Transcript: Coach Cooper Off Day Press Conference

goal1

 Questions for coach Cooper.

Q.  Jon, status of your goalie, Ben Bishop?
COACH  COOPER:   Well,  in  honor  of  the 11-year anniversary of our
organization’s  first  Stanley  Cup,  how would John Tortorella answer that question?

Q.  Is he available tomorrow night?
COACH COOPER:  I’ll just leave it at that (laughter).

Q.  Brad Richards was saying the other day that one thing that really distinguishes the triplets line is they’re willing to try to do things that might scare other young players.  Why is that?
COACH  COOPER:  Actually, I haven’t really I guess thought of it that
way.   That’s  a  really  good  player,  skilled  player,  as Brad Richards
thinking the same way they think.
They’re  willing  to  play the game uncomfortable, if you know what I
mean.   They  go  outside  of probably what’s the norm.  The one thing that
really  makes them work, though, is they all have extremely high hockey IQs and can play the game at a really fast pace.
Ultimately  if  you  want  to  have that kind of success, you have to
compete.   All three of them do that.  They’re not afraid to go to any area
on the ice.
Richie  is  right, they’re willing to do that.  The other thing, too, is all three of them really get along with each other off the ice.  I think that chemistry and friendship helps them, too.

Q.  Do you know who is going to play in net for you tomorrow?
COACH  COOPER:   No,  I don’t, which would tell you, if I don’t know,
that  Bish  could  be available.  You’ll have a better indication, I guess,
tomorrow  at  the  skate.   Although  our  morning  skates are all optional
anyway.   Bish,  notoriously he goes on sometimes during them and sometimes
he doesn’t.  I’m sure you’ll get a clue then tomorrow.

Q.   In  a  world  where  the  way  the game is looked at is changing
dramatically,  do  you  avail  yourself  of  the  advanced metrics that are available for hockey analytics?
COACH COOPER:  I think information is good.  I think you’re naïve not to take in everything around you.  If statistics is part of that, I want to see it.  I want to have it at our disposal.
How  much  we  use  or how much it changes your thinking, I can’t sit here  and  say, well, I’m 100% analytics says yes, so that’s our direction.
The  one thing that analytics does not take into account is the human mind, the  human spirit and the human soul.  So I think that comes into play.  If there’s one combatant to analytics, that’s it.
Mostly, I want the information, and we use it.

Q.   Patrick  Roy  said earlier this year in trying to build his team
into  a contender, he doesn’t just want to be a good team, he wants to play a  style  that’s  pleasing for his fans to watch.  Your team would fit that description.  What is your true organic philosophy on the way you think the game should be played even at this time of year, whether you can appreciate how entertaining last night was for everyone?
COACH  COOPER:  Yeah, I’ll be honest, I don’t know how somebody could leave  that  rink  last  night and not be an instant hockey fan if that was your first game.
To  me,  it’s  a  speed  sport.   These guys are phenomenal athletes.
Ultimately  I  coach games to win games.  I guess there’s different ways to
do  that.   But  we  believe  these guys have these abilities, why not take
advantage of them?
I’m  a  big  believer  in  literally  playing  the whole game skating forwards.  I think you can do that.
I  think your best defense is having the puck.  So if you can have it as much as you can, it’s really tough for the other team to score.
The  entertainment value, I know we are in the entertainment business a  little  bit, but I don’t really put any stock in that.  I think we’re in the  winning business.  Ultimately any fan will tell you, I think winning’s the greatest entertainment.
If  you  look  outside our building, inside our building, there’s two teams  left  standing,  we’re  one  of them, you can’t get a seat inside or
outside.   I  think for the fans, the fact that you’re winning, it’s pretty
entertaining.
But  you’ve  watched  us enough.  You’ve seen the way our team plays.
It’s how we play.

Q.   You  have been, on the road during the playoffs, better than the
regular season.  Any explanation for that?
COACH  COOPER:  Actually, to be honest, it’s different because in the regular  season,  you’re  going  on  five-game  road  trips, you’re in five different  cities,  different  time  zones,  you’re  playing back-to-backs.
Playing  on  the  road in the NHL really doesn’t work in your favor a whole ton.
I  think  when  you  look at our home record, I’m not making light of anything,  but  teams  usually  come  down  to  Florida,  and  they’ve been potentially  somewhere  where  it’s  been  20 below.  They get four days in Florida,  they  play  us  and  the Panthers.  I think one of us should take advantage of the team at some point in there.
So we’re kind of a destination city because you have to come down and play us both.  So I think that works in your favor.
But   on   the   road,  it’s  different.   Especially  where  we  are
geographically, we’re going on long trips all the time.
The  one  thing  that I know going to the playoffs, there was so much talk about how bad we were on the road, I think it changed our focus.
Conversely,  there was so much talk about how good we are at home, we just took that for granted.  We wanted to put a show on at home.  It didn’t work out for us.
I  truly  believe, if it makes any sense at all, that our poor record during  the regular season kind of united our focus.  I think that’s why we play better on the road.
The  other  thing, too, is you get breaks.  The rest, all that, helps out, too.

Q.  Referencing that style of play question a little bit, all through the  series,  no  matter which one it is, going into the Stanley Cup Final, but  Game 1 and Game 2, the difference between the two styles, can you talk about  your  team’s ability to adapt to no matter what the game seems to be playing out as?
COACH  COOPER:  Well, I think that’s what’s great about our group.  I think  for a lot of these players growing up in their life, I’m not so sure defense  came  first  in  their repertoire of playing, which to me, I don’t
care.   For  a  coach,  it’s much easier to make an offensive-gifted player
learn  how  to  play  D  than it is to make a defensive-minded player score goals.
I  think  playing  defense  is  a  choice to me.  You got to make the choice,  do  you  want to do it or not.  Everybody from our captain down to our goaltender, they make a choice to play D.
Now,  do  we  do it every single night?  Do we get caught up in games where  it’s run-and-gun, we get caught up in that?  There’s no question.  A lot  of  that,  you know, it’s human nature, the way we like to attack, the way we like to play.
Are  we  the perfect team?  No, we’re not.  I think we’re a fun team.
I think we’re a committed team.  I think we play as a group.  When the game is on the line and those guys got to buckle down, they know how to do it.
I think that’s, I guess, the way we’ve adapted.  When it’s time to go win  a  hockey  game,  these  guys find a way to do it.  That’s what’s been great about them.

Q.  I know you know Joel very well, have a relationship with him.  He was one of your mentors, you said.  Have you cut off communication as Marty and Stammer did in the last round?
COACH  COOPER:   Well,  we  spoke  actually  –  as I said, when they
advanced  to  the  Final, we spoke right after that.  We’ve spoken a couple times.
I  think  just  because you’re in the Final together, it doesn’t stop you  from becoming friends.  We’re in a different position because we coach our  teams, but it’s 20 players going against 20 players.  They’re the ones battling it out.  We’re just the two guys that have prepared our teams.
Have I cut communication off with him?  No, we don’t speak on a daily basis  in  this time.  But if I walked by him on the street, I would make a point of going over to say hi to him, there’s no question.

Q.   If  Vasi  does  play  tomorrow,  he’s  played well in some tough
buildings.  What about him makes him able to step up to the challenge?
COACH  COOPER:   Well,  the  game that sticks out for me, we ended up
losing  that  game.   But when we were on the Island, we were fifth game in
ten  nights,  it was a tough trip for us.  I think Vasi kicked out 40-plus.
We didn’t have the puck the whole night.  We had a 1-0 lead sometime in the
third.   I don’t remember exactly.  We ended up losing the game 2-1, but we
should have lost 10-1.
The  building  was  rocking.  It was just a crazy atmosphere.  He was
unreal.   He  just played with this unreal calm about himself.  That’s kind
of  when  I  knew  we had something in this kid.  Other games, usually he’s come in in tough situations sometimes.  He’s had to battle his way through.
Even in the playoffs, we’ve put him in in tough situations.
He’s played under some bright lights.  He’s World Junior, KHL.  These guys are with him more than I am.  I’ll tell you, I don’t know if we have a more prepared player in our locker room than that kid.  He’s ready to go in at any moment.  You got to love that in him.
So if Bish can’t go tomorrow, is that a blow to us?  Sure it is.  But do  we  think  the  series  is lost because Vasilevskiy is going in?  Not a chance.
I  don’t  know.   I  look  at  our  tandem, I’d like to stack them up
against any tandem in the league because I think we’ve got, you know, 1 and 1A.

Q.   When  it  comes to defending against Toews and Kane, together or
apart, how much is it being hyper aware where they are?
COACH  COOPER:   You  have to be aware of that at all times.  They’re
two outstanding players.  We’ve got some good players on our team, as well.
We didn’t get here, you know, by not being able to play.
We  have  a lot of confidence in the Stralmans, Hedmans, Garrys, down the list, that those guys can make it hard on players.
I  know  that  a  lot  has  been  made  of  the  last couple games of Paquette’s  line,  how they’ve neutralized Toews’ line a little bit for two games.  If Toews’ line has to go against Fil’s line or Johnny’s line, we’re comfortable with that.
That’s  one  of  the  assets of our team, if one line gets caught out there  with  somebody, there’s not any stress on our bench.  It’s not as if Brian  Boyle  hasn’t  faced  top  centers in his career.  He’s gone against these guys.  That’s what is good about our group, we have that balance.
To  answer  your  question, of course we’re aware when they’re on the
ice.   They’re dangerous players.  We respect them immensely.  But we don’t
fear ’em.
THE MODERATOR:  Thank you.
COACH COOPER:  Thank you.

(Feature Photo/Getty Images)

Follow me on Twitter @LightningShout and please “like” LightningShout on Facebook. You can email us at [email protected].

Arrow to top