In their final game before the All-Star break, the
Pittsburgh Penguins flat lined in a loss to the Vegas Golden Knights. The ugly
7-3 loss was a free skate version of the team which has been seen too many
times this season. Penguins head coach Mike Sullivan took his team to the
woodshed following the loss. He demanded the players enjoy the break but return
prepared to find their identity and buy-in.
The obvious inference was the Penguins continue to fight
their identity. Sullivan doubled down Sunday.
As Sullivan sees what he calls the evolution of the NHL
game and the Penguins strengths, the identity is not a simple catch-phrase
like “Just Play,” which once settled the emotionally rattled Penguins.
Sunday after practice, Sullivan dropped a load of bricks
on his team. Not in anger or haste, but in full warning.
Anyone that plays sports knows that it’s difficult to find consistency without having
an element of conscience to your game. Part of that consistency is discipline
of mind; it’s a discipline of spirit that players have to acquire in order to
become the team that the Penguins think there capable of becoming.
Perhaps it was fitting Sullivan continued to challenge
his team on an evening when former coach Michael Therrien was also in at the
UPMC Lemieux complex. Sullivan didn’t call his players soft, but he challenged
their conscience and discipline. And their spirit.
His words shouldn’t be taken dismissively or lightly.
Penguins on-ice coach-slash-centerman Matt Cullen also
had an answer that would never fit on a bumper sticker. The Penguins
squandered their eight-game winning streak and with a poor west coast
trip.
For the Penguins the number one goal on the ice is making
the right decisions with the puck. The Penguins have a skilled group of players
and they need to take advantage of. When
the Penguins make good decisions with the puck and put it in areas where they
can use their speed and skill to their advantage, the penguins usually do pretty
well.
In hockey terms, as one trusted hockey advisor told PHN,
it’s about players keeping the puck ahead of themselves. Good areas are about
advancing the puck forward, getting low in the offensive zone and pressuring
the opponent.
The Penguins long-time identity since the arrival of a
gawky 18-year-old Mario Lemieux has been offense but that isn’t the case
in 2019.
There a lot of teams that can score goals. It’s not about
playing super safe with the puck or playing basic hockey. It’s about not giving
them freebies and free opportunities with the puck. Make them have to come 200
feet with the puck to score.
That doesn’t necessarily mean chip-and-chase hockey or
ugly grinding hockey, but it does mean not forcing one when the opponent takes
it away. If the opponents stacks the blue line, the formula is to move the puck
forward to the offensive corner and battle for it.
Trying to stickhandle around one or two defenders is not
the wise move. Nor is forcing the rush when the opponent drops players to cover
the rush.
When
the Penguins are winning consistently…there not beating themselves by, not
turning pucks over.
When
the Penguins are forcing teams to play 200 feet rather than turning the puck
over at the red line it makes it easier on defense.
Those multiple identity points from being hard to play
against, puck management to using speed and skill were the common themes.
But again note a question about identity involves getting
the puck low and creating havoc. The Penguins said the right things, Sunday
after practice. At least the grinders know. The Penguins identity is no longer
about outracing opponents and dominating with speed. It’s about suppressing the
opponents and using their skill advantage.
And now the great battle begins, both internally and
externally. The Penguins will battle teams fighting for a playoff spot and
battle themselves to play winning hockey. Conscience, discipline of mind and
spirit; those are big words from a head coach with big goals.
And at least a few players understand the details but
those players along with the Penguins top line including Sidney Crosby and Jake
Guentzel are not the problem. Now we’ll see if the middle lines, including
Evgeni Malkin, Phil Kessel and Derick Brassard can display that discipline,
too.
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