It doesn't matter much whether Phoenix Coyotes coach Dave Tippett chooses to use Thomas Greiss or Mike Smith in goal when playing the Colorado Avalanche. Each goaltender has enjoyed a great deal of success against the Avalanche, a trend that continued Tuesday at Pepsi Center when Greiss made 29 saves in the Coyotes' 3-1 win for his fourth career victory against Colorado without a loss. Greiss got the start because Smith, who has an 8-1-3 record against the Avalanche, fell ill Tuesday morning and didn't improve as the day wore on.
"It's no problem," Greiss said.
"You have to be ready if it's injury or sickness."
Antoine
Vermette supplied all the offensive support Greiss needed with
two second-period goals, and the Coyotes pulled within one point of
the eighth-place Avalanche in the Western Conference. The Coyotes
have a 17-8-5 record and 39 points in 30 games.
"It was great," Vermette said of
Greiss. "He was phenomenal for us. He stood big time for us,
gave us a chance. It was a solid road win. There was nothing fancy
about our game. We got our chances and we put them in."
The Coyotes played without captain Shane
Doan, who missed his second game in a row because of illness, but
defenseman Zbynek
Michalek was solid in his first game after missing nine with a
lower-body injury.
"I try to do my thing every night,"
Vermette said. "When you’ve got a guy like Shane not being
around, his presence around the team, off the ice means a lot to this
team. With a few veterans out of the lineup, you want to make sure
the other veterans on the team step up. It gives other guys an
opportunity to step up and I thought Griess responded really well."
The loss was the second in a row and third in four
games for the Avalanche (20-9-0), who have played one fewer game than
the Coyotes.
"We didn't get too high early in the
season when things were going our way and now it's certainly not a
time to get too low," Avalanche captain Gabriel
Landeskog said. "We didn't have that punch-first
mentality in front of the net. We have to be relentless there and we
have to be hungrier there, that's for sure."
The teams combined for all four goals in a 7:01
span of the second period. Vermette began the scoring spree at 8:31
and ended it at 15:33 to give the Coyotes a two-goal lead heading to
the third period.
"In the second period we got a couple of
changes when they couldn’t get a change and sometimes that can
swing momentum for you," Tippett said. "Momentum is
a big part of the game and if you grab momentum and keep it, that’s
big."
Greiss kept the Avalanche off the board with a
number of tough saves, including one on a breakaway against Andre
Benoit, and his teammates rewarded him.
"It’s always nice to get a couple of
shots early and get into the game, not wait around," Greiss
said.
The Avalanche have had trouble finishing chances
lately, scoring 15 goals in the past eight games.
"We had some great scoring chances in that
first period," Colorado coach Patrick Roy said. "I
think it's just the type of shots that we're taking on our chances.
They need to be better shots, but I thought we had a good start. We
played very well in the first period. We gave them only two scoring
chances and we had four or five pretty good chances. Their goalie
made some great saves."
Vermette scored on a power play to open the
scoring when he skated to the net, got inside position on Avalanche
defenseman Nate
Guenin, and converted a pass from Keith
Yandle. Jordan
Szwarz made it 2-0 at 12:06 when he put in the rebound of Jeff
Halpern's shot while moving down right wing with Avalanche
forward Patrick
Bordeleau after goalie Semyon
Varlamov made a pad save. Bordeleau cut the deficit in half at
14:28 with his career-high fourth goal after Cody
McLeod battled Coyotes defenseman Michael
Stone behind the Phoenix net. When Stone tried to clear the puck,
it hit Bordeleau and caromed off Greiss' left skate before sliding
across the goal line.
"It just bounced off my skate and in,"
Greiss said.
The Coyotes responded 1:05 later. Mikkel
Boedker outraced Avalanche defenseman Nick
Holden for the puck in the corner, circled from behind the net
and passed to Oliver
Ekman-Larsson for a shot on goal. Varlamov made the stop, but
Vermette fired the rebound into the net for his ninth goal of the
season. The Coyotes got a scare at 6:09 of the period when Bordeleau
checked Mike
Ribeiro into the boards. Ribeiro fell to the ice and was in
obvious pain, but he returned shortly after and assisted on
Vermette's first goal. The Avalanche failed to score on two power
plays and are 0-for-22 in their past eight games.
No comments:
Post a Comment