Games

Recap
 
Hossa helps Penguins push Flyers to the brink
PITTSBURGH 4, PHILADELPHIA 1
 

PHILADELPHIA (Ticker) -- The Pittsburgh Penguins are making
short work of their Keystone State rivals.

All-Star Marian Hossa scored two goals as the Penguins moved
within one game of the Stanley Cup Finals with a 4-1 triumph
over the Philadelphia Flyers in Game Three of the Eastern
Conference finals on Tuesday.

Defenseman Ryan Whitney and Ryan Malone also tallied as
second-seeded Pittsburgh grabbed a commanding
three-games-to-none advantage in their third consecutive
best-of-seven series.

Captain Sidney Crosby had two assists for the Penguins, who
became the fourth team in league history to open the postseason
with an 11-1 record.

The 1983 Edmonton Oilers were the last team to win 11 of its
first 12 games in the playoffs. The Wayne Gretzky-led Oilers
eventually succumbed to the New York Islanders, who won their
fourth Stanley Cup in as many years.

Crosby, who wasn't even born until 1987, isn't so much worried
about the Oilers' history as he is the Penguins' present.

"We're being consistent right now," Crosby said. "We have a
great attitude. The reward you get for making sure that you
take each game serious and that you're consistent - but I don't
think we feel like we've archived anything. I think that we're
just happy with the attitude and way we're working."

Pittsburgh native R.J. Umberger scored for sixth-seeded
Philadelphia, which hopes to avoid being swept when it hosts
Game Four on Thursday.

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

"We cannot lose again. It has happened before where teams come
back. We are in a pretty big hole, but look at the last series
between San Jose and Dallas," said Philadelphia's Joffrey Lupul,
referring to the Western Conference semifinal series in which
Dallas won the first three games before San Jose collected the
next two and pushed Game Six to four overtimes before being
eliminated.

"San Jose was right there with a chance to come back in the
series. I guess that's the thing you look for. We are not
going to quit. We are going to come out in Game Four and play
as hard as we can."

The shorthanded Flyers were playing without their top two
defensemen - All-Star Kimmo Timonen and Braydon Coburn. Prior
to the start of the series, Timonen was diagnosed with a blood
clot in his left foot, while Coburn was hit near the left eye
with the puck just 1:51 into Sunday's contest.

After veteran blue-liner Derian Hatcher was penalized for
hooking, the Penguins quickly converted on their first power
play of the evening.

Whitney skated into the left faceoff circle and wristed a shot
which deflected off captain Jason Smith and inside the left
goalpost just 5:03 into the first period.

"That was crucial," Penguins coach Michel Therrien said of the
early lead. "We wanted to try and dictate every time we come
into a new building and you have a two-game lead. They was kind
of our game plan to make sure we pursued the puck and to attack
them as quickly as we can. After that, we committed
defensively and we didn't give up much."

Hossa doubled the advantage just over 2 1/2 minutes later.

The talented Slovak skated through the neutral zone, weaving
around Jeff Carter at the blue line before wristing a shot which
sailed between the legs of both Lasse Kukkonen and past
goaltender Martin Biron.

"It started out with us playing well defensively. Sid grabbed
the puck in our zone and he just threw it to me," Hossa said as
he recalled the play. "I just tried to use my speed. I made a
move on the blue line and after I saw the defensemen, I just
tried to shoot the puck through his legs. I don't think that
the goalie saw the puck."

Umberger halved the deficit just over three minutes later.

After Vaclav Prospal's wraparound attempt was thwarted by
Marc-Andre Fleury, the puck trickled out front to an unmarked
Umberger, who alertly slipped the puck between the pads of
Fleury.

Umberger has 10 goals this postseason - the most by a member of
the Flyers in 11 years - and trails only Detroit's Johan
Franzen, who has 12 tallies.

After the teams played a close-to-the-vest second period which
featured little open ice and limited shots, Malone regained
Pittsburgh's two-goal advantage midway through the third
session.

Rookie Steve Downie's ill-advised pass led to Hart Trophy
finalist Evgeni Malkin leading a 3-on-2 rush in the other
direction. While the initial rush was denied, Malone corralled
a rebound in the slot and backhanded it past Biron for his
fourth tally of the postseason.

"We are frustrated a little bit, but that's normal in a
situation that is not a good," said Biron, who finished with 21
saves. "We didn't play a good game either. Give Pittsburgh
some credit, but I think that we're going to have to come up
with something better, because the first three didn't work. We
have to find something that works."

Hossa capped the scoring with an empty-net tally with 54 seconds
remaining to seal the victory.

"I don't think that there is any lack of commitment on our
team's part," Flyers coach John Stevens said. "We have got to
find a way to play with confidence and execute with the pressure
that we're receiving.

"They're on a roll and you can just see it. There is a lot of
hockey left. Obviously it is not a situation that we would have
scripted for ourselves."


 
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