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GameDay: vs. Minnesota (15-10-2, 32 Pts) 7:30 ET

Update (7:55 PM): Abel to Yzerman has the usual liveblog-in-comment-thread going on.  - Matt

Update (7:38 PM): If you’re an out-of-market fan and can’t watch the game on NHL Center Ice because of the NHL Network blackout, you can catch it online here on NHL TV. It’s even the FSN Detroit feed. - Matt

Update (4:05 PM): Looks like it won’t be Niklas Backstrom in net for the Wild after all, as Michael Russo (after disparaging comments about Detroit) reports that Josh Harding will start instead. That’s a bit of a relief, as Backstrom is one of the League’s better young goalies. (via Snapshots) - Matt

Update (3:15 PM): George Sipple reports that Kirk Maltby told hhim he’d see a specialist today in an effort to understand what’s going on with his back, which has kept him out of the past four games. Malts says that it’s no worse than it was, but it’s no better, despite rest. Hopefully the doctor will have good news. - Matt

Update (3:10 PM): Bruce MacLeod has an update from practice. Nothing new, as Kirk Maltby (back) did not skate and Kris Draper (knee) only skated on his own. - Matt

In a hurry this morning, so this’ll be brief:

Tonight is the first of four games between these two teams this season. The Wings won series last year, 3-1. They’ll meet again on the 20th of this month, the 10th of next month, and the 5th of the month after that to wrap things up.

The Wild had a four-game winning streak snapped on Wednesday with a 3-1 loss to Philadelphia at home. Tonight’s game kicks off a five-game road trip that will take them next to Columbus (tomorrow), San Jose, Anaheim, and LA.

Marian Gaborik is the team leader in goals with 10 and in assists with 22. Pierre-Marc Bouchard is the leader in assists with 19.

The Wild have a fair number of injuries. Via the Freep: “D Nick Schultz (throat), out; F Mark Parrish (hip), D Kurtis Foster (face), F Derek Boogaard (back), C Mikko Koivu (knee), D Petteri Nummelin (head), questionable.”

Niklas Backstrom should be the starter tonight for Minnesota. He’s posted a 2.26 GAA and .915 save-percentage thus far this season.

For the Wild perspective, see The State of Hockey News, Wild Puck Banter, Casual Hockey, Puck Wild, In the State of Hockey, and Land of Lakes and Hockey.

The Wings have won their last four and are coming off a dominating performance against the Montreal Canadiens. Tonight is the first of a two-game mini-homestand. They’ll see Carolina next, on Sunday, before heading to Nasvhville Monday.

Henrik Zetterberg still leads in goals with 18, but Pavel Datsyuk is making a bid to catch up, having scored seven over his last five. He has 11 now, and leads in assists with 20.

Kris Draper (knee) and Kirk Maltby (back) are both out tonight, which means Matt Ellis and Aaron Downey will remain in the lineup and on the fourth line.

Dominik Hasek will get his second consecutive start.

For more of the Wings perspective, see Snapshots, Gorilla Crouch, Abel to Yzerman, HockeyTownTodd, Gloveside, Behind the Jersey, No Pun Intended, Red Wings Nation, and Winging It In Motown.

The Wild had a stretch of strong play interrupted by the Flyers this week and will be looking to pick up where they left off before that game. The Wings need to continue with the strong defense that shut down the Montreal power play and find a way to shut down Marian Gaborik. It should be an interesting game, with both teams great on defense, but with different styles.

Thursday game to be televised

The Freep reports that FSN will carry the Wings’ exhibition game against the Wild at 7:30 PM on Thursday night. It’s the first time those of us who weren’t able to go to Traverse City will be able to see the guys in action. I’ve got a busy week coming up, but I’ll do my best to get a game report posted.

Wings 3, Wild 1

The Wings won the first round of their three game series with Minnesota last night, 3-1 at the Joe. It wasn’t the team’s best performance, but Dominik Hasek was stellar, making 34 saves and keeping the Wild out of it. It was definitely a case of goaltending winning the game for the Wings. It doesn’t happen very often, but when it does, seeing Hasek in net is a good feeling.

Dan Cleary, who’s been playing center lately, started the game for the Wings with Robert Lang and Jason Williams on his wings. Chris Chelios and Brett Lebda held the blueline. Next out were Henrik Zetterberg, Pavel Datsyuk, and Tomas Holmstrom. Neither line did a whole heck of a lot and as play was uneventful for the first two minutes or so, though it was continuous. The Wild were already in a 1-2-2, clogging the neutral zone and making it difficult for the Wings to get through.

Around the 3:00 mark, things heated up a bit as the Grand Rapids Line of Jiri Hudler, Valtteri Filppula, and Matt Ellis - with Brett Lebda on the blueline to round it out - put on a show in the Wild zone for about a whole shift. Ellis kicked things off with a chance out in front of the net and his linemates then began what looked like a power play. They cycled the puck along the boards and generated some serious pressure, which culminated in a near-spectacular play by Hudler.

With Manny Fernandez on his stomach following a flurry around the net, the puck came loose as Hudler fell to his knees with his back to the net. He somehow turned and got a shot off at the open net only to see a Wild defenseman deflect it wide. It still nearly went in as another Wild player deflected it again at the far goalpost. In the end, the kids forced a faceoff which would lead directly to a goal. Great shift by the young guns.

After Fernandez froze the puck, Zetterberg’s line came over the boards to take the faceoff in the right circle. Hank won it to Holmstrom, who got it back to Niklas Kronwall on the blueline while Zetterberg headed to the net. Kronwall’s shot went wide off the backboards but the puck was picked up by Zetterberg, who took it around behind the net and scored a back-hand wrap-around goal through Fernandez’s 5-hole at 4:00. 1-0 Wings.

Around the 6:00 mark, the game lost all flow as there were a number of play stoppages and faceoffs. The Wild put the screws to the Wings for about a minute beginning at 7:00, but they were held off, though the Wings had to ice the puck.

Pavel Datsyuk and Company had a good shift around 9:00, with Pavel getting off a shot on a nice scoring chance only to be stopped. Minnesota reciprocated with a good minute of offensive zone possession, getting off a couple shots, but the Wings cleared the zone. The Wild brought it back in right away, but were offsides so play was stopped as the game became choppy again.

At 11:53, Brian Rolston was sent to the box for holding and the Wings got their first power play. They shot the puck into the zone only to have it cleared pretty much right away. The Wild took it the other way and Pascal DuPuis had a great shorthanded chance as he split the Wings defense just before he got to the net. Hasek made a great play with his stick, however, poke-checking the puck away before DuPuis could capitalize on his chance.

The rest of the power play went like this: The Wings set up, with Schneider passing it to Lidstrom, who took a shot that resulted in a flurry out front with Hudler swiping at it. That led to a faceoff and a subsequent set up by the Wings. Jason Williams, on the blueline again, blew it for the Wings, however, with a bad pass that led to the puck being cleared. Henrik Zetterberg took it back in right away and had the Wild defense at his mercy as he skated around them like pylons only to continue on behind the net without shooting. He threw it out front and Williams got off a weak shot that went wide.

At 14:50, the Wild evened the score off a strange goal by Stephane Veilleux. Veilleux took the shot from 54 feet out but it immediately went off Chelios’ skate and started bouncing. Hasek apparently had expected it to go wide or something and wasn’t quite set as it reached him. It went over his right pad and into the net. My immediate reaction was that it was a weak goal, but the replays vindicated Dom somewhat. Still, it wasn’t a hard shot and he probably should have been able to stop it. He made up for it later, however, so no worries.

The Wings went back on the power play 15:59 but it was pretty uneventful.

At this stage of the game, the Wings were controlling play, but the Wild were patiently playing their game.

Towards the end of the period, the Wild began to assert themselves, however, with a little help from the Wings. Around 18:50, the Wings lost a defensive zone faceoff and it resulted in a quick shot by Mark Parrish that forced Hasek to be sharp. 30 seconds or so later, Andreas Lilja made a crap-tastic backhand pass at his own blueline, virtually handing Mikko Koivu the puck on a silver platter. Seriously, Andreas, don’t they teach you at Defenseman School that outlet passes are supposed to go up ice, not across it?

Anyway, Koivu broke in and Mathieu Schneider had to bail his defense partner out. He took a penalty in the process (don’t be too hard on him, he may have prevented a goal), and the Wild got their first power play at 19:24. They didn’t do anything with it, though, until the second period.

FSN interviewed Zetterberg during the first intermission and they asked him the predictable question: how do the Wings regain the lead in this game and keep the Wild out of it? (paraphrase) He said something about attacking and then said, “we need to be a little more safe on the blueline.” If he was referring to Lilja’s turnover, he must have said much the same thing in the lockerroom a couple minutes later because Andreas came out in the second and third periods and played some great hockey.

The Wild started the second period on the power play and made pretty good use of it, keeping the Wings on their toes and forcing Hasek to make some good saves. Schneider’s penalty was killed off, however, in spite of their efforts.

I didn’t get the time, but Pavel Datsyuk made a nice play at the Wild blueline in a rush for the puck. Knowing he was slightly of position and wasn’t going to be able to beat the Wild player to the puck, he took his stick and held up his opponent’s for just a second until he could wheel around and get the puck. Just a smart play by a smart player, though in today’s NHL, it could have easily been called interference. I personally think the League should let stick-on-stick play go, so I’m glad Pavel wasn’t called.

Anyway, the Wild came close to taking the lead at 3:35, when Brian Rolston sent the puck off the goalpost. After that, play went up and down the ice, with neither team really having a clear advantage for a few minutes as there were no whistles.

Around the 6:00 mark, Matt Ellis was promoted to Robert Lang’s line with Dan Cleary, replacing Jason Williams. Ellis became much more noticeable after that.

The Wild had somewhat taken control of the game and were pressuring the Wings when Kris Draper took a holding penalty at 7:53. Minnesota set up and cycled the puck, getting off a shot or two before Detroit was able to clear it. They sent the puck the length of the ice, and Johan Franzen and Dan Cleary followed it. Fernandez misplayed it at the side of the net and set it up for Franzen to take behind the goalline. Johan centered it to Cleary, who went down on one knee to blast the puck from 18 feet out, beating Fernandez for his 14th goal of the season. The goal came at 9:10 and put the Wings ahead 2-1.

The Wild weren’t able to do much with the power play after that and the penalty was killed off.

Pavel Datsyuk and Company, with support from the defense, pressured the Wild into taking a penalty at 10:42. The Wings’ power play was soon halted briefly by an odd sequence of events that led to off-setting penalties. With Lidstrom handling the puck at center in front of his own bench, Veilleux decided to take a run at the Wings captain. Nick easily side-stepped the hit and left the boards open to take the brunt of the hit. Veilleux went half-over into the Wings’ bench, losing his stick in the process as Andreas Lilja, Niklas Kronwall and Chris Chelios looked on, bemused.

He tried to get back his stick, which must have fallen to the floor at the Wings’ feet, but had some trouble and decided to throw a fit. He lashed out at Kronwall, provoking an angry response from Lilja. The official immediately slapped them both with penalties, roughing for Veilleux and interference for Lilja. Not sure why Lilja got called, but whatever.

The Wings’ power play continued until Hudler took a weak hooking call at 11:49. I thought refs usually didn’t like it when players sell a penalty to them, but whoever made that call ate it up. With the teams skating four a side for 53 seconds, there was a momentary scare as Pavel Datsyuk spontaneously lost his balance and went nearly head first into the boards. Soon after that, Pavol Demitra nearly had a breakaway, but Hasek came way out of his net to knock the puck away before it developed.

Once the Wild penalty expired, they went on the power play, which was soon augmented by Lidstrom’s holding the stick penalty that handed them a 20-second 5-on-3 advantage. Babcock put Henrik Zetterberg, Chris Chelios, and Andreas Lilja out there for this sequence, but Lilja stole the show with some great defensive plays, even after he lost his stick. That’s the thing about Lilja. He plays pretty average (at times even mediocre) for games at a time and then he’ll suddenly play like an All Star.

Anyway, the Wild set up again after the puck was cleared, but by that time, Hudler was out of the box and it was just a regular power play. Minnesota did the Wings’ work for them when they cleared the puck on a blueline miscue. The Wild brought it back in, though, and their pressure continued after Lidstrom penalty expired. The Wings were pretty well covered in their zone, however, as they had three defensemen (Kronwall, Schneider, Lidstrom) and two defensive forwards (Draper, Franzen) holding off them off.

Brett Lebda made a rare major mistake at 16:05, giving away the puck right in front of the Wings’ net. Hasek was on top of things, however, and made a great save on Joel Ward.

The Wings took a two-goal lead at 18:13. Kris Draper took the puck over the blueline and, after waiting a second, released shot. It went off a Wild skate and deflected right to Lidstrom, who had the entire left side of the zone to himself. His blast blew through Fernandez to make the score 3-1.

The period wound down after that, with little to report.

During the second intermission, FSN had a nice segment on the NHL’s Video Room. I didn’t come away with all kinds of confidence in the system, however. The night FSN was there to tape the guys in the Room, it was slow and there wasn’t a ton going on. They did have to review a goal, however, and the impression I got was that they looked at it on this screen the size of the average computer monitor. Then, one guy said, “No goal. You guys comfortable with ‘no goal’?” The other guys muttered some kind of assent and that was the ruling that came down from the vaunted Toronto office. Um, if that’s all you have to do, I want that job.

The third period was extremely boring, as the Wild really clamped down on defense and the Wings apparently forgot how to pass the puck accurately. Much of the period was spent at center with the puck pin-balling around and no one having real possession. Fortunately, though, play was continuous for long stretches. Otherwise, the Wild’s poor excuse for a style of hockey would have had me falling out of my chair with boredom. I’m not even going to try to recap it, except to say that both teams had some chances, though they were fairly few and far between. Hasek was great when the Wild made pushes, though they came close late in the period when a shot rang off both posts. An empty net in the last minute or so was not enough and the Wings won 3-1.

Definitely not the team’s best game but that’s why they have Dominik Hasek. Hopefully, we won’t be subjected to more of the same tonight in Minnesota. The Wings need to find a way to open up the game a bit and not let the Wild dictate the pace. Chris Osgood will need to be on his toes, as the Wild are good at exploiting mistakes and seem to play better at home. The game is at 8:00 PM ET tonight.

GameDay: vs. Minnesota (17-14-2, 36 Pts) 7:30 ET

Tonight is the second of four games between these two teams this season. The Wings won the first meeting, 3-0 on December 1st, with Dominik Hasek getting credit for the shutout, and Dan Cleary, Nick Lidstrom, and Mikael Samuelsson scoring the goals. Tonight’s game is the first of three games against the Wild over the next six days. I suppose playing the Wild three times in a row beats doing the same with Chicago, like they did last year.

Since the 1st, the Wild have gone 4-3-1, with wins coming over Chicago (two), Calgary, and Vancouver. Their most recent game, the win over the Canucks, halted a three-game skid, during which they lost to the Flames, Oilers, and Canucks - all on the road. The Wild have one of the worst road records in the league at 4-11-1, having lost their last seven games away from their home rink.

The Minnesota Star-Tribune implies that this is due, in part at least, to the Wild being in the tough Northwest Division, in which each team has a winning record at home but a losing record on the road. There may be something to that argument but the Wild have lost in Ottawa, Columbus, Montreal, Phoenix, San Jose, Anaheim, and Colorado as well as in their divisional opponents’ rinks. So, they have a penchant for losing on the road wherever they are.

Marian Gaborik (groin) is listed as questionable for tonight’s game.

The Wings have gone 5-3-0 since beating the Wild on the 1st and are coming off a commanding 5-0 win over the Columbus Blue Jackets on Wednesday. Unlike the Wild, the Wings have no major disparity between their home and road records, which are 10-3-3 and 10-6-1 respectively.

The Free Press reports that Dominik Hasek will start tonight and Chris Osgood will start tomorrow night in Minnesota.

The Wings need to come out of this ridiculous little home-away-home series with at least winning record, if not three wins, and tonight is a good time to get started. The Wild have been working on improving their road record, but it’s still their big weakness and it should be exploited. A fast start by the offense and tight defense will deflate the Wild’s attempts at getting back on track away from home.

GameDay: @ Minnesota (13-10-1, 27 Pts) 8:00 ET

Update (7:15 PM): Helene St. James reports that Babcock will have a couple new lines tonight:

Kopecky-Datsyuk-Holmstrom
Lebda-Filppula-Maltby

Both should be good at generating pressure, I’d think. - Matt

Tonight is the first of four meetings between these two teams this season. The Wings won the 2005-2006 season series 3-1, with wins coming November 11th, 2005 (3-1), and January 30th (5-4), and April 2nd, 2006. The Wild’s win came on January 3rd, a 4-2 decision. The teams will wrap up their season series in December when they play three games over five days.

After a strong 6-0-0 start, Minnesota came back to earth, filling out their record with 7 wins and 11 losses, including one overtime loss. They have lost two in a row and have only won two of their last seven. Their recent troubles can no doubt be attributed in part to the absence of Martin Gaborik (20. Oct, groin) and Pavol Demitra (20. Nov, concussion), both of whom contributed offensively when in the lineup. Gaborik may return tonight tonight, the AP reports.

Unfortunately for Minnesota, Demitra and Gaborik aren’t the only players out with injuries, as Michael Russo of Minneapolis-St. Paul Star Tribune writes today in a sob-story of a piece. The team will be without six regulars tonight if Gaborik sits.

Flint native Brian Rolston leads the team with 12 goals and 21 points. Starter Manny Fernandez has a 9-8-0 record, a 2.69 GAA, and a .913 save percentage.

The Wings snapped a five-game losing streak with a 2-1 win over the Dallas Stars on Monday, socring their sixth and seventh shorthanded goals in the process. The power play is still a concern but the team apparently has been working on it this week so perhaps we’ll see a new look tonight.

Dominik Hasek will get the nod tonight, meaning he’ll likely be on the bench tomorrow at JLA against the Sharks.

Brett Lebda will play as a forward tonight to help cover for the absence of both Johan Franzen (sprained knee) and Jason Williams (charley horse).

Despite their injuries, the Wild still have some weapons to go with their defensive game plan. The Wings will need to play tight defense themselves, while at the same time getting higher quality shots at the net. I have a feeling the power play may not click tonight because Minnesota is #3 in the League on the penalty kill. Our own PK unit will need to be sharp against the #4 power play. Given where both these teams are this season, it should be a hard-fought game.

I don’t know that I can justify watching the game tonight with my end-of-the-semester homework load (yeah, on a Friday night. It sucks, I know). We’ll see though.

A2Y: Wings avert 300; hang on to beat Wild

IwoCPO offers his take on last night’s game in Minnesota.

Link

Wings 5, Wild 4

Well, this game lived up to the cliches “It’s the new NHL!” and “It was a Wild game!,” the over-used material Ken Daniels repeated as the Wild climbed out of a 4-0 first period deficit to bring it within one goal in the second. But the Wings got an important insurance goal from defenseman Andreas Lilja, his first as a Red Wing, to make it 5-3 Wings. It proved to be the game-winner in a 5-4 win against the Wild in the Xcel Energy Center. Chris Osgood got the start for the Wings, but was pulled after allowing 4 goals on 10 shots through two periods of play. Manny Legace came in and allowed one goal on six shots in the third. The Wild had their own goaltender shuffle, with Fernandez pulled after his tough first period, replaced by Roloson. Shots were 27-16 Wings. The Wings shuffled a lot of their lines tonight as well - check the lines below.

The Wings owned the first period, beating the Wild to loose pucks and outshooting them 14-6. Steve Yzerman opened the scoring with a power play goal at 4:19, assisted by Williams and Shanahan. It was the Captain’s 200th career power play goal. On the play, the Captain picked up his own rebound on a shot between the circles, and muscled it in on a sprawled Fernandez. 1-0 Wings.

Just 53 seconds later, the Wings got an even strength goal from Lang, assists Williams and Holmstrom. 2-0 Wings. And at 9:59, Samuelsson scored, assist Zetterberg. 3-0 Wings.

At 17:24, Zetterberg scored a neat even strength goal, assists to Samuelsson and Lidstrom. On the play, Zetterberg carried the puck from the near boards across the mouth of the crease. He waited for Fernandez to drop for a save, and found a tough angle, but an empty net to make it 4-0 Wings. The Wild were booed off the ice as 20 minutes expired.

Fernandez was pulled, and Roloson started the second period. It was all Wild during the second. The Wings looked like they were floating around, and the Wings’ coaching staff warning the team about that during intermission didn’t seem to help. Even strength goals from Gaborik (3:53), White (16:53), and Zyuzin (17:51) made it 4-3. The Wild only had four shots in the second, but three goals resulted. 4-3 Wings. Osgood was pulled as a result, and Legace came in at the start of the third.

After trading periods, the Wings and Wild were both skating well in the third and it looked like the goals swings were over. At 1:48 Lang was called for hooking - something he’s been getting called for nearly every game. On the play, he had one hand on his stick and tripped a Wild player when it got caught between his legs. It was a standard call in the new NHL, and Lang better adapt to that eventually.

At 11:53, Lilja scored his first goal as a Red Wing, a point shot even strength, assisted by Lang and Draper. 5-3 Wings. With the Wild still confident, and the home crowd 100% behind them (after booing them 20 minutes in), the Wild were poised to get back within one. It came at 14:11, on a harmless point shot from Kuba, with no traffic in front of Legace. 5-4 Wings. Legace made up for it a short time later, making a clutch save on a Randy Robitaille breakaway with less than five to go.

The Wings held onto their lead, even as the Wild gained a 6-on-4 advantage with Roloson pulled and Maltby called with a boarding major and game misconduct with around 20 seconds left. 5-4 Wings final. Shots in the game were 27-16 Wings.

Overall, it was a bittersweet win for the Wings. They finally got an even strength goal (4 in the game), and scored early for once (4-0 lead after 1 period). Unfortunately, the cliches fought back and the “new NHL” allowed the Wild to creep back within a goal. The Wings had a tough night in net, Osgood allowing 4 goals on 10 shots and Legace 1 goal on 6 shots. I’m sure the Wings will just be happy to get on the plane back to Detroit and that their January schedule is over, especially the past couple weeks. The Wings were 8-4-2 in January, but have lost 3 of the last 5 - two of which were losses to Central Division points-rival Nashville.

The Wings will have to watch out on Wednesday for the Blues, who have dumped some salaries, some “Weight” you might say (sorry but the horrible puns have taken ahold of me), but have nothing to lose. They won 3-2 tonight against the Flames, with rookie Lee Stempniak, just called up from the minors, scoring the winner during the fifth round of the shootout.

Lines*

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

D-pairings

Lilja-Lidstrom
Lebda-Schneider
Chelios-Schneider
Lebda-Chelios
Lebda-Lilja
Schneider-Woolley
Woolley-Chelios
Woolley-Lidstrom
Schneider-Lilja
Lidstrom-Chelios
Lidstrom-Schneider
Chelios-Lilja

PP

Yzerman-Lang-Shanahan-Woolley-Schneider
Yzerman-Shanahan-Williams-Lidstrom-Lang

*compiled by Brian

Wings 5, Wild 4

What a crazy and bizarre game. The Wings were up 4-0 by the end of the first period with goals by Steve Yzerman, Robert Lang, Mikael Samuelsson, and a beauty by Henrik Zetterberg. Yzerman’s goal notched him his 200th career power play goal. After going pointless for seven games, hopefully Samuelsson will bounce back offensively after scoring his 17th goal of the season. Wild goaltender Manny Fernandez was taken out after the first period.

I watched the first part of the second period, upon which the Wild scored to make it 4-1. I then had to watch 24 with my college friends so I missed the rest of the second and most of the third period. I came back with five minutes left in the game to see the score at 5-4 and my heart dropped. I’m always skeptical when the Wings are up by so much because especially with the new rules, it’s pretty easy to even that all up. Fortunately, Andreas Lilja scored his first goal as a Wing to win the game for Detroit. At some point, Manny Legace replaced Chris Osgood in goal where he made some impressive saves to keep the Wings in the game.

Detroit outshot the Wild, 27-16.

Boxscore
Play by Play
Offensive Scoresheet

Wings 2, Wild 4

The Wings began January very much on the wrong foot, losing 4-2 in un-inspiring fashion to Minnesota in front of their home fans. Detroit looked flat for the majority of the night and were out-hustled and out-worked by the Wild all night, despite finishing the game with a season-high 45 shots.

Chris Osgood again made the start for the Wings and played well, though two of the three goals he allowed were fairly weak. He had little chance on the first, however, which came from the slot off a quick centering pass from behind the net. Andrei Zyuzin was left all along out front and was handed an easy one-timer goal by the Red Wing defense at 5:55 of the first period.

The Wild scored again a little over a minute later, this time from Filip Kuba, who took a shot from the point. The goal came soon after a defensive-zone faceoff for the Wings and immediately after a television break so it’s not like they didn’t have time to prepare.

The Wings were especially flat for the first half of the opening period, though they awakened some in the second half. The teams traded power plays around mid-period but accomplished little. As Detroit started to come on a little, the Wild gave up their offensive posture and assumed a defensive one, sitting back and absorbing the Red Wing attack.

Detroit got a third power play at 16:40 but lost the chance when Jason Williams was called for interference ten seconds later. This led to a relatively uneventful period of 4-on-4 hockey as the period wound down.

The Wings went on the power play early in the second but failed to convert. The Wild were aggressive, winning battles for the puck and generally looking like they wanted a win. The Wings, on the other hand, floated and looked like they expected cute passing and skill to win the day all by themselves.

Detroit finally got a break, however undeserved, when Willie Mitchell accidentally high-sticked Brendan Shanahan. Mitchell initially got two minutes but when Shanahan showed the ref he was bleeding, two more minutes were tacked on, giving the Wings four minutes to work with starting at 5:33.

The Wings made good use of it, scoring at 6:14. Nicklas Lidstrom took a shot from the point and it was deflected out front by Tomas Holmstrom. The puck went in and cut the Wild lead in half.

The second minor penalty was killed off by the Wild fairly easily, though the Wings were able to set up and get a little sustained pressure.

As the teams headed to mid-period, the Wings, led by Holmstrom, began to win a few battles and generate a few quality chances. In each case, however, Roloson was there to make the save and the Wings’ comeback attempts were foiled.

The Wild handed the Wings another power play before the period ended but they did a very good job killing it off and the Wings began to float again as time ran out in the second. In the final seconds of the period, the Wings gave up a very good chance but the puck fortunately went wide as the Wild attempted to capitalize.

Detroit began the third period fairly well, with a good shift by Shanahan, Datsyuk and Woolley in the early going. Dan Cleary had a couple point-blank shots off a flurry early on as well but he was unable to convert.

The Wings gave up a 2-on-1 a little over five minutes in and it resulted in a Wild power play, though fortunately not in a goal. Henrik Zetterberg had a nice chance shorthanded, going into the Wild zone all alone and weaving through the defense but he did not score. At this point, the OLN signal blanked out for a moment, leaving the words “poor quality signal.” Nothing new for Wings fans, who have to deal with about one such blackout per game when FSN is doing the broadcast. At least OLN is prepared for it and lets the viewer know what’s going on. FSN sure doesn’t! As for the Wild power play, it was well-orchestrated, and forced Osgood to make a couple good saves.

The Wild took a two-goal lead at 8:04 when Jason Woolley made an ill-advised and badly planned pass in his own zone along the boards. Brian Rolston intercepted it and ripped a shot from the circle past Osgood, who apparently wasn’t quite set on the play. I didn’t think it was a good goal for Osgood to give up, despite the awful play by Woolley.

Robert Lang, who was alternately flat and sharp tonight, had a good shift playing with Samuelsson and Zetterberg after the Wild goal but they were unable to get the puck past Roloson.

Zetterberg and Samuelsson were involved in a flurry a few minutes later and came very close to scoring but again, Roloson made the necessary stops. The Wings were getting some good chances but had a distinct inability to finish that made it frustrating to watch. A prime example of this came at 13:53, when Shanahan found himself with the puck all alone out front. It was as glorious a chance as they come but he sent the puck over the net and missed an opportunity to cut into the Wild lead.

Around this time, the OLN crew started talking about Detroit “desperation” but if the Wings were desperate, they didn’t really show it. They certainly didn’t look as concerned as they did during the Atlanta game last month or even against Chicago a couple weeks ago. Anyway, they did score again, at 17:58. Apparently, it was Holmstrom again, though I swear Datsyuk got a stick on it first and at least deserves an assist. Regardless of what I think, the official stance is that Holmstrom deflected Woolley’s shot and made it 3-2.

Babcock pulled Osgood for the extra skater with a minute and a half or so left (a little early for my taste) but I didn’t realize it until Gaborik and Daigle were sprung on a 2-on-1 with Lidstrom playing defense. Daigle ended up with the puck and shot it into the empty net, crushing any hopes Wings fans may have had for a comeback at 18:39. Babcock is lucky the Wings didn’t score again because I’d have not been happy had his decision to pull Osgood so early resulted in a loss despite a comeback. As it was, the loss left a bad taste in my mouth.

The OLN crew did mention Jiri Fischer and reported that he has apparently never felt better. He is taking the advice of a friend and living one day at a time, while making preparations for tomorrow. They said he is very positive and apparently “symptom free,” though doctors continue to monitor him. So, good news on that front.

Even though the Wings’ loss was more due to the skaters than Osgood, I think we’ll see Manny Legace back in net Thursday against the Blues. I’ll be at that game, with my sister, who’ll have her camera and experience as a photography major to go with it.

Lines

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

D-parings

Lilja-Lidstrom
Lidstrom-Woolley
Lebda-Lilja
Schneider-Lebda
Schneider-Woolley
Chelios-Schneider
Chelios-Lidstrom

GameDay: vs. Minnesota (18-17-4, 40 Pts) 7:00 ET

Tonight is the second of four games between these two teams this season. The Wings won their last meeting, 3-1 on November 11th. Brendan Shanahan, Jason Williams and Johan Franzen scored for Detroit, who notched their 15th win that night.

The Wings are hot, having won their last five and eight of their last ten. Their winning streak began in Tampa Bay, where they won 6-3, on December 17th and continued with wins over Columbus (4-3 SO), Chicago (3-2 OT), Dallas (4-1) and Columbus again (5-2) to round out 2005. This game kicks off a huge month for the Wings, as IwoCPO of Abel to Yzerman pointed out yesterday. The Wings play 14 games in January, the majority of which are against playoff-bound teams. They will face Nashville three times and play three of the East’s best teams in a very short span (four days). This will be the last “easy” week our guys will have for a while, with tonight’s game and Thursday’s meeting with the Blues.

Minnesota are hot as well, with wins in six of their last eight. They had a three-game winning streak halted last Thursday when the lost 4-2 in Calgary but they rebounded Saturday with a 4-3 win over Vancouver. Manny Fernandez is among the mid-season contenders for the Vezina Trophy, posting a 2.05 GAA and a .930 save-percentage to go along with his 14 wins. Fernandez has been greatly helped by his teammates, who have allowed just 98 goals this season. Only Ottawa has given up fewer (88). The Wild penalty kill is an impressive 89.1%, which leads the league, having allowed just 23 power play goals this season.

Chris Osgood will get another start tonight and will hopefully continue his stellar play.

Don’t expect a thriller tonight. The Wild still play the trap and will play a very tight game defensively. The Wings will have to counter with a tight defensive game of their own because Minnesota will capitalize on any mistakes. The last meeting between these two teams was not very exciting either but if the Wings can out-work the Wild as they did back in November, they should be able to start off January on the right foot.