Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

NHL Betting Info. 6/9

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • NHL Betting Info. 6/9

    Quick start moves Penguins within one win of Cup
    By Ross McKeon, The Sports Xchange


    SAN JOSE, Calif. -- The Pittsburgh Penguins are speeding closer to their fourth Stanley Cup.
    Pittsburgh's suffocating pace stifled the San Jose Sharks again Monday in a 3-1 win in Game 4 of the Stanley Cup finals at SAP Center. The Penguins pushed their advantage to 3-1 in the best-of-seven series.
    "This is the hardest hockey I've witnessed in all the years I've been in this league," Penguins coach Mike Sullivan said. "You've got to work for every inch of ice."
    Game 5 will be Thursday in Pittsburgh, where the Sharks have to win to force another game at home.
    "This group doesn't get too frustrated. We just have to keep going," Sharks forward Chris Tierney said.
    San Jose coach Peter DeBoer continued to shuffle personnel on his forward lines in hopes of finding combinations to solve the Penguins' defense. The fact the Sharks went 0-for-2 on the power play hurt, and Pittsburgh scored the first goal for a fourth consecutive game.
    "When you have the lead, you can play differently and feel more comfortable getting into a four-line rhythm," DeBoer said. "You can put your guys out there, trust them, because there's not that pressure we have to create a chance and score a goal."
    "I don't know what it is. It hasn't been an issue until this series, but it's been a big issue through four games," he added.
    Melker Karlsson snapped Pittsburgh goalie Matt Murray's shutout bid with his fourth goal of the playoffs at 8:07 of the third period. He picked up a rebound of Brenden Dillon's blocked shot and beat Murray over his left glove to slice the Penguins' advantage to 2-1.
    However, Pittsburgh's fourth-line right winger, Eric Fehr, scored his third goal of the playoffs at 17:58 for the insurance the Penguins needed to kill the hosts' comeback hopes.
    "We've earned an opportunity, and that's it," Pittsburgh forward Matt Cullen said. "We haven't done anything yet, and it's easy to get far ahead of yourself."
    Murray finished with 23 saves, while San Jose goalie Martin Jones made 17 stops.
    Pittsburgh scored the only goal of the middle period to take a 2-0 lead into the third period.
    Evgeni Malkin recorded his first goal of the series and fifth of the playoffs at 2:37, just nine seconds into Karlsson's interference penalty.
    Malkin had an easy tap-in as he got slipped behind the Sharks defense on the far post, where teammate Phil Kessel hit him with a perfect cross-ice feed from above the left circle.
    "Malkin's overall game was really good, at both ends of rink," Sullivan said. "(He's) so hard to defend. The puck follows him. It's one of his strongest games."
    As has been the case throughout the series, Pittsburgh jumped out first and led 1-0 at the first intermission. The Sharks produced the final six shots to end a period with more shots than the Penguins for the first time (8-6).
    "We've got to get the first goal. It's huge," Tierney said. "We're good when we have the lead, and they're good when they have the lead."
    Sharks defenseman Paul Martin added, "That's been tough for us to claw and produce when we don't get that first one."
    The Penguins took advantage of a bad San Jose line change to score 7:36 after the opening faceoff.
    A quick turnaround shot by Kessel from the right circle bounded off Jones' pad right to an unmarked Ian Cole, and the Penguins defenseman one-timed his first goal of the playoffs past the San Jose netminder.
    Jones made a number of key saves to keep it only a one-goal lead. Defenseman Brian Dumoulin was stoned on his second grade-A chance of the period at 11:30. And Jones denied both Penguins power-play shots after defenseman Marc-Edouard Vlasic interfered with Sidney Crosby at 11:37.
    DeBoer started to shuffle his lines and shorten his bench at midgame.
    Couture joined Joe Thornton and Joe Pavelski as he did late in Game 3. Centers Tierney and Nick Spaling were promoted one line each as forwards Karlsson, Dainius Zubrus and Tommy Wingels saw their ice time reduced in the second period.
    In the third, Joonas Donskoi moved alongside Thornton and Pavelski while Couture centered Patrick Marleau and Joel Ward, while a quick third line of Karlsson, Tierney and Spaling displayed its offensive prowess. It just wasn't enough to get the job done.
    "We've got to find a way to get the second one to tie the game up," Couture said. "We had chances, we had opportunities. We just didn't score. We had some nice looks we didn't capitalize on."
    Martin said, "It's tight on both sides. We had some opportunities we didn't capitalize on. It's disappointing and a tough one for us."
    Couture fired a shot off the shoulder of Murray with 5:01 left following a turnover by Pittsburgh defenseman Kris Letang. Marleau drew iron, and the San Jose power play failed for a second time late when it managed one shot by defenseman Brent Burns.
    NOTES: Sharks LW Tomas Hertl (lower-body injury) missed his second straight contest in Game 4 on Monday. "Day-to-day. He's out tonight," San Jose coach Peter DeBoer said. Hertl sustained a lower-body injury believed to be to his left ankle in overtime of Game 2. A Czech report suggested Hertl is out for the series with a knee injury. ... Penguins rookie G Matt Murray bounced back from a playoff loss on May 20 to go 4-0 in Pittsburgh's next four games before losing Game 3 against the Sharks. ... San Jose's captain C Joe Pavelski has no goals and no points with four shots in the series. He produced a series-high five shots on goal Monday.

  • #2
    Re: NHL Betting Info. 6/9

    NHL notebook: Stevens named Wild assistant coach
    By The Sports Xchange


    Scott Stevens will be headed back behind the bench as the rugged Hall of Famer was named as an assistant coach for the Minnesota Wild on Tuesday.
    Stevens, 52, served as a co-coach for the New Jersey Devils during the 2014 season before spending time as an analyst for the NHL Network. The three-time Stanley Cup champion spent 13 of his 22 NHL seasons with the Devils and will head to Minnesota to join Bruce Boudreau, who was named the Wild's coach in April.
    Minnesota, which has qualified for the playoffs in four straight seasons, was bounced in six games in the first round by the Central Division-rival Dallas Stars in April.


    - The Tampa Bay Lighting named Todd Richards as their new assistant coach.
    Richards, 49, is the Columbus Blue Jackets' all-time winningest coach and also spent two years behind the bench with the Wild.
    One year removed from a Stanley Cup Finals appearance, Tampa Bay advanced to the Eastern Conference final before getting upended by the Pittsburgh Penguins this season.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: NHL Betting Info. 6/9

      Winning title in Pittsburgh would be rare treat
      By Alan Robinson, The Sports Xchange


      PITTSBURGH -- The Stanley Cup was cradled by Sidney Crosby before 350,000 parade onlookers, dunked in Mario Lemieux's swimming pool, carried on a slippery ride across a baseball outfield by Bryan Trottier.
      The one adventure that has never happened to the shiny silver cup in Pittsburgh is being lifted at center ice after a championship-clinching victory.
      In fact, of the 11 major sports championships won by Pittsburgh teams since the Pirates claimed the 1960 World Series at Forbes Field -- six Super Bowls, three Stanley Cups, two other World Series -- not one was won on home turf or home ice.
      But the Penguins, improbably, can win their fourth Stanley Cup in a quarter-century on Thursday night if they can close out the San Jose Sharks, who trail 3-1 in a finals in which Pittsburgh has never fallen behind in regulation.
      And, even better for fans who are paying $1,000 for standing room tickets for Game 5 at Consol Energy Center, the Penguins have a chance to claim the Cup in Pittsburgh.
      "We can feel like there's something big coming up here," Penguins forward Carl Hagelin said Wednesday. "Guys are ready to play. We've won games all year, and that's the plan (Thursday)."
      Every game of the finals but one has been decided by one goal, yet the Penguins have had a clear advantage in shots, speed, scoring chances and, most visibly, momentum.
      Now they have a clear path to the NHL championship -- the second of the Sidney Crosby-Evgeni Malkin era -- but it's one that is also fraught with danger. Lose Game 5 at home and the Penguins must trek back to the West Coast for a Game 6 on Sunday they most certainly don't want to play.
      "It's been close, the line is so thin out there -- both teams are playing at a high level," Penguins center Matt Cullen said. "We've been able to get the big goal when we needed it.
      "(But) the trick is nothing's been done yet. We've got a long ways to go. We haven't done anything yet, other than give ourselves a good opportunity."
      Sharks coach Peter DeBoer, whose team lost Game 2 in Pittsburgh, knows that if San Jose can take Game 5 there, spoil the Penguins' party and make them go all the way back to the West Coast again, the series will take on a much different feel. Even if only one of the 32 teams that trailed 3-1 in the finals came back to win the cup -- and that took place 74 years ago.
      "I think it's closer than it feels," said DeBoer, whose team had the NHL's best regular-season road record. "We've got to give ourselves an opportunity that if they stumble, we're going to jump on it."
      Sharks forward Joel Ward doesn't think the assuredly frantic atmosphere at Consol will be a major disadvantage -- even if Pittsburghers have been waiting to celebrate another title at home since Bill Mazeroski's home run cleared the left-center field wall for the Pirates on Oct. 13, 1960.
      "We're not worried about the hoopla, what they've got going on," Ward said. "It's just a matter of we've got to go out and execute. We've been playing with desperation all year."
      To try to maintain steadiness and not create a sense of panic, DeBoer plans to keep his lines the same as in Game 4, which Pittsburgh won 3-1 on Monday night in San Jose. That means Melker Karlsson will skate on the top line with Joe Pavelski and Joe Thornton, with Tomas Hertl (lower body injury) still expected to be out.
      Asked about Hertl's status, DeBoer said, "It's day to day" -- then reacting to media reports that Hertl is done for the playoffs, he said condescendingly, "In Czech, that means out for the season."
      "They've (his players) been where Pittsburgh is sitting right now (in earlier rounds), saw how quickly that can turn if you lose a game or the momentum swings the other way," DeBoer said. �It can happen to anybody."
      The Penguins aren't talking as if they plan on it happening to them.
      "I'm not going to talk about what they're going to have," Hagelin said. "We're going to have a great desperation level.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: NHL Betting Info. 6/9

        Thursday's NHL Stanley Cup finals Game 5 betting preview: Sharks at Penguins


        San Jose Sharks at Pittsburgh Penguins (A: +145, H: -155, O/U: 5)


        Penguins lead series 3-1


        The Pittsburgh Penguins are on the threshold of a milestone moment, needing one win to become the first major sports team in the city to win a championship at home since the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1960. Armed with a 3-1 series lead, the Penguins go for their fourth Stanley Cup title when they host the San Jose Sharks on Thursday night in Game 5.


        Pittsburgh pushed the Sharks to the brink of elimination with a 3-1 victory at San Jose on Monday night to edge closer to its first Stanley Cup championship since 2009. "We have to try to do our best to ignore some of the noise surrounding the group and I think our players are well aware of it," Penguins coach Mike Sullivan said of the tantalizing opportunity of hoisting the Cup in front of the home fans. The Sharks are trying to become the second team in league history to win the Cup after facing a 3-1 series deficit -- a seemingly insurmountable task given that they have yet to hold a lead in regulation against Pittsburgh. "We want to win one game and get a Game 6 back here at home," San Jose coach Peter DeBoer said. "I think we would be comfortable in that spot that we could get it to go seven."


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


        PROBABLE GOALIES:


        Sharks - Martin Jones (W/L: 13-9, GAA: 2.06, SAVE %: .918)


        Penguins - Matt Murray (W/L: 14-5, GAA: 2.09, SAVE %: .927)


        ABOUT THE SHARKS (59-35-10, 51-42 O/U): After averaging a playoff-best 3.5 goals through the first three rounds of the postseason, San Jose has scored only seven times in four games versus Pittsburgh. Captain Joe Pavelski scored 13 goals and had a seven-game point streak entering the Finals, but he has been held off the scoresheet by the Penguins. "If it's different, if it's 3-1 and you don't have anything, it's a different story," Pavelski said. "But right now, with the hole we're [in], a goal or two probably changes the outcome. The way it's been going for most of the postseason, I feel like I should probably have a bit more." Forward Logan Couture has a postseason-best 26 points, but both he and defenseman Brent Burns have been limited to two assists in the Finals.


        ABOUT THE PENGUINS (63-30-11, 45-41 O/U): Center Evgeni Malkin, the Conn Smythe Award winner in Pittsburgh's 2009 run to the Cup, admitted he wasn't producing enough through the first three games of the series and responded to his own "I want more" declaration by setting up one tally and scoring what proved to be the game-winner in Game 4. “We’ve seen him do it so many times,” Penguins forward Matt Cullen said. “He’s such a big part of the team. He demands a lot of himself, so to see him come out like that in a big game when he kind of called himself out a bit, it’s pretty impressive. That’s what good players do." Forward Phil Kessel is near the front of the line for this season's Conn Smythe after collecting a pair of assists Monday to boost his team-high total to 21 points.


        TRENDS:


        * Sharks are 8-2 in their last 10 road games vs. a team with a home winning % of greater than .600.
        * Penguins are 6-0 in their last 6 home games vs. a team with a road winning % of greater than .600.
        * Under is 12-3-2 in Penguins last 17 Stanley Cup Finals games.
        * Under is 4-0 in the last 4 meetings in Pittsburgh.
        * Sharks are 1-4 in the last 5 meetings in Pittsburgh.


        CONSENSUS: At the time of publication of this preview, the Pittsburgh Penguins are grabbing 71 percent of the public picks and Over 5 is leading the way in totals wagering at 66 percent.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: NHL Betting Info. 6/9

          Preview: Sharks (46-30) at Penguins (48-26)


          Date: June 09, 2016 8:00 PM EDT


          PITTSBURGH -- The Stanley Cup was cradled by Sidney Crosby before 350,000 parade onlookers, dunked in Mario Lemieux's swimming pool, carried on a slippery ride across a baseball outfield by Bryan Trottier.


          The one adventure that has never happened to the shiny silver cup in Pittsburgh is being lifted at center ice after a championship-clinching victory.


          In fact, of the 11 major sports championships won by Pittsburgh teams since the Pirates claimed the 1960 World Series at Forbes Field -- six Super Bowls, three Stanley Cups, two other World Series -- not one was won on home turf or home ice.


          But the Penguins, improbably, can win their fourth Stanley Cup in a quarter-century on Thursday night if they can close out the San Jose Sharks, who trail 3-1 in a finals in which Pittsburgh has never fallen behind in regulation.


          And, even better for fans who are paying $1,000 for standing room tickets for Game 5 at Consol Energy Center, the Penguins have a chance to claim the Cup in Pittsburgh.


          "We can feel like there's something big coming up here," Penguins forward Carl Hagelin said Wednesday. "Guys are ready to play. We've won games all year, and that's the plan (Thursday)."


          Every game of the finals but one has been decided by one goal, yet the Penguins have had a clear advantage in shots, speed, scoring chances and, most visibly, momentum.


          Now they have a clear path to the NHL championship -- the second of the Sidney Crosby-Evgeni Malkin era -- but it's one that is also fraught with danger. Lose Game 5 at home and the Penguins must trek back to the West Coast for a Game 6 on Sunday they most certainly don't want to play.


          "It's been close, the line is so thin out there -- both teams are playing at a high level," Penguins center Matt Cullen said. "We've been able to get the big goal when we needed it.


          "(But) the trick is nothing's been done yet. We've got a long ways to go. We haven't done anything yet, other than give ourselves a good opportunity."


          Sharks coach Peter DeBoer, whose team lost Game 2 in Pittsburgh, knows that if San Jose can take Game 5 there, spoil the Penguins' party and make them go all the way back to the West Coast again, the series will take on a much different feel. Even if only one of the 32 teams that trailed 3-1 in the finals came back to win the cup -- and that took place 74 years ago.


          "I think it's closer than it feels," said DeBoer, whose team had the NHL's best regular-season road record. "We've got to give ourselves an opportunity that if they stumble, we're going to jump on it."


          Sharks forward Joel Ward doesn't think the assuredly frantic atmosphere at Consol will be a major disadvantage -- even if Pittsburghers have been waiting to celebrate another title at home since Bill Mazeroski's home run cleared the left-center field wall for the Pirates on Oct. 13, 1960.


          "We're not worried about the hoopla, what they've got going on," Ward said. "It's just a matter of we've got to go out and execute. We've been playing with desperation all year."


          To try to maintain steadiness and not create a sense of panic, DeBoer plans to keep his lines the same as in Game 4, which Pittsburgh won 3-1 on Monday night in San Jose. That means Melker Karlsson will skate on the top line with Joe Pavelski and Joe Thornton, with Tomas Hertl (lower body injury) still expected to be out.


          Asked about Hertl's status, DeBoer said, "It's day to day" -- then reacting to media reports that Hertl is done for the playoffs, he said condescendingly, "In Czech, that means out for the season."


          "They've (his players) been where Pittsburgh is sitting right now (in earlier rounds), saw how quickly that can turn if you lose a game or the momentum swings the other way," DeBoer said. "It can happen to anybody."


          The Penguins aren't talking as if they plan on it happening to them.


          "I'm not going to talk about what they're going to have," Hagelin said. "We're going to have a great desperation level."

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: NHL Betting Info. 6/9

            NHL


            San Jose-Pittsburgh (P 3-1)
            Penguins can win 4th Stanley Cup here; would be first title Pittsburgh team has won at home since '60 World Series. San Jose lost five of last seven games with Pittsburgh, they lost three of last five playoff road games. Seven of last 14 Shark-Penguin games went OT, four to shootout- seven of last eight tilts stayed under total. San Jose is 1-8 on power play in series; Penguins 1-8. Pittsburgh has a 133-98 edge in shots in first four games. Sharks are in Stanley Cup finals for first time; Penguins are in for first time since winning Cup in '09, its third Stanley Cup title. Pittsburgh won its last three home games, giving up a total of four goals.


            Playoffs tally: 1st round-- Home: 23-24, Over: 16-17-14
            2nd round-- Home: 16-9, Over: 11-5-9
            Conference finals-- Home 6-7, Over 7-5-1
            Home: 3-1 Over: 0-4

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: NHL Betting Info. 6/9

              Preview: San Jose at Pittsburgh

              When: 8:00 PM ET, Thursday, June 9, 2016
              Where: Consol Energy Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

              Matchup Edge

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



              The Pittsburgh Penguins are on the threshold of a milestone moment, needing one win to become the first major sports team in the city to win a championship at home since the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1960. Armed with a 3-1 series lead, the Penguins go for their fourth Stanley Cup title when they host the San Jose Sharks on Thursday night in Game 5.

              Pittsburgh pushed the Sharks to the brink of elimination with a 3-1 victory at San Jose on Monday night to edge closer to its first Stanley Cup championship since 2009. "We have to try to do our best to ignore some of the noise surrounding the group and I think our players are well aware of it," Penguins coach Mike Sullivan told reporters of the tantalizing opportunity of hoisting the Cup in front of the home fans. The Sharks are trying to become the second team in league history to win the Cup after facing a 3-1 series deficit -- a seemingly insurmountable task given that they have yet to hold a lead in regulation against Pittsburgh. "We want to win one game and get a Game 6 back here at home," San Jose coach Peter DeBoer told reporters. "I think we would be comfortable in that spot that we could get it to go seven."

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

              ABOUT THE SHARKS: After averaging a playoff-best 3.5 goals through the first three rounds of the postseason, San Jose has scored only seven times in four games versus Pittsburgh. Captain Joe Pavelski scored 13 goals and had a seven-game point streak entering the Finals, but he has been held off the scoresheet by the Penguins. "If it's different, if it's 3-1 and you don't have anything, it's a different story," Pavelski told reporters. "But right now, with the hole we're [in], a goal or two probably changes the outcome. The way it's been going for most of the postseason, I feel like I should probably have a bit more." Forward Logan Couture has a postseason-best 26 points, but both he and defenseman Brent Burns have been limited to two assists in the Finals.

              ABOUT THE PENGUINS: Center Evgeni Malkin, the Conn Smythe Award winner in Pittsburgh's 2009 run to the Cup, admitted he wasn't producing enough through the first three games of the series and responded to his own "I want more" declaration by setting up one tally and scoring what proved to be the game-winner in Game 4. “We’ve seen him do it so many times,” Penguins forward Matt Cullen told reporters. “He’s such a big part of the team. He demands a lot of himself, so to see him come out like that in a big game when he kind of called himself out a bit, it’s pretty impressive. That’s what good players do." Forward Phil Kessel is near the front of the line for this season's Conn Smythe after collecting a pair of assists Monday to boost his team-high total to 21 points.

              OVERTIME

              1. San Jose is 3-0 in Game 5s this postseason, including a pair of road victories.

              2. Penguins G Matt Murray needs one win to tie Patrick Roy, Cam Ward and Ron Hextall (15) for the most by a rookie in one postseason.

              3. Sharks first-line F Tomas Hertl (lower body), who missed the past two games, is listed as day-to-day for Game 5.

              PREDICTION: Sharks 3, Penguins 2

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: NHL Betting Info. 6/9

                Trends - San Jose at Pittsburgh
                W/L Trends

                San Jose
                • Sharks are 8-2 in their last 10 road games vs. a team with a home winning % of greater than .600.
                • Sharks are 18-6 in their last 24 after scoring 2 goals or less in their previous game.
                • Sharks are 21-8 in their last 29 vs. a team with a winning record.
                • Sharks are 32-13 in their last 45 games playing on 2 days rest.
                • Sharks are 2-6 in their last 8 road games.
                Pittsburgh
                • Penguins are 6-0 in their last 6 home games vs. a team with a road winning % of greater than .600.
                • Penguins are 11-2 in their last 13 Thursday games.
                • Penguins are 5-1 in their last 6 Stanley Cup Finals games.
                • Penguins are 8-2 in their last 10 vs. Western Conference.
                • Penguins are 23-7 in their last 30 vs. a team with a winning record.
                • Penguins are 6-2 in their last 8 vs. Pacific.
                • Penguins are 23-9 in their last 32 when their opponent scores 2 goals or less in their previous game.
                • Penguins are 20-8 in their last 28 after allowing 2 goals or less in their previous game.
                • Penguins are 20-8 in their last 28 games following a win.
                • Penguins are 42-17 in their last 59 overall.
                • Penguins are 35-17 in their last 52 home games.
                OU Trends

                San Jose
                • Under is 5-0-1 in Sharks last 6 games playing on 2 days rest.
                • Under is 4-0 in Sharks last 4 overall.
                • Under is 4-0-1 in Sharks last 5 vs. Metropolitan.
                • Under is 5-0-1 in Sharks last 6 vs. Eastern Conference.
                • Under is 4-0 in Sharks last 4 Stanley Cup Finals games.
                • Under is 4-0 in Sharks last 4 vs. a team with a winning record.
                • Over is 5-1-1 in Sharks last 7 Thursday games.
                • Under is 4-1 in Sharks last 5 road games.
                • Under is 4-1-1 in Sharks last 6 after scoring 2 goals or less in their previous game.
                • Under is 18-7-2 in Sharks last 27 when their opponent allows 2 goals or less in their previous game.
                Pittsburgh
                • Under is 5-0 in Penguins last 5 overall.
                • Under is 4-0 in Penguins last 4 after allowing 2 goals or less in their previous game.
                • Under is 4-0 in Penguins last 4 games following a win.
                • Under is 4-0 in Penguins last 4 vs. Pacific.
                • Under is 4-0 in Penguins last 4 vs. Western Conference.
                • Under is 5-0 in Penguins last 5 vs. a team with a winning record.
                • Over is 9-2-2 in Penguins last 13 Thursday games.
                • Under is 4-1-1 in Penguins last 6 games playing on 2 days rest.
                • Under is 4-1-1 in Penguins last 6 home games.
                • Under is 12-3-2 in Penguins last 17 Stanley Cup Finals games.
                • Over is 13-5-5 in Penguins last 23 when their opponent scores 2 goals or less in their previous game.
                Head to Head

                • Under is 4-0 in the last 4 meetings in Pittsburgh.
                • Under is 4-0 in the last 4 meetings.
                • Home team is 15-5 in the last 20 meetings.
                • Sharks are 1-4 in the last 5 meetings in Pittsburgh.
                • Sharks are 1-4 in the last 5 meetings

                Comment

                Working...
                X