Of course not, but in case you were wondering, Blue Jackets defenseman Zach Werenski said that was the case three times after the loss to New York. That was in response to a question about if the message when the team is winning -- stay the course and don't get too high or too low -- remains the same when it's losing.
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"Yeah, we don't panic by any means," Werenski said. "We have a day off tomorrow, come back Monday vs. Detroit and try to get a win there. I think this weekend, we were 0-2, but I think we could have gotten at least one point out of it, maybe even two the way we played yesterday. That's how the game of hockey goes, though. You can lose some games you should win and win some games you should lose. It's all over the place.
"No need to panic, but we have to learn from it, watch some video on things we can clean up, and all the good things we've done, we have to keep doing that. There's no need to panic. Just try to get back to our game Monday."
And there is a lot of truth to what Werenski said about the Blue Jackets playing some good hockey, including everything before the Rangers' three-goal explosion midway through the second period Saturday night and even some of the chances the Jackets had in the third period.
Friday, there were a lot of good minutes as well in a fantastic hockey game that the Capitals were able to win with a goal with 1:22 to go. In fact, according to Natural Stat Trick, the Jackets at 5-on-5 had 52.9 percent of the shot attempts, 60.0 percent of the scoring chances and 63.8 percent of the expected goals in the two games, yet came out 0-2.
That speaks to some bad luck, as well as maybe how big the mistakes the Jackets made were. Almost all of the nine goals scored over the weekend by the Capitals and Rangers were the result of breakdowns by the Blue Jackets, either turnovers that gave the opposition advantageous looks at the net or players getting out of position.
Fixing that going into tonight's game against the Red Wings will be of the utmost importance, but perhaps its good to have errors of execution rather than errors of effort because the former can be taught as the days go by.