Tuesday, January 27, 2009

bruins 3 - capitals 2 (OT)

The Bruins spent tonight trying to find a rhythm while still shutting down Alexander Ovechkin.

Drawing a penalty seven seconds into the first, and giving up the first goal on the subsequent powerplay, the B's found themselves down early in the game. This seems to be a recurring theme in recent games.

Mid-way through the period, Shawn Thornton picked off an errant Ovechkin pass and dangled Theodore down, before roofing the puck of the goalie's right shoulder. Thornton showed remarkably soft hands for such a hard-faced man; this is the energy player's 4th goal of the season. 1-1 far past the midway part of the first period.

However, in a situation that I think summarized the game, the Bruins' soft defensive coverage allowed the Capitals to score with 20-something seconds left in the period. I'll return to this idea later, but it seems obvious that bonehead defensive coverage will eventually lead to goals-against, and sometimes losses. 2-1 Caps at the end of the first.

Patrice Bergeron made his return to the lineup (as did Ference and Lucic), and played a solid two-way game, as is his style. He showed no ill effects from his second concussion, and it was his play that led to the tying goal.

With about 5 minutes left in the period, Bergeron dove to tip a puck past Alexander Semin, and keep the play in the offensive zone. He then fired a pass through two defenders to Marc Savard, who feined a cross-crease pass and wristed it over Theodore's glove. 2-2 through the end of the second and through the third period.

As the first minute of the game suggested, the Bruins had penalty trouble all night, but it was Washington that drew the haunting whistle.

WoOoOooOo....!

Just as overtime got underway, Niklas Backstrom was called for hooking and the Bruins held a 4-on-3 advantage. It did not take long for the Bruins foursome to find passing lanes and push the Caps players in tight toward Theodore, but it was ultimately just a strange deflection off the leg of Capitals' defenseman Shaone Morrisonn that potted the winner.

The goal was credited to David Krejci, who looked to be trying to thread a pass through to Marc Savard on the far post. But the Bruins get a lucky bounce and take the win in OT.

This game marks the 20th time in 48 games that the Bruins have allowed the first goal. For a team with the record they have, this should not be the case. However it is precisely because they keep winning that they seem to get away with what is often scrambly, undiscliplined play. Case in point, they are now 14-4-2 when allowing the first goal, but they often look shaky for stretches in every game (especially recently).

As a recent post about Dennis Wideman suggests, the Bruins need all their players at full potential to really dominate a game. Without this the Bruins often show traits that a premier team in the league -- say in the Playoffs -- would fatally take advantage of.

If you give a team like Detroit or San Jose the first goal in each game, goals within the last or first minute of any period (the Bruins gave the Caps one of each tonight), regularly allow 30 or more shots a game, and put a long string of players into the penalty box, the best teams will beat you. Especially over a seven-game series.

Playoff runs are fickle things, as many teams can testify, and Bruins' history is littered with grand teams that scuttle in the first round. The Bruins need a return to the hard-hitting, actively forechecking game of early this season because it is their primary tool in dictating the game. By doing so, they'll be in a better position to control the puck, cut down on lazy errors and ponderous high-risk decisions that have littered their game since early December.

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