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Howard Simon's Blog



Stafford Ice Cold

Since the season opening five goal explosion in a win over the Philadelphia Flyers, the Buffalo Sabres offense has been, as Head Coach Lindy Ruff desc ribed it, a “one trick pony”.  The Sabres have managed just eight goals in the last four games and have lost three of the four.

Thomas Vanek, Jason Pominville and Cody Hodgson have combined for nine of the team’s 13 goals this season so Ruff is looking for any of  the other ponies in the stable to produce.  Much is expected of the Tyler Ennis, Marcus Foligno and Drew Stafford trio but that group was broken up after four very unproductive games.

Ennis and Foligno showed signs of their respective games coming around this past weekend with both players finally breaking into the goal scoring column but Stafford remains ice cold.

A two time 20 goal scorer and just two seasons removed from a career best 31 goals(which as many will point out occurred in a contract year), Stafford has yet to score this season.  It isn’t due to a lack of chances.  His 16 shots on goal is tied for third best on the team and Stafford’s average of 18 minutes and 47 seconds of ice time a game, is third best among the forwards.  He’s also logged more than 17 minutes of power play time over the first five games yet he has as many goals for the Sabres as I do. 

Slow starts have been an issue for the former first round draft pick out of North Dakota.  Last season he actually scored three goals in the first four games but tallied just one in the next 22.  Through the end of January, Stafford had only eight goals.

Four years ago, Stafford had just three goals in his first 20 games and the season before that, it was two goals over the first 17 contests.  Even in his 31 goal campaign, most of that damage was in the second half of the season.  He scored 27 times from December through the end of the season.

If you look at shooting percentages, Stafford has been trending downward.  In his first full NHL season, the 27 year old Stafford scored on 19% of his shots.  It dropped in each of the next three years to 15,  10 and then down to 7%.  It jumped up to a career best 17% two years ago(in the contract year) and plummeted back down to 8% last season when he had a career best 226 shots on goal.

 

 

 

 



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Topics : Sports
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Locations : North DakotaPhiladelphia
People : Cody HodgsonDrew StaffordEvenJason PominvilleLindy RuffMarcus FolignoThomas Vanek




 
01/29/2013 11:37AM
Stafford Ice Cold
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01/30/2013 12:08PM
Stafford on Cold Ice
I go back a ways. While most listeners are calling about play of various players, your humble writer has an overview and solution. Notice how many goals are either just into a period, right after scoring, or immediately after the 1 minute time remaining. How often you see Sabre players without a stick. You seldom see it on the visitors. Goes back to Dom HASEK. They developed a culture of backing into the goalie aand trying not to lose. They also(Hope Terry and Darcy are listening)seem to get forwardds that do not score. This puts added stress on the team to try not to lose.Of the 12 forwards they dress each game, a minimum of 9 are not goal scorers. I defne goal scorers as a player that scores 35 or more goals in today's NHL. When Pat LaFontain, Alex Molginy, Dan Brierer, Chris Drury were here , we did not have these discussions. Everyone raised up their game. Now going back to Taylor Pyatt, Tim Connelly, Dixon Ward, Hecht, John Scott, Gerbe, Ennis, Ellis, Stafford, Dwerek Roy, Foligno, Hodgson, Ray, Peters, Ellis, and on and on. These are good to great AHL players that do not score. We owned all of them. I am sure I forgot many many more. Look t all the better Hockey teams. They all have major high profile goal scorers. This mediocrety on the front line leads to many breakdowns, bad habbits, poor to average goal tending, and overall malaise. It has to be in the back of all their heads, that if I give up a goal we have no way to come back.
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