No último sábado, houve o confronto entre os dois melhores times da NHL. Devo confessar que desde o meu acompanhamento, este jogo foi o que achei os jogadores do Sens mais determinados em ganhar, com vários choques fortes nos Wings, o que resultou em um placar de 2 x 3.
Os Wings são o melhor time da liga e o Goaltender do Sens (Emery) foi o reserva do Goolie do Wings (Hasek) na metade da temporada 2005/06 pelo Sens. O interessante é que dois dos gols dos Senators foram de longe e o terceiro veio de uma confusão danada em frente ao gol de Hasek.
Um resultado negativo do jogo intenso foi o ombro quebrado do Heatley que ficará +- 6 semanas de molho.
Pelas estatísticas do site da NHL, houve um fighting durante o jogo e muitas colisões, porém, não sei por qual motivo, eles não são considerados como melhores momentos. Assim, no vídeo abaixo, não é possível vermos o incidente com Heatley ou muito menos os sopapos trocados entre o Neil (Sens) e Lilja (Wins) aos 10min e 36sec. do 2º período.
Realmente acho uma pena, porque o jogo é intenso e cheio de energia, e não mostrando as brigas ou empurra/empurra fica difícil de vermos a própria rivalidade que existe entre as equipes.
Mas fazer o quê?? Enquanto não posso ver uma partida inteira, tenho que me contentar com os "Melhores Momentos" :o((.
Abaixo, segue um resumo do jogo:
OTTAWA (AP) -The
Ottawa Senators were up to the challenge of facing the NHL's winningest team in a potential Stanley Cup finals preview, even if only standings points and bragging rights were at stake.
Daniel Alfredsson scored his second power-play goal of the game with 2:56 remaining to lift Ottawa to a 3-2 win over the
Detroit Red Wings on Saturday night in a matchup of the league's top two teams.
Ottawa leads the Eastern Conference with 62 points, second overall to Detroit's total of 70 atop the West.
Alfredsson was cautious about putting too much stock in the game's significance. "I don't think it was more important but I think that we knew of their record coming in," he said. "They haven't lost a lot of games in regulation, they're playing really well, they've got a lot of players that are fun to watch and very good defensively so I think that got us ready. We really respected their team, there's no question, and I think we played our best game in quite a while."
Alfredsson restored Ottawa's lead with his 28th goal of the season after the Senators blew a 2-0 advantage earlier in the period. The Ottawa captain also scored on a slap shot from the point past former teammate
Dominik Hasek to open the scoring just 1:04 in.
Mike Fisher also scored and had an assist for Ottawa as he and Alfredsson extended their scoring streaks to nine games.
Detroit scored twice in the third, tying it with 7:54 remaining after Senators All-Star
Dany Heatley departed earlier in the period with an apparent right shoulder injury.
"I don't know if they played their best game, we certainly didn't play our best game, especially in the first 40 minutes," Hasek said. "I think it was a little bit disappointing for everyone in the locker room."
"We didn't feel we played like we could tonight, for whatever reason, through 40 minutes so you've got to give them a lot of credit," Red Wings coach Mike Babcock said. "There's two parts - there's your part and their part and they were quicker, more physical and more determined at the start and I thought we got going, but in the end it was their day."
Heatley left after he fell awkwardly into the boards while checking Detroit's
Dallas Drake behind the Senators' net. He did not return. The team said he had an upper body injury and didn't say if he would miss any time.
"You take a 50-goal man out of your lineup, other guys have to step up and score," linemate
Jason Spezza said. "Everybody has to kind of pick up a little bit of the slack. Every team goes through injuries and we're going to have to do the same thing. We'll just have to deal with it."
Emery, Hasek's backup with Ottawa during the first half of the 2005-06 season, made 27 saves for his third straight win as the Senators extended their winning streak to four.
"I think it was a test for us," Emery said. "They've been having a good year and they're first in the NHL so it kind of measures you up to the other conference and it gives you an idea of what a kind of a big game feels like again."
Hasek, who recorded shutouts in Dallas and against Colorado in each of his last two starts, was Ottawa's starting goalie two seasons ago until he suffered a season-ending groin injury while playing for the Czech Republic during the Olympics in Turin.
"I played with him for a year so it's not like I'm star-struck," Emery said. "Any time you're playing against a guy like that, a guy who's one of the best to ever play, you know that you've got to play well to give your team a chance to win against a goalie like that."
Alfredsson's first goal ended Hasek's shutout streak at 135 minutes, 22 seconds.
"I thought (Hasek) played excellent," Lidstrom said. "They had some other great chances where they could have been ahead a couple of goals, too. He kept us in the game early on and it is encouraging that we battled back, but still disappointing, losing at the end."
Steve Yzerman was honored by the Senators before the game for his recent induction into the Ottawa Sports Hall of Fame. The Red Wings legend and Ottawa native dropped the puck in a ceremonial faceoff.
Heatley had his former teammate beaten twice earlier in the game but failed to convert both times. Heatley hit the right post 8:42 in with a delayed interference penalty signaled against Drake. The All-Star right wing hit the left post when he shot after he was sent in alone by Alfredsson on a breakaway in the second.
Notes: Rafalski's stick blade sailed high in the air into the left corner after it broke off when he took a slap shot from the right point during a first-period power play. ... Heatley, in his third season in Ottawa, has yet to miss a game since he was acquired by the Senators in the trade that sent Marian Hossa to Atlanta before the 2005-06 season.