There was a lot of talk before this game about the importance of getting a good start to the game, coming out with energy right away. We were expecting the Wings to do just that. Instead they came out completely flat. I don’t think you could come out any flatter if you tried. The Wings gave up a goal only 36 seconds into the game. I’m not entirely sure what happened here, as I hadn’t even settled down in my seat before the horn was blaring. It looked like a deflection, so I don’t blame Dom. The Sharks clearly had more jump. The Wings then followed up with a seemingly endless stretch of stale, listless play.
At least Hasek looked sharp…well until about 4:17, when he apparently decided that San Jose needed another goal. He went behind the net for the puck and passed it directly to the stick of a waiting Shark, Milan Michalek. He passed to his buddy Big Joe, who, using his magnificent skill, lobbed it into the open net. Aside from that single lapse in judgment however, Hasek was playing great and kept the Wings from sinking any farther behind.
Bit by bit, the Wings regained their composure, starting with the PK. At 5:29, Draper took an inexcusable offensive zone holding penalty, and the Sharks were on their first power play, which is always scary. The first unit out was Zetterberg, Franzen, Lidstrom and Chelios. All four worked really hard to contain the powerplay. Chelios, in particular, was impressive. They successfully killed it off and, in doing so, gained a little bit of confidence. However, they still failed to generate any offensive pressure. About 11 minutes into the first, the announcers shared a depressing stat - the Wings had no shots. Zero. Zip. Nada. Not one single save for Nabokov to make. The Wings were losing and their prospects of a comeback were looking extremely dim. At that point, we realized that if the Wings could not get it together, and fast, they were gonna get swept.
Slowly, they started putting their game back together. Patrick Marleau took a hooking penalty at 11:35, but the Wings could not capitalize on the powerplay. Thornton took a slashing penalty at 13:59, and the Wings powerplay was once again fruitless. They had some chances, but no goal. Around 17:30, Zetterberg passed the puck to Datsyuk, who was just inside the blueline. He turned around and passed it back to Zetter, who was racing down the boards. Hank threw a bad-angle shot on net, and it somehow ended up in the net. Nabokov was in a horrible position to make the save. It almost looked like he expected Hank to take it behind the net. It was a weak goal for him to give up.
San Jose has only one player under 6 feet (backup goaltender Vesa Toskala), but Jiri Hudler’s not scared of a single one of them. He had a really impressive effort in this game. Hopefully Mike Babcock noticed too… He was dealing hits, fighting for the puck, and backchecking. It was a very good game for Jiri. At 17:46, our littlest forward took a boarding penalty. Who knew Jiri even had the strength to knock somebody over? After this impressive and unexpected hit, we noticed little Jiri’s ice time go up (once again diminishing in the third). Watch out Sharks, you may have big scary guys, but we have Jiri Hudler!!!
The Wings came out with a lot more energy in the second period. They had another good penalty kill at 3:08 after Bertuzzi was slapped with an interference penalty. We saw a lot of good things out of the Wings in this period. The defense was joining the rush, with both Chelios and Lidstrom joining the action on separate occasions. Hasek made a number of key saves including one huge one on a 3 on 2. Hudler continued to make the most of his limited ice time, bringing energy to every shift.
The Wings kept up their play in the third and were rewarded with a goal at 1:23. Dan Cleary pounced on a turnover by Christian Erhoff (a turnover which was caused by the aggressive play of Kirk Maltby) to even up the score at 2-2. The Joe Louis Arena crowd came alive, with octupi flying onto the ice. At this point it felt like the Wings had taken control of the game. The momentum was in their favor. They were playing exactly the way they needed to be. They played a very agressive PK when Bertuzzi took a hooking penalty at 12:50. Basically the entire third period from the point at which the Wings tied it was an intense waiting game. For awhile it looked like we might be suffering through an overtime or two. It was a huge relief when Pavel Datsyuk scored the game winning goal with 1:24 left in the period. Zetterberg made another great play on this goal. He took the puck around the back of the net, and then passed it up to Samuelsson. Sammy took a good, hard shot, but Nabokov was there. Datsyuk picked up the rebound (something they had trouble doing all game) and took it to the other side of the net, where he roofed it.
The first 15 minutes aside, the Wings played much better than game 1. Once they settled down, played a sound defensive game and put on a lot of offensive pressure. It would really help offensively if they could work on getting the rebounds. Nabokov isn’t often beaten on the first shot, but he doesn’t suck up the puck like a lot of other goaltenders do. If the Wings can drive the net and start taking advantage of those rebounds, they should be able to score with ease. Hasek continues to be solid, he just needs to be careful not to have any more momentarily lapses like he did on the Sharks’ second goal. Chelios plays like he’s 30 and Hudler plays like he’s 7 feet tall -now if we could only get the whole team on board. Lang’s effortless and careless play continues, which resulted in only two shifts during the third for the Czech. So much for Babs’ denial of his being demoted. Also, what happend to first-round Lilja? I was starting to like that guy.
For game three, the Wings need to come out with some energy. I know, it’s starting to sound an awful lot like a broken record, but it’s two games in a row that they’ve given up two goals in the first five minutes of play. With a team like San Jose, that just isn’t going to work. We came back once, we didn’t the other. It’s not a risk I’m willing to take every game. Also, keep Lang on the fourth line, but move Jiri up. He brings energy that the team desperately needs, and he’s proven that his size is not a liability. The Wings have the ability and the talent to beat this team…they just have to use it.




One thing I noticed in game 2 was Chelios’ complete misplays of stickhandling over and over. I saw at least four separate occasions where Chelios bobbling the puck resulted in a chance for San Jose, or the loss of one for Detroit. Not to knock on Chelios, but did anyone else notice these things?
I do remember a lot of Wings misplays (we do have a tendency to have a troubling amount of giveaways) - especially in the first half of the first period. However, I only noticed one major giveaway by Chelios. I may have missed something, but he looked pretty good to me. The worst culprit I noticed was Andreas Lilja. I saw him misplay the puck on at least three separate occasions. Now, I was used to him making turnovers all the time before, but he was so good last series, I thought maybe he was done with all that. Unfortunately it looks like we’ve got the old Lilja back…
How can you possibly defend Hasek for letting in a slow Kyle MacLaren wrist shot from the blueline tipped by Cheechoo, and then rip Nabokov for letting in a Zetterberg shot deflected by MacLaren? Both goals were weak. Cheechoo’s tip was minimal and Hasek still should’ve been able to stop it, and Nabokov should’ve been in a better position to stop Zetterberg’s shot - deflected by MacLaren or not. Please don’t let your bias cloud your judgment.
Overall, it was a very weak game offensively by both teams. The Wings merely outshot the Sharks 22-19, which is not their M.O. Detroit’s unspectacular offense was masked by the 3-goal comeback, but the Wings did not sustain any offensive pressure during the whole game. Fortunately for us, San Jose was just as unspectacular. Both their goals were directly set up by stupid Detroit turnovers by Maltby and Hasek, not brilliant play or any offensive pressure. (To be fair we got a lucky goal of our own. But our other two were due to great play.) Penalty killing was excellent though, and I think it will restore some confidence in the Wings’ ability to kill San Jose powerplays.
I agree with you on your last line; I also think the Wings have the ability and talent to win this series. But I think most important of all will be confidence. Remember the Sharks beat the Wings in the season series 3-1, including a humiliating 9-4 loss. The Wings need to forget about all of that. And I think Game 2 was big in restoring the Wings’ confidence and maybe hurting the Sharks’ a bit. Don’t forget that last year, the Sharks were up 2-0 against Edmonton only to lose 4 straight and the series. If we can get them down mentally, it’ll be much easier to win.
Justin, I believe that Sarah said she did not really see the first goal. You can’t blame a goalie for a deflection, unless the deflection is minimal. You can blame a goaltender for being completely out of position and letting a goal in from a harmless, outside, bad-angle shot. So yes, the Nabokov softy was worse than Hasek’s. Both turnovers occurred in the tenish minutes that Detroit just looked terrible all around. That is not a good representation of the game as a whole. It’s true, neither team had a lot of sustained pressure. But maybe that’s because both teams were playing well, not because Detroit was playing badly. These are both puck-possession, skill-driven teams. If they both play well, they are not going to give up a lot of shots or chances because both have really good defense from the whole team. This also means that the offense isn’t going to get sustained pressure for very long. Yes, Detroit has the ability to beat San Jose. But San Jose also has the ability to beat Detroit. There’s a reason they were saying this is the most evenly matched series. And there’s also a reason they were saying it would be a series to remember. So when the Wings lose, it won’t necessarily be because they were playing badly. And when they win, it won’t necessarily be because they outplayed San Jose. It’s about who can take advantage of the few chances they’re going to get.
You mentioned Nabokov’s habit of giving up rebounds. In my opinion it is absolutely vital for the Red Wings to get Holmström back for Game 4. He is by far the best infront-of-the-net-guy in the NHL. They aren’t scoring in PP without him, and no team is going all the way without converting on their PP.