Devils Win Crazy One Over Stars

What a difference a year makes. Last year, the Devils did not get their 18th win until January 15, this year, they notched it exactly one month to the day earlier, on December 15. They defeated the Dallas Stars in what was a real wild game tonight at Prudential Center.

Some trade news to begin the day, as the Devils traded forward Ryan Kujawinski yesterday to Arizona for forward Michael Latta. This is a pure AHL move, as Latta will report to the Binghamton Devils. Latta does have some NHL experience with Washington, so that is a plus if they call him up.

In injury news, Taylor Hall (knee contusion), Kyle Palmieri (broken foot) and Marcus Johansson (bruised ankle) could all return as early as this coming Monday against Anaheim. The Devils would love to have their entire group together and healthy for what amounts to the first time this season and that could be happening a lot sooner than later. That is a good thing, since, as a graphic shown on the pregame by MSG showed, 50.5-percent of the Devils’ goals have come off the sticks of those three men. The lineup tonight remained largely the same as the last game, with Ben Lovejoy and Dalton Prout being the healthy scratches for New Jersey. Nick Lappin remained in for Hall.

The Devils kicked off what would be their longest homestand of the season (six games) on a snowy night in Newark. Coach John Hynes had not liked the way the Devils had played in the backends of their last two back-to-backs, so tonight would be a test. Hynes also said that the goaltending would now “be a competition” and that Keith Kinkaid would not automatically start the second half of the back-to-backs.

In that regard, Cory Schneider got back in nets, stopping 28 of 30 shots he faced. He made some key saves, including a big one late in the game when Dallas had pulled their goaltender with about 3:30 left in the game. He would go on to be named the game’s second star. That Dallas goaltender was Kari Lehtonen, who was making his third straight start for the Stars. He had defeated the Rangers in a shootout and the Islanders in regulation to earn the start tonight against the Devils. He ended up with 21 saves on 25 Devils shots.

The Devils got the scoring started just 4:28 into the game when Steven Santini found the twine to make it 1-0 Devils. That goal came when Brian Gibbons dug the puck out of the far corner and sent a rolling puck back to Santini at the point. Santini fired the knuckle puck and scored to give New Jersey the early lead.

But Santini’s moment of triumph was quickly dashed when he got called for closing his hand on the puck behind the Devils’ net at the 5:00 mark of the first. The Stars were on the power play and they responded. Martin Hanzal scored from Tyler Seguin and Esa Lindell at 6:42. That goal was actually on Dallas’ very first shot of the game. That would tie things up at one.

In what was a penalty filled game, the Stars ended up 1-for-3 on the power play with eight shots while the Devils were 1-for-7 with ten shots. As we shall see, penalties would play a large part in what was a pretty chippy game for two teams that only see each other twice a year.

The Devils retook the lead with less than a minute left in the first period when Plano, Texas-native Blake Coleman scored at 19:06. The goal came when Coleman won the faceoff to Gibbons at the far hashmarks. Gibbons dropped to Andy Greene at the point, who fired on goal and the rebound came right to Coleman in front of the Stars’ net. He scored his fourth of the season and what is his second career goal against the team he grew up rooting for. It was 2-1 Devils.

Pavel Zacha would seemingly give the Devils a 3-1 lead as time expired, but the replay showed that time had run down just before the puck crossed the goal line. The call was no goal and the score remained 2-1 going into the first break.

The Stars would tie things back up at the 8:09 mark of the second period when the big Russian Alexander Radulov made a power move at a weird angle to get by Will Butcher and score on Schneider. Assists on that goal went to Mattias Janmark and Lindell. That tied things back up at two.

And then things started to get really crazy. First, John Klingberg was called for a vicious cross check on Brian Boyle at 10:56. That penalty was ultimately killed off by Dallas, but just as that penalty was about to expire, at 12:48, Stephen Johns was called for high sticking Miles Wood and ended up drawing a double minor. The Devils would have a few seconds of a 5-on-3 and then four minutes for their power play to get to work. Just as the double minor was about to expire, at 16:39, Brian Boyle would score to give the Devils back the lead. It came when Jesper Bratt worked the puck along the far half wall. He passed to Zacha at the far point. Zacha corralled the puck with his feet and passed over to Butcher at the opposite point. He one-timed it on net and, after a few whacks, Boyle was able to put it home to give the Devils the 3-2 lead. it was his 100th career NHL goal.

Following that goal, during the celebration, Boyle exchanged words with Klingberg (whom he had not forgotten had given him a hard cross check into the boards when he was vulnerable earlier on) and, eventually, Dallas’ Greg Pateryn stepped in. They went at it for awhile and when the dust settled, Pateryn was called for unsportsmanlike conduct, as was Boyle. However, Boyle also drew a ten minute misconduct penalty. He would be unavailable for the rest of the second period and the first half of the third.

The pushing and shoving continued throughout most stoppages, with Pavel Zacha taking a roughing penalty at the end of the second period during one such scrum. Dallas would have the man advantage going into the third period, on fresh ice.

That one was killed off and the Devils would end up doubling up Dallas at the 12:57 mark of the third period. Recent callup Nick Lappin got that one when he took the puck in the far corner and fired on net. The rebound came out to Jimmy Hayes, who guided it back to Lappin, who shot and scored to make it 4-2. Boyle had the secondary assist on that goal. Lappin was named the game’s third star.

Boyle would end up capping off a three point night with an empty netter at 18:00 of the third period. As mentioned, Stars coach Ken Hitchcock had pulled Lehtonen with about 3:30 left in the game and the Devils worked really hard to keep getting the puck out of their zone. It finally paid off when Boyle scored to make it 5-2. Boyle would go on to be named the game’s number one star.

Lappin and Stars pest Antoine Roussel got into a shoving match with about 7.5 seconds remaining in the game on a neutral zone faceoff to top things off, but the Devils pulled out the two points. It should also set up an interesting rematch between the two teams when the Devils go to Dallas on January 4.

Stats saw Sami Vatanen lead in ice time with 23:04, Drew Stafford (who was essentially playing the Taylor Hall role on his line with Nico Hischier and Bratt) lead in shots on goal with six, Coleman lead in hits and Brian Gibbons, Steven Santini and Damon Severson all tie for the lead in blocks with two each.

The Devils now stand in a virtual three-way tie with Columbus and Washington for first place in the Metropolitan Division. They have the same 41 points as the other two teams, but are technically listed as second place due to the fact that they have played less games than the Blue Jackets. It is a real dog fight in the Metro Division right now and the Devils are keeping pace for the moment.

Next up, Monday, the Devils will see a familiar face in their building when Adam Henrique and the Anaheim Ducks come to town. I will be attending that game and will hope to get a post up as quickly as I can. It is sure to be an emotional night as Rico returns with his new Ducks teammates.

Henrique With Three Points as Devils Beat Minnesota in OT

Coming off of a hard loss in Winnipeg, the Devils rolled into the “State of Hockey” in a good state. They felt that they worked hard and played well against the Jets, but got a few bad breaks and ended up losing the game. They rebounded tonight with a 4-3 overtime win over the Wild with the game winner coming off the stick of, who else? John Moore.

The Devils, on this road trip, were 1-1-1, including the games in Chicago, Toronto and Winnipeg. They would have some changes coming to the lineup with that lackluster record. Adam Henrique was shifted to a line with Blake Coleman and Brian Gibbons while Pavel Zacha slotted back into the lineup. He had been told by coach John Hynes about what the coaching staff and management wanted to see from him and he would come back in after sitting for four games. He would play the wing tonight. Jimmy Hayes, Stefan Noesen and Dalton Prout were the healthy scratches. Noesen slotted out with Zacha back in.

Minnesota had gotten off to a rough start, but have been playing well of late. One of the reasons for that was their goaltender, Devan Dubnyk who had a shutout streak last week that eclipsed 195 minutes. The Devils would not be seeing Zach Parise, who is out long-term after having back surgery. He will likely be out until February. The Wild are also below .500 on the road, but play above .500 at home at the Xcel Energy Center. This was the Devils’ fifth game already this season against Central Division opponents.

The Devils got the scoring started when Adam Henrque buried his fourth at 18:32. When Hynes put him on the fourth line, he was looking to light a fire under Henrique. It would pay off tonight. The goal happened when Gibbons came up the left wing and fired the puck. Henrique redirected it, and it ping-ponged around the Wild crease until Dubnyk ended up putting it in himself after he had seemed to settle it down. Andy Greene had the secondary assist on that goal that made it 1-0 New Jersey. The Devils would take that lead into the first intermission, marking the first time they had done that on this road trip. Minnesota was 2-7-0 this year when allowing the first goal of the game.

In the second period, the Wild would tie things up just 1:32 in when Nino Niederreiter scored on the power play. Steven Santini, who had quite a game, went off for hooking Jason Zucker and the Wild would capitalize. Mikael Granlund and Mikko Koivu had the assists on that goal.

After Santini took a second penalty, he would also get the Devils back the lead in the second period. It happened when Santini got the puck at the far halfwall and whipped it on net. It beat Dubnyk and the Devils had the 2-1 lead. The goal was unassisted. Santini had a very eventful second period and revealed during a second intermission interview with Deb Placey of MSG that today was his mother-in-law’s birthday. As it is also former Devils player, coach and broadcaster John MacLean as well as yours truly’s birthday, I figured I’d wish her a happy birthday here.

The Devils went into the third period with a 2-1 lead and would pad that lead a little bit at the 7:19 mark of the third. It came off of the stick of Will Butcher and was quite a bit more impressive than his first NHL goal scored in Winnipeg. It came when Henrique gained the Wild blue line with the puck. He dished aside to Butcher, who had joined the rush when a delayed penalty was about to be called on Minnesota. Butcher ripped one high glove side to beat Dubnyk and give the Devils a 3-1 lead. Ben Lovejoy had the secondary assist on the goal.

The Devils had a chance to nearly go up 4-1, when Kyle Palmieri hit the post with a wide open net midway through the third period. That is also about the time the game began to get more and more chippy. The teams were pushing and shoving after every play it seemed.

Minnesota cut the Devils lead down to one when Mikael Granlund scored his first of two with this one coming on the power play. Miles Wood was serving a holding the stick penalty against Eric Staal and Granlund would score at the 11:14 mark of the third off assists from Jared Spurgeon and Koivu. Overall, the Wild were 2-for-4 on the power play with eight shots while the Devils were 0-for-2 with four shots.

The Devils seemed to have things in hand but that missed opportunity for Palmieri would come back to bite them when Minnesota coach Bruce Boudreau pulled Dubnyk with 2:30 remaining in the game. Granlund would tie things up at the 18:24 mark, his second of the game from Ryan Suter and Staal. The Devils were unable to win the defensive zone faceoff and Granlund connected and the game was tied up at three.

Once time ran out, we were headed to OT. The Devils did not want a repeat of last week in Toronto and, in fact would not get it. Just 52 seconds into the three-on-three session, Taylor Hall stickhandled the puck through the Minnesota zone and back out to the neutral zone, delaying so the Devils could get a full change. He gave to Henrique, who had just come on the ice. Henrique skated into the Wild zone, and connected on a beautiful pass to a trailing John Moore. Moore, of course, buried it to give the Devils the 4-3 win. It was Moore’s sixth overtime goal (all with the Devils) and moves him to within two of Scott Niedermayer’s team record for OT goals by a defenseman.

The goalies had a good game for both teams, especially Cory Schneider. Schneider made 33 saves on 36 Wild shots in getting the win. Dubnyk stopped 21 of 25 shots on goal. John Moore was the game’s first star while Mikael Granlund was the second and Will Butcher the third.

Individually for the Devils, Andy Greene continued to be a minutes eater, logging a team high 22:05 tonight. Hall led the way with four shots on goal and, in a rugged game, Santini was the leader in hits with four.

Next up, the Devils return home to take on the Boston Bruins the night before Thanksgiving. The Devils currently stand in first place in the Metropolitan Division, and the feeling among some is that if you are in a playoff position by Thanksgiving, you usually make the playoffs. Time will tell on that, but in the meantime, we will have Wednesday’s game right here for you.