Turco logs fourth career post-season shutout, Stars beat Ducks 4-0 in opener

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ANAHEIM, Calif. - Marty Turco put on an acrobatic show in goal and the Dallas Stars' power play provided more than enough offence to put the defending Stanley Cup Champions in an early playoff hole.

Turco earned his fourth career post-season shutout and Dallas defeated the Anaheim Ducks 4-0 in Game 1 of their first-round playoff series Thursday night. Game 2 is Saturday night in Anaheim.

Turco made 23 saves, Steve Ott and Loui Eriksson had first-period power-play goals, and Jere Lehtinen and Brendan Morrow added power-play scores in the second for the Stars, who have been eliminated in the opening round for each of the past three years.

Morrow also had two assists, as did Mike Ribeiro.

The Ducks' usual strong suits, their veteran defence and goalie Jean-Sebastien Giguere, were vulnerable, Giguere faced 37 shots.

Anaheim's offence also lacked spark after the Stars took the early 2-0 lead. The Ducks went a stretch of almost 20 minutes, beginning midway through the first period to about the same mark in the second, without getting off a shot.

Anaheim, the NHL's most penalized team this season, also hurt itself with penalties, with the Stars cashing in on power-play opportunities. The Ducks drew 11 penalties to the Stars' seven.

Turco, meanwhile, did a fine job with traffic in front of him. During a frantic few seconds of an Anaheim power play in the second period, with a crowd in the crease, he first swatted the puck away, then went down on his back and kicked at it, and finally rolled over on his stomach and blocked another try.

Ott started the Stars rolling when he scored at 11:25 of the opening period. Stephane Robidas, battling a Ducks defender on the right boards, wristed a shot that Ott, near the goal line, redirected past Giguere on the glove side.

The score came on Dallas' first power play of the game, with Travis Moen off for elbowing.

Eriksson scored his first career playoff goal at 17:34 of the period, with the help of some picture-perfect passing. Robidas made a crisp pass to Brad Richards in the left circle and Richards passed up a shot to slide the puck across to Eriksson, who was slicing across the top of the right circle.

Eriksson one-timed the shot past Giguere on the stick side.

On Dallas' third goal, Ribeiro, from behind the net, fed the unguarded Lehtinen and he snapped a wrist shot over Giguere's right shoulder.

Morrow made it 4-0 when Ribeiro, just across the goal line near the right post, slid the puck across the crease and Morrow was able to get his stick beyond the defenders and push the puck past Giguere.

Notes: The Stars took the regular-season series against the Ducks 5-3, and earned a shootout point in one of the losses. The Ducks, though, won the final two meetings. ... Dallas was good on the road this season, going 22-14-5 and scoring a West-high 118 goals away from home. ... Turco is coming off his fifth consecutive 30-win regular season, second behind only Martin Brodeur's 12 straight seasons with 30 or more wins.

Terry Zaroski (Posted 2008-04-11 16:21:37)
You guys make hockey players sound like soccer players. Bert did a very stupid thing and he paid for it. Craig McTavish killed a women while driving drunk. Eventually the hockey world forgave him didn't they? Does he not still coach? Let it go already.

Jim Terry (Posted 2008-04-11 12:23:30)
No, Finnigan, I would NOT be happy to have Bertuzzi. . .for ANY reason! What good would come from having the Cup if you have to be ashamed of HOW you got it?? "Let the guy move on." Holy cow. . .to the next victim, to the next career ending cheap shot? I'll bet Moore would like to move on with his career, too, but wait...Bertuzzi ended that, didn't he?!?!? The game would not suffer one miniscule instant without him, but some other player could.

Greg Shackelford (Posted 2008-04-11 09:08:34)
The Ducks played very undisciplined and took many dumb penalties (come on, playing a puck with just half of the shaft of your stick?!?!?). Did anybody else have a problem with Brad May being named 2nd Star? He played less then 8 minutes and had 3 hits, while his team was embarassed on their own ice (however, I don't think he had any penalties, which could be the reason).

T Finnigan (Posted 2008-04-11 08:39:48)
No instigator on Bertuzzi because it was (and truly should have been) ruled as breaking up a scrap instead of starting one. Close call but the right one. However, I would take Bertuzzi in a second if the Stars were to pick him up. You kiddin' me that you wouldnt ? Let the guy move on. He's not the player he used to be, but he's a complete package still. I hope the Stars dont try to match the physical play. Stay focused on the game and poke the Ducks full of holes.

Julie S (Posted 2008-04-11 05:46:38)
I would love to see the Ducks win another cup but they did pretty much shoot themselves when then got Bertuzzi. He doesn't deserve to win the Stanley Cup after ending someone's career, if they don't get to play for it you shouldn't either. How about instead of always suspending Pronger Bertuzzi can take one for the team and take his suspension!

Jim Terry (Posted 2008-04-11 01:39:06)
Great, typical Ducks-Stars game. Hard-hitting, fast, lots of end-to-end action! It's gonna be a fun series!! One question though. . .why is Todd Bertuzzi STILL in the NHL??? This guy is only different from any other goon because he actually does have some talent. OK, two questions. . .since when does being third-man-in NOT get a penalty?? Normally, the refs are very liberal with the instigator penalty, so why not here?? It is just lucky for Boucher that he didn't have his back to Bertuzzi. . .i.e. Steve Moore- - -remember him, he's the one who had his career ended by the goon Bertuzzi!!!

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