Albany Times Union

Familiar faces in different places in East

Isles’ Trotz coached Capitals; Flyers staff was in Montreal

- By John Wawrow

Two years removed from coaching the Capitals to win the Stanley Cup, Barry Trotz is now behind the sixth-seeded New York Islanders’ bench in preparing to face third-seeded Washington in the first round of the NHL’S Eastern Conference playoffs beginning Wednesday night.

Familiarit­y is breeding respect among the East opponents entering the first round.

“That group has a lot of pedigree, they’ve got a lot of star power,” Trotz said of the Alex Ovechkin-led Capitals. “I think it’ll be a hell of a series.”

Trotz was behind the Capitals’ bench in 2015, when Washington eliminated the New York Islanders in seven games of a first-round series.

“It was a highly competitiv­e emotional series and I expect a lot of the same,”

Trotz said.

Capitals coach Todd Reirden played down the notion of facing his former boss.

“It’s not Barry Trotz versus Todd Reirden or any of those type of things,” he said.

The Islanders hold a 5-2 playoff series edge over Washington.

The top-seeded Philadelph­ia Fly

ers have two former Montreal coaches — Alain Vigneault and assistant Michel Therrien — on their staff in preparing to face the upstart Canadiens. Montreal was the last team in the East to qualify for the expanded playoffs, and then needed four games to win its best-of-five series over Sidney Crosby and the Pittsburgh Penguins.

“Yeah, 2020 has been really weird for many people, for the whole hockey world, and that’s why we’re here, too,” Canadiens forward Phillip Danault said, noting how a year ago Montreal fell one point short from qualifying for the postseason. “Yes, we had a bit of luck to be in the playoffs. But obviously, I think anything can happen.”

The Flyers and Canadiens have split their previous six playoff meetings, with Philadelph­ia most recently beating Montreal in five games in the 2010 conference finals.

The fourth-seeded Boston Bruins and the fifth-seeded Carolina Hurricanes open on Tuesday, a year after the Bruins swept the Hurricanes in the conference finals.

Also on Tuesday, the secondseed­ed Tampa Bay Lightning will begin their series against the seventh-seeded Columbus Blue Jackets.

Bad-news Bruins

Bad enough the Presidents’ Trophy-winning Bruins looked flat at times in losing all three round-robin games to finish as the East’s fourth seed. Injuries continue to be an issue.

Vezina Trophy finalist goalie Tuukka Rask and leading scorer David Pastrnak both missed practice Monday after being deemed unfit to participat­e. Without going into detail, coach Bruce Cassidy said both are expected for Game 1.

“Of course I would have liked another day, just to rest,” Cassidy said, noting how Boston is coming off a 2-1 loss to Washington on Sunday. “Maybe, for us, in this case it’s good to get back at it right away, because we haven’t been involved in the sort of sudden-death playoff atmosphere.”

The Bruins have won four of five series against Carolina/ Hartford.

Rested vs. tested

Hurricanes coach Rod Brind’amour hopes Carolina hasn’t lost its edge since completing its three-game sweep of the New York Rangers on Aug. 4.

And whatever advantage the Hurricanes might have had in playing meaningful games as compared to the Bruins playing in a round-robin series might also have been negated.

“If we had started a day or two after that series, then I would’ve said, yes, for sure, there would’ve been maybe a little advantage there,” he said. “Now, I think that probably went away with us sitting for a week.”

On the bright side, defenseman Dougie Hamilton could be in position to make his playoff debut in Game 1 for Carolina.

Blue-collar Blue Jackets?

Tampa Bay coach Jon Cooper took exception to the Columbus Blue Jackets being referred to as “a blue-collar” team.

“Is that a positive or a negative?” Cooper asked. “If bluecollar means a hard-working team, they are. But they don’t have blue-collar talent. They have blue-chip talent.”

Cooper and the Lightning know just how good the Blue Jackets are in a rematch of last season’s first-round series in which Columbus swept the Presidents’ Trophy winners in four games.

“What happened last year, happened last year. That’s in the history books forever,” Cooper said, noting how both teams have made various changes to their lineups. “I wouldn’t call them a blue-collar team. I’d call them a really good team.”

Lightning struck

Tampa Bay faces the possibilit­y of opening its series against Columbus minus its two top players.

Captain Steven Stamkos has been out since suffering a lower body injury before the start of training camp last month. And defenseman Victor Hedman’s status is uncertain after the Norris Trophy finalist appeared to twist his right ankle in a 4-1 loss to Philadelph­ia on Saturday.

“It’s a tough job to fill and we have to do it collective­ly,” defenseman Kevin Shattenkir­k said. “It’s not just going to be one person coming in and trying to emulate Victor Hedman.”

Goalie shuffle

Columbus coach John Tortorella ruled out Blue Jackets goalie Elvis Merzlikins from Game 1. That means the Blue Jackets will start Joonas Korpisalo, who is coming off a 33-save outing in Columbus’ 3-0 Game 5 win over Toronto on Sunday night. Korpisalo also shut out Toronto in Game 1, but was yanked for Merzlikins after allowing three goals on 15 shots in Game 3.

 ?? Nick Wass / Associated Press ?? islanders coach Barry trotz expects “a hell of a series” against the Capitals, the franchise he previously coached.
Nick Wass / Associated Press islanders coach Barry trotz expects “a hell of a series” against the Capitals, the franchise he previously coached.

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