Johansen gets some help in breakaway challenge
Associated Press
COLUMBUS
Ryan Johansen of the hometown Columbus Blue Jackets pulled a kid out of the stands and guided him to a goal to win the breakaway challenge, and Nashville’s Shea Weber fired the hardest shot with a 108.5-mph blast at the NHL All-Stars skills competition on Saturday night.
Weber missed the net on his first attempt but made up for that with a shot second only to five-time winner Zdeno Chara’s 108.8-mph drive in 2012.
The team captained by Blue Jackets forward Nick Foligno defeated one led by Chicago Blackhawks captain Jonathan Toews, 25-19.
Patrick Kane of the Blackhawks had the fastest time in the accuracy shooting, and Tampa Bay’s Jonathan Drouin was the fastest skater.
Team Foligno will meet Team Toews today in the 60th All-Star game.
Washington Capitals star Alexander Ovechkin — who stole the show at Friday night’s draft by pleading to be picked last so he would win a new car — led the hardest-shot competition with a pair of 101.4 mph drives. But Weber stepped into his final shot to win the event.
The breakaway challenge proved to be the most innovative of any of the light-hearted, head-to-head competitions.
Johansen pulled Blue Jackets trainer Mike Vogt’s 7-year-old son, Cole, out of the stands to score a goal to the delight of the crowd. The center also endeared himself to Ohio State fans by pulling off his Blue Jackets sweater to reveal a No. 5 Ohio State football jersey — similar to one worn by injured star quarterback Braxton Miller — on his first shot.
Johansen also employed a star-laden V-formation to the net on his third and final attempt.
Moments later, Philadelphia’s Jake Voracek did exactly what Johansen did — except instead of a little boy he grabbed diminutive Calgary rookie Johnny Gaudreau and guided him toward scoring a goal.
In the fastest skater event, in which players were paired off and raced around the perimeter of the rink against the clock, Team Foligno went 5-0 — winning all four races and pocketing an extra point for Tampa Bay’s Jonathan Drouin posting the fastest time of 13.103 seconds.
Toronto’s Phil Kessel, who was dealt by Team Toews for Tyler Seguin on Friday in a duplicate of a real 2009 deal between Boston and Toronto, surprised many by edging the Dallas Stars star in the first speed pairing of the event.