Flyers Lose in Shootout

Evgeni Nabokov made 45 saves and Frans Nielsen and John Tavares scored on Ilya Bryzgalov in a shootout, helping the New York Islanders beat the Philadelphia Flyers 1-0 on Tuesday night.

Evgeni Nabokov faced a barrage of shots from all angles, stopping everything that came at him.

Nabokov made 45 saves and Frans Nielsen and John Tavares scored on Ilya Bryzgalov in a shootout, helping the New York Islanders beat the Philadelphia Flyers 1-0 on Tuesday night.

Nabokov was sensational, turning aside every shot he faced _ including two in the shootout. He recorded his 52nd career shutout and second this season in his return to the NHL after a brief stint in Russia.

“They were all decent and quality shots,” Nabokov said. “Sometimes you get a rebound, a weird bounce and they go in. That is just the way the game is.”  

The last-place Islanders are 6-1-2 in their last nine games and 11-5-2 in their past 18. 

Coming off losses to New Jersey and the New York Rangers last weekend, the Flyers hoped to rebound against a team they used to dominate. But they couldn't get one past Nabokov.

“Their goalie played really well,” Philadelphia's Kimmo Timonen said. “But I was happy with the way we played. If we play like that, we'll win a lot of games. That's our hockey. We skate, we hit, we force teams to turn the puck over. We had chances, but he made the saves. We played a complete game for 65 minutes.”  
 
Nielsen scored on the first shot in the shootout. After Nabokov stopped Danny Briere, Tavares fired one past Bryzgalov. Nabokov then stuffed Wayne Simmonds to end it.
 
Nabokov registered his 305th win, tying former Islanders great Billy Smith for 22nd on the all-time list.
 
“I can't say much. He won this game for us,” Nielsen said. “We didn't play well. He was incredible. He made some big saves for us.”
 
Nielsen had another reason to celebrate. Before the game, he agreed to a four-year contract reportedly worth $11 million.
 
“I'm proud to be part of it for another four years,” he said. “They have treated me so good here and I can't wait to be contenders again.”  
 
The Flyers were 6-0 against New York last year and 2-1 this season. The Islanders snapped a 13-game winless streak in Philadelphia with a 4-1 victory last month.
 
Nabokov, runner-up for the Vezina Trophy in 1998, played part of last season in the KHL and declined to report to the Islanders after being claimed off waivers. But he returned to the NHL this season and has played well in the absence of No. 1 goalie Rick DiPietro. Nabokov entered with a 2.31 goals-against average and .920 save percentage. He improved to 12-12.
 
“Anytime you get goaltending like that you get a win, and against a good team,” Islanders coach Jack Capuano said.
 
Nabokov stopped a pair of Scott Hartnell's one-timers in the first two periods and stoned Claude Giroux on a rebound in front. He also made a sprawling save on Max Talbot's short-handed breakaway shot in the second and blocked Jaromir Jagr's point-blank slap shot a few minutes later.
 
Nabokov made a couple more big saves on Philadelphia's power play in the opening minute of the third, including a pad stop on Braydon Coburn's slap shot from the point.
 
“We just couldn't get one past the goaltender,” Flyers coach Peter Laviolette said. “He played a good game. We didn't score _ wasn't from a lack of trying.”
 
After being released by SKA St. Petersburg last year, Nabokov wanted to play in North America. He signed a one-year contract with the Detroit Red Wings in January. But NHL rules forced him to go through the waiver process before going to Detroit and he was claimed by the Islanders.
 
Nabokov refused to report, choosing to stay home on the West Coast rather than play for a non-contending team.     
 
Bryzgalov made 18 saves in regulation and overtime. His best stop was a kick save on P.A. Parenteau in the first period. He stuffed Nino Niederreiter's backhander right after the Flyers killed off a penalty in the second.


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