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  Sun, May 11, 2008


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Flustered Texans see stars
Dallas loses cool after dropping second game of conference final against the Red Wings
By NEIL STEVENS, THE CANADIAN PRESS
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Detroit Red Wings winger Henrik Zetterberg celebrates his goal during the first period of Game 2 of the Western Conference hockey finals against the Dallas Stars in Detroit, Saturday, May 10, 2008. (Paul Sancya/Associated Press)

DETROIT -- It was a huge win for the Detroit Red Wings and surely will turn out to be a costly loss for the Dallas Stars.

The Red Wings surprised everybody just before the second game of the NHL's Western Conference final last night by announcing that Johan Franzen, the leading goal scorer of the NHL playoffs, wouldn't play because he's out indefinitely with concussion-like symptoms.

But the setback didn't stall their drive for the Stanley Cup.

Rookie Darren Helm, with his first big-league goal, and Henrik Zetterberg scored for Detroit, and goaltender Chris Osgood again was outstanding in a 2-1 victory that gave the Wings a 2-0 series lead going into Game 3 in Dallas tomorrow night.

The Stars lost veteran forward Jere Lehtinen to a leg injury early in the second period of Game 2 and, given what happened at the end of last night's contest, they should lose Mike Ribeiro, too.

Ribeiro was assessed a match penalty as time expired after slashing Osgood across the chest. Osgood crumbled to the ice, but was uninjured.

That wasn't all, though.

With five seconds left, Steve Ott went after Kris Draper from behind and punched the Wings' veteran centre in the head. Ott got roughing and misconduct penalties.

"I'm fine with that," Draper said of the Ott assault. "He threw a punch at me.

"No harm done. You get up and you go. But something like (the slash on Osgood), that's right out of Slap Shot. (Ribeiro) just literally ... intent to injure on our best player.

"I couldn't believe it when he did it."

Colin Campbell, the NHL's discipline czar as director of operations, was in attendance.

"It's an intense series," said Draper. "There's a lot on the line and it's physical but ... that's just crossing the line.

"The league's been great all year about stepping in and taking care of this stuff. If it's not a goalie and he two-hands, it could hit a player in the throat, face, teeth, whatever. You kind of shake your head at what he was thinking. It's up to the league to step in and do what they have to do."

Some of the Stars were complaining Osgood butt-ended Stephane Robidas during the scramble around the Detroit net with two seconds left.

Osgood said he stuck out an arm to try and ward off a hit against one of his teammates and didn't try to butt-end anybody.

"If it did, it was an accident," he said. "I don't think it justifies a two-hander over the top of the net."

Detroit's latest win was its eighth in a row -- all since Helm was inserted into the lineup and Osgood took over from Dominik Hasek in the nets.

"This is as good as we played as long as I've been here," said captain Nicklas Lidstrom, who earned Stanley Cup rings in 1997, 1998 and 2002.

Joe Louis Arena remained a chamber of horrors for Dallas goalie Marty Turco, whose career winless streak there grew to 11 games.

"We played a lot better," Turco said. "We've got no doubt we can win some hockey games at home.

"We're disappointed we're down 2-0, but it'll be a totally different atmosphere when we get home."

Helm, summoned from the AHL farm in Grand Rapids, Mich., in March, opened the scoring with his first NHL goal at 5:56.

Robidas tied it when he slammed in a cross-ice pass from Ribeiro on a power play at 10:41.

Zetterberg made it 2-1 on a powerplay at 15:13 with Tomas Holmstrom creating havoc in front of Turco.

RED WINGS

STARS

2

1

RED WINGS LEAD SERIES 2-0 GAME 3: TOMORROW, 6 P.M., TSN












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