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Penguins youth marches to Stanley Cup
By Dan Wetzel
Jun 13, 2009
DETROIT Hed given up five Game 5 goals on this same sheet of ice. He was yanked in the second period as catcalls and confidence dropped around him, the Detroit crowd going wild over his failures.
The old questions were returning to his young shoulders you cant win a Stanley Cup with Marc-Andre Fleury(notes), the fans kept laughing. Pittsburgh cant win with all these kids, not yet at least.
Now it was six days later, now everything was on the line, the Stanley Cup shined up and waiting. It was the final, furious seconds of Game 7 and Fleury was back in this red-clad house of horrors, these relentless Red Wings swarming him one last time.
He had held them all night. Twenty-two saves to this point, just one goal. Pittsburgh was clinging to a 2-1 advantage. In the final minutes hed deflected one shot off his shoulder and then the cross bar. In the final seconds hed knocked a shot off to the side.
Now Niklas Lidstrom had the puck on his tape though, room to shoot, the clock in its absolute final tick of life. This was a Hall of Famer with one shot for the Stanley Cup.
Fleury had little choice and perhaps less chance. All the goalie could do was heave his body toward the open side net.
The puck slammed into his chest.
One second later his teammates mobbed him. Ten minutes later he had Lord Stanley in his hands.
He circled around and lifted it in the air, right back in the face of all those Detroit fans that had abused him the week before, right back at those that thought that these Penguins werent ready for the big step, right back at everyone who believed a guy nicknamed Flower would wilt under the pressure.
What is Game 5? Marc-Andre Fleury smiled after. I lift the Cup tonight.
Here were all these Penguins, too young, too green and too inconsistent going out and not just lifting it but seizing it. Here were all these 20-somethings, the team of the future skating into Joe Louis Arena on Friday and deciding the future was starting right now.
They were in 11th place in the middle of the season. They were the fourth seed entering the playoffs. They needed to win all four playoff series on the road. They were forced to take four of five from the mighty Wings, even rebounding from that horrific 5-0 humiliation a week ago.
Talent they had. Everything else they occasionally lacked.
Their coach, Dan Bylsma, said he always thought this team could win a Stanley Cup just maybe not this year he admitted.
Then came Game 7 and it didnt matter who did or didnt think anything. The players believed. This wasnt so much Pittsburgh winning as Pittsburgh dominating.
They were quicker to the puck than Detroit. They showed more life, better execution and deeper hunger. They sucked the life out of Joe Louis long before they pumped in two second-period goals; the educated hockey fans of Hockeytown well aware that their team was being outplayed.
In the end they watched a goaltender thatd been run out of the building in less than two periods, deliver 53 minutes of shut-out, Game 7 hockey. Then, after his one slip up, he rebounded to provide a few final minutes of Cup-winning brilliance.
Just stop the puck, Fleury kept repeating. Just stop the puck.
Everybodys always saying, Oh, were not sure [about Fleury], he never won anything, Maxime Talbot said. But you know what? He proved [to] everybody that hes a winning goaltender.
Winning was the only question left for the Penguins. The star power was there, but the Stanley Cup isnt impressed with beauty. It is swayed by grit and determination and heart.
So here was this team of forever youth and scraggly beards, going against the winning machine out of Detroit. Here was Jordan Staal(notes), 20. Sidney Crosby(notes), 21. Evgeni Malkin(notes) and Tyler Kennedy(notes), 22. Fleury, 24. Talbot, who had both goals Friday, was an old man at age 25.
Theyd seemingly grown up together. All of these kids arriving in Western Pennsylvania at nearly the same time; just after Mario Lemieux helped save the proud franchise from relocation.
It was a perfect storm.
I met Sid when he was 13, I was 16, Talbot said of the hockey prodigy. When he was 12 he had an agent. And I was in front of my TV when we won the lottery, Pittsburgh got the first pick overall and it was Sidney Crosby. I was kind of scared.
It was a reasonable emotion and not just because they played the same position. Crosby would bring skill to the team. Hed also bring immediate demands and grand expectations. This was a team of destiny, everyone thought. Not everyone was willing to wait for destiny though.
Every misstep was blown up; every loss seen as a sign of greater failure; every bad individual performance a question on long-term potential.
Theres a lot of scrutiny about these guys, Bylsma said.
Until this perfect spring day in Michigan, in the toughest building in hockey, they provided all the answers by taking down the sports modern dynasty.
Here was Pittsburgh, their time now, their Cup here.
Here was Marc-Andre Fleury, a last-second save for the ages. Here was the goalie holding the Stanley Cup above his head and with a look of redemption into those fast-emptying stands that had once tauntingly sung his name.
No one was mocking him now.
No one was questioning these Penguins either. Not now, not ever again.
Stanley Cup Finals:
Game 7: Youthful Pens lift Cup
Game 7: The Kid's all right
Game 7: Hossa, Wings come up short
McKeon: Who's ready to step up in Game 7?
McKeon: At 47, Chelios takes a backseat
Passan: Fleury ready to blossom
Game 6: Grinder, enigma shine for Pens
Game 6: Wings take pass on Cup
Wetzel: Datsyuk makes Wings different
Game 5: Pens need to develop amnesia
Game 5: Datsyuk proves he's MVP candidate
Game 4: The Kid finally shows up
Game 3: Pens finally impose their will
Game 2: NHL uses only convenient rules
Game 1: Pens, Fleury get bad bounces
Sports Ticket Depot - NHL Stanley Cup, News Archive Index: 2010, 2009, 2008 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Stanley Cup Fun Facts
» The Stanley Cup weighs 35 pounds and stands just under three feet in height
» Each winning player and team management member gets to take the Cup home for a day to share with family and friends
» The Stanley Cup is the oldest championship trophy competed for in professional sports
» Names misspelled on the Stanley Cup Adam Deadmarsh was spelled
"Deadmarch" but later was changed; the only misspelled name to be corrected
» The Stanley Cup has climbed Mt. Elbert in Colorado 14,433 feet
» It is the only trophy in professional sports that has the names of winning players, coaches, management and club staff engraved on the silver chalice
» The Stanley Cup has appeared on talk shows, including Late Show with David Letterman, Tonight Show with Jay Leno, Meet the Press with Tim Russert, Late Late Show with Craig Kilborn, Late Night with Conan O'Brien
» As a player, Henri Richard has won the most Stanley Cup titles 11
Sports Ticket Depot - NHL Stanley Cup, News Archive Index: 2010, 2009, 2008 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Game 7 of Stanley Cup finals is most-watched NHL game in 36 years
Associated Press
June 16, 2009
NEW YORK - Game 7 of the Stanley Cup finals is the most-watched NHL game in 36 years.
The Pittsburgh Penguins' championship-clinching 2-1 win over the Detroit Red Wings on NBC on Friday night averaged 8 million viewers. The network said Monday that's the most since Game 6 of the 1973 Stanley Cup finals between Montreal and Chicago.
Game 7 earned a 4.3 rating and 8 share. It was the highest rating for a series-ending game since Game 7 of the 2003 Anaheim-New Jersey series.
The rating is the percentage of all homes with televisions tuned into a program, while the share is the percentage of all TVs in use at the time.
Sports Ticket Depot - NHL Stanley Cup, News Archive Index: 2010, 2009, 2008 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
My profile: Brian Leetch, former NHL defenseman and Hockey Hall of Fame candidate
Jeff D'Alessio
Sunday, Jun. 14, 2009
Born: March 3, 1968, in Corpus Christi, Texas
Status: Married
Alma mater: Boston College
What I'm up to these days: Enjoying spending time with my 3 kids -- Jack (9), Riley, girl (6) and Sean (3); helping out with friends' charity events
What's on TV: Lost, American Idol, NHL on the Fly, SportsCenter
What's in my iPod: Pearl Jam, Counting Crows, Dave Matthews, Top 40, Beyonce
What I drive: Black '03 GMC Yukon, black '05 Mercedes
Favorite flicks: Stripes, Pulp Fiction, The Lord of the Rings trilogy, Old School
Bookmarks: National Weather Service Marine Forecasts -- offshore and coastal; ESPN.com; Canoe -- SLAM! Sports -- Hockey; NYPost.com; Boston.com; PGATour.com
On my office shelves: Books -- fiction, non-fiction and sports; photo albums -- college and NHL trophies; replicas of the Stanley Cup, Norris, Conn Smythe and Calder trophies; mail that needs to be filed; baseballs; pictures of my children
Love to trade places for a day with ... Eddie Vedder on the day of a concert. Would love to see if the nerves are the same pre-concert as pre-NHL game and would love to be able to sing, play guitar and feel the energy of the crowd for those 2-plus hours. Would want to see if the feeling after a concert is the same or better than after an NHL victory.
First job: Paper route, 11 or 12, Cheshire, CT. Had to deliver 35 papers over a six-mile route. I'd bungee cord the papers to the back of my bike. Only had a couple crashes over the years and only was bitten by a dog once.
Talent I'd most like to have: Good singing voice, play guitar
Favorite meal: Breakfast any time of the day -- French toast, pancakes, eggs, bacon, hash browns
Favorite athletes to watch in other sports: Tiger and LeBron
Favorite city to visit: NYC -- I lived there for 18 years but now live in Boston. Otherwise, Miami
Favorite team as a kid: Yankees
Favorite physical attribute about myself: I broke both my ankles at different times and have a plate and nine screws in my right one. I like how the scars look running up both sides of my leg. I pretend I was bitten by a shark or survived jumping out of a plane with no parachute.
And least ... My balding head and expanding waistline
Favorite value in others: Loyalty
Dream date: Heidi Klum
My heroes: My mom and dad
My bucket list: 1. Attend a practice round or Thursday round at the Masters; 2. Play golf for a week in Ireland with friends
Sports Ticket Depot - NHL Stanley Cup, News Archive Index: 2010, 2009, 2008 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Wild fires GM Doug Risebrough
June 16, 2009
ST. PAUL, Minn., April 16 (UPI) -- The NHL's Minnesota Wild franchise has fired Doug Risebrough, its president and general manager since 1999.
Risebrough, the only general manager in the Wild's history, helped lead Minnesota to the Western Conference finals in the 2002-03 season and three other playoff appearances during his tenure.
"I cannot begin to thank Doug enough for all that he has done for this organization over the past nine years," team owner Craig Leipold said. "When he arrived, he brought instant credibility expertise and extraordinary work ethic to an expansion franchise in desperate need of those things."
Leipold added that a search for a new general manager will begin immediately, and his responsibility will be to replace former head coach Jacques Lemaire, who resigned Monday after the Wild missed the playoffs for the first time since 2003-04 with their 40-33-9 record, good for ninth place in the Western Conference.
Sports Ticket Depot - NHL Stanley Cup, News Archive Index: 2010, 2009, 2008 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Todd Richards is new coach of NHL's Wild
June 16, 2009
ST. PAUL, Minn., June 16 (UPI) -- Minnesota native Todd Richards was introduced Tuesday as the coach of the NHL's Minnesota Wild.
Richards, 42, replaces Jacques Lemaire, who was the team's coach for the first eight seasons of its existence. Lemaire amassed 293 wins, including 40 last season, as coach. Lemaire resigned at the end of season.
Richards reportedly favors a more up-tempo game than Lemaire, whose teams were noted for tough defense. The team was second in the NHL in goals allowed last season but 22nd in scoring goals.
Richards joins the Wild after one season as an assistant coach with the San Jose Sharks. Before that he was head coach of the Wilkes-Barre-/Scranton Penguins and led the team to the AHL's Calder Cup Finals. He played collegiately for the University Minnesota.
"Todd's track record as a player and coach speaks for itself," Minnesota General Manager Chuck Fletcher said Tuesday. "He is a proven winner and is an ideal fit as the Minnesota Wild's new head coach."
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