NHL Playoffs – Round Two
Posted by behindthejersey on May 12, 2006
I haven’t been able to watch any of the second round games because my TV doesn’t work in my room and I’m on bedrest right now. Anyways, I had picked Carolina to make it into the finals so I don’t care much about the Eastern Conference playoffs. I find it very interesting that the Western Conference top four seeds failed to make it into the second round – ouch.
Edmonton Oilers vs. San Jose Sharks
I just don’t want the Oilers to go onto the next round; they made my surgery recovery a lot suckier! And yes, I’m bitter. It’ll be interesting to see how the Thornton/Pronger matchup works out in future games. The Wings didn’t have any problems with the Sharks (aside from the one game after the Olympics when we were missing all our Swedes) because Lidstrom and the rest of the defense were able to shut down Thornton, which apparently is the key to the game’s score result. Here’s some thoughts on this series from around the blogosphere…
Jon @ Sharkspage: Sharks in 6
Earlier in the season when asked how he would prepare for a specific opponent, Sharks head coach Ron Wilson said “I don’t care. They are going to have to prepare for us.” San Jose is going to roll Cheechoo-Thornton and the MBB line with an air of confidence that they can not be stopped. The Sharks have to focus on staying out of the penalty box, and putting forth a solid 60 minute effort each night. Edmonton will have to get on the board early, and apply constant pressure on offense.If the Oilers build a lead and let the penalties stack up for S.J., they could edge the Sharks in a seven game series. On the other hand, if both coaches roll 4 lines and let the players fly on the ice, this could be the most entertaining series in the playoffs for sheer speed and offensive ability. More likely, phantom slashes and trips will result in a parade to the penalty box and a lack of 5-on-5 play.
Sacamano @ Battle of Alberta: Edmonton in 6
It looks to me like the Oil have the advantage on the back end and in net, but that San Jose has some pretty good scorers. In other words, it looks an awful lot like the last series. Calculator has all the numbers, and they pretty much confirm that the two teams are pretty well matched and it is going to be a heckuva series.Conditioning might also play a factor as the Eggheads at the NHL head office again gave Edmonton a bizarre schedule — back to back Sunday/Monday games, and three games in four nights. I’m not sure what to think of this. Detroit seemed to have more jump than Edmonton in the OT periods, but in the short-rest afternoon games, Edmonton ran the show.
Mudcrutch79 @ mc79hockey.com: Edmonton in 6
The other way? If the hockey gods are against Edmonton. This series is close enough that I figure it comes down to whoever gets the bounces, with a possible slight edge to the Oilers based on their goaltending (which should hopefully nullify the Sharks apparently superior ES offence) and penalty kill. After witnessing the third period of the sixth game against Detroit (not to mention the Flames’ humiliating home ice exit from the playoffs), I believe that the Gods are with the Oilers. Edmonton in six. I would have said five, but if the Flames have taught us anything with the asskicking that they took in front of what was apparently a crowd of 19,000 mimes on Wednesday night after their fans insufferable behaviour since their team choked the Cup away in 2003-04, it’s that the Gods hate hubris.
James Mirtle: Edmonton in 6
Much like in the Ottawa-Buffalo series, the Sharks simply don’t have anyone on the blueline who is even close to the calibre of blueliner as Chris Pronger. What I expect coach Craig MacTavish will do is task Pronger with neutralizing Joe Thornton, which would go a long, long way to crimping the Sharks goal scoring. At the other end, Sharks coach Ron Wilson will lean heavily on Scott Hannan and Kyle McLaren, as his remaining four defenders are all very inexperienced. What the Oilers need to do is work the forecheck on this team, press hard and generate the kind of shovel-garbage goals they got in the Detroit series. Vesa Toskala has been phenomenal in the Sharks net since February, and Dwayne Roloson needs to match his first-round performance.
Anaheim vs. Colorado
As a loyal Wings fan, I hate the Avs. Ever since the rivalry, I root for anyone playing against the Avs – even if that means I root for the Mighty Ducks. Seemingly, there aren’t very many Anaheim and Colorado blogs…
James Mirtle: Anaheim in 6
One of the great secrets of this Ducks team is how strong defensively its forward core is. Sam Pahlsson, Rob Niedermayer and Todd Marchant all played more than 17 minutes a game in their first-round series, and it’ll be that trio that tries to key on Joe Sakic, Milan Hejduk and Alex Tanguay. Colorado hardly generated any offence from anyone outside of their top four forwards in the first round, which should make it easy for the Ducks to key on those players. Much like the Calgary series, this will be a low-scoring affair, and Jose Theodore is going to really have to hold the fort and now allow any bad goals.