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Tuesday, March 16, 2010
Coach Wilson under attack!
The day of Game 3 in Pittsburgh, this analysis piece of the series thus far by Post-Gazette Pens beat writer Bob Whitley strongly called into question the coaching tactics of Pittsburgh bench boss Johnny Wilson. In a scathing attack, the scribe took Wilson to task for supposedly not unleashing a fleet-footed offense on the Bruins, among other errors. This despite the Penguins pulling off one of the playoffs' early surprises by coming out of the tough Boston Garden with a split.
They never said being a coach was easy!
They never said being a coach was easy!
Monday, March 15, 2010
Game 2: Pens can't "bar the door" vs. Bruins
After their surprising victory against the mighty Bruins in Game One, the Penguins came out trying to play the same style that got them that impressive win two nights earlier: play tight defense, try to capitalize on the odd offensive chance, and - most of all - pray that goalie Greg Millen can keep standing on his head.
Well, it worked OK for the first period, but not much longer, as the Beantowners evened things up rather easily, skating off with a 4-1 win and a 1-1 series tie in their best-of-five 1980 preliminary series round.
Here's a wire article with some reaction from Pens D-man Ron Stackhouse and Bruin goalkeeper Gerry Cheevers.
Saturday, March 13, 2010
Penguins-Bruins 1980: Game 1
In Game One, the Penguins shocked the Bruins and the mere 9,725 Boston spectators who came out to see what was supposed to be a ho-hum drubbing of the visitors. The rejuvinated Pens, coming off a disappointing end to a disappointing regular season, withstood a 38-shot Bruin barrage to claim a 4-2 victory.
Goalie Greg Millen, in his first-ever playoff action, stood on his head, stopping enough of Boston's 20 third-period howitzers to give the underdog Pens an inconceivable 1-0 series lead.
This article from the April 9, 1980 Post-Gazette summarizes the tilt, while the others around it contain some nice quotes from the victors' locker room deep in the bowels of the old Boston Garden.
This game was also the playoff debut of Raymond Bourque, the future Hall of Famer. He fired an incredible nine shots on Millen - who stopped them all.
Goalie Greg Millen, in his first-ever playoff action, stood on his head, stopping enough of Boston's 20 third-period howitzers to give the underdog Pens an inconceivable 1-0 series lead.
This article from the April 9, 1980 Post-Gazette summarizes the tilt, while the others around it contain some nice quotes from the victors' locker room deep in the bowels of the old Boston Garden.
This game was also the playoff debut of Raymond Bourque, the future Hall of Famer. He fired an incredible nine shots on Millen - who stopped them all.
Thursday, March 11, 2010
1980 Playoffs: Penguins-Bruins
Over the next few posts I'm going to look at the Penguins 1980 Preliminary Round battle with the Boston Bruins, which turned out to be anything but what most fans expected it to be: a quick Bruin whitewashing.
This article from the April 7, 1980 Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, written on the eve of the series opener, looks at the state of the Igloo-dwellers at the end of a disappointing regular season that saw them finish seven games below the .500 mark. The team could hardly have felt great about itself after finishing the campaign with a 9-1 abomination at home against the Buffalo Sabres.
Add in the fact that the Big Bad Bruins had: a) finished a whopping 32 points better than the Pens; b) swept Pittsburgh four-straight in the playoffs the year before; and c) had gone deep into the playoffs the previous two seasons (Finals and Semi-Finals), and the Penguins' fate seemed sealed.
But, as all sports fans know, anything can happen. And something close to "anything" was about to...
This article from the April 7, 1980 Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, written on the eve of the series opener, looks at the state of the Igloo-dwellers at the end of a disappointing regular season that saw them finish seven games below the .500 mark. The team could hardly have felt great about itself after finishing the campaign with a 9-1 abomination at home against the Buffalo Sabres.
Add in the fact that the Big Bad Bruins had: a) finished a whopping 32 points better than the Pens; b) swept Pittsburgh four-straight in the playoffs the year before; and c) had gone deep into the playoffs the previous two seasons (Finals and Semi-Finals), and the Penguins' fate seemed sealed.
But, as all sports fans know, anything can happen. And something close to "anything" was about to...
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