The San Jose Sharks came up with the perfect way to kick off their extended break for the 2014 Sochi Olympics. The Sharks beat the Columbus Blue Jackets 3-2 at SAP Center on Friday night, closed within five points of the first-place Anaheim Ducks in the Pacific Division and made coach Todd McLellan a winner in his franchise-record 435th game with San Jose. They also snapped a four-game losing streak to Columbus and scored more goals than they had in any of their previous six games. John McCarthy, Patrick Marleau and Tommy Wingels had one each.
"We're right there," captain Joe
Thornton said. "We're going to get some guys back from
the injured reserve. We feel like we'll get some good rest and make a
good push and see what happens where we are at the end of the year."
Logan
Couture, Raffi
Torres and Tyler
Kennedy are expected to be ready to rejoin the lineup after the
break, making the Sharks even stronger.
"We're 80 points at the Olympic break,"
said McLellan, who had shared the franchise record for games coached
with Darryl Sutter before Friday. "We would have been
probably pleased with that at the beginning of the season.
Considering some of the players we lost over and throughout the year,
we go into the break satisfied. Coming out of it we have work to do."
The Blue Jackets enter the break with 63 points.
Despite losing to the Los Angeles Kings in overtime Thursday and to
the Sharks 24 hours later, they're one point behind Detroit for the
second wild-card spot in the Eastern Conference and one point behind
the third-place Philadelphia Flyers in the Metropolitan Division.
"We'll enjoy our time off and recharge the
batteries," coach Todd Richards said. "When we come
back, let's have a focus, let's be prepared to work."
Ryan
Johansen and Boone
Jenner scored goals for Columbus, which had a chance to win
despite being outplayed all night thanks to a 44-save performance by
Sergei
Bobrovsky. Sharks goaltender Antti
Niemi made 19 saves for his 29th victory. The Sharks led 2-1
entering the third period, and Wingels made it 3-1 at 5:11 with his
12th goal of the season and second in as many games, he had the
overtime winner in a 2-1 victory against the Dallas Stars on
Wednesday. Defenseman Marc-Edouard
Vlasic set the play in motion with a long-range blast. The
rebound went to Jason
Demers in the right circle, and he ripped a shot that Bobrovsky
dove to stop. But the puck trickled past him and Wingels tapped it
into an open net. The Blue Jackets didn't get into San Jose until
late Thursday night after playing the Kings, and Wingels said San
Jose wore them down. The Sharks controlled the puck for nearly a
minute before Wingels scored by crashing the net.
"You take advantage of a line and a team
when you get into that situation," Wingels said. "We
controlled the puck there. We shot it and got it back a couple times
and then we were fortunate to get a goal. Not all of our goals are
going to be pretty, and that shows it. We may have found our scoring
now. Now we have a break. Guys will get refreshed and we'll be ready
to play in a couple of weeks."
Jenner made it 3-2 at 10:45 with his 10th goal of
the season. Demers, who returned to the lineup after missing three
games with a groin injury, gave away the puck in his own end.
Johansen quickly sent the puck from behind the net to Nathan
Horton. He got it to Jenner in the slot, and Jenner beat Niemi
with a wrist shot.
"We were able to fight back,"
Johansen said. "Obviously you don't want to go into a break
with a loss, but we have been playing great hockey the past few
games. The boys battled hard and we just fell a little short. We'll
take things from this game and work on them. Yeah, with the game last
night we were a little tired in the third period."
The Sharks' trouble on the power play continued
Friday. They entered the game on a 1-for-24 skid and went 0-for-5
with the man advantage. Columbus went 0-for-4. McCarthy gave the
Sharks a 1-0 lead at 3:23 of the first period with his first goal of
the season and third of his NHL career. He hadn't scored a goal since
Nov. 6, 2010, a span of 73 games.
"It's been a long time and it felt really
good to get one," McCarthy said.
McCarthy won a faceoff in the right circle in the
Columbus zone, got the puck to James
Sheppard, headed toward the net and got his stick on Sheppard's
shot, redirecting it over Bobrovsky's left shoulder. McCarthy, a
seventh-round choice by San Jose in the 2006 NHL Draft, was
reassigned to Worcester of the American Hockey League last Saturday
after clearing waivers but was recalled Thursday, one day after
rookie Matt
Nieto injured his left foot blocking a shot against Dallas.
"It's an emotional thing when you go on
waivers," McLellan said. "We still think enough of
him to bring him back and play him in the position that he played in.
It's nice to see him get the offense. He's been very responsible
defensively and a very good penalty-killer for us lately but to get
the offense has to make him feel good."
Marleau made it 2-0 at 8:13 with his 23rd goal of
the season tipping Scott
Hannan's rocket past Bobrovsky to cap a relentless shift by the
Sharks' top line. Marleau nearly scored from close range; Brett Burns
blasted a shot from the slot, and the rebound went to a wide-open
Hannan above the left circle. Hannan, who had two assists in San Jose
victory against Dallas, and Burns earned the assists. Midway through
the period, Jenner put a rebound past Niemi from close range, but the
play was ruled no goal because his stick was higher than the crossbar
when he made contact. The call on the ice was confirmed after a video
review. The Blue Jackets cut San Jose's lead in half 18 seconds into
the second period on Johansen's unassisted goal. The Sharks turned
the puck over in their end, and Johansen quickly made them pay by
beating Niemi with a wrist shot for his team-high 24th goal. The
Sharks outshot Columbus 15-8 in the second period and had four power
plays but came away empty. Columbus nearly pulled even midway through
the second while San Jose was on a power play. Calvert came in on a
breakaway and powered a shot through Niemi's legs, but the puck hit
his pad and angled wide left.
"We played last night, but no excuses, we
had to find a way to win this game," Richards said. "They
were better than us. They were faster than us and they worked harder.
Our effort was there."
During the game, Sharks fans gave McLellan a loud
ovation for his latest franchise record, but he said he didn't even
notice. "Kind of just zero right in on the game. For me it's
almost like a teacher. I don't think the teacher ever goes home and
is really satisfied with their performance. They're always satisfied
with the classroom's performance. That's what it's all about. It's
nice to stand behind there and see guys execute and play the way they
need to play, play for each other. That's where the satisfaction
comes from, and tonight was one of those nights."
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