The Winnipeg Jets had no answer for Matt Duchene on Thursday night. Duchene scored twice in regulation to rally the Colorado Avalanche from an early two-goal deficit, then scored the deciding goal in the shootout to beat the Jets 4-3 at MTS Centre. Duchene scored in the first round of the shootout and PA Parenteau ended the game by snapping a shot past Ondrej Pavelec in the second round. Semyon Varlamov stopped both Winnipeg attempts. The win moved the Avalanche (21-9-0), who had lost two in a row and three of their past four, nine points ahead of the Jets in the Central Division. Despite their recent struggles, the third-place Avalanche have 21 wins in their first 30 games, matching a franchise record set twice before.
"We regrouped, we stayed focused and our
guys kept playing as a team," Avalanche coach Patrick Roy
said of his team's early 2-0 hole. "That is the dangerous
part of [an early deficit], because sometimes when you get behind,
you have the tendency to [play] individually. That's not what we did
tonight, we stuck to the plan, we stuck together, played as a team
and I think we just [came] back."
The Jets (14-14-5) have one win in their past four
games and are last in the Central Division at 33 points, they have
the same number of points as the Dallas Stars and Nashville Predators
but have played more games than either of those teams. A 3-10-3
record against Central Division opponents has hampered the Jets'
ability to assert themselves in their new home in the Western
Conference. A visit from the Stars on Saturday concludes a crucial
three-game homestand for the Jets, who are beginning to fade from the
Western Conference playoff picture.
"It's a tough point to lose,"
Jets coach Claude Noel said. "I don't know that we deserved
to win, but we could have won. I think that what it shows is that
winning in the National Hockey League is not an easy process, and
it's difficult to change the way that things function. Right now, we
are a [nearly] .500 hockey team, and .500 isn't good enough. It's not
going to cut it, and it hasn't cut in the past. This year in the
[Western Conference], it's not even close."
Duchene also assisted on a goal by Ryan
O'Reilly to help the Avalanche overcome a 2-0 deficit. Winnipeg's
Blake Wheeler had his first two-goal game since March 19, 2013, and Michael
Frolik scored the other goal for the Jets, who went 2-for-6 on
the power play. Wheeler scored a power-play goal halfway through the
third period to send the game past regulation, but the shootout
victory improved Colorado's record when leading after two periods to
18-0-0.
"It makes it that much sweeter,"
Duchene said of the comeback. "They came out flying. It shows
what a resilient and mature group we have to stick with it."
Varlamov stopped 35 shots through 65 minutes.
Pavelec started for the fifth time in six games for the Jets and made
23 saves. Colorado is 17-0-0 this season when scoring first, but the
Jets carried the first period, building a 2-0 lead and taking a 12-2
shots advantage by the period's midpoint. Wheeler and Frolik gave the
Jets a 2-0 advantage in the first 5:45 as the Jets recorded seven of
the game's first eight shots. But Duchene made it 2-1 at 15:08,
ending a seven-game stretch without a goal, with his 13th of the
season .
"I really only started feeling good two or
three games ago, so it was nice to put a couple in," said
Duchene, who had missed three games with an oblique injury before
beginning his seven-game skid.
While Winnipeg outshot the Avalanche14-4 in the
first period, and the Avalanche had managed six shots through the
opening 30 minutes, they awakened in the second period. O'Reilly tied
the game at 14:47 with his 10th goal, and Duchene put Colorado ahead
for the first time when he scored his 14th goal at 19:57. It was his
third three-point night of the season. Wheeler's tying goal came with
two seconds left on a penalty to Colorado defenseman Cory
Sarich. Another loss undid the positive feelings that a Winnipeg
team in need of positives had generated early. The Jets went ahead on
their second shot of the game when Wheeler spun and directed a shot
from the bottom of the right circle that deflected off a skate and
trickled past Varlamov 24 seconds into the game. The goal was his
third in a span of 19 games dating to Oct. 29. Back-to-back minor
penalties to Colorado defensemen Erik
Johnson and Nate
Guenin put Colorado two men down. Colorado killed off Johnson's
minor, but Jets rookie defenseman Jacob
Trouba fired a low, hard shot from the point that Frolik tipped
past Varlamov at 5:45 for his eighth of the season.
"Anybody would like to start the way we
started," Noel said. "We got the building involved,
the fans involved. A lot of the game started to shift for me in the
second period."
But a center-ice collision between Wheeler and
Colorado's Nathan
MacKinnon set up the Avalanche's first goal. Duchene, one of the
NHL's best skaters, scooped up the loose puck at the Winnipeg blue
line and outraced Dustin
Byfuglien before he tucked the puck past Pavelec. Duchene and
O'Reilly combined on the Avalanche's second goal after several
minutes of sustained offensive pressure. Duchene circled behind the
Winnipeg net and slipped a pass to O'Reilly, who lifted a shot from
the left of the net over Pavelec's left shoulder.
"It's the momentum that you've got to
recognize, how you control it," Noel said. "But we
didn't recognize the momentum, and you could clearly see it, you
could feel it probably in the whole building. You could see they were
generating some [opportunities]."
Duchene put the Avalanche ahead when a Winnipeg
turnover in the Colorado zone set up a transition rush for the
Avalanche. MacKinnon sped past Wheeler down the left boards and put a
shot on Pavelec; Duchene stuffed the rebound into the net for his
second goal of the game.
"We've been taking positives out of losses
for too long," Wheeler said. "It feels like three
years, you come in after a game like this, and you say, 'We did some
good things.' You have to stay positive and draw from the positives
from the game, because we did a lot of good things, but we didn't do
enough to win the game, and that's the bottom line."
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