The Detroit Red Wings (and their fans) put up a fight against the Philadelphia Flyers last night, winning a 6-4 decision that was a little wild and woolly.
The Hockey News’s Sam Stockton posted an overnight recap which emphasizes the “wild and woolly” aspects of the loosely-played game…
Patrick Kane scored the winner for the home side at the 7:22 mark of the third period, burying a wrist shot off a marvelous Moritz Seider stretch pass that led Kane seamlessly into the attacking third. “Well last game I had a similar play, and I missed the net to the far side,” Kane said post-game, when asked about the sequence. “I’ve come down that wing a few times in my career and scored going short side, so sometimes that play happens once or twice in a row and you get redemption the second time.” Though he was only referring to a personal redemption, the notion applied just as well to his team’s second look at the Flyers in six days.
Even with six goals on the evening, the Red Wings have scored fewer goals than every other team in the Eastern Conference, but, per JT Compher (who scored Detroit’s first of the night on a first period power play), the early season offensive lethargy didn’t detract from confidence. “In the room we know that we’re capable of scoring more,” Compher said.
Coach Lalonde understood that the team didn’t play its best defensively…
Detroit’s performance wasn’t perfect. The Red Wings needed every last drop of rush offense they produced because, even after the initial sting of Konency’s goal, they couldn’t entirely cut out Philadelphia’s counter-attacks. As coach Derek Lalonde put it, “as a group, we probably could’ve managed our game a little better.” Nonetheless, Lalonde was pleased with his team’s overall effort, pointing to the way Detroit limited their guests’ offensive volume. “We had four shots we gave up in the first,” he noted. “We held them to under 20 shots. We’ll take that game any night. Obviously, we didn’t make it comfortable…but of course, we’ll take that game.”
But there was a big reason for that, and it was the loss of Simon Edvinsson to an “upper-body injury” in the 1st period. MLive’s Ansar Khan noted Lalonde’s remarks regarding his 5-man defensive corps, which mostly included a Ben Chiarot-Moritz Seider pairing and a Justin Holl-Jeff Petry pairing…
Continue reading Morning news: On the Wings’ win over Philly, Simon Edvinsson’s injury and the Habs games to come