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April 20, 1992 - Image 16

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The Michigan Daily, 1992-04-20

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Page 8-The Michigan Daily-Sports Monday- April 20,1992

Red
Associated Press

WI

ngs,

Canucks lose home-ice advantage

The Detroit Red Wings and
Vancouver Canucks strived all sea-
son to finish first in their NHL divi-
sions. They did, gaining home-ice
advantage for the first two rounds of
the playoffs.
One night into those playoffs,
that advantage is gone. If the
Canucks and Red Wings don't re-
bound for victories at home tonight,
they might start thinking about vaca-
tion instead of another playoff series.
Detroit, winners of the Norris
Division during the season, fell 4-3
to Minnesota. Vancouver, tops in the
Smythe, lost to Winnipeg 3-2.
Another host, the Los Angeles
Kings, was beaten at home, by
Edmonton 3-1. Only Chicago
surived at home, taking St. Louis 3-
1.
Last night, the Wales Conference
playoffs began. New Jersey was at
the New York Rangers and
Pittsburgh at Washington in the

Patrick, while Hartford played at
Montreal and Buffalo at Boston in
the Adams.
North Stars 4, Red
Wings 3
With Jim Johnson and Brian
Bellows connecting in the third pe-
riod, the North Stars went up a game
on Detroit.
"The attitude was, 'Let's get
ready for the next game,"' Bellows
said.
Red Wings coach Bryan Murray
knows which team was ready for the
first game. It wasn't his squad.
"We didn't play with the same
urgency that Minnesota did,"
Murray said. "They are going to play
this way, and try to take the talent
out of the game. We have 18 guys
who can play better in Game 2. At
least, I hope they can."
Jets 3, Canucks 2
Winnipeg used an international
flavor, getting goals from a Swede

(Frederik Olausson), a Russian
(rookie Evgeny Davydov) and an
American, Ed Olczyk, who scored
on a breakaway in the third period to
win it. That offset goals by former
Soviet stars Pavel Bure and Igor
Larionov.
Rick Tabaracci, usually the Jets'
No. 2 goalie, stopped 20 shots.
Tabaracci, who played only 18
league games, was Paddock's goal-
tending choice over Bob Essensa be-
cause Tabaracci was 1-1-2 against
Vancouver this season.
Oilers 3, Kings 1
Edmonton beat Los Angeles with
perfect penalty-killing. The Kings
were blanked on nine power plays,
five in the third period, and had only
nine shots on their power plays.
"I thought it was a very disci-
plined effort and probably the best
penalty-killing we've exhibited this
year," said Oilers coach Ted Green.
Edmonton sustained two more
injuries in the win. Left wing Craig

Simpson sprained his right shoulder
and right wing Anatoli Semenov
also injured his shoulder. The Oilers
already are without veteran de-
fensemen Craig Muni and Kevin
Lowe.
Blackhawks 3, Blues 1
Chicago won a playoff opener for
the first time since 1985 as Ed
Belfour stopped 33 of 34 Blues
shots.
Brett Hull, the NHL's leading
goal-scorer, led the Blues with five
shots but couldn't score. And
Belfour made his best save against
Brendan Shanahan in the second pe-
riod.
"They took the flow from us in
the second," said Blues coach Brian
Sutter. "(Jeff) Brown hits the post,
(Philippe) Bonzon hits the post,
Belfour makes a great glove save on
Shanahan and right after that we turn
the puck over in the neutral zone and
it's 1-1."

Division Semifinals

(Best-of-7)
Saturday, April 18
Minnesota 4, Detroit 3, Minnesota
leads series 1-0
Winnipeg 3, Vancouver 2, Winnipeg
leads series 1-0
Chicago 3, St. Louis 1, Chicago
leads series 1-0
Edmonton 3, Los Angeles 1,
Edmonton leads series 1-0
Sunday, April 19
Hartford at Montreal, 7:05 p.m.
Buffalo at Boston, 7:05 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Washington, 7:05 p.m.
New Jersey at N.Y. Rangers, 7:35
p.m.
Monday, April 20
Minnesota at Detroit, 7:35 p.m.
St. Louis at Chicago, 8:35 p.m.

Winnipeg at Vancouver, 10:35 p.m.
Edmonton at Los Angeles, 10:35
p.m.
Tuesday, April 21
Hartford at Montreal, 7:35 p.m.
Buffalo at Boston, 7:35 p.m.
New Jersey at N.Y. Rangers, 7:35
p.m.
Pittsburgh at Washington, 7:35 p.m.
Wednesday, April 22
Detroit at Minnesota, 7:05 p.m.
Chicago at St. Louis, 8:35 p.m.
Vancouver at Winnipeg, 9:35 p.m.
Los Angeles at Edmonton, 9:35 p.m.
Thursday, April 23
N.Y. Rangers at New Jersey, 7:35
p.m.
Washington at Pittsburgh, 7:35 p.m.
Montreal at Hartford, 7:35 p.m.
Boston at Buffalo, 7:35 p.m.

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