Games

Recap
 
Gaborik leads Wild to first division title
MINNESOTA 3, CALGARY 1
 

ST. PAUL, Minnesota (Ticker) -- Captain Marian Gaborik took it
upon himself to make the Minnesota Wild's last regular-season
home game a special one.

Gaborik scored a pair of goals in the third period Thursday to
snap a tie and lead the Wild to a 3-1 victory over the Calgary
Flames and the first division title in franchise history.

Todd Fedoruk also tallied and Pavol Demitra added two assists
for the Wild (44-28-9), who clinched the Northwest Division
crown for the first time since entering the NHL in 2000-01.

"It's a great accomplishment to have the banner up there,"
Gaborik said, referring to the rafters of the Xcel Energy
Center. "We have the toughest division in the league. It's
always been battles against Calgary, Edmonton, Vancouver. We
came up big in this game."

"It's a big thing for this team," Wild goaltender Niklas
Backstrom said. "It's a young team. But we can't be too
satisfied with this. The big games are still ahead."

Daymond Langkow scored for Calgary (41-30-10), which lost for
the third time in four games. However, the Flames were
guaranteed a playoff spot later Thursday, when the Vancouver
Canucks (39-32-10) dropped a 2-1 decision to the Edmonton
Oilers.

Not knowing what was in store later in the evening, Calgary was
preparing for a showdown for a postseason berth with Vancouver
on Saturday.

"We're prepared to have to win to get in," Flames captain Jarome
Iginla said. "It's like a Game Seven. We've been playing what
has felt like Game Sevens the last few nights."

"We needed to take care of business earlier than we did, and now
it's going to come down to Saturday," Langkow added. "We'll
have to play the most desperate game of our season."

The only thing Calgary will be playing for Saturday is playoff
positioning, as it currently is one point behind sixth-place
Colorado (43-31-7) and one ahead of eighth-place Nashville
(41-31-9).

Entering their regular-season home finale with a 1-5-1 record
against the Flames this season, the Wild fell behind early as
Langkow gathered a loose puck on the doorstep during a power
play and backhanded it past Backstrom at 2:41 of the first
period.

But that was all Backstrom would give up, as the Finn made 20 of
his 26 saves over the final two periods.

"It's been for two or three months where every two points mean a
lot," Backstrom said. "Everything has been so tight. You
can't have a bad night. That's why it's a fun sport. Every
save, every blocked shot counts for something."

Known more for his rugged style, Fedoruk cashed in on a man
advantage just over three minutes after Langkow's goal to even
the contest.

From behind the net on the right side, Demitra dished to
Fedoruk, who beat netminder Miikka Kiprusoff from the doorstep
at 5:54 for his sixth goal of the season.

Following a scoreless middle period, Gaborik took control in the
third.

"We raised our game in the second period, but they picked it up
again in the third," Iginla said.

After tipping a pass from Demitra past Adrian Aucoin in the
neutral zone, Gaborik skated around the defenseman and beat
Kiprusoff to the glove side from the left faceoff circle 71
seconds into the period for a 2-1 edge.

"Demitra made a nice play," Gaborik said. "I just tried to flip
it over the defenseman and get a quick shot."

Exactly 12 minutes later, the Slovakian fired a wrist shot from
the left circle past Kiprusoff, who was screened by Fedoruk, for
a power-play goal and a 3-1 bulge. It was the 42nd of the
season for Gaborik and completed his second consecutive two-goal
effort.

"Gaborik is learning," Wild coach Jacques Lemaire said. "If we
want to do well in the playoffs, he's the guy that has got to
play. He's the guy that has to be at his maximum."

"He's been solid all year," Minnesota's Mikko Koivu added. "Now
that the playoffs are starting, we are really going to need
him."

The two tallies also secured the 500th career win for Lemaire,
who has been behind Minnesota's bench since the team's
inception.

"That's 500," Lemaire said. "Now I'm looking for 501."

"We're happy for him to get that 500th win when we clinched the
division," Gaborik said. "That has to be special for him."

Kiprusoff finished with 23 saves for the Flames, who have lost
four of their last six games.


 
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