TAMPA, Fla — Andrei Vasilevskiy made 29 saves for his 36th career shutout to help the Tampa Bay Lightning beat the New Jersey Devils 4-0 on Saturday night.
Vasilevskiy, who became the fastest goaltender in the NHL to reach 300 wins when he beat Winnipeg 4-1 on Thursday night, had his second shutout of the season. He was at his best midway through the second period, robbing Jesper Bratt and Nico Hischier after each was left alone in front of the net.
Nick Paul put Tampa Bay ahead at 14:27 of the opening period when his long wrist shot went through a screen and past Jacob Markstrom. Darren Raddysh scored 39 seconds into the third period to double the lead, Victor Hedman added a power-play goal at 7:40 and Anthony Cirelli was credited with an empty-net goal with 12 seconds left when Devils defenseman Luke Hughes threw his stick to keep the puck out of the net.
Tampa Bay has won five in a row against New Jersey, including both games this season, and is 9-1-0 in its past 10 meetings with the Devils.
Markstrom finished with 22 saves for New Jersey, which came into the game off back-to-back road wins against the Florida Panthers.
Takeaways
Devils: New Jersey, which entered the game second in the NHL with 72 goals, was shut out for the third time this month.
Lightning: Tampa Bay scored first for the ninth consecutive game. They are 5-3-1 during that span.
Key moment
Cirelli won a faceoff cleanly to set up Raddysh’s third-period goal and give the Lightning some breathing room.
Key stat
Vasilevskiy improved to 9-5-0 in his career against New Jersey, but it was the first time he’s shut out the Devils.
Up next
The Devils host Carolina on Thursday night. The Lightning visits Pittsburgh on Tuesday night.
“You know, it might just be time we take a look if HOAs are really even necessary.
Maybe we should just do away with homeowner associations as a whole.”
South Florida lawmaker Rep. Juan Carlos Porras (R-Miami) says it may be time to do away with homeowners associations altogether, as more Floridians speak out about rising fees, costly lawsuits, and even arrests tied to HOA disputes. He said this week that he is considering filing legislation in the next session that would abolish HOAs statewide.