Maybe Joe
Thornton and Patrick
Marleau should ask to renegotiate their new contracts with the
San Jose Sharks.
One day after reaching agreement on three-year extensions, Thornton
scored two goals, including the game-winner at 3:30 of overtime, and
Marleau scored one to lift the Sharks to a 3-2 victory Saturday night
against the Minnesota
Wild
"For me and Patty both to score, it's a
great night for us," said Thornton, who had his first
multigoal game since scoring twice against the Columbus Blue Jackets
on Jan. 31, 2012.
Marleau scored his 22nd goal of the season in the
second period to tie the game at 2-2. "It's a nice coincidence, that's for
sure," he said. "Guys feel good about it, and
hopefully that's what led to tonight's win."
Thornton took a pass from Joe
Pavelski in the left circle and ripped a shot past Minnesota
rookie goalie Darcy
Kuemper, who made 29 saves, to end the game. Pavelski, who had
scored 19 goals in his previous 21 games, assisted on both of
Thornton's goals against Minnesota as he reversed roles with the
NHL's leader in assists. On Thornton's game-winner, Pavelski stole
the puck then controlled it at the blue line until Thornton broke
wide open.
"What a steal and just the poise to hold
onto it and hold onto it and wait for me to get into the zone,"
Thornton said. "He just out-competed and laid it in on me,
and game over. He can do it all, and tonight he just decided to be
the passer, so that was nice of him."
The Sharks overcame a 2-0 second-period deficit to
win their sixth straight game and beat the Wild in San Jose for the
seventh straight time. San Jose, which got 20 saves from goaltender
Antti Niemi,
won two of three games against Minnesota to take the season series.
Matt Cooke
and Keith
Ballard scored for the Wild.
"If you get a point in this building, it's
really not that bad of a thing," Wild coach Mike Yeo said.
"They are obviously a very strong team, especially here at
home. I think what was disappointing was like you could see what was
happening, we lost the extra point because of the faceoff circle
tonight. We spent the entire night chasing, and it's inevitable that
they will put you on your heels and give them some momentum. We never
started with the puck. That was the big story."
The Sharks won 41 of 59 faceoffs (69 percent). The
Wild jumped to a 2-0 lead on goals by Cooke in the first period and
Ballard early in the second. The Sharks pulled even on second-period
goals 49 seconds apart by Thornton and Marleau. Cooke gave the Wild a
1-0 lead at 9:33 of the first period with an unassisted goal, his
eighth of the season. He deflected a cross-ice pass from Thornton
that got past defenseman Brad
Stuart and bounced off the right boards. Cooke beat Stuart to the
puck and scored on a breakaway, faking right then beating Niemi to
the far side. The Sharks outshot Minnesota 11-7 in the first period,
but after firing eight shots in the first 7:46, they went more than
eight minutes before recording their next shot. Ballard extended
Minnesota's lead to 2-0 at 4:16 of the second with his first goal of
the season and first since Oct. 6, 2011, a span of 115 games. His
most-recent goal came when he played for the Vancouver Canucks
against the Pittsburgh Penguins. Jason
Pominville won a battle for the puck on the back boards and sent
it to Mikael
Granlund. Granlund skated behind the net and zipped a pass to
Ballard, who scored from the circle. Pominville earned an assist for
his 500th NHL point.
"We got a point against a good team in a
tough building to play," Ballard said. "And for the
most part, we played a fairly solid game. We weren't the best at
times. But we hung in there and even after they got those two quick
goals, I thought we responded pretty well. We just couldn't find the
time to get the third one tonight."
Shortly after his team fell behind by two goals,
Sharks coach Todd McLellan shuffled his lines. The biggest move was
flopping top-line wing Brent
Burns with second-line wing Matthew
Nieto. Each of those new-look lines produced a goal in
the second period. McLellan said a hit from Wild forward Zach
Parise on Sharks defenseman Jason
Demers midway through the second period might have "woke us
up a little bit."
"We sure weren't very sharp,"
McLellan said. "I thought we started the game well. For the
first eight minutes, we were fine. We were playing the kind of game
we wanted. We had the turnover in the neutral zone, and after they
scored, we never regained any type of momentum until later in the
second period. Had to shuffle some lines, play guys in different
roles a little bit just to wake everybody up. We have to be aware of
that as a team. We can't fall into a trap where we get sleepy, lazy,
nonchalant just because we're at home. Teams are competing hard, and
we have to match that."
Thornton scored his seventh goal of the season at
11:12 of the second, taking a pass from Pavelski in the left circle
and banking a shot off Wild forward Kyle
Brodziak's right arm and past Kuemper. Less than a minute later,
the Sharks pulled even when Marleau beat Kuemper with a shot from
close range to the far side after Tommy
Wingels whiffed on a shot attempt but recovered to get the puck
to Marleau.
"They're our guys, and we need them when
we're down," Sharks defenseman Matt
Irwin said of Marleau and Thornton. "It's just kind of
ironic what happened."
No comments:
Post a Comment