The Vancouver Canucks went into the second intermission against the Colorado Avalanche on Sunday night with a 1-0 lead and a lot of questions about their ability to hold onto it. Instead of talking about trying to protect the lead between periods, the Canucks built on it early in the third. Mike Santorelli set up Ryan Kesler's goal 1:32 into the third period then scored his second goal of the game less than six minutes later to lead the Canucks to a 3-1 win against the Avalanche.
"If you want to be successful in this
league, you've got to be able to hold onto leads, and tonight we did
it the right way," Santorelli said. "We wanted to
come out strong and not look at the time, and that's what we did."
Vancouver had blown five third-period leads in its
past seven games at Rogers Arena, including a two-goal lead against
the Phoenix Coyotes on Friday before winning in overtime. It was the
focus after that game and again after practice Saturday, but the
inability to finish games off wasn't talked about at all between
periods against Colorado.
"You have to be careful," coach
John Tortorella said. "If you talk too much about it, it
turns into a self-fulfilling prophecy."
Colorado forward Jamie
McGinn scored with 7.1 seconds left to spoil Roberto
Luongo's shutout bid.
"If you ask me about the goal, I am going
to snap," Luongo, who finished with 28 saves, said with a
laugh. "Thank God it wasn't the tying goal. That stuff
happens. We'll take the two points."
Vancouver has won four straight for the second
time this season, and consecutive games at home for the first time
since early October. But after blowing so many leads lately, how they
did it was just as important.
"Coming in after the second, we didn't
talk about anything, just kept talking about regular things and
playing our game," Luongo said. "We didn't talk
about playing with the lead, and we scored some big goals."
Kesler scored on an empty-net tap-in 1:32 into the
third period after Jean-Sebastien
Giguere stopped Santorelli's shot from the slot only to have the
rebound go straight to Kesler behind him at the side of the goal.
"We didn't want to sit back and hold onto
that one-goal lead. We wanted to go after them," said
Kesler, who has 15 goals, including five in the past four games.
"They seem to all be greasy and you have to go to those areas
to get the goals so I'll keep going to those areas."
Six minutes later, Santorelli kept it on a 2-on-1
break with Chris
Higgins and wristed a perfect shot over Giguere's blocker.
Giguere, who was back in the Colorado goal after making 28 saves in a
3-2 win against the Calgary Flames on Friday, finished with 18 saves
but lost for the first time in eight starts this season.
"These are just stats for you (media) guys
to talk about," Giguere said of his 7-0-0 start. "It
was nice, but I try to go in there and compete every day, and
unfortunately losing is part of the game too. I'm just going to
regroup and get ready for the next chance I get to play."
It was also just the second time this season
Giguere has played consecutive games ahead of Semyon
Varlamov, who gave up all eight goals in a 8-2 loss to the
Edmonton Oilers on Thursday.
"I honestly felt we played a better game
than them, and unfortunately we have nothing to show for the result,"
coach Patrick Roy said. "But, I mean, Luongo was good. Both
goalies were good actually."
Santorelli opened the scoring 5:34 into the first
period after Higgins intercepted defenseman Nate
Guenin's soft pass behind the Colorado net. Higgins fed out to
Santorelli, who was cutting to the crease from the right and made a
quick deke in tight to get around Giguere before tucking a backhand
into the empty net on the other side.
"What a great play by [Higgins] behind the
net causing that turnover and finding me out front, and I just made a
move," Santorelli said.
Colorado outshot the Canucks 12-6 in the first
period, but Giguere had to make a couple great saves in the final
three minutes to keep it close. Luongo answered him early in the
second period, denying John Mitchell on a breakaway from the top of
the faceoff circle after a giveaway, and got a break when Nick
Holden's shot from the top of the faceoff circle hit both posts
and stayed out. There was no break on McGinn's goal. Luongo was close
to picking up his third shutout of the season and the 65th of his
career, which would have moved him one behind Roy for 14th place on
the all-time NHL shutout list. But McGinn's shot went off his right
pad, off the post, and in off the back of his skate. Luongo joked
that Roy pulled Giguere with five minutes left because he "didn't
want me to catch up to him on the shutout record," but made it
clear he was only kidding. Roy, who is second all time in the NHL
with 551 career wins, said it was only a matter of time before Luongo
passes him for shutouts, but added, "He has some work to do on
wins though."
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