Confusion corner mishap dings Jets
Lecavalier scores from sharp angle as Pavelec looks for puck at point
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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 30/10/2011 (5088 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
TAMPA, Fla. — Ondrej Pavelec was the best of the Winnipeg Jets on Saturday night, but he wasn’t perfect — and he needed to be.
Pavelec lost track of a rebound and while his eyes were searching for the puck, Tampa Bay Lightning sniper Vincent Lecavalier whipped it past the unsuspecting goalie from a sharp angle near the corner.
The goal was the difference as the Lightning took a 1-0 win over the Jets before 19,204 fans at the St. Pete Times Forum. Winnipeg is now 3-6-1 on the season while the Lightning improve to 5-4-2 after an important Southeast Division matchup.

Pavelec was able to stop all but one of Tampa’s 27 shots while Lightning goalie Dwayne Roloson was a perfect 28-for-28.
“It’s difficult. You let eight goals in on Thursday and get two points and in this game you let one goal in and you get the loss,” said Pavelec. “We couldn’t score… a lot of scramble in front of their net and we couldn’t put it in. Our guys played so hard in the third.
“(Lecavalier) surprised me. I made a rebound and didn’t know it went in the corner. I thought it was more on the boards close to the blue-line so that’s why I stayed in the middle. I had two guys in front of me and I couldn’t see him at all. It was a good shot and it surprised me. It’s my fault but things happen. This game was about one goal.”
The Jets have been faulted for poor defensive play and a lack of structure on the ice but they stuck to their system for the most part on this night, which was in stark contrast to their game on Thursday, which saw them down the Philadelphia Flyers 9-8.
“We recognize that we don’t have the ability to score nine every night. I thought we played hard, we played responsible and I thought Pavelec was outstanding,” said coach Claude Noel. “You can’t really fault him on the goal. He was tremendous.”
Noel liked the way his team cut down on mistakes and played within their system despite the final outcome.
“This was quite a bit better, we played way more methodical. We just need to grind one through. We couldn’t even get one,” he said. “Our power play was a little better but we took too many penalties again, giving them five power plays. It grinds you down and shortens your bench.”
Lightning coach Guy Boucher has the likes of Lecavalier, Martin St. Louis and Steven Stamkos on his bench and in a tight game where one shot is the difference they can be killers.
“We talked in the morning about missing tons of opportunities to shoot in the last game and that’s not our team. We’re a shooting-mentality team,” said Boucher. “It came from putting the puck on net from a bad angle. Our goalie coach says it all the time — normal angles and good shots, goalies stop them all the time. Bad angles, they go in.”
gary.lawless@freepress.mb.ca Twitter: @garylawless