Fresh off their win in Anaheim, the Hurricanes got a chance to start a new win streak – the Hurricanes welcomed the Nashville Predators to Raleigh. While it’s a home game for the Hurricanes, this would be an extension of the road trip, as the Hurricanes are coming across the country from California and playing just two days later.
This would be the homecoming game of sorts for Brady Skjei,
who spent a few seasons with the Hurricanes.
A lot has been said about his return, and about Mark Jankowski playing
his former team – all that said, I do think this connection point may be overstated
a touch. I enjoyed Skjei playing in a
Hurricanes uniform, but he wasn’t a cornerstone. He was well liked by the team, so I do get the
excitement of him being back in the building.
Tonight, the job is simple – continue to stack points. Play a Hurricanes hockey game – that is, get
to the forecheck, keep hounding the puck, generate traffic out front and defend
well in the zone.
Below are my thoughts on the game:
- All line combinations stayed the same – Pyotr Kochetkov was in net. Goes with the saying “if it isn’t broke, don’t fix it”. I support this decision.
- Over the course of the night, all lines had decent chances, but you could tell early on that Juuse Saros was going to be a Rubix Cube in net tonight for the Predators. He made a couple dynamite saves early on, and that play continued through the night.
- Early on, we had to go to the penalty kill – Dimitri Orlov was whistled for high sticking, so we head to the kill. And throughout the kill, we looked good – in fact, it wasn’t until :30 left in the first kill that the Predators were able to set up. From there, they ended up scoring – it was a shot by Brady Skjei that was a little wide of net, but Kochetkov came out to make a play on it. The puck slowed off his skate and landed directly behind him – where Michael Bunting picked up the loose change and cashed it in. The other two kills – textbook. One mistake involving two former Hurricanes get this one started, though – 1-0 Predators.
- I had a few notes on just how well the Roslovic-Kotkaniemi-Hall combination played together tonight. They had a great bump up shift and later in the 1st had a great chance in front that Saros was dead to rights on, but the puck rolled just a little on Roslovic. I was impressed by three things –
- The passing of the three as a unit – these three seem to know where each other are at all times.
- The body positioning of all three (Hall in particular, but the others do it well too) to maintain puck possession.
- The net front these three give at any given time – they are always in motion in the offensive zone and it’s usually one retrieving and the other two awaiting a pass – one in the slot and one on the doorstep.
- Stankoven-Staal-Martinook also had strong shifts this game – with Stankoven and Martinook doing a lot of pick pocketing and backchecking to get possession of the puck. Stankoven is such a menace out there, but he also had a couple excellent opportunities to score from his office, either just missing or getting saved by Saros – again, he was good in net for them.
- Our fourth line of Jost-Jankowski-Robinson looked solid in the time they were out to play – generating chances throughout. With the score 1-0, Tyson Jost had one that clanged right off the post that would have tied it – sadly, this lead to a breakout chance for the Predators, who were able to enter the zone with some speed during a partial line change and buried one. Evangelista had an awesome move once he got out front to wait out Kochetkov and then sneak it in behind him. It could have been 1-1, instead it is 2-0 bad guys.
- We had three power plays on the night, and we were able to cash in on one – it started great, where Jackson Blake was able to turn a face-off loss into a win, the puck went back to Gostisbehere for a real good chance. Blake was good all night on the power play, but didn’t factor in on the goal – Gostisbehere, noticing Hall coming with speed down the boards, feeds Jarvis (who has the IQ to pull this off) and does a tap pass to Hall who drives to the front of the net and waits out Juuse Saros and buries the puck. It was a great move by Taylor Hall. I’d love to have him here for a while, but I have some questions about roster construction if we do – that’s another blog for another day, though. The other power plays weren’t very good, but the goal on the first one makes it a one goal game. Hurricanes down 2-1.
- The parts of the line of Seth Jarvis, Sebastian Aho and Jackson Blake were very good –together, they generated a ton of chances. They were dominating zone time and puck possession, which really started in the 2nd period, although they had some decent looks in the 1st. Jackson Blake was, once again, amazing tonight – he just couldn’t settle down the puck enough at times to get shots off. But he was doing Jackson Blake things the bulk of the night – being a back pick menace, a stalwart in the neutral zone, and a great distributor to his teammates as well. Seth Jarvis was also very good defensively when called upon and had a couple nice looks that he couldn’t cash in on. This line was its typical self but failed to cash in on opportunities presented – again, Saros was great (noticing a theme yet?).
- More on the 4th line – this line is going to be even better once Svechnikov comes back because Jost will be out and someone from a higher line will come down. I can almost feel a little bit of a call for a Stanky/Janky line – both those dudes like to park it in front, but both can also distribute to a net front. I saw Jankowski do it several times, just missing on some great feeds out front.
- I want to pause for a minute in this blog and throw about ten minutes of advertisements because my hands are having "Technical Difficulties". If you don’t understand what I speak of, you probably weren’t watching the game in the 2nd period – with about two minutes left, FanDuel Sports Network – the ONLY place any of us in Raleigh can watch the game – has Technical Difficulties – so we are unable to see one of our power plays (probably for the best – from the people watching it live that I was talking to a little bit, that power play stunk). I will be happy when FanDuel Sports Network is no longer in my life. I put up with it because I love the Hurricanes, but the minute the Hurricanes find a new partner is the minute I stop paying into any programming that includes this disaster of a “Sports Network” – Mike, Tripp and Shane are all paid by the team (I think Hannah might be as well, but not sure) – they would come with. It was awful as Bally’s; it’s just the same pig with a different dress. Shut this down, please. Rant over.
- The elephant in the room that can’t be ignored – tonight wasn’t Pyotr Kochetkov’s best outing. He gave up three goals on sixteen shots. The power play goal they scored – inexcusable. He doesn’t even have to make that save there – the puck was sailing past the net. He essentially came out to make a play on it, only to put it right in the spot needed for Bunting to cash in. The second goal of the night was one where I have grown accustomed to seeing Pyotr poke check that puck, but he kind of just fell face first when Evangelista made his move and eventually buried it.
- Pyotr eventually gave up a third goal, where it was essentially a 5-on-3 – I wasn’t aware that the Lenovo Center allowed spectators on the ice, but that is precisely what Jesperi Kotkaniemi and Jalen Chatfield were on the goal – the second of the night for Evangelista. I am not exactly sure what happened with Chatfield – he is typically on a man. It is entirely possible he lost his man, expecting Taylor Hall to win a board battle. As for Jesperi Kotkaniemi – he was out there kind of just skating around, looking all sorts of out of place. In a vacuum, it was very weird to see and you could easily call for his benching/demotion. But then, if you rewind the game for about six minutes of play time, you’ll notice that Rod decided to bump Jankowski up with Hall and Roslovic and KK moved down to play with Robinson and Jost. I am not trying to make excuses for KK – but I did think he played well overall – for him to get the shaft so that Jankowski, a 4th line center, could get more minutes – I thought that was just a bad idea. And I still think it is a bad idea. Fans are excited about Jankowski, calling him better than Mikko Rantanen – it’s absurd. Jankowski plays against 4th line players typically and is a higher end player on that sort of line. To have him play up against 2nd liners was not his best use, and further, it could have created some confusion with Kotkaniemi on how he slots in, which isn’t ideal just eleven games away from the playoffs. I know Jesperi is a professional athlete, and he needs to just play where he is asked. He didn’t deserve to be bumped down so that Jankowski could get more opportunities. Figure that out another time.
I know there is a desire to get Jankowski out there a little
more – and against his former team, that seems like a fun time to do it. But that didn’t seem like the right time to
bring out the blender, down 2-1 in a game we were dominating for large stretches. I guess this is why I am not a coach. We aren’t going to win them all but
generating any points this time of year is a big deal. Unfortunately, tonight wasn’t that night.
Next up: A home date
with the Montreal Canadians.