Colorado Avalanche coach Patrick Roy was confident that goalie Semyon Varlamov would recover quickly after he and the Russian team failed to win a medal at the Sochi Olympics. In his first game since returning from Sochi, Varlamov made 40 saves Friday and the Avalanche held on for a 4-2 win against the Phoenix Coyotes at Pepsi Center.
"I wasn't concerned about it,"
Roy said. "When I saw him after the Olympics, I saw a big
smile on his face. I knew he was ready to bounce back. [Goalie coach]
Francois [Allaire] had a couple meetings with him and he was
well-prepared for this game. The key was giving him the night off
[Wednesday], give him the time to feel really comfortable."
Varlamov made 18 saves in the third period, nine
on three Coyotes power plays, and Gabriel
Landeskog completed a three-point night by scoring a power-play
goal with 3:11 remaining in regulation after Shane
Doan's second power-play goal of the game with 6:02 to play cut
the margin to 3-2.
"They came pretty hard in the third
period," Varlamov said. "We sat back a little, but
we scored two quick goals, which was really good. I think that was
the key to the game. I didn't feel any pressure. I felt pretty good,
actually. I think I played pretty solid hockey. The guys did a great
job offensively. The goalie always likes it when the guys score lots
of goals."
Varlamov practiced for the first time Monday after
arriving from Russia and dressed as Jean-Sebastien
Giguere's backup Wednesday, when the Avalanche lost 6-4 to the
Los Angeles Kings.
"I think those days helped me,"
he said. "I was tired emotionally and it gave me some rest.
So I got back into a normal routine, trained with Francois. I felt
pretty good."
Colorado (38-17-5) is in third place in the
Central Division with 81 points, three behind the second-place
Chicago Blackhawks with one game in hand. Phoenix (27-22-11) is
fourth in the Pacific Division with 65 points but very much in the
hunt for a berth in the Stanley Cup Playoffs with 22 games remaining.
"It comes down to the last [22] games,"
Doan said. "It always does. We have to figure out a way to
get more points."
Paul
Stastny had a goal and an assist for the Avalanche, and Nathan
MacKinnon added two assists to stretch his point-scoring streak
to 10 games, the longest by an NHL rookie since Chicago's Jonathan
Toews had a 10-game streak from Oct. 10-31, 2007.
"It's nice, but I've been playing with
some really good players," said MacKinnon, who has five
goals and nine assists in the streak. "I feel lucky to be on
a winning team like this."
Nate
Guenin and Stastny scored goals early in the third period to give
the Avalanche a 3-1 lead. Guenin broke a 1-1 tie 48 seconds into the
period with a shot from the right circle that beat goalie Thomas
Greiss to the far side. It was Guenin's third goal in 80 career
NHL games and his first since March 19, 2012, when he scored against
the San Jose Sharks while playing for the Anaheim Ducks.
"It's about time," Guenin said.
"Just good timing there. The puck slipped through and I kind
of saw an opening. I got my new sticks and I got used to them
yesterday, so I have to give them some credit. We wanted this one
bad. We felt we let one slip away the other night. We really wanted
these two points, especially in front of our home fans. We want this
to be a tough place to play and the fans were rocking."
Stastny scored at 6:12 after Greiss made a save
against MacKinnon, who used his speed to drive down left wing. The
rebound came to Landeskog, who passed to Stastny in front for a shot
into an open net.
"He was flying," Roy said of
MacKinnon. "It was a great play by him going to the net and
it was an outstanding play by Landy. It was a super pass to Paulie."
Doan, who had gone eight games without a point,
scored his second goal after Avalanche defenseman Cory
Sarich dived to knock the puck away from Martin
Hanzal but was penalized for tripping. Keith
Yandle fired a shot from just inside the blue line and Doan
tipped it in. The Avalanche responded with a power-play goal from
Landeskog, who scored from the right circle off a pass from
MacKinnon. The teams traded first-period power-play goals, with the
Coyotes striking first at 12:47 on a goal by Doan. Mikkel
Boedker took a shot from the right circle that hit the far post
and caromed to Doan in front for a chip shot into a half-open net. PA
Parenteau tied the game for the Avalanche at 15:38. Greiss made a
big stop against Nick
Holden driving to the net before Parenteau launched a long shot
that hit the inside of the left post and bounced in. The loss was the
first for Greiss in five career games against the Avalanche. He
finished with 29 saves.
"We were solid in a lot of areas again,
but in the end a couple of mistakes cost us," Coyotes coach
Dave Tippett said. "The power play late in the third really
hurt us. It came down to a turnover, a penalty and a goal. The margin
for error is very slim."
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