(Sports Network) - Fans of the Phoenix Coyotes have to be wondering which club
will show up for its upcoming opening-round matchup: the one that dominated
the month of February or the squad that struggled through a good portion of
March before getting hot at the end.
If February's team shows up, than the Coyotes are primed to advance out of the
postseason's first-round for the first time since relocating to the desert.
At the very least, Phoenix should be happy with a new first-round opponent. In
each of their previous two postseasons, the Coyotes were matched up with the
Red Wings and failed to move on. Phoenix pushed the 2010 series to seven
games, but was swept out of the opening round a year ago.
Many wondered if the Coyotes would be able to get back to the playoffs after
the offseason loss of goaltender Ilya Bryzgalov, but Mike Smith has found a
home in Phoenix. The 30-year-old joined his third NHL team in six seasons when
he signed with the Coyotes and set career highs across the board with 38 wins,
eight shutouts, a 2.21 goals-against average and .930 save percentage.
Smith was dominating at times, winning 11 straight starts from Feb. 4-28 and
ending the regular season with five victories in a row. That included three
straight shutouts before back-to-back 4-1 wins, with the latter one against
the Wild securing the Coyotes' first Pacific Division title in franchise
history.
Smith posted a career-high shutout streak of 234 minutes and 25 seconds that
ended in his second-to-last game, getting himself on track after an up-and-
down March in which he went 6-4-3 with a 2.47 GAA. But the real test now
begins for the netminder, who has made just three career appearances in the
playoffs, with one start, while allowing two goals on 48 shots in that time
with the Lightning in 2010.
While the Coyotes lack playoff experience in the crease, they have plenty of
it up front in Radim Vrbata, Ray Whitney and Shane Doan. Whitney and Vrbata
form Phoenix's most dangerous line that is centered by Martin Hanzal, and both
put together excellent regular seasons.
Whitney led the Coyotes with 77 points while playing in all 82 games, and
reached a milestone this season with his 1,000th career point. Vrbata,
meanwhile, had a career-high 35 goals and 12 of them were game-winners to
match Steven Stamkos for the league lead as well as Jeremy Roenick's franchise
record set in 1999-2000.
Doan, the Coyotes' captain, also reached the 20-goal mark and was third on the
club with 50 points.
Phoenix had 10 players reach double-digit goals, but only Vrbata, Whitney and
Doan reached at least 20. Winger Lauri Korpikoski was the next highest among
'Yotes forwards with 17, while the gritty Raffi Torres had 15.
Torres reached the Stanley Cup Finals last season with the Canucks and
also came up short in a bid for the Cup while with the Oilers in 2006 against
Whitney's Hurricanes.
Whitney leads all Phoenix players with 87 postseason contests, 19 goals, 27
assists and 46 points, while Daymond Langkow is second on the team with 14
goals, 23 assists and 37 points in 59 career playoff games.
Antoine Vermette, Mikkel Boedker and Taylor Pyatt round out the Coyotes'
offensive attack.
While scoring depth may not be a strength of the Coyotes up front, they have a
pair of defensemen who know how to put up points. Both Keith Yandle and Oliver
Ekman-Larsson reached double-digit goals with 11 and 13, respectively, while
Yandle ended another solid campaign with 43 points. Ekman-Larsson, the sixth
overall pick of the 2009 draft, had a breakout campaign and his 13 goals were
the most by a Phoenix defenseman since Teppo Numminen's 13 in 2001-02.
Veterans Derek Morris, Michal Rozsival and former Blackhawk Adrian Aucoin
round out a decent defensive grouping that will need to stay healthy.
Despite having Yandle and Ekman-Larsson firing away from the blue line, the
Coyotes ranked 29th out of 30 NHL teams on the power play at 13.6 percent,
while their penalty kill was eighth (85.5 percent).
CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS (6th seed, West)
REGULAR SEASON RECORD: 45-26-11
2011 PLAYOFFS: Lost to Vancouver 4-3 in conference quarterfinals
(Sports Network) - Chicago Blackhawks captain Jonathan Toews said he is
confident he will be able to play in his club's first-round postseason series.
That probably isn't the word that best describes Chicago's goaltending
situation.
The Blackhawks are just two years removed from lifting Lord Stanley's Cup
after beating the Flyers in six games to cap the 2010 playoffs. Their hero in
that run to the championship was goaltender Antti Niemi, but financial reasons
now have him skating with the San Jose Sharks.
With Corey Crawford taking over the reigns last season, the Blackhawks were
ousted n the first round in seven games by the eventual Western Conference-
champion Vancouver Canucks, with Crawford posting a 2.21 goals-against average
and .927 save percentage in the seven starts.
Crawford, Chicago's likely Game 1 starter, took a step back in 2011-12, going
30-17-7 with a 2.72 GAA and .903 save percentage. He yielded 27 starts to Ray
Emery, who made the team out of camp on a tryout contract and went 15-9-4 with
a 2.81 GAA and .900 save percentage.
Those similar numbers can't have the 'Hawks feeling great about their
goaltending.
That makes the return of Toews that much more important. Chicago needed all
the wins it could get down the stretch thanks to a nine-game losing streak
from Jan. 21-Feb. 14, with all but one of those defeats coming regulation. The
Blackhawks also played the final 22 games of the regular season without Toews
due to a concussion, but the center thinks he will be able to suit up for
Thursday's opener.
Even with the missed time, Toews tied for second on the club with 29 goals and
was fourth with 57 points. He is a key part of an offense that ranked tied for
fifth with 241 goals and had five skaters break the 20-goal barrier. Dave
Bolland fell just one goal shy of making it six.
More importantly, Chicago's offensive core of Toews, Patrick Kane, Patrick
Sharp and Marian Hossa were all part of the Cup-winning club from two years
back. Chicago's expected top line of Toews, Kane (23 goals, 43 assists) and
point-leader Hossa (29G, 48A) is one of the best in the game, while Sharp adds
great depth with a team-high 33 goals.
Viktor Stalberg wasn't part of the 2009-10 club, but the 26-year-old Swede
broke out this season with 22 goals, 21 assists and 43 points. Marcus Kruger
has looked good between Stalberg and Sharp, while Bolland's line of Bryan
Bickell and Andrew Shaw can grind.
Chicago has a former Norris Trophy winner on its top defensive pairing with
Duncan Keith, who led all Blackhawks blueliners with 36 assists and 40 points
while playing almost 27 minutes a night. His partner Brent Seabrook had a
plus-21 rating, while Johnny Oduya gave Chicago a much-needed puck carrier
when he was acquired from the Winnipeg Jets before the trade deadline.
Nick Leddy disappointed with a minus-12 rating while playing all 82 games and
Niklas Hjalmarsson struggled to stay healthy.
If there is one area that could be Chicago's undoing, it is special teams. The
Blackhawks tied for just 25th in the NHL on the power play (15.2 percent),
though that unit has the potential to get hot at any moment.
Hossa could be the key. He has been excellent in his playoff career, notching
36 goals, 61 assists and 97 points in 127 postseason contests. Sharp (39
points) and Kane (48 points) have also produced in their playoff careers,
while Toews, who has 46 points in 26 playoff games, was the winner of the Conn
Smythe Trophy in 2010.
The 'Hawks also were near the bottom of the league on the penalty kill,
ranking 27th at 78.1 percent.
MATCHUP
These two clubs have never met in the postseason and the Coyotes won three of
the four regular-season meetings, including one in a shootout. Both teams
struggled on the power play against each other, with Phoenix going 0-for-7 and
Chicago scoring just twice in 12 opportunities up a man.
Smith won all three of his starts against the Blackhawks, posting a 1.29 GAA
and picking up a shutout in the most previous encounter on Feb. 11 in Phoenix.
Crawford and Emery both appeared in three of the four meetings with the
Coyotes. The former went 1-1 with a 4.28 GAA, while Emery was 0-1-1 with a
much-better 1.52 GAA.
Vrbata led all Phoenix skaters with three goals in the four games against the
Blackhawks, while Whitney had two goals and a team-best six points. Toews led
Chicago with three goals and an assist, while both Sharp and Kane also lit the
lamp and combined for seven points.
The Coyotes were a streaky team in the second half, but ended the regular
season on the upswing, while the Blackhawks posted an 8-1-4 mark over their
final 13 games.
Chicago certainly has firepower potential on offense, though it will take
Toews some time to round into form. That's okay for the Blackhawks since they
finished strong without their captain anyway.
It could be too late though if the Coyotes can ride Smith to a quick start and
get production from their bottom lines against a shaky Blackhawks goaltending
situation.
Sports Network predicted outcome: Coyotes in 6
The Sports Network