It was not just about a goaltender having a bad playoff
series or his team failing to meet justifiably lofty goals. Both of those results could be explained in a
vacuum. This was about a goaltender enduring
his second consecutive miserable first round performance for a franchise with Stanley
Cup or bust expectations. The fact that
Tomas Vokoun rescued the Pens, at least long enough for his teammates to flat
line against Boston only exacerbated the issue.
There is no sugar coating the obvious, Fleury was abysmal,
just as he was a year earlier against Philly.
Keep in mind this evaluation is coming from a well-known Fleury
defender. His critics were far less
accommodating of his performance.
There was however no justification for last year's performance against the Islanders. Fleury was well rested and the team in front
of him was at least competent defensively.
He was coming off a brilliant regular season and even opened the
playoffs with a shutout. And then after
just one shaky goal early in game 2 everything came
unglued. What followed was a mortifying
parade of leaky goals, several of which he inexplicably kicked in to his own
net.
By the end of game four, Bylsma had no choice but to switch goaltenders. And when Fleury was given a second chance of
sorts against Boston, he looked completely lost. Given that precipitous fall, the overriding
cup or bust pressure on the Pens, and the Fleury’s
excessive salary cap figure I was almost positive he would be tending goal in
Edmonton or Miami this season.
Amazingly that did not happen.
I’m not sure if it was true faith or the lack of a readily
available alternative but the Pens stuck with Fleury. And they were rewarded with what was, in my
opinion, his second best season in the Burgh (behind only the 2010-11 year). At face value he was brilliant, often
carrying a team that was decimated by injuries and lacking any semblance of 3rd
and 4th line depth. A good
argument could be made for him sharing the team MVP award with Sidney
Crosby. His brilliance this season stoodon its own, without consideration of the extenuating circumstances.
It was even more brilliant when you consider where he was a
year ago and the pressure he was under this season as a result. I still recall national media sites running
stories and pasting up video of Fleury allowing a soft goal…IN A TRAINING CAMP
SCRIMAGE.
Fleury often gets criticized for being mentally soft. Admittedly that assessment is hard to dispute
when he follows two straight brilliant regular seasons with apocalyptic post
season meltdowns. When you consider how
low he was at the end of last season, it’s nothing short of miraculous that he
put it back together. Many athletes could
not recover from such a fall, as least now without a change of scenery. Fleury did so, right under the spotlight of
his critics.
It takes incredible strength of character to pull that
off. Fleury should be commended for how
much of that he showed this season.
Alas the harsh reality is that as of this morning, none of
it matters.
It’s a fact of hockey life that goaltenders are always under
pressure in the playoffs. The pressure
on Fleury however is astronomical. He
has literally reached a crossroads in his career; one where any meaningful evaluation
of his performance beings in mid-April.
There is virtually nothing he can do in the regular season to dissuade his
critics; most of whom accept that strong regular season play from him is a
given. It’s literally ALL about the post
season for Marc-Andre Fleury.
I’ve been watching sports for nearly 35 years and I honestly
cannot remember another athlete who was under this type of post season pressure. Fleury’s not alone under the microscope of
course; at the very minimum he’s got a time share with Dan Bylsma, but the
spotlight shines brightest on the Penguin net-minder. I would be shocked if any reputable playoff
preview does not lament the potential for a Fleury meltdown to take down the
Pens.
Further compounding the issue is that this year’s Penguin team
has some fairly obvious red flags. Excepting
Brandon Sutter, the 3rd and 4th lines are substandard for
a championship contender. They’ve
struggled to find a winger to replace Pascal Dupuis. And the team was far too dependent on special
teams’ play and shootout victories for its regular season success. For the first time since 87 and 71 missed the
playoffs in 2011, the Penguins are justifiably not a Stanley Cup favorite.
For a team with such a make-up to have a deep run, or dare I
suggest live up to the Stanley Cup aspirations of its fan base, Fleury must be
nothing short of brilliant from start to finish. I’m talking Tim Thomas 2011 or Jonathan Quick
2012 style brilliant. Or better yet, Fleury
2008 brilliant.
Is the point clear yet?
To ratchet up the pressure a tad higher, Fleury is likely playing
for his future in the Burgh. The team is
already excessively top heavy against the salary cap; a situation which further
deteriorates next year when new contracts for Letang and Malkin kick in. There is simply no room for a $5 Million per
year goaltender if he cannot raise his game when it matters most. And unlike last year, there is no safety net
behind him. It seems highly unlikely the
Pens will turn to Vokoun (after a season of inactivity) or Jeff Zatkoff should MAF
flounder again. Simply put, the Penguins
will sink or swim with #29.
For what it’s worth, I genuinely hope Fleury steps-up. This goes beyond being a Penguin fan and
understanding that Fleury’s ‘A’ game is a prerequisite for post season
success. The Flower by all accounts is
one of the truly good guys in professional sports. He seems to genuinely love playing the game. And he’s had too much success in his career to
be branded solely on his recent post season failures. As a reminder, that success includes 289
regular season victories, two trips to the Stanley Cup finals, and one very
memorable championship. He’s absolutely capable of being great when it matters most.
Nothing would make me happier than to see Fleury carry the
Pens this post season. It would be a fabulous and deserved redemption story;
one that seemed incomprehensible 10 months ago.
If that does not happen my prediction from last May likely comes to pass; a year later than expected.
ALL HAIL THE MIGHTY
PENGUIN…BLESSED BE THE PENGUIN, FOR IT IS GOOD.
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