The Reporter (Vacaville)

Dubnyk helps to narrow gap between Sharks, Golden Knight

- By Curtis Pashelka

Devan Dubnyk had just robbed Jonathan Marchessau­lt twice in a matter of a few seconds. Once on a one-timer from just outside the crease, the other on a wrist shot from point-blank range after the Vegas Golden Knights forward had gotten behind the San Jose defense.

With Dubnyk still on the ice, Marchessau­lt couldn’t help but get in a couple of verbal jabs as he expressed his frustratio­n toward the Sharks goalie.

“He just told me, ‘That’s enough.’ He was tired of it,” Dubnyk said of the brief exchange.

“I had a few good (saves), so he just said, ‘no more.’ Obviously, I’m not going to listen to that, but those are the fun parts of playing.” Right now for perhaps the first time all year, the Sharks are at a point where they’re confident their goalie is going to be just as good, if not better, than the one at the other end of the ice. That’s obviously going to be critical if the Sharks have any hope of making a serious run at a playoff spot in the second half of the season. Over the last four games, Dubnyk and Martin Jones have a combined .959 save percentage, which jumps to .974 at even strength.

“The last four games, our goaltender­s have been very, very good,” Sharks captain Logan Couture said. “They’ve given us a chance in every game, they’ve made game-changing saves. A big reason why we were able to win those games in Anaheim were both of our goalies making big saves at big times.”

Dubnyk stopped 34 of 36 shots Monday night in the Sharks’ 2-1 loss to the Golden Knights at T-Mobile Arena, halting their win streak at three. The two teams play again Wednesday, as the Sharks (11-12-3) are still looking for their first win over the West Division-leading Golden Knights (19-6-1) this season.

Dubnyk was every bit as good as Vegas goalie Marc-Andre Fleury, who made 23 saves to improve to 3-0-0 against the Sharks this season, allowing just two goals on 73 shots.

The Sharks still haven’t beaten the Golden Knights this season, still have never held a lead in any of the four games they’ve played.

But there’s a feeling among the Sharks players that the gap between the two teams has narrowed a little bit.

It starts with the Sharks’ goaltendin­g.

The Golden Knights were coming off a sixgame road trip — which began with two wins over the Sharks at SAP Center — and looked and felt a little lethargic in the first period. They found their legs in a largely dominant second period, though, and the biggest reason why it was a close game in the third was the play of Dubnyk, who had 16 saves to keep it a 1-0 game going into the third.

“I thought we generated enough offense to win,” Couture said. “(Dubnyk) played incredible in the net, made some big saves down the stretch to give us an opportunit­y there with a few minutes left.”

Here are the Sharks’ combined save percentage­s at various times this season.

GAMES ONE TO 10 >> Overall — .895; Even strength — .891.

GAMES 11 TO 20 >> Overall — .880; Even strength — .900.

GAMES 21 TO 26 >> Overall — .923; Even strength — .923.

The Sharks also feel they’re playing a tighter defensive style, as they’ve now allowed just three even-strength goalsagain­st over the last four games.

 ?? JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sharks goaltender Devan Dubnyk (40) blocks a shot by Golden Knights right wing Alex Tuch (89) during the second period on Monday in Las Vegas.
JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Sharks goaltender Devan Dubnyk (40) blocks a shot by Golden Knights right wing Alex Tuch (89) during the second period on Monday in Las Vegas.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States