Games

Recap
 
Kostopoulos caps Canadiens' comeback
MONTREAL 4, PHILADELPHIA 3 (OT)
 

MONTREAL (Ticker) -- The Philadelphia Flyers found a new way to
lose after holding a two-goal lead.

Alexei Kovalev scored his second goal of the game with 29
seconds remaining in the third period and Tom Kostopoulos
tallied 48 seconds into overtime, lifting the top-seeded
Montreal Canadiens to a 4-3 triumph over the sixth-seeded Flyers
on Thursday in Game One of their Eastern Conference semifinal
series.

Andrei Kostitsyn also scored and rookie Carey Price made 30
saves for the Canadiens, who host Game Two on Saturday.

"There was a couple of good bounces for both teams tonight, but
that's what the playoffs are about," Price said. "You get a
good bounce here and there and it kind of determines the winner.
They got a couple of good bounces tonight, but so did we, and
we came out on top."

R.J. Umberger, Jim Dowd and Joffrey Lupul tallied for
Philadelphia, which played its second overtime game in three
days and third overall this postseason.

"It was tough, but our team hasn't done things the easy way,"
Flyers center Jeff Carter said of the heartbreaking loss. "We
always seem to make things hard on ourselves, but we'll be ready
to go in Game Two."

"There were a lot of weird goals tonight all over the place,"
Philadelphia's Daniel Briere added. "We got some lucky bounces
going our way, they got some lucky bounces going their way. ...
We're disappointed with the result, but at the same time, we
started 0-1 in the first round against Washington and we found a
way to come back."

Kovalev was impressed with the Flyers' effort, considering the
club was playing for the third time in four days, with all three
games being in different cities.

"They played three games in four nights, and they tried to steal
one," Kovalev said. "You have to give them credit for the good
effort they put in tonight."

The Canadiens, who swept the four-game series against the Flyers
during the regular season, were trailing by a goal before
Philadelphia's Mike Richards received a questionable kneeing
penalty with 69 seconds remaining in the third. With Price on
the bench for an extra attacker, Montreal took advantage to
forge a 3-3 tie.

"If it was a knee, I obviously didn't mean to," said Richards,
who did not appear to make contact with Kovalev with his knee.
"I thought it was my shoulder, but I haven't seen the video."

Carter broke his stick on the faceoff in the right circle,
allowing Canadiens captain Saku Koivu to get the puck back to
Kovalev. The Russian snapped a shot past goaltender Martin
Biron and into the top right corner of the net for his 41st
career postseason goal, sending the game to overtime.

"That's what hockey is all about - shoot the puck and score,"
Kovalev said. "I almost went to the net, but as soon as I saw
Saku putting that second effort, I was just hoping that the puck
would come out somewhere. It came out in perfect timing and I
was able to put the shot in."

"It was a tough play," Biron said. "Carter broke his stick and
it's a scramble, but (Kovalev's) a good player and he's going to
get those loose pucks."

Less than a minute after the opening faceoff in overtime,
All-Star defenseman Andrei Markov blasted a shot from the left
point that was stopped by Biron, who finished with 30 saves.
After Kostopoulos grabbed the rebound and was denied, he got a
second chance and deposited the puck into the net as Biron's
momentum did not allow him to get back into position in time.

"It was incredible to come back after being down a couple of
times," Kostopoulos said. "He made a huge save on my first
shot, and I was lucky enough to get the second rebound. ...
(Steve) Begin and (Bryan) Smolinski did a great job tying up
their men in front of the net and I was able to get two whacks
at it."

"I was kind of expecting it, but I didn't know if it was going
to be deflected," Biron said of Kostopoulos' initial shot. "I
actually made the save, but the rebound sort of stayed out
there. Sometimes that's just the way it happens."

Richards, who was on the ice when the goal was scored, was
disappointed with Philadelphia's effort defensively on the play.

"The puck just kind of went to the defense and I tried to block
it, and I think they had one or two chances in front of the net
to score," Richards said. "We've just got to be better in our
defensive zone next game."

Montreal coach Guy Carbonneau could not have asked for a more
deserving player to score the winning tally.

"He's the type of player who doesn't receive the credit he
deserves," Carbonneau said. "It's nice to see him playing out
of the shadows. I'm really happy for him tonight."

"It was really exciting to score a goal like that," Kostopoulos
said. "It's definitely the biggest one I've ever scored in my
life. But if Saku doesn't win that crucial faceoff with (32)
seconds left and Kovy doesn't score that huge goal to bail us
out, I'd be sitting here telling you about how on Saturday we
need to bounce back from being down 1-0 in this series."

Philadelphia, which suffered two of its three losses to
Washington in the conference quarterfinals after owning two-goal
leads, opened the scoring thanks to a miscue by Montreal
defenseman Patrice Brisebois.

Carrying the puck down the right wing, Umberger attempted a
backhand pass to a teammate on the doorstep. But in an attempt
to knock away the puck, Brisebois inadvertently tipped it into
his own net with 6:45 remaining in the first period, giving the
Flyers a 1-0 edge.

"It was like two heavyweight fighters checking each other out,
looking to see who would make the first mistake, and it was us,"
Carbonneau said.

Dowd gave Philadelphia another dreaded two-goal bulge with 3:11
to go, one-timing Steve Downie's backhand pass from behind the
net past Price and into the top left corner from the slot.

Briere, who was jeered every time he possessed the puck, had a
chance to make it 3-0 but fired a shot over the net during a
breakaway with 81 seconds left. Last summer, Briere elected to
sign as a free agent with Philadelphia after being courted by
Montreal.

Biron maintained the two-goal advantage by making a right pad
save on Kostitsyn's penalty-shot attempt at 6:32 of the second
period. Kostitsyn was awarded the chance after being knocked
down from behind by Philadelphia defenseman Lasse Kukkonen
during a breakaway.

Kostitsyn managed to get Montreal on the board just over three
minutes later with his fourth goal of the postseason.

Brother Sergei Kostitsyn skated down the right wing and cut to
the slot before losing control of the puck. However, it went
right to Andrei, who beat Biron from the inner edge of the left
faceoff circle at 9:44 to cut the deficit to 2-1.

Tomas Plekanec nearly knotted the contest with eight minutes
remaining, but Biron managed to poke-check the puck away from
the Czech after he breezed past defenseman Derian Hatcher for a
solo rush.

The Canadiens pulled even on a controversial shorthanded goal by
Kovalev with less than four minutes to go in the second.

"He's been huge," Kostopoulos said. "He's gotten big goals for
us all year round."

Plekanec led a rush down the right wing and unleashed a slap
shot from the top of the faceoff circle that Biron stopped. The
rebound popped into the air, and Kovalev batted it into the net
with his stick near the crossbar at 16:03.

The referee ruled it a goal, and after a lengthy video review,
Kovalev was awarded his third tally of the playoffs.

"You're definitely hoping that they're going to count it, but
it's not my decision to make," Kovalev said. "If it didn't
count, we'd go back and try to get another one, but they counted
it."

"I just thought that his stick hit the top of the net after it
hit the puck," Philadelphia coach John Stevens said. "Logically,
you think it's a high stick, but they got a break there."

The Flyers cashed in on a power play early in the third to take
a 3-2 lead.

Defenseman Braydon Coburn ripped a slapper from the right point
that Price got a piece of with his glove. While falling to the
ice, the puck hit the right shin of Lupul and entered the net
just 19 seconds into the period.

"Sometimes (the puck) doesn't stick to you," Price said. "It
hit my glove a couple of times and was spinning out. Sometimes
that happens - it doesn't stick to you like it normally does."


 
Free Sports Scores and Odds by Phone - All New Numbers!
AKRON
800-682-6222
ALBANY
800-355-0004
ALEXANDRIA
703-660-8700
ATLANTA
404-842-1313
BALTIMORE
410-484-1818
BIRMINGHAM
205-945-5544
BOSTON
617-723-1818
BUFFALO
716-824-2525
CAMDEN
800-878-8736
CHARLOTTE
704-342-1313
CHARLESTON, SC
843-769-7200
CHICAGO
312-609-1313
CINCINNATI
800-682-6222
CLEVELAND
216-623-1313
COLUMBIA, SC
803-765-1313
DALLAS
972-423-3111
DALLAS
972-423-3111
DAYTON
800-682-6222
DOTHAN, AL
800-524-4116
EVANSVILLE
800-711-0002
FORT LAUDERDALE
800-524-4116
GREENVILLE, SC
864-370-2828
HARRISBURG, PA
800-711-0002
HARTFORD
800-828-4455
HOUSTON
713-774-1200
HUNTSVILLE, AL
800-524-4116
INDIANAPOLIS
800-711-0002
KNOXVILLE
800-524-4116
LAS VEGAS
702-979-1844
LEXINGTON, KY
800-711-0002
LITTLE ROCK
800-682-6222
LOS ANGELES
800-711-0002
LONG ISLAND
800-355-0004
LOUISVILLE
800-711-0002
MEMPHIS
800-524-4116
MIAMI
305-669-5433
MILWAUKEE
800-682-6222
MOBILE
251-666-5400
MONTGOMERY
800-524-4116
NASHVILLE
615-244-8888
NEW HAVEN, CT
800-828-4455
NEW YORK CITY
800-355-0004
NEWARK
800-878-8736
NORFOLK
757-461-1818
PHILADELPHIA
215-471-3000
PHOENIX
800-878-8736
PITTSBURGH
412-645-9800
PROVIDENCE
800-828-4455
RICHMOND
804-359-9400
ROCHESTER
585-454-1616
SAN FRANCISCO
800-711-0002
SCRANTON, PA
570-342-6500
SOUTH JERSEY
800-878-8736
SPRINGFIELD, MA
800-828-4455
SYRACUSE
315-437-1313
TAMPA
800-524-4116
TRENTON
609-528-2500
TULSA
800-682-6222
TUSCALOOSA
800-524-4116
WASHINGTON, DC
202-898-1818
WORCESTER, MA
800-828-4455
YOUNGSTOWN
800-682-6222
OTHER - NATIONWIDE
412-645-9800

Disclaimer