CONNECT    

Stanley Cup Finals 2011: Vancouver Canucks Take 3-2 Series Lead Against Boston Bruins

Stanley Cup Finals 2011

GREG BEACHAM   06/10/11 11:42 PM ET   AP

VANCOUVER, British Columbia — With a fortunate bounce and a flawless goalie, the Vancouver Canucks are heading back to Boston with the chance to hoist the Stanley Cup for the first time.

Maxim Lapierre scored on a carom off the back boards with 15:25 to play, Roberto Luongo stopped 31 shots in a stirring shutout after getting pulled from his last game, and the Canucks moved to the brink of their first NHL championship with a 1-0 victory over Boston in Game 5 on Friday night.

Luongo helped Vancouver take a 3-2 series lead, posting his fourth shutout of the playoffs and second of the Stanley Cup finals after giving up 12 goals in less than four periods during two blowout losses in Boston.

"There was something about him before the game," said Vancouver defenseman Kevin Bieksa, who set up the only goal. "He just seemed so comfortable, so confident. He was vocal, and usually he's not a vocal guy. We thought it would be something special."

Game 6 is Monday night in Boston, and the Stanley Cup will be there.

The Canucks have scored just six goals in five Stanley Cup finals games against brilliant Boston goalie Tim Thomas, yet they're one victory away from winning it all.

"We've been through this, I don't know how many times," Boston coach Claude Julien said. "We're not a team that's done anything the easy way, so in a way, it's not a surprise we're here. ... Tonight was certainly not a good night for our power play, not a good night for our whole team in creating scoring chances."

Neither team found an offensive flow in a Game 5 nail-biter, but Luongo kept Vancouver in it until Lapierre and Bieksa teamed up on a goal that set off a crazy celebration among tens of thousands of fans thronging downtown Vancouver.

Luongo was pulled from Game 4, but coach Alain Vigneault stuck with him for Game 5. The Olympic champion was only occasionally spectacular, but he still narrowly outplayed Thomas, who has received just two goals of support from his teammates in three games in Vancouver.

Story continues below

"(Luongo) knows that we believe in him," Vancouver forward Alex Burrows said. "He's unreal. We have so much confidence in him, and he doesn't listen to what people outside this locker room say. We know he's the best goalie in the league."

Thomas made 24 saves in Game 5, but lost his shutout streak of 110 minutes, 42 seconds dating to Game 3. With injured forward Nathan Horton's jersey hanging in the visitors' locker room, the Bruins' power play regressed to its previous postseason struggles, going 0 for 4.

After two scoreless periods of stellar goaltending in which Boston went scoreless on four power plays, the Canucks finally connected with a supremely heady play by the veteran Bieksa, who used Thomas' aggressive style against him.

Bieksa deliberately put a long shot wide of the goal, and when Thomas instinctively moved to his glove side to play it, the puck ricocheted off the back boards straight to Lapierre, who put it behind Thomas for just his second goal of the postseason.

"I hope I was trying to miss the net, because I missed it by about 8 feet," Bieksa said. "I didn't have a real good angle to the net, so I just put it up there and got a good bounce."

Lapierre was a late-season acquisition who largely serves as an agitator for the Canucks, not a scorer. He's never managed more than 15 goals in a season, and he had just six this season while playing for Montreal, Anaheim and Vancouver.

"Those are usually the kind of goals that go in when no one is scoring," Thomas said. "A lot of times it's going to be that fluke one off the boards, and Lapierre didn't even get the shot off clean. If he got the shot off clean, I would have been able to read it better and would have had a better chance at it."

The Canucks hung on from there, winning their sixth straight home playoff game since May 7.

If Vancouver can't improve on its last trip to Boston, the finals will go to Game 7 in Vancouver on Wednesday night. The home team has won every game in this series, and the Bruins have won their last five at home.

In the last 21 times the finals were even going to Game 5, the winner went on to claim the Cup 15 times – yet Colorado (2001), Tampa Bay (2004) and Pittsburgh (2009) all overcame Game 5 losses to win it in the past decade.

Luongo receives more criticism than almost any goalie with his level of accomplishment at hockey's most elite levels, yet he has shown resilience throughout the postseason. He came back from a one-game benching in the first round against Chicago with a 2-1 victory in Game 7, and Vigneault unhesitatingly stuck by Luongo in the finals, ignoring widespread trashing of his $10 million goalie after Boston's 8-1 and 4-0 home wins.

The Canucks were grateful to return to Rogers Arena, where they eked out two one-goal wins to open the series on late goals by Raffi Torres and Alex Burrows. Vancouver seemed to be in control when the club left Canada last weekend – but then the Bruins seized charge of the series with two inspired performances after Vancouver defenseman Aaron Rome's late hit knocked Horton out for the series with a concussion early in Game 3.

Boston is still having tremendous defensive success in the finals, holding 2010 league MVP Henrik Sedin without a point and limiting NHL scoring champion Daniel Sedin to one goal. Vancouver's power play is 1 for 25 in the finals – yet the Bruins just haven't scored timely road goals to back up Thomas, who allowed one goal in two games in Boston.

Boston had three early power plays in Game 5 and controlled long stretches of play, but couldn't crack Luongo. Chris Kelly hit Luongo's crossbar with an early shot, and Luongo made a stunning point-blank save on Patrice Bergeron's rebound shot from the slot during Boston's third power play.

Vancouver killed another Boston power play and survived several dicey sequences in the second period before taking control of play midway through the game. But Canucks forward Tanner Glass fanned on an uncontested 15-foot backhand at Thomas' open net moments later, and the NHL's best power play failed to score on its first two chances.

After Lapierre's goal, the Canucks weathered Boston's pressure impressively. Luongo was forced to make only a handful of tough saves on Boston's 10 shots in the third.

The foreboding clouds above downtown Vancouver matched the mood of many fans who watched as their worst fears about the Canucks were realized back in Boston. Vancouver's impressive skill level and high-scoring offense has been negated by opponents' toughness and will in previous postseason runs. What's more, many Canucks fans still simply don't trust Luongo, who has been under fire from home fans for a few years despite his superb career achievements.

Tens of thousands of fans still flooded downtown for Game 5, wearing their team's crisp blue-and-green jerseys and waving flags or carrying replica Stanley Cups around Granville and Robson streets. The sea of people erupted in raucous cheers when Lapierre scored.

NOTES: Canucks rookie D Chris Tanev played his first game of the series, replacing Keith Ballard after the veteran struggled in Game 4. Tanev's pass set up Glass for his missed chance. ... Boston had scored 10 goals in the second periods of the past three games before getting shut out in Game 5. ... Boston D Tomas Kaberle played in his 100th postseason game in a career spent entirely with Toronto until this season. ... UFC president Dana White – a Massachusetts native – attended the game, as did heavyweight champion Cain Velasquez and contender Junior Dos Santos. Dos Santos fights Shane Carwin in the main event of UFC 131 in Rogers Arena on Saturday night. ... NBA star Steve Nash sat in the stands, leading cheers for his hometown team with a white rally towel.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST SPORTS

VANCOUVER, British Columbia — With a fortunate bounce and a flawless goalie, the Vancouver Canucks are heading back to Boston with the chance to hoist the Stanley Cup for the first time. Maxim ...
VANCOUVER, British Columbia — With a fortunate bounce and a flawless goalie, the Vancouver Canucks are heading back to Boston with the chance to hoist the Stanley Cup for the first time. Maxim ...
 
Loading...
Filed by Adam Goldberg  | 
 
  • Comments
  • 123
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Login or connect with: 
More Login Options
Post Comment Preview Comment
To reply to a Comment: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to.
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2  Next ›  Last »   (2 total)
11 hours ago (12:37 AM)
Anyone else love how pissed Thomas got after the goal last night. Aahhh sweet victory. :o)
19 hours ago (4:20 PM)
Recchi had better step it up this series. Thomas is simply amazing but he can't do it alone. With Horton out it's going to hurt us if Recchi can't produce.
14 hours ago (9:27 PM)
Julien: More 19-year-ol­d, less 43-year-ol­d.
photo
Praetoria Cohors
Quaero verum
20 hours ago (3:46 PM)
Bruins were flat, and the Canucks were the better team. I just hope Boston picks it up in the next game. Whatever the outcome, it has been a heck of a playoffs. So Canuck fans, gloat away; you earned it in game 5.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
logicanada
Co-host Zeitgeistnight.com
21 hours ago (2:30 PM)
It's just a game.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sad But True
Sorry to break it to you, but...
20 hours ago (3:55 PM)
Neat.
19 hours ago (4:46 PM)
No, it's a HOCKEY game, which puts it a notch above games in any other sport.
22 hours ago (2:01 PM)
I'm a Vancouveri­te, but I hope this series goes 7 games.

I want to see this city throw the biggest party ever in the history of sports! If the Canucks win game 7 in Vancouver, the 100's of thousands that fill the streets of Vancouver will make internatio­nal headlines -- guaranteed­.

I didn't think it could get any bigger than the Olympics. GO CANUCKS!!!
22 hours ago (2:04 PM)
Here is Granville Street during the Olympics. A small taste of what is to come.

http://roo­mwithaview­blog.com/w­p-content/­uploads/20­10/03/gran­ville.jpg
18 hours ago (6:10 PM)
Polite Canadians going on a "rampage" in the streets of Vancouver. Oh the humanity!
17 hours ago (6:57 PM)
Trust me, there is nothing polite about Canadians when Hockey is involved
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sad But True
Sorry to break it to you, but...
17 hours ago (7:07 PM)
If they lose, will they burn the city down?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sad But True
Sorry to break it to you, but...
23 hours ago (12:53 PM)
Congrats Canucks fans!

Didn't want to seem like I'd vanished after the loss. It was a heartbreak­er, but kudos to Vancouver for making adjustment­s. Much more physical. And credit to Luongo for rebounding at home. He was absolutely stellar.

My hatred for Burrows has grown, and his legend as a foul, anti-sport­smanship t.urd has been sealed, but I'll just disregard him completely­.

The team itself did what they had to do, and they excel in these very tight, 1 goal games. I knew it would end up coming down to another bizarre, flukey goal, but in all honesty, I would have been ecstatic with a puck that bounces off somebody's crotch as long as it crossed the line.

I'll be at Game 6 going absolutely nuts. I expect another convincing win by the Bruins. But hey, we shall see.
23 hours ago (1:10 PM)
Burrows disgraces hockey. It was a well played game, the Canucks came out with much more energy, and for some reason Burrows still thinks he needs to cheat to give his team an advantage in a game where they had the edge and home ice. Burrows exposes his lack of character every time he's on the ice. Trying to draw a trip on a faceoff--f­alling to the ice and grabbing his face--it's an embarrassm­ent to the game. There's no way Lucic should have gone off. The League needs to address the divers and cheats like Burrows to save the integrity of the game. I'm embarrasse­d for hockey and for the Canucks.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sad But True
Sorry to break it to you, but...
22 hours ago (1:13 PM)
The officiatin­g has been odd. The other night, Kesler threw a punch at Chara while the official was trying to separate them, and Chara got a 10 minute major. Last night, a clown makes sure he trips himself while acting like his leg got blown off, and Lucic gets an equalizing call.

Vancouver fans do concern me with their bizarre reactions. The place was filled with booing and anti-ref chanting after Kesler high-stick­ing Thomas -- quite possibly the most obvious penalty in the history of the NHL.
23 hours ago (12:41 PM)
The series will go seven. Game six is a lock. Hopefully, Julian pulls his head out of his backside and has this team hitting in Vancouver like they did in the final four or five minutes of game five.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sad But True
Sorry to break it to you, but...
23 hours ago (1:09 PM)
Boy, the Bruins really tighten up on the road, just as the Canucks do. What a strange series. Up for grabs games in Vancouver, and blow-outs in Boston.

If there's a Game 7, which I think there will be, it should be insane.
22 hours ago (1:42 PM)
I think the Bruins return home, Julien tells them to return to "Bruins hockey" the usual cliches, they go out, hit people and win that game. If they had done it in Vancouver just once they could be going home to close it out. They will need ONE good road game to win this series--an­d I am dubious. Julien seemed clueless when interviewe­d by Pierre McGuire, claimed the Bruins were being outhit because they "possessed the puck longer." Maybe he said something different to the team, but if he did they didn't show it. I also question the lack of playing time for Seguin--gi­ving Recchi so much time on the power play, etc. They needed energy, and Seguin had it. If the Bruins aren't up for a high energy game seven--and give as good as they get--they don't deserve to win.
23 hours ago (12:32 PM)
Three good games in Van City, and two stinkers in Bean Town. Maybe I will sit out game 6 and check back in for game 7.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sad But True
Sorry to break it to you, but...
23 hours ago (1:01 PM)
Wow, quite a fan.
22 hours ago (2:01 PM)
One of those diehard Canucks hockey fans they tell us about.

The one's that like to see the game played the right way, 5 on 4. ;)
photo
richjustdonothaveenough
a bottom up economy
11:09 AM on 6/11/2011
Maxim Lapierre..­.laying on the body! What an animal.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sad But True
Sorry to break it to you, but...
23 hours ago (1:02 PM)
That was Edler's game.
22 hours ago (2:06 PM)
Maxine had a good game, I'll give her credit where it's due.

(However, she was more the beneficiar­y of the forecheck, not responsibl­e for it.)
photo
richjustdonothaveenough
a bottom up economy
11:04 AM on 6/11/2011
By the way they nearly 20K fans sang the "O Canada" you would think that Canadians are proud of their country. - They sang simply amazing.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sad But True
Sorry to break it to you, but...
23 hours ago (12:55 PM)
I do love that. It gives me chills.

That said, the United States doesn't tend to see everything so "nationall­y". Whereas Canadians view Vancouver as representi­ng Canada, we tend to view Boston as representi­ng New England (and wherever else Bruins fans reside).
21 hours ago (2:19 PM)
I think Vancouveri­tes may get a bit ahead of themselves there....T­here are plenty in fans in Calgary and Edmonton who are praying for a humiliatin­g defeat for the Canucks
photo
ontariogirl
Resistance is futile......
2 hours ago (9:21 AM)
We are very proud of our country. I love it when the fans sing the anthem. We sing right along with them at home. Teary eyed of course. :)
Best of luck to all on Monday.
photo
Lahonda
Bynocent Instander
10:21 AM on 6/11/2011
Go 'nucks!
photo
tcnsrq
excuse me
10:00 AM on 6/11/2011
Bruins have a good hard hitting team but the Canucks absolutely crushed them in last nights game.....s­o many great hard hits.....b­etter hits even than the 1st period in game 2.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sad But True
Sorry to break it to you, but...
23 hours ago (12:56 PM)
Agreed, the Canucks upped their physical game last night. Dump, run, and hit. It's not the most offensive style, but clearly it works to counter Boston's aggression­. Tough loss for the Bs, but I anticipate an "up for grabs" Game 7.
photo
FirstGame72
The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters
09:44 AM on 6/11/2011
I hate to tell you this hockey fans but there's something more than a little sketchy and strange about a team in the finals that is outscored 12-1 on the road but then comes back to win 1-0.
If nothing else, all analysis of this series should now revolve around that single fact. Usually when a team is whiped out 8-1 and then 4-0 in consecutiv­e games they're done for the series.
Without some real hard analysis to explain the last three games this entire series seems very fishy (it sort of reminds me of the '03 series between NJ and the Ducks only even more strange and unexplaina­ble).
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Zombeaver
We're gunna need a bigger boat.
09:52 AM on 6/11/2011
Uh huh, so there is a conspiracy involving two rosters and the league officials? Really? Here's what I think: over analysis leads to mental paralysis.
photo
FirstGame72
The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters
10:37 AM on 6/11/2011
Hey, I'm just pointing out the 10,000 lb killer whale sitting in the room with all of us shooting spray out of his blow hole. Somebody had to have the courage to do it.
10:03 AM on 6/11/2011
It's Canuck CHARACTER and GRIT...and one hot Boston goalie.
10:09 AM on 6/11/2011
The Canucks win at home because their fans are hot as all hell. Vancouver girls get it done... Need proof? http://www­.lionsdenu­.com/vanco­uver-just-­got-hotter­-canucks-g­irls-galle­ry/
23 hours ago (12:43 PM)
Canuck diving and embellishi­ng, and having the last change.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sad But True
Sorry to break it to you, but...
23 hours ago (12:58 PM)
The more you post, the weaker you get.

You have it backwards. The Canucks are a skill team first and foremost, while the Bruins are more about character and grit. Last night, I applaud the Canucks for altering the style according to the opposition­. It worked...t­hough one could argue that Luongo was the only reason.
photo
headly67
Well raise my rent
10:05 AM on 6/11/2011
My I've never heard such silliness, have you ever seen a game before?

Devils and Ducks?? You had the greatest goalie ever getting 3 shut-outs. What's so strange?
photo
FirstGame72
The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters
10:46 AM on 6/11/2011
Greatest gaolie? You don't mean Giguere?
Actually I've had the displeasur­e of following Mr. Brodeur's career fairly closely and I can say with confidence that he is one of the biggest big-game chokers in NHL goalie history (for instance that series against the Ducks should have been over in five games, Brodeur alone prolonged it).
Many of the Devil's playoff wins between 1994-2003 came DESPITE of Martin, not because of him.
photo
ontariogirl
Resistance is futile......
10:12 AM on 6/11/2011
You need to cut back on the cocktails so early in the morning.
photo
FirstGame72
The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters
10:51 AM on 6/11/2011
The substance I ingested this morning actually heightens my senses and awareness and helps me cut through the crap to see the truth of things, hence my comments about this sketchy finals series.
I will however retract my opinion if the Canucks either win game 6 in Boston or at least blow out the Bruins in game 7. More likely it's 1-1 or 1-0 going into the third period of game 7 in Vancouver. Just as the NHL "fathers" would want.
20 hours ago (3:14 PM)
I think it's the poor ice conditions in the garden that puts the Canucks at a relative disadvanta­ge to blame, plus encouragem­ent from the home crowds for both teams that explain it. The puck was bouncing around in game 4 and possibly the Canucks just weren't their usually fast selves skating on soft ice they're not used to.
I remember a few years ago the Lighting had horrible ice conditions at home for the first two months of the season and won almost all their home games.
09:39 AM on 6/11/2011
"Maxim Lapierre scored on a carom off the back boards with 15:25 to play"

carom? Try rebound next time egghead.
23 hours ago (12:46 PM)
Carom (n)

any strike and rebound, as a ball striking a wall and glancing off
3 hours ago (8:46 AM)
I understand the word but am wondering why the writer didn't say "rebound".
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sad But True
Sorry to break it to you, but...
23 hours ago (12:59 PM)
And another non-hockey person chimes in...
3 hours ago (8:46 AM)
I went to 10 NHL games last season and have the NHL Network package on my cable.
19 hours ago (4:43 PM)
'Carom' is a word commonly used in billiards but is often used by hockey broadcaste­rs. Expanding the vocabulary is not a bad thing. Try it someday.
3 hours ago (8:47 AM)
I've never heard Don Cherry use that word.
09:35 AM on 6/11/2011
Burrows is a disgrace to the Game. I hope he enjoys watching how he played the Game when he has retired and sees the cheater he was and has to live with it. What a Bum.

Go Bruins!
23 hours ago (12:48 PM)
Burrows manages to humiliate himself and disgrace the game every time he's on the ice, and yet the Canucks fans call the Bruins dirty. It's hilarious. That penalty he got for wrapping his leg over the stick of Lucic to try to draw a tripping penalty during the faceoff--t­hat's got to be embarrassi­ng if you're a Canucks fan.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sad But True
Sorry to break it to you, but...
23 hours ago (12:59 PM)
I now despise this girl. Really, he is anything but a sportsman.

The good news is that everyone now knows it.