The Daily Courier

Get on a ‘role:’ teams depend on it

- By WILL GRAVES

Casey DeSmith keeps insisting the NHL playoffs are no different than any other game he’s ever played in his life.

The Pittsburgh goaltender said his job at Madison Square Garden on Tuesday against the New York Rangers was no different than it was at any other time of the season.

Stop the puck when it comes your way. Keep your team in it. Don’t let one mistake morph into another. Pour everything you can into making sure you’re not on the wrong side of the post-series handshake line.

To DeSmith, it doesn’t matter he hasn’t appeared in a postseason game in five years, when 3,608 people watched his WilkesBarr­e/Scranton Penguins fall to the Providence Bruins in Game 5 of the first round of the 2017 AHL playoffs.

It’s just hockey. Right? “I think as soon as you start to try and make it bigger than it is, problems start to happen mentally,” he said.

It’s a great approach — in theory. Yet, when the puck drops, especially if it’s your first foray into the unique crucible the playoffs provide, it is different. At least at first blush.

“Those first 10 minutes sometimes feel like it’s the fastest game you’ve ever played in your life,” Nashville veteran defenceman Roman Josi said. “After that, you kind of settle in and you just play hockey and I think that’s important in the playoffs.”

DeSmith is hardly the only player improbably thrust into the spotlight as the chase for the Stanley Cup begins. Both conference­s feature players with unremarkab­le resumes who could have an outsize impact on the outcome.

An injury to top goaltender Frederik Andersen forced Metropolit­an Division champion Carolina to turn to Antti Raanta. Raanta shined in a 5-1 win over Boston on Monday night, but if he struggles at some point, rookie Pyotr Kochetkov (3-0 regular season) is the Hurricanes’ next option.

Then again, maybe playoff experience is overrated. Jordan Binnington helped the St. Louis to their only championsh­ip in 2019. He started Game 1 of the Blues’ series with Minnesota on the bench while Ville Husso and his career 53 starts went to work in net and made 37 saves in a 4-0 shutout over the Wild. At least there is an establishe­d hierarchy in Pittsburgh, Carolina and St. Louis. Not so much in Washington, which has Ilya Samsonov and Vitek Vanecek against topseeded Florida. The duo’s combined career playoff wins? Zero.

In Minnesota, 21-year-old rookie forward Matt Boldy made his playoff debut on Monday playing alongside Kevin Fiala just a few months after being called up from the minors. Part of Boldy’s role will be making sure linemate Kevin Fiala’s scorching April carries over into the postseason.

“(Boldy’s) made, obviously, great strides and progress, not only physically but mentally,” coach Dean Evason said. “He’s a very composed, very calm, very mature person.”

Calming the inevitable jitters is something DeSmith will need to do quickly if he doesn’t want Pittsburgh’s 16th straight postseason appearance — the longest active streak in major North American profession­al sports — to turn into a potentiall­y franchise-altering one-and-done.

All the 30-year-old career NHL backup has to do is help make sure the Penguins avoid a fourth consecutiv­e early exit, prop open the championsh­ip window for the venerable core of Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin and Kris Letang a little longer or at the very least keep Pittsburgh in it until injured All-Star Tristan Jarry — out since April 15 with a lower-body injury — is ready to go.

Oh, and he has to potentiall­y outplay Vezina Trophy candidate Igor Shesterkin, who limited the high-flying Penguins to four goals in four meetings during the regular season. No pressure or anything.

The Penguins are longshots to reach the Stanley Cup Final, according to FanDuel Sportsbook, and were largely uninspired down the stretch despite the steady play of DeSmith, who went 8-3-3 with a 2.44 goalsagain­st average after the All-Star break.

So DeSmith will do what he has had to do since signing with the ECHL’s Wheeling Nailers nearly seven years ago: attempt to prove the skeptics wrong.

“If you don’t have a battle mindset, I think it’s hard to succeed in the playoffs just because it’s a grind,” he said. “It’s such a battle-oriented environmen­t.”

One that can sometimes turn afterthoug­hts, role players, or backups into folk heroes or — better yet — champions.

Yes, the lights will be brighter on Tuesday night than they were at the Mohegan Sun Arena half a decade ago. The stakes will be considerab­ly higher. The adrenaline, however, will be familiar.

“I’m grateful for some of my prior playoff experience, (in the minors) or otherwise so hopefully some of that comfortabi­lity carries over,” DeSmith said.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Pittsburgh Penguins goaltender Casey DeSmith blocks a shot by Edmonton Oilers’ Derick Brassard during an NHL game in Pittsburgh on April 26.
The Associated Press Pittsburgh Penguins goaltender Casey DeSmith blocks a shot by Edmonton Oilers’ Derick Brassard during an NHL game in Pittsburgh on April 26.

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