Orlando Sentinel

Slashing crackdown, youth boost scoring

- By Stephen Whyno

The nets aren't bigger, the goaltender­s aren't smaller and yet scoring is up significan­tly around the NHL.

Through the first two months of the season, goals are up more than 12 percent from the same time a year ago, including a whopping 14 percent increase on the power play and a 38 percent spike in short-handed goals.

“That's what the league wanted,” San Jose Sharks defenseman Marc EdouardVla­sic said. “The league has done everything in their power to make there more goals out there, and that's exactly what's going on.”

The uptick can be credited to a concerted crackdown on slashing by issuing more penalties and a leaguewide move toward younger and more skilled players. The current pace of 6.01 goals per game would be the highest since 2005-06, when a series of rule changes were put in to open up the game and get more scoring to attract new fans.

Deputy NHL Commission­er Bill Daly said general managers are pleased with the current pace, which has lasted beyond the typical high-scoring October as defenses settle in for the season.

Stricter enforcemen­t of slashing was designed to reduce hand and wrist injuries, though it has had a positive effect on offense with defenders unable to whack at puck carriers' sticks in an effort to stop them.

Players have noticed, even if some are frustrated at the varying degrees of what rises to the level of a slashing penalty. Every referee is watching closely.

“The last five years, you could do so much more with your stick and probably now lots of players are afraid to use their sticks,” Los Angeles Kings forward Jussi Jokinen said. “I think everybody wants to see more goals, so scoring being up, I think it's good.”

Everyone except maybe the goaltender­s may think so, but it's not like they've been terrible. Four goalies who have played at least 20 games have a save percentage of .930 or higher.

“The goaltender­s, they haven't been any better than they are right now and some of them are still getting lit up pretty good,” said Washington Capitals coach Barry Trotz, who has the league's leading goal-scorer in Alex Ovechkin.

Certainly the emphasis on slashing has helped players such as Ovechkin, Calgary's Johnny Gaudreau and New York Islanders star John Tavares, who can do wonders with even a few extra inches of space. Columbus Blue Jackets forward Josh Anderson, who scored 10 goals in his first 15 games, said slashing is on everyone's mind and “guys are not getting (their sticks) up into the hands as much as they used to.”

Slashing and otherwise, there have been 173 more power plays than last season and teams are converting on 19.7 percent of them. Almost half the league is at or above 20 percent.

Los Angeles coach John Stevens said teams are in “attack mode” all the time now, and Trotz estimates that he spends three-quarters of time trying to figure out how to score more.

But risk is also inherent in the NHL getting younger and featuring so many rookie scorers such as Arizona's Clayton Keller, Chicago's Alex DeBrincat and Vancouver's Brock Boeser. The average age of an NHL player is 27 and Daly said the number has dropped over the past several years. He said more scoring is a byproduct as junior hockey and college programs get better at making players NHL-ready sooner.

Team compositio­n has also changed. There are fewer journeyman faceoff specialist­s and grinders, and more players kept for speed and skill.

“Just the mold of all teams is kind of changing: They're going for smaller, skilled guys rather than guys who are two-way forwards and stuff like that,” said Kings defenseman Drew Doughty, who is all of 27.

 ?? RALPH FRESO/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Arizona’s Clayton Keller (11 goals, 12 assists) is one of many dynamic rookie scorers in the NHL this season.
RALPH FRESO/ASSOCIATED PRESS Arizona’s Clayton Keller (11 goals, 12 assists) is one of many dynamic rookie scorers in the NHL this season.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States