuss mitout vun in Game Six.”
So…
“Ze mass-a-matical function predicts he vill heff at least vun goal tonight.”
Can’t argue with that. But what about the other side of the rink? The Rangers haven’t ever lost a series in which they led three games to one. Is there any pressure on that side of the rink?
“Ah, you betcha!”
And there is, I suppose, some mathematical formula to show that?
“Nein…zey play in New York. Iff zey lose, zey vill never hear ze end of it until next Zeptember.”
What about Henrik Lundqvist? He was dominating early in the series, but he has been somewhat less than that in Games Five and Six. What sort of pressure is on him?
“More pressure zenn Don Koharski leaning up against a donut case.”
Good one, Prof.
“I’ve been zaving zat vun.”
But seriously, we hear that Lundqvist won’t have three bad games in a row. Anything to that?
“Vell, it’s not eggscakly unheard of. Earlier ziss year, he had three conzeckutiff games in which he allowed four or more goals.”
That would be December 23rd to December 29th, against the Caps, Devils, and Islanders, in which he allowed four, four, and five goals.
“Ja, and zeen zere iss zat real schinker of a run he had in early Dezember…”
Six, three, and eight goals allowed in consecutive games to Montreal, Calgary, and the Devils. He’s never done it in a playoff series, though.
“Ja, und until he allowed nine goals in two games against the Caps in 80 minutes, he hedd not allowed more than three goals in conzeckutiff games in ze playoffs, either.”
And, he’s allowed 14 goals in his last four games, covering 199:52 of play…that’s a 4.20 GAA.
“You’re pr-r-r-retty goot mit de mass-a-matiks your zelf.”
Thanks, Prof. I take it then, that there is more pressure on Lundqvist in this game?
“Oh, ab-zo-lutely. Zere iss a mooltiplier effect here. Iff you take ze lack of offense on ze part of ze Rangers…”
You mean six goals in their last five games…
“Ja, zat compunds ze problem for Lundqvist. Not only has he allowed zo many goals, but now, the Rangers heff to be sinking zat Lundqvist hess to…how do you say it?”
Pitch a shutout?
“Eggsackly! Pitch a shutout to vinn.”
And with the opposing forces of the constant of Ovechkin and the variable of Semin that would argue for some production in this game.
“It schpells ‘doom’ for ze Rangers.”
Nothing is guaranteed. All the Capitals have done in forcing a Game 7 is give themselves a chance to win a series they should, in fact, win. But the whole notion of pressure is, to our way of thinking, a product of sportwriters, fans, and Tony Kornheiser.
Players have dreamt about such moments since they were kids – Canadian boys on a pond dreaming it was Game 7 of a playoff game, and the puck is on their stick. European kids dreaming of perhaps making the big save to win an Olympic gold medal or World Championship. A youngster in New England with thoughts of stuffing home a rebound in the last second of a championship game.
Frankly, we’re thinking that fans are feeling more pressure than the players are.
For the players, it’s just a matter of going out to, as the late Herb Brooks put it, “play your game.” If both teams do that, the talent and the momentum are tilted steeply to the Capitals’ end of the ice. In a one-game playoff, a goalie – either goalie – could be an outsized factor. But the Capitals are deeper, more talented, on a roll. And the other goalie has had his struggles lately.
Tonight is the Capitals’ “final exam” of sorts, the product of lessons learned in last year’s Game 7 overtime loss to the Philadelphia Flyers. They’ve spent a year studying. Think they’ll pass, Professor?
“Oh, ja…based on ziss zimple arizzmetic, mit flying colors…”
I don’t know, Professor.
“Ach! Und you call yourzelf a pr-r-r-rognosticator! It is ze AB-normal force zat izz important here.”
And zat…I mean, that would be?
“You tell me, schmarty pents.”
Ovechkin?
“Zee? You do heff a brain!”
Well, we try.
“Don’t get carried avay…Now, you zee, ze ab-normal force applied to ze area of ze hockey rink can heff ver-r-r-r-ry interestink effects of ze outcome of the egg-shperiment.”
You mean the hockey game.
“Ja, vutt-ever…anyvay, ze ab-normal force in ziss instance is apr-r-r-roaching a constant.”
You mean the fact that he has a goal in each of his last three games.
“Ja! Ver-r-r-r-ry goot! You sure you aren’t a vizziks schtudent?”
Not since college, Prof.
“OK, now…vee contr-r-r-ol for ze Ovechkin factor, but vee heff not accounted for all ze variables on pressure. Vutt are vee missink?”
Tell us, Professor…
“Ah, you remember zat for every action, zere iss a reaction, ja?”
I seem to remember that…
“Vell, here, for vun Alex, vee heff a corresponding Alex egg-zerting force on ze hockey rink.”
You mean Semin.
“Egg-sackly!”
And he has more goals than Ovechkin in this series.
“Ja, but mit Semin, ze force is a bit more variable. He had vunn goal in Game Vun, no goals in Game Two, two goals in Game Three, did not heff vun in Game Four, had vun in Game Five, and vuss mitout vun in Game Six.”
So…
“Ze mass-a-matical function predicts he vill heff at least vun goal tonight.”
Can’t argue with that. But what about the other side of the rink? The Rangers haven’t ever lost a series in which they led three games to one. Is there any pressure on that side of the rink?
“Ah, you betcha!”
And there is, I suppose, some mathematical formula to show that?
“Nein…zey play in New York. Iff zey lose, zey vill never hear ze end of it until next Zeptember.”
What about Henrik Lundqvist? He was dominating early in the series, but he has been somewhat less than that in Games Five and Six. What sort of pressure is on him?
“More pressure zenn Don Koharski leaning up against a donut case.”
Good one, Prof.
“I’ve been zaving zat vun.”
But seriously, we hear that Lundqvist won’t have three bad games in a row. Anything to that?
“Vell, it’s not eggscakly unheard of. Earlier ziss year, he had three conzeckutiff games in which he allowed four or more goals.”
That would be December 23rd to December 29th, against the Caps, Devils, and Islanders, in which he allowed four, four, and five goals.
“Ja, and zeen zere iss zat real schinker of a run he had in early Dezember…”
Six, three, and eight goals allowed in consecutive games to Montreal, Calgary, and the Devils. He’s never done it in a playoff series, though.
“Ja, und until he allowed nine goals in two games against the Caps in 80 minutes, he hedd not allowed more than three goals in conzeckutiff games in ze playoffs, either.”
And, he’s allowed 14 goals in his last four games, covering 199:52 of play…that’s a 4.20 GAA.
“You’re pr-r-r-retty goot mit de mass-a-matiks your zelf.”
Thanks, Prof. I take it then, that there is more pressure on Lundqvist in this game?
“Oh, ab-zo-lutely. Zere iss a mooltiplier effect here. Iff you take ze lack of offense on ze part of ze Rangers…”
You mean six goals in their last five games…
“Ja, zat compunds ze problem for Lundqvist. Not only has he allowed zo many goals, but now, the Rangers heff to be sinking zat Lundqvist hess to…how do you say it?”
Pitch a shutout?
“Eggsackly! Pitch a shutout to vinn.”
And with the opposing forces of the constant of Ovechkin and the variable of Semin that would argue for some production in this game.
“It schpells ‘doom’ for ze Rangers.”
Nothing is guaranteed. All the Capitals have done in forcing a Game 7 is give themselves a chance to win a series they should, in fact, win. But the whole notion of pressure is, to our way of thinking, a product of sportwriters, fans, and Tony Kornheiser.
Players have dreamt about such moments since they were kids – Canadian boys on a pond dreaming it was Game 7 of a playoff game, and the puck is on their stick. European kids dreaming of perhaps making the big save to win an Olympic gold medal or World Championship. A youngster in New England with thoughts of stuffing home a rebound in the last second of a championship game.
Frankly, we’re thinking that fans are feeling more pressure than the players are.
For the players, it’s just a matter of going out to, as the late Herb Brooks put it, “play your game.” If both teams do that, the talent and the momentum are tilted steeply to the Capitals’ end of the ice. In a one-game playoff, a goalie – either goalie – could be an outsized factor. But the Capitals are deeper, more talented, on a roll. And the other goalie has had his struggles lately.
Tonight is the Capitals’ “final exam” of sorts, the product of lessons learned in last year’s Game 7 overtime loss to the Philadelphia Flyers. They’ve spent a year studying. Think they’ll pass, Professor?
“Oh, ja…based on ziss zimple arizzmetic, mit flying colors…”
Caps 4 – Rangers 1
3 comments:
I am still thinking Valiquette will factor into this equation somehow -- not precise enough to qualify as 2nd string theory, just a vague apprehension that he will throw everything into chaos and we will be sucked into the black hole that is May with no Caps hockey.
Funny post, although I have the sneaking suspicion that it's gonna be closer than 4-1. That being said, I'd love it if the Caps proved me wrong/you were right. GO CAPS!
The first goal is always crucial in any playoff game (especially a game 7) but definitely in this game.
If NYR strikes, it'll be their first lead in a long time and they'll be feeling really good about themselves and it ought to take "The King's" game up a notch knowing he's got some support. Like in the early games of the series.
But if Washington gets an early lead, with the crowd behind them, it might be curtains right there. Like the later games of the series.
Whoever scores the first goal of this game, to me, will win. Perhaps better put: the Rangers are in a whole lot of trouble if they're not the ones to get on the board first.
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