Columbus Blue Jackets goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky was one of the best goaltenders this season, so good, he is one of three players who are candidates for the Hart and Vezina Trophies. His 2.06 GAA and his .931 were both league bests. Yet despite his amazing regular season, he found himself struggling again in the playoffs. Columbus was eliminated in five games to the Pittsburgh Penguins and Bobrovsky’s 3.88 GAA and .882 save percentages were a key reason for the Blue Jackets’ failures.
However, the Columbus Dispatch’s Aaron Portzline writes that Bobrovsky, who is known for his hard offseason work after losing 17 pounds last offseason off his 199-pound frame which led to his phenomenal season, is receptive to working with sports psychologists and/or doing other types of mental training to get past his playoff struggles in recent years.
While the Blue Jackets have not reached the playoffs since the 2013-14 season, Bobrovsky struggled in the playoffs there too, finishing with a 3.18 GAA and .908 save percentages in six games (also against the Penguins), which were no where near a match to his regular season statistics.
According to Portzline, both Bobrovsky and the Columbus coaching staff, agreed the goaltenders’ struggles were mental. No one will say what his offseason mental training will entail, but no matter what he does, no one will know anything until next year’s Stanley Cup playoffs.
“Bob will do the necessary work in whatever area he needs to work, and he’ll get over the hump,” Columbus general manager Jarmo Kekalainen said. “He has to prepare himself to be the best when it counts the most.”