June 19, 2013

NHL Roundup: Sens’ Anderson sends Devils to 9th straight loss

de997ae99d13c752a3681c44fe5279e3 NHL Roundup: Sens’ Anderson sends Devils to 9th straight loss

(PhatzRadio / AP) — NEWARK, N.J. — Craig Anderson made 33 saves in his third shutout of the season, and the sent the sliding New Jersey Devils to their with a 2-0 victory .

Jean-Gabriel Pageau and second-period goals for the Senators, who won for the second straight night, following a five-game skid, to boost their playoff chances.

Ottawa, in sixth place in the Eastern Conference, leads ninth-place Winnipeg by four points. New Jersey is 10th, eight points behind Ottawa and four behind the and the postseason cutoff with seven games to play.

The Senators will finish a season-high, seven-game trip at Boston on Monday.

The defending Devils dropped to 0-5-4 without injured star forward Ilya Kovalchuk. The slide is one game shy of the , set early in the 1983-84 season.

Despite outshooting the Senators 23-9 in the opening 40 minutes and getting an early two-man advantage, the Devils trailed 2-0 heading into the third period.

BLACKHAWKS 3, RED WINGS 2, SO

CHICAGO — Brandon Saad scored in the fifth round of the shootout after tied the game late in regulation, and Chicago clinched the Central Division title with a victory over Detroit.

With St. Louis losing to Columbus earlier Friday, the Blackhawks wrapped up the Central race for the first time since 2010 when they won the . Chicago also increased its lead over Anaheim for the top seed in the to seven points.

The shootout was tied 1-1 when Saad beat Jimmy Howard with a . then stopped , sealing the win and giving the Blackhawks a four-game over Detroit.

Viktor Stalberg also scored for Chicago. Two quick goals by Franzen and Cory Emmerton late in the second period gave Detroit a 2-1 lead, but the Blackhawks answered down the stretch, winning their final game against the Red Wings as division foes.

BLUE JACKETS 4, BLUES 1

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Cam Atkinson had a goal and an assist, and Sergei Bobrovsky made 31 saves as Columbus snapped St. Louis’ season-high, six-game winning streak.

Artem Anisimov, Ryan Johansen and Marian Gaborik also had goals for Columbus, which continued its climb from cellar-dweller to playoff contention. The Blue Jackets, 11-1-3 in their last 15 home games, were last in the NHL after a 5-12-2 start but have earned points in 18 of 22 games since (13-4-5).

Kevin Shattenkirk made it 1-0 for the Blues, who went with rookie Jake Allen in goal instead of Brian Elliott, who has posted three shutouts in a row.

The Blue Jackets are 10th in the Western Conference with 43 points, two behind eighth-place Detroit. The Blues are sixth with 48 points.

Bobrovsky improved to 11-3-5 with a 1.68 goals-against average at home this season.

STARS 5, PREDATORS 2

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Rookie Alex Chiasson scored two goals, and Dallas beat Nashville for its fourth straight win.

Ray Whitney had a power-play goal and an assist, and Erik Cole and Tom Wandell had a goal apiece. Vern Fiddler also had two assists for the Stars, who are ninth in the Western Conference — two points behind eighth-place Detroit and the postseason cutoff. Dallas is tied in points with Phoenix and Columbus.

Richard Bachman stopped 26 shots and improved to 5-3. He started in place of Kari Lehtonen, who was scratched because of a lower body injury.

Taylor Beck and Bobby Butler scored for Nashville, which has lost five straight and eight of nine.

Dallas also snapped a four-game skid against Nashville and avoided being swept this season by their future division rival.

FLAMES 3, COYOTES 2, OT

CALGARY, Alberta — Mark Giordano scored the winning goal 4:36 into overtime, and Calgary snapped a three-game home losing streak with a victory over Phoenix.

Curtis Glencross and Mikael Backlund combined to set up Giordano just inside the blue line. While goalie Mike Smith was screened, Giordano put a shot just inside the goal post. Smith shrugged his shoulders as if he didn’t see the puck.

Jiri Hudler and Lee Stempniak also scored for Calgary (15-21-4), which had lost six of seven.

Antoine Vermette and Keith Yandle scored for Phoenix (18-16-7), which earned three of six points on a three-game trip.

NHL Roundup: Sens’ Anderson sends Devils to 9th straight loss is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 NHL Roundup: Sens’ Anderson sends Devils to 9th straight loss  NHL Roundup: Sens’ Anderson sends Devils to 9th straight loss  NHL Roundup: Sens’ Anderson sends Devils to 9th straight loss  NHL Roundup: Sens’ Anderson sends Devils to 9th straight loss  NHL Roundup: Sens’ Anderson sends Devils to 9th straight loss

 NHL Roundup: Sens’ Anderson sends Devils to 9th straight loss

NHL Stanley Cup Finals 2012: Kopitar’s OT goal lifts Kings over Devils 2-1

04d6d5e66423ba4537d7b1d75dade5c3 NHL Stanley Cup Finals 2012: Kopitar’s OT goal lifts Kings over Devils 2 1
#9 of the New Jersey Devils fights for the puck with #14 and #11 of the Los Angeles Kings during Game One of the 2012 Final at the on May 30, 2012 in Newark, New Jersey.
(May 29, 2012 – Source: / North America)

NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — East. West. It doesn’t make a difference to the Los Angeles Kings.

All they have done in the playoffs is win and the Eastern New Jersey Devils became their .

Anze Kopitar scored a spectacular goal on a breakaway with 11:47 left in overtime Wednesday night and the Kings beat the Devils 2-1 in Game 1 of the .

“From a series standpoint, it’s huge to put them behind us, right off the get-go,” Kings captain said. “It makes it a little more difficult for them to get back into it if we play our game and do the right things.”

Kopitar did everything perfectly on his breakaway after taking a great chip pass from Justin Williams. He faked a , put the puck on his forehand and beat a prone Martin Brodeur.

“All losses this time of year are really hard to take because your dream is slowly shutting down,” Brodeur said. “We lost one game, there’s six games left in this series. They need to win three. We need to win four.”

Los Angeles has won all nine of its road games in the playoffs, an . The Kings are now one win shy of tying the for postseason .

More importantly, they are three wins away from the franchise’s first NHL title since entering the league in 1967-68. They have won 11 playoff games dating back to last season.

Los Angeles is now 13-2 this postseason.

Kopitar saw Justin Williams battling with Devils defenseman and forward along the boards.

“I wanted to make sure I went to the middle,” Kopitar said. “I don’t know if he heard me or not, but I yelled for the puck and he chipped it. It was perfect, right on my tape. It happened pretty quick and I was able to finish it off.”

As soon as he rifled the puck into the net, Kopitar raised his hands and banged himself into the boards, facing the crowd off to Brodeur’s right.

“To put it past a goaltender like Marty,” Kopitar said, “is a good feeling.”

The veteran goaltender dejectedly skated off to the locker room as the rest of the Kings piled on Kopitar.

Williams said his setup was a prayer.

“I just threw an area pass,” he said. “I hoped that he was alone and he was. I’ve played with him a long time. You just kind of feel it. If it wasn’t there, it would have went to nobody.

“It was a no-lose situation.”

This is the third straight series in which the Devils have lost the first game.

“I think it was probably the worst game in the playoffs for us,” said Devils leading scorer Ilya Kovalchuk, who was limited to one shot. “Maybe we were a little too nervous before the game started, but it’s all excuses. We’ve got to make sure we know what we didn’t do right, and be a different team next game.”

Fourth-line center Colin Fraser scored in the first period for the Kings, the No. 8 seed in the West who beat the top three teams to get to their first Stanley Cup finals since 1993.

Anton Volchenkov tied it late in the second period for New Jersey, the East’s sixth seed.

Kings goaltender Jonathan Quick finished with 17 saves in what was a relatively easy night. Brodeur had 23 saves as the Devils lost in overtime for just the second time this postseason; they have won four times. Los Angeles is 3-0 after regulation this spring.

The Devils had two great chances to take the lead early in the third, and for a split second it appeared they went ahead with 16:02 to play in regulation when Zach Parise scored off a wild goal-mouth scramble.

While the horns went off and the fans celebrated, Dan O’Halloran quickly waved off the goal.

It was reviewed in Toronto and replay clearly showed Parise swept the puck into the net with his hand.

Defenseman Mark Fayne was probably kicking himself six minutes later when he missed a wide-open net from the edge of the crease in what was the Devils’ best period of the night.

“We didn’t deserve to win tonight, and we didn’t,” said Devils veteran Patrik Elias, a member of their Cup-winning teams in 2000 and 2003.

The Kings had their chances, too, with Brodeur making two outstanding saves about 10 seconds apart. He made a stacked-pad save on a one-timer by defenseman Drew Doughty from 30 feet after a drop pass from Mike Richards. A turnover seconds later set up forward Dustin Penner for a shot from the left circle.

The Kings came into the finals after steamrolling Vancouver, St. Louis and Phoenix in just 14 games, and they made the Devils look ordinary in the first 40 minutes, holding them to nine shots.

But a fluke goal by Volchenkov tied the game with 1:12 left in the second.

Volchenkov took a shot from the left point that Quick kicked away in front. The puck went airborne, avoided Elias in front and hit off the shoulder of Kings defenseman Slava Voynov before going into the net.

Until then, Fraser’s first career playoff goal was beginning to look like the winner.

It was a typical Kings’ goal, created off the forecheck — by the fourth line, no less.

Jordan Nolan checked New Jersey’s Andy Greene behind the Devils’ net, outfought him for the puck and found Fraser between the circles for a shot that beat Brodeur 9:56 into the game.

The Kings had chances to extend the lead, but Brodeur, who was the difference in the Devils’ victory over the rival Rangers in the conference finals, made three good saves. The best stop by the 40-year-old, three-time Cup winner came on the opening shift of the second, when he blocked Kopitar point blank on the edge of the crease.

Kopitar, of course, would get one past Brodeur much later in the evening.

Brodeur also stopped forward Jeff Carter from in close and made a big pad stop on Penner in the second.

The Devils were held without a shot for more than 14 minutes of the period before Parise was credited with one on a short-handed attempt in which the puck rolled off his stick into the crease.

Quick, who wasn’t very busy in the first two periods, made his best save with a glove stop on Zubrus from the left circle after a turnover.

However, New Jersey managed to tie it on Volchenkov’s strange goal.

The tally came just after Quick got into a tussle with Parise in the crease, and refused to let the Devils’ captain get up after he fell as Parise lost his helmet.

“I think we’re going to have to find another level,” Devils coach Peter DeBoer said. “We were a little tentative, as was expected for a Stanley Cup final. I think we got better as the game went along, but you have to play 60 minutes against that team.

“We have to be better than we were tonight.”

NOTES: Less than a minute into the game, the chant of “BEAT L-A” echoed through the arena. … Doug O’Neill, the trainer of Kentucky Derby and Preakness winner I’ll Have Another, was on hand, as was New York Giants offensive lineman Chris Snee and New York Jets coach Rex Ryan. … Volchenkov’s goal was his first in the playoffs since Game 3 of the 2007 Stanley Cup finals when he played for Ottawa against Anaheim. … Kopitar’s goal was his second OT winner in the postseason. The other was in 2010 at Vancouver. He has 12 points in the last nine games, including six goals. …The was the first Game 1 of the finals that went to overtime since 2002, when the Carolina Hurricanes defeated the Detroit Red Wings 3-2 at Joe Louis Arena on a goal by Ron Francis, just 58 seconds past regulation.

NHL Stanley Cup Finals 2012: Kopitar’s OT goal lifts Kings over Devils 2-1 is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

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325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 NHL Stanley Cup Finals 2012: Kopitar’s OT goal lifts Kings over Devils 2 1

NHL Stanley Cup Finals 2012: Kopitar’s OT goal lifts Kings over Devils 2-1

04d6d5e66423ba4537d7b1d75dade5c3 NHL Stanley Cup Finals 2012: Kopitar’s OT goal lifts Kings over Devils 2 1
Zach Parise #9 of the New Jersey Devils fights for the puck with #14 and Anze Kopitar #11 of the during Game One of the 2012 Final at the on May 30, 2012 in Newark, New Jersey.
(May 29, 2012 – Source: / North America)

NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — East. West. It doesn’t make a difference to the Los Angeles Kings.

All they have done in the playoffs is win and the Eastern New Jersey Devils became their latest victim.

Anze Kopitar scored a spectacular goal on a breakaway with 11:47 left in overtime Wednesday night and the Kings beat the Devils 2-1 in Game 1 of the .

“From a series standpoint, it’s huge to put them behind us, right off the get-go,” Kings captain said. “It makes it a little more difficult for them to get back into it if we play our game and do the right things.”

Kopitar did everything perfectly on his breakaway after taking a great chip pass from Justin Williams. He faked a , put the puck on his forehand and beat a prone Martin Brodeur.

“All losses this time of year are really hard to take because your dream is slowly shutting down,” Brodeur said. “We lost one game, there’s six games left in this series. They need to win three. We need to win four.”

Los Angeles has won all nine of its road games in the playoffs, an . The Kings are now one win shy of tying the for postseason .

More importantly, they are three wins away from the franchise’s first NHL title since entering the league in 1967-68. They have won 11 playoff games dating back to last season.

Los Angeles is now 13-2 this postseason.

Kopitar saw Justin Williams battling with Devils defenseman and forward along the boards.

“I wanted to make sure I went to the middle,” Kopitar said. “I don’t know if he heard me or not, but I yelled for the puck and he chipped it. It was perfect, right on my tape. It happened pretty quick and I was able to finish it off.”

As soon as he rifled the puck into the net, Kopitar raised his hands and banged himself into the boards, facing the crowd off to Brodeur’s right.

“To put it past a goaltender like Marty,” Kopitar said, “is a good feeling.”

The veteran goaltender dejectedly skated off to the locker room as the rest of the Kings piled on Kopitar.

Williams said his setup was a prayer.

“I just threw an area pass,” he said. “I hoped that he was alone and he was. I’ve played with him a long time. You just kind of feel it. If it wasn’t there, it would have went to nobody.

“It was a no-lose situation.”

This is the third straight series in which the Devils have lost the first game.

“I think it was probably the worst game in the playoffs for us,” said Devils leading scorer Ilya Kovalchuk, who was limited to one shot. “Maybe we were a little too nervous before the game started, but it’s all excuses. We’ve got to make sure we know what we didn’t do right, and be a different team next game.”

Fourth-line center Colin Fraser scored in the first period for the Kings, the No. 8 seed in the West who beat the top three teams to get to their first since 1993.

Anton Volchenkov tied it late in the second period for New Jersey, the East’s sixth seed.

Kings goaltender Jonathan Quick finished with 17 saves in what was a relatively easy night. Brodeur had 23 saves as the Devils lost in overtime for just the second time this postseason; they have won four times. Los Angeles is 3-0 after regulation this spring.

The Devils had two great chances to take the lead early in the third, and for a split second it appeared they went ahead with 16:02 to play in regulation when Zach Parise scored off a wild goal-mouth scramble.

While the horns went off and the fans celebrated, referee Dan O’Halloran quickly waved off the goal.

It was reviewed in Toronto and replay clearly showed Parise swept the puck into the net with his hand.

Defenseman Mark Fayne was probably kicking himself six minutes later when he missed a wide-open net from the edge of the crease in what was the Devils’ best period of the night.

“We didn’t deserve to win tonight, and we didn’t,” said Devils veteran Patrik Elias, a member of their Cup-winning teams in 2000 and 2003.

The Kings had their chances, too, with Brodeur making two outstanding saves about 10 seconds apart. He made a stacked-pad save on a one-timer by defenseman Drew Doughty from 30 feet after a drop pass from Mike Richards. A turnover seconds later set up forward Dustin Penner for a shot from the left circle.

The Kings came into the finals after steamrolling Vancouver, St. Louis and Phoenix in just 14 games, and they made the Devils look ordinary in the first 40 minutes, holding them to nine shots.

But a fluke goal by Volchenkov tied the game with 1:12 left in the second.

Volchenkov took a shot from the left point that Quick kicked away in front. The puck went airborne, avoided Elias in front and hit off the shoulder of Kings defenseman Slava Voynov before going into the net.

Until then, Fraser’s first career playoff goal was beginning to look like the winner.

It was a typical Kings’ goal, created off the forecheck — by the fourth line, no less.

Jordan Nolan checked New Jersey’s Andy Greene behind the Devils’ net, outfought him for the puck and found Fraser between the circles for a shot that beat Brodeur 9:56 into the game.

The Kings had chances to extend the lead, but Brodeur, who was the difference in the Devils’ victory over the rival Rangers in the conference finals, made three good saves. The best stop by the 40-year-old, three-time Cup winner came on the opening shift of the second, when he blocked Kopitar point blank on the edge of the crease.

Kopitar, of course, would get one past Brodeur much later in the evening.

Brodeur also stopped forward Jeff Carter from in close and made a big pad stop on Penner in the second.

The Devils were held without a shot for more than 14 minutes of the period before Parise was credited with one on a short-handed attempt in which the puck rolled off his stick into the crease.

Quick, who wasn’t very busy in the first two periods, made his best save with a glove stop on Zubrus from the left circle after a turnover.

However, New Jersey managed to tie it on Volchenkov’s strange goal.

The tally came just after Quick got into a tussle with Parise in the crease, and refused to let the Devils’ captain get up after he fell as Parise lost his helmet.

“I think we’re going to have to find another level,” Devils coach Peter DeBoer said. “We were a little tentative, as was expected for a Stanley Cup final. I think we got better as the game went along, but you have to play 60 minutes against that team.

“We have to be better than we were tonight.”

NOTES: Less than a minute into the game, the chant of “BEAT L-A” echoed through the arena. … Doug O’Neill, the trainer of Kentucky Derby and Preakness winner I’ll Have Another, was on hand, as was New York Giants offensive lineman Chris Snee and New York Jets coach Rex Ryan. … Volchenkov’s goal was his first in the playoffs since Game 3 of the 2007 Stanley Cup finals when he played for Ottawa against Anaheim. … Kopitar’s goal was his second OT winner in the postseason. The other was in 2010 at Vancouver. He has 12 points in the last nine games, including six goals. …The was the first Game 1 of the finals that went to overtime since 2002, when the Carolina Hurricanes defeated the Detroit Red Wings 3-2 at Joe Louis Arena on a goal by Ron Francis, just 58 seconds past regulation.

NHL Stanley Cup Finals 2012: Kopitar’s OT goal lifts Kings over Devils 2-1 is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

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NHL Roundup: Blues win over Oilers 1-0

93458559ea466425fd51f7fe0bc0c525 NHL Roundup: Blues win over Oilers 1 0
Jaroslav Halak #41 of the St. Louis Blues holds on to the puck after making a save against the at the Scottrade Center on January 19, 2012 in St. Louis, Missouri.
(January 18, 2012 – Photo by Dilip Vishwanat/ North America)

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Jaroslav Halak made 15 saves for his second , and Alex scored with 5:14 left in the St. Louis Blues’ 1-0 victory over the Edmonton Oilers on Thursday night.

St. Louis has earned points in a franchise-record 14 . The Blues are 7-0-1 in January, an NHL-best 20-3-3 at home and lead the league with nine shutouts.

The Blues are tied for second overall in the NHL, a point behind Detroit.

Edmonton has dropped 12 of its last 13 road games.

Halak, coming off a 1-0 victory over Dallas on Monday, has four shutouts this season and 20 overall. He improved to 10-0-3 in his last 13, hasn’t allowed a goal in 148:28 and hasn’t lost in regulation since Nov. 22.

scored his eighth goal of the season on a wraparound. He has at least one point in a career-best eight games.

RED WINGS 3, COYOTES 2, SO

GLENDALE, Ariz. (AP) — scored in regulation, then spun in front of the net and made a spectacular in a shootout to give Detroit its fifth victory in a row.

Three of the wins in Detroit’s streak have come in shootouts, two of them over Phoenix by identical scores.

Ian White also scored for the NHL-leading Red Wings.

Gilbert Brule scored his second goal in the five games since Phoenix claimed him off waivers from Edmonton. scored the other goal for the Coyotes.

ISLANDERS 4, FLYERS 1

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — made 40 saves, and Josh Bailey, , and Michael Grabner scored to help snap a 13- in Philadelphia.

The Islanders also broke an eight-game losing streak against Philadelphia, which had won 23 of its previous 24 games against the Islanders. The victory was the Islanders’ third in their last four games, and it marked the first time New York won in Philadelphia since April 7, 2007, a 4-2 victory.

Matt Read scored for Philadelphia.

BRUINS 4, DEVILS 1

NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — Nathan Horton and Gregory Campbell scored in a 35-second span in a four-goal third period that carried Boston past New Jersey.

Defenseman Andrew Ference tied it at 3:01 of the period and Horton and Campbell put the Bruins ahead for good as they beat New Jersey for the third time in three games this season. Chris Kelly had an empty-net goal.

Tim Thomas made 30 saves as Boston snapped the Devils’ three-game winning streak with the three-goal outburst in the 4:44 span. Petr Sykora scored for the Devils.

PENGUINS 4, RANGERS 1

NEW YORK (AP) — Richard Park scored the go-ahead goal 2:23 into the third period, Evgeni Malkin padded the lead with two, and Marc-Andre Fleury made 30 saves in Pittsburgh’s victory over New York.

Malkin has 24 goals this season, including seven in four games.

Fleury played in his 19th straight game for the Penguins, who have won four in a row following a six-game streak. Chris Kunitz also scored for Pittsburgh. Carl Hagelin scored for New York.

SENATORS 4, SHARKS 1

SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) — Colin Greening scored twice and Craig Anderson made 36 saves in Ottawa’s first victory in San Jose in eight years.

Kyle Turris and Erik Karlsson also scored for Ottawa. The Senators have won six of their last seven games and have points in 11 of 12. Anderson won his fifth straight road game and is 7-0-2 in his last nine road games. Brad Winchester scored for the Sharks.

JETS 4, SABRES 1

WINNIPEG, Manitoba (AP) — Ondrej Pavelec made 25 saves and Winnipeg extended Buffalo’s franchise-record road losing streak to 11 games.

Andrew Ladd, Tobias Enstrom, Tim Stapleton and Nik Antropov scored for Winnipeg, with Enstrom and Stapleton connecting on two of the Jets’ four power-play chances.

Drew Stafford scored for Buffalo.

MAPLE LEAFS 4, WILD 1

TORONTO (AP) — Phil Kessel scored his team-leading 25th goal, and Joffrey Lupul had three assists to lead Toronto past Minnesota.

Nazem Kadri, Joey Crabb and Mikhail Grabovski also scored to help Toronto snap a three-game losing streak.

Jonas Gustavsson made 20 saves, allowing only Nick Johnson’s late goal.

FLAMES 2, KINGS 1, SO

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Jarome Iginla scored the tying goal on a power play in the second period, Olli Jokinen and Michael Cammalleri connected on Calgary’s first two shots in a shootout, and the Flames ended a six-game road losing streak with a victory over Los Angeles.

Miikka Kiprusoff made 31 saves and stopped two of the three he faced in the . Dustin Brown scored in the first period for the Kings, who are 8-1-6 since Darryl Sutter replaced Terry Murray as coach.

Calgary’s victory was Brent Sutter’s 200th as an NHL head coach. The only other time he and his brother were behind opposing benches was Saturday, when the Kings beat the Flames 4-1 in Calgary. Darryl coached the Flames in 2003-04, when they were beaten in Game 7 of the finals by Tampa Bay.

PREDATORS 3, BLUE JACKETS 0

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Pekka Rinne made 38 saves — 18 in the third period — for his fourth shutout of the season, and Martin Erat had a goal and an assist in a 2:03 span in the second period for Nashville.

Mike Fisher scored on a power play, and Shea Weber had a long short-handed goal into an empty net.

Columbus fell to 2-3 under interim coach Todd Richards.

NHL Roundup: Blues win over Oilers 1-0 is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

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