NHLers on the evolution of power plays and penalty killing
Mark Giordano has witnessed the NHL’s power-play evolution up close.
The league’s oldest player this season at age 40, the Toronto Maple Leafs defenceman quarterbacked the Calgary Flames’ No. 1 unit in his Norris Trophy-winning 2018-19 season.
By that time, many power plays had already morphed from the classic setup featuring two defencemen at the point and three forwards around the net to a 1-3-1 formation — usually with another centre or winger — that spread out the opposition and created more avenues to the net.
“Can’t keep the skill you have off the power play,” Giordano said of the modern man advantage. “But there’s way more risk-taking.”