Johnson taking postives from last season

HARTFORD, Conn – Chad Johnson experienced about the ultimate in good news-bad news last season.
 
The good? The New York Rangers called up the goalie from the Connecticut Whale on Feb. 28 after backup Martin Biron sustained a broken collarbone when hit by a shot in practice.
 
The bad? Johnson played only 20 minutes in two months while backing up Henrik Lundqvist.
 
And things didn’t start all that well this season when the first shot of warm-ups in the Rangers’ first scrimmage went off Johnson’s facemask, requiring him to go to the bench for repairs.
 
But Johnson, who struggled much of the season before being summoned by the Rangers, insists spending weeks with the Rangers and goaltending coach Benoit Allaire far outweighed having virtually no playing time.
 
“It was good to be here with Benoit and work on kind of really getting my game back, tweaking all the little things and getting my habits back,” said Johnson, who wasn’t scheduled to play Wednesday night in the Rangers’ preseason opener against the New Jersey Devils in Albany, N.Y., home of the Devils’ AHL affiliate.. “In that aspect, it was good for me to be up and be around the atmosphere, the crunch of trying to make the playoffs and then obviously the playoffs, too.
 
“The experience of being around that atmosphere helped me for sure. Just being exposed to that sort of environment with the fans and the media was good for me. Obviously you want to play games and showcase your skills and help your team win in Hartford or New York, but that was the situation. Being in the minors, you have to anticipate certain situations like that, so I took everything that I could from it.”
 
The 25-year-old Johnson was 16-19-0 with a 2.72 goals-against average, .901 save percentage and two shutouts in 40 games when called up. Though he benefitted from his time with the Rangers, it was difficult spending all but one period practicing, cheerleading and opening the bench door for his teammates.
 
“It’s sort of tough because you don’t really do a lot of game-situation stuff throughout practice, especially later in the season,” said Johnson, a fifth-round pick of the Pittsburgh Penguins in 2006 acquired for a similar pick in 2009. “But for me, it was just a matter of keeping my mental intensity up. Benoit was always there after practice to do some small game situations for me. It’s just the situation you’re in, so you have to make the best of it and be ready whenever you possibly can. Obviously I would have like to have played a lot more, but again it’s kind of crunch time, and that was the situation that I was in. I understood the situation and tried to make the most of it. I tried to help the team as much as I could throughout the game, so obviously I was there in a different aspect throughout practice and off the ice, too.”
 
Johnson admitted his first four months of last season weren’t as good as his rookie campaign when he was 24-18-2 with a 2.54 GAA, .911 save percentage and three shutouts in 44 games with the then Hartford Wolf Pack and 1-1-2, 2.35 and .919 in five games with the Rangers.
 
“I think it was more my approach to the game,” Johnson said. “I think the way I approached and prepared for games wasn’t what it should have been. I was more worried about the technical side instead of just going out and playing and competing to win the hockey game. So over the summer, I adjusted that as far as preparing for games, along with getting stronger and improving in little things, like my footwork, that Benoit talks about.
 
“In the end, when you’re in a game, it’s all about competing hard and trying to get those two points somehow. How you get it done is making sure you’re making the saves you should and play solid to help the team win. I think I improved on that aspect, and physically I’ve gotten stronger and in better condition, which I think is going to help my overall game.”
 
Rangers assistant general manager/assistant coach/Whale GM Jim Schoenfeld agrees that Johnson needs to concentrate better than he did last season, which likely will come with more ice time.
 
“Being with the Rangers is nice, but playing is better,” Schoenfeld said. “The key is being ready for every shot. His high end is as high as many, but it’s the ability to focus and not let in the one you’re supposed to stop. To me, goalies have to stop everything they’re supposed to stop, plus a few. And even if you stop more than a few that are hard, if you let one in that you’re supposed to stop, it knocks the heck out of your team.
 
“So that to me is that consistency of focus. You’re not going to get beaten by a bad-angle shot because you’re focused on being where you should be. You’re not going to be beaten by giving up a bad rebound because you’re lazy and don’t steer it into the corner. It’s all that mental clarity, and that’s something that has to be developed, just like your leg strength, your arm quickness and everything else. It’s something that you have to work on all the time.”
 
Schoenfeld related Johnson’s inconsistency last season to golf, though in the more fast-paced game of hockey, goalies live by the credo, “He who hesitates is lost.”
 
“When you’re learning a new skill or technique, the time to think about is when you’re practicing it, so when you get in a game, you just try to put the ball in the hole,” Schoenfeld said. “When you get in the (hockey) game, you just stop the puck any way you can. You can’t be thinking about a lot of things, so sometimes when they’re going through the process of learning, when the game starts, it doesn’t matter how you do it but you stop the puck. Technique is important – don’t get me wrong, it’s critical to have good technique to be an efficient goaltender – but the most important thing is stopping the puck. After plenty of practice, the habit becomes habit-forming, but you can’t think about it. It’s a reaction, and your first reaction to the shot has to be instinctive.”
 
Johnson said he tried to improve the mental part of his game by zeroing in on his goals for every game and individual plays that might arise. He said he has focused on having a clear mind, knowing what his goal is for each game and period and staying in the present without thoughts of outcomes or statistics.
 
“I just want to keep it simple and not try to do too much or try to win games all by myself,” Johnson said. “I just have to play the way I can and have confidence in doing it, nothing too elaborate because it’s a simple game. My job is simple, you stop the puck. When you start making it too complicated is when you kind of get in trouble. Everybody always has their own little different way of doing things, whether it’s coaches or the media saying you should have done this or that, but it’s not really a complex game. You just have to stick to what you do. That’s all you can really worry about.”
 
It stems from majoring in psychology at the University of Alaska-Fairbanks, where he was the Central Collegiate Hockey Association Player of the Year and a Hobey Baker Award finalist his senior year when he was 14-16-5 but had a 1.66 GAA, .940 save percentage and six shutouts in 35 games.
 
“You just have to focus to making that next save because nothing else really matters,” Johnson said. “It’s just training your mind to think a certain way. And I learned that from school taking sports psychology stuff, which, as I look back, helped me, too.”
 
Lundqvist and Biron are ticketed to be the Rangers goalies, with Johnson, Cam Talbot and youngsters Jason Missiaen and Scott Stajcer vying for spots in Hartford, though some decisions may have already been made. During the prospects tournament last week in Traverse City, Mich., Rangers director of hockey operations Gordie Clark said Missiaen, who spent a month with the Whale last season, would be going to Greenville of the ECHL to get some seasoning. Clark and Schoenfeld have said Stajcer would be headed back to the Ontario Hockey League as an over-aged junior because he has missed most of last season after hip surgery in November. But Stajcer played well in the prospects tournament and a strong camp could earn him a spot with the Whale.
 
It’s all part of the increased depth in the Rangers organization, which helps in Hartford.
 
“I think the team is going to be more experienced on the back end,” Johnson said. “Early on last year, we didn’t have a lot of experience with a lot of young guys coming in, which can be a good thing because they compete hard and don’t really care if they’re playing three (games) in three (days) or who you’re playing against. They’re just coming in and competing hard, so I think defensively, we’re going to be a lot stronger. Obviously there are a lot of D-men in the organization and not a whole lot of spots available (in New York), so I think we’re going to be good on defense with a lot of experience and skill.
 
“Up front, we’re going to have a lot of skill, too, a lot of youth, which I think is going to be good. It brings that energy, that excitement to the game. I think it’s good having young guys in there because you just go out and play, you don’t think about anything else. You just want to go in and play as well as you can when you first get in there, so I think it’s good for the whole team to have a lot of young kids who really compete every day because it brings everybody else up and challenges everyone else in practice and in games to be their best.”
 
Youngsters such as late-season additions Carl Hagelin, Andrew Yogan, Tommy Grant and Kale Kerbashian could be joined by Ryan Bourque, son of Hockey Hall of Famer Ray Bourque, Jonathan Audy-Marchessault, Jason Wilson, Jordan Hickmott and/or Tayler Jordan. Bourque and Audy-Marchessault excelled in the prospects tournament, where the Rangers lost 5-2 in the final to the more experienced Buffalo Sabres.
 
So with so much youth up front, the defense and goaltending might have to carry the Whale at the start of the season, which begins Oct. 8 against the Adirondack Phantoms in Glens Falls, N.Y. The home opener is Oct. 15 against the Bridgeport Sound Tigers, whose head coach is former Wolf Pack defenseman Brent Thompson. One of his assistants is West Haven native Eric Boguniecki, who was the AHL’s MVP with the then Worcester IceCats in the 2001-02 season.
 
“It has to start with your goaltending. I think that’s how you win games,” Johnson said. “Whether it’s in the minors or the NHL, teams that do well and go far in the playoffs all have good goaltending throughout the season. And having good defense and playing good strong team defense is important, too, is how you’re going to consistently win hockey games. You can win games being really offensive, but you’re not going to be as consistent as if you’re just playing strong defensively.
 
“So for sure early on, our defense and goaltending are going to have to be our strong points, and with playing strong D, you’re going to get the puck and get more opportunities so you’re going to score more goals. So I think if we just focus on playing well defensively early on, offensively things are going to come.”
 
While Johnson appears headed to Hartford, he is taking nothing for granted in training camp, especially in light of what happened last season. Not to mention the Rangers will be taking three goalies to Europe for four preseason games before the season opener Oct. 7 against the Los Angeles Kings in Stockholm, Sweden, and everyone knows who two of them will be, barring injuries. Coach John Tortorella said Tuesday that he wants to get Lundqvist and Biron as ready as possible in the preseason games.
 
“You want to compete and showcase what you can do to the organization and all the scouts that are here,” Johnson said. “Obviously they have Henrik and Marty there, but you come into this camp as a tryout camp and a training camp to compete and battle and show what you can. For me, I’m not really that worried about Hartford. When the time comes and I’m down there, I’ll worry about down there. Right now, I’m worried about trying to make the New York Rangers, even if they do have things penciled in. Things change all the time, so you want to make sure you’re playing the best you possibly can all the time. It’s important for me to have a good camp and do what I do, play the best I possibly can. That’s all that I can control.”
 
 
LUNDQVIST, TALBOT BACKSTOP RANGERS IN PRESEASON OPENER
 
Lundqvist and Talbot were scheduled to split the preseason opener in Albany, and the defensive pairings were expected to be: Dan Girardi-Brendan Bell, Michael Del Zotto-Steve Eminger and Erixon-Dylan McIlrath, who played together in the prospects tournament.
 
The lines scheduled lines were (left to right): Brandon Dubinsky-Artem Anisimov-Dale Weise, Hagelin-Erik Christensen-Christian Thomas, Sean Avery-John Mitchell-J.T. Miller and Bourque-Shane McColgan-Andre Deveaux.
 
Lundqvist told the New York media that this would be the last start that he doesn’t finish, but didn’t know which games he would play. He’s likely to start four of the seven preseason games and most assuredly against his former team, Frolunda, on Sept. 30 in Gothenburg, Sweden.
 
Tortorella said the Rangers will be taking three goalies, 10 defensemen and 18 forwards to Europe. They hope to be down to the maximum 23 for the regular season after the first two games in Europe. The final cuts will join the Whale, giving coach Ken Gernander and assistants J.J. Daigneault and Pat Boller about a week to form their lines and defensive pairings for their opener Oct. 8 against the Adirondack Phantoms in Glens Falls, N.Y.
 
Right wing Chad Kolarik, who played his first four NHL games with the Rangers last season after being acquired from Dane Byers on Nov. 13, wasn’t scheduled to play Wednesday but couldn’t even practice. He tried to skate after being injured Tuesday during a scrimmage but quickly left the ice.
 
The 25-year-old forward played reasonably well and had an assist on the fourth line with the Rangers as an injury replacement, and his past performance will be part of his evaluation this year.
 
“He did some things for us last year,” Tortorella said. “You can’t take anything away or against what they’ve done prior. You have to keep it in your memory how they’ve played. But it’s also, ‘Are they improving?’ And Kolarik is not getting a chance to show that if he can’t skate.”
 
Kolarik, Weise, Hagelin, Bourque and Mats Zuccarello are vying for a possible one or two forwards spots, with veterans Avery and Christensen on the bubble.
 
“There’s a lot of players in there that really need to show some things to really move along,” Tortorella said after the morning skate. When asked if that included Avery and Christensen, Tortorella said “very definitely.”
 
We’ll have a look at the game and reactions Thursday.
 
Story Bruce Berlet of the Connecticut Whale
 
Comment@prohockeynews.com

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