San Jose Sharks podcsast with Mary Lisa Walsh: Sharks up for the challenge against Bruins; B’s playing eight of next nine on the road

On the San Jose Sharks podcast with Mary Lisa the Sharks are falling into some of their old habits and beating the best teams in league like the Washington Capitals with two goals plus one being the empty netter. Before that game the Sharks were beaten by the New Jersey Devils last Thursday in a 3-0 shutout.

Once again the Sharks playing well against good teams like the Caps and not so well against the weaker teams but the Boston Bruins certainly should qualify as a good team and they had a great start this season. The B’s have been coming on lately and they’ve moved to the top of their conference. They certainly should qualify as a tough opponent and the Sharks seem to play up to the competition when they come into the building.

photo credit: zimbio.com–San Jose Sharks Brett Burns who scored the tying goal in the second period at 11:46 against the Bruins on Tuesday night

Mary Lisa does the San Jose Sharks podcasts each week at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

NHL Podcast and commentary with Joe Lami: Blackhawks in shock after being blanked 5-0 by Kings; The Flames Michael Frolik’s hat trick gives Calgary a boost; plus much more on the NHL

photo credit: pinterest.com–NY Islanders Cal Clutterbuck who scored the game winning goal against Florida on Monday night

On the NHL podcast with Joe Lami, The New York Islanders scored three goals in the third period after being down 2-0 and took the game back from the Florida Panthers on Monday night 3-2. What’s happening to the Chicago Blackhawks who are slumping and lost a 5-0 shutout to the Los Angeles Kings on home ice.

The NHL plans to use extra cameras during all Stanley Cup Playoffs in the event of coaches challenges. The NHL doesn’t want to lose any games to any bad, close or borderline calls that would be left in question in the playoffs. The San Jose Sharks are hosting the Boston Bruins on Tuesday night at SAP Center. The Sharks got shutout last Thursday 3-0 by the New Jersey Devils. The Sharks got hopping mad about that and came out and beat one of hockey’s best teams the Washington Capitals 5-2. Sharks captain Joe Pavelski scored the go ahead goal when the score was tied 2-2 for the eventual 5-2 win.

Listen to Joe Lami’s entire NHL podcast below and every week right here at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

 

Sharks Take Washington 5-2

By Mary Walsh

AP photo: The San Jose Sharks goalie Martin Jones stops one of 23 shots against by the Washington Caps on Saturday night

SAN JOSE– The San Jose Sharks defeated the visiting Washington Capitals by a score of 5-2 on Saturday. A wide variety of goals came from Joe Pavelski, Patrick Marleau, Brenden Dillon, Brent Burns and Joe Thornton. A power play goal, a short-handed goal, two even strength goals and an empty netter, combined with a strong defensive game showed the Sharks to advantage against the best team in the NHL. One more win will clinch a playoff berth for the Capitals, but they would not get it Saturday.

Goaltender Martin Jones made 23 saves for the Sharks, and some of those saves were more harrowing than others. He stopped a shot from a two-on-none breakaway in the second period. He stopped a penalty shot. He stopped a couple of shots that looked fairly unstoppable. He stopped almost everything the Caps threw at him. At the other end, Philipp Grubauer also made 23 saves, but the Sharks took more shots.

Tomas Hertl drew the first penalty of the game, a slashing penalty to Jason Chimera at 5:02. The Sharks power play was not systemically weak, but they seemed to have a lot of trouble handling the puck, as if it were bouncing or sticking unexpectedly. The Capitals did not have the same problem, so one could assume the problem was the opponent and not the ice. The Sharks had two shots on goal in the power play, but no goal.

The Sharks did score first, during some confusion at the Washington end of the ice. Joe Thornton was not confused, nor was Brenden Dillon, who sent the puck to the net and created a rebound for Thornton to pick up. Assists went to Dillon and Tomas Hertl.

The Capitals responded with several good chances of their own, but the Sharks minimized their time and space. On one play, a Shark lost his footing at the Caps blue line, allowing Ovechkin to escape through the neutral zone. Some good hustle from the Sharks defense got in his way before he could get a shot off.

Despite the pressure from the Caps, the Sharks maintained a small 11-9 lead on the shot clock as the first period wound to a close. With 14 seconds left in the period, Nick Spaling was called for a high stick against Jason Chimera.

The Sharks started the second period on the penalty kill and added a second penalty just 20 seconds in, a delay of game to Brent Burns. The three defenders for the Sharks were Joel Ward, Marc-Edouard Vlasic and Justin Braun. They stopped a couple of shots but eventually the skilled Washington power play was too much and TJ Oshie tied the game. Assists to Niklas Backstrom and Alex Ovechkin.

The Sharks went back on the penalty kill at 3:39, a boarding call against Joe Thornton. Couture, Martin, Burns and Karlsson started the kill, cleared the puck, and made way for a second unit of Vlasic, Braun, Marleau and Ward. The latter two broke away in the final 30 seconds of the kill for a two on one and a short-handed goal. The goal was Marleau’s, due to a last-second pass from Ward. A second assist went to Vlasic. It was Marleau’s 476th goal, putting him in 51st place among NHL all-time goal scorers.

The Caps had another excellent breakaway chance, with two skaters crossing the Sharks blue line without an escort. Sharks defenders got back in time to give the puck carrier a little grief, but he got a pass away to Matt Niskanen, who had time to take a shot. Martin Jones handled the shot cleanly and held on to the puck.

The Caps tied the game again just past the midway point. After a series of fumbles by the Sharks, from overskating the puck to drop-passing it to no one, the Caps launched a brief attack that ended with the puck taking an odd bounce off a skater in front of the net, and over Martin Jones’ pads. The goal went to Justin Williams, with assists to Evgeni Kuznetsov and Andrei Burakovsky.

The Sharks finished up the period with a power play, a hooking penalty to Kuznestov, drawn by Joonas Donskoi. The Sharks power play was interrupted when Jay Beagle earned a penalty shot when Burns slashed him during a short-handed breakaway. Jones stopped the shot and the Sharks power play carried over to the third period.

Joe Pavelski was not having a particularly good game, but 49 seconds into the third period he scored a power play goal. A fairly straight-forward play started with a pass from Brent Burns to Joe Thornton. Pavelski caught the pass from Thornton and backhanded it past Grubauer for the Sharks’ third lead of the game.

Another player’s game improved dramatically early in the third: Brenden Dillon’s. Although he already had a point, he did not have a good second period. At 2:51 of the third, however, he picked up Tierney’s pass on the blue line and sent a hard shot at the Washington net. The puck laced its way through traffic and gave Dillon his second goal of the season. Assists went to Tierney and Roman Polak. That was Polak’s first point since joining the Sharks jst before the trade deadline.

Couture had a chance shortly after that, finding himself briefly one on one with Grubauer. Grubauer snatched the puck out of the air and kept the score 4-2 Sharks.

Just past the midway point of the period, Joonas Donskoi blocked a pass with his stick and the puck deflected onto the Sharks bench, hitting Paul Martin. He left the bench with a trainer but returned to the ice during the next commercial break.

With a little over three minutes left, the referees drew the crowd’s ire after Mike Weber spent some time shoving Melker Karlsson’s face into the ice while kneeling on his back. It looked very much out of order but no penalty was called.

An empty net goal from Brent Burns closed it out.

The Sharks next play on Tuesday against the visiting Boston Bruins.

Sharks Bedeviled on Home Ice

By Matthew T.F. Harrington

photo credit: nj.com/devils–New Jersey goaltender Keith Kinkaid who threw a shutout at the San Jose Sharks Thursday night stops one of 30 shots

SAN JOSE, Calif. — Despite nearly a 2-to-1 shooting advantage, the San Jose Sharks were blanked by the New Jersey Devils 3-0 at home Thursday night. Sharks goalie Martin Jones made 13 saves on 15 shots, but the Sharks (37-24-6) dropped their 15th game of the season at the SAP Center on a goal from Devante Smith-Pelly and two from Travis Zajac. Keith Kinkaid picked up his second career shutout starting in place of injured Devils netminder Corey Schneider.

“We had not one or two, but a bunch of guys off,” said Sharks coach Peter DeBoer. “That’s real. (The Devils) were a hungry team. They were rested, sitting here waiting. They were desperate, they were hungry. They played a hard, heavy game.”

The Sharks went on the power play three times, but failed to beat the suffocating New Jersey defensive system. San Jose threw the puck on the 26-year-old Kinkaid 30 times, including 7 chances on the power play but failed to beat the third-year goalie.

“We were just looking for that one goal on the power,” said Sharks captain Joe Pavelski. “Or 5-on-5 where it was going to crack them. But we could have been better. We could have had more jump and been harder in more areas.”

Despite a limited offensive output, the Devils (32-29-7) were able to beat Jones 3:14 into the 2nd after a Smith-Pelly shot from the wing found its way through a crowd into the back of the net. Stephen Gionta and Mike Sislo assisted on Smith-Pelly’s 9th of the season.

“A team like that, they get the first one it just makes it harder to play against them,” said defenseman Paul Martin on New Jersey’s defensive system. “They’re good at shutting down plays, not giving up too much. For us to have the start we had was not what we wanted.”

Zajac scored his first of the game on a pass attempt from behind the net that hit defenseman Paul Martin’s leg. During the ensuing scramble, Jones tried to pull the loose puck off the goal line before it crossed over for a score. After video review, the officials ruled the puck did cross the goal line for a 2-0 New Jersey lead 1:35 into the 3rd period.

“I didn’t even see it or watch it afterwards,” said Martin. “I know it hit me then crossed the line before Jones grabbed it. It’s one of those things where we need to be more clean in our own end. This was a sloppy game in general for us from the start.”

It was the first shot on goal in over 18 minutes for the Devils.

“It’s a stat you don’t recognize,” said Pavelski. “They’re not getting a whole lot out there. A couple looks they did find ways to get them in. That’s all that really mattered.”

Zajac would score his 2nd goal of the game (and 12th of the season) with Jones pulled and 53 seconds remaining in regulation.

The Sharks couldn’t continue the momentum they built from a two-game sweep of the two Alberta teams after beating the Calgary Flames Monday night and the Edmonton Oilers Tuesday.

“It’s always tough, the first game at home after a road trip,” said Martin. “No Matter how long it is. We’ve been successful on the road. It takes a lot out of us winning those games and finding ways to win on the road. I think we take it for granted. It’s expected that the same thing is going to happen at home without the same effort or intensity.”

While none of the players could answer definitely why the team has underperformed at home this year, most responses came down to the quality of the ice. The SAP Center now hosts the Sharks AHL affiliate, the San Jose Barracuda, which has led to a degradation in the ice quality noted by visiting teams and now the tenants of SAP.

“The ice was not the way we’d like it to be,” said Martin. “But everyone is playing on the same ice. We just need to find a way.”

When asked if the team would adjust its pass-heavy, speed-based offense, coach had a different solution.

“Maybe fix the ice, how about that?” joked DeBoer.

The ice won’t be fixed, if ever, before the Sharks next home game Saturday. San Jose takes on the Eastern Conference leaders the Washington Capitals before facing the Atlantic Division-leading Boston Bruins Tuesday night at home. While there won’t be changes to the ice, the Sharks will hope for changes to their game.

“I’m sure there’s a few things we can fix up and be better at,” said Pavelski. “We’ve got a big game ahead of us Saturday.”

 

Sharks hand Oilers their first shutout since December 31st

~ Photo credit: (Jason Franson/The Canadian Press via AP)

~ By Pearl Allison Lo

~ After his fellow goalie nearly had a shutout, San Jose’s James Reimer decided he would go for it, blanking the Edmonton Oilers 3-0 Tuesday, in the Sharks’ final game at Rexall Place.

Reimer made a strong contribution with 31 saves, in just his second start for the team. It was his first win since February 13. He is now 5-0 against the Oilers.

It was the largest margin of victory between the teams so far in three games this season. The other two games were decided by a goal.

San Jose had a solid back-to-back game effort, with their second shutout in just under a month. They ended Edmonton goalie Cam Talbot’s four game win streak. It was the most goals he had given up since February 23. The Sharks also killed two power plays.

After two games without a point, Logan Couture scored two goals, each with a different pair of teammates.

Couture got the game winner early. It was the second straight goal the Sharks scored within the opening two minutes. This one came at 1:33. Couture shot at the net and alertly got his own rebound, as he was able to spot the loose puck before Talbot. Matt Nieto and Joonas Donskoi aided with the goal.

At 15:50, 10 seconds into the power play, Couture struck again, this time after moving into the left faceoff circle. Joe Pavelski started it from the left faceoff circle, passing back to Brent Burns at the point before Burns passed to Couture. Burns now has a five game point streak

San Jose also emerged from the first with a penalty free period.

Pavelski joined the party, with his second goal in as many games. He did so at 14:03 of the second. Thornton started the play from the boards and Pavelski tipped in Paul Martin’s shot.

Game notes: The Sharks are now 22-2-0 leading after one and 25-0-2 leading after two. They being a three game homestand Thursday, facing the New Jersey Devils at 7:30pm.

San Jose Sharks podcast with Mary Lisa Walsh: Sharks edge one out thanks to Martin; SJ to see old coach McClellan tonight in Edmonton

AP photo: San Jose Sharks Brett Burns gets in a tussle during the Sharks 2-1 win over the Calgary Flames

On the San Jose Sharks podcast with Mary Lisa the Sharks goaltender Martin Jones said he’s never been in a game quite like the one he played in on Monday night stopping 47 shots in a narrow margin decision that gave the Sharks a 2-1 decision in Calgary. It’s certainly good news for the Sharks that he was able to handle that but it’s really not great news that the Sharks let that happen. They were really not on top of their game in Calgary on Monday until overtime for those final 17 seconds.

The fact that they couldn’t stay out of the penalty box, the fact that they couldn’t get more shots and they couldn’t protect their goalie better made it harder to keep the play at the other end. It’s important to win they could use those points and it would be nice not to be third at the end of the regular season.

Mary Lisa has much more on the Sharks podcast listen below and every week at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

NHL podcast with Joe Lami: Caps snap Ducks 11 game win streak; Kings Jeff Carter nets his 300th career goal; Aves goalie Varlamov stops 37 shots by the Yotes

AP photo: Washington Captials TJ Oshie finds the back of the net with a shootout goal beating the Anaheim Ducks goaltender John Gibson Monday night

On the NHL podcast with Joe Lami the Washington Capitals win in a shootout on Monday night to end the Anaheim Ducks 11 game win streak. The Ducks had a Mighty steak going. Also the LA Kings Jeff Carter netted his 300th goal of his career after the Kings Drew Doughty and Anze Kopitar scored two minutes apart in the second period as the Kings take down the Vancouver Canucks 5-1.

The Colorado Avalanche’s goaltender Seymon Varlamov stopped 37 shots from the Arizona Coyotes in a 3-1 win for Varlamov a great defensive outing in net. Also in a rivalry game the Chicago Blackhawks got a key victory over the Detroit Red Wings 4-1. The Hawks Patrick Kane scored his 38th goal of the season and the Hawks goaltender Corey Crawford had 33 saves. Lastly Joe takes a look at the San Jose Sharks Martin Jones in goal who had a hot night in his own right stopping 47 shots against the Calgary Flames at the Saddledome for a 2-1 Sharks overtime win.

Listen to Joe Lami for NHL headlines commentary on the podcast below right here at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Categories NHL

Jones burns out Flames

~Photo credit: (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press via AP)

~ By Pearl Allison Lo

~ The Calgary Flames burned strong against San Jose Sharks Monday, sending the game to overtime, but fell in the end, 2-1.

Sharks’ goalie Martin Jones had a career-high 47 saves, as he faced seven power plays. This performance came after a one-game hiatus. Before that, Jones had been in net for 10 straight games.

San Jose’s seven penalties equaled the amount they had last game against the Canucks on Saturday, but the difference was Jones.

In fact, the Sharks had more penalties by the end of the first against Calgary, then against Vancouver, but San Jose emerged with the lead as well.

Early goals ended up paying off for the Sharks in the game.

The first came at 1:56 of the game, as Brent Burns became the first defenseman in franchise history to have a four game goal streak. That was the first part of the Gordie Howe hat trick, which Burns got a day before his birthday.

During San Jose’s first penalty, Jones stopped Sean Monahan twice.

Jones was able to replicate his save success when the Sharks had two more penalties in the first period, causing a 5-on-3 for about 30 seconds.

The Flames’ Garnet Hathaway drew three of the first four penalties, and soon became involved in another one.

After drawing a hi sticking penalty from Burns, Hathaway got two minutes for instigating a fight and a 10 minute misconduct.  Besides an additional fighting penalty for both, Burns got a double minor for drawing blood. This was the second part of the Gordie Howe hat trick for Burns.

8 seconds after Calgary’s fifth power play expired, Flames goalie Joni Ortio got his first save in just a little bit more than a period’s worth of time. Ortio emulated Jones to stop Nieto at 10:11 of the second.

Calgary peppered Jones with 18 shots in the period. In contrast, San Jose only tested Ortio four times.

The Flames did not let up on Jones at all, adding an additional 18 shots in the third. Their persistence paid off with a 6-on-4 power play goal by Joe Colborne and Mark Giordano at 18:38, to earn a point. The power play was created by the lightest of the penalties of the night, a delay of game call and with an extra attacker seconds before the goal.

Overtime then ended as quickly as it started. 19 seconds in, Joe Pavelski scored his sixth on the road and ninth this season, game winning goal, to lead the NHL, according to Bret Hedican. Surprisingly, according to Darin Stephens @SharksStats, it was Pavelski’s first career overtime goal in the regular season. Pavelski was aided by Burns and Joe Thornton, the finale of the Gordie Howe hat trick for Burns. San Jose is now 15-0-0 with such a player accomplishment, Stephens mentioned.

Game notes: Burns now has eight total points in four straight games. Dougie Hamilton led with a game-high and at least a season-high eight shots. The Sharks will play the second of back-to-back games against the Oilers, Tuesday at 6pm.

 

Barracuda Down Condors 4-2

By Mary Walsh

photo credit: San Jose Barracuda

SAN JOSE– The San Jose Barracuda climbed a little closer to a playoff spot with a 4-2 win over the Bakersfield Condors. Petter Emanuelsson scored two goals for San Jose, while John McCarthy scored the game winner and Jeremy Morin added an insurance goal into an empty net. Joel Rumpel made 24 saves for the Barracuda in his first AHL game. After the win, he said that he was “a little bit nervous before the game. But the guys let me feel the first couple from the outside, so it was easy from there.”

The teams took ten penalties in the first two periods alone, not counting fighting majors. The only goal scored during any of those penalties was a short-handed goal by Bakersfield’s Jujhar Khaira. After the game, John McCarthy explained how that takes a toll on a team, even when the penalty kill is successful:

It kind of gets in way of the flow of the game. We’re not really rolling our lines when that happens so that’s something we’ve got to work on going forward. I think even last game, first period we took too any penalties. There’s a lot of guys who aren’t killing penalties then they’re kind of out of the flow of the game.

Some players, though, thrive on the penalty kill. After the game, assistant coach Ryan Mougenel said of McCarthy:

One of Mac’s biggest strengths is the penalty kill. I think it’s really kind of translated into his offense. Sometimes it’s little things, like some guys at practice have to watch pucks go in the net to have success, to score, like Goldobin. He [McCarthy] builds his confidence through the pk and he’s one of our most consistent guys.

The penalties started early and came often after that. The first was a cross-checking penalty to Bakersfield’s Rob Klinkhammer at 4:18. San Jose had a couple of shots and the Condors only cleared the puck once, but the Barracuda could not get a puck past goaltender Eetu Laurikainen.

That came a few seconds after the penalty expired. It was not a beautiful zone entry, but the Condors fumbled an interception at their blue line, putting the puck in front of Petter Emanualsson. He got moving quickly and before the defenders could get after him, he had taken his shot and scored.

Half way through the first period, the shots were 9-5 Barracuda. The shots stayed that way even when the Condors scored the tying goal. A strange bounce sent the puck into the blue paint, off of a body and into the net, surprising even the Bakersfield player who was on his way behind the net to collect the puck. The goal went to Mitch Moroz, with an assist to Dillon Simpson.

Fighting majors took Gus Young and Kale Kessy out of the game for five at 12:04. Karl Stollery and Andrew Miller joined their teammates in the box with coincidental minors for slashing and roughing respectively.

Bakersfield’s Jujhar Khaira thought had scored the go-ahead goal, but he had done so over the prone body of the Barracuda goalie. Rumpel was thus prone only because Dillon Simpson had skated into and fallen over him seconds earlier. The goal was disallowed for goaltender interference and the Barracuda got a power play. The final 30 seconds of that power play were amplified into a five on three when Matthew Ford also went to the box, this time for cross-checking.

The Barracuda found themselves on the other end of a five on three early in the second period. At 1:43, Nikolay Goldobin went to the box for tripping. Just under 90 seconds later, Stollery joined him after being called for interference. San Jose escaped the penalties unscathed, and drove the play to the other end to rebuild their shot lead.

By the middle of the second period, the Barracuda again had the shot lead at 22-18, and again took the lead on the scoreboard. A good rush from Ryan Carpenter on the wing and Petter Emanuelsson up the middle beat the Condors to the punch. Assists went to Carpenter and Gus Young.

The Condors responded by taking an interference penalty. Kessy had been in the box for less than a minute when Khaira won a race to the puck and went all the way down the ice to tie the game again. Kessy got out of the box just long enough to take two more penalties and sit for four minutes, called for high-sticking and unsportsmanlike conduct.

With 2:30 left in the four minute power play, the Barracuda lost Jevpalovs to a penalty. With less than two minutes left in the Bakersfield penalty, Jeremy Langlois went to the box for kneeing, putting the Barracuda down 3-4. San Jose weathered that too, but had squandered a perfectly good power play.

The Barracuda were back on the penalty kill less than two minutes into the third period. Julius Bergman went to the box for holding at 1:06.

Eventually, the penalties burned themselves out and with just over four minutes left, John McCarthy won the race to a puck as it exited the Barracuda zone: “I think somebody was catching up to me on my inside so I didn’t have time to move it to my forehand and shoot. So I just got it to the net and hopefully if it didn’t go in maybe we would have got a second whack at it. But it went in.” It squeaked by on the short side, bouncing off of the goaltender’s back. Assists went to Parkes and Stollery.

The Condors pulled their goaltender withe less than 90 seconds remaining and Morin scored the empty netter with six seconds to go.

The Barracuda next play on Wednesday at 7:00 PT against the Heat in Stockton.

San Jose Sharks Saturday nite game wrap: Power Play Woes Doom Sharks

By Ben Leonard

AP photo: San Jose Sharks Joe Pavelski takes a shot against Vancouver Canucks goalie Jacob Markstrom Saturday night

SAN JOSE, Calif.–Recently, when the Sharks have fallen behind, they have their opponent right where they want them. Being down heading into the third period had been no trouble for the Sharks, who had won two of their last three games in that fashion. 

However, on Saturday, major penalty kill woes and undisciplined play were simply too much for the Comeback Kids to overcome, falling 4-2 to the Vancouver Canucks. Linden Vey, Daniel Sedin, and Dan Hamhuis all scored on power plays to help propel the Canucks to the victory.

Coming into Saturday, the Sharks were tied for fourth in the NHL with 71 third period goals, and had scored 9 in their last three games. It all seemed to be going according to plan heading into the third, with San Jose down 2-1 heading into the third. Center Michael Haley had scored in the first period for San Jose, his first of the season, but evidently got too amped up about the milestone and picked up a double minor penalty for high-sticking. Down a man, San Jose quickly gave up a goal to Vey, assisted by Sven Baertschi, and just a few minutes later, gave up another power play goal after center Joe Pavelski was called for tripping. That four-minute span killed the Sharks, who went 4 of 7 on the penalty kill.

The team’s play was frustrating for Pavelski: “After we scored that first goal, we started taking a lot of penalties — a lot of soft ones too. It was everybody, and was one of those nights where we just couldn’t stay out of the box….When you only have to kill a few a night, it makes it a lot easier.”

Overall, it was a sloppy performance for the Sharks, who picked up seven penalties and struggled on special teams. In spite of that, they almost found a way to pull a win out of their hat. Newly acquired goalie James Reimer did his best to keep San Jose in the game, not surrendering a goal when the team was at full strength. Brent Burns tied the game up with fifteen minutes left in the third, assisted by Joe Thornton and Marc-Edouard Vlasic, but it was to no avail.

Hamhuis netted yet another power play goal with 9:32 left to play, and the Sharks couldn’t muster any more magic. The Sharks got off 16 shots in the third, but none of them found the back of the net. Vancouver ended up icing the game with an empty net goal at the 17:54 mark, leaving many at the SAP Center filing for the exits.