Martin Brodeur may not be the New Jersey Devils' unquestioned No. 1 goalie anymore, but right now he's their good luck charm. For some reason that coach Peter DeBoer hasn't been able to explain, scoring becomes a problem for the Devils when Cory Schneider is in net. With Brodeur standing between the pipes, as he was Saturday at Prudential Center, they're even getting offense from their blue line and beating the first-place team in the Metropolitan Division. Andy Greene scored his second goal of the season and Adam Larsson scored his first regular-season goal in nearly two years to help lift the Devils to a 4-1 win against the Pittsburgh Penguins. Brodeur did his part, making 27 saves for his sixth win in 11 starts this season and fourth in a row. Jaromir Jagr scored the insurance goal with 5:54 left in the third period and then added an empty-net goal to give him seven goals and 16 points in 20 games. Both are team highs. New Jersey has scored 32 goals in Brodeur's 11 starts this season, but only 10 in Schneider's nine starts.
"We're looking to try to get to .500 and
go from there, go forward," Brodeur said of the Devils, who
are 7-8-5. "We're not there yet. We had a tough start, but
now I think the last five, six games, it's been really good. We've
been in every game and scoring a few more goals and getting some wins
because of that."
Dainius
Zubrus had a particularly strong game for the Devils, factoring
into the first three goals. He forced the turnover that led to
Greene's goal in the first period, led the rush that led to Larsson's
goal in the second period, and forced the turnover that led to Jagr's
first goal in the third. He was credited with assists on New Jersey's
second and third goals.
"He wasn't the weakest link on our line,"
Jagr joked.
Chris
Kunitz scored a breakaway goal for Pittsburgh early in the second
period, but after breaking out with four goals in a win against the
Nashville Predators on Friday, the Penguins offense once again
couldn't find a way. The Penguins have scored four even-strength
goals in their past five games and have gone 1-4-0. They have only 25
goals over their past 12 games and are 5-7-0 in that stretch after
winning seven of their first eight games with the help of 30 goals.
"We had an open net, posts, and the power
play probably hurt us [Saturday night] with the opportunities we had
in the third to get us back in the game," Penguins captain
Sidney Crosby
said. "I don't know if it's been a common thing, but we
certainly had a fair amount of chances."
Crosby is talking about the back-to-back
power-play opportunities Pittsburgh had midway through the third
period when it was a 2-1 game. The Penguins had seven shots on goal
over the two power plays but couldn't convert.
"They have too many guys with too much
firepower there, so obviously we can't get into a track meet with
them," Greene told NHL.com. "I thought we did a good
job of limiting their chances. They're going to get their chances,
but you've gotta limit their second and third chances, and I thought
we did a good job of that."
Greene gave the Devils a 1-0 lead with 19 seconds
left in the first period, when his seemingly harmless shot from the
left point trickled through Penguins goalie Marc-Andre
Fleury. It was New Jersey's third shot on goal. Craig
Adams was the high man on Greene and the shot appeared to deflect
off his stick, changing direction just enough to fool Fleury, who
fumbled the puck and had it go through his five-hole.
"It hit something, but I don't know
exactly what," Greene said. "I saw the replay
quickly. It definitely got deflected. It dipped and I obviously
couldn't see it. I was waiting on everybody else, and I was like,
'Holy cow, that went in.'"
The Penguins got a break of their own early in the
second, leading to Kunitz's game-tying breakaway goal. Marek
Zidlicky had the puck squirt away from him at the offensive blue
line. Kunitz then beat a backpedaling Zidlicky to the puck and broke
in for a breakaway. Brodeur shut the door the rest of the way,
though, and the Penguins wound up giving the Devils one too many
quality chances in the latter part of the second period.
"We gave them three good opportunities on
odd-man situations, and they capitalized," Penguins coach
Dan Bylsma said.
Larsson converted on a 4-on-3 rush to give the
Devils a 2-1 lead with 1:38 left in the second period. He hadn't
scored since Nov. 26, 2011, against the New York Islanders. Zubrus
led the rush up the middle of the ice and fed Travis
Zajac on his right side while Jagr went to the net. Larsson
joined in, beating Evgeni
Malkin and James
Neal down the ice. Zajac quickly moved the puck back across the
ice to Larsson, who beat Fleury under the blocker with a shot from
the left circle. Prior to Larsson's goal, Steve
Bernier got free on a breakaway only to have the puck roll off
his stick as he tried to deke to his backhand, and Fleury robbed
Michael Ryder
with a diving save after Ryder stole the puck from Matt
Niskanen in the Penguins zone.
"It was a good team win, especially with
us going on the road here for the next while," Greene said.
"I don't want to say it was a must-win, but it was a big win.
We pulled this victory out and can go on the road with a good
feeling."
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