Detroit Free Press

Wings full of confidence going past regulation

Victory against Avs was 4th win in past five OT games

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

The Detroit Red Wings take a three-game winning streak into the weekend, earned on the strength of their excellence in overtime.

Patrick Kane was the latest to ensure victory, keeping the Wings rolling as they face the St. Louis Blues in a Saturday matinee. The game before that, it was Ben Chiarot. By any name, an overtime goal spells a pair of points for the Wings and solidifies their place in the playoff race.

“We really had a team effort including the penalty kill,” Kane said after Thursday’s 2-1 victory over the Colorado Avalanche. “We had a great kill against one of the top power plays in the league. It’s always huge to win the specialtea­ms game — the power play scored for us, we killed off all the penalties and got great goaltendin­g.

“It felt like a playoff game — low-scoring, the crowd was into it. The Avalanche-Red Wings is a big rivalry, so people are excited about it. Great win.”

Kane’s latest marker gave the Wings 12 players with at least 10 goals. Kane has done it in just 25 games.

“It’s been great having him,” Dylan Larkin said. “Our building has gotten a boost. We call it the ‘Kaner effect’ — you notice that the top of the upper bowl is full every night. It’s nice to have that. You saw him pumping up the crowd there on his own, out of the scrum.

“It’s a lot of fun right now. That was a huge win. Great atmosphere. Our fans were unbelievab­le and it was a huge win for our hockey team.”

The Wings (30-20-6) are at 66 points, moving past the Tampa Bay Lightning (65 points) into the first wild-card spot in the Eastern Conference with two games in hand on the Bolts. They’re six points up on the next-closest playoff hopefuls, the New Jersey Devils and Washington Capitals (though the Caps have played one fewer game.)

Thursday’s victory improved the Wings to 9-6 in overtime and 4-1 in the last five such games.

It was 1-0 Colorado after two periods.

“I felt like we deserved better than being down 1-0, but we hung in there,” head coach Derek Lalonde said. “You don’t win that often trailing going into the third, so I think it speaks a lot of our group.”

The Wings are 8-14-2 when trailing after two periods. They had 51 seconds of power play to start overtime, but it took nearly another 3 minutes, until there was 1:18 left, for Kane to score off a setup by Larkin and Chiarot.

“What I like is we went through a four-onthree, and we went through two other sets of

forwards before we got back to Dylan and Patty,” Lalonde said. “It speaks to the depth of our group. Just a real positive.”

That Kane would score isn’t surprising — he’s one of the most talented players in the game. That Chiarot has been a key part of the last two overtime victories, on the other hand, delights teammates in a different way.

“He’s been a little bit of an overtime assassin; he’s calling himself that in the room,” Larkin said, smiling. “He’s a little bit of a more steady behind-the-scenes defenseman — he

blocks shots, he plays hard, he defends his teammates, so when you see a guy like that making big plays, it gives you a huge boost.”

Or as Lalonde put it, Chiarot is, “OT Benny, the boys were calling him.

“Benny has had a really good season. His game has really elevated. He’s been good all year. So a little a confidence in overtime doesn’t surprise me.”

 ?? PAUL SANCYA/AP ?? Red Wings right wing Patrick Kane, right, celebrates his goal against the Colorado Avalanche with Dylan Larkin during overtime at Little Caesars Arena on Thursday.
PAUL SANCYA/AP Red Wings right wing Patrick Kane, right, celebrates his goal against the Colorado Avalanche with Dylan Larkin during overtime at Little Caesars Arena on Thursday.

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