Canucks want to finish Dallas off,
know from history it won't be easy
(AP) - Trevor Linden knows not to look
past a potential series-clinching win before getting it.
Three times during his career with Vancouver, Linden has seen the
Canucks come back from 3-1 deficits to win a best-of-seven playoff
series.
Linden was also part on the Canucks team that squandered a 3-1 advantage
against the Minnesota Wild and lost the conference semifinal in 2003
after leading 2-0 in Game 7.
That's why Linden and some of the other Canucks veterans spoke to the
team in the dressing room prior to practice on Wednesday. The Canucks
have a 3-1 lead against Dallas in their first-round series and can
eliminate the Stars on Thursday night.
"You just want to make sure guys understand there is a lot of hockey
left," said the 37-year-old Linden, who scored the winning goal in
Vancouver's 2-1 victory Tuesday night. "There is a lot of game left and
we have to be at our best here to close it out."
Defenseman Willie Mitchell was on the Wild team that rallied to beat the
Canucks four years ago.
"It's four (wins), it's not three," said Mitchell, who made a game
saving play in Dallas by sweeping a puck out of the Canucks' net before
it crossed the goal line. "The last one is going to be the toughest."
The Canucks endured a rollercoaster of emotions during the 2003
playoffs. They fell behind the St. Louis Blues 3-1, then regrouped to
win the series. Vancouver then took a 3-1 lead in the series against
Minnesota. At one point former Canucks forward Todd Bertuzzi told some
Wild fans not to bother buying tickets for Game 6 because there wouldn't
be one.
He was wrong, but the collapse taught Vancouver a lesson.
"You need to have that killer instinct," captain Markus Naslund said.
"We're up now, we're playing at home and we have a good chance of
finishing this series off."
The biggest difference between this year's Canucks and past teams is
goalie Roberto Luongo, who has been near unbeatable in his first playoff
appearance and seems to get stronger every night.
"I feel comfortable right now," said Luongo, who has a 1.49
goals-against average and leads the playoffs with a .950 save
percentage. "I feel I'm in a groove right now and just want to keep it
going."
Dallas' Mike Ribeiro knows his team needs to focus on one game at a time
instead of having to win three in a row. Ribeiro was on the Canadiens
when they rallied back from a 3-1 deficit to beat Boston in 2004.
"We played a simplified game and took it one period at a time," Ribeiro
said. "Once you win Game 5, the pressure goes to them to close the
series.
"You're just playing and they've got the pressure to finish it out. The
thing is, you don't want to think about winning three games, you just
worry about the next one."
Even though the Canucks are up, they could easily be trailing 3-1. Three
of the games have been decided by one goal, two have gone into overtime
-- including the opener that Vancouver won late in the fourth OT.
Vancouver has been outplayed for long stretches. The power play is
ranked last in the playoffs, having managed just one goal in 22 chances.
The Canucks have also taken themselves off the power play nine times in
the series by taking a penalty of their own.
The Stars are looking for some answers of their own. Dallas couldn't
take advantage of a 5-on-3 advantage for 1:55 in Tuesday's loss.
The Stars' Mike Modano has yet to score in the series and didn't have a
shot on goal in 24 minutes of ice time in the last loss.
Dallas has lost six consecutive home playoff games and was eliminated in
the first round the last two seasons.
Still, Mitchell knows the Stars won't just give up and let the Canucks
win.
"People react differently when they are backed into a corner," he said.
"This is where we're going to see their best.
"Sometimes you will play well and the bounces will go the other way.
Next thing you know the series is tied. There is no margin for error.
The last one is always the toughest."
Linden played for the Canucks when they trailed Winnipeg 3-1 in the 1992
Smythe Division semifinal before winning the series. Vancouver trailed
Calgary 3-1 in the first round of the 1994 playoffs, but won the final
three games, all in overtime.
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