Turco, opportunistic Stars down Wild
Marty Turco made 40 saves in his return to the net and his teammates scored four goals on just 18 shots as the Dallas Stars beat the Minnesota Wild 4-2 at American Airlines Center Tuesday night.
Turco, making his first start since January 24, was busy. He saw 14 shots in the first, 15 in the second and 13 more in the third. The 40 saves was a season high.
"I saw the puck pretty puck pretty good. I was excited to get back in there and was remembering some of the nuances and rituals that take place. It felt really good to get back out there," said Turco. "The guys played a good, solid game."
"Great night. He made some great saves," said Stars center Mike Modano. "We didn't give him too much help back there as far as the shots were concerned, but he obviously had a big bounce-back game for us, and that was something we needed."
While Turco was making some timely saves, the players in front of him were scoring some timely goals. Twice Minnesota scored to cut the Stars' lead in the game to one goal and both times the Stars responded by scoring within one minute to extend the lead back to two goals.
"The timely scoring that we had, the two goals directly after their goals - you can't replace that," said Stars coach Marc Crawford. "As much as you score on your opportunities but it's the way you score, it just takes the wind right out of the opposition."
The Stars have won six of their last nine games (6-3-0) and improved to 9-2-0 in their last eleven games at home. When they skated off the ice Tuesday night they were within one point of eighth place in the Western Conference. But they were three points out by the end of the night after Detroit rallied to beat the Sharks in San Jose.
Modano had one goal - the game-winner - and one assist. Jamie Benn had one goal and one assist as well. Brad Richards and James Neal also scored for the Stars.
Minnesota dominated the shot clock in the first period but the Stars got the only goal when Neal deflected a Karlis Skrastins shot past Wild goalie Wade Dubielewicz. Richards extended the lead in the second period, scoring on the second of back-to-back power plays for the Stars.
The Wild appeared to get a big momentum boost when they scored on the second of back-to-back power play chances in the final minute of the period to make it a 2-1 game, but Modano answered 25 seconds later and with just 24.4 seconds left in the period to make it a 3-1 game.
"It's huge shifts, huge shifts," said Wild coach Todd Richards. "When you score or whether the other team scores, those are real, real, real important shifts from the fact that you battle, you're down 2-0. You battle, you finally get one, 2-1. There's some life now on the bench. There's a minute to go in the period and we give up a goal. That was huge."
Minnesota cut the lead to 3-2 with 3:57 left in the game, but the Stars answered just 53 seconds later when Benn forced a turnover and scored off a snap shot from the slot.
"We were on our heels in the third, and let them come at us and you could kind of see that coming. They scored, but to go right back, and force the issue and score was huge," said Richards. "We did it twice tonight after their goals. That's probably why we won the game, those two shifts after those goals."
Minnesota lost for the seventh time in their last eight road games and lost for the 12th straight time in Dallas. The Wild fell three points behind the Stars in the Western Conference standings. The Stars now hit the road to take on the Blue Jackets in Columbus on Thursday.
| Game Recap |
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The Wild outshot the Stars
14-4 in the first period, but Dallas got the only goal. That
came at the 11:00 mark when Karlis Skrastins came down the
boards to get a rebound off a traffic and his shot was tipped in
by James Neal.
Marty Turco was sharp in net for the Stars in the first 20 minutes, making a couple of nice stops on deflections. Minnesota got its first power play early in the second and Turco came up with a nice stop on a close range shot by Owen Nolan to keep the Wild off the scoreboard. The Stars got back-to-back power plays midway through the second and had 11 seconds of five-on-three time. They scored on the second five-on-four when Brad Richards beat WIld goalie Wade Dubielewicz with a slap shot from the left point at the 12:54 mark. The Wild got back-to-back power play late in the first period. The first one came when Steve Ott went after Cal Clutterbuck, who had just decked Richards with a big hit. It was the second fight of the game between Ott and Clutterbuck. Ott picked up the extra minor for roughing and the Stars killed off that one. Just after that Mark Fistric took a holding penalty and the Wild cashed in when Guillaume Latendresse deflected a Brent Burns point shot past Turco with 50 seconds left in the period to make it a 2-1 game. But the Stars were able to extend the lead before the period ended when Brenden Morrow set up Mike Modano, who scored off a one-timer with 24.4 seconds left in the second to make it a 3-1 game. Minnesota cut the lead to 3-2 when Andrew Brunette scored during a scramble in front of Turco with 3:57 left in the game, but the Stars again answered within a minute. This time it was Jamie Benn, who stole the puck from Wild defenseman Marek Zidlicky in the neutral zone, skated into the Minnesota zone and scored from the slot just 53 seconds after the Wild tally. Minnesota pulled Dubielewicz with just under two minutes to go and got a power play with just under one minute left but could not score. |
| Quotable |
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"I don't have a choice. You
prepare for whatever, and you want to make a difference.
Sometimes you make a difference with good goaltending or bad,
and that's the nature of the position, and I've seen a lot of
work since my last start, so I wasn't too worried about getting
shots. I was just making sure the body was moving properly,
which it did. I've just got to make sure that continues." -
Stars goalie Marty Turco on if he likes to see a lot of action
after a long layoff "He was good. He did what he had to do. We played with a lot of confidence in front of him - he helped us out with moving pucks, which I think is why he had a shot total so low. We broke the other zone a lot cleaner, and when he's on, it makes it a lot easier for us to get out of the zone." - Stars center Brad Richards on Turco "Yeah." - Stars coach Marc Crawford, when asked if Marty Turco would start in Columbus Thursday night "I thought for 60 minutes we played some really, really good hockey. We gave up for goals but I thought defensively it was one of our better games as far as giving up chances. We were lax on a couple plays and we ended up fishing the puck out of our net. Those are huge plays. We worked so hard in the offensive zone to generate chances and get opportunities. And we worked hard defensively, but there were a couple of occasions where we just relax for a second and the pucks in our net." Wild coach Todd Richards |
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