May 22, 2013

NHL Roundup: Reimer SO sends Devils to 10th straight loss

e620fab0c866b93195a4dc91603c7963 NHL Roundup: Reimer SO sends Devils to 10th straight loss
goaltender makes a save on New Jersey Devils left winger , right, during the first period of their in Toronto, Monday, April 15, 2013. (AP Photo/The Canadian Press, Frank Gunn)

(PhatzRadio / AP) — TORONTO — made 31 saves, and Phil Kessel snapped a late in the third period to lift the Toronto Maple Leafs to a 2-0 victory over the New Jersey Devils on Monday night, despite recording only 12 shots.

Kessel broke the deadlock with a power-play goal at 13:28 of the third, and scored into an empty net with 36.6 seconds remaining to back Reimer’s third shutout of the season.

Toronto (24-14-5), aiming for its first since 2004, is 9-1-4 in its past 14 games.

The Devils (15-17-10) lost for the 10th straight time (0-6-4) and were blanked for a second . New Jersey, the defending Eastern , is in 11th place — six points below the postseason cutoff with only six games left.

FLYERS 7, CANADIENS 3

MONTREAL — Scott Hartnell scored three goals and Philadelphia snapped a four-game losing streak with a victory over Montreal.

and each had a goal and two assists, and and Erik Gustafsson also scored for the Flyers (18-21-3), who matched their season high for goals as they try to make a late push for a playoff spot.

Philadelphia is in 12th place in the Eastern Conference, four places and seven points behind the and the postseason cutoff. The Flyers have six games remaining.

Max Pacioretty, Brendan Gallagher and Alex Galchenyuk scored for the Canadiens (26-10-5), who were coming off a 5-1 loss in Toronto. They have had two lopsided losses since clinching a playoff spot on Thursday.

The Flyers outshot Montreal 33-28. Carey Price was pulled for a second game in a row in favor of Peter Budaj. Price left at the end of the second period after allowing six goals on 29 shots.

Montreal’s Ryan White was ejected in the first period for a direct hit to the head of defenseman Kent Huskins.

BLACKHAWKS 5, STARS 2

CHICAGO — Chicago’s Andrew Shaw, Niklas Hjalmarsson and Marian Hossa scored in the third period after Dallas rallied to tie it, and the Blackhawks went on to beat the Stars for their sixth straight win.

Jonathan Toews netted his team-leading 21st goal, and Viktor Stalberg also scored for NHL-leading Chicago, which has points in nine consecutive games (8-0-1). Ray Emery made 16 saves and improved to 16-1.

Jamie Benn scored both goals for the Stars, whose five- ended. They got even after falling behind 2-0. Richard Bachman made 23 saves in his third straight start in place of No. 1 goalie Kari Lehtonen, who is out because of a lower body injury.

Bachman has been in goal since relieving Lehtonen in the first period of the Stars’ 5-1 win over Los Angeles on Tuesday.

The Stars remained in ninth place in the Western Conference, two points below the postseason cutoff with six games remaining.

CANUCKS 5, PREDATORS 2

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Ryan Kesler scored two goals and Roberto Luongo made 36 saves to lead Vancouver over Nashville.

Derek Roy, Jason Garrison, and Alex Burrows also scored for Vancouver, which has won five of six. Daniel Sedin, Henrik Sedin, and Jannik Hansen each had a pair of assists.

Nick Spaling and Bobby Butler scored for the Predators, who were eliminated from postseason contention with their franchise-record seventh straight loss and 10th in 11 games. They had qualified for the playoffs in seven of eight years.

BLUE JACKETS 4, AVALANCHE 3, OT

DENVER — Nick Foligno scored at 4:31 of overtime, Sergei Bobrovsky stopped 29 shots, and Columbus beat Colorado for its fourth straight win.

Blake Comeau, Mark Letestu and R.J. Umberger also added goals to help the Blue Jackets remain in the thick of the Western Conference playoff race. They pulled even in points (47) with Detroit for eighth place.

Cody McLeod scored twice and Jamie McGinn added another goal for the Avalanche, who are last in the West.

Foligno skated in on the right side of Jean-Sebastien Giguere and sent a wrist shot by the veteran goalie.

WILD 4, FLAMES 3

CALGARY, Alberta — Jason Pominville scored twice to help Minnesota beat Calgary and snap a three-game losing streak (0-2-1).

Pominville has four goals in six games since being acquired from Buffalo at the NHL trade deadline.

Mikko Koivu and Pierre-Marc Bouchard also scored for Minnesota, which began a three-game trip. The Wild moved past St. Louis into sixth place in the Western Conference and three points behind Northwest Division-leading Vancouver.

Jiri Hudler, Sven Baertschi and Ben Hanowski — making his NHL debut — scored for Calgary.

SHARKS 4, COYOTES 0

GLENDALE, Ariz. — Antti Niemi stopped 35 shots for his fourth shutout of the season, Tommy Wingels had a goal and an assist, and San Jose earned a key road victory by racing past Phoenix.

The Sharks overwhelmed Phoenix in the second period to move within a point of Los Angeles for fourth place in the Western Conference.

San Jose outshot Phoenix 24-7 in the period, going up 3-0 on goals by Wingels, Logan Couture and Joe Pavelski.

Niemi made some tough saves early and was steady after the Sharks took the lead to earn his 23rd career NHL shutout, and Matt Irwin scored a late power-play goal.

Jason LaBarbera stopped 37 shots for Phoenix, which remained 11th in the West and four points out of the final playoff spot with six games left.

The Coyotes had earned a point in eight of their previous nine games (5-1-3), but were still 11th.

NHL Roundup: Reimer SO sends Devils to 10th straight loss is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 NHL Roundup: Reimer SO sends Devils to 10th straight loss  NHL Roundup: Reimer SO sends Devils to 10th straight loss  NHL Roundup: Reimer SO sends Devils to 10th straight loss  NHL Roundup: Reimer SO sends Devils to 10th straight loss  NHL Roundup: Reimer SO sends Devils to 10th straight loss

 NHL Roundup: Reimer SO sends Devils to 10th straight loss

College Football: Bowl projections: Upsets, Miami’s ban change postseason outlook

20c1969f82310c89c8516ab966d00d5b College Football: Bowl projections: Upsets, Miami’s ban change postseason outlook

(PhatzRadio / AP) — Apologies to Texas A&M and Clemson fans for providing last week in the form of projected BCS berths. Saturday’s upsets changed my BCS lineup considerably.

For one thing, the Pac-12 is all but assured two BCS bids now, which eliminates the ACC’s second berth. And with the SEC back in line for a participant, the will go to the Sugar, not the . The made sense in Glendale, but LSU (or Florida if it beats Florida State this week) gets the nod opposite Oklahoma in New Orleans.

Mind you, Clemson could get back in the BCS mix if Oklahoma loses to Oklahoma State or TCU and the Big 12 fails to qualify a second team. If not, this week’s Clemson-South Carolina winner will head to the Chick-fil-A Bowl. Meanwhile, A&M fans probably won’t mind their projected : a Cotton Bowl with Texas.

Elsewhere, Miami invoked another self-imposed bowl ban on Monday, which throws quite the wrench into things. Right now, I’m projecting just 70 eligible teams for 70 spots. That included 6-5 Georgia Tech, which will now play in the game against 10-1 Florida State following this week’s with 10-1 Georgia. Should the finish 6-7, they could still get in (much like UCLA last year) if there aren’t eligible teams otherwise.

The biggest winners from Miami’s decision might be 5-6 Rice and 5-6 . One of the NCAA’s contingencies if there aren’t enough six-win teams is to allow a 5-7 team if it has a top-five APR score among available candidates. Rice (986) and (973) fit that bill.

As always, please remember:

• After the No. 1 and 2 teams are slotted and replaced, the BCS at-large selection order this year is 1) Fiesta, 2) Sugar and 3) Orange. The highest-ranked champion from a non-automatic qualifier is guaranteed a if it finishes in the top 12 or in the top 16 and ahead of an AQ-.

• Most bowls are not obligated — I repeat, NOT OBLIGATED — to choose in exact order of conference standings. For instance, “Big 12 No. 3″ means “third selection of Big 12 teams,” not “the Big 12′s third-place team.” Bowls often pick a team with an inferior record due to geography, anticipated fan travel, the need to avoid a regular-season rematch, or just plain politics.

BCS bowls

DATE PREDICTED MATCHUP
Jan. 1 Rose: Nebraska (Big Ten champ) vs. Oregon (Pac-12 champ)
Jan. 1 Orange: Florida State (ACC champ) vs. Louisville (Big East champ)
Jan. 2 Sugar: LSU (BCS at-large) vs. Oklahoma (BCS at-large)
Jan. 3 Fiesta: Kansas State (Big 12 champ) vs. Stanford (BCS at-large)
Jan. 7 BCS championship: Notre Dame (BCS No. 1) vs. Alabama (BCS No. 2)

Other bowls

DATE PREDICTED MATCHUP

Dec. 15 New Mexico: Nevada (MWC No. 4) vs. Arizona State (Pac-12 No. 7)
Dec. 15 Idaho Potato: Utah State (WAC) vs. Toledo (MAC No. 3)
Dec. 20 Poinsettia: San Diego State (MWC No. 2) vs. BYU (BYU)
Dec. 21 Beef ‘O’ Brady’s: UCF (C-USA) vs. Ball State (Big East*)
Dec. 22 New Orleans: Arkansas State (Sun Belt No. 1) vs. Rice (C-USA)
Dec. 22 Maaco: Boise State (MWC No. 1) vs. USC (Pac-12 No. 5)
Dec. 24 Hawaii: Fresno State (MWC) vs. Middle Tennessee (C-USA*)
Dec. 26 Little Caesars: Northern Illinois (MAC) vs. San Jose State (Big Ten No. 8*)
Dec. 27 Belk: Cincinnati (Big East No. 3) vs. Duke (ACC No. 5)
Dec. 27 Military: Western Kentucky (ACC No. 8*) vs. Central Michigan (Army*)
Dec. 27 Holiday: Oregon State (Pac-12 No. 3) vs. West Virginia (Big 12 No. 5)
Dec. 28 Independence: Wake Forest (ACC No. 7) vs. Louisiana Tech (SEC No. 10*)
Dec. 28 Meineke Texas: Minnesota (Big Ten No. 6) vs. Baylor (Big 12 No. 6)
Dec. 28 Russell Athletic: Rutgers (Big East No. 2) vs. NC State (ACC No. 3)
Dec. 29 Pinstripe: Syracuse (Big East No. 4) vs. TCU (Big 12 No. 7)
Dec. 29 Buffalo Wild Wings: Texas Tech (Big 12 No. 4) vs. Michigan State (Big Ten No. 5)
Dec. 29 Alamo: UCLA (Pac-12 No. 2) vs. Oklahoma State (Big 12 No. 3)
Dec. 29 Armed Forces: East Carolina (C-USA) vs. Air Force (MWC)
Dec. 29 Kraft Fight Hunger: Arizona (Pac-12 No. 6) vs. Navy (Navy)
Dec. 31 Music City: Virginia Tech (ACC No. 6) vs. Vanderbilt (SEC)
Dec. 31 Sun: Georgia Tech (ACC No. 4) vs. Washington (Pac-12 No. 4)
Dec. 31 Liberty: Tulsa (C-USA No. 1) vs. Ole Miss (SEC No. 8/9)
Dec. 31 Chick-fil-A: Clemson (ACC No. 2) vs. (SEC No. 5)

Jan. 1 Heart of Dallas: Ohio (Big Ten No. 7*) vs. Iowa State (Big 12 No. 8)
Jan. 1 Capital One: Florida (SEC No. 2) vs. Michigan (Big Ten No. 2)
Jan. 1 Outback: Northwestern (Big Ten No. 3) vs. Georgia (SEC)
Jan. 1 Gator: Wisconsin (Big Ten No. 4) vs. South Carolina (SEC No. 6)
Jan. 4 Cotton: Texas (Big 12 No. 2) vs. Texas A&M (SEC)
Jan. 5 BBVA Compass: Bowling Green (Big East*) vs. Louisiana-Lafayette (SEC No. 8/9*)
Jan. 6 GoDaddy.com: Kent State (MAC) vs. Louisiana-Monroe (Sun Belt No. 2)

Teams in bold have accepted a bid.
* — Replacement team for a conference without an eligible team.

College Football: Bowl projections: Upsets, Miami’s ban change postseason outlook is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 College Football: Bowl projections: Upsets, Miami’s ban change postseason outlook  College Football: Bowl projections: Upsets, Miami’s ban change postseason outlook  College Football: Bowl projections: Upsets, Miami’s ban change postseason outlook  College Football: Bowl projections: Upsets, Miami’s ban change postseason outlook  College Football: Bowl projections: Upsets, Miami’s ban change postseason outlook

 College Football: Bowl projections: Upsets, Miami’s ban change postseason outlook

MLS Roundup: San Jose Earthquakes gain a 1-1 draw against the Portland Timbers

ba2cbd06d7f7358afda6ccf9735e21d4 MLS Roundup: San Jose Earthquakes gain a 1 1 draw against the Portland Timbers
#8 of and Steven Smith #14 of go after a ball in front of the goal during the second half of the game at Jeld-Wen Field on October 27, 2012 in Portland, Oregon. Wondolowski scored a goal in the first half that tied an MLS season record for goals scored and the game ended in a 1-1 draw.
(October 26, 2012 – Source: Steve Dykes/ North America)

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — Chris Wondolowski tied the MLS single-season record with his 27th goal and the wrapped up the regular season with a 1-1 draw against the Portland Timbers on Saturday night.

Wondolowski scored in the 24th minute, matching the record set by of Tampa Bay in 1996. The 29-year-old forward booted a into the lower left corner of the net after Portland goalkeeper Donovan Ricketts was whistled for taking out Steven in a race to secure the ball.

San Jose (19-6-9) has already secured its second Supporters’ Shield and home-field advantage throughout the playoffs. The Earthquakes went undefeated in their last 10 matches and lead the league with 72 goals. They will face the winner of the Nov. 1 match between and in first round.

The Timbers (8-16-10) appeared to be going down to defeat in the cold, steady drizzle until Bright Dike scored his fifth goal in the 67th minute to tie the score and put some life into the Portland attack.

UNITED 1, FIRE 1, TIE

BRIDGEVIEW, Ill. (AP) — Lionard Pajoy scored in the 50th minute, and Bill Hamid made eight saves to help United rally to tie Chicago.

The draw gave D.C. second place in the Eastern Conference.

United (17-10-7) went 5-0-2 in its last seven matches to finish with 58 points, one more than New York and Chicago (17-11-6). New York finished third, ahead of fourth-, on a tiebreaker.

With New York beating Philadelphia earlier in the day, the Fire needed to beat D.C. to avoid playing in the first-round one-game elimination round.

Instead, Chicago will host fifth-place Houston in that game Wednesday night. The winner plays Eastern Kansas City in the second round.

Patrick Nyarko scored for Chicago in the 16th minute.

3, UNION 0

CHESTER, Pa. (AP) — scored twice, and added a goal for New York.

The (16-9-9) reached the playoffs for the third straight year, and the ninth time in 10 seasons. New York won all three matches this season against the Union (10-18-6), who lost their final three games and will miss the postseason for the second time in three years.

Cooper scored on a penalty kick in the 13th minute after Tim Cahill was taken down by defender Carlos Valdes in the box a minute earlier. Henry scored his 15th goal to make it 2-0 in the 35th minute.

Cooper added his team-leading 18th goal — and fifth against Philadelphia this season — in the 66th minute.

RAPIDS 2, DYNAMO 0

COMMERCE CITY, Colo. (AP) — Kamani Hill and Andre Akpan scored to help Colorado beat playoff-bound Houston.

Colorado (11-19-4) finished one of the worst campaigns in franchise history with only its second two- of the year. The Rapids were 3-5-3 in their last 11 games.

Goalkeeper Steward Ceus posted his second shutout in his second career MLS start.

Houston (14-9-11) had already rapped up fifth place in the Eastern Conference and its sixth playoff appearance in seven years. The Dynamo will play Chicago in the wild-card game Wednesday night in Chicago.

Houston rested many of its regulars including its top five goal scorers and starting goalkeeper Tally Hall. Tyler Deric subbed for Hall and made his first career MLS start.

REVOLUTION 1, IMPACT 0

MONTREAL (AP) — A.J. Soares scored in the 89th minute to lift New England past Montreal.

Soares was inside the box to head Chris Tierney’s free kick past the reach of goalkeeper Troy Perkins for an unsatisfying end to a game the Impact mostly dominated.

The Revolution (9-17-8) ended a 13-game winless run in road matches and won for the first time in Canada soil, having previously gone 0-5-3 in Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver.

The Impact finished the season 12-16-6.

WHITESCAPS 0, REAL SALT LAKE 0, TIE

SANDY, Utah (AP) — Real Salt Lake played to the scoreless draw with Vancouver and made a little bit of history along the way in the regular-season finale.

RSL (17-11-6) became just the second MLS team to not allow a goal in the first 15 minutes of any regular-season match when it held Vancouver (11-13-10) scoreless before halftime. Houston also accomplished the feat in 2009. Both teams qualified for the playoffs.

MLS Roundup: San Jose Earthquakes gain a 1-1 draw against the Portland Timbers is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

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NBA Preview: Miami might have No. 2 vs LA Lakers

29cb7960681365f43646b643d2ba6cfa NBA Preview: Miami might have No. 2 vs LA Lakers
#6 of the waits for play against the Atlanta Hawks at on October 7, 2012 in Atlanta, Georgia..
(October 6, 2012 – Source: . Cox/ North America)

(PhatzRadio / SI Feature) — This week’s issue of SI features my annual forecast for the season. In the issue, I predict the Miami Heat will defend their championship in a spectacular Finals against the . Please allow me to explain.

The Lakers are going to face the tougher bracket to the Finals because they’ll have to knock out Oklahoma City, the defending . The Thunder didn’t make any crucial offseason additions because their priority was to deal with a new contract (either this month or next summer) for James Harden, and also because they’re counting on their young stars to improve as a group. James’ loss in the 2011 Finals inspired him to make major gains last season, and Durant will be seeking the same kind of improvement. Harden will be equally demanding of himself, Russell Westbrook will benefit from another year at the point and the example of their stars — renowned as a hard-working trio already — will bring forth similar efforts from their teammates.

But it won’t be enough to beat the Lakers. So long as they’re healthy, the Lakers are going to win the matchups, and the difference-maker is going to be .

Westbrook and are going to give each other headaches. Kobe Bryant will win his against Thabo , and Durant will win his against Metta . will play his normal overbearing defense against . Harden will provide his typical surge of scoring off the bench, and if those were the only matters of interest in the series, then Oklahoma City would have a fair chance.

The difference will be passing. The Thunder aren’t known for their halfcourt offense, and their inability to create plays for one another on that side of the floor hurt them against Miami. Nash is going to be the best passer in this series, and the Thunder might be able to survive his playmaking if that was their only worry. But the secondary option of Gasol as a playmaker in the frontcourt will make the difference. The Lakers will be able to run offense through two players — Nash or Gasol — while, until he proves otherwise, Westbrook will be entering the series as a score-first point guard. The Thunder have loaded up with terrific defenders in Westbrook, Sefolosha, Perkins and Serge Ibaka, but when the pace of this series slows, the winning advantage will be the ability of the Lakers to liberate each other with passing.

And yet it’s not a sure thing for the Lakers, because the mileage on Nash and Bryant should give hope to the Thunder. They’ve invested in youth, while the Lakers are gambling that their elderly starting backcourt (a combined 91,375 regular-season and playoff minutes have been accrued by Nash and Bryant) will be healthy after another long regular season. Howard underwent back surgery this year and Gasol is coming off a tiring Olympics, and so the Thunder’s goal should be to outwork and outlast the Lakers.

The deep Spurs look like a strong No. 3 in the West as Kawhi Leonard builds on a strong rookie year. But the rest of the conference is in upheaval. The roster of the rising Nuggets (my pick at No. 4 in the West) is blended superbly but lacks star power, while the Clippers (No. 5) are loaded with charismatic talent to go with a lot of injury concerns. The Mavericks (No. 7) are in transition for another year, the Grizzlies (No. 6) are being sold (which figures to result in major changes and distractions) and the unpredictability over Ricky Rubio’s return from knee surgery keeps me from picking Minnesota (No. 9) to overtake Utah (No. 8) for the final playoff spot in the West.

Three title contenders stand apart from the rest of the league — the Thunder, Lakers and Heat. The rival in the East who looks most capable of scaring the champs is Boston, because the Celtics have (in my own opinion) the league’s most effective point guard in Rajon Rondo. The Heat have always had problems stopping Rondo within the schemes of coach Doc Rivers, and Rondo and center Kevin Garnett will each be confident of winning an individual matchup against Miami. If Miami was stretched to seven games in the conference finals last season despite injuries that decimated the Celtics’ depth, then shouldn’t the Celtics’ improved depth renew their hope of upsetting Miami this time?

The problem is that Boston opens the season (on Tuesday in Miami, by no coincidence) with three stars at 35 or older (Garnett, Paul Pierce, Jason Terry). Rivers will be pacing their minutes while also integrating Terry and the rest of his new bench. The priority will be to manage health and to marry a new blend of complementary talent. At the same time, the Celtics will be competing in their own division against the improved Knicks and Nets, who won’t be pacing themselves for the playoffs. The Knicks and Nets will be racing all year to win their New York rivalry. They and the Celtics all have a chance to win 50 or more games this season, but when April arrives, Boston will be more likely to back off and accept a lower seed in order to rest Garnett and Pierce for the postseason.

That’s why I’m picking Boston to finish third in the Atlantic — behind the Knicks and Nets, respectively — and No. 5 in the East overall. The Celtics will beat Brooklyn (No. 4) in the opening round but lose in the conference semis to No. 1 seeded Miami, which will celebrate its third straight postseason win against Boston.

I’m picking the Pacers to move up to No. 2 in the East as the team grows together. Paul George will mature, George Hill will solidify himself as the starting point guard and David West will continue to distance himself from his 2011 knee surgery. I like the more experienced and defensive-minded Knicks (No. 3) to reach the conference finals at Indiana’s expense.

The Bulls are penciled in at No. 7 in the East because of doubts (similar to Minnesota’s with Rubio) over the timing of Derrick Rose’s return from knee surgery. The 76ers will be No. 8 as they struggle to reinvent themselves around Andrew Bynum. Every franchise in the East except for Charlotte and Orlando looks forward to winter with some hope of making the playoffs in the spring.

The bottom line is that no one is going to be able to beat LeBron James this season. The league MVP is going to be driven by the confidence he earned from last year’s championship and he’s going to have the best season of his career. At 27, he is peaking. His teammates and coaching staff are in their third year together, and the team has improved with the additions of Ray Allen and Rashard Lewis. So long as they’re able to withstand Rondo’s Celtics, the Heat will be headed for a showdown in the NBA Finals against Kobe’s Lakers.

That promises to be the most anticipated Finals since the 1980s. The Lakers will be hungry to earn a sixth title for Bryant and a first for Nash and Howard, and they’ll be aiming to establish their advantages at point guard and in the front court. But the Heat will prevail because there will be no stopping LeBron. The Heat have four stars of their own, they are a fully-integrated team that excels defensively and in transition, and their best player is better than anyone anywhere. Miami wins inevitably.

NBA Preview: Miami might have No. 2 vs LA Lakers is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

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NHL Stanley Cup Finals: Devils avoid elimination, beat Kings on late goals

5c0bf282879fcc7241f05a642ea87c13 NHL Stanley Cup Finals: Devils avoid elimination, beat Kings on late goals
#10 of the skates for the puck against Adam Henrique #14 Andy Greene #6 of the in Game Four of the 2012 Stanley Cup Final at Staples Center on June 6, 2012 in Los Angeles, California.
(June 5, 2012 – Source: /Getty Images North America)

LOS ANGELES (AP) — When Adam Henrique decided to face by shaving his beard into a bristly mustache, the New Jersey Devils realized their remarkable rookie isn’t exactly buckling under the pressure of the .

probably has pads older than his teammate, and the NHL’s winningest goalie was acutely aware of the stakes riding on his every save in Game 4.

After the 22-year-old clutch scorer and the 40-year-old goalie teamed up to put the Stanley Cup back in its crate, the Devils headed home still nursing the chance of a comeback for all ages.

Henrique scored the with 4:29 to play, Brodeur made 21 saves, and New Jersey beat the Los Angeles Kings 3-1 on Wednesday night to avoid a sweep in the finals.

After making a series of stunning saves in a performance that evoked his greatest moments, Brodeur said he believes in the Devils’ comeback chances “more than yesterday.”

“You know, I think we wanted to make them jump on a plane and come to New Jersey,” Brodeur said. “We had to go anyway. Might as well get a game over there.”

Game 5 is Saturday night in Newark, N.J.

and also scored third- as the Eastern Devils disappointed Los Angeles’ long-suffering fans who have waited nearly 45 years for their franchise’s first championship.

A few minutes after Drew Doughty tied it for the Kings, Henrique scored his third enormous goal of the postseason, taking a pass from David Clarkson and rocketing a wrist shot past , the Kings’ nearly unbeatable goalie.

The finalist ended two of the Devils’ first three playoff series with overtime goals, and he kept New Jersey alive with his latest.

“It’s fun. This is where every kid dreams of playing one day,” Henrique said. “We know it’s going to be a tough task to come back, (but) there’s no quit in the group in here. We know we can do it. We know we can put four together and come back.”

Quick stopped 21 shots for the Kings, but lost his streak of nearly 139 shutout minutes right when he probably could have wrapped up the Conn Smythe Trophy as playoff MVP. The Kings had allowed just one third-period goal in their previous nine games.

Kovalchuk added an empty-netter that sent fans streaming forlornly out into a warm evening in Southern California.

“We stayed alive,” said Elias, who has two of the Devils’ five goals in the series. “Marty had to work hard, but he gave us a chance. All we’ve got to do it keep playing hard.”

With a golden chance for a Hockeywood ending, Los Angeles dropped to 15-3 in its spectacular postseason run, failing to win the title on its first try — and in its 200th playoff game, no less — in front of the faithful fans who have never seen the Stanley Cup.

The Kings should head to New Jersey with confidence: They have won all 10 of their road playoff games this spring and 12 straight overall — both NHL postseason records. But after never trailing in the , the Kings never led in Game 4.

“I think (wrapping it up) was definitely on our minds, but they found a way to get a late goal,” Kings captain Dustin Brown said. “We’ve just got to hit the reset button. We’ve been in this situation now four times in the playoffs, and we’ve always come back with a big rebound game.”

Los Angeles set an NHL record by taking a 3-0 lead in all four of its playoff series, but failed three times to close out its opponents in Game 4. Vancouver and Phoenix also won Game 4 before losing Game 5.

The Devils became just the sixth of 26 teams in finals history to force a Game 5 after falling behind 0-3. Only the 1942 ever rallied with four straight wins in the finals, and only three teams in NHL history have done it in any playoff round.

“I think the last three games could have gone our way as easily as they’ve gone L.A.’s way,” Devils coach Peter DeBoer said. “We finally got rewarded tonight.”

After a tight-checking game between two very tight teams, Elias’ rebound goal with 12:04 to play put a hush over Staples Center. But 62 seconds later —and six seconds after Clarkson went off with a questionable boarding penalty — Mike Richards passed ’s faceoff win to Doughty, who rocketed a long shot past Brodeur for the fourth goal of his breakthrough postseason.

But after so many minutes of tight defense, New Jersey won it with a stunning goal in transition: Former Kings forward Alexei Ponikarovsky got the puck to Clarkson, who found Henrique across the ice for his first goal since ending the Eastern Conference finals with an overtime goal.

“That’s probably the best feeling I’ve ever had in my whole career,” Clarkson said. “I saw (Henrique) coming, so I got it to him, and the shot was incredible.”

The Kings opened their first Stanley Cup finals in 19 years with two tense overtime victories in New Jersey, surviving largely on the brilliance of Quick. Los Angeles then returned home and routed the Devils 4-0 in Game 3 on Monday night, setting the stage for a celebration.

But the Devils got into the details, and the Kings must regroup.

“We couldn’t score,” Kopitar said. “We had a couple of chances, and we didn’t bear down. We didn’t get a couple of bounces in, and you have to create your own bounces. They played with a little more desperation than we did, and we have to correct that in Game 5.”

No surprise given the tremendous stakes, both teams were nervous and jumpy from the opening faceoff in Game 4. Quick got plenty of work early when the Devils got two power plays in the opening minutes, while Slava Voynov and Kopitar hit Brodeur’s posts for the Kings in the scoreless first period.

Both teams appeared to be as tense as the crowd in the second, with Brodeur making a stellar pad save on Simon Gagne’s breakaway chance late.

The NHL unpacked the Stanley Cup deep inside Staples Center before the third period, but it never saw the ice.

Gagne and Trevor Lewis got a breakaway chance early in the third, but Brodeur sprawled on his back to stop Lewis. Brodeur mishandled the puck moments later and nearly gave it right to Brown, but the deflection off Brown’s right skate barely missed the net.

Elias finally slipped in on Quick and slapped home a rebound of ’s shot, putting a pall on the crowd and ending Quick’s scoreless streak at 138 minutes, 39 seconds.

The gloom didn’t last long: Doughty teed up the latest in his long line of booming shots, and Brodeur was at least partly screened by Anton Volchenkov in front.

NOTES: The Kings set a franchise attendance record for the second straight game, packing 18,867 into Staples Center. … The Devils changed their lineup for Game 4, inserting Sykora into his sixth Stanley Cup finals along with D Henrik Tallinder, who had been out since January with a blood clot. Sykora, a healthy scratch since Game 3 of the Eastern Conference finals, replaced Jacob Josefson, while Tallinder took the spot of former Kings D Peter Harrold. Sykora played more than 12 minutes, and Tallinder logged nearly 20 minutes. … Gagne played his second straight game after returning to the lineup for Game 3. He had been out since Dec. 26 with a concussion. … Staples Center was occupied by an LMFAO show on Tuesday night, and Van Halen will play before the teams return for a potential Game 6, although Kings coach Darryl Sutter says the ice is holding up well. … Will Ferrell, Matthew Perry and Alyssa Milano attended the game.

NHL Stanley Cup Finals: Devils avoid elimination, beat Kings on late goals is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

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NHL Stanley Cup Finals 2012: Kopitar’s OT goal lifts Kings over Devils 2-1

04d6d5e66423ba4537d7b1d75dade5c3 NHL Stanley Cup Finals 2012: Kopitar’s OT goal lifts Kings over Devils 2 1
#9 of the fights for the puck with #14 and #11 of the Los Angeles Kings during Game One of the 2012 Final at the on May 30, 2012 in Newark, New Jersey.
(May 29, 2012 – Source: /Getty Images North America)

NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — East. West. It doesn’t make a difference to the Los Angeles Kings.

All they have done in the playoffs is win and the Eastern Conference champion New Jersey Devils became their latest victim.

Anze Kopitar scored a spectacular goal on a breakaway with 11:47 left in overtime Wednesday night and the Kings beat the Devils 2-1 in Game 1 of the .

“From a series standpoint, it’s huge to put them behind us, right off the get-go,” Kings captain said. “It makes it a little more difficult for them to get back into it if we play our game and do the right things.”

Kopitar did everything perfectly on his breakaway after taking a great chip pass from . He faked a , put the puck on his forehand and beat a prone Martin Brodeur.

“All losses this time of year are really hard to take because your dream is slowly shutting down,” Brodeur said. “We lost one game, there’s six games left in this series. They need to win three. We need to win four.”

Los Angeles has won all nine of its road games in the playoffs, an . The Kings are now one win shy of tying the for postseason road victories.

More importantly, they are three wins away from the franchise’s first NHL title since entering the league in 1967-68. They have won 11 consecutive road playoff games dating back to last season.

Los Angeles is now 13-2 this postseason.

Kopitar saw Justin Williams battling with Devils defenseman and forward along the boards.

“I wanted to make sure I went to the middle,” Kopitar said. “I don’t know if he heard me or not, but I yelled for the puck and he chipped it. It was perfect, right on my tape. It happened pretty quick and I was able to finish it off.”

As soon as he rifled the puck into the net, Kopitar raised his hands and banged himself into the boards, facing the crowd off to Brodeur’s right.

“To put it past a goaltender like Marty,” Kopitar said, “is a good feeling.”

The veteran goaltender dejectedly skated off to the locker room as the rest of the Kings piled on Kopitar.

Williams said his setup was a prayer.

“I just threw an area pass,” he said. “I hoped that he was alone and he was. I’ve played with him a long time. You just kind of feel it. If it wasn’t there, it would have went to nobody.

“It was a no-lose situation.”

This is the third straight series in which the Devils have lost the first game.

“I think it was probably the worst game in the playoffs for us,” said Devils leading scorer Ilya Kovalchuk, who was limited to one shot. “Maybe we were a little too nervous before the game started, but it’s all excuses. We’ve got to make sure we know what we didn’t do right, and be a different team next game.”

Fourth-line center Colin Fraser scored in the first period for the Kings, the No. 8 seed in the West who beat the top three teams to get to their first Stanley Cup finals since 1993.

Anton Volchenkov tied it late in the second period for New Jersey, the East’s sixth seed.

Kings goaltender Jonathan Quick finished with 17 saves in what was a relatively easy night. Brodeur had 23 saves as the Devils lost in overtime for just the second time this postseason; they have won four times. Los Angeles is 3-0 after regulation this spring.

The Devils had two great chances to take the lead early in the third, and for a split second it appeared they went ahead with 16:02 to play in regulation when scored off a wild goal-mouth scramble.

While the horns went off and the fans celebrated, Dan O’Halloran quickly waved off the goal.

It was reviewed in Toronto and replay clearly showed Parise swept the puck into the net with his hand.

Defenseman Mark Fayne was probably kicking himself six minutes later when he missed a wide-open net from the edge of the crease in what was the Devils’ best period of the night.

“We didn’t deserve to win tonight, and we didn’t,” said Devils veteran , a member of their Cup-winning teams in 2000 and 2003.

The Kings had their chances, too, with Brodeur making two outstanding saves about 10 seconds apart. He made a stacked-pad save on a one-timer by defenseman Drew Doughty from 30 feet after a drop pass from Mike Richards. A turnover seconds later set up forward Dustin Penner for a shot from the left circle.

The Kings came into the finals after steamrolling Vancouver, St. Louis and Phoenix in just 14 games, and they made the Devils look ordinary in the first 40 minutes, holding them to nine shots.

But a fluke goal by Volchenkov tied the game with 1:12 left in the second.

Volchenkov took a shot from the left point that Quick kicked away in front. The puck went airborne, avoided Elias in front and hit off the shoulder of Kings defenseman Slava Voynov before going into the net.

Until then, Fraser’s first career playoff goal was beginning to look like the winner.

It was a typical Kings’ goal, created off the forecheck — by the fourth line, no less.

Jordan Nolan checked New Jersey’s Andy Greene behind the Devils’ net, outfought him for the puck and found Fraser between the circles for a shot that beat Brodeur 9:56 into the game.

The Kings had chances to extend the lead, but Brodeur, who was the difference in the Devils’ victory over the rival Rangers in the conference finals, made three good saves. The best stop by the 40-year-old, three-time Cup winner came on the opening shift of the second, when he blocked Kopitar point blank on the edge of the crease.

Kopitar, of course, would get one past Brodeur much later in the evening.

Brodeur also stopped forward Jeff Carter from in close and made a big pad stop on Penner in the second.

The Devils were held without a shot for more than 14 minutes of the period before Parise was credited with one on a short-handed attempt in which the puck rolled off his stick into the crease.

Quick, who wasn’t very busy in the first two periods, made his best save with a glove stop on Zubrus from the left circle after a turnover.

However, New Jersey managed to tie it on Volchenkov’s strange goal.

The tally came just after Quick got into a tussle with Parise in the crease, and refused to let the Devils’ captain get up after he fell as Parise lost his helmet.

“I think we’re going to have to find another level,” Devils coach Peter DeBoer said. “We were a little tentative, as was expected for a Stanley Cup final. I think we got better as the game went along, but you have to play 60 minutes against that team.

“We have to be better than we were tonight.”

NOTES: Less than a minute into the game, the chant of “BEAT L-A” echoed through the arena. … Doug O’Neill, the trainer of Kentucky Derby and Preakness winner I’ll Have Another, was on hand, as was New York Giants offensive lineman Chris Snee and New York Jets coach Rex Ryan. … Volchenkov’s goal was his first in the playoffs since Game 3 of the 2007 Stanley Cup finals when he played for Ottawa against Anaheim. … Kopitar’s goal was his second OT winner in the postseason. The other was in 2010 at Vancouver. He has 12 points in the last nine games, including six goals. …The was the first Game 1 of the finals that went to overtime since 2002, when the Carolina Hurricanes defeated the Detroit Red Wings 3-2 at Joe Louis Arena on a goal by Ron Francis, just 58 seconds past regulation.

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NHL Stanley Cup Finals 2012: Kopitar’s OT goal lifts Kings over Devils 2-1

04d6d5e66423ba4537d7b1d75dade5c3 NHL Stanley Cup Finals 2012: Kopitar’s OT goal lifts Kings over Devils 2 1
Zach Parise #9 of the fights for the puck with #14 and Anze Kopitar #11 of the during Game One of the 2012 Final at the on May 30, 2012 in Newark, New Jersey.
(May 29, 2012 – Source: / North America)

NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — East. West. It doesn’t make a difference to the Los Angeles Kings.

All they have done in the playoffs is win and the Eastern New Jersey Devils became their latest victim.

Anze Kopitar scored a spectacular goal on a breakaway with 11:47 left in overtime Wednesday night and the Kings beat the Devils 2-1 in Game 1 of the .

“From a series standpoint, it’s huge to put them behind us, right off the get-go,” Kings captain said. “It makes it a little more difficult for them to get back into it if we play our game and do the right things.”

Kopitar did everything perfectly on his breakaway after taking a great chip pass from . He faked a , put the puck on his forehand and beat a prone .

“All losses this time of year are really hard to take because your dream is slowly shutting down,” Brodeur said. “We lost one game, there’s six games left in this series. They need to win three. We need to win four.”

Los Angeles has won all nine of its road games in the playoffs, an NHL record. The Kings are now one win shy of tying the NHL record for postseason .

More importantly, they are three wins away from the franchise’s first NHL title since entering the league in 1967-68. They have won 11 playoff games dating back to last season.

Los Angeles is now 13-2 this postseason.

Kopitar saw Justin Williams battling with Devils defenseman and forward Dainius Zubrus along the boards.

“I wanted to make sure I went to the middle,” Kopitar said. “I don’t know if he heard me or not, but I yelled for the puck and he chipped it. It was perfect, right on my tape. It happened pretty quick and I was able to finish it off.”

As soon as he rifled the puck into the net, Kopitar raised his hands and banged himself into the boards, facing the crowd off to Brodeur’s right.

“To put it past a goaltender like Marty,” Kopitar said, “is a good feeling.”

The veteran goaltender dejectedly skated off to the locker room as the rest of the Kings piled on Kopitar.

Williams said his setup was a prayer.

“I just threw an area pass,” he said. “I hoped that he was alone and he was. I’ve played with him a long time. You just kind of feel it. If it wasn’t there, it would have went to nobody.

“It was a no-lose situation.”

This is the third straight series in which the Devils have lost the first game.

“I think it was probably the worst game in the playoffs for us,” said Devils leading scorer , who was limited to one shot. “Maybe we were a little too nervous before the game started, but it’s all excuses. We’ve got to make sure we know what we didn’t do right, and be a different team next game.”

Fourth-line center Colin Fraser scored in the first period for the Kings, the No. 8 seed in the West who beat the top three teams to get to their first Stanley Cup finals since 1993.

Anton Volchenkov tied it late in the second period for New Jersey, the East’s sixth seed.

Kings goaltender Jonathan Quick finished with 17 saves in what was a relatively easy night. Brodeur had 23 saves as the Devils lost in overtime for just the second time this postseason; they have won four times. Los Angeles is 3-0 after regulation this spring.

The Devils had two great chances to take the lead early in the third, and for a split second it appeared they went ahead with 16:02 to play in regulation when Zach Parise scored off a wild goal-mouth scramble.

While the horns went off and the fans celebrated, referee Dan O’Halloran quickly waved off the goal.

It was reviewed in Toronto and replay clearly showed Parise swept the puck into the net with his hand.

Defenseman Mark Fayne was probably kicking himself six minutes later when he missed a wide-open net from the edge of the crease in what was the Devils’ best period of the night.

“We didn’t deserve to win tonight, and we didn’t,” said Devils veteran Patrik Elias, a member of their Cup-winning teams in 2000 and 2003.

The Kings had their chances, too, with Brodeur making two outstanding saves about 10 seconds apart. He made a stacked-pad save on a one-timer by defenseman Drew Doughty from 30 feet after a drop pass from . A turnover seconds later set up forward Dustin Penner for a shot from the left circle.

The Kings came into the finals after steamrolling Vancouver, St. Louis and Phoenix in just 14 games, and they made the Devils look ordinary in the first 40 minutes, holding them to nine shots.

But a fluke goal by Volchenkov tied the game with 1:12 left in the second.

Volchenkov took a shot from the left point that Quick kicked away in front. The puck went airborne, avoided Elias in front and hit off the shoulder of Kings defenseman Slava Voynov before going into the net.

Until then, Fraser’s first career playoff goal was beginning to look like the winner.

It was a typical Kings’ goal, created off the forecheck — by the fourth line, no less.

Jordan Nolan checked New Jersey’s Andy Greene behind the Devils’ net, outfought him for the puck and found Fraser between the circles for a shot that beat Brodeur 9:56 into the game.

The Kings had chances to extend the lead, but Brodeur, who was the difference in the Devils’ victory over the rival Rangers in the conference finals, made three good saves. The best stop by the 40-year-old, three-time Cup winner came on the opening shift of the second, when he blocked Kopitar point blank on the edge of the crease.

Kopitar, of course, would get one past Brodeur much later in the evening.

Brodeur also stopped forward Jeff Carter from in close and made a big pad stop on Penner in the second.

The Devils were held without a shot for more than 14 minutes of the period before Parise was credited with one on a short-handed attempt in which the puck rolled off his stick into the crease.

Quick, who wasn’t very busy in the first two periods, made his best save with a glove stop on Zubrus from the left circle after a turnover.

However, New Jersey managed to tie it on Volchenkov’s strange goal.

The tally came just after Quick got into a tussle with Parise in the crease, and refused to let the Devils’ captain get up after he fell as Parise lost his helmet.

“I think we’re going to have to find another level,” Devils coach Peter DeBoer said. “We were a little tentative, as was expected for a Stanley Cup final. I think we got better as the game went along, but you have to play 60 minutes against that team.

“We have to be better than we were tonight.”

NOTES: Less than a minute into the game, the chant of “BEAT L-A” echoed through the arena. … Doug O’Neill, the trainer of Kentucky Derby and Preakness winner I’ll Have Another, was on hand, as was New York Giants offensive lineman Chris Snee and New York Jets coach Rex Ryan. … Volchenkov’s goal was his first in the playoffs since Game 3 of the 2007 Stanley Cup finals when he played for Ottawa against Anaheim. … Kopitar’s goal was his second OT winner in the postseason. The other was in 2010 at Vancouver. He has 12 points in the last nine games, including six goals. …The was the first Game 1 of the finals that went to overtime since 2002, when the Carolina Hurricanes defeated the Detroit Red Wings 3-2 at Joe Louis Arena on a goal by Ron Francis, just 58 seconds past regulation.

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