16 May, 2008

Is the Big ‘Mo with the Team in Red?

Hockey’s most mysterious quality is momentum. It wavers at times — is obliterated, even — from shift to shift. Years ago I saw it change for the Caps from bad to beautiful with a single shift of chaos from Kevin Kaminski. A solitary act of incompetence by a single referee, as with yesterday’s mystery infraction alleged against Sergei Fedorov in period two, can (and did) radically realign a game’s outlook.

The Caps earned a series-prolonging victory Saturday afternoon, but it wasn’t until about 4:30, as I walked toward a Verizon Center exit behind Flyer forward Mike Knuble, that I thought this series’ momentum might have changed.

I was walking, but Knuble most assuredly was not. He was more in a shuffle of anguish. I’ve seen my share of miraculous recoveries from fairly major injuries in 48 hours’ time, especially in the NHL playoffs, but watching Knuble labor under such obvious distress, I began to wonder if the sudden shift in the series’ authorship of the physical — for the second straight game the Caps outhit the Flyers — might have signaled a new overall control. In this series, control of the physical most often means victory.

Suddenly, Saturday seemed like more than a single loss for the team still the favorite to prevail.

It was only after I’d arrived home that I learned from Corey Masisak’s blog that Knuble was indeed out for Monday — and Tuesday, if there’s a game 7.

Meanwhile, in the other dressing room, there are suddenly answers where 40 hours earlier there were only questions.

In a series in which Alexander Ovechkin is goal-starved his countryman Sasha Semin has announced himself as a stealth sniper, setup man, and in-your-face antagonist, the latter of which I don’t imagine was of much concern to the Flyers’ coaching staff when this series began. Semin’s game-winning goal Saturday was surreal — I described it in my game file as a “high-slot sling of heavy, heavy heat” — and the type of tally that can rattle an opposing team out of its comfort zone. It’s one thing to have a home team hold serve in a gritty elimination game; it’s quite another to see a secondary star being born into a primary role and leading a comeback. The Flyers have done a magnificent job of mitigating the impact of the planet’s best hockey player. Now they have to do something about his roomie on the road.

And keep an eye on that Mike Green fella.

Semin’s 6 points through the series’ first five games are second only to Green’s 7, but it’s when you stand about a foot away from the supremely shy 24-year-old and see the playoff’s black and blue etched deep within his face that you fully appreciate his maturation this postseason.

That’s right, there was an Alexander Semin sighting among the press yesterday afternoon. He did his best to duck us again — biking (his customary post-game pursuit), bathing, even immersing himself in a video training session — but eventually he came out and with the aid of a Russian journalist answered a half dozen questions from the local press. He has a Halloween-scary look about him now. It’s really quite beautiful.

“I’m playing as well as I can, I’m happy with how I’m playing and I feel good,” he said.

In his bashfulness Semin is economic with his expressions but also thoughtful in a summary kind of way.

“It’s a different game in the playoffs,” he noted. “You simply can’t make mistakes at the blueline — you can’t lose the puck, you have to use your chances.”

Semin’s turnover awareness may be most heartening to a fanbase patiently awaiting his maturation on that front. He’s playing with confidence, an inspiration for which there is no surprise: on playing with Sergei Fedorov — “He sees the ice very well, he’s a great passer and as far as what he’s brought to the team I think it’s more of a confidence.”

Alluding to Semin in particular and some of his other young players as well, Bruce Boudreau confirmed a change, a maturation within this series: “I think there’s a big difference from the first three games of the series to the last two,” the coach said in his postgame press conference. “Semin, Backstrom, some of these younger guys are really playing good hockey right now.”

Another player helping to change this series’ outlook is its unlikeliest, perhaps — Steve Eminger.

“He’s stepped in and done a tremendous job,” his coach said late Saturday afternoon. “He’s playing physical, he’s taking hits, he’s doing a lot of the stuff that Steve Eminger can do.”

There is no game film to analyze for the remarkable ascensions individual players make from one night to the next in the NHL playoffs. The opposition merely endures it and hopes one of its own can answer in kind. But the combination of three young Caps so delivering — Semin and his new-found grit, Backstrom suddenly looking no longer the NHL rookie, and Steve Eminger, the forgotten one now a third-pairing rearguard creeping toward top four minutes with his polish and poise — gives the Caps and their fans hope for the underdog on Monday night.

“It’s not a situation that we’re not used to,” Gabby noted. “We’re gonna go into that building and we’re gonna play as hard and we’re gonna leave everything in that building that we have.”

No one I think doubts the effort they’ll bring. The Flyers, however, now thrust in the must-win role themselves, elst they face Red Chinatown again, have to wonder if the series’ swagger has swung Washington’s way as well.

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8 Comments

  1. vt caps fan wrote:

    I’m not sure we can keep the ‘mo for a full 60 minutes on Monday, I thought philly was going to score if they had another 2 more minutes (luckily they didn’t). I know the boys in red white and blue give it everything they’ve got.
    And it should be interesting.

    With regards to Semin: I personally believe that he has been our best player. He’s playing like that other Alex guy. : ) Mainly cause he’s hitting, defending his teammates, playing a little bit of D (biggest shocker I’ve seen from him), and he’s making plays in the offensive zone. I hope he can keep this up.

    I BELIEVE!

    LETS GO CAPS!!!!

    Sunday, April 20, 2008 at 11:48 am | Permalink
  2. MulletMan wrote:

    I know that Semin was complaining earlier in the season (while injured) that the trainers were bulking him up and he couldn’t feel the puck anymore, it looks like he got his touch back. If he keeps up play like that I may have to rethink my feelings on his renewed contract :)

    Sunday, April 20, 2008 at 12:01 pm | Permalink
  3. hockeygrl_76 wrote:

    It’s good to here from Semin. I’d love to hear his insights more often. I think he’s a talented player and I think he’s shown us another side of him in these playoffs. I like it! I’m glad Steve Eminger is getting recognition. I thought he’s gotten shafted this year.

    Sunday, April 20, 2008 at 12:18 pm | Permalink
  4. Victor wrote:

    I’m damn glad to see Semin playing to his ability. It seems he’s stopped flaking out and is playing some scary hockey. To be honest, somewhere in the middle of the season I would have loved to have seen the Caps trade him for someone who had both feet firmly on the ground (Joachin Hecht from Buffalo, for example); now I wouldn’t trade him for the world.

    Sunday, April 20, 2008 at 12:26 pm | Permalink
  5. zelda wrote:

    Semin has picked up his game amazingly well. One of my favorite moments from the game yesterday was seeing Semin on the jumbotron after he scored his goal and the fans went wild - he was tring not to look pleased, but it was obvious he was loving it. We have to keep him!

    See everybody back here Tuesday night at the Booth!

    Sunday, April 20, 2008 at 12:43 pm | Permalink
  6. Ken wrote:

    ALl that matters is tomorrow’s game. Go out and win it CAPS.

    Sunday, April 20, 2008 at 3:16 pm | Permalink
  7. All the Caps deserve the credit for where they are now forcing a game 6 against a mostly veteran Flyers team.

    After game 4 I wanted to make the comment that if Ollie were in goal, he would be getting all the blame for the losses. As the Caps D matures we will become a perenial playoff team, as that has already started.

    Huet has been a huge factor in this, and he is playing hot, with some phenomenal saves. Should we rest him and bring in Ollie, who assuredly is rested and will be motivated to play the game of his life to get the Caps through this series?

    Sunday, April 20, 2008 at 3:34 pm | Permalink
  8. radbytrade wrote:

    I’ve got to tip my hat again to the Caps. For a brief moment I overcame my Philadelphian-bred insecurities and figured this series was, thankfully, in the bag. This wasn’t one of those games where the losing team or its fans can put on a facade to the tune of, “Well, we shot ourselves in the foot,” or “We beat ourselves here today.” This was a case of the Washington Capitals going out and playing desperate, winning hockey. The kind of hockey the Flyers couldn’t figure out until they took advantage of a bad call to bring things within 1.

    The only positive I can take out of this game is that maybe, MAYBE, the Flyers have found that same desperation needed to close out a series. Make no mistake, if the Orange & Black don’t find a way to put the Caps away tonight, I don’t see them recovering mentally from coughing up a 3-1 series lead for the rubber match in Washington.

    It’s a terrible shame that either of these teams has to go home in the first round.

    Go Flyboys. Best of luck, Caps fans.

    Monday, April 21, 2008 at 10:12 am | Permalink

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