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Penguins try to redefine finals

June 04, 2008|Helene Elliott

PITTSBURGH -- The Pittsburgh Penguins' season was ticking away. Champagne was being delivered to the Detroit Red Wings' locker room at Joe Louis Arena and the Stanley Cup had been polished to a blinding shine.

In the first defining moment for a young team, Maxime Talbot -- on the ice in place of goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury, brought the Penguins even with 34.3 seconds left in the third period by scoring a tenacious, second-effort goal.


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Despite being short on defense after Sergei Gonchar crashed into the boards and was engulfed in back spasms, the Penguins mustered a magnificent effort. Backed by Fleury's 55-save performance they won on a triple-overtime goal by Petr Sykora, who had called his shot and turned words into deeds.

It was stirring. Exciting. A great spectacle.

And tonight at Mellon Arena they must do it all again.

Not the overtime part, necessarily. Just the part where they skate off triumphantly.

If they don't, the clock will run out on their dreams.

"I think any time you go through something like that, come out with a win, to see the way everyone kept battling and didn't give up, it certainly means a lot to everyone," Penguins captain Sidney Crosby said.

"And having gone through that, I think we're better for it."

Better, absolutely.

Being good enough to push the finals to a seventh game at Detroit on Saturday will call for them to reach a level they've never approached before.

Sort of like Fleury's performance in Game 5.

If they need an encore, he said Tuesday, it's no problem.

"I'll be ready," he said, "and I'm sure everybody in the room will be ready also. And we just won't quit. We're going to go hard and try to get that win again."

It's not impossible that this series, seemingly so one-sided after the Red Wings started out with back-to-back shutouts, will go a full and fully dramatic seven games.

The Penguins are 9-1 at home in the playoffs, losing only to the Red Wings in Game 4. They can gain strength from their resilience and from seeing their second line, anchored by Sykora and Evgeni Malkin, become a factor Monday for the first time.

"I think we got the momentum going right now, and we can't get too high. We have to just really get to the calm stage like before Game 5 and nothing really changes for us," said Sykora, who scored a quintuple-overtime goal for the Ducks in 2003 to win the opener of their second-round playoff series against Dallas.

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