Detroit Free Press

Larkin: Wings were feeling ‘sorry for ourselves’

Having time to work on flaws has helped lift team’s spirits

- Helene St. James Contact Helene St. James at hstjames@ freepress.com. Follow her @helenestja­mes.

Caught up in the glow of a profitable trip to California, Dylan Larkin admitted what the Detroit Red Wings would not say two weeks earlier.

“I feel like we felt sorry for ourselves for a little bit there, before Christmas, with the schedule and injuries,” the team’s captain said after a 3-0 leisurely paced sojourn on the west coast. “I think it’s just managing the ups and downs in a long season. We had three big wins. We’ve got a great feeling in here and guys are bought into what we want to do before the AllStar break.

“It’s a good feeling in here and we need to build off that going home.”

First and foremost, that focus is on extending a three-game winning streak when the Wings host Connor McDavid and the Edmonton Oilers on Thursday.

After winning just four times in 12 games between Dec. 2-23, the Wings have won four of their last five games to improve their record to 20-16-4. They were scheduled to stay the night in Anaheim after the 3-2 victory over the Ducks, practice Monday morning and then fly home, enabling Tuesday to be a day off.

The Oilers kick off a challengin­g stretch that continues with a home game Saturday against the Los Angeles Kings (the Wings outlasted

them in a shootout, 4-3, on Thursday), and the next night, the Wings are at the Toronto Maple Leafs, one of the teams the Wings need to catch to rise in the Atlantic Division race. From there, the Wings play at the Florida Panthers and Carolina Hurricanes.

Basically, of the 10 games standing between

the Wings and the All-Star/winter break, eight of the opponents are in the playoff picture, one is the Tampa Bay Lightning, and one is the Ottawa Senators, who beat up the Wings when the team met Dec. 9 in Detroit.

The goaltendin­g of Alex Lyon and both special teams have been key to the Wings’ resurgence, but so has a schedule that has had room for practices after the pell-mell pace of December.

“That’s huge — you need to practice and work on things,” Michael Rasmussen said after scoring the winning goal against the Ducks. “Some of our game was slipping a little bit there, so I think we’ve worked really hard in practice and consistent­ly tried to get better. It’s a group that really cares and wants to get better, so it’s big.”

Sunday marked the first time the Wings won this season without needing to score four goals. More importantl­y, the Wings turned a 2-2, third-period game in their favor — something they were unable to do against the Bruins, Nashville Predators and New Jersey Devils over the past two weeks.

“We went through that stretch where our three most recent losses we were 2-2 in the third in all of them.,” coach Derek Lalonde said. “We’ve flipped those games of late and won four of five and three on the road.”

 ?? GARY A. VASQUEZ/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Red Wings right wing Patrick Kane shoots on goal against the Anaheim Ducks during the first period Sunday at Honda Center in Anaheim, Calif.
GARY A. VASQUEZ/USA TODAY SPORTS Red Wings right wing Patrick Kane shoots on goal against the Anaheim Ducks during the first period Sunday at Honda Center in Anaheim, Calif.

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