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New Jersey Devils Lose Close Game Against New York Rangers, 3-2

This loss sucks namely for two reasons.

The first is that it's the RangersSteve touched on this in his quick wristers recap, and I agree with him that losing to the Rangers is always bad.  Especially tonight because it could have been a win.  Outside of the penalty killing, the New Jersey Devils played better across the board than they did on Saturday.   The passing was much better, the breakouts were improved, Martin Brodeur played better overall, the power play wasn't a waste of time (1 for 5, 5 shots - not great, but not awful), and the defense actually asserted themselves instead of letting the Rangers dictate the game (and they kept Marian Gaborik and Brandon Dubinsky fairly quiet).   No, the Devils weren't perfect in all aspects.  Mistakes were made, truth be told.  But they were vastly improved over Saturday's loss to the Flyers.   If this was a loss against, say, Vancouver in the middle of, say, January, I probably wouldn't feel so bad or distraught over the loss.  Not that I would be happy about it, by no means, but it wouldn't hurt as much.

But because it's the second consecutive loss to a hated rival at home to start the season, this 3-2 loss to the Rangers sucks. (link goes to NHL.com recap).

The second reason, the sad reality is that the Rangers - Matt Gilroy on one of his six shots - got one through Brodeur that he wished he had back; and the Devils just could not equalize in the following 22:10 of the game.  It's not that they didn't try, just that they could have executed a little better than they did.    If you want the Rangers' perspective, Blueshirt Banter is where you want to go.  My further thoughts on the game come after the jump.

Star-divide

The first period was quite promising for New Jersey.  The Devils struck first when Rob Niedermayer put this shot past Henrik Lundqvist.  Yeah, you read that right, Rob Niedermayer. His linemates of David Clarkson and Jay Pandolfo set up Niedermayer perfectly in the circle and Niedermayer just beat Lundqvist cleanly.  Considering that Michel Rozsival took an interference penalty less than a minute later, a goal and a power play so early is a great way to start the game.

However, nothing ever comes easy as the Rangers struck back with a power play goal.  The penalty was a Ilkka Pikkarainen hook that, well, it was on the other side of the rink in a scrum, let's assume he actually did hook someone.  (Aside: Pikkarainen was OK in limited action, better than Andrew Peters at least.) Michael Del Zotto opened his NHL goal scoring account off a rebound that was so simple, I'm sure Kryzysztof Oliwa could have scored on it.  Martin Brodeur made the initial save, everyone but Del Zotto was to Brodeur's left and the puck went in the opposite direction.  Easy for Del Zotto, impossible for Brodeur to stop, and it's 1-1.

But then the Devils got onto another power play thanks to Brandon Dubinsky holding a Devil in his own zone. This time, the Devils re-took the lead with this excellent, excellent power play goal that only video does it justice.

Yet, the Devils got burned on another power play later in the first.  This was controversial as it all started with Chris Drury going knee-on-knee on Paul Martin. Intentional or not, it was a gutless act, and thankfully - as Gulitti reported tonight - Martin is OK.  Paul Martin continued playing.   After the game, Martin and Drury both claim no intent, but Johnny Oduya rightfully felt otherwise during the game and went right for Drury.  Amazingly, Oduya got an extra minor for his jumping on top of Drury and making him feel the fury.   Yes, the play by Drury that could have caused an injury and was about to be whistled for a penalty was erased because Oduya was sticking up for his teammate - a rare instance where I see it as justified.

Anyway, Rob Niedermayer got beat on the ensuing faceoff by Ryan Callahan, Michael del Zotto fed it nicely to Ales Kotalik, and Kotalik's shot just hit the post and in to beat Brodeur.  Like Niedermayer's shot just beat Lundqvist, Kotalik's just beat   That's 2-2 and a little later, that's the period.

Now, at this point, I'm still feeling confident in the Devils chances because the Rangers have yet to do anything of note on even strength.   I went into all the goals in detail and truth be told, both goalies surrendered 1 goal they had no chance on and 1 goal where they were just beat by a good shot.  Still, with a 9-7 shot advantage and the crowd clearly cheering for the Devils, I felt good about the Devils retaking the lead if only because this first period was way better than any of the three from Saturday night.   

If the Devils could limit the penalties against them and continue pressuring the Rangers, then surely they'd pull ahead.   The Devils, as mentioned earlier, were clearly doing a much better job moving the puck up ice and maintaining their positions on defense.

Unfortunately, the Devils - or the Rangers - didn't keep the penalties down.  By the end of the game, each team was given 9 penalties, 6 power plays for the Rangers, and 5 for the Devils (including an abbreviated 5-on-3).  Both team's penalty kills did much better as none surrendered any goals from then on.  Even worse, though, the Devils were the ones to make an ultimately fatal error. 

The second period featured some more penalties (3 for each), but it was really an up-and-down affair as both teams put 12 on each other.  I felt the Rangers looked a little sharper and then it happened. After trading chances and rushes and so on and so forth, the Rangers got a break.  Matt Gilroy got one low and through Brodeur somehow and that was pretty soft late in the second.   Gilroy had a good game and has to feel good about his first NHL goal.  From that point, the Rangers dominated much of the remaining time until Callahan ran Brodeur.

But again, I was still hopeful because the Devils weren't giving up in terms of intensity.  OK, they were clearly rattled after the Gilroy goal and there were a few shifts beforehand where the Devils defense looked real confused.  But it was only 3-2, the team had a power play to build some momentum, and we can see what they are made of tonight.  Would the Devils come out with the fire to propel themselves to get an equalizer?

From where I was sitting, in the third period, the Devils did bring the fire.  They threw hits, they out-hustled the Rangers, and they didn't relent on offense.  In the first half of the period, Brodeur made some big saves to keep the score at 3-2 and the game was fairly even from my vantage point.   As the third period wore on, the Rangers stupidly decided to bunker down, essentially they asked the Devils offense to try and beat them.  I say that's stupid because it's a tactic that can (and on some nights will) burn a team with the lead; especially when the attacking team keeps pressing the defense, who keeps icing the puck so they stay out there. 

But despite that (and icing it three times by one tired unit), the Rangers escaped with the win tonight.  The Devils forwards weren't afraid to take shots from whereever or attempt killer passes across the rink.  Yet, some of these shots missed, some were blocked  (a few important ones by Dan Girardi), and some were just stopped by Lundqvist. 

We can praise the Devils' three lines - yes, the bench was shortened and hence ZZ Pops played 22 minutes - for not giving up on a puck, fighting hard to win possession back.  It's great to see after a game where the Devils didn't even get to do much of that.  We can even praise the team for playing much better after an awful first game.   But again, it wasn't enough and that's simply not enough against a hated rival.  They couldn't put home any scoring chance that would have gotten that game-tying goal.  I wonder if there was a crucial chance to do that.  According to Gulitti, Brian Rolston is claiming responsibility for blowing a shot on a diagrammed play on the short 5-on-3 power play in the third - a slapshot that was hard but way wide and high.  Fair enough, but the Devils couldn't convert on later chances. 

As a result, one could blame Brodeur solely for the Gilroy game, but blame should also be given to the team for not getting that equalizer after having a little more than a period to work with and the opposition just bunkering in their own zone, allowing the Devils to set-up on offense in the final 5-6 minutes of the game.   I firmly believe that a ZZ Pops line firing on all cylinders and/or a second line where all are on the same page (Zubrus was pretty good, Bergfors and Rolston were just there - maybe they just need time?) would have gotten that goal.  In theory, though.

We can take solace that this was a vast improvement over Saturday's game and that it's only 2 games into the season.  Did the Devils play a great game?  No, but they weren't out-played by the Rangers.  They just couldn't get that equalizer.   Should we worry about the team in general, should we jump out of a metaphorical window?  I don't think so.  If they play horribly on the upcoming road trip, then I'd begin to worry. 

Still, because it's a loss against the Rangers, this loss just plain sucks.  Feel free to add your thoughts about tonight's game in the comments.

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Atmosphere Report

In the recap, I did note that the Devils fans were clearly louder at the Rock. This shouldn’t be surprising as some sections at Saturday’s 5-2 loss to Philly were starting Let’s Go Devils chants even when the Devils were down 5-1.

The Devils fans can hold up their heads up high for supporting their team vocally. The Rangers fans, maybe it’s different at MSG, but they are the very definition of “you only sing when you’re winning.” And even then, it wasn’t much. So quiet through the final buzzer – including the real piece of work cheering Brodeur getting run by Callahan (was not wearing an Avery jersey, but a Colton Orr – he likes his more anonymous jerk hockey players)

OK, it doesn’t mean much given the result, but it’s a little something to consider.

Devils in my heart! Devils in my mind! Devils in my eyes! Devils until I die!
In Lou We Trust - The Devils SBN Blog

by John Fischer on Oct 6, 2009 12:01 AM EDT reply actions  

Devils Rangers

How much cap room do we have left? Wasn’t the number somewhere around 10 million? Why does it feel like we are a team that lacks a significant amount of depth this season. Last year it felt like the team was ozzing with depth. But our top line is all we really have as a scoring threat. ’

We want to pretend that the Roloston line is a scoring threat but they aren’t. Zubrus hasn’t scored since his six goals in sequence last year, and Roloston has not lived up to his potential, and i think enough time has passed from his injury for that excuse to be null.

Elias being out is a lot more obvious than it should be. And i know this kid is a rookie, but is anyone else not impressed with the play of Murphy? He appears tentative and hasn’t made the best choices with the puck. And he gets a lot of playing time. I was impressed with Bergfors during preseason, but did he really impress enough to earn a second line regular and get significant powerplay time? He too seems to be overplaying the puck.

Is anyone else out there thinking we should kept Shanny? Can anyone out there honestly tell me that he woulnd’t play a key role in our powerplay and second line? Does anyone else think we should be using some of that cap money that is available to us? Is there anyone out there on the market that could help add depth?

Tonight the Devils played OK in spurts against a very young Ranger Defense, and i don’t know if the ice was bad, but we didn’t look sharp. It was an improvement from Saturday, but only bad teams take credit on a loss for an improvement and i am not ready to admit we are pulling for a bad team. Does anyone get the feeling that we are in a rebuilding year?

And NOTE: Brodeur was better, but he misplayed the game winner. All he had to do was stay still and cover his angle or drop down into a rare butterfly. He overplayed it. But he did keep the devils in it to come back.

by nmtrawinski on Oct 6, 2009 1:18 AM EDT reply actions  

Murphy isn’t a Rookie and I’m sorry two games into the season and Rolston (not ROLOston, he’s not a circular chocolate candy) isn’t living up to his potential already? What is your idea of potential at this point, two hat tricks??

Rolston has a goal and 7 shots on goal in 2 games, I think he’s making his presence fully known.

by Zelepukin on Oct 6, 2009 4:28 AM EDT up reply actions  

Are you kidding me, you gave me a spell check?

Listen guy. Who cares if i didn’t spell ROLTON’s name right. You have nothing to grab onto so you attack a mispelling.

Listen, the guy scored one goal on 7 shots, but he’s on a line that doesn’t sustain any offensive pressure. He was basically useless to the team last year, and i’d like to see him and his line control the puck more in the zone and create more offensive chances. If you want to be nitpicky about it, he did miss the net last night from the point on the powerplay at least 3 times.

Potenital = offensive threat and pressure. Can you honeslty say that teams are considering him an offensive threat, or that he’s creating that much of a threat?

by nmtrawinski on Oct 6, 2009 11:31 AM EDT up reply actions  

I would hope teams are considering him an offensive threat considering the guy has a rocket of a slapshot, he has a recent history of scoring plenty of goals (last season aside), and he’s getting more minutes on a more offensive line.

That line really needs some time together to get in sync, in my opinion. They weren’t great last night, true; but I don’t think opposition defenses aren’t respecting his presence.

Also, it’s R-O-L-S-T-O-N. And Cory Murphy his playing his third season in the NHL – maybe it’ll be his first full season, but he isn’t a rookie.

Devils in my heart! Devils in my mind! Devils in my eyes! Devils until I die!
In Lou We Trust - The Devils SBN Blog

by John Fischer on Oct 6, 2009 5:11 PM EDT up reply actions  

no no no john. Marty is too old, Shanny would have 5 goals already and a team with 5 young first time NHLers should be playing in perfect harmony already. Trust me I know…. I met Jaque Caron once.

by they can take a player but not the core on Oct 6, 2009 6:05 PM EDT up reply actions  

Look, if Brent Sutter, Brian Gionta, and a unicorn stayed on the Devils, they’d be on their way to winning the 2011 Stanley Cup by November.

Devils in my heart! Devils in my mind! Devils in my eyes! Devils until I die!
In Lou We Trust - The Devils SBN Blog

by John Fischer on Oct 6, 2009 9:28 PM EDT up reply actions  

It's called a TYPO.

And he’s got a rocket slap shot, but his line doesn’t not create any offensive pressure. I’ll give them some more time, but the line Rolston was on last year was not an offensive threat either.

by nmtrawinski on Oct 6, 2009 8:38 PM EDT up reply actions  

well with john maddens stick handling and mike rupp’s speed around the edges, I too feel Rolston’s line underperformed last year.

by they can take a player but not the core on Oct 6, 2009 10:46 PM EDT up reply actions  

it shows how much we are missing elias

also, how can bergfors be called for diving and the ranger player be called for hooking?

by dsarch on Oct 6, 2009 7:23 AM EDT reply actions  

I watched this game to the bitter end, and although the devils player better, they could not get the the front of the Ranger net when it mattered. All the shots came from the perimeter if they got through at all. They need forwards to drive to the net not take pot shots from the blue line. Yes toward the end of the game they started doing it but for long stretches they did not.

by thatguy011071 on Oct 6, 2009 8:10 AM EDT reply actions  

why was mottau in there at the when they pulled broduer we had them pinned a little and he lets the puckgo past him and game over i dont think i seen oduya out whats up with that i would have rather seen greene out there instead of mottau i think hes horrible

by lou b on Oct 6, 2009 9:10 AM EDT reply actions  

Few observations

-I thought Niedermayer looked pretty good for someone we all had concerns about coming in. I don’t what his face-off % was, but he seemed to do pretty well.

-WTF was Pikkarainen doing out there on the PP? He has not impressed at all.

-The extra penalty on Oduya was total bunk. At the least there should have been coincidentals, and perhaps I’m showing my bias, but I thought Drury should have gotten a double minor, and perhaps even a major.

-The dive call was also bunk. I’ll never understand how there can be a penalty AND a dive. It’s like beating a murder rap and then being found guilty in a civil case.

-There were to many shots taken with no traffic in front of Lundqvist and he’ll stop those every time.

-Rolston and Zubrus look better than last year, but clearly miss Elias. We’re largely a one line team and other teams not only recognize this, but seem to really want to take Parise out (figuratively and literally).

-The fourth line needs a shake up. They were consistently outplayed by Donald freaking Brashear last night.

-Brodeur played better, but still looked shaky. The third goal was a softie, and his rebound control was iffy all night. I don’t know if it’s rust or age or injury or what, but I think the defense needs to step up and forget the reputation of the man back there and protect him like they did Clemmensen last year until he proves he’s got his groove back.

-I’d be interested to see a report on just how many players first NHL goals came against Brodeur. It’s uncanny how often it happens, just as it always seems when a streak is mentioned, it’s almost immediately broken (Rangers 0-9 on the PP this season? Goal imminent.)

by elesias on Oct 6, 2009 9:35 AM EDT reply actions  

Your Observations

-I agree that Pikkarainen is a big what the F**K.

-I too feel that the penalty on Oduya was BS. Is the NHL forgetting it’s foundation. The best part about the game is the passion, you got to let Oduya take a shot. There is no way the result of a near career ending kneeing should result in a powerplay for the other team. I too think he should have been awarded at least a double and a game misconduct.

-How is it a dive when a player is on his way down from an illegal infraction? I’ll never understand this.

-The shot choices were pathetic on a goalie who plays perfect positioning. We needed traffice and forwards to drive the net.

-Did anyone else notice that the Parise line was broken up a few times last night? If that is the answer to this teams lack of offensive depth we are in trouble. That line needs to stay together, and we need to focus on building 1.5 more offenive threats.

-From preseason and the first two games, i don’t feel that our fourth line is NHL ready. If you watched Mike Rupp play vs the rangers and the islanders he can control the puck and create a nice pass and scoring play. the point of the fourth line is to shake things up, land a nice hit, and occasionally be able to surprise a team with a hard effort earned goal. From the looks of it, these guys can’t control the puck and appear to be chasing faster more talented players.

-Let’s hope it’s rust on Brodeur. He definatly misplayed that third goal. Like i said earlier, all he had to do was stand still and be agressive on his angle. No reason to drop to one knee and open up the five hole. You know he wants that back.

-It probably just seems that way becuase you watch ever devils game that rookies score their firsts on brodeur. But i agree it always seems like we are watching some rookiecollect the puck from the back of the net.

by nmtrawinski on Oct 6, 2009 11:41 AM EDT up reply actions  

Mottau-Pikkarainin have to sit

I read Lou’s quote this morning, he sounds like he is not worried about it, so I will stick with my 10 games in plan to decide if we should be in full panic mode.

A couple of points-

What was it with us getting chased on every faceoff? I think Parise took more draws then Zajac, and it seemed like we got chased on every draw.

Mottau was awful last night, and the game winner was on him because he couldn’t get the puck out of the zone. He played poorly and I don’t see how he doesn’t sit and Greene get a shot in that spot. Murphy looked ok, and I don’t want to lose his puck moving on the power play.

Pikkarainin- I’ll say it again, I don’t see why Lou is in love with this guy. He showed nothing last night IMO, and took an early penalty that resulted in a power play goal.

Peters- also ineffective. The toughness on this team last night came from Oduya and Salvador.

Pelley- Quickly playing his way off this team.

MEMO TO JACQUES- Nobody is fighting- maybe Pelley centering Halishuk and Zharkov would work. At least they would be a threat instead of a liability.

Elias can’t come back fast enough!

by pepe22 on Oct 6, 2009 9:40 AM EDT reply actions  

I noticed Zajac was thrown out of the face off every single time in the second period. These Linesman need to stop abusing what little power they have. Truth is, if a player gets the boot from the face off dot, it’s usually becuase the linesman faked out the guy and is taking too long to drop the puck.

-Mottau better wake up becuase he’s on his way to Andy Greenes seat during games up in the stands. I think Murphy should take off Rafalski’s number b/c i’m expecting him to play the same way.

Pikkarainin Should go back to whatever European league he was playing in. Not Impressed

-Peters needs to drop his gloves and fight, or stay on the bench. Fourth lines should be somewhat competitive with another teams fourth line. There is no reason why we should be chasing around Brasheir Brasheir looked like Gaborik out there against our fourth line.

-Pelley who? Did he get worse from 2 years ago when he came up? He was actually impressive when we first got to the Rock, now he just looks awful.

by nmtrawinski on Oct 6, 2009 11:46 AM EDT up reply actions  

not ready for panic quite yet.

am i the only one who thinks they look really disorganized.i c alot of missed passes, forced looking passes in there own zone that turn into turnovers,and occasionaly a d man skating to the front of his own net deeking threw A crowd.my optimsum isnt boundless but i really feel like im watching alot of new players trying to find there chemistry and i think as said in some one elses post i wont b to worried unless it still looks like this 10 games from now.Pikkarainen is on the power play to provide a screen and try and get to rebounds from rolstons shot could we give him aleast 3 or 4 nhl games before we start booing i really got a felling from what lou said and from his #’s in finland league that the devils are planning on him evolving into a bobby holikish type player.and one last thought, i like langs and am happy with him being captin but so far this year im really really likeing rolston and his shot,his presence on and off the ice.i would think lemarie is atleast thinking about him as captin quietly in the back of his mind.

by Imperator_Celtic on Oct 6, 2009 3:04 PM EDT reply actions  

Roloston as Captain

That can never happen. It was bad enough when Sutter took it away from Elias. He might be thinking of it, but it will never happen.

by nmtrawinski on Oct 6, 2009 3:14 PM EDT up reply actions  

Colin White

Colin White has been a mainstay in the NJD lineup for what seems like years now. I have numerous gripes with the guy in general and last year when I saw him on the PK against Carolina in the playoffs, I felt like throwing up multiple times.

He is not a smooth skater, passer, shooter, and puck handler. He apparently weighs ~220 lbs. but plays like 200lbs. Some guys are strong on there skates, maybe attributed to aggressiveness but Colin is just god awful. From what it looked like last night he was one the third D line pairings with Mottau (an offensive lines dream). If it’s not glaring right now I hope Fraser can step in a give this thing a go. White has perplexed me the last two years and I only hope the guy is will get better at facilitating in the defensive zone because its like the bully picking on the little kid around the net all day long.

by jknc09 on Oct 6, 2009 6:21 PM EDT reply actions  

Colin White

Problem here is, who do you put in to replace him. He’s not the worst d man that the devils have. He has improved his carelessness that he came to the devils with when he was a young player. But i still blame him 90% for the devils early exit vs carolina last season with his out of position check that let staal walk in on his wing.

He’s playing better than Mottau.

by nmtrawinski on Oct 6, 2009 8:43 PM EDT reply actions  

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