Sunday, January 15, 2017

KHL 2016/17 - Day 134

Five games for today, beginning with...

Traktor Chelyabinsk hosting Spartak Moscow. Markus Svensson and Pavel Francouz are in the creases. Chelyabinsk started in the first period with a Jiri Novotny goal, via Artyom Borodkin and Maxim Yakutsenya. Moscow tied it in the second period with a Lukas Radil goal, passed from Tim Stapleton and Ryan Stoa. Traktor retook the lead with a Nikolai Belov goal, coming off of Alexander Shinin. Chelyabinsk added on with an Artyom Penkovsky goal, going in unassisted. Spartak got one back in the third period with a Denis Tolpeko power play goal, powered by Maxim Potapov and Sergei Shmelyov. This only made it 3-2, the final, with the three stars going to Penkovsky, Belov, and Novotny.

Along to Magnitogorsk, where Metallurg welcomes Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod. Ilya Proskuryakov and Ilya Samsonov draw the starts in goal. Nizhny Novgorod opened in the first period with a Grigory Zheldakov goal, assisted by Kaspars Daugavins and Bobby Butler. Magnitogorsk tied it with a Tommi Santala power play goal, powered by Tomas Filippi. Torpedo retook the lead with a Brandon McMillan goal in the second period, via Vladimir Galuzin and Maxim Osipov. Metallurg retied it with a Danis Zaripov goal, with a lone assist by Chris Lee. Metallurg won 3-2 in overtime with a Lee goal, made possible by Sergei Mozyakin and Jan Kovar. The three stars were Lee, Zaripov, and Santala.

Up in Cherepovets, Severstal hosts Metallurg Novokuznetsk. Rafael Khakimov and Jakub Kovar are between the pipes. Cherepovets got going in the second period with a Denis Yezhov goal, assisted by Maxim Trunyov and Dmitry Kagarlitsky. Severstal added on in the third period with a Clay Wilson goal, guided in by Arseny Khatsei and Alexei Ugarov. Cherepovets iced it at 3-0 with a Khatsei empty net goal, set up by Sergei Monakhov. The three stars went to Kovar (16 save shutout), Khatsei, and Yezhov.

Over in St. Petersburg, SKA brings in Sibir Novosibirsk. Ivan Nalimov and Mikko Koskinen protect the nets. St. Petersburg led off in the first period with an unassisted Evgeny Dadonov goal. Novosibirsk tied it in the second period with a Konstantin Okulov goal, helped along by Adam Polasek and Yegor Milovzorov. Sibir took the lead with a Joonas Kemppainen goal, via Evgeny Artyukhin. SKA tied it again with a Viktor Tikhonov goal, courtesy of Pavel Datsyuk and Ilya Kovalchuk. St. Petersburg retook the lead with a Nikita Gusev goal, with a lone assist by Vadim Shipachyov. SKA added on in the third period with an Ilya Kablukov power play goal, powered by Kovalchuk and Anton Belov. St. Petersburg extended the lead as Shipachyov scored a power play goal, thanks to Dadonov and Gusev. SKA padded the lead with a Dadonov goal, his second of the game, made possible by Gusev and Shipachyov. This produced the 6-2 final, with the three stars given to Dadonov, Gusev, and Shipachyov, while Kovalchuk gets an honorable mention.

Finally, Slovan Bratislava hosts Ugra Khanty-Mansiysk. Alexander Sharychenkov and Barry Brust man the nets. Bratislava began in the first period with a Ziga Jeglic power play goal, powered by Jonathan Cheechoo and Michal Sersen. Slovan added on with a Cheechoo power play goal in the second period, coming off of Jeff Taffe and Jeglic. Bratislava extended the lead in the third period as Igor Musatov scored, thanks to Tomas Surovy and Kyle Chipchura. Khanty-Mansiysk got on the board with an Andrei Alexeyev goal, via Kirill Belyayev and Evgeny Kulik. Ugra got closer with an Anton Korolyov goal, passed from Evgeny Lapenkov and Kulik. This only made it 3-2, the final, with the three stars being Cheechoo, Jeglic, and Kulik.

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