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Conner’s penalty shot helps Pens beat Wings

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Associated Press

PITTSBURGH

The Pittsburgh Penguins accomplished about all that is possible on the ice the last four years by winning a Stanley Cup, playing for another and capturing some of the NHL’s top individual awards.

Everything, that is, except converting a penalty shot.

Chris Conner scored on Pittsburgh’s first successful penalty shot since 2007, Jordan Staal added his third goal in three games and the Sidney Crosby-less Penguins beat the injury-thinned Detroit Red Wings 4-1 on Tuesday night.

Conner made it 2-0 by going from his forehand to his backup to beat backup goalie Joey MacDonald between the pads 11:29 into the first period, about eight minutes after Staal scored. He was awarded the penalty shot after being hooked by Kris Draper.

“I kind of knew what I was going to do the whole time going in, you just have to execute and make it work,” Conner said.

Pittsburgh had been 0 for 12 on penalty shots since Jarkko Ruutu scored against Toronto on Jan. 20, 2007, coincidentally with the same move that Conner used.

“No one brought that to my attention,” Conner said of the lengthy streak. “I’m glad they didn’t tell me before that.”

Two of the NHL’s best teams met for only the third time since facing each other in the 2008 and 2009 Stanley Cup finals — they split a pair of games last season — but a number of top names were missing.

Crosby, the NHL’s leading scorer, sat out a sixth consecutive game with a concussion. The Red Wings were without goalies Jimmy Howard and Chris Osgood, forwards Tomas Holmstrom, Pavel Datsyuk and Danny Cleary and defenseman Brad Stuart.

The Red Wings took 18 of a possible 26 points in their first 13 games after Datsyuk started their run of injuries by breaking his right hand, but Detroit’s lack of depth showed up as Pittsburgh won its third in a row.

The Penguins were 0-1-2 in their first three games without Crosby, who might not return until after the Jan. 30 All-Star game.

MacDonald, playing in only his fifth game this season, made an early mistake that led to Staal’s goal 3:02 into the game.

The goalie took too long to play the puck behind the net, allowing Tyler Kennedy to steal a short pass intended for Jonathan Ericsson and feed it to an undefended Staal at the side of the net. Staal has three goals and six points in three games.