There will be a Game 7.
The home team won for the sixth time in the Eastern Conference
quarterfinal series between the Washington Capitals and the New York Rangers
when the Rangers held off the Capitals, 1-0, at Madison Square Garden on Sunday
afternoon.
One was all the Rangers needed in this one, thanks to a 27-save effort
by goalie Henrik Lundqvist, who earned his seventh career playoff shutout. Derick Brassard scored the game’s only goal
mid-way through the second period, when from his perch at the top of the
offensive zone he let fly with a slap shot that might have hit two Capitals on
its way to the net before bending down and under goalie Braden Holtby’s glove
into the back of the net. It might have
avoided Jason Chimera out front, but it certainly seemed to hit defenseman
Steve Oleksy’s arm on its way to the net.
And so, the hockey gods smiled on the Rangers. The Capitals could not solve Henrik Lundqvist
on any of their 27 shots, and it set up a seventh game at Verizon Center on
Monday night.
Other stuff…
-- The hockey gods were not the only ones smiling on the Rangers in
this game. The Rangers were not charged
with any infractions until the teams had a full-on scrum at the conclusion of
the game. It was the first time that the
Caps did not have a single power play in a playoff game since Game 7 of the
Eastern Conference semifinals against Pittsburgh in 2009.
-- Meanwhile, the Rangers enjoyed five power plays over a 43 minute
stretch from mid-way in the first period to mid-way in the third. In three games in New York, the Rangers had
15 power plays to the Caps’ five.
-- And for those of you wondering... Rule 52.1 states: "Slew-footing is the act of a player using his leg or foot to knock or kick an opponent’s feet from under him, or pushes an opponent’s upper body backward with an arm or elbow, and at the same time with a forward motion of his leg, knocks or kicks the opponent’s feet from under him, causing him to fall violently to the ice."
...Having done it poorly (Dorsett was the one who tumbled to the ice) makes no difference. Coming as it did near the boards, it was a dangerous play.
-- And for those of you wondering... Rule 52.1 states: "Slew-footing is the act of a player using his leg or foot to knock or kick an opponent’s feet from under him, or pushes an opponent’s upper body backward with an arm or elbow, and at the same time with a forward motion of his leg, knocks or kicks the opponent’s feet from under him, causing him to fall violently to the ice."
...Having done it poorly (Dorsett was the one who tumbled to the ice) makes no difference. Coming as it did near the boards, it was a dangerous play.
-- Alex Ovechkin had picked the wrong time to go cold. This was his fourth straight game without a
point, his longest streak of the season and his longest since going four games
without a point from November 12 through November 19th in the
2011-2012 season.
-- And there is a difference between “cold” and “playing poorly” (not
that the usual talking heads will acknowledge it).
Twelve shot attempts, five on goal, three hits, two blocked shots. If there was a surprising number in there, it
was 19:03 – his time on ice. But then
again, that’s what having no power plays will do. Only Mike Green had more time on ice in this
game (23:40, like Ovechkin all at even-strength).
-- If you are wondering, the Caps have gone into a Game 7 five times in
team history having lost Game 6. They
have one win in those instances, that one coming last year in the Eastern
Conference quarterfinal series against Boston.
-- There were 22 faceoffs in the Capitals’ end of the ice, 11 in the
Rangers’ end. A lot of that was the
power play differential, but some of it was the territorial advantage the
Rangers had in this game, too.
-- Of those 11 offensive zone faceoffs, the Caps won three, only one of
those wins coming in the third period (1-for-4).
-- Tom Wilson played only 5:12 in this game, only one shift in the
third period (that lasting one second). Part
of that was his having an equipment problem, but we wonder if the spare ice
time is having effects on how the third and fourth lines are assembled over the
course of a game and the effects on continuity.
-- A curious dynamic on the Ranger side…Brad Richards getting only 9:34
of ice time and only two shifts in the third period. He hasn’t played well in this series, but this
seemed to be an odd time to be sending a message to Richards, if that was what
was going on. Of course, if Richards has
a big Game 7, John Tortorella will look like a genius.
-- You would not think energy would be an issue in Game 7, but the way
ice time was parceled in Game 6 among the players of each team does raise the
question with the second half of a back to back coming up. The Rangers had two forwards with fewer than
five minutes of ice time – Chris kreider and Arron Asham. That meant guys like Ryan Callahan (22:22)
and Derek Stepan (23:27) were out past their usual bedtime in terms of ice
time.
So, another Game 7. It is not
what we prognosticated, but this will be the seventh time in the last nine
playoff series for the Caps that they will face a Game 7. It is not exactly a surprise. If there is a ray of sunshine to take out of
this game it is that the Caps did not play especially well, got no benefit of
the doubt in the way the game was called, gave up a bit of a fluky goal, and
still lost by only the thinnest of margins.
But thin margins are a staple of playoff hockey, and the Caps find
themselves too often on the wrong side of them.
They have one more chance to make things right, or spend another
off-season wondering, “what if?”
No comments:
Post a Comment