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Impact
Impact!
NHL.com's Online Magazine
December/2003, Vol. 2, Issue 4
  • Winning faceoffs often makes the difference

  • NHL vets know that faceoff success is vital

  • Impact! Look at the Top 10 faceoff men

  • Wigge: Don't ignore the importance of faceoff success

  • Ducks discovered how vital faceoff can be

  • In Vancouver, the Canucks draw on success

  • Montreal's Charron schooled in faceoff facts

  • Photo of the month

  • Back issues of Impact

  • Hard Check Trivia


  •  
    Brendan Morrison
    "If you assume (faceoffs are) evenly divided, we get 20 chances offensively to gain possession of the puck and do something with it in their zone. And that's really valuable." -- Canucks associate coach Mike Johnston

    Work in progress



    -- continued from page 1 --

    "Our faceoff percentage over the last two years has really come up," Johnston said. "Our centermen have become much better on draws. They've worked really hard and taken more of a focus on it."

    The Canuck coaching staff meticulously tracks faceoff stats throughout a game; how many chances were generated from the draw, which players are doing well against which other players, and under which circumstance. It's an entire series within the game.

    Late in a contest, and mulling over a key draw deep, head coach Marc Crawford can phone assistant Barry Smith up in the press box and ask which center has done the best against say, Mike Ricci on his backhand in the offensive zone. That information can be key in holding a lead or getting the game-tying goal.

    "There are probably 60 faceoffs in a game," Johnston said. "If you assume they're evenly divided, we get 20 chances offensively to gain possession of the puck and do something with it in their zone. And that's really valuable. Conversely, in your own zone, you don't want to lose possession and allow the opposition a scoring chance."

    As much as anyone, Linden has sparked the turnaround for Vancouver centermen. He's been in the League long enough to have a pretty good book on opposition centers and is a deep well of information. He's like the NHL encyclopedia of the faceoff men.

    Linden knows who relies on quickness or power, and who has specific tendencies that might be exploited. And it's not just pre-game chatter. The centers share information along the bench during the game.

    "We talk a little bit," Linden said. "Sometimes if a guy's doing well, you ask what's he doing to you, or maybe, what you're doing to him and how you're beating him.

    "It's hard to tell what makes a good face-off guy," Linden said. "Because you think a big strong guy would make a good faceoff guy, and then you see a little guy that's got good quick hands. Adam Oates is an extremely good faceoff guy just because he's got strong wrists. He can snap your wrists off he's so strong. So sometimes the big strong guys aren't necessarily the best guys."

    The top two faceoff men in the NHL are 5-foot-11, 185-pound Yanic Perreault of the Montreal Canadiens and 5-11, 191-pound Jason Krog of the Anaheim Mighty Ducks. They clearly aren't out-muscling the likes of Dave Andreychuk and Keith Primeau. They're speed guys with exceptional timing and a little luck.

    Vancouver's Lindgren is a bit of a hybrid. He's the team's best faceoff center. He's quick, and at 6-2, 202-pounds, he's strong enough to overpower for the puck when he needs to.

    "It's about timing and a little bit of confidence," says Lindgren. "It's a weird thing, I mean, if you think you're good on faceoffs, you're good on faceoffs. You know what I mean? But you have your good days and your bad days. There really are so many different techniques, and everybody is so different. That's what makes it so hard."

    Lindgren uses a stick with a big blade. It's kind of like using a drift net in the ocean. You just wave it out over the red circle and then yank it back in. Anything in its way -- including a loose puck -- usually ends up coming back with it. At least according to Sedin, who begrudgingly admits his countryman is the best faceoff man on the team.

    "If you talk to him, you can say it's just because he's got a big blade," jokes Sedin. "That thing is just huge."

    In addition to the giant blade, Lindgren says the other key to a good percentage is mixing it up so other centers can't easily predict your strategy. Using the same technique time after time makes your gambit too easy to counter.

    "Faceoffs really matter when they're important faceoffs," says Brendan Morrison. "Faceoffs in your own zone and power-play faceoffs in the offensive zone are really important. A lot of neutral-zone faceoffs are important, too, but not as important as the defensive-zone ones."

    There's a old story about Pittsburgh's Mario Lemieux and taking draws. An ex-teammate once said Mario would intentionally concede neutral-zone draws throughout a game to soften his opponent up. Thinking Mario was an easy draw, they would let their guard down or go into the faceoff expecting the same old weak-wristed tactic he'd been using all game. But when it counted -- like an offensive-zone draw on a late power play -- he would stiffen and switch up his strike at the puck taking his opponent by surprise. Not great for the stat sheet, but good for the two points.

    Like Lemieux, Morrison stats don't tell the whole story, but not because he's intentionally duffing draws. He lines up between Markus Naslund and Todd Bertuzzi, and because of it, Morrison has the unenviable task of going head-to-head with the opposition's best checking centers every night.

    "It would be nice to be consistently good, but that's the way matchups go sometimes," explains Morrison, lounging in the hallway just outside the Canuck dressing room. "Some guys match up better against other guys, and it's just a matter of who you're going against that night. That makes all the difference in the world."

    And unlike Mario, the puck doesn't follow Canuck players around the ice like a well-trained Golden Retriever. Lost possession off a draw means energy wasted trying to get it back.

    "Puck possession is a big thing," says Morrison. "You don't want to be chasing the puck all night if you can have it. I think if you look over the course of a game, almost every game a goal is a direct result of a faceoff. You can make a difference night in night out on draws."

    While the Canucks are striding through a bit of a faceoff renaissance as of late, the real test will come during the Stanley Cup Playoffs when the other Western Conference powerhouses load up on veteran faceoff aces. Vancouver centermen might want to dust off those knitting needle and glue guns after all. Heck, a crocheted stick cozy and ultra-tacky blade might just be the extra edge they need to find the bouncing puck.

    It's all about whatever works.

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