Games

Recap
 
Modano powers Stars past Red Wings
 

By John Tranchina
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

DALLAS (Ticker) - The Dallas Stars live to fight another day.

Mike Modano snapped a tie 5:35 into the third period as the
Stars staved off elimination with a 3-1 triumph over the Detroit
Red Wings in Game Four of the Western Conference finals on
Wednesday.

Captain Brenden Morrow and Loui Eriksson also tallied and
defenseman Sergei Zubov had two assists for fifth-seeded Dallas,
which faces a three-games-to-one deficit in its best-of-seven
series.

Henrik Zetterberg scored the lone goal for top-seeded Detroit,
which will look to advance to its fifth Stanley Cup Finals
appearance since 1995 by closing out the series at home in Game
Five on Saturday.

"It's going to be a different game," Detroit goaltender Chris
Osgood said. "We'll play better at home (and ) we expect to
have our best game of the season. We played good at times. They
had the puck in our zone way too much. It was an on/off night.
We played a poor first and that carried over the whole game."

"This isn't over. No one's told us to stop playing," Stars
center Brad Richards said. "This is a fun time of year and
we're going to enjoy every minute of it and we got another life
tonight."

Osgood finished with 19 saves but fell to 9-1 in the postseason
for the Presidents' Trophy-winning Red Wings, who saw their
franchise-record nine-game postseason winning streak come to an
end.

"We're playing a great team. They're not going to go away,"
said Zetterberg, who has a league-high nine-game scoring streak.
"We're happy we won one of two in Dallas. We just have to stay
out of the box. It was tough to get any momentum going."

"We probably played a little more desperate, we know there is no
tomorrow," said defenseman Stephane Robidas, who assisted on
Eriksson's tally. "It could have been our last game of the
season, our backs are against the wall and that's how we have to
play - we have to play with desperation."

Dallas coach Dave Tippett credited netminder Marty Turco for his
team staving off elimination.

"He came up with a heck of a game for us tonight," Tippett said
of Turco, who finished with 33 saves. "We were looking for a
better team effort - and that's what we got right from Marty on
out."

The Stars dominated the first period, holding a 9-5 edge in
shots and generating numerous scoring chances along with three
power plays - but just like in Games Two and Three, they were
unable to capitalize on their opportunities.

Dallas' best chance came with 6:15 elapsed as rookie defenseman
Nicklas Grossman, who scored a goal in Game Three, rang a wrist
shot off the goalpost from the right faceoff circle.

True to form with the rest of the series, the pendulum shifted
back to the Red Wings as they outshot Dallas, 10-1, through the
first half of the second period and 14-6 overall.

"They were a desperate team out there, we have to match that
intensity," Detroit captain and five-time Norris Trophy winner
Nicklas Lidstrom said. "I thought we did that in the second
half of the game, but not the first half, where we had some
penalties and gave them some momentum."

Pavel Datsyuk apparently opened the scoring with a power-play
tally for the Red Wings at 7:33 into the second session, but
referee Kelly Sutherland disallowed the goal, deeming that Tomas
Holmstrom was in the crease and impeded Turco's ability to stop
the puck.

Replays showed that Holmstrom's skates were outside the
blue-painted crease and that he did not actually touch Turco.

"The guy's out of the paint," Detroit coach Mike Babcock said.
"That's a repetition call, totally. It's disappointing. These
(referees) are doing their very best, just like us. They want
to get to the Stanley Cup Finals. Kelly's a good referee, he
just blew the call. That's life."

"It was a goal, Homer was outside the crease," Zetterberg said.
"Everything goes really fast out there and unfortunately, it was
a missed call. I don't think it's a rule, but that's that. I
don't think the loss came on that call."

The Wings continued to pour on the pressure, but it was the
Stars who broke through for the game's first goal with just 22.7
seconds left in the second.

Robidas fired a wrist shot from the right circle which
ricocheted off Osgood, then off Eriksson in front and into the
crease. Eriksson swatted it in for his fourth goal of the
postseason.

"We got it down deep there and got the cycle going, Robi shot it
at the net," Eriksson said. "I was standing in front and it
hit my body and I think I tipped it in with my stick right
before it went in. It was a nice one."

It was the Stars' first lead of the series - although it only
lasted 72 seconds as Detroit leveled the contest just 49 seconds
into the third period on Zetterberg's 10th goal of the
playoffs.

The talented Swede unleashed a scorching wrist shot from the the
left faceoff circle which beat Turco inside the far post.

"I thought they handled it unbelievably," Tippett said of
surrendering the lead so quickly. "It was talked about by the
players on the bench, this was not going to deter us. It was a
little bit about, 'Let's just keep doing what we're doing and
give ourselves a chance.'"

Dallas countered on a power play at 5:35, on Modano's fifth goal
of the postseason. Stationed in the high slot, Modano received
a perfect feed from Zubov in the left circle and ripped a
one-timer over Osgood's shoulder.

It was Modano's 15th career game-winning goal in the playoffs,
tying him with New York Rangers captain Jaromir Jagr for third
among active players.

"We were struggling a little bit on the power play," Modano said
of the power-play unit which was 1-for-15 in the first three
games of the series. "We were able to get it set up finally.
Zubov down low on that side is someone that can really thread
the needle, find the open guy."

Morrow provided some insurance with his ninth of the playoffs
with 5:26 remaining, firing a shot from the high slot past a
screened Osgood.
 
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