Evgeni Malkin and Kris Letang are two of the most talented
hockey players on Coach Dan Bylsma’s 2013 Pittsburgh Penguins roster. Malkin and Letang can often successfully make
plays on the ice that other players would never even dare to attempt.
Coach Dan Bylsma needs to get Malkin and Letang to knock it
off, immediately.
In the first-round playoff series against the New York
Islanders, Malkin and Letang have made both brilliant plays and terrible
plays. The sum result: decidedly average performance from a former
playoff MVP and a current Norris Trophy nominee. And decidedly average performance from a
team’s best players is not a way to advance in the Stanley Cup playoffs.
But what does Bylsma need from Malkin and Letang, and how
does he bring it out of Malkin and Letang?
Facts
Evgeni
Malkin has won a Stanley Cup, a league MVP, and a scoring title with Dan Bylsma
as his coach.
One of
Dan Bylsma’s first moves upon becoming Pittsburgh’s head coach in February of
2009 was to make then-21-year-old Kris Letang a healthy scratch, being very
clear that he expected Letang could be a much better player. In the years since 2009, Letang has steadily
grown from a promising, skilled kid playing protected minutes to a player who
plays well enough in all situations to be in the conversation for the Norris
Trophy every season.
Factually,
Evgeni Malkin and Kris Letang have produced—to elite levels— with Dan Bylsma as
their head coach.
Regular Season Observations
Ever watch the Penguins during the regular season?
Ever notice how Malkin and Letang can just toy with the opposition? Ever seen Malkin annually part Tampa Bay’s
defense and score an amazing goal? Ever
seen Letang—successfully—deke at the blue line and then set up a scoring
chance?
Yeah. They do that all the time in the regular
season. When there’s time and space to
do so. When teams aren’t focusing their
entire game plan on—at playoff-level intensity—ferociously hitting them at every
chance because they know exactly what Malkin and Letang can do and they’d
prefer they didn’t do it to them.
Ever
watched Malkin and Letang when games get out of control? Ever notice how both players try to do way
too much, and cause misery for themselves?
They try to take over with their talent.
They try to do too much; they try to do it all themselves (race up ice
to create a scoring chance, thread an impossible pass that gets picked off, and
things along those lines). And they end
up making mistakes that don’t make sense for players of their talent: they turn
over the puck when they shouldn’t, make an inexplicable decision, or take a
needless penalty.
And in
the regular season—the good far outweighs the bad. And you play Letang big minutes and you play
Malkin big minutes and they help your team keep the puck away from the opponent
most of the game and they put up points and they’re elite players who help make
sure your team is one of the best teams in the NHL.
Playoff Observations
Have you
noticed that both Malkin and Letang are giving the puck away too
frequently? Have you noticed that both
players have moments where they absolutely look like elite talents, and other
moments where they look like anything but elite talents?
If
you—as a fan—have noticed, be sure that the opponents have noticed. Be sure that the coaches on both sides have
noticed.
But
what do you do? When it comes to
player who—all regular season long, can just toy with other players and general
cover over any errors—what happens when there’s just not the same time and
space to do that, the exact same way, and those plays that are there in more
open ice just aren’t there for the taking?
A Game 4 Moment (Replicate, Please?)
Did you
notice the play that resulted in Pittsburgh’s third goal in Game 4? Letang contemplated doing something fancy
with the puck, and then he just dumped the puck to a place where Matt Cooke
could win a battle and retrieve the puck. It was the safe, simple, and smart play. And it resulted in a Pittsburgh goal.
But did you notice—of course you did—Letang
and Malkin turning over the puck and generally thinking if they just pushed and
pushed and pushed, their talent would be enough?
Talent
has to learn how to make the safe, simple, and smart play. Malkin and Letang are capable of doing so.
But
getting them to the point where they’re using their talent to make the safe and
simple play as a matter of course—and only taking that “risk” when there’s no
risk at all—
And
getting this to happen as a matter of course in incredibly emotional, tightly
contested playoff games.
Suffice
to say Malkin and Letang haven’t done that—regularly—in the postseason since
the Penguins’ last championship (and that timing—while hardly on those two
players alone—is not a coincidence). Dan
Bylsma has to hope video helps. He has
to hope conversations, or a kick in the rear, or whatever it is (because I’m
not going to pretend I have a clue about the best way to get through to Malkin
or Letang), somehow get through to two of his best players.
Because
habits where talent alone wins you games—great as that is. It’s of little use when the playoffs
start. And that’s when talent has to
be disciplined to make the safe, simple, and smart play.
No
matter what the coach says or does or doesn’t do, Malkin and Letang need to use
their talent to execute the safe, simple, and smart plays. But Dan Bylsma’s got to make it his mission
that they understood that’s all they have to execute. Because, if they do that, well—talent really
can take care of the rest. But no
talent is sufficient enough to overcome a regular failure to execute fundamental
plays.
And while
it’s on the players to start executing, it’s also on the coach to let those
players know: “Use your talent to take
what’s there, rather than force what’s not there—and trust that your talent
making simple, safe, smart plays will be sufficient to take care of the game.”
It’s
certainly far preferable than “Take this risk, and take that risk” and “then,
since at least one of those risks—inevitably—went wrong, do everything you can
to take more risks to make up for that risk you just took so we can get back
even or reclaim the lead!”
You
don’t want to stifle the creativity of your best players. But just as Jaromir Jagr didn’t become the
best player in hockey until he learned to stop beating the same player 4 times,
Malkin and Letang—in spite of their already impressive list of
accomplishments—still have growing and learning to do in terms of making the
smart and simple plays every time.
And a coach doing whatever he must to get that truth to click in is likely a key for any hope the Penguins have for
postseason success. That’s no easy
task for Dan Bylsma, of course—getting gifted players to perform at a level
commensurate with their abilities is nowhere near as easy as “gifted” makes you think
it should be—but it’s one thing he’ll need to figure out if he hopes to win
another championship with Malkin and Letang.