Meds wrote:Luongo was weak.....again. That first goal was the direct result of him laying on his belly again. Sure he made a really nice first save, but if he'd come across with his toe in a butterfly position, instead of sprawling and putting himself in a position that ensures there will be no second save if the puck is even a foot off the ice, that goal doesn't happen.
Seems like your frustration with Luongo is boiling over...
It's awfully funny reading about Luongo on his belly on the first goal after he sprawled post to post to stop a one timer in close. If you don't think goalies end up on their stomach over 90% of the time when they slide over like that then you need to give your head a shake. If he would have slid over with a more upright posture he wouldn't have made it over in time to stop the shot.
Meds wrote:The second goal was a deflection, and usually I give goalies a pass on those, not this time. He saw that shot all the way in from the point, it wasn't a one-timer or cross ice pass where he had to move from post to post, it was shot-pass that was obviously designed for a tip, so what does he do.....yeah, he tries to play the grounder instead of getting his body square in front of the puck
So he should anticipate the tip before it happens, and when it's not tipped it'll weakly flutter by him. He was in fine position before the tip happened, he was square and covering much of the net and the tip went high short-side above his elbow. If he doesn't stay more centre in the crease when that shot was released it could have gone in without being tipped. Goalies anticipate shots when they come off the stick and get in position according to the initial projection of the release. Also, how do you anticipate where the tip is coming?
To be fair, it was the most savable goal he gave up, but not because he should have anticipated the tip and stayed tight to his post, but rather because he was a touch slow picking up the direction of the tip. Typically however, tips are the hardest things for goalies to read, and with the butterfly goalies are trained to get in their stance and when the tip goes high it has a good chance of going in. This isn't a Luongo phenomenon, but a very common characteristic of all butterfly goalies.
Meds wrote:The third goal was a scramble, but another one of those goals that I'm pretty sure Schneider prevents simply by not playing on his stomach in full sprawl.
Yeah, it's impossible to score on jam plays when Schneider is net. The guy never loses his ground and I've NEVER seen him let in a bad goal.
Also, Luo didn't end up on his stomach on that play. He kicked out his leg and fell back when the puck had already gone in.
I also find it frustrating when goalies can't hold the line, and if Luo was on his game he probably doesn't give up the 2nd or 3rd goal, or maybe even both.
Like Tater said, he had a better performance, but like many on the team, he hasn't completely found his game yet.