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View Poll Results: Wild/Ducks series who wins? | |||
Wild in 4 | 0 | 0% | |
Wild in 5 | 0 | 0% | |
Wild in 6 | 4 | 16.67% | |
Wild in 7 | 6 | 25.00% | |
Ducks in 4 | 1 | 4.17% | |
Ducks in 5 | 4 | 16.67% | |
Ducks in 6 | 7 | 29.17% | |
Ducks in 7 | 2 | 8.33% | |
Voters: 24. You may not vote on this poll |
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05-14-2003, 01:53 AM | #41 (permalink) |
Psycho
Location: Aurora, CO
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Ok, I've watched most of these first two games. I originally picked the ducks, but I know that Minnesota at some point will figure out how to score, They just tossed the 'Nucks around and the Avs were lucky to make it a 7 game series. Keep in mind the ducks have come from behind in 3-1 disadvantages, all because of there outstanding offense. If Jiggy gets in trouble, he'll let them score on him like a broken dam releases water.
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05-14-2003, 07:39 AM | #42 (permalink) | |
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Location: Ottawa, ON, Canada
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You say none of us know anything about hockey? Did you even <B>see</B> the first game? The Wild, who everybody expected to be dead tired coming off of their 7 games series with Vancouver, completely dominated the Ducks in terms of offense, and if you don't count the goaltenders, the Wild were the better team in terms of defense. Why do you think the Ducks didn't score during regular time? The Wild didn't have a super hot goaltender to rely on. The Ducks sat back, and let their goaltender ride them through 4 1/2 periods, right before they capitalized on a single mistake made by Minnesota in the second overtime. I'm sorry if my tone is harsh, but I really hate average teams that ride their outstanding goaltenders through the Playoffs. The Buffalo Sabres did this when they had Hasek. They even managed to get to the Playoff Finals. But once the other team got around their goaltender, they showed what a poor team they really were. And don't get me wrong. The Ducks have some mighty fine players like Kariya, Oates, and Sykora, but there just isn't enough talent on that team to justify their current standings. The same thing that happened to the Sabres is eventually going to happen with Ducks. They can't expect Giguere to carry them forever.
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"A witty saying proves nothing" - Voltaire Last edited by Quadraton; 05-14-2003 at 05:08 PM.. |
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05-14-2003, 08:41 AM | #43 (permalink) | |
Psycho
Location: Aurora, CO
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05-14-2003, 09:23 AM | #44 (permalink) |
Insane
Location: Imprisoned in Ecotopia
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I'm an old North Star fan and I haven't seen a Minnesota team in the Stanley Cup Playoff for a long, long time. I hope they win it all, but I'm proud of our three-year old team any way you look at it. Look out world - Minnesota is back in the NHL
By the way, the Minnnesota Gophers are the reigning NCAA Hockey Champ! |
05-14-2003, 04:53 PM | #45 (permalink) |
Registered User
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Once "Jiggy" lets the first goal past..the flood gates will open. When and if that happens look for the Wild to become full of energy again. Their speed will eventually overtake Giguere. They get plenty of chances and let's face it the Wild's Power Play is awesome. A power play that good doesn't stay dormant long. As far as the east goes.. if the Devils come out.. they will own the ducks. Broduer is a WAY better net-minder than Giguere. I think his home goals against average is 0.89. That's tiny. The sens and ducks will make a good series but the wild and devils will make a better one. As much as I hate to say it, I think the Devils will skate with the cup.
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05-14-2003, 08:02 PM | #47 (permalink) |
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Location: Manhattan
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JS has been scored on before, he recovers.. dont think the flood gates will open. That's wishful thinking.
Who in their right mind thinks the Wild can come back from a 3 game deficit?
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05-14-2003, 09:05 PM | #48 (permalink) | |
Insane
Location: florida
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05-15-2003, 05:26 AM | #49 (permalink) |
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Location: Ottawa, ON, Canada
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Nah. The Wild are dead. They aren't the same team that beat the Avalanche and the Canucks. They looked tired, and frustrated. The Ducks are also doing what they should be doing, and that's collapse in front of the net. I think the Ducks players stopped more shots than the Duck's goaltender.
Oh well, looks like it's going to be a Senators-Mighty Ducks final (And I swear, if they end up having to engrave the words "Mighty Ducks" on the Stanley Cup, we're going to have to melt it down and start all over again).
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05-15-2003, 06:48 AM | #50 (permalink) | |
spurt king
Location: Out of my mind
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Oh so true!!! The picture is so grim right now for the Wild. I watched last night and either the missed the net of whiffed on the puck or that damn goalie just stoned them them. Without a doubt if the Ducks had ANYONE else in goal this series would not be this way. The Wild are pressing hard and cannot find daylight in that damn net!!!!!! I will pray to lord stanley before game 4 and seek his advice and guidence for the wild.
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05-15-2003, 11:46 AM | #52 (permalink) |
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Location: Canada
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I always say that an average team with great goaltending can win series, but an above average team with average goaltending cannot.
I think this year in particular is proving my point. Looking ahead to the finals, both Ottowa and NJ have goaltenders who can play above average, but will they ? I feel that is the key. |
05-16-2003, 07:23 AM | #53 (permalink) |
spurt king
Location: Out of my mind
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I will now ask, ask the powers that be, lord stanley and crew to give the Wild at least a win tonight. Don't let these guys be the team that gets completely shut out and swept... please, give the Wild the strength to embarass the Ducks at home.... their too cocky now, they need some humble soup....
Please just one!!
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05-16-2003, 08:53 AM | #54 (permalink) |
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Location: around the corner
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Far too much is being made of Giggy right now, he is not standing on his head so much as his fundementals are perfect he isn't letting anyone see the net behind him, he's playing a game of possesion/puck control and his team is playing great defence.
As far as the final if it's the Devils, Broduer is more of a stand up goalie who is getting hotter as the play-offs go on, and Lalime, Mr. butterfly seems to be hot as well. If the Ducks keep the D system that is working so well for them watch for the Devils to cycle down low and wait for some one to chase them. If its the Sens, look to to see Chara move from the point to the net. Either way the coaching out of the east will break the system out of the west. |
05-16-2003, 02:12 PM | #55 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: Up yonder
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I know I'm just a girl and all....but I think Giguere is ok...a few others think that too.....
Giguere no overnight sensation By Phil Coffey | NHL.com May 15, 2003 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Pssst. Over here. We're going to let you in on a little secret here, a little inside info. Jean-Sebastien Giguere isn't an overnight sensation. There you go, the cat's out of the bag. Sorry to ruin all these storylines in the media about Giguere dropping down from Planet Zumar to lead the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim into the Stanley Cup Playoffs and upset series wins against the Detroit Red Wings and Dallas Stars. "We're out in Anaheim and it's like we're on a desert island," teammate Mike Leclerc said. "The hockey world is finally getting to see him. He's been doing this for two years." Another thing, like their goaltender, the Mighty Ducks hardly qualify as a team that appeared out of thin air to get to the Western Conference Finals. A 95-point regular season is a huge block of evidence that Anaheim is a very good team. But that's another story for another day. Now, here is the deal on Giguere. After three games of the Western Conference Finals against the Minnesota Wild, Giguere hasn't allowed a goal in more than 2:13:17 hours. For the record, his scoreless streak is up to two hours, 18 minutes and 28 seconds, dating to Game 6 against Dallas in the second round. That's quality goaltending at a critical time of year. It's unlikely there would be any storyline here if Giguere hadn't had an excellent regular season. Giguere appeared in 65 games during the regular season and posted a 34-22-6 record with a 2.30 goals-against average and eight shutouts. Ironically, his goals-against (2.13) and save percentage (.930) were better in 2001-02, but the team wasn't as strong, so Giguere's record was 20-25-6. By then, Anaheim knew it had a No. 1 goalie, especially after his first season in Anaheim, when the then-unheralded Giguere was 11-17-5 with a 2.57 GAA and .911 save percentage. So Giguere, originally drafted in the first round of the 1995 Entry Draft (13th overall) by the Hartford Whalers, has found a home. Now, he and the Mighty Ducks are looking for a home in the Stanley Cup Finals. Earning the respect and admiration of his teammates has played a big part in Giguere's success. Long before the rest of the world started taking notice, his teammates knew they had a winner. The goaltender realized as well that there would be no personal success if there wasn't team-wide success. "The secret has been 20 guys showing up every night helping me do my job," Giguere says when quizzed about his postseason heroics. "I couldn't do that without any of the guys on the ice. My defense [has] been playing unbelievable. They did a great job making sure I see the puck all the time. If there is a rebound, they take it away. You have all [of] the forwards coming back helping the D's, taking their guys in their zone and scoring big goals. If we all do our job as good as we can, then we have a chance to be successful. "I can't do it out on the ice by myself," he said after shutting out the Wild in Game 2. "I need my D to help me and the forwards to come back and take them in. Tonight, they did such a good job, obviously. I saw every shot out there. They took all the rebounds away and they were really tough in front of the net. It was tough for the Wild to try to come and get in front of me." As a result, another playoff shutout is added to the ledger. But, the goaltender insists there is only one stat worth tracking now -- the total number of wins leading up to the 16 it takes to win the Stanley Cup. "Jiggy is making a case for himself to be moved into the next level of great goaltenders." --Anaheim veteran Steve Thomas. "A shutout is really not important in the playoffs," he said. "What's important is trying to get the win as much as possible. It doesn't matter what the final score is. It could be 8-7, 1-0. We just want to win. As far as the 'zone' is concerned, I'm feeling pretty good. You know, I was ready to play in the playoffs. I have been practicing for this for three years. I have been trying to get ready for this exact moment, and right now, I'm having a lot of fun. Every game is a great challenge. I'm feeling like I'm getting better right now." "He's gotten on a roll here," agreed Wild goalie Manny Fernandez, who was on the losing end of Game 1's 1-0 double-overtime decision. "He's got a lot of confidence. He's made himself a little bubble. He's kind of a legend right now living in this League." "Jiggy is making a case for himself to be moved into the next level of great goaltenders," Anaheim veteran Steve Thomas said. "A lot of guys do a pretty good job, but the ones who are great make a difference in big games. That's what great goaltending is about." Giguere hasn't just gotten hot in the playoffs. He had three shutouts in a row during the regular season and also had a scoreless streak of 237 minutes and seven seconds, longest in the NHL in more than 50 years. "I don't think the playoffs have anything to do with being hot or cold. It has to do with being prepared," said Giguere. "If you're prepared and ready to go, you should be successful." Giguere and the word "prepared" are joined at the hip. That is the basis of his goaltending philosophy -- being ready. "If I make a spectacular save, it means I did something wrong," Giguere said. "I have had two of those. That is enough for one playoff." Giguere explains, "If I make a spectacular save, it means I did something wrong." Giguere was referring to a spectacular save he made in Game 1 against the Wild. The Wild nearly grabbed the lead in Game 1 during a power-play sequence after Ducks center Samuel Pahlsson was called for cross-checking at 10:05 of the second period. A fine backhand, cross-crease pass by Andrew Brunette set up teammate Marian Gaborik, Minnesota's top scorer, for a backhand shot from low on the left side, but Giguere lunged across the paint to get the paddle of his stick on Gaborik's bid. The save was tough for everyone to fathom, that's how good it was. Well, except for Giguere, who had another description for it. "A little bit lucky," Giguere said. "I thought Brunette did a great job. I don't think he had much to shoot at, and he made a nice pass to Gaborik. It was just kind of a diving save. Sometimes you need one of those. Hopefully, I won't have to do too many, but I'll take it. "That's not the way I want to make saves. I was out of position. I was lucky. I want to be square to the shooter, square on the puck." "That might have been the save of the playoffs," Anaheim captain Paul Kariya said. To Mighty Ducks defenseman Keith Carney, the save was just business as usual with Giguere. "Here we go again," Carney said. "Game 1 on the road, another overtime game and Jiggy making it possible for us to win at the end." "Giguere is on top of his game," Wild coach Jacques Lemaire said. "But like any other goaltender, you look at them closely and you find they have strengths and weaknesses, and you have to work on his weakness. We know where they are. We have to get the opportunity, and we'll get them." The clock is ticking on the relentless Wild, who have twice come back from a 3-1 deficit to advance this spring. Minnesota's ability to come back, especially on the road, provides a solid sense of reality for Giguere. "Our confidence level is pretty good," he said. "Even coming into the playoffs, we knew we had a pretty good team. We knew we could win some games. We're a pretty young team, but getting those two series wrapped up is really good for the confidence. The Wild's confidence is probably as high as it is for our team. It's going to get harder and harder to win games. It's going to be very exciting. It's going to be very tough and a lot of fun to play in. "This is what I have been working toward the last three years," he said. "I have worked hard because I wanted this moment."
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05-16-2003, 09:14 PM | #58 (permalink) |
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Location: Ottawa, ON, Canada
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Wow. I never saw this one coming.
4 - 0 for the Mighty Ducks. I mean, geez, I knew Giguere was hitting a hot streak, but damn, I didn't realize he was an inferno. It'll be kind of interesting to see if the East (whoever goes on) can find the formula to crack Giguere's defences.
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05-16-2003, 09:22 PM | #59 (permalink) |
Sultana ruined my evil persona
Location: Los Angeles
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Awsome!!
I can't belive it but I'm gonna hold my excitement for the Cup. Really hard to belive the Ducks are going to the Stanley Cup finals. I really like thier chances against who ever they play. I would perfer to play the Devils just because I'd like to see Martin and Giggy duke it out. Ducks in 6.
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05-17-2003, 03:02 AM | #61 (permalink) |
Psycho
Location: Aurora, CO
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Kadath I don't think that's for the entire playoffs only for this series. Giguere did set a record though for least amount of goals allowed in a series...the previous mark was 2, and that happened twice. He'll get cold in the down time though.
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05-17-2003, 11:54 AM | #63 (permalink) | |
Muffled
Location: Camazotz
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I totally wasn't paying attention when I worked out the average. His average for this series was 0.25, for the playoffs was 20/12, or 1.67, which is none too shabby. I got a little too zealous.
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05-17-2003, 11:59 AM | #64 (permalink) |
Please touch this.
Owner/Admin
Location: Manhattan
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Geez.. all the hate... why cant you guys give him respect? Surely you couldn't have done any better.
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05-17-2003, 06:29 PM | #66 (permalink) |
Psycho
Location: Aurora, CO
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It's not that I'm trying to down play Giguere's play, but prior to these playoffs no one knew who he was. He's not a Rookie this year and sure Patrick Roy was awesome when he first entered the league but Giguere has been around. I can recite many examples of a team having a one shot wonder in the Playoffs, take for example "The Moose". Thing is Giguere is riding a hot streak, and sure he might be able to pull the entire thing off but it's unlikely. The rest of the Ducks aren't putting up stats that could allow the Wings to win if Giguere begins to fail. I'm all for the underdog and Giguere is just that, an underdog. He realistically should have been shut out a little prior to all of this.
. And Giguere's Offificial stats 1.22 GAA,96.0% SVP Other Goalies still in it... Lalime 1.66 GAA, 93.1% SVP (Most likely out of it though) Brodeur 1.47 GAA 94.4% SVP Those stats are way to close to be considered 'hands down' Giguere's game. We'll see though in the finals.
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"In this world gone mad, we won't spank the monkey... the monkey will spank us." -Jason Mewes |
05-17-2003, 06:33 PM | #68 (permalink) |
Registered User
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I never saw a sweep coming. The ducks really controlled the games. Jiggy did an amazing job in net let's see if he can keep it up. I'm betting against him. I think he's a great net-minder but I don't know how much he has left. Whoever they play it should be a good series. If it is New Jersey..which it looks like it will be then I'll take the devils in 6. Brodeur is a better goalie IMO, and I like the devils offense and special teams. Plus, they know what it's like to play for the cup. Whatever happens, it will be a fun series to watch even though I hate both teams
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05-20-2003, 10:14 AM | #69 (permalink) |
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Location: around the corner
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The thing with Giggy, is that if you look back at him in JR, and other times he's gotten like this before, and carried his team, but he comes crashing back to earth big time, and well time will tell...but if your going to put any money down go with the eastern winner.
Either way you look at it the QMJHL still pumps out the best 'tenders in hocky and this year proves it again with all three teams that are still in having starting goalies out of there. |
05-20-2003, 11:05 AM | #70 (permalink) | |
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I wouldn't be so sure about a sens/ducks final just yet.. speaking of the sens..why hasn't Spezza been in the lineup at all for the playoffs..the kid is good..he proved that last night. As far as your second comment I couldn't agree more |
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05-21-2003, 04:43 AM | #73 (permalink) | |
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05-21-2003, 07:11 AM | #74 (permalink) | |
Pup no More
Location: Voted the Best
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05-21-2003, 01:49 PM | #75 (permalink) |
Registered User
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While I'm not a Sens fan it would be kinda good seeing them win the cup knowing that their fate is murky at best. Who knows where they will end up or what will happen. Hopefully I'm not out of date on this but last I heard they were up for sale and I never heard of a buyer.
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05-22-2003, 06:40 AM | #76 (permalink) | |
Upright
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05-22-2003, 07:27 AM | #77 (permalink) | |
Pup no More
Location: Voted the Best
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ducks, nhl, series, wild |
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