This Rangers season so far this year has been perfectly encapsulated by Nikolai Zherdevs performance tonight. Twice he had ridiculous, PUTRID turnovers that directly led to rushes against. He also took an inexcusable slewfooting penalty, and did a blatant dive/embellish in order to draw a penalty (which worked, but it was a dive/interference/baiting/whatever you want to call it nonetheless). He also scored an absolutely sick goal, he set up the game winner, and he made the most brilliant defensive play ever seen by a “lazy Russian”. Here is a guy (and a team) with a lot of question marks. How good can he (they) be? How much offense can he (they) provide? How good will his (their) defense be? How disciplined can he (they) be? All questions that will help to give us an idea of how the Rangers will eventually look like after all is said and done. Right now the answer is sort of…I’m not sure, to all of those questions. The defense can be brilliant at times, like Zherdevs beautiful backcheck (and this guy was labeled as lazy?!), but Dimitri Kalinin also had a brain fart of epic proportions that led to the game being tied late in the 3rd. Zherdev scored an absolutely beautiful goal, but the offense was shooting blanks most of the night as Scotty Gomez set up wingers with picture perfect chances only to have them stink up the joint and not put the puck in (I am pointing at you Nigel!). The Power Play did score a goal, but they did so on an individual effort by Zherdev, and by and large looked hopeless, and possibly worse than last year.
Their are questions and real concerns about this team, and yet they seem to defy all logic, and continue to win game after game. They are beating teams they should beat, and they are overcoming their own cockiness (read, laziness) to start these games by finishing strong. But they are also not correcting mistakes in their overall game quickly enough, and they are also having new problems creep up as old problems are partially resolved.
Let me give you an example.
Markus Naslund has finally decided to take my advice and shoot the effing puck more. That makes me happy, and is also directly leading him to score more goals. Problem, fixed. Right? However now on a line centered by a center who is a shooter not a scorer, his scoring ability is being grossly underutilized. Solution…now a problem. I will say this again, and I know I sound like a broken record, but it is absolutely criminal for the Rangers to be wasting Scotty Gomez, and some very fine performances by him, with 2 wingers who simply can not put the puck in the net with any kind of consistency. Ryan Callahan is a 3rd liner. I love the guy, I consider him a vital cog for this team, but he should be playing with energy players who will put the puck home because of their work ethic, rather than their sheer skill. Nigel Dawes is a very easy to figure out player. If he isn’t scoring, he is one of the 3 most useless players on this team. If the puck is going in the net, he is worth his weight in gold (goal’d?), if the puck is not going in the net, as it is now, he is doing far more harm than good. The solution should be blatantly obvious. First, you unite Gomez with some real scorers. Want to put him with Zherdev? Dubinsky? Naslund? Drury? Someone like that? Be my guest. As long as it is someone whom we can all agree is a legitimate scoring threat out there. You do not, I repeat, do not put an offensive weapon like Gomez with no thumbed players, particularly at a time where Gomez is flying, but can’t get his linemates to finish his glorious chances.
But all in all the story of this game, as has been the story of just about every game the Rangers have played so far this season is Henrik Lundqvist. Henrik once again played a superb, remarkable game. Giving up 2 goals, both from ridiculously high percentage areas with no defensive player within 5 feet, but stonewalling the Thrashers on numerous scoring chances other than that. Personally, I feel the Rangers were out forechecked in this game. The Thrashers did a great job of getting the puck in deep, cycling, getting a shooter to shake off his defender, and getting the puck to that shooter. The Rangers let Henrik out to dry numerous times, a few chances at point blank range, but as has been the story this entire season, he has stood tall and saved out butts. If Henrik isn’t the early season leader for the Hart trophy, I’d like to see the guy who is. The Rangers of course have built their entire franchise, their entire system around Henrik, so it should be no surprise when he is playing this good. The surprise to me is how the rest of the team really hasn’t stepped up to the same level of commitment, night in and night out, that Henrik has. What I am getting at is our slow starts, and frequent long lapses in concentration, and effort. I am talking about these long periods of time where Henrik has to be King Henrik, rather than just plain old ordinary Henrik Lundqvist. Henrik should not be under constant barrages under Tom Renneys system. Under his system the 5 man unit defends as 1, they clog the middle, and force everything to the outside. Under his plan, they should also have control of the puck far more than then are, and they should be causing far more turnovers than they are. In short, the team around Henrik, by and large, is not pulling their own weight. I think it is time they realized that smoke, mirrors, and a red hot goalie can only get you so far.
Wake up boys, there is still a long way to go.
Chris Drury must have been reading the message boards. Seriously, it was remarkable how focused and “on” he looked tonight. From the opening drop of the puck, which shortly there after included a flukey goal, all the way till the very end of this game, Drury was playing his usual 2-way game to perfection, and he actually played the offensive zone effectively. In a role reversal here tonight, it was the combination of Naslund and Drury that lifted up an absolutely atrocious (and that is being kind) performance by Nikolai Zherdev, who played about as bad a game as I have ever witnessed from a professional hockey player without actually lumberjacking someones face a-la Chris Simon. Zherdev turned the puck over with a blind behind the back pass that was a perfect tape to tape pass…to the wrong team, 5 feet from his goalie. That wasn’t all Zherdev did wrong, on top of having a handful of boneheaded turnovers, he also had a few terrible penalties (yes, I felt both were legit), and was more or less invisible in the offensive zone with the exception of his shot that led to Drurys goal (and netted him an assist). Zherdev better learn that you need to come to play every night, and that crap like what we saw last night will never be tolerated in Rangerland.
It seemed to me, when watching Nikolai Zherdevs game tying snipe shot that in the time between Zherdev looking up, and releasing his shot, the game must have slowed down to Matrix like proportions. It seemed like when Zherdev got the puck on his stick, he had time to pick out every single possible shooting angle, he had time to measure the ambient wind speed, to calculate air drag on his shot, and put the precise amount of mustard on the shot to beat Fleury cleanly. Or, he just ripped a perfect shot top shelf. Whatever, it was freaking beautiful.
That’s the phrase isn’t it? You can’t go home again? Something like that? Well the Blue Jackets sure as hell wished Nikolai Zherdev had followed that old adage and never showed up last night. Instead the 23 year old Rangers sniper had arguably his best game as a Ranger, notching 2 primary assists and a goal to ice the Blue Jackets late in the 3rd. It was a really impressive night for Zherdev, particularly with just how putrid his two linemates were. Chris Drury and Markus Naslund had, in my opinion, their worst games (offensively) as Rangers. Drury and Naslund were constantly out of synch, neither could read off of the other with any degree of accuracy, and the 2 of them just held back Zherdev big time.
The only thing worse than watching my Rangers lose to a team on their home ice, is to do so while ailing a hurt ankle. After coming home from my game last night where my ankle got destroyed by a guy twice my size (trust me, thats saying something…I’m a big boy) I got to watch the Rangers sleep walk through their final game in this 7-11 stretch. I was very upset that Rangers fans booed Sean Avery out there, because that made no sense whatsoever to me. Here is a guy who bled Rangers blue, who said repeatedly how much he wanted to stay a Ranger, who had a love affair with the fans, and would go and chat it up with the people in the 400’s, and you boo him?! For what? For being unceremoniously kicked out by a Rangers team who would fit his style of play perfectly? For saying a few off color remarks about the team? THIS IS SEAN AVERY FOR CHRISTS SAKE! If you were expecting him to be all lovey dovey after being kicked off the team, you were sadly mistaken. If I were there at MSG, you would be seeing one Ranger fan give Sean Avery a standing ovation, and a guy who would cheer him every time he touched the puck. I loved what Avery brought to this team, and loved the way he played the game. I don’t give a crap about how he was off the ice, but on the ice he was a joy to watch.
All I read on the message boards is how upset everyone is about the reffing. About how the refs blew the too many men on the ice call, about how that call cost us the game. All I can say to that is…meh.
So far this season there is really only one thing I can point to as a big time problem for this club, and it can be summed up in two words. Markus Naslund. Naslund has really brought down the level of production on every line he has played on. From the power play to even strength, from the first line to the third line, Markus is absolutely killing this team with his play. And really, it is all a production of one thing. Naslund is a really good guy, and really wants to badly fit in with this teammates. In short, he is overpassing. The guys is as skilled a sniper as there is in the NHL today, and he is passing up glorious scoring chance after glorious scoring chance. Basically the guy is not playing Markus Naslund hockey, and it showed yet again today. Instead of sneaking around the perimeter getting himself open for a quick shot, he is parking his ass in front of the net, he is playing behind the net, and he is looking at his linemates before he looks at the goal. Bad. Bad. Bad.
Sorry for the delay, yesterdays debate and post debate coverage kept me busy till 3am, then I hit the sack. Anyway, I think this was a good, and important loss for the Rangers to suffer. I think something like this was just what the doctor ordered. Why? Because it is important to be humbled and be brought back down to earth when your ego gets too high. The Rangers, like they did after they went up 4-0, and like they have done for a multitude of long stretches this year, failed to play hockey once they took an early lead. After the Rangers went up 1-0 they simply stopped playing their game. They stopped aggressively forechecking, they stopped playing defense as a 5 man unit, they made sloppy passes, skated lazily (none more glaring than the guy wearing the C on Vaneks breakaway), and out and out showed little passion for a game they are so handsomely rewarded to play.
After having a full 24+ hours to digest the Cherepanov situation, I still find myself quite disheartened by the situation. And yet life must go on and we must continue rooting for our team. As such I decided to go ahead and put this up finally. In their most impressive victory of the season, the Rangers played a superb New Jersey Devils team and still managed to continue their thus far perfect season. Part of this is directly attributable to what I was pointing to be the Devils potential achilles heal this year…Uncle Daddy. Yet again against the Rangers Uncle Daddy gave up an extremely soft goal on a flutter shot that was going wide. Dubinsky got what is likely to be his easiest goal of the season when he fired a shot that was immediately tipped and started to flutter well wide of the goal. Uncle Daddy tried to play the puck, and instead redirected it into his own net. Doh!