The new Winnipeg Jets beat the old Winnipeg Jets 3-2 in a shootout at MTS Centre on Thursday in a game between two teams trying to break out of the crowded pack of Western Conference teams chasing a spot in the Stanley Cup Playoffs. With the win, the Jets have 64 points, one point behind the Coyotes, who hold two games in hand and currently sit one point back of the Dallas Stars for the second of two wild-card spots in the West. The game began a stretch of nine of 12 games on home ice for the Jets, who are attempting to reach the postseason for the first time since 2007 when the organization was based in Atlanta. Given the Jets' position in the playoff hunt, coach Paul Maurice was happy to get that extra point Thursday.
"That's the way that our games are going
to look now, and if you can get two points on teams that are
scratching and clawing at this point, absolutely [the Jets will take
the win]," he said.
Martin
Hanzal's power-play goal early in the third period pulled Phoenix
even at 2-2 before the teams clamped down defensively for the
remainder of regulation time. Shootout goals from Olli
Jokinen and Devin
Setoguchi carried the Jets to the extra point; Antoine
Vermette hit the net for the Coyotes in the tiebreaker.
"Coming out of the break, we wanted to
make sure that we came out with energy," Coyotes coach Dave
Tippett said. "For the most part, I didn't mind our game."
Tippett's team managed to scratch out a point
against a Winnipeg team that has been hot since Maurice took over for
Claude Noel on Jan. 13. The Jets are now 10-3-1 and own the NHL's
second-best points percentage since the coaching change.
"We'll take the two points, move on and
try to get sharper from here," Jets captain Andrew
Ladd said.
Coyotes defenseman Oliver
Ekman-Larsson opened the scoring with his ninth goal of the
season. Jets right wing Blake
Wheeler countered with his team-leading 23rd goal in the first
period, and center Bryan
Little added his 19th goal during a second-period power play. The
game featured a matchup of goaltenders from the 2014 Sochi Olympics.
Smith, who won a gold medal with Canada, started for the Coyotes in
making his League-leading 50th appearance and stopped 27 shots. Jets
goaltender Ondrej
Pavelec, a member of the Czech Republic team, made 34 saves.
Smith did not play for Canada during Olympic competition, and he
welcomed the opportunity to resume his heavy workload in the Phoenix
net.
"It's tough," Smith said of his
lack of recent game competition. "It's exciting to get back
in there and playing again. Obviously, it was an unbelievable
experience, and I'll have those memories for the rest of my life and
I wouldn't give [them] back for anything. It was tough to watch,
tough to not be in games. But I accepted that role and knew when I
came back that I'd get a lot of ice time, so I'm well-rested."
Pavelec countered with strong work late in the
regulation and overtime as Phoenix pressed for the winning goal.
"To win that game, Ondrej really had to
compete hard in the net," Maurice said.
The Coyotes took a 1-0 lead when Radim
Vrbata's pass reached Ekman-Larsson alone in the slot, and the
Swedish defenseman snapped a shot that went over Pavelec's left glove
with 7:43 left in the first period. Wheeler answered for the Jets
2:38 later. After Wheeler and Dustin
Byfuglien jostled with Smith in close, Wheeler sent a shot from
the right boards that snuck through the goaltender's pads as he
attempted to regain his footing. Little broke a 1-1 tie late in the
second period when he pounced on Phoenix defenseman Zbynek
Michalek's turnover in the slot and lifted a shot over Smith. The
power-play goal with 1:59 remaining in the period came as Winnipeg
was on a 1-for-15 slide and tied for 25th in the League entering the
game with the man advantage. After killing off an Ekman-Larsson
slashing minor to start the third period, the Coyotes' eighth-ranked
power play went to work with Winnipeg center Jim
Slater off for hooking. With 28 seconds left on the minor, Hanzal
jabbed a rebound behind Pavelec at 6:40 for a 2-2 game. Each team
battled rust, especially in the game's first half, and knows that it
will need to sharpen its game as the Western Conference race
intensifies. The Coyotes departed Winnipeg after the game for a road
game Friday against the Colorado Avalanche. Tippett found reasons for
optimism in his team's play against Winnipeg. After playing the
Avalanche, the Coyotes settle back in Phoenix for three consecutive
home games next week.
"There are certainly some positive things
from our group to build on there," Tippett said. "We
just came back, so we [knew] it [was] going to be a little bit
choppy. But I liked the effort, I liked some of the structure we
played with, and now we have to continue to bring that night in and
night out. There was lots of urgency and intensity. There were some
turnovers I didn't like in the game; those are things that we have to
continue to clean up. But the will we played with and the
desperation, that's going to have to be there every night."
The Jets will play Saturday afternoon at the
Nashville Predators, another team they are trying to fend off in the
playoff chase.
"It's a positive to maybe not play your A
game and still get two points," Wheeler said. "You
know that it's not going to be the last time we have to do that this
year. It's an all-out sprint. There is no time to think about being
tired. You've got to lay it on the line. If [we] want to be a playoff
team, which we want to be, there's going to be a lot more hard hockey
ahead of us."
Olympian and gold-medal hockey player Jocelyne Larocque drops the puck for Winnipeg Jets' Olli Jokinen (12) and Phoenix Coyotes' Oliver Ekman-Larsson (23) before the Winnipeg Jets game against the Phoenix Coyotes at MTS Centre Thursday night.
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