2008 Stanley Cup Finals: Difference between revisions
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===Game 5 Summary=== |
===Game 5 Summary=== |
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*'''First Period''' |
*'''First Period''' |
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**Scoring: (1) Pittsburgh [[Marian Hossa]] ([[Sidney Crosby]],[[Pascal Dupuis]]) 8:37; (2) Pittsburgh [[Adam Hall]] ([[ |
**Scoring: (1) Pittsburgh [[Marian Hossa]] ([[Sidney Crosby]],[[Pascal Dupuis]]) 8:37; (2) Pittsburgh [[Adam Hall]] ([[Maxime Talbot]]) 14:41; |
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**Penalties: [[Brooks Orpik]], Pittsburgh (Hooking) 2:08; Pittsburgh (Too Many Men) (served by [[Tyler Kennedy]]) 4:15; [[Pavel Datsyuk]], Detriot (Tripping) 5:24; [[Kirk Maltby]], Detroit (Roughing) 10:50; [[Maxime Talbot]], Pittsburgh (Roughing) 10:50; |
**Penalties: [[Brooks Orpik]], Pittsburgh (Hooking) 2:08; Pittsburgh (Too Many Men) (served by [[Tyler Kennedy]]) 4:15; [[Pavel Datsyuk]], Detriot (Tripping) 5:24; [[Kirk Maltby]], Detroit (Roughing) 10:50; [[Maxime Talbot]], Pittsburgh (Roughing) 10:50; |
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Revision as of 00:57, 3 June 2008
This sortkey documents a current sporting event. Information may change rapidly as the event progresses. Initial news reports, scores, or statistics may be unreliable. The last updates to this sortkey may not reflect the most current information. |
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Coaches | Detroit: Mike Babcock Pittsburgh: Michel Therrien | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Captains | Detroit: Nicklas Lidström Pittsburgh: Sidney Crosby | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Referees | Paul Devorski, Marc Joannette, Dan O'Halloran and Brad Watson[1] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Dates | May 24 – June 7 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Networks | NBC, CBC, Versus, RDS, NASN | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Announcers | (CBC) Bob Cole, Greg Millen[2] (Versus/NBC) Mike Emrick, Ed Olczyk |
The 2008 Stanley Cup Finals will determine the winner of the Stanley Cup and the champion of the National Hockey League (NHL) for the 2007–08 season. As a culmination of the 2008 Stanley Cup Playoffs, the series pits the Eastern Conference champion Pittsburgh Penguins against the Western Conference champion Detroit Red Wings. The best-of-seven series began May 24.[3]
This is Pittsburgh's third appearance in the Stanley Cup Final, and their first one since winning consecutive championships in 1991 and 1992. Detroit makes their 23rd appearance in the championship series, and their first since winning the Cup in 2002. This is also the first Cup Final between two American-based NHL teams since 2003. The 1993 Montreal Canadiens remain the last Canadian-based team to have won the Cup.
The Cup Final is being broadcast in Canada as part of CBC's Hockey Night in Canada in English and on RDS in French. In the United States, Versus televised Games 1 and 2, and NBC is broadcasting the rest of the series. [3] In the United Kingdom, all games are being aired live on Five.
Path to the Final
The Detroit Red Wings entered the Final after winning the Presidents' Trophy as the team that finished the regular season with the most points in the league. Led by forwards Henrik Zetterberg, Pavel Datsyuk, and Johan Franzén, Detroit scored 55 goals in the first three rounds of the playoffs. With struggling goaltender Dominik Hasek being replaced mid-series by Chris Osgood, the Red Wings defeated their division rival Nashville Predators in the Western Conference Quarterfinals, in six games. The team swept the Colorado Avalanche in the Western Conference Semifinal round, and defeated the Dallas Stars in six games to win their fifth Clarence S. Campbell Bowl in franchise history.
The Pittsburgh Penguins entered the championship series after winning the Atlantic Division and earning the second-best regular season record in the Eastern Conference. The team was led by Sidney Crosby; missing 29 games throughout the regular season, the captain returned to lead the first three rounds of the playoffs in assists, and to tie for the lead in points heading into the Stanley Cup Final. Goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury recorded three shutouts throughout the playoffs, to lead the league in that category. Evgeni Malkin and Marian Hossa, who was acquired at the trade deadline, each recorded nine goals and ten assists throughout the playoffs. The Penguins swept the Ottawa Senators in the Eastern Conference Quarterfinals, a reversal of the series of the previous season when Ottawa beat Pittsburgh 4–1. In the Eastern Conference Semifinals, the Penguins defeated division rival the New York Rangers, in five games. The team won the Prince of Wales Trophy by defeating a second division rival, the Philadelphia Flyers, also in five games.
Rosters
Detroit Red Wings
# | Player | Catches | Acquired | Place of Birth | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
30 | Chris Osgood | L | 2005 | Peace River, Alberta | |
35 | Jimmy Howard | L | 2003 | Ogdensburg, New York | |
39 | Dominik Hasek | L | 2006 | Pardubice, Czechoslovakia |
# | Player | Shoots | Acquired | Place of Birth | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
3 | Andreas Lilja | L | 2005 | Helsingborg, Sweden | |
4 | Kyle Quincey | L | 2003 | Kitchener, Ontario | |
5 | Nicklas Lidstrom – C | L | 1989 | Vasteras, Sweden | |
14 | Derek Meech | L | 2002 | Winnipeg, Manitoba | |
22 | Brett Lebda | L | 2004 | Buffalo Grove, Illinois | |
23 | Brad Stuart | L | 2008 | Rocky Mountain House, Alberta | |
24 | Chris Chelios | R | 1999 | Chicago, Illinois | |
28 | Brian Rafalski | R | 2007 | Dearborn, Michigan | |
36 | Garrett Stafford | R | 2007 | Los Angeles, California | |
46 | Jakub Kindl | L | 2005 | Sumperk, Czechoslovakia | |
52 | Jonathan Ericsson | L | 2002 | Karlskrona, Sweden | |
55 | Niklas Kronwall | L | 2000 | Stockholm, Sweden |
# | Player | Position | Shoots | Acquired | Place of Birth | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
8 | Justin Abdelkader | C | L | 2005 | Muskegon, Michigan | |
11 | Daniel Cleary | LW | L | 2005 | Carbonear, Newfoundland | |
13 | Pavel Datsyuk – A | C | L | 1998 | Sverdlovsk, U.S.S.R. | |
17 | Dallas Drake | RW | L | 2007 | Trail, British Columbia | |
18 | Kirk Maltby | RW | R | 1996 | Guelph, Ontario | |
20 | Aaron Downey | RW | R | 2007 | Shelburne, Ontario | |
25 | Darren McCarty | RW | R | 2008 | Burnaby, British Columbia | |
26 | Jiri Hudler | C | L | 2002 | Olomouc, Czechoslovakia | |
33 | Kris Draper – A | C | L | 1993 | Toronto, Ontario | |
37 | Mikael Samuelsson | RW | R | 2005 | Mariefred, Sweden | |
40 | Henrik Zetterberg – A | C | L | 1999 | Njurunda, Sweden | |
42 | Mattias Ritola | C | L | 2005 | Borlange, Sweden | |
43 | Darren Helm | LW | L | 2005 | St. Andrews, Manitoba | |
44 | Mark Hartigan | C | L | 2007 | Fort St. John, British Columbia | |
48 | Cory Emmerton | LW | L | 2006 | St. Thomas, Ontario | |
51 | Valtteri Filppula | C | L | 2002 | Vantaa, Finland | |
82 | Tomas Kopecky | LW | L | 2000 | Dubnica, Czechoslovakia | |
93 | Johan Franzen | LW | L | 2004 | Vetlanda, Sweden | |
96 | Tomas Holmstrom | RW | L | 1994 | Piteå, Sweden |
Pittsburgh Penguins
# | Player | Catches | Acquired | Place of Birth | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
29 | Marc-Andre Fleury | L | 2003 | Sorel, Quebec | |
35 | Ty Conklin | L | 2007 | Anchorage, Alaska | |
30 | Dany Sabourin | L | 2007 | Val-d'Or, Quebec |
# | Player | Shoots | Acquired | Place of Birth | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2 | Hal Gill | L | 2008 | Concord, Massachusetts | |
3 | Mark Eaton (IR) | L | 2006 | Wilmington, Delaware | |
4 | Rob Scuderi | L | 1998 | Syosset, New York | |
5 | Darryl Sydor | L | 2007 | Edmonton, Alberta | |
19 | Ryan Whitney | L | 2002 | Boston, Massachusetts | |
44 | Brooks Orpik | L | 2001 | San Francisco, California | |
55 | Sergei Gonchar – A | L | 2005 | Chelyabinsk, U.S.S.R. | |
58 | Kris Letang | R | 2005 | Montreal, Quebec |
# | Player | Position | Shoots | Acquired | Place of Birth | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
9 | Pascal Dupuis | LW/RW | L | 2008 | Laval, Quebec | |
10 | Gary Roberts – A | LW | L | 2007 | North York, Ontario | |
11 | Jordan Staal | C | L | 2006 | Thunder Bay, Ontario | |
12 | Ryan Malone | LW | L | 1999 | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania | |
17 | Petr Sykora | RW | L | 2007 | Pilsen, Czechoslovakia | |
18 | Marian Hossa | RW | L | 2008 | Stara Lubovna, Czechoslovakia | |
24 | Kris Beech | C | L | 2008 | Salmon Arm, British Columbia | |
25 | Maxime Talbot | C/LW | L | 2002 | LeMoyne, Quebec | |
27 | Georges Laraque | RW | R | 2007 | Montreal, Quebec | |
28 | Adam Hall | RW/C | R | 2007 | Kalamazoo, Michigan | |
37 | Jarkko Ruutu | LW | L | 2006 | Helsinki, Finland | |
38 | Jeff Taffe | C/LW | L | 2007 | Hastings, Minnesota | |
48 | Tyler Kennedy | C/RW | R | 2004 | Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario | |
71 | Evgeni Malkin | C | L | 2004 | Magnitogorsk, U.S.S.R. | |
87 | Sidney Crosby – C | C | L | 2005 | Cole Harbour, Nova Scotia |
Game 1
May 24 | Detroit Red Wings | 4 – 0 | Pittsburgh Penguins | Joe Louis Arena | Recap |
Pittsburgh's Gary Roberts and Detroit's Chris Chelios were both benched for game one. Prior to the game, a ceremonial faceoff featuring former Pittsburgh captain and current team chairman Mario Lemieux and former Detroit captain and current team vice president Steve Yzerman. Each dropped a puck to their current captains Sidney Crosby and Nicklas Lidstrom, respectively.
At 15:20 into the first period, a goal scored by Nicklas Lidstrom was waved off after Tomas Holmstrom was called for goaltender interference. The remainder of the first period went scoreless, as Pittsburgh failed to capitalize on four consecutive power plays. At 13:01 into the second period, Mikael Samuelsson gave the Red Wings the unassisted game-winning goal, on a wrap-around. Just over two minutes into the third period, Samuelsson added his second unassisted goal of the game. At 17:18 into the third period, Dan Cleary scored after recieving an assist from Brad Stuart, to give the Red Wings a 3–0 lead. Henrik Zetterberg scored with 13 seconds remaining, giving the Wings their second goal on the power-play. Chris Osgood recorded his second shutout of the playoffs, to give the Red Wings a 4–0 victory in game one. The Red Wings outshot the Penguins 36–19.
Game 1 summary
- First Period:
- Scoring: None
- Penalties: Kris Letang, Pittsburgh (Interference) 3:51; Tomas Holmstrom, Detroit (High sticking) 4:02; Nicklas Lidstrom, Detroit (Hooking) 10:15; Darren Helm, Detroit (Tripping) 12:38; Tomas Holmstrom, Detroit (Interference) 15:20; Hal Gill, Pittsburgh (High sticking) 19:00
- Second Period:
- Scoring: (1) Detroit: Mikael Samuelsson (unassisted) 13:01
- Penalties: Sidney Crosby, Pittsburgh (Slashing) 1:55; Ryan Whitney, Pittsburgh (Holding) 13:13; Evgeni Malkin, Pittsburgh (Tripping)
- Third Period:
- Scoring: (2) Detroit: Mikael Samuelsson 2:16 (unassisted); (3) Dan Cleary (Brad Stuart) SHG 17:18; (4) Henrik Zetterberg (Tomas Holmstrom, Nicklas Lidstrom) PPG 19:47
- Penalties: Nicklas Lidstrom, Detroit (Interference) 15:27; Jarkko Ruutu, Pittsburgh (Slashing) 18:08
- Goalie Statistics:
- Detroit: Chris Osgood — Shutout (2nd of playoffs), 19 saves / 19 shots
- Pittsburgh: Marc-Andre Fleury — 32 saves / 36 shots
- Shots by Period:
Team 1 2 3 T Pittsburgh 12 4 3 19 Detroit 11 16 9 36
Game 2
May 26 | Detroit Red Wings | 3 – 0 | Pittsburgh Penguins | Joe Louis Arena | Recap |
In preparation for game two, head coach Michel Therrien revised Pittsburgh's lines; the revision included Gary Roberts who did not play in game one.[4] Johan Franzen, the leading goal-scorer in the playoffs, returned to the line-up for Detroit.[5]
Detroit's Brad Stuart scored the first goal of the game 6:55 into the first period, on a slap shot, with an assist from Valtteri Filppula. Tomas Holmstrom added a goal at 11:18 into the first period, to put Detroit up 2–0. Pittsburgh struggled throughout the period, failing to get a shot on goal for the game's first twelve minutes. Detroit outshot the Penguins 11–6 in the second period, but both teams failed to score. At 8:48 into the third period, Valtteri Filppula acquired his first goal of the series, beating goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury with a wrist-shot. Chris Osgood recorded his second consecutive shutout, stopping all 22 shots faced.
Game 2 summary
- First Period:
- Scoring: (1) Detroit: Brad Stuart 1 (Valtteri Filppula) 6:55; (2) Tomas Holmstrom 4 (Henrik Zetterberg) 11:18
- Penalties: Brad Stuart, Detroit (Tripping) 11:33; Ryan Malone, Pittsburgh (Interference) 15:14; Daniel Cleary, Detroit (Hooking) 17:49; Gary Roberts, Pittsburgh (Roughing) 19:46
- Second Period:
- Scoring: None
- Penalties: Brooks Orpik, Pittsburgh (Roughing) 11:17; Tomas Holmstrom, Detroit (Slashing) 11:17; Ryan Malone, Pittsburgh (Slashing) 17:30
- Third Period:
- Scoring: (3) Valtteri Filppula 4 (Johan Franzen, Brad Stuart) 8:48
- Penalties: Marian Hossa, Pittsburgh (Holding) 0:22; Ryan Malone, Pittsburgh (Roughing) 3:42; Pavel Datsyuk, Detroit (Roughing) 3:42; Dallas Drake, Detroit (Tripping) 7:49; Ryan Malone, Pittsburgh (Goaltender Interference) 8:04; Maxime Talbot (served by Tyler Kennedy), Pittsburgh (Roughing) 11:51; Maxime Talbot, Pittsburgh (Roughing) 11:51; Johan Franzen, Detroit (Roughing) 11:51; Ryan Whitney, Pittsburgh (Roughing) 16:08; Petr Sykora, Pittsburgh (Goaltender interference) 18:52; Johan Franzen, Detroit (Roughing) 18:52; Andreas Lilja, Detroit (Roughing) 18:52; Evgeni Malkin, Pittsburgh (Roughing) 18:52; Gary Roberts, Pittsburgh (Roughing) 18:52; Gary Roberts, Pittsburgh (10 Minute Misconduct) 18:52; Maxime Talbot, Pittsburgh (10 Minute Misconduct) 20:00
- Goalie Statistics:
- Detroit: Chris Osgood — Shutout (3rd of playoffs), 22 saves / 22 shots
- Pittsburgh: Marc-Andre Fleury — 31 saves / 34 shots
- Shots by Period:
Team 1 2 3 T Pittsburgh 6 6 10 22 Detroit 12 11 11 34
Game 3
May 28 | Pittsburgh Penguins | 3 – 2 | Detroit Red Wings | Mellon Arena | Recap |
Game three was held in Pittsburgh, where going into the matchup the Penguins had won sixteen consecutive home games.[6] Pittsburgh continued to shuffle their lineup by replacing defenseman Kris Letang with veteran Darryl Sydor,[7] but going back to the top line combinations from game one. The Penguins captain Sidney Crosby scored the team's first goal of the series late in the first period, with an assist from Marian Hossa. The Penguins went up 2-0 after Crosby scored a second time, his second coming on the power-play, just 2:34 into the second period. Johan Franzen pulled the Red Wings within one, when he scored on the power-play at 14:48 of the second period. Adam Hall scored his second goal of the post season, when the Penguins winger scored at 7:18 of the third period, putting his team up 3-1. Mikael Samuelsson scored a second goal for the Red Wings, with assists from Brad Stuart and Valtteri Filppula. However, Pittsburgh's 3-2 lead held, giving the team their first victory of the series. Despite winning the game, Pittsburgh was outshot by the Red Wings for the third consecutive game by at least 10 shots.
Game 3 summary
- First Period:
- Scoring: (1) Pittsburgh: Sidney Crosby (Marian Hossa) 17:25
- Penalties: Johan Franzen, Detroit (Holding) 1:04; Jordan Staal, Pittsburgh (Holding) 3:05; Sergei Gonchar, Pittsburgh (Hooking) 12:07; Brian Rafalski (Tripping) 19:19.
- Second Period:
- Scoring: (2) Pittsburgh: Sidney Crosby (Marian Hossa, Ryan Malone) PPG 2:34; (1) Detroit: Johan Franzen (Nicklas Lidstrom, Niklas Kronvall) PPG 14:48
- Penalties: Niklas Kronwall, Detroit (Hooking) 2:02; Hal Gill, Pittsburgh (Cross checking) 8:54; Hal Gill, Pittsburgh (Cross checking) 12:57
- Third Period:
- Scoring: (3) Pittsburgh: Adam Hall (Maxime Talbot, Gary Roberts) 7:18; (2) Detroit: Mikael Samuelsson (Brad Stuart, Valtteri Filppula) 13:37
- Penalties: Evgeni Malkin, Pittsburgh (Hooking) 15:42
- Goalie Statistics:
- Detroit: Chris Osgood — 21 saves / 24 shots
- Pittsburgh: Marc-Andre Fleury — 32 saves / 34 shots
- Shots by Period:
Team 1 2 3 T Pittsburgh 6 13 5 24 Detroit 9 9 16 34
Game 4
May 31 | Pittsburgh Penguins | 1 - 2 | Detroit Red Wings | Mellon Arena | Recap |
Jiri Hudler's game-winning goal at 2:26 of the third period broke a 1-1 tie, and the Red Wings killed off a Penguins 1:26 5-on-3 advantage midway through the final period to help preserve the victory in Game 4. Pittsburgh scored first on Marian Hossa's power play goal 2:51 into the game before Nicklas Lidstrom tied the game at 7:06 of the first period.
Game 4 summary
- First Period:
- Scoring: (1) Pittsburgh: Marian Hossa (Sergei Gonchar, Sidney Crosby) PPG 2:51; (1) Detroit: Nicklas Lidstrom (Brian Rafalski, Pavel Datsyuk) 7:06
- Penalties: Dallas Drake, Detroit (Roughing) 2:11; Pascal Dupuis, Pittsburgh (Cross checking) 5:04; Brian Rafalski, Detroit (Roughing) 9:03; Kris Draper, Detroit (Holding) 14:28; Maxime Talbot, Pittsburgh (Diving) 16:59; Brett Lebda, Detroit (Cross checking) 16:59; Brooks Orpik, Pittsburgh (Roughing) 17:55; Johan Franzen, Detroit (Elbowing) 17:55
- Second Period:
- Scoring: None
- Penalties: Jordan Staal, Pittsburgh (Interference) 3:44; Brian Rafalski, Detroit (Holding) 16:04
- Third Period:
- Scoring: (2) Detroit: Jiri Hudler (Darren Helm, Brad Stuart) 2:26
- Penalties: Marc-Andre Fleury (served by Marian Hossa), Pittsburgh (Delay of Game) 4:08; Kirk Maltby, Detroit (Hooking) 9:36; Andreas Lilja, Detroit (Interference) 10:10
- Goalie Statistics:
- Detroit: Chris Osgood — 22 saves / 23 shots
- Pittsburgh: Marc-Andre Fleury — 28 saves / 30 shots
- Shots by Period:
Team 1 2 3 T Pittsburgh 9 8 6 23 Detroit 14 7 9 30
Game 5
June 2 | Detroit Red Wings | 0 – 2 | Pittsburgh Penguins | Joe Louis Arena |
Game In Progress Western Conference Champions, Detroit Red Wings Leads 3-1 over the Eastern Conference Champions Pittsburgh Penguins. This is the first time the Stanley Cup is winnable in the 2008 finals.
Game 5 Summary
- First Period
- Scoring: (1) Pittsburgh Marian Hossa (Sidney Crosby,Pascal Dupuis) 8:37; (2) Pittsburgh Adam Hall (Maxime Talbot) 14:41;
- Penalties: Brooks Orpik, Pittsburgh (Hooking) 2:08; Pittsburgh (Too Many Men) (served by Tyler Kennedy) 4:15; Pavel Datsyuk, Detriot (Tripping) 5:24; Kirk Maltby, Detroit (Roughing) 10:50; Maxime Talbot, Pittsburgh (Roughing) 10:50;
- Second Period
- Scoring: N/A
- Penalties: N/A
- Third Period
- Scoring: N/A
- Penalties: N/A
- Shots by Period:
Team 1 2 3 T Pittsburgh 7 0 0 7 Detroit 8 0 0 8
Remaining game schedule
All times listed below are Eastern Daylight Time. Games marked in italics are if necessary.
June 4 | Pittsburgh Penguins | 8:00pm | Detroit Red Wings | Mellon Arena | NBC, CBC, RDS |
June 7 | Detroit Red Wings | 8:00pm | Pittsburgh Penguins | Joe Louis Arena | NBC, CBC, RDS |
Detroit leads series 3–1 | |
See also
References
- ^ "Stanley Cup Officials". HHLOA. 05-21-2008. Retrieved 2008-05-22.
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(help) - ^ "Broadcasters piecing together on-air rosters". The Globe and Mail. 2008-05-21. Retrieved 2008-05-21.
- ^ a b "2008 Stanley Cup Final will begin Saturday, May 24". NHL.com. 2008-05-19. Retrieved 2008-05-20.
- ^ Molinari, Dave (2008-05-26). "Moving forward: Therrien shuffles lines hoping to make a difference in Game 2". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved 2008-05-26.
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(help) - ^ Anderson, Shelly (2008-05-26). "Red Wings' Franzen will play tonight". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved 2008-05-26.
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(help) - ^ Kreiser, John (2008-05-27). "Penguins hope home is where the wins are". NHL.com. Retrieved 2008-05-28.
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(help) - ^ Rosen, Dan (2008-05-28). "Cup winner Sydor jumps back into Pens lineup". PittsburghPenguins.com. Retrieved 2008-05-28.
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