Thursday, October 19, 2006

Devils 2 - Penguins 1: Bobbled!

Well, it seems Evgeni Malkin won the war over Sidney and his bobblehead with his first NHL goal, but the Penguinos still lost 2-1 to those damn devils!

From NHL.com:

First, Sidney Crosby. Now, Evgeni Malkin. The Pittsburgh Penguins' young stars keep making impressive debuts but losing to Martin Brodeur.

Brodeur withstood Malkin's first career goal in his first game to become only the third goaltender in NHL history to reach the 450-win mark, with Jamie Langenbrunner's goal in the third period making the difference in the New Jersey Devils' 2-1 victory over the Penguins on Wednesday.

Malkin, one of the most awaited young players in recent seasons, was everything he was supposed to be despite missing nearly a month of play with a dislocated left shoulder. The 6-foot-4 center made exceptional passes, used his long reach to grab pucks and set up scoring chances. He also showed he could create scoring of his own by somehow finding a puck that Brodeur thought he had controlled and pushing it into the net at 18:38 of the second, tying it at 1.

"I was worried, it's the first game I'm playing," Malkin said, speaking through interpreter George Birman. "In the future, I think it is going to be easier. I had no problems with the shoulder and, hopefully, that's how I'm going to feel."

Malkin also displayed a strong shot, causing a brief delay in the third period with his slapshot broke a pane of glass behind of the net.

Adding the 20-year-old Malkin to a lineup that already includes Sidney Crosby, who became the youngest player in the NHL history to score 100 points at age 18 last season, wasn't enough to prop up a Penguins offense that has been surprisingly deficient with 12 goals in five games and two in their last three home games, all losses.

Coach Michel Therrien unexpectedly played Malkin and Crosby on the same line at times in their first regulation game together, beginning with the opening shift.

"I didn't expect that, and it was nice for us to start what I hope is the first of many shifts together," Crosby said. "It was good for him to get the first goal, there was a lot of buildup for this and, hopefully, he'll get a lot more."

The two created numerous scoring chances - the Penguins had a season-high 38 shots - but only Malkin was able to beat the 34-year-old Brodeur, who joined Patrick Roy (551) and Ed Belfour (457) as the only goalies with 450 or more victories in regular-season games.

"I think people always look at round numbers, you see 450 and you notice it," Brodeur said. "Now the race is on to 500, hopefully in a couple of years."

Malkin's goal came when he was sent out immediately after the Penguins killed a penalty. His shift began when he skated hard down the right side and put a shot on Brodeur that missed, but he recovered to make a backhand pass that Crosby nearly scored on. Still on the ice 30 seconds later, Malkin set up a Mark Recchi shot that Brodeur appeared to have corralled, only to have Malkin poke it in.

"I had it between my pads, and you have to protect the goalie in that situation," said Brodeur, who felt play should have been stopped ahead of the goal. "You can't have guys stabbing at the puck. If that's not a goal, then there's a fight, that's why need to blow the whistle there."

Malkin was visibly excited by the goal, pumping his fist underhanded at knee level several times. He banged his stick on the ice before trading hand slaps from his teammates as he skated along the bench, a huge smile on his face.

"Recchi gave me a great pass right on the stick and I gave him a pass," Malkin said. "I just went to the net and shot the puck."
Sidney played 21:25, had 3 shots on goal, and finished pointless and EVEN on the night. He did go 11 for 21 on face-offs and dished out two hits as well

VIDEO CLIP HERE.







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