Games

Recap
 
Norstrom gives Stars commanding lead over Sharks
DALLAS 2, SAN JOSE 1 (OT)
 

By John Tranchina
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

DALLAS (Ticker) -- It wasn't pretty, but the Dallas Stars
certainly will take it.

Defenseman Mattias Norstrom scored 4:37 into overtime as the
Stars took a commanding three-games-to-none lead in their
Western Conference semifinal series with a 2-1 triumph over the
San Jose Sharks in Game Three on Tuesday.

It was the second overtime victory of the series for Dallas, as
captain Brenden Morrow netted the winning goal in a 3-2 triumph
in Game One.

In this one, defenseman Sergei Zubov tallied, Mike Ribeiro
recorded two assists and Marty Turco finished with 19 saves for
the fifth-seeded Stars, which hosts Game Four on Wednesday with
a chance to eliminate the Sharks.

"We'll take it," Morrow said of the win. "We played some real
good hockey and we're in a real good position right now. We are
finding ways to win hockey games and have gained some steam
here. It's a battle. They are good defensively and they do a
good job clogging up lanes."

"We're going to try to end their season, and they know that,"
Norstrom said. "The desperation level will be higher, so we
have to match that and exceed it."

Captain Patrick Marleau scored a shorthanded goal and All-Star
Evgeni Nabokov turned aside 27 shots for second-seeded San Jose,
which is looking to avoid losing in the conference semifinals
for the third consecutive season.

"There's no quit in this room," Nabokov said. "All the games
have been pretty close. We've been leading two games in the
third (period). It's been little bounces here and there.
There's nothing we can do about it. We have to regroup and
forget these games."

Only two teams have overcome a three-games-to-none deficit in
the Stanley Cup playoffs - the 1942 Toronto Maple Leafs, who
accomplished the feat against the Detroit Red Wings in the
Finals, and the 1975 New York Islanders, who defeated the
Pittsburgh Penguins in the quarterfinals.

After San Jose called a timeout in overtime, Norstrom wristed a
shot from the top of the left faceoff circle that appeared to
deflect off defenseman Marc-Edouard Vlasic and over Nabokov's
shoulder for the game-winning tally.

"We were putting the pressure on, the puck popped out to me and
I tried to get it on net as quickly as I could," Norstrom said.
"It hit his stick and it ended up in the net. I'll take it off
sticks, off feet, as long as it goes in. I've never had a
bigger goal. It feels great."

For Norstrom, a 14-year veteran who only had reached the
conference semifinals on one previous occasion, it was his
second goal in five games after going the first 41 of his
postseason career without one.

"We've got a lot of guys in here that are playing great, but
there's one guy that's been there for us all year long," Turco
said of Norstrom. "He's a man that's been vocal, that's played
a lot of minutes, that's been asked to do a lot, without much
fanfare. That's his game. He doesn't care, he wants this team
to win, and he's the kind of guy you need this time of year to
be on top of his game. It's great for him to see that one go
in."

"They got a couple of good bounces on their goals, a couple off
our sticks found the back of the net," Marleau said. "But we've
got to get some more shots and get some of those bounces
ourselves."

The goal gave the home team a victory for the first time in the
series. It also put Dallas within one win of its first trip to
the conference finals since 2000.

After failing to convert three first-period power plays, the
Sharks opened the scoring during the Stars' first man-advantage
opportunity. Marleau capitalized on Zubov's turnover and raced
in on a breakaway, beating Turco to the glove side with just 35
seconds remaining in the first period to give San Jose the first
goal in each of the three games of the series.

"That was a great play, Patty made a great play," San Jose coach
Ron Wilson said. "Zubov made a blind play, and then Patty
jumped all over it and buried it. That was a great play because
he was tired and still found a way to score."

Zubov made amends 47 seconds into the third period, ripping a
slap shot that deflected off blue-liner Craig Rivet and past
Nabokov just 12 seconds into a 5-on-3 power play.

"We took a bad penalty at the end of the second period and then
we put a gun to our head with that 5-on-3 opportunity, and they
converted," Wilson said. "They got excited and we got back on
our heels."

Niklas Hagman nearly gave the Stars the lead with 9:10 remaining
in regulation, when he was awarded a penalty shot after being
taken down from behind on a breakaway by defenseman Christian
Ehrhoff. Hagman made a move to his backhand, but Nabokov got
enough of the shot with his arm to send it wide of the net.

"I wanted to come with a little speed, maybe a little fake and
try to move it quickly to backhand, try to get it up," Hagman
said. "But when I moved it to my backhand, it bounced a little
bit and I couldn't shoot it right away."

Nabokov was outstanding in goal as, for a while, it appeared as
if he might steal a win the way Turco did in Game One.

"We found ways to win," Stars coach Dave Tippett said. "I
thought this was our best game of the series and we really
pushed the play. I also thought this was Nabokov's best game."

Dallas' Joel Lundqvist hit the crossbar with a wrist shot from
the doorstep in the first period, but the Stars were unable to
get another shot past Nabokov until Zubov's goal in the third.


 
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