Portland rallies past Chiefs
Same ol' story at the Arena Sunday night - for the fourth (and final time) in four visits, Portland comes away with the win, rallying with three third-period goals to defeat the Spokane Chiefs 5-4.
The win came despite an amazing performance from Spokane goalie James Reid, who insisted there would be no ill affects when the teams square off in Portland Tuesday.
My unedited game story and some additional details on the goals follow, but first some World Juniors information.
Team USA wins its second game 3-0, but Spokane's Tyler Johnson didn't figure into the scoring. You can read more on what happened to Johnson on Saturday on the Team USA blog.
Despite 16 goals in Canada's opening win, Spokane's Jared Cowen didn't pick up a point. Canada plays its second game today.
Spokane's Stefan Ulmer didn't score in the 6-2 loss to Russia but had an assist in the 7-3 loss to Sweden on Sunday.
By Dave Trimmer
Staff writer
It’s not often a goalie can give up more than double his league-leading average and still be the player of the game but it happened at the Arena Sunday night.
James Reid thrilled a crowd of 7,476 fans with 36 mostly spectacular saves but it wasn’t enough as the Portland Winterhawks rallied for a 5-4 win with three unanswered goals in the third period, only the second time the Spokane Chiefs have lost after entering the third period.
“He was in the way a lot tonight, I like that,”
“As a (defensive) group we didn’t play very well,” Sauter said. “I don’t think you can point at any one guy and say he was the difference, good or bad, as a team we just weren’t as good and we’re going to improve tomorrow and be better Tuesday (in Portland).
The tension of the game, in which the Winterhawks had a 41-33 shot advantage, ended with a post-game brawl involving all players on the ice, good for 104 penalty minutes, 59 on the visitors, who out-shot the Chiefs 41-33, including 16-8 in the third period.
“I thought our goalie definitely played well enough to give us a chance to win,” Sauter said. “I thought, again, same old thing, turnovers were our Achilles heel. Up 4-2 after two periods, you’ve got to take care of the puck, you have to manage the game and we just didn’t do a very good job.
Words can’t begin to describe some of the saves Reid made and there was one by defenseman Brett Bartman just before the midway point of the third period when the Chiefs were leading 4-3. After a great point-blank save by Reid, a Winterhawk tried to center the puck from behind the net and hit Reid’s back. As the puck floated toward the goal Bartman grabbed it and tossed it to safety.
But shortly after that Jacob Berglund batted a crossing pass from Chris Francis, who spun around in the left circle before spotting his wide-open teammate, into the net to tie the game.
Then, with the Chiefs unable to clear their zone, Berglund stole the puck behind the net and found wide-open Stefan Schneider for the game winner at 16:12.
“We weren’t really clicking the whole time tonight,” Reid said. “I knew I had to make some big saves and did, but I guess it was just too many chances, too many breakdowns.”
Sauter said, “Sometimes when you’re not totally focused on your job you make not even a mistake but you’re not where you should be, you miss an assignment by a half a step, a step and it sometimes gets exploited. Theire third goal was an example of that, their fourth goal another example and then the fifth goal, we make a blind pass in our own end and again it ends up on their stick, out front and in our net.
“Normally we don’t make those mistakes but it seems when we make one it’s a big one and it costs us.”
The story of first period was Reid, who stopped two breakaways while his teammates were on a power play and several point-blank shots before Brad Ross connected on his second breakaway chance midway through the period.
Sandwiching Ross’ 17th goal were markers by
The second period featured stellar goaltending as well but the big tally was a bad goal.
First Levko Koper gave the Chiefs a 3-1 lead just 31 seconds into
the period.
After a faceoff in the
“I thought we had played better in the second than the first, not a lot, but a little,” Sauter said. “But you think if you play better in the third you’ve got a chance to win. It’s disappointing you give up three in the third, but at the same time we have to take what we can and learn from it and move forward. No sense in pouting about it now, we just have to learn from our mistakes.”
Barbardo got his second goal when he skated down the right side, blew past one defender, cut in on goal when he got to the circle, hesitated as another defenseman slid past him and then poked the puck between Ian Curtis’ pads.
Miller’s sixth goal was a pin-point shot from the right circle. He had the puck behind net, couldn’t find a way out front and skated to the circle. He stopped, in fact everyone stopped, giving Miller plenty of time to pick an opening.
Late in the period the Chiefs lost a great opportunity after
Brett Ponich picked up a penalty and got into a losing fight with Kyle Beach.
After order was restored, Taylor Jordan’s yapping from the bench produced
another penalty and a five-on-three for
Koper gave the Chiefs a 3-1 lead just 31 seconds into
the period when Mitch Wahl won a faceoff with the puck going straight to Koper
for a quick, hard wrist shot.
After a faceoff in the