Flyers must worry about Pens offense Associated Press
PITTSBURGH -- They're fretting about the shots that aren't
eluding Ron Tugnutt, the clutching and grabbing the Pittsburgh
Penguins supposedly are doing to get them off their game -- and,
maybe, get into their heads.
Two games and two losses into an Eastern Conference semifinal
series they were expected to win, the Philadelphia Flyers are
affixing blame onto nearly every possible factor. Not the least of
which was their inner-seated thinking the Penguins couldn't
possibly win two games at Philadelphia.
|
|
|
|
Tue, April 2
Philly has to get to the net. They made some line changes, moving Daymond Langkow on a line with John LeClair, and Keith Primeau will be with Simon Gagne. The Flyers have to get to goalie Ron Tugnutt.
The Flyers can't change the way they play. That's how they're built: A big, attacking team. They need to continue to do what they believe in and the style they play. Also, their power play needs to get going. The power play helped them beat Buffalo and is a huge weapon for them.
Goalie Brian Boucher has played well. Pittsburgh is unique from some other East teams because they move the puck side-to-side a lot. They don't just come down the wall and shoot. Boucher has to make the saves when moving across.
|
|
|
But as the series shifts to Pittsburgh for Game 3 Tuesday,
several Flyers offer this suggestion -- stop complaining, stop
looking back and, maybe, stop focusing on what's going wrong and
start trying to get it right.
Specifically, the Flyers might want to worry less about why
they're not scoring and do a better job of containing Pittsburgh's
scorers. Most of all Jaromir Jagr, who has outscored the Flyers
3-1, even if it seems Tugnutt and his .961 save percentage are
getting all the credit for the Penguins' unanticipated 2-0 lead.
Even if the Flyers were solving Tugnutt, they still haven't shut
down Pittsburgh's scorers. Jagr has three goals, Robert Lang has
two and Martin Straka has a goal and a bunch of assists.
"I don't think they're worrying about me right now," Jagr said
Monday, following a hour-long practice. "I've been lucky. Some of
the goals we've scored were lucky, especially coming off my
stick."
Still, even if the Flyers start solving Tugnutt, they haven't
proven they can win a shootout against the Penguins, who have
outscored the Flyers and Washington 23-9 in seven playoff games.
"It doesn't matter what you do if you don't score," Flyers
interim coach Craig Ramsay said.
To generate more offense, Ramsay has made two significant lineup
changes. Center Daymond Langkow moved up to the first line between
John LeClair and Mark Recchi, and the slumping Keith Primeau
dropped to the second line with Simon Gagne and Rick Tocchet.
Ramsay also added veteran defenseman Adam Burt into the rotation
and removed rookie Mark Eaton.
"I just wanted to give them something to think about, a
different look," Ramsay said. "Langkow's played well, Primeau's
played well, who knows what will happen once the game gets
started."
The Flyers made the changes to try to get to Tugnutt, whose
career record is an unremarkable 134-170-9, but clearly is at the
top of his game.
The Penguins, never known as a defensive team, are frustrating
the bigger, more aggressive Flyers with their ability to clear out
the net, thus preventing Tugnutt from facing a lot of rebounds from
bad angles.
| | Jagr hasn't been the only Pens forward doing damage in the series. |
"He's in our head right now," Tocchet
said.
Maybe it's not just the goaltender, Tugnutt said.
"I think the team in general has thrown them off," Tugnutt
said. "The way we've played may not be the same team they faced
and beat regularly during the season."
Ramsay argues these changes include flagrant holding, clutching,
and hauling down players around the net.
"We don't coach interfering or holding," he said.
Imagine that -- the tough-guy Flyers complaining the Penguins,
never known for their physicality, are manhandling them. Now that's
an upset.
The Penguins' response? If that's what they're worried about,
let them worry, and maybe it will get their minds off playing. Not
that the Penguins aren't expecting a desperate, charged-up opponent
in Mellon Arena, where the Flyers are 3-14-5 in their last 22
games.
"They'll play the same type of game, they'll play hard and
physical," Penguins coach Herb Brooks said. "They do it very
well.
"This is not over, and we know it."
Still, the Penguins are aware that if they can again get the
early lead, as they did in winning 2-0 in Game 1 and 4-1 in Game 2,
the Flyers might start doubting their ability to win the series.
"We don't want to give them any life," Tugnutt said. "We
don't want to get behind the 8-ball. We can take a commanding lead,
or we can let them get back into it." |