Jake Walman’s goal with 3.2 seconds left gives Detroit Red Wings 3-2 win over Hurricanes

Detroit Free Press

This is how the Detroit Red Wings inject meaning into the last weeks of their season: By making it difficult for opponents with playoff positioning on the line.

They challenged the Carolina Hurricanes on Thursday at Little Caesars Arena, limiting quality scoring chances as the Metropolitan Division-leading Hurricanes tried to cement home-ice advantage through the first two rounds. Jake Walman played spoiler with 3.2 seconds to play, giving the Wings a 3-2 victory and a little two-game feel-good streak.

“These games are meaningful for us,” Walman said. “It’s a lot of experience playing against teams that are battling for playoff spots. This is our playoffs, so every game is important, and I think it will help us next year and in the long run.”

The Hurricanes outshot the Wings, 33-22.

“It’s a really tough team to play,” Wings coach Derek Lalonde said. “They just funnel everything to the net. It’s really disciplined what they do, it’s really hard to play against. I thought for the most part, we defended fairly well. We defended second efforts around the net fairly well. But even their two goals were just wristers that found the back of the net.

“It’s a good win for us, playing an elite team like that.”

Earlier this week, the Wings bested the Pittsburgh Penguins, who are trying to secure a wild-card spot.

Dominik Kubalik scored in the opening minute Thursday but it was goaltender Alex Nedeljkovic who was busiest in the first period, making 10 saves. The Hurricanes scored twice on 14 shots in the second period, but Dylan Larkin got it to 2-2.

Walman took a pass from Andrew Copp on the winning play.

“It was a go-for-broke kind of play,” Walman said. “I knew there was not much time left, and he made a really good pass, and it went in.”

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It was a satisfying night for Nedeljkovic, who won for the second time in three starts after being recalled from the minors.

“It’s nice getting to get into a rhythm, feeling good,” he said. “Couple goals kind of beat me from afar, so still a couple things you’d like to clean up, but I thought overall we did a pretty good job of limiting their quality chances.”

20-goal scorers

Kubalik became the second player on the team this season to reach 20 goals (Larkin has 28) when he scored in the opening minute. Kubalik got the puck from David Perron, skated up the left flank and fired a shot that Frederik Andersen saw coming and should have had. Perron, with 19 goals, is likely to hit 20, too. The Wings came into the season thinking they’d have 30-goal scorers in Tyler Bertuzzi and Jakub Vrana, but that went south two games in, when Bertuzzi broke a hand and Vrana was placed in the NHL and NHLPA players assistance program. Both were traded at the March 3 deadline.

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Pushing back

The Hurricanes showed why they’re in first place in their division, scoring in the opening minute of the second period when veteran defenseman Brent Burns fired a shot through traffic that eluded Nedeljkovic and tied the game. Defense partner Jacob Slavin followed suit at 4:18, seven seconds after the Wings had killed off a second penalty. Their other special team made good a little later. The power play needed just seven seconds to convert, with Larkin finishing a setup down low from Alex Chiasson, who picked up his sixth power play point since joining the Wings 12 games ago. The goal at 7:26 was the Wings’ first shot on net of the period.

“They had a push, they were 2-1, and with a team like that, you don’t want to trail very long at all, because they are very comfortable just managing their game,” Lalonde said. “So it was very important to score immediately after that.”

Edvinsson’s role grows

After being a healthy scratch the previous two games, Simon Edvinsson was back in the lineup for his fourth appearance. He was paired with Ben Chiarot (who hadn’t played since March 14 because of an upper-body injury), which put Edvinsson in a top-four role. Edvinsson has stood out for how physical he has played, though for a second straight game, he took two penalties. Overall, though, he has looked comfortable with the puck, figuring out how much more quickly he has to make decisions at the NHL level. The expectation is he’ll appear in five more games, which puts him at nine — one short of triggering the first year of his entry-level contract.

Contact Helene St. James at hstjames@freepress.com. Follow her on Twitter @helenestjames.

Read more on the Detroit Red Wings and sign up for our Red Wings newsletter. Her latest book, “On the Clock: Behind the Scenes with the Detroit Red Wings at the NHL Draft,” is available from  Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Triumph Books. Personalized copies available via her e-mail.

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