The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Playoffs will feature clash of playing styles

- By Stephen Whyno

Catch-me-if-you-can speed, heavy pressure and frustratin­g grinding hockey will all collide in the Stanley Cup playoffs.

The 16 teams that open the playoffs run the gamut of styles and the one that comes out on top in June will again set a blueprint for the rest of the NHL to follow.

It’s a copycat league that tends to follow the last winner, even as the pendulum swings from year to year.

If the Chicago Blackhawks win their fourth Cup in seven years or Connor McDavid and the Edmonton Oilers shock the league to win their first since 1990, speed will continue to be in vogue.

But if someone such as the Boston Bruins or Montreal Canadiens raises the trophy, maybe size and strength is back to being the recipe for winning.

“In playoff hockey it’s about all the little things: It’s battles on the wall, in front of the net,” New York Rangers defenseman Marc Staal said.

“All that stuff becomes magnified and there’s no small plays out there. A team that can compete and win those types of battles usually has a good chance of success.”

How to win those battles and dictate the style of a game or series varies drasticall­y. The Pittsburgh Penguins won the Cup last year relying on their depth that will again be tested in the absence of top defenseman Kris Letang, beating the bigger but still deep San Jose Sharks, who will try to shake off late-season struggles to return to the final and break through.

Also trying to break through for the first title in franchise history are the Washington Capitals, who are built a little bit like the 2012 and 2014 Cup champion Los Angeles Kings who forechecke­d hard and used their size.

But the Capitals have skill from Alex Ovechkin on down and speed throughout the lineup to play just about every kind of game out there.

“We have a blend,” Capitals defenseman Matt Niskanen said. “I think our skilled guys are, generally speaking, a little bit bigger. We have good goaltendin­g and without the puck, if we have to, with the system we play, we can lock it down pretty well defensivel­y, but we also have enough creative guys and speed guys that if the game turns into an up-and-down rushes type game, we have guys that can do that, as well.”

On the way to the 2015 Stanley Cup Final, the Blackhawks and Tampa Bay Lightning showed that speed and skill can win even though playoff hockey has the reputation as a haven for mucking and grinding and low-scoring games.

But even those teams could lock down defensivel­y, something any championsh­ip contender must be able to do.

“We emphasize defense first all the time,” said Minnesota Wild coach Bruce Boudreau, in the playoffs for the ninth time with his third team.

“That’s our whole emphasis . ... I don’t know about my style. I got to believe whoever we play, they’re going to fear us as much as we fear them.”

Almost as much as running into a hot goaltender, the fear of facing a bad matchup is real in the playoffs even for the most talented teams.

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