Montreal 3 Sabres 0 (Bell Centre)
posted by Rocket
All Habs
“Now if I’ve told you once, I’ve told you a thousand times – poise counts!” – Kramer
Last night, I was quoting Ghandi, tonight it’s Kramer. Yes, at All Habs, there’s something for everyone.
No word whether Seinfeld’s “The Chaperone” was required viewing at the morning meeting of the Canadiens but the coach said “poise” was on the agenda.
Jacques Martin was conducting class, and letting his students know that too many of them didn’t appear to want the puck on Friday night in Philadelphia. Brian Gionta and Scott Gomez were the exceptions to that rule and recommended as role models.
“What I liked is that we’re learning,” said Martin after the game tonight. “We had more poise and we were more comfortable with the puck.”
Indeed, the Habs have learned that scoring early and sitting on a slim lead for two-and-a-half periods is not wise. Yet it is something they have tried often this season, including the two previous games this week.
But not tonight.
The Canadiens continued to skate, forecheck, and pressure Sabres’ puck carriers in any zone on the ice. With the Sabres pressing to catchup, the Canadiens were also able to take advantage of mistakes, and increase their lead.
The concept is simple enough, but it seemed to come as a revelation to one person.
“When we forecheck, and use speed and quickness, we are a very good hockey team,” said coach Martin.
Was this a light bulb moment? After 79 games this season, is coach Martin finally caught on to a system many of us have been advocating since October? I would love to think so.
Martin may stand at a podium and tell the media that he wants an aggressive, puck possession team and that he wants players to forecheck. But if his team has a lead, whatever he tells them translates into a 1-4 system with players backpeddaling as fast as they can out of the neutral zone to protect their own end.
I think it’s just too hard for him to change.
But for a game, whether driven by the players or the coach, the Canadiens pressed the Sabres. Goal scoring came from players who have worked very hard throughout the season. Tonight they were rewarded for their efforts.
Ryan O’Byrne’s first goal in 25 months seemed to give the whole team a lift. The third and fourth line were solid with Tom Pyatt and Sergei Kostitsyn being the other scorers for the Habs. Dominic Moore had two assists.
The Canadiens also dominated at the faceoff dot with Tomas Plekanec winning 12 of 14 draws (86%) and Scott Gomez going 15 for 21 (71%).
Jaroslav Halak had a second outstanding game but can share this shutout with his teammates who did a great job filling the shooting lanes and not allowing second shot chances.
“His teammates supported him better this time,” said Martin about Halak’s performance. “He made some good saves, but he didn’t have to work as hard.”
The Habs’ power-play continues to be a concern going 0-for-5 tonight.
Coming into this game, the Canadiens had not scored three goals in their previous seven games (not counting empty net goals). On Twitter, Arpon Basu posted a message that the Habs’ record is 33-3-3 when scoring three or more goals. Of those games, Halak is 23-2-0, and Carey Price’s record is 10-1-3.
Without putting too fine a point on the numbers, they simply mean that both goaltenders are equally doing the job when the team provides the offense.
So perhaps it’s time that coach Martin prepares a few more lesson plans. The topic? Scoring. Five-on-five scoring. Power-play scoring. Any style of scoring that provides three goals a game.
How can the team get that production? By forechecking. Being aggressive. And poise. Because poise counts!
Rocket’s three stars
1. Jaroslav Halak
2. Ryan O’Byrne
3. Sergei Kostitsyn
Special mention: Dominic Moore, Tom Pyatt
Player quotes from wire services were used in this report.
(photo credit: Reuters)
OK, so Friday night I was impressed with how the Flyers started to turn their game play around and last night I was treated to a second consecutive game with one of my teams showing some effort and life!
It's a relief to see that the Habs (whether inspiring themselves or following JM's poise commentary) were able to find their feet, their forecheck, and their fire once again. I'd prefer to not wait until the last week of the regular season for them to figure this out, BUT I'll take it :)
What's interesting to me is who ended up being the goal-scorers in this game. O'Byrne? Pyatt? Assists by Moore? It seems maybe the guys who typically get overlooked as point contributors finally decided enough was enough and found a way to get the job done (and light a fire under their teammates!).
I hope this playing trend continues this week…it's a pattern I wouldn't mind seeing repeat itself!
And in keeping with the quote contingency (following a well-placed Marko Ramius quote by @All_Habs on Twitter last night)…
"You're afraid of our fleet. Well, you should be. Personally I give us one chance in three. More tea anyone?"
I'd say the Habs have an even better chance than that :)
Ain't it amazing how much better that 3rd line is when Sergei is on it? RDS had an epiphany about it last night and it made me smile :) Only took them this long to realize he's a kid finding his spot and I think he finally found it.
Too bad Metro is out. Metro is another missing piece for his sneaky plays on the powerplay. But that just means the rest of the guys will have to compensate and find another way to score.
I know I am ready to die happy when we start mixing Seinfeld and hockey together. Add a sprinkling of Star Wars, and you can just give me the needle!
It's hilarious to me that Jacques Martin is *now* trying to sell the fact that using speed and forechecking is a key to success. Who is he fooling? I'm sure there are some that he's "enlightening", but they clearly have not been paying so much attention this season.
The best thing about last night's win is that the Canadiens now have at least 1 convincing win against all of the top 4 teams in the East. That's a great comfort to me going in to the post-season, especially beating the Sabres this way.
The biggest question that remains is how long Jacques Martin will continue to employ a tough and aggressive forecheck. To most of us, he ought to totally abandon his old methods of falling back and clinging to dear life.
I'd be lying if I said I was not concerned about the top 6 forwards. I do believe they will snap out of it (they're too talented not to), but when Pyatt, O'Byrne and SK74 are the ones scoring, it is a sign of relief and concern. I'm just hoping that the top 6 spring to life when the games are for even more meaningful.
What these 2 shutout wins likely mean is that next Saturday's game against the Leafs will be more an exercise in trying not to get injured (are you listening Markov?) than needing 2 points to make the post season. A couple more points this week vs the Islanders or Hurricanes will all but confirm that, but in all likelihood, we can sit back and relax as we move on and the Leafs hit the links.
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