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NHL Hockey Scoreboard: Recap
Recap | Box Score | Today's Scoreboard
Detroit 3, Philadelphia 2
Posted: Friday October 19, 2001 01:35 AM
Philadelphia Flyers
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Detroit Red Wings
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DETROIT (Ticker) -- Brett Hull has been scoring goals off one-timers for 15 years. It's been almost that long since the Philadelphia Flyers defeated the Detroit Red Wings on the road.

Hull scored with 18 seconds remaining to cap a furious final minute as the Red Wings rallied for a stunning 3-2 victory over the Flyers, whose winless streak at Joe Louis Arena reached 13 games.

Philadelphia was less than a minute away from its first win in Detroit since November 4, 1988. But Sergei Fedorov put a wrist shot from the right faceoff dot into the top left corner of the net to lift the Red Wings into a 2-2 tie with 41 seconds left.

Hull got the game-winner from an almost identical spot moments later. Steve Yzerman passed out of the right corner and Hull snapped a trademark one-timer from the right dot over the left shoulder of goaltender Brian Boucher.

"That was Yzerman, he did it," Hull said. "He said he was getting the puck. I sensed that. After he had it, I came out of the corner to get ready for the pass."

"The last one, I don't think you could place any more perfect," Boucher said. "I didn't pick it up, I didn't see the shot. He's a goal-scorer, he put it in a great place."

It was the third goal of the season for Hull, who became the sixth different player on the Red Wings to get a game-winner.

Detroit has won four straight and six of its first seven games.

"It took our best two periods to beat them," Red Wings coach Scotty Bowman said. "We didn't give up. We had a good, strong second and third period and Dom (Hasek) held us in in the first. ... In the third period, you need a bounce here and a bounce there because it's tough to score goals in this league."

The stirring comeback stole the spotlight from Marty Murray, whose first NHL goal since October 19, 1995 gave Philadelphia a 2-1 lead with 5:12 left in the second period.

"It stinks," Boucher said. "When they score to make it 2-2, you hope you can at least get a point out of it. We didn't even get that. That makes it tough."

Jeremy Roenick also scored for the Flyers, who are winless in five of their last six games (1-2-3-0).

"Obviously, it's difficult," Philadelphia coach Bill Barber said. "I thought we played well for our situation for 50 minutes. Really, by rights, we made two mistakes and it was two goals. Other than that, I was happy with our effort. We did what we wanted to do. We jammed the middle and we played the way our lineup was at the time."

Playing without injured center Keith Primeau, the Flyers scored first on Roenick's goal 2:59 into the opening period. Defenseman Dan McGillis flipped the puck from inside the blue line to Roenick, who broke up the middle and put a deflection under Hasek's glove.

Luc Robitaille tied it at 5:20 of the second period, completing a three-way passing play involving Yzerman and Hull.

"What a pass (from Hull)," Robitaille said. "I know from watching him all these years that he's a great shooter, but people don't know how good a passer he is."

Boucher denied Kirk Maltby on a shorthanded breakaway with 6 1/2 minutes to go in the period and Murray put Philadelphia back in front moments later. With the Flyers still on the power play, Murray got to a rebound at the edge of the right circle and whipped the puck into the top right corner of the net.

"I don't think we were playing very smart," Hull said. "It's been the same thing all year -- giveaways in our zone."

Another constant for the Red Wings has been Brendan Shanahan, who has picked up a point in all seven games and leads the NHL in scoring with eight goals and four assists.

While Philadelphia has rallied for three ties when trailing after two periods, it fell to 1-1-0 when leading after 40 minutes.

"The last two goals were really almost out of the scoring area," Barber said. "It's tough to digest, considering our injury problems. But still, I guess it's better earlier in the year than later."


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