Buffalo Sabres Jack Eichel, Rasmus Ristolainen Mostly Impress In WCH Debut
The Buffalo Sabres front office has to be happy with what it saw from two of its young, core players Sunday night in Toronto.
In case you forgot, the Buffalo Sabres have four players competing in the 2016 World Cup of Hockey. While I enjoy watching Ryan O’Reilly play and have nothing against Dmitry Kulikov . . . yet . . . the two players I am the most interested in watching during the tournament are Jack Eichel and Rasmus Ristolainen.
How fortunate for me, then, that Eichel and Risto faced each other in their team’s opening game of the WCH. Even better, how lucky am I that I actually managed to watch Team North America rout Finland 4-1, despite the fact that the game took place during my kids’ bedtime? Because I never get to do ANTHING when it’s my kids’ bedtime!
The best part, of course, was watching Eichel and Ristolainen play well enough that you cannot help but be excited if you are a Buffalo Sabres fan.
Eichel actually got North America on the board first, showing some great awrseness, quick reflexes and strong hands when he stuff an Auston Matthews rebound through Pekka Rinne’s five-hole.
Eichel spent most of the evening playing alongside Detroit’s Dylan Larkin and Calgary’s Johnny Gaudreau, and their speed caused all sorts of havoc for Finland. Whether or not they can continue to get good scoring chances against Russia tonight remains to be seen, but that trio is definitely showcasing a dangerous combination of skill and chemistry.
Obviously, it was not just Eichel’s line that was fun to watch (unless you played or rooted for Finland) – if you watched even 60 seconds of the game, it was clear that the young kids representing North America were the far better team. Finland is going to match up much better against the rest of the World Cup field, but the sheer speed of team North America was just too much for the Finns. Honestly, Finland is lucky the score was only 4-1; North America had one goal waved off due to goaltender interference, and another goal erased when an alert Finnish defenseman swept the puck out of the net before it finished crossing the red line. This game could have been 7 or 8 to 1, easy.
The fact that Finland was overwhelmed early and often didn’t help Ristolainen’s cause, and once he wound up giving away the puck in his own zone, which led to one of North America’s four goals. Of course, it took an acrobatic redirection by Gaudreau to get that puck past Rinne, but turnovers are bad, no matter how you slice it. Still, Ristolainen finished the game -1, with 4 hits and 2 blocked shots. I look for him to have more of a positive impact when Finland faces Sweden on Tuesday.
More from Sabre Noise
,
The Buffalo Sabres front office has to be happy with what it saw from two of its young, core players Sunday night in Toronto.
In case you forgot, the Buffalo Sabres have four players competing in the 2016 World Cup of Hockey. While I enjoy watching Ryan O’Reilly play and have nothing against Dmitry Kulikov . . . yet . . . the two players I am the most interested in watching during the tournament are Jack Eichel and Rasmus Ristolainen.
How fortunate for me, then, that Eichel and Risto faced each other in their team’s opening game of the WCH. Even better, how lucky am I that I actually managed to watch Team North America rout Finland 4-1, despite the fact that the game took place during my kids’ bedtime? Because I never get to do ANTHING when it’s my kids’ bedtime!
The best part, of course, was watching Eichel and Ristolainen play well enough that you cannot help but be excited if you are a Buffalo Sabres fan.
Eichel actually got North America on the board first, showing some great awrseness, quick reflexes and strong hands when he stuff an Auston Matthews rebound through Pekka Rinne’s five-hole.
Eichel spent most of the evening playing alongside Detroit’s Dylan Larkin and Calgary’s Johnny Gaudreau, and their speed caused all sorts of havoc for Finland. Whether or not they can continue to get good scoring chances against Russia tonight remains to be seen, but that trio is definitely showcasing a dangerous combination of skill and chemistry.
Obviously, it was not just Eichel’s line that was fun to watch (unless you played or rooted for Finland) – if you watched even 60 seconds of the game, it was clear that the young kids representing North America were the far better team. Finland is going to match up much better against the rest of the World Cup field, but the sheer speed of team North America was just too much for the Finns. Honestly, Finland is lucky the score was only 4-1; North America had one goal waved off due to goaltender interference, and another goal erased when an alert Finnish defenseman swept the puck out of the net before it finished crossing the red line. This game could have been 7 or 8 to 1, easy.
The fact that Finland was overwhelmed early and often didn’t help Ristolainen’s cause, and once he wound up giving away the puck in his own zone, which led to one of North America’s four goals. Of course, it took an acrobatic redirection by Gaudreau to get that puck past Rinne, but turnovers are bad, no matter how you slice it. Still, Ristolainen finished the game -1, with 4 hits and 2 blocked shots. I look for him to have more of a positive impact when Finland faces Sweden on Tuesday.
More from Sabre Noise