Lecavalier has 2 goals, assist in Lightning’s 4-1 win over Coyotes
By APMonday, November 16, 2009
Lecavalier leads Lightning to 4-1 win over Coyotes
GLENDALE, Ariz. — Vincent Lecavalier had two goals and an assist and Mike Smith made 30 saves as the Tampa Bay Lightning beat the Phoenix Coyotes 4-1 Monday night.
Alex Tanguay had a goal and two assists and Martin St. Louis also scored for the Lightning, who have recorded points in six straight games — four wins and two overtime losses.
Adrian Aucoin scored the lone goal for the Coyotes, who have dropped five of their past seven.
Phoenix’s already thin defensive corps took an additional hit with 3:35 left in the first period when Jim Vandermeer was whistled for a 5-minute major penalty and a game misconduct for running Kurtis Foster into the right half boards.
Lecavalier gave the Lightning a 1-0 lead at 5:59 of the first period, beating Jason LaBarbera on a soft backhand shot from the right faceoff circle.
Tanguay made it 2-0 with the Lightning on a 5-on-3 power play, scoring on a quick rebound from the right edge of the crease after LaBarbera stopped Ryan Malone’s original shot.
Aucoin pulled the Coyotes within a goal on a blast from the point with 40 seconds left in the opening period, but St. Louis restored the Lightning’s two-goal lead when he put home his own rebound at 4:30 of the second.
Lecavalier capped the scoring with 8:14 left with a shot that bounced off the inside of LaBarbera’s right pad and the goalie’s left skate before going into the net.
Phoenix center Peter Mueller left the game with 24.2 seconds to go in the second period after sustaining an apparent lower-body injury and did not return.
NOTES: Lecavalier had only one goal in his previous eight games. … The Coyotes already were without defensemen Zbynek Michalek, Kurt Sauer and Ed Jovanovski. Sauer and Michalek are on injured reserve and Jovanovski missed his fourth straight game with a lower-body injury. Phoenix center Matthew Lombardi was a game-time scratch with a lower-body injury. … NHL commissioner Gary Bettman met with officials from the city of Glendale earlier Monday to discuss the state of the league’s attempt to sell the Coyotes to an owner committed to keeping the team in the Phoenix area. The NHL purchased the team on November 2 to end the franchise’s summer-long saga in bankruptcy court. … The announced crowd was 9,503, ending a three-game streak of five-figure attendance.
Tags: Arizona, Athlete Health, Athlete Injuries, Glendale, Men's Hockey, North America, Phoenix, Professional Hockey, United States