Scrooge pays visit to Jets
Winnipeg denied chance to move up in East by persistent Pens
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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 24/12/2011 (5093 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
A home-heavy schedule has provided the Winnipeg Jets opportunity for traction.
The Jets certainly haven’t wasted it — 7-2-1 in the last 10 at the MTS Centre — but Friday’s tell-tale 4-1 defeat against the Pittsburgh Penguins left an empty feeling because it was within reach for so long.
“Can we muster up 20 minutes to play?” Jets coach Claude Noel said, voicing the critical question about the game which was 1-1 through 40 minutes. “Obviously we weren’t able to. But I would rather look at the big picture.
“To me it was a typical three (games) in four nights game. I’m not going to sit here and criticize my team. I think we’ve had a good month.”
The Jets have progressed, going into their two-day Christmas break two games above .500 at 16-14-5. Ninth spot in the NHL’s Eastern Conference is by no means the end of the world and 37 points is just two points off the playoff line.
“We made some strides as a group,” said Jets left-winger Tanner Glass. “The last little bit we left some points on the table we could have snagged. But we grew as a group. With a young team, we’re trying to make strides, learn about ourselves and learn about playing the right way and I think we learned a lot in this homestand.”
The run of favourable schedule is not over. It’s 7-4-1 so far in the string of 13 of 15 at home, with games to come next week in Denver, then at home against the Los Angeles Kings and Toronto Maple Leafs.
Friday’s third period, though, will take some of the stripes off the candy canes.
The Penguins forced the issue right off the bat and James Neal scored just 22 seconds in.
Then goals by Jordan Staal and Pascal Dupuis just 40 seconds apart before the five-minute mark ended matters rather quickly.
“I think the first one was, first shift of the third,” said Glass. “That’s a tough one to give up.”
Added defenceman Zach Bogosian: “It’s obviously frustrating. We were right there with them until the start of the third.”
Pittsburgh’s third win in a row pushed it to nine games above .500 at 20-11-4.
The well-executed road game plan accomplished its goal, leaving goalie Marc Andre Fleury with not a lot to do.
Fleury even had a great sleight-of-hand in the second period with the game tied, simply pushing his net off the posts with the Jets teeing up a Grade A scoring opportunity.
To the officials, it was like it never even happened. The same could not be said early in the third, when Jets defenceman Dustin Byfuglien knocked into Pens defenceman Ben Lovejoy, who bowled over Fleury, who again knocked his net off. This one was a penalty, interference to Byfuglien, and Stall’s goal was the result.
“They can score quick,” Bogosian said. “They have a lot of firepower. If you take Buff’s penalty, and I don’t even know if that’s a penalty, and they score on that. If we pop one in, it’s a pretty close game. Say what you want but we didn’t play the way we should have in the third.”
The Jets would probably like to have the first period back, too, so it’s probably a major case of of ifs and buts and candies and nuts ….
But certainly unlike their tidy 4-0 win over Montreal on Thursday, the Jets were not opportunistic in the first, when they more scoring chances than their five shots on goal.
tim.campbell@freepress.mb.ca