Follow Us on Facebook Follow Us on Twitter VI Mobile College Basketball March Mayhem Picks College Basketball March Mayhem Picks VegasInsider.com VegasInsider.com
Handicapper Bios Sports Picks Free Odds Contests Sportsbook
Sports Betting Home NFL NBANHLMLBNCAA FBNCAA BKGolfAutoHorsesBoxingVI More Sports
 
NHL Scores Matchups Teams Standings Schedules Injuries News
 
 · Latest News
 · Player Updates
 · Transactions
Buy Picks Vegas Odds
 
 · Vegas Odds
 · Offshore Odds
 · Future Odds
 
Recap: Devils , Islanders
Date: March 10, 2012 7:00 PM EDT
  

UNIONDALE, N.Y. (AP) - Marek Zidlicky picked the perfect time for his first goal of the season and his first since joining the New Jersey Devils.

The veteran defenseman, acquired two weeks earlier from the Minnesota Wild, scored with 1:25 left in the third period - just 14 seconds after teammate David Clarkson tied the game - to lift the resilient Devils past the New York Islanders 2-1 on Saturday night.

Advertisement

New Jersey (39-24-5), which won two of three from the Islanders this week, has three consecutive victories and wins in four of five. The Devils are 4-1-1 in their last six games and have allowed one goal or fewer in five straight games.

``My plan always is to take shots from everywhere and push hard every shift,' said the 35-year-old Zidlicky, whose slap shot from the right point eluded rookie goalie Anders Nilsson. ``It was a chance for me to step up, and a great way to get my first goal here.'

The Devils, who outscored the Islanders 7-2 in their two wins this week, are 13-6-1 since the All-Star break and have exceeded their win and point totals from last season when they missed the playoffs. With 83 points, they are sixth in the Eastern Conference.

``We showed character. We played hard,' said winning goalie Johan Hedberg, who made the start after Martin Brodeur recorded successive home victories over New York's Islanders and Rangers this week. ``We knew if we kept pushing, something good would happen.'

For the Islanders, it was a demoralizing loss.

Nilsson, the 21-year-old Swedish goalie, was less than two minutes from his second straight shutout over the Devils. He beat New Jersey 1-0 last Sunday for his first NHL win, becoming the first Islanders player to get victory No. 1 via a shutout.

``You play hockey to win, and it's hard to be excited when you don't win,' said Nilsson, who made 33 saves in his third NHL start. ``I felt like I should have stopped both goals.'

The loss pushed the Islanders (28-31-9) nine points behind eighth-place Washington in the Eastern Conference. New York is 14th in the East, ahead of only Montreal.

John Tavares broke the scoreless tie 6:46 into the third period, and Nilsson seemed poised to celebrate another shutout. The Devils' late surge stunned Tavares and the sellout crowd at Nassau Coliseum.

``You never expect something like that,' Tavares said. ``It stings.'

Clarkson tied it with 1:39 remaining, squeezing the puck past Nilsson for his 28th goal, and Zidlicky quickly gave the Devils the lead while New York's P.A. Parenteau was in the penalty box for boarding.

Tavares scored his 27th goal of the season, off a setup by linemates Matt Moulson and Parenteau. Tavares snapped in a wrist shot past Hedberg from the slot.

Nilsson was called up from Bridgeport on Feb. 29. He was the AHL goalie of the month for February by going 6-0-1.

``It took us 118 minutes to solve him, but we finally did,' Devils captain Zach Parise said. ``They made us work for it. He was very good.'

Nilsson made a key glove save at 18:44 of the second period on a snap shot by Dainius Zubrus from the left circle. Hedberg stopped Micheal Haley on a breakaway at 16:47 of the second.

The Islanders will face the East-leading Rangers at Madison Square Garden on Sunday night.

``It's how we regroup after this one that counts,' Islanders coach Jack Capuano said. ``Both goaltenders played well and there was a physical edge to our game. But we go 0-for-3 on the power play and that was the difference.'

NOTES: The Devils' record for fastest two goals is 8 seconds, by John Madden and Patrik Elias on April 6, 2001, against Boston. ... Parenteau earned his 45th assist of the season, the most by an Islanders player since Travis Green had 45 in the 1995-96 season. ... The Islanders were without forwards Casey Cizikas and Matt Martin because of the flu. Right wing Michael Grabner returned after missing three games with the flu. ... The Islanders recalled Haley from Bridgeport on Saturday. They also signed undrafted 20-year-old forward Mike Halmo, who led Owen Sound of the OHL with 40 goals and 44 assists.

AP NEWS
The Associated Press News Service

Copyright 2013
The Associated Press
All Rights Reserved

 BETTING TRENDS
 Team  ML   PUC   O/U 
 NJD  88%   87%   57% 
 NYI  12%   13%   43% 
BT MOVEMENTS

 
 
  
GOLD Membership
Over 150 Member Plays free each month. Signup Today!
 
 

NFL
NFL Sports Picks
NFL Vegas Odds
NFL Online Odds
NFL Matchups
NFL Scores

More Sports
Golf
Auto Racing
Horse Racing
Boxing
WNBA

MLB
MLB Sports Picks
MLB Vegas Odds
MLB Online Odds
MLB Matchups
MLB Scores

Features
Free Odds
Contests
Newsletters
VI Radio
Las Vegas Travel
Follow us on Twitter
Add us on Google+
Join us on Facebook

NBA
NBA Sports Picks
NBA Vegas Odds
NBA Online Odds
NBA Matchups
NBA Scores

Sports Betting Tools
Live Odds
Mobile Odds
Parlay Calculator
Gaming Terms
TV Listings
Handicapping Records
Sports Betting
About Sports Betting
Sportsbook Reviews

NHL
NHL Sports Picks
NHL Vegas Odds
NHL Online Odds
NHL Matchups
NHL Scores

VegasInsider Info
About Us
Help Center
Privacy Policy
Terms of Use
Refund Policy
Contact Us
User Feedback

College Football
NCAA FB Sports Picks
NCAA FB Vegas Odds
NCAA FB Online Odds
NCAA FB Matchups
NCAA FB Scores

Sportsbooks
CarbonSports · Review
SportBet · Review
Sportsbook · Review
TopBet.eu · Review

College Basketball
NCAA BK Sports Picks
NCAA BK Vegas Odds
NCAA BK Online Odds
NCAA BK Matchups
NCAA BK Scores

Rotation Schedules
Baseball: June 03 - Aug 07

Copyright © 1997-2013, VegasInsider.com Inc., The Global Leader In Sports Gaming Information. All rights reserved.
For questions or comments, please contact us at 1-800-211-4759.