Fleury wilting in final
Gerard Gallant didn’t consider pulling Marc-Andre Fleury as another game and perhaps the Vegas Golden Knights’ Stanley Cup hopes slipped away.
The struggles and another pile of Washington Capitals goals are on the entire team. Gallant couldn’t pull all his players at once.
“There was nothing that he could have done,” Gallant said.
As the face of the franchise and its backbone on the ice, Fleury did just about everything to lead the expansion Golden Knights to the Cup final with a .947 save percentage that made him the playoff MVP front-runner. In four games against Washington, Fleury has allowed 16 goals on 103 shots, a pedestrian .845 save percentage that speaks as much to Vegas crashing back down to earth as a team.
There is plenty of blame to pass around for the Golden Knights as they face a 3-1 series deficit that no team since the 1942 Toronto Maple Leafs has overcome in the final. Vegas needs Fleury to be better and his teammates to improve in front of him in Game 5 on Thursday night or they will watch their opponent celebrate a championship their home ice.
“When you’re a goalie you don’t want to get scored on,” Fleury said. “There was a lot of that (in Game 4). It’s never a good feeling. It’s a team game. Everybody’s trying hard out there, trying to help me out. We’ll find a way to make it work.”
It’s not working right now. The Capitals’ strategy of making lateral passes to get Fleury moving sideto-side is proving effective at even strength and on a power play that’s scoring at a 26.7 per cent clip.
Golden Knights players can’t help but feel like they’re letting “Flower” down.
“We have the best goalie in the league and he’s been carrying (us) the whole year along and we feel like the goals... there’s not much (he) can do on those,” centre Pierre-Edouard Bellemare said.