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A complete game

That’s what the Wings just put on. Or at least as complete a game as is possible. They flat out dominated for all but a few brief periods today. A heck of a performance. Here’s hoping it’s a sign of more to come.

I’m starting to feel foolish for maintaining that this series would be a close one. I really thought the Avs were better than this. I guess not. It’s not over yet, of course, but if the Avs don’t dig deep and get it together in Game 3, they’ll be headed for a quick Round 2 exit.

And let me just say that Peter Forsberg is not necessarily the answer for Colorado. They are going to have to do this as a team, with or without him. And nothing they’ve shown so far, including their comeback attempt in Game 1, has demonstrated that they have what it takes.

The Wings, on the other hand, look as determined as I’ve ever seen them. They are series about this run, folks.

And how about Johan Franzen? Please keep it up, Mule!

I can’t wait until Game 3.

BtJ liveblog here.

I’ll have more on the game tomorrow morning. End-of-year schoolwork beckons.

By the way, I apologize for the disappearance of the site today. There was some issue with the server and the database that I couldn’t get anyone to handle until midway through the third period.

Game 2: vs. Colorado, 3:00 ET

This afternoon is the second game of the Western Conference Semifinal series between the Detroit Red Wings and the Colorado Avalanche. The Wings lead the series 1-0 after winning 4-3 Thursday night.

The Avs came out of Game 1 somewhat embarrassed. They’re bound to be better today. Some keys to the game for Colorado:

A stronger start. They got knocked around for virtually the entire first period Thursday night. If they come out of the gates playing like they did in the second and third periods, they’ll be in a better position.

Stay out of the box. The Wings only managed one power play goal in Game 1, but it wasn’t for lack of opportunities. The Avs need to keep the penalties to a minimum if they want to keep the ice level and not tilted toward their end.

Play with more physicality. The Wings were the rougher team Thursday night and there aren’t many nights where that’s true. The Avs need to use their bodies more.

Wojtek Wolski is out for sure. Peter Forsberg is questionable, but there’s a slim chance he’ll play. Jose

Theodore will return for Game 2 after being pulled in Game 1 due to an illness-induced poor performance. Expect him to be tougher to beat today.

The Wings played a fairly solid game Thursday night, but they have a few areas upon which they could improve. Some keys to the game for Detroit:

Another strong start. They came out guns blazing in Game 1 and should repeat that today. With the Avs certain to be better prepared, there’s no reason to hold back in the opening minutes.

Better decisions defensively. The Wings played nearly a complete defensive game, but the Avs made them pay for the few mistakes they did make. Defensemen like Brian Rafalski need to remember to let the forward take the trailer in a 3-on-2 rather than leave his partner hanging out to dry with a 2-on-1 down low. That sort of thing.

Special teams. They need to capitalize on power play opportunities and kill off penalties. They didn’t do a good enough job of the first on Thursday and will probably have to do more of the second today.

Brad Stuart will return to the lineup after returning to Michigan from California following the birth of his son, Logan Michael. Andreas Lilja should be the odd man out. Kirk Maltby likely remains out.

Chris Osgood will start again for the Wings.

This isn’t must-win territory for either team, but there are obvious benefits to winning this game. I think we can expect an exciting afternoon as both teams play to their potential. The Avs are at a disadvantage with two key offensive contributors out, but they still have skill enough remaining to keep themselves in the game. The Wings will have to be as close to perfect as possible.

Joe Hass is liveblogging the game again here.

Wolski could miss remainder of series; Forsberg “questionable” for Game 2

Update (4:46 PM): Forsberg is maintaining that he’s “day-to-day” and that a decision on his status for Game 2 has not been made. - Matt

George Malik summarizes a Joel Quenneville press conference in which the Colorado coach says first line winger Wojtek Wolski is unlikely to return during this series due to an “upper body injury.”

Peter Forsberg is “questionable” for Game 2 with the groin injury that kept him out of Game 1.

Both injuries are obviously bad news for the Avs, but gret news for the Wings.

Game 1: Wings 4, Avalanche 3

Update (10:32 PM): Christy Hammond has a brief post up on the game with some great accompanying pictures. My favorite: Al twirling the octopus in the zamboni pit. - Matt

Update (10:22 PM): Apologies to Joe Sakic: it was Andrew Brunette who turned the puck over along the left wing boards just prior to Johan Franzen’s second goal, not the Avs’ captain. Thanks to Justin for pointing that out in the comments. - Matt

Update (12:46 PM): George Malik’s wrap-up is here. - Matt

The Detroit Red Wings defeated the Colorado Avalanche last night 4-3 and took a 1-0 lead in their Western Conference Semifinal series.

Just prior to the game, it was announced that Peter Forsberg would not play because of a groin injury. The news had an obvious effect on Colorado’s morale. For more on that, see Adrian Dater’s post.*

The Wings came out strong, with the top line of Pavel Datsyuk, Henrik Zetterberg, and Tomas Holmstrom looking particularly good. From the onset, it looked like the Avalanche did not have an answer for those three.

Andreas Lilja and Niklas Kronwall laid on a couple big hits in the first five minutes as the Wings looked more physical than their opponents, for once.

The Avs scored first, despite the fact that they were being outplayed for the bulk of the first 10 minutes. With the Wings only partially changed from their fourth line to their second line, Paul Stastny, Ryan Smyth, and Milan Hejduk gained the Detroit zone and began to grind it out. A quick centering pass by Smyth from behind the net led to a lightning-fast goal by Stastny. He got the puck up over Osgood from close range and put his team up 1-0 at 8:53.

The Wings responded 53 seconds later. Zetterberg carried the puck into the Colorado zone on the left wing and, met with Cody McLeod just over the line, dropped it off to Datsyuk behind him. McLeod then released Zetterberg and took Datsyuk, who sent the puck up to a free #40. Hank fought through a hold from Adam Foote and put the puck through Jose Theodore to tie the game up at 9:46.

Following the goal, the Wings looked strong. Their physical edge continued with a Kris Draper hit on Tyler Arnason at the Colorado blueline and the top line continued to wreck havoc in the Avalanche end. The fourth line of Jiri Hudler, Darren Helm, and Darren McCarty, put on a nice shift just prior to an Avalanche penalty at 11:04.

The Wings took a 2-1 lead  at 13:48 off a fortunate bounce. Johan Franzen began the play as he carried the puck into the Colorado end. He was sandwiched by two Avalanche players and just managed to get the puck up to Dan Cleary. Cleary’s shot was stopped by Theodore, but the puck disappeared. Watching it live, it looked as though Franzen was the first to find it and knock it in. Replays, however, showed that the puck hit Theodore and bounced 20-30 feet straight up in the air. After a delay, it landed to Theodore’s left and bounced into the net.

Not long after the goal, Ben Guite had a big scoring chance for the Avs, but Chris Osgood made the save.

The Wings extended their lead at 17:23 while on the power play. Following the faceoff, Niklas Kronwall and Jiri Hudler played catch for a little bit before Kronwall unleashed a blast toward the net. Johan Franzen, coming across the front, got his stick on it and redirected it down to the top of Theodore’s right pad and in.

At 18:48, the Avs returned to the penalty box as the Eurotwins+Holmstrom cycled in the Colorado end. Those three then skated circles around the Avs until the period ended.

The Wings began the second on the power play, but couldn’t convert. They did, however, score within the first two minutes of the period. Joe Sakic Andrew Brunette turned the puck over to Mikael Samuelsson along the far side boards in the Colorado end. Sammy then slid it across to Valtteri Filppula, who dropped a no-look pass to Johan Franzen 43 feet out. Franzen’s one-timer beat Theodore over his left pad at 1:13.

Of the four goals Theodore allowed, this was the worst, but the blame rests mostly with Sakic Brunette for the turnover. In any case, Joel Quenneville saw fit to pull Theodore at this point. Peter Budaj came in and Theodore went to the bench, though he eventually changed into street clothes and left the arena because he was “ill.” If he was so sick, why did he start in the first place? I wonder if he wasn’t pouting.

The Avs seemed to wake up a bit after the goalie change. They had a couple solid scoring chances not long afterwards and scored their second goal just over four minutes after the Wings’ took their 4-1 lead. It ws a simple enough play: JM Liles broke in down the left wing and took a shot that beat Osgood five-hole. Chris Chelios dove across in an attempt to block the shot, so it may have been tipped. If it wasn’t, it was a weak goal to give up. 4-2 at 5:17.

The Wings didn’t immediately take their foot off the gas, as they had a number of solid chances in the subsequent minutes. They put on a decent power play beginning at 6:15 and and had some strong cycle shifts at full strength. The Avs continued to improve throughout all of this, however, and gradually the balance of play evened out for the most part.

The Avs had a big scoring chance with 6:20 or so left when Paul Stastny found himself free to take a shot from the slot. On the flurry that followed, Ryan Smyth roughed up Nick Lidstrom and got away with it. In the shift following that, Zetterberg, Datsyuk, and Holmstrom put on another good performance. Darren Helm and Darren McCarty had a 2-on-1 nearly develop not long after that, but it fizzled out.

At 16:29, Milan Hejduk made things interesting by scoring the Avs’ third goal. The play began as a 3-on-2 with Ryan Smyth carrying and Brian Rafalski and Nick Lidstrom back. No big deal, right? Wrong. Smyth got the puck up to Stastny and rather than fall further back, Rafalski chose to stick with Smyth, creating a 2-on-1 down low. Stastny waited until he was virtually at the goalline and then slid the puck across to Hejduk, who tipped it in just inside the right post. Osgood couldn’t get across fast enough.

After that, the Avs swarmed a little. In the midst of this, Nik Kronwall laid on another big hit, this time on Jones at center. Andreas Lilja took an ill-timed holding penaly at 17:50 and put the Avs on the power play. Colorado had a few chances with the man-advantage and put the Wings on their heels a bit. Chris Osgood, however, came up big.

I missed the first 10:00 or so of the third because I had to run an errand, but from what I can tell from the BtJ liveblog, the Wings looked decent.

When I got back, one of the first things I saw was Jordan Leopold’s running of Valtteri Filppula into the endboards around the 10:30 mark.

The second half of the third period, at least, was mostly Colorado’s game. They were much more dangerous than they had been in the first and second and forced Chris Osgood to make a number of big saves. They beat him once, but the shot rang off the post. The Wings could get little going offensively.

Budaj was pulled for the extra skater with about 1:08 left and the Avs had some trouble getting set up. When they did, however, they came very close to scoring. The play began with Smyth behind the net. He sent a pass out front to Leopold, who was covered by Brian Rafalski and stood to Osgood’s left at the post. Rafalski lifted Leopold’s stick and the puck went through to the slot, where Liles had jumped up. Osgood somehow managed to get across and make the save on Liles, who should have had a goal. Save of the game, if not the playoffs to this point, for Chris Osgood.

That came with 8.4 seconds left. The remaining time wound down and the Wings finished on top, 4-3.

The Big Three obviously had a strong game. The second line looked good as well. The third line was physical and did its job. The fourth line also did its job, but ran into a couple matchup problems that should have been avoided. See the Stastny goal.

Defensively, the Wings were pretty strong with the obvious exception of the Rafalski brain cramp that led to Hejduk’s second goal.

Chris Osgood looked steady, though the Liles goal was a little weak. He came up big in the third period, however, and saved the Wings when the Avs were creating scoring chances.

In addition to the loss of Forsberg, the Avs saw Wojtek Wolski leave the ice in the first period with what is being described as an upper body injury. It could also be a knee issue, however. That’s a big loss as he was one of their top line wingers.

Scott Hannan took a shot off the inside of his foot and though he finished the game, he may not be able to go Saturday.

Ryan Smyth looked good for the Avs. Some of their best chances were generated by his passes.

The final score was the result of a combination of two things: 1) the Avs waking up and actually playing hockey, and 2) the Wings letting up a bit offensively. In Game 2, you can bet that Colorado will come out stronger, but you can also count on the Wings to press the attack for longer.

Links

Highlights

Abel to Yzerman

Gorilla Crouch

Bruce MacLeod

No Pun Intended

FanHouse Icesheet

Jerseys and Hockey Love

Shane Giroux

In the Cheap Seats

Mile High Hockey

*Say what you want about Dater, but his bluntness is at times refreshing. Not many beat writers are so quick to be critical of the players they talk to on a daily basis.

A wild start

That was a bit of a wild one. The Wings came out with guns blazing in the first and chased an allegedly ill Jose Theodore in the second.

Then the Avalanche woke up and remembered they’re in the second round. They were helped along by a couple gifts from a brain-cramping Red Wings defense and made it an interesting game down to the final minute.

After 20, it looked like the Wings might run away with this series. After 60, it looks like it’s going to be very tight, just like expected. And that was without Peter Forsberg in the Colorado lineup.

The Wings will need to make better decisions defensively in Game 2, that’s for sure.

BtJ liveblog here.

More to come tomorrow.

Round 2 Series Preview: 1 Detroit vs. 6 Colorado

Update (6:47 PM): The guys over at the FanHouse have posted their second round roundtable in which the first topic of conversation is the Wings/Avalanche series. - Matt

Update (3:23 PM): The Denver Post’s Adrian Dater has some pre-game comments here. - Matt

Update (3:07 PM): IwoCPO has keys to Game 1 here. - Matt

Update (3:00 PM): Tapeleg has a guide to the Avalanche for “temp fans” over at Jerseys and Hockey Love. - Matt

Update (2:10 PM): With Christy Hammond working the game for the Wings, Joe Hass will liveblog the game at Behind the Jersey again. - Matt

Update (1:15 PM): Ansar Khan has the projected lines and pairings for the Avalanche:

Wolski-Sakic-Brunette
Stastny-Forsberg-Hejduk
Smyth-Arnason-Jones
McLeod-Guite-Laperriere

Sauer-Foote
Salei-Leopold
Hannan-Liles

Also, Eric McErlain has posted a preview of the series at the Fanhouse. - Matt

Update (11:35 AM): Bruce MacLeod reports that Brad Stuart will not be in the lineup tonight. His wife has given birth to their second child (Logan Michael), but he won’t make it back to Detroit until later today. MacLeod says he will skate tomorrow and will play Saturday.

Andreas Lilja will fill in for Stuart tonight. It looks like he’ll be the only change to the lineup:

Datsyuk-Zetterberg-Holmstrom
Franzen-Filppula-Samuelsson
Hudler-Draper-Cleary
Drake-Helm-McCarty

Lidstrom-Rafalski
Kronwall-Lilja
Lebda-Chelios

- Matt

Tonight is Game 1 of Series “K” between the Detroit Red Wings and the Colorado Avalanche.

Playoff History

In five series between these two teams historically, Colorado has the edge 3-2, with a 17-13 record through 30 games. The teams last met in the postseason in the 2002 Western Conference Finals. The Wings came out on top in that series, winning in seven.

Regular Season Series

The Wings swept the season series 4-0 with wins December 27th (4-2), January 8th (1-0), February 1st (2-0), and February 18th (4-0).

The Avalanche

Colorado finished the regular season 44-31-7. Their 95 points were good for sixth place in the West.

They faced Minnesota in the first round. The first three games went to overtime, with the Wild taking a 2-1 series lead going into Game 4. The Avs then came back to win the series in six.

Forwards

Joe Sakic leads the forward corps in playoff scoring with 6 points (2G, 4A). Andrew Brunette, Wojtek Wolski, and Peter Forsberg each have five. Milan Hejduk and Ryan Smyth are not far behind with 4 and 3 points respectively.

There’s no denying that the Avs have a lot of skill up front. Forsberg proved the doubters wrong by notching 13 assists in nine regular season games. His production obviously tailed off a bit in the playoffs thus far, but he’s still looking better than a lot of people expected. Sakic remains a threat if for no other reason than that he’s got a wicked wrist shot and is one of the great leaders from his generation remaining in the game. Wolski is a shifty guy and Stastny is a stud, though his one playoff goal is a little underwhelming. Hejduk, Brunette and Smyth remain scoring threats. This is quite the solid group.

Defense

Trade deadline acquisition Ruslan Salei leads the Colorado blueline in points with four. He is joined by a strong defensive corps that includes Adam Foote, JM Liles, Kurt Sauer, Scott Hannan, Jordan Leopold, and Jeff Finger. Not as offensively-minded as the Wings’ defense, these guys are a tough and formidable group. As much as the Foote acquistion was derided and laughed at (guilty), it’s paid off as the defense has solidified.

Goaltending

Jose Theodore is the man in Denver now and posted a .940 save-percentage and 1.88 GAA in the first round (against a Lemaire-coached Wild team, mind you). He’ll be tough to beat.

Thoughts

It’s been remarked that the lineup the Wings will face tonight is a much-improved version of that which they faced during the regular season. That is definitely true. However, the Wings are also a different team than they were the last time these two teams faced off.

During the last two meetings, the Wings were without Niklas Kronwall and had not yet acquired Brad Stuart. During the fourth game, Nick Lidstrom was injured while the team was already without Dan Cleary and Brian Rafalski in addition to Kronwall. Those are significant and make it difficult to gauge this series. It should be remembered, though, that the Wings won that fourth game in the midst of their terrible February slump.

In my mind, the biggest addition to the Avs’ roster is Peter Forsberg. There have been some speedbumps along the way, but he’s healthy and producing. His performance in this series will have a lot to say in how it goes. He’s historically a Red Wings killer and is sure to elevate his play in this round. The Wings must shut him down and that’s going to be quite the job for the player who once was compared to the famous Swedish forward: Henrik Zetterberg.

The Wings will have to play their game to perfection because the Avs can skate with them as well as any other team in the League. Their secondary forwards will need to build on their first round performances in order to match the Avs’ deep forward corps. Players like Tomas Holmstrom, Kris Draper, Darren McCarty and Dallas Drake will need to pound Forsberg, Hejduk, Stastny, Wolski, Smyth, and Company whenever they have the opportunity. Forsberg, in particular, can be goaded into visciousness and that should translate into power play opportunities.

The Wings beat a hot goaltender in the first round, but they’ll be up against one with a lot more experience this time around. Theodore is the other key to this series. He’s not going to be rattled easily and will be a definite challenge. Chris Osgood will need to match him save for save and more.

Although the rivalry is nothing it used to be, you can bet that emotions will run high. With both teams bringing back relics from the past, old memories will be stirred and bad blood will come to the surface pretty quickly.

Both teams go into this round knowing that they won’t have it easy and that they’ll have to come out firing on all cylinders. That should make for a great, tight series.

Links

James Mirtle: Round 2 picks

George Malik - “preview-a-palooza

Abel to Yzerman: “Oh, There Will Be Blood

No Pun Intended: series preview

Colorado Avalanche Talk: series preview

Jibblescribbits: series preview

Game 6: Wings 3, Predators 0

Update (12:25 PM): IwoCPO’s thoughts on the series are here and George Malik’s wrap-up is here. - Matt

The Detroit Red Wings advanced to the Western Conference Semifinals with yesterday’s 3-0 Game 6 win over the Nashville Predators. Their second-round opponent will be determined by the result of tomorrow night’s Game 7 between the San Jose Sharks and the Calgary Flames. If the Flames can win on the road, they’ll face the Wings next. If the Sharks pull out a win, they’ll face Dallas and Colorado will face Detroit.

The Wings put on a strong performance in the clinching game. They weathered a major first period storm put on by the Predators and gradually took control of the game. The opening frame was just about all action, with the teams trading chances up and down the ice. Both goalies looked very good. Detroit had a tendency to turn the puck over in their own zone during this period, which made things interesting for Chris Osgood.

The second period was more settled, but still had its moments excitement. One such moment that stuck out was the Predators exploitation of a bad line change around the 8:00 mark. A Brett Lebda turnover at center led to Rich Peverley outmuscling Darren Helm at the Detroit blueline and breaking in on Osgood alone. He lost control of the puck in open ice, however, which was more a demonstration of the poor quality of the ice surface than any knock against him.

The Wings went on the penalty kill at 13:37. Seven seconds later, they scored a shorthanded goal to make it 1-0. The goal came just after a faceoff at center. Nick Lidstrom received the puck from Henrik Zetterberg behind the red line and sent in a medium-strength shot that bounced in front of Dan Ellis in the slot and went in over his shoulder. It was definitely a tough break for the rookie goaltender, but a great one of the Wings. They went on to kill off a critical 5-on-3 following Kris Draper penalty at 14:43.

To the Predators credit, their play only dropped a little after that. They certainly didn’t give up after what could have been a backbreaking sequence of events.

Toward the end of the period, Pavel Datsyuk carried the puck into the zone and drove to the net like a much larger man. He got off a backhand shot and ended up barreling into Ellis as he lost an edge, knocking the net off. It seemed like a pretty straightforward play, but there was a bit of a delay as it was reviewed to make sure the puck didn’t go into the net. In the end, they made the right call: no goal.

The Wings extended their lead at 3:52 of the third with a goal from Jiri Hudler. The play began with Darren Helm carrying it into the zone on the left wing. Darren McCarty went up the middle toward the net, drawing David Legwand into Ryan Suter and leaving Hudler free as the trailer. Helm slid the puck across and Hudler unleashed a rocket that beat Ellis from 43 feet out. It was a well-deserved reward for the fourth line’s hard work throughout the game. Unfortunately, they hardly saw the ice for the rest of the game after that.

Detroit didn’t let off the gas, but had a definite defensive mindset after that. The Predators continued to come at them until the very end of the game, but the Wings limited them to just seven shots for all that. Nashville would gain the zone and set up a play that would only be broken up by a well-placed Detroit stick or skate, even if only at the last second. If a shot did get through, Chris Osgood made the save.

Late in the period, Pavel Datsyuk, Henrik Zetterberg, and Tomas Holmstrom wrought havoc in the Nashville zone, culminating in Datsyuk ringing a shot off the crossbar after forcing Ellis down and out.

Ellis was pulled with about a minute and a half remaining and Nashville put on a good amount of pressure, but as time wound down, it was evident that a comeback was not going to happen. Brian Rafalski finished it off when he pulled down a shoot-in attempt up the middle and put in the empty net from 134 feet.

The Nashville crowd cheered the Predators all through the period, down to the buzzer, and through the handshake. Regardless of the reality of the lack of support for the Predators state-wide, there is no doubt that the folks at the Sommet Center are high on their team.

Darren Helm and Dallas Drake both had strong games. Helm will be pushed out when Kirk Maltby (hamstring) returns, but he’s a great guy to have waiting on the sidelines in case of injury. Drake, as the NBC crew says, just needs to fine-tune his radar and he’ll be laying people out left and right.

The usual suspects, Holmstrom, Datsyuk, and Zetterberg, looked good. I thought Brad Stuart looked as good as he has since returning from his injury. Brian Rafalski finally looks like a playoff veteran. Niklas Kronwall had another big open ice hit. His reputation is developing as he starts playing like he did in Grand Rapids.

The Wings escaped the first round in good shape: no major injuries, no massive travel miles, and no Game 7. They also seem to be hitting their stride and should be ready to handle whoever gets thrown at them.

Links

Highlights

No Pun Intended

Behind the Jersey

Round One done

Quick thoughts:

Osgood made the decision to play him look better with every save.

Darren Helm is a keeper.

Darren McCarty’s comeback has paid off in spades.

Dallas Drake is a wrecking ball.

It was good to see the Wings weather the early storm and come back strong for a pretty complete game. Their third period performance was masterful.

Kudos to the Predators for never giving up, even after the Lidstrom goal and the failed 5-on-3.

My condolences to Preds fans, who showed their support loudly throughout the game as well as after it.

More coming in the morning.

Game 6: @ Nashville, 3:00 ET

Update (2:41 PM): The official blog contradicts Khan and says that Legwand will be a game-time decision after he goes through warmups. - Matt

Update (2:35 PM): Ansar Khan reports that Jason Arnott will sit out today with a concussion. David Legwand, on the other hand, will play. - Matt

Update (11:07 PM): Behind the Jersey liveblog is here and PredJoe has pregame thoughts here. - Matt

This afternoon is the sixth game of the Western Conference Quartefinal series between the Detroit Red Wings and the Nashville Predators. The Wings lead the series 3-2, having won each of their home games (3-1, 4-2, 2-1 OT). The Predators won Games 3 and 4 (5-3, 3-2).

Facing elimination today, the Predators must win and force a Game 7. Some keys to the game for the Preds:

Forecheck hard. In order to disrupt the Wings’ puck possession game, they’ll need to hit it where it starts: the breakout. If the Preds can throw Detroit’s defensemen off with an aggressive forecheck, they’ll breakup the outlet process. Of course, if they get caught deep, it will backfire on them.

Ride roughshod. The Wings are no longer a stereotypically soft team. They do, however, get a little rattled when met with overly physical and just plain nasty hockey. If they are goaded into trying to return the favor, they’ll get off their game even more.

Stay out of the box. How this will work with the second key, I don’t know, but they need to stay out of the box.

Dan Ellis. He has to keep his rebounds down and his focus up. Another performance like Friday night’s and he’ll put his team in a position to pull out a win.

It looks like the Predators may still be without Jason Arnott (”flu”) and David Legwand (bruised foot).

For the Wings, this is a must-win game as well. Going to Game 7 is definitely not something anyone on that side of the ice wants to see happen. Some keys to the game for Detroit:

Score early. And not just once. Take the crowd out of it and the wind out of the Predators sails.

Go to the net. That’s how they’ll accomplish key one. Too many long and unscreened shots will result in too many easy saves for Dan Ellis. They have to buzz the net whenever they can.

Puck movement. With the Predators on the hunt physically, fast and accurate puck movement will be essential.

Keep the foot on the gas. No letting up at any point throughout the game. They need to be as close to perfect as possible.

No lineup changes for Detroit are expected.

The Wings are in a position here to move on to the second round. They even have a possible opponent lined up. They can’t think about that, however. The Predators are still between them and the Semifinals and the Predators have shown that they aren’t about to go away. A Red Wing loss today and this is anybody’s series Tuesday night.

Game 5: Wings 2, Predators 1 (OT)

Update (12:17 PM): Here’s the game winner:

Look for Filppula’s reaction to the goal on the long view replay. - Matt

The Wings got something of the statement game they were looking for last night, though you wouldn’t know it by the score. By a rough estimation, they controled the puck for 50 minutes of regulation in Game 5 and peppered Dan Ellis with 54 shots.

The game wasn’t perfect, however.

Some thoughts:

… The Wings had the strong start we were looking for, though they only managed to put one of 17 first period shots past Ellis.

… Valtteri Filppula’s goal at 4:20 of the first kicked off a strong game for the young Finn. He was one of the three heroes of the overtime period with his great backchecking leading to the turnover that started Johan Franzen’s breakaway.

… The Wings needed composure last night and they had it. They could have easily been devastated after Radek Bonk scored at 19:16 of the third, but they kept their heads up and looked determined to pull out a win, though there was no hiding the disappointment in Henrik Zetterberg’s voice during the third intermission.

… Speaking of disappointment, it was also evident in Ken Daniels’ voice when he made the call on the Bonk goal. I obviously can’t blame him. That came as a shock, though there was little the Wings could do about it. The Predators saw their moment and pounced. It was exactly what I was afraid of all game.

… I give Nashville credit for keeping their celebration low-key on the tying goal. They obviously realized how fortunate they were to be in that position at all, having had their rear ends handed to them up and down the ice all night.

… Chris Osgood only faced 21 shots. A number of them were quality scoring chances, however, and he really came up big. For all the criticisms leveled at him over the years, you can see how Wings fans have embraced him like they’ve never come to embrace Dominik Hasek. The “Ozzie! Ozzie!” chant went up more than a few times last night.

As a fan who spent most of the game in a state of high tension, seeing Osgood’s calm confidence as he turned aside the puck definitely helped.

… I hope this round is enough to quiet the Pavel Datsyuk doubters out there. He’s was great again last night, even though he was kept off the scoreboard. Henrik Zetterberg has been less so, but still solid.

… Niklas Kronwall is going to be a real force for years to come if he can stay healthy.

… Obviously, the big concern coming out of this game is the fact that the Wings couldn’t get a better scoring average, despite the fact that the Predators were without three of their top centers (Jason Arnott, David Legwand, and Scott Nichol).

A good 20 of those 54 shots (if not more) were long and unscreened. Obviously, a long shot is better than no shot, but I’d definitely like to see in increase in the quality of scoring chances in Game 6.

… The Predators deserve credit for keeping the Wings away from the net as much as they did. Ellis, however, is the real hero of the game for Nashville. His tendency to give up juicy rebounds was not nearly as evident last night as it has been in other games. Had it been, the result may have been different. As it was, however, he made the first save and generally held onto the puck.

… The Wings will need to find a way to get the puck in the net more often Sunday. It’s not going to be an easy game. The Predators, though they took a thrashing so far as puck possession and shots are concerned, have plenty of confidence in their ability to steal a game, even with the Wings playing their style to a “t.”

They are in the driver’s seat again, but if anything, this series has shown that having the wheel doesn’t mean much if you don’t fight to keep it. Game 6 will be interesting.

Links

Highlights

Gorilla Crouch

Behind the Jersey

On the Forecheck