Saturday, December 18, 2010

Game 31: Hurricanes 4, Ducks 2

By Brian LeBlanc
NCSportsTalk.com - Puck Drops
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Two weeks ago, the Hurricanes left on their longest non-State Fair road trip of the season, a five game trip through cities where the Canes have historically not played very well.  And although the trip went according to form in Nashville in the first game of the trip, the Canes earned points in their next four games and return home tonight on a three-game winning streak that few could have predicted when the team hit the road.

Tonight, the Canes come back to Raleigh and face the Anaheim Ducks, a familiar team to two of the newest members of the Hurricanes.  Troy Bodie and Ryan Carter were acquired within a few days of each other by waiver claim and trade, respectively, and each has solidified the Canes' fourth line in their short stint with the team.  They'll play tonight with Zach Boychuk, who makes his season debut after being one of the final cuts in training camp and subsequently setting the world on fire in the American Hockey League.  Boychuk ranks second in the AHL in points, with 32 in 28 games with the Charlotte Checkers, and it looks like the early-season demotion has worked wonders for a guy who looks like he may be a long-term linemate of Eric Staal in the distant future.  Boychuk replaces Jiri Tlusty, who is out for tonight's game with an upper-body injury courtesy of a Ben Eager charging penalty on Thursday night in Atlanta.

At the other end, the Ducks are surprisingly competitive this season, ranking one point behind division-leading Dallas in the Pacific Division.  Most of their core that won a Stanley Cup in 2007 has moved on, but they still have the likes of Corey Perry, captain Ryan Getzlaf and the ageless Teemu Selanne playing alongside youngsters like Bobby Ryan and rookie Cam Fowler, who fell to #12 in the draft this past June but has played like he has something to prove after falling that low.

The Canes are riding a season-high winning streak entering tonight game; can they extend it to four after tonight?  We're about to find out...



2:20 1st: And just like we planned it, the fourth line gets a great scoring chance on its first shift of the game.  Boychuk skated into the slot from the far corner splitting the Ducks' defense and firing a quick snap shot on Ducks goalie Jonas Hiller, who was quick with a kick save.

2:39 1st: Ducks lead 1-0; Getzlaf 12 (Perry, Ryan) And just like that, down come the Ducks, forcing a turnover and taking the first lead of the night.  A bad turnover in a clearing attempt up the far boards from Jay Harrison was intercepted with ease by Bobby Ryan, who fed Corey Perry in the far circle.  Perry fired a shot that was stopped by Cam Ward, but Jamie McBain lost track of Ryan Getzlaf in the low slot and Getzlaf cleaned up the rebound easily, firing it through Ward's five-hole to give the Ducks the lead.

7:00 1st: It looks like the Canes have resolved to not feel sorry for themselves after the goal, and the top line of Eric Staal, Erik Cole and Jeff Skinner spent more than a minute of uninterrupted time in the Ducks' zone, culminating in a cross-checking penalty to Getzlaf to give the Canes the first power play of the night.

7:27 1st: Canes tie it at 1; Staal 14 (Jokinen, Pitkanen) (pp) And it doesn't take long for the Canes to make the Ducks pay for Getzlaf's penalty.  Jussi Jokinen found Eric Staal all alone at the blue line, and in a monumental defensive lapse the Ducks completely lost track of him, giving him all sorts of space to come in and create a play.  That's exactly what the Canes' captain did, beating Hiller with a shot that Hiller should have stopped; he looked up at the ceiling as soon as the puck went through him.  No question that's one he wants back.

13:30 1st: The game has settled down a bit, with neither team getting much in the way of quality chances and the biggest hit for either team coming a few minutes ago when Todd Marchant wiped out and bowled over Cam Ward, drawing a response from the Canes.

16:45 1st: The Canes get away with one, as Cam Ward loses his stick to the near corner and isn't able to retrieve it, yet he still manages to kick out a Saku Koivu shot to keep the game tied  A few seconds later, the Canes cleared the zone and Ward got his stick back.

17:30 1st: Less than a minute later, Ward absolutely robbed Perry on a deflection chance that had five-hole goal written all over it.  He's had a great period, which is only about the fifteenth time that's been said this month.

19:34 1st: Canes lead 2-1; Staal 15 (McBain, Jokinen) (pp) Look out, here comes the Carolina power play, and Eric Staal has two in the first period to get the Canes to 2-for-2 with the man advantage.  A shot from the blue line by Jamie McBain looked like a designed shot to miss the net, and it did its job, bouncing off the boards to the left of Hiller and right to Staal, who was untouched at the far post and tipped home the rebound past Hiller's outstretched left leg to give the Canes their first lead of the night.

End 1st: Shots in the first were tied at 11 apiece, and the Canes certainly looked to have the better play late in the period after a Pitkanen holding-the-stick penalty that they successfully killed.  Good to see the Canes haven't fallen into the first-game-after-a-road-trip pit tonight.



1:41 2nd: Canes lead 3-1, Staal with a hat trick; Staal 16 (Cole, Skinner) A natural hat trick is a great way to come home after two weeks on the road, no?  Eric Staal notched his twelfth career hat trick with a lucky bounce off the skate of Anaheim's Cam Fowler.  A centering pass from Jeff Skinner behind the net bounced off Fowler and right to Erik Cole, who centered to Staal for his third of the evening and second straight from just outside the crease.

9:00 2nd: Since the Staal goal, the Ducks have calmed down and killed off a penalty while slowly tilting the ice toward Cam Ward, who's stood tall in net.  Perry will be seeing Ward's glove in his dreams tonight after being robbed twice by the Carolina netminder.

11:35 2nd: Staal just about had a fourth, off a great Skinner centering pass with Staal camped out at his designated spot to the left of Hiller, but Cam Fowler broke up the pass as Staal one-timed some air instead of the puck.

16:10 2nd: Fowler's done a great job of getting his stick in passing lanes tonight.  The third one I can remember in the game broke up a shorthanded 2-on-1, with Chad LaRose trying to find Ryan Carter 30 feet from the Anaheim goal but Fowler's deflection tipped the puck out of line and the Ducks came back the other way.

17:35 2nd: Another Ward denial of Perry. Ho hum.

18:30 2nd: Since giving up the first goal, one that he was not at fault in the least on, Ward has played out of his mind, stopping the next 23 Anaheim shots, some of them in highlight-reel fashion.  Safe to say that two-goal game in Florida was a fluke now, no?

End 2nd: The Ducks did everything they could to score in that period, but if not for Staal there would be no question that Ward would be the first star.  He's played great, keeping the Ducks at bay for the last 37-plus minutes.  Shots in the second were 15-11 Ducks, who hold a 26-22 overall league.



3:35 3rd: Ward is absolutely on fire now. The Ducks had a 3-on-1 down low and Ward robbed Ryan Getzlaf with a kick save while Teemu Selanne was interfering with him, then a few seconds later snared a point shot from Paul Mara that looked like it might have changed direction in front of the net.

4:25 3rd: And another 2-on-1 for Carter and LaRose is broken up by Fowler.  This time, the pass actually got through, but Carter had to elevate the puck to avoid Fowler's stick and LaRose couldn't bury the bouncing puck.

11:15 3rd: Staal's had a couple of chances for his fourth of the night, and it took a stop by Hiller in Ward-ian fashion to deny Staal off a great centering pass from Jeff Skinner, who's quietly had a very effective game despite only tallying one assist tonight.

13:22 3rd: And just like that, Skinner nearly scores on a weird knuckling puck that bounced off both Staal's stick and Skinner's glove en route to Hiller making a really challenging save.  The way things have gone tonight, it wouldn't have been surprising at all to see it go in.

17:29 3rd: Three penalties for the Canes in thirty seconds: Corvo for roughing, Sutter for closing his hand on the puck, and Staal for high sticking. The Canes' bench is apoplectic.

18:12 3rd: Ducks cash in: Getzlaf 13 (Visnovsky, Perry) (pp) The 5-on-3 remains so, as Ryan Getzlaf scores on a shot from the blue line that Ward was screened on with a few seconds left in the Corvo penalty.

18:55 3rd: Ward with an incredible save on Saku Koivu from point-blank. Words can't describe what a save that was. Simply incredible.

End 3rd: Joe Corvo iced it with an empty-net goal with 4.7 seconds left, and immediately was sucker-punched by Corey Perry, sparking what almost turned into a line brawl while the Canes bench was celebrating the goal, with Brandon Sutter of all people getting in a few haymakers on Perry before they were separated.  Needless to say, if these two teams saw each other more than once per year there would be some fireworks.  Shots in the third were 19-10 Ducks, meaning Ward earned his second straight win with more than 40 saves, the first time a Canes goalie has done that since Sean Burke in December of 1997, months after the team moved to North Carolina.

Postgame: Paul Maurice was on a roll tonight, answering questions about Corvo's penalty, the 6-on-3 kill late in the game and Ward's performance with a wry smile indicating that he was quite pleased with most of the team's game tonight.  And with good reason: the team is on a roll now, with their first four-game winning streak of the season and a goaltender playing as well as any goalie in the NHL at the moment.  Often, these first games back after a long road trip can be devoid of much excitement, but that was far from the case tonight.

Click for locker room audio from Eric Staal and Cam WardMaurice's press conference is attached.

The Canes now head to Tampa for a Monday date with the Lightning, then they're back here for a faceoff with Montreal next Thursday.  We'll be back here then, and hope you'll join us as well.

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