
Day at a Glance
Now there's something to shout about
Posted: Friday June 18, 1999 07:29 PM
By Denise N. Maloof, CNN/SI
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| In the Crease |
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Sports Illustrated contributor Pierre McGuire, a former coach
of the Hartford Whalers, dissects strategy for CNNSI.com throughout the
Stanley Cup finals.
It wasn't pretty, but the Dallas Stars got the job done
in game five. They battled physically in all three zones, played with the
passion required, and they got a lot of key efforts from grinders. Jamie Langenbrunner was the
guiding light for the Stars, because after the first period it seemed the
Buffalo Sabres had more
energy then the Stars.
Langenbrunner got the second period started with some physical play,
second effort, and he painted a picture for his teammates to follow.
Players that get their uniforms dirty shift in and shift out have a unique
ability to stimulate their teammates. Langenbrunner was that man in Game
Five.
It may have been the most inartistic game in this years playoffs, but it
was the most intense game of the year. It came down to whomever won the
last one-on-one battle would be victorious. The insurance goal for the
Stars was scored because of a battle won by Mike Modano versus Alexei Zhitnik along the
boards. If the Stars are going to win their second game of these playoffs
at Marine Midland Arena in Buffalo, they'll need a lot of the same type of
efforts displayed by Modano and Langenbrunner. Buffalo can bring a
lot of confidence into Game Six. They matched the Stars hit for hit, and
they also made the appropriate adjustments, which allowed them to compete.
While Mike Peca didn't get to play a lot of minutes against Joe Nieuwendyk in Dallas, look
for the scenario to change when Lindy Ruff gets the last line change in
Buffalo. This series is becoming a war of attrition. Case is
point was the injury in the dying moments of the game to Sabre Defenseman
Rhett Warrener after he
tangled with Derian
Hatcher. Game Six will not be a game for the faint of heart. |
| BUFFALO (CNN/SI) -- Sixty minutes, and maybe we've got a
Stanley Cup champion.
Folks are clamoring to return to Hot Wing Land for that very reason, and
the most anxious are the Sabres, who got their lack of offense and a 3-2
Stanley Cup finals deficit handed to them in Thursday's 2-0 loss at Reunion
Arena.
Both Dallas coach Ken Hitchcock and Buffalo coach Lindy Ruff called it the
most emotional and intense game of the series, and they should know. The
two men ended Game 5 with a cameo shouting match across ice, boards and
assistants, and both chuckled it off separately, postgame.
"I was angry because Hitch was angry at me," Ruff said. "So I guess we
were both emotional. He started yelling at me. I was yelling back. [The
crowd was so loud I couldn't hear what he was yelling. I doubt if he could
hear what I was yelling. Heck with it."
"Kind of like two guys from Aubrug saying hello to each other," was
Hitchcock's straight-faced assessment, invoking geographical rivalries
from both coaches' Alberta roots. "He's from Aubrug. I'm from Edmonton.
We're not too far away."
Neither coach would divulge subject choices (what a surprise).
So expect Saturday night's meeting in Marine Midland Arena to be a Game 6
rolled up in a Game 7. The Sabres win or retire to golf courses. The Stars
can claim Lord Stanley's Cup. In many ways, Thursday's game was a Game 7
for the Stars, whose older legs may have found it near-impossible to
rebound for two consecutive wins.
Saturday, it's the Sabres' turn, and it's good bet that nobody else --
media included -- wants to return to Dallas for Game 7
"Absolutely we expect to win," said Buffalo's Dixon Ward. "I'm not going to
guarantee anything, but we are going to go out there with full intention.
We're going to give everything we've got to win it."
"Personally, I don't do anything different," said Buffalo's Dominik Hasek, who probably
felt like the Lone Ranger on Thursday thanks to no offensive support. "One
mistake, one goal is the difference every game," he added. "It's close and
I expect it to be the same in Game 6."
| Storylines We're
Following |
Just win, baby Yes, the goalies are huge, but the Stars
have performed despite suffering two potentially crippling injuries to big
guns Mike Modano and Brett
Hull while the Sabres, who have escaped relatively unscathed, pending
news of Rhett Warrener's right leg, have sputtered and fizzled offensively.
Buffalo desparados Whatever stops Lindy Ruff has left
in his coaching bag, he'll need to pull them out for Saturday's Game 6.
Whether it's commiserating over unlucky bounces or lighting a fire under
some forwards' butts -- read: Miroslav Satan -- all the
usual stuff like lineup matchups may not be enough.
Goal duel It's come down to this: The Dominator and
the Eagle. The best man will extend an already-exciting series or win a
Stanley Cup. |
| NHL's Three Stars |
| Each day throughout the Stanley Cup finals, we'll
take a look at three key individuals.
Mike Modano . It's a Stars sweep this
time. Only four had more ice time Thursday night, and one was goalie Ed Belfour. If he's as active
Saturday as he was Thursday (28 shifts, three shots, two points, 15-of-23
on faceoffs) imagine what he might do with a healthy left wrist.
Pat Verbeek .
He's an unrestricted free agent, one of Dallas' thirty-somethings, and
probably won't return next season, but his icer at 15:21 of Game 5 deserves
kudos for its one-on-one quality against Dominik Hasek.
Darryl Sydor .
The same guy who then-juniors coach Hitchcock once sent from a summer youth
camp because he was too young -- a 15-year-old at the time - delivered
Thursday's game-winner. It was the defenseman's third playoff goal. |
| Bandwagon |
| Game 6
| |
Just the fact we've
got one. |
| More temperate temperatures | |
At least now it feels
like hockey weather, compared to last week's broiling 90s in both Stanley
Cup finals cities. Thursday's high in Dallas was in the pleasant, non-humid
80s. Weekend temps in Buffalo are predicted to be in the low 70s thanks to
a Canadian -- how appropriate -- cold front. |
| Stiff upper lips
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| We know they
have to maintain it, but the Sabres' almost-cheery,
can't-wait-till-we-get-home-and-beat-their-socks-off attitude after Game 5
was a bit too much. Reality? They're one game from gone, and
desperate. | | |
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