Paul Stastny emphatically ended a nine-game scoring drought Monday night. Stastny scored twice in the second period and chipped in with two assists to lead the Colorado Avalanche to a 6-2 win against the Dallas Stars at Pepsi Center. After going nine games without a point, Stastny had three in the second period when the Avalanche scored four times to build a 5-1 lead.
"I always put pressure on myself,"
he said. "If anything, I was more frustrated, whether I
showed it or not. No one will see it, but inside it's frustrating.
That's how it is. It's a long season and you just have to keep
battling through it. Not everything is going to go your way. Some
games you don't play well and you get points, some games you play
well and you deserve something and you don't get anything."
Andre
Benoit, who went 10 games without a point and Erik
Johnson, who went 21 games without a goal and five without a
point, also scored in the second. The Stars and Avalanche traded
third-period goals. Tyler
Seguin scored his 18th at 3:26 for Dallas and Tyson
Barrie registered his first of the season in 18 games at 15:16.
"That was pretty much us laying an egg,"
Stars forward Jamie
Benn said. "They came out strong and jumped all over us.
They're a good team and they've got four pretty good lines. They just
keep coming at you and we couldn't find a way to stop it."
The Avalanche, who play in Dallas on Tuesday, are
in third place in the Central Division with 45 points, two more than
the Minnesota Wild, who have played three more games. The Stars are
fifth with 35 points.
"It's a big game any time you play home
and home," Stastny said. "You want to get that first
win. Getting back on the winning track is big."
Offense had been a problem for the Avalanche until
they broke through against the Stars with a season-high 48 shots.
They totaled 12 goals in the previous six games and were held to one
goal in three of them.
"The door opened for us," said PA
Parenteau, who tied his career high for assists with three. "It's
good for our confidence, good for everyone. It was a big team win and
nice to get the offense going like that. We were on the puck the last
few games and couldn't get it done. The confidence was low for a few
guys who couldn't get on the board. It's tough on you. You're playing
decent hockey and you're not getting rewarded. Tonight a lot of guys
did and it's fun to see."
Stastny broke a 1-1 tie at 8:29 of the second
period when he tipped in Maxime
Talbot's shot through traffic and Benoit scored from near the top
of the left circle at 13:42 with a shot that eluded goalie Kari
Lehtonen to the stick side. Three minutes earlier, Lehtonen
robbed Nathan
MacKinnon's backhanded shot on a clean breakaway. Stastny scored
again at 16:33. Gabriel
Landeskog took a shot from just inside the blue line and Stastny
deflected it in while being checked by Stars defenseman Brenden
Dillon.
"He was in the paint both times,"
Avalanche coach Patrick Roy said. "This is where you have to
be. When we're talking about scoring different ways, if you don't
score shooting in the slot area or coming down the wing, you have to
be somewhere else and that's what we did. We showed great urgency
around their net. We really wanted to put the puck behind their
goalie. I certainly think it's going to help our confidence."
Johnson scored his third goal of the season and
first since Oct. 25 with a shot from the right point that slipped
under Lehtonen's right leg with three seconds to play. The Avalanche
outshot the Stars 21-10 in the first period, but they headed to
intermission in a 1-1 tie. MacKinnon put the Avalanche in front 1-0
at 10:38 with his seventh goal and first in five games. He accepted a
drop pass from Matt
Duchene, skated down the left side and beat Lehtonen to the far
corner. The goal gave MacKinnon 19 points, second among NHL rookies
behind San Jose Sharks forward Tomas Hertl, who has 24 points. The
Stars tied the game with 32.8 seconds left in the period when rookie
Kevin
Connauton, playing in his seventh NHL game, scored his first goal
while each team was shy a skater. Connauton drove to the net to tip
Seguin's pass behind Colorado goalie Semyon
Varlamov.
"The excitement of the goal wore off
pretty quick in the second period and we handed them some easy
chances," Connauton said. "They’ve got so much
skill up front, if you're going to give them looks like that they're
going to bury them."
Varlamov made two big saves moments later while
the Stars were on a power play. He stopped Alex
Goligoski skating in alone and scrambled to his left to smother
Seguin's stab at the rebound. The Avalanche went 0-for-5 on the power
play despite 14 shots, including two 5-on-3 advantages, and have gone
31 in a row without a goal in the past 11 games.
"You know what? The power play was really
good tonight," Roy said. "We had a lot of shots and
that's what we ask. Eventually it's going to go in. We didn't need
the power play tonight, but we had urgency and I was very happy with
it."
The Stars went 0-for-5 with the man advantage.
They are in a 2-for-23 slump in five games.
Semi-On Varlamov taking time off from kidnapping his girlfriend to make this save.
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