Jets 3, Blue Jackets 2

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- A three-goal first period destroyed the home debut of Blue Jackets coach John Tortorella and sent the Winnipeg Jets to a 3-2 win in Nationwide Arena.

Right winger Blake Wheeler and center Bryan Little each had a goal and an assist for the Jets, while center Andrew Copp scored the first goal of his NHL career.

Jets goaltender Ondrej Pavelec had an easy night, needing only 19 saves, 10 in the second period, for the victory.

The Blue Jackets, off to the worst start in franchise history at 2-10-0, got a first-period goal from left wing Brandon Saad and a late third-period goal from left wing Scott Hartnell.

Hartnell's goal came with an extra attacker on the ice with only 1:14 to play, but the Blue Jackets couldn’t force a tie.

Goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky was pulled during the first intermission after allowing three goals on 11 shots on goal in the first period.

He was replaced by Curtis McElhinney for the final two periods. McElhinney stopped all 16 shots he faced.

The Jets took a 1-0 lead only 5:52 into the game, when Little skated wide of Blue Jackets defenseman Ryan Murray and beat Bobrovsky with a slap shot from the right circle.

The lead grew to 2-0 less than a minute later.

Copp, playing in his 12th career NHL game, scored just moments after a Jets faceoff win. Defenseman Tyler Myers sent the puck in off the end boards and Copp lifted it over Bobrovsky before he could cover.

The Blue Jackets pulled to 2-1 at 10:32, when Saad redirected a centering feed from center Brandon Dubinsky.

But the Jets regained a two-goal advantage before the period was over, however.

At 16:59, the Jets converted a power-play goal when Little set up Wheeler for his sixth goal of the season.

Wheeler's shot from the left circle sailed between Bobrovsky's glove and his left pad, scoring inside the far corner.

That spelled the end for Bobrovsky, who won the NHL's Vezina Trophy (best goaltender) in 2013 but has struggled with inconsistency ever since.

The Blue Jackets were granted a four-minute power play midway through the third when Jets defenseman Mark Stuart was whistled for high-sticking Saad.

But the Jackets generated only one shot on goal during the four minutes.

The push came in the closing seconds with McElhinney pulled for an extra skater.

The Jets improved to 4-1 on the road.

The Blue Jackets, who lost 3-1 in Washington on Friday, had hoped to give Tortorella a proper welcome in Nationwide Arena.

He joined the Blue Jackets after Todd Richards was fired on Oct. 21 following an 0-7-0 start.

The Blue Jackets are 2-3-0 under Tortorella.

NOTES: Veteran D Fedor Tyutin was a healthy scratch for a second straight game, a surprising move by Blue Jackets coach John Tortorella on two levels. Tyutin, 31, is the Blue Jackets' highest-paid defenseman, making $5 million this season. Also, before Friday's game in Washington, he hadn't been scratched since Dec. 6, 2010. ... Giving up the first goal is usually a kiss of death in the NHL. But heading into last night's game, Winnipeg had fallen behind 1-0 in eight of 10 games. The Jets were 5-2-1 in those games. ... Blue Jackets RW Jared Boll, a healthy scratch in the last seven games, went back into the lineup, making his first appearance since Tortorella was hired.
Season Series
ColumbusStatsWinnipeg
0-2-0Vs2-0-0
6Goals9
12.0Shot %14.5
11.1Power Play %33.3
50.4Faceoff %49.6