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Jackets Odd Men Out In 4-2 Loss
To Red Wings
By Steve Sirk
Thursday’s game between the Columbus Blue Jackets and Detroit Red
Wings was a stark contrast to the Jackets’ lackluster home efforts
against Vancouver and Carolina. For starters, it was watchable.
And it was interesting. Dare I say it, it was even exciting. Of
course, none of these things translated to victory. The Jackets
learned the hard way that giving the potent Motor City
Millionaires a succession of odd-man rushes is like spotting
Michael Jordan a trampoline in a slam dunk contest. Bad idea. And
so it went in a 4-3 loss to the Red Wings before a sellout crowd
at Nationwide Arena.
After sleepwalking through two listless displays of nonchalance in
the past week, the Jackets came out ready to play. How could they
not? As usual, there was a blight of red-clad squid-munchers from
the Mitten State fouling up the atmosphere. As if that wasn’t bad
enough, Pittsburgh Steelers coach Bill Cowher took a break from
renting out his jaw as a jalopy-propping cinder block in order to
burrow out of the hubcap-littered hills of eastern Pennsylvania in
order to take in the game. Red Wings. Steelers. There was truly a
disturbance in the force. Had the Jackets come out like zombies in
this game, the fans would have pushed for mandatory drug testing
for formaldehyde.
The Jackets came out with some jump, and it was newly acquired
winger Brian Holzinger who almost put the Jackets on top on his
first shift with the club. The Parma, OH native found himself
1-on-1 with Wings goalie Curtis Joseph, but as he attempted to
maneuver around Joseph, the puck rolled off the end of his stick
and trickled just wide.
“I was a bit excited on my first shift,” said Holzinger. “Ideally,
you’d like a chance like that a little later in the game when
you’re settled down and in the flow of the game, but you’ve got to
take your chances when you can get them. I thought I had him, but
it just rolled off my stick at the end.”
Trevor Letowski was suitably settled down at 5:36 when he gave the
Jackets a 1-0 lead on a wrap-around. The sequence started with a
Scott Lachance slap shot from the right point that Letowski
deflected just wide to the right. He circled around the net to
retrieve the puck, popping out the left side to jam it into the
net.
“Our line had put together some good shifts, and we were
rewarded,” said Letowski. “I almost tipped it in the first time on
the shot from Lachance, but fortunately I was able to get the
rebound and beat him on the other side.”
The Wings tied it at 11:27 of the first, when Jason Williams
roofed a backhander off a feed from Brendan Shanahan. After
skating around defenseman Anders Eriksson, Williams beat Jackets
goaltender Marc Denis high to the stick side.
Not even a minute later, it appeared as though the Wings had taken
a 2-1 lead. Nicklas Lidstrom unleashed a slap shot from the blue
line. In transit, both Steve Yzerman and Tomas Holmstrom lifted
their sticks into the air in an effort to whack at the shot. The
puck went in and the goal was immediately waived off, pending a
video review. On the replay, it looked as though Yzerman hit it
well above crossbar height, although the referees eventually
deemed Holmstrom had hit it with a high stick. Either way, no
goal.
The second period was largely about Nikolai Zherdev, for better or
worse. At the 3:00 mark, Darren McCarty tripped Zherdev and the
referee raised his arm. It was a miracle. After flopping on a
breakaway against Vancouver on Saturday, Zherdev had gone six
solid periods whereby he was fair game to trippers, stick-holders,
and hook-men, all of whom operated with blatant abandon, knowing
punishment was not forthcoming. The refs had swallowed their
whistles. But at long last, the Zherdev penalty drought was over.
Perhaps these guys didn’t get the memo.
The penalty occurred in a cluster of Detroit infractions that gave
the Jackets 45 seconds of 5-on-3 hockey. Columbus could not
capitalize. There were chances to be had-- including Joseph
flat-out stealing a goal from Zherdev from point blank range— but
the Jackets could not cash in.
The Wings took a 2-1 lead at 7:46 when Williams scored his second
on the night. Zherdev coughed up the puck while attempting to gain
the opposite blue line, and for the third time on the evening, a
Zherdev turnover led to an odd-man rush the other way. The third
time was the anti-charm, as former Jacket Ray Whitney nudged the
puck forward to Williams, who found himself one-on-one with Denis.
Williams again went to the backhand, again shot to the stick side,
and again roofed it.
Zherdev made amends late in the second, scoring his 8th goal of
the season at 16:49. The skillful Russian faked a shot from the
left circle that caused defenseman Jiri Fischer to close his legs
together in an effort to prevent the expected shot from going
through him. The shot never came. Instead, Zherdev calmly strolled
right around the helpless defenseman, and whipped a precision
wrist-shot past the glove of Joseph.
Both teams turned up the heat in the third, but in the end,
Detroit’s firepower was too much to over come. The pivotal play
came with 8:00 to play. The Jackets seemed poised to take the
lead. After a mad scramble, NHL goal-scoring leader Rick Nash
found the puck on his stick right in front of the Detroit net.
Just as Nash was about to send the crowd into a frenzy, Joseph
brazenly attempted to poke check the puck away. It was a gamble,
but it was all he had.
It worked. And then the Wings were off in the other direction, and
it was a 4-on-2. Uh-oh. Lidstrom played a long diagonal outlet to
Yzerman, who carried into the offensive zone. He laid the puck off
to Lidstrom at the blue line, who played across the zone to Brett
Hull at the left face-off circle. Over the past 15 years, the
words “Brett Hull”, “left face-off circle” and “one-timer” are
often followed by the word “goal.” This was no exception. Hull’s
blast beat Denis high to the stick side with 7:55 to play.
“Unfortunately for us, two guys fell behind the net and Nash was
knocked off balance,” said Jackets coach Gerard Gallant. “That’s
how they got their 4-on-2. They don’t miss many of those,
especially with Brett Hull shooting.”
The Wings held on from there. Henrik Zetteberg tacked on an
empty-netter with 5 seconds to play to finish the scoring.
“We dominated for parts of the game,” said Manny Malhotra, “but
again, it was mental lapses that cost us the goals.”
“All three goals were odd-man rushes,” Denis tersely stated.
“That’s the bottom line. The first was a 2-on-1, the second was a
bad clear, and the third was a 4-on-2. That’s what it came down
to. I’m not saying they had the most scoring chances, but they had
the best. You give them that many odd-man rushes and they are
going to burn you. That’s what they did.”
Needless to say, after staring down Detroit’s myriad gun barrels,
Denis was not in a glass-half-full frame of mind, no matter how
close the score.
“Success is defined by results,” he said. “This is getting old. It
really is.”
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