Marc-Andre Fleury came out on top against Craig Anderson in a battle of two goalies attempting to respond from lackluster games. Fleury made 24 saves to lead the Pittsburgh Penguins to a 2-1 overtime win against Anderson and the Ottawa Senators on Monday at Consol Energy Center. James Neal scored the game-winning goal 1:55 into overtime. Neal collected a rebound off of a shot by Robert Bortuzzo and snapped the puck past Anderson to end his eight-game goalless drought.
"I was just trying to get the puck on the
net and hit the net more," Neal said. "When you
don't score you sometimes try to pick corners and be a little too
cute with it. It's something maybe I've done in the past few games,
but I was able to find one tonight. It was a good feeling. I felt
like we were playing a game we wanted to play all night."
After allowing three goals in a loss to the
Phoenix Coyotes on Saturday, Fleury made one of the best saves of the
season to keep the game tied 1-1 midway through the third period.
Ottawa forward Jason
Spezza sent a pass to Erik
Karlsson to the right of Pittsburgh's crease, and the defenseman
shot at a wide-open upper-right corner of the net. Fleury sprawled
and whipped his glove at the puck to make the save with 10:33 left in
the game.
"That's something that I did not count
on," Karlsson said. "It's a great save, and I really
can't do anything else but tip my hat and say good job and I thought
it was a clear shot at an open net, but he clearly denied me. Pretty
hard too. He knows he did a good save, and unfortunately, I'm going
to be on the highlights for quite some time with that one."
Fleury said his save at the end of Game 7 of the
2009 Stanley Cup Final was the best he has ever made. Penguins coach
Dan Bylsma disagreed, calling Fleury's save on Karlsson "flat
out" the best save he's ever seen his goalie make.
"It was going high to the right corner,
and he had to get up there to get it," Bylsma said. "It
was an open cage, he pushes over, gets the glove up there to make the
save. I hope we see this one over and over again as one of the great
saves. I'm not sure I've seen another save that's any better than
that one."
Fleury earned his NHL-leading 30th win of the
season. Despite each team playing with an up-tempo pace during the
second period, neither scored and the game remained tied 1-1 entering
the second intermission. Pittsburgh controlled the play through much
of the period and held a 15-4 advantage in second-period shots
through the first 14:37 of the period, but couldn't capitalize on
several opportunities. Neal and Matt
Niskanen each missed on open-net shots during the Penguins'
second power play of the game. The Penguins missed the net on six
second-period shot attempts, and when they did hit the net, Anderson
was there to stop each of their 16 shots. After allowing five goals
to the Toronto Maple Leafs on Saturday, Anderson responded by making
46 saves against the Eastern Conference's top-ranked offense (3.11
goals per game). One of his better saves came 5:57 into the game when
he made a glove stop on Brandon
Sutter, who sped through the Ottawa zone and had a clear shot at
the left of the net.
"We knew we had to come out hard after the
second half of our game in Toronto, which was not up to our liking,"
Anderson said. "We needed to come back and have a good game,
and we knew they would want to come back hard at us too after we beat
them in our building."
Not to be outdone, Fleury made an equally
impressive stop 1:36 later on Mika
Zibanejad. Spezza sent a pass from the boards to Zibanejad, who
tipped it on goal from in front of Pittsburgh's crease. Fleury
blockered away the shot to keep the game scoreless. Senators forward
Stephane Da
Costa and Penguins forward Brian
Gibbons each scored his third goal of the season to send the game
to the first intermission at 1-1. Da Costa drove down the left boards
in Pittsburgh's zone and past defenseman Olli
Maatta toward the left post behind Fleury. He roofed a wrist shot
over Fleury's right shoulder and into the upper-left corner of the
net to give Ottawa a 1-0 lead with 5:55 remaining in the first.
Gibbons answered 2:18 later on a Pittsburgh power play. He reached
with his stick to deflect Maatta's slap shot from the point past
Anderson. The Penguins' top-ranked power play finished the game
1-for-3.
"I think we had a good entry there,"
Gibbons said. "[Jussi
Jokinen] made a good play bumping it back to Olli, and he waited
for me to get in front and the shot went off my stick. It worked
out."
Penguins forward Taylor
Pyatt left the game 22 seconds into his first shift with a
lower-body injury after missing on a check and falling into the
boards. Pittsburgh was without defenseman Kris
Letang, who missed a third consecutive game with an undisclosed
illness, but limited Ottawa's shots by pressuring the puck and
getting in shooting lanes. The Penguins also played without Letang in
the teams' first game of the season, a 5-0 Senators win Dec. 23.
Senators coach Paul MacLean thought his team responded well to the
6-3 loss to Toronto.
"We had a lot of guys that played real
well. I thought our competition level was good, and when you get to
overtime against this team, things can go wrong in a hurry and they
did."
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