PITTSBURGH(AP)
Ryan Malone, the one Penguins player with firsthand memories of
the team's two previous Stanley Cup appearances, scored twice
and set up a third goal and Pittsburgh routed rival Philadelphia
6-0 Sunday to win the Eastern Conference championship and a trip to
the NHL finals.
The Penguins, dominating Game 5 from the start with Malone and
Evgeni Malkin scoring in the first 10 minutes, will play the winner
of the Detroit-Dallas series for the Stanley Cup. The Red Wings
take a 3-2 series lead into Dallas for Game 6 of the Western
Conference finals Monday night.
Marian Hossa had a goal and three assists and Sidney Crosby, the
20-year-old captain of a team that was the Eastern Conference's
worst only two seasons ago, added two assists. Jordan Staal, only
19, scored his third goal in two games and fourth of the series.
Pascal Dupuis, an Atlanta teammate of Hossa's before the two
were dealt to Pittsburgh at the trading deadline, also scored.
Pittsburgh, one of the youngest teams to play for a championship
in any major pro sport, is returning to the Stanley Cup finals for
the first time since 1992, when Mario Lemieux _ long before he
bought the team _ led them to their second title in as many
seasons. Malone was the only current Penguins player who was there,
along for the ride as the 12-year-old son of then-Penguins scouting
director and former player Greg Malone.
By the time Dupuis scored about 4 minutes into the third period,
the Penguins were conjuring up memories of their first Cup run in
1991, when they beat Minnesota 8-0 in Game 6 of the finals to
secure their first Stanley Cup.
For the overachieving Flyers, it was a disappointingly bad
finish to an unexpectedly good season. Last in the NHL overall
standings last season, they made a series of productive offseason
moves to rebuild in a hurry and not only made the playoffs, but
upset third-seeded Washington and top-seeded Montreal before losing
in the first all-Pennsylvania conference finals.
The Flyers fell behind in the series 3-0, just as Ottawa and the
New York Rangers did in Pittsburgh's previous two series _ the
Penguins needed only 14 games to reach the Cup finals. They are
12-2 in the postseason and 8-0 in 47-year-old Mellon Arena, the
NHL's oldest arena but one that will host at least one more
finals before the Penguins move into a new arena across the street
in about two years.
The Penguins have won their last 16 at home dating to the
regular season, not losing there since a shootout loss to San Jose
on Feb. 24.
They play in an old barn of a building, but the Penguins are a
breathtakingly young team in which four key players _ Staal (19),
Crosby (20), Malkin (21) and goalie Marc-Andre Fleury (23) _ are 23
or younger. In any other major pro sport, most or all would likely
still be in college or the minors due to their age.
Fleury, like Crosby a former No. 1 draft pick, made 21 saves in
yet another impressive performance and is 22-4-1 since late
November.
The Penguins are winning with a commitment to defense that often
was lacking with a franchise that has long had a preference for
goal scorers such as Lemieux and Jaromir Jagr rather than goal
stoppers. They're also winning with a coach, Michel Therrien,
who was hired by previous management and, despite overseeing the
fourth-best single-season turnaround in NHL history only last
season, was given only a one-year contract extension.
Philadelphia welcomed back All-Star defenseman Kimmo Timonen,
who missed the first four games of the series with a blood clot on
his left ankle, but even he couldn't make a difference as the
Penguins put this one away early. They led 3-0 before the midpoint
of the second period as Hossa scored his ninth of the postseason.
By then, the sellout crowd of 17,132 was alternating its familiar
"Let's Go Pens" chants with "Go Home
Flyers."
Notes:@ Malkin and linemate Petr Sykora played after missing
practice Saturday with undisclosed illnesses. Malkin, who also has
nine playoff goals, hadn't scored since Game 1 of the series.
... Pittsburgh is 10-0 in the playoffs when it scores first. ...
Philadelphia has lost six in a row and 11 of 12 in Pittsburgh,
counting the regular season.
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