Skip to Main Navigation

The Buffalo News

Web Search
by YAHOO! SEARCH

Bruins spoil debut of Sabres' Enroth

Published:November 7, 2009, 11:58 PM

Font Size:
  • E-mail
  • Share
  • Print

Updated: August 21, 2010, 9:01 AM

BOSTON — The easy way out for the Buffalo Sabres would have been to blame the kid for their second straight loss. Rookie goaltender Jhonas Enroth gave up a goal on the first shot he faced in the NHL. He allowed three on his first 13 shots and spent most of his debut scrambling around the crease.

In fact, it would have been much too easy to blame the 21-year-old when the Sabres had so

many other problems around him. Enroth was shaky at times Saturday night in a 4-2 loss to the

Boston Bruins before 17,565 in TD Banknorth Garden, but he wasn't solely responsible for any

of the four goals in a game littered with missed nets, poor communication and mistakes.

Let the facts show what they show.

The Sabres lost two straight games for the first time in this young season and were

severely outplayed for the second consecutive evening. The struggling Bruins scored more than

three goals for only the second time since Oct. 10 and quadrupled their output for their three

previous games combined.

Enroth's fault? Hardly.

"As a team, we broke down," center Paul Gaustad said. "Jhonas played well enough to win us

the game. It's on the players."

Mark Recchi gave the Bruins an early lead when he scored on a deflection. Zdeno Chara

bombed a slap shot through a screen and off Henrik Tallinder for the second goal. Jason

Pominville's pass bounced off Steve Montador's skate, handing the Bruins their third goal

after Byron Bitz cleaned up a mess around the net. Derek Roy made a poor play on Marco Sturm's

goal.

"You never want the first one to go in," Enroth said. "It was a tough start, but I think I

came back pretty good.

,"Overall, I think I played pretty good."

Roy scored for Buffalo in the second period. Pominville added another late in the third

after the damage, and the Sabres were done.

Sabres coach Lindy Ruff made the decision early last week to play his backup Saturday night

regardless of whether Patrick Lalime would be ready after suffering a groin injury. Ruff was

intent on Ryan Miller taking a mental-health day after the star goaltender played 12 of the

first 13 contests this season.

Ruff could have siphoned another game out of Miller with the Sabres not playing again until

Wednesday, but instead he elected to stick with the master plan and take a peek at the former

second-round pick. Enroth wasn't brilliant by any measure, but he wasn't bad, either, en route

to 33 saves.

"He stood pretty tall for us. You have to give him credit for hanging in there," Ruff said.

"The greater issue is that our game has lacked energy for the last three games."

The Bruins were reeling going into the game after scoring one goal over their three

previous games and enduring a shutout streak of 192 minutes, six seconds. Scoring figured to

be the least of their problems this year after they led the conference last season with 274

goals and 116 points. But these Bruins aren't those Bruins.

Winger Phil Kessel took 36 goals with him when he was traded to Toronto during the

offseason. Center Marc Savard and winger Milan Lucic, the playmaker and the punch for the

Bruins a year ago, are sidelined with injuries. Take away three top-six forwards from any

team, and goal production is certain to drop.

Boston was suffocating in an 0-for-20 drought on the power play over its previous six-plus

games before converting its first two opportunities with the extra man against the Sabres.

It could have been worse. Enroth made a pad save on Daniel Paille after the former Sabres

winger broke loose on a short-handed breakaway. Patrice Bergeron also broke free while

short-handed in the third before losing the puck.

The Sabres had opportunities to help Enroth but failed when they had a two-man advantage for

40 seconds in the first period. They missed open nets. They failed to convert on eight power

plays. They lacked energy.

"When we're a good team, we're all pulling in the same direction," Pominville said. "Our

support is good. We're making short passes and getting out of our zone easily. Our last couple

of games, it hasn't been like that. I think we've given up more chances against in the last

two games than all of our previous games."

Comments

There are no comments on this story.

Blogs

Sports, Ink

This Day in Buffalo Sports History: Leaving the big time

BillBoard

Polian says Gronk failed Colts physical

Prep Talk

Busy Tuesday night for #preptalkscores, including big wins for Cleve Hill (with video), Akron, Iroquois, Maryvale, EA

Sports Updates

Sports Wire

The Feed / What’s Happening Now

Latest Updates
Most Commented
Most Viewed
Winter 2011-12

Our mild weather could have a downside

Sabres & NHL

Sabres coach Ruff injured in practice collision

Courts

Young teacher admits guilt in child porn case

Jerry Sullivan

Fitz won't blame injury for poor play

Police Blotter

Task force reports record drug bust

Police Blotter

Weaving motorist charged with felony DWI

Jeff Simon

No spark in Madonna’s boring Super Bowl performance

Schools

6 SUNY schools on best-value list

Amherst

Drug use linked to fatality

City & Region

3rd expert says death should be reclassified

Buffalo Marketplace

Marketplace videos

Watch the latest offers, products and services from our advertisers.

Browse our print ads

It's the ultimate advantage for Buffalo consumers. Never miss another ad again!

Buffalo Savers: coupons

Buffalo coupons at your fingertips.
Just click and print. It's Easy!

close

Browse our print adsclose

Special Sections

Buffalo Saversclose

Local coupons

Featured coupon