The Colorado Avalanche faced seven power plays, but still shut out the Pittsburgh Penguins on Monday. Gabriel Landeskog's second-period goal was enough to propel the Avalanche to a 1-0 win against the Penguins at Consol Energy Center. Pittsburgh allowed 14 Colorado shots, but the Avalanche took advantage of their limited chances. Goalie Jean-Sebastien Giguere made Landeskog's third goal of the season, which came with 14:34 left in the second period, stand up in a matchup of two teams that entered play Monday with 7-1-0 records. He made 34 saves.
"For us, every win is important,"
Avalanche coach Patrick Roy said. "This one is very special
for us. It's not very often we're going to win in Pittsburgh [when]
they had seven power plays. They are probably one of the best in the
League, and they were moving the puck really well. Your goalie needs
to be your best player in every situation, and [Giguere] was our best
player."
Giguere earned his second shutout in three starts
for Colorado.
"[Semyon
Varlamov] and I are working with a new goalie coach and Patrick,
who is helping us, too," Giguere said. "Altogether,
I think we feel pretty good. It's a new season, a new attitude all
around. It's a lot more positive. I would've believed being over
.500, but maybe not 8-1."
Landeskog was called for hooking 3:18 into the
second period. The Penguins failed to score on their fifth power play
of the game, and Ryan
Wilson found Landeskog in the neutral zone seconds after he
stepped out of the box. He charged toward the Pittsburgh net and sent
a wrist shot below Marc-Andre
Fleury's glove. Colorado remained unbeaten in five road games.
The Penguins lost their first game in six played in Pittsburgh.
Forward Matt
Duchene called the game a measuring stick for the Avalanche after
their morning skate Monday. While he wasn't satisfied with the team's
play, he was impressed by its resolve.
"We took way too many penalties and we
made it pretty easy for them, their top guys, to get touches,"
Duchene said. "[Sidney
Crosby] and [Evgeni] Malkin had touches and really good games,
and we pretty much let them because we let them touch the puck a lot
early. Patrick's been talking about it all camp. There's nights where
we're not going to be at our best and we have to find ways to win,
and tonight we did."
Pittsburgh forced four Colorado penalties in the
first period, and seven overall, but the Penguins' power play, which
had scored on 28 percent of its chances entering Monday, didn't take
advantage of any of those chances while registering 13 shots.
Colorado, which entered the game with the League's fourth-ranked
penalty-killing unit (87.5 percent), limited the Penguins'
opportunities.
"I think special teams were largely a big
story of the night," Penguins coach Dan Bylsma said. "Going
0-for-7 on the power play, we had plenty of opportunities there, had
plenty of good looks. I think there were three or four the guys would
like to have back."
After going 7-for-7 in Pittsburgh, the Avalanche
penalty kill was second in the NHL at 90.3 percent. The bulk of the
game's action took place in Colorado's zone through two periods, but
the Avalanche defense pressed Pittsburgh's forwards and blocked 20
shots, led by Jan
Hejda's five, while Giguere stopped another 18 to keep the
Penguins off the scoreboard heading to the third.
"It's tough when they don't go in like
that," Crosby said. "But we still did a lot of good
things, and we deserve better. That's how the game works sometimes.
Sometimes, you deserve to win and tonight, we deserved better, but
didn't get the result we wanted."
Pittsburgh registered 34 shots, 20 more than
Colorado. The Penguins had an opportunity to tie the game late in the
third period, but Giguere denied Chris
Kunitz's point-blank wrist shot. Crosby slid a puck past Erik
Johnson on a 2-on-1 and right on to Kunitz's stick in front of
Colorado's net. Kunitz fired the puck from just outside the crease,
but Giguere made a glove save to preserve the Avalanche's one-goal
lead with 7:34 left. Giguere is 3-0-0 with two goals allowed this
season. He needed to continue that level of play for the Avalanche to
win at Pittsburgh. Pittsburgh's defensemen guarded their blue line,
making it difficult for Colorado to enter the Penguins' zone. Once
the Avalanche did establish possession, Pittsburgh surrounded Fleury
and blocked 11 shots.
"It was quiet for most of the night,"
Fleury said. "The guys did great and didn't give much. It's
just unfortunate we couldn't get a goal."
Pittsburgh generated several scoring chances in
the first period, while holding the Avalanche to four shots. Nathan
MacKinnon registered Colorado's first shot 13:38 into the first.
The Avalanche's four first-period shots were tied for the fewest
amount allowed by Pittsburgh during a period this season. The
Penguins allowed four shots in the first period of their 3-2 win
against the Edmonton Oilers on Oct. 15. Crosby alone outshot the
Avalanche in the first period by registering five shots. Crosby
finished with a season-high seven shots, but failed to score a point
for the first time this season. MacKinnon, a fellow Cole Harbour,
Nova Scotia, native, was also held without a point with two shots.
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