Games

Recap
 
Ducks top Stars, stave off elimination
ANAHEIM 5, DALLAS 2
 

ANAHEIM, California (Ticker) -- The Anaheim Ducks are not yet
ready to relinquish their title as defending Stanley Cup
champions.

Ryan Getzlaf, Teemu Selanne and defenseman Sean O'Donnell each
had a goal and an assist as the Ducks avoided elimination Friday
with a 5-2 victory over the Dallas Stars in Game Five of their
Western Conference quarterfinal series.

Corey Perry and Todd Marchant also scored for the Ducks, who
still trail in the series, three games to two.

Captain Chris Pronger and Chris Kunitz each recorded a pair of
assists and Jean-Sebastien Giguere made 40 saves for Anaheim,
which went 2-for-3 on the power play.

"I felt really good tonight," Giguere said. "My job is just to
try to give the team a chance to win. If I do that, I feel like
we have the guys up front that can score some goals and we did
that tonight. It wasn't always pretty, but we did the job and
found a way to win. It was do-or-die. I wanted to leave it all
on the table.

"We felt like they have outplayed us and outwilled us in the
first few games of the series, we weren't very satisfied with
that. Tonight we wanted to show a lot of desperation, a lot of
emotion. I think we did that."

Marchant said Giguere was "unbelievable."

"That's what we expected of everybody," Marchant said. "We
needed everybody to come out and play their best game and we
were able to do that. And we give ourselves another chance.
That's all we wanted going into this game, play as well as you
can, see what happens, and if you get another chance, live to
fight another day, that's great.

"Now our focus is on Game Six. It's the same thing. We want to
go out and play the best game we can for 60 minutes and if
we're fortunate to come out of that, then we give ourselves
another chance."

Defenseman Mattias Norstrom and Mike Ribeiro tallied for the
Stars, who host Game Six on Sunday.

"Obviously you don't want to give them any life," Dallas
defenseman Stephane Robidas said. "They've been successful in
the playoffs and they know how to win. We just have to focus on
Sunday and not think about it further or what's going to
happen."

With the 2007 Eastern Conference champion Ottawa Senators
already out of contention for the Cup, the Ducks were one loss
away from assuring that two different teams will vie for the
championship this postseason. But after Giguere kept Anaheim in
the contest with some stellar play in the first two periods,
the club erupted for three goals in the third to guarantee at
least one more playoff game.

"I guess desperation is the descriptive as far as the game was
concerned," Anaheim coach Randy Carlyle said. "We had our fair
share of scoring chances and I'm sure they had their fair share.
I thought Giguere was the best player on the ice tonight."

Giguere made 14 saves in the opening session and 16 more in the
second as the Ducks carried a 2-1 lead into the third. Teemu
Selanne expanded the advantage during a 5-on-3 power play in the
first minute of the period and, after Ribeiro got Dallas back
within one, O'Donnell restored the two-goal bulge midway through
the session.

From the right point, Pronger unleashed a slap shot that went
wide of the right goalpost. But the puck caromed off the end
boards to Selanne, who one-timed it past goaltender Marty Turco
from the left side of the net 48 seconds into the third for a
3-1 cushion.

Ribeiro netted his fourth career playoff goal at 4:41, but
O'Donnell put Anaheim ahead, 4-2, with 7:55 remaining, receiving
a pass from behind the net by Kunitz and beating Turco low to
the glove side from the slot for his first tally of the series.

The goal came one day after O'Donnell had a costly giveaway in
Game Four.

"I don't think I tried anything special tonight. I think it was
more of a coincidence that I was able to do that tonight,"
O'Donnell said. "We'll call it even these two games - I cost
one, I got one. That's what the playoffs are all about -
getting contributions from players you're not expecting it
from."

Marchant sealed the victory with an empty-netter with 84 seconds
to go.

The Ducks opened the scoring at 8:25 of the first, when Perry
carried down the right wing and put a wrist shot from the right
faceoff circle between the pads of Turco. The goal came just
moments after Giguere made a diving save on a chance by Ribeiro.

The 2003 Conn Smythe Trophy winner, Giguere came up with another
brilliant stop with 8:15 left in the period, denying Stu Barnes
from alone in the low slot during a 2-on-1 rush.

Selanne nearly gave Anaheim a two-goal lead with 6:26 remaining,
when he attempted a wraparound at the left post. But after
video review, it was determined the puck did not completely
cross the goal line before Turco knocked it away with his stick.

One second after their power play expired, the Stars pulled even
late in the period. After several failed clearing attempts by
the Ducks, Brad Richards made a cross-slot pass to Norstrom, who
put a shot from the left circle over Giguere's right shoulder
with 93 seconds left in the session.

"After our power play they were maybe a little bit tired,"
Norstrom said. "It was a very nice pass by Richards. I just
tried to put it high and fortunately it went in."

Getzlaf put Anaheim ahead for good during a man advantage midway
through the second. Standing in the left circle, the Ducks'
leading scorer during the regular season waited for his
teammates to set a screen before firing the puck between the
legs of defenseman Matt Niskanen and past an unsuspecting Turco
at 11:03 for a 2-1 edge.

Turco finished with 27 saves for Dallas, which went 0-for-7 on
the power play.

"We would have loved to have done it tonight," Turco said.
"Certainly our effort was there. It was enough, but we let in
too many chances. Now we'll get a pretty good crack at it at
home.

O'Donnell said the Ducks have to take fewer penalties.

"Seven's still a number that's way, way too high," O'Donnell
said. "I think it was just a matter of the odds before we
finally got on a roll and killed some of them. They were giving
it to us pretty good the first four games on the power play. We
made some adjustments. They're still going to get some
chances, but we want to try and take away their
bread-and-butter."

"Special teams were the key tonight and we didn't do much on the
power play," Robidas said. "They did pretty good on their
power play, so we're just going to have to bear down on that,
and focus and forget about this one, and get ready for Sunday
night."

 
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