Last-minute goal by Joel Eriksson Ek lifts Wild over Senators, 3-2
Published in Hockey
ST. PAUL, Minn. — As the Wild awaited the arrival of Quinn Hughes, their makeshift lineup held down the fort.
The Wild outlasted the Senators 3-2 on Saturday afternoon at Grand Casino Arena on a last-minute goal by Joel Eriksson Ek.
Hughes, the star defenseman from Vancouver, is expected to make his Wild debut Sunday in St. Paul against Boston.
Eriksson Ek broke a 2-2 tie with 24 seconds to go in the third period, one-timing in a Marcus Johansson pass from along the boards to give the Wild their third consecutive victory.
“We locked eyes for a little bit, me and Jojo,” Eriksson Ek said of the game-winning goal. “That vision he has, I just knew he was gonna pass it.”
Jesper Wallstedt made 34 saves, and Tyler Pitlick scored his first goal with the Wild while Elk River’s Matt Kiersted made his team debut on the blue line.
Aside from dealing Marco Rossi, Zeev Buium, Liam Ohgren and a first-round draft pick to acquire Hughes, the Wild were missing Jonas Brodin and Jake Middleton to upper-body injuries. Kiersted became the 37th Minnesota-born player to play for the Wild.
How it happened
After Wallstedt fended off Ottawa during a sleepy start for the Wild, his teammates returned the favor in the second period by capitalizing twice.
Pitlick was up first, deflecting in a shot from captain Jared Spurgeon at 3 minutes, 54 seconds. Then at 16:02, Ryan Hartman redirected in a Johansson feed on the 1-for-3 power play.
Back-to-back penalties by David Jiricek and Eriksson Ek later in the period put the Senators on the power play, and they cashed in just after the Wild survived the 5-on-3 portion when Tim Stützle lunged at a rebound that popped out of Wallstedt’s glove with just 23 seconds left in the second.
Turning point
As the second period ended, Hartman and the Senators’ Ridly Greig fought, which hinted at the history between these two teams.
Last season, Hartman was suspended 10 games for roughing Stützle and “using his forearm to violently slam” Stützle’s head into the ice after a faceoff.
Hartman later had the suspension reduced to eight games after appealing to Commissioner Gary Bettman.
In the third period, Ottawa continued to test the Wild, and the Senators pulled even on another power-play goal — this time from Dylan Cozens at 5:45 — after a questionable slashing penalty on Kirill Kaprizov. The Senators’ power play finished 2 for 4.
But the Wild regrouped, with Eriksson Ek burying his third goal in as many games to halt Ottawa’s comeback. The game-winner withstood a video review to ensure the Wild’s Matt Boldy didn’t catch the puck with a high stick before Johannson set up Eriksson Ek.
“I didn’t touch it. I knew I didn’t touch it. So, I wasn’t that worried about it,” Boldy said.
Senators goalie Leevi Merilainen made 22 stops.
Key stat
The Wild are on an 11-game point streak (9-0-2) at home.
What it means
Already depleted because of injuries, the Wild needed to call on even more reinforcements after trading away Rossi, Buium and Ohgren. Besides Kiersted, Nicolas Aube-Kubel also drew in to make his team debut.
Even with Hughes on the way, the Wild will have to rely on their depth while Middleton, Brodin, Mats Zuccarello, Marcus Foligno and Vinnie Hinostroza heal.
Coach John Hynes said he didn’t expect Brodin (upper body injury) to be out more than a week.
The Wild still stuck to their baffling script of getting tested by the teams below them in the standings. As such, the Wild should be back to business with the Bruins (a top-10 team like them) on deck.
Up next
Hughes’ debut will be Sunday at Grand Casino Arena when the Wild face the Bruins at 5 p.m.
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