"Usually, it's an absolute cannon from the point and goes through the goalie, that one, he sort of fumbled," Trotz said. "But [he] got rewarded. He's had a lot of really good shots that haven't gone in. It was good for him to have one of those that maybe didn't get all of it and sort of found its way in the net."
Pulock's strike was his first goal of the postseason and a nice reward given the heavy minutes he and his d-partner Adam Pelech have logged after going head-to-head against the Sidney Crosby line in this series.
Through four games, Pulock and Pelech have had their work cut out for them as they've been tasked with the Penguins top line of Jake Guentzel, Crosby and Bryan Rust, while also seeing shifts against Evgeni Malkin, who made his postseason debut in Game 3. So far, Pulock and Pelech have been effective and have held the Pens' top line - who each hit the 20-goal mark in the regular season - to only three points (2G, 1A) in total throughout the series.
Perhaps most impressively has been the ability to keep Crosby without so much as a point for three-straight games. "Just good awareness when they're on the ice," Pulock said of facing Crosby and Malkin.
"Obviously, they're both good players so just taking their time and space away, being hard on them when you get a chance and not letting them have any free ice. That's the biggest thing." Pulock, who stands 6-foot-2, 215-pounds, has noticeably been using his sturdy frame more assertively against Crosby's smaller, but brawny, 5-foot-11, 200-pound stature, making for some arduous battles up and down the ice.