So New Jersey finally found a way to win. Brodeur, like all great goaltenders, bounced back from a poor game.
The first period was a rather cautious affair, as both teams seemed reluctant to take any chances. They seemed to be almost feeling each other out, or waiting for just the right time to go for a scoring opportunity.
The Devils played even more cautiously in the second period, managing 3 shots. LA, meanwhile had 7 shots. But once again, the period ended scoreless.
The Devils finally started to open up in the third. And it promptly paid off.
Elias opened the scoring about 8 minutes into the third, which I felt was huge, since the team scoring the first goal had won the previous 3 games.
The lead lasted one minute, exactly.
Drew Doughty tied it on a powerplay goal just 4 seconds after David Clarkson went to the penalty box.
With less than 4 minutes to go, Adam Henrique scored what turned out to be the winner, and New Jersey tightened the screws on defence to make the lead hold up. Kovalchuk added an empty netter to seal the deal.
Again the Kings came back, and again they lost in OT.
The Habs jumped out to a 2-0 lead early in the second period.
McSorley, atoning for getting caught with an illegal stick in game 2, tied it with just 5 seconds left in the second period.
After a scoreless third, LeClaire again won it overtime, but this time it was at the 14:37 mark. The Habs now had a 3-1 stranglehold on the Series, with game 5 in Montreal.
New Jersey spotted the Red Wings an early lead, 2-1, and then reeled off four straight goals to win their first Stanley Cup.
Shawn Chambers scored twice and Billy Guerin collected 3 assists.
The Red Wings were held to just 16 shots on goal, while New Jersey scored their 5 on just 26 shots on a shaky Mike Vernon.
Los Angeles: No panic yet, and now we go on the road!
New Jersey: We’re still alive, but let’s not lose this one at home!
Salvador
Brodeur
Doughty
8.5: The teams took a while to actually open up. The goaltending was great, but Quick showed some vulnerability.
References
The first period was a rather cautious affair, as both teams seemed reluctant to take any chances. They seemed to be almost feeling each other out, or waiting for just the right time to go for a scoring opportunity.
The Devils played even more cautiously in the second period, managing 3 shots. LA, meanwhile had 7 shots. But once again, the period ended scoreless.
The Devils finally started to open up in the third. And it promptly paid off.
Elias opened the scoring about 8 minutes into the third, which I felt was huge, since the team scoring the first goal had won the previous 3 games.
The lead lasted one minute, exactly.
Drew Doughty tied it on a powerplay goal just 4 seconds after David Clarkson went to the penalty box.
With less than 4 minutes to go, Adam Henrique scored what turned out to be the winner, and New Jersey tightened the screws on defence to make the lead hold up. Kovalchuk added an empty netter to seal the deal.
The Way It Was
1993
Again the Kings came back, and again they lost in OT.
The Habs jumped out to a 2-0 lead early in the second period.
McSorley, atoning for getting caught with an illegal stick in game 2, tied it with just 5 seconds left in the second period.
After a scoreless third, LeClaire again won it overtime, but this time it was at the 14:37 mark. The Habs now had a 3-1 stranglehold on the Series, with game 5 in Montreal.
1995
New Jersey spotted the Red Wings an early lead, 2-1, and then reeled off four straight goals to win their first Stanley Cup.
Shawn Chambers scored twice and Billy Guerin collected 3 assists.
The Red Wings were held to just 16 shots on goal, while New Jersey scored their 5 on just 26 shots on a shaky Mike Vernon.
Attitudes In The Dressing Room At This Point:
Los Angeles: No panic yet, and now we go on the road!
New Jersey: We’re still alive, but let’s not lose this one at home!
My Three Stars:
Salvador
Brodeur
Doughty
Game Rating Scale 1 (boring) - 10 (exciting)
8.5: The teams took a while to actually open up. The goaltending was great, but Quick showed some vulnerability.
References
Official Site of the National Hockey League | NHL.com. National Hockey League. Web. 11 Jun. 2012. <https://www.nhl.com>.
Sports Reference LLC. Hockey-Reference.com - Hockey Statistics and History. Web. http://www.hockey-reference.com. Web. 11 Jun. 2012.
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