DALLAS -- Brett Hull is erasing the memory of a horrible regular season
with a torrid start to the postseason.
Hull, whose goal ended the Stanley Cup Finals last season, closed out the
Dallas Stars' first-round victory over the Edmonton Oilers by blasting in the
winning goal in a 3-2 game Friday night.
"I've been fortunate that a few shots have gone in," said Hull, who led
Dallas with three goals and six points in the five-game series. "We've got a
lot of guys trying to pick up the slack."
The Stars opened their title defense with an incredibly balanced scoring
attack: 11 players scored their 14 goals in the series. Mike Modano was the
only other player with more than one.
Jamie Langenbrunner and defenseman Derian Hatcher were the new scorers
Friday. Langenbrunner gave Dallas a 1-0 lead by scoring on a power play early
in the second period, then Hatcher made it 2-1 just 87 seconds after the Oilers
tied it later in the period.
Edmonton forced another tie 1:03 into the third period when a shot from
behind the net by Jim Dowd caromed off Hatcher's skate and went by goaltender
Ed Belfour before he knew what happened.
The winning goal was set up when Joe Nieuwendyk left the puck for Hull in
the high slot. Hull, who has more career playoff goals (80) than any player
participating in this postseason, wound up and drilled it to the right of
Edmonton's Tommy Salo.
"That's what I'm supposed to do," Hull said. "That's my job. I live to
score goals."
By winning in five games, the Stars got the next-best thing to a sweep:
three home victories and a split on the road. They desperately wanted to avoid
another trip to Edmonton's raucous Skyreach Centre and will get some extra rest
before learning their second-round opponent, either Colorado or San Jose.
"I really did not want to jump on a plane tomorrow," Hatcher said. "We
wanted to spend Easter at home."
The Oilers will be going home again wondering how to beat the Stars -- or,
maybe, trying to figure out a way to avoid them. This is the third consecutive
year Dallas has eliminated Edmonton from the playoffs. The Oilers have lost 12
in a row at Reunion Arena.
"We've got to get better as a team and an organization because we've got a
couple of years of not getting to the next level," coach Kevin Lowe said. "We
need to tweak it here and there."
Said defenseman Tom Poti: "They stick to their game plan for the whole 60
minutes. As a team we have to learn from that."
The Stars won their seventh consecutive knockout game since 1998. Belfour,
celebrating his 35th birthday, made 24 saves as he upped his record to 14-2 in
games that can end a playoff series.
Salo, who also stopped 24 shots, fell to 1-8 in the playoffs -- with all the
games against Dallas.
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| Tommy Salo and the Oilers lose to the Stars for the third consecutive year.(AP) | |
The Oilers did not lead in any of the three games at Reunion, but they made
this one interesting by matching the Stars shot-for-shot, hit-for-hit and
nearly goal-for-goal. Both teams even had about the same number of missed
opportunities.
Dallas broke through first with Langenbrunner's goal on the Stars' sixth
power play. His point-blank shot came during a 5-on-4 advantage, but at the
time it was more like 5-on-2 because Bill Guerin was barely out of the penalty
box and Jason Smith had lost his stick.
"We had a couple of bad breaks," forward Ryan Smyth said.
Modano and Nieuwendyk both had two assists. For Modano, the two points give
him 84 in his postseason career, breaking the club record set by Brian Bellows.
Modano broke Bellows' career franchise goals record this season.
The seventh-seeded Oilers were without Doug Weight for more than 20 minutes
in the late second period and early third because of back spasms.
Dallas was without defenseman Sergei Zubov, who skated Thursday and was
thought to have had a 50-50 chance of playing. He probably will return for the
second round, as could forward Jere Lehtinen.
AP NEWS
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