トップ > ニュース一覧 > 記事
Islanders Lose Boqvist, Go Scoreless On Eight Power Plays In 4-1 Loss To Los Angelesン

Islanders Lose Boqvist, Go Scoreless On Eight Power Plays In 4-1 Loss To Los Angeles

Kirby Lee-Imagn Images
Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

If the New York Islanders didn't have bad luck, they'd have no luck at all.

After a weak performance in a 4-1 loss to the Anaheim Ducks on Sunday, the Islanders could not catch a break in a 3-1 loss to the Los Angeles Kings on Tuesday.

The Islanders had two goals that were waived off for goaltender interference after review. They allowed a breakaway goal after a broken stick.

And they also lost defenseman Adam Boqvist at 4:47 for th rest of the game after being on the receiving end of a Kevin Fiala hit:

The Islanders went 0-for-8 on the power play, with 16 total shots, allowing two short-handed goals.

Here's the sequence of events:

It was a good pace for the folks back East, with some rush chances right off the hop. Bo Horvat was flying in the first period with three shots but the Islanders found themselves down 1-0 at 15:33 of the first.

Forty seconds after Tony DeAngelo took a slashing penalty, the Kings scored after Vladislav beat a screened Sorokin:

Down a goal, the Islanders had a strong start to the second period, with Anders Lee finding the equalizer at 8:37.

After the Islanders sent the puck into their own end, Adam Pelech carried the puck up ice.

He fed Jean-Gabriel Pageau on the blue line, who then found Lee who went five-hole on Kuemper:

This was Lee’s 25th goal of the season.

The Kings quickly responded, as a defensive zone turnover found Trevor Moore, who fed Phillip Denault atop the slot before firing it past Sorokin at 9:14:

Down 2-1, the Islanders thought they found the equalizer when Anthony Duclair put a rebound past Kuemper on the power play, but goaltender interference was called:

Then, the Islanders once again headed to the power play at 13:40 for a delay of game penalty on Joel Edmundson, but an Anthony DeAngelo broken stick led to a Quinton Byfield breakaway.

Byfield skated down ice before firing the puck past Sorokin at 14:00 for his 15th goal of the season:

With 2:11 remaining in the second period, the Islanders once again had a power play goal called back for goaltender interference, this time on Lee:

The Islanders outshot the Kings 17-9 in the second period.

In the third period, the Islanders continued to give up rush chances, but Sorokin did a strong job fighting them off. The Islanders had their own chances, but could not beat a compact Darcy Kuemper.

The Islanders failed to capitalize on a 5-on-3 power play from 1:01.

With just over four minutes to play in regulation, Patrick Roy pulled Ilya Sorokin for the extra-attacker.

While Sorokin was on the bench, the Islanders were awarded their eighth power play of the game.

After going back into his crease for the offensive-zone face-off, which the Islanders lost leading to a full ice clear, Sorokin went back to the bench to give the Islanders 6-on-4 advantage.

Drew Doughty scored on the empty net off the boards at 18:43 of the third fr the 4-1 win.

Michael Ostrower contributed to this story.

UP NEXT: The Islanders return home ot host the Edmonton Oilers on Friday night at 7:30 PM

続きを読む

Advertisement

Advertisement

あなたにおすすめ
‘Richard II’ Review: Jonathan Bailey Shows Off His Shakespearean Chops in a Stern, Stripped-Down Production
‘Richard II’ Review: Jonathan Bailey Shows Off His Shakespearean Chops in a Stern, Stripped-Down Production
“Nothing in his life became him like the leaving it.” OK, that’s the wrong play since it’s a line from “Macbeth,” but it best sums up Jonathan Bailey’s performance in the new London production of “Richard II”: The actor cranks up several gears the moment his character is forced by usurper Henry Bullingbrook to give up the throne of England for a life of imprisonment in the second half of director Nicholas Hytner’s staging of Shakespeare’s history play. But the fact that Bailey takes time to catch fire is not entirely his fault, since neither Shakespeare nor Hytner make life easy for him. Given that the play is set at the close of the 14th century, it’s no surprise that Hytner believes the play, which depicts the ushering in of a nation’s decades-long succession crisis, needs contemporary reference points. That explains composer Grant Olding’s doom-laden, grinding, low strings that herald a driving rhythm and a light-touch, bitter piano melody opening the production, a clear hat-tip to Nicholas Britell’s Beethoven-tinged theme to “Succession.” It also governs Bob Crowley’s crisp men-in-black-suits design. The antithesis of the exuberantly colored “Guys and Dolls,” the last show to play at Hytner’s physically versatile Bridge Theatre (and which ran almost two years), this limited run of “Richard II” is stripped-down and stern. Gone is the expected heraldry and splendor of the English court in which King Richard traditionally basks. Instead, the audience is arranged in the round observing a traverse-style black runway staging with changing, minimal locations being lifted up through the floor on hydraulics. It makes for welcome fluidity, highly useful in a play that, for the first half at least, moves through an uncomfortable number of locations and a load of exposition.This is a story about the threat to the kingdom and, specifically, Richard, who ruled neither wisely nor well with absolute power by ancient Divine Right. The nation is torn apart by the plots and counterplots of men and their forces loyal to the crown and those backing Henry Bullingbrook, the Duke of Hereford who, successfully as it turns out, puts his eyes on the ultimate prize and steals it.That the tussle for dominance between the men is so potentially dramatic is illustrated by the fact that around fifty years ago, Richard Pasco and Ian Richardson, two leading Shakespeareans of their day, alternated the roles when they led the play in a celebrated RSC production. Here, alas, the balance is uneven. Royce Pierreson is nicely forthright and determined but his performance is unvarying. The wonderfully character-driven abdication scene between the two men is the production’s highpoint, but elsewhere Pierreson’s determination is too one-note. Anyone questioning the wisdom of the star-casting of “Bridgerton” and “Wicked” talent Bailey should bear in mind that he played Cassio in Hytner’s riveting “Othello” at the National Theatre back in 2013 and followed that with an arresting Edgar/Mad Tom opposite Ian McKellen’s King Lear for director Jonathan Munby. As a result, his handling of the language and, crucially, the intent behind it, is entirely easeful. His king is self-satisfied and perfectly petulant, dispatching orders, and often men’s lives, with gleaming disdain. He’s even better when he’s calmly and quietly coming to understand himself and the nature of his previous selfishness in the play’s highly reflective and tender final scenes.But between those extremes of temperament, the living center of the character remains unseen, robbing the production of strength. That’s partly because he has to energize scenes that here lack force. Hytner is unquestionably one of the great directors of Shakespeare, but this production is uncharacteristically undercast in places. Some of the acting proves more proficient than powerful.
Couple Arrested for Allegedly Murdering 13-Year-Old Girl Over Stolen Chocolates
Couple Arrested for Allegedly Murdering 13-Year-Old Girl Over Stolen Chocolates
Getty
‘Captain America: Brave New World’s Julius Onah On Why He Thanks Octavia Spencer In Movie Credits
‘Captain America: Brave New World’s Julius Onah On Why He Thanks Octavia Spencer In Movie Credits
Julius Onah is the director behind Marvel’s Captain America: Brave New World, and in the “Special Thanks” credits, there was a shoutout to Octavia Spencer.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Chinese users turn to off-exchange Congolese copper to ease supply tightness
Chinese users turn to off-exchange Congolese copper to ease supply tightness
SHANGHAI (Reuters) - China will import even more off-exchange refined copper this year, according to analysts and traders, as output from the Congo booms and users look to alleviate shortages and head off a potential disruption to supplies of U.S. scrap.
Trudeau gets smiles with stern speech to President 'Donald'
Trudeau gets smiles with stern speech to President 'Donald'
Some people found a bit of levity in Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's remarkably stern speech on Tuesday, as he outlined Canada's response to the potentially devastating tariffs brought by U.S. President Donald Trump.
UK defence minister to meet US counterpart Hegseth on Ukraine peace plan
UK defence minister to meet US counterpart Hegseth on Ukraine peace plan
LONDON (Reuters) - British defence minister John Healey will meet U.S. Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth in Washington on Thursday to discuss a peace plan for Ukraine, Britain's ministry of defence said.

Advertisement

アクセスランキング
Winnipeg importer says food prices will rise as U.S. tariffs cause trouble for farmers, consumers
A Winnipeg food importer and distributor says the cost of food brought in from every part of the world will go up for Canadian consumers and businesses in the wake of U.S. Donald Trump's 25 per cent tariffs.
Winnipeg importer says food prices will rise as U.S. tariffs cause trouble for farmers, consumers
Gas price expert: Trump has 'costly' option to shut Canadian oil out of U.S. refineries
Gas prices fell on average across most Canadian cities over the past week, dropping 1.8 cents per litre of regular fuel, according to data from Kalibrate.
Gas price expert: Trump has 'costly' option to shut Canadian oil out of U.S. refineries
Millie Bobby Brown plans to 'shave her hair off' again for major life event
Millie Bobby Brown wants to "shave her hair off" when she has her first baby. The 21-year-old actress - who is getting married to Jon Bon Jovi's son Jake Bongiovi - is keen to raise a family in the future, and she'd love to go back to her 'Stranger Things' look by getting rid of her locks in time for giving birth. She told the 'Call Her Daddy' podcast: "I always tell Jake, for my first baby, I want to shave my hair off. "I don’t know. It was really liberating, would suggest it for anyone. Any girl... Maybe [I would shave it] right before I’m about to give birth because I just think hair is such an ordeal anyway to deal with. "I’m gonna nurture my child. Why deal with my hair? And I think it’s such a liberating experience. "To be a woman is, and I felt like I had that experience as a girl, but I’d like to have that experience as a woman." Millie was just 12 years old when she was cast as Eleven in 'Stranger Things', but she had absolutely no qualms about shaving her head before filming the hit Netflix show. She recalled: "I honestly did not care and I’m saying that like I really did not care. I didn’t have anxiety, I wasn’t sad when they shaved it off. "I just thought, 'Cool. Now this is what I’m doing.' I think it started to hit me months and months in where you get to that age where you’re 11 now and you’re shaving it consecutively every three days because it cannot grow past a certain length because we’re filming, so continuity-wise you’re shaving it, so every time it started to grow and I’d get excited, we’d shave it again." She started to feel "insecure" once she and her friends were getting to the age where boys were getting interested in other girls. She added: "So, I think it became to the point where I was like 12, 11 or 12, where I was like, the boys started liking girls and I was kind of like maybe, 'Why are boys not liking me?' "And then I was like, 'I’m feeling insecure now,' so I would put wigs on and I did get really, really bullied. "In public, people would make comments and stuff but honestly, I still to this day loved the experience and I would do it again."
Millie Bobby Brown plans to 'shave her hair off' again for major life event
Selena Gomez Celebrated Fiancé Benny Blanco’s Birthday in an $11K Hot Pink Ball Gown and Furry Coat
Earl Gibson III/GG2025/Penske Media via Getty
Selena Gomez Celebrated Fiancé Benny Blanco’s Birthday in an $11K Hot Pink Ball Gown and Furry Coat
After Losing 80% of My Stomach to Cancer, I’m Urging Others to Take Warning Signs Seriously
By the time she was 44, Teresa Tiano was already intimately familiar with cancer. Not only was she treated for stage 0 bladder cancer eight years earlier, but she had also lost both parents to cancer. In July 2011, she became concerned she would follow in her father's footsteps and develop colon cancer. Although she was younger than the recommended age to begin colon cancer screening, she asked her healthcare providers to book her both an endoscopy and colonoscopy.
After Losing 80% of My Stomach to Cancer, I’m Urging Others to Take Warning Signs Seriously
【年収アップの秘訣ランキング発表!】3位スキルアップ、2位資格取得をおさえ、1位は「即収入増が狙える副業」
【年収アップの秘訣ランキング発表!】3位スキルアップ、2位資格取得をおさえ、1位は「即収入増が狙える副業」
‘Broadchurch’ Creator Chris Chibnall’s Debut Novel Being Made Into ITV Drama Series
Former Doctor Who and Broadchurch showrunner Chris Chibnall’s debut novel is becoming an ITV drama series.
‘Broadchurch’ Creator Chris Chibnall’s Debut Novel Being Made Into ITV Drama Series
3 First Responders Killed in Mississippi Medical Helicopter Crash
University of Mississippi Medical Center/Facebook (3)
3 First Responders Killed in Mississippi Medical Helicopter Crash
気付けば財布が軽い…「つい無駄遣いしてしまう人」に共通する落とし穴とは?FPが伝授する簡単な見直し術
気付けば財布が軽い…「つい無駄遣いしてしまう人」に共通する落とし穴とは?FPが伝授する簡単な見直し術
5 barriers women face to saving money and how to overcome them
5 barriers women face to saving money and how to overcome them
Hedge Funds Help Drive Record Growth in Dubai Financial District
(Bloomberg) -- Dubai’s financial district reported a record 25% increase in company registrations last year, helped in part to by a continuing influx of hedge funds that’s transformed the city into an emerging hub for the sector.
Hedge Funds Help Drive Record Growth in Dubai Financial District
Trump Foresees ‘A Little Disturbance’ as He Vows to Expand Trade War in Speech to Congress
President Trump told Congress Tuesday he expects “a little disturbance” as he broadens his trade war, less than a day after imposing 25% tariffs on goods from Canada and Mexico.
Trump Foresees ‘A Little Disturbance’ as He Vows to Expand Trade War in Speech to Congress
Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton hits wild 3-pointer over Giannis Antetokounmpo, completes 4-point play to beat Bucks
Tyrese Haliburton pulled off a ridiculous 4-point play Tuesday night that left Giannis Antetokounmpo and the Milwaukee Bucks absolutely stunned.
Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton hits wild 3-pointer over Giannis Antetokounmpo, completes 4-point play to beat Bucks
‘Richard II’ Review: Jonathan Bailey Shows Off His Shakespearean Chops in a Stern, Stripped-Down Production
“Nothing in his life became him like the leaving it.” OK, that’s the wrong play since it’s a line from “Macbeth,” but it best sums up Jonathan Bailey’s performance in the new London production of “Richard II”: The actor cranks up several gears the moment his character is forced by usurper Henry Bullingbrook to give up the throne of England for a life of imprisonment in the second half of director Nicholas Hytner’s staging of Shakespeare’s history play. But the fact that Bailey takes time to catch fire is not entirely his fault, since neither Shakespeare nor Hytner make life easy for him. Given that the play is set at the close of the 14th century, it’s no surprise that Hytner believes the play, which depicts the ushering in of a nation’s decades-long succession crisis, needs contemporary reference points. That explains composer Grant Olding’s doom-laden, grinding, low strings that herald a driving rhythm and a light-touch, bitter piano melody opening the production, a clear hat-tip to Nicholas Britell’s Beethoven-tinged theme to “Succession.” It also governs Bob Crowley’s crisp men-in-black-suits design. The antithesis of the exuberantly colored “Guys and Dolls,” the last show to play at Hytner’s physically versatile Bridge Theatre (and which ran almost two years), this limited run of “Richard II” is stripped-down and stern. Gone is the expected heraldry and splendor of the English court in which King Richard traditionally basks. Instead, the audience is arranged in the round observing a traverse-style black runway staging with changing, minimal locations being lifted up through the floor on hydraulics. It makes for welcome fluidity, highly useful in a play that, for the first half at least, moves through an uncomfortable number of locations and a load of exposition.This is a story about the threat to the kingdom and, specifically, Richard, who ruled neither wisely nor well with absolute power by ancient Divine Right. The nation is torn apart by the plots and counterplots of men and their forces loyal to the crown and those backing Henry Bullingbrook, the Duke of Hereford who, successfully as it turns out, puts his eyes on the ultimate prize and steals it.That the tussle for dominance between the men is so potentially dramatic is illustrated by the fact that around fifty years ago, Richard Pasco and Ian Richardson, two leading Shakespeareans of their day, alternated the roles when they led the play in a celebrated RSC production. Here, alas, the balance is uneven. Royce Pierreson is nicely forthright and determined but his performance is unvarying. The wonderfully character-driven abdication scene between the two men is the production’s highpoint, but elsewhere Pierreson’s determination is too one-note. Anyone questioning the wisdom of the star-casting of “Bridgerton” and “Wicked” talent Bailey should bear in mind that he played Cassio in Hytner’s riveting “Othello” at the National Theatre back in 2013 and followed that with an arresting Edgar/Mad Tom opposite Ian McKellen’s King Lear for director Jonathan Munby. As a result, his handling of the language and, crucially, the intent behind it, is entirely easeful. His king is self-satisfied and perfectly petulant, dispatching orders, and often men’s lives, with gleaming disdain. He’s even better when he’s calmly and quietly coming to understand himself and the nature of his previous selfishness in the play’s highly reflective and tender final scenes.But between those extremes of temperament, the living center of the character remains unseen, robbing the production of strength. That’s partly because he has to energize scenes that here lack force. Hytner is unquestionably one of the great directors of Shakespeare, but this production is uncharacteristically undercast in places. Some of the acting proves more proficient than powerful.
‘Richard II’ Review: Jonathan Bailey Shows Off His Shakespearean Chops in a Stern, Stripped-Down Production
Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco taking wedding planning 'one day at a time'
Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco are taking "one day at a time" with their wedding planning. The newly-engaged lovebirds aren't rushing into their big day, and 37-year-old musician joked his bride-to-be, 32, is constantly coming up with a whole new idea. He told Rolling Stone magazine in a joint interview: “I think every day she’s planned a new wedding in her head. “We’re very much ‘take it one day at a time’ type of people. We’re still not over this moment. "Literally, while you were talking, she was sitting there staring at her ring.” The 'Only Murders In The Building' actress pointed out that for now, they're focused on the upcoming release of their collaborative album 'I Said I Love You First'. She added: “Also, I genuinely feel like this is such a special time that we get to apply it to this album and really just pour our heart into it, and completely translate what we feel and bring it to the world. "That’s my main focus right now, at least.” In December last year, Selena revealed Benny had proposed using an oval-shaped ring with a large diamond. He popped the question during a picnic which featured Taco Bell, but he insisted there wasn't an "elaborate" meaning behind the fast food involvement, He explained: “There’s not this whole elaborate thing. I think we’re very lucky to be surrounded by such great people, and we’ve still just been enjoying so much. “It feels like we got engaged yesterday, but also feels like we got engaged 20 years ago. I’ve known her since she was 18, and so it’s like we got all that stuff out of the way. "By the time we’re dating, it’s like, whoa. My biggest regret is that we didn’t get to do this earlier, like we waited this long to be together. But I know it was perfect and it was right.”
Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco taking wedding planning 'one day at a time'
The NHL has nailed its all-star break with the 4 Nations Face-Off. Could it be a blueprint for the NBA?
Yahoo Sports’ great basketball columnist, Vincent Goodwill, summed up the vibe at the just completed — and mostly listless — NBA All-Star weekend as such: “You can’t manufacture soul.”
The NHL has nailed its all-star break with the 4 Nations Face-Off. Could it be a blueprint for the NBA?
Canadian oil and gas stocks: Scotiabank flags 'buying opportunity' amid Trump tariff threat
Scotiabank Global Equity Research predicted U.S. President Donald Trump’s 10 per cent tariff on all energy imports from Canada, due to go into effect Tuesday, would be short-lived, as higher energy costs pinch American consumers. On Monday afternoon, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said the U.S. has agreed to pause tariffs on Canada for at least 30 days.
Canadian oil and gas stocks: Scotiabank flags 'buying opportunity' amid Trump tariff threat
Petronas Mulls Over $1 Billion Loan for Malaysian LNG Project
(Bloomberg) -- Malaysia’s Petroliam Nasional Bhd is in talks with banks for a potential loan to fund a liquefied national gas project, according to people familiar with the matter.
Petronas Mulls Over $1 Billion Loan for Malaysian LNG Project
3 die on Victoria streets little more than an hour apart as Island Health issues drug toxicity warning
Three people died a little over an hour apart in Victoria on Monday, Victoria police and the B.C. Coroners Service have confirmed.
3 die on Victoria streets little more than an hour apart as Island Health issues drug toxicity warning
Is The Rangers' Core Still In Need Of A Dissection?
A little more than two months have elapsed since the Rangers corpse was being examined. The question at the time: was the patient alive or not?
Is The Rangers' Core Still In Need Of A Dissection?

Advertisement