San Jose 2, Tampa Bay 5

123T
SAN(16-5-4)0112
TAM(9-5-7)2125

Final

7:30 PM ET, October 22, 2009
St. Pete Times Forum
Tampa, Florida

Sharks-Lightning Preview

Regular Season Matchup
 W-L-OTHOMEROADDIVCONF
SAN16-5-47-0-29-5-23-1-29-3-4
TAM9-5-75-0-44-5-33-2-16-5-5
· Complete Standings
Team Stat Comparison
 
83
Goals
55
59
Goals Against
58
25
Power Play Goals
17
14
Power Play Goals Allowed
21
3
Shorthanded Goals
1
1
Shorthanded Goals Allowed
3
358
Penalty Minutes
347
14
Average Penalty Minutes
17
Goalie Breakdown
  GOALIE GP W TGA GAA SO SV SV%
Evgeni Nabokov 22 14 48 2.19 2 597 .926
Thomas Greiss 4 2 9 2.63 0 95 .913
Antero Niittymaki 11 6 22 2.02 0 323 .936
Mike Smith 11 3 36 3.37 0 281 .886
STATS LLC

The San Jose Sharks have rebounded from early deficits twice already on this road trip, but they're hoping a win will come a little easier Thursday.

The high-powered Sharks will try to get off to a good start and beat the struggling Tampa Bay Lightning for the fifth straight time as they continue their six-game trip.

San Jose's opponent has scored first in each of the last six games, but the Sharks are still 4-1-1 in that stretch, posting back-to-back victories in New York over the Islanders and Rangers.

They trailed the Rangers 2-0 midway through the first period Monday night but bounced back with an offensive outburst in a 7-3 victory. Devin Setoguchi had two goals and an assist, while Patrick Marleau also chipped in with three points.

"We don't want to put ourselves in that situation very often, but when we do we know we've got the firepower that can come back and put the puck in the net," defenseman Dan Boyle said.

Buoyed by NHL assist leader Joe Thornton and the fast start of newcomer Dany Heatley, San Jose (5-3-1) has averaged 3.5 goals per game. The Sharks, though, haven't needed that many in recent matchups with the Lightning.

In four meetings between the clubs since the 2004-05 lockout, the Sharks have gone 4-0-0 and outscored Tampa Bay 17-4, including a 7-1 home win Jan. 13.

They also won 3-0 at Tampa last Oct. 25, with Boyle assisting on the first goal in his initial return to Tampa after the Lightning traded him to San Jose on July 4, 2008. Boyle spent five-plus seasons as one of the team's top blueliners, notching 10 postseason points during the Lightning's run to the Stanley Cup in 2004.

Those times of prosperity are only a memory for Tampa Bay (2-3-2) as it sputters to another difficult start. Last season, coach Barry Melrose was fired after starting 5-7-4, and the Lightning finished as the league's second-worst team.

They've been outscored 11-2 in their last two games, and coach Rick Tocchet said there could be some personnel changes if the problems continue.

"Yeah, I'm sure there will be if these guys have something hanging over their heads," Tocchet said. "Yeah, I think (general manager) Brian (Lawton) will do it."

Lawton and Tocchet had a brief closed-door meeting with the players after a 4-1 loss at Pittsburgh on Saturday.

"We seemed light on our sticks," Tocchet said. "There are certain guys the past three, four games who are losing battles because they're light on their sticks, and we're going to have to get back to basics here, quickly."

Star center Vincent Lecavalier -- a 52-goal scorer three seasons ago -- is still looking for his first goal. His drought is at 14 games dating to March 17.

It's unclear who will be in net for Tampa Bay. Antero Niittymaki took the loss against the Penguins, while Mike Smith is 0-2-2 with a 4.08 goals-against average after losing 7-1 at Ottawa last Thursday.

The Lightning can only hope a return home will help. They're 2-0-1 at St. Pete Times Forum.

 

 

NHL Scores

Thursday, October 22nd
NY Islanders 1 Final
Montreal 5
New Jersey 4 Final
NY Rangers 2
Boston 3 Final
Philadelphia 4 SO
Washington 5 Final
Atlanta 4
Nashville 6 Final
Ottawa 5 OT
San Jose 2 Final
Tampa Bay 5
Columbus 4 Final
Edmonton 6
Detroit 2 Final
Phoenix 3 OT
Dallas 4 Final
Los Angeles 5 OT