Las Vegas Review-Journal

Knights hunt for calm after storm of scoring

Defense aims to offer Capitals fewer opportunit­ies in Game 2

- By David Schoen Las Vegas Review-journal

By all accounts, the opening game of the Stanley Cup Final made for entertaini­ng viewing, with 10 goals, four lead changes and end-to-end action for 60 minutes.

Nothing personal, but Golden Knights goaltender Marc-andre Fleury wouldn’t mind if Game 2 was a little more boring.

“I hope so,” he said Tuesday at City National Arena. “It was exciting to watch, I think, but not the goalie’s favorite, I’ll say.”

The Knights maneuvered through Monday’s 6-4 victory over Washington like a fearless teen driver on a joyride, weaving through traffic and flirting with danger at every turn before safely arriving at their destinatio­n.

Expect a less hazardous trip when the best-of-seven series continues at 5 p.m. Wednesday at T-mobile Arena.

“I’m sure it was great for the fans on TV,” Knights coach Gerard Gallant

KNIGHTS

I also set the initial bar incredibly low, believing most officials are basically incompeten­t at some level or simply haven’t been able to keep up with the speed and pace and athleticis­m of the sport they officiate — or both — so to be overly disparagin­g seems unfair.

But then you watch Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final between the Golden Knights and Capitals on Monday. Then you reread Dryden. Thirty-five years after “The Game” was published, much of what he wrote about officials was apparent during a 6-4 win by Vegas at T-mobile Arena to open the best-of-seven series, which is to say hockey remains the most inconsiste­ntly officiated sport in the world.

Fine folks who seem at times not to have any idea what to penalize and when.

In attempting to allow the game to discover its natural rhythm, Dryden believed it included so many infraction­s, calling near all of them wouldn’t allow things to be judged consistent­ly with other important factors. So, as he wrote, it’s a penalty here, several uncalled ones there, never too many so that the flow of the things will be overly interrupte­d. Hence, the inconsiste­ncy. Example: Vegas scored to tie things at 4-4 at 2:41 of the third period Monday when officials missed a blatant cross-check by Ryan Reaves on John Carlson, allowing Reaves to jam home his second goal in as many playoff games.

It shouldn’t have counted. Washington should have been on the power play and leading 4-3.

“It’s just unforgivab­le,” NBCSN analyst Mike Milbury said on the postgame telecast. “You’ve got two officials … you have to make the call. It’s a turning point of the game … That’s not the way we’re supposed to play. You’re not supposed to play prison rules. You’re supposed to play by the NHL rule book. You’re supposed to know it. You’re supposed to be alert. You’re the best officials in the league.”

Instead, that goal was followed three minutes later by Capitals forward Tom Wilson crushing Jonathan Marchessau­lt with a blindside hit that put the Vegas front-liner off the ice and into a concussion protocol for 15 minutes.

And because officials took so long calling a two-minute minor interferen­ce on Wilson — it could have easily been a five-minute major — David Perron of the Knights came off the bench for a retaliator­y cross-check on Washington star Alex Ovechkin.

Meaning, instead of the Knights being on a power play, things went 4-on-4.

I’m not surprised the league’s department of player safety didn’t bother to further discipline Wilson, because beside goalie interferen­ce, which the folks in Toronto have a better chance at solving those Millennium prize math problems than calling with any sense of consistenc­y, the most confusion lies with what exactly constitute­s an illegal hit.

This isn’t about fans, who watch with biased eyes favoring whatever side they want to win.

It’s not about media, either those employed by the team or others who bizarrely consider themselves part of it.

It’s about the players and coaches and management officials who worked so tirelessly all season to reach this point.

They deserve better.

Vegas and Washington will likely be sharper in Game 2 on Wednesday than they were Monday.

The officials need to be as well.

It’s been much of the same these Stanley Cup playoffs, much of the inconsiste­nt calls that have defined the NHL for some time now.

But these are the finals, and that should demand everyone’s very best.

Even if Ken Dryden saw this stuff decades ago.

Contact columnist Ed Graney at egraney@reviewjour­nal.com or 702383-4618. He can be heard on “The Press Box,” ESPN Radio 100.9 FM and 1100 AM, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through Friday. Follow @edgraney on Twitter.

 ?? Richard Brian ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @vegasphoto­graph Golden Knights goaltender Marc-andre Fleury blocks a wrap around attempt by Washington Capitals center Evgeny Kuznetsov during the third period Monday in Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final at T-mobile Arena.
Richard Brian Las Vegas Review-journal @vegasphoto­graph Golden Knights goaltender Marc-andre Fleury blocks a wrap around attempt by Washington Capitals center Evgeny Kuznetsov during the third period Monday in Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final at T-mobile Arena.

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