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NHL Betting Info. 5/1

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  • NHL Betting Info. 5/1

    Preview: Stars (50-23) at Blues (49-24)


    Date: May 01, 2016 3:00 PM EDT


    Scoring depth and dependable goaltending are believed to be the Dallas Stars' biggest obstacles to a Stanley Cup run.


    They showed they're capable of both in Game 1 of their second-round series with the St. Louis Blues.


    As Dallas tries to build off a strong all-around performance, the Blues know they'll need an improved effort Sunday to draw even.


    The Stars dictated play throughout much of Friday's 2-1 victory, though the outcome remained in doubt until the end. Rookie Radek Faksa scored the tiebreaking goal on a rebound with 4:44 remaining, and Kari Lehtonen withstood a furious St. Louis surge in the final minutes to maintain Dallas' home-ice advantage.


    On a night when Tyler Seguin remained out of the lineup and Jamie Benn and Jason Spezza weren't major factors, the Stars received a big lift from their third line of Faksa, Antoine Roussel and Alex Hemsky. The trio accounted for both goals, with the 22-year-old Faksa setting up Roussel for the game's initial score midway through the second.


    "He's a heck of a player," Spezza said of Faksa, who spent much of the regular season in the AHL. "He's always in the right spot.'


    Lehtonen played a key role as well, recording 14 of his 31 saves in the final period. The 12-year veteran improved to 4-1 with a 2.01 goals-against average this postseason, bringing some needed stability to a goaltending position that was often a weakness during the regular season as he and Antti Niemi split time.


    Dallas led the NHL with 265 goals en route to edging the Blues for the West's best record, with much of that production coming from its core of Benn, Seguin, Spezza and Patrick Sharp. That also was the case in its opening-round series with Minnesota in which Benn, Spezza and Sharp registered 11 of the team's 21 goals.


    With better balance likely key to advancing against one of the league's stingiest defensive teams, Friday's result has to be viewed as encouraging.


    "I thought we played a good game," Stars coach Lindy Ruff said. "I thought our energy was good and got better as the game went on. I thought we skated well. I thought we defended well. I thought we were physical. That's a good start to the series for us."


    For St. Louis, the goal will be regaining the intensity and physicality it displayed in a grueling seven-game series with rival Chicago. The Blues came out sluggish in Game 1, with Dallas owning a 31-17 shot advantage over the first two periods and finishing with a 32-26 edge in hits.


    St. Louis outhit the Blackhawks 283-206 in the opening round, while Dallas ranked 26th in the league in that category during the regular season.


    "They outplayed us and deserved to win this one," captain David Backes said. "We need to regroup and find our game and play for a full 60 minutes like we did in the first series. I think we will be just fine. It's going to be another long, tight, hard hitting, fun matchup; but we have to get to our game sooner and for longer."


    Getting Vladimir Tarasenko back on track is another priority. The Blues' top scorer has been held to one goal over the last four games after recording three with two assists over the first four of the Chicago series.


    St. Louis does continue to receive solid work from Brian Elliott, who kept the Blues in the opener with 40 saves.


    Elliott again won't have to deal with Seguin, who has played just once in these playoffs due to a lingering Achilles injury. Forward Patrick Eaves, who had five points in the Minnesota series, is also out after exiting Game 1 with a foot injury.

  • #2
    Re: NHL Betting Info. 5/1

    Preview: Predators (41-27) at Sharks (46-30)


    Date: May 01, 2016 8:00 PM EDT


    San Jose's Peter DeBoer and Nashville's Peter Laviolette acknowledged after their second-round series opener that their teams can play better.


    While that may sound like coachspeak, such remarks are appropriate after the Sharks struggled for the first 40 minutes and the Predators floundered in the last 20.


    San Jose took Game 1 behind a dominant third period and will look to go up 2-0 on Sunday night before the series shifts to Nashville.


    Playing for the first time in a week after eliminating Los Angeles in the first round, the Sharks came out a bit rusty Friday against the Predators. They entered the third period down 1-0 before erupting for five goals to rally for a 5-2 victory.


    "Coming off the break, we had some questions of how we would be. I saw some of the effects of that the first two periods. We found a way," DeBoer said. "To be able to come out of Game 1 with a win even though I think we didn't play our best 60 minutes is good because I think we'll be better in Game 2."


    Former Predators forward Joel Ward set up Tomas Hertl's power-play goal that tied the game early in the third before scoring the tiebreaker with 8:11 remaining. Logan Couture added a power-play goal and an empty-netter, and Tommy Wingels sealed it with another empty-net goal in the final minute.


    'As the game went on we got better, and we could feel them on their heels a little bit,' captain Joe Pavelski said. 'It was just good to see the guys keep feeding off the crowd, feeding off goals and really pushing for that next one.'


    The Predators, who had just one day off after their Game 7 win in Anaheim, knew they had to play smart because they were going up against a team that had been locked in on the power play. They only took one penalty in the first two periods but allowed the Sharks to score on both of their man-advantage opportunities in the third.


    San Jose has converted 29.2 percent of 24 power-play chances in the playoffs, going 5 for 7 in its last two home games, while Nashville has killed 78.6 percent of 28 penalties.


    "We know they're dangerous on the power play and we can't put ourselves in that position too many times cause they're going to score goals," Predators defenseman Mattias Ekholm said.


    One bright spot for the Predators is they went 1 for 2 on the power play after going 1 for 26 in the Ducks series. Mike Fisher had the man-advantage goal early in the second period, and Ryan Johansen scored late in the third after Pekka Rinne was pulled for an extra skater.


    "I thought it was an even game until they scored that third goal, so there's so positives, there's some negatives," Ekholm said. "But it's Game 1 out of seven, so we'll come back for Game 2."


    Martin Jones made 29 saves for San Jose, which improved to 9-2 in the playoffs against Nashville.


    The Sharks, who took a 2-0 series lead en route to beating the Kings in five games, are 7-2 in playoff series when winning the first two games.


    Rinne stopped 33 of 36 shots for the Predators, who have been inconsistent defensively in their last five playoff games, surrendering 14 goals in three losses and two in a pair of wins.


    "There were some good things and some bad things," Laviolette said. "We're capable of playing better."

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: NHL Betting Info. 5/1

      NHL


      Sunday's games


      St Louis-Dallas (D 1-0)
      Blues had won six of last seven games with Dallas before Stars' 2-1 win in Game 1; home team won five of last six series games, with seven of last nine staying under total. Last three St Louis series wins all came in OT or SO-- Blues won three of last five games in this building, but they've lost three of last four games overall, with lone win Game 7 vs Chicago in last series. Dallas won sevne of last nine games, including five of last six at home; over is 3-1-1 in their last five games. Stars outshot St Louis 42-32 in Game 1; they were 0-3 on power play, St Louis 0-2. .


      Nashville-San Jose (SJ 1-0)
      Sharks exploded for five third period goals to win Game 1, after Nashville led 1-0 after second period; San Jose outshot Preds 13-9 in third period, was 2-3 on power play- Nashville was 1-2. Predators lost three of last four games here; they've lost four of last six games overall. San Jose had five extra days to prep after beating LA in five game sin first round; Sharks won eight of last ten games overall- they've lost six of last ten games with Nashville, but won last two. Six of last nine series games stayed under the total.


      Playoffs tally: 1st round-- Home: 23-24, Over: 16-17-14
      2nd round-- Home: 4-2, Over: 3-2-1

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: NHL Betting Info. 5/1

        Preview: St. Louis at Dallas

        When: 3:00 PM ET, Sunday, May 1, 2016
        Where: American Airlines Center, Dallas, Texas

        Matchup Edge

        STL Edge in: DAL
        Offense
        Defense
        Power Play
        Penalty Kill
        Face Offs
        Discipline
        Goaltending



        The Dallas Stars owned the NHL's second-best home record during the regular season and look to continue that dominance when they host the St. Louis Blues on Sunday afternoon in Game 2 of their second-round playoff series. The Stars squeezed out a 2-1 victory in Game 1 to improve to 8-0-1 in their last nine at American Airlines Center.

        Although the Stars were clearly the better team in the series opener, coach Lindy Ruff understands what awaits his team on Sunday. "This series has just started. Game 1 is a long ways behind us right now," Ruff said. "This is like a Game 7. They don't want to go down 2-0." The Blues won four of five meetings - three beyond regulation - during the regular season and finished two points behind Dallas for the best record in the Western Conference. "We knew it wasn't going to be an easy series," St. Louis netminder Brian Elliott said. "So we're down one and now we've got to respond."

        TV: 3 p.m. ET, NBC, Sportsnet, TVA

        ABOUT THE BLUES: After going toe-to-toe in a hard-hitting seven-game series against reigning Stanley Cup champion Chicago, St. Louis couldn't match the speed of Dallas, which poured 42 shots on goal but also enjoyed a surprised 32-26 edge in hits. Star forward Vladimir Tarasenko, who led the Blues with 40 goals during the regular season and scored four times in the first-round series win against the Blackhawks, logged 21:04 of ice time in Game 1 and absorbed seven of those hits. "It's really fun to play against those guys because like (Stars captain) Jamie Benn said, 'They hate us, we hate them.' But it's fun stuff," Tarasenko said Saturday.

        ABOUT THE STARS: Rookie center Radek Faksa, a former first-round draft pick who scored five goals in 45 games this season while splitting time between Dallas and the minors, set up one goal before scoring the decisive tally Friday - his second game-winner of the postseason. "He's always in the right spot," teammate Jason Spezza said of Faksa. "You can tell he's been well-coached. He's a big guy down the middle who doesn't cheat, ever. Really good (defensively). When you have a guy who's 6-3 and plays like that, it really helps." With forward Patrick Eaves on crutches Saturday with a foot injury, Ruff said Valeri Nichushkin will play in Game 2.

        OVERTIME

        1. Stars G Kari Lehtonen stopped 31-of-32 shots to improve to 7-1-0 in his last eight starts.

        2. St. Louis is 0-for-5 on the power play over the past three games.

        3. The Stars on Saturday recalled Fs Curtis McKenzie and Brett Ritchie from Texas of the American Hockey League.

        PREDICTIONS: Blues 3, Stars 2 (OT)

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: NHL Betting Info. 5/1

          Preview: Nashville at San Jose

          When: 8:00 PM ET, Sunday, May 1, 2016
          Where: SAP Center at San Jose, San Jose, California

          Matchup Edge

          NAS Edge in: SJ
          Offense
          Defense
          Power Play
          Penalty Kill
          Face Offs
          Discipline
          Goaltending



          Facing a fatigued opponent in the opener of their Western Conference second-round playoff series, the San Jose Sharks kept applying pressure until the Nashville Predators finally wilted. The Sharks look to ride the momentum of a five-goal third-period blitz when they host Nashville in Sunday night's Game 2.

          San Jose erased a slim deficit by erupting for five goals in the last 20 minutes for a 5-2 win over the Predators, who had a short turnaround after ousting Anaheim in a Game 7 showdown 48 hours earlier. "As the game went on we got better, and we could feel them on their heels a little bit," Sharks captain Joe Pavelski said. "It was just good to see the guys keep feeding off the crowd, feeding off goals and really pushing for that next one." Nashville, which still trailed by one goal with just under two minutes remaining before giving up a pair of empty-net tallies, opted not to practice Saturday after surrendering a postseason-high 38 shots on net. “There were some good things and some bad things," Predators coach Peter Laviolette said. "We’re capable of playing better.”

          TV: 8 p.m. ET, NBCSN, CBC, TVAS

          ABOUT THE PREDATORS: After its power play was muted by Anaheim in the first round, finishing a woeful 1-of-26, Nashville converted on 1-of-2 chances Friday, only to negate it by allowing San Jose to score twice on three attempts with the man advantage. “I think it was just shooting ourselves in the foot,” Predators center Ryan Johansen said. “We turned over the puck a few times, took a couple penalties, and they fed right into that. We just got away from our game plan and our structure a little bit." While Johansen netted one goal and set up another, leading scorer Filip Forsberg was held off the scoresheet for the sixth consecutive game.

          ABOUT THE SHARKS: Joel Ward established a clutch reputation with seven goals in 12 playoff games with Nashville in 2010-11 and he wasted no time tormenting his former team by assisting on the tying tally before scoring the go-ahead goal Friday. "You get to this time of year in the NHL and there are eight teams left and 22 sitting home, and there is very little separating the teams talent-wise," Sharks coach Peter DeBoer said. "It's usually will and strength and how hard you are willing to play. I think that is why he thrives, because those are his characteristics." Linemate Logan Couture also was a presence with two goals in Game 1.

          OVERTIME

          1. San Jose is 7-for-24 on the power play in six playoff games.

          2. Counting Game 3 versus Anaheim, in which he was hurt in the opening minutes, Nashville is 0-4 without F Craig Smith in the playoffs.

          3. Sharks D Brent Burns, who set franchise marks in goals (27), assists (48) and points (75), was named a Norris Trophy finalist.

          PREDICTION: Sharks 3, Predators 2

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