The Phoenix Coyotes have scored 40 goals, won seven games, earned 16 points and are off to their best 12-game start in a decade. What they don't have is a very happy coach - or anything that resembles the system play Dave Tippett believes to be essential for his team to be anything more than fan-friendly. The Ice Capades continued Saturday as the Coyotes won another track meet at Jobing.com Arena. Phoenix rallied from two deficits and blew yet another two-goal lead before Keith Yandle and Oliver Ekman-Larsson scored power-play goals 1:43 apart in the third period for a wild 5-4 victory against the struggling Edmonton Oilers. The Coyotes improved to 4-0-1 at home and 7-3-2 on the season despite blowing a 3-1 second-period lead and trailing 4-3 midway through the third period after a three-goal Edmonton flurry. Phoenix has allowed 39 goals - four or more in a game five times. Watching the Coyotes has been fun for the fans, but not so much for Tippett.
"I like scoring goals, don't get me wrong.
I like some of the plays we're making on that end," Tippett
said after several postgame comments dripping with sarcasm. "I
just don't like us giving up four and five a night. You're not going
to win in this league doing that. You'll be a fun team, that's about
it. If you're going to go out there and be loosey-goosey and give
away chances and goals left and right, it might be good entertainment
but it won't be winning hockey."
Phoenix is getting away with it so far.
Ekman-Larsson had a goal and two assists while Radim Vrbata added
chipped in with assists for the Coyotes, who are 12-1-2 in their last
15 meetings against Edmonton and have points in eight of the last
nine games (6-1-2). Edmonton was 0-for-2 on its power play, which has
now failed 21 straight times in the past seven games. But when the
Oilers took three penalties in the final 10:10 of the third period,
the penalty kill failed them twice. At 3-8-1, the Western Conference
basement dwellers have lost seven of the last nine and head to Los
Angeles for a tough back-to-back against the Kings on Sunday. Martin
Hanzal, Michael Stone and David Schlemko scored goals in the first
5:47 of the second period to wipe out a 1-0 Edmonton lead. Goals by
Will Acton and David Perron pulled the Oilers even after 40 minutes,
and when Ryan Jones deflected home a Ryan Nugent-Hopkins shot at 7:23
of the third period, Edmonton had a 4-3 lead.
"Once again, we played a pretty solid game
for the most part," said Nugent-Hopkins, who had a pair of
assists. "Obviously, you can't take three penalties in the
last 10 minutes."
Captain Andrew Ference started Edmonton's parade
to the box, hooking down Rob Klinkhammer. Yandle used a screen to put
a hard wrist shot past former teammate Jason LaBarbera and into the
bottom corner for his first goal of the season at 10:40 to tie the
game for the third time. Edmonton's Mark Arcobello caught Klinkhammer
in the face with a high stick 41 seconds later to give the Coyotes
another power play. Yandle make a sprawling, goalie-style stop with
his gloves to ruin an Edmonton clearing attempt before
Ekman-Larsson's shot from the point trickled through LaBarbera's pad
to give Phoenix the lead for good.
"I went back to my Little League days on
that one," Yandle said. "I used to play a mean
shortstop back then. The defense scored four goals today. If you look
at our back end, every guy can jump up and make plays and I thought
we did that today."
Mike Smith made 24 saves in his battle with
LaBarbera (23 saves), who left Phoenix for Edmonton as a free agent
during the summer. But neither goalie was sharp in a rare Arizona
afternoon matinee, and the Oilers didn't give LaBarbera much help -
two of Phoenix's first three goals were deflected into the net by
Edmonton players.
"I know what our players were thinking
there, they are trying to get their sticks on the puck,"
Edmonton coach Dallas Eakins said. "But we don't want that.
You block shots with your body, not your stick."
Tyler Pitlick gave Edmonton a 1-0 lead 9:59 into
play when he regained control of his own fanned shot and reloaded one
that found its way between Smith's pads. The unassisted goal was the
first in the NHL for the 21-year-old Pitlick, who left soon afterward
when he was clipped by a Schlemko hip check. Outscored 14-5 in the
first period this season, and 5-0 in the past two games - Phoenix
regrouped quickly with a flurry of three goals in a five-minute span
early in the second. It started with Hanzal, who is in the midst of
the best offensive surge in his career. Just 47 seconds into the
period, Ekman-Larsson took a crisp pass from Shane
Doan and found Hanzal steaming up the slot. The pass deflected
off Hanzal's skate and by LaBarbera to give Hanzal his fifth goal and
third in the last two games. Hanzal has at least one point in nine of
Phoenix's first 12 games.
"He's gone to the net and screen in front
of the net as well as I've ever seen him do," Tippett said.
"He's had a good start to the year and he's an important
player for us."
Stone, in for the injured Rostislav Klesla, put a
shot through traffic that hit Ference before beating LaBarbera at
5:20. Schelmko's 55-footer from the point was deflected into the net
by Arcobello 27 seconds later, leaving LaBarbera flat-footed and
obviously frustrated. Edmonton coach Dallas Eakins pulled LaBarbera
for Devan Dubnyk, but sent his starter back out after a 39-second
break and the Oilers regrouped in front of him to get back even
before the end of the period. At 8:03, Acton won a battle for a Ben
Eager rebound and stuffed it past Smith for his second goal. Then
Perron, who was robbed by Smith in close and hit the crossbar earlier
in the period, was on the receiving end of great passes from Justin
Schultz and Nugent-Hopkins for an easy put away at 19:42 to make it a
3-3 game.
"The first two goals were no good goal for
[Smith] to give up," Tippett said. "The third one
would be tactically glaring … the kind of thing we'll be looking at
[in practice] Monday."
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