The
playoffs are often referred to as the “second season.” They are also thought of as the time when
stars rise to the top as opposed to those who produce big numbers in the
regular season. For the Rangers they
hope that the fresh start helps to bring back the vintage version of Marian
Gaborik and not the one who skated around in his sweater for the 2010-11
regular season.
The
numbers on Gaborik say that he had 22 goals and 48 points in his 62 games this
season despite battling through both injuries that kept him off the ice and
inconsistent lines throughout the season.
Those numbers were good enough to rank him third on the team in goals
and tied for second on the team in points.
While respectable for some players that level of production is
unacceptable from a player of Marian Gaborik’s talent level.
The
Rangers have to hope that Gaborik takes the challenge of avenging his
disappointing regular season and proves he should still be considered among the
elite offensive players in the game. The
team needs that second version of Gaborik to come to the forefront if they are going
to make a run in the playoffs. If he
does not do just that, then the stay in the second season could be over before
the Rangers even reach the second round.
Peter Botte of the New York Daily News passes along quotes from John Tortorella Monday.
Peter Botte of the New York Daily News passes along quotes from John Tortorella Monday.
"For a lot of players that feel they've struggled a little bit, or even if they have played well, you wipe the slate clean here," Tortorella said after practice Monday. "I hope Gabby realizes the slate is clean. So let's get to work."
The
key word there from Tortorella might be work.
The difference in the Gaborik that scored 42 goals last season and only
22 this year is the work rate he is playing with. Last year the reason he was so successful was
the speed, creativity and hands for sure, but also the willingness to go to the
front of the net where he hound pucks to bury instead of hanging around the
outside and making himself easy to defend.
If Gaborik decides to skate and press the Capitals defense he should be
able to create problems for them and help propel the Rangers into the series.
The
Rangers have gotten to where they are right now because so many players have
overachieved and gotten the most out of their talents this year. One who has not and has plenty more to
provide in terms of production from the first season to the second one is
Marian Gaborik. Maybe there is a belief
that the team can make a run without a producing Gaborik because they have
basically been forced to do so already this year, but playoff hockey is a
different animal and to survive your best players have to play at their best. Those players have to want the pressure, not
shrink from it. Now for the Rangers and
their fans all that is left is to hope Gaborik realizes that.