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Hiller makes 35 saves for shutout, Ducks stun top-seeded Sharks

SAN JOSE, Calif. - Jonas Hiller coolly stopped every puck like a seasoned playoff veteran, showing all the post-season poise that the top-seeded San Jose Sharks still haven't found.

Hiller made 35 saves in a sparkling playoff debut for eighth-seeded Anaheim, and Ryan Getzlaf had a goal and an assist in the third period of the Ducks' 2-0 victory over the Sharks on Thursday night.

Getzlaf set up captain Scott Niedermayer's tiebreaking power-play goal early in the third before roaring out of the penalty box to score his own goal with 2:25 to play.

With their Swiss goalie's flawless play, the playoff-tested Ducks put an early playoff scare into the Sharks, who won the Presidents' Trophy during the regular season with 117 points.

Evgeni Nabokov made 15 saves for San Jose in the opener of the first post-season series between two California clubs in four decades.

San Jose claimed home-ice advantage throughout the playoffs by winning the Presidents' Trophy for the first time in franchise history, while Anaheim needed a prolonged late-season surge just to reach the post-season. Both teams know those details don't matter much in the post-season, and the Sharks looked like the less-experienced club for most of the night at a largely sombre Shark Tank.

San Jose showcased its superior skill while outshooting the Ducks by a 2-to-1 margin, but the Sharks rarely threatened to get any of those chances past Hiller, who claimed the Ducks' starting job during the second half of the regular season. Coach Randy Carlyle stuck with Hiller instead of going back to Jean-Sebastien Giguere, the 2003 Conn Smythe Trophy winner who watched the game from a folding chair behind the glass opposite the Anaheim bench.

Niedermayer, the Ducks' other Conn Smythe winner, had the touch to break open a scoreless game.

After two scoreless periods, the Ducks got a man-advantage from a foolish tripping penalty by Jonathan Cheechoo. Getzlaf, the playmaker who had four assists in Anaheim's most recent visit to San Jose, made a sharp pass to the opposite faceoff circle for a one-timer by Niedermayer, who slipped his low shot past Nabokov with 14:42 left.

Getzlaf committed an elbowing penalty with 4 1/2 minutes to play, but Anaheim's penalty-killers held on. Getzlaf then came straight to mid-ice from the penalty box, accepted a pass from Mike Brown after Marc-Edouard Vlasic's turnover, and ripped a shot past Nabokov with 2:25 to play, cementing the Ducks' upset victory.

The Sharks' rivalry with the Ducks has simmered for several years while Anaheim made two Stanley Cup finals appearances and San Jose attempted to catch up. The Sharks finally moved ahead this season with a 26-point advantage over the Ducks in the Pacific Division, but enters the playoffs with three consecutive second-round playoff ousters looming over them.

Anaheim surged into the playoffs after nearly giving up at the trade deadline, when the Ducks shipped defensive forward Travis Moen to the Sharks. Moen, who will be a free agent this summer, scored the Stanley Cup-winning goal for Anaheim two years ago.

Through the first 45 scoreless minutes, the Sharks resembled the squad that coasted to the close of the regular season after clinching the division title a month earlier. San Jose struggled to string together consecutive clean passes, and had difficulty keeping the puck in Anaheim's zone, even during power plays.

The Ducks had the first two periods' best scoring chance during a power play when Corey Perry drove the net, but Teemu Selanne missed a fairly easy chance to tap home the rebound - awakening memories for Sharks fans of Selanne's near-identical failure for San Jose during Game 7 of a 2002 playoff series against Colorado.

Notes: The Sharks scratched 43-year-old F Claude Lemieux in favour of enforcer Jody Shelley. Lemieux missed 19 of San Jose's final 21 regular-season games with a jaw injury and as a healthy scratch. Shelley barely touched the ice, and Anaheim enforcer George Parros also played sparingly. ... Giguere has the highest playoff winning percentage among active goalies at 33-17 (.660). ... San Jose lost just five games in regulation at the Shark Tank during the regular season.

COMMENTS (26)

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tyler Posted
(2009-04-30 08:24:46)



Lots of Joe Thornton insults here. Typically I would defend him, but I am getting really sick of that. I am a huge Sharks fan and for a long time through every game since 1998, I am sick of (certain) players not showing up in the post-season. If San Jose doesn't win the cup this year, then we have some major issues to deal with in the offseason. (like getting rid of joe thornton for a playoff performer)
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Mike Posted
(2009-04-30 08:24:45)



Not sure why everyone expects Joe to go to the net in the post season - he doesn't in the regular season. Assists are his thing, not goals. Not to many assists are earned 2 feet from the blue paint. What the Sharks need is a change in mind-set. For years, they've said that they can play anyone's game. You're fast? They'll be fast. You're tough? They'll play tough. What they have not done is force other teams to play THEIR game. The Wings have been dominate because when you play them, you have to play the Wings' style in order to compete - you have to adjust your game. The Sharks seem to think it is a matter of pride to adjust their game to their opponent. As a former SJ resident and a long time SJ fan, I have to say NO! The great/dominate teams force the weaker team to play their style. With the Sharks always changing their style, they are always putting themselves into the role of the weaker team, regardless of how strong their roster is. This is in no way, shape or form a recipe for success. Disagree if you will, but think back to this very season and look at how many times the Sharks forced other teams play the "Sharks" way for an entire game. Despite the record, not too many times. This approach might work in the regular season, but when you have to face the same team for up to 7 games, I think this approach speaks for itself (and explains the "choke" label).
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Rob Posted
(2009-04-30 08:24:43)



@M.Sanchez the more I think about it yours is probably the most objective perspective in that I know you've seen a lot of both teams and probably hate them both. What I want to know is why don't you sound like the Kings fans who I see/hear/watch-get-kicked-out at the Honda center? They seem a little less reasonable, so to speak. @duck soup I had mixed emotions when they pickud up Lemieux, too (being a Red Wings closet supporter), but sort of wondered why they didn't bring in Messier and Roy as well. Go Ducks!
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pokecheck Posted
(2009-04-30 08:24:42)



lol@Sharksfan05. Red Wings fans said the same thing after the Ducks beat them in 6. We outplayed the Ducks. If Clowe & Moen weren't on the ice, your Sharks didn't get anything going in the low slot. Not even screens. Ducks have 12 forwards and 6 dmen who will muck it up in the low slot at both ends of the rink. Sharks have Moen, Clowe and 16 perimeter players. Ducks in 6.
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Duck Soup Posted
(2009-04-30 08:24:41)



Scratching Lemieux was a mistake. He may be old and slow but he knows how to play and how the Sharks need to play to win the in post season. I detest him and seeing him on the ice sets my teeth on edge. When I heard they had brouhgt him back to life it sent a chill down my spine. If anybody can awaken the playoff beast in the Sharks it is him and I hate him for it.
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Blackhawksfan Posted
(2009-04-30 08:24:38)



"No Show Joe"? Awesome nickname for Jumbo in the playoffs, until he can make it happen thats what I'll call him..
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Kenny Posted
(2009-04-30 08:24:34)



Good game. Was on the edge of my seat the whole time. Everything I expected from these two teams when they finally met in the playoffs. Although I wouldn't go as far as some sharks fans are saying, that the Sharks outplayed the Ducks. SOG is meaningless at the end of the game, and the Ducks PK unit completely shut down the Sharks' power play unit. When all is said and done, the Sharks didn't perform when they needed to, and the Ducks did. The Sharks aren't out of it yet, and I expect (as well as many people) that this game will end in seven. GO DUCKS!
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fred Posted
(2009-04-30 08:24:25)



hate both teams but i would like to see the ducks beat the sharks in 4 straight........GO RED WINGS
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Rob Posted
(2009-04-30 08:24:22)



@ Jim ... love and laughed at the smaller boat comment. We are still bringing the bigger boat, large harpoons, and chum just in case, though. Keep battling Ducks!
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Old Skul Hockey Posted
(2009-04-30 08:24:22)



@SharksFan05- Actually, that is how my surname is spelled. Skul is of Olde Scottish origin, from the Orkney Islands if you must know.
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