With their top guns still mired in a slump, the
San Jose Sharks
were in desperate need of an offensive boost from the supporting cast
against the surging Dallas
Stars. Tommy
Wingels answered the call. So did Marty
Havlat and defenseman Scott
Hannan. Wingels scored at 1:52 in overtime, lifting the Sharks to
a 2-1 victory against the Stars at SAP Center on Wednesday night.
Havlat scored a second-period goal and also set up the game-winner
with a slick pass from behind the net to Wingels in front for a quick
shot past Stars goaltender Kari
Lehtonen. Hannan earned assists on both goals. The Sharks went
0-for-3 on the power play and are in a 1-for-24 skid with the man
advantage. San Jose had lost four of its past five games before
facing Dallas and had scored all of four goals during that stretch,
none by Joe
Thornton, Patrick
Marleau and Brent
Burns and one by Joe
Pavelski.
"It was time for some others to step up
and score," said Sharks coach Todd McLellan, who coached his
434th game with San Jose, tying Darryl Sutter for the most in
franchise history. "To see Marty and Tommy both do it in one
game is a good thing for our team. As far as the power play goes, it
needs some work obviously, but it's a bit reflective of some of our
players right now. They're not as sharp as they need to be. We'll try
and put it back together and get it to where it needs to be."
Sharks backup goaltender Alex
Stalock stopped 19 shots, allowing only Valeri
Nichushkin's third-period goal, to earn his eighth win of the
season. Lehtonen also finished with 19 saves. After starting their
three-game road trip by beating the Anaheim Ducks on Saturday and the
Phoenix Coyotes on Tuesday, Dallas earned a point in the finale. With
62 points, the Stars are tied with Phoenix; both teams are one point
behind the Vancouver Canucks for the second wild card spot in the
Western Conference. The Stars are 5-1-2 in their past eight games.
"We were lucky to get a point out of it,"
forward Vernon
Fiddler said. "It would have been nice to get two, but
they made a play and we didn't. ... We need to find a way to get
these extra points. They add up at the end of the year."
Wingels ended the game with his 11th goal of the
season and first since Jan. 20 against the Calgary Flames.
"I'm a big part of the group that the
scoring's kind of vanished from," Wingels said. "I
got one tonight, but the numbers in the past games still aren't where
they need to be. It's something we're working on, the group of guys
that need to pick it up. We will. We're confident players and we'll
get there."
The Sharks grabbed a 1-0 lead at 18:06 of the
second period on Havlat's fourth goal of the season and first since
Dec. 17 against the St. Louis Blues. Havlat set up in the slot, just
inside the left circle, and redirected a pass from Hannan past
Lehtonen, taking full advantage of Bracken
Kearns' screen. Havlat played in his fifth game after missing 17
with a lower-body injury. The goal was his first point since
returning to the lineup.
"It feels nice to win the game,"
said Havlat, crediting Hannan for making great passes on both of San
Jose's goals. "That's the most important thing. I don't
really care who scored the goal."
Dallas pulled even at 6:27 of the third period
when Nichushkin scored his 12th goal of the season, capping an
extended siege by the Stars. Trevor
Daley sent a pass to Nichushkin in the low slot, and he hammered
a one-timer past Stalock.
"I figured he was going to pass it,"
Stalock said of Daley. "I was playing the guy there off the
side, he made a good pass, and the guy got it off quick. They made a
good play."
The Sharks outshot Dallas 17-14 through the first
two periods, but they didn't get their next shot until just 5:41
remained in the third. Marleau redirected a Thornton blast on goal
near the end of a Sharks power play, but Lehtonen made the save. The
Sharks went on their third power play of the game with 3:47 left when
Erik Cole
went to the box for tripping Wingels, but Dallas killed that one
without allowing a shot.
"It was a good game," Stars coach
Lindy Ruff said. "We fell behind but we played a real good
third period. We had to kill a couple of penalties and I thought we
dominated on the PK. We have to be happy getting five of six
[points]," he said of the road trip. "The PK was fabulous.
They were relentless and really working."
The Sharks were coming off a lackluster 5-2 loss
Monday against the Philadelphia Flyers, but they showed much more
energy and effort against Dallas.
"It improved," McLellan said of
his team's effort. "It's pretty evident when you look at the
game tonight and compare it to the Philadelphia game. It doesn't mean
we were cleaner or faster or more polished, just the commitment level
went up. We still got to improve, but the games are getting tough.
They're becoming more and more like playoff games right now. Tight
checking, shot blocking, faceoffs, that type of stuff goes up a lot
more. Even the penalty kills are a lot better than they were earlier
in the year. So good for us to play in those games and win, but still
some areas that need to be polished up."
Stalock started for the fourth time in San Jose's
past eight games in place of Antti
Niemi, who was pulled Monday after giving up three quick goals
early in the third period as the Flyers built a 4-2 lead. Stalock
started against Dallas for the first time in his career on Dec. 21
and stopped 44 shots in a 3-2 shootout victory.
"Seeing them once already helped a little
bit," Stalock said. "They're going to look at things
in my game too maybe and change it up. Try to be stronger second time
around."
Fourth-line wing Adam
Burish, making his season debut, started for San Jose and was
credited with three first-period hits. Burish missed the first 57
games after suffering a herniated disk in San Jose's preseason opener
and undergoing surgery.
"It was fun to play with those guys,"
said Burish, who skated with Mike
Brown and Andrew
Desjardins. "I just had fun out there. It was fun to be
back out there. I felt like I was laughing and smiling the whole
time. It was fun. I played in Dallas for a couple of years so I know
some of those guys. I had a blast out there."
Sharks rookie Matt
Nieto, who scored both goals against Philadelphia, nearly scored
from close range early in the first period, but Lehtonen made the
save. Nieto suffered a lower-body injury late in the second period
while blocking a shot and did not return to game. He left the
dressing room after the game wearing a walking boot on his left foot.
"He blocked a shot and was sore, so he
didn't come back," McLellan said. "Probably not a
good sign for the next game, but we'll know more tomorrow."
No comments:
Post a Comment