Red Wings pounce on Jackets' mistake

4/17/2009
ASSOCIATED PRESS
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  • DETROIT - The playoff-neophyte Columbus Blue Jackets belonged on the ice with the mighty Detroit Red Wings for more than half of Game 1.

    Then, Manny Malhotra made an awful decision and Columbus couldn't recover.

    Detroit's Jonathan Ericsson scored the go-ahead goal with

    6:39 left in the second period on a shot that Malhotra tried to snatch with his glove, the defending Stanley Cup champions scored again less than a minute later and went on to beat the Blue Jackets 4-1 last night.

    "I saw the shot all the way and I wanted to grab it," Malhotra said. "But I didn't get enough of it, obviously."

    Obviously.


    Detroit coach Mike Babcock certainly wasn't going to apologize for the fortunate break that proved to be the pivotal moment of the playoff-opening game.

    "The way they're playing,

    everyone is playing goal and trying to block shots," Babcock said. "You can block a lot of shots, but it also ends up going off you sometimes."

    Columbus' Ken Hitchcock insisted he doesn't coach his players to do what Malhotra did in front of goalie Steve Mason.

    "We've made that mistake before and it cost us the same way," Hitchcock said. "That's an easy, simple save for Mason."

    Chris Osgood had to make a diving save 1 1/2 minutes into the game, bailing out a teammate who turned the puck over, and didn't give up a goal in the first period despite facing three power plays and 14 shots.

    Mason stopped the first 21 shots he faced before giving up three goals - two of which he was helpless to stop - in a five-shot stretch.

    The rookie said the series is

    "absolutely" not over.

    "We leave here with it being a game apiece and that will be a good accomplishment," said

    Mason, who finished with 30 saves.

    Game 2 of the first-round series is here tomorrow night.

    The Blue Jackets were in control early, easily outshooting the Red Wings and not allowing a second shot until midway through the first period.

    Mason turned away each of the 14 shots he faced in the first, and Osgood had 13 saves in the scoreless period.

    "From there on it was all downhill," Mason said.

    Detroit's Jiri Hudler fired up a restless crowd by scoring midway through the second period.

    Undaunted, Columbus scored less than a minute later.

    R.J. Umberger made it 1-all at 11:40 of the second period and it wasn't until Malhotra made the gaffe a few minutes later that the Red Wings seized the momentum.

    Ericsson lifted a shot from above the right circle toward the net, Malhotra stuck out his left glove while standing in front of Mason and the go-ahead goal was in the books.

    "This is playoff hockey. This is what happens," Hudler said. "Thank God it went in."

    Forty-eight seconds later, Niklas Kronwall gave Detroit a two-goal lead on a shot that Mason never saw - until it was past him - because burly forward Johan Franzen was perched in front of him.

    Less than three minutes into the third period, Franzen slipped a shot between Mason's right skate and the post to make it 4-1. He scored after two Blue Jackets went after Henrik Zetterberg behind the net.

    "The fourth I'd like to have back," Mason said.

    BRUINS 4, CANADIENS 2

    BOSTON - Phil Kessel had two goals and an assist, and Zdeno Chara scored with 8:45 left to break a third-period tie and give Boston a victory.

    Tim Thomas stopped 26 shots for the Bruins. Carey Price made 35 saves for the Canadiens.

    Kessel and David Krejci gave Boston a 2-0 lead before Montreal tied it on goals by Chris Higgins and Alex Kovalev. Kessel made it 4-2 with 13.4 seconds left on an empty-netter on a pass from Milan Lucic, a goal that prompted a round of fisticuffs that continued after the final whistle.