June 11, 2012, New Jersey Devils-Los Angeles Kings Game Six Stanley Cup Final advance notebook
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Julio Cortez/Associated Press
Peter DeBoer.
The blueprint was not to fall behind in Stanley Cup playoffs.
It is rare, though, that the best-laid plans are followed seamlessly in the two-month long tournament.
The Devils entered Monday night's Game 6 of the Stanley Cup final
trailing the Kings, three games to two. The Devils had won the last two
games of the series to improve their record in win-or-go-home games to
4-0 in the 2012 Stanley Cup playoffs. The Devils beat Florida in Games 6
and 7 (both in overtime periods) in the Eastern Conference quarterfinal
to win a series they had trailed three games to two.
"I don't know if there is preparation [to play
win-or-go-home-for-the-summer games]," Devils head coach Pete DeBoer
said during his media availability Monday morning. "That comes from
within your room. That's gut-check time. Those are the questions that
you don't know how your team will respond to as a coach until you get in
those situations."
Save for rare exceptions, many of the 82 games that make up regular
campaign are rather unimportant. Players, coaches and executives freely
acknowledge "anything can happen" once a team qualifies for the
playoffs.
The one strength of the regular season is that it allows teams to determine their overall mental makeup.
For a team that entered its fifth do-or-die game of the Stanley Cup
playoffs with a 4-0 record, the Devils have proved the athletes that
make up the Eastern Conference champions are overflowing with character.
"There [are] clues during the year," DeBoer said. "At different points
you get those pressure points — a must win or a big game to end a losing
streak — and you see how your team responds. Until you're actually
facing the fact of going home for the summer unless you win, you're not
really sure how you're going to respond."
Devils keeping emotions in check
The line between confidence and cockiness is infinitesimal.
It is a truism that the Devils recognize and are guarding against. They
understand their two wins in Games 4 and 5 only guaranteed that they
would play Monday night. Nothing else.
"I don't see any reason why we should be overconfident or satisfied.
We're still down 3-2. We're still in the same spot. One loss [and] we're
done," Zach Parise said. "I think just having gotten a couple wins,
we're playing with more confidence. But I don't think that makes us feel
overconfident.
"We still know how great of a team they are [and] how much better we
need to play to make this thing even go further," Parise said. "But that
being said, we're still in a really tough spot, having to win a road
Game 6 to extend this thing."
Follow NHL beat writer Denis Gorman on Twitter @DenisGorman for news throughout the playoffs.
Follow NHL beat writer Denis Gorman on Twitter @DenisGorman for news throughout the playoffs.
http://www.metro.us/newyork/sports/article/1145339--stanley-cup-notebook-devils-step-up-at-right-times
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