San Jose Sharks forward Joe Pavelski hasn't given up hope of getting his first NHL hat trick, but he had no complaints Thursday night about his 22nd career two-game goal and a convincing 4-1 victory against the Detroit Red Wings at SAP Center.
"It'll happen, I bet," Pavelski
said, flashing a broad smile. "Hopefully. We'll see. We'll
keep trying. That was one of the better looks I've had at it,
though."
Pavelski has played 524 games and scored 171 goals
in his career. He nearly got his first hat trick with 23 seconds left
to play when he had the puck and was wide open in the left circle,
but his shot went wide left. Andrew
Desjardins and Dan
Boyle also scored for the Sharks. Tomas
Tatar had the lone goal for the Red Wings. With his 20th and 21st
goals, Pavelski moved one ahead of Patrick
Marleau for the team lead. Pavelski has 12 goals in his past 15
games. With 37 games left to play, he's nine goals shy of tying his
career-high of 31 set two seasons ago.
"He's been really good," Sharks
coach Todd McLellan said of Pavelski, who's skating on the top line
with center Joe
Thornton and right wing Brent
Burns. "We need to keep him that way. When the team
really needs him, he elevates his game. That's the sign of a real
good player. Again, playing with the two players that he does, he's
just got to get himself in the right spot and find pucks, and he took
advantage of it again."
What's been the key to his hot streak?
"Been around the net a little bit,"
Pavelski said. "Got some big goals and some goals you're kind
of lucky with at times. Playing with some good players. We were
getting some multiple looks throughout the night. Between (Burns) and
me, we were getting a lot to the net, and (Thornton) was making all
the passes. The power play was beginning to click a little so it all
adds up."
Sharks goaltender Antti
Niemi made 24 saves and improved to 12-2-2 all-time against the
Red Wings. Detroit's Jimmy
Howard allowed four goals on 23 shots and was pulled after the
second period for backup Petr
Mrazek. Howard fell to 3-6-4 against the Sharks. After Pavelski
and Tatar scored in the first period, the Sharks scored three times
in the second to blow the game open. Desjardins, Pavelski and Boyle
scored in a span of 6:44, putting the Sharks in control against their
former Western Conference rival.
"We stopped skating and started watching
them on the power play," Red Wings defenseman Niklas
Kronwall said. "In the second half of the first period we
started doing some good things but for whatever reason we stopped
skating. We should keep going, keep skating. I've said it too many
times already. It's time for us to start doing something."
The Sharks, who improved to 16-1-3 at home this
season, are 11-2-1 against the Red Wings in their past 14 meetings.
Pavelski gave the Sharks a 1-0 lead at 4:59 of the first period with
his 20th goal of the season. He took a pass in the slot from Joe
Thornton and ripped a one-timer past Howard. The Red Wings pulled
even at 12:34 on Tatar's ninth of the season. Tatar controlled the
puck behind the Sharks net and darted out to Niemi's right and past
defenseman Marc-Edouard
Vlasic, who had lost his stick, before he flipped a sharp-angled
backhand high and to the far side.
"I saw the one guy without a stick and
looked up to try and pass," Tatar said. "When no one
came over to help I chose to take it. The puck was following me
tonight. It's too bad I only scored one goal. I had plenty of other
opportunities."
The Sharks regained the lead when Desjardins
scored at 9:44 of the second period. He beat Red Wings defenseman
Jakub Kindl
to the puck along the left boards in the neutral zone, turned on the
speed and ripped a bad-angled shot from the lower left circle that
went under Howard's right arm and into the net. It was Desjardins'
second goal of the season.
"I think we've been trying to concentrate
on getting it past the d-men, getting it by them and getting on the
forecheck," Desjardins said. "I was just fortunate
to catch him flat footed and use the boards and got by him and shot
the puck on the net and good things happened I guess."
Pavelski struck again at 12:25, knocking a rebound
past Howard for his second goal to give San Jose a 3-1 lead. Howard
stopped Brad
Stuart's blast from the blue line, but he couldn't control the
rebound, and Pavelski beat him with a sharp-angled shot from close
range. Boyle increased the Sharks' lead to 4-1 at 16:28 with a
power-play goal. He took a pass in the right circle from Jason
Demers and beat Howard to the far side.
"It was nice for once not to have somebody
in front of me," Boyle said. "I beat him with a good
shot."
The Sharks went 1-for-4 on the power play while
Detroit went 0-for-4, extending its drought to 0-for-12 in the past
three games. The game turned chippy late in the third period with a
handful of scrums and scuffles leading to a parade to the penalty box
for both teams. It started with 14:57 gone, Tyler Kennedy slashed Danny DeKeyser which sparked a three-way fight with him and Kyle Quincey. Less than a minute later (15:55) Todd Bertuzzi reverted to type and was called for a misconduct penalty after first fighting Tommy Wingels and then Marc-Edouard Vlasic. The third and final fight occurred at 18:07 with Scott Hannan and Danny Cleary. Both received fighting majors, but Cleary received an extra penalty for roughing while Hannan got one for Instigating and a further misconduct.
Forwards Tommy
Wingels and Tyler
Kennedy returned to the lineup for San Jose. Wingels missed five
games with an upper-body injury while Kennedy missed four with the
flu. Neither one got a point, but they got into a number of scraps
and energized the Sharks, who were without six injured players: Matt
Irwin (upper body), Tomas
Hertl (knee surgery), Logan
Couture (hand surgery), Marty
Havlat (lower body), Adam
Burish (back surgery) and Raffi
Torres (knee surgery).
"It's huge," Thornton said of
getting Wingels and Kennedy back in the lineup. "They both
looked like they played well tonight. They looked fresh. TK he looked
great and Tommy just throwing his weight around. It's nice to get
guys back."
Detroit got defenseman Danny
DeKeyser back from a groin injury but played without three key
forwards, Pavel
Datsyuk (lower body), Johan
Franzen (concussion) and Darren
Helm (groin). Stephen
Weiss (hernia), Jonathan
Ericsson (broken ribs) and backup goaltender Jonas
Gustavsson (groin) were also out of the lineup.
"The first period was fine," Red
Wings coach Mike Babcock said. "We gave up two ugly goals [in
the second]. For whatever reason, they went up 3-1 and that seemed to
do it for us. We have to be mentally strong and keep skating no
matter what. With this group we need good discipline and good
goaltending and we didn't get it."
No comments:
Post a Comment