DALLAS 2, BUFFALO 1 (3OT)
BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) - The Dallas Stars were almost too exhausted
to lift the Stanley Cup -- and the Buffalo Sabres were almost too
mad to let go.
Brett Hull scored at 14:51 of the third overtime, putting a
rebound over weary Dominik Hasek as the Dallas Stars won hockey's
biggest prize as much by exhaustion as execution, outlasting the
Buffalo Sabres 2-1 in Game 6 of the Stanley Cup Finals Saturday
night.
It was the second-longest overtime game in Stanley Cup finals
history and the longest to decide a winner -- and a disputed
winner at that. The angry Sabres protested that Hull's left skate
was in the crease as he scored to make Dallas the first Sun Belt
city to hoist the Stanley Cup. When Lord Stanley paid $50 for the
cup in 1892, he likely didn't envision it being won by a team
located much closer to Mexico than Canada. The OT lasted 54:51,
the longest in the finals except for Edmonton's 3-2 victory over
Boston in Game 1 in 1990 that lasted 55:13.
"We had nothing left. They had nothing left. Thank God it's
over," Stanley Cup playoff MVP Joe Nieuwendyk of Dallas said.
The game may have been over. The arguing was only beginning.
The Sabres refused to leave their locker room for 20 minutes,
claiming the goal shouldn't have counted. When they heard NHL
officials supervisor Bryan Lewis' explanation that Hull had
possession of the puck both inside and outside of the crease,
they almost couldn't believe it.
It was the NHL's worst nightmare -- to have one of the most
exciting, if lowest scoring, finals in years decided by a
controversial play. TV replays showed Hull's left skate in the
crease before he shot.
"Can he have a foot in (the crease) and the goal count? Yes,"
Lewis said. "He played the puck from his foot to his stick and
shot and scored. He was deemed to be in control and possession of
the puck even if a skate was in crease."
Lewis said this very scenario -- a skate being in the crease but
a goal being counted -- was contained in a March 25 memorandum to
officials.
The Sabres countered by insisting that Hull did not have control
of the puck. Hasek, who made 48 saves, was among the most upset.
"It makes me very mad. It could happen any time during the
season, but if it happens in a Stanley Cup Final ... I still
cannot believe it," he said. "I don't understand what the video
judge is doing. Maybe he was in the bathroom. Maybe he was
sleeping. Maybe he doesn't know the rule."
After seeing the replay, Hasek said, "I was going to put my
jersey on and go back out."
Hull replied, "All I know is, I'm not going back out there."
The Sabres' Joe Juneau suggested the NHL didn't want the
embarrassment of restarting a game that everybody thought had
ended, saying, "It was a gutless move."
Sabres coach Lindy Ruff said, "That's your worst nightmare right
there. We're going to protest, of course. Anybody could see it.
It wasn't a goal. All we want is a review. They said it was a
good goal."
Hull ended the intense, suspenseful game with his third goal of
the series and third career overtime playoff goal. Hasek,
outplayed again by Ed Belfour, went to his chest to bounce on a
shot by Jere Lehtinen, who scored the first goal four hours
before. But the puck rebounded into the slot to Hull, who lifted
it into the net from the right side of the crease.
"You can have all the other ones, this is the biggest for me,"
Hull said. "It is unbelievable."
Hull's name goes on the ancient trophy with that of his father,
Bobby, who won an NHL title with Chicago in 1961.
"It is unbelievable starting out as a kid growing up in that
shadow and finally making a niche for myself," Brett Hull said.
"This finally completes the cycle. I hope someday my son or
grandkids can do it."
Stars coach Ken Hitchcock said Hull played in the last two games
with a left knee that needs reconstructive surgery and two
injured groin muscles.
"He may be rehabbing when the next season starts," Hitchcock
said. "He played on one knee and no groins the last three shifts.
He limped to the front of the net. He limped into the corner. ...
I'm glad there isn't a Game 7, because I don't know where this
team would be (physically) if we did."
Dallas' delight at winning a Stanley Cup only six years after the
Minnesota North Stars relocated there probably is surpassed only
by Buffalo's disappointment at losing -- again. The Buffalo Bills
lost four consecutive Super Bowls earlier in the 1990s, once when
Scott Norwood's game-winning field goal attempt against the New
York Giants sailed wide.
Once again Saturday, Buffalo was wide right. Joe Juneau, Michael
Peca and Alexei Zhitnik all missed excellent scoring chances from
the third period on that sailed to the right by Belfour. Of
course, the odds also were in Dallas' favor as soon as the game
went into overtime. The last six teams with a chance to win the
cup in overtime have done so. Also, the road team has won the
last eight Stanley Cup finals overtime games.
The Stars are the fourth team to win a Stanley Cup in a game
decided in multiple overtimes, joining Colorado (1996), Detroit
(1950) and Chicago (1934). With 22 goals -- 13 by Dallas and nine
by Buffalo -- it was the lowest-scoring six-game final round in
Stanley Cup history. The record of 25 was set by the New York
Rangers (14) and Toronto (11) in 1940.
"Today is the happiest day of my life," said Belfour, who
stopped 53 shots, allowing only Stu Barnes' second-period goal.
"It is just unbelievable. I'm just happy to be on this team and
get a chance to play on such a great team. ... I am a hardworking
goaltender and am happy to be on this team."
Mike Modano assisted on the Stars' final five goals of the
series. Modano led the Stars with 23 points in the playoffs, two
more than Nieuwendyk, whose six game-winning playoff goals
matched the record Joe Sakic set with the Colorado Avalanche in
1996.
Dallas Stars 2, BUFFALO SABRES 1 (3OT)
1ST 2ND 3RD 1OT 2OT 3OT FINAL
--- --- --- --- --- --- -----
Dallas 1 0 0 0 0 1 2
Buffalo 0 1 0 0 0 0 1
FIRST PERIOD - SCORING: 1, Dallas, Lehtinen 10 (Modano, Ludwig),
8:09. PENALTIES: None.
SECOND PERIOD - SCORING: 2, Buffalo, Barnes 7 (Primeau, Zhitnik),
18:21. PENALTIES: Sanderson, Buf (interference), 5:19; Ludwig,
Dal (interference), 10:49; Hogue, Dal (tripping), 14:28; Peca,
Buf (slashing), 19:27.
THIRD PERIOD - SCORING: None PENALTIES: None.
FIRST OVERTIME - SCORING: None. PENALTIES: None.
SECOND OVERTIME - SCORING: None. PENALTIES: None.
THIRD PERIOD - SCORING: 3, Dallas, Hull 8 (Lehtinen, Modano),
14:51. PENALTIES: None.
SHOTS ON GOAL
1ST 2ND 3RD 1OT 2OT 3OT TOTAL
--- --- --- --- --- --- -----
Dallas 5 11 10 4 13 7 50
Buffalo 11 15 6 6 12 4 54
POWER PLAY: Dallas 0 of 2; Buffalo 0 of 2. GOALIES: Dallas,
Belfour 16-7 (54 shots-53 saves). Buffalo, Hasek 13-6 (50-48).
Referees: Terry Gregson, Bill McCreary. Linesmen: Gord Broseker,
Kevin Collins.
A:18,595 (18,595).
|