Thursday 10 December 2015

NHL - Pittsburgh Penguins @ Colorado Avalanche 4-2 - Wednesday, December 09, 2015


Beau Bennett scored two of the Pittsburgh Penguins' three goals during a 3:24 span of the third period in a 4-2 come-from-behind win against the Colorado Avalanche at Pepsi Center. Bennett had six of the Penguins' 33 shots, while Chris Kunitz had three shots and an assist, and Sidney Crosby two shots and an assist. Goalie Marc-Andre Fleury made 24 saves for the Penguins, who finished 2-2-0 on a four-game road trip. Bennett tied the game 2-2 at 7:19 of the third period, slipping a backhander into a half-open net shortly after the Penguins finished killing off back-to-back Avalanche power plays, including a 5-on-3 advantage for 36 seconds.
Patric Hornqvist’s goal at 9:24 put the Penguins in front to stay. Defenseman Olli Maatta took a shot from below the right circle that hit goalie Avalanche Reto Berra, popped into the air with several players in front and Hornqvist deflected the puck into the net. Colorado coach Patrick Roy used his coach's challenge, believing Berra was interfered with on the play, but the goal stood. Bennett scored again at 10:43 off the rush, beating Berra to the stick side with a shot from the right circle.
The Avalanche agreed. They've had problems with two-man advantages all season and went 0-for-5 on power plays Wednesday. They've failed to score on 13 consecutive power plays in their past six games. The Avalanche split two games at home, where they have a 4-7-1 record.
Colorado grabbed a 2-1 lead in the first period on goals by Matt Duchene and Erik Johnson. Matt Cullen scored for the Penguins. Duchene opened the scoring at 5:34 with his 15th goal of the season. MacKinnon carried the puck into the Penguins' end on right wing and took a shot that Kris Letang deflected. The puck caromed to Duchene in the left circle, and he beat Fleury between the pads.
Duchene has points in 16 of the past 19 games (14 goals and 10 assists) after getting one goal and one assist in his first 10 games. Mikhail Grigorenko had the other assist. Grigorenko was in the lineup after Gabriel Landeskog was scratched because of a back injury. He started the game on Colorado's top line with MacKinnon and Duchene but was demoted to the fourth line and replaced by Alex Tanguay later in the first period.
Berra kept the Avalanche in front by stopping Crosby on a shorthanded breakaway at 7:58 with Cullen in the penalty box for interference. But Cullen tied the game at 10:56. Maatta took a shot from the right point and Cullen deflected it past Berra for his second goal in four games and third of the season.
The Avalanche went back in front at 15:00 on Johnson's goal. Johnson brought the puck into the Penguins' zone, passed to Carl Soderberg on the right side and continued to the net. He redirected Soderberg's return pass over Fleury's stick for his first goal in 11 games and fifth of the season. Bennett played parts of two seasons at the University of Denver.


Pens Quotes
Mike Johnston: "Beau was good. I don't know how many hits he had, but Beau, when he's competing, his skills will start to take over and he got some open ice. I thought that line was really good tonight. It was one of those games where you knew if you stuck with it you were going to get some opportunities. The second period we controlled the play below the circles and the offensive zone. That's how we wanted to play them. Then you get a penalty and you get a 5-on-3 call and all of a sudden now you've got a monstrous penalty kill. I think that was the turning point in the game."
Beau Bennett: "We knew if we kept on them like that, we were going to get our chances. We had a lot of chances in the second [period], we just weren't burying any of them. So it was good to stay on them and probably could have had a couple more. They let me walk towards the middle and the goalie didn't adjust. It was kind of the same play I had in Anaheim [in a 2-1 loss Sunday] where I hit the post. I was fortunate to get this one in."


Avs Quotes
Patrick Roy: "I won't make the judgment is it the right call or a bad call. To me, if the guy cross-checks our defenseman into our goalie and he's incapable of making the save because of it, for me it's goalie interference. But maybe for someone else it might be a hockey play. [Grigorenko] was not good enough on the one-on-one battles. He needs to win his battles. He lost a lot of battles."
Nathan MacKinnon: "They did a good job on the kill. We had some chances. Fleury made some good saves on us. It's always tough to not score [on a 5-on-3]. It's tough, then they come right down and score to tie it 2-2. I thought they dominated us in the second period as well. It's frustrating."


Other Results

The Vancouver Canucks were outplayed early but recovered to win a wild third period and beat the Penguin's Metropolitan Division Rival, New York Rangers. Daniel Sedin and Alexander Edler took turns setting up each other for goals in the third period, and the Canucks defeated the Rangers 2-1 at Rogers Arena. Edler one-timed a drop pass from Sedin over the glove of Henrik Lundqvist during a 5-on-3 power play 3:19 into the third period, with a shot that went into the net off the crossbar. Dan Boyle tied the game on a penalty shot at 8:54, but Sedin restored the lead 30 seconds later by redirecting Edler's slap pass from the point past Lundqvist from just above the goal line.
In the Atlantic Division, the 732nd game between the Canadiens and the Bruins, who made their NHL debut in 1924-25, came 91 years and one day after their first. On Dec. 8, 1924, Montreal won 4-3 at Boston Arena, which is now Matthews Arena, the home rink of Northeastern University. The Boston Bruins finally swung some momentum back in their favor in their long rivalry with the Montreal Canadiens, which they will carry into their next game at the 2016 Bridgestone NHL Winter Classic.
Loui Eriksson and Landon Ferraro scored 42 seconds apart in the third period to help Boston defeat Montreal 3-1 at Bell Centre. Eriksson scored a shorthanded goal on a breakaway to tie the game 1-1 at 7:53 of the third. Ferraro gave the Bruins a 2-1 lead with his third goal, second in three games, at 8:35. Patrice Bergeron made it 3-1 with his ninth goal at 13:42. Bruins captain Zdeno Chara batted a cross-ice pass by P.K. Subban out of midair, knocking the puck forward to Eriksson, who drove in on a breakaway from Boston's blue line. Byron got credit for his fourth goal at 8:49 of the first. He flipped a centering pass from the end boards in the left corner that floated into the goalmouth and bounced into the net off Zach Trotman.

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