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After a disappointing effort against Nashville in New York, the Rangers began their season-long, five-game road trip with their second-best effort of the season against in Seattle.
Here are 10 thoughts on the Rangers.
1. I used to love the oddity of a Rangers West Coast road trip and the unusual start times. Now with two toddlers that wake up just a few hours after the end of a West Coast game, not so much.
The late-night starts are bad enough, but to have to endure four of them in a row in the second week of the season makes it even worse. Then add in a lighting delay a minute into the first of these games, and you have the scene from Saturday night in Seattle.
Seattle’s Climate Pledge Arena underwent a $1.15 billion renovation prior to the Kraken beginning play in the NHL, yet somehow all of that money couldn’t prevent a bank of lights from going out midgame. About a minute into play, the Rangers and Kraken were forced to sit around after a dim landscape fell over the Rangers’ zone. Following a lengthy delay, the game was resumed under the agreement the teams would switch sides halfway through each period, so each team would have to defend the dim zone an equal amount.
2. The Kraken scored the game’s opening goal on a Justin Schultz one-timer just before the teams were to switch sides for the first time (8:41). Jonathan Quick slid too far to his right on the Schultz blast, and whether the goal was a result of the lightning issue or just a mistimed slide by Quick, the Rangers trailed 1-0 and it began to feel like the bank of lights would regain their power just as the Kraken were supposed to defend the dim zone.
3. Thankfully, the lights didn’t regain their power prior to the switch (and didn’t regain their power for the entirety of the game), and Artemi Panarin tied the game at 1 at 12:15 in the first.
As the first man in the zone on the forecheck, Alexis Lafreniere created pressure on Vince Dunn below the goal line and Dunn hastily threw the puck up the boards where Filip Chytil was waiting. Chytil immediately found Panarin all alone on the opposite side of the zone, fed him the puck, and Panarin ripped it shortside past Philipp Grubauer.
4. Early in the second, Jacob Trouba was called for boarding for a hit on Andre Burakovsky. It was a late hit by Trouba, but wasn’t vicious. In the moment, it was hard to believe the relative lack of force of by Trouba on the hit could even knock over Burakovsky. The Kraken forward’s awkward fall led to him leaving the game. Burakovsky had to undergo surgery for whatever happened to him on the play that will keep him out six to eight weeks. What the surgery was on or for is unclear as his absence has always been labeled an upper-body injury in the NHL’s continued silly characterization of injuries.
5. With the Rangers attacking the lit zone in the first half of the second period, Mika Zibanejad cleanly won a draw in the right circle back straight back to K’Andre Miller, and Miller set up Trouba for a one-timer from he point. Trouba’s shot squeaked threw the legs of Grubauer, and Kaapo Kakko outmuscled Brian Dumoulin to get behind the Kraken defenseman and bang in the puck sitting behind Grubauer in the crease for a 2-1 lead.
A little less than five minutes later, Lafreniere forced another turnover at the goal line, passed it off to Chytil who skated elegantly around the right circle. Chytil weaved through Dumoulin and Jaden Schwartz and flicked a backhand pass to Lafreniere who had positioned himself in the slot after forcing the turnover. Lafreniere deflected the puck over the shoulder of Grubauer, and the Rangers had a 3-1 lead.
6. With the Rangers attacking the dim zone to begin the third, Miller skated the puck up the ice and went untouched through the neutral zone with the Kraken choosing to not put a stick or body on the Rangers defenseman. Miller crossed the blue line and gave the puck up to Chytil who then gave it to Panarin streaking down the middle. Chytil’s pass was deflected into the air, but Panarin was able to glove it down to the ice. The puck never settled, and yet, Panarin was able to snap the bouncing puck past Grubauer for his second of the game to give the Rangers a three-goal lead.
Both of Panarin’s goals came in the dim zone (as did three of the game’s five goals). As the Rangers’ most productive player this season, he now has three goals and four assists on the year, having produced at least one point in all five games.
“For me, I want it darker, so it’s harder for goalies,” Panarin said. “That’s why I scored two.”
7. Chytil hasn’t found the back oft he net through five games, but his play is noticeable and his game has taken another positive step from the player he was a year ago. His three assists were a career best in a single game as he led all Rangers forwards in ice time with 19:14. It was his quick decision making that led to the Rangers’ first and third goals, and his pass with a little luck that led to the fourth goal.
“We had a tough last game,” Chytil said. “We just had to bounce back and this was the best scenario for what could happen.”
8. Nearly halfway through the third, the game got chippy with Yanni Gourde finding himself tangled up with Chris Kreider in front of the Rangers’ bench in what resulted in matching roughing penalties. A little over a minute later, Vincent Trocheck dropped the gloves with Jared McCann off a faceoff. It was just Trocheck’s sixth career fight (third with the Rangers), but you wouldn’t have guessed it with the way he used and landed both rights and lefts on McCann.
9. “I liked the way we skated and competed right from the drop of the puck,” Peter Laviolette said of the 4-1 win. “Pretty consistent for 60 minutes.”
It was easily the Rangers’ best game played and best effort since opening night in Buffalo, which continues to be the standard for how their play is evaluated.
The Rangers may only be 3-2 on the season, but in terms of expected goals, they have outplayed their opponent in every game except for the ugly, shockingly bad game against Nashville. Courtesy of Clear Sight Analytics Hockey, here is the expected goals total for each of the Rangers’ five games.
Rangers 3.50, Sabres 1.41
Rangers 3.38, Blue Jackets 3.13
Rangers 3.25, Coyotes 2.59
Predators 3.48, Rangers 1.29
Rangers 4.78, Kraken 1.31
10. Coming off a disappointing effort against the Nashville, I wasn’t sure which version of the Rangers would take the ice in Seattle. But knowing what Laviolette is capable of as a head coach and what the roster is capable of as a team, it seemed unlikely they would lay two eggs in a row.
“Five games on the road is a long time,” Kakko said. “First win feels good.”
One down and four to go for the season’s longest road trip, with all four remaining games in Western Canada. If the Rangers play in Calgary, Edmonton, Vancouver and Winnipeg like they did in Seattle, the lengthy road trip won’t feel so long.
Vintage Ice Hockey is the only company that sells premium-quality jerseys, apparel and team merchandise for defunct minor league hockey franchises. It’s a family-run, hockey fan-driven company that’s committed to celebrating and preserving the legacies of defunct minor league hockey franchises. Check out their collection spanning over 100 years of minor league hockey and use code KTTC for 15% off your order!
Last modified: Oct 26, 2023