High-scoring games, low-scoring games, come-from-behind wins. The Anaheim Ducks' winning streak has taken on all forms, and the latest had Saku Koivu's veteran skill all over it. Koivu's goal 51 seconds into overtime gave Anaheim a 3-2 win against the Phoenix Coyotes, and the Ducks extended a franchise record with their 10th consecutive win, the NHL's longest streak since the Pittsburgh Penguins won 15 in a row last March. The Ducks remained the only team without a regulation loss at home (14-0-2). Koivu tipped a shot by Ben Lovejoy, who took a pass from Cam Fowler at the top of the slot and snapped it on net. Koivu won a faceoff to start the possession that led to his second goal of the game, giving him 251 in his NHL career.
"Those tips there, they're more luck than
anything else," Koivu said. "You try to get open and
try to get your stick in there and try to get in front of the
goaltender, and we got lucky on that one."
Anaheim, which trailed 2-0 in its previous game
against the Washington Capitals on Monday, took the opposite route to
this win. Phoenix erased a 2-0 deficit with 4:34 left in regulation
on goals by Martin
Hanzal and Mike
Ribeiro. The Ducks regrouped and rode Koivu's line and goaltender
Jonas Hiller,
who tied a Ducks record with his eighth straight win, matching the
mark set by Viktor
Fasth from Jan. 26-Feb. 16, 2013. Anaheim's last regulation loss
was 6-3 to the Dallas Stars on Nov. 26, and coach Bruce Boudreau
didn't downplay the significance of the streak.
"I think it's neat," Boudreau
said. "Anytime you can get to be part of something that
nobody else has done, I think it's a special occasion. I don't make
light of it. I think No. 10 is magic when you get into streaks,
because it doesn't happen very often."
Hiller made 23 saves, and the goals he allowed
were forgivable. The Coyotes pulled goalie Thomas
Greiss for an extra attacker, and Ribeiro got his stick on Keith
Yandle's slap shot from the right side that made it through
traffic at 19:16 to stun the announced standing-room crowd of 17,442.
It has to be said from TV pictures the arena looked no way near full
to capacity. That came after Hanzal put a rolling puck into an open
net after an odd dump-in carom at 4:34. Hiller came out to play the
puck and got back to get the paddle of his stick on the shot but
could not stop it. The goal was upheld after a video review. Greiss,
starting in place of Mike
Smith, made 38 saves against one of the League's best offensive
teams. The bulk of his work came with 29 saves through two periods.
He helped the Coyotes withstand two effective Ducks power plays in a
16-shot second by Anaheim because of roughing and tripping penalties
by Yandle and Radim
Vrbata, respectively.
"He saw a lot of shots and he made a lot
of saves," Yandle said of Greiss. "If you look at
all their goals, it was tough saves. Not a lot of guys would have
that. He did his job. We have to find a way to help him out a little
more."
So much of Anaheim's streak has been about its top
line, but on this night the Ducks needed Koivu's shutdown line to
alleviate the scoring pressure. Andrew
Cogliano made a deft redirection to give the Ducks a 2-0 lead
5:04 into the third period. Daniel
Winnik's pass might have deflected off a Coyotes player before a
streaking Cogliano got his stick on it; Greiss had little chance on
the play. Koivu's first goal came shorthanded to finish off a sharp
first period by Anaheim, which showed no rust from a four-day break.
Koivu cut across to the left circle and, unpressured, took a short
backswing and fired near the wall to beat Greiss to the stick side at
17:08. Koivu said he's in a good place after he missed 15 games this
season with a concussion.
"I think [250 is] a good number, but when
you play with guys like Teemu [Selanne] on your team, and he has
almost 700 goals, you kind of forget that. But it's nice. I guess I'm
not known for scoring goals, and it's a fairly good number, and I'll
take it. After the concussion, there were a few games that kind of
took me to get, not so much physically, but just the mental part of
the game, to feel comfortable, and now I'm starting to get some
results, and it's a good sign."
Phoenix is 3-3-4 without captain Shane
Doan, out with Rocky Mountain fever. The Coyotes went past
regulation for the fifth straight game and were coming off a 4-3
shootout loss to the San Jose Sharks on Friday.
"It was a real tough turnaround with days
off and then playing two games in less than 24 hours, so I give our
guys credit for hanging in there, and we managed to salvage a point,"
Phoenix coach Dave Tippett said. "That's five games in a row
in overtime [and] we have only got one extra point, so that's a
little disappointing."
Anaheim's power play fell to 0-for-20 over seven
games after it came up empty on three tries, although it had good
puck movement and scoring chances. Its next chance will come Sunday
at San Jose, but the Ducks allowed themselves to recognize 10
straight wins.
"The League is so competitive … we've
been able to find ways to win games," Koivu said. "There's
been a few that we've been down by a few goals but found ways to win
the games and get the goals that we needed. Even though we know
there's a lot of good things, we've got to find a bit more
consistency when things are going well to push it a little more, but
10 wins is not easy and it's something that we can build on."
Once again though Ryan
Getzlaf and Corey Perry were acting like whiney brats throughout the
game. It is disappointing that two quality players like that feel the
need to provoke opponents and deliver cheap shots, only to go run and
hide behind the officals when someone stands up to them. Another
skirmish occurred later on in the game with Patrick Maroon getting
involved with several others.
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