A gutsy win for Ottawa. But it's a false dawn for the Senators because their top line of Spezza-Alfie-Heatley still is missing in action, and its top defensemen, Phillips and Redden, have been awful.
There's no way Ottawa will win this series if that top line and D men don't get going because you can't count on grinding lines to play as well offensively every night as Ottawa's did tonight. Plus Chris Neil's wife can't have a baby every day.
Still, Ottawa was much better tonight because its grind lines showed the way by moving their feet. Ottawa's speed prevailed tonight, but in a much different way than most pundits expected. It wasn't a case of the top line flying through the neutral zone and making pretty plays; it was more of a case of the grind lines, with Fisher and McAmmond leading the way, getting the puck in deep and then using their speed to beat the Ducks to the pucks in the corner and behind the net. Then Ottawa got its cycling going behind the net, continuing to move its feet, and was very effective.
But unless Alfredsson, Heatley and Spezza decide to do the same thing, Ottawa won't win. Heatley might be the most invisible 50-goal scorer in the NHL since Mike Bullard. The guy just does nothing out there.
Heatley should take a cue from Fisher, who is a f*cking man among men. What a leader to hog-tie Getzlaf -- a big, strong boy -- in that scrap and pin his mouthy ass to the ice. Fisher could have DESTROYED Getzlaf with UFC-style submission punches if he wanted but instead obeyed the code and instead just put his forearm across Getzlaf's throat to keep him pinned.
Man, I love Mike Fisher. If Ottawa had 12 of him at forward, this series would be 3-0, Sens.
Emery was solid, but Trampoline Ray is back. Some of his rebounds were just ridiculous. A good goalie coach really needs to work with this guy over the summer to teach him how to control rebounds. Some of his rebounds are fatter than Rosie O'Donnell's thunder thighs.
Ottawa also is very fortunate that the Selanne-MacDonald-Kunitz (Marchant after Kunitz's injury) line was very quiet tonight, damn near invisible. The Pahlsson line also was quiet offensively, but remained very effective defensively against the big line for Ottawa.
Another player who was bad tonight was Pronger, and it's very, very rare that you'll see that. He knocked the puck into his net for one Ottawa goal and was out of position on another. He also was rattled by forechecking hits by, you guessed it, Fisher.
But it's a moot point, as I highly doubt you'll see Pronger in Game 4, anyways. That elbow he threw on McAmmond was WAY more brutal -- and late -- than the forearm shiver on Holmstrom in the Detroit series, for which he received no penalty but a one-game suspension.
I'm sick of the Pronger apologists saying he hits high because he's 6-6. Bullsh*t. Pronger is one of the most composed, smooth defensemen in the league, with incredible body control, so he knows exactly what he's doing when he goes high. A cheap f*cking shot, period, on a guy that was running Anaheim hard with his effective forechecking.
Finally, and this is a small point, the ice was MUCH better in Ottawa than in Anaheim. Passes were faster and more crisp, and you saw the puck sitting flat a hell of a lot more than the first two games. That helps Ottawa slightly, as it's the speed and precision team.
But Ottawa will not win this series if Spezza-Alfie-Heatley continue to play as soft as the Stay-Puf Marshmallow Man and if Redden and Phillips look slow and rattled by Anaheim's constant hitting.
Take care,
PK
"You know why I love boxers? I love them because they face fear. And they face it alone." - Nick Charles
"First on the throttle, last on the brakes." - @MotoGP Twitter signature
XBL Gamertag: pk4425