Sports Page 20 Friday, May 22, 1981 The Michigan Daily Islanders smash North Stars; win Stanley Cup 4 4 UNIONDALE, N.Y. (AP) - Butch Goring, the Islanders' catalyst throughout the National Hockey League. playoffs, scored two first- period goals to propel New York to its second consecutive Stanley Cup with a 5-1 victory last night over the Minnesota North Stars in the fifth game of the finals. The Islanders, who lost only three of 18 postseason games this spring, jum- ped to a 3-1 lead after one period. They stretched it to 4-1 on Bob Bourne's goal just 39 seconds from the end of the second session and coasted to the championship before 15,000 delirious fans. IT WAS Goring who drove most of the fans to ecstacy - and the North Stars to elimination - with his relentless brand of two-way hockey. Aside from being New York's best checker, the 12-year veteran center was an offensive force when the Isles were most in need, just as he was last season in sparking the Islanders to their first championship. Goring beat 19-year-old Minnesota rookie goalie Don Beaupre with a 15- foot wrist shot on a power play at 5:12 of the first period after a pass from Bour- ne set him up in front. At 10:03, Goring, who joined the team in a trade with Los Angeles only a month before last year's playoffs, poked a Clark Gillies pass behind Beaupre. Just 25 secondsrafter Goring's first goal, Wayne Merrick heat Beaupre from short range after John Tonelli had outmuscled two Minnesota defensemen for the puck behind the North Stars' net. MINNESOTA'S STEVE Christoff cut the North Stars' deficit to 3-1 when he snapped a 25-foot shot past Islanders' goalie Billy Smith at 16:06. The gutsy North Stars, who finished the season in ninth place overall while the Islan- ders were first, then kept pace with New York for much of the second period. The Islanders held a 16-4 shot advan- tage in that second period but, for more than 19 minutes of the stanza, did not come any closer to scoring than did the North Stars. But, with 39 seconds left in the period, Minnesota defenseman Paul Shmyr misplayed the puck at the side of his net and Bourne took advantage, rip- ping a 25-foot shot past Beaupre to clin- ch it. Defenseman Mike McEwen closed out the scoring with a long slap shot with just 2:54 left to play. For his effort, Goring was awarded the Conn Smythe Trophy as the playof- fs' Most Valuable Player. 4 SUCCEEDS OLYMPIC ASSISTANT: Brooks to coach Rangers NEW YORK (AP) - Herb Brooks, coach of the 1980 U.S. hockey team that won the Olympic gold medal, repor- tedly wil 1 be named coach of the New York Rangers after the National Hockey League playoffs. New York's Daily News, Times and Post all reported yesterday that it was virtually set for Brooks to succeed Craig Patrick, his Olympic assistant, as the Rangers' coach. PATRICK, WHO replaced Fred Shero as coach last Nov. 22 and now is the Rangers' general manager, said, "Herb Brooks has not signed to coach the Rangers. I'm not going to do anything, on any matters, until the playoffs end." While Patrick was directing the Rangers, Brooks, 43, was coaching a team in Davos, Switzerland. Brooks quit that job several months ago. Reportedly, latrick is to meet today with Brooks' lawyer, Art Kaminsky, and will discuss the Rangers' job. "I'm asking for some decent money and the philosophical backing to do things that people in the NHL say I can't do," the intense Brooks was quoted as saying. "I've given my cards to Art Kamin- sky and told him to run with them, and he's been talking to people but I don't know what kind of substance has tran- spired," he added. 4 4 I 4 4 Minnesota North Stars' Mike Polich sails through the air in front of the New York Islanders goal as the Islanders' Mike McEwen and goalie Billie Smith defend during early first period action in the NHL Stanley Cup finals at Nassau Coliseum in Uniondale, New York. I 4