NHL
roundup: Avs beat OT buzzer and Ducks
Send a link to a friend
[November 19, 2018]
Gabriel Landeskog scored the
tying goal in the third period, and Mikko Rantanen delivered the
game-winner with 1.3 seconds remaining in overtime Sunday to give
the visiting Colorado Avalanche a 4-3 victory over the Anaheim
Ducks.
The Avalanche had a three-on-two advantage over the final 15 seconds
after the Ducks' Pontus Aberg was called for slashing. Rantanen's
slap shot from the slot got past Ducks goalie Ryan Miller just
before a shootout was needed.
The Ducks stayed competitive all game despite playing four rookie
defensemen for the first time since 1994-95. Andy Welinski, Marcus
Pettersson, Josh Mahura and Jacob Larsson all saw action. Mahura was
making his NHL debut.
Miller made 38 saves while the Avalanche's Philipp Grubauer stopped
30 shots.
Stars 6, Islanders 2
Dallas scored four unanswered goals in the second period and cruised
over host New York as goalie Ben Bishop made 37 saves.
Esa Lindell scored twice in the second period and Alexander Radulov
scored twice in the third for the Stars, who have won two straight
following a two-game losing streak. Radulov's second goal was the
100th of his career. Roope Hintz and Tyler Seguin also scored for
Dallas, with Hintz collecting his first NHL tally.
Anthony Beauvillier and Scott Mayfield scored for the Islanders, who
had their two-game winning streak snapped and have lost four of six
(2-3-1). Starter Thomas Greiss was pulled after giving up three
goals on 19 shots. Robin Lehner stopped 11 of 14 shots in relief.
Hurricanes 2, Devils 1
Justin Williams and Micheal Ferland scored in the opening 30
seconds, and Carolina defeated New Jersey in Raleigh, N.C.
Williams notched a goal 22 seconds into the game, and Ferland's goal
came at the 30-second mark as the Hurricanes erased some of the
misery from a night earlier, when they had one of their worst
performances of the season in a 4-1 home loss to Columbus.
Pavel Zacha scored for the Devils at 6:33 of the first period, as
the game's final 53 minutes were scoreless.
[to top of second column] |
Avalanche left wing Gabriel Landeskog (92) moves the puck up ice
against the Anaheim Ducks during the second period at Honda Center.
Mandatory Credit: Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports
Blackhawks 3, Wild 1
Host Chicago got first-period goals from Jonathan Toews and Brandon
Saad, then used an empty-netter by Dominik Kahun in the final minute
to thwart a late challenge by Minnesota.
Corey Crawford made 39 saves, helping Chicago win for just the
second time in its past 11 games. The defeat was Minnesota's second
in two days. The Wild were coming off a 3-2 home loss to Buffalo.
Toews opened the scoring by beating Wild goalie Alex Stalock on the
power play, notching his 10th goal of the year. Saad made it 2-0
nine minutes later, scoring his sixth of the season at 17:29.
Minnesota's only goal also came on a power play, with Zach Parise
netting his ninth of the season at the 7:56 mark of the second
period.
Knights 6, Oilers 3
Jonathan Marchessault scored twice in a three-point game, and Reilly
Smith netted one goal and two assists as Vegas rolled past host
Edmonton. Marc-Andre Fleury made 29 saves in a much-needed win for a
Vegas team that went into the day's action sitting 30th in the
31-team league.
It was a second blown-lead loss in as many nights for the Oilers,
who have dropped six of seven games. Edmonton's Connor McDavid
opened the scoring just 52 seconds into the affair when he deflected
Matt Benning's point shot to net his 99th career NHL goal.
The Golden Knights took over the game with a three-goal second
period. After Max Pacioretty put the Golden Knights ahead for good
at 3:53 with a lucky tally -- on his crossing pass, the puck
ricocheted off Benning's skate and into the cage -- Marchessault
scored his first of the night on a power play 40 seconds later.
--Field Level Media
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |