Stars send reeling Sharks to 10th straight loss

ByABC News
January 13, 2015, 10:29 PM

— -- DALLAS (AP) -- The slumping San Jose Sharks figured changes were coming -- and they were right. Before the opening faceoff against Dallas on Wednesday night, the Sharks learned they had acquired three-time All-Star center Joe Thornton from the Boston Bruins in a four-player trade. Thornton can't arrive soon enough for the Sharks, who lost their 10th game in a row, 4-1 to the Stars. Antti Miettinen scored on a penalty shot and Sergei Zubov added a power-play goal for Dallas, 10-2 in its last 12 games. But the biggest news of the night was San Jose's acquisition of Thornton for forwards Marco Sturm and Wayne Primeau and defenseman Brad Stuart. "He's one of the top centermen-forwards in the league," Sharks defenseman Kyle McLaren said of Thornton. "This gives us more offense to carry the load. We're very excited to have him but at the same time we should be mad at ourselves." Thornton becomes a teammate of his cousin, San Jose left winger Scott Thornton. While Scott Thornton will welcome his cousin, he's also angry at himself and his team for the bad streak that caused management to pull off a trade that's been in the works for weeks. "There's not one guy to blame," Scott Thornton said. "We should all feel guilty about this." Jaroslav Svoboda and Brenden Morrow also scored for Dallas, and Marty Turco had 17 saves. The Stars suspected before the game that a San Jose deal might be coming, and Dallas coach Dave Tippett didn't know how the Sharks would react. "We were really concerned about that game because of the situation that San Jose was in," Tippett said. "You never know how it's going to go. You never know how it's going to affect their team. It could give them a big boost or it could get them all thinking. A good start was key for us." Evgeni Nabokov, winless in his last 11 starts, stopped 23 shots for the Sharks. The last time the Sharks were in Dallas was Oct. 26, and they came away with a 5-4 overtime victory that triggered a season-best five-game winning streak. San Jose is 0-7-3 since that run, and Sharks management decided to shake up the roster with the blockbuster deal for Joe Thornton, the Bruins' captain and the first overall pick of the 1997 draft. Miettinen gave Dallas a 1-0 lead at 5:10 of the opening period when he beat Nabokov thorough the pads with a forehand move he's been working on in practice. Miettinen was awarded the penalty shot after he skated into the San Jose zone a stride ahead of Nils Ekman, who pulled Miettinen down. "That's pretty much what I tried to do," Miettinen said. "I tried that same move in preseason four times and it didn't work. ... That's what I've been doing in practice on penalty-shot drills, just try to fake glove [side] and shoot five-hole." Dallas made it 2-0 at 17:43 of the opening period on Svoboda's first goal of the season. San Jose took advantage of a mistake by Turco at 18:02 of the first period to cut the deficit to 2-1. Turco was trying to handle the puck behind his net, but the puck took a crazy hop off the end boards and onto the stick of Alyn McCauley, who shot into an open net. Zubov's power-play tally at 3:55 of the third period and Morrow's goal at 10:58 extended Dallas' lead to 4-1. "Our power play got us a huge goal," Tippett said. "It was a good team game."