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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
Sport
Andrew Destin

Penguins’ defense falters, comeback bid all for naught in road loss to Red Wings

DETROIT — Luck was on Casey DeSmith’s side for the first eight minutes. He would’ve needed a four-leaf clover pinned to his uniform to keep Detroit’s David Perron and company in check.

In his third straight start, DeSmith gave up six goals, including three in the first frame and a hat trick to Perron in the third in the Penguins’ 7-4 loss to the Red Wings at Little Caesars Arena in Detroit. Perron scored two go-ahead goals, the latter of which was the game-winner before tacking on a clincher that incited caps to fall from the stands.

DeSmith initially benefited from some good fortunes, as shots from Detroit’s Olli Maatta and Dylan Larkin that sneaked past him clanked off iron and stayed out of the net. But DeSmith’s luck lasted only so long; as Mark Friedman sat with the second of his two first-period penalties, the Red Wings’ Jonatan Berggren sneaked the biscuit through DeSmith’s five-hole.

Andrew Copp doubled the Red Wings’ advantage 34 seconds later, tipping in a Moritz Seider shot from the point over DeSmith’s right shoulder and in. Pierre-Olivier Joseph was looking for Jake Guenzel to start a breakout, but the latter couldn’t corral the pass and the puck wound up on Seider’s twig.

Another blue-liner bomb went past DeSmith later in the frame, courtesy of Gustav Lindstrom. The third-line defenseman walked in and fired a shot off Friedman’s behind and into the net, upping the home team’s advantage to three before the first intermission.

The Penguins did not go down easily, however. Jason Zucker, who had cooled after a scorching start to March, punched in a rebound off a Rickard Rakell shot to trim the Penguins’ deficit to 3-1 early in the second period. Jake Guentzel took advantage of a Penguins 5-on-3, deflecting in an Evgeni Malkin slot shot following two Detroit penalties to make it a 3-2 game.

Detroit’s first penalty burned, the Penguins then notched another power-play goal, this time from Jeff Carter, but the score wasn’t confirmed until after much controversy. There was no goal call on the ice initially, but replay review showed the puck indeed trickled past the goal line; Detroit netminder Alex Nedeljkovic inadvertently pushed Carter’s deflection past the red line of demarcation in with his left skate.

Carter’s goal was ruled a good one, but Detroit coach Derek Lalonde challenged the play for goalie interference by Zucker. The call on the ice held and the Penguins had completed a three-goal comeback, setting the stage for a thrilling finish.

The Red Wings briefly avenged their blown lead when Perron sniped early in the third period, putting the Red Wings back on top 4-3. Josh Archibald made sure that advantage didn’t last for long, though, scoring on a wraparound goal for his second score of the month and sixth of the year to draw the tally back even at four apiece.

Perron took over from there, notching two more goals before Larkin put in an empty-netter.

ICE CHIPS

— Jeff Petry returned to the Penguins’ lineup after a five-game absence with an upper-body injury. Petry, who was banged up in the Penguins’ 4-2 loss to the New York Rangers Mar. 16, has missed 21 games in his first campaign in Pittsburgh. He was sidelined earlier in the season with a wrist injury that kept him out for over a month.

— With Petry back in action, Taylor Fedun was sent down to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton after a four-game run in the starting lineup during which the Penguins went 2-2. Friedman, similarly recalled as the team battles injuries to its defensemen, stayed in the lineup to partner with Chad Ruhwedel.

— Petry initially partnered with Brian Dumoulin, but coach Mike Sullivan later switched him to skating with Joseph. Kris Letang finished the evening with Dumoulin.

— Rakell started the game on the third line and Mikael Granlund on the second, but coach Mike Sullivan switched the two toward the end of the first period. Midway through the Penguins’ 4-3 win against the Washington Capitals on Saturday, coach Mike Sullivan bumped Rakell down from the second to the third line and had Granlund fill his vacated spot.

— The Penguins’ point streak against the Red Wings halted at eight games. The team had gone 6-0-2 in its last eight contests against Detroit dating back to Apr. of 2019.

— Zucker’s goal was his first since Mar. 12, ending a seven-game drought. He still has an impressive eight goals this month.

STAT N’AT

37 — A game removed from setting a new career-high for starts at the NHL level, DeSmith’s latest appearance gave him a new watermark, too, of 37. DeSmith saw time in 36 games in the 2018-19 campaign, previously the most of his NHL tenure.

COMING UP

The Penguins return to Pittsburgh Wednesday for an afternoon practice at UPMC Lemieux Sports Complex in Cranberry. Then, it’s the start of a three-game homestand on Thursday, with the Nashville Predators first on the slate.

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