Devils’ Win Streak Ends at Five in Anaheim

The Devils rolled into Anaheim the winners of five straight but the victims of a bad break. It was announced yesterday that Taylor Hall would miss 3 to 4 weeks after having arthroscopic surgery on his left knee to repair a torn meniscus. He was back in New Jersey where he underwent the surgery.

Michael Cammalleri would also not be with the team for this road trip. But there was some good news from he is expected to be back for the homestand in New Jersey. According to Deb Placey in the MSG+ pregame show, John Hynes said that his personal situation with his family is “progressing in a positive direction.”

So, without their top sniper as well as one of their leading scorers in Hall, they would head into California to begin the last part of a western road string. They had won five straight, their longest winning streak in three and a half years, although they were only playing at NHL .500 on the road.

Since the two clubs met in the Devils’ home opener back in October, some things had changed. The Ducks had gotten Hampus Lindholm back, signing him out of his holdout. Also, the Ducks were now atop the Pacific Division, a way better hockey team than the Devils had faced last month.

Jon Merrill made his season debut for the Devils, coming off of injured reserve to replace Yohann Auvitu on the back end (Auvitu was a little banged up following the Dallas game). In other lineup switches, Pavel Zacha moved from center to left wing for the game.

In net for the Devils was Cory Schneider who was solid, making 20 saves on just 23 Ducks shots. The Devils did a good job containing Anaheim, keeping them to only those 23 shots. Anaheim sent out a bit of a surprise, starting Jonathan Bernier between the pipes. He made 27 saves on the Devils’ 29 shots on goal.

Coach John Hynes sent out Kyle Palmieri, Devante Smith-Pelly and Ben Lovejoy to start the game, all former Ducks, similar to what he did with Vern Fiddler in Dallas.

After a scoreless first period which saw spurts of action – in the early minutes Adam Henrique put a little bit too much on a pass to Zacha in front that bounced over the big Czech’s stick. In the final seconds of the period, Cory made a big save and Henrique was able to clear the rebound from the crease. The Devils looked good going into the second frame.

Early in the second period, at about the 14:40 mark, the Devils were on a 2-on-0 when Beau Bennett took the pass and bobbled the puck and had to shoot from a sharp angle. Although he did not score on the play (which is frustrating for him, as he is still looking for his first goal of the year), the Devils did draw a penalty and would go on the power play.

But they would not score, as they went 0-for-3 with the man advantage, including late in the game when they had a chance to tie things up as we shall see. They did hold Anaheim 0-for-2 on the power play as well, so their penalty kill is still solid.

The Devils would finally break through when former Duck Devante Smith-Pelly scored at 10:32 of the second. It occurred when Jacob Josefson won the offensive zone draw for the Devils back to John Moore. Moore went point-to-point with Kyle Quincey, who fired on net. Smith-Pelly deflected the shot by Bernier and the Devils took a 1-0 lead.

Things looked in the Devils’ favor, as the team was 4-0-2 when scoring the first goal of the game and the Ducks had not won a game this season where they had given up the first goal of the game.

About three and a half minutes later, Quincey would find the back of the net himself when Adam Henrique and Pavel Zacha cycled down low and eventually gave the puck to Quincey at the point. He fired and beat Bernier cleanly, doubling up the Devils lead to 2-0. Anaheim coach Randy Carlyle would challenge the goal, challenging goalie interference on Kyle Palmieri. The replay showed that Palmieri was not near Bernier when the puck was already by the Ducks’ goaltender. The call on the ice stood, it was a good goal and Anaheim lost their timeout.

The Devils lead would last for about three and a half minutes until 17:24 when it would begin crashing down. First, Rickard Rakell scored his fifth of the year with an assist to Ryan Getzlaf. Less than 20 seconds after that goal, Jakob Silfverberg notched his sixth with assists to Korbinian Holzer and Andrew Cogliano. Suddenly, in a flurry of action, the game was tied up at two.

Cogliano would be at the center of a scrum in the middle of the third period when he gave Schneider a snow shower. PA Parenteau took exception to it and the teams started pushing and shoving. Emotions were high and Cogliano had been a thorn in the Devils’ side all night.

Things would remain tied up until 16:20 of the third when Ryan Kesler poked the puck in off of a scramble in front of Cory. Josh Manson and Silfverberg had the assists. With just about four minutes left in the game, New Jersey suddenly found themselves down 3-2.

But, the Devils would seemingly have a reprieve when Manson was called for tripping Zacha just 11 seconds after the Anaheim goal. The Devils were on the power play late and had a chance to tie it. They would pull Schneider with a few seconds left on the man advantage to make it a 6-on-4, but were unable to find the back of the net. With Cory pulled and repeated icings by the Ducks, they still could not get anything going in the offensive zone and ultimately fell 3-2.

The bright side, as the Devils head up to Los Angeles for a game on Saturday, is that it remains that all but one of their losses this year have come by only one goal. This also concludes the Devils’ season series with the Ducks, having a 1-1 record with them.

The team will need to regroup quickly. They lost a close one to a good Anaheim Ducks club. Now they need to be ready for the Kings and a 4 PM puck drop on Saturday.

Devils Rebound, Defeat Tampa Bay at Home

The last Devils win against the Tampa Bay Lightning came in December of 2014, five straight losses led to tonight’s game at the Prudential Center. The second meeting already in this young season for these two teams and their first of two in a week as they get set to do battle in Tampa next Saturday. This was the Devils’ first home game of the year against an Eastern Conference foe.

The day got off to some bad news as they found out that Blake Speers broke his wrist in his season debut with Sault Ste. Marie of the OHL. He will be out for at least six weeks. Speers had just been returned to his junior team for the season from the Devils.

There was still no battle of the World Cup’s Team USA goalies: Cory Schneider versus Ben Bishop. Cory Schneider got the start for the Devils, but Tampa elected to go with Andrei Vasilevsky. Schneider made 32 stops on 33 Lightning shots, while Vasilevsky made 20 saves on the Devils’ 23 shots on net. Cory was brilliant again tonight, making some great saves especially while Tampa was on the power play.

The Devils had a little bit of luck, as it were, as Nikita Kucherov was not in the lineup for the Bolts. He joined Matt Taormina as Tampa’s scratches. Scratched for New Jersey were Reid Boucher and Jacob Josefson.

Adam Henrique got the scoring started off, giving the Devils a 1-0 lead just 3:57 into the game. It came on a breakaway off of a nice outlet pass from Damon Severson. Henrique ripped the puck short side and beat Vasilevsky to get the Devils rolling. Michael Cammalleri had the secondary assist. The goal was Henrique’s 100th career NHL goal. Congratulations to him on that milestone.

The good news was that the Devils had the lead; the bad news was that the Devils had not won a game this season where they led first. The question was, would they be able to keep the lead with Tampa Bay, one of the top scoring teams in the Eastern Conference and the NHL?

Damon Severson had the answer to that question at 13:13 (appropriate as the Devils were celebrating Halloween tonight a few days early) of the first. It started when Kyle Palmieri went point-to-point with Andy Greene. Greene gave to Henrique, who fired from the slot and the rebound came out to Severson, who was pinching in. He buried it and the Devils had a 2-0 lead. It was the second goal in as many games by a New Jersey defenseman. It was also Damon Severson’s first goal since December 11, 2015, breaking a 51 game goal drought.

The second period kicked off with Cedric Paquette and Sergey Kalinin squaring off just 39 seconds in to the frame. Kalinin was able to get a good right hand in and dropped Paquette, winning the fight in a rout and setting the tone for the Devils. Paquette was trying to get his team back into the game, but Kalinin answered the call.

A minute and a half or so later, Henrique went off the ice for cross checking Tyler Johnson and it looked like Tampa might be back into things. The PK unit ended up staying on the ice for the majority of the penalty, but Cory was able to keep the Lightning off the board with a few good stops.

The Devils had been looking to two players in particular to find the back of the net, one was Michael Cammalleri and the other was Devante Smith-Pelly. Smith-Pelly would do his part when he scored at 5:22 of the second period. The play began when Kyle Quincey pinched in to keep the puck in the Tampa zone. He gave the puck to Nick Lappin, who shoveled it in front to Smith-Pelly who finished it, putting it behind Vasilevsky. Smith-Pelly was very physical in front of the net, winning the battle for position and being in the right spot to put the pass home. The assist to Lappin was his first NHL point and Quincey’s assist was his first point as a Devil. New Jersey now enjoyed a 3-0 lead. This also marked the Devils’ first three goal lead this season, as they scored on their first shot of the second period.

The Devils looked to add to it late in the second frame when PA Parenteau and Henrique had a 2-on-1 odd man rush, but Vasilevsky was able to make the blocker save.

Things would get a little bit closer as the Bolts came flying out of the gate in the third period. And sure enough, Tyler Johnson scored just 1:59 into the period to break Schneider’s shut out and cut the Devils’ lead to 3-1. The lone assist went to Brayden Point.

Michael Cammalleri was stopped on a breakaway midway through the third period. He has not scored since December of 2015 due to his injury-plagued season last year. He did have a good game, however.

Tampa coach Jon Cooper would pull Vasilevsky with a little over three minutes left in the game, but to no avail. The Devils held out and were able to hold on for the 3-1 win.

On the night, the Devils’ power play went 0-for-1 while Tampa did not score in four chances with the man advantage.

Next up on the docket for the Devils, it’s more of the same as they head to Florida to first take on the Panthers in Sunrise on Thursday (yes, the Devils go almost a full work week without playing a game). They then meet up with the Lightning again next Saturday this time at Amalie Arena, completing the season series then.