from Larry Brooks of the New York Post,
The Rangers’ inability to reproduce a consistent work ethic is the most disturbing aspect of their stutter-step 6-6-2 first month.
You can give them somewhat of a pass on their difficulty in making the first pass in their own end to jump-start the attack game.
The extended twin absences of Ryan McDonagh (who, truth be told, was playing at a C grade with the “C” on his chest) and Dan Boyle, compounded by John Moore’s five-game sabbatical that ended on Sunday, has robbed the Rangers of their best puck-movers.
And it is the first pass, the clean breakout that gets the puck as quickly as possible onto the sticks of the forwards, that serves as the foundation of Alain Vigneault’s coaching philosophy. The Rangers not only want to get the puck from Point A to Point B as quickly and efficiently as possible, they must.
This is not a team built to win physical battles. The more games the Blueshirts play, the more evident their lack of size and strength on the boards. They don’t win nearly enough one-on-ones. And with so much time spent chasing the puck in their own end, they then become a dump-and-change team once they finally clear the zone. In and out. One and done.
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