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Wings 5, Coyotes 1

The Wings wrapped up their five-game road trip with a commanding 5-1 win over the Phoenix Coyotes last night at Jobing.com Arena. They outshot the Coyotes 45-16, but didn’t pull ahead until the third period, when they scored four goals. Mikael Tellqvist, starting instead of Curtis Joseph, kept the Coyotes in it until that third period explosion, and deserves a lot of credit for it. The win salvaged the Wings’ trip, giving them a 2-3 record with which to be thankful after blowing the first two games.

Dominik Hasek was in net for the Wings and looked pretty good the few times he was actually tested. He looked a little foolish on the Coyotes’ lone goal, but it was a bit of a broken play and not necessarily his fault. He got an easy win as the Wings controlled the play for most of the game.

Both teams had penalty trouble all night. There was a stretch in the first period in which the Coyotes had a power play and then it changed to a brief 5-on-3 when the Wings got another penalty. After the first penalty expired, Phoenix continued on the power play until they got a penalty themselves. After a brief period of 4-on-4 hockey, Detroit went on the power play and soon the Coyotes had another penalty and the Wings were on a 5-on-3 themselves. Neither team could score, however. Penalties came often for the rest of the game, and the Wings made Phoenix pay by scoring on three of their power play opportunities.

The Wings looked to have taken a 1-goal lead at 14:29 after a shot by Johan Franzen went in the net off Kris Draper’s skate. Replays showed that Draper had moved his foot forward to propel the puck on net, and the play was overturned after review. It was a “subtle yet distinctive” movement, according to FSN road color man, Larry Murphy.

The Wings did get on the board nearly five minutes later while on the power play. On their second set up, Henrik Zetterberg took a shot from Tellqvist’s left. The puck glanced off the side of the goalie’s mask, right on one of the straps and Tellqvist’s helmet began to fall off. The puck fell at Tomas Holmstrom’s feet and knocked it in as the mask hit Tellqvist’s glove hand. The Coyotes immediately protested the play, saying the whistle was supposed to go as soon as the helmet fell off. The officials talked it over and awarded the Wings the goal, much to Wayne Gretzky’s displeasure. Apparently, the rule is that the whistle goes if the mask falls off only if the puck is not in a scoring position. So, 1-0 Wings at 19:11.

The Wings had a scare at the start of the second period. Just eight seconds in, Owen Nolan shot the puck into the Wings’ end and caught Nick Lidstrom on the knee with it. Lidstrom immediately fell to the ice in pain and laid there until the trainer came out. He was helped off the ice and made it back to finish the game, but it was about as scary as they come. Lidstrom remains the team’s most important player and they can’t afford to have him get injured.

During the Wings’ first power play of the period, Pavel Datsyuk got involved in a scrum after a play. It was the second time he’d done so last night, and was definitely good to see. He’s not just getting involved offensively, he’s evidentally trying to build a tougher reputation.

The Wings caught a bad break at the end of the period when a fight for the puck between Derek Morris and Robert Lang resulted in a high sticking double minor for Lang. As they were going for it, Morris knocked Lang over and Robert understably threw his arms up. His stick went with them and caught Morris in the face. Morris did a great job of throwing his head back and may have gotten the extra time because due to whiplash rather than blood. Anyway, the Wings had to start the third period on the penalty kill and paid for it right off the bat.

While still on Lang’s first minor, Yanic Perrault dished the puck to Zbynek Michalek, whose shot went wide of the net off the backboards. Perrault picked up the puck and sent it into the net just as Hasek, who had been caught with his pants down when Michalek’s shot went wide, dove across. 1-1 at :28. The Wings killed off the second minor.

Holmstrom put the Wings ahead with his second goal of the night at 6:57 following a faceoff. Henrik Zetterberg won the draw to Pavel Datsyuk, who threw the puck out front from the right wing. Holmstrom took the pass, spun a bit and got off a close-range backhand shot that was stopped. The rebound trickled out to Tellqvist’s right, however, and Homer got his stick on it, knocking it in and putting his team up by one.

Valtteri Filppula drew his second penalty of the night at 8:27 and the Wings went back on the power play. On their third set up, they capitalized. Zetterberg made a great tip pass over the stick of Morris along the right wing boards to Holmstrom, who centered it to Pavel Datsyuk. Datsyuk had all kinds of time to walk in on net and he used it well, moving backhand to forehand and beating Tellqvist inside the left post to make it 3-1. A great goal, coming at 10:11.

Holmstrom completed his hat trick at 14:52 when he tipped in a Nick Lidstrom blast from the point. Not much else to say about this goal, except that a few members of the large Red Wings fan contingent at the arena honored Homer by throwing their hats on the ice.

The Wings went back on the power play at 16:12 and Babcock sent out a bit of a secondary unit, with Andreas Lilja, Jiri Hudler, Jason Williams, Valtteri Filppula and Niklas Kronwall. The Coyotes took another penalty at 17:14, however, and Babcock sent out more of a top unit again. They made the Coyotes pay on a 5-on-3 power play at 17:54, when Pavel Datsyuk got his second goal and fifth point of the night. Kronwall took a shot from the top of the right circle and it was stopped, but the rebound was fought over by Dan Cleary and Datsyuk at the side of the net. Pavel got his stick on it and knocked it in to make it 5-1.

The Coyotes had a shorthanded 2-on-1 following the goal, but blew it and couldn’t connect.

By the end of the game, the arena was largely empty except for Wings fans, who paid double to see their team play in the desert. According to a Wings fan that was there (from an email list), the arena was filled to only 55-60% capacity, with large swaths of the lower bowl, seats on the glass included, empty. Wings fans are still the best hockey fans in the Phoenix area, apparently, even with the discrimminatory pricing the Coyotes have. Dave at Gorilla Crouch has more.

… The Wings have sent Joey MacDonald to Grand Rapids for a two-week conditioning stint. … The Wings have scored at least two power play goals in three consecutive games. … Holmstrom’s hat trick was the second of his career. The first took place on March 18, 2001 against the Sharks. … Box scorePlay-by-playShift chartGorilla Crouch

Overall, a good game by the Wings. The Coyotes had it rough coming off a long road trip, but their goaltender kept them in it for two periods and they weren’t able to take advantage of it. They didn’t have a terrible game, but they definitely don’t have the kind of weapons the Wings do and for all their talk about being a playoff team, they’ll find hard to win if they put out many 16 shot efforts. The Wings will face a similar problem when they host the Blackhawks on Saturday. It’s definitely difficult to come off a long road trip and since the Wings seem to fall into many of those historical hockey stererotypes, I don’t expect them to dominate like they have the past two games.

GameDay: @ Phoenix (20-20-2, 42 Pts) 9:00 ET

Update (3:55 PM): It looks like Josh Langfeld never made it back to Grand Rapids after being sent down on Tuesday. After the flu hit the roster, the Wings must have canceled the transfer (it’s no longer listed under the 9th), because they kept Langfeld around until sending him down for real today, as Ansar Khan reports. Apparently, they don’t need him any more because Kris Draper is over the flu and able to play tonight. - Matt

Tonight is the second of four games between these two teams this season. The Wings won the first meeting 9-2 on October 11, 2006 in Detroit. Mathieu Schneider had a hat trick and Dominik Hasek got the win. The teams will finish up the season series in February, trading home games on the 7th and 17th.

The Coyotes are suddenly one of the hottest teams in the league, having won seven straight and eight of their last nine. Five of those wins came on the road as they travelled to Washington, Carolina, Atlanta, Chicago, and Dallas. Now, they’re home for the first time this month, with a three-game homestand in front of them. The last time they were home, they rolled over the San Jose Sharks, 8-0.

Their recent run of success has head coach Wayne Gretzky saying “playoffs” but they’ll have to keep this up for a while if they want that to be a reality. It does look, though, like this isn’t an aberration, as they’ve been able to keep it up for a while now and against some very good teams.

One reason for their turnaround has been goaltending. They acquired goalie Mikael Tellqvist on November 28 and since they have been able to rotate starting duties between the Swede and Curtis Joseph, with positive results. Having two effective goalies has made the skaters more confident, as the Arizona Republic points out. Tellqvist has started the last two games for Phoenix, leading me to believe Joseph will be in net tonight on rotation.

The Wings have had a long January road trip of their own, but it has gone almost entirely opposite of the Coyotes’. They dropped the first three games to San Jose (9-4), LA (4-2), and Anaheim (4-2), before finally getting a win Tuesday night in Colorado (4-3 SO). It was one of their better wins this season, despite the fact that they needed a shootout to get it due to somewhat iffy goaltending and a couple bad breaks. They will close out the trip tonight.

Dominik Hasek will be in net, despite a so-so (in my opinion) game on Tuesday. Babcock must want the extra umph Dom can bring to the table against the Coyotes, since they’ve been so hot lately.

Apparently, the Wings will soon make good on their word and stop over-playing Hasek, as Chris Osgood will reportedly get more starts for the rest of January. That’s good to hear, but I’ll believe it when I see it. Osgood is slated to be in net Saturday against Chicago, so that’s a start.

The only player with a short-term injury at the moment is Mathieu Schnedier (knee sprain). He’s out tonight, but expected back Saturday, according to Helene St. James.

It looks like Kris Draper has the flu, and though he’s listed as “probable” by the Freep, I wouldn’t be shocked if he sat out.

The Wings need to pick up where they left off Tuesday night and come out flying again. The Eurotwins have to be as effective as they were against the Avs and the other lines will need to bring their own brands of pressure. Should be a good game, if the Wings are warming up themselves and Tuesday night wasn’t an anomaly.

The Wings neglect to sign MacLean, who goes to Phoenix

I’d totally missed this last week but it was pointed out to me and I was pretty surprised. If you remember, Don MacLean had an MVP season in the AHL last year, scoring 56 goals and notching 36 assists in 76 many games with the Griffins.

He was brought up to the NHL late in the season and played three games with the Wings, scoring a goal and adding an assist. According to MacLean, however, the Wings didn’t have much of an interest in signing him. So, Phoenix gave him two-year, two-way contract that will pay him the league minimum ($500,000) if he makes the NHL roster.

Quite frankly, I cannot understand why the Wings had no interest in MacLean. He may well prove unable to put up the same numbers in the NHL but surely he was worth giving a chance, especially given the loss of Shanahan. They’ll give little Jiri Hudler a contract but ignore MacLean, who has size, significant scoring ability and who was signed at a can’t-beat price. Real smooth, Kenny. Oh well.

Good luck in Phoenix, Don.

Link

TSN: Roenick returns to Phoenix

Well, so much for signing with a Canadian team, JR. Or with Detroit.

Link

Wings 2, Coyotes 5

The Wings ended their season series with Phoenix with a disappointing 5-2 home loss, continuing the trend that began November 5th with another home loss to the Coyotes in the second game between the two teams this year. Both teams finished with two wins and it is highly unlikely they will meet again before next season (the Coyotes need a miracle to make it to the playoffs).

It was a redemption game for Curtis Joseph and a “stayin’ alive” game for the Coyotes, who need the dominos to fall just right after having knocked over the first one with this win.

Before the game, the Wings held a recognition ceremony for their Olympic medalists at center ice. Robert Lang went out first, as the lone bronze medal winner on the team, and was followed by the five Swedes: Mikael Samuelsson, who left his medal in Sweden with his father, Niklas Kronwall, Tomas Holmstrom, Henrik Zetterberg and Nicklas Lidstrom. The JLA PA system played the Olympic anthem and what I’m guessing was the Swedish national anthem throughout all of this.

Mike Babcock’s starting lineup was the medalists sans Samuelsson, who is still out with a sore wrist and was once again replaced in the lineup by Mark Mowers. The other lineup change was Brett Lebda’s insertion for Jason Woolley. For Phoenix, it was the first game back for young defenseman Derek Morris, who has recovered from a knee injury.

Phoenix was sharp in the early going, getting a couple nice chances in the first couple minutes and generally looking like they wanted the win. This enthusiasm probably led to their first penalty of the game, an interference call that came at 2:56.

The ensuing Red Wing power play was decent and was highlighted by a near goal from Pavel Datsyuk, who just couldn’t stuff the puck past Joseph’s arm at the right goal post.

Kronwall had a fairly big hit at center ice at 5:04 or so. It would have been a lot bigger had Dave Scatchard not avoided the brunt of it. I’m looking forward to the days when people can’t avoid taking the full force of Nik’s hits. He’s getting there.

The Wings had the puck deep in the offensive zone and were cycling around before Mowers got tangled up near the net and lost the puck. It went the other way fast and the Coyotes scored on that rush. Legace made the initial save, off a tip-in of the shot from the left wing, but unfortunately kicked the rebound off his left pad right to a streaking Mike Comrie. Comrie made no mistake and sent the puck into the net past a helpless Legace, just before Mowers got to him on the backcheck. 1-0 Coyotes at 6:50.

Phoenix went back to the penalty box not long after that but the Detroit power play was cut short by an iffy hooking call on Pavel Datsyuk. Robert Lang, left all alone down low, had a nice chance from the left wing during 4-on-4 play but was stoned by Joseph for a nice save.

When the Coyotes went on the power play for 26 seconds or so after their penalty expired, Manny was forced to make a big save on Denis Gauthier, who was also left alone down low, but who fortunately didn’t get all he wanted on the shot. The Wings killed off the penalty but ended up giving up a goal before Pavel could rejoin the play from the box.

With the puck deep in the zone, the defense decided to attack Shane Doan, who had the puck and promptly dished it to Steve Reinprecht. Reinprecht was behind the Detroit defense by then and had former Red Wing Boyd “De-void” Devereaux with him. He passed the puck to Boyd and he roofed the puck over his former teammate to give his team a two goal advantage at 9:54.

One thing I hate to see in replays is a big #3 looking on aghast as the opposition scores on a helpless goalie. This goal was just another example of such an event. Lilja, do you have to try to be so useless or does it come naturally?

At this point Ken Daniels and Mickey Redmond starting comparing this game to Saturday’s, nothing how similar the two are but with the roles reversed. That kind of talk continued for a while.

Around 12:30, Pavel Datsyuk took a nice pass along the right wing and took the puck down the boards, cutting around behind the defense and skating in on net. He ended up sending it wide left, however, having got our hopes up for nothing. Geoff Sanderson had a similar chance going the other way almost immediately following. He too sent it wide left, much to Red Wings fans’ relief.

Brett Lebda found himself with the puck in the slot, wide open after it played pinball in front of the net, at 13:32 but his glorious chance went for naught as his shot hit Joseph’s shoulder from 26 feet out.

Thirty seconds later, the Coyotes were headed the other way on a 3-on-2. Devereaux centered the puck to Scatchard, who’s shot from the slot was in and out so fast it seemed like it hit the post. 3-0 Coyotes at 14:02. It’s gotten ugly.

The Wings put on some pressure and drew a penalty as a result. They set up the power play and got another penalty, resulting in a lengthy 5-on-3. They got set up again and very pretty patient with the puck, doing a good job of cycling it and keeping it in despite Phoenix’ best efforts. The result was their first goal. It came from Pavel Datsyuk, who one-timed Schneider’s pass and beat Joseph from the right wing. Lidstrom had the other assist (his 600th career assist) on the goal, which came at 16:32 and put the Wings within two.

Detroit looked better as the period wound down, getting a few nice chances that nevertheless were balanced by a very big Phoenix scoring opportunity with nine seconds left. Henrik Zetterberg deflected the puck high on what would have almost surely been a back-breaking goal.

The Wings outshot Phoeix 12-8 in the first but weren’t playing so hot on defense and were down by two as a result.

Mark Mowers opened the second period with a play he definitely wants back: he had Joseph down and out but sent the puck off the cross bar instead of into the net where it should have gone. Ah well.

It didn’t take long for the Wings to make up for Mark’s blown play, though. When Phoenix failed to clear the zone around 2:40 or so, Kris Draper picked up the puck and took it along the boards to the back of the net, where he centered it to Brendan Shanahan. Shanny was wide open in the slot and one-timed the puck but Joseph made the save. The rebound came right back to Brendan, though, and he one-timed that, this time scoring in the top right corner to put his team within one at 2:53.

After that, the pace quickened, with both teams getting chances. The Wings went on the power play just before the halfway mark of the period and though they put on a good show, they were unable to score. There was a bit of a scare when Steve Yzerman was roughed up by the Phoenix punks in front of the net. He skated off and went straight to the dressing room but he returned a couple playing-time minutes later, seemingly okay.

Somewhere in here, I noticed an interesting choice for a defensive pairing by Mike Babcock: Brett Lebda and Niklas Kronwall. A lot of youth and inexperience there, but it seemed to work out pretty well. A climes of the future (and a bright one at that).

The Wings started to get into some penalty trouble as the game wore on and it began to get in the way of their comeback attempts. Two penalties by defensemen in the second half of the period didn’t help, with the Coyotes looking to finish the kill.

The third began with some fairly even play in the zones but Tomas Holmstrom began an unfortunately timed parade to the penalty box at 4:47 and the Wings spent most of the first half of the period killing off penalties when they should have been focused on a comeback.

The Coyotes scored again during Jason Williams’ high sticking penalty, a tip in by Comrie off a shot from the point by Michalek. Manny didn’t have any chance on that one, it’s just unfortunate his teammates put him in the position of having to make the save when shorthanded. 4-2 Coyotes at 9:05.

After that goal, Gretzky’s team went to a 1-4 defensive posture as they settled down, confident they would win.

The Wings had another power play but couldn’t score, though it wasn’t a bad effort.

At 14:57, the Wings were awarded a penalty shot on a strange play. A Phoenix player had lost his stick and Comrie had moved it in the way of the puck while in the defensive zone, resulting in the call. Because Mark Mowers was the last Red Wing to have possession, he was awarded the shot. I initially thought the Wings had the choice of whom to send out and when I saw Mowers head to center, I wasn’t too thrilled. Anyway, Mowers tried much the same shot Lidstrom tried on Thursday, with the same result. Joseph turned the puck away easily with his blocker and the score remained 4-2 Phoenix.

Not long after that, Schneider went off for interference and the Coyotes got their last goal as a result. Somehow Shane Doan ended up all alone out front and he had Legace at his mercy. Manny fell pretty quickly and Doan put it over him as Lidstrom and Maltby tried desperately to get back in time to stop him. 5-2 Coyotes at 15:51.

To cap off the night, Brendan Shanahan was given an unsportsmanlike conduct and a game misconduct penalty at 17:08 and was booted from the game. Steve Yzerman served the penalty.

It was a disappointing game and proof that I probably went too far when I said the guys were over any Olympic hangover.

I hope they play better on Thursday against the Kings. I’ll be there with my Dad, having just bought a pair of tickets.

Abel to Yzerman’s game summary

Lines*

Lang-Zetterberg-Holmstrom
Datsyuk-Shanahan-Draper
Franzen-Maltby-Cleary
Williams-Lang-Yzerman
Zetterberg-Mowers-Holmstrom
Draper-Datsyuk-Shanahan
Shanahan-Yzerman-Lang
Cleary-Datsyuk-Shanahan
Datsyuk-Zetterberg-Holmstrom
Yzerman-Lang-Holmstrom
Datsyuk-Franzen
Cleary-Franzen
Maltby-Draper
Shanahan-Draper
Lang-Zetterberg

D-pairings

Kronwall-Lidstrom
Kronwall-Schneider
Kronwall-Lilja
Kronwall-Chelios
Chelios-Lidstrom
Lidstrom-Lilja
Lidstrom-Schneider
Lidstrom-Lebda
Lebda-Kronwall
Chelios-Schneider
Lebda-Schneider
Lebda-Chelios
Lebda-Lilja
Schneider-Lilja
Chelios-Lilja

PP

Datsyuk-Williams-Zetterberg-Holmstrom-Lidstrom
Cleary-Shanahan-Draper-Kronwall-Schneider
Datsyuk-Lang-Holmstrom-Schneider-Lidstrom
Shanahan-Yzerman-Zetterberg-Kronwall-Schneider
Datsyuk-Zetterberg-Holmstrom-Schneider-Lidstrom
Yzerman-Lang-Shanahan-Lidstrom-Schneider

*compiled by Brian

GameDay: vs. Phoenix (28-29-4, 60 Pts) 7:30 ET

Tonight is the final game between these two teams this season. The Wings lead the season series 2-1, with road wins October 15th (2-0) and this past Saturday (the 4th, 7-3). The Coyotes’ lone win came on November 5th, a 4-1 decision at the Joe.

The Wings came off the Olympics with an embarrassing 5-1 loss to the Sharks a week ago but put on strong performances in the next two games on their way to wrapping up a three-game West Coast trip. After shutting out the Ducks 2-0, they traveled to Phoenix for what turned out to be a bit of a wild one. The Wings jumped out to an early two-goal lead and looked to be in command but the score at the end of the first was 3-2 Detroit as the Coyotes, with the help of some fortunate penalty calls, stormed back to make the score more respectable. By the end of the second, however, the Wings were leading 7-3 and the result was no longer in doubt.

Although the guys looked “sluggish” in practice yesterday, it seems pretty safe to say that the team is recovered from any Olympic hangover and is ready for the final stretch of the season as they seek to lock up the top spot in the West and perhaps take a shot at the President’s Trophy.

The Wings kick off a three-game homestand tonight, a stretch in which they will play host to the Kings and the Hawks as well as Wayne Gretzky’s team.

Manny Legace should be in net tonight and will be looking to settle in a rhythm as the race to the end heats up.

Mikael Samuelsson did not practice yesterday and is awaiting the results of a second batch of X-rays, according to the Detroit News. His status for tonight depends on what the X-rays say and whether he feels he can shoot the puck as hard as he has been.

The Coyotes will be looking for revenge after Saturday’s game and know they need to win if they want to have any chance at all of catching the eighth seed, Edmonton by the end of the season. They don’t have a very easy schedule remaining, however, and it’s going to be tough enough without having to face the top team in the West another time. A win tonight might be just what they need to get the ball rolling, however, so I hope the Wings are ready for a push by Phoenix.

Curtis Joseph embarrassed himself on Saturday, giving up seven goals and taking two nasty slashing penalties but I expect he’ll be in net again tonight. He’s still their best bet in net and if they’re looking to put him on the trading block, they’ll probably want to showcase him before they do.

Wings 7, Coyotes 3

The Wings wrapped up their three-game West Coast swing with a dominating 7-3 win over Phoenix last night. They showed some real jump early but got into penalty trouble and had to withstand some persistent pressure from the Coyotes, who did not want to give up the whole game.

Five Wings finished with multiple points but most notable was Nicklas Lidstrom. His goal and two assists likely cemented his place as the forerunner for the Norris, though I’m sure it won’t be as certain as it should be because of the Canadian media’s love affair with Bryan McCabe. Lidstrom now leads all NHL defensemen in points with 58.

Mikael Samuelsson missed the game due to a sore wrist but was replaced in the lineup by Mark Mowers, who played on the line with Henrik Zetterberg and Tomas Holmstrom. Less than a minute in, Holmstrom took the puck down the right wing and sent a nice backhand pass to the front of the net. I initially thought Zetterberg redirected the pass over Curtis Joseph (I’m not the only one) but it turns out it was Mowers, who gave the Wings a 1-0 lead at :59.

The Wings continued to dictate the pace of the game for the next couple minutes and this resulted in another goal. Pavel Datsyuk was hooked with the puck out front, resulting in a delayed call, and Lidstrom moved up as a result, taking the puck and letting loose a shot that was stopped by Joseph. The rebound went right to Brendan Shanahan in the slot, who ripped the puck into the net and punished the Phoenix defense for ceasing to play when the ref’s arm went up. 2-0 Wings at 3:26.

Six minutes into the game, the Wings were outshooting Phoenix 6-1 but things began to even out as the refs began to make some calls.

The first came at 6:06 and the resulting penalty kill was a good one, with Manny Legace making a couple great saves. Andreas Lilja was called for holding the stick with 18 seconds remaining on the initial penalty but the subsequent 5-on-3 was uneventful.

At 10:23, Chris Chelios was called for interference but this was killed off as well. Immediately following the Phoenix power play, the Wings took the puck down the ice in an odd-man rush. Henrik Zetterberg took the puck down the right wing and looked to center it to Pavel Datsyuk but it was blocked by the Coyote defenseman, who had fallen in a desperate attempt to cut off the pass. The puck came right back to Hank and he had a wide open net because Joseph had committed to Datsyuk. Zetterberg put it in the net and gave the Wings a 3-0 lead.

The Coyotes really began to lay on the body after this, determined not to bow out of the game gracefully. They nearly scored at 17:58, when Mike Ricci’s shot gave Manny a little trouble. The play was reviewed but was ruled no-goal. The Wings went on the penalty kill, however, because the play happened on a delayed call.

The ensuing Phoenix power play was a good one and resulted in another Red Wing penalty 22 seconds into it, when Chris Chelios was called for cross-checking. The Coyotes wasted very little time in scoring on the 5-on-3, making it 3-1 at 18:38 off the goal from Shane Doan.

They struck again 52 seconds later (still on the power play) when Steve Reinprecht redirected Zybnek Michalek’s point shot into the corner on Manny’s stick side. Legace had no chance on that one. 3-2.

So, after starting the period so strongly, the Wings allowed the Coyotes to storm back and put the end result a bit more in doubt.

The Coyotes controlled the play more at the start of the second period but neither team was really able to get much going. The Wings finally got a power play of their own four minutes in but it was pretty anemic to begin with. The third unit was solid, however, and ended up drawing another penalty, giving the team a short 5-on-3 opportunity. They weren’t able to score, however, and the Coyotes got a lift from conducting a nice penalty kill.

Phoenix was very tight on the puck and there wasn’t a whole lot of room most of the time. When they weren’t as tight, though, the Wings took advantage. They scored again at 11:29 and gave themselves another two goal lead with a goal by Steve Yzerman. For most of the game, the Lang-Williams-Yzerman line had been rather weak, in my opinion, but they were good on that shift. Not long before Yzerman’s goal, Jason Williams had almost scored after taking a pass from Chris Chelios and tipping it into Joseph’s face (essentially). Yzerman’s goal was the result of a nice pass from Robert Lang from behind the net. The Captain shoveled the puck under Joseph as he was bowled over to make it 4-2 at 11:29.

The Wings seemed pretty energized after that but the Coyotes didn’t care. They responded with another goal at 12:49 to bring themselves within one again. Ricci ended up with the puck, which had been bouncing around the zone, and beat Legace stickside from 13 feet out. Not much chance on that one, just unfortunate Ricci was left uncovered.

Not long after that, the teams went to four aside as Joseph and Maltby were called for slashing and roughing respectively. The 4-on-4 lasted less than a minute, however, because the Coyotes had another player go to the box, giving the Wings a 4-on-3 power play. The Wings put on a textbook example of how to run a man-advantage and it resulted in their fifth goal at 15:10. Zetterberg, Lang and Lidstrom played catch for a while before striking with a shot in the slot from Hank, who had all the time he needed to rip it past his old teammate. 5-3 Wings.

Fifteen seconds later, the Wings struck again. I was so absorbed in writing down the notes for the last game that I only saw the tail end of the play and I missed the replays because I was writing busy writing on that goal. All I know is that it was a bad goal for Joseph to give up, a pretty harmless shot from the point by Lidstrom that just beat him before he was set. And Curtis knew it was bad. He was very obviously frustrated after that and dealt out a couple cheapshots with his stick, only one of which was seen by the refs. 6-3 Wings.

At 16:56, Joseph was caught venting his anger and the Wings went back on the power play. Wayne Gretzky did something to tick off the referees and he was slapped with a bench minor so the Wings got a full two minute 5-on-3 to work with. They did a pretty good job but weren’t able to get much going until the end. Mathieu Schneider let loose a blast with one second remaining on the man-advantage, though, and it ended up going in off Brendan Shanahan to make it 7-3 at 18:57.

So, the Wings took a look at the Coyotes’ attempt at a comeback and laughed.

Curtis Joseph was pulled between periods and was replaced by Philippe Sauve for the third period.

Highlights of the third included:

Henrik Zetterberg’s near hat trick off a great personal effort at 7:50 or so. His shot rang off the post, though, and he was denied his 30th goal.

Manny Legace’s big saves on Tyson Nash not long after that, causing Ken Daniels to declare, “He’s the ‘Manny’ of the hour tonight!”

The Coyotes getting another 5-on-3 chance but giving up a near breakaway to Nick Lidstrom instead of scoring. The play resulted in a penalty shot, Nick’s first, but fortunately for Phoenix, not in a goal, as Nick was stoned by Sauve.

The final score was 7-3, with Steve Yzerman getting credit for the game winning goal.

The two teams will face off again on Tuesday night in Detroit.

Notes
… Henrik Zetterberg has scored a point in all but four away games (Chicago, Edmonton, Phoenix on November 1st, 3rd and 5th and November 16th at Calgary). He finished the night with two goals, one assist. … Other multi-point scorers for the Wings: Robert Lang - two assists, Brendan Shanahan - two goals, one assist, Matheiu Schneider - three assists. …

GameDay: @ Phoenix (28-28-4, 60 Pts) 9:00 ET

Tonight, the Wings complete their Western road trip with a game against Phoenix. The teams have split their previous two meetings, with the Wings’ 2-0 shutout on October 15th and the Coyotes 4-1 response on November 5th. The teams will complete the season series of four games on Tuesday in Detroit.

The Wings are still feeling the effects of the Olympic break, the Freep reports, and it’s been evident in their play. They lost their first game back, by an embarrassing score of 5-1, in San Jose on Tuesday but rebounded on Wednesday with a solid win over the Ducks, 2-0. The story of the Sharks game was the absence of the team’s Swedish stars and the subsequent weakening of the overall defense that resulted in five power play goals allowed. The Swedes were back against Anaheim, however, and were involved in both goals as well as in killing off four penalties.

Manny Legace started against the Sharks but was benched in favor of Chris Osgood for the Anaheim game. Despite the fact that Osgood had a good game, Legace will be back in net again tonight as Mike Babcock gives him the opportunity to rebound.

The Coyotes’ return to NHL play was a bit better than the Wings’: they beat their division leaders, the Stars, 6-2 on Thursday (why, oh NHL, weren’t they playing on Tuesday or Wednesday? when my Wings had to play both days!). It seems the Olympics helped Wayne Gretzky’s team forget the four game losing streak that accompanied that scandal (remember that?).

They are expecting a sell-out crowd tonight but not by their own fans. The Arizona Republic reports that it’s “not surprising considering the opponent is the Detroit Red Wings.” Glendale is Hockeytown West, in case you didn’t know, and the Wings will have a rather large contingent of their own fans to help egg them on tonight. The ‘Yotes have won just four games out of 19 home games against the Wings since the franchise moved to Arizona. Not a very good average.

I expect Curtis Joseph will start tonight, which could create somewhat interesting dynamics, with Manny at the other end.

This game should be another “getting back in the swing of things” game, as everyone’s body clocks continue to adjust and players get used to the NHL ice surface again. With a full roster, the Wings ought to be able to pull off a win, I think, but the Coyotes may be about to surge given their commanding win over Dallas the other night.

NHL back in the press but it’s not a good thing

This is the last thing the League needs now. A nightmare.

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