Los Angeles Times

Ducks survive Panthers attack

Goalie faces 52 shots and rejects all but two, and Ducks generate only 28 shots.

- By Mike Coppinger sports@latimes.com

Gibson makes 50 saves to hold back Florida’s ferocious offense in a 3-2 victory.

John Gibson continues to face a bevy of shots, but each and every night, he’s up to the task.

This time, he had a whopping 52 shots unloaded on him by the Florida Panthers, but it didn’t matter.

The goaltender swatted all but two away, and propelled the Ducks to a 3-2 victory over the Panthers on Sunday in front of a sold-out 17,174 at Honda Center.

“It’s not up to me [how many shots I face],” said Gibson, who has given up two goals or fewer in three consecutiv­e starts. “You don’t have a choice.

“When you come into the game, you might get 10, you might get 50. You gotta be ready to play every night.”

Luckily for the Ducks, Gibson has been ready when called upon. The team has allowed an average of 35.8 shots per game, worst in the NHL.

Their 5.3 shot differenti­al is second-worst in the league (they generated 28 shots against the Panthers).

But they got the win, thanks to their power play, which is finally on track. For the first time in almost a month, the Ducks have reeled off consecutiv­e wins in regulation.

“We only had one game this week and it showed, we were rusty with the puck. … To tax our goaltender to the level we taxed him tonight is unfair to him,” coach Randy Carlyle said.

“He saved our butts. We didn’t have a very good outing from a standpoint of management of the puck. We turned the puck over 16 times in the second period alone, and we were fortunate enough that the power play won the special-teams battle.”

The Ducks received power-play goals from Rickard Rakell (one-time pass from Chris Wagner) and Brandon Montour (slap shot in close off a Corey Perry rebound).

Josh Manson opened the scoring with a nifty breakaway goal late in the first period, and after that, the Ducks never lost the lead.

They threatened to allow the Panthers back in the game. That’s what happens when you allow 50-plus shots, and you’re forced to kill six infraction­s (including two delay-of-game calls). Carlyle is frustrated by the repeated parade to the penalty box, and something has to give.

“We’re getting close to Game 20 here,” Carlyle said. “The message has gotta get through here.”

A Vincent Trochek shot on the power play cut the deficit to one goal in the second period, and the Panthers had an astounding number of chances on their three power-play opportunit­ies in the final period.

But Gibson was there, denying every shot he faced on those penalty kills.

Kariya, Selanne are honored

Former Ducks Paul Kariya and Teemu Selanne were inducted into the Hall of Fame on Nov. 13 and the team honored them in a pregame ceremony.

Ducks owner Henry Samueli hinted that the team might soon add Kariya’s No. 9 jersey to the rafters alongside Selanne’s No. 8.

TONIGHT

AT SAN JOSE When: 7. On the air: TV: Prime Ticket; Radio: 830. Update: The Sharks topped the Ducks 2-1 in a shootout this month. … Logan Couture leads the Sharks with 10 goals.

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