The Detroit Red Wings dropped a frustrating 5-1 decision to the Montreal Canadiens last night in the Wings’ home opener, and this morning, a quintet of writers have weighed with more discussion about the Red Wings’ loss.
First, MLive’s Ansar Khan points out that, while the Wings gave up a gaggle of odd-man rushes due to neutral zone turnovers, the team believes that their errors are fixable–but only at a cost:
“You don’t give up two-on-ones; if a D’s down, a forward covers,” [coach Todd McLellan] said. “You manage the puck; you don’t turn it over. I thought we got off to a good start, but our game management, you’re going to hear that all year from me because clearly, it’s still a huge issue. We just played the game; we didn’t play to win the game.
“The players will say we can fix this. We can. Some of them have been doing it for years. It’s time. We just spent 3-3½ weeks at training camp dealing with these situations. If it happened once or twice in a game, OK. But there’s maybe six or seven outnumbered rushes at the end of the first period from the 10-minute mark on and it’s unacceptable. We’ll have to drill it back into them.”
The Canadiens scored five unanswered goals after Dylan Larkin opened the scoring on the power play at 3:50 of the first. John Gibson, in his Red Wings debut, allowed all five goals on 13 shots and was pulled for Cam Talbot with 3:48 remaining in the second.
“I thought it was a great start, really good intensity, and then the game kind of slipped away from us,” Moritz Seider said. “We weren’t detailed. They just kind of outworked us, out-skated us, got a lot of great opportunities around our net and nothing Gibby could have done to prevent goals.”
McLellan and players said they “hung (Gibson) out to dry.”
“We didn’t execute and everything they got, I feel like we let them get behind us,” Larkin said. “We seemed like we really couldn’t do the simple things, chipping pucks in and getting to our game on the forecheck. We shot ourselves in the foot so many times that we didn’t have time to get to our game and create offense. It was chaotic and a lot of the chaos was self-inflicted, and it was a strange, strange game and we just really did not help ourselves at all. And I do believe it’s all fixable.”
Second, Detroit Hockey Now’s Kevin Allen noted the following about the Red Wings’ rookie trio:
Continue reading Morning news: on fixable errors, rookie debuts, boo birds, ‘5 thoughts’ and an optimistic Monarrez (sort of)