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Around SBN: Lance Berkman Could Have Torn ACL

The New Jersey Devils End Preseason With 2-1 Win Over Philadelphia Flyers

In comparison to Friday night's game, the New Jersey Devils looked a million times better tonight.  Passes were much crisper and mostly on-target.  Puck movement through the neutral zone wasn't always an adventure.   Then again, that shouldn't be a surprise.  Those rosters were as different as night-and-day since Friday's squad was mostly a 'B' team and tonight's was more of an 'A' squad.    Tonight could accurately be described as a final dress rehearsal where the Devils played most of the team that will be seen next Saturday. 

I'm sure there will be a few changes to be made, there are still some tough decisions left to be made for the active roster to be made by Lou, Peter DeBoer, and the rest of the staff. It's those decisions that I think most fans will be asking with respect to this game.  Did anyone make a good final case to be on this team?  Will anyone lose their spot in the roster due to not playing well?  Is there any reason to worry about the team going into the regular season?  Questions like that.

Oh, and the New Jersey Devils won 2-1 tonight over the Philadelphia Flyers.  It's nice to beat a rival.  After all, a Devils fan should hate the Flyers every day and savor victories of any sort of over them.  Yet, as of right now, tonight's result - and all of the other preseason games - are now meaningless.   Performances are going to be what drives the Devils to make their final decisions before opening night next Saturday.  Let's talk about them more after the jump.

Star-divide

The Stats: From NHL.com:  Game Summary; Event Summary; Play by Play; Faceoff Report

What Did I Say About Discipline: One of the worst parts of tonight's performance were the penalties the Devils took. They took 5, they were largely avoidable and dumb, and one of them led to the one goal the Flyers did score.

Let's go over the five.  Eric Boulton was warned on a faceoff by a ref and then on the next one, he kept yapping and got sent to the box for unsportsmanlike conduct. That's just stupid.   David Clarkson forgot that you can't hook a player on the hands for even a little bit (and he did so while chasing a puck on offense - which was dumb and worth 2 for hooking.  Clarkson later bumped Ilya Bryzgalov on an attack, so he got another minor on top of that.  Petr Sykora was careless in raising his stick and clipped Andreas Lilja in the face. That was only a two minute penalty since there was no blood. Adam Larsson even took a call.  He was behind Harrison Zolnierczyk in the Devils' end, Larsson hooked his legs and pulled, and that earned him two for tripping.

The bad news is that almost all of these could have been avoided tonight. The good news is that they're avoidable and I'm sure DeBoer will instruct his players to be more mindful in the future.  Even if the Flyers didn't play Claude Giroux, Daniel Briere, and/or Chris Pronger, handing the opposition five power plays in a game is receipe for disaster.

That Goal Against Looked Familiar: On Thursday night, Giroux slid a pass right to Jaromir Jagr on the left post.  He was uncovered and since Martin Brodeur was facing Giroux since he had the puck to his right, Jagr was on Brodeur's flank.  It was an easy power play goal.   I blamed Anton Stralman since he didn't do anything about the pass and he had no clue who was around the net despite being in the slot himself.

Tonight, almost the exact same play happened.   Matt Read held the puck to Brodeur's right, Brodeur was focusing on Read as he should have, and Read saw Scott Hartnell wide open in the slot.  Due to his positioning, he was Brodeur's left flank.  Read slides a pass to Hartnell and he taps it in for a PPG.  I blame Henrik Tallinder as he was in the slot just ahead of Hartnell instead of covering him.  

Martin Brodeur Is Old And Old And Old And Makes Great Saves And Old: He's quick, he's big, he's 39.  Martin Brodeur faced 26 shots and was forced to make some bail-out saves for a good chunk of them.  The Devils' defense bended too much in the second period, so Brodeur had to contend with some heads-up plays, rebounds not really cleared out, and several odd-man rushes.  His most spectacular reaction was diving to his left to make a stop, the puck bounced off something (a skate? a stick) and started to trickle into the corner, Brodeur just stabbed the puck away with his stick. That was the tipping point for that end of the Rock chant Marty's name.  Brodeur was fine tonight and anyone worried about how he'll do this season are too focused on his birthdate and not how he played.

Defense Bending Too Much:  It wasn't so much players were in the wrong position or just got torched.  Some of them were just bounces that favored the Flyers. Some of them were just hustle plays where the Flyers threw players forward faster than backchecking Devils.  Some of them were, well, not so good plays.  Andy Greene notably kept a puck from trickling through Brodeur and helped Marty freeze it.  That was good, except when you consider he made a giveaway that led to the whole play.    I attributed it to the concept of bending-not-breaking; where upon a defender may give up some space but not the most valuable space to the opposition.  As such, the Flyers put up 13 shots in the second period and several forced Brodeur to be great. 

I will say the Devils were sharper (stiffer?) in the third period. While the Flyers still put 9 shots on net, they were more routine stops instead of two-on-one or three-on-two situations.

Adam Larsson Probably Made This Team:  If he didn't, then he was stress-tested tonight. The 18-year old defender led all of the Devils in even strength (19:11) and total ice time (23:46) tonight.  Given that the blueline was filled with NHL vets, I don't think Larsson would have received that much ice time unless he's on this team in some capacity.

I don't think he will (or should) get this much ice time in the regular season, though.  While he was getting long shifts, he wasn't used on the PK at all.  DeBoer chose to go with vets and Alexander Urbom over Larsson on penalty killing situations. Given that the Devils had 9:12 to kill tonight, Larsson only getting 32 seconds of that tells me that the coaches didn't want to put him in defensive-specific situations.   That makes sense to me since he's still an 18-year old who's still adjusting to the North American game in a position that favors experience.

Penalty Killers Got Practice: With 5 power plays to kill, the PK units got a work out.  They weren't bad tonight. Sure, there was the one goal allowed, but that was a failure on Tallinder instead of a breakdown in coverage. Tallinder recovered nicely from that error and was more aware of his surroundings in the slot.   Philly only got 6 shots on all of their power plays, which isn't a bad rate at all to have.  The Devils got several clearances and even managed to get a shot on net.   Most of all, they did it while set up in a box formation - something I like to see on a shorthanded situation.

Who got the minutes? Tallinder was a mainstay, followed by Mark Fayne, Anton Volchenkov, and Alexander Urbom. Urbom earned that time tonight, and according to Tom Gulitti, made DeBoer look foolish for suggesting he won't make the team.  The other surprise is who isn't in this group: Andy Greene. He didn't get any PK time. He was eating a lot of even strength minutes with Larsson, so perhaps DeBoer wanted to rest him.  But that's a bit of a surprise.  What was also a surprise was that Dainius Zubrus was a regular among the forwards.  In his first preseason game, Zubrus got thrown into killing penalties right away. He wasn't too bad at them either.  The other forwards on the PK were Zach Parise, Patrik Elias, Jacob Josefson, Brad Mills, and Adam Henrique.  DeBoer rotated among the six forwards, keeping fresh guys up top to pressure the points.

If we consider tonight's game to be a dress reherseal, than these players will probably be the main penalty killers during the season.  The exception would be Urbom, probably with Greene or possibly Bryce Salvador if he gets back into form.   I would also figure that DeBoer plans to cycle through three forward pairings in 4-on-5 situations. I doubt it'll be this exact group of six (Mills isn't making this team at the minimum); and I'm confident Travis Zajac will be among them once healthy. 

Power...Play?:  Yes, the Devils had some power plays tonight.  The Flyers took some dumb penalties of their own. They also earned one dangerous boarding call on Lilja. He ran Nick Palmieri late into the boards after an offside whistle during the Devils' man advantage on a Eric Wellwood minor.  Fortunately, Palmieri was OK and continued to play.

Anyway, the Devils power play had their ups and downs.  They looked good moving the puck around on their first power play, but failed to get the puck to the net.  On their second power play, they looked about the same and were successful. Fayne fired a shot through traffic - which didn't hit a body, unlike the many other times the Devils attempted that kind of shot; Bryzgalov stops it; the puck bounces to his right; and David Clarkson was in the right place to bat it in past the goalie's right.   It broke the deadlock on the scoreboard and it (mostly) redeemed his other actions tonight.   Those were the good power plays.

The other two were bad. The third power play featured the Devils in their own for more time than going forward. They seemed out of sync for some reason and two Devils managed to run into each other behind their own net.  I don't know why they struggled with the basics on the third one, it's not like DeBoer was fiddling with the units during the game.  Lilja's hit gave them a brief 5-on-3 where they looked competent; but the resulting 1:44 was just "meh."  Overall, it wasn't a bad night. While the Devils only put four shots on net, they did score one PPG, and when they did set-up, it looked good.  With some more practice, this half of special teams might be more consistently threatening.

Wait, Who Got a Breakaway and Scored: The Devils pulled off three breakaways tonight.  First, it was Petr Sykora, who got a lead pass from Parise, came in on Bryzgalov's right, and slid the puck in through the sliding goalie.  It was a sweet goal.  Ilya Kovalchuk later got an opportunity, came in on Bryzgalov's left, and Kovalchuk tried to fire it against the grain high, glove-side.  He got the shot off, but the goalie stayed patient, didn't make the first move, and was able to stop it with his glove.  The third was by Parise, who came in on Bryzgalov's left, but the goalie was in position and didn't have to move too much to stop Parise's shot.  

I wouldn't get torn up about Parise or Kovalchuk not scoring on their breakways. They'll get more opportunities and they'll even bury a few of them.  Sykora's was the real surprise.  I don't know he got that far open, but he did and thankfully Parise hit him with a perfect pass through the neutral zone.  Sykora himself admitted he isn't a great skater per this post by Gulitti, so that he finished on his opportunity is especially good news.  Who knows if he'll get a chance like that in the future? 

Does Sykora Have a Future in New Jersey?:  I'm not really sure what more he could do, other than show that he can be a faster skater more often.  He finished a play tonight, he's scored elsewhere in preseason, and he's done everything the coaches have asked him.  I'm still not sold on whether he can really contribute much during the regular season.   I think his lack of speed and his defense will undercut him.  But if all of this wasn't enough to get him a contract, then I'm not sure what else would have done it.  We'll find out soon.

The Kovalchuk Unit: The line of Kovalchuk-Josefson-Nick Palmieri got a real work out tonight and the results were mixed.  Kovalchuk looked sharper than he did on Thursday night and he drew two of Philadelphia's four penalties tonight.  Yet, in action, he had to do much of the heavy lifting on offense and didn't get off as many shots as I would have liked.   At least tonight did clue us into whether Kovalchuk or Parise would be double-shifted late.   It was Kovalchuk, which helped him get 23:10 of ice time tonight.

I actually liked Palmieri tonight.  He threw some nice checks, he drove to the net as he's supposed to do, and he battled well for pucks.  He drew the other two penalties Philly took tonight, so that's a plus for the line.  Josefson had a mixed night, in my opinion.  He got creamed at faceoffs (4-for-12) and wasn't always a factor on offense.  Still, he did play in all situations and managed to get 2 decent shots on net tonight. I'm not really sold on this line working all that well unless there's just general improvement from all three guys. I could see this threesome getting mauled on match-ups away from the Rock and/or against a deep team.  Were I to make a change, I would consider swapping Josefson and Zubrus. Given that Zubrus was out for most of preseason, we may not see it at all; but I think Zubrus' two-way game and size would help the line out in it's own end while giving Palmieri some relief in the trenches.  Josefson can enjoy softer minutes as he develops in the NHL.

Zach Parise Looks Fine: He didn't score, but he was buzzing around the net like he normally did.  If you were to tell me he wasn't injured, I would have believed you. The points will come, and Elias will help him get there.

Mattias Tedenby Played Tonight: Yes, he did.  I'd figure I'd let you know.

Requisite Flyers Note: The Devils only putting up 20 shots on net was a let down of sorts, but then again, the Flyers put out a mostly NHL defense.  Throw in Chris Pronger and it could be their blueline next Saturday.  Bryzgalov was forced to make some tough saves on some of those 20 shots, but the Devils could have made a better effort to put more shots on net.   I'm sure they will going forward.  As for Philly's offense, a handful of forwards were the most dangerous. Read, Wayne Simmonds, Scott Hartnell, and Sean Couturier each had 4 shots on net and Jakub Voracek had 3. They broke in consistently into New Jersey's end and gave Brodeur a lot of work.  Outside of Couturier, the Devils will see these guys next Saturday.  Hopefully, DeBoer will show enough video as to prevent them from being so prolific at getting clean shots on net.  Overall, the Flyers gave the Devils a good game even if it wasn't their full-strength roster.  Flyers fans should be pleased with that.

Henrique Looked Nice:  Throwing him on a PK with Brad Mills wasn't something I wanted to see, but it didn't burn the Devils so it worked.  Since Henrique was centering Mills and Boulton, he didn't get a lot of ice time.  Throughout preseason, he showed flashes of how good he was off the puck and in stickhandling the puck.  Yet, I don't think it's to his benefit or the team's benefit to play limited minutes.  I think he's better suited for another season in Albany, where he can be one of their top forwards. I will say this, if (or, gulp, when) injuries mount at forward, then I think we'll see more of Adam Henrique.

Jacques Lemaire May Appreciate This Final Point:  The team was skating hard well into the third period.   Say what you want about DeBoer or the team, but they're definitely in shape. 

What did you think of tonight's preseason finale?  Who do you think had a good night? Who do you think had a poor night?  Did anyone play themselves onto the team tonight?  Do you also think Larsson and Sykora will probably make this team? Were you surprised at least a little bit on the PK assignments?  Did you notice anything of importance in tonight's game that I missed? Please leave your answers and other thoughts on tonight's game after the jump. Thank you to everyone in the Gamethread who commented and read it; and thank you for reading.

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Regarding Larsson: I know you have been very cautious when it comes to Larsson and burning his ELC/rushing him to the NHL, but at this point, you have to admit that we have a pretty special player on our hands here.

I can go into depth on all the things he does right (and wrong) and explain what makes him so good but we can all see it. It’s apparent that he’s not only going to make the team, but he will see top pairing minutes (not vs. top competition mind you) due to his usefulness on the PP and at even strength.

I don’t think DeBoer shied away from putting him on the PK because of the player (he can clearly handle PK duties), rather it was a small attempt to limit his gaudy minute total; something he said he would do before the game (it didn’t exactly work out that way though). Either way, as I have said, I fully expect him to lead the team or at least come close to leading the team in ice time. The bigger thing to look for is the quality of competition he is put up against. It’s one thing throwing 22 mins per game at an 18 year old, its another throwing 22 Chara-esque minutes at him.

Nonetheless, it will be fun to watch him this season. Hopefully it’s one to remember.

Three other notes:

1. I couldn’t be happier for Sykora. It’s really great to see a millionaire pro athlete truly man up, swallow his pride, and work his ass off to make a team. Definite respect.

2. Tedenby protected the puck well a few times.

3. I can really see why Corey Pronman and other scouts are talking up Urbom. For a guy so big he can really skate, and not skate like a dumbass, but skate with a purpose. His physical game is what will make him an effective NHLer, but it isn’t too difficult to envision him as a (going out on a bit of a limb here) Chris Phillips type defenseman somewhere down the line. I fully expect him to take over Salvador’s role next year either way.

by dkball7 on Oct 2, 2011 12:30 AM EDT reply actions  

Urbom was a pleasent surprise yesterday, I can’t agree more.

"It's magic, it's tragic, it's a loss, it's a win"

by Elektrostal_Kid on Oct 2, 2011 9:27 AM EDT up reply actions  

Yes it is just preseason, yes, he’s only played a few games, BUT Larsson is beginning to remind me of Drew Doughty when he was a rookie…bold statement-YES…true statement-I believe so.

by Marty's Better #30 on Oct 2, 2011 12:32 AM EDT reply actions  

Adam Larsson at age 18 makes Scott Niedermayer look like Ken Sutton. I think we can all agree on this by now after seeing a few preseason games.

by wolfcaster on Oct 2, 2011 12:35 AM EDT reply actions  

I said it in last nights thread and I’ll say it again. He is definitely top 4 defenseman. But let’s see where he’s at two months into the season before we get too bold with our statements.

by SonicJoe on Oct 2, 2011 7:23 AM EDT via mobile up reply actions  

But let’s see where he’s at two months into the season before we get too bold with our statements.

this

"It's magic, it's tragic, it's a loss, it's a win"

by Elektrostal_Kid on Oct 2, 2011 9:25 AM EDT up reply actions  

With Sykora the devs almost have no choice but to sign him as they need scoring and he provides depth @ center if injuries hit that position. I can’t see how they wouldn’t sign him. I would like to see Teddy on that line or Henrique but I guess thats their “off” wing and would be more comfortable @LW. I’d rather not see Sykora here but he does bring scoring, experince and depth so what other choices do they have after an impressive camp and preseason.

I’m glad Deboer is going to play AL a lot. This kid must’ve been born under a lucky star because this is the perfect place for this kids development. He comes to a team that needs his talents, has the best tutelage in Stevens and Robinson, could be paired w/ fellow Swede nhl vet Tallinder and is coming up w/ countrymen his own age in JJ and Teddy. There was something very magical for this kid to have this orginization at this time to win lottery for his services.

by 68devils on Oct 2, 2011 7:23 AM EDT reply actions  

I don’t know why, but it just feels to me like Kovalchuk has been setting up the opposing goalies for the regular season. Seems like every one of his shots in the preseason has been about the exact same shot no matter where he’s taken it from: low on the glove side, just above the pads.

by elesias on Oct 2, 2011 8:16 AM EDT reply actions  

I felt the same way for a while this preseason, and I think it was confirmed with that fancy-pants stick-trick BS he pulled last night on that breakaway. He had a beautiful circle ripper opportunity that he’s scored on for his whole life, and he didn’t take it. I wouldn’t be surprised if Bryz gets a hell of a surprise on the 8th.

I’m not going to lie to you. It felt good and I’m going to do whatever is in my power possible to stay there as long as I can. - Petr Sykora on playing on a line with Elias and Parise.

by Murdoc on Oct 2, 2011 8:51 AM EDT up reply actions  

I think thats wishful thinking, but i hope its true. I felt like he was just ripping the same shot time after time. I was also hoping he would get another goal or two in the pre-season to get him going. The one time slapshot PP goal just isn’t enough in my opinion.

by JerseyKid. on Oct 3, 2011 12:34 PM EDT up reply actions  

I’m suprised Fayne doesn’t get more congratulations, to me, He’s been awesome yesterday, not a single error, moving the puck with accuracy, strong and determined, his anticipation was perfect. That’s the reason why he was flying under the radar perhaps….

…And What a Shot !!!

"It's magic, it's tragic, it's a loss, it's a win"

by Elektrostal_Kid on Oct 2, 2011 9:25 AM EDT reply actions  

re: the flyers goal, you’ve got the blame all wrong – josefson and zubrus can’t allow that first pass through the box. yeah, tallinder should’ve been better, but they allowed a cross-seam pass which is bound to screw everything up.

Driving Play - The Blog with Three First Lines

by Triumph44 on Oct 2, 2011 9:49 AM EDT reply actions  

Based on last night’s game, I feel we are all set and ready for next Saturday’s opener. Just two open items : a contract for Sykora, and for pete’s sake give the ‘C’ to Parisie.

by piscataway_devil on Oct 2, 2011 10:16 AM EDT reply actions  

Another stuff: There’s something between Ilya and Jacob, their passing game in the defensive zone is already great, sooner or later Josefson will be Ilya’s center but up to now, the sweden seems to lack of strengh to play on a top line (as a center).

Don’t get me wrong, he’s doing a good for a kid but I agree with John, now Zubrus should center the 2nd line.

That would be a better idea to let Josefson developping his game on the 3rd line against a softer opposition. Moreover, since Kovalchuk will certainly get a ton of double-shifts, they’ll still work together quite often anyway.

So to me, that would be a Win-Win situation.

"It's magic, it's tragic, it's a loss, it's a win"

by Elektrostal_Kid on Oct 2, 2011 11:47 AM EDT reply actions  

In terms of competition, any line Kovalchuk is on won’t see the toughest competition per se, but will most certainly see the toughest defensive pairings/lines against (Pronger, Staal, Martin, Chara etc.). I’d rather have Josefson face the toughest checkers rather than the toughest scorers personally, so being on the “2nd line” with Kovy isn’t the worst thing in the world. Also, I don’t like the idea of a “kid line” as a 3rd line. Tedenby-Josefson-Clarkson could be good with really sheltered minutes, but that puts even more of a burden on Parise-Elias-whoever to out score other teams top lines.

I miss Travis :(

by dkball7 on Oct 2, 2011 12:15 PM EDT up reply actions  

I’m not convinced of this – I seem to remember the Flyers matching Pronger on Parise – plus for most teams the best scorers are the best checkers as well.

Driving Play - The Blog with Three First Lines

by Triumph44 on Oct 2, 2011 1:02 PM EDT up reply actions  

sorry, I wasn’t clear – Pronger was on Parise in the 2010 playoffs.

Driving Play - The Blog with Three First Lines

by Triumph44 on Oct 2, 2011 1:04 PM EDT up reply actions  

I remember that too, which was why Parise was inneffective besides on the PK that series.

And Kovalchuk speeds away, great moves, busting through, DID YOU SEE THAT?

by KovyisLove on Oct 2, 2011 2:31 PM EDT up reply actions  

To your second point: Well traditionally most teams have employed a checking line, but recently there has been somewhat of a “fad” going around where teams match up strength vs. strength similar to what Babcock did with Zetterberg and Datsyuk and Sutter did with Parise and Zajac. I believe more teams will start copying what Vancouver does; giving their top players ridiculously easy minutes and zone starts while giving their checkers impossible zone starts and tough minutes. I guess it depends on the team though.

Pronger was matched up vs. Parise in that series, but last pre-season game (for what it’s worth) he was matched vs. Kovy.

by dkball7 on Oct 2, 2011 3:04 PM EDT up reply actions  

i don’t see that happening. it’s very, very hard to do what the canucks are doing, and they have personnel uniquely suited for it. the rangers kinda do similar things. but i don’t anticipate this catching on.

Driving Play - The Blog with Three First Lines

by Triumph44 on Oct 2, 2011 3:20 PM EDT up reply actions  

any line Kovalchuk is on won’t see the toughest competition per se, but will most certainly see the toughest defensive pairings/lines against (Pronger, Staal, Martin, Chara etc.

Well, that’s what I was talking about when I was speaking about a lack of strength for JJ… It’s in his offensive game. Jacob seems to lose a lot of offensive effectiveness when he faces tough checkers, physical players.

 Bottom line, for the sake of the team, I certainly don’t want to see Kovalchuk trying too much by himself once again.

"It's magic, it's tragic, it's a loss, it's a win"

by Elektrostal_Kid on Oct 2, 2011 3:40 PM EDT up reply actions  

I know this is a crazy idea, but we should try Henrique at 2nd line center. He wins a lot of faceoffs and has nice hands. He could be the cog that Kovy needs to score. I think JJ would be better with Tedenby on the 3rd line and let Zubs center the 4th.

by MoonDragn on Oct 3, 2011 10:17 AM EDT reply actions  

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