Games

Recap
 
Hudler puts Red Wings one win away from Cup
DETROIT 2, PITTSBURGH 1
 

PITTSBURGH (Ticker) -- After falling behind early, the Detroit
Red Wings soared back to push the Pittsburgh Penguins to the
brink.

Jiri Hudler snapped a tie 2:26 into the third period, leading
the Red Wings to a 2-1 triumph Saturday over the Penguins in
Game Four of the Stanley Cup Finals.

Captain Nicklas Lidstrom also scored and Chris Osgood made 22
saves for the Presidents' Trophy-winning Red Wings, who grabbed
a three-games-to-one lead. Detroit can capture the 11th
championship in franchise history - and fourth in 11 seasons -
with a win in Game Five at home on Monday.

"It never gets old," said Lidstrom, who was a member of
Detroit's previous three championship teams but is one win away
from becoming the first European-born captain to hoist the
Stanley Cup. "We know, as a team, we haven't won anything yet.
We won three games. ... But sure, you're excited about being in
a position like this. This is what you play for all year
long."

Marian Hossa netted a power-play goal and Marc-Andre Fleury
turned aside 28 shots for Pittsburgh, which fell to 9-1 at
Mellon Arena this postseason and 11-1 when scoring first.

"What we have to do is keep our chin up still," Hossa said. "We
still have got a good chance. ... We're facing a tough
situation, but on the other hand, they have to win one more
game, and we have to make it really tough on them."

"We have to play desperate hockey, fight for another day,"
Penguins defenseman Darryl Sydor added. "The youth of this
hockey team hasn't experienced that yet, so that's probably a
good thing. We're going to come out and play hard (on Monday)
and lay the chips where they may. We're not going to go down
without a fight, for sure. We still believe in here."

Already feeling good about themselves after their victory in
Game Three, the Penguins increased their confidence when Hossa
tallied less than three minutes into the first period. But
after Lidstrom knotted the game later in the opening session,
Hudler put the Red Wings ahead early in the third.

Brad Stuart made the goal possible by stopping a clearing
attempt at the right point. The defenseman then weakly threw
the puck down low, and Darren Helm got in the way of Pittsburgh
blue-liner Brooks Orpik, allowing it to reach Hudler at the
bottom of the right faceoff circle.

"Me and Orpik kind of raced for (the puck), and I was able to
lift his stick and make sure I got the puck to Hudler," Helm
said. "I saw him out of the back of my eye. It was just a
little thing. I got the puck to him and he was able to bury it.
I didn't even get to see the goal."

With his back to the net, Hudler quickly turned and put a
backhander off the left arm of Fleury and inside the right
goalpost at 2:26 for his fifth goal of the playoffs and a 2-1
advantage.

"Sometimes you need a bit of luck (to) get it past them," Hudler
said.

"Once or twice, we could have brought the puck out," Penguins
coach Michel Therrien said. "This is a good team. Good teams
find a way to win. Their fourth line scored the winning goal,
so what are you going to say?"

The goal proved to be the difference, although Pittsburgh had
several chances to forge a tie.

During a two-man advantage, captain Sidney Crosby received a
cross-crease pass at the right side. But Henrik Zetterberg, who
is a leading candidate for the Conn Smythe Trophy, tied up the
superstar's stick before he could get possession and take a
shot.

"He made a good play on me, got my stick," Crosby said. "Just
did a good job of trying to get a stick in the lane. I don't
think he did anything out of the ordinary besides (what) any
other guy would do on a 5-on-3."

"They had a great opportunity to tie it up," said Zetterberg,
who is a finalist for the Selke Trophy. "It's a challenge to
play against such good players, especially when you're down two
guys. They have a lot of room."

During the penalty kill, Zetterberg also gained possession of
the puck and killed some time in the offensive zone, which drew
the praise of coach Mike Babcock.

"I was thinking of lacrosse at that time," Babcock said. "I
always hear my son's coach yelling when they're shorthanded,
'Get a hold of it and hang onto it.' That's what (Zetterberg)
was doing.

"I've been telling people for three years how good Zetterberg
is, so this isn't a surprise to me. He's just a conscientious,
good two-way player."

The Penguins failed to register a shot on Osgood during the
5-on-3, which lasted 86 seconds.

"They were skating well and we just did a great job, getting in
the shooting lane," Osgood said. "It wasn't like they weren't
shooting, they were. We blocked a ton of shots. ... We were a
little lucky, too, at the same time. (The puck) bounced back to
our guys."

"That was definitely the turning point, for sure," Hossa said.
"Five-on-3, we didn't score. That was one of the points that
cost us the game. We have to score there. ... It would have
been a different game."

And in the waning moments of the third, the only save the
All-Star goalie needed to make was a big one, as he turned away
Hart Trophy finalist Evgeni Malkin's tip-in chance from the
doorstep with four seconds remaining.

After collecting 19 points through the first three rounds of the
playoffs, Malkin has yet to get on the scoresheet in the
Finals.

"I'm pretty frustrated and kind of disappointed that I didn't
score any goals," the Russian said through an interpreter.
"I'll just have to work harder. If I would score just one goal,
I would get away from that bad streak.

"In hockey, it happens when you go on streaks when you can't
score, you can't do anything, basically. You have to work hard
and just get through that time. Hopefully, I will eventually
score."

Malkin admittedly has been hard on himself for his lack of
production in this series but is trying to battle through the
slump.

"Personally, I have been thinking about the fact I have not been
scoring goals," he said. "But after a while, I just don't
think about it and (realize) I should just let it go. The
coaches just talked to me and just said, 'Just let it go. Just
play with the team.' I'm not really thinking about it anymore."

Despite his struggles, Malkin still has the support of his
teammates.

"He's battling just like everyone else out there," Crosby said.
"There's not a lot of room. To be honest, I don't think
anybody's really creating that much out there. He's created a
few chances, just like everyone else. ... He's going to be
rewarded for it, it's just a matter of time."

"He's a guy with a lot of character, and I'm sure he's going to
bounce back," Pittsburgh's Maxime Talbot added. "He's taking a
lot of criticism because he played so good before, but you look
at the rest of the guys. He's not the only one that has to
score some goals."

Detroit applied pressure from the start but had three of its
first four shot attempts blocked. Dallas Drake then was called
for roughing just 2:11 into the contest, and the Penguins needed
only 40 seconds to take advantage.

From above the right faceoff circle, defenseman Sergei Gonchar
wristed a shot that was stopped by Osgood. Hossa grabbed the
rebound at the right side and appeared on his way behind the net
before stuffing the puck inside the goalpost at 2:51 for a 1-0
edge.

"Hossa made a great play," Osgood said. "The guy has
unbelievable hands. Not many guys can do that move."

The goal was just the fourth of the series for Pittsburgh, which
scored four or more in each of its four wins over Philadelphia
in the Eastern Conference finals.

The lead lasted less than five minutes, however, as the Red
Wings pulled even just as their first power play ended.

Two seconds after Pascal Dupuis' cross-checking penalty expired,
Lidstrom unleashed a slap shot from the left point that found
its way past a screened Fleury at 7:06, knotting the game at
1-1.

"That's something I cannot stop," Fleury said. "Things happen
some days, and it just (stinks) it happened right now."

The goal was the 42nd of the Norris Trophy finalist's postseason
career, moving him past Hall of Famer Ray Bourque for third
place on the all-time list among defensemen.

The pace remained high for the remainder of the first period and
entire middle session, but neither team was able to break the
deadlock. Detroit outshot Pittsburgh, 21-17, through 40
minutes.

"It's certainly tight out there," Hossa said. "Detroit is a
really good defensive team and it's really tough to get great
chances. But we have to find a way. That's not an excuse.
Obviously, we need to score more goals."

 
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