Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Goalies save day in duel

Stars’ Oettinger shines brightest; Brossoit stellar again for Knights

- By Ben Gotz Contact Ben Gotz at bgotz@reviewjour­nal. com. Follow @Bensgotz on Twitter.

Mason Marchment wrapped Dallas Stars goaltender Jake Oettinger in a long embrace when one of the greatest goaltendin­g duels in T-mobile Arena history was over.

Oettinger’s counterpar­t didn’t linger on the ice.

Laurent Brossoit received encouragin­g pats and fistbumps from his Golden Knights teammates as he skated back to the locker room, but he was down the tunnel in a flash.

He had no reason to hang his head. For 65-plus minutes of hockey Saturday, Brossoit and Oettinger traded brilliant save after brilliant save to keep the announced crowd of 17,906 spellbound.

Oettinger just ended up making two more. He stopped both attempts he faced in a shootout to lift the Stars to a come-from-behind 3-2 win.

The Knights’ five-game home winning streak was snapped, but they extended their point streak to nine games (6-0-3).

It was fitting the two goaltender­s were even.

Brossoit and Oettinger each finished with 41 saves in a game in which only a spectacula­r play could beat them. Sometimes that didn’t even work.

Brossoit proved that true 1:02 into overtime when, while laying on the ice, he pushed himself up, spun around and stopped a shot from right wing Tyler Seguin with the back of his glove. It was easily the best save of a game that featured dozens of highlight-reel plays from both sides.

Oettinger, Dallas’ 24-yearold

Vezina Trophy candidate, still came out on top in the end.

He did concede first, with right wing Michael Amadio deflecting a shot from close range into the net with eight minutes left in the second period. The Stars tied the game 2:01 later when rookie center Wyatt Johnston was left alone on the backdoor.

Oettinger blinked again in the third period after center Jack Eichel finished an impressive play off the rush. Center Chandler Stephenson touched the puck just enough in the neutral zone to send Eichel toward the

goal with speed, and Eichel beat Oettinger left to right to put the Knights ahead 2-1 with 4:37 left in regulation.

The Stars again found an answer.

Center Roope Hintz scored a tying goal with 38 seconds remaining in the third period, moments after left wing Jason Robertson made an incredible defensive play to stop an empty-net scoring chance by Stephenson.

Brossoit and Oettinger refused to concede during five up-and-down minutes of overtime, so the teams were forced to use a shootout to settle things. Robertson

and Hintz scored on their attempts, and Eichel and left wing Paul Cotter didn’t.

That settled a heavyweigh­t clash between the two division leaders in the Western Conference.

Dallas moved two points behind the Knights in the standings with 23 games left to play.

Here are three takeaways from the loss:

1. Brossoit’s run

It took Brossoit five months to get into the Knights’ net this season.

He’s playing like he never wants to leave.

The 29-year-old has started three straight games since being called up Feb. 11. He’s stopped 103 of the 110 shots he’s faced in those games for a .936 save percentage.

2. Oettinger impresses

Oettinger continues to be a thorn in the Knights’ side.

He’s 3-0 against them in his career. He has allowed only four goals in those games while saving 101 of the 105 shots he’s seen.

Saturday’s win was Oettinger’s 24th this season, which is tied for the sixthmost in the NHL.

3. Balanced scoring

Eichel’s goal made him the first Knights player to reach 20 this season.

The team previously was one of five in the NHL, and the only one in a playoff position, not to have a 20-goal scorer.

The Knights have still found success thanks to their depth. Amadio’s goal was his 10th of the season, one off his career high.

He became the Knights’ 11th double-digit scorer. Only Seattle (12) has more.

 ?? David Becker
The Associated Press ?? Knights goaltender Laurent Brossoit blocks a shot Saturday by Stars center Roope Hintz, one of his 41 saves in his third straight strong start. Hintz finished with a goal.
David Becker The Associated Press Knights goaltender Laurent Brossoit blocks a shot Saturday by Stars center Roope Hintz, one of his 41 saves in his third straight strong start. Hintz finished with a goal.
 ?? ?? Center Jack Eichel celebrates a nifty third-period goal that gave the Knights a 2-1 lead with 4:37 remaining in regulation. Roope Hintz scored the equalizer for Dallas in the final minute.
Center Jack Eichel celebrates a nifty third-period goal that gave the Knights a 2-1 lead with 4:37 remaining in regulation. Roope Hintz scored the equalizer for Dallas in the final minute.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States