Saturday, February 14, 2009

Bucks 4, Scorpions 2


Echoes of the first half of the season in this one, as the Scorpions managed to shoot themselves in the foot more than a few times -- the only difference is that they did it in the game's late stages, rather than digging themselves a hole early on.

Observations:
  • There were plenty of mistakes on the ice tonight, but it ultimately boiled down to three big ones that cost the Scorps a shot at two points. The first has to be Matt Miller's goal 18 seconds into the third period. Every goalie gives up bad goals, but with the way Kyle McNulty had been playing, you never would have expected such a critical error at such a critical time. That goal gave Laredo the lead and a chance to, once again, fall into their lull-you-to-sleep defensive game that most hockey fans wish died with the two-line pass. For his part, Miller regained his crown as the king of soft goals at the SASC -- did anyone honestly think Miller's weak shot from the off-wing would beat Scott Reid to win this game? The second mistake that hurt the Scorpions was the slashing penalty to Chris Robertson that negated a quick-response goal. I didn't see the penalty, but I can't imagine what Robertson was thinking throwing a slash, even a retaliatory one, after his pass sprung Trimm and Delforte on a 2-on-1 deep in the Bucks' zone. It brought back memories of game 5 against Arizona last year, when Craig Macdonald's slash behind the play washed out a Mitch Stephens goal, turning what would have been a two-goal game into an 8-5 blowout. The last mistake tonight falls on the shoulders of Torren Delforte, who plays such a smart, hard-fought game that he's rarely at fault. Delforte had a chance to tie the game at 3-3 late in the third period after Neil Trimm threaded him a beautiful pass in the low slot, but the usually savvy rookie tried too hard to pick his corner and completely missed the net from inside the hashmarks. If you a get a golden opportunity like that against a defensive powerhouse like Laredo, you need to at least make the goalie work, especially late in the game. Opportunism is the only way to beat such a solid two-way team
  • Brent Cullaton's empty-netter will hurt the Scorpions' penalty-kill stats on a night where their shorthanded unit was otherwise reliable. Randy Murphy seems to have really tightened up his PK unit in the past few weeks, and the results have been there for the Scorps. Getting the powerplay going is another issue altogether, and one that needs to be addressed quickly
  • There were a couple of epic battles in the corners between Delforte and Laredo's Serge Dube. Dube is one of the league's premier defensemen and a guy who really knows how to play the game, but Delforte gave the Bucks' captain all he could handle down low.
  • I have to hand it to the Bucks' top line -- the first goal of the game was absolutely beautiful. The build-up to the play, starting with Dube and Cullaton in the defensive zone, was about as picture-perfect as any coach could draw it up. They made the neutral zone look uncharacteristically big, and Darryl Smith's finesse finish was icing on the cake. Man, are those guys talented. With the likes of Jeff Bes, Rick Kozak, Bobby Russell and Steve Weidlich all waiting in the wings, it's just plain scary to think about what this team could look like come playoff time
  • One bright spot for the Scorpions tonight was the play of Tom Maldonado. He's definitely been feeling the hip check as of late, and it was quite the sight to see the 5'9" Maldonado plant the 6'4" Erick Lizon square on his butt in the corner. Oh yeah, that mid-air goal wasn't too shabby either

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Boy, I have to hand it to you. You are the worst couch hockey player I have seen. #1, Robo's so-called slash that you didn't see, was a soft one-hand on the stick, trying to get the puck. If you had been watching either game that I was on the weekend, you would have seen who one, and who lost the game, the refs. I thinkg the boys played hard both nights. Get off the couch!

Anonymous said...

I believe there was another "mistake" that you missed tonight. I have never really notices this before but Craig Mac, very very rarely uses his body in any plays; he is usually standing, and I mean standing out by the blue line, hoping was of the hard playing linemates will pass him the puck so he can become a hero. To me that is not a team player, letting your teammates do all the work and you get the glory! bah!!

Alex Mansfield said...

I was actually shooting during the third period, so I had my eye to the viewfinder and was focusing on the scoring play that developed because of Robertson's pass. When I say I didn't see it, I literally mean I didn't see it, so I have no room to speculate on the call that Kevin Graber made. If you read the blog entry from Friday night's game, you'll see that I had plenty of questions of my own about the officiating. But while Laredo scored explicitly because of Graber's actions on Friday night, you can't pin the third period goals they scored Saturday on him. As for Macdonald, I agree that his physical play has decreased exponentially since he got that concussion two seasons back. But the fact of the matter is, his job is that of a finisher, and finishers are supposed to find the open space and bury the puck. He might be softer than a lot of folks would like to see (myself included), but if you lead your team in both goals and assists, you're clearly doing something right

Anonymous said...

Mac should still be in on the plays NOT standing back and watching others to do the work