Red Wings win Stanley Cup
Using a little Motown magic on the road, the Detroit Red Wings
won the Stanley Cup for the fourth time in 11 seasons Wednesday
night with a 3-2 victory over the Pittsburgh Penguins in Game 6 of
the finals.
The celebration came two nights later than expected. The
Penguins forced the series back to Pennsylvania by tying Game 5
with 34.3 seconds left in regulation and winning it shortly before
1 a.m. in Detroit on Petr Sykora's power-play goal in triple
overtime.
Undeterred, the Red Wings hit the road and wrapped up their
fourth straight series on the road in these playoffs. Detroit is
third in NHL history with 11 Stanley Cup titles, trailing fellow
Original Six clubs Montreal and Toronto.
Just like in Game 5, things got a little dicey for the Red
Wings, who allowed Sergei Gonchar's power-play goal with 1:27
remaining that got the Penguins to 3-2. Pittsburgh had already
pulled Game 5 hero Marc-Andre Fleury to create a 6-on-4 skating
edge.
With the final seconds ticking down, Penguins captain Sidney
Crosby put a backhander on goal that Marian Hossa just missed with
a tip at the right post.
It set off a pile-on celebration behind the Detroit goal for the
Red Wings, as the disappointed fans in Mellon Arena saluted their
club once more with a chant of "Let's Go Pens!"
In the best night for Swedish hockey since the national squad
won the gold medal at the 2006 Turin Olympics, defenseman Nicklas
Lidstrom became the first European captain of a Stanley Cup
champion, and Henrik Zetterberg, who had a goal and assist in the
Cup clincher, won the Conn Smythe Trophy as playoff MVP.
His goal 7:36 into the third period pushed the Red Wings' lead
to 3-1. He tied teammate and countryman Johan Franzen for the
playoff lead with 13 goals, and matched Crosby for the postseason
scoring crown with 27 points.
Lidstrom is one of five players to be the Red Wings for their
four most recent titles (1997, 1998, 2002, 2008).
Crosby came close in his third NHL season to adding a Stanley
Cup title to his resume that already includes a scoring title and a
league MVP award.
Brian Rafalski gave Detroit a 1-0 lead in the first period and
Valterri Filppula doubled it in the second. Chris Osgood made 20
saves and improved to 14-4 in the playoffs after taking over for
No. 1 goalie Dominik Hasek in the first round of the playoffs
against Nashville. Osgood allowed only 30 goals in 19 games.
Detroit earned its final two victories of the championship
series in Pittsburgh, where the Penguins won their first nine
postseason games. Until the Red Wings came to town, the Penguins
hadn't lost at home since February.