Rangers Take Step Back In Chicago

Wednesday night, the New York Rangers regressed. After picking up six out of a possible eight points, including two overtime losses to the Avalanche and Knights, that push the team back into playoff contention, the Blueshirts were outworked, outcompeted, and out-efforted by a Blackhawks team that came into the contest 2-6-2. Maybe New York looked past Chicago, with Montreal next up and Anaheim, with Chris Kreider and Jacob Trouba, coming on Monday. But the Blueshirts are not good enough or talented enough to get away with that kind of performance. It showed in the final score and in the way Chicago dominated the action.

Game recap:

Rangers lines vs. Chicago:

Sheary-Trocheck-Miller
Panarin-Zibanejad-Lafrenière
Berard-Laba-Cuylle
Brodzinski-Carrick-Chmelař

Gavrikov-Schneider
Soucy-Borgen
Robertson-Morrow

Shesterkin
Quick

Scratches: Vaakanainen, Raddysh  
LTIR: Fox (upper-body injury), Rempe (upper-body injury), Edström (lower-body injury)

A few thoughts:

1) New York went 0-for-3 on the man-advantage and is now 0-for-12 since Adam Fox was sidelined. The five forward experiment may have mercifully ended, though the reason for that change is not solely due to the lack of production and solid process, but the shorthanded goal allowed in the first period last night. That score resulted in Scott Morrow replacing Will Cuylle, at least for the last two attempts last night. A final decision on what we will see moving forward has yet to be made. 

Peter Baugh summed up the event nicely: “The Rangers were more than 1:30 into their first power play of the game when Louis Crevier struck. Zibanejad lost a puck at the top of the offensive zone, and Ilya Mikheyev tried to find a surging Crevier with a pass in the neutral zone. The two couldn’t connect, but the puck eventually bounced to Matt Grzelcyk at the blue line (after Cuylle had his pocket picked). Crevier was at the opposite blue line by then (with every Ranger on the ice somehow ignoring the fact that he was there alone), and Grzelcyk fed him. Crevier cut to the net and scored on a partial breakaway. Zibanejad and Trocheck, who had been on the ice since the start of the power play, were the two players trying to chase him. Cuylle and Artemi Panarin were nowhere to be found.

Make the change. The five forwards are not working. There is no guarantee Morrow will be the elixir needed, but something has to be altered.

2) Inability to finish – the Rangers generated only 21 official shots while also hitting the post twice. Shot volume was insufficient, though they did have a couple of good chances. Once again though, the team’s inability to finish came back to bite them. If the top-six doesn’t produce, the burden falls on the third and fourth lines. Cuyyle-Noah Laba-Brett Berard had an okay gamewith Laba standing out, but they failed to score. What’s even more damning, as Baugh pointed out, the Jonny Brodzinski-Sam Carrick-Jaroslav Chmelař fourth line and third line had zero shot attempts at five-on-five when fully together. As a result, the blender was out and don’t be surprised if we see Taylor Raddysh on Saturday. 

3) Standings: New York is seventh out of eight Metro Division teams in total points and last in point percentage. In addition, the Rangers have played the most games in the division with the Islanders at 31 and Capitals, Devils and Blue Jackets having played 30 contests each. Now, the Blueshirts have to hope teams in front of them lose or at most earn one point to keep the division as tight as teams 1-7 in total points are separated by five points.

Home Forums Rangers Take Step Back In Chicago

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  • #54160
    airjan23
    Participant

    Wednesday night, the New York Rangers regressed. After picking up six out of a possible eight points, including two overtime losses to the Avalanche a
    [See the full post at: Rangers Take Step Back In Chicago]

    #54163
    Brukie
    Participant

    When you have a Coner Sheary in your top six, your team is very flawed!!!

    #54174
    Pags66
    Participant

    When you have a Coner Sheary in your top six, your team is very flawed!!!

    Valid statement today, but historically not true. He played mostly top 6 minutes on back to back Cup winners despite falling down for no reason at least once a period.

    #54191
    Brukie
    Participant

    Im sorry, I dont live in the past.

    #54326
    nyrangers9479
    Participant

    Quote isn’t working. Sheary is 33 years old now, he’s a bum and has no place in the top 12, let alone top 6. He’s not an NHL player.

    #54485
    Tonybere
    Participant

    It is maddening. Gabe just keeps scoring points every game. And we suffer through a guy that has not one offensive instinct playong on the top line. If he was productive once it would be from playing with Sydney.
    Panarin is no Crosby. To be fair, Artemi did impress me with a backcheck in Chicago, but only one. He was the guy that was playing the point on the PP and just charged up ice with a guy beside him going the other way!! No one but the 3rd line play for each other. Our captain has no goals and the team lacks heart.

    #54487
    Tonybere
    Participant

    The jerseys were the best part of the game. It looked like a live Bubble Hockey game!

    #54498
    picklerick
    Participant

    Well the rangers were never going to be able to beat that Wild offer for Quinn Hughes

    #54525
    nyrangers9479
    Participant

    Seeing what VAN got for Hughes, trading Fox should be a no brainer. I’ve been advocating trading him for years and now I don’t see how you don’t trade him if there’s a similar offer out there.

    #54532
    Brukie
    Participant

    Seeing what VAN got for Hughes, trading Fox should be a no brainer. I’ve been advocating trading him for years and now I don’t see how you don’t trade him if there’s a similar offer out there.

    I dont see this team competing for a Cup, time to restart a rebuild, retool, whatever you want to call it. Keep 24 and younger, trade anyone else!!

    #54561
    Tonybere
    Participant

    Fox has full control for 2 more years. He’s not going anywhere for at least that long.
    I know he would bring back assets, but I still want Panarin gone more. It has to happen by March. Top priority has to be talking him into waiving.

    #54569
    aecliptic
    Participant

    Fox has full control for 2 more years. He’s not going anywhere for at least that long.
    I know he would bring back assets, but I still want Panarin gone more. It has to happen by March. Top priority has to be talking him into waiving.

    Yea, this has to happen. It would likely only be with a cup contender, so preferably Id rather take a stud young prospect over a late 1st. Although considering the nature of this upcoming draft, it could be an option.

    #54660
    picklerick
    Participant

    Yea I’m out until drury’s gone I think

    #54875
    nyrangers9479
    Participant

    I look at this team and think, we’re not a win now team. We’re not a team deep with prospects that we’re waiting to develop. We’re a mediocre team at best with no direction. I just don’t see how 2-3 years from now, with the path we’re on we’re going to be a better team unless we get lucky with some FA’s that only want to come to NY. And if that’s the plan, it’s a bad one.

    #54891
    nyrangers9479
    Participant

    Why doesn’t this site keep me logged in even when I hit remember me?

    Also; most posts crash the page so I have to copy and paste them so I don’t lose what I’ve typed so when I reload the page I can just paste it.

    Clicking pictures of fire hydrants in boxes is very aggravating as well for every post.

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