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 NHL & Minor Leagues
Stoner Offline

Forums Stevie Wonder


Beiträge: 5.577

12.04.2003 08:25
Ergebnisse vom 11.04. Antworten

Conference Viertelfinale

Boston - New Jersey 2-4 (1-2/1-0/0-2)
(Playoffstand 0-2)
Toronto - Philadelphia 1-4 (0-2/1-2/0-0)
(Playoffstand 1-1)
Edmonton - Dallas 1-6 (1-3/0-1/0-2)
(Playoffstand 1-1)

Boston - New Jersey 2-4 (1-2/1-0/0-2)
(Playoffstand 0-2)


Auch Bryan Berard(Bos.) und John Madden(N.J.) schenkten sich nichts.

In einer von beiden Seiten ziemlich rauh geführten Playoffpartie konnten die Devils die Oberhand behalten und führen die Serie nun mit komfortablen 2-0 an. Dass sie das zweite Heimspiel auch gewinnen sollten, daran glaubten nach den ersten 13 Minuten nur wenige Zuschauer, denn die Gäste dominierten eindeutig das Geschehen. Erst nachdem Glen Murray(9.) das 1-0 der Bruins erzielt hatte und die Hausherren auch noch kurz darauf in Unterzahl massiv unter Druck standen, gelang Kapitän Scott Stevens ein überharter Check auf offenen Eis, der Mike Knuble zu Boden gehen ließ, und weckte dadurch seine Kollegen auf. Nicht nur die Aggressivität wuchs von da an, sondern auch die Leistung der Hausherren wurde besser.
Innerhalb von fünf Minuten drehte New Jersey den Spieß um, indem Jeff Friesen(15.) und Brian Rafalski(20.pp) ins Schwarze trafen, ehe noch die erste Pause begann. Nach dieser mussten die Devils für ihre fast brutale Gangart allerdings bezahlen, als Colin White wegen übertriebener Härte auf der Strafbank saß und Dan Mcgillis(34.pp) den nummerischen Vorteil ausnutzte.
Im letzten Abschnitt brachte Jamie Langenbrunner(41.pp) mit einer sehenswerten Direktabnahme, bereits 15 Sekunden nach Wiederbeginn, seine Farben wieder in Front und Joe Nieuwendyk(55.) nutzte dessen Übersicht zum verdienten Endstand von 4-2. Langenbrunner ist bisher der erfolgreichste Devil, denn an fünf der sechs geschossenen Treffer war er mit drei Toren und zwei Assits beteiligt.

Toronto - Philadelphia 1-4 (0-2/1-2/0-0)
(Playoffstand 1-1)


Sami Kapanen(Phi.) checkt Jonas Hoglund(Tor.) in die Bande.

Ähnlich überlegen wie schon in der ersten Partie der Serie agierten die Flyers in der vergangenen Nacht, machten aber diesmal nicht so viele Fehler, wie deren Trainer Ken Hitchcock nach den 60 Minuten feststellte, und konnten die Serie nun ausgleichen. Dass es bei diesem Spiel auch mit dem Toreschießen klappte, bewiesen Simon Gagne(13.sh), der in Unterzahl die Scheibe zum 1-0 einschweißte, sowie Jeremy Roenick(18.), der nach einem Housley-Konter den Puck vom ersten erfolgreichen Schützen bekam und Goalie geschickt Ed Belfour überlistete.
Die Dominanz hielt auch im Mittelabschnitt an, jedoch war Alexander Mogilny(25.) ein Mal in der Lage sich aus seiner Bewachung zu befreien und erzielte prompt seinen vierten Playofftreffer. Die Antworten folgten jedoch auf dem Fuße. Mark Recchi(27.) stellte nur 102 Sekunden danach den alten Anstand wieder her, ehe John Leclair(31.pp) im Powerplay - Shayne Corson saß gerade wegen Torhüterbehinderung auf der Strafbank - sogar auf 4-1 erhöhen konnte.
Im letzten Drittel wollte dann keinem Team mehr ein Erfolgserlebnis gelingen und die Partie verflachte etwas, so dass die 'tough guys' für Unterhaltung sorgen mussten. Torontos Tie Domi und Philadelphias Donald Brashear lieferten sich einen Faustkampf und rissen die ausverkaufte Kulisse nocheinmal zu Jubelstürmen hin. Am Spielstand änderte sich nichts mehr.

Edmonton - Dallas 1-6 (1-3/0-1/0-2)
(Playoffstand 1-1)


Einer von zwei Massentumulten...

Die erwartungsgemäß harte und knappe Serie der Dauergegner der ersten Playoffrunde wurde in dieser Nacht durch einen 6-1 Kantersieg der hoch favorisierten Texaner ausgeglichen. Allerdings lieferten sich die Kontrahenten einen Kampf, der streckenweise nichts mehr mit Eishockey zu tun hatte. Am Ende des zweiten Drittels heitzten Derain Hatcher und Brad Isbister die eh schon aggressive Stimmung an, indem sie sich gegenseitig übel foulten und es dadurch im letzten Drittel fast zum Eklat gekommen wäre. Insgesamt nur vier Minuten standen während des dritten Abschnitts zehn Feldspieler auf dem Eis, weil sich durch die ständig anhaltenden Unsportlichkeiten die Teams selbst dezimierten. So fanden zum Beispiel zwei Massentumulte statt, Edmontons Trainer Craig MacTavish legte sich verbal mit einem Zuschauer an und Cory Cross wurde des Eises verwiesen, weil er nach unerlaubten Ellbogencheck einen Gegenspieler mit seinem Stock zu verletzen versuchte.
Neben den hässlichen Szenen wurde auch noch Eishockey geboten. In Führung waren die Oilers, die nur 13 Mal auf des Gegners Gehäuse feuerten, durch Marty Reasoner(7.pp) gegangen, ehe Sergei Zubov(11.pp) ebenfalls in nummerischer Überlegenheit ausglich. Ein Doppelpack von Scott Young(15.pp/20.) brachte die Hausherren erstmalig in Front. Nachdem Jason Arnott(39.) kurz vor dem Ende der zweiten Pause auch noch das 4-1 erzielt hatte, spiegelten sich schon die frustrierten Emotionen der Gäste in deren Aktionen wieder, die im weiteren Spielverlauf nur noch mit groben Unsportlichkeiten auffielen.
Den Endstand in dem überaus turbulenten letzten Drittel stellten schließlich Mike Modano(45.) und Ulf Dahlen(47.pp) her. Der letzte Treffer des Abends kassierte Goalie Jussi Markkanen, der nach dem fünften Gegentor seine Nummer Eins Tommy Salo ablöste und noch immerhin zwölf Mal geprüft wurde.

Quelle: http://www.eishockey.com/berichte/aktuell.htm


--------------------------------------
Grüße
Stoner
National Forums League Champion 2002
...Eishockey ? Was ist das ? Habe ich das schon mal gesehen ?
...ja, am 29.03. bei Wings at Blues 6-2

sandy69 Offline

NHL-Legende


Beiträge: 1.307

12.04.2003 09:03
#2 RE:Ergebnisse vom 11.04. Antworten

There's your answer

Stars even series with 6-1 rout of Oilers in Game Two

by J. Douglas Foster
Three Stars
April 11, 2002 -- Many wondered if a 2-1 loss to Edmonton in Game One of the Western Conference Quarterfinal would serve as a wakeup call for the Stars.

Wakeup call?

Only if that call was followed by a pot of coffee, a case of Vivarin and an industrial-sized order of smelling salt.

This giant, quite obviously, is awake.

The heavily-favored Stars, seeded No. 1 in the Western Conference, certainly played like the best team in their conference during Friday's Game Two -- if not the most proud.

Even after the No. 8-seeded Oilers struck for the game's first goal, the Stars quickly began the dismantling of Edmonton, scoring three in the first, one in the second and two in the third on their way to a 6-1 victory, one which evened the series at 1-1.

So was it the Oilers who woke the Stars?

"No, it was us," said Stars right wing Scott Young, who scored twice in the first period, one of those being the game-winning goal. "We needed to get ourselves going, there's no question. We were not happy with that first game at all, especially here at home after we worked so hard to get home ice, just to give it away in Game One. Give them credit for way they played in Game One, but we weren't nearly as determined as we were tonight.

"I read in the paper 'Rude Awakening.' And it was."

If Wednesday's awakening was "rude," then finding a word for the spanking the Stars handed out in Game Two would be quite difficult.

Despite the fact that Marty Reasoner gave the Oilers a 1-0 lead with a power-play goal six minutes into the game, that would be the last time the Oilers showed any signs of having a chance at victory. Because once the Stars got any kind of chance with their power play, they began putting the game away.

It started when Sergei Zubov blasted one in from the point during a 5-on-3 situation just four minutes after Reasoner's goal. Four minutes after that, Young gave the Stars the lead for good with a power-play goal, one which he scored by executing a perfect deflection of a pass from Darryl Sydor.

"They started taking a few penalties," Stars left wing Ulf Dahlen said, "and our power play was pretty good."

Neither the Dallas power play -- nor Young -- was finished capitalizing.

In the final minute of the first, the Stars went up 3-1 when Young ripped a slapshot past Edmonton goaltender Tommy Salo at warp speed.

From there, the Stars put it into cruise control -- despite the fact that the game turned very ugly and penalty-laden during the final 40 minutes.

Even with the turn of events that produced a combined 39 penalties -- including 24 called against the Oilers for a total of 75 minutes -- the Stars kept scoring.

It continued when Jason Arnott put the Stars up 4-1 with a hard-working goal off a Dahlen assist nine minutes into the second, a score that would last into the third.

In that frame, Mike Modano scored his second goal in as many playoff games, hammering one past Salo -- one which chased Salo from the game -- off a Brenden Morrow assist. Even with replacement goaltender Jussi Markkanen in the game, Dallas kept scoring, with Dahlen getting another power play goal for Dallas seven minutes into the third.

The scoring stopped, but the extracurricular activities didn't. Penalties were handed out, players were ejected, and tempers ran hot the rest of the way.

"That was a good old-fashioned revved-up playoff game right there," Stars head coach Dave Tippett said. "That was fun."

What made it fun for Dallas was getting the victory, one which Tippett himself called "crucial" a day earlier.

Not only did they win, however, but they played better. Much better.

And in turn, they most likely made a big statement, which is especially important as they head to Edmonton for Games Three and Four.

"Our backs were against the wall," Arnott said. "We had to come out with a win. We couldn't get down 2-0 going into their rink. It's tough enough to play there as it is."

STARGAZING

Winning Game Two is certainly a good omen for Dallas as 71.1 percent of the teams that have won Game Two have gone on to win during seven-game series' in NHL playoff history.

In Modano's last three playoff games against Edmonton -- dating back to the 2001 playoffs -- he has a three-game point streak. He has six points -- three goals, three assists -- during the streak.

Stars right wing Claude Lemieux was scratched with a minor injury. He is listed as day-to-day..

Sydor's wife Sharlene gave birth to the couple's third child Thursday morning, a boy named Dylan.

Quelle:
http://www.dallasstars.com/




MatsSundin#13 Offline

Formationstanzexperte


Beiträge: 3.409

12.04.2003 10:36
#3 RE:Ergebnisse vom 11.04. Antworten

Dallas vs. Edmonton 1:1

Game 2: Edmonton @ Dallas 1:6

DALLAS (Ticker) -- The Dallas Stars did not spend the entire game on the power play. It only seemed that way.
Converting three of an amazing 19 power plays, the Stars scored six unanswered goals to rout the Edmonton Oilers, 6-1, and even the Western Conference quarterfinal series at one victory apiece.
Dallas was listless in a 2-1 loss in Game One, but the top-seeded Stars flexed their muscle in this one, posting their first playoff win at their new home, the America Airlines Arena.
"That was a good old-fashioned revved up playoff game, that one right there," Dallas coach Dave Tippett said. "That was fun and a good game. We played hard and will take some positives out of this game and move forward."
With the contest out of a reach, the third period disintregated into a constant procession to the penalty box, with the Stars going on the power play 12 times over the final 20 minutes.
"It's unfortunate, a bit of an ugly finish," Dallas center Mike Modano said of the chippy play in the third period.
"The officials did what they had to do to control it," said Scott Young, who scored two goals for the Stars in the first period. "They called a lot of penalties all game. There's only so much you can do as an official."
The penalty-filled contest represented another chapter in the rivalry between the Stars and Oilers, who are meeting in the playoffs for the sixth time in seven years.
"I don't know if it was a rivalry against us or against the referees," Modano said. "They (Oilers) were frustrated like we were last game."
"If we lose the game, we were at least going to take our toll physically on the opposition," Edmonton coach Craig MacTavish said. "we started to get physical and we weren't happy at the liberties we felt Dallas was taking with our guys. We weren't going to stand for that."
Dallas defenseman Derian Hatcher received his second straight game misconduct, which according to NHL playoff rules, mandates a two-game suspension, although the Stars have a right to appeal within 48 hours. That was the only negative for Dalas, which outshot the Oilers, 41-13.
"My first playoff win obviously feels very good," said Dallas goaltender Marty Turco, who recorded just 12 saves. "I've got the attitude like the other guys on the team. We're taking it one game at a time and tonight we were successful."
The Oilers maintained their composure throughout their victory in the series opener and got a lucky bounce to grab the early lead in this one.
Eric Brewer's slap shot from the center of the blue line went wide, but it hit the back boards and bounced in front to Marty Reasoner, whose shot ricocheted off the stick of Turco to make it 1-0 at 6:34 of the first.
But the Oilers self-destructed, giving the Stars five power plays in the opening 20 minutes, including a pair of 5-on-3s.
Dallas took full advantage, scoring three goals in the last 10 minutes of the period, including two power-play tallies.
"The game is over now, so we are just going to put it behind us," Edmonton right wing Brad Isbister said. "We got the split, so we're happy. It's not total goals, it's wins."
The Stars converted their first 5-on-3 as Sergei Zubov snapped a wrist shot from inside the blue line that beat Tommy Salo with 9:57 left in the first.
Dallas cashed in another power play to take the lead for good.
Darryl Sydor faked a shot from the left circle, then passed in the slot to Young, who scored on a one-timer with 5:48 remaining.
The Oilers gave up another goal with just 50 seconds left in the first as Young's slap shot from the right circle hit the far post before deflecting into the net to make it 3-1.
"We didn't have our strongest game last gamne, so we needed to come out on all cylinders tonight," Dallas center Jason Arnott said. "We got the bounces tonight and Marty played well in net."
The Oilers also allowed a late goal in the second as Arnott scored with 1:08 remaining. The Stars did not let up, with Modano and Ulf Dahlen scoring in the third period.
"We're confident and we're going back home," Oilers left wing Ethan Moreau said. "That (loss) is not going to deflate us one bit."
The Oilers host Game Three on Sunday, but they will need a bounce-back game from Salo, who was pulled 6:03 into the third period. Jussi Markkanen made his playoff debut, stopping 11 of the 12 shots he faced.


New Jersey vs. Boston 2:0

Game 2: Boston @ New Jersey 2:4

EAST RUTHERFORD, New Jersey (Ticker) -- The New Jersey Devils stood pat at this year's trade deadline. But a year-old deal is paying big dividends.
Jamie Langenbrunner scored the go-ahead goal 15 seconds into the third period and set up Joe Nieuwendyk's insurance tally as the Devils defeated the Boston Bruins, 4-2, to take a two games to none lead in their Eastern Conference quarterfinal series.
Langenbrunner and Nieuwendyk came over in March 2002 as part of a four-player trade with Dallas. Their line, with left wing Jeff Friesen, has accounted for five of New Jersey's six goals in the series, with Langenbrunner netting both game-winners.
"Our line's clicking pretty well right now," Langenbrunner said.
"We've had a few chances and we're creating some opportunities.
The way Dog's (John Madden) playing (Joe) Thornton's line, we feel we have to do some scoring. And right now, we're getting a few."
The Devils started the third period with a 4-on-3 power play after defenseman Bruins Nick Boynton was penalized for slashing Madden at the end of the second.
"I thought the call was late, and I don't understand a call like that, given how the game was played," Boynton said.
Langenbrunner got a pass from defenseman Scott Niedermayer just inside the blue line and ripped a slap shot that beat goaltender Steve Shields to the stick side and found room inside the left goalpost.
Eight of Langenbrunner's 18 career playoff goals have been game-winners. In last year's first-round loss to Carolina, he had just one assist in five games.
"I think anytime you fail, and that's what we did last year, it's a lot to think about all summer," Langenbrunner said.
"It's driving a lot of us to try to do better and to succeed this year."
Less than two minutes after killing a penalty on Niedermayer, New Jersey padded its lead. A pass from Langenbrunner sent Nieuwendyk in on a breakaway and the 17-year veteran made no mistake, lifting a backhander over Shields and under the crossbar for his first playoff goal since 2001.
"Jeff (Friesen) made a great play in the defensive zone to show good patience," Nieuwendyk said. "He went rink-wide to Jamie and he gave me a nice touch pass up the middle."
Martin Brodeur protected the lead with 24 saves as the Devils became the only team to win both of its home games in this year's playoffs.
"This series is far from over," Langenbrunner cautioned. "We did what we had to do in winning our home games."
Glen Murray and defenseman Dan McGillis scored for the Bruins, who host Game Three on Sunday.
"Everybody in this locker room at one time or another has won four games in a row," Boynton said. "We're not doubting ourselves at all. What we have to do is go home and win Game Three on Sunday."
Boston tied it at 2-2 with 6:01 to go in the second period. With five seconds left on defenseman Colin White's roughing penalty, Jozef Stumpel backhanded a pass from behind the goal line to the top of the slot. McGillis' shot beat Brodeur high to the stick side.
The intensity picked up in the second period, with referees Kevin Pollock and Brad Watson handing out 10 penalties, including four for roughing.
The Bruins grabbed their first lead of the series 8:52 into the opening period when Murray put a backhander from low in the left faceoff circle past Brodeur for his 18th career playoff goal.
The momentum shifted to New Jersey when defenseman Scott Stevens leveled Mike Knuble with a hit at the Devils' blue line with 6:25 to go.
"That was a hit that seemed to wake everybody up," New Jersey coach Pat Burns said. "I think when he goes out and plays like that, it's easy for me behind the bench to yell, `Hey, there's an example there.'" Less than a minute later, Friesen got a pass from Langenbrunner in the slot and wristed a shot through traffic and past Shields for his sixth career postseason goal and first in three years.
Knuble took a borderline interference penalty with 36 seconds to go in the period, and New Jersey needed just 10 seconds to take the lead.
Madden drew two defenders in the right faceoff circle but managed to slide the puck to the top of the slot, where Rafalski had time to fire a slap shot past Shields' stick side. It was the defenseman's 13th career playoff goal and the Devils' first in five power-play chances in the series.
New Jersey owned the worst power play in the NHL during the regular season but was 2-for-7 in this one.
"If you're power play's not clicking, it gives the other team the luxury to take you down," Langenbrunner said. "Once the power play gets going, it makes you think a little bit more about taking penalties."
"A couple of power-play goals against us is what really cost us tonight," Knuble admitted. "I thought our power play was pretty good, but their power play was very sharp."


Philadelphia vs. Toronto 1:1

Game 2: Toronto @ Philadelphia 1:4

PHILADELPHIA (Ticker) -- Quiet in Game One, the big guns came alive for the Philadelphia Flyers.
Simon Gagne and Jeremy Roenick scored in the first period and Mark Recchi and John LeClair tallied in the second as the Flyers dominated the Toronto Maple Leafs, 4-1, to even the Eastern Conference quarterfinal final series at one win apiece.
"We had everybody on deck today," Philadelphia coach Ken Hitchcock said. "Everybody was playing. We needed our best players to play well and that gives us a fighting chance. We're a team built on four lines and when we get the lead early in a hockey game, we can roll four lines."
Although he did not face a great deal of pressure, Roman Cechmanek was sharper in net for the Flyers after allowing five goals on just 15 shots in a 5-3 loss in the opener. He finished with 16 saves on Friday.
Philadelphia played with more desperation and energy in this one, outshooting Toronto, 15-5, in the first period and dominating throughout.
"We wanted to throw pucks at the net and and we were hungry around the net as well," LeClair said. "We were a little bit sharper with the puck tonight."
The shorthanded Maple Leafs played without Darcy Tucker (knee), Doug Gilmour (knee) and Glen Wesley (ankle) and Nik Antropov (foot), who were also scratched.
"I came here expecting to win the first game and we did," Toronto coach Pat Quinn said. "We played smarter, way smarter than tonight. I expected when we dropped the puck tonight, that we were going to win Game Two. The Flyers had something to say about that."
Quinn bemoaned the lack of scoring opportunities for the Leafs, who have attemped only 32 shots in the first two games.
"This is the worst team I've ever had for (not) wanting to put the puck on the net," he said. "They want to over-pass. How many times did you see that we tried to make that nice little pass to a soft area instead of whipping it at the net. Sometimes, you have to play simply in a game."
The tone may have been set during the pregame warmups, when Philadelphia's Donald Brashear and Toronto's Tie Domi engaged in a brief shouting match. The two heavyweights finally squared off 7 1/2 minutes in the third period, drawing fighting penalties.
"I really don't like it when the word 'stars' is used," Roenick said. "Our club is based on 22 guys that play this game. We win by playing as a team. We don't win by individual efforts. Hitch just wants us to play the way he has outlined for us."
Maple Leafs goaltender Ed Belfour held off the Flyers for the first 12 minutes, but gave up a pair of costly rebounds, the first resulting in Gagne's shorthanded goal.
Belfour made a blocker save on Gagne's wrist shot from the right circle off his chest, but the puck bounced in the air. Gagne charged to the net and after the puck hit his skate, pushed his own rebound past Belfour to give the Flyers a 1-0 lead with 7:51 left in the first.
"It was a great way to start the game," Gagne said of his goal.
"Tonight, my goal was to come out hard. I wanted to use my speed and go to the net. It feels good to have a game like this."
With 2:13 left in the period, Roenick deflected a centering pass from Gagne to make it 2-0. Gagne set up the goal by fighting off a check from defenseman Bryan McCabe along the left boards.
"Gagne played fantastic tonight," Roenick said. "He used his speed and was very focused. He was the type of player we needed."
Alexander Mogilny gave the Maple Leafs some life by scoring on a wraparound 4:38 into the second to halve the deficit. It was the fourth goal in two games for Mogilny, who recorded his first career playoff hat trick in the opener.
"They were on the puck all night long and they didn't give us much out there," Mogilny said. "The shots they did give us, I could have played in net and no one would have scored."
Recchi delivered the back-breaker 1:42 later, scoring a bad-angle goal from behind the net as his backhander in front bounced off McCabe's skate.
Just over four minutes later, LeClair's power-play tally gave the Flyers a three-goal cushion. Belfour made a kick save on Eric Weinrich's wrist shot from the blue line, but LeClair, stationed in front, poked in the rebound.
"Jeremy was angry at himself for the way he played in Game One," Hitchcock said. "Today, he stayed in the middle of the rink, where he was more effective. LeClair did the same thing. LeClair used his speed getting up the ice, rather than standing and waiting."
Philadelphia already has scored seven goals in the playoffs after managing just two in their five-game first-round loss to Ottawa last season.
"There was no doubt who deserved the game tonight," Toronto center Mats Sundin said. "If it wasn't for Ed Belfour, the score would have been a lot worse. We were outplayed in the first game and again tonight. We feel lucky to go home with a split."
The Maple Leafs host Game Three of the best-of-seven series Monday.

von: http://www.nhl.com

Mats


Vielleicht wirds ja besser!?

AC/DC rules!

holypalooza Offline

O.A.L. Member


Beiträge: 11.626

12.04.2003 11:39
#4 RE:Ergebnisse vom 11.04. Antworten

In Antwort auf:
Torontos Tie Domi und Philadelphias Donald Brashear lieferten sich einen Faustkampf und rissen die ausverkaufte Kulisse nocheinmal zu Jubelstürmen hin.


Méschda Hoschbess holy ...und nichts ist wie es scheint!!

Brawls. Blood. Mayhem. Philly style. You want it … we got it!

The hockey brawl is raw entertainment. No Hollywood crap.

Cornholio Offline

Schnulzenkönig


Beiträge: 5.823

12.04.2003 12:18
#5 RE:Ergebnisse vom 11.04. Antworten

HOLY, WO IS DAS VIDEO
-----------------
Ich bin 2. offizieller Bienchen-Fan * Member of the official Lions-Board's-BLIND GUARDIAN-Circle
"... Wings forward Darren McCarty used his fists to extract revenge from a turtling Lemieux ..."

* Brausestäbchen * Schmetterlinge * Wackelpudding * Insider #14

holypalooza Offline

O.A.L. Member


Beiträge: 11.626

12.04.2003 12:23
#6 RE:Ergebnisse vom 11.04. Antworten


...guck mal im trashtalkthread, letzte Seite!!


Méschda Hoschbess holy ...und nichts ist wie es scheint!!

Brawls. Blood. Mayhem. Philly style. You want it … we got it!

The hockey brawl is raw entertainment. No Hollywood crap.

Mainpirat Offline

O.A.L. Member


Beiträge: 1.810

12.04.2003 13:21
#7 RE:Ergebnisse vom 11.04. Antworten

In Antwort auf:
Toronto - Philadelphia 1-4 (0-2/1-2/0-0)

Na also geht doch!


Rock on,
and on, and on...

John LeClair breaks down the left wing all alone, moves into the circle and cranks a wicked slap shot with zero hesitation. The baffled goaltender is left with no answers, just questions as the First Union Center's horn blazes and the crowd booms.

holypalooza Offline

O.A.L. Member


Beiträge: 11.626

12.04.2003 13:35
#8 RE:Ergebnisse vom 11.04. Antworten

@ MP:

...es kommt noch besser!!


Méschda Hoschbess holy ...und nichts ist wie es scheint!!

Brawls. Blood. Mayhem. Philly style. You want it … we got it!

The hockey brawl is raw entertainment. No Hollywood crap.

Cornholio Offline

Schnulzenkönig


Beiträge: 5.823

12.04.2003 13:52
#9 RE:Ergebnisse vom 11.04. Antworten

Danke Holy
-----------------
Ich bin 2. offizieller Bienchen-Fan * Member of the official Lions-Board's-BLIND GUARDIAN-Circle
"... Wings forward Darren McCarty used his fists to extract revenge from a turtling Lemieux ..."

* Brausestäbchen * Schmetterlinge * Wackelpudding * Insider #14

bigfoot49 Offline

Titel gesucht
Co-Admin

Beiträge: 11.081

12.04.2003 14:37
#10 RE:Ergebnisse vom 11.04. Antworten

:2-Sieg gegen Boston

Devils bauen Play-off-Führung aus

Die New Jersey Devils haben in der nordamerikanischen Profiliga NHL in der ersten Play-off-Runde einen 4:2-Erfolg gegen die Boston Bruins gefeiert und ihre Führung in der Best-of-Seven-Serie auf 2:0 ausgebaut.

In East Rutherford gerieten die "Teufel" zunächst durch einen Treffer von Glen Murray in Rückstand, doch New Jerseys Jeff Friesen glich wenige Minuten später aus. Brian Rafalski konnte auf 2:1 erhöhen, bevor Boston durch Dan McGillis gleichzog.

Flyers gleichen aus

Die Philadelphia Flyers besiegten die Toronto Maple Leafs vor heimischem Publikum mit 4:1 und konnte damit in der Best-of-Seven-Serie auf 1:1 ausgleichen. Simon Gagne und Jeremy Roenick schossen die Flyers bereits im ersten Drittel 2:0 in Front, Mark Recchi und John LeClair machten dann alles klar für die "Flyers".

Klatsche für die Oilers
Die Dallas Stars verpassten in der eigenen Halle den Oilers aus Edmonton eine 6:1-Niederlage und konnten damit in den Play-offs wieder auf 1:1 gleichziehen. Die Gäste aus Kanada fanden während der gesamten Partie nicht ins Spiel. Nachdem für Edmonton nach einem 1:4-Rückstand nach dem zweiten Drittel der Sieg nicht mehr möglich schien, dominierten Fouls die Begegnung. Von den letzten 20 Minuten spielten die Oilers zwölf in Unterzahl.
http://sport.ard.de/sp/eishockey/news200...hrung_aus.jhtml



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