Archive for June, 2009
Stanley Cup – Penguins Celebrate 2-1 Victory Over Red Wings
by BetIAS on Jun.15, 2009, under Don't Miss!
By: Cindy Ferguson
The tables were turned in this year’s Stanley Cup Finals, as Pittsburgh Penguins captain Sidney Crosby hoisted the Stanley Cup onto his young shoulders. The Penguins managed a 2-1 victory in Game 7 of their series against the Detroit Red Wings, a win that brought them the Stanley Cup for the first time in over 15 years.
Even though the heavily-favored Red Wings had a managed a lead twice in the series – first at 2-0, then at 3-2 – the Penguins always managed to even the score. Each team had won three games at home, and the two entered into a Game 7 winner-take-all in Detroit.
The Penguins’ Maxime Talbot was able to score two goals for his team in the second and the Wings were unable to tie the score – although not for lack of trying. In fact, Detroit outshot Pittsburgh overall, 23-17.
“It’s hard, you know,” 39-year-old Wings captain Niklaus Lidstrom explained. “You’re so close to a Stanley Cup. You’re fighting hard the whole season to put yourself in that situation, so it’s hard losing the way we did tonight.”
The game began with a scoreless first period, although the Penguins made 11 shots on goal to the Wings’ 6. At the start of the second, Pittsburgh’s Evgeni Malkin pressured Wings defenseman Brad
Stuart into slapping a bad pass. Talbot was able to intercept, firing the puck past Detroit netminder Chris Osgood at just over 1 minute.
The assist was Malkin’s third in the series. Game 7 was the second consecutive game in which neither Crosby nor Malkin scored for the Penguins, although Malkin, who was awarded the Conn Smythe Trophy for post season MVP, led NHL scorers in both the regular season and in the playoffs.
Nine minutes later, Talbot made a wrist shot from the left circle, sliding under the crossbar to push the Penguins’ lead to two at 10:07.
Crosby, who played just one shift in the second before leaving the ice due to a knee injury, lauded his teammate. “Max came up with some big goals there,” the captain said. “We don’t get to this point without everyone contributing. I knew the guys were going to find a way to pull it off.”
Pittsburgh’s Bill Guerin stated more simply, “Thank God for Max Talbot.”
And Marc-Andre Fleury. Pittsburgh’s on-again, off-again goaltender wiped away bad memories of Game 5’s 5-0 shutout loss to the Wings and played a remarkable Game 7. He made 23 saves of 24 shots, stopping Detroit’s 3rd period flurry of shots –the Wings outshot the Penguins 6-1 – including a final denial of four-time champion Lidstrom with just one second left on the clock.
Jonathon Ericsson had managed to cut the Wings’ deficit to one with 6:07 left in the game. Niklas Kronwall came close to tying the game with 2:14 left, but he slapped the crossbar. Then came Lidstrom, who was officially marked as 59 feet away but who was in fact much closer. Lidstrom targeted the empty side of the net.
Fleury, however, threw himself bodily across the ice, stopping the puck with his chest.
“I knew there wasn’t much time left,” the now-legendary netminder explained. “I just decided to get my body out there and it hit me in the ribs.”
It was an impossible save that gave the Penguins the Cup.
The victory paralleled the two-year duel between the New York Islanders and the Edmonton Oilers. The Oilers, a young upstart team, were defeated by the veteran New York Islanders in the final round of the Stanley Cup playoffs; the next year, the Oilers returned, defeating their erstwhile conquerors, and claimed the Stanley Cup. Over twenty years later, the Oilers find a counterpart in the Penguins, as the Islanders do with the Red Wings.
However, unlike the Islanders, the Red Wings are not down and out for the count. Many of their key players will remain for the next several years, although next year is Lidstrom’s last. The Wings anticipate a strong season next year.
“I’d rather be out there [celebrating victory on the ice],” Wings player Henrik Zetterberg admitted. “But we’ll learn from this, too. It’s going to make us stronger. We have a great group of guys in here.”
Oh yes, the Red Wings will be back. But for now, the Penguins can relish their victory, enjoying the fame that comes with being the best team in the NHL.
Stanley Cup Playoffs – An Unpredictable Game 7
by BetIAS on Jun.12, 2009, under Sports News
By: Cindy Ferguson
Who do they think they are? The Pittsburgh Penguins are, to the surprise of most spectators and commentators, pushing and shoving the Detroit Red Wings on the road to the Stanley Cup. The Wings, last year’s Stanley Cup champions and generally the favored pick for this year’s silver trophy, are now approaching a Game 7 with a team many had expected to be eliminated in Game 6.
After an obscenely embarrassing 5-0 Game 5 shutout, the Pittsburgh Penguins resurged in Game 6 and scrambled for a rough and dirty victory. But, to use an oft-overused albeit easily understood tautology, a win is a win. And the Detroit Red Wings no longer appear to be simply biding their time for the Stanley Cup.
The Penguins were reinvigorated at the Mellon Arena, their home stadium. After a scoreless first period, Pittsburgh’s Jordan Staal gave the Penguins a lead in the first minute of the second. Six minutes into the third, Tyler Kennedy gave the Penguins their second point.
Kris Draper began to even the score, giving Detroit its only point in the game and making his first goal in the playoffs. His teammates struggled to close the game with another point, and the third period was marked by a flurry on the ice.
But the combined (and much improved) effort of Pittsburgh goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury and Rob Scuderi maintained the Penguins’ lead. Scuderi threw himself on the ice to stop a low slot shot from Johan Franzen, blocking the puck first with his leg pad then with his boot.
The Penguins managed a 2-1 victory without either of their luminaries, Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin, scoring a point for the second consecutive game. Pittsburgh has been reproved for lacking depth, but Game 6 might force us to give more credence to the rest of its linemen.
Game 6 evened out the series, with each team winning all its home games. Now they will face each other one last time in a very unpredictable winner-take-all game.
The Red Wings have a one advantage that, thus far, seems to have been key in this playoff series: home-ice advantage. The final game will be in the Wings’ home territory, a benefit that may extend beyond the rah-rahs of a supportive audience.
“I think there’s a few shifts every period where the road team has to get that change and they can’t maybe sustain that pressure on the other team like they’re able to at home,” Detroit blueliner Brian Rafalski explained. “The road team has to try and get their players out, get more of a matchup and it creates a little bit of offense for that team.”
Beyond that, the Red Wings have a clear advantage in experience; Detroit is a dynastic club filled with veteran players. They also have a depth that the Penguins seem to be lacking; with key players missing from much of the playoff season due to injury, the Wings have still been able to surge to the top. And if star winger Marian Hossa – who must be overwhelmed by the irony of facing a team he thought unlikely to win the Stanley Cup – is able to get his game back and join teammates Henrik Zetterberg and Pavel Datsyuk, the Penguins will be facing two deadly Wings lines. Not to mention, of course, netminder Chris Osgood, who has put on an extraordinary if understated performance throughout the playoffs.
The Penguins, however, are not entering the final game without an arsenal of their own. They have an advantage in special teams that thus far hasn’t played out in the series, but may become important in Game 7. The Penguins are 4-for-13 in power plays, while the Wings are 4-for-21. It would be a huge boon if Pittsburgh’s Sergei Gonchar can generate a power play in Game 7.
Nor is Pittsburgh lacking in star-power. Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin bring some serious talent to the team. Granted, they have been mired in a slump in which neither scored in the past two games, but if they start generating points, the Wings might find themselves in trouble.
Most importantly, the Penguins need a strong performance from goaltender Fleury, who struggled in three of the games this series. He is capable of giving a sharp performance, and if he manages one in Game 7, the Penguins’ chances of bringing home the cup are significantly improved.
In short: Detroit appears to be a more solid team, but if the Penguins can bring all their players through – if – they have a real shot at the Cup.


