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Toronto Maple Leafs
It's Over From CNNSI.com TORONTO (AP) -- The Buffalo Sabers are back in the Stanley Cup finals, and they didn't even need a brilliant performance by Dominik Hasek to do it. Erik Rasmussen scored midway through the third period Monday night to snap a tie as the Sabres rallied to beat Toronto 4-2 and capture the Eastern Conference final in five games. Last year, the Sabres whooped it up after sweeping the Montreal Canadiens in the second round, then found out they couldn't win every series relying on goalie Dominik Hasek and lost to the Capitals in the conference final. This time the celebration was subdued.
"I feel proud of this team, but we have a long way to go," said Dixon Ward, whose empty-net goal in the final minute secured the Buffalo victory. "We haven't won anything yet. We weren't playing for that [Prince of Wales] trophy. We only care about one trophy."
That would be the Stanley Cup, the only piece of hardware that Hasek hasn't won. "I'm very, very happy," Hasek said. "It's a great feeling. I think the difference was our experience. We're a very hungry team. We're a different team than last year. We know what it takes to win more than two rounds." Rasmussen's goal came just over two minutes after the Sabres had a goal by Vaclav Varada disallowed and sent Buffalo to the Stanley Cup finals for only the second time since the team joined the NHL in 1970. This group of Sabres is far from flashy, but proved again that the way the game is played today, there is no substitute for grit. Despite the raucous Maple Leaf fans, who haven't seen their beloved team in the finals since they won their last Cup in 1967, the Sabres persevered again. Twice the Sabres fell behind and twice they battled back. Rasmussen broke a 2-2 tie off a brilliant effort by Holzinger. Holzinger broke into the Toronto zone along the left boards, stopped, spun around and fired a hard drive at Curtis Joseph. The puck skidded to Rasmussen and he drilled it back in at 11:35 before Joseph could recover. Toronto got a terrific chance to tie the game again when Buffalo defenseman Alexei Zhitnik was called for holding with just under three minutes left. Toronto pulled goalie Curtis Joseph to get a two-man advantage, but Ward ended the suspense with 1:02 left before the Maple Leafs could manage a shot on Hasek. It was a quick ending for the Maple Leafs, who led the league in scoring during the regular season. They rallied in the first two rounds to beat Philadelphia and Pittsburgh after falling behind in each series but could not solve the Sabres' tough, close checking. "It was a heartbreaking game," said Toronto captain Matts Sundin. "I thought we deserved better. It seemed the puck was bouncing our way in the first two series. It didn't work in this one." |
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