The Province

The ‘short side is the new five hole’

NHL players are finding ways to exploit the ‘Reverse VH’ stance for more goals

- STEPHEN WHYNO THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

It’s the kind of goal that makes fans groan because, man, he probably should’ve stopped that.

A shooter skating down the wing or even behind the net fires the puck between a goaltender and the near post for a short-side goal. It looks like it shouldn’t go in, but it has been happening a lot more this season as players figure out what goalies are doing or at least trying to do.

“Those goals, they don’t look good, but I think if people knew how hard it was to do that manoeuvre, they might be a little less quick to jump to judgment on the goalies,” Chicago Blackhawks goalie Scott Darling said.

That manoeuvre is called the “Reverse VH” and it’s the most widespread way for goalies to cover the post and not allow soft goals to be scored. An opposite of the previously used “VH” stance, it means a goalie’s pad against the post is horizontal along the ice while the back leg is vertical.

The Reverse VH is more effective than its predecesso­r, but as NHL Network analyst and former goaltender Kevin Weekes said: “Short side is the new five hole.” And everyone in hockey knows it.

Brian Boucher, another retired goalie turned analyst, said you can’t go two or three nights without seeing a short-side goal somewhere around the league. As recently as Thursday night, Colorado Avalanche captain Gabriel Landeskog went short side on Stanley Cup-winning Pittsburgh Penguins goaltender Matt Murray on a textbook sharp-angle shot that looks like a bad goal, but is more the product of shooters understand­ing techniques.

“Guys are realizing that the sharp-angle shots are extremely difficult to stop,” Vezina Trophy-winning goalie Braden Holtby of the Washington Capitals said. “You do see more and more guys trying it because it’s a high-quality scoring chance. Guys figure out trends now. They kind of figure them out a little quicker than they used to, which isn’t great for us.”

Jonathan Quick led the Los Angeles Kings to two Cups by using the Reverse VH and taking advantage of his Gumby-like athleticis­m. The stance, which originated in Sweden a few years before, took off in the NHL after Quick won the Cup in 2012. Now it’s a go-to technique for most goalies.

“A lot of guys are looking at that RVH, they’re like: ‘Quickie’s doing it. I’m going to do the RVH,’” Weekes said. “Quickie is the best at it. His body works in ways that nobody’s does, really. There’s no combinatio­n of guys that are that violently athletic — off-the-charts athletic and explosive — and also flexible like Jonathan Quick to that extreme.”

Goaltendin­g analyst Justin Goldman points out that when a skater is coming down the ice, there’s actually more room for the puck on the short side than the far side because there’s less distance for it to travel. More short-side goals isn’t a result of the Reverse VH being a bad stance, but instead he believes it’s goalies overusing it and losing the cat-andmouse game between them and shooters.

Too often goalies drop to their knees into the Reverse VH and become sitting ducks for Alex Ovechkin, Sidney Crosby, Joe Pavelski and some of the best snipers around.

“The shooter knows the goalie’s going to drop into this stance, which means he can release a puck a half a second or a half a step sooner than usual and he knows what his target is before he even looks up and sees where the goalie is,” Goldman said. “They’re almost over-anticipati­ng what a shooter is going to do before he actually does it and the shooter has the capacity now, he has the wherewitha­l and he has the accuracy to pick that spot.”

Darling thinks some goalies are still mastering the relatively new Reverse VH and 2006 Cup-winner Cam Ward of the Carolina Hurricanes acknowledg­ed he still uses the old VH style because he’s more comfortabl­e in it. Ward looks at Tuukka Rask of the Boston Bruins as someone who can push side to side with power out of the Reverse VH and Goldman called 2013 Vezina winner Sergei Bobrovsky of the Columbus Blue Jackets the “poster child” for doing it right.

“It’s a tough position to get fully square, but when the puck’s behind the net it gives you good coverage for pass outs and things like that,” Philadelph­ia goaltender Steve Mason said. “It’s complicate­d, but I think sometimes it can be overused.”

Flyers teammate Jakub Voracek said he just shoots “wherever it’s open,” but that’s often the short side nowadays.

“If the goalie shows them something that they weren’t expecting to see, as in a hole, then they get another option,” Weekes said. “It presents a different look and also a different shooting location for opposing shooters.”

A lot has changed with the game since Boucher set the consecutiv­e shutout record with the Coyotes in 2004 and he doesn’t even know if he’d be able to perfect the Reverse VH and deal with the expectatio­ns of goaltender­s today.

“You’ve got to be in position to make the second and third saves because at the end of the day it’s about keeping the puck out of the net,” Boucher said. “Whether it’s your fault or it’s not your fault, if you don’t keep it out of the net you’re going to have a tough time winning games and you’re going to have a tough time having a job.”

“Guys are realizing that the sharp-angle shots are extremely difficult to stop.” — Braden Holtby

 ?? — AP ?? Two-time Stanley Cup winning goaltender Jonathan Quick of the Los Angeles Kings is being given credit for popularizi­ng the Reverse VH stance that has become a trend for NHL goaltender­s. However, players are beginning to find goal-scoring holes in that...
— AP Two-time Stanley Cup winning goaltender Jonathan Quick of the Los Angeles Kings is being given credit for popularizi­ng the Reverse VH stance that has become a trend for NHL goaltender­s. However, players are beginning to find goal-scoring holes in that...

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