Carolina @ Philadelphia 3-2 - It took an extra 24 hours, but the Carolina Hurricanes got the two points they came to Philadelphia for. Jiri Tlusty's goal with 6:10 remaining in regulation broke a tie and the Hurricanes beat the Philadelphia Flyers 3-2 on Wednesday night in a game postposed from Tuesday due to the snowstorm that blanketed the Northeast. Goals by Alexander Semin and Nathan Gerbe gave the Hurricanes a 2-0 lead before Flyers captain Claude Giroux scored late in the second period and Scott Hartnell tied it early in the third. But the Hurricanes dominated play after Hartnell's goal and were rewarded when Tlusty picked up the rebound of Andrej Sekera's left-point blast and popped it past Steve Mason for his seventh goal of the season. The Hurricanes outshot the Flyers 16-9 in the third period and 32-24 for the game. Semin, added to the Russian Olympic Team a day earlier as an injury replacement, gave the Hurricanes the lead 11:57 into the game. He took a breakout pass from Eric Staal, reached the top of the right circle in the Flyers' zone and lasered a wrist shot past defenseman Andrej Meszaros into the top left corner past Mason's glove for his 10th goal of the season. Gerbe made it 2-0 at 13:38 of the second period with one of the season's most spectacular goals. Flyers defenseman Luke Schenn wasn't able to handle a bouncing puck at the Carolina blue line, Gerbe scooted past him to pick up the puck and went in alone before beating Mason with a between-the-legs shot for his 10th of the season. But Gerbe's goal seemed to wake up the Flyers, who lifted their game and capitalized on some poor defensive play by the Hurricanes in their own zone to get on the board with 34.6 seconds remaining in the period. Khudobin's poor clearing attempt wound up on the stick of Michael Raffl along the left wall. He threw the puck at the net, Jakub Voracek banked the loose puck off Khudobin and Giroux whacked home the rebound with a backhand swipe for his 14th of the season. Hartnell tied the goal at 3:00 of the third period, 13 seconds after a needless high-sticking penalty by Riley Nash. Giroux controlled the puck along the left wall near the goal line and fed Wayne Simmonds, whose close-in shot was stopped by Khudobin. But the goaltender couldn't control the rebound, and Hartnell zipped it home for his 12th of the season and a 2-2 tie. The Hurricanes nearly went back in front less than a minute later. Justin Faulk's screened blast from the right point beat Mason but pinged off the far post, and Mason made two stops on Tuomo Ruutu, who was left alone in front. But the Hurricanes continued to dominate play, and the Flyers generated little offense through the final 17 minutes. Carolina forward Patrick Dwyer left the game late in the second period with an upper-body injury and didn't return.
Chicago @ Detroit 4-5 SO - The Detroit Red Wings are banged up, battling a slew of injuries, and too proud to let it matter when facing a longtime rival like the Chicago Blackhawks. The Red Wings exacted a small measure of revenge for a painful seven-game loss to Chicago in last spring's Western Conference Semifinals by overcoming their injury issues to beat the Blackhawks 5-4 in a six-round shootout Wednesday night at Joe Louis Arena. The teams hadn't seen each other since May 29, when Chicago won Game 7 in overtime, and though nothing will completely ease the pain of having their season ended, getting the second point against the NHL's defending champions, was a big lift for a Detroit team in need of one.
"I think that last playoff run kind of
left a sour taste in our mouths, especially after they [went] on to
win it," forward Justin
Abdelkader said after finishing with two assists and a plus-3
rating. "We enjoy playing them and I think our fans enjoy it
just as much or maybe even more than we do. It was loud. It was
probably the loudest it's been all season here. It felt good."
Detroit fans haven't had many opportunities to get
as loud as they did following the shootout, which was decided by
Darren Helm's
goal to start the sixth round and Jonas
Gustavsson's save against Andrew
Shaw in the bottom half. Detroit's home record is just 8-11-7,
but two of the past three games here ended with Red Wings shootout
victories. They're hoping this one can spark a hot streak with home
games this coming weekend against the Montreal Canadiens and Florida
Panthers.
"It's always fun to beat [Chicago],"
said Detroit defenseman Kyle
Quincey, who scored a goal for the first time since Dec. 30 to
tie the game 3-3 early in the second period. "We know that we
can beat most teams if we play our game, but it does reiterate the
fact that if we do play well, we can do it. Hopefully we use this as
a template going forward."
Along with Quincey, the Red Wings got
goals in regulation from Tomas
Tatar, Patrick
Eaves and Gustav
Nyquist. The offensive outburst helped Gustavsson (31 saves) earn
a win in his first game back from a nine-game absence with a groin
injury. Corey
Crawford (27 saves) took the loss for the Blackhawks (32-8-12),
who got goals from Marian
Hossa, Shaw, Patrick
Sharp and Marcus
Kruger. Jonathan
Toews and Sharp scored in the shootout for the Blackhawks, who
fell to 5-7 in shootouts and 5-12 in games that last more than 60
minutes. Detroit got goals by Patrick
Eaves and Todd
Bertuzzi in the tiebreaker before Helm's winner.
"We weren't very good tonight,"
Chicago coach Joel Quenneville said. "They worked hard. They
were the harder-working team and getting ourselves a point out of
there, with a chance for two in the shootout, certainly we'll take a
point because we didn't play well enough or hard enough."
The Blackhawks, who visit the Minnesota Wild on
Thursday to finish a back-to-back set, came into the game 9-0-1 in
their previous 10 trips to Detroit. They got off to another strong
start by forcing the Red Wings to play catch-up, but couldn't sustain
it. Detroit overcame a 2-0 deficit in the first with the goals by
Tatar and Eaves in the last half of the period, then responded to
another Chicago goal early in the second by scoring twice for a 4-3
lead. Kruger's goal 5:12 into the third wound up earning the
Blackhawks their point, but they also had a number of close calls
offensively that weren't successful. The teams meet only twice this
season following the NHL realignment that moved the Red Wings into
the Eastern Conference. But Toews doesn't feel the move will do
anything to diminish one of hockey's great rivalries.
"I don't think it's going anywhere,"
Toews said. "Both teams still know what it means to play one
another and it might add to it, I think, that we see each other less
often. Tonight was maybe a bit of a slower start, but I definitely
think the intensity picked up and we saw the type of game we're used
to out of them later in the game. It's frustrating not to find a way
to win."
The intensity might've lagged after the opening
puck drop, but the Blackhawks weren't slow-footed. In fact, it felt
like another big game might be in the making for them against an
overmatched, beat-up rival. Hossa scored his 21st goal at 8:41 of the
opening period when Toews threw a pass that deflected off his shin
pad and into the net, which was wide-open with Gustavsson caught out
of position. Shaw quickly made it 2-0 at 10:26 by whacking a loose
puck in the crease past Gustavsson for his 14th goal and third in the
past five games. Patrick
Kane and Brandon
Saad picked up the assists, as Chicago's second line produced its
first points in three games. The Blackhawks were ready to cruise, but
the Red Wings refused to cave. They fought back to tie, and that
breathed new life into the game and building. Tatar cut it to 2-1 by
firing a shot between Crawford's pads at 11:14 off a long rebound,
and Eaves got the equalizer at 17:40, after a nifty assist by
Abdelkader. After his stick was knocked out of his hands, Abdelkader
kicked the puck to Eaves for a hard shot that beat Crawford high to
the glove side.
"You can't hand-pass the puck and I didn't
have my stick so it was kind of a slide tackle move, kind of a kick,
and I got it to him," Abdelkader said. "Anytime
Patty Eaves gets alone in front he's going to score more often than
not."
Zetterberg got the secondary assist, but was just
warming up. Detroit's top line, centered by its captain, turned it up
a notch in the second to create a pair of goals that gave the Red
Wings their first lead. Zetterberg assisted on both. After Sharp put
Chicago ahead 3-2 six seconds into a power play with his 26th goal,
Quincey and Nyquist responded to give Detroit its first lead.
Quincey's came on a half-slapper from the high slot at 6:20, and
Nyquist made it 4-3 by capping a pretty tic-tac-toe play with a
tap-in goal after passes from Abdelkader and Zetterberg. Kruger's
goal tied it 4-4 and provided a dramatic backdrop for the rest of the
third period and overtime, when a number of near-miss opportunities
nearly ended the game.
"They're a great team and we played well
right from the start," said Eaves, whose 17:17 of ice time
was the most for him in the past 86 games. "We needed these
two points worse than they [did]. It's huge for us and hopefully it
will springboard us to something else."
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