June 20, 2013

2013 Stanley Cup Finals: It’s just a game but maybe hockey can heal in Boston

93ea6d3b614df6052ce57c84a263ecd2 2013 Stanley Cup Finals: It’s just a game but maybe hockey can heal in Boston

(PhatzRadio / AP) — BOSTON – It’s just a , but maybe this final can heal as well as entertain.

The know nothing can take away the pain of the that ravaged their city. Still they know that stringing together wins in the NHL post-season is bringing a to their -crazy home town.

“I think we help it in probably a large way,” Claude Julien said Tuesday when asked whether the Bruins’ playoff run can in some small way help heal the city. “Everybody’s looking right now for something to cheer about, to smile about.

“I guess it doesn’t fix the things or the people that’s been lost. That’ll never be fixed. At the same time you’ve got to try and heal. As much as the city itself has been touched by that, so have we as a team. I’ve known that for a long time, that’s all we talked about in the dressing room. It really hit us hard.

“Right now we got to focus on doing our and trying to stay focused on that so that in the end you hope that you can make that happen. But right now it’s got to be about us before we can even think about that. And if we think about ourselves and the we need to do, hopefully the rest takes care of itself.”

The April 15 killed three people and injured more than 260.

Two Bruins games were rescheduled in the of the attack. Julien’s team ended up finishing the season by playing in 11 days. They won just two of them, wobbling into the playoffs mentally and physically exhausted.

After surviving a first-round charge by the Maple Leafs, the Bruins really have been Boston Strong. Monday night’s win over Chicago was the Bruins’ seventh straight at home. The Bruins are 8-2 this post-season at TD Garden, outscoring their 28-17.

And Boston carries a 2-1 lead into 4 of the best-of-seven series with the Blackhawks on .

forward Shawn Thornton, a gritty fourth-liner who is a fan favourite, admitted that trying to relate hockey to a real-life horror was hard.

“It’s tough to talk about,” said the Bruins tough guy. “Just to put that into the same perspective as a hockey game, I think isn’t right either. So it’s a tough question to answer. I’m not going to lie.”

But he hopes the Bruins can make a difference,

“It’s tough to speak for that, but I’m hoping, yeah,” he said. “We come to the rink every day, and we love this city. If it helps, then amazing.”

Thornton called Boston “a small, big city.”

“You get to know a lot of people around here when you stick around. There’s a few of us that live here year-round now. There are good people here. Once you get to know people, they’ll do anything for you. So that helps. Sam Adams too, Harpoon. Good beers.”

Memories of the attack are still raw. A makeshift memorial is still on display at Copley Square and Boston Strong T-shirts are omnipresent.

The Bruins have quietly honoured many whose lives were affected by the bombings.

During the playoffs, their so-called “Fan Banner Captains” have had a Boston Strong theme.

For Game 3, the captains were Rob Rogers, Jenn Rogers, and Jennifer Lemmerman, the siblings of Sean Collier, an MIT Police Officer who was killed in a firefight with the bombing suspects.

Bomb technicians, victims and their families, and first responders have similarly been honoured.

After the attacks, Bruins owner Jeremy Jacobs pledged US$100,000 to The One Fund Boston, the charity established to help families affected by the bombing. The TD Garden, the NHL and the players association pledged $50,000 each.

2013 Stanley Cup Finals: It’s just a game but maybe hockey can heal in Boston is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 2013 Stanley Cup Finals: It’s just a game but maybe hockey can heal in Boston  2013 Stanley Cup Finals: It’s just a game but maybe hockey can heal in Boston  2013 Stanley Cup Finals: It’s just a game but maybe hockey can heal in Boston  2013 Stanley Cup Finals: It’s just a game but maybe hockey can heal in Boston  2013 Stanley Cup Finals: It’s just a game but maybe hockey can heal in Boston

 2013 Stanley Cup Finals: It’s just a game but maybe hockey can heal in Boston

2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Hard-charging Bruins grab 2-1 lead in Stanley Cup with victory over Blackhawks

af7faa26614bd7ac2c3b21b27f2b1acf 2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Hard charging Bruins grab 2 1 lead in Stanley Cup with victory over Blackhawks
(20) of the Boston Bruins celebrates with after scoring a goal in the against the Chicago Blackhawks in Game 3 at TD Garden on Monday in Boston. (Harry How/)

(PhatzRadio / AP) — BOSTON – They are still two wins away from their destination, but the Boston Bruins are gathering steam.

and Patrice Bergeron scored second- and Tuukka Rask made 28 saves Monday as the hard-charging Bruins blanked the Chicago Blackhawks 2-0 to take a 2-1 lead in the final.

The Bruins were full value for their second straight win, coming out hard and crashing Chicago to erase memories of a sluggish first period in Game 2. Boston seemed bigger, faster and meaner on this night.

Even anthem singer Rene Rancourt seemed up for it, adding a few more degrees of difficulties to his of pre-game fist pumps and facial contortions. The TD Garden crowd of 17,565, Boston’s 163rd straight , ate it up.

History has Boston at the front of the NHL championship bus now. Teams winning Game 3 after splitting first two games of the final have gone on to win 21 of 25 times since the best-of-seven format began in 1939.

The Bruins improved to 4-0 in Game 3s this post-season while the Blackhawks fell to 0-4.

Boston isn’t celebrating quite yet, however.

“It’s nice to get a win,” said captain , who mixed it up with as the clock wound down. “We’re up 2-1. We’ve got to get ready for the next one.”

“We’ve still got a few more games to go,” added Tyler .

Paille, the overtime hero of Game 2, opened the scoring for Boston as the Bruins’ reshaped third line of Paille, and Seguin paid dividends again. The trio accounted for both Boston goals in the Bruins’ in Game 2.

Bergeron then scored on the power play, with Paille and Kelly drawing the penalties that led to the goal. The Bruins forward was a one-man machine, with six shots in the first two periods alone. He also dominated faceoffs, winning 19 of 22 in the first 40 minutes.

The other Bruins did the little things too. Blocking shots. Winning faceoffs. Shrugging off Blackhawks like annoying little brothers. When the situation called for it, they just dumped the puck somewhere safe and regrouped.

The Bruins outshot Chicago 35-28 as Rask earned his third shutout of the playoffs. It marked just the second time in 2013 that the Blackhawks had been shut out.

“Tonight I thought we made it rather easy on (Rask) as far as traffic and finding and seeing pucks,” said Chicago coach Joel Quenneville. “I think we got to be better at going to the net in non-puck areas.”

The Blackhawks will get a chance to do just that in Game 4, which goes Wednesday in Boston.

There was drama before the game as Chicago co-scoring leader Marian Hossa was a late scratch, replaced by Ben Smith after being injured in the warmup. That meant shelving a marquee player on a $7.9-million contract for a $550,000 forward who had played once this season.

“Marian Hossa out of the lineup after something apparently happened in warm-ups,” tweeted the Hawks.

Quenneville later clarified that the injury had nothing to do with the warmup. Hossa has an upper-body injury, was a game-time decision and is listed day to day.

“We’re hopeful he’ll be ready for the next game,” he said.

Still, it was a take-no-prisoners warmup. Claude Julien said Chara suffered a small cut during warmup after losing an edge.

Bruins defenceman Dennis Seidenberg said later the ice was poor as hot, humid weather and a visit by the Rolling Stones last week probably didn’t help matters.

Quenneville pointed to faceoffs and the power as the difference-makers. Boston won 40 of 56 faceoffs and Chicago went 0 for 5 with the man-advantage.

The Hawks have not scored a power-play goal in their last 20 chances dating to Game 2 of the Western Conference final. The Bruins, meanwhile, have killed off 27 straight penalties.

Quenneville, who had earlier decided to replace Brandon Bollig with Viktor Stalberg, shook up his lines like a frustrated Scrabble player. Captain Jonathan Toews surprisingly started with Marcus Kruger and Michael Frolik, while Smith opened with Dave Bolland and .

But it was the Bruins, outshot 19-4 in the first period of Game 2, who came out in high gear. They had seven shots on Corey Crawford within the first five minutes.

And whenever Toews came over the boards, he found the giant shadow of Chara waiting.

Crawford, who would finish with 33 saves on the night, stopped Bergeron from in close. At the other end, the imperious Rask handled a blast from Duncan Keith.

Boston’s Brad Marchand had a glorious chance on a breakaway on the penalty kill late in the period after somehow coralling a long Chara clearance. But he lost control of the puck just in front of Crawford and, showing his frustration, smashed his stick to pieces as he returned to the bench.

Boston killed off a pair of penalties in the first period. It was hard to say whether it was because the Bruins’ penalty killing was so good or the Hawks’ power play so bad.

Chicago clawed its way back as the first period wore on and managed 10 shots to Boston’s 11 by the time it was over.

The Bruins controlled the faceoff circle, however, wining 17 of 22 in the first period.

Boston opened the second with another offensive burst and grabbed the lead. Paille was rewarded for some hard work at 2:13 in the Chicago end, lifting Bolland’s stick to steal the puck and rifling a wrist shot past Crawford, who seconds earlier had stopped Seguin. It was Paille’s fourth goal of the playoffs.

Prior to Game 3, the Blackhawks had only surrendered four power-play goals in 63 short-handed situations.

The Paille-Kelly-Seguin line now has seven points in the past two games with three goals and four assists.

When Chicago did get an opportunity, Rask was there. The big Finn stopped Patrick Kane cold after a Hawks defenceman found him cruising in alone.

Chicago had to kill off a brief 5-on-3 opportunity late in the second and Bergeron ripped a low shot in from the doorstep at 14:05 just seconds after Bolland, the first Hawk to escape the penalty box, tried to get back into the play. Bergeron’s seventh of the post-season capped a nifty passing play.

Jaromir Jagr’s sweet assist on the play moved the 41-year-old in sole possession of fifth place in all-time post-season scoring with 197 points (78 goals, 119 assists).

Bolland, for cross-checking, and Niklas Hjalmarsson, tripping, went off for hauling down Kelly and Paille, respectively, as they drove at the goal.

Like a hockey homage, Seguin almost recreated the Bergeron goal on another power play later in the period only to be stopped by Crawford. A frustrated Seguin put his stick between his teeth when the play ended as he pondered what might have been.

The Bruins held a 26-18 edge in shots after 40 minutes.

Boston, blunting the Chicago attack with whatever was needed, killed off two more penalties in the third to further frustrate the Hawks. The Bruins, meanwhile, almost made it 3-0 late in the game during another Bolland penalty.

Chicago’s Bickell hit post in dying seconds as the Blackhawks pressed to get on the board but couldn’t find a way past Rask.

Notes: It was Chicago’s first visit to TD Garden since March 29, 2010, when the Bruins won 3-0. … The first two games of the series lasted some 186 minutes, leaving both teams with one win and five goals … Chicago started Viktor Stalberg in place of Brandon Bollig … Tickets for Game 3 ranged from $325 to a corner balcony seat to $7,500 for a 12th-row centre-ice loge seat on StubHub earlier Monday … The Bruins won all three of their home games in the 2010-11 final, outscoring the Canucks 17-3.

2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Hard-charging Bruins grab 2-1 lead in Stanley Cup with victory over Blackhawks is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Hard charging Bruins grab 2 1 lead in Stanley Cup with victory over Blackhawks  2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Hard charging Bruins grab 2 1 lead in Stanley Cup with victory over Blackhawks  2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Hard charging Bruins grab 2 1 lead in Stanley Cup with victory over Blackhawks  2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Hard charging Bruins grab 2 1 lead in Stanley Cup with victory over Blackhawks  2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Hard charging Bruins grab 2 1 lead in Stanley Cup with victory over Blackhawks

 2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Hard charging Bruins grab 2 1 lead in Stanley Cup with victory over Blackhawks

2013 Stanley Cup Finals: The hits keep coming in the Stanley Cup, but the Hawks aren’t paying much attention

5ab525d36ff48a2fea4e22891bc4a5e2 2013 Stanley Cup Finals: The hits keep coming in the Stanley Cup, but the Hawks aren’t paying much attention

(PhatzRadio / AP) — BOSTON – As the wind down and referees put away their whistles, the hit parade is in full gear.

The led the battle of hits in of the final, edging the 61 to 59 in a thrilling matchup that went to . In 2, the Bruins outhit the Hawks 50-34 in single OT en route to tying the series at one apiece.

The value of the statistic is debatable. Critics say judging a hit is subjective and depends on who does the counting and where.

But it is a tempting gauge when the speed of the stylish is matched against the grinding Bruins. There is no shortage of skill and speed in the yellow and black, but there is a touch of a to Boston at times as cruises the ice like a great white shark and uses his long stick to harpoon the puck — or the player carrying it.

Combine that with an Energizer Bunny work ethic and the Bruins can leave a mark.

Everyone loves a Ferrari. But in a collision with a , which one would you like to be strapped into?

If anything, the helped wake up the Jekyll-and-Hyde Bruins in a physical seven-game first-round series that saw Toronto outhit Boston 351-290.

Bruins defenceman Krug believes the hitting in Saturday’s Game 2 helped turn the tide against Chicago.

“I think it’s fair to say they were feeling pretty good about themselves after the and we were a little upset with how we played,” Krug said Sunday as the series switched to Boston for Game 3 on Monday and Game 4 on Wednesday. “Just getting a couple of those body checks early in the period. You saw (Bruins defenceman) , he had a few big hits and that was really important for us, especially the way they had us clamped down in our own zone.

“You see a guy with a big hit and, all of a sudden, things change a little bit so we started taking care of the puck and getting our forecheck going and everything turned from there.”

On the other side, the Blackhawks downplayed the impact of the increased physical play.

“We know they have some guys that are playing physical,” Chicago defenceman Niklas Hjalmarsson said Sunday. “You just try to keep your head up, not to get hit too hard. But it’s something I’m used to. I don’t really think about that too much.”

Chicago’s players say there is more to winning the physical battle than just finishing checks.

“I don’t really think a whole lot about it,” Blackhawks defenceman Duncan Keith said of the hit count. “I definitely think being physical is something that you need to have. But whether they get more hits, we get more hits, I don’t go and look at that stat at the end of the game.

“I think we want to be physical, but also more than anything we want to be hard to play against. That’s being hard in the puck areas, trying to win those 1-on-1 puck battles, races for the puck.

“Boston’s got a physical team. We’ve played physical teams in Los Angeles, as well. I think for us it’s about being strong 1-on-1 with the puck, trying to be tough to get the puck.”

Although his players might ignore it, Chicago coach Joel Quenneville clearly looks at the stat sheet. While he acknowledges the Blackhawks have often trailed in the hits category, Quenneville also sees the bigger picture.

“I think we’ve got to be harder to play against than we were (Saturday),” he said. “ is more representative of how we have to play to be successful. As long as we are not deterred in where we have to travel to be successful is something we’ll talk about.

“L.A. (which Chicago beat in the Western Conference final) is a physical team. Boston, they’re a big team. At the same time we can’t get distracted knowing if we get outhit, it makes a difference. Our guys have to travel, whether it’s to the net or first to pucks, we’ve got to be there.”

The talk Sunday in the Chicago camp was about getting back to basics.

“I think the simpler we play it, the more of a direct approach, it can play in our favour,” said Quenneville, whose team is 0-3 in Game 3 during these playoffs.

2013 Stanley Cup Finals: The hits keep coming in the Stanley Cup, but the Hawks aren’t paying much attention is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 2013 Stanley Cup Finals: The hits keep coming in the Stanley Cup, but the Hawks aren’t paying much attention  2013 Stanley Cup Finals: The hits keep coming in the Stanley Cup, but the Hawks aren’t paying much attention  2013 Stanley Cup Finals: The hits keep coming in the Stanley Cup, but the Hawks aren’t paying much attention  2013 Stanley Cup Finals: The hits keep coming in the Stanley Cup, but the Hawks aren’t paying much attention  2013 Stanley Cup Finals: The hits keep coming in the Stanley Cup, but the Hawks aren’t paying much attention

 2013 Stanley Cup Finals: The hits keep coming in the Stanley Cup, but the Hawks aren’t paying much attention

2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Bruins beat Blackhawks 2-1 in OT, even Cup series

1f7085089f1171197c1a73269a0286e1 2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Bruins beat Blackhawks 2 1 in OT, even Cup series
The celebrate a goal against Chicago goalie (50) as Chicago Blackhawks defenseman Michal Rozsival (32) looks on during 2 of the , Saturday, June 15, 2013, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Charles Rex )

CHICAGO (AP) — The Boston Bruins were mad when they played poorly in the first period of Game 2 of the finals. Then they went out and got even with the Chicago Blackhawks .

This group of Bruins is one resilient bunch.

Daniel Paille scored at 13:48 in overtime and Boston used another great performance by Tuukka Rask to overcome a sluggish start in a 2-1 victory over the Blackhawks on Saturday night, tying the series at a game apiece.

“We got rewarded because I thought from the second period on, we were a good team, a better team, and by the end I thought we had more chances,” Bruins coach said.

Three days after a three- in the opener, Boston and Chicago once again were tied after regulation. The Bruins then turned up their play and finally cashed in after goaltender singlehandedly kept the Blackhawks in the game.

Brandon Bollig had a turnover in the Chicago end and Tyler passed it to Paille, who shot it under Crawford’s glove and off the right post for his third goal of the playoffs. The slick shot sent the Bruins back to Boston with the momentum ahead of Game 3 on Monday night.

“We just kept the pressure on and Seggy threw the puck to me,” Paille said. “I just popped out and had to shoot the puck quick, get it off my stick. I was able to send it post low. He made a good play passing it over instead of shooting.”

scored for Chicago, which looked more and more gassed as the night wore on. Crawford made 26 saves.

“You’ve got to kind of swallow this one and move on,” Sharp said. “We know what’s on the line in this series and going into Boston’s going to be tough, but we’re ready for the challenge. We’ll find a way to be better for Game 3.”

Paille also had an assist on Chris Kelly’s tying goal in the second, and Rask made 18 of his 33 stops in the first period.

“That’s kind of how our room is. On any given night, someone can step up,” Kelly said. “Paille showed that tonight.”

The first two games of last year’s Stanley Cup also went to overtime, with Los Angeles taking a 2-0 lead at New Jersey before going on to defeat the Devils in six games. Before last season, it had been 61 years since the first two games of the finals needed an extra period to decide the winner. In that 1951 Stanley Cup, each of the five games went to overtime, with Toronto taking the series against Montreal.

The way Chicago and Boston are playing, a repeat is certainly possible.

It was the third consecutive overtime game for the Blackhawks, who eliminated Los Angeles with a 4-3 victory in two overtimes in Game 5 of the Western Conference finals, and then defeated Boston 4-3 in ’s marathon. Chicago dropped to 4-2 during OT games in this year’s playoffs.

The Bruins lost the opener when Dave Bolland’s tip went off Andrew Shaw’s leg and past Rask for the winning score. They also blew a 3-1 third-period lead in that one, but seemed to have no problem putting the loss behind them that night.

After all, the same core group of Bruins dropped the first two games of the 2011 Stanley Cup finals against Vancouver and came back to win. They trailed 4-1 in the third period of Game 7 against Toronto in this postseason and came back to win.

It’s a spirit that runs hand in hand with their home city these days. In the aftermath of the bombings, the Bruins talked about wanting to do something for the city, and they took another step toward that goal in Game 2.

“We’re excited to come away with a win. But it’s only 1-1,” defenseman Dennis Seidenberg said. “It’s a long series. We have to start focusing on the next game, and start better.”

The Bruins’ final push was a stark contrast to the beginning of the game, with the Blackhawks looking refreshed during a dominant first period. The Bruins looked tired and slow, except for Rask, and he was enough to keep it close.

Rask turned away numerous prime opportunities for Chicago, but Sharp managed to score while the goaltender contended with a pile of bodies in front of the net. It was his ninth playoff goal, breaking a tie with Bryan Bickell for the team lead and matching Boston center David Krejci for the NHL’s best total.

A few minutes later, Marian Hossa pushed Rask’s pads and the puck just over the red line in goal. But the officials ruled the play had been whistled dead before the score.

“I thought the whistle was a little quick, but that’s the way it is,” Blackhawks captain Jonathan Toews said. “It’s frustrating when the bounces don’t go your way, but it is what it is.”

When the first period was over, the Blackhawks had 19 shots on goal. Sharp (six) and Hossa (five) each had more shots than Boston had as a team (four).

It was not a pretty scene in the Bruins’ locker room at intermission – Julien said there was “a bit of a chat.” Still, Chicago only had a 1-0 lead.

“I think we were angry,” Seguin said. “We were motivated. I think the guys just weren’t happy in here. We knew we could be better. We were making mental mistakes.”

Boston began to control the action in the second, leading to the tying score.

Paille had a takeaway against Sharp behind the net and then made a nice move to get to the other side of the goal. Crawford turned him away, but Kelly was there to poke in the rebound at 14:58.

Kelly’s first playoff goal since April 12, 2012, against Washington and No. 11 for his career ended Boston’s scoreless stretch of 1 hour, 40 minutes and 57 seconds dating to the third period of the opener.

“It’s like the second period, I thought we lost the pace of the game on that end of the rink,” Blackhawks coach Joel Quenneville said. “We had the perfect start to the game, then we stopped doing what made us successful. We stood around. They countered.”

NOTES: Bruins F Nathan Horton played 21 1/2 minutes after leaving the series opener with an unspecified upper body injury. … Toews received a standing ovation when he was recognized in the first period with a videoboard message honoring the center for winning this year’s Frank J. Selke award, given to the NHL’s best defensive forward. … It was the first split of the first two games of the Stanley Cup finals since 2004, when Calgary won the first game on the road and Tampa Bay took Game 2. The Lightning won the series in .

Jay Cohen can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/jcohenap

2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Bruins beat Blackhawks 2-1 in OT, even Cup series is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Bruins beat Blackhawks 2 1 in OT, even Cup series  2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Bruins beat Blackhawks 2 1 in OT, even Cup series  2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Bruins beat Blackhawks 2 1 in OT, even Cup series  2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Bruins beat Blackhawks 2 1 in OT, even Cup series  2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Bruins beat Blackhawks 2 1 in OT, even Cup series

 2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Bruins beat Blackhawks 2 1 in OT, even Cup series

2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Bruins beat Blackhawks 2-1 in OT, even Cup series

1f7085089f1171197c1a73269a0286e1 2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Bruins beat Blackhawks 2 1 in OT, even Cup series
The celebrate a goal against goalie (50) as Chicago Blackhawks Michal Rozsival (32) looks on during 2 of the , Saturday, June 15, 2013, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Charles Rex )

CHICAGO (AP) — The Boston Bruins were mad when they played poorly in the first period of Game 2 of the Stanley Cup finals. Then they went out and got even with the Chicago Blackhawks .

This group of Bruins is one resilient bunch.

Daniel Paille scored at 13:48 in overtime and Boston used another great performance by Tuukka Rask to overcome a sluggish start in a 2-1 victory over the Blackhawks on Saturday night, tying the series at a game apiece.

“We got rewarded because I thought from the second period on, we were a good team, a better team, and by the end I thought we had more chances,” Bruins coach said.

Three days after a three- in the opener, Boston and Chicago once again were tied after regulation. The Bruins then turned up their play and finally cashed in after goaltender singlehandedly kept the Blackhawks in the game.

Brandon Bollig had a turnover in the Chicago end and Tyler passed it to Paille, who shot it under Crawford’s glove and off the right post for his third goal of the playoffs. The slick shot sent the Bruins back to Boston with the momentum ahead of Game 3 on .

“We just kept the pressure on and Seggy threw the puck to me,” Paille said. “I just popped out and had to shoot the puck quick, get it off my stick. I was able to send it post low. He made a good play passing it over instead of shooting.”

scored for Chicago, which looked more and more gassed as the night wore on. Crawford made 26 saves.

“You’ve got to kind of swallow this one and move on,” Sharp said. “We know what’s on the line in this series and going into Boston’s going to be tough, but we’re ready for the challenge. We’ll find a way to be better for Game 3.”

Paille also had an assist on ’s tying goal in the second, and Rask made 18 of his 33 stops in the first period.

“That’s kind of how our room is. On any given night, someone can step up,” Kelly said. “Paille showed that tonight.”

The first two games of last year’s Stanley Cup also went to overtime, with Los Angeles taking a 2-0 lead at New Jersey before going on to defeat the Devils in six games. Before last season, it had been 61 years since the first two games of the finals needed an extra period to decide the winner. In that 1951 Stanley Cup, each of the five games went to overtime, with Toronto taking the series against Montreal.

The way Chicago and Boston are playing, a repeat is certainly possible.

It was the third consecutive overtime game for the Blackhawks, who eliminated Los Angeles with a 4-3 victory in two overtimes in Game 5 of the , and then defeated Boston 4-3 in Wednesday night’s marathon. Chicago dropped to 4-2 during OT games in this year’s playoffs.

The Bruins lost the opener when Dave Bolland’s tip went off Andrew Shaw’s leg and past Rask for the winning score. They also blew a 3-1 third-period lead in that one, but seemed to have no problem putting the loss behind them that night.

After all, the same core group of Bruins dropped the first two games of the 2011 Stanley Cup finals against Vancouver and came back to win. They trailed 4-1 in the third period of Game 7 against Toronto in this postseason and came back to win.

It’s a spirit that runs hand in hand with their home city these days. In the aftermath of the Boston Marathon bombings, the Bruins talked about wanting to do something for the city, and they took another step toward that goal in Game 2.

“We’re excited to come away with a win. But it’s only 1-1,” defenseman Dennis Seidenberg said. “It’s a long series. We have to start focusing on the next game, and start better.”

The Bruins’ final push was a stark contrast to the beginning of the game, with the Blackhawks looking refreshed during a dominant first period. The Bruins looked tired and slow, except for Rask, and he was enough to keep it close.

Rask turned away numerous prime opportunities for Chicago, but Sharp managed to score while the goaltender contended with a pile of bodies in front of the net. It was his ninth playoff goal, breaking a tie with for the team lead and matching Boston center David Krejci for the NHL’s best total.

A few minutes later, Marian Hossa pushed Rask’s pads and the puck just over the red line in goal. But the officials ruled the play had been whistled dead before the score.

“I thought the whistle was a little quick, but that’s the way it is,” Blackhawks captain said. “It’s frustrating when the bounces don’t go your way, but it is what it is.”

When the first period was over, the Blackhawks had 19 shots on goal. Sharp (six) and Hossa (five) each had more shots than Boston had as a team (four).

It was not a pretty scene in the Bruins’ locker room at intermission – Julien said there was “a bit of a chat.” Still, Chicago only had a 1-0 lead.

“I think we were angry,” Seguin said. “We were motivated. I think the guys just weren’t happy in here. We knew we could be better. We were making mental mistakes.”

Boston began to control the action in the second, leading to the tying score.

Paille had a takeaway against Sharp behind the net and then made a nice move to get to the other side of the goal. Crawford turned him away, but Kelly was there to poke in the rebound at 14:58.

Kelly’s first playoff goal since April 12, 2012, against Washington and No. 11 for his career ended Boston’s scoreless stretch of 1 hour, 40 minutes and 57 seconds dating to the third period of the opener.

“It’s like the second period, I thought we lost the pace of the game on that end of the rink,” Blackhawks coach Joel Quenneville said. “We had the perfect start to the game, then we stopped doing what made us successful. We stood around. They countered.”

NOTES: Bruins F Nathan Horton played 21 1/2 minutes after leaving the series opener with an unspecified upper body injury. … Toews received a standing ovation when he was recognized in the first period with a videoboard message honoring the center for winning this year’s Frank J. Selke award, given to the NHL’s best defensive forward. … It was the first split of the first two games of the Stanley Cup finals since 2004, when Calgary won the first game on the road and Tampa Bay took Game 2. The Lightning won the series in seven games.

Jay Cohen can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/jcohenap

2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Bruins beat Blackhawks 2-1 in OT, even Cup series is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Bruins beat Blackhawks 2 1 in OT, even Cup series  2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Bruins beat Blackhawks 2 1 in OT, even Cup series  2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Bruins beat Blackhawks 2 1 in OT, even Cup series  2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Bruins beat Blackhawks 2 1 in OT, even Cup series  2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Bruins beat Blackhawks 2 1 in OT, even Cup series

 2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Bruins beat Blackhawks 2 1 in OT, even Cup series

NASCAR: Jason Leffler’s death sparks debate among drivers

6e882ed74da0ebfb710a5490b88af3f3 NASCAR: Jason Leffler’s death sparks debate among drivers
Jason Leffler’s car after a wreck Wednesday night during a race at the in New Jersey.(Photo: Christopher Taitt via @ChristopheTaitt)

Story Highlights

, and Kasey Kahne among drivers who say they will still moonlight
Tony Stewart calls for understanding of short-track owners and venues
Brad Keselowski says he doesn’t race at smaller venues because of safety concerns

(PhatzRadio / USA Today) — BROOKLYN, Mich. – was watching at Bridgeport Speedway as Jason Leffler was killed when his 410 sprint car slammed into a wall twice.

It won’t preclude Blaney from continuing to dabble in open-wheel while moonlighting from his full-time ride in the No. 7 Chevrolet of Tommy .

When Blaney’s NASCAR career is over, the champion of the and USAC Silver Crown probably will return full time to racing’s minor leagues.

“That’s what I came from and that’s where I learned how to race and grew up racing,” Blaney said. “That’s my first love. You do all you can do safety-wise and use your head, and that’s about the extent of it.”

Defending Brad Keselowski cited safety as a primary reason he doesn’t run short tracks very often.

“They don’t have the safety standards that we have here in NASCAR,” Keselowski said. “That’s not to say that all tracks in NASCAR have it right, either. But it’s even 100 times worse at the local level.”

A sense of trepidation mixed with resignation permeated the garage Friday at in the wake of the death of Leffler. said Friday they were still investigating the cause of Leffler’s accident Wednesday at the 0.625-mile dirt oval in Swedesboro, N.J.

According to his team, Leffler was wearing a Simpson Hybrid head and neck restraint system, which is one of six approved for use in NASCAR. A blunt force injury occurs when an object strikes the body with force causing compression of tissue. Head and neck restraints are designed to prevent injuries resulting from deceleration trauma when the body is moving and strikes another moving or stationary object, causing stretching or tearing of body tissue.

Leffler’s resilient personality and versatile grit made him popular and respected among peers while racing in all three of NASCAR’s national series.

Those opportunities dried up this season for Leffler, 37, who responded by returning to his roots and racing sprint cars. The Long Beach native won three consecutive USAC Midget championships in 1997-99 before heading to stock cars in the footsteps of friend and mentor Tony Stewart, who provided a place for Leffler to stay for nearly a year when he moved to Indiana.

Stewart is one of many drivers who still race at the grass-roots levels of short-track racing that produced them. Last year, the three-time champion ran 90 races between sprint cars and stock cars. He is on pace for more than 100 in 2013 with no plan to slow down despite the loss of his good friend.

“I am as careful as I am when I get in a car on a city street,” Stewart said. “There will be more people that die in car crashes today than die in race cars. It’s just part of it, and I am one of those that believe when it’s your time, it’s your time.”

Stewart defends short tracks

That doesn’t mean the three-time Sprint Cup champion isn’t stringent about safety in his sprint car, which is built by his team with a full-containment seat and other attention to detail.

Stewart, who owns the prestigious Eldora Speedway — where NASCAR’s truck series will run July 24 — along with short tracks in Marion, Ill., and Paducah, Ky., also vigorously defended the safety conditions at the facilities that play host to lesser racing circuits than NASCAR’s premier series, which generally has higher standards that larger speedways can afford to meet through costly upgrades.

“I think things are the best they’ve ever been at this point,” Stewart, who also owns USAC and World of Outlaws teams, said of the nation’s short tracks. “There are facilities that need some work and there are facilities that put a lot of effort into it. It’s like getting on a city street today. Can it be safer? Sure. There are always things you can do better.

“Am I scared to go to any racetrack or feel concerned of not feeling safe? No. I think for the majority just about everywhere you go does a pretty good job and the best they can under the circumstances they have to work with. The safety standards weren’t what caused (Leffler’s crash). It was an accident. Just like if you go out and there’s a car crash. It’s an accident.

“Short-track promoters are doing everything they can do to operate and just stay afloat and to keep having tracks for drivers that want to be NASCAR drivers just to have the ability to race and learn so they can come up to this level. It’s hard enough for these promoters and track owners to do what they’re doing, so please try to cut them a little slack this week. Nobody as a track owner wants to go through what happened this week, but it’s not due to a lack of effort on their part to try to make their facilities as safe as possible.”

As a driver-owner, Stewart also enjoys the luxury of having virtual carte blanche to race when he pleases (he said Stewart-Haas Racing sponsors don’t need any convincing it’s a good idea). Other teams consider sponsor conflicts, scheduling hassles and safety conditions before approving a driver to moonlight in another series.

Kahne checked on safety measures with his team

Hendrick Motorsports driver Kasey Kahne owns multiple sprint car teams but hasn’t raced his own since last May because he elected to focus on contending for his first Sprint Cup championship. He hasn’t talked to team owner Rick Hendrick about when he might race sprint cars again.

He talked Thursday with his Kasey Kahne Racing drivers and crew chiefs to ensure their safety measures were up to date before his team headed to a race Friday night in Minnesota.

“Racing can be dangerous, and we found that out Wednesday night,” said Kahne, who was sporting a black ballcap with a “LEFturn” logo that his team made in honor of his friend, Leffler, who had that nickname emblazoned over his driver’s door. “It’s what we all love to do. You just have to make the cars and seats and devices and all of that stuff to be as safe as you possibly can. Freak accidents happen every day, no matter what you’re doing.”

Michael Waltrip Racing’s Clint Bowyer, who often races Late Models on dirt, said “safety standards (are) as best as we know how to make them on any level, whether it’s a street stock competition or a Cup race. It’s still sad. Jason was such a good guy; fun to be around and it’s just weird to think that he’s not around anymore. Of course, it’s scary, but we’re all racers, and we love to go to the racetrack just like he did. It’s what we’ve done our whole lives, and it’s probably not going to stop now.”

Each series — be it Late Models or World of Outlaws — has a sanctioning agreement that the track must sign. The agreements include safety standards.

Some, though, might continue to pause at electing to race at tracks that aren’t outfitted with energy-absorbing SAFER barriers to cushion heavy impact or other safety measures that larger tracks can afford.

Safety measures a concern for some

That’s a major concern for Keselowski.

“My dad raced local short tracks and every once in a while, we’ll talk about some track that he went to with my brother, and I’ll ask him how it was, and he’ll tell me, ‘Well, it hasn’t changed since 1975 when I was last there.’ I’m pretty sure safety has taken some pretty big leaps forward since 1970-something, and I think that’s the issue facing safety at most local tracks.

“Obviously, it’s not a simple issue. They have funding limitations that kind of plague that level, but I’m nervous for anyone that races at those levels because I know what happens if something goes wrong and those safety standards aren’t there. … It’s a shame that our industry is reactive, and I wish it wasn’t. That’s a much bigger piece than NASCAR – that’s the whole industry of racing. We have a tendency to wait until something bad happens before we fix things, and we need to stop that. That’s how you prevent things like this from happening, but that’s just not in our culture. Unfortunately for the 5-year-old little boy that lost his dad, that’s our sport.”

Keselowski was referring to Charlie, Leffler’s son, who has been mentioned by many drivers over the past two days in a series of poignant tributes.

“It’s hard to believe the next time I go to a racetrack I won’t see Jason,” Keselowski said. “I don’t think that’s really sunk in for me, and I don’t know that it’s really sunk in for anyone because that’s the kind of racer he is. You could see him at any track, whether it was the Cup race at Pocono or some Late Model race or Sprint Car show on the other end of the country that you just show up to watch. He could be there.

“He was a pure racer who cared enough for this sport that even when there was a race that he perhaps wasn’t going to make a lot of money off of or make a strong living, he raced it because that’s what he does. Jason may not have had the most amount of success at the Cup level, but he had the respect of the garage.”

Leffler had two shots four years apart at trying to stick full time in Sprint Cup but washed out before making it to a with Chip Ganassi Racing in 2001 and with Joe Gibbs Racing in ’05.

Yet he kept plugging away – something that isn’t often seen in other pro when an athlete is knocked out of the major leagues.

“It’s risk vs. reward,” Jeff Gordon said. “If you can step down a couple tiers and get a good ride and be competitive and enjoy what you are doing and go out there and at least have a shot at winning races, then you adjust. You adjust your lifestyle. If a professional baseball player or a football player thought he could step away from the sport but come in and play a game or two and still be competitive, and they let them do that, I think he’d do it. It’s the fact that nobody really allows that to happen.

“I like to never say never, so I think that guys would like to step away and not necessarily say, ‘I’m never going to drive another race car ever again,’ because what if there was something on their bucket list that they wanted to do? Would it be the Baja 500 or the Baja 1000 or driving a Rally Car or riding a motorcycle? If you feel like you can do it, it’s your prerogative to go out there and do that.”

For some, Leffler’s wreck wasn’t viewed so much as a deterrent as a stark reminder of a driver’s job hazards.

“It’s just proof that we will never get to the stage where everybody is immune to getting hurt in a race car,” Stewart said. “That is just the scenario that we are in and there isn’t anybody that gets behind the wheel that doesn’t understand that going into it, and Jason was that way as well.”

Kahne flew to Pocono Raceway last week with Leffler, whom he said “was happy and in a good place” before making the final NASCAR start of his life.

“It’s just really sad,” he said. “He was just a good guy. Always had a smile on his face. Always would talk to you and say, ‘Hi.’ It didn’t matter who you were. It’s really hard to believe he’s gone.”

Follow Ryan on Twitter @nateryan

NASCAR: Jason Leffler’s death sparks debate among drivers is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 NASCAR: Jason Leffler’s death sparks debate among drivers  NASCAR: Jason Leffler’s death sparks debate among drivers  NASCAR: Jason Leffler’s death sparks debate among drivers  NASCAR: Jason Leffler’s death sparks debate among drivers  NASCAR: Jason Leffler’s death sparks debate among drivers

 NASCAR: Jason Leffler’s death sparks debate among drivers

NHL News: Evgeni Malkin takes hometown discount to seal new deal with Penguins

34e0bd0a4df24d8f03a5020501a06ebd NHL News: Evgeni Malkin takes hometown discount to seal new deal with Penguins
Despite the rumors, trading Evgeni was never really an option for the . (/Icon SMI)

(PhatzRadio / SI) — Shortly after the Pittsburgh announced that they’d signed Evgeni Malkin to an eight-year, $76 million extension this morning, the blog Russian Machine Never Breaks tweeted a pretty tidy perspective on the deal. The numbers illustrate the massive risk that the have exposed themselves to with this contract and the 12-year, $104.4 million deal signed by Sidney Crosby last year. But when you’ve got the chance to lock down the two best players in the world, what else are you gonna do?

Risk aside, this agreement is still a for GM , who is doing a of getting his house in order ahead of the draft and the start of free agency. Trading a -breaking talent like former Malkin, or worse, letting him escape for nothing next summer, was never an option. This deal keeps the player happy, and ensures that Pittsburgh employs the best 1-2 center punch in for nearly a decade to come.

The average annual value of Malkin’s extension is $9., which is noticeably, if not significantly, higher than the $8.7 million AAV of Crosby’s deal. Don’t expect that to be a problem.

If Shero ever had any intention of using Crosby’s number as a ceiling, in the manner that Boston’s Harry Sinden depressed every other ’s contract with his Ray Bourque Rule, that plan was kiboshed by the applied through the new . Crosby’s term and total were considerably greater than what Shero could offer Malkin, so boosting his AAV was his only recourse to “level” the financial playing field.

Still, Malkin took a discount to get the deal done. Forget about those $15 million per year in the KHL rumors for a minute. If Pittsburgh ’t eagerly taken care of him at this point, there would have been a line of teams happy to do so next summer, and $ would have been just the starting point.

So good on Malkin, and Crosby, for aiding the organization by leaving money on the table. Unfortunately, it might not be enough to impact negotiations with Kris Letang, who also needs an extension this summer. The Norris Trophy-finalist is said to be looking for something in the range of the deals signed last summer by Shea Weber and Ryan Suter, which would put him between $7-8 million per year for eight years.

Letang won’t get that from Pittsburgh. Instead, look for an offer somewhere in the range of five years, $33 million. If that doesn’t get it done, he’ll get shipped out of town–sooner rather than later–to maximize his return in a Jordan Staal-style deal, and his roster spot will be contested by the wealth of young defensive talent Shero has wisely stockpiled through trades and the draft.

Always seems like he’s one step ahead, doesn’t it?

NHL News: Evgeni Malkin takes hometown discount to seal new deal with Penguins is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 NHL News: Evgeni Malkin takes hometown discount to seal new deal with Penguins  NHL News: Evgeni Malkin takes hometown discount to seal new deal with Penguins  NHL News: Evgeni Malkin takes hometown discount to seal new deal with Penguins  NHL News: Evgeni Malkin takes hometown discount to seal new deal with Penguins  NHL News: Evgeni Malkin takes hometown discount to seal new deal with Penguins

 NHL News: Evgeni Malkin takes hometown discount to seal new deal with Penguins

2013 NBA Finals: ‘Something has to give’ in Game 4 as Heat try to bounce back and tie NBA Finals

1a5d234c1d324b73e6a521812030313a 2013 NBA Finals: ‘Something has to give’ in Game 4 as Heat try to bounce back and tie NBA Finals
(Eric Gay/ Associated Press ) – ’ Tim Duncan, left, and guard , right, of France, talk during a practice on Wednesday, June 12, 2013, in San Antonio. San Antonio will face the in 4 of the NBA Finals on Thursday; San Antonio leads the series 2-1.


(PhatzRadio / AP)
— SAN ANTONIO – Game 4 of the NBA Finals will tell more about the than a 66-win regular season ever could.

Any questions about and the Heat were supposed to have been answered by now. He was too good to be taken out of games, his too talented to go through long where they weren’t contributing.

But they didn’t resemble the league’s reigning powerhouse in Game 3, when the San Antonio Spurs handed them the third-worst beating in finals history in a 113-77 . They looked like the confused club from two years ago, when the finals last came to Texas.

Another loss and they’re on the of something much bigger than another finals failure.

Lose this series, and the whole Big Three era might be a failure.

“Something has to give ,” James said Wednesday. “They have a championship pedigree. They have four (titles). We have two. So something has to give. We’ll see what happens. We’ve been able to bounce back throughout adverse times throughout the season throughout the years that we’ve been together, these three years. We’ll see.”

“We’ll see” is the approach the Spurs are taking with , who has a mild hamstring strain. The team is calling the All- day to day after he was hurt during Game 3 and had an Wednesday.

“I want to wait until tomorrow before I make a decision whether he should play or not,” Spurs said. “And obviously a lot of it will have to do with Tony, and what happens to him during the day, and how I think his play will affect our team, whether good or bad.”

The Spurs didn’t need much from him Tuesday, when and Gary Neal combined for 13 of the Spurs’ NBA Finals-record 16 3- and Kawhi Leonard had 14 points and 12 , essentially playing James even.

James had his practice jersey hanging over his back like a cape Wednesday, and he knows the Heat need him to be Super on Thursday.

And he insists that what he’s going to be.

“As dark as it was last night, can’t get no darker than that, especially for me,” he said. “So, I guarantee I’ll be better tomorrow for sure.”

He should, given that his 7-for-21 effort with no free throws was about as bad as the four-time MVP can play. But he came to Miami so he didn’t have to do it all, where a partnership with Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh meant his days of having to carry teams were supposed to be over.

But with Wade battling right knee pain for a while and Bosh mired in a slump, there has rarely been the vaunted three-man attack that was expected when they joined up in July 2010.

“If us three don’t lead the charge, we’re not going to be NBA champions,” Wade said. “Our teammates count on us, so we have to step up.”

Some of the problem could be fatigue for a team that was forced into some playoff-atmosphere games in the regular season while trying to extend what became a 27-game winning streak, the second-longest in league history. With a huge lead in the standings in March, the Heat could have instead opted to give their veterans some extra rest.

That’s what Popovich has always done, essentially sacrificing a couple of lengthy winning streaks in recent years by resting key players when they were still intact.

“There are no right and wrong answers to the way people do things, because it’s pretty hard to assess and evaluate,” Popovich said. “Suffice to say, everybody has a different approach to playing time or when to sit or not sit players. And we do it one way, other teams do it differently. There’s no one to say one way is right or the other way is right.”

But the Heat’s way will be second-guessed — just like everything about them is — if they don’t pull out this series. There will be calls to break up the Big Three, criticisms of James, and everything else that Tim Duncan and the Spurs never had to deal with in small-market San Antonio.

“I guess if you allow yourself to be affected by it and you allow yourself to look and read everything, then everyone is under a microscope,” Duncan said. “As I’ve said, I don’t envy that kind of scrutiny and pressure in any way.”

It’s what the Heat signed up when James arrived and guaranteed titles three summers ago, and the pressure became even greater after they flopped the first time with their loss to Dallas at the end of their first season together.

The Heat looked so vulnerable then, but seeing them as bewildered as they were Wednesday was stunning. James too often seemed to linger around the perimeter, an old habit reappearing when it seemed he’d put it aside for good and wouldn’t allow himself to settle for jumpers anymore when he could go into the post instead.

Part of the reason is the Spurs, with a solid defensive game plan and a versatile defender in Leonard who can apply it. But the Heat also realized another problem was simply their own effort — or lack thereof — in going for rebounds and loose balls.

“We just collectively played a very bad basketball game last night. And that was everybody, including the staff. It was hard to really judge anything and evaluate anything from that game,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “That’s why after the film session, all we’re focused on is how we prepare the next 24 hours to have our best game of the series tomorrow night.”

Game 4 is where the Heat started to lose control of the series against Dallas two years ago, but they know it’s where they have to regain it this time. They haven’t lost two in a row in five months, and this isn’t the time for that to end.

“We’ve been at our best when I guess our backs are up against the wall, and we’re at it again,” James said. “We’ll see how we respond tomorrow.”

___

Follow Brian Mahoney on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/Briancmahoney

2013 NBA Finals: ‘Something has to give’ in Game 4 as Heat try to bounce back and tie NBA Finals is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 2013 NBA Finals: ‘Something has to give’ in Game 4 as Heat try to bounce back and tie NBA Finals  2013 NBA Finals: ‘Something has to give’ in Game 4 as Heat try to bounce back and tie NBA Finals  2013 NBA Finals: ‘Something has to give’ in Game 4 as Heat try to bounce back and tie NBA Finals  2013 NBA Finals: ‘Something has to give’ in Game 4 as Heat try to bounce back and tie NBA Finals  2013 NBA Finals: ‘Something has to give’ in Game 4 as Heat try to bounce back and tie NBA Finals

 2013 NBA Finals: ‘Something has to give’ in Game 4 as Heat try to bounce back and tie NBA Finals

2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Los Angeles Kings fail to repeat, but have pieces to contend next season

ef1cebc71178d1a1e4a912b7ee6d4750 2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Los Angeles Kings fail to repeat, but have pieces to contend next season
The Kings will have some roster decisions to make, but will return plenty of talent. (Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images)

(PhatzRadio / SI) — Say this much about the Los Angeles Kings: They went out fighting.

They scrapped their way back from what had to be a spirit-crushing 2-0 deficit n the first minutes of 5. They battled for the equalizer after Patrick Kane scored what looked to be the with just over three minutes remaining in the third. And then they traded punches with the for more than 30 minutes of extra time before Kane drove home the dagger on a gloriously executed two-on-one with .

They fell short of repeating as champs, but this was a from a team that ends the season knowing it had completely emptied the tank.

“It’s not easy to repeat, but we came in, we gave ourselves a good chance,” said Rob Scuderi. “We were stopped here in the Western Conference Finals, but overall I’m pretty proud of the team, especially considering tonight in that early 2-0 hole. It looked like we folded up shop and called it a season to a better team on home ice, but we battled back. We stayed with it, and at least we gave ourselves a chance.”

The loss ended a streak of six consecutive victories for the Kings, adding up to 25 postseason wins over the past two years. No one should hang their heads after that. But questions about what went wrong — and what to do about it — are inevitable.

Ultimately, the Kings failed because of their inability to win on the road, a cruel irony considering they were such inhospitable guests last year, setting an with 10 wins on the way to the Cup. They dropped all three games played in Chicago this series and were just 1-8 away from the in the playoffs. “We wanted to keep playing until the end of June,” said. “We just couldn’t win one on the road.”

It’s tough to say why, exactly. The margin for error thins quickly on the road. One fewer save, a less aggressive forecheck, a scoring bid that sails wide instead of going bar down. Any or all of these can turn the tide of a game. And they’re more likely to occur when guys are as banged up as the Kings were.

“[We had] three, four guys that were game time [decisions] after Game 6 in San Jose, literally,” coach Darryl Sutter said. “I think most teams are going to say that the farther you go. Also tells you how tough it is to win. You have to stay healthy. You have to be close to 100 percent, especially with your top guys. I know we weren’t.”

Among the walking wounded: Stoll (concussion), Mike Richards (concussion), Dustin Brown (torn PCL), Justin Williams (separated shoulder) and Drew Doughty (tweaked ankle.) Chances are that list will grow by a couple over the next few days. As I wrote in my game story last night, the Kings paid a heavy price in their earlier series against St. Louis and San Jose. The Kings won those two battles, but ultimately lost the war to defend the Cup because of the physical toll exacted by the Blues and Sharks.

The trick now is ensuring next year’s club learns from this defeat and is better prepared to finish the , and so the focus falls on Dean Lombardi as he re-tools his roster. The Kings’ GM has $52. committed to just 14 players, leaving just over $11 million to spackle over the holes and make a key upgrade or two, including a top-six left wing and a bottom-pairing defender who can take care of his own zone first.

Dustin Penner, Rob Scuderi and Brad Richardson are UFAs. None of these vets are likely to be back. Bottom-six Kyle Clifford, Trevor Lewis and Jordan Nolan are RFAs. Their is key to maintaining the team’s identity, but they have to make themselves available at the right price. Breakout star Slava Voynov and Jake Muzzin are locks to be re-signed, but fellow RFA Alec Martinez might have played his last game with the team.

The same is probably true for young goaltender Jonathan Bernier. With no first-round pick in this year’s draft (it was dealt to Columbus as part of the Jeff Carter trade), Bernier’s ability to maximize the return for the promising RFA may be the most important call Lombardi makes all summer.

It’s always tough to fall short of the goal, especially when a team gets this close, but the Kings look to have the pieces in place to stay in contention for years to come.

2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Los Angeles Kings fail to repeat, but have pieces to contend next season is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Los Angeles Kings fail to repeat, but have pieces to contend next season  2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Los Angeles Kings fail to repeat, but have pieces to contend next season  2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Los Angeles Kings fail to repeat, but have pieces to contend next season  2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Los Angeles Kings fail to repeat, but have pieces to contend next season  2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Los Angeles Kings fail to repeat, but have pieces to contend next season

 2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Los Angeles Kings fail to repeat, but have pieces to contend next season

2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Los Angeles Kings fail to repeat, but have pieces to contend next season

ef1cebc71178d1a1e4a912b7ee6d4750 2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Los Angeles Kings fail to repeat, but have pieces to contend next season
The Kings will have some roster decisions to make, but will return plenty of talent. (Jonathan Daniel/)

(PhatzRadio / SI) — Say this much about the Los Angeles Kings: They went out fighting.

They scrapped their way back from what had to be a spirit-crushing 2-0 deficit n the first minutes of 5. They battled for the equalizer after Patrick Kane scored what looked to be the with just over three minutes remaining in the third. And then they traded punches with the for more than 30 minutes of extra time before Kane drove home the dagger on a gloriously executed two-on-one with .

They fell short of repeating as champs, but this was a from a team that ends the season knowing it had completely emptied the tank.

“It’s not easy to repeat, but we came in, we gave ourselves a good chance,” said Rob Scuderi. “We were stopped here in the , but overall I’m pretty proud of the team, especially considering tonight in that early 2-0 hole. It looked like we folded up shop and called it a season to a better team on , but we battled back. We stayed with it, and at least we gave ourselves a chance.”

The loss ended a streak of six consecutive victories for the Kings, adding up to 25 postseason wins over the past two years. No one should hang their heads after that. But questions about what went wrong — and what to do about it — are inevitable.

Ultimately, the Kings failed because of their inability to win on the road, a cruel irony considering they were such inhospitable guests last year, setting an with 10 wins on the way to the Cup. They dropped all three games played in Chicago this series and were just 1-8 away from the in the playoffs. “We wanted to keep playing until the end of June,” said. “We just couldn’t win one on the road.”

It’s tough to say why, exactly. The margin for error thins quickly on the road. One fewer save, a less aggressive forecheck, a scoring bid that sails wide instead of going bar down. Any or all of these can turn the tide of a game. And they’re more likely to occur when guys are as banged up as the Kings were.

“[We had] three, four guys that were game time [decisions] after Game 6 in San Jose, literally,” coach Darryl Sutter said. “I think most teams are going to say that the farther you go. Also tells you how tough it is to win. You have to stay healthy. You have to be close to 100 percent, especially with your top guys. I know we weren’t.”

Among the walking wounded: Stoll (concussion), Mike Richards (concussion), Dustin Brown (torn PCL), Justin Williams (separated shoulder) and Drew Doughty (tweaked ankle.) Chances are that list will grow by a couple over the next few days. As I wrote in my game story last night, the Kings paid a heavy price in their earlier series against St. Louis and San Jose. The Kings won those two battles, but ultimately lost the war to defend the Cup because of the physical toll exacted by the Blues and Sharks.

The trick now is ensuring next year’s club learns from this defeat and is better prepared to finish the , and so the focus falls on Dean Lombardi as he re-tools his roster. The Kings’ GM has $52. committed to just 14 players, leaving just over $11 million to spackle over the holes and make a key upgrade or two, including a top-six left wing and a bottom-pairing defender who can take care of his own zone first.

Dustin Penner, Rob Scuderi and Brad Richardson are UFAs. None of these vets are likely to be back. Bottom-six Kyle Clifford, Trevor Lewis and Jordan Nolan are RFAs. Their is key to maintaining the team’s identity, but they have to make themselves available at the right price. Breakout star Slava Voynov and Jake Muzzin are locks to be re-signed, but fellow RFA Alec Martinez might have played his last game with the team.

The same is probably true for young goaltender Jonathan Bernier. With no first-round pick in this year’s draft (it was dealt to Columbus as part of the Jeff Carter trade), Bernier’s ability to maximize the return for the promising RFA may be the most important call Lombardi makes all summer.

It’s always tough to fall short of the goal, especially when a team gets this close, but the Kings look to have the pieces in place to stay in contention for years to come.

2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Los Angeles Kings fail to repeat, but have pieces to contend next season is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Los Angeles Kings fail to repeat, but have pieces to contend next season  2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Los Angeles Kings fail to repeat, but have pieces to contend next season  2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Los Angeles Kings fail to repeat, but have pieces to contend next season  2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Los Angeles Kings fail to repeat, but have pieces to contend next season  2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Los Angeles Kings fail to repeat, but have pieces to contend next season

 2013 Stanley Cup Finals: Los Angeles Kings fail to repeat, but have pieces to contend next season