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AVALANCHE 3 BLUE JACKETS 0
Klesla?s decisions costly to Jackets in lackluster loss
Saturday, November 18, 2006
Michael Arace
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
NEAL C . LAURON DISPATCH Manny Malhotra dives as he makes a shot from close range on Colorado goaltender Peter Budaj in the second period.
NEAL C . LAURON DISPATCH Rick Nash falls in front of goaltender Peter Budaj after being pulled down by Karlis Skrastins, who was called for a penalty.
The Colorado Avalanche beat the Blue Jackets, as usual, and the story of the latest meeting might best be told in a tape of Nikolai Zherdev on a foray through the middle, an attempt to beat three men in the neutral zone, and the inevitable turnover.
"We had the puck a lot," Avalanche coach Joel Quenneville said.
Indeed they did. The Avalanche played a terrific road game and rolled to a 3-0 victory in front of an announced crowd of 16,375 in Nationwide Arena. Half the folks left the building long before the postgame turkey shoot, which offered fans a coupon for a free turkey if they could shoot a puck through a slot at the bottom of a piece of plywood. There?s a good joke in there somewhere.
The Avs are 19-1-2 all time against the Blue Jackets. They snapped a four-game losing streak. Paul Stastny, Ossi Vaananen and Marek Svatos had the goals. Peter Budaj, at this point far superior to Jose Theodore, was in the Colorado net. For the fifth time in 17 games this season, the Blue Jackets were shut out.
The Jackets have lost five in a row and 11 of 14. They have a 5-11-1 record and the fewest points (11) in the league. On Wednesday night, they put forth a strong offensive effort in the debut of interim coach Gary Agnew. Last night, they walked into Colorado?s traps and coughed up the puck.
"What was the difference between last game and this game?" Agnew posed. "Passion, emotion, intensity. We talked a lot about the game plan and for whatever reason, we refused to execute. ? We weren?t going to the paint like we were the other night. We weren?t paying the price to score."
It was a tough night for Blue Jackets defenseman Rostislav Klesla, whose instant decisions were cursed by hard luck.
Goal No. 1: This one came on a power play at 7 minutes, 29 seconds of the first period. Klesla cleared the puck from the top of the crease and it went directly onto the blade of Stastny, who was stationed on the inside of the right circle. Stastny snapped off a wrist shot that pinged the inside of the near post.
Goal No. 2: This one came at 9:18 of the second period, after Klesla left his own zone to chase a puck through the middle. The play quickly transited the other way. Andrew Brunette pulled up and hit the second trailer, Vaananen, who put some excellent torque on a wrist shot that got Fredrik Norrena through the wickets.
Goal No. 3: This one came with 92 seconds remaining in the second period. Klesla tried to clear the zone from up high and Tyler Arnason intercepted at the blue line. Arnason stepped in and left a pass for Svatos, who had space to take the puck low ? and put an excellent wrist shot high above the glove and inside the far post.
The victim in all of this was Norrena, who was making his third start of the season and his first in Nationwide Arena. There was a palpable feeling, from the earliest stages, that his mates still didn?t have any offense for him.
"They played better than us, maybe smarter, too," Norrena said. "Hopefully, everyone wants to get better in here. Then we can start turning it around."
Some credit is due the Avs, who did a good job of stunting the Jackets? attack. They won fights, picked off passes, blocked shots and got a good night of goaltending from Budaj (25 saves). As the game wore on, those who hung around were rocked to sleep.
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