Times Colonist

Vrbata helps Coyotes beat his old team

-

GLENDALE, Arizona — Radim Vrbata scored two goals against his former team, and the Arizona Coyotes moved out of last place in the Pacific Division with a with a 4-3 win over the Vancouver Canucks on Thursday night.

Luke Schenn and Alexander Burmistrov also scored for Arizona, and Max Domi had two assists. Louis Domingue stopped 26 shots to help the Coyotes win for the third time in four games to jump a point ahead of the Canucks in the standings.

Nikolay Golodkin, Brock Boeser and Daniel Sedin scored for Vancouver, which lost its sixth straight.

Vrbata, who played for the Canucks from 2014-16 and is the Coyotes’ leader in goals and assists this season, put Arizona ahead for good early in the second.

The Coyotes scored twice on the power play and are 6 for 12 on the man advantage over their last five games.

Lightning 4, Maple Leafs 1

TORONTO — Few in the Maple Leafs room know what it feels like to clinch a playoff berth in the NHL and it showed some Thursday night.

The Leafs had a chance to punch their first ticket to the postseason since 2013, but fell flat against the Tampa Bay Lightning — downed 4-1 at the Air Canada Centre. Afterward, head coach Mike Babcock wondered whether the group was tightening up as the city prepared itself for a once unlikely entry in the playoffs.

“We made it way harder than it should be,” Babcock said. “You go over and over a foundation of how to play so in the big moments you do what you do, but we didn’t do that.”

The defeat kept the Lightning and Islanders alive in the race for the last Eastern Conference playoff spot while ensnaring the Leafs in a precarious weekend challenge — albeit one in which they control their own fate. Secure two points over two games against Pittsburgh and Columbus, two Metropolit­an division heavyweigh­ts, and the club marches into the playoffs for only the second time since 2004.

Fall short and talk of another late-season meltdown follows.

Among the five players remaining from the last Leafs playoff squad (and also those that fell apart in now infamous fashion), Tyler Bozak didn’t think the group was feeling the weight of clinching despite of the lacklustre showing against Tampa, which followed a 4-1 loss to Washington on Tuesday.

“No, I think we’re excited,” Bozak said. “Me personally I haven’t been in this position a lot so it’s nice to be a part of it and it’s something that we’re really enjoying. So hopefully we have a better result next game.”

Seemingly fatigued in their loss to the Capitals, the Leafs looked like they had some energy back in the early-going against the Lightning, nearly scoring with a pair of chances on the second of two straight power plays — one from Bozak, the other from Nazem Kadri.

Auston Matthews, among the many first-year Leafs looking to get into the playoffs for the first time, was noticeable in the opening 20 minutes too. He was crunched at one point by fellow rookie Jake Dotchin — the two players banging knees — and then nearly scored a few minutes after that.

But chances were relatively few for a usually high-powered offence. Andrei Vasilevski­y faced only 27 shots, sharp when the Leafs posed any threat, which was mostly early.

The Lightning looked like the plucky group that’s risen from the ashes to join the playoff race.

A rising 21-year-old talent, Brayden Point has been near the front of that surge and he scored on a second-period power play to give Tampa the 1-0 lead. Kadri struck back a couple minutes later with his 32nd goal of the year, but the Lightning climbed in front once more shortly thereafter.

It was magic from Nikita Kucherov, the 23-year-old Russian sliding through the slot before whipping his 39th goal of the year past Frederik Andersen.

Tampa extended the lead to two early in the third frame, any chance of a playoff celebratio­n for the Leafs sealed when Point added his second 12 minutes or so after that.

Victor Hedman was a star for the Lightning, too, the Norris trophy candidate piling up three assists in almost 29 minutes.

Frustratio­n was apparent on the other bench with a second opportunit­y to clinch slipping away. The Leafs could have eliminated the Lightning with a victory.

“Obviously everyone wants to win and I don’t know if you can say we’re nervous, but maybe we need to be a little bit sharper and just go from there,” veteran Leo Komarov said.

Ducks 4, Blackhawks 0

ANAHEIM, California — Corey Perry scored a power-play goal, John Gibson made 37 saves in his 12th career shutout and the Anaheim Ducks clinched home-ice advantage in the first round of the playoffs with a 4-0 victory over the Chicago Blackhawks.

Rickard Rakell had a goal and an assist for the Ducks, who moved to the brink of their fifth consecutiv­e Pacific Division title in a meeting of the Western Conference’s two division leaders.

Chris Wagner and Ryan Kesler also scored for Anaheim.

 ?? ROSS FRANKLIN, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Coyotes goalie Louis Domingue makes a save on a shot from Canucks winger Brock Boeser during the first period in Glendale, Arizona, on Thursday.
ROSS FRANKLIN, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Coyotes goalie Louis Domingue makes a save on a shot from Canucks winger Brock Boeser during the first period in Glendale, Arizona, on Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada