The Dallas Stars are on a roll at the right time, while the Phoenix Coyotes just can't string two wins, or two consistent efforts, together, behaving like Jekyll and Hyde. In the kind of tight, low-scoring game that has been the hallmark of this series, Antoine Roussel scored the go-ahead goal 3:25 into the third period and the surging Stars beat the Coyotes 3-1 on Tuesday. Roussel, snapped a 1-1 tie with his ninth of the season and first in 19 games. After a poor line change and a neutral zone turnover, Ryan Garbutt dropped the puck back to Roussel, who picked the top corner and rang his wrist shot off the crossbar. Garbutt added his 11th into an empty net with 26.7 seconds left.
"We knew that was one of the biggest games
of the year," said Roussel, who scored in his NHL debut
against the Coyotes on Feb. 1, 2013. "We didn't start the way
we wanted, but the third period was really good for us and we got
away with the win. The last 10 minutes we locked it down and didn't
give them much."
The Stars (26-21-9) improved to 5-1-1 in their
past seven games. They are two points behind the Vancouver Canucks,
who hold the final wild-card playoff berth in the Western Conference,
and one point behind the Coyotes. Phoenix could have moved past the
Canucks with a victory and into a playoff spot for the first time
since Jan. 9. Such is their frustrating form, there is no way they will make the post season. You can't beat good teams like Pittsburgh one game yet lose to Buffalo and Dallas either side of it.
"We've been playing hard every night,
using our speed," Garbutt said. "Everyone has been
playing to the best of their abilities and but having fun at the same
time."
Red-hot Antoine
Vermette scored his team-leading 21st goal of to give Phoenix a
1-0 lead midway through the second period, but Dallas' Shawn
Horcoff matched it with a power-play goal just over three minutes
later.
"They beat us. They played better than
us," Phoenix captain Shane
Doan said. "We had just a couple of mistakes, but those
mistakes cost us. (Horcoff's) power-play goal that ties it back up is
a big goal for them. We played more of a 60-minute game, but it
wasn't good enough."
In the previous 29 games between Dallas and
Phoenix, 18 had been decided by one goal. This game was just as
tight. Goalie Mike
Smith played a strong game for the Coyotes with 37 saves, but his
teammates mustered very little offensively.
"We put a lot of pucks on Smitty but he
played really well and kind of kept them in it," said Dallas
goalie Kari
Lehtonen, who made 27 saves for Dallas. "We were a lot
better team for the first two periods. It's a low-scoring, tight game
against Phoenix usually. I feel like the last seven or eight games
we've played well, had the most chances and improved a lot."
Tyler
Seguin assisted on Horcoff's goal to extend his point streak to
six games and give him 55 points in 54 games. Dallas spent the past
three days in Arizona and many of the player's fathers made the trip,
spending a day at a dude ranch before capping the mini-vacation off
with a win.
"I think the dads really enjoyed it, and
to have their sons win a game is great," Dallas coach Lindy
Ruff said. "I think the one whose son's scored were probably
especially proud and they got to see it live."
The Coyotes, who were 10-2-1 in the past 13 home
games against Dallas and had won the past four, were outhustled and
outplayed by the Stars all night.
"It's a game where every play is
critical," Phoenix coach Dave Tippett said. "Right
before they scored their first goal, we had the puck on our stick and
all we had to do was get it down the ice. We didn't and it ends up in
the back of the net. Against Pittsburgh (a 3-1 win on Saturday), we
played solid, did good things with the puck and won enough one-on-one
battles to stay competitive in the game. Tonight was the exact
opposite.
Dallas had 13 shots in the first period and 18 in
the second. But Smith was on his game with big saves on Rich
Peverley and Seguin in the first and then Seguin and Alex
Chiasson back-to-back in the second period to keep the game
scoreless on the first 29 minutes. Then the hottest Coyote got
Phoenix on the board with a great individual play. Vermette swiped
the puck from Dallas' Jamie
Benn in the neutral zone and raced in on Lehtonen. He fought off
a late stick check from Jordie
Benn, went forehand-to-backhand and slipped the puck between the
goaltender's pads at 9:21 to give the Coyotes the lead. Vermette's
goal was his ninth in 10 games and extended his career-best point
streak to eight games. The lead didn't last long. Less than two
minutes later, Derek
Morris was called for tripping, giving Dallas its third power
play of the night. Smith stopped Peverley in the slot but Seguin
chipped the puck to Horcoff, whose whirling, no-look backhander
slipped under Smith's pad at 12:32 to even the game. Horcoff's goal
was his seventh of the season and his fourth on the power play.
"I thought the penalty on Morris was a
soft call," Tippett said.
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