On a night when he figured in three of his team's six goals, Phoenix Coyotes center Mike Ribeiro was happier about his team defense than its offense. Mike Ribeiro and Mikkel Boedker each scored a goal and added two assists, leading the Coyotes to a 6-2 win against the Edmonton Oilers on Tuesday night. Ribeiro set up a pair of goals in less than a minute in the second period, then scored in the third. It was his first three-point game of the season. But defense, not offense, has been the Coyotes' weak point this season. Allowing two goals to a team with a lot of young offensive talent was a good sign.
"I guess we'll take the two goals against,
that's what we're looking for, to tighten things up defensively,"
Ribeiro said. "We knew if we stayed patient in the third that
they would probably try to open up and that's what happened. We had
our chances, were able to score and we'll take those two points
especially on this road trip."
Boedker scored a goal in the first, then collected
assists in the second and third period. It was also his first
three-point night of the season. Radim
Vrbata, Shane
Doan, Keith
Yandle, and David
Moss also scored for the Coyotes, who won the opener of a
four-game road trip that continues Wednesday against the Calgary
Flames. It was a solid bounce-back effort for the Coyotes after a 5-2
home loss to the Chicago Blackhawks on Saturday.
"Obviously after the Chicago game, we
wanted to make sure we came out and played more to our identity,
especially on the road," Coyotes coach Dave Tippett said.
"We're starting a tough trip, we wanted to come in and play well
tonight. I thought for the most part, we did a lot of good things. In
the third period, we wanted to make sure we had the pedal down and
get ahead a little bit. We had to kill a couple of penalties at the
end, but it was pretty much a solid effort."
David
Perron scored both goals for the Oilers, who fell to 3-9-0 at
Rexall Place this season. Boedker opened the scoring on the power
play at 3:37 of the first period, finding a rebound in front of
Oilers goaltender Devan
Dubnyk and slipping the puck underneath him. Dubnyk, making the
start in place of the injured Ilya
Bryzgalov, had stopped Vrbata's initial shot but lost track of
the rebound.
Perron responded at 9:51, capitalizing on a
giveaway by Coyotes defenseman David
Schlemko, who handed the puck to Mark
Arcobello at the top of the faceoff circle. Arcobello dropped it
back to Perron, who wired a shot past goaltender Mike
Smith.
"We had to get out of the first period,
that's been kind of our Achilles' heel for the last few games,"
Doan said. "Getting out of the first and getting that first
power play goal was big. We kind of continued to get better
throughout the game. It was a big effort from our group all around,
our group played better."
Vrbata put the Coyotes up 2-1 at 6:58 of the
second, converting a centering feed from Ribeiro, who found him
between a pair of Oilers in front of the net. Just 58 seconds later,
Doan tipped a Ribeiro floater from the point past Dubnyk, who
appeared to lose sight of the puck as it headed toward the net.
Perron cut into the lead at 19:08 when he took a pass from Ales
Hemsky in front and beat Smith from the slot for a power-play
goal. But the Coyotes blew the game open with three goals in the
third period.
Ribeiro restored their two-goal lead at 4:46 by
capitalizing on a turnover behind the Oilers net. Defenseman Justin
Schultz gave up the puck to Moss, who slid it to Doan at the side
of the net. Doan found Ribeiro unattended in front for a shot past
Dubnyk. Yandle extended the lead at 9:33, undressing Oilers
defenseman Jeff
Petry on a rush and firing a shot over Dubnyk's shoulder.
"I was actually encouraged by our first
period," Oilers coach Dallas Eakins said. "In the
second those two quick goals hurt us, their third one being a fluky
one, but then we battled back. Our group has to get more comfortable
being in close games. After that, the fourth goal, the fifth, the
sixth, that is about as bad as I have seen three or four of our
defensemen play this year and it cost us."
Moss made it 6-2 at 10:15, tipping an Oliver
Ekman-Larsson point shot that was stopped by Dubnyk, but then
diving to swat the rebound into the net.
"It was a leaky game, defensively,"
Oilers captain Andrew
Ference said. "We didn't simplify things, that's for
sure. A couple of our shifts after they had just scored goals, that's
when you have to press reset and it is imperative that the next shift
is a strong one. You need to get it out of your zone and into theirs
and we fell flat in that regard tonight. We did a poor job tonight."
The Oilers (9-18-2) host the Colorado Avalanche on
Thursday in the second of a five-game homestand.
"We can't really blame it on being a young
team anymore," forward Taylor
Hall said. "I don't think that crutch is still there. It
is a matter of our attitude coming into games and starting games
well. It's like we try to do a little too much and against a team
like Phoenix, they are going to get into your end and cycle you to
death and make you pay, and that's what happened."
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