Red Wings dominate Stars

Published Friday May 9th, 2008

Detroit defeats Dallas 4-1 in NHL Western final opener

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DETROIT - The opening game of the NHL's Western Conference final was no contest.

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AP
Dallas Stars’ goalie Marty Turco deflects a shot during the first period yesterday against the Detroit Red Wings in Detroit.

The Detroit Red Wings continued to roll, winning their seventh straight game, in ripping the Dallas Stars 4-1 last night.

As if they didn't already have enough offensive weapons, the Wings turned what had been an ordinary power play thus far in the post-season into a three-goal flame thrower.

Power-play goals by Brian Rafalski and Johan Franzen put Detroit up 2-0 in the first period, and a power-play goal by Tomas Holmstrom plus an even-strength goal by Valtteri Filpulla made it 4-0 before Brenden Morrow replied late in the second period.

The Red Wings hadn't played in a week but showed no signs of rust in the teams' first post-season meeting in 10 years.

Detroit outshot Dallas 31-21. Chris Osgood remained superb in the nets since replacing Dominik Hasek in the first round and improved to 7-0. Marty Turco, winless in 10 career regular-season starts in Joe Louis Arena, was a loser again.

On power plays, Detroit was 3-for-6 and Dallas was 0-for-4 in front of a near-capacity crowd of more than 21,000.

Game 2 is Saturday in Detroit (CBC, 7 p.m.).

Six penalties were assessed in the first period. Dallas took four of them, and Detroit jumped to a 2-0 lead.

The Red Wings had a two-man advantage when Rafalski slapped a long shot that sailed over a kneeling and screened Turco at 4:28. Mattias Norstrom was serving a hooking penalty and Mark Fistric joined him in the penalty box for roughing up Holmstrom after a whistle.

Franzen deflected down a high Niklas Kronvall shot and sent the puck skittering past Turco's feet at 15:34 after Toby Petersen had been nabbed for holding.

Franzen's 12th goal of the post-season, in his team's 11th game, tied the club playoff record of five consecutive games with a goal. The six-foot-three Swede shares it with Gordie Howe, who went five in a row in 1949 and 1964, and with Ted Lindsay, who had a similar streak in 1952.

Shots were 4-4 early on but the Red Wings were up 12-4 after 20 minutes.

Osgood made a fantastic leg save when Niklas Hagman got free for a shot from on Osgood's doorstep six minutes into the second period.

"Ozzie, Ozzie," cheered the crowd.

Holmstrom made it 3-0 when, parked in front of Turco, he deflected in a high Nicklas Lidstrom shot at 6:40. Mike Ribeiro cringed in the penalty box, where he'd been exiled for hooking. The scoring sequence began when Henrik Zetterberg beat Steve Ott on a faceoff in the Dallas end.

The crowd got on Turco by chanting his name over and over.

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