Sharks center Logan Couture, looking distinctly satisfied. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez) |
(Yes, it's been a long time--but I'm going to have another go at this blogging thing, and we'll see how it pans out. This is an opinionated recap, with a few observations here and there.)
[Also, it's ridiculously late, and NHL videos are a pain to embed, but I'll try to incorporate them in the morning.]
[Also, it's ridiculously late, and NHL videos are a pain to embed, but I'll try to incorporate them in the morning.]
What I saw tonight
shocked me.
I’ve been a passive
follower of San Jose for a few years--beyond passive, even. My stance on the Sharks is the same way it is with most Western Conference teams. I like them but don't feel passionately for them, I read the news on them every day, and I watch them when I can. More like a barely-occasional follower. I
like Thornton and Marleau and Boyle as players, and I like the way this team is
built on paper. However, the viewing opportunities are limited, and I’m a Capitals fan first
and foremost (ROCK THE RED) so the bulk of my time is devoted to them.
With this
limited direct contact, I go by what the media says about this team (and, to my shame, most West Coast teams) more often
than not, and track the numbers when I can. But what the media has said about
the direction of these teams over the season runs completely counter to the message that this three-game
battle has proclaimed: the Sharks have arrived. The Vancouver Canucks, on the other side, have
devolved into an undisciplined team, taking penalties at will and simply being outmuscled and outwilled by a rather determined team from SoCal.
My studying obligations (for final exams, whose significance will be zero in 20 years)
took me away from the game for small parts of the first and the second period, but I was around to see the reaction
to Marleau’s high-sticking of Ryan Kesler, and the outrage from the Sharks bench
that Kesler stayed on the ice. My limited hockey knowledge brings an NFL analogy
to mind, and I’m of the opinion that he would sit out the shift; a very animated Sharks assistant Jay Woodcroft seemed to share my opinion. But Kesler stayed on, and played through a largely uneventful power play.
Refereeing decisions and Kesler trickery aside, this game was littered with cheap shots. At the 14-minute mark in the third, Kesler slashed at the back of Scott Gomez’s head after Gomez was deposited on the ice following a check. The reportedly tame Sedins both threw cheap shots in the 3rd period (Daniel on Logan Couture, Henrik on #15 in front of the net). Vancouver didn't hesitate to buzz the Sharks net after play had stopped, and this led to some chippy encounters. But the referees kept pulling Canucks who lost their cool away from the scrum, and sending a few to the box, Zack Kassian among them.
Refereeing decisions and Kesler trickery aside, this game was littered with cheap shots. At the 14-minute mark in the third, Kesler slashed at the back of Scott Gomez’s head after Gomez was deposited on the ice following a check. The reportedly tame Sedins both threw cheap shots in the 3rd period (Daniel on Logan Couture, Henrik on #15 in front of the net). Vancouver didn't hesitate to buzz the Sharks net after play had stopped, and this led to some chippy encounters. But the referees kept pulling Canucks who lost their cool away from the scrum, and sending a few to the box, Zack Kassian among them.
Most importantly, the Sharks had the grit to respond. Their responses weren’t
all about turning cheeks—Tommy Wingels tackling a Canuck in front of the net after a frozen puck stoppage
was one of the more memorable images of the night—but it was more disciplined than the guys in white. Logan Couture’s response in the third period will most
likely grab headlines and dominate blogs, and it's a great subplot: after
taking the punch from Mssr. Henrik off of a faceoff, he proceeded to score 20 seconds later on the ensuing power play, taking the pass from Joe Thornton before pulling the trigger and putting it past Schneider into the far side of the net. This is revenge at its sweetest. Couture, the game's First Star, had a night to remember all over the place, winning 15 of 18 faceoffs and getting two assists to go with his two goals.
The Sharks were gaining the offensive zone at will, and
had the 38 shots on goal to show for it. The San Jose forwards seemed to be
playing at a different gear, especially Joe Pavelski. Pavelski,
of whom much ado was made for his goalless playoff drought (14 games), answered the call with
2 goals, the first off a one-timer on a 5-on-3 advantage to open the scoring, and the second a fantastic deflection to make it 2-0.