Detroit 3, St. Louis 5

123T
DET(11-7-4)2103
STL(8-9-4)1315

Final

3:00 PM ET, October 3, 2009
Stockholm Globe Arena

Tkachuk scores twice as Blues dampen pro-Red Wings crowd

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Game Information

Referees: Greg Kimmerly, Bill McCreary
Linesmen: Shane Heyer, Lyle Seitz
Attendance: 13,850
Team Stat Comparison
 
66
Goals
50
62
Goals Against
52
22
Power Play Goals
10
20
Power Play Goals Allowed
15
1
Shorthanded Goals
2
0
Shorthanded Goals Allowed
2
204
Penalty Minutes
324
9
Average Penalty Minutes
15
Scoring Summary
1ST PERIOD DET STL
0:31 Tomas Holmstrom
Assists: Brian Rafalski, Johan Franzen
1 0
2:08 Daniel Cleary
Assists: Henrik Zetterberg, Todd Bertuzzi
2 0
18:27 Keith Tkachuk (Power Play)
Assists: Andy McDonald, Paul Kariya
2 1
2ND PERIOD DET STL
3:47 Andy McDonald (Power Play)
Assists: Keith Tkachuk, Brad Boyes
2 2
7:29 Niklas Kronwall (Power Play)
Assists: Jason Williams, Henrik Zetterberg
3 2
13:24 Brad Boyes
Assists: Jay McClement, Barret Jackman
3 3
13:37 Patrik Berglund
Assists: Erik Johnson, Darryl Sydor
3 4
3RD PERIOD DET STL
11:48 Keith Tkachuk (Power Play)
Assists: Erik Johnson, Paul Kariya
3 5
Associated Press

STOCKHOLM -- For the second straight game, a veteran stepped up and helped the St. Louis Blues rally past the Detroit Red Wings.

Keith Tkachuk had two power-play goals and an assist as the St. Louis overcame a two-goal deficit for the second straight night, beating the Red Wings 5-3 on Saturday to sweep the two-game series.

Burnside: Howard Blue

On a night when Detroit backup Jimmy Howard hoped to start answering questions about his ability to handle NHL play, he instead created more skepticism about the Wings' goaltending situation. Story
•  Video blog

"Detroit is the best team in the Western Conference and to come over here and beat them twice is huge for us," Tkachuk said. "Hopefully we can keep building. It's a great learning experience for some of our young guys.

"In both games, our goaltending really kept us in the game in the first period. They were on our heels a little bit in the first period in both games. It could have been over in the first.

Tkachuk said he enjoyed the week in Sweden.

"I had a blast, it was a great experience," he said. "It was a once in a lifetime thing. It was fun playing before a great crowd and see our own fans traveling all the way from St. Louis."

St. Louis trailed 2-0 early in the game, then again 3-2 in the second period before blitzing Detroit with two goals 13 seconds apart later in the same period that gave the Blues a 4-3 edge and silenced the pro-Red Wing crowd.

The Blues won opener 4-3 on Friday behind Paul Kariya's two power-play goals before another soldout crowd at the Ericsson Globe Arena in the Swedish capital.

"Our penalty killing wasn't good tonight either," Detroit coach Mike Babcock said. "We know we have to play better for 60 minutes than we've been doing here."

The Blues' win again spoiled the homecoming of the Swedes on the Detroit team.

Red Wings captain Nicklas Lidstrom, a six-time winner of the Norris Trophy as the NHL's best defenseman who hails from a city near Stockholm, had a disappointing outing and finished without points.

Andy McDonald, Brad Boyes and Patrik Berglund also scored for St. Louis.

Tomas Holmstrom and Niklas Kronwall, two of the Red Wings' eight Swedes, and Daniel Cleary scored for Detroit.

With so many Swedes on the roster, Detroit is arguably the most popular NHL team in Sweden. There were red jerseys throughout the crowd at both games.

Detroit came out fast in the first period, taking a 2-0 lead just 2:08 in and opening the scoring after just seconds.

Holmstrom, parked in front of the goal, tipped in the first goal after being set up by fellow Swede Johan Franzen. Cleary made it 2-0 from close range.

Tkachuk made it 2-1 with 1:33 left in the period, just after the Red Wings had killed a two-man advantage by the Blues for nearly a minute.

McDonald tied it with a power-play goal at 3:47 in the second period, tapping in a backhand rebound past goalie Jimmy Howard.

Kronwall put Detroit ahead again with a shot from the right circle at 7:29.

Brad Boyes tied it at 3 at 13:24, beating the goalie with a shot from a tough angle behind the pads. Then, just 13 seconds later, Howard gave up another goal exactly the same way after Berglund's shot from the right circle.

Tkachuk scored midway through the final period, tipping in a shot from close range.

Former Toronto Maple Leafs captain Mats Sundin received a standing ovation and the loudest cheers of the evening when he dropped the puck during a ceremonial faceoff before the game. The Stockholm native retired earlier this week after an NHL career that lasted nearly two decades.

This was the second straight year the NHL opened the season with a two-game series in the Swedish capital. Last year, the Pittsburgh Penguins and the Ottawa Senators split their series in the same arena.

The NHL returned to Europe this weekend for the second straight year with regular-season openers in Stockholm. The Chicago Blackhawks and the Florida Panthers played a similar doubleheader in Helsinki -- the first regular-season games ever in Finland.

 

 

NHL Scores

Saturday, October 3rd
Chicago 4 Final
Florida 0
Vancouver 0 Final
Colorado 3
Detroit 3 Final
St. Louis 5
Carolina 2 Final
Boston 7
Montreal 2 Final
Buffalo 1 OT
Philadelphia 5 Final
New Jersey 2
Pittsburgh 4 Final
NY Islanders 3 SO
Ottawa 2 Final
NY Rangers 5
Toronto 4 Final
Washington 6
Tampa Bay 3 Final
Atlanta 6
Minnesota 1 Final
Columbus 2
Nashville 3 Final
Dallas 2 SO
Calgary 4 Final
Edmonton 3
San Jose 4 Final
Anaheim 1
Phoenix 6 Final
Los Angeles 3