• Powered by Roundtable
    PA Stats Inc
    Nov 18, 2008, 03:03

    DETROIT (Ticker) -- The Detroit Red Wings are beginning to

    remind the hockey world why they are the defending Stanley Cup

    champions.

    Ty Conklin made 21 saves and defenseman Niklas Kronwall recorded

    a power-play goal and an assist as the Red Wings skated to a 4-0

    victory over the Edmonton Oilers on Monday.

    "We've been making a pretty big push to be better in our end,"

    Conklin said. "We've been winning games, but we've given up a

    lot of goals. We take a lot of pride in the number of goals and

    the chances we give up. Looks like we're on the right track."

    Starting in place of Chris Osgood for the second straight game,

    Conklin turned aside nine shots in the first period, five in the

    second and seven in the third en route to notching his first

    shutout of the season and fifth career.

    "It's nice to get that first (shutout) here to get rid of the

    butterflies early," Conklin said. "I had to make a couple of

    tough saves on a 5-on-3, but for the most part we were solid in

    our end. That's as good as we've been all year."

    Mikael Samuelsson, Jiri Hudler and Johan Franzen also tallied

    and Henrik Zetterberg had two assists for the Red Wings, who

    have won three straight games and five of six.

    During their recent hot stretch, the Red Wings' lone blemish

    came against the Pittsburgh Penguins, a 7-6 overtime loss on

    last Tuesday. In that contest, they squandered a three-goal

    lead in the third period and fizzled against the team they

    thwarted in the Stanley Cup Finals last season.

    After that loss, the team made its displeasure heard, hinting

    that such play will result in disappointment at the end of the

    season. Since then, Detroit has outscored its opponents, 11-5,

    in the successful three-game span.

    "I thought we played well tonight," Detroit coach Mike Babcock

    said. "We didn't give up much. We looked good on special

    teams. We talked about (tightening up defensively) but that's

    just talk. You have to do it. We were disappointed with our

    third period last week.

    "Tonight was much better. We didn't have many turnovers. You

    want to make plays, but if they're not there, you can't force

    things."

    Kronwall extended his points streak to four games after

    accepting a feed from Zetterberg and firing a hard wrister past

    Dwayne Roloson from the slot 6:11 into the first with the man

    advantage.

    "If you drew up what we didn't want to do to start, that's what

    we did," Oilers coach Craig MacTavish said.

    Kronwall also has five assists over the past four games,

    including three in the last two. He had just six assists in 11

    October games.

    "It's sad that when we're down just 1-0 after the first period,"

    Oilers center Shawn Horcoff said. "We should be able to build

    off of that. The first intermission, that's when we should have

    tightened things up."

    Roloson finished with 37 saves, but was exposed again three

    minutes into the second after defenseman Brett Lebda fed a

    cross-crease pass to Samuelsson, who was sitting on the

    doorstep.

    "The difference was the second period," MacTavish said. "We

    have five or six red zone chances where it's just us and the

    goalie and we don't hit the net. And then, Samuelsson scores

    for them to make it 2-0 and then they get another goal and the

    game was over."

    Hudler increased Detroit's lead to 3-0 with a slap shot from the

    right faceoff circle on a 3-on-2 rush with 5:42 left in the

    session, and Franzen capped the scoring with a backhander off a

    botched clearing attempt by Roloson midway through the third.

    "I thought this was one of our best games," Franzen said. "It

    was a big game for us, before we go out on the road again."

    Edmonton has dropped three straight and its offensive slumber

    has been a major factor in its recent play. The Oilers have

    scored just nine times in the last five contests.

    Oilers right wing Fernando Pisani left in the third with a

    broken ankle suffered after crashing awkwardly into the boards

    trying to take possession of a loose puck.

    "Broken ankle," MacTavish said. "Fernando's done for a while."