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Thrashers snap 9-game skid
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New York Rangers goalie Chad Johnson hits Atlanta Thrashers’ Todd White with his stick in the first period Thursday in Atlanta. - photo by The Associated Press

ATLANTA — The Atlanta Thrashers and 36-year-old goalie Johan Hedberg needed a shootout to outlast the New York Rangers and youngster Chad Johnson.

Bryan Little scored in the fifth round of the shootout and help the Thrashers snap a nine-game losing streak, 2-1 over the Rangers on Thursday night.

The Thrashers earned their first win since Dec. 17 in their return from an 0-5-2 road trip.

"What I did today was put my red slippers on and click my heels three times and say, 'There's no place like home,"' Thrashers coach John Anderson said.

The Thrashers avoided their first 10-game skid since their inaugural season 10 years ago.

"Hopefully, this can turn things around for us and get us back on the winning side of things," Little said.

The 23-year-old Johnson, making his first NHL start, almost spoiled the homecoming. He shut out the Thrashers through two periods. Johnson, subbing for workhorse starter Henrik Lundqvist, stopped 31 shots. He allowed Jim Slater's third-period goal that forced overtime.

"It's disappointing not getting the two points," said Johnson, who added that he played a solid game. "The first five minutes I was a little nervous, but I settled down."

Rangers coach John Tortorella didn't notice any jitters from the bench.

"He was solid," Tortorella said. "He made some great saves without any type of panic in his game. He was there. The puck hit him and he looked very confident. That's a very good sign for a guy starting his first game."

Johnson also gave up a goal to Slava Kozlov in the shootout.

Enver Lisin gave the Rangers a 1-0 lead in the second period.

Hedberg had 29 saves and gave up only Marian Gaborik's goal in the extended shootout.

"I tried to make them make the first move," said Hedberg, of New York's overtime shooters. "I was a little lucky."

Hedberg turned aside Eric Christensen, Ryan Callahan and Ales Kotalik before rookie defenseman Michael Del Zotto shot wide to end the shootout.

"We deserved this win," Hedberg said. "We have been working for it for a long time now."

Johnson stopped 17 of 20 shots in his NHL debut in relief of Lundqvist against Philadelphia on Dec. 30. The start against Atlanta was his second appearance.

Johnson earned an assist on Lisin's goal.

"I barely touched it," Johnson said.

The Thrashers improved to 3-0 against the Rangers this season and have won five straight in the series.

Lundqvist made his 17th straight start on Wednesday at home, when he beat the Dallas Stars 5-2. New York has recorded a point in 10 of 11 games (7-1-3).

"With the travel (Wednesday) night and the back-to-back games, I thought it was a hard-fought point," Tortorella said.

The Thrashers have played 19 games since their last win in regulation, a victory over Florida on Nov. 30.

New York's Sean Avery didn't take long to find the penalty box. Avery and Atlanta's Tobias Enstrom drew minors for roughing only 1:57 into the game.

Avery tied a career high with four points on Wednesday in his first game against the Stars, who dumped him last season.

NOTES: The Thrashers lost 10 straight from Feb. 25-March 16, 2000. ... Thrashers G Kari Lehtonen, recovering from two back operations, has been pain-free while beginning individual workouts on the ice, according to general manager Don Waddell. Waddell said a rehab stint with AHL Chicago hasn't been ruled out when Lehtonen is ready for competition, perhaps in a few weeks. ... The Thrashers played their first home game since Dec. 21. ... Lundqvist has allowed two goals or fewer in 13 of his past 16 games.

Community Events
Thrashers headed to Canada after team's sale
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WINNIPEG, Manitoba — The wait is over for Winnipeg hockey fans.

For Atlanta, it means saying goodbye to another NHL team.

True North Sports and Entertainment scheduled a news conference Tuesday at Winnipeg's MTS Centre to make "a significant community announcement."

True North has been in negotiations with the owners of the Atlanta Thrashers to buy the NHL team and move it to Winnipeg. The deal is reportedly worth $170 million, which includes a $60 million relocation fee that would be split by the rest of the league.

Winnipeg has been without NHL hockey since the Jets moved to Phoenix in 1996. The Thrashers entered the league three years later as an expansion franchise, but ownership problems, a losing team and dwindling attendance doomed the club. The team ranked 28th out of 30 teams this year with an average attendance of less than 14,000.

Assuming the deal goes through - it still must be approved by the other owners - Atlanta would become the first city in the NHL's modern era to lose two teams.
The Flames moved to Calgary in 1980 after eight seasons in Atlanta.

True North was making its announcement one day before the start of the Stanley Cup final, which begins Wednesday in Vancouver between the Canucks and the Boston Bruins.
While there was no prohibition on announcing major news during that series, the league preferred to get the Thrashers' sale off its plate before opening its signature event.

For weeks, the two sides had been working through complex legal details on the sale and relocation of the team, while leaving open the possibility that a local buyer would emerge late in the process. No one ever came forward with a serious offer, according to the Thrashers' ownership group, Atlanta Spirit, and the city's mayor, Kasim Reed.

"It is going to hurt the city but we will withstand it just fine and we will get through it," Reed said.

NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman said on his weekly radio show that the inability to find an owner who wanted to keep the team in Atlanta was a barrier the league couldn't overcome.

"It would be one of those head scratchers where you say, 'Look at all of this great corporate opportunity, look at all of this grass roots hockey, why doesn't somebody want to own a team here?'" Bettman said. "And that would be a difficult, but unfortunate, situation to be dealing with if it has reached, or does reach, that point."

Bettman was asked if Atlanta had hopes of landing another NHL team if it lost its second franchise.

"The prospect of leaving Atlanta isn't something that I'm particularly fond of," he said. "So I can't even contemplate the notion of what would happen after that in terms of coming back. We respect the importance of Atlanta as a city. It's a big market, but this is a franchise that's got a problem in that market."

Team president Don Waddell says there remains some hope for a late development until a sale is made official and approved by the NHL board of governors, which is scheduled to meet June 21 in New York. But considering Atlanta Spirit, which also owns the NBA's Atlanta Hawks and the operating rights to Philips Arena, has been trying for years to sell the hockey team, that seems highly unlikely.

Also, any potential owner would have to agree to become a tenant at Philips Arena, a major stumbling block because it would cut into potential revenue from sources such as concessions, parking, luxury suites and other events.

"Ownership still is committed to selling at a greatly reduced price to anyone committed to Atlanta," Waddell said.