From the desk: RAISE GRESCHNER WITH THE GREATS & THE BRICK CITY STYX
BATTLE OF THE HUDSON
Devils lead Rangers; 2-1
I - NJD 4; NYR 3
II - NJD 5; NYR 2
III - NYR 6; NJD 1
SATURDAY
Rangers
vs.
Devils
FROM
NEWARK
Filip Chytil's Return Impacts Team in More Ways That One
The beleaguered Mike Zibanejad for major portions of Thursday's game at Newark was withheld from Coach Quinn's ice. There's no controversy; it was well deserved, in a manner of speaking. He is otherwise usually out there for the most shifts and ice time. But despite two points in his last two games and the primary assist on Alexis Lafreniere's third-period goal, everyone knows Mika is struggling with just two goals and eight points through 21 games. Last season through the same number of games, Mika scored at a torrid pace with eleven goals and 13 assists for 24 points. Said another way, he is presently scoring two-thirds less than last season.
Meanwhile, Filip Chytil is two games into his return from injury and already has a point, his fourth in only seven games played this season. But there's a rub. During Filip Chytil's seven games played, Mike Zibanejad also registered four points. In Mika's 14 games played in Chytil's absence, he registered only four points. Now that Chytil is back, he and Zibanejad scored a point in the same game for the third time. I'm inclined to think none of this is mere coincidence.
So, what's a head coach to do? Does Quinn bump Filip Chytil up to the first line and either bump everyone down a spot or leave Ryan Strome on the second line and drop Zibanejad down on the third line?
In the continuing absence of Artemi Panarin, Jacob Trouba, and Kaapo Kakko, the onus is on Blueshirts veterans to pick up the slack. Pavel Buchnevich has five points in his last four games, and Chris Kreider is in the midst of one of those mind-boggling streaks we've witnessed so many times before. With a natural hat-trick against the Devils, Kreider now has seven goals in his last nine games, including two hat-tricks. He now has 13 goals and 15 points for the season. Let's enjoy it while it lasts because history says these bursts of brilliance come and go.
Here comes Alexis Lafreniere! After notching just two points in his first 16 games, the Blueshirts teenager now has two goals and five points in his last four games while finally playing consistently alongside the Rangers' other top-five forwards.
Igor Shesterkin was brilliant, that is, until succumbing to a non-contact leg injury with just under 6:00 left in the third period. He left the ice, clearly favoring one leg. At the same time, it confirms the need for depth within the pipes. No confidence was lost with having Alexandar Georgiev minding the net. But Igor was indeed winning the day.
Moreover, if it wasn't for Igor, the Rangers, in all practicality, should have lost Thursday's game. The best centerman on the ice, Jack Hughes, opened the scoring at 7:12 of the first period. But Shesterkin performed cartwheels in shutting out Newark the rest of the way. Newark won 16 more faceoffs than the Rangers, which correlated into 36 shots on goal versus just 19 shots for the Rangers. Mackenzie Blackwood was pulled early in the third period of Thursday's game. At some point, the Devils effectively stopped playing in front of him.
Blackwood is otherwise sporting a .912 Sv% and 2.77 GAA through eleven starts.
After a quick start to the season, the Devils have now lost seven of eight since returning from COVID hell. Losing two of three against the Sabres is most troublesome. They were also playing Thursday yet again, minus their captain Nico Hischier, who is now in concussion protocol, not to mention suffering a broken nose/sinus fracture. He will not be returning soon.
Second-year Jack Hughes has five goals and 13 points in 19 games, and despite Newark fortunes, Miles Wood and Ty Smith continue to impress as well. Wood leads the team with seven goals, and Smith leads with nine assists.
Should Wood and particularly defenseman Ty Smith be having betters seasons than Kyle Palmiere? That's a discussion worth having. The Devils are no doubt strong up the middle, unlike the Rangers. Bit whereas the Rangers appear string on the wing, the Devils do not.
But aren't they too a rebuilding team?
On that note, Coach Lindy Ruff doesn't seem to be winning over the masses either. Rangers fans know what that's like from when he coached the Broadway blueliners to certain fan dissatisfaction.
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