Showing posts with label New York Rangers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New York Rangers. Show all posts

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Hockey Night in Raleigh: Carolina Hurricanes vs. New York Rangers

Carolina Hurricanes - Staal brothers start vs. New York Rangers - PKS Consulting LLC
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Game Notes:

The Carolina Hurricanes host the New York Rangers at PNC Arena in Raleigh, N.C. on Thursday.

It isthe third and final game of a three-game series between the teams this season.

The Hurricanes fell to the Rangers 2-1 in a shootout on Mar. 18 at Madison Square Garden, but seek to continue their current two-game win streak in front of their fans to end the season on as high a note as possible considering they will miss the playoffs for the fourth straight year.

The story of the night is that Jared Staal, younger brother of captain Eric and assistant captain Jordan, will start in his first career NHL game after being recalled from Carolina's AHL affiliate club, the Charlotte Checkers.

All three Staals are part of the starting lineup with Justin Faulk and Tim Gleason backing them up with Dan Ellis starting in net.

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Commentary for each period will follow on the hour.

Follow on Twitter @pksport for colorful thoughts & commentary - share as you like.

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Before the puck drops:


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1st Period

It all started fine with all three Staal brothers - Eric, Jordan, and Jared - starting the game for the Hurricanes.

They became a part of NHL history in doing so, and everyone in attendance felt good as the puck finally hit the ice to begin the last home game of the season in Raleigh.

For Carolina, the opportunity to complicate things for the Rangers who need to win to clinch a playoff spot, would be motivation enough in addition to extending their recent modest two-game win streak.

However, the Rangers were all business throughout the period as they outshot and outscored the Hurricanes, leading 2-0 as both teams went to their dressing rooms.

Derek Stepan opened the game's scoring at 3:19 with a top-shelf shot that beat Carolina goaltender Dan Ellis.

The Hurricanes had their share of opportunities to score on Rangers netminder Henrik Lundqvist, but he was well-positioned to turn each one away, including during Carolina's lone power play of the period.

Derick Brassard extended the Rangers' lead as he cleaned up a rebound from a scramble in front of Ellis with 4:08 left in the period.

End of Period: New York 2, Carolina 0

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2nd Period

Even while being outshot 15-4, Carolina managed to capitalize on their opportunities as Jiri Tlusty and Tuomo Ruutu both beat Lundqvist to tie the game by the end of the middle 20 minutes of play.

While on their second power play of the game, Marc-Andre Bergeron found Tlusty in the slot who then slid the puck to Skinner in the corner and shifted to Lundqvist's right.

Skinner made a tape-to-tape return pass to Tlusty who then scored his 22nd goal of the season at the 4:51 mark.

Exactly three minutes later, Hurricanes grinder Kevin Westgarth worked along the right boards in the neutral zone and pushed the puck forward to Ruutu.

The Finnish forward then crossed the Rangers blue line with Jordan Staal breaking alongside him in the slot.

Using Staal as a decoy, Ruutu's shot handcuffed Lundqvist and found the top corner over the Ranger netminder's stickside shoulder to tie the game 2-2 at 7:51.

The Rangers dominated much of the remainder of the period, but Ellis managed to keep his team in the game with help from his defensemen.

The best chance that New York had to retake the lead was a sequence of play that had captain Ryan Callahan and Derek Stepan take separate shots on goal that were denied by Ellis along with the help of defensemen Bergeron and Jamie McBain.


End of Period: Carolina 2, New York 2
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3rd Period

Carolina comes out fast and furious as after an errant pass hits Tlusty's skate in the Hurricanes end, he breaks out with a pass to Eric Staal.

Skating into the Rangers on a two-on-one, Staal gained the zone with Tlusty and fed him with a cross-slot pass, leaving the Czech sniper alone to face Lundqvsist.

Tlusty tucked the puck above the Rangers goalie's glove hand and put Carolina ahead 3-2, just 49 seconds into the period.

Ellis truly took over as he made save after save to keep the Hurricanes ahead for much of the remainder of regulation time.

However, with Ruutu penalized for tripping with under five minutes to play, a point shot from Brad Richards missed the net, but hit the end boards and ended up in Ellis' crease.

As Ellis moved to find it, the puck entered the net and the score was tied 3-3 with 2:57 to play.

New York continued to apply pressure in the Carolina zone, but the Hurricanes turned away each attempt as the period ended to send the game into overtime.

End of Period: Carolina 3, New York 3

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 Overtime:

After peppering Lundqvist with shots, the Hurricanes couldn't defend Ryan Callahan and his shot from the wing beat Ellis up high.

Rangers won and clinched a playoff spot.

Final: New York 4, Carolina 3

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Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Hockey Night in Raleigh: Carolina Hurricanes vs. Pittsburgh Penguins

Carolina Hurricanes vs. Pittsburgh Penguins - Westgarth vs Engelland - PKS Consulting LLC
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Game Notes:

The Carolina Hurricanes host the Pittsburgh Penguins for the second time this season at PNC Arena in Raleigh, N.C. on Tuesday.


The Hurricanes won the first game back in February, a 4-1 decision.

Carolina returns Justin Faulk and Alexander Semin to the lineup after both were out with injuries.

The Penguins have already clinched a playoff berth, their seventh consecutive, and start a three-game road trip against Carolin.

Pittsburgh's lineup now includes former Hurricanes players, the recently traded Jussi Jokinen and Brandon Sutter.

Commentary for each period will follow on the hour.

Follow on Twitter @pksport for colorful thoughts & commentary - share as you like.

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Before the puck drops:


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1st Period

The Hurricanes got on the board first with a power play goal from defenseman Joe Corvo at 4:06.

Jordan Staal won the faceoff to the right of Pittsburgh goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury and Corvo's point shot made it through traffic and beat Fleury high and over his catching glove.

It didn't take the Penguins long to tie the game as defenseman Robert Bortuzzo's pinch to the top of the Hurricanes goalkeeper Justin Peters' crease allowed him to put the puck past him.

After winning the puck along the right boards, the work of Craig Adams and Pascal Dupuis paid off as the cross-ice pass to Bortuzzo finished the play just 92 seconds later..

Both teams continued to trade puck possession and rushes at both ends for another eight minutes until Brendan Morrow put Pittsburgh ahead for the first time in the game on a top-shelf shot that beat Peters.

Dupuis and former Hurricanes forward Jussi Jokinen were involved in the play that turned the puck over inside the Carolina blueline and Jokinen's no-look backhand pass found Morrow in the slot for the wide-open shot on Peters.

Trailing 2-1, Carolina tied the score with 4:27 remaining in the period as defenseman Bobby Sanguinetti unleashed a point shot and scored in the same area as Corvo did earlier in the period.

Captain Eric Staal won the faceoff to Fleury's right and received the assist after Sanguinetti's shot wove through five bodies and found the top left corner once again.

End of Period: Carolina 2, Pittsburgh 2

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2nd Period

Both teams skated to a scoreless period, still tied 2-2 with the Hurricanes outshooting the Penguins 9-8.

Key stops at both ends from both goaltenders during a period which tested the Hurricanes penalty killing unit twice with successful results in denying Pittsburgh the opportunity to score again during the period.

Carolina's closest chance to score came on a fanned shot by Eric Staal to Fleury's left post which the Penguins keeper smothered successfully.

End of Period: Carolina 2, Pittsburgh 2
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3rd Period


Tied 2-2 after two periods of play, the Hurricanes looked to be on their way to giving their fans a win to cheer about at home.


The anticipation crescendoed when forward Riley Nash score his fourth goal of the season just two minutes into the third period to give Carolina a 3-2 lead.

However, midway through the period, the Penguins needed only 13 seconds to not only tie the score, but to take the lead back and to keep it to win the game in regulation time, scoring an ENG with 1.9 seconds remaining.


Final: Pittsburgh 5, Carolina 3

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Saturday, April 6, 2013

Hockey Night in Raleigh: Carolina Hurricanes vs. New York Rangers

Carolina Hurricanes vs. New York Rangers - Peter Koutroumpis, PKS Consulting LLC
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Game Notes:

The Carolina Hurricanes host the New York Rangers at PNC Arena in Raleigh, N.C. on Saturday.

It isthe second of three games between the teams this season as the Hurricanes fell to the Rangers 2-1 in a shootout on Mar. 18 at Madison Square Garden. 

The Hurricanes’ 5-0 shutout loss to the Lightning on Thursday marked the team’s largest losing margin this season, and the team's current six-game home losing streak (3/14-4/4: 0-6-0) is its longest since the team lost a franchise record seven straight home games from Dec. 27, 2002-Jan. 20, 2003 (0-6-0-1).
 
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Commentary for each period will follow on the hour.

Follow on Twitter @pksport for colorful thoughts & commentary - share as you like.

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Before the puck drops:

Few words to describe Hurricanes’ 5-0 loss to Lightning

The Carolina Hurricanes could not score any goals against the Tampa Bay Lightning and were shut out 5-0 in front of a crowd of 17,042 in attendance at PNC Arena in Raleigh, N.C. on Thursday.They put...

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1st Period

An energetic period of play from both teams as the Hurricanes outshot the Rangers 14-12 and outhit them 13-11.

This one has been a very physical affair right from the start.

At even strength, the Hurricanes have kept the New York defensemen looking over their shoulders as their forecheck has been more agressive than it's been in quite a while.

The man-advantage wasn't productive for either team as Carolina ended 0-2 while New York went 0-for-1 on the power play.

Rangers keeper Henrik Lundqvist made several key saves on shots from forwards Jeff Skinner, Zac Dalpe and defenseman Jay Harrison, to name a few.

Hurricanes netminder Dan Ellis was kept just as busy as Rangers captain Ryan Callahan and Mats Zuccarello had shots stopped to keep this game scoreless aftter one period.

End of Period: Carolina 0, New York 0

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2nd Period

It took the Rangers only two minutes to finally put the puck past Dan Ellis as Derek Stepan scored a power play goal to break the scoreless game at that point.

Just 31 seconds later, on a botched breakout setup, New York's Callahan picked the puck away from Ellis behind the Carolina net as he bumped with his own defenseman, allowing the Rangers captain to score on an empty net.

Lundqvist continued his dominance in the Rangers net as he continued to stymie the Hurricanes from all angles and no matter how far they shot the puck from.

Leading 2-0, New York was afforded another power play as defenseman Tim Gleason was sent to the penalty box for high sticking.

As a result, Rick Nash beat Ellis from the high slot on a spin-around move after getting the pass from the point and extending the Rangers lead to 3-0 with 8:41 to go in the period.  

Any energy that the Hurricanes had from ending the first period, did not return for any consistent period of time throughout the period.

When Carolina did exhibit a few significant bursts of energy with its offense, it was Lundqvist who kept it in check as New York continue to control play for the majority of it, and outshot Carolina 18-14.  

End of Period: New York 3, Carolina 0
 
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3rd Period

Justin Peters started the period in place of Dan Ellis.

The Hurricanes started the period with much more zip and peppered Lundqvist with numerous shots around the 17-minute mark, but they still couldn't get the puck behind him.

New York's energy level was still high and applied consistantly at both ends of the ice, challenging Peters when they could at even strength and on the power play

Facing the risk of being shut out for two consecutive games, the Hurricanes' Zac Dalpe finally beat Lundqvist high, over his glove hand at 9:27 in.

The play was set up after Eric Staal established possession in the Rangers zone along the boards to the left of Lundqvist where he then slid the puck into the corner where Jeff Skinner looked to find Dalpe open in the slot, for the one-time shot that beats the big goalkeeper.

With less than 10 minutes to play, Carolina had another power play opportunity that resulted in more quality shot attempts on net, but Lundqvist and the Rangers continued to stop the puck from crossing the goal line.

By the end, the Rangers held the Hurricanes off to secure a win after playing a back-to-back while the Hurricanes ended up losing their seventh consecutive game at home.

Final: New York 4, Carolina 1
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Sunday, March 17, 2013

The need to patrol the ice in Carolina: It's time to take back the rink

The Carolina Hurricanes have made quite a run during the first half of the NHL season, earning first place in the Southeast division and sitting in third in the Eastern Conference for quite a while.

Though many had expected the personnel changes that the team made last summer would make them stronger, many still hadn't become believers that they would make such a resurgence.

Many still don't and what has transpired over a period of days, only reinforces that cynicism.

Two big losses

After losing their second in as many games, dropping decisions to division rivals the Washington Capitals and Tampa Bay Lightning, the Hurricanes finally lost their grip on the division lead and dropped to eighth and final spot in the conference standings,

What happened in just two games?

They stopped scoring at even strength, that's what happened.

Yes, it was only two games - 94 minutes and 14 seconds to be exact - in which they went scoreless against desperate opponents, and that lapse cost them four valuable points.

Capitals supporters and media all but had their own team out of the playoff race, but their resurgence during the final two periods against the Hurricanes on Thursday, fueled by the efforts of embattled captain Alex Ovechkin who has taken his share of criticism for not getting the job done, stole two points from Carolina.

Add to the that, the dominance that the Lightning continued to hold over the Hurricanes two days later - making it three straight wins over Carolina so far this season - and a recipe for disaster began to brew.

To panic or not?

Is it time to sound the alarm bells for Carolina and its fan base?

Definitely.

It just all depends upon what aspect of Carolina's game it ignores to  prop up sooner rather than later that may hurt the team in the end.

Eric Staal's third-period goal against the Lightning will hopefully be the starting point to get Carolina's scoring machine started again.

If not, then there is big trouble ahead.

No longer intimidating

What made the difference on Thursday and Saturday, that saw the Hurricanes hit a wall that it hadn't hit for a while?

Quite simply - the Capitals and Lightning were not intimidated by Carolina.

The Hurricanes' top scorers were tossed and pushed around, and forced to work extra hard during both games and couldn't get the job done.


“They were physical down low," Staal said after the loss to Tampa Bay.

"We were unable to draw any power plays and get to the net as good as we wanted to.”

Not for lack of effort, but the edge the Hurricanes had held two to three weeks earlier against each of their opponents that they faced wasn't there and quite simply, they didn't stand up for themselves either.

With Carolina lacking toughness and unable to to score, both Washington and Tampa Bay figured it out what they needed to do to beat them.

Push Jeff Skinner around in the corners and open ice; tie up Jordan Staal constantly; keep Eric Staal in the corners and behind the net; and banish Alexander Semin to the tops of the faceoff circles to let him shoot pucks over the glass all night.

Check.

Take a penalty and earn a breather as the NHL's 29th best PP unit fires pucks wide or into their opponents' pads before reaching the net.

Check.

Keep pressing and finishing checks on a tiring defensive corps and get your chances to score, even while being outshot by the the energetic Hurricanes forwards.

Check.

Fear no retribution or distraction otherwise throughout the game because it seems that this team doesn't have a mean bone in their bodies, and are actually mending themselves at the moment.

Is this an unfair description of a quality group of talented players and people?

No.

That's not what other teams think about when they take them on in a battle for a playoff spot.

They want to grind them down and will do it in any way possible, and with a good chance that they will not pay a price for it.

Washington and Tampa Bay did this all in two games, believe it or not.

Where's the Sargeant?

The Hurricanes brought in a good candidate to patrol the frozen water at PNC Arena when they traded for Kevin Westgarth - all 6-foot-four-inches and 234 pounds of him, give or take a few pounds as the season has progressed.

Not the fastest skater, not the worst puckhandler, but a sizable presence that with a good fit of fourth-line teammates has been able to keep the puck hemmed in opposing teams' zones while the team's scoring producers get a squirt of water and words of encouragement from head coach Kirk Muller.

Not having played since Mar. 7, a 4-2 loss to the Montreal Canadiens, Westgarth has been a healthy scratch and the Hurricanes have gone 2-2 without him, and have hit a low that they must come out of  very quickly.

When Westy is included in the lineup, the Hurricanes have tallied a 9-6-1 record with the Sargent-at-Arms ensuring that no extra liberties are taken with his teammates.

Why the case for including him in the lineup?

The last two games provide enough proof for it - the team did not look intimidating - on the scoreboard or on the ice.

His presence will make opposing teams adjust their lineups accordingly, maybe even getting them to think that the Hurricanes are desperate and will play with 'crazed looks' in their eyes - hint, hint.

With Carolina's next two games, a back-to-back series, coming up against a struggling New York Rangers team and a Panthers team that likes to played hard against them - the situation screams for it.

Match crazy and desperate with the like.

It's time to put the foot patrol back on duty and Chief Westgarth to assume his post.

A playoff spot, and defending one at that, depends on it.


Kevin Westgarth vs. Colton Orr - HockeyFights.com

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