The sky might be falling. Unable to rebound from their dismal outing in game one, the Tampa Bay Lightning dropped a second straight home game on Friday night to start their Eastern Conference Quarterfinal matchup with the Montreal Canadiens.
If you thought that things couldn’t get worse for the Lightning after game one, you were proven wrong tonight. The Bolts were once again outplayed, outcoached, and outscored in a rather one-sided contest. The final score was 4-1, but the number that really matters is the 0-2 record that Tampa will bring to Montreal. The fat lady is currently working on some vocal exercises, and man is she sounding good.
In the pregame blog I made sure to highlight Lightning coach Jon Cooper’s opportunity to establish himself as one of the league’s best coaches this year. The great playoff coaches know how to make in-game adjustments and postgame adjustments that can help to turn the tides of a hockey game. For at least a few minutes to start game two, it looked like Cooper had figured out a way to beat Montreal’s coverage. Perhaps the best evidence of this can be seen on the first period’s possession chart.
After a hot start by #TBLightning things evened out quickly in first period at evens (via @ExtraSkater) pic.twitter.com/lDs5inB8oV
— Ðrpon Basu (@ArponBasu) April 19, 2014Of particular interest to me is the fact that Montreal was able to silence Steven Stamkos in a way that few teams have been able to over the years. He was, if we’re being totally honest, invisible. The Canadiens didn’t give him an inch of space, and so his speed never became a factor. The proof is in the pudding, as Montreal didn’t let Stamkos generate anything when the game was on the line.
Good team D by MON -- Stamkos one shot in last 53 mins
— Elliotte Friedman (@FriedgeHNIC) April 19, 2014Rene Bourque creating more offense than Steven Stamkos tells you just about everything you need to know about this one.
— Michael Stuart (@HB_MikeStuart) April 19, 2014After battling through an evenly matched first frame, the Canadiens took advantage of things early on in the second. Shockingly, they did it with a power play goal. Much has been made of Montreal’s struggles with the man advantage, but they converted on an early second period hooking call to make it 1-0. David Desharnais tipped home a well-placed PK Subban shot, and just like that the energy was sucked out of the Tampa Bay Times Forum.
The Canadiens doubled up their lead when Rene Bourque scored his first of two on the night at the 10:35 mark of that middle frame. The enigmatic forward made both Eric Brewer and Sami Salo look like fools, as he cut right to the front of the net and poked the puck past a sprawling Anders Lindback. At 2-0, realists probably got the sense that the game was over. Carey Price looked ridiculously good, and the Bolts looked mind-numbingly bad; it was hard to believe that Tampa would be able to score one, let alone two.
While the Lightning, as a team, certainly deserved to be down 2-0 (at least) through two periods, one guy who didn’t deserve that fate was Lindback. He made some key saves early in the hockey game, and once again gave the skaters in front of him a chance to win. Disappointingly, but not shockingly, they failed to pull out a victory for him.
The night got worse for the big Swedish goaltender, as he was pulled midway through the third period after giving up the 3-0 goal to Brendan Gallagher. That meant that Kristers Gudlevskis, otherwise known as “that Latvian kid,… was thrown into the fray. For a fleeting moment, maybe you thought that Gudlevskis would be able to repeat his Olympic heroics and match Price save for save. That didn’t happen. Only minutes after Lindback got the hook, Gudlevskis got caught way out of position and allowed Rene Bourque to score a wrap-around goal that made it 4-0.
Teddy Purcell scored a garbage time goal for the Bolts to make it 4-1, but it wasn’t nearly enough. The team was brutal, and undoubtedly deserved to lose the hockey game.
It will be interesting to see what Jon Cooper does with the goaltending for game three in Montreal. Nobody is pinning these first two losses on Lindback, but it might make sense to change things up and throw Gudlevskis in to see what happens. The reality is that the Bolts are on life support right now. What they’ve been doing hasn’t worked. Change might.
Even so, let’s not pretend that any goaltender would have changed the outcome in the first two games at the Forum. Not even Ben Bishop could have salvaged this sinking ship. This may sound ridiculous, but the Bishop injury has proven to be rather inconsequential so far. One of my Twitter followers, The Hockey Hitman, had this to say about it.
Not having Ondrej Palat has been more detrimental to #TBLightning in this series thus far than not having Ben Bishop.
— The Hockey Hitman (@thehockeyhitman) April 19, 2014I’ve already made reference to the unfortunate point that Jon Cooper was once again outcoached. After having so much success during the regular season, Tampa’s bench boss doesn’t seem to have the answers here in the post-season. Of course, it’s still early. Who knows what tricks he might pull out of the hat when the series resumes in Montreal. Cooper is a rookie NHL coach; this is a learning experience for him too. That being said, Michel Therrien has had his number through two games.
While the road ahead for the Lightning doesn’t necessarily contain certain death, it does come with its fair share of challenges. The team played Ben Bishop and its other best players so much down the stretch to secure home ice. Well, they just went 0-2 at the Forum to start this series. That advantage has been thrown out the window; the Canadiens hold all the cards now.
From @EliasSports, #Habs 49-5 all-time in best-of-seven series in which they take a 2-0 series lead ...
— Tim Wharnsby (@WharnsbyCBC) April 19, 2014... Of course, last time they had a 2-0 lead was vs. #Bruins in 2011 and lost that series.
— Tim Wharnsby (@WharnsbyCBC) April 19, 2014@HB_MikeStuart Remind lightning fans what happened to Carolina after losing their first two home games of the 2006 playoffs. #NeverSayDie
— Johnny De Silveira (@canuck4liberty) April 19, 2014Game three of this first round series will take place on Sunday night at the Bell Centre. The Bolts don’t have much time to regroup, but they’ll likely need to if they don’t want to end up in a 0-3 hole. Some of that regrouping may have started tonight, as TSN’s Ryan Rishaug noted that the players held a closed door meeting following play.
As I sign off, I’ll leave you with this. Thanks for reading.
My prediction was Tampa in six.... pic.twitter.com/FBxcxKjSsT
— Michael Stuart (@HB_MikeStuart) April 19, 2014