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Post by danvilleshark on Jan 30, 2020 8:08:26 GMT -8
Well the shit show continues. Guess quitting meth was a bad call this year.
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Post by HOOCH2173 on Jan 30, 2020 8:17:18 GMT -8
Well the shit show continues. Guess quitting meth was a bad call this year.
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Post by danvilleshark on Jan 30, 2020 8:42:55 GMT -8
SAN JOSE -- A missed chance at redemption.
The Sharks (22-26-4) were dominated by the Vancouver Canucks (29-18-4) in their final game before the All-Star break. On Wednesday night at SAP Center, it looked like San Jose might even the score, but a third-period collapse ruled out that possibility.
Facing the first-place team in the Pacific Division, the Sharks got off to a great start, with Tomas Hertl scoring less than five minutes into the game. Brent Burns gave the Sharks a one-goal lead in the second period, and Team Teal would take that same advantage into the second intermission. But three straight Canucks' goals in the first half of the third period turned a small lead into a larger deficit, and San Jose never caught back up.
Martin Jones put in an uneven performance in his first start since Jan. 16, stopping 20 of 24 shots. The 5-2 loss widened the gap in the standings between the two teams, which now stands at a whopping 14 points.
Here are three takeaways from a game the Sharks are going to regret:
Ninja Hertl The night started wonderfully for Hertl, but he didn't get a chance to finish it.
The Sharks' lone All-Star representative -- and the guy that should have been the All-Star Game MVP -- didn't take long to enforce his will against the Canucks. Hertl's tremendous cross-ice saucer pass to Timo Meier ultimately set up his own goal, as Vancouver goaltender Jacob Markstrom was unable to control the rebound from Meier's resulting shot. The puck popped right back to Hertl, who promptly deposited into the back of the net. His goal song? The "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" theme song. Duh.
Shortly after hearing some M-V-P chants from the SAP Center crowd, Hertl awkwardly went into the boards after colliding with two Vancouver players and appeared to sustain a leg injury. He went back to the bench under his own power, but was quickly taken up the tunnel to San Jose's locker room.
Hertl came back out onto the ice minutes later during a TV timeout and appeared to be testing his leg, but after reconvening with the Sharks training staff, he was taken back into the locker room and was ruled out for the rest of the game soon thereafter.
It's unknown if Hertl will miss any time, and if so, how much. But with Logan Couture already missing from the lineup, if Hertl joins him, that might be the final straw for the Sharks' bleak playoff hopes.
Jones' first audition If Wednesday was the first of 10-15 auditions for Martin Jones throughout the remainder of the season, we didn't exactly learn a whole lot.
Jones wasn't great, but he wasn't bad, either. There were a couple goals that maybe he should have had, but in most situations, he was dealing with a ton of traffic in front of him. And, to his credit, he came up with a few timely saves to keep his team in front through the first two periods. But then the third happened, and, well, the timely saves weren't there.
Sharks interim coach Bob Boughner expressed earlier in the week that he wants to make sure Jones doesn't have too many long layoffs, and planned to do a fairly even split with counterpart Aaron Dell. Boughner also conceded, though, that if one of San Jose's two netminders got hot, they'd be given a chance to keep it going. Jones didn't get hot Wednesday night against the Canucks, and it'll probably be Dell on Saturday against the Tampa Bay Lightning.
Faceoff struggles The Sharks dominated Vancouver in both shots (40-25) and hits (21-9). Those are usually signs that a team had a fairly successful night, but obviously, that's not what happened for San Jose. Part of the reason why was the Canucks' dominance in the face-off circle, where they won 38 draws to the Sharks' 20. That's a huge disparity, and continues a disturbing trend for San Jose, as the Sharks have now won fewer than 45 percent of the faceoffs in each of their last four games. That's their longest such streak of the season, and perhaps its no surprise that they've been outscored 15-7 over that span and lost three of the four contests.
It's tough to score when you don't have the puck, and clearly, the Sharks needed the puck a lot more Wednesday night.
Sharks takeaways: What we learned in deflating 5-2 loss to Canucks originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
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Post by danvilleshark on Jan 30, 2020 8:49:13 GMT -8
SAN JOSE -- The Sharks keep finding new ways to lose.
Of their 25 regulation losses this season entering Wednesday night's game against the visiting Vancouver Canucks at SAP Center, precisely zero of them came in games in which San Jose held a lead going into the third period. 19 times had the Sharks taken an advantage into the second intermission, and they were 17-0-2 in those contests.
So much for that.
Where there was once a zero, there is now a one. San Jose never trailed through the first two periods Wednesday night and took a 2-1 lead into the third period behind goals from Tomas Hertl and Brent Burns. A winning recipe, right?
Wrong.
Within the first three minutes of the third period, Vancouver tied it up. Within the first seven minutes, the Canucks turned a one-goal deficit into a one-goal lead. Less than a minute after that, Vancouver scored the back-breaker, and the rout was on. An empty-net goal later, and the Canucks departed San Jose with a 5-2 victory.
Getting outscored in the third period is nothing new to the Sharks this season, as they've now been outscored 94-56 in the third after Wednesday's debacle. A considerable portion of that negative margin has been accrued in blowouts, though, as San Jose actually has won more than half of its games that have been decided by a single goal and two-thirds of its games that have been decided by two goals. When it comes to games decided by three-or-more goals, though -- like Wednesday night -- the Sharks have prevailed in less than one-fifth of those contests. They've also now given up 12 empty-net goals.
So, yes, the third-period numbers might be a bit inflated. Even so, that doesn't change the fact that San Jose clearly has struggled to finish games. Only twice had it come back to bite the team when leading entering the third period, and at least in each of those two hiccups, the Sharks managed to come away with a point. That wasn't the case against the Canucks, and Team Teal knew it missed a golden opportunity to gain much-needed ground in the standings.
"We didn't give them a lot 5-on-5 at all," Sharks interim coach Bob Boughner said after the loss. "We played a very good defensive game. A couple long shots go in and you find yourself in a hole a little bit. I know we produced a fair number of chances and we had some good zone time and we had some good rush play -- there's a lot of good about it. But, yeah, they found a way to go into the third, and that's where we're sitting right now."
"It was a tough one because I thought we played well enough to win," Boughner added. "I thought we did some really good things."
Sharks forward Barclay Goodrow's disappointment was both readily evident and simultaneously concise.
"It's something we'll have to get fixed soon," Goodrow said of the team's third-period issues.
[RELATED: Sharks feel duty to advocate for mental health awareness]
The Canucks are in first place and for good reason, but on home ice with a lead entering the third period and an obvious need for points, that's a game the Sharks had to have. They blew it, and even if they do fix their third-period problems soon, it might already be too late.
How Sharks' third-period struggles have sunk team's NHL playoffs hopes originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
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Post by d5shark on Jan 30, 2020 12:00:10 GMT -8
Lower body injury in the 1st period. (personally I think he took a shot to the nuts) Good call there chief.
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Post by Badger on Jan 30, 2020 12:01:55 GMT -8
Lower body injury in the 1st period. (personally I think he took a shot to the nuts) Good call there chief. Sharks All-Star Tomas Hertl out for season after tearing ACL, MCL
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Post by d5shark on Jan 30, 2020 12:39:39 GMT -8
Sharks All-Star Tomas Hertl out for season after tearing ACL, MCL Jumbo back to being number 1 center
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Post by cjelli on Jan 30, 2020 12:47:34 GMT -8
Sharks All-Star Tomas Hertl out for season after tearing ACL, MCL Jumbo back to being number 1 center
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Post by danvilleshark on Jan 30, 2020 13:16:25 GMT -8
Sharks All-Star Tomas Hertl out for season after tearing ACL, MCL Poor Hertl. That really sucks.
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Post by John96 on Jan 30, 2020 13:48:36 GMT -8
Tough break on Hertl, poor guy.
This is probably going to help Wilson. No team expects to survive without its top two centers. Obviously we all knew this team wasn’t going anywhere but now they can say they lost any chance they may have had with this injury.
Time to sell and see what the prospects can do.
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Post by Marbles on Jan 30, 2020 14:49:08 GMT -8
Lower body injury in the 1st period. (personally I think he took a shot to the nuts) Good call there chief. Out for season. We are fucked.
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Post by Marbles on Jan 30, 2020 14:50:04 GMT -8
Can we start rejecting invitations to the all star game?
EK65 Couture Hertl
Sheesh.
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Post by danvilleshark on Jan 30, 2020 14:52:05 GMT -8
Sharks All-Star Tomas Hertl out for season after tearing ACL, MCL I take it back. This was the dagger.
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Post by cjelli on Jan 30, 2020 14:56:35 GMT -8
Sharks All-Star Tomas Hertl out for season after tearing ACL, MCL I take it back. This was the dagger. No. That was the handful of soil. The dagger was the EK65 contract.
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Post by danvilleshark on Jan 30, 2020 15:01:53 GMT -8
I take it back. This was the dagger. No. That was the handful of soil. The dagger was the EK65 contract.
Only Hasso can fix this and he seems ok with things.
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Post by cjelli on Jan 30, 2020 15:04:23 GMT -8
No. That was the handful of soil. The dagger was the EK65 contract.
Only Hasso can fix this and he seems ok with things. Let's see how the revenue generation goes in the remaining two months. I think it's going to be worse than the tank-for-mcdavid season.
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Post by Fugazi on Jan 30, 2020 15:08:00 GMT -8
Lower body injury in the 1st period. (personally I think he took a shot to the nuts) Good call there chief. Hey lower body eh
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Post by Marbles on Jan 30, 2020 18:11:56 GMT -8
Surely though this game must be blamed on Pimp. He was too damn happy in period 2.
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Post by redbeard on Jan 30, 2020 18:32:18 GMT -8
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