Get all your news in one place.
100's of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
Sport
Sarah Mclellan

Nino Niederreiter's overtime goal rescues Wild after bad third period

SAN JOSE, Calif. _ The Wild's getaway to California packed in three games against three perennially competitive opponents, but the actual itinerary wasn't as intimidating.

No back-to-backs.

One day off.

Two practices.

So by the time the Wild reached the finale Sunday in San Jose, they had the early jump over a team completing a back-to-back.

But the head start wasn't enough to sustain the Wild, as they had to shrug off the Sharks in overtime to pocket a 4-3 win SAP Center and finish with four out of a possible six points on its road trip while improving to 4-1 in its last five games.

Winger Nino Niederreiter sealed the victory 3 minutes, 26 seconds into the extra period _ the team's second consecutive overtime win. This came after the Sharks tied it at 14:59 after goalie Alex Stalock couldn't hold onto a save, enabling winger Tomas Hertl to shuffle in the loose puck.

Signs of a collapse came much earlier, though, amid a string of seven penalties by the Wild _ a lopsided advantage that the Sharks used to generate momentum and help them climb out of a three-goal hole.

Just 4:19 after puck drop, the Wild converted on their own power play amid a slick passing sequence. Center Eric Staal found winger Jason Zucker below the goal line, and Zucker fed defenseman Ryan Murphy _ who was left alone at the back post to wire a shot by Sharks goalie Martin Jones for his first goal as a member of the Wild. It was the Wild's lone power-play goal in three opportunities.

Later in the first, the Wild grew their lead after defenseman Ryan Suter set up Staal for an easy tap-in at 10:27.

A pair of penalties slowed the Wild's attack the rest of the period, and the team also struggled to find a rhythm early in the second. But Staal recalibrated the group with his second of the game _ this one a wrap-around that he managed to jam between Jones' right skate and the post. Jones totaled 20 saves.

The Sharks challenged the goal to see if goaltender interference was a factor, as Niederreiter was in front of Jones at the top of the crease, but the goal counted. It was Staal's second two-goal effort of the season and seventh multi-point game.

The parade to the penalty box continued after that, with the Wild committing four penalties in the period _ two of which were called on the same play to give the Sharks a five-on-three advantage.

And that's when they capitalized, with defenseman Brent Burns' slap shot eluding Stalock at 19:07 _ this not long after defenseman Jonas Brodin blocked an attempt from Burns and Stalock made a key stop on Hertl.

Another penalty early in the third, the second committed by defenseman Gustav Olofsson, was costly, as Burns capitalized again with a sizzling slapper at 2:41. That was just the boost San Jose needed to amplify its pressure on the Wild, a heavy push that culminated in Hertl's tying goal before Niederreiter's game-winner in overtime.

Stalock finished with 31 saves.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100's of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.