Friday, January 31, 2014

Weber nets 2, including OT winner, as Preds down Devils

Final OT
Series (Game 2 of 2)

Devils 2

(23-21-12, 58 pts)

Predators 3

(25-23-8, 58 pts)




8:00 PM ET, January 31, 2014
Bridgestone Arena, Nashville, Tennessee

1 2 3 OT T
NJ 0 2 0 02
NSH 1 0 1 13
S. Weber (Predators - D): Goals: 2, Assists: 0
D. Legwand (Predators - C): Goals: 1, Assists: 0
J. Jagr (Devils - RW): Goals: 1, Assists: 1
 
 
 
 
 
Associated Press
Weber Leads Predators Past Devils
Shea Weber scored twice in the Predators' 3-2 overtime win over the Devils.Tags: NHL, New Jersey Devils, Nashville Predators, Patrik Elias, Jaromir Jagr, David Legwand, Shea Weber

NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- The Nashville Predators are glad captain Shea Weber managed to play with an upper-body injury that sent him out of their previous game.
Weber scored two goals, including the game winner at 1:29 of overtime, and the Predators rallied late in beating the New Jersey Devils 3-2 on Friday night.
"It's going to take a lot to keep him out of a hockey game," Predators forward David Legwand said of the big defenseman. "He loves playing the game and shows that over the course of his career. He was big for us tonight. Obviously on the first one and in overtime, two huge goals."
Weber didn't practice Thursday and was a game-time decision after leaving Tuesday night's win in Winnipeg early in the third period. Nashville coach Barry Trotz said Weber's decision to play made all the difference.
"He's one of the best at his position, plain and simple," Trotz said. "He's our building block, and he's a difference-maker in this business. There aren't too many guys at his level."
Legwand scored with 10.8 seconds remaining in regulation with goalie Carter Hutton on the bench to force the extra period.
The puck squirted out to Legwand, who scored on a slap shot from the right circle. Hutton, who struggled in giving up the two goals to New Jersey, stopped Michael Ryder on a breakaway 80 seconds into overtime to keep the game tied.
"It is good to get the win obviously," Weber said. "It took us 60 minutes to get it tied up, but we found a way. We battled hard and got it tied up. Obviously, Hutton made a huge save in overtime and gave us a chance to win."
Then Colin Wilson took the puck back the other way and drove toward the net before dropping the puck off to Weber, who beat Cory Schneider with a wrister from the left circle.
"We played four games in six nights," Devils coach Peter DeBoer said. "We got an unfortunate bounce at the end, and we'll take the point and move on."
Patrik Elias scored a goal and had an assist, and Jaromir Jagr had a goal for the Devils. Travis Zajac had two assists.
Out of the 16 games played between these teams, this was the 13th decided by one goal.
This was a rare visit to Nashville with the Devils playing only their 10th game here Friday night and first since Oct. 15, 2011.
The Devils, who beat Nashville 5-0 in New Jersey on Nov. 10, wrapped up a three-game trip against the Western Conference with their second game in as many nights after beating the Stars in overtime in Dallas on Thursday night.
"It's tough two nights in a row ... giving up a lead in the last minute, and we should've had an extra point tonight again," Schneider said.
The Predators want to build some momentum before the Olympic break, and they have earned points in five of six games, going 4-1-1. They had a couple of days off after their previous game, and outshot the Devils 9-3 in the opening minutes and 33-26 for the game.
Weber gave Nashville a 1-0 lead after the first period, beating Schneider with a slap shot 6:45 into the game off an assist from Patric Hornqvist.
New Jersey tied it at 13:00 of the second when Elias came skating up the left side and fired off a shot that might have gone wide if not for Hutton trying to snag it with his glove. The puck glanced off Hutton's glove and redirected into the net for a goal.
Jagr got his 17th goal this season late in the second, putting the Devils ahead 2-1. Jagr skated behind the net and fired a wrister that hit off Hutton and slipped between the goalie and the left post for a 2-1 lead at 18:59 of the second. But the Predators gave Hutton a chance to make up for those goals in overtime.

Game notes


Jagr has 698 career goals. ... Weber leads all defensemen with 15 goals, and eight have come in the first period. Nashville is 11-1-2 when Weber scores. ... Nashville is 19-2-5 when scoring first this season and just 2-22-2 when trailing after two periods. ... The Devils are 7-1-2 in Nashville.
Copyright by STATS LLC and The Associated Press

Updated NHL Scoreboard for the games of January 31,2014 from ESPN.GO.COM

As of 2AM,EST/11PM,PST




1
 (21-28-8, 50 pts)
4
 (30-23-3, 63 pts)

1 2 3T
New York Islanders 0 1 01
New York Rangers 1 0 34
W: Lundqvist (38 SV)
L: Nabokov (33 SV)
NYI:K Okposo (24)
NYR:B Boyle (4), D Brassard (9), R McDonagh (8), B Richards (14)

Ryan Getzlaf, Corey Perry keep Ducks rolling against Flyers

Final
Series (Game 2 of 2)

Flyers 3

(26-23-6, 58 pts)

Ducks 5

(40-11-5, 85 pts)



10:00 PM ET, January 30, 2014
Honda Center, Anaheim, California

1 2 3 T
PHI 1 0 23
ANA 2 1 25
R. Getzlaf (Ducks - C): Goals: 1, Assists: 1
F. Beauchemin (Ducks - D): Goals: 0, Assists: 1
D. Winnik (Ducks - RW): Goals: 1, Assists: 0
 
 
 
 
Associated Press
Ducks Fly By Flyers
The Ducks picked up their 40th win of the season with a 5-3 victory over the Flyers.Tags: NHL, Philadelphia Flyers, Anaheim Ducks, Ryan Getzlaf, Corey Perry, Matt Read, Daniel Winnik

ANAHEIM, Calif. -- Ryan Getzlaf has been shooting the puck more this season, and it has been paying off for himself and his teammates.
Getzlaf put Anaheim ahead to stay in the final minute of the first period with his career-high 26th goal, and Corey Perry, Patrick Maroon and Daniel Winnik also scored as the Ducks beat the Philadelphia Flyers 5-3 on Thursday night.
Getzlaf, in the first season of an eight-year, $66 million contract extension he signed in March, scored 25 goals during the Ducks' 2006-07 Stanley Cup championship season and matched that total in 2008-09.
"If he shoots the puck, he's going to score. And he shoots the puck a lot -- a lot more than he's done in the past. So consequently, he's getting goals," coach Bruce Boudreau said in reference to Getzlaf's 136 shots on net.
The Ducks' captain also recorded his second career Gordie Howe hat trick -- a goal, an assist and a fight with Steve Downie.
"He said to me earlier that I owed him one from that first game of the season when we fought and he was with Colorado," Getzlaf said. "So he asked me to go, and I thought it an OK time for me to do it."
Saku Koivu added an empty-net goal and Frederik Andersen made 27 saves, helping the Ducks improve their NHL-leading record to 40-11-5 and their home mark to 22-2-2. They have won 22 of their past 26 games and are off to the best start in franchise history.
Winnik gave Anaheim a 4-2 lead with a short-handed goal, the ninth allowed this season by the Flyers -- tying Edmonton for the league lead.
Koivu broke up a pass in the Ducks' zone and went off on a 2-on-1 break with Winnik, who beat Steve Mason to the glove side with 7:34 remaining while teammate Hampus Lindholm was off for high-sticking Claude Giroux.
"The way they play on the power play, they get four guys down below the hash marks after a shot," Winnik said after his first goal since Oct. 10. "It was something we knew going into the game, so we felt there could be chances that way and we were fortunate to get one tonight. It felt really good. It was a long time coming. It's nice to get that pressure off me."
Andersen is 13-2-0 in his first 15 NHL starts and hasn't allowed more than three goals in any of them. He has a 1.94 goals-against average, including a two-period relief stint in his NHL debut Oct. 20, when he earned a 6-3 win in relief against Dallas by stopping all 24 shots he faced after Jonas Hiller left with a 3-1 deficit.
"Our depth at goaltending has been outstanding, and when Freddie's played, he's been unbelievable," Getzlaf said. "He's a big kid, and for a young guy, he plays really calm in the net. He's not too active, and that's a good sign. He's a goalie that settles things down back there."
Vincent Lecavalier, Matt Read and Michael Raffl scored for the Flyers, and Mason stopped 23 shots following his 33-save shutout against Detroit on Tuesday at Philadelphia. The Flyers are 3-6-2 in their past 11 games following a 7-1-0 stretch.
"It was a pretty physical game," Boudreau said. "They were trying to push us around, but I thought we did a pretty good job of standing up for ourselves."
Philadelphia went in averaging a league-worst 15.9 penalty minutes per game, but it was the Ducks who couldn't stay out of the box during the first period as the Flyers cashed in on one of three power plays. Lecavalier beat Andersen through the pads with a 25-foot wrist shot from the right circle, tying it at 1 with three seconds left on Matt Beleskey's interference penalty.
Getzlaf regained the lead for Anaheim, parking himself at the edge of the crease and redirecting Lindholm's 50-foot slap shot past Mason with 36 seconds left in the period.
Perry made it 3-1 at 10:29 of the second, beating Mason to the glove side from the low slot after getting a cross-ice pass from Getzlaf. The Ducks are 9-0-1 this season when Getzlaf and Perry score goals in the same game, and 23-3-4 under those circumstances since Feb. 1, 2010.
"There wasn't a single clean shot from the point the entire night," Mason said. "They did a great job of getting sticks on it, bodies in front. When you have a team like that, it makes it difficult to stop pucks. We controlled a lot of the play, but they were able to get two deflections in there. For the most part, we did a pretty good job."
Read scored his 14th goal with 14:12 remaining, after Mark Streit's sharp-angle shot from the left corner struck Andersen in the chest and bounced into the net off Read's right leg.

Game notes


C Nick Bonino, one of four players to appear in all 56 games for Anaheim, went to the dressing room with an upper-body injury after an open-ice hit from C Zac Rinaldo at 12:38 of the opening period. He played four shifts in the second period before calling it a night. ... Rinaldo returned to the lineup after missing 10 games with a high left ankle sprain. ... Lindholm leads all rookies with a plus-minus figure of plus-25. He was a plus-2 against the Flyers. ... Winnik's goal was his second this season and third in his past 96 games. ... The Flyers have connected on the power play in five straight games and 11 of the past 14. ... The Flyers are 26-20-6 since Craig Berube replaced Peter Laviolette as coach following the team's second consecutive 0-3 start. ... The Ducks are 32-1-2 when scoring three or more goals and 31-0-2 when allowing fewer than three. They also are 30-1-2 when leading after two periods.
Copyright by STATS LLC and The Associated Press

Senators cruise as Lightning lose Ben Bishop, Valtteri Filppula

Final
Series (Game 3 of 5)

Lightning 3

(31-18-5, 67 pts)

Senators 5

(24-20-10, 58 pts)




7:30 PM ET, January 30, 2014
Canadian Tire Centre, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

1 2 3 T
TB 0 1 23
OTT 2 2 15
K. Turris (Senators - C): Goals: 1, Assists: 1
M. Methot (Senators - D): Goals: 1, Assists: 0
J. Spezza (Senators - C): Goals: 0, Assists: 2
 
 
 
 
Associated Press
OTTAWA, Ontario -- Ben Bishop's return game in Ottawa didn't last long.
The Tampa Bay goaltender left the game after a couple of minutes after getting accidentally kicked in the head by a teammate, and the Senators went on to beat the Lightning 5-3 on Thursday night.
Bishop, who has been outstanding for Tampa this season, hopes to be back in action soon.
"I had a little bit of a headache, but it's gotten better as the game went on," Bishop said. "Hopefully I'll wake up (Friday) and feel better and be able to practice."
Bishop, who was playing his first game in Ottawa since being traded to the Lightning in April, came way out of his net to play the puck and ended up getting kicked by teammate Nikita Kucherov.
The goalie lay on the ice motionless, silencing the 19,757 on hand before he was able to leave the game on his own.
"It was very disappointing," Bishop said. "It's almost sad. I was happy to be back and excited to play, and then that happens right away."
On the play, the Senators' Marc Methot scored into a wide-open net, picking up his fifth of the season for a career high.
Erik Karlsson, Zack Smith, Kyle Turris and Bobby Ryan also scored for the Senators (24-20-10) as Craig Anderson stopped 35 shots.
The win allowed the Senators, with 58 points, to move into a tie with the Columbus Blue Jackets for the eighth and final playoff spot, but the Blue Jackets hold the tiebreaker with more wins (27).
"You have to take care of the games you have, and we did that (Thursday)," Ryan said. "If you don't, you're going to be on the outside looking in, and that's not where we want to be."
Alex Killorn, Tyler Johnson and Victor Hedman scored for the Lightning (31-18-5), who have lost two straight. Anders Lindback faced 27 shots.
"It was a tale of two different teams," Tampa Bay coach Jon Cooper said. "The one thing that concerned me was we didn't play desperate. There's one thing about competing really hard, but we just didn't seem to have that desperation. Whether that was because of the way the game started, but at some point, you have to turn the page."
Ottawa made it 2-0 with 25 seconds remaining in the period as Jason Spezza took a stretch pass from Milan Michalek, froze the Lightning defense and found Karlsson all alone in front of a wide-open net.
The Lightning cut the lead in half as Killorn beat Anderson cleanly, but it wasn't enough as the Senators went on to score two more by the end of the period to take a 4-1 lead after 40 minutes.
Smith made it 3-1 as he grabbed a loose puck at the side of the net, moved in front, and put a shot off the crossbar that bounced off Lindback and in. Turris then picked up his 18th late in the period as Ryan fought off Hedman and left the puck back for Turris, who buried it.
Ryan made it 5-1 early in the third as he picked up his team-leading 20th of the season. It was his first goal in six games.
"You hope there'll be a domino effect (from the goal) and I can move forward with it," Ryan said.
Johnson made it 5-2 scoring a short-handed goal late in the third.
Tampa pulled Lindback with more than three minutes remaining in regulation and made the most of the man advantage as Hedman made it 5-3. The Lightning made the final minutes exciting as they kept Lindback on the bench, but they were unable to complete the comeback.
"I thought we battled really hard in the last few minutes," Martin St. Louis said. "I guess the desperation came in too late I guess."
In addition to losing Bishop, the Lightning also lost leading scorer Valtteri Filppula early in the second. Filppula returned briefly, but then left the game with a lower-body injury.
Cooper had no update on Filppula and said he would be re-evaluated Friday.

Game notes


Michalek picked up his 200th career NHL assist on Ottawa's second goal. D Chris Phillips missed his second straight game with a lower-body injury. ... D Joe Corvo and LW Matt Kassian were healthy scratches for Ottawa. ... D Keith Aulie and C Tom Pyatt were healthy scratches for the Lightning. ... With an assist on the Lightning's third goal, St. Louis, with 965 career points, moved into a tie with Maurice Richard for 85th place in the NHL's all-time scoring leaders. It was also St. Louis' 600th NHL assist.
Copyright by STATS LLC and The Associated Press

Ryan Johansen's 2 goals push Jackets past Caps

Final
Series (Game 4 of 4)

Capitals 2

(24-22-8, 56 pts)

Blue Jackets 5

(27-23-4, 58 pts)




7:00 PM ET, January 30, 2014
Nationwide Arena, Columbus, Ohio

1 2 3 T
WSH 0 1 12
CBJ 2 2 15
R. Johansen (Blue Jackets - C): Goals: 2, Assists: 0
S. Bobrovsky (Blue Jackets - G): Saves: 30, Save Pct.: .938
J. Johnson (Blue Jackets - D): Goals: 0, Assists: 1
 
 
 
 
 
ESPN.com news services
Blue Jackets Snap Slide
The Blue Jackets ended a three-game slide with a 5-2 win over the Capitals.Tags: Alex Ovechkin

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Ryan Johansen has become the young Columbus Blue Jackets' most promising player.
Johansen scored twice and Derek MacKenzie, Brandon Dubinsky and Cam Atkinson also had goals to lead the Blue Jackets to a 5-2 victory over the Washington Capitals on Thursday night, ending a three-game losing skid.
"I felt like I had the puck on my stick the whole night," said the 21-year-old, whose goal total now matches his age.
The Capitals looked sluggish and slow the whole night.
Alex Ovechkin -- leading the NHL with 38 goals -- had a career low minus-5 rating.
"I was today the worst player out there," he said after registering as many shots (2) as penalty minutes. "I can't play like that. I have to bounce back. ... I feel bad for my team because I have to lead. But today I was bad."
Columbus rookie defenseman Ryan Murray said the defense keyed on Ovechkin.
"We were really isolating him on that side of the power play and just kind of blocking all the seams so they couldn't get pucks to him," he said.
Meanwhile, the Blue Jackets were very good.
Jack Johnson and Fedor Tyutin each had two assists for the Blue Jackets, who had totaled six goals in the losing streak. MacKenzie opened the scoring with a short-handed goal and seemed to light a fire under the Blue Jackets. Dubinsky had an assist to go with his goal. And Sergei Bobrovsky had 30 saves, 19 of them coming in the ragged, penalty-filled final period.
"It was a huge win for the guys," coach Todd Richards said. "We challenged them this afternoon, (saying we were) needing more from individuals. We got that tonight."
Each team was 0 for 7 on the power play in a chippy, physical game that saw Washington defenseman Mike Green pounded into the boards on a check by Boone Jenner in the first period. He did not return. The Capitals' Tom Wilson also laid out Blue Jackets defenseman Nikita Nikitin, which seemed to add some edge to his teammates.
The Blue Jackets tied a franchise mark by scoring at least three goals in each game of a team-record eight-game winning streak but had mustered just two per game in the three losses since. Meanwhile, the Capitals had scored 10 goals in winning their last two games.
"We scored in different ways," Richards said. "We had a short-handed goal that gave our team some life. Then Joey (Johansen) stepped up. He had a big game."
Yet Columbus roared to a 4-0 lead and never looked back.
Joel Ward had a short-handed goal and Eric Fehr also scored for the Capitals, who had won two in a row after dropping seven straight.
"We were terrible," Washington coach Adam Oates said after his team fell behind 2-0 after a period. "It was probably the worst period I've seen the boys play in over a year. Why, I don't know. It was collectively all of us."
The Capitals were playing their fourth of a season-long five-game road trip that ends in Detroit on Friday night.
Moments after Bobrovsky gloved a power-play shot by Ovechkin, the Blue Jackets scored a short-handed goal.
MacKenzie pounced on a loose puck at center ice and skated in from the left wing unimpeded, deking to get Braden Holtby down on the ice and then sliding the puck inside the near post.
Johansen then carried the puck up the ice on a break, pulled up to look for a teammate, and passed to Jack Johnson, who fired a slap shot from the right point. The puck caromed off Jenner and Johansen had a vacant net to tap in the rebound.
On goals by Dubinsky and Johansen's second, the Capitals were basically spectators, watching while they made moves and put the puck in the net.
The final 28 minutes was a succession of penalties. The damage had already been done.
"We lost some of our discipline and took too many penalties in the third period, got away from our game," Johansen said. "But we did a great job in the first and second periods."

Game notes


Columbus LW Blake Comeau, still hurting from a sprained ligament in his left knee, was scratched. ... The Blue Jackets reassigned defenseman Tim Erixon to their American Hockey League affiliate in Springfield, Mass. ... The game was eerily similar to a lopsided 5-1 Blue Jackets victory over the Caps on Jan. 18, also in Nationwide Arena. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Copyright by STATS LLC and The Associated Press

NHL Scoreboard for the games of January 30,2014 from ESPN.GO.COM

4
 (29-20-5, 63 pts)
1
 (34-16-3, 71 pts)

1 2 3T
Montreal Canadiens 2 2 04
Boston Bruins 1 0 01
W: Budaj (34 SV)
L: Rask (15 SV)
MTL:D Briere (8), A Emelin (1), B Gionta (9), M Pacioretty (23)
BOS:D Hamilton (5)
4
 (38-14-2, 78 pts)
1
 (30-20-6, 66 pts)

1 2 3T
Pittsburgh Penguins 3 1 04
Los Angeles Kings 1 0 01
W: Zatkoff (30 SV)
L: Quick (4 SV)