The Phoenix Coyotes don't mind working overtime if the results continue like this. The Coyotes won in a shootout for the third time in as many games when Antoine Vermette's shot trickled off the pad of goalie Roberto Luongo and just across the goal line in the sixth round Tuesday night, giving Phoenix its fifth straight win in a 3-2 victory against the Vancouver Canucks at Jobing.com Arena. Mikkel Boedker had the shootout winner against Nashville on Oct. 31 and Vermette had the winner against the San Jose Sharks on Saturday before getting just enough of another difference-maker around Luongo on Tuesday. The Canucks had one last chance to extend the shootout, but Henrik Sedin lost control of the puck and never got off a shot on Phoenix goalie Mike Smith. The arena was packed full of Canucks fans which added to the atmosphere.
"It's a game of inches, and that puck just
got over the goal line," Phoenix coach Dave Tippett said.
"Last year, shootouts were one of the places we came up short
on some points (4-6 overall), so it's good to see us get some this
year."
The Coyotes are now 7-0-1 at home and join the
Sharks and Anaheim Ducks as the only three teams yet to suffer a
regulation loss at home this season. The Coyotes, one point behind
the Ducks in the race for the most points in the NHL, meet up with
them in Anaheim on Wednesday. Smith, now 8-0-2 in his past 10
decisions, made 31 saves through overtime and stopped Mike
Santorelli, Chris
Higgins, Daniel
Sedin, Ryan
Kesler and Henrik
Sedin in the shootout. Alexandre
Burrows was the only Canuck to convert.
"It was kind of a chess match and the
chances weren't the highest," said Smith, who had to make 48
saves in San Jose on Saturday and has stopped 120 of 125 in his past
three starts. "I think we learned a lot from the last game
and we got another big two points."
Luongo had 30 saves before stopping Mikkel
Boedker, Mike
Ribeiro, Oliver
Ekman-Larsson and Shane
Doan in the shootout. Radim
Vrbata matched Burrow's goal in the second round before his
showdown with Vermette.
"I knew I got a piece of it with my pad,"
Luongo said. "I didn't know which way the puck was spinning,
but when I turned around I saw it barely across the line. It's
disappointing to lose, but a great game for both teams."
Dan
Hamhuis and Kesler scored second-period goals for Vancouver.
Vrbata scored in the first period before Doan scored in the second
for the Coyotes. Phoenix played most of the game with five defensemen
after Derek
Morris left the game with a lower-body injury midway through the
first period.
"We really missed Mo and it's a burden for
any team, but we really have great defensive depth right now,"
Doan said. "We don't have one guy back there we're trying to
hide and there's no drop-off. Any one of our ‘D' could play the
most minutes in a game. It's a great luxury."
The Coyotes grabbed a lead 46 seconds into the
game, when a hard forecheck by Doan behind the net forced Vancouver
defenseman Christopher
Tanev to send the puck around the boards. Martin
Hanzal cut off the clearing attempt at the hash marks and put a
puck toward the net that Vrbata deflected up and over Luongo at 1:15.
It was the sixth goal of the season for Vrbata, and all six have come
in Phoenix's eight home games.
"It's a little weird because last year I
scored a lot of my goals [11 of 12] on the road," Vrbata
said. "I will take goals wherever they come, and it's
important to be strong and winning and getting points at home. So far
that's working out."
The Canucks turned up the heat quickly in the
second period and needed 25 seconds to score. Santorelli won a
faceoff back to Hamhuis at the point. Hamhuis waited for traffic to
form in the slot and let go a shot Smith never saw until it was past
his glove. Then, with Vermette in the penalty box for roughing,
Vancouver's power play cashed in. Henrik
Sedin put a saucer pass over Hanzal's stick and Kesler stepped
into it for a one-timer that banked in off the crossbar at 4:15.
Kesler's ninth goal of the season extended Henrik
Sedin's career-long points streak to 12 games (3-11-14). Daniel
Sedin got the second assist to run his streak to seven (5-4-9).
But Doan answered with a one-timer of his own. The Coyotes hemmed the
Vancouver checking line in with own end with good pressure and Keith
Yandle faked a shot from the high point before teeing up Doan for
a low one-timer that banked in off the far post at 17:39. Doan's
fifth goal of the season was his third in the past four games and set
up the tight finish.
"I tried to stretch my bench and I
shouldn't have. You put that on me," Vancouver coach John
Tortorella said. "I shouldn't have my fourth line out there
then."
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