ISLANDERS, BLUE JACKETS GRAB 3-0 SERIES
LEADS
ABOUT LAST NIGHT
HERE IS WHAT HAPPENED ON DAY 5 OF THE
STANLEY CUP PLAYOFFS:
NEW YORK ISLANDERS 3, PITTSBURGH PENGUINS 1:
The Islanders moved within one victory of eliminating the Penguins with the
Game 3 win. Robin Lehner made
25 saves for New York, which is looking for its first series sweep since
defeating the Edmonton Oilers in the 1983 Stanley Cup Final.
Columbus Blue
Jackets 3, Tampa Bay Lightning 1: The Blue Jackets moved within one
win of a sweep after defeating the Lightning in Game 3. Columbus is the second
team in NHL history to take a 3-0 series lead in the first round against the
Presidents' Trophy winner, joining the Los Angeles Kings, who defeated the
Vancouver Canucks in five games in 2012.
Winnipeg Jets
6, St. Louis Blues 3: Kyle Connor scored
twice to help the Jets to the Game 3 win, their first of the series. Patrik Laine and Dustin
Byfuglien each had a goal and an assist, and Connor
Hellebuyck made 26 saves for the Jets. David Perron, Vladimir
Tarasenko and Alexander
Steen scored, and Jordan
Binnington made 23 saves for the Blues, who won Games 1 and 2
in Winnipeg and had won their final seven regular-season home games.
Vegas Golden
Knights 6, San Jose Sharks 3: Mark Stone scored the
first hat trick of his NHL career to help the Golden Knights take a 2-1 series
lead. Stone, who was acquired by Vegas in a trade from the Ottawa Senators on
Feb. 25, also had two assists, and Paul Stastny scored
two goals and had three assists for the Golden Knights.
WHAT WE LEARNED
HERE
ARE SOME TAKEAWAYS FROM DAY 5 OF THE STANLEY CUP PLAYOFFS:
INABILITY TO PROTECT LEAD DOOMS PENGUINS
AGAIN
Not only has it been difficult for the Penguins to take a
lead in the first three games of their best-of-7 series against the Islanders,
they haven't been able to protect a lead once they do get it. That doomed them
again in Game 3. Penguins forward Garrett
Wilson scored the opening goal at 12:54 of the first period,
but New York forward Jordan Eberle tied
the game 28 seconds later and Brock Nelson put the
Islanders ahead 1:02 after Eberle scored. The Penguins have had the lead twice
in the series for a combined 3:17. Defenseman Erik
Gudbranson put them ahead 1-0 in the second period of Game 2,
but Eberle tied it 2:49 later.
ISLANDERS NOT FAZED BY PENGUINS CROWD
The Islanders knew Penguins fans would bring the noise at
the start of Game 3 with hopes of helping them get back in this series. But
after allowing the first goal, New York silenced the crowd when Eberle and
Nelson scored 1:02 apart in the first period to give the Islanders a lead they
would not relinquish.
LIGHTNING FOUND SOME LIFE
It might wind up being a case of too little, too late,
but the Lightning found their skating legs and ways to make plays through the
middle of the neutral zone and the offensive zone in the third period of Game
3. It's at least a formula for success, something for them to build on as they
try to start climbing the mountain in Game 4 on Tuesday, trailing the best-of-7
series 3-0. They pushed and had a determination to use their skill. They had
the Blue Jackets on their heels for the first time since the first period of
Game 1. They gained the zone with puck control and were able to use a lot of
the misdirection in the offensive zone that they love to use to open shooting
lanes and create opportunities. If they can just find a way to bottle what they
did and use it early in Game 4, it might spring their hope to life too.
BLUE JACKETS STAYING PHYSICAL AND
DISCIPLINED
Columbus has found the balance between playing
aggressive, physical and fast, while staying disciplined. It's maybe the most
important balance a team can find against the Lightning because of their potent
power play. The Blue Jackets didn't give Tampa Bay a single power play
opportunity in Game 3. Their only two penalties were matching minors. They gave
the Lightning just two power plays in Game 2 after giving them three in Game 1.
That the Blue Jackets' discipline hasn't come at the expense of their
physicality is arguably the biggest reason why they're leading the series 3-0.
JETS HAVE WEAPONS
The Jets had shown some measure of frustration after
losing the first two games against the Blues at home. But Winnipeg was the
third-highest scoring team in the Western Conference this season, with 270
goals, and captain Blake Wheeler said
after the morning skate Sunday that offense was not his worry, that defense was
going to tell the tale. Wheeler was right on both counts. The Jets scored six
goals past Blues goalie Jordan Binnington in Game 3. And in building a 3-1 lead
through two periods, the first lead of more than one goal by either team in the
series, the Jets were quick on pucks and aggressive in all zones, holding the
Blues to 13 shots on goal.
BLUES HAVE A HIGHER GEAR
The Blues couldn't find their speed, tenacity or close
gaps in Game 3, things they used to win Games 1 and 2 in Winnipeg. Coach Craig
Berube warned after the morning skate that nobody expected everything in the series
to go St. Louis's way, that the Jets would have a response, and he was correct.
But don't expect the Blues' top game to be absent for long. The Blues were
30-10-5 and won their final seven home games of the regular season. They know
how to find their top gear.
MARTIN
JONES CONTINUES TO
STRUGGLE
That's six more goals against for San Jose goalie Martin
Jones, after he allowed three on seven shots and was pulled in Game 2. Coach
Peter DeBoer didn't pull Jones in Game 3 for what would have been the sixth
time in 16 games against Vegas, but the Sharks have to figure this out. Jones
had a poor season, has a poor track record against Vegas and has looked off his
angle on too many goals. He's sliding instead of setting his feet, and the
Golden Knights are beating him high repeatedly.
VEGAS CAN WIN SPECIAL TEAMS BATTLE
The Golden Knights are 4-for-13 on the power play (30.8
percent) in three games. And not only have they held the Sharks to 3-for-16 on
the power play (18.8 percent), they've scored two shorthanded goals. The theory
entering the series was that Vegas was better off 5-on-5, and that might still
be true over the long term, especially considering the Sharks have Norris
Trophy winners Brent Burns and Erik Karlsson running
their power play. But the Golden Knights are winning the special teams battle
right now.
No comments:
Post a Comment