The Devils were the buzz of the hockey world a week ago. Akira Schmid had just put the finishing touches on a victory over the New York Rangers in the first round of the playoffs. If you were expecting the Devils would have a strong playoff run, the NHL playoffs bracket had done about as well as it could have. Some of us may have even made the hasty prediction that the Devils will win the Stanley Cup this year. Naturally, when Akira Schmid posts a.951 and 2 shutouts while winning 4 of 5 starts to win a postseason series, it is simple to feel happy making a conclusive declaration like that. The Devils seemed to have a goaltender in place.
But after seven days, the Devils have
Almost collapsed, yet it seems they still have a lot of work to do. And online is where it all begins.
Although you are well familiar with how the first four games of the Carolina series have played out, let’s quickly review. Vitek Vanecek, who had been the Devils’ starting goalkeeper for the entire regular season, took over after the aforementioned Schmid struggled in Games 1 and 2 with an.806 save % and was replaced twice in the first period. Vanecek had a poor playoff save % of.825, and he was removed from the game early in a crucial Game 4 where the Devils had a chance to even the series. The Devils were defeated instead of tying up the series and making it a best-of-three.
It is by no means adequate. And as a result, the Devils are currently 60 minutes away from being eliminated.
Of course, it would be dishonest to attribute the whole outcome of last night’s game, as well as Carolina’s past two victories in this series, to goaltending alone. You can read John’s breakdown of all the other mistakes the Devils made in Game 4 here. In the first two periods, when the game was still “within reach,” the puck handling was appalling, resulting in 19 Devils turnovers to just one for the Hurricanes. When facing an aggressive club like Carolina, Vitek Vanecek and Akira Schmid weren’t the only ones who consistently handle the puck carelessly. They weren’t the ones that consistently skipped class inthe area of defence. Luke Hughes’ ill-advised shift change and the caroms off the sticks of Jonas Siegenthaler and Damon Severson in the defensive zone that went straight to Martin Necas and then into the goal are not the goalie’s responsibility. It didn’t help things that the Devils skaters appeared to prefer being anywhere except on the ice in a playoff game by the time Brent Burns made it 5-1 Carolina and Vanecek was thankfully lifted.
Even while Vanecek isn’t totally to blame, it doesn’t really matter. The outcomes are just not there in our sector, which is results-driven. The saves must be made by the goaltender. He did not succeed.
Additionally, the fact that Lindy Ruff went back to Vanecek in the first place was a mistake, as he accomplished nothing in Game 3 other than meeting the low standard of not being worse than Frederik Andersen and Pyotr Kochetkov in Sunday’s victory, didn’t help the situation last night. Despite his difficulties in Games 1 and 2, it was simple to assume that Schmid should have been given the opportunity to start.
I understand that Ruff’s alternatives are limited and that the Devils currently don’t have a lot of high-quality possibilities. The Devils properly concluded that Mackenzie Blackwood isn’t an option, therefore she has been relegated to the press box and ought to have the same chance as me to start Game 5. After Utica’s season came to an end a few days ago, Nico Daws, who has yet to play a single NHL game this year, was recently recalled. Jonathan Bernier, who has also been inactive for the whole season and may never play again, is in no position to save the Devils at this point. The Devils’ best option out of two dubious choices was Schmid. At a time when the Devils need to bat for the fences, he also has the greater upside.the same way they did when they added Luke Hughes to the starting lineup for Game 3.
Unfortunately, Ruff made the wrong decision, and there is very little room for mistake when you are already down 2-1 in the series. Because you can’t reasonably change the lineup after winning Game 3, Ruff used a “winning lineup” in Game 4. Vanecek, who struggled in Game 3, was unable to make enough stops to keep them in the game. The club conceded another goal shortly after Ruff’s infamous “too little, too late” timeout to “calm the team down” failed, as expected, and Vanecek was ultimately withdrawn.
Simply said, the goaltending in this series hasn’t been good enough. And as a result, the Devils’ season is about to end.
This season, though, that hasn’t always been the case. Despite his postseason problems in a tiny sample size, Vanecek nonetheless had a successful season. In his little play during the year, Schmid was even more effective, and if nothing else, he will always remember the Rangers series. Even Blackwood, who this year had a limited number of strong moments, at least had them. As seen by past performances, the Devils club, which features goaltending that ranges from good to average, is capable of being a very strong unit. Comparing this to what we observed a year ago,when Andrew Hammond and Jon Gillies consistently gave the Devils no chance. Given the low bar of “playing meaningful games late in the year,” the organisational choice to run it back with Blackwood and trade for Vanecek was justifiable. That was the norm last year.
Since then, the bar has been increased.
The standard now needs to be higher after a season with a franchise-record 112 points and a playoff series victory. really high. Blackwood cannot continue to allow 4 goals per game. It is unacceptable for Vanecek to lose every postseason game he starts. Schmid has struggled with Carolina. For a club that should have Stanley Cup hopes going ahead, this level of play in goal is insufficient, and continuing to squander time with subpar choices will just waste years of this window that can’t afford to be spent. Ask Connor McDavid whether he’s pleased that Mike Smith and Mikko Koskinen made the Oilers waste some of his greatest years. We’ve reached theThe Devils don’t believe in Blackwood enough to start him in postseason games, and given how terribly he’s performed so far, they can’t really turn to Vanecek again in postseason.
If the Devils are serious about contending for titles, they must make net upgrades. They must work in the goaltender industry. Again. Despite how awful it is that they have to repeat it, they must.
Tom Fitzgerald is in a tough spot since goalies are hard to come by. There are only so many Igor Shesterkins or Ilya Sorokins to go around, and Fitzgerald still lacks one. The position is unstable by nature. Every year he has been the team’s general manager, he has filled that roster hole. Because of the Devils’ position in the chronology and the quality of the possibilities accessible to him prior to this season, the list of options even open to him was probably short.I’m grateful, but no thanks. Fitzgerald must walk a fine line, and I don’t envy him.
But in order for the Devils to move forward, it must be completed.
Blackwood has given us enough evidence to know that he is not the solution, and if this is what we can expect from Vanecek in the biggest games of the season, that won’t do either. When Vanecek is at an.825 and -7.6 goals saved over projected in the playoffs, no one cares that he went 33-11-4 with a.911 percentage during the regular season.
Akira Schmid should be included in the Devils’ plans in some way, and we’ll have plenty of time this summer to discuss prospective choices in net, but they must thoroughly investigate all available options, including outside ones. On the day the Jets disbanded, Connor Hellebuyck declared that he had no interest in a rebuild. As you may remember from when I wrote about this last year, Connor Hellebuyck is someone in whom I am really interested, despite the fact that his price will be exorbitant. Although Juuse Saros has two years left on a contract that is favourable to the team, he is most likely not yet available. Yaroslav Askarov, a former first-round choice of the Predators who was aggressively traded at the trade deadline this season, is waiting in the wings in AHL Milwaukee.It will only be a matter of time before they make Saros accessible. Despite having a plenty of experience in big games and seeming quite vulnerable last night, Frederik Andersen will be a UFA.Boston has two excellent goaltenders in Jeremy Swayman and Linus Ullmark, both of whom have NMCs, so it will be interesting to watch how they manage their approaching cap situation. Ilya Sorokin and Igor Shesterkin are two years away from free agency, though it’s doubtful that they’ll leave their present teams given that they are entering walk years. There will eventually be alternatives, and these will be good options.
If and when these choices become available, the Devils need to be first in line. At this time, the risks are too great to keep using subpar solutions. That’s not to suggest the Devils don’t have other issues that need to be resolved during the summer, and this isn’t meant to minimise all Carolina did well this series to establish a deserving 3-1 lead. But when you can rely on your goalkeeper and everyone understands that he or she has the capacity to steal a series, the margin for error in every series becomes significantly larger. Despite their poor performance against the Devils, the Rangers came extremely close to winning the series because to Shesterkin’s outstanding performances. TheThe fact that Schmid was superior helped the Devils defeat the Rangers. No matter who has been in goal for the Devils, they haven’t been good enough to defeat Carolina. However, the game would be much more exciting if someone, anybody, could make a stop.
I view things in that manner. Maybe you have a different perspective. As usual, thanks for reading and feel free to leave a comment.