Games

Recap
 
Briere's goal gives Flyers commanding series lead
PHILADELPHIA 4, MONTREAL 2
 

PHILADELPHIA (Ticker) -- Daniel Briere and Martin Biron quickly
are becoming Philadelphia's favorite sons.

Briere snapped a tie with 3:38 remaining in the third period and
Biron again stood tall in goal as the sixth-seeded Philadelphia
Flyers skated to a 4-2 victory over the top-seeded Montreal
Canadiens on Wednesday in Game Four of their Eastern Conference
semifinal series.

R.J. Umberger netted a pair of goals and Scott Hartnell also
tallied for Philadelphia, which claimed a commanding
three-games-to-one lead in the best-of-seven series.

"It was like that in the first round against Washington, and now
it's like that again," Biron said. "We're in the position we
were in before, and I think we learned a lot from that first
series (which lasted seven games). We have to get our game
going in the right direction the next game."

Briere also set up a tally and Vaclav Prospal registered two
assists for the Flyers, who can advance to the conference finals
with a win in Montreal on Saturday.

"I think we need to go in there with the mind-set that it's Game
Seven," Briere said. "Just like the way we played in Game
Seven in Washington. We know what happened in the first round
and we let (the Capitals) get back in it. This is far from
over, and we need to realize it."

"We won't underestimate how difficult it will be to get the next
game," Philadelphia's Mike Knuble said. "We don't want to
extend it any more. That crowd and that franchise is very
proud, and it's going to be a very tough place to play."

Tomas Plekanec and captain Saku Koivu scored and Jaroslav Halak
- who started in place of Carey Price - turned aside 22 shots
for the Canadiens, who went 0-for-4 on the power play.

"I was surprised," Halak said of getting his first career
postseason start. "I was told this morning. I wasn't thinking
that it was the playoffs. I was thinking that it was a normal
game."

"I have to give him credit. He was good," Montreal coach Guy
Carbonneau said. "Obviously not good enough, but he was in a
tough situation. He made some great saves early."

With two of the final three games at the Bell Centre, Carbonneau
believes the Canadiens can overcome the deficit.

"I am still really confident we can win this series," he said.
"We have two days to recharge. After that, it's three games in
four nights, and I like our chances."

For the ninth time in 11 playoff games - and fourth in four in
this series - Philadelphia grabbed a two-goal lead Wednesday.
The Flyers, however, lost three of those contests and appeared
on their way to another disappointment as the Canadiens scored
goals 37 seconds apart midway through the third to forge a 2-2
tie.

But Briere, who entered one goal behind Detroit's Johan Franzen
for the league lead this postseason, helped stall Montreal's
momentum by cashing in during a power play late in the third.

With Steve Begin in the penalty box for interference, Knuble
unleashed a shot from the left faceoff circle that hit a crowd
in front of the net. The puck dribbled to the left of the
crease, where Briere shoveled it past Halak for his eighth goal
of the playoffs and a 3-2 lead.

"I'm not going to lie. It was a very good feeling," said
Briere, who also leads the league in playoff scoring with 14
points. "After being on the ice for those two goals that let
them back in the game, it definitely felt good. ... When they
scored those two goals, all we were thinking about was that we
had to get it back."

It was the second power-play goal of the night for Philadelphia,
which has scored with the man advantage in all but two of its
11 playoff games.

"They looked like they were determined," Flyers coach John
Stevens said of his power-play unit prior on Briere's goal.
"They just had that confidence that something good was going to
happen. That's easy to say because we scored, but really, Danny
and Vinnie (Prospal), they all were ready to go. They were on
the same page."

As expected, the Canadiens did not agree with the penalty
against Begin, who was called for interfering with Sami Kapanen
in the neutral zone.

"I don't want to get fined," Carbonneau said when asked about
the infraction. "Did you watch it? You watch the whole game
and you tell me after what you think."

"It was 50-50," Montreal's Bryan Smolinski said. "I was right
in front of the play. (Begin) is a physical guy and he wanted
to finish his check. He got caught on the short end of that. I
can't say that it was a great call, but I think that (Begin)
did his job right."

Umberger completed his second two-goal performance in three
games and sealed the victory with an empty-netter in the game's
final seconds. The native of Pittsburgh, who turns 26 on
Saturday, has seven goals this postseason - including six in
this series.

"I guess I've been kind of a rover and I just try to make the
most of my opportunities," Umberger said. "I just want to be on
the ice. I enjoy playing this game."

Biron, who has allowed just six goals on 108 shots over the last
three contests, kept the Canadiens off the scoreboard with a
brilliant effort in the first period, when the Flyers were
outshot by a 14-7 margin.

"Ever since the playoffs started, he's taken it to another
level," Knuble said. "It's been an absolute treat to watch. I
don't know if it's the new baby or what, but he has been
extremely hot."

"Biron is on the top of his game right now," Carbonneau said.
"Whether he's lucky or good or extremely good, he's making the
saves."

Less than a minute after Philadelphia's Jeff Carter was stopped
by Halak on a shorthanded breakaway chance just six minutes into
the game, Biron made a superb save on a redirection in front by
Plekanec. With 98 seconds to go in the first, the netminder
made another huge stop on Tom Kostopoulos from alone on the
doorstep.

"Marty deserves a lot of credit," Stevens said. "He's set a
standard of play for himself that he's been able to consistently
achieve. I think until you have success this time of year, you
really don't know what your standard is. He has never had a
reference point, and now he has a reference point that he can
play at a very high level and be the difference in the hockey
game, and he was again tonight."

The Flyers also successfully killed a pair of power plays in the
first with the help of Biron.

"Our goaltending and our penalty kill has been our saving
grace," Umberger said. "They have such a great power play and
they're able to tic-tac-toe the puck around. They still got
some goals, but we aren't letting them overtake us."

With every save Biron made, he was serenaded with chants of
"Marty! Marty!" by the 19,872 fans at the Wachovia Center.

"It's awesome," Biron said. "You feel like you have 20,000
people behind you. It's a great feeling. Throughout the whole
game, when the game is tight or when the game can go one way or
the other, it's great to have the fans behind you."

Umberger gave Biron some support with a man-advantage goal at
7:47 of the second. Briere led a 3-on-2 rush down the right
wing and made a cross-slot pass to Umberger, who beat Halak to
the short side from the left circle to extend his goal-scoring
streak to four games.

"I wasn't surprised by the shot," Halak said. "I was fibbing a
little bit and it got me on the short side. It shouldn't have
happened, especially in the playoffs."

"R.J. has been terrific and deserves a lot of credit," Stevens
said. "He's a man without a home, really. I move him all over
the place, and I do it for the good of the team. That's what
makes him so valuable."

The tally came just 14 seconds after Biron made a sensational
right pad save on Begin's shot from the slot.

Hartnell ended a seven-game drought by doubling Philadelphia's
lead at 6:47 of the third.

Prospal intercepted a pass in the neutral zone and carried the
puck up ice before unleashing a shot that hit the right
goalpost. The puck came right to Hartnell, who buried it from
the right circle for his second tally of the postseason.

Just when the sellout crowd thought it could breathe easy, the
Canadiens had it gasping for air.

Blue-liner Josh Gorges wristed a shot from above the right
circle that appeared to carom off the leg of Flyers defenseman
Derian Hatcher and past Biron with 7:01 left in the period. The
goal, however, was credited to Plekanec, as it was believed he
got a piece of the puck before it got by the goalie.

"We need to get guys in front of the net and look for rebounds
and make it hard on (Biron)," Gorges said. "He's making the
first saves. We have to find a way to get second and third
chances."

Before the fans' hearts could get back to a normal beat, Koivu
knotted the contest with his third of the postseason.

Defenseman Mark Streit's one-timer from the blue line hit a body
in the low slot, and the puck bounced to the right side. All
alone, Koivu gathered it and deposited it into a vacant net with
6:24 remaining.

"We've been able to pierce them in the third period," Carbonneau
said of his team, which tallied twice in the third period of
Game Three to get within 3-2. "We need to find a way to do it
in the first and second and get our confidence back."

"I thought that we played a good game, especially in the third
period," Biron said. "We didn't give them much. They got a
couple of bounces that were favorable for them. We battled hard
right after them and we were able to draw a big penalty."

 
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