Tatar, Vanek propel Red Wings past Penguins
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[February 20, 2017]
PITTSBURGH -- The odds still
seem to be against Detroit. The Red Wings are far below the wildcard
cutoff in the Eastern Conference, scrambling not to finish last.
For a weekend, though, they played like a team with plenty of
desperation and determination -- like a team that does not want to
see its streak of 25 straight seasons in the playoffs come to an
end. They scored twice early in the third period Sunday en route to
a 5-2 win over the defending Stanley Cup champion Pittsburgh
Penguins at PPG Paints Arena, one day after they beat the NHL's best
team, Washington, in a shootout.
"Two big wins. We knocked out Washington and (Pittsburgh)," said
winger Thomas Vanek, who scored one of those early third-period
goals. "You start chopping teams away."
Detroit (24-25-10) has one more game, at home Tuesday against the
New York Islanders, before its bye week.
"We've talked about getting on little bit of a run here," Vanek
said. "If we can get one more here coming into the Islanders at
home, that'd be a huge win. You take that break and you try to take
the best advantage of it. All in all, we continued to keep ourselves
in this."
The two wins in a row follow a five-game losing streak.
The Penguins (36-14-8), who were off Saturday, ended a string of
nine games in a row with at least one point. They became the last
team to lose in regulation since the All-Star break.
"They're obviously really talented," defenseman Nick Jensen, who
opened the scoring for the Red Wings, said of the Penguins.
"Sometimes you get pinned in your zone and they'll go to work on
you, and you just have to weather the storm a little bit. The
biggest keys that we did were we were tight on them all night. We
didn't give them much room in the neutral zone, and when they did,
we were on them pretty quick. That's what limited them on chances a
lot."
Red Wings goaltender Petr Mrazek made 26 saves to improve to
14-15-6.
Detroit took a 1-0 lead at 8:48 of the first. Nick Jensen, on a
two-on-one with Justin Abdelkader, faked a shot coming down the
right side of the Pittsburgh zone, got past defenseman Brian
Dumoulin and slid the puck behind goaltender Matt Murray.
The Penguins tied with a short-handed goal at 14:09 of the first.
Kris Letang got the puck in his end and opted to carry it out rather
than clear it. He set up Tom Kuhnhackl, who got a partial breakaway
and beat goaltender Petr Mrazek past his glove.
Steve Ott restored the Red Wings' lead, 2-1, at 16:29 of the first
with a backhander from close range.
"It's an easy game when you play with the lead, there's no question
about it," Detroit coach Jeff Blashill said.
That hasn't been the case for all of Pittsburgh's opponents. It has
won an NHL-leading seven times when trailing after two periods, but
the Red Wings avoided handing the Penguins No. 8.
Detroit took advantage of a turnover by Jake Guentzel in the
Penguins' end to increase its lead to 3-1 just 27 seconds into the
third. Tomas Tatar finished a give-and-go with a one-timer.
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Pittsburgh Penguins
center Sidney Crosby (L) reacts after scoring a goal against Detroit
Red Wings goalie Petr Mrazek (34) during the third period at the PPG
PAINTS Arena. The Red Wings won 5-2. Mandatory Credit: Charles
LeClaire-USA TODAY Sports
Vanek followed at 2:16 when he got a loose puck in the neutral zone,
moved in and scored from the slot to make it 4-1.
"We just need to come out with a little more jump in the third,"
said Murray, who made 19 saves as his streak of games with no
regulation losses ended at six. He's now 4-1-2 in his past seven
starts.
"You get scored on twice early in the third like that, it's not
going to be easy to come back from, especially when we're already
down," he said. "Both of those saves, I need to make those saves. We
definitely can't afford to get scored on early in the third like
that."
Just seven seconds later, Pittsburgh closed to within 4-2 on Sidney
Crosby's league-leading 32nd goal, a shot from the left dot that
went under Mrazek's pads.
Luke Glendening added an empty-net goal with 51.3 seconds remaining
for the final score.
The Penguins were 0-for-4 on the power play, including two chances
in the third.
"We've just got to execute," Crosby said. "It comes down to that. We
didn't do a good job of executing five on five and on our power
play. They were a little more desperate with the way they played."
NOTES: Pittsburgh LW Conor Sheary (upper body) has begun skating,
coach Mike Sullivan said. ... The Penguins honored C Sidney Crosby
before the game for eclipsing 1,000 points last week. He received a
plaque from team owner and Hall of Famer Mario Lemieux. Earlier, he
received a gold-plated stick from his teammates. ... D Cameron
Gaunce replaced D Steve Oleksy in the Pittsburgh lineup. The
Penguins also scratched RW Carter Rowney. ... The Penguins on
Saturday returned F Josh Archibald to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton of the
American Hockey League. ... Detroit D Mike Green missed a second
game in a row because of illness. The Red Wings also scratched C
Gustav Nyquist and RW Tomas Jurco. ... Detroit hosts the New York
Islanders Tuesday before beginning its bye week.
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