NHL podcast with Joe Lami: NHL Board of Governors meet on expansion this week; Preds with worst power play beat team with best power play; Sharks Couture returns against Calgary

On the Sharks podcast with Joe Lami the NHL Board of Governors meet this week in Pebble Beach Calif regarding expansion of teams to Quebec City and Las Vegas. The board will listen to proposals about new arena ideas, location, demographics, and budgets. Vegas and Quebec were listed as the top prospects for expansion as those cities hope at getting an NHL team in the bag get heard this week.

The Nashville Predators have one of the worst records in the NHL for the power play they rank 28th in the league 75% with seven goals, and 14 shorthanded goals. They faced the Boston Bruins, the Bees have the best power in the league and the comparison on the power play is one extreme to the other and guess what happened in that Monday game? Nashville scored late to beat the Bruins 3-2.

The Sharks Logan Couture is expected to be back in the line up against Calgary Flames at the Saddle Dome. The Sharks have lost three of their last four games and are 1-5 going into Tuesday’s game. With Couture back he missed eight weeks of action since October 15th.

photo credit:stadiumnews.com The new Quebec City arena future hopeful home of the Nordiques

Joe Lami does the NHL podcast on http://www.sportsradioservice each week listen to the podcast below

Categories NHL

Lightning Strike Early And Often, Beat Sharks 4-3

By Mary Walsh

photo credit: AP of Tampa Bay’s Nikita Kucherov skates as he scored twice aginast San Jose Saturday night

SAN JOSE: The San Jose Sharks finally scored a power play goal at home. They scored three, but lost 4-3 to the Tampa Bay Lightning on Saturday. Tampa Bay’s 20th place penalty kill probably jumped up a couple of ranking spots after killing seven penalties on Saturday night. Or maybe not, since they also gave up three power play goals. The first one was to Matt Tennyson, who broke the cursed power play scoring drought for the Sharks. The second went to Joel Ward, and the third to Brent Burns.

Al Stalock made 16 saves on 20 shots for the Sharks, while Lightning goaltender Ben Bishop made 24 saves on 26 shots before leaving the game with an injury. His replacement, Andrei Vasilevskiy made seven saves on eight shots. Tampa Bay goals were scored by Eric Condra, Nikita Kucherov (two) and Brian Boyle. There were some bright spots in the Sharks’ game, but not enough.

Tampa Bay wasted no time getting the scoring started. Just 2:19 into the game, Nikita Kucherov was able to skate through the slot, avoiding one Sharks defender and using the other as a screen, to put a shot right under Stalock. An assist went to defenseman Victor Hedman.

Near the halfway mark, Joe Pavelski was called for high sticking. Really, the infraction occurred as much as a minute before the time of the penalty, as Tampa Bay tried to make something of the delayed call, skating at length with their net empty. Despite their efforts, they were unable to launch an attack until the power play was under way. Even then, they only recorded one shot with the man advantage.

It was not until after that power play expired that the Lightning struck again, this time with a pass from the wall, near or below the goal line, that seemed to bounce off of a well-placed stick in front of the blue paint. The goal went to Eric Condra, with assists to Andrej Sustr and J.T. Brown.

The Sharks drew a hooking call with 3:27 left in the period. Brian Boyle was the culprit. The Sharks had some difficulty getting their power play in order, and Tampa Bay’s penalty killers were aggressive.

Karlsson, Donskoi, Hertl, Braun and Martin took the ice with less than 30 seconds left in the penalty. The first power play unit was made up of Thornton, Pavelski, Ward, Marleau and Burns. The power play expired and the Sharks went into the first intermission down by 2-0. The Sharks were also trailing on the shot clock, with just four to Tampa Bay’s six.

The Lightning took another penalty, this time for too many men on the ice, but Tommy Wingels was called bout 30 seconds later for goaltender interference.

During the four on four time that followed, the Sharks kept the Lightning hemmed in their zone, and put a few shots on net to boot.

Around the seven minute mark of the second, the Lightning overwhelmed the Sharks’ fourth line of Chris Tierney, Dainius Zubrus and Mike Brown. The Lightning did not score, but the Sharks were trapped in their zone for too long.

The Sharks had another try on the power play at 9:20, when Braydon Coburn was called for holding. Tommy Wingels drew that call. The Sharks recorded a few shots during the power play but did not get anything past Bishop.

At 12:55, the Sharks seemed to have scored after a wild scramble, but the goal was called off as the referee lost sight of the puck and blew the whistle before the puck crossed the line.

That was followed by a holding call to Andrej Sustr, and again the bulk of the power play time was given to the top unit. They could not do anything with that time, but the second unit, if indeed that is what they are, did score. Matt Tennyson’s shot from near the point got by Bishop, with assists to Justin Braun and Tomas Hertl. The other skaters on the ice were Donskoi and Karlsson.

With just over five minutes left, Chris Tierney went to the box for tripping. The Sharks were doing a great job killing the penalty, often stopping the Lightning at the blue line. Half way through, Joel Ward was called for tripping as well, putting the Sharks down by two men for 50 seconds. The Sharks held them off for 30 of those seconds but Steven Stamkos and Kucherov took advantage of the Sharks being a little too far from their goal and found a 2 on 1 chance. A late pass from Stamkos set Kucherov up perfectly. He picked a corner over Stalock’s shoulder and gave Tampa Bay a 3-1 lead.

At the end of the second, the shots were 18-14 Sharks, the score 3-1 Lightning.

The Sharks’ belaguered power play had another shot 40 seconds into the third period, when Tomas Hertl drew a tripping call on Anton Stralman. Donskoi, Hertl and Karlsson started this one, but had no luck. The Ward-Marleau-Thornton unit came out for the second minute of the power play. No joy there either.

DeBoer put the third line out after the power play expired, with Wingels, Hertl and Nieto. They started well but Brian Boyle broke away with Brown in a two on one. Stalock stopped Brown’s shot but lost track of the puck. As it sat there behind his skate, Boyle tapped it in.

Jason Garrison went to the box next, 5:42 in, for interference. That power play started with a two on one chance for Tampa Bay. Burns and Stalock stopped them from scoring but the Sharks never gained any traction.

Victor Hedman went to the box at 8:13 for cross-checking Chris Tierney. Thirteen seconds into the power play, Brent Burns’ shot went off Joel Ward and by Bishop. Marleau was acting as a screen, and Bishop claimed there was some interference but the goal stood up after a review. Assists went to Brent Burns and Joe Pavelski.

With 11:10 left in regulation, Ben Bishop took a stick through the mask and left the game, being replaced by Andrei Vasilevskiy.

With the penalty count becoming ridiculous, Tampa Bay’s Alex Killorn went to the box for boarding Brenden Dillon.

Brent Burns was clearly on a tear as he took control of the power play, caught a puck at the point, skated backwards around the Lightning zone to pick his spot, and shot it over Vasilevskiy’s shoulder from the faceoff circle.

The Sharks had a couple fo chances after that but even with an empty net they could not truly control play in the offensive zone and no more goals were scored.

The Sharks next play on Tuesday at 6:00 PT, a road game against Calgary.

San Jose Sharks Friday: Gibson shuts out Sharks

By Pearl Allison Lo

photo credit: otttawacitizen.com of Anaheim goaltender John Gibson

ANAHEIM– The Anaheim Ducks’ John Gibson got his second shutout in three games, as the Ducks beat San Jose Friday on the Sharks’ one-game road trip.

It was another tight rivalry contest played between the teams, where defensed dominated. All three games so far have been shutouts.

San Jose Coach Peter DeBoer said, “Both goalies were great, special teams were even. It just came down to who’s probably going to get that first goal is probably going to win. We had our opportunities early in the game, I thought they were a little better in the third…”

The Sharks only had one shot for the most of the third period. Their second and last shot came with less than a minute left.

San Jose Captain Joe Pavelski said, “It seemed that we weren’t clean enough. When we had our chance to break out it was either a puck hopped or we missed the play. They had good pressure.”

Sharks’ center Joe Thornton added, “…we didn’t sustain too much in their end…we were just kind of hesitant a little bit, and we shouldn’t be. We have good players, we make good plays and we didn’t execute as good as we did the first two periods.”

San Jose had four opportunities, but were unable to continue their power-play goal streak. The loss also ended Joel Ward’s five-game point streak and Patrick Marleau’s four-game goal streak.

The Sharks got their first penalty kill at 3:02 of the first period. Sami Vatanen had a shot which Melker Karlsson went down to block. Vatanen’s shot nearly went into the net, as it hit post.

San Jose’s second penalty of the night came when Micheal Haley, who was just recalled from the San Jose Barracuda before the game, got into a fight with Chris Stewart at 9:40.

Both teams each had another penalty and then one more penalty came at the 20-minute mark, which gave the Sharks a man advantage going into the second period.

Both San Jose’s Brent Burns and Anaheim’s Rickard Rakell had three shots apiece. The Ducks outhit the Sharks 17-8, Kevin Bieska with four of them.

San Jose got a penalty kill in the second when Nick Ritchie was called for too many men on the ice.

Right after the horn blew to end the second period, a number of players got into a scuffle.

Anaheim blocked eight shots. The Sharks returned the favor in hits, 11-6.

Mike Santorelli finally broke the deadlock when he got the puck under goalie Martin Jones’s left arm. Santorelli was fed by Nate Thompson at 2:49. Stewart had the second assist. It was Thompson’s first point of the year in two games.

On his goal, Santorelli said “The three of us got in on the forecheck. Stewart and Thompson were down low and Thompson made a good pass up to me.”

San Jose’s chances to get back in the game got slimmer when Joe Pavelski was called for tripping at 16:37.

Ducks’ center Shawn Horcoff said on winning games in this fashion, “…Playoff games are like that. You have to learn how to close these games out. We did it by being aggressive.”

Game notes: Jones has now stopped 68 of 70 shots against Anaheim this year. Burns had a game-tying four shots and a game-high four blocked shots and 27:14 of ice time. The Sharks’ Justin Braun had a game-high seven hits. Anaheim’s Corey Perry, Vatanen and Rakell had four shots apiece. Frederik Andersen was still missing in action, as backup Gibson made his sixth straight start. Gibson was the third goalie San Jose has faced in the teams’ three games so far this year. After Mirco Mueller was reassigned Thursday, Dylan DeMelo became the seventh defenseman who flew with the team to Anaheim. The Sharks play the second of back-to-back games, against the Tampa Bay Lightning Saturday at 7:30pm.

 

San Jose Sharks podcast with Mary Lisa Walsh: Sharks offense to behold after Sat’s Calgary match; all set for Pens at SAP Tue nite

On the SJ Sharks podcast Mary Lisa discusses the Sharks key win over the Calgary Flames 5-2 last Saturday after losing a tough one to Chicago on Wednesday 25th 5-2. December might be the month for the Sharks as they face the Penguins on Tuesday night, go to Anaheim Friday and are back home on Sunday with the Tampa Bay Lightning.

The Sharks wasted no time scoring two quick goals in the first period of Saturday night’s game against the Flames with Tommy Wingels second of the year and Tomas Hertel his third of the season. With a 2-0 lead in the second period the Sharks wasted no time attacking the net and getting another two goals from Joel Ward (9) and Patrick Marleau (9).

Tonight’s battle with the Pittsburgh Penguins and Sidney Crosby is an anticipated event and the Pens likewise look forward to a little scrumming with the Sharks of the South Bay.

AP photo: Sidney Crosby Pittsburgh Penguins

For the full analysis on Sharks hockey this week Mary Lisa tells you all about it below on the podcast at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

 

NHL podcast with Joe Lami: NHL gets set for free fanfest at Winter Classic; Habs Price out for six weeks; Sharks and their next 3 games

On the NHL podcast with Joe Lami today Joe discusses the NHL has announced that there will be a free fan festival for the 2016 NHL Winter Classic which will be part of the NHL celebration at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough MA. Also the Montreal Canadiens will be hurting as much as goaltender Carey Price. Price is out six weeks with a lower body injury and the Habs are confident that his back up Mike Condon can hold the goal net down.

Joe also talks San Jose Sharks hockey and their upcoming games with the Penguins, Ducks, and Lightning, and playing seven out of eight on the road starting Dec 8th. All on the NHL podcast below.

Joe Lami does the NHL podcasts for http://www.sportsradioservice.com each week click below to listen

 

 

SJ Sharks Saturday game recap with Mary Lisa Walsh: Sharks Win 5-2 At Home

By Mary Walsh

photo credit CSNBA of the SJ Sharks Tommy Wingels

SAN-JOSE- The San Jose Sharks played the Calgary Flames Saturday, and won 5-2. As if in honor of Ryane Clowe night at SAP, the Sharks played a strong, physical, wily game. Tomas Hertl probably had the most rough and tumble game of his career. Mirco Mueller went to the box with a fighting major. Tommy Wingels, the team’s habitual hits leader, changed things up and was the Sharks’ shot leader for the game.

The first two goals of the game, and the first and third stars of the game, went to the second line of Tommy Wingels, Tomas Hertl and Matt Nieto. Two-thirds of that line was benched in the third period of their last game, so it was rewarding for all involved to see them play so well Saturday. After the game, head coach Pete DeBoer said:

They were a key part of the game tonight, set the tone with the forecheck, got us those two first period goals, key part. We need those guys. Great response game by them and now we need to continue to build on it.

The Sharks won the game without the help of one of their top four defensemen. Justin Braun missed the game and is likely to be out for longer with an infected elbow. The last time the Sharks lost the services of a top defenseman, they struggled badly.

Asked after the game how the defensive corps made the adjustment, Marc-Edouard Vlasic said:

We played well as a team, we didn’t turn pucks over, good support in the d-zone. Good forecheck… I mean, you can be missing two of your top d-men but if you play the way we did tonight you’ll win.

The win seemed a long time coming, as the Sharks’ road record is much better than their home record lately. Additionally, The Flames have been struggling this season, especially in the area of special teams. They posed a perfect storm as a visiting, struggling team that the Sharks should be able to beat. That sort of opponent has long been poisoned bait for the Sharks. That the Sharks prevailed in a big way could mean that the team is breaking some bad habits.

While the shot clock showed the teams even, the first half of the first period found the Sharks more often in the Flames zone than vice versa. Obviously, the Flames had enough time to take their share of the shots, but the Sharks seemed to have the edge to start the game.

There were a couple of near fights, one near each net. Everyone got involved, leaving few skaters not in the fracas, but no penalties were handed out, no one got knocked down, and the game went on.

The line combination of Tomas Hertl, Matt Nieto and Tommy Wingels had started the game with a lot of jump, and at 9:03 of the period, Tommy Wingels opened the scoring with a tipped shot from Marc-Edouard Vlasic. Assists went to Vlasic and Tomas Hertl.

The second goal was Hertl’s, a beautiful wrist shot from the bottom of the circle. Brenden Dillon caught puck on its way, kept it in, and made a quick pass to Hertl for the shot. The only assist went to Dillon.

The period ended 2-0 Sharks with the shots at 11-10 Sharks.

Patrick Marleau was called for holding just 1:31 into the second, giving the Flames the first power play of the game. The Sharks had a lot of trouble clearing the puck in the first minute, and Jones had to scramble. Once the Sharks did get the puck out, they were able to handle the rest of the kill.

At 4:23, Mirco Mueller was called for charging. The Sharks executed the second penalty kill handily, but remained trapped in their zone for some time after it was over.

The sharks had their own turn on the power play at 8:16 of the second. Derek Engellund knocked Nieto down a bit late near the net, which moved Hertl to jump into the fray and just miss being called for something himself. Engellund went to the box for roughing.

Beforew the power play was over, was called for high-sticking Hertl. Hertl protected his face with a hand but the hand seemed to suffer the consequences. Hertl recovered and the Sharks had a short five on three power play.

Seconds into it, Joe Thornton sent a neat little pass across to Joel Ward, who was standing undisturbed in front of the net. Ward was able to tap it in past Hiller.

While the second penalty was still playing out, Patrick Marleau took a shot from the left circle and beat Hiller with the help of some traffic in front of the blue paint. Assists went to Joe Pavelski and Brent Burns.

The period came to an end with the Sharks leading by four goals and five shots.

Just before the middle of the third period, Mirco Mueller and Joe Colborne had a very brief scrap that landed them both in the box for five minutes. It was very brief, but may have had the desired effect, on the Calgary Fames. 41 seconds later, Marcus Granlund skated into the Sharks zone and took a wrist shot that beat Martin Jones. It was his first goal of the season. Assists went to TJ Brodie and Mark Giordano.

25 seconds after that, Tommy Wingels and Marc-Edouard Vlasic scored on a rush the other way. Vlasic took Wingels’ pass from the half boards and shot the puck under pressure from a Flames defender. Vlasic did fall in the end, but the puck went in. Assists went to Wingels and Nieto.

During a scramble around the net at 11:40, Brenden Dillon was called for hooking. The Flames did not score there but, with 1:17 left in the period, they did. After playing the puck behind the net and hastily returning to his net, Martin Jones stopped a couple of shots as Flames skaters moved in, but Michael Ferlund’s shot trickled by him. It was Ferlund’s first of the season, and an assist went to David Jones.

Final score: 5-2 Sharks.

The Sharks’ newest player, Dainius Zubrus, played 13:15 minutes on a line with Mike Brown and Chris Tierney, and 2:02 minutes on the penalty kill. He had two blocked shots and two hits to his credit.

Due to an injury to Justin Braun, Brenden Dillon was paired with Marc-Edouard Vlasic, while Matt Tennyson and Mirco Mueller made up the third pair. They played 14:13 and 11:47 respectively.

The Sharks next play on Tuesday at SAP Center, against the Pittsburgh Penguins at 7:30 PT.

Sink Tank: Sharks six-game win streak evaporates in home loss to the Blackhawks

Score!

By Morris Phillips

SAN JOSE–Coming off a perfect six-game road trip and eager to show off their new, winning ways back at home with an eye on regaining sole possession of first place in the Pacific Division, the Sharks figured to take the ice at the SAP Center Wednesday night in a feeding frenzy.

But their opponent, the Stanley Cup champion Blackhawks, aren’t exactly a home-cooked meal.

Brent Seabrook capitalized on Chicago’s early momentum, scoring on a one-timer eight minutes in, and the Blackhawks kept the Sharks on their heels throughout in a 5-2 win.   The Hawks came out flying, amassing the first eight shots on goal, while the Sharks didn’t get their first until 13 minutes had elapsed and they were trailing 1-0.

“The story of the game was the first period and how we started,” Coach Peter DeBoer said. “We were sloppy and a little slow in the first.”

While the Sharks lost for the first time since November 10, the Los Angeles Kings also lost 2-1 in Tampa to the Lightning in a shootout. But the Kings picked up a valuable point to maintain their perch atop the Pacific Division.

In four of the six games on the just-completed road trip, the Sharks allowed two goals or less. But in the first period alone, goalie Martin Jones was beaten twice, giving the Blackhawks a 2-1 lead after a period. If Wednesday’s matchup was the NHL’s hottest team versus the league’s hottest player, than Patrick Kane was the clear winner there, picking up a pair of assists, including the cross ice pass to set up Seabrook’s opening goal.

Kane also assisted on Duncan Keith’s second period goal that put Chicago up, 3-1. The Blackhawks’ offensive catalyst has now collected points in a career-best 17 consecutive games and he leads the NHL with 21 assists and 34 points.

While the Sharks were returning from their perfect road trip through the Northeast, the Hawks spent the last couple of days in Las Vegas, an annual tradition for their club in the month of November. But the kicker may have been the bad taste the Hawks acquired over the weekend in a humbling loss at Vancouver where they surrendered six goals to the Canucks.

Corey Crawford allowed five goals on just 19 shots Saturday, but he was back in goal Wednesday with much different results. Crawford kept the Sharks relatively quiet, allowing a power play goal to Brent Burns in the first period, and a goal to Patrick Marleau in the third, after the Hawks killed off a pair of critical, two-minute penalties earlier in the period.

And as soon as Marleau’s goal cut Chicago’s lead to 3-2 with 8:40 remaining, Andres Desjardins answered a minute later with his first goal of the season to again extend the Hawks’ lead to two goals.

Jones saved 21 of 25 shots faced, a performance well off his goals against average of 2.02, which ranks him behind only Henrik Lundquist, Braden Holtby and Ben Bishop on the list of the NHL’s top goaltenders.

Danius Zubrus, the 37-year old veteran best known for his days in New Jersey with the Devils, made his Sharks’ debut Wednesday on the team’s fourth line.  Zubrus, who worked out for almost a week with the club before he was signed to a one-year deal, was on the ice for 10:13 and saw some time on the Sharks’ penalty kill unit.

The Sharks resume their home stand on Saturday when the Calgary Flames visit the SAP Center at 7:05pm.

 

NHL podcast with Joe Lami: 37 yr old Zubrus reunites with DeBoer from their NJ days

The San Jose Sharks took a look at former New Jersey Devil player Daniel Zubrus 37. Zubrus signed a one year two way contract with the Sharks. Zubrus got a look see during the Sharks practice on Tuesday and Sharks head coach Peter DeBoer liked what he saw and signed Zubrus after practice.

Zubrus is expected to make his Sharks debut on Wednesday night at SAP Center against Chicago. He played five years in New Jersey under DeBoer. Zobrus has been in the NHL since 1995 and has played with five NHL clubs the Flyers, Canadiens, Capitals, Sabres and Devils. He has 1243 career games and 225 career goals.

Joe will also discuss the 21 game home winning streak of the Anaheim Ducks who just recently chalked up number 21 against the Calgary Flames. Also the Rangers have a nine game home winning streak and they have put together a team that can defend the net and shoot the puck and goaltender Hendrick Lindquist has been known to stop the puck successfully a time or two.

photo credit Zimbio of former New Jersey skater now with the Sharks Daniel Zubrus

Join Joe on this week’s NHL podcast at http://www.sportsradioserivce.com

 

 

San Jose Sharks podcast with Mary Lisa Walsh: Red hot Sharks to face struggling Black Hawks in Sharks lair SAP

On the SJ Sharks podcast for the Sharks it’s win, win, win, as they come off a sweep from their road trip winning all six games straight. The Sharks look to continue their win streak going for win number seven against a struggling Chicago Blackhawks team that saw six goals get past them when visited Vancouver on this swing.

Patrick Marleau who reached the 1000th career point on this last road trip also added one more point more to that career total going 1001. It was reported before the trip that he was exploring the idea of a trade to the Kings, Ducks or Rangers but none of that panned out or it was something of an idea that went away fast.

Sharks goaltender Martin Jones was named the NHL Player of the Week for November 23rd. Jones was a huge part of that road trip success and also help shutout the Philadelphia Flyers 1-0 at Well Fargo Center a tough place to accomplish the shutout against a very aggressive Flyers team that know how to crash the net.

Mary Lisa Walsh does the SJ Sharks podcast each week at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

AP photo: SJ Sharks goaltender Martin Jones

 

Six Win Road Trip First In Sharks History

By Mary Walsh

The San Jose Sharks ended a perfect six-win road trip on Sunday, with a 5-3 win against the Columbus Blue Jackets. It was the first time the Sharks swept a road trip longer than four games, and the first time they won six games on a single trip.

Al Stalock got his first start since November 10, making 28 saves on 31 shots. Sharks goals came from Patrick Marleau, Brent Burns, Brenden Dillon, and two from Joe Pavelski. It was Brenden Dillon’s first goal of the season and the game winner. After missing Saturday’s game for a personal matter, Sharks head coach Pete DeBoer was back behind the bench in time for the game.

After the game, Sharks captain Joe Pavelski said the team did not set out on this trip thinking of a win streak:

We didn’t talk about it. We talked about one day at a time. You look back now, it’s just a long time from then. Six in a row. You know, it’s good but it’s… we need that. It’s what we expect. We expect to win on a nightly basis and give ourselves that opportunity. Once we’re here it’s “take the good from it and now we gotta translate it back home.”

The Sharks started the game well, out shooting the Blue Jackets 10-5 in the first period. Each team had a power play in the first but the only goal scored came at even strength from Patrick Marleau. Joonas Donskoi took a shot that resulted in a small rebound. Marleau was in front of the blue paint, where he could tap the puck under Sergei Bobrovsky and into the net. Donskoi and Ward got the assists.

Micheal Haley and Mike Brown both fought in the first period, within four seconds of each other, against Dalton Prout and Gregory Campbell respectively.

The Blue Jackets pushed back early in the second period, out shooting the Sharks 7-1 in the first five minutes. Their efforts paid off when Ryan Johansen, surrounded by Sharks in front of the net, poked the puck between his feet and through Stalock. Assists went to Kerby Reichert and Josh Anderson.

Seconds later, the home team took the lead with a goal from Boone Jenner. An odd-man rush drew Stalock to the left, and a cross-ice pass left an open net for Jenner to shoot at. Assists went to William Karlsson and Brandon Saad.

The Sharks’ struggles continued through the first half of the period, until they got some respite from a power play. Joe Pavelski took a stick to the face from Rene Bourque at 8:57. The power play was short-lived as Brent Burns was called for interference just a minute in. Half a minute later, Justin Braun was called for holding.

The Sharks survived the brief four on three and the five on three that followed. Some seconds of five on four followed but the Sharks weathered it.

The Sharks got another chance on the power play at when Dalton Prout was called for cross-checking Mike Brown. The Sharks did not score but it was still an improvement over the previous attempt. By the end of the second, Columbus had the 2-1 lead on the scoreboard, and a 19-7 lead in shots for the period.

Late in the period, Tommy Wingels went to the dressing room. He had blocked a couple of shots earlier and seemed to be suffering the effects. He was back on the bench for the third period.

The Blue Jackets put the puck in the net at 2:23 of the third. DeBoer challenged the goal, as Scott Hartnett was standing in the blue paint for some time before the goal, impairing Stalock’s ability to move freely. Donskoi was blocking Hartnell’s exit, if he wanted to make one. The challenge came up empty, giving the Blue Jackets a 3-1 lead. The goal was Cam Atkinson’s, with assists to Nick Foligno and Hartnell.

The Sharks cut the lead to one goal, with a Justin Braun shot from the blue line, deflected in by Joe Pavelski at 6:13. The assists went to Braun and Marc-Edouard Vlasic.

The Sharks then tied it up with a power play goal. Joel Ward was at the point and gave every indication he was looking for a shot. Brent Burns was lurking in the circle on the other side of the ice. Ward sent a quick pass through the penalty killers to Burns, who knocked it in before Bobrovsky could get across.

1:50 later, San Jose’s Chris Tierney won an offensive zone draw and Brenden Dillon caught the puck on its way to the blue line. He took a shot that Bobrovsky probably could not see, as Tierney was screening him as he made his way to the net.

The Blue Jackets pulled Bobrovsky with less than two minutes left. Seconds later, Pavelski stole the puck from Boone Jenner in the offensive zone and scored into the empty net.

Scott Hartnell picked up a misconduct in the final minutes, putting the Sharks on a power play for the final 1:16 of the game.

The final shot count was 31-29 Columbus, the final score 5-3 Sharks.

The Sharks next play on Wednesday at home against the Chicago Blackhawks.