Not the most convincing of wins, but I'll take whatever I can get at the moment.
The boys got the bounces (finally), but Calgary wasn't necessarily the superior team last night, despite being on home ice against a principally neutered opponent (how is that Demitra and Gaborik both have groin injuries at the same time? Are they more than just friends?). The PK looked like a headless chicken whenever it lacked Lombardi and the Flames break-out is oddly similar to the Oilers break-out from last year:
[description] A panicked defender rims the puck to a winger with his ass on the boards and prayer in his heart. He's immediately set upon by one or two of his forechecking opponents. Sometimes, he'll succeed in coaxing the puck through a few legs or off the glass into the neutral zone. Far more frequently, though, he'll be rapidly overwhelmed, the puck will be shot back in, and the dance will begin anew.
As such, the Flames have a really hard time in the transition. A lot of energy is wasted just trying to extract the puck from their own end of the rink and/or retrieve it from the neutral zone. Whether it's the scheme at fault or the puck distributing skills of the defenders (I think it's the latter), the Flames are going to have to find a more efficient way to break-out. And soon.
Craig Conroy and Owen Nolan are empty helmets out there. Aside from his typical short-circuiting of Calgary's forecheck, missing opportunities, and losing key draws, Conroy flubbed a back-check last night leading to the Wild's first goal. Then there's Nolan, who seems to be resigned to his inexorable descent into obsolescence (at least Conroy is TRYING). He does little more than coast around. He looks surprised or confused whenever the puck lands on his stick. He frequently fails to even finish checks. He has truly become THE AMONTE (although, to be fair, Tony did seem to work his ass off more often than not).
As for the good, Matthew Lombardi looked like one of the best forwards on the ice for the second straight game. He saved a goal with a heady back-check in the third and was probably the Flames best penalty killer. He was briefly moved up to play with Tanguay and Iginla near the end of the game and didn't look out of place. I think it's only a matter of time now before we see Lombo as a permanent fixture among the top 6.
It's a small and tentative step forward, but it's a step. Kipper didn't let a softy in for the first time in awhile and Regehr is looking a little leaner and meaner since taking out his aggressions on poor Ales Hemsky on Saturday night. A consistently better Kipper and an intractable Regehr would go a long way to righting this ship. The PK would likely improve (a bit) and the only remaining issue would be coaxing some goals out of the supporting cast...
Take me to the airport, put me on a plane
5 hours ago

5 comments:
I'm actually liking Regehr on the PP for the first time in a couple of years. His shots from the point are getting through.
Phaneuf gets a lot more attention at the point than Regehr is currently getting, but for the time being perhaps Flames fans should send a bunch of balloons for ALL the D-corps to shoot at in practice.
nice one MG. I fully agree on Conroy and Nolan.
Last night's game struck me as being a lot like Flames/Wild games of old (yawwwwn)...clearly the Wild haven't forgotten how to play their old way (and I don't question why they would go back to that now, with Demitra and Gaborik out). I think it played a big role in making the transition game look horrible.
That, and you could tell Tanguay was still a touch under the weather. But he'll get better, and so will we...
I agree, it's the latter. There aren't a lot of ways you can create break outs, a lot of it depends on forward positioning (boards is always good) and creativity of defenceman.
The defenceman then can skate it out, pass it, stall, fake etc.
I'm not sure we have any defenceman that can skate it out, so without that option...
I'm not sure we have any defenceman that can skate it out, so without that option...
Phaneuf can and does on occasion. one out of six isn't good though.
The other issue is, the defenders often feel pressured because they're not very fast - they get to the puck and the opposition forechecker is on them immediately. Combine that with the general lack of puck skills and you get the Flames break-out most of the time.
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