After defeating the Tampa Bay Lightning 4-3 in a shootout on Monday night, Phoenix Coyotes goaltender Mike Smith had a confession to make. But it was clear what this game meant to Smith from the massive fist-pump he let out with after stopping Ryan Callahan's shootout attempt to end the game. Smith, who made 28 saves, was the Lightning's goalie from 2007-2011. His tenure ended in disappointment and a stint in the minors.
"I might not have told the whole truth
this morning when I said I didn't want to win this game that bad. You
get in the game and I've got friends and family here watching the
game too and it was my first game back here and there was definitely
extra motivation to play well tonight," Smith said.
Radim
Vrbata had the only goal in the shootout and Martin
Erat scored his first goal with his new club, helping the Coyotes
extend the Lightning's winless streak to five games. Ondrej
Palat scored his second goal of the game with 38 seconds
remaining in regulation to tie the game at 3-3 and send it to
overtime after Mikkel
Boedker gathered a loose puck and backhanded it past Lightning
goalie Ben
Bishop to give the Coyotes the lead at 7:48.
"That was real important for my
confidence," Boedker, who hadn't scored since Jan. 24, said.
"It feels good. It was coming for me tonight and that always
feels good."
Tampa Bay began the second and third periods with
a one-goal lead, but Phoenix equaled the score early in each period.
"We tried to play fast tonight; we put
some young legs in the lineup tonight and they play fast,"
Phoenix coach Dave Tippett said. "We are desperate for
points. You never know how that will turn out, but it turned out
alright for us."
Erat, acquired prior to the NHL Trade Deadline
from the Washington Capitals, scored his second of the season 2:13
into the third period, when Victor
Hedman's attempt to bounce the puck off the end boards behind the
Lightning net failed. The puck slipped in front of the crease, where
Erat sent it behind Bishop, who was looking for the puck to his
right. The goal tied the score at 2-2.
"We don't [follow] the D-to-D pass behind
the net and the goaltender follows the puck. We're way too
lackadaisical and it's a mental error," Lightning coach Jon
Cooper said. "That ends up in the net. The third goal, we've
run that coverage a thousand times. Just a blown assignment. That
shouldn't happen in midget hockey, let alone the NHL. That's what
frustrating. The guys played hard, but we made some mental errors
down the stretch. That's the frustrating thing."
Brandon
McMillan scored his second goal in as many games when he sent a
rebound under Bishop's right pad to make it 1-1 at 1:01 of the second
period. The tie score held up for most of the period until Palat
scored his 16th of the season with 53 seconds remaining in the
period. Callahan dug the puck out from behind the Phoenix goal, cut
in front, got a shot away that Smith blocked, but then edged the puck
over to Palat. Keith
Aulie also had an assist on the goal. Tyler
Johnson scored his NHL-leading fourth shorthanded goal of the
season and 20th overall at 11:26 of the opening period to give Tampa
Bay a 1-0 lead. Johnson took a pass from Palat, cut in front of the
Phoenix net and backhanded the puck over Smith. Phoenix went 0-for-3
on the power play. The Lightning have not allowed a power-play goal
in their past six home games. Bishop stopped 17 shots for Tampa Bay.
With the loss, the Lightning's shootout record for this season fell
to 6-5.
"The well has gone dry for us in the
shootout," Cooper said. "That's something we used to
do pretty well at. Just another thing that's tough. That's 0-for-10
in shootouts in 48 hours. I don't have the answer. I would never have
suspected the results we are getting."
By contrast, the win sent the Coyotes, in the
midst of a four-game road swing, out of town on a hopeful note.
Phoenix will visit the Florida Panthers on Tuesday.
"When things get going the right way,
those are things that fall into place," Tippett said. "We
haven't had enough of those this year. Hopefully this is a sign that
there are good things to come."
Lightning defenseman Sami
Salo left in the second period with a lower-body injury and did
not return.
No comments:
Post a Comment