Experts Believe Devils Can Pull Of Miracle

playmaker7

The GOAT
Hall of Fame
Joined
Feb 18, 2006
Messages
53,162
Reaction score
226
While the numbers still don't look great for the New Jersey Devils, there may be reason to believe their miracle could come true.

"I would say with (Sunday's) win and looking at their next five games, with 12 games left in the season New Jersey could be in great position to hunt down the teams in front of them," NHL Network analyst Craig Button told NHL.com. "Remember, they still have three games in hand on the Rangers. They play the Rangers (April 9) and that could be a massive game for both teams."

The Devils are 20-2-2 since Jan. 9 and still sit 12th in the Eastern Conference, eight points out of a playoff spot, but that's the bad news. The good news is that each of their next five games will be against teams (Ottawa, Atlanta, the Islanders) that, like them, are also outside of the top eight.



Beyond that the Devils still have to play nine games against teams that currently occupy a playoff spot in the Eastern Conference, but over the last two months they are 9-1 against the East's current top eight and 13-1 against the teams ahead of them in the standings. Tampa Bay is the only team to beat them, but the Devils also topped the Lightning three times.

"The fact that they go 20-2-2, I don't know that I've ever seen anything like this," Button said. "You talk about a tale of two seasons, wow. I just can't fathom it. WithJacques Lemaire, when I watch what he's doing with this team, I just shake my head."

Button's colleague at the NHL Network, analyst Kevin Weekes, is doing the same. Weekes, a former Devils' goalie, lauds Lemaire as "brilliant," and he's a firm believer that New Jersey will make it to the playoffs because of the way the Devils are trending vs. the teams they're competing with.

The Devils have 18 points over their last 10 games. That's three more than the Maple Leafs, the next hottest team among the six competitors for the final two spots in the Eastern Conference. The Sabres have 12 points in the last 10 games while the Hurricanes have 11, the Rangers 10 and the Thrashers just seven.

"When you look at the teams ahead of them right now, I'm telling you, I'm not convinced that any of those teams are going to get in," Weekes told NHL.com. "Carolina doesn't convince me. Buffalo is rolling, but I'm not convinced that Buffalo is going to get in because Ryan Miller hasn't been Ryan Milleras much this year. Atlanta is done and I think the Leafs are going to fall short because they don't have enough depth at the end.

"I see Jersey at 12 leaping Atlanta, leaping Toronto and maybe finishing ahead of Carolina and possibly Buffalo. They're just playing better than those teams."

Button said the Devils worst enemy will be the three-point game. Outside of upcoming games against Atlanta, they won't have the direct ability to influence the teams ahead of them until they play at Buffalo on March 26. They have to hope the teams ahead of them cancel each other out.

Carolina and Buffalo face each other twice before the end of the season. The Rangers and Sabres face each other once. Toronto still has to play the Sabres twice and the Hurricanes once.

"If (Carolina and Buffalo) split regulation wins and get two points each, and the Devils win two corresponding games, now the Devils have gained two points on both the Sabres and Hurricanes," Button said. "The only thing the Devils don't want is a three-point game. That just means everyone keeps inching ahead."

According to statistical analysis kept by Button, the Devils' odds of reaching the playoffs have increased by almost six percent since Jan. 27. Button's data suggests the Devils would have to win 76.5 percent of the rest of their games in order to qualify for the playoffs, but he couches that by saying the teams they're chasing can't get hot at the same time.

Button uses winning percentage (wins vs. regulation/OT/shootout losses) to chart his data. He suggests the cutoff for a playoff berth in the East is currently right around 88-89 points, because that's about how many the Rangers would finish with if they continued to win at the rate they have all season (51.47 percent of the time). Buffalo would finish with 90 or 91 points if it won at its seasonal rate, according to Button's analysis. The Sabres have three games in hand on the Rangers.

Three-point games could sway the percentages, but Button doesn't factor them in because they are impossible to predict.

"What I do is basically go with the body of work, what the teams' winning percentage has been to this point, and if they play at this winning percentage what do they need to do to gain that eighth spot for the playoffs," Button said. "The teams below have to play at a better winning percentage. The Devils on Feb. 1 needed .820 winning percentage the rest of the way to make the playoffs. Now they've done that and only have to play at a 76 percent clip. So their odds have improved.

"At the halfway point of the season they were slim and none. Now they're not none anymore, and they're better than slim."


I'm not sure about it, but it damn sure looks possible. What do you guys think
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Who Wins Game 5?

  • Tampa Bay Rays (Away)

    Votes: 5 33.3%
  • Houston Astros (Home)

    Votes: 10 66.7%
Top