Log In


Reset Password
  • MENU
    Pro Sports
    Saturday, May 11, 2024

    NHL roundup

    Minnesota's Devan Dubnyk drops to his pads while making the save on a tip by the Bruins' David Pastrnak during the first period of Tuesday's game at TD Garden. The Wild won, 5-0. (Charles Krupa/AP Photo)

    Bruins 5, Wild 0

    Charlie Coyle, Chris Stewart and the Minnesota Wild just needed time to capitalize against Boston's emergency goalie tandem.

    Coyle and Stewart scored 12 seconds apart during a four-goal second period, Devan Dubnyk made 27 saves and the Wild beat the Bruins 5-0 on Tuesday night.

    "That first period was ugly. We thought it was going to be a long night if we kept playing like that," said Ryan Suter, who also scored. "We knew that we had more and we finally started to play the way we needed to play."

    Goals by Coyle and Stewart rattled the short-handed Bruins, who entered the game missing Tuukka Rask (lower body) and Anton Khudobin (right arm/wrist).

    Malcolm Subban made his second career start but was pulled after allowing three goals on 16 shots. He was replaced by Zane McIntyre, who made his NHL debut just hours after being called up from AHL Providence.

    Dubnyk got his 20th career shutout and the first for the Wild this season.

    "That's what we're looking for on the road," Dubnyk said. "We played hard. We got scoring chances. We outscored them. We were just doing a lot of good things."

    Subban started but was pulled after Suter's power-play goal 10:36 into the second period put Minnesota up 3-0. McIntyre took over and finished the rest of the game, stopping 15 of 17 shots.

    With starter Rask day-to-day and Khudobin out for several weeks, Boston coach Claude Julien said the Bruins didn't give their youngest goalies much help.

    "I don't care who's in net," Julien said "I think when you have some injuries you need to be better in those situations and we weren't good enough tonight."

    Jason Zucker had a goal and two assists, Suter added an assist and rookie Joel Eriksson Ek got his first three NHL assists. Jason Pominville scored in the third period.

    The Wild broke the scoreless tie 5:07 into the second when Coyle tapped in his own rebound, then Minnesota struck again when Zucker slipped a pass from behind the net to Stewart, who hit a one-timer past Subban to put the Wild up 2-0.

    "To add on like that was important because we didn't have a letdown," Suter said. "We got one and then we kept building on to that."

    Suter scored by one-timing a crossing pass from Matt Dumba just 5 seconds after Boston defenseman Adam McQuaid was called for cross checking.

    Fans mocked Subban's struggles by cheering McIntyre after a routine stop, but there was little else to cheer on the night. Zucker took a pass from Suter with 3:21 left in the second to give the Wild a 4-0 lead after two.

    "You look at what you could have done and you can't dwell over it," Subban said. "I've got to keep working through it. That's all you can really do."

    Devils 5, Coyotes 3

    Travis Zajac scored twice in the final 2:01 to lead New Jersey over Arizona.

    Taylor Hall scored twice and Adam Henrique also had a goal for New Jersey, which is 3-0-0 at home and 0-2-1 on the road.

    Hall, acquired by the Devils in a trade with Edmonton in June, has scored all five of his goals this season at Prudential Center.

    Cory Schneider made 28 saves to help New Jersey win its third straight against Arizona dating to last season, and its fifth in seven games against the Coyotes overall.

    Oliver Ekman-Larsson scored twice in the third period for Arizona to tie it before Zajac’s two goals. Jordan Martinook also scored for the Coyotes, and Justin Peters stopped 30 shots.

    Zajac ripped an off-wing slap shot for a 4-3 lead with 2:01 left, then added an empty-netter with 14 second remaining.

    Ekman-Larsson’s first goal came 7:51 into the third and his power-play goal at 13:53 evened the game. The second score was Arizona’s third power-play goal of the season in 21 chances.

    Hall’s second goal made it 2-1 about midway through the second period. With New Jersey on a power play, Hall gathered a pass from rookie Pavel Zacha in the neutral zone and carried it into the offensive zone before putting the puck between defenseman Luke Schenn’s legs. Hall recovered the puck as he moved to the inside, then snapped a shot that beat Peters cleanly.

    New Jersey went 2 for 3 on the power play and killed two of Arizona’s three opportunities. The Devils have killed 17 of 19 power plays this season.

    Henrique scored when Reid Boucher’s shot ricocheted off his skate and past Peters with 5:57 left in the second. The goal was the first of the season for Henrique, and it also accounted for Boucher’s first point of the season.

    Arizona has lost five straight on the road to fall to 1-5-0 and finishes a six-game road trip at Philadelphia on Thursday.

    Penguins 3, Panthers 2

    Sidney Crosby scored in his season debut as Pittsburgh rallied to beat Florida.

    Crosby, who scored on a power play, missed the team's first six games with a concussion. Carl Hagelin and Eric Fehr also scored for the Penguins, who extended a seven-game unbeaten streak against the Panthers.

    Marc-Andre Fleury, who has started the first seven games of the season for Pittsburgh, stopped 20 shots. Matt Murray, who backstopped the Penguins to a Stanley Cup in June, served as the backup to Fleury after missing the first six games with a broken hand.

    Reilly Smith scored a power-play goal and Mark Pysyk also scored for the Panthers, who have lost 11 of 12 against the Penguins in Pittsburgh.

    James Reimer made 19 saves in his second start of the season.

    Lightning 7, Maple Leafs 3

    Steven Stamkos matched a career-high with four points — two goals and two assists — and the Lightning beat the Maple Leafs.

    Frederik Andersen gave up seven goals on only 24 shots, the third time in five starts he has allowed at least five goals and fourth time he's allowed four or more. The 27-year-old has an .851 save percentage so far this season.

    Alex Killorn, Victor Hedman, Nikita Kucherov, Vladislav Namestnikov and Jonathan Drouin added goals for Tampa Bay, while Ben Bishop made 40 saves.

    William Nylander, James van Riemsdyk and Auston Matthews scored for the Maple Leafs, who outshot the Lightning 43-24.

    Red Wings 4, Hurricanes 2

    Dylan Larkin scored two goals to lead the Red Wings to their fifth consecutive win, a decision over the Hurricanes.

    Andreas Athanasiou had a goal and an assist and Thomas Vanek scored for Detroit (5-2-0). Petr Mrazek made 28 saves for the Red Wings, whose last five-game winning streak was Jan. 13-27, 2015.

    Jordan Staal and Victor Rask scored for Carolina while Cam Ward stopped 21 shots.

    An apparent goal by the Hurricanes' Teuvo Teravainen with 3:03 left was waved off because he deflected a shot in with a high stick.

    Athanasiou gave Detroit a 4-2 lead with 2:56 left in the second period on a wrist shot from the right circle. It was Athanasiou's second goal of the season.

    That was after Carolina scored twice in the second to pull within a goal.

    Flames 4, Blues 1

    Brian Elliott stopped 23 shots in his return to St. Louis, Johnny Gaudreau and Sam Bennett each had a goal and an assist and the Flames beat the Blues.

    Elliott was traded from St. Louis to Calgary in June, and the 17,337 in attendance serenaded Elliott with chants of "Moose," his nickname, on his first couple of saves. Elliott's best save came late in the second when he slid his right pad across the crease to rob Nail Yakupov on a rebound attempt.

    Dennis Wideman and Deryk Engelland also scored to help the Flames snap a seven-game losing streak at St. Louis.

    Kevin Shattenkirk scored for the Blues on a two-man advantage in the third, and Carter Hutton made 26 saves. After winning their first three games, the Blues are 1-2-1 in their last four.

    Flyers 4, Sabres 3 (SO)

    Claude Giroux and Jake Voracek scored shootout goals to cap a fantastic Flyers rally in a win over the Sabres.

    Trailing 3-1, Brayden Schenn and Mark Streit scored the tying power-play goals with 3:05 left in regulation.

    Buffalo's Dmitry Kulikov was whistled for charging when he wiped out Jake Voracek late in the game to start a scrum between the two teams. Schenn quickly followed with a power-play goal with 3:05 left to make it 3-2. Streit scored with 1:51 left in regulation when he knocked in the puck on the fourth rebound past a stunned Anders Nilsson.

    Travis Konecny also scored for the Flyers. Matt Moulson scored two goals for the Sabres.

    Stars 3, Jets 2

    Antti Niemi made 28 saves and the Stars beat the Jets.

    The win salvaged the last game of Dallas' 1-1-1 home stand. Winnipeg lost its second straight and fourth in five games.

    Brett Ritchie, Patrick Eaves and Tyler Seguin scored for the Stars.

    The goals against Niemi came in the closing seconds of the second and third periods. Joel Armia beat him to the puck to score with 5 seconds left in the second, and Mark Scheifele put in a rebound on the power play with 9 seconds to play in the third.

    Niemi made two big saves while the game was scoreless in the first period. He stopped a breakaway by Alexander Burmistrov and a shot by Scheifele on a 2-on-1.

    Seconds later, the Stars had a 2-on-1. Curtis McKenzie passed back into the slot to Ritchie, who sent a wrist shot past Michael Hutchinson at 14:37 and Dallas never trailed again.

    Senators 3, Canucks 0

    Ryan Dzingel scored two goals and Craig Anderson made 22 saves for his first shutout of the season and the 34th of his career as the Senators beat the Canucks.

    Jean-Gabriel Pageau scored into an empty net for the Senators.

    Anderson entered play with a 3.66 goals-against average and an .866 save percentage, but was flawless as Ottawa (4-2-0) opened a three-game road trip through western Canada with a solid defensive effort.

    Ryan Miller made 25 stops for Vancouver (4-2-1), which has dropped three straight and lost at home for the first time in 2016-17.

    After opening the scoring in the first period, Dzingel added his fourth of the season at 2:12 at of the third, taking a slick no-look feed from Bobby Ryan in front and beating Miller for the first two-goal game of his career.

    Sharks 2, Ducks 1 (OT)

    Marc-Edouard Vlasic scored less than 90 seconds into overtime to give the Sharks a victory over the Ducks.

    Joe Pavelski also scored for the Sharks, who snapped a two-game losing streak.

    Chris Wagner scored for the Ducks, who had a two-game winning streak snapped.

    Goaltender Jonathan Bernier, in just his second game with the Ducks, left the game following the first period with an upper body injury. He stopped 10 of the 11 shots he faced.

    John Gibson, who led rookies in goal against average and shutouts last season, came on and stopped the first 25 shots he faced before allowing Vlasic's goal in a 1-on-1 situation.

    Sharks goalie Martin Jones stopped 19 of 20 shots and improved to 3-5 all-time against the Ducks.

    Kings 3, Blue Jackets 2

    Alec Martinez scored 1:14 into overtime, and the Kings rallied to beat the Blue Jackets for their third straight victory.

    Drew Doughty scored the tying goal with 5:57 left in regulation for the Kings, who won their third straight overtime game after an 0-3-0 start to the season. Captain Anze Kopitar also scored, and third-string goalie Peter Budaj stopped 19 shots in his third consecutive win.

    Cam Atkinson scored a tiebreaking power-play goal late in the second period, and Sergei Bobrovsky made 27 saves for Columbus. Brandon Saad also scored for the Jackets, who had won two straight after an 0-2-0 start.

    Martinez ended it by putting a rebound into an open net for the defenseman's second goal of the season.

    Comment threads are monitored for 48 hours after publication and then closed.