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Dispatch
2/12/06
2/12/06
PREDATORS 5 | BLUE JACKETS 2
Jackets still can’t solve Predators’ power play
Sunday, February 12, 2006
Aaron Portzline
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
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NASHVILLE, Tenn. — In a town known for producing music with the same old story lines — drinkin’, fishin’ and pickup trucks — the Blue Jackets stuck to their recurring theme last night.
The Jackets lost 5-2 to the Nashville Predators, limping into the Olympic break with a second straight loss.
It’s the way the Blue Jackets lost that put a tear in their beer. On the other hand, rocker Kid Rock — seated among the 17,113 in Gaylord Entertainment Center — had a heck of a time.
"We didn’t want to go off to the break with a loss," coach Gerard Gallant said. "But we did a couple of things we said we didn’t want to do, and we paid for it."
First, the Jackets dug themselves an early hole, allowing a goal in the first 2½ minutes for the fourth straight game.
Marek Zidlicky put the Predators up 1-0 at 2:19 of the first period, a powerplay goal on a shot that might have killed Jackets goaltender Marc Denis if it didn’t whiz on through to the back of the net.
"We talk about it before every game, especially on the road," left winger Jody Shelley said. "You can’t give up the early goal. It got these guys going. It got the crowd into it."
It didn’t exactly kill the Jackets’ chances, and it was an improvement from a night earlier in Nationwide Arena, when Colorado took a 1-0 lead after only eight seconds.
The Jackets came back to lead 2-1 a little more than two minutes later.
Rick Nash scored at 3:40 of the first to tie the score at 1, putting the puck in the only 2 inches of net that Predators goaltender Tomas Vokoun didn’t have covered, the 2 inches of the upper left corner.
Only 49 seconds later, Nash dropped a puck between his legs to Nikolai Zherdev, who did that little toe drag he does and beat Vokoun with a wrist shot.
"I liked the way the guys came right back," Gallant said. "We didn’t want to give up that first goal, but it didn’t really seem to faze us. . . . It’s not what lost us the game."
No, that would be the Predators’ power play, which has eaten the Blue Jackets alive. They scored two power-play goals, giving them 15 in seven games against Columbus.
The Predators scored two other goals less than 10 seconds after Blue Jackets penalties expired, in effect giving them four power-play goals.
At 12:22 of the first, Zidlicky sent a slap shot through traffic on a power play to make it 2-2.
Then, Nashville ended the scoring in a crazy first period at 17:35. Defenseman Paul Kariya zoomed past Adam Foote and Predators forward Scottie Upshall skated past Nash.
Kariya had the first shot, the rebound kicking hard off Denis’ left pad. Upshall had the easy part, popping in the rebound to make it 3-2.
The Predators’ goals in the second and third periods came moments after power plays ended.
Martin Erat, set up along the half boards, threw an oh-whatthe-heck wrist shot toward Denis that went in only five seconds after Foote was freed.
At 13:27 of the third, only nine seconds after Jody Shelley’s slashing penalty expired, Kimo Timonen worked his way through Sergei Fedorov, Foote and Radoslav Suchy to beat Denis with a roofer and make it 5-2.
The Jackets had two prime chances to make it interesting in the final period, but Zherdev was stuffed by Vokoun on a breakaway at 14:14, and Trevor Letowski misfired at an open net at 8:05.
The loss was the Jackets’ sixth in their past seven games in Nashville.
"We need a break," Gallant said.
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