When he stepped onto the familiar ice at SAP Center for the Florida Panthers' morning skate Tuesday, goaltender Roberto Luongo had a feeling he was going to have a good game that night against the San Jose Sharks, a team he had faced often with the Vancouver Canucks. Luongo made 52 saves, 28 in the third period, and led the Panthers to a stunning 3-2 victory, snapping the Sharks six-game winning streak.
"Some days you feel it more than others,"
Luongo said. "Even this morning at practice I felt good, even
though I was off yesterday. You just have that feeling sometimes when
you know you're going to play well. I've always enjoyed playing in
this building. It was a fun game."
Maybe for Luongo, but not for the Sharks
(45-18-7), who missed a chance to take over first place in the
Pacific Division after the Anaheim Ducks lost 3-2 to the Washington
Capitals. Both teams have 97 points, but the Ducks have a game in
hand.
"Really disappointing," Sharks
coach Todd McLellan said. "We started average and didn't get
better and then fell asleep. There wasn't a lot of emotion in the
game, a lot of drive from our behalf and then fell asleep and tried
to get desperate at the end. You can't win. It doesn't matter what
you're in, you can't win like that. We've talked about this lesson a
lot of times this year already with teams that are maybe not in the
playoffs and we keep shooting ourselves in the foot. Until we fix
that we'll probably end up with the same results."
Brandon
Pirri, Quinton
Howden and Scottie
Upshall scored second-period goals for the Panthers (26-35-8).
The Sharks outshot Florida 29-2 in the third period but scored only
once; Brent
Burns beat Luongo with 3:03 remaining to cut the margin to one
goal. The 29 shots were a franchise single-period record. Marty
Havlat also scored for the Sharks, and goaltender Antti
Niemi made 21 saves.
"Lu played well," Sharks captain
Joe Thornton
said. "He made some good stops. That's what he does. He's a
world-class goalie. I thought we could do a little bit better getting
in his eyes but he played well."
After a scoreless first period, Havlat gave San
Jose a 1-0 lead at 4:02 of the second with a power-play goal, the
Sharks' first at home since Feb. 3 against the Philadelphia Flyers.
Overall, the Sharks went 1-for-6 on the power play and are 4-for-65
in their past 20 games. Florida owned the rest of the period,
building a 3-1 lead on goals by Pirri, Howden and Upshaw. The
Panthers pulled even at 11:23 on Pirri's unassisted goal. He
intercepted forward James
Sheppard's pass in Florida's zone and headed the other way. Pirri
darted past defenseman Jason
Demers and fired a wrist shot that bounced off Niemi and into the
air. The puck landed behind Niemi on his left skate, then went
through defenseman Scott
Hannan's legs and over the goal line.
"I had some room there," Pirri
said. "With the speed with (Jimmy
Hayes) and (Howden), they create a lot of speed going down the
wing. Kind of backs everyone off. Maybe their gap wasn't as good as
they wanted it to be. I just shot it and obviously got a little lucky
there."
The Panthers struck again 17 seconds later, this
time on Howden's third goal of the season, all in four games. Pirri
won a faceoff against Andrew
Desjardins, quickly brought the puck into San Jose's zone and
fired a shot. Niemi made the save, but Howden ripped the rebound past
him, giving Florida a 2-1 lead at 11:40.
"They came out with some good pressure,"
Howden said of the Sharks. "We needed to respond in a big
way. You just kind of make it easy on yourself. You chip pucks and go
after 'em. That first one Pirri made a great play himself, kind of
holding onto it. He made a great play there, and the other one was
just shooting pucks on net and going to the net."
Upshall made it 3-1 with 15 seconds left in the
period, taking a pass from Joey
Crabb and wristing a shot from the circle through Niemi's legs.
"They scored three pretty quickly,"
Sharks defenseman Dan
Boyle said. "I don't think anybody is going to be too
happy with their execution and effort through 40. We had some chances
but overall we could have stepped it up a little bit better. Whether
it was their first goal or us just not doing it a little bit more, a
combination of both I think allowed them in the game and put them up
two goals after two."
The Sharks turned up the pressure on Florida in
the third period as the Panthers began a parade to the penalty box.
San Jose sent a barrage of 15 shots Luongo's way during four power
plays in a span of 7:09, but he stopped them all.
"You could tell he was just on his game
from the beginning," Pirri said of Luongo. "It's
pretty impressive what he can do. We probably would have liked to
give him a little more help. He's the best goalie in the world for a
reason."
Burns made it a one-goal game at 16:57. Thornton
won a faceoff in the offensive zone, and Burns put the puck through
Luongo's legs for his 19th of the season. The Sharks pulled Niemi
with 1:35 left and made a desperate push. Joe
Pavelski had a chance to score from close range but was denied
with less than a minute left.
"I'm upset about the second goal,"
Luongo said. "Should have had it. "It was coming in
swirling toward me so I just went to go cover it, and as I went down
I think Burns just spun around and shot it. I wasn't ready for a
shot."
The Sharks have a huge game Thursday against
Anaheim at SAP Center, but they said they weren't looking past the
Panthers.
"We knew going in that they were going to
come out and that they were going to work," center Logan
Couture said. "I think we have more talent in this room
than they have in theirs, but the first two periods, they outworked
us."
The Sharks outshot Florida 10-8 in the first
period but looked sluggish in their first home game after a
three-game trip in which they swept the Columbus Blue Jackets, New
York Islanders and New York Rangers. Couture came close to opening
the scoring with 7:54 left in the period when he darted toward the
crease and redirected a pass from Patrick
Marleau. But Luongo stopped the puck between his pads. Panthers
defenseman Dmitry
Kulikov played his 300th NHL game, and rookie forward Garrett
Wilson made his NHL debut, skating on Florida's fourth line.
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