Three Takeaways – Roller coaster continues, Kraken beat Bruins again in shootout

by | Feb 27, 2024 | 14 comments

“Just when I thought I was out… They pull me… BACK IN!” Ok, but seriously, we don’t know what to make of this Seattle Kraken team right now. After sweeping the season series against the Boston Bruins by fighting tooth and nail for a 4-3 shootout victory, the Kraken are back to five points from a playoff spot. That’s still a huge mountain to climb, though, and the NHL trade deadline is looming ever closer.

The players aren’t doing a great job of giving clarity to their general manager on what he should do in advance of that March 8 deadline. They handily knocked off the high-flying Canucks, followed that up by laying an egg against the Wild, and then rebounded for a thrilling come-from-behind win over another of the best teams in the league, the Boston Bruins, on Monday.

“Our level never really changed throughout the game,” coach Dave Hakstol said. “We competed very hard, the confidence level was good… [We got] timely saves, timely plays, collectively and individually. That gets it done for a big two points.”

We’ll pause our What should this team do at the deadline? questions here, and instead just talk about what happened Monday. Here are our Three Takeaways from a thrilling 4-3 Kraken shootout win over the Bruins. 

Takeaway #1: A big night for Grubi

If this team stays in the playoff race beyond the deadline, it will be interesting to see how Hakstol’s goalie usage evolves. There have been interesting twists and turns in this saga throughout the season, with Daccord rising to near-star levels during Grubauer’s injury absence, then Grubauer returning and not getting many opportunities to play with Joey having seized the net. 

Now, Daccord has had a couple of his less-stellar outings of the season in a row, and Grubauer has been playing like he wants the crease back. 

“[Grubauer was] solid all the way through,” Hakstol said. “Really solid, some big saves at the right times, three for three in the shootout. I mean, there’s not much more we can ask for from Grubi tonight.”

32 shots against isn’t a massive volume, and his .31 goals saved above expected isn’t all that dazzling of a number. But Grubauer came up with some gigantic stops at critical junctures in the game, and he also shut down both of Boston’s Charlies (Coyle and McAvoy) and sealed the win by kicking away David Pastrnak’s second cheeky chip shot of the game.

Pastrnak scored the game’s first goal with almost the exact same move he made in the shootout, pulling the puck behind him and then sending a soft wrist shot meant to deceive the netminder. 

“He came in way slower than in the game,” Grubauer said of the shootout attempt. “So [he had] a little bit more time to make a move in the shootout. But this guy has so many tricks in the bag. You don’t expect him to do the same thing twice.”

Grubauer’s biggest saves came A.) with the game tied 2-2 in the third period, when he slid to his left and robbed the face-licking Brad Marchand twice (seen below), and B.) when he confidently waffleboarded away a Jake DeBrusk breakaway opportunity.  

Hakstol tends to lean heavily on one goalie at a time. Early in the season, it was Grubauer. Then Grubauer went out, and Daccord took the net and helped save the season. Now Grubi seems to be heating up.

What happens next? 

Takeaway #2: Burakovsky has to score soon

On a night when Oliver Bjorkstrand and Andre Burakovsky swapped places in the lineup (with Bjorkstrand making a rare departure from his usual line with Eeli Tolvanen and Yanni Gourde), Bjorkstrand broke a nine-game goalless drought, and Burakovsky notched his third assist in four games. 

Bjorkstrand’s goal came at a huge moment and looked for a fleeting few minutes like it would be the game-winner. 

“It’s nice,” Bjorkstrand said. “I think I’ve been struggling a little bit, so sometimes it’s just getting that goal, and it kind of gives you a boost. I felt like I was able to create some chances today and build momentum off that, and good things happened.” 

Bjorkstrand’s goal didn’t hold up as the winner because Coyle deflected a Pastrnak shot in with 2:52 left, comically tricking Boston fans into throwing their hats on the ice. But Seattle recovered from that letdown quickly and looked awesome through much of an exciting OT period.

Meanwhile, Burakovsky has perhaps been Seattle’s second-best forward (behind Jared McCann) since the All-Star break/bye week, and yet he still remains mired with ONE GOAL in 27 games on the season. 

The good news is that he’s started to chip in with assists, and we believe the floodgates are going to open soon. He’s getting so many looks, one is bound to go in sooner or later. 

“About 10 minutes ago, we just said we’re going to bring a bucket of Kentucky Fried Chicken in, I think, maybe for practice on Tuesday,” Hakstol joked, referencing a mix-up between Pedro Cerrano and Jake Taylor in the movie Major League. 

For folks like Sound Of Hockey’s John Barr, who hates funny things, the bit in the movie is this: power hitter Cerrano can’t hit a curveball, so he requests a live chicken to sacrifice to the god Jobu, who he believes can help him break his slump. But Taylor misunderstands the request and gets him a bucket of Colonel Sanders’ finest instead. Needless to say, the KFC offering does not break Cerrano’s slump. 

With the way Burakovsky has been struggling to score, Seattle may want to jump right to the live chicken. 

“He’s just got to keep doing the things that he’s doing right,” Hakstol said, more seriously. “The puck’s not going in, he’s hitting posts, he’s hitting bodies at net front. The big thing for him is continue possessing the puck, attack the net, get inside a little bit more, and keep shooting the puck. And good things will happen for him.” 

Personally, I would recommend that Burakovsky simply says, “F*** you, Jobu! I do it myself.” That’s what ultimately worked for Cerrano in the fictional film about a totally different sport, so surely it would work for Burakovsky.

Takeaway #3: A successful goalie interference challenge! 

I haven’t kept stats on this (I feel like Alison has?), but anecdotally, it sure feels like the Kraken lose goalie interference challenges wayyyyyyy more than they win them. After former Kraken Morgan Geekie appeared to give the Bruins a 3-2 lead (in what could have made for an incredible storyline if it had stood and gone as the winning goal), Hakstol asked the officials to take another look at the play. 

On a partial breakaway, Geekie deked and shot, slammed into Grubauer, then pushed the puck over the line as he was falling to the ice. 

Grubauer was surprised after the game when we told him it was his former teammate, Geekie, who had run into him. 

“Was that Geeks?” Grubauer inquired. “I mean, you never know these days what the call is going to be, if it’s called interference or not. I didn’t even see or notice that he touched the puck a second time. I think that was a great call by Toronto. It could have been a turning point of the game here.”

By the way, it was something of a rough night for Geekie, who took a tripping penalty, had a goal negated, was a minus-one, and got hit in the face with a shot from Kevin Shattenkirk. 

He did get a nice tribute video from the Kraken, though, so perhaps that was a consolation prize. We always liked that guy. 

Darren Brown

Darren Brown is the Chief Content Officer at soundofhockey.com and the host of the Sound Of Hockey Podcast. He is a member of the PHWA and is also usually SOH’s Twitter intern (but please pretend you don’t know that). Follow him @DarrenFunBrown and @sound_hockey or email darren@soundofhockey.com.

14 Comments

  1. Jim Powers

    Roller coaster for sure. But at 5 points back of the final playoff spot, with 24 games to go and 4 other teams vying for the same spot and most being more consistent lately, Francis knows it is too late and should begin to transact.

    What I am really interested in, besides the obvious trades of UFAs, if whether he is trying to get a young center who i rumored to be available, like Mittelstadt from the Sabres or Norris from the Senators. Getting a lot younger over the next season or two is important as the expansion draft selectees mostly age out.

    Reply
  2. John Barr

    Let the record show that I have seen Major League.

    Reply
  3. dapaxton

    Gruuuuuuu…he really stepped out last night. I love the idea that Gru and Daccord are each going to bring the best out of each other.
    Can someone please change my mind about Burakovsky please? Last night he seemed caught between playing hard and this is too much effort.

    Reply
  4. Alex R

    Baffling gane. Kraken were sloppy and getting outmatched most of the first 2 periods and it felt like only a matter of time before the game slipped away. Funny enough is that the Bruins have one of the worst records when leading after 2 periods so all hope was not lost. I still can’t belive we won. Larger picture, we should be selling now although I think there’s some pressure from top brass to make the playoffs and help season ticket renewal sales. That could hamstring us in the long run if that’s the case.

    Reply
  5. Jon

    Kraken need to play every period like that 3rd period, desperate and relentless.

    Reply
  6. Matt

    Kudos to Bruins fans that threw their hats on the ice for a non-hat trick and then got to watch their team lose in OT. Ya hate to see it.

    Reply
    • Nino

      “Now, Daccord has had a couple of his less-stellar outings of the season in a row, and Grubauer has been playing like he wants the crease back.”

      I agree with this and I don’t have any clean words to sum up my feelings on it. Common Gru you’ve been with us three years getting a very good starting salary and now you want to start playing well because your job is getting taken!!!! How about playing well because you’re getting paid to do it? If he continues playing well and pulls himself off the not tradable list move him as quickly as possible. What we are seeing is just how inconsistent he is, not a good thing for a starting goalkeeper. The goaltending we have seen recently is what was expected of him thee years ago when he signed a SIX year contract!!!!! We really have only seen it probably 15/20 games throughout that span, not good enough sorry.

      Same thoughts on the Kraken, yet again we see what they are capable of doing but can’t find the motivation most nights, this is all on 🔥H. We definitely need a new coach next season if not sooner.

      Reply
  7. djdw00

    The real highlight of the night for me was watching the loud-mouth Boston fan two rows behind me skulk off after the shootout with his shoulders slumped and his hands tucked into his front pockets – no longer wearing a Bruins hat.
    I’m all for fans going to see their favorite teams on the road, and I don’t expect them to just sit on their hands, but for some reason, obnoxious is the favored form of expression for some folks who root for teams from certain cities.
    Go Home Bruins fans!!!
    Go Kraken!!!

    As far as what the Kraken should do now… I’m gonna “pause” my thoughts on that until the next Monday Musings. I’m hoping the upcoming tilt against the Penguins is as fired-up as last night and the Canucks game.

    Reply
    • Matt

      I’ve found with the east cost teams that the visiting fans actually from those cities are loud but fun – you can chat and joke with them during the game, and have a good natured banter.

      But the fans that are actually from other places but not native of those cities like to be loud but have the thinnest skin I’ve ever encountered at a hockey game. I mean, you’re a visiting fan – if you can’t take some good, clean banter… then you’ll find a lot tougher cities than Seattle.

      The Bruins fans around me last night were charmin soft. If they had been in Philly, they wouldn’t have made it.

      Reply
      • djdw00

        I’ve had great experiences with Bruins fans previously as well… win or lose. That’s usually the case. If fact, that’s been the case all along at all Kraken games I’ve attended, but when there IS some A-hole… they’re from Boston, or New York, or… yes… Philly. As the woman in front of me said, “At least he’s not as bad as the Philly fans”. Just check out the Mullet Arena brawl… Bruins fans. Sure, the Canucks fans tried to burn down their own city… but that was at home.
        I’ve run into the same thing at baseball games (Yankees fans) and football games, (Eagles fans).
        It was the exception, not the rule… but it sure was nice seeing that guy shuffle out in silence after trying to repeatedly get a “Let’s Go Bru-ins” chant going… among other annoyances.
        Go Kraken!!!

        Reply
  8. Boist

    What a strange game. I felt like we really didn’t deserve it, but then sort of did. So many very sloppy plays, by Gourde, Burakovsky and Dumoulin in particular that led to prime Bruins chances. The line shuffling seemed to really affect their first period — chemistry was off, and effort was non-existent. Gru bailed them out, mostly. Each half of each period were totally different. And then Beniers was frickin awesome in OT but couldn’t quite get it done. Rollercoaster indeed!

    The Bruins fans near me were very nice. Many were sort-of Kraken fans, since they live in the area, so they were respectful. We still need to sell, but it was nice to actually see a W!

    Reply
    • Jonathan Toren

      Boist left out Borgen and Oleskiak being directly responsible for the first 2 Bruins goals through basic lack of effort. Really the bottom 4 defensemen all played pretty badly in that game. Thankfully Dunn and Larsson still rock and were leaned on more heavily in that 3rd period (although I can’t seem to confirm ice time by period).

      I don’t know if Evans is currently more reliable than any of the 6 starting vets, but it does seem bad for his development for him to just be sitting in the press box for weeks like this. Is it because they expect to trade Schultz and/or Dumoulin any day now but haven’t quite found the right deal? Why not just call up Cale Fleury to play that emergency backup role?

      Tanev also had so many boneheaded plays and didn’t even seem to have much of his speed, which is really his only asset. They should get Kartye back in the lineup, and Tanev really should be the forward to sit. I wonder if it is the “turbo” mythology keeping him in the lineup and not his actual play or production (his production being by far the worst of any full-time forward).

      Burakovsky swung between extremes — absolutely dazzling plays that ALMOST led to goals, then head-slapping turnovers.

      Whatever — the playoffs ship sailed a few weeks ago, we just have to enjoy each game as they come, and this one was a total blast (albeit not a masterpiece at all).

      Reply
  9. Robert Lynam

    Darren, c’mon, Taylor 100% gave Cerrano the KFC on purpose so that Cerrano wouldn’t sacrifice a live chicken in the locker room. He played it off as his misunderstanding to spare the team’s stomachs, and to not offend Cerrano; like a good captain should. The KFC works, to a degree, as Cerrano rejects Jobu and takes control over his own destiny – hitting a 2 run homer off a curve ball to tie the deciding game against NYY.

    Reply
    • John Barr

      I’m with Robert on this one.

      Reply

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