Games

Recap
 
Robidas helps Stars eliminate Ducks
DALLAS 4, ANAHEIM 1
 

By John Tranchina
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

DALLAS (Ticker) - Stephane Robidas picked a great time to strike
for his first career playoff goal.

Wearing a full face cage after a puck broke his nose in Game
Five, the rugged defenseman scored the tying goal early in the
third period and then set up Stu Barnes' game-winner 52 seconds
later to lift the Dallas Stars to a series-clinching 4-1 triumph
over the defending Stanley Cup champion Anaheim Ducks on Sunday
night in Game Six of their Western Conference quarterfinal
series.

Marty Turco made 17 saves for the fifth-seeded Stars, who won
the series four games to two and advanced to the conference
semifinals to play either the second-seeded San Jose Sharks or
sixth-seeded Colorado Avalanche.

After several seasons of disappointing first-round exits, Dallas
advanced to the conference semifinals for the first time since
2003.

"Now we have the monkey off our back with regards to the first
round," Dallas captain Brenden Morrow said. "We are not
settling for this, but it does feel good. I'm happy for this
team and now we'll enjoy this and then get ready for the next
round."

"It's very gratifying for a team that has been through a lot,"
added Stars coach Dave Tippett, who is now just 2-4 in playoff
series. "This is the first step in a mission that we all hope
extends for a long time."

The fourth-seeded Ducks became the latest defending Stanley Cup
winners to flame out early, as no champion has made it into the
conference semifinals since the Colorado Avalanche in 2002.

"Anything short of the Stanley Cup is a disappointment for this
group," said Ducks goaltender Jean-Sebastien Giguere, who made
22 saves. "Our goal is set on going all the way. I don't think
it was a lack of effort. We tried, but we just couldn't come
up with the win."

Missing its top blue-liner Sergei Zubov and fellow defenseman
Philippe Boucher, Dallas relied on three rookie defensemen, but
it was the gritty veteran Robidas who filled the void,
registering his fifth and sixth points of the series.

"Everybody's talking about how we missed Zubov," Robidas said.
"He's our best defenseman and we lost Boucher after two games -
obviously that really hurt, but I think guys that stepped in did
an unbelievable job. All year long, we've had to battle
through injury. That's part of the game and the guys that
stepped in just did what they had to do."

"There's not too many players on teams that does as much as he
does," Turco said of Robidas. "When you talk about injuries to
two All-Star defensemen, and for the minutes he's logged, for
the position that he's put himself in, it's quite notable. It's
not amazing to us how hard he's worked, how dedicated he is,
and he means the world to this team."

With the Ducks leading, 1-0, after a second-period goal by Corey
Perry, the Stars capitalized on their fourth power play of the
night just 78 seconds into the third session.

Mike Modano's slap shot from the blue line sailed wide, but the
puck caromed off the end boards and went right to Robidas in the
left faceoff circle. The blue-liner's one-timer zipped between
Giguere's pads to even the game at 1-1.

"It hit the board and the rebound came right on my blade and I
just shot in on net," Robidas said of his first playoff goal in
his 25th career postseason game. "I saw Giguere was kind of out
of place, I wasn't really aiming at any spot in particular, I
was just lucky to be there at that spot in time, and it just
went in."

"We were fortunate we got an early power play and capitalized on
that," Stars coach Dave Tippett said. "That was big for us,
where it just generated so much momentum for us. You could just
sense it there on the bench, that there was a big hungriness
there, that we were going to do whatever it took to win."

Less than a minute later, Robidas led the rush into the Ducks'
zone and fed a nice pass to a charging Barnes in the slot.
Barnes' one-timer sailed into an open net for his second goal of
the series to give Dallas a 2-1 advantage.

"Robi made a couple of great plays," Barnes said. "He got by a
couple guys and found me in the slot and all I had to do was put
it in."

Dallas then clamped down defensively, allowing just one shot
through the first 15 minutes of the third period.

"They're a team that plays very tight defense," Anaheim
defenseman Scott Niedermayer said. "They had all their guys
back and protected the middle of the ice well and made it hard
to penetrate. It's disappointing because we believe we could do
better. Our sights were set higher than this."

Loui Eriksson sealed the defending champions' fate with a
breakaway goal with 2:18 remaining, beating Giguere with a wrist
shot from the slot. Modano then added an empty-netter with 3.3
seconds left after Ducks captain Chris Pronger picked up a
penalty.

"We knew it wasn't going to be easy and we knew it would be a
grind," Modano said. "We pushed them back and this feels pretty
good right now."

"We tried, every guy gave it everything he had," Anaheim coach
Randy Carlyle said. "Those are the things you thank them for
their work ethic throughout the course of the season, but their
lack of execution in the playoffs is an issue we'll deal with
over the summer."

After missing the first three games while recovering from a
lacerated quadriceps, Perry has been outstanding since his
return in Game Four, earning a point in each game he's played.
His wrist shot from the top of the right faceoff circle beat
Turco between the pads to give the Ducks a 1-0 lead just 2:11
into the second period.

"We were doing things okay, then they came in with two quick
goals," Niedermayer said. "On a one-goal lead, you never want
to sit back and I'm not sure if we did that or not."

No team has won back-to-back Stanley Cups since the Detroit Red
Wings accomplished the feat in 1997 and 1998.

"This is not a happy ending," Ducks winger Teemu Selanne said.
"I think we didn't do things as good as we could. Everybody
wants to beat you when you're the champions. You try hard but
when you're a little bit off here and there, that's why you
can't win."
 
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