Posted by Sabrina B. @gametimegirl
Chris Osgood was too busy feeling the pressure from the Colorado Avalanche to put any on himself. Â That was precisely what he needed.
Osgood tied a career high with 46 saves in the Detroit Red Wings’ 4-3 overtime victory over the Colorado Avalanche on Monday night to become the 10th goalie in NHL history to reach the 400-win plateau.
“Just the way it’s been my entire career. Nothing ever comes easy,” Osgood said, grinning.
After the game, Osgood felt more relief than accomplishment. This win has been weighing heavily on him.
But with the Avalanche applying constant pressure, he didn’t have time to give the milestone a moment’s thought.
“You try to put it out of your mind and go play. But it never works that way sometimes,” Osgood said. “I didn’t have an opportunity to think about it. I was just playing.”
Niklas Kronwall scored the winner with 1:18 remaining in overtime and just like that the celebration was on. Osgood’s teammates hopped off the bench and swarmed him on the ice.
“Our guys just dug down deep and we played really well,” Osgood said.
Nicklas Lidstrom, Jiri Hudler and Johan Franzen also scored for the Red Wings, who have won three of their past four games.
Matt Duchene scored twice for Colorado and T.J. Galiardi added another as the Avalanche had a season-high 49 shots.
“Sometimes that’s the way it goes; you deserve to win and you don’t get it,” said Galiardi, whose team has dropped three straight. “It’s an upsetting game.”
Kronwall scored the winner on a power play following a tripping call on Peter Budaj as the Avs goalie stuck out his stick and got a piece of Darren Helm as he skated around the back of the net.
A good call?
Budaj was on the fence.
“It’s the referee’s call. It’s not my call. I thought I tried to play it honest,” Budaj said. “I did collide with (Helm’s) skate.”
For Kronwall, the goal was a sense of atonement.
His team leading 3-2 late in the third period, Kronwall was called for tripping. Duchene took advantage by knocking in a rebound with 2:36 remaining to send the game to overtime.
That’s when Kronwall slammed in a shot from the left circle.
“Felt really good to contribute,” Kronwall said. “But tonight was all Ozzie. We didn’t play a good game whatsoever, but he stood on his head. It was all him tonight.”
Osgood came up big all evening, but no more than in the second period when he stopped one point-blank shot after another to keep the game tied at 2. He finished with 23 saves in the period, including a solid backhanded attempts by Philippe Dupuis and Adam Foote.
So good was Osgood during a stretch in the middle portion of the period that the Red Wings fans in attendance at Pepsi Center began chanting “Ozzie.”
“I thought Ozzie set the tone,” Red Wings coach Mike Babcock said. “We didn’t skate. We weren’t very good. But Ozzie hung in there.”
Late in the second period, Kevin Shattenkirk was hit in the forehead on a shot by Kris Draper, knocking the defenseman to the ice. He was helped off by the trainer, a towel covering his bloody face. He returned midway through the third period with five stitches.
“I was pretty lucky,” Shattenkirk said.
Detroit took advantage of the Avalanche’s shaky penalty-kill unit all night, scoring all four of its goals on the power play.
“Our power play won the game,” Osgood said.
Osgood did his part, too.
“This is one I definitely won’t forget,” Osgood said. “It was a lot of fun for me.”
Detroit’s offense didn’t seem to lack in production despite missing Danny Cleary, who will be sidelined for at least a month after breaking his left ankle Sunday night in Minnesota.
Read more:Â http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/hockey/nhl/gameflash/2010/12/27/27119_recap.html?eref=sihp#ixzz19Pd9bmvi



























No one cares about Hockey and you yourself couldn’t name or even recognize a player if he walked right in front of you.