NHL coverage from the United Kingdom, by Hockey Nerd 'Sergei Adamov' Follow me on Facebook.com/Hockey-From-Across-the-Pond Twitter: @SergeiAdamov
Tuesday, 27 August 2013
NY Rangers - Preview
Entering the 2012-13 NHL season, expectations
couldn't have been higher for the New
York Rangers. Coming off a season when they finished first in the
East and advanced to the Eastern Conference Final, they enhanced
their lineup over that summer with the acquisition of forward Rick
Nash. Despite being an early Stanley Cup favorite, the Rangers
occasionally struggled to find traction last season. But a strong
finish and an offseason coaching change have the club poised to make
a run in 2013-14. Nash did his part last season, scoring 21 goals and
42 points in 44 games. The Rangers went 0-3-1 in the four games he
missed due to injury. The offense and power play struggled for long
stretches, but the team got hot at the perfect time. They were 10-3-1
in April and went more than a month without losing at Madison Square
Garden. The Rangers also managed to outlast the Washington
Capitals, arguably the League's hottest team entering the Stanley
Cup Playoffs, in seven games in the opening round. But New York
struggled against the Boston
Bruins in the second round, bowing out in five games. A failure
to match the Bruins' aggressiveness and clutch play ultimately
convinced Rangers management it was time for a change. Coach John
Tortorella was let go after more than four seasons in New York. He
was replaced by former Vancouver
Canucks coach Alain
Vigneault, who built a new coaching staff from scratch and could
be exactly who the team needs to jump-start its offense. For a
three-year stretch with Vancouver, Vigneault's offense was the class
of the NHL. With Nash spearheading a forward unit that includes Derek
Stepan and Carl
Hagelin, the New York offense should improve. The Rangers showed
something of an offensive explosion late last season when they signed
forward Mats
Zuccarello and acquired center Derick
Brassard in a deadline-day trade with the Columbus
Blue Jackets. Each player had success with the Rangers, helping
forward Brad
Richards snap out of a lengthy slump that defined the toughest
season of his career. Partnered occasionally with Zuccarello and
Brassard, Richards finished the regular season with a six-game
scoring streak of 11 points. But the veteran center scored one goal
in 10 playoff games before being a healthy scratch for the Rangers'
final two games against the Bruins. With a new staff, Richards will
need a bounce-back season if he wants to end speculation the Rangers
might use their compliance buyout on his nine-year, $60 million
contract. The defense was typically stout, ranking fourth in the
League at 2.25 goals allowed per game. The Rangers feature arguably
the world's best goaltender, Lundqvist, and veteran defensemen who
play responsibly in their own end. That unit includes Dan
Girardi, Anton
Stralman and Ryan
McDonagh, who signed a four-year contract extension this summer.
John Moore
was acquired in the trade with Columbus and emerged as a strong
presence, but Michael
Del Zotto took a slight step back from his breakout 2011-12
season. It remains to be seen what lingering effects the eye injury
sustained by alternate captain Marc
Staal will have on his play. If Staal can return to the form he
showed prior to the injury, the unit should be one of the best in the
League. Hagelin and captain Ryan
Callahan had shoulder surgery during the offseason and their
rehab could cause each to miss the beginning of the season. Once they
return, the offense is expected to take a step forward under
Vigneault. For a team that came so close in 2011-12 and found its
stride at the perfect time in 2012-13, a new coaching staff and core
players who have had a few seasons to develop chemistry could give
Madison Square Garden another playoff run. But the Rangers will need
to make improvements under Vigneault in order to compete with the
elite teams in the Eastern Conference.
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