Devils Downed by Flyers in First Meeting of Season

The Devils renewed pleasantries with the Philadelphia Flyers tonight, losing 5-3 on Prudential Center ice.

First off, happy birthday to “the Great One” Wayne Gretzky. He turns 60 today and the Devils even paid tribute to him with a video package (minus his time as a Ranger) on the big board.

In Devils roster news, Nolan Foote was assigned to AHL Binghamton on Monday.

Mackenzie Blackwood remains on the COVID-19 protocol list, so Scott Wedgewood made his third consecutive start. He stopped 26 of the 30 Flyers shots he saw, including making 9-of-11 on the power play and 17-of-19 at even strength. He finished with an .867 save percentage.

Just speculating, but you have to thing we might see Eric Comrie on Thursday against these same Flyers if not to just give Wedgewood a little bit of rest. Wedgewood’s shutout streak of 89:07 was ended with the first goal of this game.

The Flyers threw out backup Brian Elliott following Carter Hart’s “Ron Hextall-esque” meltdown in Philly’s loss at Boston this past weekend. Elliott stopped 23 of 26 shots against, stopped all four Devils’ power play shots and was 19-for-22 at even strength. He sported a .885 save percentage.

Statistically, Flyers were more dominant in the faceoff circle, winning 52-percent of the game’s faceoffs. Philly was 2-for-5 on the power play while the Devils were 0 for their lone power play. The Flyers played a much more disciplined game than New Jersey, as penalties continue to be a problem for the Devils. Each team had ten hits, the Flyers out blocked the Devils 11-4 and had 50-percent less giveaways at six to the Devils’ 12.

The Devils lineup remained the same as last game starting with the same lines and defensive combos. Connor Carrick and Will Butcher were the healthy scratches again.

First off, a stick tap to the Flyers’ Claude Giroux, who surpassed Bobby Clarke tonight in games played as the Flyers’ captain. He becomes the Philly captain with the most games played with the “C.”

The game started with a good chance for the Devils when Pavel Zacha was sprung fort a partial breakaway early. He shot 5-hole on Elliott but was turned aside.

Andreas Johnssson took a holding call at the 13:30 mark of the first. On the ensuing power play, Yegor Sharangovich rang one off the post on a shorthanded breakaway for the Devils.

But then a similar pattern settled in. The Flyers took the 1-0 lead on that power play when Ivan Provorov shot from the point and James van Riemsdyk tipped it by Wedgewood as he was all alone in front of the Devils net. The goal came at 15:03.

That Flyer lead would carry over to the second period and then… more of the same. Kyle Palmieri was called for goalie interference and Philly was back on the power play 20 seconds into the frame.

On this power play, the same play. Provorov shot from the point, van Riemsdyk tipped it by Wedgewood – all alone in front of the net – and the Flyers had a 2-0 lead.

This was only the second time this season the Devils were down by multiple goals. But hope was on the way.

It began at 11:59 of the second when Michael McLeod finally scored his first NHL goal. It came on a delayed penalty as Nate Bastian got the puck to Miles Wood, who went behind the Philly net, centered it to McLeod in front of the net and he tipped it over the goal line for his first NHL goal. The Devils had now cut the lead in half.

Things would be taken care of at the 16:43 mark when Ty Smith tipped the puck up to Janne Kuokkanen. Kuokkanen dropped the puck to Johnsson who fired on net. Travis Zajac was camped out in front and tipped the shot by Elliott to tie the game at two.

Smith, although playing a big part in the goal, did not receive an assist on the scoresheet. He would not score a point tonight and that would end his point scoring streak at five games.

The Devils nearly took the lead in the third period when a Johnsson shot pinged off of the crossbar and out. The officials called it a no-goal on the ice that was the correct call. Damon Severson would hit a post a few minutes later. This would cost the Devils in the long run.

At the 7:03 mark of the third, Nolan Patrick, recently recovered from a migraine issue, scored when Travis Konecny worked the puck to Giroux. He shot and Wedgewood fell down making the save. The puck trickled out to the far faceoff circle where Patrick was waiting to put the puck in the empty net. It was now 3-2 Flyers.

And Philly was not done there. The Devils went down two again when Joel Farabee scored at the 12:36 mark. Smith tried to make a backhanded pass to the middle of the Devils’ zone. The puck banked off of Scott Laughton’s skate to Farabee. Wedgewood was down again and Farabee scored, making it 4-2 Flyers.

The Devils pulled Wedgewood withabout 2:50 left in regulation, down two and, at the 18:24 mark, Provorov scored into the empty net unassisted. This followed a few Philadelphia attempts to pot one in the vacated cage. It was now 5-2.

But things were not over. Zacha, who opened the game with a chance but was stopped, scored at 18:52 when he put a Nick Merkley rebound past Elliott from the faceoff circle. Dmitry Kulkov had the secondary assist. That made the score 5-3, our final.

Individually, PK Subban led all Devils skaters with 22:50 of ice time. Jack Hughes led the forwards with 20:14. Shots were led by Zacha, Hughes and Severson who each had three. Hits saw Merkley, Matt Tennyson and Smith all lead with two each. Ryan Murray had two blocked shots to lead in that category. McLeod led in takeaways with three.

Faceoff percentage saw Zacha lead with a 66-percent winning clip.

The Devils were renew things again with the Flyers on Thursday at the Prudential Center again in their next matchup. Same Devil time, same Devil channel (possibly). See you all then!

Devils Hold on to Edge Rangers

The Devils nearly shot themselves in the foot with penalties, but were able to hang on to defeat the Rangers at Madison Square Garden tonight, 4-3.

Firstly, some roster news to get to.

Yesterday, the Devils claimed goaltender Aaron Dell off of waivers from the Toronto Maple Leafs. Dell is a good addition to the Devils’ crease following the retirement of Corey Crawford, who was expected to share time with Mackenzie Blackwood in net.

Dell has 87 starts and 107 games played in the NHL with the San Jose Sharks. He has a 48-34-12 all-time record and a career 2.76 goals against average and .908 save percentage.

If nothing else, he is a good NHL goalie who should take some of the workload off of Blackwood as the season wears on.

Now on to the game. Tonight was the first of eight meetings this season between the Hudson River Rivals. It marks the first time since 2007-08 that these teams will battle eight times over a season. Four will come at the Garden while four will be played at Prudential Center. It was also the Devils’ first road game of the season, although only being played about ten miles away from Newark.

The lineup once again remained the same for Lindy Ruff’s Devils. Why shake things up when they’ve been working well? Connor Carrick and Will Butcher remained out of the lineup as healthy scratches. Former Devils legend Kevin Rooney and Tony DeAngelo did not play for the Rangers.

In goal, the aforementioned Mr. Blackwood started his third straight for New Jersey, making 47 saves on a whopping 50 New York shots. Fourteen of those saves came on the power play, as the Devils beat a path to the penalty box and the Rangers got 16 shots on the man advantage.

The Rangers started Alexandar Georgiev and he stopped 16 of 19 shots faced. Igor Shesterkin came on in relief in the third period and stopped all eight shots he saw. The Devils had a total of 28 shots, including one of the power play, which Georgiev did not get.

The Devils were 1-for-2 on the power play while the Rangers were 2-for-6! Hey, I told you the Devils played with fire tonight. The Devils as a team had 12 PIM to the Rangers’ four minutes.

The Devils edged New York in faceoff wins with 51-percent over the Rangers’ 49-percent. The Rangers led in hits, 25-21 while the Devils led in blocks 18-10. The Devils played the sounder game, with only ten giveaways to the Rangers’ 19.

The Devils wasted no time in getting on the scoresheet. Just 32 seconds into the game, PK Subban stretched a pass along the boards from behind the Devils’ goal line to Miles Wood. Wood, who has been hot, barreled into the Ranger end, getting a shot off on Georgiev. The Blueshirts’ netminder could not control the rebound and a trailing Travis Zajac potted it to give the Devils the 1-0 lead.

For Wood, it continued a point streak, with a point in all three games to start the season. He is the seventh player in Devils history to begin a season with a three-game point streak.

The Devils would go into the intermission with the lead, but the Rangers would tie things 2:50 into the second. It came on the power play when Artemi Panarin backhanded a pass, after an Adam Fox shot rebounded to him, to Chris Kreider. Kreider put the puck past Blackwood to tie things at one apiece.

The Devils would retake the lead at 4:13 gone by in the second. Jack Hughes began a hot streak when Yegor Sharangovich won a faceoff in the Ranger end back to Ty Smith at the point. He shot and the puck bounced over Georgiev and landed just against the far post flat just outside the goal line. Hughes dove into the crease, behind Georgiev, to put the puck in and give the Devils the 2-1 lead. Smith’s assist made him the first defenseman in Devils franchise history to score at least a point in his first three career NHL games.

Hughes would complete his first career two-goal game and it would only take 4:19. At the 8:39 mark, Hughes blocked a shot by Jacob Trouba just inside the Devils’ blueline. He grabbed the now loose puck and was off to the races. He cut in on a full breakaway on Georgiev and put the puck five-hole past him. That made it 3-1 Devils.

But on this night, things would not be that easy. Again on the power play, at 12:09, Mika Zibanejad shot from just below the Devils’ goal line. He kind of flubbed the shot and the puck fluttered over Blackwood’s blocker and in. Fox and Panarin had the assists and it was now 3-2 Devils.

But the Devils would respond with a power play goal of their own at the 16:00 mark of the second. Kyle Palmieri found a seam to Hughes at the near faceoff dot. He looked to shoot, but instead passed to Wood at the side of the net. He seemingly kicked the puck into the Rangers’ net. However, because his skate was already in the position it was in and the puck kind of deflected in without a distinct kicking motion, the Rangers did not challenge and the goal stood. It was now 4-2 Devils on New Jersey’s first power play goal of the season.

The Devils nearly made it 5-2, but this goal would be challenged by New York.

It came a few minutes after Wood’s goal when Andreas Johnsson dropped the puck to Hughes just inside the Rangers’ blue line. Hughes skated the puck behind the Ranger net and passed to Subban at the point. Subban shot through a Palmieri screen and scored. This would seemingly give Hughes a four-point night.

However, Ranger coach David Quinn chose to challenge this one due to Palmieri seemingly being offside as he was entering the Ranger zone, just before passing to Johnsson.

The call on the ice was good goal but replay found Palmieri about two steps offside without control of the puck. The goal was waived off and it was back to a 4-2 Devils lead.

The third period saw New York’s Filip Chytil tie cut the Devils’ lead to one seven minutes into the frame. The period also saw Shesterkin come on in relief in the Rangers’ net.

Pavel Buchnevich dropped the puck to Phillip Di Giuseppe and he shot. Blackwood could not control the rebound and there was a mad scramble in front of him with Chytil eventually putting it behind him. This was the first even strength goal surrendered by the Devils in this early season so far.

The Devils nearly handed the Rangers the game with power plays when Smith took a holding call at the 10:45 mark and Nathan Bastian took a hooking call at 16:36. It should be noted that Brenan Lemieux (Claude’s son) drew both of those penalties for the Rangers.

But the Devils persevered, killing both power plays and winning a key faceoff when Shesterkin was pulled and Subban shot for the empty net, resulting in icing and faceoff in the Devils’ zone with about 11 seconds to play.

With that, the Devils get their first regulation win of the season, against their archrivals in a tightly contested game.

Stats-wise (and again, grain of salt – NHL.com has been wonky), Palmieri led in time on ice with 17:33, Zajac won 59-percent of his faceoffs, Wood led in shots with four, Bastian led in hits with four, Damon Severson led in blocks with five and Hughes led in takeaways with two. Severson also led all defensemen with 26:15 time on ice.

So, next up, the Devils will remain in the state of New York, heading to Long Island and the Nassau Coliseum to take on the Islanders on Thursday at 7 PM. We will, of course, have that for you right here.