Fixing the Isles’ power play
The difference between the Islanders’ 9-4 start and their 4-5-1 record over the past 10 games was the effectiveness of their power play. If you’re looking for answers to the Isles’ recent scoring drought, that’s the place to start.
Through those first 13 games, the power play converted 14 of 59 chances, and the result was that the Islanders scored at least three goals in eight of those games. Over the past 10 games, the Islanders have failed to score more than two goals (not counting their shootout goal against Ottawa) primarily because the power play is 3-for-39 in that stretch, including a goal credited to Miroslav Satan that actually was poked in by Rangers forward Blair Betts in Thursday’s 4-2 loss at Madison Square Garden.
After playing nine games in 15 days, coach Ted Nolan gave all but a few players a day off from skating today while he and his staff looked at ways to fix the power play for Saturday night’s game against Atlanta at the Coliseum.
“We’re going to change it up a little bit, maybe use Miro a little more on the half-wall,” Nolan said. “He’s very intelligent with the puck, and he loves to attack the net.”
Satan had been working on the second unit with Mike Sillinger and Trent Hunter, but he’ll move up to the first unit with Mike Comrie and Ruslan Fedotenko. Nolan plans to put Bill Guerin with Sillinger and Hunter to create a “banging line.”
“We’ve got to get pucks to the net, get traffic and create some opportunities,” Nolan said.
Against the Rangers, Nolan returned to a lineup with seven defenseman because he was uncertain whether Radek Martinek could get through the game after suffering a gash in his left cheek that took 15 stitches to close. “He could barely chew his food on game day,” Nolan said of Martinek. “We were going to scratch him, but he really wanted to play. So, we had extra defense just in case.”
Look for Nolan to stick with seven defensemen against the Thrashers, not only as a precaution against injury, but also because it keeps both Bryan Berard and Marc-Andre Bergeron available to quarterback the power play units.
If the power play gets going, the rest of the offense should follow. “We’re scoring most of our goals even strength,” Guerin said. “Two even strength goals a game is pretty good. If you put in one or two on the power play, that makes a big difference.”
Guerin overstated the numbers a bit. Over the past 10 games, the Isles have scored only 12 goals at even strength (1.2 per game) along with three on the power play, two short-handed goals plus a shootout goal. But you get the idea. The numbers for the first 13 games included 23 even-strength goals (1.8 per game) plus the 14 power-play goals and one shortie. When the power play works, it opens things up.
COMING ATTRACTIONS: More lineup changes are afoot, though not necessarily all for the Atlanta game. Please check out the Islanders story in Saturday’s Newsday.