GIN ANTONIC
Registered User
My point is that in the playoffs there are fewer penalties called overall compared to the regular season. With a smaller sample size each one carries more weight in terms of your percentages. So that's just the math part of it. Then there is the cause and effect side where you are facing tougher competition vs. regular season so it may be expected that your overall effectiveness would go down. And then the third part I mentioned is that the Canes just flat out haven't been good enough in the special teams department in the playoffs. Not sure the specific reasoning behind it but at the end of the day it doesn't matter, you have to adjust and when you get those chances you need to convert. Canes haven't done that and it's been a huge reason why they haven't had success in later rounds.Well, if someone has common sense, they would extrapolate if more penalties were called there'd by more opportunities for your negative rating to decrease (become more negative in this case). I mean how can you argue that the other team is having great success on the power play against you, but you are having a lack of success because not enough opportunities?
This was literally all in my original post about it.