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Dedge
05-10-2007, 08:20 AM
NO QUACKERS: L.A. columnist predicts a repeat of 2003 for Ducks
Helene Elliott / L.A. Times
Sorry, Detroit. You can't call yourself Hockeytown anymore.
Not when Joe Louis Arena hasn't been sold out for any of the Red Wings' six home playoff games this spring and the Ducks are riding a 28-game sellout streak.
Not when the Red Wings, who rely heavily on 45-year-old defenseman Chris Chelios and 42-year-old goaltender Dominik Hasek, had to mobilize their walkers to rally past the spineless San Jose Sharks in six games in the second round.
Not when the Ducks, who won each of the first two rounds in five games and are rested for Friday's Western Conference finals opener, don't fear playing at "The Joe," as the downtown arena is known.
"I like the boards, the ice. The atmosphere is good there," defenseman Sean O'Donnell said. "I like everything about playing in Detroit."
The Ducks absolutely will love it after they end the Red Wings' season short of a Stanley Cup title, as they did in 2003.
"We're going to have to earn every inch we get on that ice," goalie Jean-Sebastien Giguere said, "but I know as a team we can do it because I've seen us do it. When we play our best, I know how good we are, and we can do it."
Four years ago, Giguere began establishing himself as one of the finest goalies of his generation with a 63-save effort in his playoff debut, a 2-1, triple-overtime playoff victory at Detroit. In a spectacular performance that launched the Ducks' trip to the Cup finals, Giguere stopped 165 of 171 shots in a series sweep -- and he has gotten better since.
So has the team in front of him.
Supporting cast
By signing Scott Niedermayer as a free agent in 2005 and trading for Chris Pronger in 2006, the Ducks added unique elements of speed, creativity, physicality and experience. Niedermayer and Pronger, vying with Detroit's Nicklas Lidstrom for the Norris trophy as the NHL's top defenseman, make for a front-loaded defense. But the Ducks have built a solid supporting cast.
Francois Beauchemin, who thrives when the hitting gets hard and has a fearsome shot from the point, plays pressure-filled minutes. O'Donnell is averaging nearly 21 minutes and has a plus-3 defensive rating.
In putting together a trio of Travis Moen, Sammy Pahlsson and Rob Niedermayer, the Ducks created a stopper line that also has a knack for scoring big goals.
By finding and developing youngsters Ryan Getzlaf, Corey Perry and Dustin Penner, the Ducks added youth and speed they didn't have in 2003. They're too swift and deep for the aging Red Wings, who lost defenseman/power-play catalyst Mathieu Schneider to a broken wrist in the second round. Lidstrom, 37, is in fine form, but he and Chelios can't carry the defense by themselves.
"Maybe we can take advantage of that by using our speed and maybe being physical on these guys," Beauchemin said. "We've got to play a physical game."
The Ducks will try to add miles to the collective odometer of Detroit's defensemen by getting the puck in behind them and bumping them when possible. But they must be assertive without being overzealous and must avoid the careless penalties that led to them being short-handed 29 times against Vancouver.
"We've got to stay disciplined and play five-on-five as long as we can and be patient because they're an experienced team that doesn't give up a lot," Beauchemin said.
To center Andy McDonald, the key is not being lured into playing the Red Wings' game.
"They're a puck-possession team. If you're going to play into that, you're not going to beat them," he said. "For us, it means being physical on them, stopping the progression. If you're going to chase them all over the ice and run all over the place, they're going to pick you apart.
"We want to finish our checks so they can't play that give-and-go hockey. And be physical."
Coaching change
Mike Babcock, who coached the Ducks during their 2003 Cup run but left for a better offer from the Red Wings in 2005, has the Red Wings playing a tighter defensive game.
For scoring, they count on the line of Pavel Datsyuk, Henrik Zetterberg and the ever-pesky Tomas Holmstrom, and they'll try to plant Holmstrom at the edge of Giguere's crease for deflections and rebounds.
The Ducks can't let him annoy them into taking penalties.
"The worst thing I can do is try to slash him or try to fight him off because that's taking me out of the game," Giguere said. "So I'm going to focus on seeing the puck and making saves and whatever is around me, I've seen it before, so I've just got to deal with it."
And just like before, the Ducks will win.





Man she does seem sure of herself. And mighty confident in the Ducks. Hopefully they will underestimate the Wings.


Dan




William H Bonney
05-10-2007, 08:32 AM
Ouch,,, sounds like the series is already over. One thing the Ducks do have in their favor is,,, they're "due". Kinda like the Wings of the mid-90's,, Dallas of the late 90's, I think this just might be their year.

jpollman
05-10-2007, 08:35 AM
She's a MORON!

Ok, so we're no longer Hockeytown because we didn't sell out six games?! Ooooh, they're so proud of their twenty-eight game sellout streak. Big freakin deal! How many consecutive sellouts did Detroit have before this post season? I really feel that the reason for the availability of tickets was this LOUSY economy we have here in Michigan.

She'll definitely eat her words!

Bring on the D*cks! :D

John

Jigawhat
05-10-2007, 08:40 AM
she needs to dig a few more years back into the history books and see that the Wings had 3 cups with that team until Giguere stopped us. How many do the Ducks have since?? :confused: oh, that's right... nada.

looking forward to tomorrow! Pavel and Hank are gonna find that five-hole of Jiggy's and abuse him!

Dedge
05-10-2007, 09:42 AM
looking forward to tomorrow! Pavel and Hank are gonna find that five-hole of Jiggy's and abuse him!

Ummm, this quote makes me feel a little Nauseous. :lol::lol::lol:


Ya know what. Both Calgary and San Jose (the cities, not the teams) have been very confident in so far in these playoffs. I always find it interesting to read what other newspapers are writing about their teams during the playoffs. Well, while the Wings are playing them anyway, I guess I don't care too awful much what they have to say outside that.

Go Wings!
Dan

ih772
05-10-2007, 01:26 PM
Why are you guys letting the opinion of a female sports writer get to you?

bombcast
05-10-2007, 03:34 PM
She should be making dinner and cleaning up around the house, taking kids to violin lessons and ****.

Itchin' to go
05-10-2007, 05:38 PM
NHL attendance ranking..

'02-'03....Detroit 2nd, Anaheim 26th
'03-'04....Detroit 2nd, Anaheim 23rd
'05-'06....Detroit 3rd, Anaheim 24th
'06-'07....Detroit 2nd, Anaheim 20th


What was she saying about attendance and Hockeytown? Maybe she was trying to point out how many bandwagon playoff fans the Ducks have. Point well taken.

Ryan

ih772
05-10-2007, 11:42 PM
She should be making dinner and cleaning up around the house, taking kids to violin lessons and ****.

Well I didn't want to come right out and say it but since you insist. :lol:

bombcast
05-11-2007, 07:01 AM
:lol:

ckhanna
05-11-2007, 07:05 AM
Whew!!! Watch out with that one

Trout King
05-14-2007, 12:32 PM
She is correct....Detroit isn't hockey town....Anaheim is...lol:lol:

Detroit has 9 Cups, while Anaheim has let's count all of them....0! Cups.

Itchin' to go
05-14-2007, 04:27 PM
Actually Detroit has 10 cups.

Ryan