Games

Recap
 
Morrow sends Stars to conference finals
DALLAS 2, SAN JOSE 1 (4OT)
 

By John Tranchina
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

DALLAS (Ticker) - It took considerably longer than they planned,
but the Dallas Stars have finally advanced into the Western
Conference finals.

Captain Brenden Morrow scored at 9:03 of the fourth overtime as
the Stars outlasted the pesky San Jose Sharks in the eighth
longest game in NHL history for a 2-1 triumph in Game Six of
their conference semifinal series.

After holding a three-games-to-none lead in the series, Dallas
dropped two straight before Morrow's tally eliminated San Jose
by a four-games-to-two margin in the best-of-seven series.

"I didn't want to say it to the players, but with a seven-period
game and jumping on that plane tomorrow, that would have been
no fun, no fun at all," Stars coach Dave Tippett said of the
prospect of heading back to San Jose for Game Seven. "I don't
know if the players thought that way, but that would be a tough
road to hoe, going there."

It was the fourth overtime game of the series and the longest in
this year's NHL playoffs.

Marty Turco turned aside 61 shots and Antti Miettinen tallied
his first goal of the postseason for the fifth-seeded Stars, who
will face the top-seeded Detroit Red Wings on Thursday.

"The exhilaration of that win and the fashion, it can only help
the belief system that we have built and are growing," Turco
said. "And we're going to need all that against Detroit,
they're playing great, they've had a great season up til now.
This team's going to be ready to go."

With the victory, Dallas advanced to the conference finals for
the first time since 2000, when it ultimately lost to the New
Jersey Devils in the Stanley Cup Finals.

Vezina Trophy finalist Evgeni Nabokov made 53 saves and Ryane
Clowe scored in regulation for the Sharks, who have now been
eliminated in the conference semifinals for the third straight
season.

"I thought for the most part, we carried the play," San Jose
coach Ron Wilson said. "We have no reason to hang our heads in
shame. We showed character."

Sunday's contest was the longest game since the Vancouver
Canucks posted a 5-4 triumph over the Stars in four overtimes on
April 11, 2007.

"It's just good to be on the right side, especially winning the
series in overtime like that, in front of our fans," said Dallas
defenseman Stephane Robidas, who set up Morrow's winner.
"Marty gave a great show, making huge saves."

With Sharks defenseman Brian Campbell in the penalty box for
tripping, Morrow camped out in front the crease and received a
centering feed from Robidas. The captain redirected the puck
past the outstretched right pad of Nabokov for the
series-clincher.

"It was as fitting as anything I have ever seen in sports with
Brenden Morrow getting the winner," Dallas coach Dave Tippett
said. "He took this team on his back and it's just great to see
him get that goal."

Morrow, who scored the overtime-winner in Game One, also set an
NHL record by delivering 19 hits - including one on Milan
Michalek right before the end of regulation which knocked him
out of the game.

"I was pretty ticked about Game Five," said Morrow, who had two
apparent goals disallowed in that one. "But it was nice to get
that one and close them out."

"I don't think you can pick a better player to score that
overtime goal," Robidas said. "I think if there's one guy that
deserves it, that's him. Last game, he should have had a hat
trick, he didn't get it and I'm sure he'd trade that hat trick
for that goal. It's huge, he's a warrior, he's working hard,
he's our captain, he's our leader and we're just happy for him."

San Jose was attempting to become just the sixth team in NHL
history to rebound from a three-games-to-none deficit and reach
Game 7, and just the third to win the series outright.

"We had our chances, I guess, but that's the way it goes,"
Campbell said. "There was a lot of confidence in the room.
Several of these games could have gone either way, especially
the overtime ones, so we really didn't feel like we were in that
hole that much because we were right there with them."

The Sharks had won three straight times when facing elimination
in this year's playoffs, after dropping their previous six
contests when up against the wall.

"Every loss is tough. It's the end of a series, but I am proud
of those guys," Wilson said. "We ask everybody to play hard on
the team, and they all did. We showed that tonight."

Dallas nearly ended it just 91 seconds into the first overtime
when Brad Richards blasted a slap shot from the right faceoff
circle toward an open net, but Nabokov made an incredible glove
save right on the goal line.

Each club had multiple opportunities in the first extra period
after that, but each netminder came up with big saves. Turco
robbed captain Patrick Marleau with a beautiful, pad-stacking
save with eight minutes left in the period, then Nabokov denied
Mike Ribeiro all alone in front with 73 seconds to go.

"Nabby made some saves on Ribeiro and Richie and Marty was
unbelievable for us," Morrow said. "The previous (overtime
games in the series), I don't think lasted five minutes and this
one didn't look like it would either and it turned into a
marathon."

Ribeiro even rang a point-blank snap shot off the crossbar with
49 seconds left in the first extra session.

"We had some good opportunities and Turco came up huge for
them," said Marleau, who led the Sharks with eight shots on
goal. "It was a great game. Nabby made a huge save on Richards
and we had our opportunities to score, but Turco stopped them
all."

Just 10 seconds into the second overtime, a turnover by Robidas
led to an uncontested slap shot from All-Star Joe Thornton in
the high slot, but Turco made a kick save. San Jose outshot
Dallas, 11-2, in the second overtime.

The Sharks thought they had finally won the contest midway into
the third overtime when Clowe fed a short backhanded pass to
Torrey Mitchell at the lip of the crease, but Turco made a
sprawling save, smothering the puck under his outstretched
glove, which slid onto the goal line. After a video review, the
on-ice ruling stood and play went on.

"You can't say we didn't leave everything on the ice, that's for
sure," San Jose center Jeremy Roenick said. "We had a lot of
opportunities to win this hockey game and they got the bigger
break. It's frustrating, but this team worked hard, showed a
lot of character and battled. This game could have gone either
way."

When Clowe lifted a wrist shot through a screen from the top of
the right faceoff circle to tie the game at 1-1 just 79 seconds
into the third period, the Sharks seemed to be on the way to
another big comeback. It was the first point of the series for
Clowe, who scorched Calgary for eight points in the first five
games of San Jose's seven-game triumph in the conference
quarterfinals.

Miettinen gave Dallas the early lead, which has been somewhat of
a curse in this series as the team scoring first had lost all
previous games in the series.

After Nabokov made a nice save on defenseman Sergei Zubov's slap
shot from the blue line, Miettinen banged home the rebound past
a diving Nabokov at 4:49 of the second period.

The game was the longest in Sharks' franchise history,
surpassing a three-overtime thriller they lost in Game Three of
the 2006 conference finals against the Edmonton Oilers.

It was the third longest for the Stars.

 
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