RECAP: Gin and Jussi. PENS WIN.




There was a collision in front of Fleury late in the second period. He somehow lost his glove. But that didn't faze him:

Almost wish a puck would have gotten through to see him make a save with his bare hand. But that also could have meant a broken hand, so we're glad it didn't happen.
Add a commentSpecial performance by Marc-Andre Fleury tonight.

This game was a battle to the very end. And it leaves you wondering what a Pens/Rangers series could include.
Fleury bailed out his teammates time and again. Jussi Jokinen had a goal in regulation and the game-winner in the shootout. He won like 2,000 faceoffs, too.
Rick Nash still sucks.
Add a comment

New York Rangers (18-15-3) @ Pittsburgh Penguins (28-10-0)
ROOT, NHLN-US, MSG PLUS, RDS - 7:00 pm/et
Consol Energy Center - Pittsburgh, PA

The Pittsburgh Penguins thought that they could just show up at MSG on Wednesday night and have the New York Rangers hand them a victory with a side of fries and a tasty beverage to wash it all down. Unfortunately, all the Rangers handed them was a plate of humiliating defeat pie.
Have the Penguins learned that their collective awesomeness and "OMG remember we had a 15-game winning streak" aren't enough to bring them easy victories or will Ryane Clowe poop in their faces again?
The New Double J, Jussi Jokinen, makes his Pittsburgh Penguins debut tonight. Read all about him.
Add a comment

With a Winnipeg loss Thursday night, the Pens need only to get to overtime Friday night to clinch a playoff berth. There's obviously bigger fish to fry, but we'll never forget the bad times.
Now that the NHL trade deadline has passed, Pens GM Ray Shero can watch his son compete at Nationals. #usahnats2013 twitter.com/USAHMagazine/s…
— USA Hockey Magazine (@USAHMagazine) April 5, 2013
Add a comment
Reader Zach Fabi, a second semester senior at the US Military Academy at West Point, majoring in Engineering Management (Systems Engineering) came to us willing to explain some advanced stats. Over the past two years he has done significant work with statistical analysis, primarily analyzing baseball statistics, done two internships over the past two summers with the New York Yankees working in their scouting department running regressions and analysis for their minor league system.
Today Zach looks at what the advanced stats tell us about Douglas Murray.
Last week the Pittsburgh Penguins traded for everyone’s favorite Coke machine on skates when they gave up a 2nd rounder and a conditional 2nd rounder for Douglas Murray.
Almost immediately people across the hockey world who don’t happen to root for the guys in Black and Gold (feel free to include Bruins fans in this group as well) began to bash the Penguins for the move.
They said he was slow, a sloppy skater who was even more sloppy with the puck. They said he was past his prime, and was not worth two draft picks, especially picks as high as 2 second rounders.

They then began to site his peripherals and advanced stats as reasons why he was a bad addition to a Pens team that was flying high. They looked at his Corsi, and his Quality of Competition and said that he is easily one of the worst defensemen in the league (I’m not quite the twitter fiend the rest of the Pensblog staff is so I’m not going to go digging through the archives to prove my point).
There was a fanpost over on another Penguins blog, Pensburgh, that attempted to give context to the Murray deal by using advanced stats .
He does a pretty good job of explaining why Murray’s peripherals are fairly sub-par, but I think he misses the boat slightly here. The reality of the matter is, statistics only take you so far when it comes to explaining the context of a situation. True, Murray doesn’t have great peripherals, and a lot of this can be attributed to small sample size this year, and the poor quality of his teammates, but none of this means that he will not be able to contribute to this Penguins team in a big way.
The Penguins acquired Douglas Murray with a certain expectation. That expectation was that Murray would provide a (quite) large physical presence on the blue line, one that would give up the body, block shots, and clear the crease. He is a defensive defenseman, not someone who is expected to provide much in terms of possession or goal scoring (as if that longest active goal-less streak wasn’t a dead giveaway).
Many people will say, ok, that’s great, he’s a defensive defenseman, but that doesn’t mean he should have shoddy peripheral statistics. Well, actually, let’s take a look at the numbers. I did some (very poor) detective work and went searching for the guys who are considered the best of the so-called “defensive defensemen.” Admittedly this detective work involved a single google search, but it lead me to a Bleacher Report article from last year, where they made a nice little slide show list of the top ten defensive defensemen in the NHL. I then took those defensemen, added Douglas Murray to the list, and compiled some of their stats from behindthenet.ca and NHL.com, and I made another table

Figure 1 (Top Ten Defensive Defensemen)
Jussi Jokinen leads the Pens with 24 takeaways.
Crosby was at practice.

DGB inspects what's wrong with Deadline Day.
Here's an amazing Fenwick Close graphic from Eyes on the Prize that you can attempt to decode today.
Go Pens
Add a comment