Edmonton Journal

JETS SOAR INTO SECOND ROUND

Dominant display on home ice finishes off series with Minnesota, writes Ken Wiebe.

- Kwiebe@postmedia.com Twitter.com/WiebeSunSp­orts

The Winnipeg Jets didn’t want to give the Minnesota Wild any reason to believe they could rally to win this opening-round series.

By scoring 31 seconds into the contest in what became a four-goal outburst in the first period, the Jets cruised to a 5-0 victory over the Wild on Friday to advance to the second round of the Stanley Cup playoffs.

The Jets will face either the Nashville Predators or the Colorado Avalanche. The Avs were 2-1 winners Friday, forcing the series to a Game 6 on Sunday. Sven Andrighett­o had the game winner at 18:32 of the third period.

This was the first playoff series victory in Jets 2.0 history and it came in decisive fashion.

Outside of a 6-2 loss in Game 3, the Jets were in control of the series, playing a sound defensive game while holding a substantia­l edge in shot attempts, shots on goal and scoring chances.

While it was an obvious benefit for the Jets that the Wild were without top defenceman Ryan Suter for the series and lost forward Zach Parise before Game 4, Minnesota didn’t get enough offence out of their key cogs — with the exception of Game 3 when they erupted for six goals in two periods.

There was some intrigue regarding the Jets lineup starting at the morning skate, as defenceman Tyler Myers made a somewhat unexpected appearance and immediatel­y declared himself ready to return to action after leaving Game 3 with an unspecifie­d lower-body injury.

The Jets were already without the services of defenceman Josh Morrissey, who served his one-game suspension for crosscheck­ing Wild centre Eric Staal.

So instead of having rookie blue-liner Sami Niku make his playoff debut, the Jets welcomed back Myers and moved him to the left side with Jacob Trouba.

“When a new guy comes in, whether he’s played for you or not, you feel a little better about your game. Especially if you come off a win,” said Jets head coach Paul Maurice.

“So we come off a win without him, we know we’re out Morrissey and that’s a hole. Tyler’s a really good player here. Sure, you put a veteran guy back in your lineup, it always makes the room feel good.”

Maurice also explained how he came to the decision of which right-handed shooting defenceman would play on his off side.

“Comfort. Roles and comfort,” said Maurice.

“We wouldn’t take a guy who never plays against the other team’s best and ask him to do that just because he shoots a certain hand. We’ve got some forwards who prefer to play on their off side and we’ve got some guys who absolutely don’t want to do it. So it’s all comfort.”

The Jets felt even better after a dominant opening shift that put them in the driver’s seat.

Trouba took a pass from Mark Scheifele and walked into the slot and beat Wild goalie Devan Dubnyk with the first shot on goal of the contest.

Wild forward Jason Zucker was a bit shaken up after blocking a point shot earlier in the shift and he lost Trouba in coverage.

When it came time for the pre-game warm-up, Jets winger Nikolaj Ehlers was nowhere to be found and Matt Hendricks suited up for the first time in the series.

With Ehlers as a surprise scratch, Bryan Little got a promotion to the second line and he quickly checked in with his first goal of the series on a nifty redirectio­n after a point shot from Dustin Byfuglien that made it 2-0.

The Jets then scored twice in a span of 49 seconds to take a commanding lead.

When Wild defenceman Jonas Brodin couldn’t handle a pass from Matt Dumba, Jets winger Brandon Tanev pounced on the loose puck and beat Dubnyk with a wrister from the slot at 11:10.

Wrapping up the first-period scoring was Joel Armia, who supplied his first goal of the series on a redirectio­n of his own after a point shot from Byfuglien.

The Jets scored those four goals on 10 shots, which prompted Wild head coach Bruce Boudreau to get out the hook and replace Dubnyk with Alex Stalock.

Following the first period, Armia left the game with what the Jets called an upper-body injury.

Scheifele rounded out the scoring with a power-play goal that came 32 seconds into the third period.

It was the fourth goal of the series for Scheifele, with two of them coming from nearly the same spot during the manadvanta­ge.

The Jets were forced to make a sequence of transactio­ns after backup goalie Steve Mason suffered a lower-body injury just before the morning skate began.

Mason was on the ice getting in some extra work with goalie coach Wade Flaherty and suffered a lower-body injury when he pushed from post to post to try and make a save.

On Friday afternoon, the Jets recalled goalie Michael Hutchinson from the Manitoba Moose of the American Hockey League and loaned Jamie Phillips to their primary affiliate.

 ?? KEVIN KING ?? The Winnipeg Jets celebrated four goals on their first 10 shots in the first period and proceeded to score a 5-0 victory over the Minnesota Wild to win Game 5 on home ice Friday night and clinch their opening-round series, the first series victory for...
KEVIN KING The Winnipeg Jets celebrated four goals on their first 10 shots in the first period and proceeded to score a 5-0 victory over the Minnesota Wild to win Game 5 on home ice Friday night and clinch their opening-round series, the first series victory for...

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