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No Points for Getting Close: New Jersey Devils Lose to the Carolina Hurricanes 4-2

The New Jersey Devils came close to getting a result in a game they really shouldn't have gotten any. However, close only counts in horseshoes, hand grenades, and maybe a few other things. So the Devils didn't. They went down to Raleigh and lost 4-2 to the Carolina Hurricanes. That it was close at all at some point in the game was a feat in of itself.

The first period wasn't so bad for the Devils. They out-shot the Canes early on, only allowing a Chad LaRose breakaway as the home team's lone shot on net for the first 7 minutes of the game. The Devils were looking OK. Then they got a power play and disaster struck again. Tim Gleason picks up a loose puck after an Ilya Kovalchuk slapshot was shot and chips it up-ice. It bounces off Kovalchuk and gets behind him. Brandon Sutter swoops in, heads up ice in a 2-on-1, and beats Johan Hedberg cleanly to put the Canes up 1-0. The goal against was the 11th shorthanded goal against by the Devils. That would be the first of two low points for the Devils in the first.

The second came when Ryan Carter needlessly and recklessly hit Jaroslav Spacek from behind into the endboards. Carter earned a major penalty, a game misconduct, and an ejection for the hit; and the Devils would have three minutes of power play time to kill (Bryan Allen jumped Carter and got 2 for roughing after the hit). Zach Parise added to the woes with a tripping call during the 4-on-4 play, so the Devils had to kill a 4-on-3 situation, then a 5-on-3, and then a 5-on-4. The Devils did so. Outside of that mess and the SHGA, the Devils weren't so bad.

In a stunning twist, the second period decided to be the period of doom. In a word, it was MacLean-ish. Yes, the Devils played as poorly as they did in many of the second periods from last season when John MacLean coached the team. How bad was it? It took the Devils 16:13 to get their first shot on net, a weak, sharp-angle shot at Cam Ward's legs by Dainius Zubrus. By that point, Tuomo Ruutu made it 2-0 Carolina and not long after Zubrus' shot, Anthony Stewart beat Hedberg shortside to make it 3-0. It was a horrid period all around, save for possibly Hedberg - and even he messed up on Stewart's shot.

Amazingly, the Devils eventually attempted a comeback in the third period. I have to emphasize eventually as Carolina kept pace with them shot-for-shot. They had 10 on the board before New Jersey got on the board. David Clarkson hammered a shot from distance, a play created by Anton Volchenkov of all players working and winning the puck down low. It seemed to be a consolation shot until Volchenkov set up Clarkson for a shot in the slot with 2:22 left. Ward stopped it but couldn't stop Adam Henrique putting in the rebound. It's 3-2 Carolina and the Devils had a conceivable shot at a late equalizer. A miracle comeback wasn't impossible at that point in the game.

The Devils didn't generate much; as Carolina collapsed hard in front of the net. Even with an extra man, the Devils only got one shot on net since Henrique's goal. That shot of a comeback died when Ilya Kovalchuk had the puck in the corner, saw Henrique and attempted to hit him with a pass. Henrique falls and the puck slides all the way into the empty net. Carolina won 4-2. Oh, and Cam Ward got credited for the goal since Sutter didn't touch Kovalchuk's pass. I and the scorer thought so at first, but nope - Ward was the last Cane to touch it.

As disappointing as it felt watching it happen in real time, I'm not concerned about that ENG. I'm far more concerned that close was the best the Devils could do given their performance. The Devils started off well, but they coughed up another SHGA and stupid offensive zone penalties helped Carolina at least settle the Devils down. The second period was a nightmare by New Jersey and fully deserved to lose the game outright on that alone. Even in the third period, the Devils didn't exactly out-play Carolina and needed Anton Volchenkov to make a big offensive play as well as a long shot from Clarkson finding it's way through traffic to just get on the board. If the Devils somehow got an equalizer, then the team would have had to been arrested for grand theft of a NHL standings point. The Devils, overall, played a bad game of hockey. They didn't deserve to get close, and so they didn't deserve a result. If they wanted one, maybe they should have played smarter hockey in between the first and last 7 minutes of the game.

I have a few more thoughts on tonight's game after the jump. For the opposition's perspective, please check out Bob Wage's recap at Canes Country.

Star-divide

The Stats: The NHL.com Game Summary | The NHL.com Event Summary | The NHL.com Play by Play Log | The NHL.com Shot Summary | The Time on Ice Shift Charts | The Time on Ice Head to Head Ice Time Charts | The Time on Ice Corsi Charts

The Game Highlights: If you missed the rare Volchenkov two-assist night, then you're going to want to see this highlight video from NHL.com.

MacLean-Ish: I have to empahsize how bad the Devils' second period was. The Devils didn't get their first shot on net until 16:13 into the period and that shot was a weak one. The Devils had a few opportunities earlier; but they either literally or metaphorically passed them up. And the Stewart goal didn't get the Devils fired up either. The Devils were out-shot 13-2 in the second period. The Devils were out-done in Corsi, going from 0 at the end of the first period to -15 at the end of the second period. That's straight up abysmal. That's just like some of the worst performances during that infamous John MacLean era.

By the by, the late shots for a comeback ended the game -9 for the Devils. Again, Carolina kept pace shot-for-shot with NJ until the goals. At that point, Carolina tried to shut the game down and came close save for that rush up ice that led to Henrique's goal.

The Effects of an Ejection: With Carter tossed from the game, Peter DeBoer had to mix and match his lines, not unlike MacLean's attempts and getting guys going from his infamous tenure. Kirk Muller matched them up fairly well. So we got to see Travis Zajac center Zach Parise and Kovalchuk, which didn't get them going. Only late in the game did we see Patrik Elias with the duo, but perhaps that was in the middle of a change. Either way, they all ended up below zero in Corsi. Due to the Zajac move, Adam Henrique got bumped down to the third line, which didn't work well either defensively, but they achieved something late. Henrique did get more shots on net with 4 than Kovalchuk (3), Zajac (1), and Parise (1). He was also one of the few Devils to get a positive Corsi tonight, if you can believe it.

I think who possibly suffered the most from the forced changes was Mattias Tedenby. In addition to getting nothing on offense, he got absolutely wrecked in possession with a -14 Corsi, tied for the lowest among all skaters in the game. Sure, Bryce Salvador got -14 too, but he's been facing tough competition. Not so much for the diminutive winger.

Carter Should Be Suspended: Carter's hit from behind on Jaroslav Spacek was unnecessary and dangerous. Carter had no chance to get to the puck; he clearly wasn't playing for the puck; he saw Spacek's #8 clear as day; and he just plowed into him. Carter got tagged for a cross-check on Tim Brent in a similar spot earlier in that first period, and in general should know better than to hit a defenseless player like that. He deserved his major penalty, he deserved to get ejected, and I think he should be suspended for the play. If there's any good news out of the hit, then it's that Spacek did return to the ice and played 17:38 overall this evening. My confidence in the NHL's disciplinary committee is rather low, so I suspect if Carter isn't given a heavy punishment, it's going to be because of the penalty given to him and Spacek returning. Still, it's the sort of hit the NHL should be trying to remove from the game, so we'll see if they'll assign a punishment.

Tell Me If You Heard This One Before: OK, so a goaltender allows a goal on a shorthanded 2-on-1 that comes in on his left and sees the shooter the whole lot; gets beaten on a rebound from a loose puck that bounces away from defenders and onto the stick of an opposing player who has the goaltender beaten dead to rights; allows a goal he really should have stopped; and is saved by the post from allowing anything further.

Who am I describing? Johan Hedberg from tonight's game, or Martin Brodeur's game against the Rangers last Tuesday? The honest answer is yes.

Snark aside, it's hard to fault Hedberg for when the team played so poorly for large stretches of the game. That said, Hedberg has now let up 15 goals in his last 5 starts. If anything, tonight put lie to the notion that Hedberg has been the better goaltender in recent games, as well as the theory that the team plays better in front of Moose.

A-Train & Foster Offense: One of the few silver linings from this game was the performances by Anton Volchenkov and Kurtis Foster. Foster ended up with a +7 in Corsi and Volchenkov was a +3, both of which are very good marks considering how badly the Devils were beaten on in possession. Foster had as many attempts on net as Kovalchuk did tonight with 6, had as many shots on net as Kovalchuk with 3, and dumped the puck in for Volchenkov to create the first goal. I felt Foster had a good night, possibly his best since becoming a Devil.

That Volchenkov created any offense at all is worth noting as he's got Colin White-esque offensive skills. He jumped up on the play and won the puck away from Tim Gleason, gets past him, gets through Jamie McBain behind the net, and put a pass perfectly on Clarkson's stick. It was a great effort even if Clarkson didn't score, and since he did, we have video evidence of it. He was just as slick on the second Devils goal. To start it, he handled a bouncing puck in the neutral zone well, skated north and fought off Alexei Ponikarovsky, and gained the zone. He threaded a pass through McBain and Jussi Jokinen to Clarkson in the slot. While Clarkson's shot made the rebound that became the goal, it doesn't happen without A-Train's offensive moves. Do I think he should do it more often? Well, no, but tonight, it gave the Devils some consolation on a night where quite a bit went wrong.

Again - I Love the PK: The New Jersey Devils allowed 33 shots on net and 7:40 of power play time for Carolina over 4 opportunities. The Devils held them to only 4 shots against and even got a shorthanded shot on net. That's simply fantastic work by the penalty killing units. The pinnacle was during Carolina's lengthy 5-on-3. The Devils allowed no shots on net in 1:20 of a two man disadvantage. Given that it was late in the first period and the Canes were up a goal, the PK ensured at the time that the Devils would not head into the second period down two goals. Granted, the Devils managed to flop in the second anyway; but it wasn't because of the PK. The penalty killing units were the only part of the Devils performance that showed up and consistently performed well when called upon. Well done, Dave Barr & Co.

Depressing Power Play Stat Line: One opportunity, 2 minutes, 2 shots on net, 1 goal against. In a word: ugh. I don't even want to talk about it further. Please feel free to insert the standard-by-now "Shorthanded goals have to stop happening" and "Fire Oates" thoughts.

Kovalchuk's Poor Night: While he tied with Foster in shooting attempts with 6; Kovalchuk could have had a better night. I think the puck that got past him at the point was really a bad bounce; but if the plan is to keep #17 at the point, then he should be expecting to face pucks like that from the defense. I think the misfired pass near the end of the game was also a bad break; it's not like Kovalchuk used psychokinesis to knock down Henrique. Still, Kovalchuk didn't have a good game. When the offense was at it's nadir in the second period, he didn't do much to pull them out of it. It was a time where he should've been selfish and just bomb pucks on net at any time he had a clear shooting lane. Even getting pucks right on Ward's chest would have been better than the goose egg put up. Instead, he didn't and that hurt. At least Kovalchuk is cognizant of his performance, as per this post-game post by Tom Gulitti. Me, I'd rather just see him play better.

Parise's Poor Night: While he had a better Corsi than Kovalchuk at -1 compared to -5; Parise managed only one shot on net. One! And he didn't attempt any other shots. One shot on net in 20:45 of play from the team leader in shots on net. Oh, and he took a tripping minor during a forecheck in the 4-on-4 situation in the first period. It may have been soft, but he got his stick on Tim Gleason's skate and had some role in him falling. I have but two words for #9: C'mon man.

To Be Fair: A lot of Devils have had poor nights. Strong start and interesting ending aside, when the team gets out-shot 13-2 in the second period and is even in shots with the opposition while down 3 goals in the third, there's a lot of bad nights going on by various players. As much as we can pin the loss on #1 or #17 or some other scapegoat, this was truly a team loss by the Devils. The Devils shouldn't have to be put into a situation where they need a late equalizer after an improbable comeback within the final 7-8 minutes of the game. They should avoid being down 3-0 to begin with. They should be avoiding getting out-attempted by 15 after 40 minutes. They should be avoiding taking horrible penalties that either puts them down a man temporarily or permanently for the night. There's a lot left to be desired with the performance, which really sticks out for it's lameness since they've played mostly good hockey for the last two weeks or so.

Now, the Carolina Hurricanes obviously played a good game of hockey. They didn't sit on a 3-0 lead, they came quite close to making it 4-0 or 4-1 in the third without the ENG, and Muller did a great job matching up the Devils' mixed lines. They smelled blood in the second period and feasted on puck and territorial possession. While McBain looked bad on the two Devils' goals, he otherwise had a good game. Eric Staal whiffed on a puck giftwrapped for him in the slot; but he was the driver of the strong play by Carolina with a +13 in Corsi. Chad LaRose had three great chances to score and was a bit unlucky not to on either of them. Ruutu was held even in Corsi, but got 3 shots on net and kept his point streak alive with a second peroid goal. Their fourth line chipped in a goal, which turned out to be the game winner. Cam Ward looked good and got credited for a goal, which is a rare achievement. There's a lot to like about tonight's game if you're a Canes fan; I wouldn't sweat New Jersey coming close at the end. While I don't expect Carolina to be anything but spoilers by the next Devils-Canes game, they certainly competed very well and deserved their win.

Two tough games are coming up at home to finish off 2011 and they're not going to get any easier than this one, Devils. The performances will have to be better because a repeat of what happened tonight may not yield a "close" situation in the third period again.

Those are my thoughts on tonight's game, so I want to know your thoughts. Other than the second period performance, what do you think the Devils need to differently on Wednesday given tonight's game? I'm assuming "not play like garbage in the second period" is a given? Do you think the Devils deserved to get close tonight? How come the PK is so good regardless of poor the 5-on-5 play and power play was this evening? Can the Devils a result in their next two games? Please leave your answers and other thoughts from this game in the comments. Thanks to everyone who commented and read the gamethread, as well as those who followed along on Twitter @InLouWeTrust. Thank you for reading.

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  • Devils are suffering from bipolar disorder
  • Goaltending is a kind of big issue, like some big holes in a big swiss cheese
  • Kovy does not understand that besides sharing the same # on his jersey, he’s nowhere near Kharlamov.
  • The defeat is well-earned, but Kovy’s making it just more painful.
  • Elias, Parise or any supposed team leader didn’t play tonight, So no play, no mistake, no blame.
  • I swear that wasn’t An2r8id in the 3rd period, Shea Weber is a pylon for pee-wee hockey drills in a comparison to that guy.
    -Carter will probably be suspended for 400 games, at least.

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

by Elektrostal_Kid on Dec 26, 2011 11:29 PM EST reply actions  

  • On the PK, the Devils usually roll out 3 lines. Because they have so much confidence in those 3 lines they can afford to play it super aggressive and make quick (and smart) line changes. This has been pretty consistent all year and is why they have the top ranked unit.
  • At even strength, the Devils can now roll out 3 good lines (and a passable 4th), allowing them to play pretty aggressive on the forecheck. Early on tonight this really worked (and has the past few games), but they lost it until very late in the 3rd (line mixups did not help either).
  • The powerplay: 17 PP goals for/ 11 PK goals against. Put 5 defensemen out there for all I care. They need to just do something different. Flying V perhaps?

Baseball players are smarter than football players. How often do you see a baseball team penalized for too many men on the field? ~Jim Bouton

by LaserVortex888 on Dec 27, 2011 12:04 AM EST reply actions  

funny, funny man. “and a passable 4th”???? Unless you mean “I’ll pass on them” they’re far from passable.

Go Devils
Go Jets

by FrankG929 on Dec 27, 2011 8:05 PM EST up reply actions  

Next Time We Get A PP...

Deboer should just decline. Kovalchuk should be benched for the next few power plays or something like that. Hedberg played well at times and others just looked lost.

This team is really at a cross roads and needs to discover some sort of identity.

Also, if the Devils want to make the playoffs these games against the bottom feeders are must wins especially considering there are 3 teams in our division that are among the elite in the NHL.

by Mr. Boom on Dec 27, 2011 12:13 AM EST reply actions  

Deboer should just decline. Kovalchuk should be benched for the next few power plays or something like that.

If only it was that simple, but here is the problem, when he was out for 5 complete games, the Devils PP went 1 for 25 and 3 shorthanded goals allowed.

He’s got to learn to be more cautious instead of always expecting from the puck to bounce right for him, that will definitely be an help, but I think Kovy’s failures are the symptoms of a whole team unable to play correctly in numerical superiority.

Kovalchuk’s constantly been on the point for Atlanta or his national team, and he has always been a scoring machine on those powerplays without any particular shorthanded issues.

I think the guy’s getting more than his fair share of rotten luck too, that’s amazing.

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

by Elektrostal_Kid on Dec 27, 2011 12:47 AM EST up reply actions  

Sorry, I wanted to quote your sentence, not to strike it. Good intention, bad result.

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

by Elektrostal_Kid on Dec 27, 2011 12:48 AM EST up reply actions  

I think it works extremely well this way.

Go Devils
Go Jets

by FrankG929 on Dec 27, 2011 8:06 PM EST up reply actions  

Kovalchuk’s constantly been on the point for Atlanta or his national team, and he has always been a scoring machine on those powerplays without any particular shorthanded issues. - NOT TRUE

Take a closer look. Until Kovalchuk came to NJ, Atlanta always gave up shorties. One of the worst teams in the league when it came to short handed goals allowed.
And 06-07 & 02-03 were the only times where Atlanta had a good Power Play with Kovy. When I say good, I mean in the top half of the league.
Get him off the point.

by carlfurmer on Dec 27, 2011 10:29 AM EST up reply actions  

Fair enough, but even if Atlanta gave up shorties, the numbers were nowhere near what we’re witnessing now. Besides Thrashers 2nd season in the league 02-03 (14 Shers) New Jersey’s allowed more Shorties in 35 games this year than Altanta in 82 games played for their last 11 years, and Altanta was a pretty pretty bad team.

Once again if people are saying Kovy is the 1st reason we give up shorties, I would like someone to explain me why the SHers mess started when he was out with 3 shorthanded goals allowed in 5 games ?
Against Florida 2 weeks ago, Tallinder takes Kovy’s spot on the PP for a few shifts : Bingo, a shorty !

At minimum, Greene, Elias, Kovy, Larsson and Tallinder have been played on the left point. We still got the same results: Breakaways, odd man’s rushes and shorthanded goals all the way.
So, instead of pointing the finger at our player one by one, it would be maybe time for Pete Deboer and Adam Oates to change their PP system perhaps ?

I’m fine with Kovy off the point by the way, It makes time I’m rooting for him on the left circle à la Elias ayway.

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

by Elektrostal_Kid on Dec 27, 2011 11:40 AM EST up reply actions  

I’m also fine with getting Kovalchuk off the left point, but moving him to the left circle à la Elias isn’t a fix — he’ll still have to cover that spot because the one defenseman will likely be in the middle of the ice while Elias/Parise and Kovalchuk are obliged to handle pucks shot up the wall.

Put Kovalchuk in the middle of the “defensive box” in the high slot, instead.

He won’t have to worry about pucks on the wall or defensive play as much from there. He’s closer to the net to utilize his wicked slap shot and one-timer. He’ll draw attention and open up ice space for everyone else, including someone in the left-wing circle (Zajac or Clarkson). That in turn will open up the back-door play to someone cutting in from the left-wing circle or the point. He’s also more likely to be able to get passes from Parise or Elias because the puck won’t have to go through every defender on the ice to get to him.

by acasser on Dec 27, 2011 12:14 PM EST up reply actions  

I do like that

They need to change things up and that sounds pretty good to me.

The Devils PP plays a lot on the points and I think it is one of the reasons they give up so many SH goals. It’s surprising because the Devils dominate 5v5 play when they are cycling the puck down low. Overall the Devils play very well on the half boards and need to play more down low on the PP.

Baseball players are smarter than football players. How often do you see a baseball team penalized for too many men on the field? ~Jim Bouton

by LaserVortex888 on Dec 27, 2011 12:19 PM EST up reply actions  

I hear you, with Kovy in the defensive box though, the team will not be able to use his passing skills anymore, he’ll be there for shots and rebounds but he wouldn’t see the puck quite often, a similar role as Clarkson.

There’s still some defensive irresponsibility on the circle, but it’s nowhere close to play the point. Kovy’s one timer is lethal at this distance, and he’d be in perfect position to make the needed cross ice-passes.

Your proposition still makes a lot of sense because it’s definitely time to try something else.

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

by Elektrostal_Kid on Dec 27, 2011 12:30 PM EST up reply actions  

There’s still some defensive irresponsibility responsibilities on the circle

It's all Autocorrect's fault

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

by Elektrostal_Kid on Dec 27, 2011 12:35 PM EST up reply actions  

Reading your comment another time, Maybe there’s a confusion. To make it clear: I’d Dress 2 defensemen on the points, Kovy taking Elias spot but on the opposite circle though, Zach in the slot for shots, deflections and rebounds, Elias around the net.

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

by Elektrostal_Kid on Dec 27, 2011 12:52 PM EST up reply actions  

He will never get a slapshot off from that position, ever. Never ever. It’s not a good position for him, either, absent that – Kovalchuk is not a good player in traffic. Few players are, but he doesn’t have the instincts to set up for that really quick shot.

Driving Play - The Blog with Three First Lines

by Triumph44 on Dec 27, 2011 3:26 PM EST up reply actions  

Take a closer look. Until Kovalchuk came to NJ, Atlanta always gave up shorties. One of the worst teams in the league when it came to short handed goals allowed.

Really?

2000-01: 9 SHGA (t-14th most)
2001-02: 3 SHGA (t-27th most)
2002-03: 8 SHGA (t-17th most)
2003-04: 11 SHGA (t-5th most)
2005-06: 13 SHGA (t-9th most)
2006-07: 9 SHGA (t-13th most)
2007-08: 13 SHGA (t-5th most)
2008-09: 13 SHGA (2nd most)
2009-10: 9 SHGA (2nd most)

Now, I just looked at the ranking immediately at NHL.com, I didn’t factor out how many teams they were tied with, but Atlanta was only a top-5 team in SHGA three times while Kovalchuk was a Thrasher. Four if you consider he spent most of 2009-10 in Atlanta. While mostly going from 9-13 SHGA is pretty bad, it wasn’t always so bad relative to the rest of the league some years. Moreover, it’s not clear whether the SHGA were the fault of Kovalchuk or not. Even among the 11 SHGA the Devils have allowed, only two can be pinned on #17.

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

by John Fischer on Dec 27, 2011 7:39 PM EST up reply actions  

looking at your numbers quickly i see errors

03-04 SHGA was 7, not 11. 05-06 is also wrong.
my comments were in response to there never being an issue with atlanta having short handed goal issues.
atlanta was mostly in the bottom half for shga while kovy was in atlanta.

the turn over to prust the other night was the straw that broke the camels back for me. if prust wasnt gassed or hurt from blocking the shot, that could have been another shortie.

by carlfurmer on Dec 27, 2011 8:51 PM EST up reply actions  

Oh, I know why. I looked at the wrong column. Those were SHGs. Oops. Sorry for the massive error.

Anyway – Elektrostal_Kid has the right numbers.

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

by John Fischer on Dec 27, 2011 9:50 PM EST up reply actions  

I don’t have the same results for several seasons. I went to nhl.com/team stats/reports:goals against/5 on 4 and 5 on 3 goals against total.

Results:
2000-01 : 07 SGHA
2001-02 : 08 SHGA
2002-03 : 14 SHGA
2003-04 : 03 SHGA
2005-06 : 09 SHGA
2006-07 : 10 SHGA
2007-08 : 09 SHGA
2008-09 : 09 SHGA
2009-10: 04 SHGA

besides the 2002-2003 season, Atlanta was statically (not in rankings with ties) just below average concerning the SGHAs.

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

by Elektrostal_Kid on Dec 27, 2011 8:53 PM EST up reply actions  

2003-04 : 5 SHGA not 3. I forgot to count 2 SHGA in 4 on 3 situations.

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

by Elektrostal_Kid on Dec 27, 2011 8:59 PM EST up reply actions  

Did anyone try to watch this game with Game Center Live? I’m trying to watch the replay and it won’t load for me at all.

www.shutdownline.com
trackingthenhl.wordpress.com

by MyFriendCorey on Dec 27, 2011 12:18 AM EST reply actions  

Are you a subscriber? If you are then it should be available. If not then you need to wait 48 hours.

Check out The Crash Line Blog: www.thecrashline.com

by Alamoth on Dec 27, 2011 9:55 AM EST up reply actions  

It didn’t work for me either, and I don’t normally need to wait 48 hours for other games. Strange though, because the game last year on Dec 26th against Toronto wasn’t available this time last year either.

Devils fan from the UK

by CD1212 on Dec 27, 2011 11:32 AM EST up reply actions  

Kovy and Confidence

Utter domination by Canes in Second Period.

Kovy makes sooooo many mistakes, when team is playing good and when its playing bad.

Chico suggested it in postgame and I agree with him the team still has a bit of a confidence issue. They have been playing better, but they will know their the real deal when they rattle off 6 or 7 in a row. I think so far they have only managed three or four wins in a row as their season high.

by max16s on Dec 27, 2011 12:50 AM EST reply actions  

I think the short-handed goal really deflated the team and Kovalchuk especially. DeBoer gave Kovy the vote of confidence the other day when TG questioned him about any correlation between Kovy on the point and the SHG problem. Then Kovy comes out and misplays a bouncing puck at the point which results in a 2-on-1 for a SHG.

I don’t think Kovy is entirely to blame for the SHG but knowing Kovalchuk as well as any of us do, he strikes me as a player who really wants to win for his coach when he likes his coach (e.g. Lemaire). I get the feeling he likes DeBoer too (not as much as Lemaire though) and when that SHG happened he put all the blame on himself for letting the coach down after he voiced his confidence in him.

Check out The Crash Line Blog: www.thecrashline.com

by Alamoth on Dec 27, 2011 9:59 AM EST up reply actions  

%$&*

Besides for our divisional rivals, I don’t think there is another team that I hate more than Carolina.

by Zubrus for Hart on Dec 27, 2011 8:25 AM EST reply actions  

Agreed.

It’s even more irksome to lose to them when they’re clearly not a good team.

by elesias on Dec 27, 2011 8:31 AM EST up reply actions  

I’ve long held that after the Rangers and Flyers, the Hurricanes are the Devils biggest rivals. How many heartbreaking losses have they handed us over the years?

by Zelepukin on Dec 27, 2011 2:00 PM EST up reply actions  

Don’t worry, soon Carolina will be a divisional rival too and we’ll get to play them SIX TIMES a season as well.

Check out The Crash Line Blog: www.thecrashline.com

by Alamoth on Dec 27, 2011 10:00 AM EST up reply actions  

I worried before the game that their traveling to NC earlier in the day of the game due to the holiday instead of the day before like normal would cause some problems, but they came out playing strongly and so I thought those fears unfounded.

Hard to say if the second period woes were in any way related to the irregular travel schedule or some leftover laziness from a few days off or the influence of just being in the same building as MacLean, but whatever the cause(s), it was dreadful to watch. The SHG and the Carter penalty really changed the game, though I find it very difficult to believe losing the fourth line Center should affect the lines as much as it seemed to.

Hypothetical situation: if the puck is drifting back toward an empty net slowly and obviously enough, couldn’t a player jump off the bench to stop it and take a Too Many Men penalty rather than give up the ENG, or is there some additional rule against that?

by elesias on Dec 27, 2011 8:30 AM EST reply actions  

It could just be a post-holiday hangover. Here are the Devils results on the game after Christmas since the lockout:

2011: 4-2 Loss @ Carolina on Dec 26
2010: 4-1 Loss vs Toronto on Dec 26
2009: 4-1 Loss @ Washington on Dec 26
2008: 1-0 Loss vs Pittsburgh on Dec 26
2007: 2-1 SO Win vs Buffalo on Dec 28
2006: 3-0 Win vs Pittsburgh on Dec 26
2005: 2-1 Loss @ Toronto on Dec 26

So the last time the Devils won the first game out of the holiday break was in 2007 when they had an additional two days off to practice/travel. Before that it was a shutout win against the Penguins in 2006. Overall record: 2-5-0. Not very good.

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by Alamoth on Dec 27, 2011 10:10 AM EST up reply actions  

To take your stat a little bit further, the Devils have never won their first post-Christmas game in franchise history if said game was on the road. It doesn’t matter if it was December 26th (which it was most often) or December 27th, if that first game out of the break was away from New Jersey it didn’t end well. I’ve found a couple of ties, I’ve found a couple of OT losses (pre-lockout) — and those were at MSG or on Long Island — but I went all the way back to 1982-1983 and I haven’t found a win under these circumstances that wasn’t played at the Meadowlands.

by acasser on Dec 27, 2011 10:26 AM EST up reply actions  

Snark aside, it’s hard to fault Hedberg for when the team played so poorly for large stretches of the game. That said, Hedberg has now let up 15 goals in his last 5 starts. If anything, tonight put lie to the notion that Hedberg has been the better goaltender in recent games, as well as the theory that the team plays better in front of Moose.

Good thing no one’s been talking about recent starts when they’ve been describing Hedberg’s competent play this year.

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by Triumph44 on Dec 27, 2011 3:27 PM EST reply actions  

Maybe they should. Here are Hedberg statline’s from November and December:

November: 4 GP, 4 GS, 9 GA, 100 SA, 91 SV, 91 Sv%, 1 SO
December: 6 GP, 5 GS, 16 GA, 156 SA, 140 SV, 89.7 Sv%, 0 SO
Both months: 10 GP, 9 GS, 25 GA, 256 SA, 231 SV, 90.2 Sv%, 1 SO

That’s not so good. December’s a little worse if you only look at his five starts: 89.5% Sv%. Basically, his competent numbers overall this season are driven by that October and were boosted by that one shutout he got in November and perhaps a little bit by the number of SA in the last few games. I do think Moose has been victimized by poor play by the guys in front of him like Brodeur, but if all we’re doing is looking at numbers, then I’m not seeing a lot of competence here.

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by John Fischer on Dec 27, 2011 8:11 PM EST up reply actions  

I’m certainly seeing way more of it than Brodeur. Remember Hedberg also came in and shut out the Kings.

Let’s see if Brodeur can give up only 1 goal in a game, then we’ll see about a shutout. Baby steps towards competence.

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by Triumph44 on Dec 27, 2011 9:49 PM EST up reply actions  

I’m certainly seeing way more of it than Brodeur. Remember Hedberg also came in and shut out the Kings.

Confirmation bias will do that. I do remember that Hedberg shutout the Kings way back in October, which is outside of the realm of recent. I also remember that the one goal the Devils allowed against LA this season was due to a breakdown that found Gagne all alone in front of the net.

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by John Fischer on Dec 27, 2011 10:10 PM EST up reply actions  

You are talking past me, I suspect, but I think if the Devils had a goalie named Sam Black with an .886 save percentage you’d be far less forgiving. I am not claiming that Brodeur was poor in the LA game – far from it, his two best games were probably that period and the game against the Flyers. Since getting injured he’s been below-replacement bad.

Regardless, the difference between Brodeur and Hedberg so far this year has basically been the difference between Tim Thomas and an average goalie. I doubt their true talent is that far apart, but who knows?

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by Triumph44 on Dec 27, 2011 10:33 PM EST up reply actions  

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