HERE ARE THE TEAMS WITH FALLING OR SOARING STOCKS AS
SECOND HALF STARTS
Rick Tocchet scored 440 goals during his NHL career --
netting a career-high 48 for the Pittsburgh Penguins in 1992-93. But opponents
probably don't remember his scoring as much as they remember his
competitiveness and grit.
Tocchet was 210 pounds of belligerence. He was relentless
and always convinced his team could still win.
Now 17 years after his retirement, coach Tocchet has passed
those traits on to an Arizona Coyotes team that has gone 6-2-2 in their last 10
to climb back into the Western Conference playoff race. With a record of
23-23-4 and 32 games remaining, the Coyotes are two points out of the playoffs
What makes the Coyotes' recent run more impressive is that
it has come at time when they have overrun by injuries. Goalie Antti Raanta and
forward Nick Schmaltz are likely out for the year and forwards Christian
Dvorak and Brad Richardson have been sidelined. Now defenseman Oliver
Ekman-Larsson is day-to-day. Yet optimism remains.
In his second season in Arizona, Tocchet has built the
Coyotes into the NHL's ninth-best defensive team, holding opponents to 2.82
goals-per-game.
Chayka describes Tocchet "as a guy who wants to punch
first."
Conor Garland is a good example. He is a fifth-round pick
who has nine goals in his first 23 games with the Coyotes. Richardson, with 11
goals, was having a career year.
As the NHL starts the second half, the Coyotes' grade
is improving.
HERE ARE OTHER TEAMS WITH CHANGING GRADES
IMPROVING GRADES
NEW YORK ISLANDERS
The NHL is starting to view this Barry Trotz-coached team
as being a Stanley Cup factor because of its defensive play. You hear
comparisons to the successful New Jersey Devils teams of the 1990s.
PITTSBURGH
PENGUINS
No one is paying much attention to the Penguins and yet
there they sit with a 26-16-6 record, a +23 goal differential, and Sidney
Crosby playing some of the best all-around hockey of his career.
MONTREAL CANADIENS
Shouldn't GM Marc Bergevin be receiving some credit for
turning around the Canadiens? They're 28-18-5. Tomas Tatar has outproduced Max
Pacioretty after their offseason trade. The Max Domi acquisition also has
worked out.
DROPPING GRADES:
BUFFALO SABRES
A 3-6-1 record in their last 10 games have dropped them out
of a playoff position. Their top players are producing, but they could use some
secondary scoring. The Sabres rank ninth with a .909 team save percentage, but
they are 15th in goals-against. That suggests they need to tighten their
defensive game.
ANAHEIM DUCKS
The Ducks look like a team waiting for general manager Bob
Murray to do something to spark their anemic offense, ranked 30th at 2.26 goals
per game. Goalie John Gibson is the only reason they are in the playoff hunt.
COLORADO AVALANCHE
A 3-7-0 slide heading into the All-Star break has some fans
worried. You don't have to be coach or GM to figure out what's wrong. They are
seventh in the NHL in scoring (3.38) and 22nd in goals-against (3.22). If
the Avs clean up their defensive play they will be a playoff team.
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