Reporters who entered the Phoenix Coyotes' dressing room were greeted with Keith Yandle and Paul Bissonnette dancing to a loud hip-hop beat. It's not every day that a team comes back in the third period against the Los Angeles Kings. Celebration was in order after Jeff Halpern's goal with 3:05 left gave Phoenix a 4-3 win Monday night against Los Angeles to silence the Staples Center crowd. Yandle also scored in the third and the Coyotes, down 3-2 to start the period, boosted their chances of making the Stanley Cup Playoffs by climbing past the Dallas Stars into the second wild-card position in the Western Conference. The Kings had been 21-0-0 this season and 126-1-11 in the past 138 regular-season games when leading after two periods, dating to April 4, 2009.
"I know how good they are here,"
Coyotes captain Shane
Doan said. "They've got such a great blue line and
they've got so many good forwards. Obviously, their record is pretty
much perfect. So it was big for us to find points, even in
regulation."
Halpern's fourth goal this season was a shot from
the left side that Kings goalie Jonathan
Quick appeared to stop with his stick; however. replays showed
that the puck crossed the line. The crowd was still cheering at the
apparent save, and Quick subsequently made an unbelievable blocker
save on Doan while prone, until video replay revealed that Halpern's
shot was a goal. Phoenix tied it 3-3 with 10:16 left on an unassisted
goal by Yandle, who ripped a slap shot from the blue line that went
in off goalie Quick's glove. The comeback embodied the urgency shown
by the Coyotes (33-25-11), who have won six of eight to move two
points ahead of Dallas, which has two games in hand.
"We were in dire straits going into the
third," Doan said. "And the fact that you've got to
find points every night. You're down to 13-14 games left. It was
big."
The Kings erased a 2-0 deficit, had killed two
penalties and were trying to close out the win after Marian
Gaborik scored on a snap shot from the slot that ramped off the
stick of Coyotes defenseman Derek
Morris at 18:19 of the second period. Instead, Los Angeles
(38-25-6) has lost three consecutive one-goal games. The Kings are
third in the Pacific Division, five points ahead of the Coyotes
"I thought they were desperate the whole
game," Quick said. "That's the time of year it is.
Everybody's playing desperate. I thought we played well enough. I
don't think I played well enough. You give up four goals, you're
going to lose games. I've got to be better."
Defenseman Alec
Martinez made it 2-2 with a shot from the left side that found
the upper right corner at 6:50 of the second to erase the 2-0
deficit. Martinez, who had seven points in his first 40 games, has
seven points in his past eight. Los Angeles forced Phoenix to spend a
lot of time in its own end in the second period, when the Kings had a
15-3 shot advantage and did not allow the Coyotes a shot in the final
15:25. Phoenix goalie Mike
Smith, in his ninth straight start, looked sharp at the
beginning, but then became flustered at times. But Smith kept the
Coyotes in the game early and finished with 36 saves. Smith was
somewhat questionable and reportedly felt "down" at the
morning skate. He was 3-6-0 in his previous 10 starts against Los
Angeles, including the postseason.
"Once you get into the game, I think the
adrenaline kind of takes over," Smith said. "I
lacked a little bit of energy tonight. But there is no time for
feeling down and being sick right now. It was good to get back in
there."
The Kings pointed to not putting in more pucks at
the start of the game.
"It comes down to having to play a full 60
minutes," Martinez said. "We didn't do that. We had
a few breakdowns. We can't have that, especially in the third period
against a hockey club like that, so this is a battle here in the West
to make the playoffs. Everyone is jockeying for spots. We've got to
sharpen up. They were a desperate hockey team tonight and we didn't
match them."
The Kings' comeback erased an ideal road start for
Phoenix, which scored two goals in 63 seconds for a 2-0 lead against
a Los Angeles team that looked disorganized at the start. Mikkel
Boedker was left completely free in the slot to lift a backhand
into the left side of the net for a power-play goal at 7:36 in the
first. Rob
Klinkhammer knocked down Radim
Vrbata's shot and swiped the puck through the feet of Kings
defenseman Robyn
Regehr at 6:33. Los Angeles salvaged the opening period on a
terrific play in transition by rookie Tanner
Pearson, who sped down the left wing and beat Smith with a wrist
shot at 17:02 for his second NHL goal. Kings captain Dustin
Brown missed a second game because of a lower-body injury.
Phoenix center Martin
Hanzal returned to the lineup from a lower-body injury.
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