Geography and the rigors of the NHL schedule were working against the Nashville Predators on Sunday, but backup goaltender Carter Hutton led them to a victory against the Winnipeg Jets. After playing at the Montreal Canadiens on Saturday, the Predators made the long trip to Winnipeg to meet the Jets at MTS Centre, where Hutton made his first start of the season, stopped 38 shots and stopped the Jets 3-1 for his first NHL win. Nashville (5-3-1) ripped open a scoreless game with three second-period goals on seven shots. Eric Nystrom's shorthanded goal 20 seconds into the period gave Nashville a 1-0 lead. Patric Hornqvist then scored his team-leading third goal to build a two-goal lead that Hutton and the Predators rode through the rest of the game. Matt Cullen scored the Predators' third goal to finish off Winnipeg (4-5-0).
"It was a big win for us," Cullen
said. "Tough travel, tough back-to-back (set) for us. It's a
big two-game stretch for this team. We're wearing teams down. We've
got four lines that can skate and play hockey. We had to figure out
how we had to play to be successful. We had a lot of new guys just
trying to find their comfort zone and fit in with the team, and they
have found that."
Nashville has picked up points in its past five
games, four of them wins that included a 2-1 road victory Saturday at
Montreal. While the Predators played and then flew to Winnipeg
overnight, the Jets rested and are nearing the end of a six-game
homestand.
"This group is really having a lot of fun
together," Predators coach Barry Trotz said of a roster that
turned over a third of its roster this past summer. "They're
a group that likes to be together, which is awesome. [Saturday] we
really worked hard, couldn't get a break and finally got the win at
the end. But you keep working hard, I always say that there are
hockey gods. If you keep doing the right things over and over again,
they might not reward you today, but they're going to reward you down
the road. Winning in Montreal on a Saturday night was big for us.
[There's] such a great atmosphere there. Coming to Winnipeg, we knew
it was going to be a tough place to come and win a hockey game. It
always has been and will continue to be, so it was a tough challenge
for us."
Hutton, a 27-year-old offseason signing whose only
work this season was relief duty Oct. 3 against the St. Louis Blues,
gave workhorse goaltender Pekka
Rinne a break as the Predators are in a stretch in which they
play nine of 11 games on the road. Evander
Kane's goal with 10:47 left in the game ended Hutton's shutout
bid.
"Playing behind Pekka," Hutton
said, "he's a world-class goalie, so when I do get a chance
to play, I need to find ways to win. That's what they brought me in
for. You never know when [the first NHL win is] going to come, right?
You've got to stick [with] it."
Hutton is from Thunder Bay, Ontario, and had his
family and friends at MTS Centre to see him play. Trotz had told
Hutton in advance that Sunday would be his first start.
"I think the guys really respect someone
who has put in the time and worked as hard as he has to get his game
[ready]," Trotz said. "It's really special for our
group getting him a win. He was ready for the start, and I was hoping
that we could rally around him in terms of getting him a win with
friends and family [in the building]."
Ondrej
Pavelec started for the eighth time in Winnipeg's first nine
games and gave the Jets 23 saves. Winnipeg was missing injured
defensemen Mark
Stuart and Jacob
Trouba and center Jim
Slater. Coach Claude Noel again shuffled his forward lines,
inserting Devin
Setoguchi, a healthy scratch Friday in a 4-3 shootout win against
St. Louis, back into the Jets' lineup in an attempt to spark an
offense still searching for consistency.
"You can't just play to play,"
Noel said. "And certainly there were periods of time to me
that we played to play; certainly the first half of the game, we just
played to play. You have to be emotionally connected to the game than
just playing to play, and we're not getting enough."
Winnipeg's seven home dates so far lead the
League, but the Jets have two wins through the homestand's first five
games.
"We can't think we're going to make a
comeback every single game," Pavelec said. "We have
to find a way to start winning games. The way we've been playing all
season long is not the way to be successful. We have to change
something and we have to change something now."
Nashville's Matt
Hendricks took a tripping minor 10 seconds into the second
period, giving the Jets their second power play. But Nystrom blocked
Jets defenseman Dustin
Byfuglien's point shot, cruised into the Winnipeg zone and backed
off defender Tobias
Enstrom before snapping a hard shot past Pavelec 10 seconds into
the Hendricks minor for the Predators' first shorthanded goal this
season. Hornqvist stopped Pavelec's clearing attempt at the right
boards and directed a shot that was heading wide until it deflected
off Jets defenseman Zach
Bogosian's skate and into the Winnipeg net at 12:07. Cullen
extended Nashville's lead to 3-0 at 14:57. Nashville pulled Pavelec
out of position, drawing the goaltender to the ice, and Cullen drove
a shot under the crossbar from the left dot seven seconds after a
Nashville power play expired. The Jets cut the Nashville lead to 3-1
midway through the third period when Kane jabbed a rebound under
Hutton's pads at 9:13. Kane's goal provided the game's lone bright
spot for the Jets.
"We needed to get secondary shots,"
Noel said. "We got shots, but we didn't get a lot of
secondary shots, and we certainly didn't battle hard enough to make
the goalie work."
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