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Archive for May, 2010

Stanley Cup Finals – Game 2 – Pre-game Comments from the Philadelphia Flyers

Posted by admin On May - 31 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS
Stanley Cup Final Media Availability

Transcripts Courtesy of the NHL Communications Department

Pre-Game 2 comments from Flyers Head Coach Peter Laviolette, Flyers Players Simon Gagne, and Ian Laperriere

Comments from Head Coach Peter Laviolette

Q. Coach, you said a couple of weeks ago that taking Dan Carcillo out of the lineup was one of the hardest things you had to do this year. What do you hope to see out of him tonight, and how much did it make you feel good to put him back in the lineup?

COACH LAVIOLETTE: I haven’t commented on the lineup tonight. But you’re right, I did hate taking him out.

Q. Your players said this morning, Peter, that they feel that what Carcillo brings is exactly what was lacking in the first game, just the edge to get everybody else going. Do you concur with that?

COACH LAVIOLETTE: What’s the question? Do I agree that Danny plays an aggressive style?

Q. And that’s what you were lacking in that first game and you have to get some of that back tonight.

COACH LAVIOLETTE: I don’t know if I agree that we were lacking that the first game. I don’t think we got out-hit. Danny certainly plays an aggressive game.

Q. Peter, what went into your decision to change your mind, I guess, and make the announcement that Leighton would be your guy in goal?

COACH LAVIOLETTE: I didn’t change my mind. I stand by my statements yesterday, as you can tell from the Carcillo comments today. I said likely we’ll keep everything internal. When questions were asked about the goaltenders yesterday, we had to make a decision. We had not had conversations until we got back to the hotel and had a coach’s meeting last night.

The goaltenders weren’t notified at the rink, so I didn’t want to comment on anything and have you guys going to them without them getting information from us first. Once we got back to the hotel, we got a chance to kind of absorb everything from the day. We made decisions with regards to the game tonight.

Q. Peter, my apologies for trying to hammer home the same nail here regarding Carcillo, but irrelevant of whether he plays tonight, when do you think he’s at his best when he’s on the ice? Because as you know, sometimes he crosses over that line. When is he at his best when it comes to being on the ice?

COACH LAVIOLETTE: Actually, Danny — I’m not sure of the exact numbers. You would have to look it up. Somebody gave them to me. He doesn’t cross over that line too much. In fact, that line goes the other way. I believe he finished top three in the penalties that he draws, as opposed to the penalties he takes. It was like a plus 25 rating.

I’m not sure of the exact numbers. You would have to look into it. Danny Carcillo has done an excellent job with his discipline when he’s been in the lineup, so he plays an aggressive game. He can agitate a little bit. He’s physical. And I think he’s done an excellent job of controlling his game and keeping it legal.

Q. Coach, how upset were you by Burish’s hit on Krajicek?

COACH LAVIOLETTE: I personally didn’t like the hit. I mean, it appeared to me to be from behind and a dangerous hit. I don’t think he saw it coming. So I thought it was a dangerous hockey hit.

Q. Peter, was it difficult to go with Leighton for this game? Was it a difficult decision?

COACH LAVIOLETTE: We haven’t had to make a decision in a long time, I said that yesterday, just based on injury. We just wanted to go back and talk about everything.

Michael Leighton, his numbers have been excellent for us in the regular season. They’ve been excellent in the Playoffs. His bounceback coming back here. Game 3 in Montreal was kind of the same scenario that we were in last night. We played — we need to play better in front of him. Everybody could be better. Our goaltending, we said that yesterday, our goaltending, defense, forwards, our game can be better; and we all seemed to respond as a team in Game 4.

So we’re looking for a better effort from everybody tonight. The team and Michael have proven that they can do that.

Comments from Simon Gagne

Q. So what’s going to be different in your guy’s game tonight?

SIMON GAGNE: I will be a lot better defensively. I don’t think we are really happy the way we were playing in the zone, especially in front of the net. It looked like the slot area was a lot open for them. And it’s something that we didn’t really do against Montreal or against Boston.
Even against the first round, against Jersey. So I think by playing a little bit better in their zone that should be better for us.

Q. Simon, you guys weren’t your usual physical selves in your first game. With Carcillo coming back in tonight, A, what do you expect, and B, how much do you need what he brings?

SIMON GAGNE: He’s a guy that — you know he’s not a big guy, but he’s going to bring some physical aspect. He’s going to run around, I think, finish every check that he’s able to do, and at the same time, he’s got some skills too. He’s a guy who can make some plays and score some big goals for us against Jersey in the first round.
So he’s definitely going to bring a lot of energy on the team. Like you said, the first game was not very physical on both sides, but we expect that to change on both teams. Having Danny on our side definitely is going to help.

Q. Simon, can you talk about the confidence level you guys have going into Game 2? Do you pull on the stuff you guys have gone through earlier in these Playoffs to give you that confidence?

SIMON GAGNE: Yeah, the first game is done. And now it’s time to focus on the game tonight. We did some good things in the first game. Now you show that we were able to play against that team, something that playing a team you only play once in a season, it’s hard to know the feeling, to know what are you going to do against that team.

Having that first one under our belt right now and know what we can do and what we have to do to beat that team, we feel confident. We feel confident now. We feel confidence about our game. I’m sure they do too on their side. For us, we came here to get one win in Chicago, and that’s what we’re going to try to do tonight.

Q. Simon, knowing that Chicago plays real well on the road, are you looking at tonight as a must-win for you guys?

SIMON GAGNE: Must win? I think every game is very important. Sure you like to win the first one. They did. I think it was right there for us. But like I just said, we came here to split series. We have a great opportunity for us tonight to do it.

Comments from Ian Laperriere

Q. Lappy, with Carcillo coming back in –

IAN LAPERRIERE: Is he?

Q. What do you guys need from him –

IAN LAPERRIERE: It was a secret.

Q. What do you guys need from him, and what’s he going to bring you tonight?

IAN LAPERRIERE: Daniel is going to bring what Daniel does best. He brings intensity. And he’s got more than that. He has skill. He showed the hockey world he can be a player too. He’s going to bring some intensity if he’s in.

Q. Lappy, how are the Finals different? How is the whole atmosphere different? And how do you — you’re going through this for the first time. How do you talk to teammates about how to handle what is different?

IAN LAPERRIERE: Well, I think the big difference is you guys. There’s a lot more media attention. There’s only two teams left. Comes down to a hockey game. You need to win four out of seven. That’s what you try to tell your younger teammates, that it’s still hockey. We need to go play out there and play our best and win games.
It doesn’t matter — the first day was surreal, all the distraction, the press conference and everything, even for me it was like, wow, that’s impressive, but right now it’s pretty much let’s play hockey.

Q. Ian, we don’t obviously get to see you guys behind closed doors and maybe when you’re out for team dinners. Can you describe the mood of the team and the confidence level going into tonight?

IAN LAPERRIERE: Very confident. We’re relaxed. There’s no panic, nothing. We know we made mistakes. That’s what cost us the first game; and we did a lot of good things and we did a lot of bad things. That’s why we came on the wrong side of the game last game. Everybody is pretty relaxed and just enjoying our free time in Chicago, I guess.

Q. Lappy, I know some of your players weren’t real thrilled with Burish’s hit on Krajicek. Is that something that gets answered for tonight given the stakes?

IAN LAPERRIERE: No, it’s the Playoffs. You have to suck it up, and there’s always next year. I’m not saying that I’m going to do anything next year, but it’s the Playoffs. You just can’t worry about what happened last game, because it might cost you two minutes or four minutes and you might lose a game because of it.
I didn’t see the hit. We talked about it at dinner last night. I guess it was really dirty. It’s — the league should take care of that, but that’s another story.

Stanley Cup Finals – Game 2 – Pre-game Comments from the Chicago Blackhawks

Posted by admin On May - 31 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS
Stanley Cup Final Media Availability

Transcripts Courtesy of the NHL Communications Department

Pre-Game 2 comments from Blackhawks Head Coach Joel Quenneville, Jonathan Toews, Dustin Byfuglien, Duncan Keith, Patrick Kane

Comments from Coach Joel Quenneville

Q. Coach, if the Flyers get the first power-play tonight, will you retire?

COACH QUENNEVILLE: No, every game is different. We expect to be on the power-play at some point in the Series. Hopefully it’s tonight.

Q. Is it semi-necessary for Dustin Byfuglien that you get on the power-play and he gets into doing that thing that’s kind of made his Playoffs here?

COACH QUENNEVILLE: I still think he was a factor last game. He’s a presence physically. I think — I know he finishes checks. I think the player receives it, knows he’s around. I think Buff — we didn’t get enough pucks at the net when he was there.

I think he’s tried to get to the front of the net. He was there sometimes when the puck didn’t arrive. I still think he’s a factor when we do get a power-play that he can make an imprint in that area. I still think he’s useful in a lot of ways.

Q. Joel, can we get the daily Andrew Ladd update, or lack thereof?

COACH QUENNEVILLE: Nothing has changed. He’s not playing tonight, (but we expect him to play later in the series).

Q. Did he skate today before practice?

COACH QUENNEVILLE: Laddy skated lightly, yeah, before.

Q. The Flyers essentially have been playing with kind of four and a half defensemen. Ryan Parent didn’t play that much. You’re talking about Byfuglien and Pronger. Can you wear down the defenses as this Series goes along to where, obviously expending a lot of energy, playing a lot of minutes like that?

COACH QUENNEVILLE: We’ll see. I know they’re pretty efficient, those guys. And Prongs can manage ice time as good as any player. I think his positioning or his intelligence helps him get through games.

But I still think we want to make it hard on him. We want to be physical on him. We want to make him play defense and we want to be physical and finish checks. At the same time, we don’t want to get out of position.

But I think that’s our challenge. I didn’t think we did a good enough job in the first game of making them play in their own end or getting to them as much as we’d like to. That’s easier said than done.

Comments from Jonathan Toews

Q. What do you expect the style of tonight’s game to be, especially early on from them?

JONATHAN TOEWS: I think for both teams, probably expect both teams to tighten up a little bit defensively. I think, speaking on our behalf, we weren’t satisfied with the quality scoring chances we gave up.
I’m sure they feel the same way. We want to work harder obviously in the offensive zone and try to draw some penalties and get some opportunities on the power-play. I think at our end of the rink, we’re going to be a lot better.

Q. Jonathan, a lot of guys admitted after the fact that maybe you guys were a little nervous or too excited for Game 1. Is that all out of your system now?

JONATHAN TOEWS: I think so. May have been the same thing for both teams. It’s a big stage. A long week just to sit there and think about it. If you’re kind of — just got a couple of days and you go in that first game, maybe you pick up where you left off in the previous round a little bit more.

But, you know, now I think as a team we feel we’re back in the routine, back in the swing of things. We can go out there and play hockey and focus on the smaller details of our game.

Q. Looked like you guys were able to control the puck a little bit better in the third period. What did you guys specifically work on between the first two and the third that helped you to change that?

JONATHAN TOEWS: Well, we just slowly got a little bit better as that game went along. I think when we finally got in our comfort zone and realized what we had to do if we wanted to win that game, brought a better work ethic. We supported each other more. If you’re in the right spots out there and you’re not thinking as much, pucks will find you and you’ll get more chances, and you don’t have to work as hard to keep that possession.
We kept things a little more simple in the third period and it worked out for us.

Q. Jonathan, the NHL has been enjoying kind of a resurgence of popularity. What do you attribute that to? And how do you guys build on that or carry that forward?

JONATHAN TOEWS: That’s a good question. I don’t really know. We just play the game and we know, obviously, being in the Stanley Cup Final for the Hawks, it’s great for our team, it’s great for our city. We’re enjoying all this attention.

Obviously, it’s crazy and a lot of things going on away from the rink that you try not to focus on too much. This is where any hockey player wants to be at any point in our career. If you can experience this just once and experience winning once in your career, I think it’s amazing.

So like I said, we’re excited about this opportunity. And so is — so are our fans and everyone in the city.

Q. John, Patrick said it doesn’t seem realistic to go a full game without a power-play. You guys have done it twice now in the last two Series. Do you have to do it a little more to earn a power-play tonight? Do you have to work, control the puck a little bit more?

JONATHAN TOEWS: I mean, I guess so. It was frustrating. We felt like we worked hard enough and we could have drawn a few the last game. Again, that’s one of those things that sometimes is not going to go your way. It’s frustrating when it doesn’t. You go out there. You kill the penalties. You do what you have to do to keep kicking and survive in those situations, and hopefully we’ll get a few breaks this game. Even if we do get a couple of power-plays, it’s up to us to go out there and take advantage of it.

Comments from Dustin Byfuglien

Q. Dustin, you’ve had one game where you’ve kind of gone back and forth with Chris Pronger. How long does it take before you have a genuine dislike for this guy?

DUSTIN BYFUGLIEN: Probably I guess when you guys started talking about it from the get-go. It is what it is.

Q. Chris kind of yesterday kind of insinuated he wanted to make it really hard for you get to the front of the net, and he wondered if you were willing to pay the price to consistently do that? Are you willing to pay the price if he’s making life miserable for you?

DUSTIN BYFUGLIEN: Definitely. You go out there and stand with him and do what you have to do. It’s part of the game. When they get a power-play they really stand around and be there with their presence. I’ll be there until the end of it.

Q. Dustin, after being in front with Pronger, you guys battling in front, can you believe no penalties were called in that game? What do you need to do to draw some penalties?

DUSTIN BYFUGLIEN: We have to continue to work and move our feet, and the penalties will start coming our way. You have to keep working.

We didn’t get what we got last game. We didn’t get any calls. So that’s something we have to work on and keep working harder.

Comments from Duncan Keith

Q. Duncan, a little bit later on in Game 1, you saw little more of the Briere line as they started having some success. Do you think you might see a bit more of them tonight? Or will you be exclusively matched up against Richards. If you do, what are the differences between the lines?

DUNCAN KEITH: I don’t really know — I’m assuming it will be against the Richards line. It’s the coach’s decision. So I’m — we’ll see what it’s like tonight.

But obviously both those lines are effective in a lot of ways. Briere has obviously been hot. He had a lot of points last game. He’s real effective for them. We know what the Richards line can do as well. They got two pretty solid lines there. All their lines are solid, for that matter. Those two lines, definitely, have to be aware of tonight for sure.

Q. Duncan, do you prepare any differently if you anticipate a game being nasty, personally especially at the outset of the game if the Flyers are going to try to do more things? Do you prepare differently for that, and how you might adjust to that going into a game?

DUNCAN KEITH: I don’t know if I really prepare any differently. I think trying to approach the game the same way every time and trying to — my focus is always trying to be good defensively. As a defenseman, that should be the goal, number one, to be rock-solid defensively. All that other stuff that goes on, you know, you try not to get caught up in that.

Every team has been physical. There’s been physical players on every team we’ve played. Certainly the Flyers have some guys who are physical. It’s just another team.

Q. A lot has been said about being overexcited or nervous during Game 1. How do you guys control the very fine line of doing the same things that you’ve done all year to get here, but also making it a little bit — amping things up for the Finals?

DUNCAN KEITH: I think the bottom line just comes down to — obviously, we understand what’s on the line and this is the Final and it’s the Playoffs. It’s not Round 1, not Round 2. It’s the Final. I think the mindset we try take into that is to be good at all the things we’ve talked about all year long, whether that’s in the defensive zone, neutral zone or offensive zone, all the things are just magnified even more just as they are from playoffs to the regular season to the pre-season, for that matter.

So I think every little play and every little detail just becomes more important.

Comments from Patrick Kane

Q. Patrick, some of the guys admitted after the fact in Game 1 that maybe they were a little nervous and that maybe led to some of the scrambly play. Do you think that will all be out of your systems tonight?

PATRICK KANE: Yeah, I hope so. I think it’s the Stanley Cup Final. A lot of us — for a lot of us it’s our first time here. So it’s pretty exciting. I think you know, for myself personally, I wouldn’t say I was nervous.

But I was maybe a little bit overexcited for the situation. I think you anticipate too much. So sometimes you go out there, you try to do too much, and it all backfires on you. I know I even said before the game that you can’t do that, but it’s one of those things you have to calm down and try to play our regular game.

Q. Do you expect the Flyers to play more nasty tonight?

PATRICK KANE: Yeah. I mean, I guess so. They are probably pretty mad at themselves. They scored five goals on the road and don’t come up with the victory.

So I’m sure as the Series goes on, it will probably get a little more intense and the physicality will pick up a bit. But it seems like they’re a pretty nasty team. I guess you expect it from them.

Q. You saw both goalies last game, Leighton starting today. How does that change things for you guys?

PATRICK KANE: Both are pretty good goaltenders. I think with Leighton, you look at a lot of the goals he scored, he didn’t have a chance on a lot of them. If we can still keep making those plays and try to break down their defense, it should bode well for us.

At the same time, I think it’s still more of the same. You have to get traffic in front of the guy. I know Boucher, he’s been hurt. So with a guy like that, you want to move him side to side as we did on Kopecky’s last goal. Against Leighton, he seems to be a pretty quick for a big guy.

So with a goalie like that, you keep getting traffic and keep making those plays, and we should have good shots.

Q. Patrick, they only have four D that are logging most of the minutes. Is the idea to wear them down, they don’t go as deep as most teams would?

PATRICK KANE: Yeah, I think so. I think one of them got hurt last game and then I don’t think one of the defenseman played many minutes. Like you said, they only had four defensemen pretty much going over other shift. I think Pronger played over 30 minutes. With a guy like that, you get down on their own end, they don’t want to play. That’s a big thing. Control the puck and make them chase you. Especially a big guy like that who’s been around a while and playing lot of minutes. Hopefully you can tire him out.

With the other three, I think they’re all really good defensemen. So at the same time they’re logging a lot of minutes. Sometimes it’s tougher against guys like that. If we can wear them down, get our big guys in and try to bang them as much as possible, that should be good for all the lines.

Q. Pat, did you guys do enough to control the puck enough to earn a power-play in the last game? Do you have to do that, do a little bit more of that?

PATRICK KANE: Yeah, I mean, if you look at our team, we love the puck possession game. A lot of our guys love controlling the puck and making plays, and that’s the way we’ve played throughout the whole year. Any team we’ve pretty much played against we’ve outshot, we’ve out-controlled the puck and different things. We want to do more of that, obviously.

I don’t know if we did enough of that in Game 1. If you look at some of the plays, I mean, here and there, two of our defensemen got cut on sticks. Sometimes you are hoping for those calls.

But like you said, we probably have to do a little more to earn a power-play. To go a whole game without a power-play, I don’t think that’s realistic.

Stanley Cup Finals – Game 2 – Practice Day Comments from the Flyers and Blackhawks

Posted by admin On May - 30 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS
Philadelphia Flyers Chris Pronger speaks with the media after practicing for the NHL Stanley Cup Hockey Finals in Chicago

Transcripts Courtesy of the NHL Communications Department

Off-Day comments from Flyers Head Coach Peter Laviolette, Flyers Players Chris Pronger, Mike Richards, Michael Leighton, Danny Briere, and Blackhawks Head Coach Joel Quenneville

Comments from Flyers Head Coach Peter Laviolette

Q. Peter, is there any reason for you not to go back to Michael Leighton tomorrow?

COACH LAVIOLETTE: Let me start this press conference by saying that we will keep everything internally with regards to lineups, lineup changes, lines, goaltenders, anything that’s internal, we’ll probably keep it internal. But thank you for asking.

Q. Are you confident that Michael Leighton, if he plays, can bounceback?

COACH LAVIOLETTE: We’re confident in all of our players. We wouldn’t be here if we weren’t. We’re confident as a group, the way we play the game. We’re a confident group, generally speaking.

Q. Peter, for the most part, last night, do you think that the majority of the goals were the responsibility of the goalie or the fault of the defense in front of them?

COACH LAVIOLETTE: I said last night our team has proven to be a group that wins as a team, and we play really well together; and we also lose as a team. When we lose as a team, typically everybody could have done something better.

I think last night is a perfect example. Sure, our defense could have played better. Our forwards could have helped out a little bit more. Our goaltender probably would like a second look at some of those. We need to tighten it up.

We didn’t give a whole lot of chances against. The ones that we did — we even had coverage on a lot of them. Some of them were one on four, one on three. We have to do a better job in front of our goaltender, making sure we are competing in that area. That’s the area we need to tighten up.

Q. Do decisions get tougher, is it tougher for to you make a decision on a goalie when you’ve seen Boucher come in and play, you’ve seen Leighton come in and play, and you’ve kind of had a guy just come in and he’s been unbelievable? Does it make a decision tough where guys have come in and can do the job?

COACH LAVIOLETTE: Those decisions are always the tough ones when it comes to telling players they can’t be in the lineup or they’re not going to get the call that night. Danny Carcillo is a perfect example. He went through it. There was no reason for him to come out of the lineup. He’s done everything we’ve asked. Based on numbers, those are tough decisions. They’re also decision that is, you know, you look at and you’re fortunate to have to make them. It means your team is playing well, and somebody has to come out of the lineup.

If you’re talking goaltending, for instance, and having to make a decision, it seems like we haven’t had to make a decision since I’ve been here because there’s really been one. The other two have been injured. Ray has been injured. When Ray came back and he was healthy, somebody else was injured. There wasn’t a lot of decision-making going on with the goaltenders. It seemed like we covered each other just enough injury-wise to get through to this point. Tough decisions are sometimes good to have to make.

Q. Peter, Blair Betts said this morning that he was surprised the lack of mental preparedness by all the centermen on the face-offs last night. Did you see anything on video? Because a couple of players mentioned they want to go back and look at videos of face-offs.

COACH LAVIOLETTE: They had us pretty good in the first period. Maybe in the 20 percentile in the first period. We got it up to 37 through the course of the game, 39, somewhere in that area. Certainly not good enough. Face-offs, a lot of times, not only do they give you possession of the puck, that’s the obvious; but they also kind of give you the state of the team and where they’re at. That’s where — hockey is about just — it’s a very competitive game, and it’s about one-on-one battles and winning those one-on-one battles. Most originate in the face-off circle. To me we have to compete a little bit better.

Q. Peter, you scored five goals, you matched their speed in a lot of ways. At the same time, would you prefer it not to be such a fast game?

COACH LAVIOLETTE: I don’t mind the fast game. Like I said, when we went back and looked at the chances, there weren’t a lot for them. I think after two periods there was six or seven quality chances. Five of them ended up in the net. The game is going to be fast. We’re not going to change the way we play, as far as the speed, and try a countering game all of a sudden.

We got here because we play an aggressive game. They do the same thing. They send their forwards hard into the offensive zone. They look to counter quickly. The game went back and forth pretty good. If they tried to change it, or we tried to change it at this point I think you would get yourself into trouble.

The one area — I’m sure they’re not happy giving up five goals. I know we’re not happy giving up six. We need to tighten it up defensively. They’re probably saying the same thing.

Q. Coach, I know you’re in the going to tell us which goalie is going in there, but when you look statistically at Leighton and his bounceback games and he was 3-1-1 during the season after getting yanked, and then he had that shutout after getting beat in Montreal, do you ride those numbers at all? Do you think about that when you’re a coach?

COACH LAVIOLETTE: I think you evaluate everything. You evaluate numbers, you evaluate practices, you evaluate what your players are saying when you’re talking to them. And you take everything into consideration and make the best decision that you can.

Q. Peter, now that do you have a decision to make, do you tell the goaltenders this afternoon? Tonight? Tomorrow morning? What’s your strategy on that?

COACH LAVIOLETTE: Our goaltenders will know well enough in advance to make sure they’re ready.

Q. Can you draw on the experience in ’06 when you kind of had the magic touch. Gerber for some games, Ward for other games. You can drop on that, but you made the good decisions and obviously had a good gut feeling most of those situations.

COACH LAVIOLETTE: I can tell you whoever is on that ice in the lineup tomorrow, and I say this wholeheartedly, there’s 100% confidence that the people that we’re choosing to go out and represent our organization were very confident in their ability to do the job. And whoever gets the start tomorrow night is really going to — is really going to shine.

Comments from Flyers Chris Pronger

Q. Chris, just wondering what you felt you guys did well against the Toews and Kane line last night to essentially keep them off the scoreboard?
CHRIS PRONGER: I think we just did a good job of denying them time and space. If they don’t have the puck, they can’t make plays. And for a lot of their shifts we played in their end, forced them to play defense and really tried to deny the puck to both Kane and Toews. The times they did get it, we closed on them quickly and forced them to dump the puck.
Q. A lot of anticipation about you and the Byfuglien matchup. It looked like you initiated more than we’ve seen in the first three rounds with the player.
CHRIS PRONGER: There was a lot of talk. You guys had a lot to say about him. So I guess we needed to calm that down real quick. I have played in the West for 14 years. I played against him a lot. So it’s not like I’ve been out East for my whole career and never played against the guy. That may have been blown out of proportion, I think.
Q. Did you initiate more last night early on?
CHRIS PRONGER: I just tried to deny him easy access to the front of the net. As I said, the first couple of days I think teams allowed him to just to go stand there. You have to force a guy like that to work. He’s a big guy. But he’s got to exert some energy and work to get into position. That tires guys out that aren’t used to it. You have to pay a price, whatever that may be.
Q. Chris, Danny was in here and said last night was important because it proved that we belong with this team, regardless of the loss. Do you feel that way, that because maybe Chicago came in as a big-time favorite in this Series, that you had to prove that you belong, that you could play with this team?
CHRIS PRONGER: Favorite to who? To you guys? This crew in here? All that matters is what we think in that locker room. And that’s it. Whether the world is picking them as favorites, we’ve all seen probably one of the most heavily favored Super Bowls, St. Louis against the New England Patriots. That didn’t turn out very well, did it. A lot of people lost money on that one. I don’t really buy into the favorites, underdogs, all that. I think from the get-go we believe we can beat that team. Do we need to tighten up a few things and play better defensively, absolutely. That’s why it’s a best of seven series.
Q. Chris, it sounds like the goalie situation is up in the air right now.
CHRIS PRONGER: What?
Q. Michael Leighton was able to do the last Series –
CHRIS PRONGER: That’s news to me. Are you starting to stir the pot? It’s news to me.
Q. That’s what your coach said.
CHRIS PRONGER: Okay. Maybe he’s keeping you on your toes too.
Q. I think he is. What’s your take on the goalie situation. Would you feel bad for Michael if he doesn’t have –
CHRIS PRONGER: I don’t have a take. It is what it is. That’s the coach’s decision. We play the same way whether Bouch is in the net or Leights is in the net. It doesn’t matter, it shouldn’t matter to us in front of him. We need to play better in front of him whoever is in the net. That’s the bottom line for us. It doesn’t matter.
Q. Chris, the result of the game aside, speaking as a defenseman, were you like appalled at all the goals that were scored last night?
CHRIS PRONGER: I wasn’t necessarily appalled. Probably more concerned with how the goals were scored, just through defensive lapses, really. It wasn’t like they created a whole lot. It was more on our mistakes. And I guess that could be disheartening and a positive thing. We can clean that up and we won’t be allowing as much.
Q. You’ve been around long enough to see these kind of things where the goalie decision has to be made. Do you think if he were not to put Leighton back in there, that sends a message to the room that I don’t have any confidence in him right now? You’re all saying that it was your fault for what happened last night. Not to go back to him, what do you think that says to the team?
CHRIS PRONGER: I don’t think he’s made up his mind. So it would probably be premature for me to speculate or say anything on the matter, Tim.
Q. Say anything.
CHRIS PRONGER: I don’t think I will. Because I don’t like the way you phrased your question.
Q. Why don’t you phrase it for me.
CHRIS PRONGER: I don’t guess.
Q. You played in Stanley Cup Finals before. Lappy was saying looking around he thought some guys first time being there trying to get used to o it, maybe especially defensively or assignment-wise. Did you see that? And how much more comfortable do you think a lot of these guys will be in Game 2?
CHRIS PRONGER: I think there’s no question it’s good to get a game under your belt, understand the circus we’re in, and obviously the stakes of the games and the atmosphere of the crowd and all the rest of that. The first game is behind us. Everybody kind of knows what’s expected of them now. If they didn’t, they do now.
Whether the guys are nervous or just had mental breakdowns, it happens. The game is a game of mistakes. And how you deal with them and correct them and all the things like that is what makes this game great and makes hockey the sport it is.
Q. Chris, what’s it like this time of year –
CHRIS PRONGER: I don’t know what Buff did, but —
Q. Stop that. It’s dead now.
CHRIS PRONGER: Well, thank you. Finally.
Q. What does it feel like, especially at this time of year, to be playing 32-plus minutes a game?
CHRIS PRONGER: It’s exhausting. I don’t know. I couldn’t get up this morning. I don’t even know how I’m sitting here. I almost fell asleep.
You know what, it is what it is. It is that time of year. You do what you can to help your team win, whether it’s playing that many minutes or 24 or whatever is asked of you, you do. You prepare yourself to play as much as you’re asked to play. Whether it means you have to shorten your shifts a little bit or alter your game a little bit, you do that.
But I feel good. Had some treatment and feel good. I’m ready to go tomorrow.
Q. You guys played a disciplined game yesterday. Do you think as a team you played physically enough?
CHRIS PRONGER: What do you want me to say? There’s two parts to your question.
Q. I think you guys played a really disciplined game. You stayed out of the box, which is a different experience for you guys. It almost felt like maybe it was a little bit too quiet. Do you feel you need to pick up the aggression a little bit?
CHRIS PRONGER: So you don’t want to us play disciplined?
Q. I’m not trying to coach this team.
CHRIS PRONGER: Okay, well, I don’t know what you are trying to ask me.
Q. Do you think since you didn’t have any penalties, maybe you should play more physically?
CHRIS PRONGER: Should we take more penalties? Is that your question, Tim? I thought she was asking the question. Can we play more physically? Absolutely. I don’t think we need to take more penalties in doing so. I think we got off track by not getting the puck in deep and being physical in that respect.
You know, if we take a couple of penalties, so be it. I don’t think we’re worried about taking penalties. I think we just got off track and started to play a little bit their game, a little bit of run and gun, and that fed into their hand a little bit.
Q. I’ll ask this question for Tim.
CHRIS PRONGER: Does it have stats in it? That’s what he’s good at.
Q. It actually does. Hartnell said he and Danny were never told to come off the ice when matched up against Toews and Kane. Danny has never been in the Selke conversation, but he had four points, Tim –
CHRIS PRONGER: 1 in 3.

Q. And Toews and Kane had no points and minus 3. Talk about their matchup.
CHRIS PRONGER: They did a great job. I think that’s the line with Ville and Danny and Hartsy. They control the puck very well. They’re all good with the puck. They make good plays. They keep it simple. And they can all skate, which helps against a line like that. You can close fast. The more you have the puck, the less chance the other team has of getting it and putting it in your net. As I said at the beginning, against that line, you have to close quickly, you have to eliminate time and space and you have to try to deny them the puck. When you’re playing with it, it forces them out of their rhythm and forces them to play defense, which they obviously don’t want to do.
Q. You’ve played in Stanley Cup Final games in Carolina and Southern California. Is the ice surface this time of the year par for the course, or is it a little bit disappointing considering this is the biggest series of obviously the year and that the conditions are not optimal?
CHRIS PRONGER: Well, it’s pretty hard for them to be optimal in June. It is what it is. It’s getting hot out, humid out. While it is the Windy City, we can’t open up the doors, as we talked about yesterday, and let all that cold wind in. I don’t think it’s any worse than it was in Anaheim or Carolina or whatever. As you’ve progress further in the Playoffs, the ice usually gets a little softer. It’s tough to keep it that cold. We could make it hard, but it would be about 4 degrees in the building. I’m sure the fans wouldn’t appreciate that very much, wearing parkas in June.
Q. As much as these games get magnified and you guys are down 1-0 here, it seems the guys on the ice today are loose. You’re up here joking around. You’re loose. How crucial is it to be loose and relaxed even though you guys have a 1-0 deficit here?
CHRIS PRONGER: Well, the world is not ending, and the sun came up today. It’s a long series. We’re looking at it as a long series. We played a decent game but not our game yesterday, and I think we understand that. The mistakes that were made can be easily corrected, and that’s what we’re looking at.
So I don’t think anybody is hitting the panic button or rushing to do anything rash here. We just need to stay focused and play probably a little more relaxed. Play a little bit more our style, and a little bit more Flyer hockey, as Tim likes to say.

Comments from Flyers Mike Richards

Q. Mike, it seems like all season you guys have had a different goaltender in there. No matter who plays in net tomorrow, does it matter to you guys, or do you not care? What are your thoughts on that?
MIKE RICHARDS: We feel comfortable playing in front of whoever. We’ve proved that all year. We’ve put our goaltenders in tough situations. Every time that we’ve done so, they responded. We feel comfortable playing in front of anyone and have confidence in either goaltender.
Q. Mike, the Bolland line, throughout these Playoffs, has done a good job shutting down the top lines in the other teams. What were they able to do against you guys? How annoying is he to play against?
MIKE RICHARDS: He’s a good player. I’ll give him that. I played against him in Junior. He’s a very smart, intelligent hockey player. I thought we had good looks last night. We just didn’t score, and did everything but.
So I think persistence is something we need to have as a line and not get discouraged by one or two bad bounces and just keep trying.
Q. Mike, a couple of minutes ago, Danny Briere made the comment saying essentially all we heard was our how great Chicago was, and that we didn’t have a chance and that game showed we belong with them. How much respect do you think your team has been given coming into this Series.
MIKE RICHARDS: Have we been given?
Q. By hockey people or fans and others about your ability to win?
MIKE RICHARDS: I don’t know. I don’t think too many people on our team focus on what you guys say. No offense. It’s just we go out there and play, and what’s written about us in the paper or said about us on TV just kind of brushes off our back. Obviously they got a good team over there. I think you guys said before was probably the favorite coming in here.
We have a good team. We’re confident in our team. We know we can play with these guys. We just have to execute better and play better.
Q. Obviously goaltenders get pulled for various reasons during games. What was the message last night that your coach was sending to your team when Michael did get pulled?
MIKE RICHARDS: I’m not sure. I think it’s more of a situation where you’re trying to rally everyone around a guy that’s played his heart out for us, a guy that’s been put in this tough situation, and all he’s done is strive for us and play well and battle for us. And to see him get pulled, I think,

 

Comments from Flyers Michael Leighton and Danny Briere

Audio from Michael Leighton and Danny Briere:

Flash required

Q. Michael, just your thoughts about getting an opportunity to bounce back tomorrow.

MICHAEL LEIGHTON: I don’t know if I’m starting yet. That’s kind of up in the air. I haven’t talked to the coach yet.

But if I am, I’m just going to kind of approach it the same way I did the last game, just keep doing what I’ve been doing, and try not to think about what happened last night.

Q. Michael, how much of last night was a case of nerves for both yourself and a lot of your teammates? Was it the first time they had been in a Final game?

MICHAEL LEIGHTON: Surprisingly, I wasn’t nervous at all. I wasn’t — that wasn’t the way I would say — the reason I played that way. For my team, I don’t know. But maybe it was that we had a couple of days off, and it just took us a little while to get into the game. We just didn’t play our game last night. We’re going to regroup and have a good one tomorrow.

Q. Just to follow-up, you mentioned you hadn’t talked to Peter yet. How disappointed would you be if you didn’t get the opportunity?

MICHAEL LEIGHTON: Obviously, I would be disappointed. We’re in the Stanley Cup Final. That’s not the time to be mad at someone if I’m not starting. If Boucher goes in, he did a great job going in the other night. If he gets the start, then I have to support him. I’m not going to sit there and pout on the bench, because we’re in the Stanley Cup Final. My goal is to win a Stanley Cup starting on or off the bench.

Q. What do you learn in a game like that that might help 2 days later as you move on to Game 2?

MICHAEL LEIGHTON: For myself?

Q. Yes.

MICHAEL LEIGHTON: Well, me and Jeff Reese went over some video this morning. He showed me some positives and negatives. We went over something and said, all right, we have to change this a little bit or watch this and watch that.

For the most part, you know, if we — we know we’re going to play better defensively in our zone. A couple of times we had four guys in front of our net, and they had one guy come in and get a clear shot, and that’s not our game. We know we’re a better defensive team than that. We’re definitely going to show it next game.

Q. Michael, what didn’t you do well, in your mind, after looking at the tape?

MICHAEL LEIGHTON: Well, I didn’t let any really bad goals in. That’s the way I look at it. I didn’t make some big saves. That’s pretty much what it came down to. Every good scoring chance they had, they scored. And a couple of them were good shots. There’s one or two that I was mad at myself for what I did. But that’s the way it goes. That’s the game of hockey.

Q. Danny, Jonathan Toews pretty much cleaned up on the face-offs last night against just about everybody on your team. What is it he’s doing that was so effective? Was he cheating, or what?

DANNY BRIERE: I don’t know. I had a tough start against him, I think my first four face-offs. And then after that we were able to settle down, and I think as a team we did better in the second and third period.
But definitely in the first period, I don’t know, I haven’t had the chance to pay much attention. We knew coming in that he was a good face-off guy. But in the morning that’s something I was planning on doing, taking time to kind of go over all the face-offs that were taken last night.

Q. What did you see?

DANNY BRIERE: He’s strong, he’s quick, and he’s strong. That’s what he seemed to be doing last night. But that’s why I want to look at the tape and see if there’s a way we can improve.

Q. A couple of things, first off, how much did nerves play into at least the first 20 or 40 minutes of this game, and some of the breakdown that is occurred first off?

DANNY BRIERE: I think both teams seemed to feel comfortable offensively, but in the defensive zone, I don’t know if it’s the nerves or guys too excited and running out of position, chasing guys down the wall, leaving the slot area open. Not just on our side, but on both teams.

So that was probably nerves and excitement at the same time.

Q. And secondly, talking with some of the Blackhawks, they didn’t really say whether they thought that we may not see another game like this. There’s nothing to suggest that it won’t be another high-scoring game, whether it’s Game 2 or somewhere down the line. Do you feel that way?

DANNY BRIERE: You never know. You look at the two teams playing now. Both teams can be good defensively. Both teams can be good offensively. So sometimes you get running like last night and things — everything seems to be going in. I mean, it’s tough to say.

One thing I can tell you is we want to tighten up defensively. We want to play better defensively. And I’m sure they’re going to try to do the same thing and they’re going to go over tapes and try to improve.

The chances that we gave them with the bad coverage in our zone, we’re not going to be winning too many games playing that way, and we know that.

Q. Danny, a lot of the Hawks believe they may have stolen one. You guys led three times through the first 40 minutes, outplayed them in big stretches. Is it hard to recover from a game when you feel like you should have won like that?

DANNY BRIERE: I don’t think so. Every loss is big in the Playoffs. I’m not going to lie about that. But at the same time, coming in, everybody was talking how good the Blackhawks were. And not too many people — I haven’t heard anybody giving us a chance to win this Series.

What I liked is, last night we proved we belong with them. You know, maybe not to all the hockey experts, but in our room, I think we realize we can play and we can stretch the Series and definitely come back in it.

Q. Danny, lots of focus from our side on who’s going to be your goalie tomorrow night. What’s it like in the room for the players who have won with both guys this these Playoffs?
DANNY BRIERE: Honestly, to us it doesn’t matter. Both guys have played well. I think they’re six wins apiece.
So it doesn’t matter who is going to play for us. But the one thing, I mean, if there’s players that should take the blame for last night, it’s certainly not our goaltending. The chances we gave, the shots we gave in dangerous areas, we haven’t done that too many times in the Playoffs.

Like I said last night, not too many goalies are going to be successful when especially with the shooters that they have also. Not too many goalies are going to be successful when you give point-blank chances to score the way we did last night.

Q. Ville Leino is listed as a rookie, but obviously he’s not playing like one. What are some things about his game, some of his strengths, that make him look like he’s not a rookie and doing this for the first time?
DANNY BRIERE: You’re right. Until we started the Playoffs, I didn’t even know he was still considered a rookie. What he does well, I think he’s very strong on the puck. Sometimes it will be a one-on-three, and he’ll find a way to keep the puck or extend the play. A lot of time you think the play is dead, and they’re about to break out, and he’ll strip the puck and keep it going.

Me and Ville, for some reason, seem to have found that chemistry as soon as we started playing together. I like playing with him. We seem to be thinking alike and finding each other in the offensive zone.

Q. Danny, if it is Michael Leighton in there tomorrow, do you look at it his bounceback statistics where he’s 3-1-1 during the season after being pulled in the next game, and the fact that when his only loss, up to this date, that he did suffer in the Playoffs, he came back and recorded a shutout. As players you must like the statistics.
DANNY BRIERE: Definitely. That’s exactly what I was going to say. The last game — the last time he had kind of a rougher night was in Montreal.

And he came back with a shutout the next night or the next game. So I mean, he’s shown a lot of character. And for a guy that’s — had to go what he went through the last few years, I think it shows his perseverance, his character that he’s still here, he’s still fighting. And he still wants to make it and make a name for himself. I’m not too worried about him.

Q. Danny, can you talk about this entire season and what it’s like with Philadelphia goaltending? Because it seems like it’s almost about a crisis management from day one of the season.
DANNY BRIERE: There’s things that are out of your control. Like injuries. And it seemed every time goalies started to play really well, they suffered an injury.

So that’s out of your control. There’s nothing you can do about it. But at the same time, looking at it today, we still have two guys that have played well at times for us throughout the year and into the Playoffs.

So to us it doesn’t really matter. We have two guys that we know can play. So I feel it’s a big advantage.

Q. Danny, can it help you guys with what you’ve been through, not just in the Playoffs but the regular season, to realize it is just one loss and you know you guys have kind of been in the situation before? Does it help the mood in the room?

DANNY BRIERE: Well, what it does is it gives us confidence that we know we can come back, that it’s never over until it’s completely over, and we hear that cliche all the time. I feel it’s never been as more true as it is with this team.

So, yes, even being down 1-0, to us, we know there’s still a long ways to go in this Series, and we feel confident that we can come back.

Comments from Blackhawks Head Coach Joel Quenneville

Audio from Coach Quenneville:

Flash required

Q. Coach, were you surprised that in last night’s game, with the possibility of 18 points on the board, that neither Kane, Toews or Byfuglien had any of those points?

COACH QUENNEVILLE: I think we had some production from some guys that hadn’t scored much lately. That line has been red hot for us throughout most of the Playoffs. Had a quiet night, but at the same time that’s usually what can happen in the Playoffs. The top line sometimes gets a lot of attention, and sometimes the other guys jump forward.
Yesterday we saw a couple of guys, Brouwer got a couple of key goals for us as well, had some scoring from a lot of different guys. It’s good to see, and knowing we had some production from some different guys.

Q. Joel, can you talk a bit about the progression of Troy Brouwer as a player. He’s guy who’s kind of had a journey to get here, has turned out to be a pretty good scorer both in the regular season and in the Playoffs for you guys.

COACH QUENNEVILLE: I think Brouwer really progressed this year. He’s taken his game to a different level this year. He’s the power forward you like to have. He’s hard to play against, can score, has a great shot. He’s big. He’s physical He can fight. We like the way he can play.
I think he had a real good year. Had slowed down at end of the year, when he got back in the during the Playoffs, I think he has progressed as he has gotten back in, great night for him last night.

Q. Joel, did you contemplate pulling Antti at all last night, and just how good he’s been in bounceback situations?

COACH QUENNEVILLE: We like the way he approaches games and he moves on after goals or after every situation. I didn’t think our coverage was very good in front of him. I thought they were loose, and we were scrambling a lot of situation. We hadn’t been throughout most of the Playoffs. But I liked how he continued to persevere and was rock solid in the third period. It’s the way he goes about his business. I just like the way he’s playing in that. So he’s a strong consideration.

Q. Joel, Brian Campbell, 13 minutes. Coach’s decision or is he not a 100%?

COACH QUENNEVILLE: He’s fine.

Q. Joel, 11 goals, and neither of the top lines scored. I’m sure you and the opposing coach are looking at this trying to figure out how to tighten up defensively. Is it possible that this could wind up being a high-scoring series every night?

COACH QUENNEVILLE: One thing, you don’t know the unpredictability of what’s going on. You can forecast, think it’s going to be low scoring, and sometimes it’s like what happened last night; or you think it’s going to be a high-scoring game, and it could be a 1-0 game.

So I think everything is played accordingly the way the game goes. I think we got a lot of respect for the guys that can make plays on their team. They have a lot of skill throughout their lineup. We saw that last night, whether it’s top guys, or second and third line scorers.

But everybody was jumping forward last night in the production department, except the top lines. At the same time, I still think it was — the game was a little bit scrambly at the beginning and more so from our end of it as far as patience with the puck. They got some bounces against us.

But I thought we were a little scrambly, more so with the puck than we’ve been throughout most of the Playoffs. I know we have to be better than we were off of those levels last night.

But certain games, the puck goes in. Who knows what’s going to happen going forward.

Q. Penalties both sides, did you see a few on video that maybe could have gone your way in terms of getting some power-plays? I’m thinking of the Seabrook follow-through that hit him? And also, your fourth liners that took a few, do you chalk it up to emotion?

COACH QUENNEVILLE: Yeah, I think Benny’s play, unfortunately (the other player’s) stick broke and probably wouldn’t have been a penalty if it didn’t break. And Burish was a hard hit. Unfortunately, the guy went into the boards a little funny. You want that energy. I thought that line was a factor and effective. You have to make sure you find that balance in that line where you can push to the end.
I still think we like their enthusiasm in the rest of the game. We got to work for our power-plays, and hopefully we get some.

Q. Joel, you didn’t seem to want to try to get your top line away from Pronger. Why not?

COACH QUENNEVILLE: Well, I think that it’s a lot easier to get the matchup for the defensemen as a forward line. Prongs can jump on the ice whether it’s off the face-off or coming up the ice.
But it was — I think whether you’re worrying about matching forward lines or the defense pairs, sometimes you don’t get both. And Prongs is out there half the game anyway. You know he’s going to see them.

Q. Joel, just talk about how adept you guys are at scoring shorthanded goals and what that can do during the game?

COACH QUENNEVILLE: Very timely. They can be a big factor in the outcome. The other team loses a lot of momentum. You get a little bit in charge of yourself. Bolly’s was a huge goal, scored a key goal against Vancouver in a comparable play. We scored short-handed at key times this year. I think it helps out the PK in our own zone, and they can be a threat to go. We got some guys that can kill penalties that can also handle a puck well, which is good for our PK. It’s been good all year.

Q. You started to get Keith and Seabrook out against the Richards line-up, and as the game progressed and Briere got better, you put them out. How do you handle that tomorrow? Is it a feel thing?

COACH QUENNEVILLE: I think they’ll start with the Richards line. We’ll see how things go. They have a lot of options. They’ve lot of weapons offensively. They do play a lot too. Sometimes they can maybe get them both.

Q. Joel, can you just talk about how Hossa’s arrival, how that kind of changed the dynamic, what he brought to the team and what he’s been doing?

COACH QUENNEVILLE: We’re very happy to have him here. I think when he did return to our lineup, be it in practice or in games, it improved the pace of our team, our speed, our puck possession game and very smart player as well.

I think everybody has been talking about his production all Playoffs. His effectiveness has been great for our team. Our team game has improved in that area, and last night I thought he played the way he plays all year.
He had a little more production and had some nice timely passes as well. But I thought he had a real big game for us. His consistency is the thing you appreciate.

Q. Joel, when you look at some of the high-end players that the Bolland line has done a good job containing going back to the Vancouver series and the Thornton line and now the Richards line, can you explain why they’re so successful as a group?

COACH QUENNEVILLE: I think Bolly is a pretty smart player. I think his anticipation is high end. His quickness and his patience with the puck and his skill level is high end as well. And I think having that assignment, he welcomes that challenge. He’s a competitive guy in his right, and I think that line has some speed and quickness, complements both sides of the puck.

Steeger has been playing well. Laddy was doing a good job as well. And you have to commend Kopey for coming in, not playing for a while and looking like he didn’t miss a beat. I think that lineup was very effective again.

Q. Coach, I don’t know how late you stay up watching videotape and how quickly or how much of a challenge it is to make adjustments in a 24-hour period in a time like this?
COACH QUENNEVILLE: I think whether it’s in games or between periods, you know when you’re watching on the bench, there’s a lot of awareness things, you know, you want to try to get the guys’ attention to in what they’re trying to do.

But I think we need to be better in certain areas of the ice. But we’re always talking about things that can make us better in what they’re up to.

Q. Joel, Kane and Toews, obviously, are very, very young players. It’s a huge stage. It’s the Final and all the things that go with that. When you look at the fact they weren’t able to make a contribution last night, did they maybe get a Mulligan for that reason because it’s such a big stage, and they are such young guys?
COACH QUENNEVILLE: We expect these guys to be a big part of our success and a big part of our team. They’ve been there all year. They’re dangerous players. They give the opposition a lot to be concerned with. Any particular night not everything is going to go your way.

I think the way they compete, they know how to play and what can make them better as well. We expect them to be a big part of it.

Q. Just an update on Ladd. Do you expect him to play, and more importantly, would it be hard to take Kopey out after his game?
COACH QUENNEVILLE: Laddy will continue. Today he’s day-to-day. But we expect him to be playing. We’ll address that tomorrow.

Stanley Cup Finals – Game 1 – Photos, Stats, Analysis, Audio, and Video

Posted by admin On May - 30 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS
Philadelphia Flyers v Chicago Blackhawks - Stanley Cup

Transcripts Courtesy of the NHL Communications Department

Post game 1 Statistics, Analysis, and Post Game Audio/Video

Photos from Game 1:

http://www.nhl.com/ice/gallerylanding.htm?id=15923

Game Summary:

http://www.nhl.com/scores/htmlreports/20092010/GS030411.HTM

Event Summary:

http://www.nhl.com/scores/htmlreports/20092010/ES030411.HTM

Play by Play:

http://www.nhl.com/scores/htmlreports/20092010/PL030411.HTM

Face off Stats:

http://www.nhl.com/scores/htmlreports/20092010/FC030411.HTM

Post game 1 audio:

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Game 1 Highlights:

Chicago Blackhawks Post game comments:

Post game comments from Tomas Kopecky:

Post game comments from John Madden:

Post game comments from Niklas Hjalmarsson:

Post game comments from Patrick Kane:

Post game comments from Jonathan Toews:

Post game comments from Dave Bolland:

Philadelphia Flyers post game comments:

Post game comments from Aaron Asham:

Post game comments from Jeff Carter:

Post game comments from Danny Briere:

Post game comments from Michael Richards:

Post game comments from Chris Pronger:

Post game comments from Scott Hartnell

Post game Comments from Michael Leighton:

Stanley Cup Finals – Game 1 – Post-game Comments from Flyers Head Coach Peter Laviolette

Posted by admin On May - 30 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS
Philadelphia Flyers coach Peter Laviolette speaks with the media about the Stanley Cup NHL Hockey Finals in Chicago

Transcripts Courtesy of the NHL Communications Department

Post game 1 comments from Flyers Head Coach Peter Laviolette

Q. Coach, on that winning goal, several seconds before the score, it looked like the puck hit Kopecky when he was still sitting on the edge of the bench. Did you think it should have been whistled down at that point?

COACH LAVIOLETTE: If a puck hits player on the bench, it’s supposed to be whistled down. Well, that’s neither here nor there right now. They scored.

Q. Coach, I don’t imagine anybody envisioned a 6‑5 game in the opening game of the playoffs. What’s your assessment of what happened?

COACH LAVIOLETTE: Our assessment was we were a little bit just too loose in front of our net, and we left too many point blank opportunities, at times we had men there. They caught a nice bounce on the breakaway goal. And it was tough to handle it. It bounced over our stick and he caught some speed on it.
We’ve got to be a little bit better defensively than we were. It wasn’t a lot of chances. It was probably a dozen chances for them. But some of them were point blank. We have to tighten it up right in front of our goal.

Q. Thoughts on Boucher’s performance tonight?

COACH LAVIOLETTE: I thought Bouch came in off the bench. He looked good in practice, and he did a good job.

Q. What are the positives you can take out of this?

COACH LAVIOLETTE: You know, you lose a game, the first game of the Stanley Cup Final. It’s hard to sit here and thumb through the positives right now. We’ll take a look at it tonight, and tomorrow and we’ll be ready to go.

Q. Peter, some of your players said that the switch in the goalie, was not a reflection on the way Leighton was playing, but a wake‑up call to the team? Can you go into that?

COACH LAVIOLETTE: Everybody has got to be better. We win as team and we lose as a team. Tonight we lost as a team. We have to be better if we’re going to win as a team.

Stanley Cup Finals – Game 1 – Post-game Comments from Blackhawks Hossa, Brouwer

Posted by admin On May - 30 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS
Philadelphia Flyers v Chicago Blackhawks - Stanley Cup

Transcripts Courtesy of the NHL Communications Department

Post game 1 comments from Blackhawks Marian Hossa and Troy Brouwer

Q. Marian, can you talk about your game today? I know you’ve been frustrated not scoring. You set up both of Troy’s goals. That obviously turned out to be important.

MARIAN HOSSA: I know in our line we got the right end of the charts. They are both great shooters. Somebody has to push the puck.
So Troy was in a great position. He just kept getting open, and I tried to find him because he was in a better position and he made the two great shots.

Q. Marian, on a night when a lot of guys seem to get caught up in the moment and not play the way they normally do, you did play your normal game. Do you think it’s the experience you have that allowed to you do that?

MARIAN HOSSA: Probably there’s a little bit maybe true about it. Because we were being in this kind of games. And you went through it. So you keep your composure, keep your game and don’t try to run around and try be somebody else. So I tried to play the same way. I’m just glad we won.

Q. Just for both of you guys, this is certainly not the Game 1 people expected. What was it like to play in a game like that? And what was happening that was ?? it seemed to be getting so crazy at times? From both of you?

TROY BROUWER: It was a little nerve?wracking, that’s for sure. Some of the guys in the Series, it’s their first time in the Final. Nerves might have had a little to do with it. It’s a real emotional game.
Lot of back and forth, a lot of up and down. You just try and stay composed, stay with it and stick to the game plan.

Q. This one is for both of you. A lot of attention paid to Bolland’s line and Toews line going into this Series. Not that you were playing poorly, but were you hoping for a night like this for your line to break out?

MARIAN HOSSA: Definitely we were getting a lot of chances. For whatever reason the puck doesn’t go in for our line, and we tried to stay patient. Tonight was one of those nights we made those chances again. This time the puck was in. That’s how we have to play in the Series. Because we know we have to help the team offensively too.

Q. Troy, Stanley Cup Final, two goals, two biggest goals of your life. Just talk about this game for yourself.

TROY BROUWER: For me, I wanted to be ready. Our lines, like Marian says, the line has been playing well, but not been able to finish off our chances.
So for us we wanted to go out. We wanted to be a dangerous line every time on the ice. I wanted to have a good game and really get some confidence for the Series.

Q. Troy, you guys didn’t get a power?play tonight. You still managed to win Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final. Is that a good momentum builder going forward? You guys don’t get a man advantage and win the hockey game?

TROY BROUWER: It definitely gives us confidence knowing we can score 5 on 5. And we had one short?handed scorer tonight, great effort by Bolly. The power?plays will come. We’re not a team completely based on our power?play, even though we do have a very skilled team and a great power?play. As long as the goals are coming from wherever the goals are coming, we’re okay.

Q. Troy, do you find tonight with Hossa, and sometimes when Kane does the same thing, all eyes are kind of on him and you’re able to find an open spot because of that?

TROY BROUWER: Yes, Hoss is obviously a great player in this league, and everybody knows it. He has been for a long time.
So the other team is going to key on him a little bit more, someone like me. That gives me an opportunity to get open, and he’s so good with his puck possession and vision that as long as you get open like in the first goal he fended off two or three guys in the corner, brought it to the front and was able to make a great back?hand pass to me. With him you just kind of got to let him do his thing and get open, and he’ll find you.

Q. Marian, your previous experience coming, how great is it to get this win and to play well in it going forward for you and for the team?

MARIAN HOSSA: The first game is always huge because you want to get the momentum going in the big games like this. And you know, huge win. There is Game 2 again. We’ll have to focus on that game. It’s all about momentum in the Final. When you grab the momentum, that’s what is huge.

Q. Marian, in a game like this where it’s back and forth, how do you get self?control and slow things down? And was that control a factor at all in the third period where the team seemed to be a bit better?

MARIAN HOSSA: I think we have to be much better because we had too many turnovers tonight. And against teams like this, they got lots of fire power. I believe if you play better defensively we’re going to help our goalie. Our goalie is going to help us, and overall it’s going to be a better performance. Tonight we take the win. But I don’t think we played well defensively.

Q. Both for Troy and Marian, several of the Flyers already saying because of the fire power that you guys can throw at them, they feel like they need to tone it down a little bit for Game 2. Do you feel like you guys could just keep it up at this pace, or would you like to maybe tone it down defensively too?

TROY BROUWER: We’re a team that likes to play a fast?paced game. I don’t think it takes much of a mystery. They have a great transition game, and they’re able to move the puck up the ice. They caught us a couple of times sleeping on changes. A little lax on our coverage.
For us, I don’t know if we want to slow the game down at all. We just want to be able to play our game and just be able to do what makes us successful.

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Stanley Cup Finals – Game 1 – Post-game Comments from Blackhawks Head Coach Joel Quenneville

Posted by admin On May - 30 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS
Philadelphia Flyers v Chicago Blackhawks - Stanley Cup

Transcripts Courtesy of the NHL Communications Department

Post Game 1 Comments from Blackhawks Head Coach Joel Quenneville

Q. Coach, what were you guys able to change between the first two periods and the third that changed the way you were able to possess the puck?

COACH QUENNEVILLE: I thought we had more speed to the game. We had more puck possession, more attack.

The first period, physically was a little jittery for both teams. More so us, and even in the second I still think we were a little bit more emotional than we normally are. And then all of a sudden we picked up the tempo, and pace that we wanted to set and continue. That’s the standard we want to move on going forward to the next game.

Q. I assume that’s the not game plan you mapped out to begin with? What’s it like to be coaching in a game and look up and it’s 5-5.

A. A lot of action. Shootout at the OK Corral. Things settled down as the game progressed. Certainly, I don’t think anybody envisioned 5?5 heading into the third period. I still thought we improved as the game went on. I think that’s kind of the niche we want to do. We want to get better and better each game.
I think it progressed in the game as well. But it was ?? I don’t think anybody ?? we stressed defense and defense first approach. But I think we got away from it tonight.

Q. Joel, one of the guys seemed to be able to keep his head was Hossa. Is that just a reflection of how many games at this level he’s played?

COACH QUENNEVILLE: He’s an amazing player. I know his production gets a lot of questioning as we have gotten along in these Playoffs. He’s so effective in so many ways. You’re so comfortable with him against anybody. Defensively his role and responsibility is ?? he finds a way to get the puck and create offense. He made a great play on Brouwer. The line was very dangerous, very effective. I thought he lead way.

Q. It’s amazing there would be six goal scores and Toews and Kane are not on the score sheet. That’s kind of a surprise I guess for you, perhaps? Any thought how they played?

COACH QUENNEVILLE: You look at the lines tonight, that was the one line I think out of the four that needed to be better. That Bolly line was good. Sharpy, Mad Dog. That line can really improve off of today’s game.

Q. Coach, looked like you moved Kane to a different line. What was your thought process?

COACH QUENNEVILLE: I think we ?? he was sitting on the bench from penalty killers. We just want to get him out there. I think some of the penalties were killing him. I don’t think it was by design.

Q. At any point during that crazy first two periods, did you think about pulling Niemi, and if not, why not?

COACH QUENNEVILLE: I thought the goals we gave him, I think our coverage wasn’t as sharp as needed to be. They put a lot of pucks at the net. Created a lot of confusion. I think we have to be sharper in that area. I wasn’t looking at the goalie to make that change. I thought he gave us a chance, and I thought he did what he had to do, particularly in the third.

Q. Just some thoughts on Kopecky’s performance after not being on the ice for a few games?

COACH QUENNEVILLE: Remarkable comeback. Great play, good patience on the winning goal. I thought that line was very dangerous. Very affective, Bolly and Steeger really complimented Kopey. I thought that line throughout the playoffs with Laddy and Kopey, he knows how to play defensively. Their production offensively seems to be timely as far as their goals. But nice return to the lineup.

Q. Coach, can you talk about Troy Brouwer’s play? Especially after what he’s going through?

COACH QUENNEVILLE: I think Brouwer is picking it up as he went along. A couple of big goals, big shot. He’s one of those power forwards that can be a factor and dangerous.
But that whole line with Sharpy and Hossa was dangerous tonight.

Stanley Cup Finals – Game 1 – Pre-game Comments from Flyers Head Coach Peter Laviolette

Posted by admin On May - 29 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS
Stanley Cup Media Day

Transcripts Courtesy of the NHL Communications Department

Pre-Game 1 comments from Flyers Head Coach Peter Laviolette

Q.        Hey, Coach can you give us your update on Boucher and his status for tonight?

COACH LAVIOLETTE:  Brian Boucher will be in the lineup tonight.

Q.  Is there anything — many of your guys have not been through this before.  Do you say anything tonight, anything out of the ordinary, or do you not like to do anything like that?

COACH LAVIOLETTE:  You know, I’ve said before, there’s so many meetings that go on, you know, and you try address everything and talk about everything so that you don’t get caught off guard, you’re not surprised by anything that may or may not happen tonight.

I think it’s really important — everybody is anxious.  Everybody wants the games to take place, the puck to drop and play some hockey.  The guys have played — they’ve prepared a long time.
I made the mistake of saying we prepared for ten months.  You guys prepared for ten months, eleven months, nine months, whatever.  Last season left you.  Ian Laperriere corrected me and said I’ve been preparing 15 years for this.  Guys are ready for this.

They want to play some hockey.  Anxious is okay.  You don’t want to be nervous.  Nervous is something you don’t want to carry around the ice.  It will eliminate you from thinking properly.  So anxious is good.  Nervous is not good.  Carter was dropped from the Series probably before he was 100%, with four days off.  How much more effective do you expect him in this?
COACH LAVIOLETTE:  I think anytime somebody comes back from being out of the lineup, and things continue to heal to a point where they’re probably getting close to 100%, I think it’s a good thing.  You get to get on the ice and work on your game and practice; and it’s not in those high-pressure situations and moments you can find in Game 5 elimination — clinching game Series-clinching game. So I think it’s a good thing to get practice and have time continue.  If you want to look for some positives for waiting four or five days, that would be one of them.  Banged up players get a chance to heal.

Q.  Just quick two-parter.  Off that first goal, both teams 7-1 when they score first, and I know your team is certainly full of comebacks.  Maybe the importance of that especially to set the tone in Game 1 of the Cup Final; and also do you see these teams as being kind of built the same as somewhat unknown goaltenders?  You have some studs on defense and some real dynamic forwards up front.

COACH LAVIOLETTE:  I think there’s a lot of similarities in the teams.  Their path was different than ours to get to this point.  They had a real successful year.  They were in the top of their conference all year.  They go through the team that finished number one in four straight.

So they’re definitely playing well right now.  And you know, I believe that our path is different, but we certainly have earned the right to be here tonight with what we had to go through to get to this point.
So as far as the first goal, I think those numbers and records you just spit out there speak for themselves.  You get on the board, you can grab — you can either ignite your building or you can kill the building.  And from there, there’s a lot of hockey left after that one goal, unless it comes late in the third.
But typically when you score the first goal, it’s a good thing, it’s a positive thing.  Then you still have a lot of work to do.

Q.  Peter, you talked about nervousness and guys I think still had mentioned over the past couple of days that they’ll have some nerves, they’ll have some butterflies.  Having been in this situation, how can you kind of help them channel that to something that could be a setback into something that could be a positive?

COACH LAVIOLETTE:  You can’t go in and wave a magic wand.  The hype of the game is here, and it’s Game 1, the Stanley Cup Finals.  You wait your whole life to play it.  The only thing you can do is talk about things and address things as a team.  And again, I think that nerves, you want to stay away from that.  We talked about all the things we had to do.  The last thing we said was just relax.  Go out and play the game.  Because you have to be able to think, you have to be able to skate.  These are talented hockey players out here.  They have to be able to make plays.  I think it’s really important to relax.

Q.  Pete, how important is it for to you see Brian back in the lineup after what he’s done for this team late in the season?  And obviously, in the early stages of the Playoffs?

COACH LAVIOLETTE:  Certainly I’m happy for him that he’s back.  You never like to see anybody out with injury to get a goaltender who really carried us down the stretch and got us through the first round is like I said before — the last half dozen or ten games of the regular season he was very good. And then in the first round against New Jersey, I believe his numbers were the best in the league after Round

1.  So when you lose that, you certainly welcome him back when you get that opportunity.
Again, when you put in a whole season’s worth of work, you don’t want to be sitting out the Finals.  It’s nice to get him back.

Q.  Everything you’ve done with these players has been unconventional.  I guess it follows that — you’re the first team I can remember that as you went further along you got healthier instead of more injured.  The one year you lost Cole late into your Playoffs, have you ever had a situation where you picked up three, four players as you went on?

COACH LAVIOLETTE:  That year we actually picked up Cole.  He was out back in maybe a week after the Olympic break.  He got hurt ten days after the Olympic break.  He played in the Olympics.  He came back and he got hurt.  So he was out up until the last two games.  We actually got him back at the end.
We certainly lost players along the way.  I think when he came back, Dougie Waite, we lost him.  That’s just the nature of the Playoffs.  Guys are willing to do anything to find success for their team.  Injuries are part of it.  They’re certainly — we’re glad that we’re in a position where we’re getting players back.

Stanley Cup Finals – Game 1 – Pre-game Comments from Blackhawks Head Coach Joel Quenneville

Posted by admin On May - 29 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS
Stanley Cup Practice

Transcripts Courtesy of the NHL Communications Department

Pre-Game 1 comments from Blackhawks Head Coach Joel Quenneville

Q.  I know that Andrew Ladd had hoped to skate this morning.  Does this mean Kopecky goes tonight?

COACH QUENNEVILLE:  That’s the case tonight.  Laddy is not playing.  We still expect him to play.  He’s progressing well.  But Kopy is in today.

Q.  What does Kopecky do for that third line which has been pretty effective so far?

COACH QUENNEVILLE:  I think he gives them some predictability.  He sees a play, can see the ice and he can check as well.
That whole group has been pretty effective.  I think they haven’t played together, but I still think there’s other options as we go along.

Q.  Follow-up to that, earlier you had Sharp with Kopecky and Hossa.  Is this so you don’t change two lines just insert one guy kind of thing?

COACH QUENNEVILLE:  We’ll see.  I know we have options.  We have lot of forwards that can go in different spots.  Hoss, you can look at Brouwer, you can look at other options as well.  But it’s — we’re probably going to begin like that and go from there.

Q.  Bolland was able to get under the skin of Thornton and Daniel Sedin in the last two series.  Richards kind of plays a different game.  He doesn’t mind plucking it up like that.  How do you see that matchup placing?

COACH QUENNEVILLE:  I think it will be competitive.  We’ll see how the matchup works.  If it’s going to be a strict matchup or not.  It’s something we’ll see how the game progresses in games going into other games.         At the same time, he’s a competitor.  I think Bolly is a comparable type of player.  And I just think that we’ll see how the game with the score goes.  It will be — I’m sure it will be a good test for both guys.

Q.  Been a long wait to get here today.  How do you feel now that it’s finally here, game day?

COACH QUENNEVILLE:  I think everybody is excited.  I know we have had some waits throughout this series and throughout the Playoffs, four or five or six days.  I think we’ve all been together targeting today.  I think everybody is excited.  The anxiousness might come out early.  The morning skate was a good way to begin today.

I think we put ourselves all year long in the spot we want to be in.  We’re really looking forward to what’s going to be happening tonight.

Q.  A couple of guys said you are doing the hotel plan again this afternoon.  Is that to minimize distractions?

COACH QUENNEVILLE:  I think that could go with what we’re talking about.  Yeah, I think that we tried it in the San Jose Series.  So we’ll see how it goes.

Q.  Is there any sort of speech you’ve been preparing, or do you try to keep things as normal as possible for what you say to them?

COACH QUENNEVILLE:  We don’t change too much the flavor of how we approach games or going in between series.  I think the guys have been diligent in their preparation and their focus has been in the right place.

There’s been a few guys in the locker room that have been in the same situation that we’re approaching here today.  I just think that I think everybody needs to get a couple of shifts under their belt to get playing hockey.  A lot of talk here all week long.  I think that’s what we’re looking for is to just play.

Stanley Cup Finals – Practice Day – Gary Bettman addresses the media before Game 1

Posted by admin On May - 28 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS
NHL commissioner Gary Bettman delivers the State of the League news conference in Chicago

This morning, NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman addressed the media prior to Game 1 of the Stanley Cup finals.

Now you Coyotes fans should pay attention to this press conference because there’s two key points about the team. The first is regarding the Coyotes starting the season in Europe the second is regarding Coyotes ownership.

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