Even before tuning in
to watch this Red Wings game, I was sure of two things. One, there would be
major homerism in tonight’s game; I have rarely seen bigger homers than
Vancouver’s announcers. Game in and game out, they toot Vancouver’s horn, they
belittle any of Detroit’s achievements, like how they’re still in the hunt with
Cleary and Abdelkader in their top-six. And two, they had one job tonight,
and that’s a win and they’re back in the hunt.
The way I see things,
it’s going to come down to the very last game of the season against Dallas, and
I don’t like the Red Wings’ chances.
In the pre-game, the
announcers kept saying that Vancouver was probably going to get to a slow
start, seeing how they just came home from a 5 game road-trip and Detroit just
isn’t the same after losing Lidstrom and Stuart. I hate and loathe when they
use that excuse, yes this team lost the 7-time Norris trophy winner, but they
can still play. When they say that, it’s like they’re saying a player has no
stick on a shootout attempt, for which it’s practically impossible for it to
work. To that, I say nay nay.
The first period went
by fast, about as fast as a Canuck diving, as shown by Burrows on a
semi-breakaway. Edler, who Detroit should have drafted but Vancouver snagged him first,
scored on an absolute bomb from the point. Emmerton did his best Datsyuk
in-between-the-leggers and it was all tied up after one period. The game had a tentative
pace after both teams had a lot on the line – Vancouver needing one point to
clinch a playoff spot and Detroit just needing to stay in the hunt.
In the second period,
Abdelkader and Ballard traded punches after Ballard hog-tied number 8 in the
blue paint (see Ma, I can rhyme!). Abdelkader is really playing like a
power-forward these last games, which is very needed and appreciated by the
Piano man, Datsyuk. Later on,
we saw a rare sight, as the Sedins attempted to jump the Mule, who just
shrugged it off but wasn’t laughing when he took an additional penalty on the
play. After the announcers laughed at who much experience the Red Wings lost in
the last two years (I swear, they make an exception to put it in EVERY time…)
The third period saw
Detroit outshoot Vancouver 17-3 and really dominating the play, but in the end,
it was Maxim ‘I have a face only a mother could love’ Lapierre who won it in
the shootout.
Thing is, and I might be in the minority here, I'd rather see Detroit lose by trying than to win only by skills and barely, like the Red Wings of old.
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