POINT RALLIES LIGHTNING WITH HAT TRACK
LIGHTNING 4, PENGUINS 3
Brayden Point's natural hat trick Thursday erased an
early two-goal deficit for the visiting Tampa Bay Lightning en route to a 4-3
win over the Pittsburgh Penguins.
Yanni Gourde scored the deciding goal in the second period, and Nikita Kucherov
had three assists for Tampa Bay, which ended a two-game losing streak by
scoring all four goals on power plays.
Louis Domingue made 28 saves for the Lightning, as Tampa Bay played without No.
1 goaltender Andrei Vasilevskiy, who was sent home for evaluation of a broken
foot he suffered in practice Wednesday.
Point began his spree with a five-on-three goal with 2.7 seconds left in the
first on a shot from the lower left circle high off the far post to cut the
Penguins' lead to 2-1. He tied the score 41 seconds into the second, again on a
five-on-three, on a one-timer from Steven Stamkos, and gave the Lightning a 3-2
lead on a conventional power play at 1:28 of the second, on a one-timer from
the slot.
CANADIENS 3, FLAMES 2
Artturi Lehkonen's first goal since the season opener was the game-winner
and Carey Price delivered a sparkling 43-save performance in goal as visiting
Montreal stole a win over Calgary.
With Price delivering save after save, the Canadiens hung on in a road game
they had no business winning, and they took advantage of a bad goal allowed by
Flames netminder Mike Smith for the difference-maker.
With the score tied 2-2 in the third period, Lehkonen, who went 17 games without
scoring, simply wristed a long shot that went through the legs of the embattled
goalie at 12:14.
BLUE JACKETS 7, PANTHERS 3
Markus Hannikainen scored the go-ahead goal with 15:59 left in the third
period as flu-ridden Columbus rallied to beat visiting Florida.
Columbus also got goals from Cam Atkinson, Brandon Dubinsky, Pierre-Luc Dubois,
Anthony Duclair, Josh Anderson and an empty-netter by Boone Jenner. Atkinson
produced his second short-handed goal of the season.
The Blue Jackets, who trailed 2-0 after the first period, won despite being hit
hard by the flu as three key players missed the game: starting goalie Sergei
Bobrovsky, leading scorer Artemi Panarin and center Riley Nash, who sat out for
the first time this season.
SENATORS 2, RED WINGS 1
Drake Batherson scored in his NHL debut, Craig Anderson stopped two
third-period penalty shots, and Ottawa snapped Detroit's four-game winning
streak with a home win.
The 20-year-old Batherson, a Nova Scotia native drafted in the fourth round
last year, scored what proved to be the game-winner in the second period. Matt
Duchene was credited with assists on both of the Senators' goals.
Defenseman Cody Ceci scored the other Ottawa goal, while Anderson made 34
saves.
ISLANDERS 7, RANGERS 5
Anthony Beauvillier collected his first NHL hat trick as the Isles
continued their dominance against their visiting Big Apple rival.
Brock Nelson, Anders Lee, Leo Komarov and Cal Clutterbuck also scored for the
Islanders, who have won two straight following a three-game losing streak. The
Islanders have won eight in a row against the Rangers dating to Dec. 6, 2016.
Islanders goaltender Thomas Greiss made 36 saves.
WILD 6, CANUCKS 2
Mikko Koivu had a goal and two assists, and Minnesota cruised to a win over
visiting Vancouver in Saint Paul, Minn.
Charlie Coyle, Eric Staal, Nino Niederreiter, Matt Dumba and Jason Zucker also
scored in the victory. Minnesota avenged a loss last month to Vancouver and
earned at least one point for the eighth time in nine home games.
Wild goaltender Devan Dubnyk made 25 saves to improve to 9-4-2. He started in
net despite feeling sore after a collision with Washington Capitals forward Tom
Wilson two nights earlier.
DEVILS 3, FLYERS 0
Joey Anderson and Kyle Palmieri each scored one goal as visiting New Jersey
defeated Philadelphia.
Blake Coleman added an empty-net goal and a pair of assists for the Devils, who
won their second straight game. New Jersey played without center Nico Hischier,
who was sidelined for the second consecutive game with an upper-body injury.
Goaltender Keith Kinkaid stopped all 29 shots for the Devils, who won on the
road for only the second time this season. It was the seventh shutout of his
career.
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