PITTSBURGH — The last gasp of
these Pittsburgh Penguins came late in the third period Tuesday night.
Facing a one-goal deficit, facing elimination, facing the great Game 7
goaltender Henrik Lundqvist, they did what they were supposed to do.
They went to the net, and they did it with desperation.
James Neal walked out in front
and tried to score. Save. Kris Letang fired from the slot. Block. Paul
Martin threw a backhander at the net. The puck skidded along the ice and
hit a discarded stick near the knob right at the lip of the crease, and
it ricocheted up, like a bad hop in baseball. Lundqvist had lost his
own stick. Yet somehow, some way, he trapped the puck between his right
arm and his body, and he held onto one of his 35 saves.
The Penguins suffered a 2-1 loss
to the New York Rangers, and they lost in the second round after taking
a 3-1 series lead, and there will be consequences. The only question is
what they will be. The general manager? The coach? Part of the core?
Coach Dan Bylsma was asked
afterward if he would think about the “inevitable” – a clear reference
to a firing – and he could only laugh at the use of the word. Since
winning the Stanley Cup in 2009, the Penguins have not been back to the
final. They have been eliminated by a lower-seeded team five years in a
row.
“The expectations are high here,
as they should be,” said defenseman Matt Niskanen, a pending
unrestricted free agent who might have priced himself out of Pittsburgh.
“We all know that. And it comes down to performance and results. Right
now just trying to comprehend what went wrong and how this happened.
We’ll see what happens in the next couple days leading up to the next
couple weeks.”
But say GM Ray Shero keeps his
job, and he fires Bylsma, and he hires Barry Trotz, with whom he once
worked as assistant GM of the Nashville Predators. And say Trotz
instills more discipline and installs a tighter defensive system. And
say they replace Marc-Andre Fleury with a new goaltender, too. Will that
make the difference in the playoffs? Because when you look at why the
Penguins were eliminated the past two years, the reason wasn’t just
discipline or defense or even goaltending ultimately.
It was also, of all things, offense.
Even though they had MVPs and
scoring champions in Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin, even though they
had Neal and Letang and Chris Kunitz, even though they were one of the
NHL’s highest-scoring teams in the regular season, they could not score
against the Boston Bruins last year and could not score against the
Rangers in the end this year. They scored two goals as they were swept
by the Bruins in the Eastern Conference final – two. They scored three
goals as they lost three in a row to the Rangers – three.
Crosby will win the Hart Trophy
as the NHL’s most valuable player in June, hands down. He ran away with
the scoring title this season with 36 goals and 104 points – 17 points
more than anyone else. He was one of the best possession players in the
league through the first two rounds of the playoffs. When he was on the
ice, the Penguins controlled 61.6 percent of the shot attempts, an
outstanding amount.
Yet he had one goal and nine
points in 13 playoff games – and his goal drought stretched to one goal
in 18 playoff games. For the first time in his career, he did not
average a point a game in the playoffs. For the first time since 2007,
when he had five points in five games in his first run, he did not
average more than a point a game in the playoffs. He did not record a point as the Penguins lost their last three games.
Crosby said he was healthy, so
if he’s telling the truth, it wasn’t because of an injury. He doesn’t
seem to go to the net as hard or as often as he did before he suffered
concussion problems, but that didn’t stop him from producing in the
first two rounds last year. He had Kunitz on his left, and he had Malkin
on his right often in this series, so it wasn’t a lack of wingers,
either.
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