RED WINGS

Friday’s NHL roundup: Faksa nets winner for Stars

Stephen Hawkins
Associated Press
Stars center Radek Faksa, center, celebrates his goal with teammates Antoine Roussel (21), Jason Demers (4) and Johnny Oduya (47) during the third period.

Dallas — The kid is all right for the Dallas Stars.

Radek Faksa, the rookie center who split his season between the AHL and the NHL, scored the winning goal off a rebound with 4 minutes 44 seconds to play and had an assist on the Stars’ other goal in a 2-1 victory over the St. Louis Blues on Friday night in Game 1 of the Western Conference second-round series.

“He brings enthusiasm, a big smile on his face, the willingness to do whatever it takes to win right now,” coach Lindy Ruff said about the 22-year-old Faksa. “He’s having a great time. He’s a kid that. He’s enjoying every minute he plays, and you can see it in his game. His play has been infectious for our team.”

Like Antoine Roussel did on his second-period goal when Faksa had an assist, Faksa started the rush that led to his tiebreaking goal.

After Faksa pushed the puck up the ice, Alex Goligoski made a pass to Ales Hemsky for the initial shot stopped but not secured by Brian Elliott. Faksa, who lives with the family of fellow Czech and 10-year older Hemsky, was there to score his second goal of the playoffs.

“I’m very excited after every goal, maybe too excited,” said Faksa, who dropped to a knee and put his hand to his ear after scoring. “Just a big excitement for me. It just feels great.”

The Blues had gotten even at 1 when defenseman Kevin Shattenkirk scored on a shot from the top of the left circle after Dallas failed to clear the puck out of the zone with 8:28 left in the game.

St. Louis was coming off a seven-game opening series against defending Stanley Cup champion Chicago Blackhawks, and maybe there was some hangover from that series that ended Monday.

“Well, I think what you’re hoping for, is that is it,” Blues coach Ken Hitchcock said. “But we can’t have that excuse in Game 2, we need to take a game in this building.”

Game 2 is Sunday in the best-of-seven series matching the Western Conference’s top two teams from the regular season.

Hitchcock was coach of the Stars when they won their only Stanley Cup in 1999, ending on a disputed clinching goal in triple overtime of Game 6 against the Buffalo Sabres and coach Lindy Ruff, now in his third season with the Stars. The coaches also went head-to-head in the 2006 playoffs, when the Sabres beat Hitchcock’s Philadelphia Flyers.

The two have become good friends since being assistant coaches as Team Canada won gold medals in the last two Winter Olympics.

Kari Lehtonen stopped 31 shots, withstanding a final surge when the Blues pulled Elliott out of the net and had an extra skater the final 1:40.

Elliott, who has played all eight playoffs games for the Blues, had 40 saves.

“Just a very fast game, they’re very fast through the neutral zone, their transition game is a little faster paced than Chicago,” Shattenkirk said. “They like to get that puck up and going to the net as soon as possible. It’s not like they have any secret formula, they just throw a lot of pucks at the net and try to crash there and get second and third opportunities.”

Dallas took its initial lead midway through the second period when Roussel started a rush down the right side and then had a cross-ice pass John Klingberg before Faksa’s wrist shot from the left slot. Roussel was there to knock in the rebound.

When someone remarked to Jason Spezza that they didn’t’ know much about Faksa, the veteran center responded, “Well, you’re going to learn. He’s a heck of a player. Hockey I.Q. He’s always in the right spot.”

(At) San Jose 5, Nashville 2: Tomas Hertl, Joel Ward and Logan Couture scored three unanswered goals in the third period for the Sharks, who took a 1-0 lead in the second-round series. Tommy Wingels and Couture added empty-net goals in the final 1:31 to seal it.

Mike Fisher scored a power-play goal in the second period and Ryan Johansen had a goal in the final two minutes for the Predators.

Capitals forward fined

The NHL fined Capitals forward Tom Wilson $2,404 for his knee-on-knee hit on Penguins forward Conor Sheary.

Wilson sent Sheary to the ice with his left knee 4 minutes into the third period of the Capitals 4-3 overtime victory in Game 1 on Thursday night.

Sheary hobbled to the nearby bench in pain and missed a few shifts, and Wilson was not penalized.