D6 SCOREBOARD PROFOOTBALL
NFLSTANDINGS AFC
EAST
New England ................... 9 N.Y. Jets ......................... 9 Miami .............................. 6 Buffalo ............................ 2
SOUTH
Indianapolis .................... 6 Jacksonville .................... 6 xHouston ........................ 5 Tennessee ....................... 5
NORTH
Baltimore ........................ 8 Pittsburgh ....................... 8 Cleveland ........................ 4 Cincinnati ........................ 2
WEST
Kansas City ..................... 7 San Diego ........................ 6 Oakland ........................... 5 Denver ............................. 3
NFC EAST
W L T PCT. PF PA 2 0 .818 334 266 2 0 .818 264 187 5 0 .545 205 225 9 0 .182 229 295
W L T PCT. PF PA 5 0 .545 282 252 5 0 .545 240 294 6 0 .455 264 287 6 0 .455 257 218
W L T PCT. PF PA 3 0 .727 250 188 3 0 .727 254 181 7 0 .364 216 229 9 0 .182 225 288
W L T PCT. PF PA 4 0 .636 285 231 5 0 .545 310 225 6 0 .455 255 256 8 0 .273 250 323
N.Y. Giants ...................... 7 xPhiladelphia .................. 7 Washington .................... 5 Dallas .............................. 3
SOUTH
Atlanta ............................ 9 New Orleans ................... 8 Tampa Bay ...................... 7
Chicago ........................... 8 Green Bay ....................... 7 Minnesota ....................... 4 Detroit ............................ 2
WEST
Seattle ............................ 5 St. Louis .......................... 5 San Francisco .................. 4 Arizona ........................... 3
x-Lategame.
THURSDAY’S RESULT Houston at Philadelphia, Late
SUNDAY’S GAMES Washington at N.Y. Giants, 1 (N.Y. Giants by 7) Pittsburgh at Baltimore, 8:20 (Baltimore by 3) San Francisco at Green Bay, 1 (Green Bay by 9.5) Denver at Kansas City, 1 (Kansas City by 8.5) Buffalo at Minnesota, 1 (Minnesota by 5.5) Jacksonville at Tennessee, 1 (Off) Cleveland at Miami, 1 (Miami by 4.5) Chicago at Detroit, 1 (Chicago by 4.5) New Orleans at Cincinnati, 1 (New Orleans by 6.5) Oakland at San Diego, 4:05 (San Diego by 13) Carolina at Seattle, 4:15 (Seattle by 6) St. Louis at Arizona, 4:15 (St. Louis by 3.5) Atlanta at Tampa Bay, 4:15 (Atlanta by 3) Dallas at Indianapolis, 4:15 (Indianapolis by 5.5)
MONDAY’S GAME N.Y. Jets at New England, 8:30 (New England by 3.5)
COLLEGEFOOTBALL SCHEDULE
THURSDAY‘S RESULT Arizona St. (5-6) at Arizona (7-4), Late
FRIDAY’S GAMES MAC Championship, N. Illinois (10-2) at Miami (Ohio) (8-4), 7 Illinois (6-5) at Fresno St. (7-4), 10:15
SATURDAY‘S GAMES EAST
Rutgers (4-7) at West Virginia (8-3), Noon
SOUTH CUSA Championship,SMU (7-5) at UCF (9-3), Noon Troy (6-5) at Florida Atlantic (4-7), 2 Nevada (11-1) at Louisiana Tech (5-6), 3 SEC Championship, Auburn (12-0) vs. South Carolina (9-3) at Atlanta, 4 Middle Tennessee (5-6) at Fla. International (6-5), 6 ACC Championship, Florida St. (9-3) at Virginia Tech (10-2) at Charlotte, N.C., 7:45 Connecticut (7-4) at South Florida (7-4), 8
MIDWEST Pittsburgh (6-5) at Cincinnati (4-7), Noon
SOUTHWEST
Big 12 Championship, Oklahoma (10-2) vs. Nebraska (10-2) at Arlington, Texas, 8
FAR WEST Utah St. (4-7) at Boise St. (10-1), 3 Oregon (11-0) at Oregon St. (5-6), 3:30 San Jose St. (1-11) at Idaho (5-7), 5 Washington (5-6) at Washington St. (2-9), 7 UNLV (2-10) at Hawaii (9-3), 10:30 Southern Cal (7-5) at UCLA (4-7), 10:30
FCS PLAYOFFS
Second Round Lehigh (10-2) at Delaware (9-2), Noon W. Illinois (8-4) at Appalachian St. (9-2), Noon Wofford (9-2) at Jacksonville St. (9-2), Noon New Hampshire (7-4) at Bethune-Cookman (10-1), 1 Georgia Southern (8-4) at William & Mary (8-3), 1:30 N. Dakota St. (8-4) at Montana St. (9-2), 2 Villanova (7-4) at Stephen
F.Austin (9-2), 3:30 SE Missouri (9-2) at E. Washington (9-2), 4:05
SOCCER
NCAAWOMEN'S DIVISIONI TOURNAMENT
SEMIFINALS
FRIDAY’S GAMES InCary,N.C. Ohio State vs. Notre Dame, 4 Stanford vs. Boston College, 6:30
NCAAMEN'S DIVISIONI TOURNAMENT
QUARTERFINALS
FRIDAY’S GAME SMU at North Carolina, 7
SATURDAY’S GAMES Michigan at Maryland, 1 California at Akron, 4 UCLA at Louisville, 7
W L T PCT. PF PA 4 0 .636 277 240 4 0 .636 310 257 6 0 .455 215 262 8 0 .273 256 301
W L T PCT. PF PA 2 0 .818 276 209 3 0 .727 265 197 4 0 .636 219 223
Carolina ........................... 1 10 0 .091 140 276 NORTH
W L T PCT. PF PA 3 0 .727 222 172 4 0 .636 269 166 7 0 .364 189 239 9 0 .182 258 282
W L T PCT. PF PA 6 0 .455 209 275 6 0 .455 213 231 7 0 .364 187 225 8 0 .273 194 319
GOLF PGA
CHEVRONWORLD CHALLENGE At Sherwood Country Club; In Thousand Oaks, Calif. Yardage: 7,052 yards; Par: 72; Purse: $5 million
FIRST ROUND Tiger Woods ............................... 32 33 — 65
Rory McIlroy ............................... 33 33 — 66 Graeme McDowell ...................... 32 34 — 66 Dustin Johnson ........................... 33 36 — 69 Stewart Cink ............................... 35 34 — 69 Luke Donald ................................ 38 32 — 70 Camilo Villegas ........................... 35 35 — 70 Ian Poulter .................................. 38 34 — 72 Hunter Mahan ............................. 36 36 — 72 Sean O'Hair ................................. 38 34 — 72 Jim Furyk .................................... 38 34 — 72 Steve Stricker ............................. 37 35 — 72 Nick Watney ............................... 37 35 — 72 Paul Casey .................................. 34 39 — 73 Matt Kuchar ................................ 38 37 — 75 Zach Johnson .............................. 38 37 — 75 Bubba Watson ............................ 39 37 — 76 Anthony Kim ............................... 39 40 — 79
LPGA
TOUR CHAMPIONSHIP At Grand Cypress Golf Club; In Orlando, Fla. Purse: $1.5 million; Yardage: 6,518; Par 72 (36-36)
PARTIAL FIRST ROUND
Playwassuspendedduetodarkness. Amy Yang ................................... 34 33 — 67
Seon Hwa Lee ............................. 34 33 — 67 Julieta Granada .......................... 35 34 — 69 Tania Elosegui ............................ 36 34 — 70 Leta Lindley ................................ 36 34 — 70 Laura Davies ............................... 36 34 — 70 Cristie Kerr ................................. 38 33 — 71 Song-Hee Kim ............................. 35 36 — 71 Eun-Hee Ji .................................. 34 37 — 71
HIGHSCHOOLS FOOTBALL
TOURNAMENTS Maryland 3A; At Ravens Stadium -- Final Wilde Lake 21, Franklin 14
BOYS'BASKETBALL
DISTRICT Booker T. Washington 69, Hospitality 31 IDEA 46, Maya Angelou Evans 45 VIRGINIA Dominion 63, Falls Church 53 Osbourn 82, Fairfax 76 PRIVATE Covenant Life 59, McLean School 36 Hebrew Academy 79, Barrie 24 McNamara 78, Spalding 52 Pallotti 66, Washington Christian 48 Bullis 64, Good Counsel 57 OTHERS Friendship Collegiate 66, Maya Angelou Acad. 48 Ideal 65, Osbourn Park 57 TOURNAMENTS Freedom Tip-Off Tournament -- Quarterfinals Woodgrove 67, Brentsville 48 Freedom-South Riding 66, Manassas Park 45 Loudoun County Tip-Off Tournament -- Quarterfinals Broad Run 74, Heritage 63 George Mason 51, Loudoun County 47
GIRLS'BASKETBALL
DISTRICT Friendship Collegiate 71, Cesar Chavez 31 IDEA 36, Maya Angelou Evans 34 VIRGINIA Fairfax 73, Stuart 16 Robinson 41, McLean 31 W.T. Woodson 51, Washington-Lee 34 PRIVATE Good Counsel 72, Bullis 61 Hebrew Academy 60, Barrie 23 Highland 55, Foxcroft 27 OTHERS Covenant Life 46, Washington Latin 27 Georgetown Visitation 49, Coolidge 39 Lee 77, Middleburg 54
SCHEDULE BOYS'BASKETBALL
FRIDAY
MARYLAND Linganore at Northwood, 7:30 Mount Hebron at Oakdale, 7 Westminster at Thomas Johnson, 7 VIRGINIA Annandale at Wakefield, 7:30 Centreville at Lake Braddock, 7:30 Kettle Run at Park View, 7:30 Mount Vernon at West Potomac, 7:30 James Wood vs. Battlefield at Battlefield, 7:30 Riverbend vs. Courtland at Courtland, 7:30 Forest Park vs. Millbrook at Milibrook, 7:30 Franklin County vs. Potomac (Va.) at Potomac, 7:30 Woodbridge vs. Marshall at South County, 7:30 North Stafford vs. East Rockingham at Spotswood, 7:30 Freedom-Woodbridge vs. Washington-Lee at Washing- ton-Lee, 7:30 PRIVATE Field at Washington International, 5:30 Washington Waldorf at Barrie, 4:15 St. John's Catholic Prep vs. Annapolis Area Christian at Annapolis Area Christian, 8:30 Haverford vs. Episcopal at Episcopal, 8 St. Stephen's/
St.Agnesvs.GermantownAcademy(Pa.) at Germantown Academy, 6 Sandy Spring vs. St. Andrew's at SAES Invitational, 7 OTHERS Eastern at Carroll, 7 Paul VI Catholic at W.T. Woodson, 8 TOURNAMENTS Broadway Tip-Off; At Broadway -- Semifinals Potomac Falls vs. Liberty, 6 Sherando vs. Broadway, 8 Freedom Tip-Off Tournament -- Quarterfinals Manassas Park vs. Woodgrove, 6 Brentsville vs. Freedom-South Riding, 7:30 Husky Tipoff Classic; At Flint Hill -- Semifinals John Paul the Great vs. Blue Ridge, 4:45 St. Anne's-Belfield vs. Flint Hill, 8:15 Langley Tip-Off Tournament -- Quarterfinals Hylton vs. Hayfield, 6 Gar-Field vs. Langley, 8 Loudoun County Tip-Off Tournament -- Quarterfinals George Mason vs. Broad Run, 6 Heritage vs. Loudoun County, 7:45 The Metro Rivalry; At Coolidge -- Semifinals St. John's vs. Eastern, 6 Gonzaga vs. Coolidge, 8
GIRLS'BASKETBALL FRIDAY
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
WOMEN NO.22MARYLAND56, PURDUE55
MARYLAND (6-1)
Tchatchouang 6-11 0-0 12, Thomas 5-10 2-3 12, Kizer 7-14 6-8 20, Cloud 0-1 0-0 0, Rodgers 1-8 2-2 5, Mincy 0-1 0-0 0, Taylor 0-3 2-2 2, Barrett 1-4 1-2 3, DeVaughn 0-1 0-0 0, Hawkins 0-0 2-3 2. Totals 20-53 15-20 56.
PURDUE (4-1)
Ostarello 1-3 0-0 2, Jones 0-0 0-0 0, Rayburn 2-11 6-6 10, Moses 4-10 1-2 12, Poston 2-4 0-0 4, Howard 4-8 2-2 10, Williams 0-1 0-0 0, Guyton 4-7 3-3 11, Wilson 1-2 1-2 3, Woods 1-2 0-1 3. Totals 19-48 13-16 55. Halftime: Purdue 27-25. Three-point goals: Maryland 1-10 (Rodgers 1-6, Mincy 0-1, Tchatchouang 0-1, Barrett 0-1, Taylor 0-1), Purdue 4-9 (Moses 3-3, Woods 1-1, Howard 0-1, Williams 0-1, Ostarello 0-1, Rayburn 0-2). Fouled out: None. Rebounds: Maryland 40 (Thomas 9), Purdue 27 (Poston 6). Assists: Maryland 12 (Taylor 4), Purdue 13 (Moses 5). Total fouls: Maryland 19, Purdue 22. A: 8,698.
NO.6OHIOST. 74, VIRGINIA46
VIRGINIA (4-4)
Shine 3-10 2-2 8, Egwu 4-7 3-5 11, W. Edwards 0-2 0-0 0, Kellum 0-3 3-6 3, Gerson 4-13 0-1 10, Wolfe 1-5 0-0 3, Moorer 3-9 0-0 6, Pitts 2-4 0-2 4, Franklin 0-4 0-0 0, McCall 0-3 1-2 1. Totals 17-60 9-18 46.
OHIO ST. (6-0)
Schulze 2-3 2-2 7, Lavender 10-15 3-3 23, Hill 4-8 4-5 12, Prahalis 4-14 3-4 14, Johnson 1-7 3-4 6, Stokes 2-3 0-0 4, Jackson 0-0 0-0 0, Moore 0-1 0-0 0, Ellerbe 0-2 1-2 1, Sanders 1-1 0-0 2, Adams 1-1 3-5 5, Harmon 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 25-55 19-25 74. Halftime: Ohio St. 40-26. Three-point goals: Virginia 3-12 (Gerson 2-3, Wolfe 1-4, Franklin 0-1, Kellum 0-1, Moorer 0-1, W. Edwards 0-2), Ohio St. 5-18 (Prahalis 3-8, Schulze 1-2, Johnson 1-4, Ellerbe 0-2, Hill 0-2). Fouled out: Moorer. Rebounds: Virginia 35 (Egwu, McCall 7), Ohio St. 47 (Lavender 13). Assists: Virginia 10 (Kellum 3), Ohio St. 16 (Prahalis 8). Total fouls: Virginia 21, Ohio St. 13. A: 2,392.
COLLEGES WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
American 46, George Mason 43 Marshall 64, George Washington 61 Minnesota 63, Virginia Tech 58
MARYLAND Thomas Johnson at Westminster, 7 VIRGINIA Forest Park at Stonewall Jackson, 7:30 Franklin County at Potomac (Va.), 6 Freedom-South Riding at Washington-Lee, 7:30 Herndon at Potomac Falls, 7 Lake Braddock at Centreville, 7:30 Loudoun County at Heritage, 7:30 Wakefield at Annandale, 7:30 West Potomac at Mount Vernon, 7:30 Woodgrove at James Wood, 7:30 Battlefield vs. Brentsville at Brentsville, 7:30 Mountain View vs. King George at King George, 7 PRIVATE Catholic at Glenelg Country, 5:30 Model at St. Andrew's, 5:45 Mount de Sales at Severn, 5:45 Pallotti at Elizabeth Seton, 7 Seton Keough at Holy Cross, 6 St. John's at Spalding, 8 St. Mary's-Annapolis at Mercy (Balt.), 5:30 Key vs. Annapolis Area Christian at Annapolis Area Christian, 7 Maret vs. Georgetown Day at Sidwell tournament, 6:45 OTHERS South Lakes at Paul VI Catholic, 7 TOURNAMENTS Husky Tipoff Classic; At Flint Hill -- Semifinals O'Connell vs. St. Anne's-Belfield, 3 Liberty Christian vs. Flint Hill, 6:30
BOYS'BASKETBALL
SATURDAY MARYLAND McDonough at South River, 4 VIRGINIA Potomac (Va.) vs. Brooke Point at Brooke Point, 7:30 Battlefield vs. Patrick Henry-Roanoke at Roanoke, 7:30 North Stafford vs. Spotswood at Spotswood, 7:30 Franklin County vs. Stonewall Jackson at Stonewall Jackson, 2 PRIVATE DeMatha at Mount St. Joseph, 7 Episcopal (Pa.) at Bullis, 5 Georgetown Prep at Malvern Prep, 3 Good Counsel at St. Mary's Ryken, 3:30 Haverford at St. Albans, 6 National Christian at Life Center Academy (N.J.), 4 Severn at Mount Carmel, 5 Spalding at Ireton, 7 Spencerville Adventist at Hebrew Academy, 8:30 The Heights at St. John's, 7 GermantownAcademy(Pa.) vs. Episcopal at Episcopal, 5 St. Stephen's/St. Agnes vs. Haverford at Germantown, PA, 3
TOURNAMENTS Langley Tip-Off Tournament -- Quarterfinals Hylton vs. Langley, 8
GIRLS'BASKETBALL
SATURDAY VIRGINIA Hylton at Mount Vernon, 7:45 North Stafford at Spotswood, 3:15 Stafford at Fauquier, 7 Franklin County vs. Stonewall Jackson at Stonewall Jackson, 12 PRIVATE Episcopal at Bryn Mawr, 1 Good Counsel at Seton Keough, 5 Key at Annapolis Area Christian, 4 Spalding at Holy Cross, 6 St. John's at Don Bosco, 2 OTHERS Riverdale Baptist at Osbourn Park, 7
-5 -5 -3 -2 -2 -2 -1 -1 -1
-7 -6 -6 -3 -3 -2 -2 E E E E E E
+1 +3 +3 +4 +7
EZ SU
KLMNO HOCKEY
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3, 2010
TONY GUTIERREZ/ASSOCIATED PRESS Alexander Semin skates away as Dallas fans jump for joy after a goal byMike Ribeiro (63).Mike Knuble scoredWashington’s only goal. Raycroft, Stars keep Capitals at bay capitals from D1
first period. The Capitals couldn’t take advantage when Raycroft would drift out of the crease or gave up rebounds in prime shooting lanes, though. Shots sailed wide or were redi- rected as Raycroft settled in. In the opposite end, Michal
Neuvirth, who finished with 19 saves in his first start since Nov. 20 against Philadelphia, looked sharp as well. Although Dallas didn’t pepper him with the vol- ume of attempts that Washing- ton fired in the other direction, the Stars created quality scoring opportunities, but Neuvirth kept second chances to a minimum. At the end of the first, rookie
centerMarcus Johansson was hit at center ice by Adam Burish. Ovechkin promptly confronted Burish as the period expired earning a minor for roughing that would begin Washington’s streak of penalties in the middle stanza. It was a moment that could have galvanized the Capi- tals in the tight contest but with
the intermission, any lingering effect from Ovechkin’s defense of his younger teammate fizzled. Washington’s penalty kill,
which entered the game success- ful on 15 of its last 16 tries, looked poised as it withstood that first penalty. Ensuing calls against Mike Knuble for hooking, Jeff Shultz (interference) and Scott Hannan (interference) would zap the unit of its aggressiveness though. The abundance of time short-
handed was taking a noticeable toll on the Capitals’s penalty kill- ers by the timeHannan’s penalty putWashington on the defensive for the fourth time in just over 12 minutes. Brad Richards took the first
shot of the man-advantage, a wrist shot that popped straight back out into the slot, where a soft spot in coverage had devel- oped in front of the net. That space allowed Mike Ribeiro to fire the rebound past Neuvirth, ashescrambledto cover theopen side of the net, with 13 minutes and 39 seconds gone in the sec-
STANDINGSANDSUMMARIES
EASTERNCONFERENCE SOUTHEAST W L OL PTS. GF GA Washington Tampa Bay Atlanta Carolina xFlorida
18 7 2 38 91 71 14 9 3 31 78 89 13 10 3 29 82 77 10 11 3 23 71 78 10 13 0 20 60 62
ATLANTIC W L OL PTS. GF GA Pittsburgh
Philadelphia 15 7 4 34 87 64 N.Y. Rangers 15 11 New Jersey
17 8 2 36 82 64 1 31 80 74
8 15 2 18 46 74 N.Y. Islanders 5 13 5 15 51 78
NORTHEAST W L OL PTS. GF GA Montreal Boston Ottawa Buffalo Toronto
16 8 2 34 68 52 14 8 2 30 70 47 11 14
9 13 3 21 62 73 8 12 4 20 51 70
WESTERNCONFERENCE CENTRAL Detroit Chicago
Columbus St. Louis Nashville
W L OL PTS. GF GA 16 4 2 34 78 59 14 11 2 30 86 79 14 8
1 29 65 57
12 9 3 27 63 68 11 8 5 27 58 63
NORTHWEST W L OL PTS. GF GA Vancouver Colorado
Minnesota Calgary
Edmonton PACIFIC
Dallas
Phoenix Anaheim San Jose
13 7 3 29 75 61 13 9 2 28 85 74 11 11 2 24 58 69 10 13 2 22 69 76 9 12 4 22 68 92
W L OL PTS. GF GA 15 8
1 31 70 63
12 7 5 29 70 70 13 11 3 29 71 80 12 8 4 28 72 68
xLos Angeles 13 10 0 26 63 57
One point awarded for overtime losses. x-Late game.
THURSDAY’SGAMES
at Dallas 2,Washington 1 at Boston 8, Tampa Bay 1 Edmonton 5, at Toronto 0 Montreal 5, at New Jersey 1 N.Y. Rangers 6, at N.Y. Islanders 5 at Pittsburgh 3, Atlanta 2 San Jose 4, at Ottawa 0 Florida at Los Angeles, Late
FRIDAY’SGAMES
N.Y. Islanders at N.Y. Rangers, 7 Colorado at Carolina, 7 Columbus at Buffalo, 7:30 Calgary at Minnesota, 8 Vancouver at Chicago, 8:30 Detroit at Anaheim, 10
BRUINS8,LIGHTNING1 David Krejci had two goals and an
assist, and Marc Savard returned to the Boston lineup, helping the Bruins rout Tampa Bay. Savard made his season debut after missing 23 games because of post- concussion syndrome, while Bruins G Tim Thomas made 37 saves to im- prove to 13-2-1. Victor Hedman scored for Tampa
Bay. TAMPA BAY ............................ 0
BOSTON ................................... 2 FIRST PERIOD
1 2
0 — 1 4 — 8
Scoring: 1, Boston, Krejci 3 (Lucic, Ference), 10:52. 2, Boston, Seidenberg 1 (Ryder), 19:40.
SECOND PERIOD Scoring: 3, Boston, Lucic 12 (Krejci, Horton), 6:48. 4, Tampa Bay, Hedman 2 (Malone, Bergenheim), 15:14. 5, Boston, Thornton 5 (Marchand, Thomas), 17:30.
THIRD PERIOD
Scoring: 6, Boston, Krejci 4, :34. 7, Boston, Ryder 7, 1:50. 8, Boston, Recchi 5 (Ryder, Chara), 7:28 (pp). 9, Boston, Wheeler 6 (Recchi), 13:55.
SHOTS ON GOAL TAMPA BAY .......................... 15
BOSTON ................................... 9
10 12
13 — 38 11 — 32
Power-play opportunities: Tampa Bay 0 of 1; Boston 1 of 4. Goalies: Tampa Bay,
M.Smith 8-5-0 (22 shots-17 saves), Ellis (0:34 third, 10-7). Boston, Thomas 13-2-1 (38-37). A: 17,565 (17,565). T: 2:24.
RANGERS6,ISLANDERS5 Marian Gaborik had three goals
and an assist in his first game with Sean Avery as a linemate, and Henrik Lundqvist made nine saves in relief of Martin Biron to lift the Rangers to a victory over the Islanders.
N.Y. RANGERS ......................... 2 N.Y. ISLANDERS ...................... 1
FIRST PERIOD
Scoring: 1, N.Y. Rangers, Christensen 4 (Avery, Gaborik), 8:11. 2, N.Y. Rangers, Callahan 8 (Dubinsky, Stepan), 17:07. 3, N.Y. Islanders, Konopka 1 (Wisniewski, Tava- res), 19:11.
SECOND PERIOD
Scoring: 4, N.Y. Islanders, Moulson 9 (Tavares, Paren- teau), 9:18. 5, N.Y. Islanders, Schremp 3 (Martinek, Comeau), 12:30. 6, N.Y. Rangers, Prust 2 (Staal), 13:21. 7, N.Y. Rangers, Gaborik 6, 16:24 (pp).
THIRD PERIOD
Scoring: 8, N.Y. Rangers, Gaborik 7 (Avery), 3:31. 9, N.Y. Islanders, Grabner 6 (Martinek, Nielsen), 12:29. 10, N.Y. Islanders, Comeau 4 (Parenteau, Hamonic), 14:10. 11, N.Y. Rangers, Gaborik 8 (Christensen, Avery), 14:35.
SHOTS ON GOAL N.Y. RANGERS ......................... 9
N.Y. ISLANDERS .................... 10
12 12
5 — 26 10 — 32
Power-play opportunities: N.Y. Rangers 1 of 2; N.Y. Islanders 0 of 1. Goalies: N.Y. Rangers, Biron (21 shots-18 saves), Lundqvist 10-9-1 (12:30 second, 11-9). N.Y. Islanders, DiPietro 3-4-4 (26-20). A: 13,742 (16,234). T: 2:32.
2 2
2 — 6 2 — 5
1 23 58 79
PENGUINS3, THRASHERS2
Sidney Crosby scored all threePitts-
burgh goals for the first natural hat trick of his six-season career as the Penguins beat Atlanta. Pittsburgh ran its winning streak to
eight games. TheThrashers’ franchise record-tying streak ended at six. Crosby has scored six goals in his
past two home games—he had three Saturday against Calgary — and has 15 goals and 14 assists during a 14-game scoring streak.
ATLANTA ................................. 1 PITTSBURGH ........................... 1
FIRST PERIOD
Scoring: 1, Atlanta, Little 5 (Stewart, Oduya), 6:21 (pp). 2, Pittsburgh, Crosby 19 (Kunitz, Engelland), 7:32.
SECOND PERIOD Scoring: 3, Pittsburgh, Crosby 20 (Asham), 4:24. 4, Pittsburgh, Crosby 21 (Orpik, Letang), 10:18. 5, Atlanta, Antropov 7 (Bergfors), 18:34.
SHOTS ON GOAL ATLANTA ................................. 8
PITTSBURGH ......................... 11
9 9
5 — 22 8 — 28
Power-play opportunities: Atlanta 1 of 2; Pittsburgh 0 of 2. Goalies: Atlanta, Pavelec 7-5-2 (28 shots-25 saves). Pittsburgh, Fleury 10-6-1 (22-20). A: 18,223 (18,087). T: 2:18.
1 2
0 — 2 0 — 3
CANADIENS5,DEVILS1 Brian Gionta and Lars Eller scored
in the first 1:38, Carey Price made 27 saves and Montreal beat New Jersey. Tom Pyatt, Scott Gomez and Benoit
Pouliot also scored to help the Cana- diens rebound a night after blowing a two-goal, third-period lead in a 4-3, home-ice loss to Edmonton. Jason Arnott scored for the Devils,
wholost for the first time in five games at home.
MONTREAL .............................. 2 NEWJERSEY ........................... 0
FIRST PERIOD
Scoring: 1, Montreal,
B.Gionta 8 (Hamrlik, Plekanec), :11. 2, Montreal, Eller 2, 1:38.
SECOND PERIOD Scoring: 3, Montreal, Pyatt 1 (Lapierre, Halpern), 2:30. 4, Montreal, Gomez 4 (Weber, Cammalleri), 8:37 (pp). 5, Montreal, Pouliot 6 (Eller, Hamrlik), 9:57.
THIRD PERIOD Scoring: 6, New Jersey, Arnott 9 (Elias, Zubrus), 8:18.
SHOTS ON GOAL MONTREAL ............................ 14
NEWJERSEY ......................... 11
10 11
8 — 32 6 — 28
Power-play opportunities: Montreal 1 of 2;NewJersey 0 of 3. Goalies: Montreal, Price 15-7-2 (28 shots-27 saves). New Jersey, Hedberg 4-4-1 (3-1), McKenna (1:38 first, 29-26). A: 11,434 (17,625). T: 2:15.
3 0
0 — 5 1 — 1
OILERS5,MAPLELEAFS0 Nikolai Khabibulin made 33 saves
and Taylor Hall scored twice to help Edmonton beat Toronto, giving the Oilers their third road victory in four nights. They earned victories in Ottawa,
Montreal and Toronto with three goal- ies. Khabibulin was making his first start after missing seven games. TheMapleLeafs wereshut out for the
sixth time this season. EDMONTON ............................. 1
TORONTO ................................ 0 SECOND PERIOD
Scoring: 2, Edmonton, Hall 7 (Eberle), 6:24. 3, Edmonton, Gagner 8 (Paajarvi, Jones), 19:57.
THIRD PERIOD Scoring: 4, Edmonton, Hall 8 (Horcoff, Eberle), 16:55. 5, Edmonton, Jones 5 (Whitney, Vandermeer), 17:29.
SHOTS ON GOAL EDMONTON ............................. 4
TORONTO .............................. 12 8 11
7 — 19 10 — 33
Power-play opportunities: Edmonton 0 of 4; Toronto 0 of 5. Goalies: Edmonton, Khabibulin 5-10-1 (33 shots-33 saves). Toronto, Gustavsson 3-7-2 (6-4), Giguere (6:24 second, 13-10). A: 19,465 (18,819). T: 2:16.
2 0
2 — 5 0 — 0
FIRST PERIOD Scoring: 1, Edmonton, Eberle 5 (Whitney), 3:10.
STARS2,CAPITALS1 WASHINGTON ........................ 0
DALLAS ................................... 0 FIRST PERIOD
SECOND PERIOD
Scoring: 1, Dallas, Ribeiro 4 (Richards, Neal), 13:29 (pp). Penalties: Niskanen, Dal (holding), 2:00; Knuble, Was (hooking), 6:54; Schultz, Was (interference), 9:47; Hannan, Was (interference), 12:12.
THIRD PERIOD
Scoring: 2, Washington, Knuble 4 (Green, Fehr), 10:18 (pp). 3, Dallas, Segal 3 (Morrow, Woywitka), 10:38. Penalties: Alzner, Was (hooking), 1:44; Woywitka, Dal (hooking), 4:33; Niskanen, Dal (hooking), 8:22; Wash- ington bench, served by Hendricks (abuse of officials), 19:52.
SHOTS ON GOAL WASHINGTON ...................... 14
DALLAS ................................... 7
10 8
14 — 38 6 — 21
Power-play opportunities: Washington 1 of 3; Dallas 1 of 6. Goalies: Washington, Neuvirth 12-4-1 (21 shots-19 saves). Dallas, Raycroft 3-1-0 (38-37). A: 13,943 (18,532). T: 2:25.
ond. The lone goal gave Dallas ener-
gy to close out the frame. Al- though the Capitals would tie the score 1-1 with just under 10 min- utes remaining in regulation, whenMike Green fed the puck to Knuble in the left faceoff circleon a power play but the reprieve was short lived.
vs. Panthers Thursday, 7 Comcast SportsNet, Versus
Radio: WFED (820 AM, 1500 AM) Twenty seconds after Knuble’s
tying marker, Stars forward Brandon Segal let go of a laser wrister that beatNeuvirth to find the top lefthandcorner of the net for the game-winning goal. Dallas withstood a late push
from the Capitals,whohad a goal disallowed with roughly eight seconds remaining in regulation because Ovechkin was in the crease.
carrerak@washpost.com
vs. Maple Leafs Monday, 7 Comcast SportsNet
0 1
CAPITALS’NEXTTHREE
1 — 1 1 — 2
Scoring: None. Penalties: Hendricks, Was, major (fight- ing), 14:41; Segal, Dal, major (fighting), 14:41; Ovech- kin, Was (roughing), 20:00.
vs. Thrashers Tomorrow, 7 Comcast SportsNet
SHARKS4,SENATORS0 Logan Couture scored twice and
Dany Heatley had an assist in his return to Ottawa, leadingSanJose toa victory over the Senators. Antti Niemi made 28 saves for his
first shutout of the season. Patrick Marleau and Justin Braun
scored power-play goals as theSharks converted each of their first two op- portunities. Heatley was booed constantly as he
played his first game in Ottawa since forcing the trade that sent him to the Sharks in 2009.
SAN JOSE ................................ 1 OTTAWA .................................. 0
FIRST PERIOD
Scoring: 1, San Jose, Marleau 11 (Boyle, Thornton), 12:49 (pp).
SECOND PERIOD Scoring: 2, San Jose, Braun 1 (Heatley), 8:22 (pp).
THIRD PERIOD Scoring: 3, San Jose, Couture 9 (Ferriero, Clowe), :35. 4, San Jose, Couture 10 (Clowe), 6:14.
SHOTS ON GOAL SAN JOSE .............................. 11
OTTAWA ................................ 13
10 9
12 — 33 6 — 28
Power-play opportunities: San Jose 2 of 2; Ottawa 0 of 3. Goalies: San Jose, Niemi 4-5-1 (28 shots-28 saves). Ottawa, Leclaire 1-6-1 (33-29). A: 18,017 (19,153). T: 2:17.
1 0
2 — 4 0 — 0
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