The Pittsburgh Penguins don't seem to be aware they are decimated by injuries. With 10 regulars out of their lineup, the Penguins beat the Minnesota Wild 5-2 on Thursday at Consol Energy Center for their sixth consecutive win. The Penguins surrendered a pair of goals after taking a 4-0 lead in the second period, but rookie defenseman Olli Maatta put the game away on a penalty shot 7:54 into the third. At the tail end of a Minnesota 5-on-3, Maatta exited the penalty box and received a pass that sent him charging toward the net. He was tripped by Wild defenseman Jonas Brodin with Penguins forward Craig Adams still in the box, setting up a shorthanded penalty shot. Maatta deked to the right, brought the puck back to the left and shot at goalie Niklas Backstrom's pads. The puck slid over the goal line to give the Penguins a 5-2 lead.
"It's a big point in the game when we go
down 5-on-3 for an extended period of time," Penguins coach
Dan Bylsma said. "You look at the clock and think, one or two
power-play goals and it's a tied game. The guys are coming; it was a
huge kill there. As the penalty kill is winding down, Olli comes out
from the first one and he gets the puck. Olli with his mother's first
game in the stands, he gets a big night."
Maatta, who also had an assist, became the second
defenseman in franchise history to score on a penalty shot.
"I've tried that move in practice a couple
of times, and that's probably the only move I've got,"
Maatta said. "It worked."
With a 1-0 lead after one period, Pittsburgh used
a three-goal second period to gain a comfortable lead. Brandon
Sutter started the period by scoring his eighth goal of the
season and second goal in two nights at 1:54. Mikko
Koivu blocked a wrist shot from Maatta but lost the puck at his
skates. He turned to find the puck, but Sutter dove around him and
wristed a shot past Backstrom to extend the Penguins' lead to 2-0.
Matt
Niskanen's second goal of the season gave Pittsburgh a three-goal
lead 1:39 later. With Chris
Kunitz screening Backstrom during a power play, Niskanen slapped
a shot into the upper left corner of the goal. The chemistry between
Sidney Crosby
and Kunitz was obvious on the Penguins' third goal of the period.
Crosby retrieved the puck in the left corner and backhanded a pass to
the front of the net. Kunitz raced past Koivu to the crease and met
Crosby's pass for a one-time wrist shot that beat Backstrom and made
it 4-0.
"With [Kunitz], you always know he's going
to be around the net," Crosby said. "I ended up
seeing some space there and he's able to get to the net pretty quick,
but that's where he's going to be. So, he's going to score a lot of
goals around there, and I was happy we were able to capitalize."
Kunitz, who was credited with the Penguins' first
goal after it initially was awarded to Pascal
Dupuis, leads the team with 20 goals. Crosby extended his point
streak to nine games with two assists. He has 15 points (six goals,
nine assists) during the streak. Pittsburgh's defense was equally
impressive, even without injured regulars Kris
Letang, Brooks
Orpik, Paul
Martin and Rob
Scuderi, as well as suspended defenseman Deryk
Engelland. The Penguins have allowed two or fewer goals in nine
of their past 11 games. Jeff
Zatkoff made 24 saves in earning his sixth straight win after
starting the season 0-2-0. Backstrom, who started in place of goalie
Josh Harding,
out for medical reasons, is now 2-6-2 on the season with a 3.12
goals-against average and .896 save percentage.
"I think my last game was pretty good and
today I could have been better," Backstrom said. "If
you play a good game or bad game, you want to be better next time.
You try to learn from every game."
Jason
Pominville got Minnesota on the board 37 seconds after Kunitz's
second goal to send the Wild into the third period facing a
three-goal deficit. It was his team-leading 16th goal. Dany
Heatley made it 4-2 at 3:13 of the third with a wrist shot past
Zatkoff. It was his seventh of the season and first since Nov. 29.
The Penguins got off to a quick start to the first period, but could
not carry the momentum past the first few minutes like they were able
to in the second. Pittsburgh took advantage of a mishandled rebound
by Backstrom to take a 1-0 lead 49 seconds into the game. Maatta sent
a wrist shot into Backstrom's glove, but the Minnesota goalie fumbled
the puck into the crease while Dupuis, Kunitz and Crosby converged on
the net. Crosby backhanded the puck at Backstrom, producing another
rebound. Kunitz finished the play by tapping the puck past a few
scrambling Wild players and into the net. The goal originally was
given to Dupuis, then was changed to Kunitz afterward. The Penguins
have scored a goal in the opening minute of three consecutive home
games.
Minnesota coach Mike Yeo said he was not satisfied
with his team's effort. "The whole game, 'frustrating' I
think is the wrong word, I think 'maddening' is a little bit more
appropriate. To come out and get outbattled and outworked, that was
disappointing."
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