Las Vegas Review-Journal

Knights step up, whip Red Wings

No Smith, no problem for Vegas in shutout

- By Steve Carp Las Vegas Review-journal

DETROIT — With Reilly Smith unavailabl­e because of injury, the message was clear to the Golden Knights — everyone must raise their game to make up for the loss of the team’s second-leading scorer.

Alex Tuch and Cody Eakin certainly got the memo. They scored two goals apiece, and Marc-andre Fleury stopped all 28 shots he faced in a 4-0 victory over the Detroit Red Wings on Thursday night at Little Caesars Arena.

“We played really well in the D zone,” said Tuch, who scored his 12th and 13th goals, including the game’s first goal 2:24 in when he beat Jimmy Howard to the glove side. “I thought we played well as a line. We were fast and forechecke­d hard and forced some turnovers.

“Smitty’s a key player for us, and he’s hard to replace. But I thought (Tomas) Tatar did well on that line, and I thought all 20 guys were ready to play.”

The Knights (43-19-5, 91 points) tied the NHL record for most road victories by an expansion team with 19. The Mighty Ducks of Anaheim won 19 games in their inaugural season in 1993-94. The Knights also improved to 2-1 on their five-game trip, which continues Saturday in Buffalo and ends Monday in Philadelph­ia.

They set the record without Smith, who suffered an upper-body injury Tuesday against Columbus and is listed as day to day.

“I think our guys take a lot of pride in that,” Knights coach Gerard Gallant said of the road record. “It’s always tough to win on the road, but some of our best wins have come on the road. For us to have 19 wins on the road at this time, it’s great.”

KNIGHTS

The victory was the 398th of Fleury’s career and the 47th shutout. He’s 23-9-3 with three shutouts this season.

“The forwards came back and blocked shots, and the D got a lot of sticks in the lane, and there wasn’t as many crisscross passes,” Fleury said. “(Smith’s) not an easy guy to replace. He does a lot of things offensivel­y and defensivel­y.”

With Fleury stonewalli­ng the Red Wings, the Knights scored three times in the second period. Eakin scored a short-handed goal after the Red Wings were caught changing lines on the power play while Tatar was off for interferen­ce.

William Karlsson poked it ahead to Eakin, who put it low to the blocker side for a 2-0 lead at 10:40.

Eakin scored his second goal and ninth this season at 17:48, going over Howard’s shoulder with a wrist shot from the slot to make it 3-0. Tuch followed 50 seconds later with his 13th this season, wristing a shot from the slot before Howard could react.

“It’s nice to contribute,” Eakin said. “I was looking to take it to the net, and I thought we didn’t really force anything. We just let it unfold and turn it toward us.

“We tried to play consistent. Flower stood on his head when we needed him, and we capitalize­d when we had to.”

Fleury stopped Darren Helm from close range on back-to-back shots with about five minutes left in the second period, then denied Justin Abdelkader from in front of the crease 5:45 into the third period.

“I liked the one I had in the third better,” Fleury said of the stop on Abdelkader. “That was a good one.”

Contact Steve Carp at scarp@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-387-2913. Follow @stevecarpr­j on Twitter.

 ?? Paul Sancya ?? The Associated Press Golden Knights goaltender Marc-andre Fleury stops a shot by Red Wings defenseman Nick Jensen during the second period of Vegas’ 4-0 victory Thursday in Detroit.
Paul Sancya The Associated Press Golden Knights goaltender Marc-andre Fleury stops a shot by Red Wings defenseman Nick Jensen during the second period of Vegas’ 4-0 victory Thursday in Detroit.

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