Sunday, April 15, 2012
The All Out Fall Out
Now, we all sit in the midst of another Penguins loss in the 2012 Stanley Cup Playoffs. Not a person on earth could of envisioned the current outcome of the first three games. Since 2009, there has not been a more resilient team in all of hockey. Battling injury after injury, it was as if the city of Pittsburgh was brought back to life after the hype of the possibility in becoming the next dynasty in professional sports slowly faded away following two years of game seven defeats to the Montreal Canadiens and Tampa Bay Lightning in the playoffs.
It's not over yet, but only three times in the history of the NHL has a team come back from a 3-0 deficit in the playoffs. Some optimistic individuals and true Penguin fans will stand firmly behind their team, saying "Hey, they won three in a row, why can't we"? Unfortunately, the play of the Flyers is not going to change. They have absolutely owned every aspect of this series. The Pens just have no answer for the Flyers resiliency which they have shown since the drop of the puck for the 2nd period of Game 1. Twenty goals in three games, given up by the Penguins. To put that drastic statistic more in retrospect, fifteen games in the month of March, the Pens gave up just over 30 goals.
Reflect back on the Flyers dramatic comeback against the Boston Bruins in 2010, coming back from three games down on what ended up being a monstrous comeback and made history. Now, the hockey world will look upon the Penguins to complete that same feet starting on Wednesday evening. The Penguins are now squandered and need an absolute miracle to get back into contention in this series. Call it a colossal comeback, because thats exactly what it would be.
We are now witnessing arguably the greatest meltdown in Penguins hockey history. A team filled full of players who had career years, a goaltender who set his career mark for wins in a season, a fifty goal scorer, forty goal scorer, and an unsung hero in Pascal Dupuis who set his name in stone with one of the longest point streaks in Pens history along with #66. Could all be forgotten and really not matter if they don't win the Cup.
Bob Johnson once coined the term, It's a great day for hockey. Well folks, today, unlike most days in this city filled with rich hockey roots and tradition, is not one of those days.
Pray for a miracle. I sure will.
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