Okay, I think I am sufficiently recovered to talk about the traumatic game last night.
My initial thought is that the Flyers spotted them two goals, and then Buffalo nicked a third after some questionable calls and a 4-on-3 (I thought we were done with the Flyers getting coincidental penalties when a Sabre punches them in the face and they literally turn around and don't even try to defend themselves--apparently not). In my opinion, Buffalo did very little to earn that lead. There's dirty goals, and there's lucky goals. Scoring from the corner and behind the net when there's no traffic or other threat for the goalie to worry about is simply luck.
It was big gut check from the Flyers though, coming out in the 2nd and scoring 2 goals while outshooting Buffalo 11-0. Nobody question the Flyers are capable of that kind of performance, but they regularly find ways to make that irrelevant.
The Flyers will have a tough game 6 in Buffalo, but I think they are likely to win. Buffalo hasn't exactly staked a very strong claim to this series, winning 2 1-0 games and barely eeking out a win yesterday despite essentially being gifted a 2 goal lead. The series is there for the taking, but the margin of error for the Flyers to leak backbreaking goals is officially zero now. These untimely goal against have been a repeated theme for them this year, whether it be goaltending or something else, but hopefully they can go 2 straight games without one.
Comments and other deep thoughts:
-Another big effort from JVR. I don't think there's any question that he and Giroux have been the Flyers' best forwards this series. Really encouraging stuff for JVR for this year and beyond.
-I still think Coburn is playing lousy. Only noticeable for a few terrible turnovers a game, not doing much else.
-That was the best the Flyers PP has played in a while. No goals, but it actually looked like a power play. I also liked getting JVR down low on it towards the end of the game. Putting him at the point just because he won the hardest shot contest was kind of insane, and he's ready to compete physically in there with the big boys. I also wouldn't be surprised to see Pronger on the PP Sunday, bad hand and all.
-I'll call it Zherdev's best game as a Flyer overall, and unquestionably his best defensive effort. If he played like that every night he'd be $4 million/year guy in the NHL, not an unclaimed waivers player. I thought he was gonna score in OT honestly.
-Might be time to give up on Richards looking like the Richards of past years this season. I don't know what the problem is, but he's not skating, mucking and hitting the way he has done in past playoffs, and the odds of it materializing in game 6 are slim to none.
-And of course, goaltending. I have been harping (obsessing?) about this topic all year, but at least now I know I wasn't crazy and wasting my breath. It would've been somewhat crazy to think that after 82 games of groping for a goalie the Flyers would sort it out in a few playoff games.
Simply put, the Flyers goalies are not giving them a chance to win. It's fine to say you don't need a standout goalie to win in the playoffs, but you're not winning jack with Bob's game 2 performance and Boosh's last night.
Boosh had to be pulled last night, but Leighton was not confidence inspiring in relief. I don't know who starts in game 6, but does it really matter? None of the Flyers' goalies are good enough, though I think Leighton is the best fit stylistically for this team (mainly just being a big body in there who can block the puck). Laviolette can play pretty much whoever he feels like in game 6 because no goalie has made a case that he deserves the start.
Good to see JVR coming on strong in the playoffs. There is no point in rehashing the goalie situation this year. My question to you is whether moving forward, Bob has the chance to develop into a "good enough" goalie?
ReplyDeleteIn my opinion the chance is definitely there for Bobrovsky to be a good NHL goalie, but there are no guarantees. The tricky question is how patient can the Flyers be? In the grand scheme of things, asking a 23 year old goalie (which Bob will be next year) to be primed and ready for the playoffs is a lot to ask of any goalie, but Pronger and Timonen aren't getting any younger, and I'm not sure they can afford to put all their eggs into one basket and count on Bob next season either.
ReplyDelete