Games

Recap
 
Sykora's tally gives Penguins life
PITTSBURGH 4, DETROIT 3 (3OT)
 

DETROIT (Ticker) -- Petr Sykora made good on his
guarantee.

After assuring NBC rinkside commentator Pierre Maguire that he
would score the winning goal after the second overtime session,
Sykora delivered the winning tally 9:57 into triple overtime as
the Pittsburgh Penguins staved off elimination with a 4-3
triumph over the Detroit Red Wings on Monday in Game Five of the
Stanley Cup Finals.

All-Star Marian Hossa and Adam Hall netted first-period goals,
and Maxime Talbot pushed the game into overtime by tallying with
34 seconds remaining in regulation for Pittsburgh.

Marc-Andre Fleury made 55 saves for the Penguins, including a
number of spectacular stops in overtime. Fleury's total was the
most in a Stanley Cup Final game since Olaf Kolzig of the
Washington Capitals turned aside 55 shots in a 5-4 overtime loss
to the Red Wings in Game One of 1998 series.

Defenseman Brian Rafalski had a goal and an assist and Pavel
Datsyuk and rookie Darren Helm also tallied for the Presidents'
Trophy-winning Red Wings, who still hold a three-games-to-two
advantage in the best-of-seven series.

"This happened to me in 2000. We lost to Dallas at home in
triple overtime, went back in their building and won it," said
Rafalski, who was playing with the New Jersey Devils at the
time. "It's not the end of the road. It's one game. There's
two games left. We get our first chance on Wednesday."

Pittsburgh, which hosts Game Six on Wednesday, is looking to
match the 1942 Toronto Maple Leafs, which is the only team to
rally from a three-games-to-one deficit in the Finals to win the
Stanley Cup.

Conversely, Detroit will look to capture its 11th Stanley Cup
title in franchise history and fourth in the last 11 seasons.
The Red Wings last hoisted the Stanley Cup in 2002 after downing
the Carolina Hurricanes in five games.

"If we can come up with the win, it's going to be a lot of
pressure on them," Sykora said. "But you just worry about the
game on Wednesday, and hopefully we can get it."

After the teams twisted and turned through 2 1/2 periods of
overtime hockey, Detroit's Jiri Hudler was whistled for a
four-minute high-sticking penalty on Pittsburgh defenseman Rob
Scuderi.

"I was just praying for blood," Scuderi said.

It didn't take the Penguins long to convert.

Stationed behind the net, All-Star Evgeni Malkin fed Sykora in
the right faceoff circle. Sykora quickly unleashed a shot which
beat Chris Osgood for his sixth goal of the postseason - and
ended a marathon contest which spanned nearly 4 1/2 hours. It
was the fifth-longest game in Stanley Cup finals history.

As for the guarantee ...

"And about the shot, just between the periods, something stupid
I said: Just guys, I'm just going to get one. So just don't
worry about the game. I'm going to get a goal," Sykora said.

"And luckily, I got a great pass from Gino (Malkin). I missed
it one time before, probably by 20 feet. And it was kind of a
lucky play. It hit the ref and went behind the net and Gino got
it, made a beautiful pass. I tried to put it upstairs, and the
puck went in."

Sykora's tally was the fourth overtime power-play goal in
Stanley Cup Finals history - and the first in 28 years. Denis
Potvin of the New York Islanders scored with the man advantage
in Game One of the 1980 Finals against the Philadelphia Flyers.

Sidney Crosby could barely contain his excitement after Sykora's
goal shifted the Finals back to Pennsylvania.

"Yeah, obviously we're happy for 'Sykie'," Crosby said. "He's
been through a few playoff series over his career. I'm sure
this is one of the biggest goals he's ever scored. We're happy
to see it go in and happy for him. And he's a goal scorer, and
he found the spot.

All-Star defenseman Sergei Gonchar, who had not played a shift
since midway through the third period after he fell awkwardly in
the second session, was credited with the second assist.

It nearly didn't come to this as Detroit was clinging to a 3-2
lead in the waning moments of the third period.

With the Joe Louis Arena faithful in a frenzy, Talbot silenced
the crowd with 34 seconds remaining. Hossa's shot initially was
stopped by Osgood, but Talbot successfully knocked the puck
into the net on his second attempt to tie the contest at 3-3.

The tally was also historic, as the Penguins became the first
team in more than 70 years and just the second team ever to
escape elimination in the Stanley Cup Finals by scoring a
game-tying goal in the final minute of the third period. The
1936 Toronto Maple Leafs accomplished the feat in Game Three of
their best-of-five series with the Detroit Red Wings. The Leafs
went on to win the game in overtime, but succumbed in the
series to the Red Wings.

Although both teams were cleary exhausted at game's end, Detroit
captain Nicklas Lidstrom did not use that as an excuse.

"You know what you're playing for. You're in the Finals. You
can't start thinking that you're tired," Lidstrom said. "You
just have to put that behind you, put that in the back of your
mind and be ready for the next shift."

After being shut out in Games One and Two of the series,
Pittsburgh finally found the back of the net at Joe Louis Arena
when Hossa tallied at 8:37 of the first period for a 1-0 lead.

Pascal Dupuis checked Rafalski in the corner, collected the puck
and quickly fed Crosby at the side of the net. The captain
alertly found Hossa just inside the right faceoff circle, and
the Slovak quickly settled the puck before wristing a shot which
beat Osgood just inside the left post for his team-leading 11th
tally of the postseason.

Hall doubled the Penguins' advantage after a sensational
individual move - and an indirect assist by Red Wings defenseman
Niklas Kronwall.

With 5:19 remaining in the first period, Hall muscled past Johan
Franzen and skated out of the corner before closing in on
Osgood. The netminder made the initial save and, as Kronwall
was poised to clear the puck behind the net, the Swede's attempt
deflected off Hall's skate and into the net. Kronwall
immediately bent his head back in bewilderment as the Penguins
claimed a 2-0 advantage.

"I just went to try to clear it and it hit the guy's skate and
went in the net," Kronwall said matter-of-factly.

Helm, who was unsuccessful on a breakaway with 2 1/2 minutes
remaining in the first period, halved the deficit just 2:54 into
the second period.

After Kirk Maltby prevented the puck from exiting the offensive
zone, he fed Helm on the wing. The 21-year-old Manitoba native
quickly wristed a puck on net which beat Fleury for his second
goal of the postseason.

Detroit was poised to level the contest late in the second
period, if not for a beautiful save for Fleury.

After a turnover at the blue line, Valtteri Filppula led a
2-on-1 advantage into the Pittsburgh zone. The Finn quickly fed
Mikael Samuelsson, but the Swede's wrist shot was denied by a
brilliant left skate save by Fleury.

Datsyuk leveled the contest - and recorded his first goal of the
Finals - with a brilliant assist from Henrik Zetterberg just
6:43 into the third period. Stationed outside the right faceoff
circle, Zetterberg fired the puck off the Russian's stick and
between Fleury's legs to forge a tie.

Rafalski pushed the Red Wings ahead just over 2 1/2 minutes
later, taking advantage of brilliant passing from fellow Swedes
Franzen and Zetterberg to collapse the Penguins' defense.
Rafalski cheated into the right faceoff circle and blasted a
shot past Fleury for his third goal of the postseason.

 
Free Sports Scores and Odds by Phone - All New Numbers!
AKRON
800-682-6222
ALBANY
800-355-0004
ALEXANDRIA
703-660-8700
ATLANTA
404-842-1313
BALTIMORE
410-484-1818
BIRMINGHAM
205-945-5544
BOSTON
617-723-1818
BUFFALO
716-824-2525
CAMDEN
800-878-8736
CHARLOTTE
704-342-1313
CHARLESTON, SC
843-769-7200
CHICAGO
312-609-1313
CINCINNATI
800-682-6222
CLEVELAND
216-623-1313
COLUMBIA, SC
803-765-1313
DALLAS
972-423-3111
DALLAS
972-423-3111
DAYTON
800-682-6222
DOTHAN, AL
800-524-4116
EVANSVILLE
800-711-0002
FORT LAUDERDALE
800-524-4116
GREENVILLE, SC
864-370-2828
HARRISBURG, PA
800-711-0002
HARTFORD
800-828-4455
HOUSTON
713-774-1200
HUNTSVILLE, AL
800-524-4116
INDIANAPOLIS
800-711-0002
KNOXVILLE
800-524-4116
LAS VEGAS
702-979-1844
LEXINGTON, KY
800-711-0002
LITTLE ROCK
800-682-6222
LOS ANGELES
800-711-0002
LONG ISLAND
800-355-0004
LOUISVILLE
800-711-0002
MEMPHIS
800-524-4116
MIAMI
305-669-5433
MILWAUKEE
800-682-6222
MOBILE
251-666-5400
MONTGOMERY
800-524-4116
NASHVILLE
615-244-8888
NEW HAVEN, CT
800-828-4455
NEW YORK CITY
800-355-0004
NEWARK
800-878-8736
NORFOLK
757-461-1818
PHILADELPHIA
215-471-3000
PHOENIX
800-878-8736
PITTSBURGH
412-645-9800
PROVIDENCE
800-828-4455
RICHMOND
804-359-9400
ROCHESTER
585-454-1616
SAN FRANCISCO
800-711-0002
SCRANTON, PA
570-342-6500
SOUTH JERSEY
800-878-8736
SPRINGFIELD, MA
800-828-4455
SYRACUSE
315-437-1313
TAMPA
800-524-4116
TRENTON
609-528-2500
TULSA
800-682-6222
TUSCALOOSA
800-524-4116
WASHINGTON, DC
202-898-1818
WORCESTER, MA
800-828-4455
YOUNGSTOWN
800-682-6222
OTHER - NATIONWIDE
412-645-9800

Disclaimer