Behind Ward, 'Canes defeat Oilers to win Stanley Cup

atxrocker

Starter
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -- Rod Brind'Amour lifted the Stanley Cup above his head, tears of joy streaming down his face. This one was for the captain and all those Carolina old-timers whose names are going on hockey's most revered trophy for the first time.
Of course, they couldn't have done it without the kid.
Rookie goalie Cam Ward stopped nearly everything that came his way, finishing off a brilliant playoffs with a rock-solid performance in Game 7. The Hurricanes skated away with their first Stanley Cup title, beating Edmonton 3-1 in the winner-take-all finale Monday night.
"It's just surreal," said Brind'Amour, the team's 35-year-old captain, his eyes still red after he left ice. "The guys on this team have been through years and years of heartache. After Game 6, I knew there's no way we were letting this go. Too many guys on this team deserve it."
A couple of low-scoring defenseman, Frantisek Kaberle and Aaron Ward, put Carolina ahead. Justin Williams finished off the Oilers, scoring an empty-net goal with 1:01 remaining after Edmonton playoff star Fernando Pisani broke up Cam Ward's shutout early in the third.
Oilers defenseman Chris Pronger, a stalwart throughout the playoffs, gave up the puck in the Carolina zone and wound up making a helpless dive to block Williams' gimme into the goal that had been vacated by Jussi Markkanen in favor of an extra skater.
Bret Hedican, among the contingent of 30-something players who had never won the cup, leaped in the air after Williams' shot went in. The crowd of nearly 19,000, which stood throughout the game, went into a frenzy.
The cup has come to Tobacco Road -- territory best known for college basketball and NASCAR racing.
"I can't describe it," said Hedican, who lost in two previous trips to the finals. "Both times were gut-wrenching. I've got the scars. But tonight, all that work, all that hard work, and our team winning, it all paid off."
It paid off, too, for Glen Wesley, Doug Weight and Ray Whitney. Along with Brind'Amour and Hedican, they had been in the league for a total of 78 seasons without winning the cup.
Now, they'll all get their names on it. Weight, who didn't play because of an injured right shoulder, put on his uniform and came out to hoist the cup. It tilted a bit to the right side, but he didn't come close to dropping it.
He and the others waited too long to slip up now.
"I still can't believe it," said Wesley, a 37-year-old defenseman who might retire now that he has his title. "It honestly feels like a dream to me."
Ward, the Conn Smythe Trophy winner as the most valuable player in the playoffs, wasn't even Carolina's No. 1 goalie at the beginning of the postseason, but the 22-year-old rookie got the call when Martin Gerber struggled in an opening round against Montreal.
The young star wound up winning more games in the playoffs (15) than he did backing up Gerber during the regular season (14).
"The kid came in when we were down and out," Brind'Amour said. "He brought us to life. Goaltending wins championships, make no mistake about it. We had the best goalie in the playoffs."
The Hurricanes were born in the old World Hockey Association as the Boston-based New England Whalers, and entered the NHL in 1979 playing out of Hartford. When their demands for a new arena were turned aside, the team headed south in 1997.
The first two years in Carolina were a dismal experience, the team forced to play 80 miles away in Greensboro while a new arena was built in Raleigh. So few fans turned up in the beginning that the upper deck was curtained off.
Now, the Hurricanes are champions, capitalizing on their second trip to the finals. Four years ago, they were beaten in five games by Detroit.
The Oilers have nothing to be ashamed of, becoming the first eighth-seeded team to make the finals under the current format. But they failed to bring Canada its first champion since Montreal in 1993, or Edmonton its first cup since 1990, when the remnants of the Gretzky-Messier-Coffey-Fuhr dynasty won the last of its five titles in seven years.
Pisani came through again, scoring his playoff-leading 14th goal by crashing the net to knock in a rebound at 1:03 of the third. Markkanen had another strong game with 24 saves, several of them dazzling.
It wasn't enough.
"It's just a matter of a few bounces and that's the difference today," Markkanen said. "They were just a little bit better."
p1_061906_brindamour_ap.jpg

Captain Rod Brind'Amour broke down in tears of joy as he lifted the Stanley Cup.
AP


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The series looked as if it would be a rout when Carolina rallied from a three-goal deficit to win Game 1 and blew out the Oilers 5-0 in Game 2. The Oilers also had to cope with the loss of playoff star Dwayne Roloson, who had played every minute of the postseason in goal until he went out with a knee injury in the opener.
But, led by Markkanen and Pisani, the Oilers rebounded from a 3-1 deficit. They pulled out an overtime win in Carolina -- with the cup somewhere in the bowels of the RBC Center, waiting to be handed out if the Hurricanes won.
Edmonton returned home and blew out Carolina 4-0 in Game 6.
That's where the comeback ended. Brind'Amour made sure of that, urging on his teammates to finish what they started.
"He's the leader of this team," Cam Ward said. "Once again, he came up huge for us."
Right from the start, Carolina seized the momentum with the sort of energy and passion that had been missing since Game 5.
Erik Cole delivered a big hit at center ice to force Edmonton into a turnover, and Matt Cullen took off the other way with the puck. He swept in on Markkanen, who made a good save off his chest.
But Mark Recchi, another member of the 30-something club, passed out from behind the net and the puck ricocheted to Aaron Ward moving in from the point. He beat the screened Markkanen with a slap shot through half-dozen players milling about in front of the goal.
It was the Hurricanes' first score in 95:01, since the second period of Game 5.
Carolina thought it had another goal in the final seconds of the period when Craig Adams backhanded a bouncing puck off and over Markkanen, who lost sight of it flipping toward the net. Defenseman Steve Staios dove into the net and touched it with his right glove, enough to stop play on a delayed penalty call even though the puck appeared to cross the line with 4.1 seconds left.
Carolina finally made it 2-0 with just over four minutes gone in the second. Kaberle fired a slap shot over a diving Edmonton defenseman Jason Smith, whose sweater appeared to catch part of the puck and cause it to dip under Markkanen's left pad when he had his glove out to make the save.
Notes: It was the first time that three straight Stanley Cup finals have gone to Game 7. ... Bill McCreary and Brad Watson were picked as the referees, working their second game in a row. This was the 11th straight finals appearance for McCreary.
Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/20.../playoffs/2006/06/19/game.seven.ap/index.html

for anyone who follows hockey...
 
Whooo!

HUR-RI-CANES!!!
















Oh wait. Wrong sport...

:o

Oh well. I root for the Miami Hurricanes, I guess I can root for the Carolina Hurricanes.

Who wudda thunk a hockey team from Raleigh, NC would someday be celebrating a Stanley Cup victory?

:)
 
The Hurricanes were born in the old World Hockey Association as the Boston-based New England Whalers, and entered the NHL in 1979 playing out of Hartford. When their demands for a new arena were turned aside, the team headed south in 1997.

If the citizens of Hartford had supported the team, perhaps they wouldn't have left?

I don't presume to know all the details behind the move, but what difference does it make? The team hasn't been there in 10 years.
 
The mid-90s were a nasty transition period for the NHL and there is a lot of bitterness over teams leaving traditional hockey markets for the southern markets. That and overexpansion are what lead to the near destruction of the NHL over the past few years. I know around this period is when I began watching more basketball than hockey although I've always watched both.

I used to love the Whale. When I lived in Boston I got both teams' games and as a fan of the underdog I tended to watch and cheer the Whale more than the B's who have been disappointing since their last cup appearance, a loss to Edmonton (a team I hated when they were a power but came to like when they went back to small market underdogs). This time my heart was with Edmonton but I'm happy for certain players on both teams that I've followed for years.
 
If the citizens of Hartford had supported the team, perhaps they wouldn't have left?
As a matter of fact, they would have.

I listen to All Night on ESPN Radio all the time, and the host, Jason Smith, is a big Hurricanes fan that used to live in Hartford and has supported the team since they were there. The owner, Peter Karmanos, essentially bought the team in 1997 with the expressed purpose of moving them. Even before the transaction was completed, Karmanos was reported to be shopping his team around to cities across the country. It is my understanding that the hard feelings between many Whaler fans and Karmanos resembles the feelings that many Cleveland Browns fans have towards Art Modell.
 
Well, then my sympathies to the people of Hartford but I'm still happy for the people of Raleigh. It's not their fault... and the team they've supported for 10 years just won the Stanley Cup.

:)
 
I wouldn't call the Whalers situation the same as the Browns. They were a source of civic pride being the only major pro team in the state (although they were trying to woo the Pats at this time) but the Whalers did not draw as well as the Browns did and they moved to an untapped market whereas the Browns moved to a metro area that already had a team. Plus they were a doormat team. Its a bummer that the people of Hartford never got a team like the ones they have had in Raleigh.
 
What can I say? Jeremy took away my disaffected :| smiley, and :mad: is the closest representation of my actual mood.

If he ever introduces a "mildly annoyed" smiley, maybe I'll use that instead.
 
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Testy.

Until their final season their arena was hovering around 60-70% capacity for the final years in Hartford. They were 85-90% their final season but by then they were already gone.

So I'd say the Browns and Whalers aren't even remotely comparable other than that a) they moved and a lot of fans are bitter (this applies to just about every other team that moved as well) and b) the city maintained the rights to the team name, but I really didn't want to go there.
 
So I'd say the Browns and Whalers aren't even remotely comparable other than that a) they moved and a lot of fans are bitter (this applies to just about every other team that moved as well)
????

That's exactly what I said the first time. What did you think I was talking about?

My exact words were:

I listen to All Night on ESPN Radio all the time, and the host, Jason Smith, is a big Hurricanes fan that used to live in Hartford and has supported the team since they were there. The owner, Peter Karmanos, essentially bought the team in 1997 with the expressed purpose of moving them. Even before the transaction was completed, Karmanos was reported to be shopping his team around to cities across the country. It is my understanding that the hard feelings between many Whaler fans and Karmanos resembles the feelings that many Cleveland Browns fans have towards Art Modell.
At no point in that quote am I comparing the circumstances under which the teams left the original cities. I am speaking directly to the fact that Karmanos took the team out of Hartford, and the Whaler fans are bitter about it, which resembles how Browns fans were bitter when Modell took the Browns out of Cleveland.

I was not speaking on the the relative fan support. I was not speaking on whether or not the team had competition from other sports in their original city. I was speaking specifically on how fans of a team that moved are bitter at the owner that moved them, and how that might resemble fans being bitter at the owner that moved the team in another sport. I know that's what I meant because that's what I was thinking when I wrote it. And you should have known that's what I meant because that's what I actually wrote. How you got whatever it is you got (which, apparently, is everything but what I actually said) out of what I posted is beyond me.

And VF wonders why I'm mad... :mad:
 
Geez Slim, I'm sorry you were having a bad night or whatever, I wasn't trying to get you upset or start a fight. The Cleveland Browns' relocation is basically considered the high point of sports owner classlessness and has had rippling effects throughout the entire sports community - "If they can move the Browns with their history and fan base they can move my team." The Whalers were just another ho-hum move that few outside the immediate area cared about.
 
I was surprised by the amount of Whalers jerseys I saw in the crowds. I was even more surprised when, during the Cup presentation, there was some presumed fanboy decked out all in green down on the ice whooping it up. Probably some fan club president so that the owner could throw a bone to the old-school fans. But it's been nine years since the team moved. It's not like what happened with Quebec. Talk about mixed emotions for Nordiques fans. The year after the team moved, they win the Cup. There were quite a few Nordiques jerseys in the crowd in Denver, and I could understand why. It still felt like THEIR team.

Although it's been nine years, I still rooted for Carolina if for no other reason than that they used to be Hartford, and there was still one player on the Canes from those years. I really wish Ron Francis could've savored this championship.

This was a damn good series. And as a fanboy of small-market teams, I really didn't mind either team winning. Thank God the new CBA allows for more of an even-footing for all of the teams.
 
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