The Prudential Center continues to be an unfriendly place for the Eastern Conference-leading Pittsburgh Penguins. Adam Henrique and Michael Ryder scored for the New Jersey Devils early in the first and second periods, respectively, and Martin Brodeur stopped 19 shots in a 2-1 win Tuesday afternoon before an announced sellout crowd of 16,592.
"I don't think it's necessarily the
building or anything," Penguins forward Brandon
Sutter told Root Sports. "It's definitely the style of
play they play. They're a very patient team. They play really well in
their own end defensively. They have some big [defensemen] that keep
you away from the net, and they play such a good defensive game, and
I think even tonight we still had a few chances."
New Jersey won both home games against Pittsburgh
this season, allowing one goal in each, and has won 11 of 13 in
Newark, N.J., with Dan Bylsma as Penguins coach.
"There has been situations in the past
where maybe we didn't stick with it or got frustrated here,"
Bylsma said. "... But we got back in it, we kept in it, [but]
we needed to find more. There were only 20 shots out there for us."
Pittsburgh's Matt
Niskanen made it 2-1 at 6:58 of the second period with his fourth
goal of the season. Marc-Andre
Fleury made 28 saves. Brodeur made several key stops in the third
period to protect the lead, including a glove save on James
Neal off a 2-on-1 break and a chest save on another Neal attempt
moments later. Earlier in the period, Brodeur made a stick save on
Chris Kunitz
and denied Sidney
Crosby off the rebound.
"[It was] pretty similar (to other games
here)," Crosby said. "I thought we had some more
chances this time around, though, I felt like some really good
chances that didn't go. But, yeah, kind of similar."
Devils right wing Jaromir
Jagr was held scoreless in his initial bid to tie Penguins great
and former teammate Mario Lemieux for seventh on the NHL scoring list
with 1,723 points. Jagr had two shots on goal. The line of Henrique,
Ryder and Ryane
Clowe combined for five points in the first 23 minutes of the
game, helping the Devils set the tone in the 1 p.m. ET New Year's Eve
start. Clowe got his first point since returning from a concussion
Dec. 27.
"I think I've felt a little better here
every game," Clowe told MSG Network. "I think our
line has jelled a little bit, which is probably what we need to help
us have some depth. Things have been going pretty smooth so far."
Clowe forced Neal to turn over the puck in the
Penguins zone and fed Henrique with a pass between the circles.
Henrique moved in and wristed a shot past Fleury at 1:38 of the first
period. It was the third straight game with a goal for Henrique and
his ninth of the season.
"They're taking some pressure off [our top
line], which is what we needed," Devils coach Peter DeBoer
said. "We needed some secondary chemistry, some secondary
scoring, and those guys have done that for us which couldn't come at
a better time. We've been waiting for a while for that."
The Devils also have been trying to get back over
.500 for some time, and are now 17-16-8.
"It's always that threshold you're looking
at when you start a season, is trying to get as many games over that
limit of .500 there," Brodeur said. "It took us a
while to get there, and now finally surpass it. ... We just have to
keep playing well and I'm sure eventually we'll be looking way down
to the .500 mark, hopefully."
Brodeur picked up the secondary assist on Ryder's
12th goal, moving the puck ahead to the forward who carried into the
Penguins end before sending a pass across to the left side for
Henrique. He found Ryder for a snap shot from between the circles at
2:45 of the second.
"I almost gave up the puck, that's why I
kind of got lucky on the assist there," Brodeur said. "I'll
take it; they don't ask how."
Niskanen answered when he finished off a cycle by
the Penguins that led to Crosby passing out from behind the net to
Niskanen at the top of the right circle for a slap shot that beat
Brodeur to his glove side. The Devils lost forward Patrik
Elias to an apparent upper-body injury 3:24 into the first
period. Elias appeared to lose his balance as a result of a hit by
Penguins forward Tanner
Glass after playing the puck in the neutral zone and crashed into
the boards. He stayed down for some time before eventually getting up
and leaving the ice under his own power; he did not return to the
game.
"It wasn't precautionary," DeBoer
said. "I don't think it was an option to have him back. But I
don't know anything more than that; I won't until tomorrow morning."
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