NHL: Predators look to halt recent woes in visit to Devils

Date:

Share post:


The Nashville Predators have lost four of five games since a team-record 18-game point streak.

But Saturday night’s 2-0 loss to the New York Islanders was less about the Predators and more about Islanders goalie Semyon Varlamov.

The Predators will look to inch closer to clinching a playoff spot on Sunday night when they complete a back-to-back set, against the New Jersey Devils in Newark, N.J.

Varlamov stopped all 41 shots he faced Saturday against the Predators.

The Devils also played Saturday night, when they snapped a three-game losing streak with a 4-3 win over the host Ottawa Senators.

The 41 shots were tied for the eighth-most the Predators have registered in a shutout loss in franchise history. Varlamov turned back 20 shots in the third period, including five during two power plays in a five-minute span. The Islanders’ goalie used his stick to deflect an attempt by Ryan O’Reilly before gloving a shot by Filip Forsberg during the second power play.

“They were a desperate team,” Predators coach Andrew Brunette said of the Islanders, who took over sole possession of third place in the Metropolitan Division with the win. “I thought we did a lot of good things all through the ice, all through the game. Maybe we were a little bit sluggish early, and I thought we got going. We just couldn’t buy a goal late in the game.”

The Predators (44-29-4, 92 points) fell into the second wild card in the Western Conference by virtue of the Los Angeles Kings’ 6-3 win over the Vancouver Canucks. The Kings, who have 93 points, vaulted into third place in the Pacific Division and dropped the Vegas Golden Knights into a tie for the wild-card spots. The Golden Knights have a game in hand on Nashville.

The two teams are seven points ahead of the St. Louis Blues. The Predators would clinch a playoff berth by collecting three points in their final five games.

The win over the Senators kept the Devils (37-36-4, 78 points) on the periphery of the Eastern Conference wild-card race. New Jersey is in 13th place in the East and five points behind the Pittsburgh Penguins, who moved into the second wild-card spot by virtue of their 5-4 win over the Tampa Bay Lightning on Saturday afternoon.

History almost repeated itself later in the evening for the Devils, who squandered multi-goal leads in each of their previous three losses. Erik Haula, Ondrej Palat and Brendan Smith scored in the first period for New Jersey, which carried a 4-1 lead into the third period before Ottawa scored twice in the third.

“They definitely had a great push, and we tried to hold (on),” said Devils center Nico Hischier, who scored New Jersey’s final goal with 8:56 left in the second. “At the end it was a little bit ugly, but we got it done, so that was good.”

–Field Level Media

spot_img

Related articles

NHL: Blues hire Jim Montgomery as coach, fire Drew Bannister

The St. Louis Blues hired Jim Montgomery as their head coach on Sunday and fired bench boss Drew...

NHL: Tall task awaits Utah HC in form of streaking Maple Leafs

The Utah Hockey Club will vie for their second consecutive victory when they visit the Toronto Maple Leafs...

NHL: NHL roundup: Sidney Crosby gets goal No. 600 in loss to Utah HC

Dylan Guenther scored twice and added an assist, leading the Utah Hockey Club to a 6-1 victory over...

NHL: Connor McDavid, Oilers rough up Rangers

Connor McDavid scored twice in the third period and added an assist in the second and Leon Draisaitl...

FREE

Get the most important breaking news and analyses for Free.

Thank you for subscribing

Something went wrong.