Stars still alive after unlikely Game 5 win Associated Press
DALLAS -- Maybe it was an omen for the Dallas Stars. They
stayed alive in the Stanley Cup playoffs the same way they won the
Cup last year.
The Stars won hockey's most prized possession on Brett Hull's
much-debated third-overtime goal in Buffalo last June. This time,
another third overtime on unfriendly ice, with the Stanley Cup in
the house awaiting a possible ceremony, prevented the Stars from
handing it over to the Devils.
| | Mike Modano, right, scored the goal that got the Stars back in the series with the Devils. |
Mike Modano's deflection of a Hull shot -- there he is again -- at
6:21 of the third overtime won a tense, 1-0 goaltenders' duel
Thursday night, and part of Friday morning, that kept the Devils
from claiming the Cup.
For at least one night. Possibly two. If the recent history of
extended overtime playoff winners holds up, possibly forever.
The fourth longest game in Stanley Cup finals history -- the
Stars have played two within a year -- forced a Game 6 Saturday
night in Dallas, with the Devils clinging to a 3-2 lead. A lead
that doesn't seem nearly as secure as 3-1. A lead that could be
gone completely by the time they return to New Jersey.
"I felt if we won this game, we would come back here (to New
Jersey) for Game 7 Monday," said Modano, who couldn't have picked
a more opportune time for his first goal of the series, and the
Stars' first even-strength goal since Game 2. "It's a big momentum
swing. I think we all feel it."
The Devils certainly do. The Stanley Cup was there to win for
them, on their home ice, before their fans. Several NHL officials
were polishing it in a dressing room for the postgame ceremony that
never occurred.
For the Devils, it was so close, yet, as each overtime passed,
ever so far away. Even after playing nearly two full games in one
night, the cup remains an elusive one victory away.
Now, they must make a hurried road trip they didn't want to
make. To play a game they didn't want to play. To play in a
building where they have won twice but, deep down, they know it
will be extremely tough to win in again.
History says teams with 3-1 leads don't lose in the finals; only
one of the 25 teams to try to overcome such a deficit have done so.
But history also said a team couldn't rally from a 3-1 deficit and
win a conference final, but the Devils are here only because they
do exactly that against Philadelphia a few weeks ago.
"I'm pretty exhausted," said Devils rookie Scott Gomez, who at
20 is exactly half as old as Stars center Guy Carbonneau. "It was
a long game, and it was tough to take. It could go either way."
Now, so could the series.
The Devils still have the edge, but perhaps not if they don't
win Game 6 in Reunion Arena, where the Stars were 9-1 in the
playoffs before losing Game 3 and Game 4.
In 1994, Vancouver faced an elimination game on the road in Game
5 against the Rangers and won it, plus Game 6, too. But the Rangers
came back to win Game 7.
"We still have two more chances to finish this thing," Devils
rookie defenseman Brian Rafalski said. "It's not over."
However, history -- funny how it keeps figuring in this series --
hasn't treated the losers of long playoff games very well. The
Devils are now just such a loser.
In 1996, the Capitals won twice in Pittsburgh to take a 2-0
series lead, then lost a four-overtime game at home. They never won
again in the series. Earlier in these playoffs, the Penguins won
the first two in Philadelphia, then lost successive overtime home
games, the second in five overtimes. They never won again in the
series.
"It takes a lot out of you to lose a game like that," Penguins
goaltender Ron Tugnutt said. "To play that long and that hard and
to lose ..."
However, the Devils, who rely heavily on four rookies, expect to
bounce back easier than the more experienced Stars. Neither team
took the ice Friday to rest their weary legs.
"Modano probably played more than half our team put together.
Every second shift he was out there," Devils coach Larry Robinson
said. "He's not a young man anymore, and they have a lot of guys
that played a lot of hockey. So I think, with the fact we use more
guys than they do, it should be an advantage."
Of course, so can momentum and confidence, two factors clearly
lacking in the Stars before Game 5. Not now.
"We seem to come up big when the time is needed," Modano said,
mentioning goaltender Ed Belfour, who made 48 saves in his fourth
playoff shutout this season. "Guys seem to rally, we seem to
support each other. We stay positive, we stay with the program and
try to find the cracks and seams to take advantage of."
The Devils just hope that crack isn't in the cup they still plan
to hoist -- if not Saturday, then Monday.
"We're still up in the series," Devils rookie Colin White
said. "And we're not going to get down." |