Center Martin Hanzal hasn't seen much of the New Jersey Devils in his seven years with the Phoenix Coyotes. But when he does, he makes the most of it. Hanzal had an assist and the game-winning goal Saturday night to help the Coyotes hang on to beat the Devils 3-2. He has three goals and eight points in his five career games against New Jersey. Phoenix, which beat the Vancouver Canucks 1-0 on Thursday, has won back-to-back games for the first time since beating the Colorado Avalanche and New York Islanders on Dec. 12-14.
"It's funny how you seem to get lucky
against the same teams. I don't have a way to explain it,"
Hanzal said. "The most important thing is we have two wins in
a row. We've got some confidence. We have to build on this. We had a
good start tonight and kept going for 60 minutes, which is what we
have to do."
Hanzal's goal came on the power play; the Coyotes
have scored at least once with the extra man in seven straight games,
one shy of their longest streak since moving to Arizona in 1996-97.
Fourth-liners Jordan
Szwarz and Jeff
Halpern scored even-strength goals for Phoenix, the first for the
Coyotes in four games. Keith
Yandle contributed two assists and has four in the past three
games. Szwarz also had his chin sliced open by the skate of New
Jersey's Reid
Boucher late in the second period, requiring two trips to the
training room for a combined 11 stitches.
"That's the first time that's ever
happened to me. It's a scary thing," Szwarz said. "Still
it's a great night for me. Our line has been playing well lately and
it's great to be rewarded. I knew right away something hit my face
and I thought it was a skate. I saw a bunch of blood pouring out so I
figured I'd better get off the ice. I haven't been told when the
anesthesia will wear off, but I'm feeling OK right now."
Ryane
Clowe had a goal and an assist for New Jersey, which had been
3-0-3 in its past six games. The Devils are 0-4-0 all-time at
Jobing.com Arena and haven't won in Arizona since beating the Coyotes
3-0 at America West Arena (now US Airways Center) in Phoenix on Feb.
12, 2003. Jaromir
Jagr made it 3-2 when he deflected home a Clowe shot with 2:14
left in regulation and goaltender Martin
Brodeur on the bench for an extra attacker. It was Jagr's 15th
goal of the season and the 696th of his career. New Jersey finished
the four-game Western road trip with a 1-1-2 record.
"It was a lot better trip before this
game," Jagr said. "Now we have to go home and
regroup. We have some tough games before the [Olympic] break and six
or seven against Western Conference teams, so we have to make sure we
get the points."
Jagr had another good chance with 1:02 left, but
Mike Smith
smothered his wrist shot from the slot.
"He's a Czech God, right?" Hanzal
said of the 41-year-old Jagr, who will be his teammate in the 2014
Sochi Olympics. "Whatever age he is, I don't want to say, but
he's a still an amazing hockey player. He got another [goal]. It's
amazing to see him out there doing it."
Smith made 32 saves and has back-to-back wins for
the first time since beating the Washington Capitals and St. Louis
Blues on Nov. 9-12. His teammates helped out with 25 blocked shots,
one shy of a season high, including six by Derek
Morris. Brodeur made 24 saves, including several big stops early
to keep his team in the game.
"We had a chance to get six out of eight
points, which is a helluva road trip against good teams,"
Clowe said. It hurts because the slow start kills you. We needed
those points. "They came out hard but it was more us. We
weren't sharp coming out of our own end. We talked before the game
about how they are a good forechecking team. We got down 2-0 chance
we woke up. We got in a hole and couldn't get out of it."
The goals for the Coyotes came from unexpected
sources. Kyle
Chipchura won a race with Devils defenseman Jon
Merrill for a puck behind the New Jersey net. He threaded a
centering pass to Szwarz, who beat Brodeur over the stick on the
short side at 2:35 for his third goal of the season. It was Phoenix's
first even-strength goal in 184 minutes and 25 seconds, dating back
to Mike
Ribeiro's goal against the Anaheim Ducks on Jan. 11. Brodeur made
big saves on Shane
Doan and Yandle, but another fourth-liner made it 2-0 at 13:13.
After a power play that yielded no shots, Halpern took a David
Moss pass hard down the left side, used defenseman Marek
Zidlicky as a screen and put a hard wrist shot past Brodeur's
glove for his second goal. But the Devils got back in the game late
in the period. Mikkel
Boedker took a holding penalty and New Jersey capitalized at
18:44. Smith stopped an Eric
Gelinas shot that was shrouded by a Michael
Ryder screen, but the rebound came to Clowe alone right of the
net. His second goal of the season cut the margin to 2-1 and gave New
Jersey some jump going into the second period. Smith made some big
saves early in the middle period, and got some help as well. He was
out of his crease when his clearing attempt was run down by Clowe
behind the Phoenix net. But Yandle alertly beat Clowe to the post to
avert a potential game-tying goal. Phoenix took back the momentum by
converting on the power play. With Zidlicky off for interference,
Brodeur stopped Yandle's shot from center point. But Hanzal was
screening in front of the crease, picked up the rebound and squeezed
a shot through Brodeur at 14:22 for his 14th of the season to restore
the Coyotes' two-goal lead.
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