Playing with 10 forwards for virtually the entire game Monday because of injuries, the Colorado Avalanche outlasted the Winnipeg Jets 3-2 in overtime in a physical game at Pepsi Center. Matt Duchene scored at 2:27 of the extra period after skating from the left corner while being checked by Jets left wing Dustin Byfuglien. The puck came loose when Byfuglien tugged at Duchene's elbow, but Jets defenseman Tobias Enstrom accidentally poked it back to Duchene, who backhanded a shot over goalie Al Montoya, who finished with 31 saves.
"I beat him with a move out of the corner
and I was taking it to the net," Duchene said. "I
saw (Ryan) O'Reilly for what I was hoping was going to be an open
net. (Byfuglien) got my elbow, and the puck bounced off my stick. It
bounced back to me and I took a whack at it. I didn't know it went in
. I just heard the crowd cheering. Good bounce, nice to get that
one."
The winning play spoiled the game for Byfuglien,
who scored both Jets goals 1:48 apart in the second period.
"He got position, and the puck ended up
back to him. A guy like that's never going to miss those. I don't
remember it," he said of Duchene's goal. "I know the
puck bounced in front of me, was poked in front of me."
Two days after losing center Paul
Stastny to a back injury on his first shift Saturday, the
Avalanche lost right wing PA
Parenteau to a right-knee injury on his first shift. He is
expected to miss the rest of the regular season.
"We showed a lot of character against a
team that was playing very desperate," Avalanche coach
Patrick Roy said. "It's a tough team to play against. They
gave us a hard time. Just don't try to feel sorry for yourselves,
this is what I said to the guys. We have to remain positive. All year
we battled through adversity and tonight was another example. Our
guys never stopped working. We played most of the game with three
lines. Everyone chipped in, everyone played hard. It was a
hard-fought game, no doubt about it."
Colorado (42-18-5), third in the Central Division,
moved to within one point (90-89) of the second-place Chicago
Blackhawks, who visit Pepsi Center on Wednesday. "We're not
out of the race for the division lead or No. 1 in the NHL,"
Duchene said. "We're right there. We just have to keep
working hard here. I mean, that's a character win tonight. There's no
other way to describe that. Guys just played their hearts out."
Winnipeg (30-28-8) earned a point to close within
four points of the eighth-place Dallas Stars, who hold the second of
two wild-card positions for the Stanley Cup Playoffs in the Western
Conference.
"It was a good battle," said Jets
coach Paul Maurice, whose team killed all six of Colorado's power
plays and scored on its lone man advantage. "The penalty kill
was outstanding, the power play, what little we saw, was 100 percent.
I don't have a lot of complaints. I didn't think we gave up a whole
lot. If you factor in the power play and penalty kill, both teams had
some really good chances. We've got to find a way to draw as many
(penalties) as we get."
The Avalanche's John Mitchell moved from
third-line center to the second line with Gabriel
Landeskog and Nathan
MacKinnon after Parenteau was injured, and he had a goal and an
assist.
"When guys go down, it's an opportunity
for a lot of guys to step up in the lineup and try and contribute and
make things happen," Mitchell said. "I knew I would
be given more of an offensive role and try and play hard and play
strong. I'm happy with the effort I put forth and I'm really proud of
all the guys in here. We stuck with it even though we were
shorthanded."
Mitchell set up Andre
Benoit's goal with 11.2 seconds to play in the second period to
tie the game 2-2. Mitchell won a draw from Olli
Jokinen in the left circle and swept the puck back to Benoit at
the point. Benoit moved in a few strides and fired a shot by Montoya,
who was screened.
"Going into the third period being down
one would have been tough," Mitchell said. "That was
a huge goal for us and a big one for him to put home."
Byfuglien's two goals in the second period gave
his team a 2-1 lead. The Jets scored 23 seconds into their only power
play of the game at 15:48 after Avalanche defenseman Cory
Sarich was penalized for holding. Bryan
Little took a shot that Avalanche goalie Semyon
Varlamov stopped, but the puck squirted in front and Byfuglien
was able to reach around defenseman Jan
Hejda with his stick to sweep the puck inside the right post.
Byfuglien scored again at 17:36 after Varlamov made a save against
Michael
Frolik. The puck went behind the net, and Byfuglien poked it
inside the near post by Varlamov's right skate. Mitchell was credited
with a goal, his first point in 12 games, to give the Avalanche a 1-0
lead at 4:38 of the second. He skated down the left wing and
attempted to pass to MacKinnon driving to the net. MacKinnon and Jets
defenseman Zach
Bogosian got their sticks down, and the puck went in off
Bogosian's blade.
"I don't score if Nate doesn't drive the
net," Mitchell said. "Whether it went off a D-man or
his skate, I made the pass, and Nate created the scoring chance by
driving hard to the net."
Varlamov made a glove save against Jim
Slater on a penalty shot at 13:01 of the first. Slater tried to
pick the top corner of the net with his shot, but Varlamov knocked
down the puck with his glove. Varlamov made another big stop against
Evander Kane
with 1:30 to go in the period. Kane used his speed to skate down the
left wing past Hejda. He cut across the slot for a shot that Varlamov
stopped with his left pad.
"He made some clutch stops," Roy
said of Varlamov, who finished with 33 saves for his 32nd win.
Jets center John
Albert left the game at 6:11 of the second period with an
undisclosed injury. He did not return.
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