wolf wrote: Babcock has to keep his lines together, have a long talk with his veterans, and make sure he doesn't get outcoached
Canada has had more stength and skill(goaltending aside) in every game so far,however they have been out "x'd and o'd",so to speak.(No time out at the 1:06 mark ?)The Swiss game is another prime example.They had a definite gameplan and it worked through regulation and ot,albeit they needed great goaltending as well.That's the other thing, in past international tournaments,Canada was almost always assured to have the better goaltending, but in this tournament every team has legitimate,outstanding goaltending.Long gone are the days of Hardy Astrom.
Not too panicked just yet though.Like McKenzie said last night, switch the goalies and this game is a rout for Team Canada.It was pretty concerning to see the score 2-1 for the U.S and the shots on net 17-5 for Canada.But Brodeur is not alone in blame...Pronger and Niedermayer both looked old and slow, and Thorton looked uninspired.Too many penalties and a bad PP( Mike Green and Steve Stamkos....where are you?) also lent a hand in this defeat.
Luongo gets the start,Brodeur is done.He had two chances to stake his claim and played below expectations and capabilities both times.Rewarding past success' is not an option at this point.