Los Angeles Times

Ducks fete Kariya but it’s no banner night on ice

- By Mike Coppinger sports@latimes.com

Paul Kariya stood on a black mat bearing his signature and gazed as a banner emblazoned with his last name and number was, at long last, raised to the rafters.

That No. 9 now hangs to the left of Teemu Selanne’s No. 8, the two players who were elected to the Hall of Fame last year in Toronto now together for eternity in Anaheim, too.

There was still a game to be played, of course, following a ceremony the first player drafted by the Ducks called “the most memorable night of my life.”

It was anything but for the Ducks players still skating on the ice.

After John Gibson was pelted with 44 shots Saturday in Las Vegas, he wondered aloud whether the team is “too satisfied with just being average.”

Maybe so, because one night later, backup Ryan Miller slammed his stick in frustratio­n after the Buffalo Sabres scored a third consecutiv­e goal to grab the lead for good during Sunday’s sold-out game at Honda Center.

The backup goalie faced 45 shots and the Ducks lost 4-2 after they lost a 2-0 lead in the second period.

The disparity in shots has been a theme for the Ducks this season, win or lose. They generated only 18 against the Golden Knights. Sunday, it was 28.

The Dallas Stars delivered 50 on net last week.

Ryan Getzlaf acknowledg­ed the team won some games they “may not have deserved at certain times” on their way to first place in the Pacific Division, success that perhaps allowed the club to ignore the mounting issue.

Eight games into the season, they’ve outshot the opposition once, and now that they’ve lost two games in a row, the problem with their unsteady play is bubbling to the surface.

“We gotta get back to doing things properly; doing things the way we want to do them on a shift-by-shift basis, not just kind of when we feel like it,” said Getzlaf, who centered a new-look top unit that included Ben Street and Pontus Aberg, who have a combined eight NHL goals in 115 games .

“Some [play] on the offensive side, my play personally tonight, was embarrassi­ng — the fact I can’t make a pass to one of my linemates. … We have young players in the lineup and some of our veteran players aren’t leading the way properly.”

Coach Randy Carlyle sought more balance with forward combinatio­ns that featured skill players on each line, a departure from his propensity to load his fourth unit with grinders.

Rookie Sam Steel, centering the fourth line between 2018 first-round pick Isac Lundestrom and AllStar Rickard Rakell, tipped in his first NHL goal to give the Ducks a 1-0 lead.

Then it was Kiefer Sherwood, suiting up for only his ninth NHL game, who padded the lead with a glove-side wrist shot off the rush from the top of the faceoff circle. That was the last success the Ducks enjoyed on a night of tribute.

Less than 21⁄2 minutes later, Kyle Okposo scored on the power play. Nearly 90 seconds later, the score was tied when Jason Pominville found a streaking Jeff Skinner alone in front.

Rasmus Ristolaine­n’s point blast on another power play made it 3-2 and the Ducks couldn’t muster the proper looks to take it back despite a final-minute onslaught with Miller on the bench.

“The telltale sign for me is I’ve had to mix lines up in the last three games in a row because I wasn’t happy with what was going on out there,” Carlyle said. “That’s a telltale sign for a coach that something’s not working.”

It looks like more lineup tinkering is coming when the Ducks regroup before a twogame road swing this week.

 ?? Mark J. Terrill AP ?? HALL OF FAMER Paul Kariya stands with girlfriend Valerie Dawson as they watch his retired No. 9 raised to the Honda Center rafters before Sunday’s game. The Ducks fell 4-2 to the Buffalo Sabres.
Mark J. Terrill AP HALL OF FAMER Paul Kariya stands with girlfriend Valerie Dawson as they watch his retired No. 9 raised to the Honda Center rafters before Sunday’s game. The Ducks fell 4-2 to the Buffalo Sabres.

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