Thursday, October 04, 2007
Montreal 3 Carolina 2 (OT)
The loss of sharpshooting defenseman Sheldon Souray to free agency was supposed to take some of the bite out of the Montreal Canadians' power play this year. The Habs led the league in power play offense last year, but had struggled throughout the pre-season, and many thought that a precipitous drop off in PP production was in the cards for this season. Tell that to Saku Koivu. The Habs' veteran captain scored two of his teams 3 power play goals, the 2nd coming just 1:05 into overtime, clinching a 3-2 win for Montreal.
Not exactly the start that the Hurricanes and their fans had in mind for the home opener of their 10th anniversary season in NC. The Cane's have now lost 5 straight season openers.
The Canes spent way too much time in the penalty box, especially in the third period, and the straw that broke the camel's back was Niclas Wallin's cross checking penalty at 0:46 of the overtime. Up 4 on 3, the Canadians did not take long to seal the win.
Early on it was the Canadians who were keeping their penalty box full, taking 7 penalties in the first 24 minutes of the game. And the Canes took advantage quickly with Erik Cole's deflection of a Eric Stall shot just 3:30 into the first on their first power play opportunity.
The Canes looked good on the power play overall, moving the puck well and peppering Cristobal Huet through the first period and a half of play. But despite controlling the play through most of the first 30 minutes, they just could not get the puck into the net - clanging at least two posts and missing 3 wide open nets. But the Canes were not without their power play woes as they were unable to convert 5 on 3 advantages late in the first and early in the second period. Those penalty kills were probably the turning point for the Canadians as they tightened up their defense, cut down on their penalties and Huet found his groove. It was now time for the Canes to start their own parade to the penalty box, losing all the momentum and confidence they had built on offense.
After spending much of the third period on the penalty kill, the Canes found a bit of rhythm late, and Brett Hedican tied the game on a slapshot from the left point off a nifty drop pass from Justin Williams at 12:48. But it was not to be in overtime.
Overall, not a horrible game from the Canes. They skated well most of the game, Cam Ward was stellar in goal, and the power play looked much better than it had for most of last year. But it was not the result that the Canes or a raucous opening night crowd was looking for. Too many mistakes and too much time in the penalty box led to some inconsistency that will need to be addressed.
But we will take the point and come back Friday looking for 2 more against the Penguins.
It just good to be talking/typing about hockey again.
-m
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