Red Wings 2, Sharks 0
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) -Chris Chelios and
Nicklas Lidstrom spent nearly all of Game 6 alternating turns on the
ice, desperately grinding on their aging legs to keep the Detroit
Red Wings ahead.
When the two brilliant defensemen finally
got out of the Shark Tank with their whooping, hollering teammates,
those old rearguards had new life - and the Detroit Red Wings had
shed their title as the Western Conference's biggest playoff
underachievers of recent years.
They might have even found a team in teal
to take their place.
Mikael Samuelsson scored two first-period
goals, Dominik Hasek posted his 13th career playoff shutout and the
Red Wings rolled into the conference finals with three straight
victories in their second-round series, beating the deflated San
Jose Sharks 2-0 Monday night.
``I thought (San Jose) just played the
most physical game of the entire series,'' Lidstrom said after
playing 29 minutes to Chelios' 26-plus. ``You could tell that they
were a desperate team. They were getting the puck in on us and
putting a good forecheck on us the entire night.''
But it didn't matter - not with the
defense in front of Hasek, who made 28 saves in his first shutout of
the spring. The top-seeded Red Wings are headed to the conference
finals for the first time since winning the Stanley Cup in 2002.
The Red Wings open the next round Friday
at home against the Anaheim Ducks.
Detroit had won just one playoff series in
the previous three seasons despite winning at least 48 games in
each, earning two Presidents' Trophies as the NHL's best
regular-season team. But the Red Wings, who finished second overall
this season, finally parlayed their veteran experience into playoff
success against a young opponent that took another postseason of
lumps.
Coach Mike Babcock recounted the list of
disrespectful perceptions that fueled Detroit's rise this
spring.
``You don't get picked to be very good,
and then you're pretty good through the regular season, and then
someone says you're not a playoff team,'' Babcock said. ``We played
two big, strong teams and have done well. And now we're going to get
another one.''
Evgeni Nabokov stopped 20 shots for the
Sharks, but the best regular season in franchise history ended in
another mystifying collapse after San Jose controlled most of the
series' first three games.
The Sharks were up 2-1 in the series and
held a one-goal lead in the final minute of Game 4. But they yielded
a tying goal in the final minute of regulation, followed by a
heartbreaking overtime score - and the next two games weren't close,
with Joe Thornton and captain Patrick Marleau failing to spark their
club.
``We're going to look back at this series,
and we're going to kick ourselves probably until training camp next
season,'' said Thornton, held scoreless in the last two games after
scoring 11 points in the Sharks' first nine postseason contests.
Chelios and his 45-year-old legs had
assists on both of Detroit's goals, and fellow defenseman Brett
Lebda returned to the Red Wings' lineup after a six-game absence
with an ankle injury - just in time to replace Mathieu Schneider,
who's out for the postseason with a broken left wrist.
``We feel pretty good about ourselves,''
Chelios said. ``I just hope we can keep our momentum going and our
success going. We know we're playing another great team.''
Such momentum shifts are no surprise to
San Jose's fans, who have watched their club blow the 2004 Western
Conference finals against Calgary and last season's second-round
series against Edmonton in similar fashion.
The Sharks blew a lead in each of their
first three losses to Detroit, but the Red Wings made certain of the
clincher early - and a litany of mistakes and missed chances kept
San Jose from coming back.
``Our start was unbelievable,'' Sharks
coach Ron Wilson said. ``We were physical. We had them hemmed in. We
made two mistakes, and they scored two goals, and that was pretty
much it. They sat back, and Hasek didn't make a mistake.''
The Red Wings scored first on a breakaway
set up by a beautiful lead pass by Johan Franzen. He positioned the
puck perfectly for Samuelsson, who rolled past stumbling defenseman
Matt Carle and dangled until Nabokov went down for an easy
score.
A few moments later during a Detroit power
play, Hasek misplayed a puck straight to Mike Grier in an error
reminiscent of Nabokov's turnover to Pavel Datsyuk in Game 4. But
Grier circled the empty Red Wings net and then completely missed it,
with his off-target shot hitting a diving Lidstrom.
Samuelsson got his second goal 8 seconds
before the first-period buzzer, thanks to another defensive blunder.
Samuelsson kept the puck on a 2-on-1 break and beat Nabokov cleanly
on the glove side.
Notes: Grier's clunker echoed Teemu
Selanne's famed mistake in Game 7 of the Sharks' 2002 second-round
series with Colorado, when he missed an open net in a 1-0 loss. ...
If the conference finals go seven games, Chelios (240) could tie
Patrick Roy (247) for the most postseason appearances in NHL
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