| Dell 
			gets first NHL win as Isles edge Sharks 
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			 [October 19, 2016] 
			NEW YORK -- Aaron Dell is a 
			27-year-old rookie goaltender who rode the busses in the minor 
			leagues for four seasons with three different organizations before 
			finally making his NHL debut. So he wasn't fazed by waiting until 
			the last second of his first game to secure a win a lifetime in the 
			making. 
 Joe Pavelski scored the tiebreaking goal with 2:11 remaining Tuesday 
			and Dell deflected a power-play shot at the horn to preserve the San 
			Jose Sharks' 3-2 win over the New York Islanders at Barclays Center 
			on Tuesday.
 
 "It took right until the very last second to make it real," said a 
			grinning Dell, who was still dressed in his pads as he spoke to 
			reporters at his locker. "I didn't really realize it until I got off 
			(the ice). So it was crazy."
 
 It was an appropriately chaotic NHL debut for Dell, who graduated 
			from the University of North Dakota in 2012 and bounced from the 
			Sharks to the Anaheim Ducks to the Calgary Flames before returning 
			to the Sharks organization in March 2015.
 
 Dell won the Sharks' backup goalie job in training camp but remained 
			on the bench until Tuesday, when he drew the task of starting the 
			second game of a back-to-back the night after San Jose played its 
			worst defensive game in years in a 7-4 loss to the New York Rangers.
 
 "It's special to play in your first game," Pavelski said. "It's 
			great to get a win for him and for the guys. First game on a 
			back-to-back night, it's not easy. It's not an easy position for any 
			goalie. He came in and did a good job for us."
 
			   Dell stopped 21 of 23 shots, but the first goal was an "own goal" he 
			accidentally generated. Islanders rookie Anthony Beauvillier was 
			credited with the goal -- his first NHL tally -- when his third 
			attempt at a put-back was batted into the net by Dell as New York 
			tied the game, 1-1, with 10:21 left in the second period.
 The Islanders took the lead just 2:10 later, when Anders Lee 
			corralled a puck just in front of the crease and fired a shot 
			through Chris Tierney's legs and past Dell's glove.
 
 The Sharks tied the score with 1:57 left in the second, when Joe 
			Thornton's pass into the crease ticked off the skate of Tomas Hertl 
			and under the left leg of Islanders goalie Jaroslav Halak.
 
 That set up a choppy third period in which neither team built a 
			serious scoring chance until Thornton created something with another 
			shot into traffic. Thornton fired from the right faceoff circle into 
			a gaggle of players from both teams in front of the net.
 
 The puck ticked off Pavelski's stick and sailed past Hertl before it 
			sailed past a trio of Islanders -- defensemen Travis Hamonic and 
			Nick Leddy as well as Halak.
 
 "He buys you that extra second to allow you to get open," Pavelski 
			said of Thornton. "When you get open, he puts it in the spot you 
			want. It's good to see that one go in, for sure."
 
 Islanders head coach Jack Capuano was frustrated by New York's 
			inability to clear the puck on the decisive sequence.
 
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			Sharks goalie Aaron Dell (30) makes a save against the New York 
			Islanders during the second period at Barclays Center. Mandatory 
			Credit: Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports 
            
			 
			"We've got to pick up sticks on that play," Capuano said. "(2:11) 
			left, get a puck to the net and it's in the back of our net."
 Pavelski was whistled for a delay of game with 1:06 left, but the 
			Islanders got just two shots off during the abbreviated power play. 
			A shot from the blue line by Brock Nelson bounced off Dell as time 
			expired.
 
 "You could see at the end the guys were really happy for him," 
			Sharks head coach Peter DeBoer said. "You could see the guys wanted 
			to do whatever they could to help him win a game."
 
 The seven goals the Sharks gave up Monday were the most they 
			surrendered since Jan. 8, 2015, but San Jose (3-1-0) has given up 
			two goals or fewer in its other three games this season.
 
 "It was a nice response game for us," DeBoer said. "I think when we 
			looked at it today, we were all a little disappointed with how last 
			night went."
 
 Melker Karlsson scored the Sharks' first goal 5:36 into the first 
			period.
 
 Halak made 24 saves for the Islanders (1-3-0), who have scored three 
			goals or fewer in each game this season.
 
 "It was a tough one, probably wasn't our best effort," Hamonic said.
 
 NOTES: The Islanders scratched C Mathew Barzal and G Jean-Francois 
			Berube. ... Islanders C Casey Cizikas, who played just 38 seconds 
			after the second period Sunday night after suffering a leg injury 
			while blocking a shot, was active. ... The Sharks scratched C Ryan 
			Carpenter, D Dylan DeMelo and LW Matt Nieto. ... Aaron Dell became 
			the 12th goalie to make his NHL debut for the Sharks. ... Dell and 
			Islanders LW Brock Nelson were teammates at the University of North 
			Dakota during the 2010-11 and 2011-12 seasons. ... The Sharks' 
			current five-game road trip is their second longest of the season, 
			while the Islanders' current five-game homestand is one of three 
			homestands five games or longer this season.
 
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