Al
Montoya quickly let in a goal he regretted Sunday night and then
spent the rest of the game making up for it in a big victory for the
Winnipeg Jets.
Playing for the first time since Jan. 5, a span of eight games,
Montoya made 34 saves in his hometown to lead the Jets to a 3-1 win
against the Chicago
Blackhawks at United Center.
"This is very special," said
Montoya, who beat the Blackhawks in the Windy City for the first time
in three career starts. "I've been waiting for this one since
I was a kid, so I can't even describe it. All my friends and family
[were] in the stands. I've had some close ones, some good games in
here, but this one takes it."
Former Blackhawks forward Andrew
Ladd, now Winnipeg's captain, snapped a wrist shot past Corey
Crawford with 7:07 left in the third period for the game-winner
on his 150th career goal. Earlier in the third, Blake
Wheeler scored his 20th goal to tie it 1-1 on just the 10th shot
of the game for the Jets, who were outshot 22-2 through the game's
first 33-plus minutes.
"I think we loosened up in the second
intermission," said Wheeler, who sealed it with his second
goal of the game, scored into an empty net with 1:15 left to play.
"We almost had to laugh at ourselves a bit the way the game
had gone, especially the first period. They were all over us and our
goalie was huge."
The victory improved Winnipeg's record to 1-5-1 in
the second game of back-to-back sets and upped the Jets' record to
6-1-0 since Jan. 12, when Paul Maurice replaced Claude Noel as coach.
Maurice was impressed with his team's persistence, especially after
being outshot 27-6 in the first 40 minutes a day after beating the
Toronto Maple Leafs 5-4 in overtime at MTS Centre.
"They were a tired group at that point,"
Maurice said. "That win right there is just a great sign
of character. I really can't say enough about [it]. That kind of
character win goes a long way."
It was a different tune for Chicago, which heads
out on a seven-game road trip that will be sandwiched around the 2014
Sochi Games in the middle of February. Brandon
Bollig scored the lone goal for the Blackhawks (32-10-12), who
couldn't get another one past Montoya. They are now winless in their
past three games and have lost two games in a row in regulation for
just the second time.
"I think the first 40 [minutes], we gave
up nothing," Blackhawks coach Joel Quenneville said. "We
get an unfortunate bounce right to their guy [Wheeler] and it's a 1-1
game. We made an uncharacteristic giveaway on the winning goal [by
Ladd]. Tough loss for sure."
Chicago, which played without forward Bryan
Bickell after Quenneville made him a surprise healthy scratch,
wasted no time taking an early lead. Bollig beat Montoya at 1:21 of
the first with a backhand attempt coming out from below the goal line
that snuck between the right pad and post for his sixth goal.
Chicago, which led 18-2 in shots after the first, put the pedal down
offensively. They pressed for an early knockout, but Montoya was up
to the challenge. He kept the scoreboard 1-0 in favor of Chicago with
a number of outstanding saves. He stopped a pair of breakaways,
including a right pad save at 7:55 to turn away Marian
Hossa before using a nifty glove save to swat away Kris
Versteeg's wrister off a partial break with 6:33 left in the
period. There was also a great stop with the right pad at 6:41 thwart
a snap shot by Patrick
Kane from close range and a blast by Patrick
Sharp from the right circle that he swallowed up eight minutes
later.
"He was our game," Maurice said
of Montoya, whom he used for the first time since taking over behind
the Jets' bench. "He got better and better. He was fantastic
in the first. He had one squeak by him, but he was great and gave us
a chance to stay in the game long enough to have the rebound that we
did."
Not much changed in the first 10 minutes of the
second. Chicago kept adding to its shot total, without scoring, and
the Jets remained stuck on two shots until nearly tying it at 13:40
on rapid-fire shots by Bryan
Little and Ladd. The only thing that kept the Blackhawks ahead
was defenseman Sheldon
Brookbank's left skate, which he used to stop Ladd's rebound
attempt from the low slot off Little's initial shot. Winnipeg gained
steam heading into the third and finally rewarded Montoya with
Wheeler's goal at 8:16, which tied it 1-1 on his first of the game. A
point shot by Mark
Stuart got redirected right to Wheeler in the bottom of the right
circle and he fired a quick snap shot over Crawford's glove, letting
the air out of the Blackhawks' night.
"They had [six] shots until the third
period," Versteeg said. "We were good for 40
[minutes] and they got a lucky bounce. It kind of snowballed in the
wrong direction. We were definitely, for sure, the better team out
there in the first 40, but you have to give them credit. They came
back and played their game."
Ladd gave the Jets the lead, 2-1, with his 12th
goal. Following a rare turnover by Hossa in the Chicago defensive
zone, Ladd scored off a wrister that skipped off Duncan
Keith's shin pad and eluded Crawford's glove. Montoya and the
Winnipeg defense then closed it out.
"That win's all [Montoya]," Ladd
said. "He gave us a chance going into the third. We talked
about it in this room. We were only down one, we had a chance to win
the game and we wanted to reward him for playing out of his mind in
the first two periods."
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