Games

Recap
 
Wolski, Stastny give Avalanche another tight win
COLORADO 3, MINNESOTA 2
 

ST. PAUL, Minnesota (Ticker) -- After an offensive outburst in
Game Four, the Colorado Avalanche and Minnesota Wild got back to
the norm Thursday.

Wojtek Wolski and Paul Stastny scored goals 79 seconds apart
early in the third period, helping the Avalanche post a 3-2
victory over the Wild in Game Five and take a three-games-to-two
lead in their Western Conference quarterfinal series.

Andrew Brunette also scored while Milan Hejduk and Peter
Forsberg each recorded two assists for Colorado, which can close
out the series at home on Saturday.

Jose Theodore made 38 saves for the Avalanche, who were outshot,
40-17.

"He saved us today," Forsberg said. "In the second period,
Minnesota was all over us. Theo kept us in. He played
outstanding today. He got us the win. It's great to have a
goalie like that and steal a win on the road."

"We were losing every battle - on the wall, in front of the
net," Colorado defenseman Jordan Leopold added. "Theo stood on
his head and got us a win."

Avalanche coach Joel Quenneville agreed with his players.

"It was all Jose," he said. "He was the only reason we had a
chance going into the third period. Jose's the reason. He made
a couple of huge saves out of nowhere."

Theodore said there were no secrets to his success thus far.

"I've felt the same way pretty much every game," he said.
"Every game, I try to stay focused, try to freeze the puck and
keep it simple."

Pierre-Marc Bouchard and Brian Rolston tallied for Minnesota,
which saw its all-time home playoff record fall to 4-9.

"We deserved to win the game," Wild right wing Marian Gaborik
said. "The chances were there, but they didn't go in."

"It's our last life," Rolston said of Game Six. "We'll come out
with the same kind of effort as we did tonight."

Colorado lost two of the first three games of the series in
overtime by a score of 3-2, but captured Game Two in the extra
session by an identical margin. The Avalanche erupted
offensively in Game Four, posting a 5-1 victory, but things once
again were tight on Thursday.

A member of the Wild when they rallied from a three-games-to-one
deficit to defeat the Avalanche in the 2003 conference
quarterfinals, Brunette gave Colorado the lead midway through
the first period with his third goal of the series.

During a power play, Hejduk unleashed a shot from the left
faceoff circle that hit a defender in front. The puck caromed
to the left side of the doorstep, where Brunette gathered it and
fired it past goaltender Niklas Backstrom with 7:36 to go in
the first.

"They are great with the puck," Wild defenseman Kim Johnsson
said. "They have some skilled guys. If you give them time,
it's going to be trouble."

Bouchard answered with a man-advantage tally of his own late in
the period to forge a tie. Defenseman Brent Burns made a
cross-slot pass to Bouchard, who beat Theodore from the right
circle with 40 seconds remaining.

The goal was the first of the series scored in the first 40
minutes by Minnesota. Of the Wild's nine goals over the first
three games, seven were tallied in the third period and the
other two in overtime.

Following a scoreless middle period, Wolski converted a
power-play chance just over five minutes into the third to put
Colorado ahead. From along the left wing boards, blue-liner
John-Michael Liles dished to Wolski, whose one-timer from the
top of the right circle beat Backstrom at 5:06 for a 2-1 edge.

"Timely power-play goal for us," Quenneville said. "Great shot,
a one-timer. Wolski got a lot of wood on that one. It was
very timely."

"We'd been all over those guys and they got that one lucky
break," Minnesota's Pavol Demitra said. "All of a sudden, it
was 2-1."

Shortly thereafter, Stastny lifted a backhander over the Finnish
goalie from the doorstep to give the Avalanche a two-goal
bulge.

"It was nice to see Paul score," Quenneville said. "He'll
probably be a little more patient in the scoring area now as we
go along. It was a great play. Paul is one of those players
that feeds off of production and is a big part of our offense."

Stastny's first career playoff goal proved crucial as Rolston
tallied with three seconds to go in the third, pulling Minnesota
within one. But there was not enough time for the Wild to
create a chance for the equalizer as the Avalanche moved within
one win of advancing to the conference semifinals.

"We played our best period of the series (in the third),"
Theodore said. "Solid defensively and created two goals."

Once again, Gaborik was kept off the scoresheet for the Wild.
The All-Star Slovakian has yet to record a point in the series.

"When you are a 40-goal scorer in the regular season, you start
to feel it a little when you go without scoring," Wild coach
Jacques Lemaire said. "You start to grip the stick a little
harder, you start to play a little tighter."

Minnesota's 40 shots tied the franchise playoff record. The 17
shots recorded in the first period set a new team mark,
eclipsing the previous one of 16 set in Game Three of the 2003
conference finals against Anaheim, also in the opening session.

 
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