fbpx

Islanders searching for a spark in key clash in Detroit

Feb 29, 2024; Detroit, Michigan, USA;  Detroit Red Wings center Andrew Copp (18) and New York Islanders left wing Pierre Engvall (18) battle for the puck in the third period at Little Caesars Arena. Mandatory Credit: Rick Osentoski-USA TODAY Sports

The last time the New York Islanders visited Detroit, they snapped the Red Wings’ six-game winning streak.

In their return trip Thursday night, those teams will play a pivotal game in the Eastern Conference playoff chase.

In a group battling for the final wild-card spot, Detroit (35-28-6, 76 points) has a three-point edge over the Islanders (29-24-15, 73).

Not long ago, the Red Wings held the top wild-card berth. They lost their grip on that spot to the Tampa Bay Lightning due to a seven-game losing streak.

Detroit has since won two of its past three games but it needed a last-minute comeback to beat Columbus on Tuesday night. Lucas Raymond scored his second goal of the contest with 12.6 seconds remaining in regulation off a feed from Patrick Kane to force overtime. Kane scored 48 seconds into the OT session to give the Red Wings a 4-3 victory.

“Patrick Kane takes the perfect shot (on the tying goal),” Blue Jackets coach Pascal Vincent said. “From that angle, perfect shot to create the rebound. That’s an elite, elite playmaker that does great stuff at key times. His goal in overtime, I’m not sure there’s enough space for a puck to get in and he finds a way to get it in.”

Losing at home to a last-place team could have been a crushing blow to a team with playoff aspirations. After surviving that scare, the Red Wings hope that victory is a springboard to the remainder of the regular season.

“I liked the response from the group,” Kane said. “That’s a huge win for us. Hopefully, it gives us some momentum and hopefully we can look back at this at some point and say it was a big turning point for our season.”

Raymond’s tying goal was his 24th of the season, setting a career high. He has scored seven goals in the past five games.

“A ton of emotions for sure,” Raymond said. “The timing of it. Right now, we’re chasing as a team and we’ll take every point. Huge win for us. We’ll try to build off it and keep it going.”

The Islanders defeated Detroit 5-3 on Feb. 29 as part of a six-game winning streak that brought them back into contention. They’ve since gone 0-4-1, including a 4-1 home loss to the Carolina Hurricanes on Tuesday.

The Islanders have scored just six goals during the skid.

“There’s a lot of hockey left, it’s obviously dwindling, but the race is tight,” forward Anders Lee said. “We’re in that race, we’re right there. It’s just tough to have these stretches here at this time, no doubt.”

Finding enough offense has been problematic for a good portion of the season. They’ve scored one goal or been shut out on 14 occasions.

“Things change quickly in this league,” forward Matt Martin said. “We have to find some life and start finding ways to win because it’s not good enough.”

Like the Red Wings, the Islanders are finding out the hard way there are no easy games on the calendar.

“This is the league now,” coach Patrick Roy said. “You have to be sharp every night and it’s no different for us. We have to find a solution.”

–Field Level Media

Mentioned in this article:

More About: