Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - January 19, 2015, Winnipeg, Manitoba
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WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
MONDAY, JANUARY 19, 2015
winnipegfreepress. com AFTER BURNER
UP NEXT VS BLUE JACKETS �o WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21 �o 8 P. M. / SN1 / TSN 1290
SHOTS > 30
Dustin Byfuglien - 5
GOALS
Bryan Little ( 18)
Michael Frolik ( 10)
Dustin Byfuglien ( 12)
SHOTS > 31
O.
Ekman- Larsen,
Tobias Rieder - 5
GOALS
Ekman- Larsson ( 12)
Lauri Korpikoski ( 4)
Tobias Rieder ( 6)
3 STARS
Bryan
LITTLE
Scored a goal
and drove the net
at will
Oliver
EKMANLARSSON
Scored his 12th
goal of the
season
Dustin
BYFUGLIEN
No questioning
the big man's
impact, again.
�s �s �s �s �s �s
S
Du
G
S
To
G
KEY PLAY
BRYAN LITTLE
You had to wait until late in
the evening for it, but surely it
was Little's shootout winner.
HITS
JETS 37 - Matt Halischuk 6
COYOTES 28 - David Moss 5
ICE- TIME LEADERS
JETS - Dustin Byfuglien - 27: 33
COYOTES - O. Ekman- Larsson - 28: 47
4
25- 14- 8
3
16- 24- 5
ARIZONA COYOTES
O NDREJ Pavelec sat slumped
in his locker stall, the sweat
still dripping from underneath
his Winnipeg Jets hat
a good half hour after the final horn
had sounded following the club's 25th
win of the season.
And the look on his mug - it was the
same for just about any other player
who made an appearance in the dressing
room following
Sunday's 4- 3 shootout
win over the Arizona
Coyotes - was that
of pure- satisfactionmeets-
absolute- exhaustion.
Indeed, there were
a lot of smiles underneath
bloodshot eyes as the Jets completed
their most- gruelling stretch of
the 2014- 15 campaign, a seven- gamesin-
11- days stretch that took them from
Winnipeg to Arizona to California to
Winnipeg to Texas to Chicago and back
here to River City.
And they didn't just survive, they thrived,
going 5- 1- 1 and pulling into a tie with the Blackhawks,
who have two games in hand, for fourth
spot in the Western Conference.
" That was big, absolutely that was big," began
Pavelec. " Seven games in 11 nights, the time
changes we had, the weather changes, the travel,
the time spent on the plane. Sure, it is what it is.
But with the guys that we have injured, I think
we did a really good job. It's not an excuse at all,
because everybody has a stretch like this.
" But," added Pavelec, pausing for emphasis,
" last year... we wouldn't have won those games.
If you look at the standings, we've shown we can
win against anybody. We're winning as a team.
That's what we did tonight. It was all about the
battle."
Look, there's a whole lot of race left before the
Jets can even begin dreaming about a playoff
spot. They know it, the coaches know it, the rest
of the Western Conference knows it. The real
push comes in February, March and - the Jets
hope - April.
But, big picture here: For the Jets to be looking
now at tracking down teams ahead of them instead
of glancing in the rear- view mirror at those
behind them says something of their maturation.
And to have done it without their Top 4 defencemen
for a long spell, without Evander Kane and
now Mathieu Perreault also speaks of their resiliency.
Let's face it, at the beginning of this season
those two characteristics - whether this team
could take another step and take a punch - were
seen as two of its biggest flaws, not strengths.
" It's kinda scary when you think about the guys
we've lost to injuries this year," said Bryan Little.
" But guys have stepped in and played bigger
roles than they're used to and by now we know
we can lose guys and have people step in and we
can still get wins."
That was the meat of a conversation Blake
Wheeler was having with reporters after the
morning skate Sunday - this notion this squad
finally understands what type of game they need
to play to be consistently successful. It's not
complicated on paper, but getting there on ice has
been a real chore.
" I think we know who we are now, know what
we're capable of," said Wheeler. " So that's where
it comes from, just that confidence that you can
lose arguably your top four ' D' and just go out
and outwork teams and still have a chance to win.
" When you get results, you're going to be more
confident. But we know who we are and that
gives us confidence. We're not searching for answers.
When our game goes astray a little bit, we
can say, this is not who we are, this is who we are
and get back to it like that. That's the biggest key,
having that awareness of what makes us go."
Now, there will be blips - no coach will be
thrilled with blowing a 3- 1 lead with just over six
minutes left, as the Jets did against the Coyotes
- but this is a bottom- line business and a ' W' is a
' W', even if it does paint over some flaws.
That's exactly how coach Paul Maurice chose
to frame everything afterwards, focussing on the
body of work in the seven games in 11 days.
" I'm a really optimistic person," said Maurice.
" But if you had said we were going to 5- 1- 1 on this
seven- game stretch. I'm not sure... I didn't think
that would necessarily have been possible.
" We've faced adversity twice so far this season:
the injuries to our back end and this schedule and
met it head on."
So, no, the NHL doesn't award survivor badges
for stretches like this. But they can still be
revealing. And that might explain why - as he
exited the podium following his post- game media
session late Sunday - Maurice grinned, even if it
was just for a moment.
ed. tait@ freepress. mb. ca
Twitter: @ WFPEdTait
Exhausted and satisfied
Pavelec, Jets get
through tough stretch
with flying colours
ED
TAIT
JOHN WOODS / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Ondrej Pavelec stood tall in the Jets net, bringing their seven- games- in- 11- days stretch to a close with a win over the Arizona Coyotes Sunday.
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