Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Ducks powerless when playing short-handed

- By Andrew Knoll Correspond­ent

The Ducks' flock grew larger and more powerful with the returns of forwards Leo Carlsson and Max Jones ahead of their welcoming the Minnesota Wild tonight.

But with the way they've been taking penalties, the resurrecti­on of Gordie Howe might not be much help in halting the six-game losing streak that left them mathematic­ally eliminated from playoff contention.

During a four-game road trip, the Ducks surrendere­d 10 power-play goals, eight of which came during the third period. They entered the final 20 minutes of their past two games, against Winnipeg and St. Louis, in competitiv­e situations, trailing 2-0 and tied 1-1 at the second intermissi­on, but then put themselves shorthande­d and got inundated by the opposition's man-advantage units repeatedly.

“It's our biggest problem right now, obviously. Slashing,

hooking, holding, tripping, these are all lazy penalties that reflect not working to get on the correct side of the attacker,” coach Greg Cronin said via text.

They gave up two evenstreng­th goals to Winnipeg in the third period and then slathered on the two powerplay tallies in a 6-0 loss that represente­d their second straight shutout after being blanked, 2-0, in Minnesota.

In Jones' and Carlsson's return in St. Louis, the Ducks got a pair of goals from Troy Terry, including one set up by Carlsson late, but turned a knotted-up game into a completely unraveled one when they gave up three power-play tallies in less than eight minutes.

Allowing three powerplay goals in two straight contests just two games after surrenderi­ng four of them establishe­d a recipe for disaster. The NHL's most efficient penalty kill, that of the Kings, has not given up multiple power-play goals in a game since a Dec. 10 loss to the New York Rangers.

While the Ducks and their wobbling penalty kill won't be competing in the postseason, top prospect Cutter Gauthier was in action in Hockey East's conference tournament over the weekend. His Boston College team eliminated Connecticu­t and will next square off with UMass-Amherst on Friday.

Gauthier has blown past his point total as a freshman (35) by pouring in 52 points to date. A deep run in the NCAA tournament could signify a delayed arrival in Anaheim for Gauthier, and it seems likely given that all of the top four scorers for BC are first-round picks in the NHL: Gauthier was selected fifth overall,

UP NEXT Today: Wild at Ducks, 7p.m., ESPN+, Hulu

Ryan Leonard was a No. 8 pick, Will Smith went fourth overall and Gabe Perreault has proved a bargain at No. 23.

The Ducks next face the one team on their fourgame journey that did not touch them up with the extra man, Minnesota. The Wild will enter the matchup on a seven-game points streak and with designs on a wild-card berth in the postseason.

Leading scorer Kirill Kaprizov has compiled 13 points across Minnesota's surge. The prime-of-his-career exuberance of Kaprizov has balanced brilliantl­y against the sagely play of 39-year-old Marc-Andre Fleury in net. Fleury, who was the subject of trade rumors until the Wild's front office put them to rest before the deadline, has been resplenden­t of late. He's allowed two goals or fewer in 12 of his past 14 appearance­s, posting a 9-2-1 record in the process, including shutouts of the Ducks and New York Islanders spaced nearly two months apart.

 ?? JEFF ROBERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Ducks' Troy Terry handles the puck past the Blues' Kasperi Kapanen during Sunday night's game in St. Louis.
JEFF ROBERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Ducks' Troy Terry handles the puck past the Blues' Kasperi Kapanen during Sunday night's game in St. Louis.

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