The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Sharks ride depth, Jones to sweep of Ducks

- By Josh Dubow

SAN JOSE, Calif. — Very little separated San Jose and Anaheim in the regular season, with the Ducks edging out the Sharks by one point for second place in the Pacific Division.

Their first-round series wasn’t nearly as competitiv­e.

The Sharks rode their superior depth, potent power play and stellar goaltendin­g from Martin Jones to the second sweep in franchise history, knocking out the Ducks with a 2-1 victory on Wednesday night.

“We’re playing well going into the second round,” defenseman Marc-Edouard Vlasic said. “Everybody is contributi­ng if it’s offensivel­y, blocking shots, taking a hit. Everybody is doing what they have to for us to win.”

After jumping on Anaheim early to win the first two games on the road, the Sharks earned a lopsided win in Game 3 thanks to undiscipli­ned play by the Ducks and then withstood a strong push to end the series in Game 4.

Jones kept Anaheim at bay for long stretches in the second and third period before finally allowing a tying goal to Andrew Cogliano. San Jose then took 1:16 to answer and scored the eventual seriesclin­cher when Vlasic’s point shot deflected off Tomas Hertl and into the net.

“The response goal was huge,” coach Peter DeBoer said. “We were on our heels. They were pressing. It’s tough to play an eliminatio­n game when you get an opportunit­y to sweep a really good team like that.”

The Sharks were in control for most of the series, outscoring the Ducks 16-4 in their most lopsided series in franchise history, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.

San Jose got as many goals from its fourth line in the series as Anaheim had from its entire team with Marcus Sorensen scoring his third of the series to give the Sharks a 1-0 lead in the first period of the clincher. Eric Fehr also had a goal from the fourth line in the series.

“Every night they hopped over the boards with energy and grabbed momentum for us, drew penalties,” DeBoer said. “They were fantastic, but I’ve said from Day 1 we need to be a four-line team if we’re going to have success. And I think the teams that are moving through are. I watched Vegas a little bit last night. They’re a fourline team.”

The expansion Golden Knights are also the next team in the Sharks’ way. The two will meet in the second round starting sometime next week in just the second series in the past 22 years featuring teams coming off sweeps in the previous round.

Vegas finished off the Los Angeles Kings on Tuesday night, part of a record-setting inaugural campaign that included a Pacific Division title in the regular season.

The Sharks will likely need another strong defensive effort next round led by Jones. He was brilliant in the clincher, making several tough saves against Corey Perry. He also had a shutout in Game 1 and set a San Jose playoff record with 45 regulation saves in Game 3.

He finished the series with

a .970 save percentage, helping the Sharks earn their second sweep in franchise history after also doing it in the first round against Vancouver in 2013.

“Goaltendin­g wins this time of the year,” forward Logan Couture said. “He was fantastic. He made a lot of Grade A saves. He was our best penalty killer. They had some really good looks. Perry had a lot of chances that Joner made some big saves on.”

By extending their season another round, the Sharks may be able to get star center Joe Thornton back in the lineup. Thornton has been out since injuring his right knee on Jan. 23. He has resumed skating and took part in warmups throughout the series but has said he doesn’t want to return until he knows he’s healthy enough to help the team and make it through what he hopes will be a run to the Stanley Cup Final.

The Sharks have time now to figure that out.

“That’s all hypothetic­al,” DeBoer said. “That doesn’t even cross our desk. Those decisions will be something if he is healthy we’ll make then. Sometimes those things sort themselves out. I’m just really proud of our group, the resiliency, the composure.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES THEARON W. HENDERSON/ ?? The Sharks’ Tomas Hertl is congratula­ted by teammates after scoring a goal against the Ducks during the third period in Game 4 of the Western Conference first round Wednesday at SAP Center in San Jose, Calif.
GETTY IMAGES THEARON W. HENDERSON/ The Sharks’ Tomas Hertl is congratula­ted by teammates after scoring a goal against the Ducks during the third period in Game 4 of the Western Conference first round Wednesday at SAP Center in San Jose, Calif.

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