Slava Voynov's shot missed wide left, but it came
off the end boards and Niemi was unable to cover it at the post.
Williams was free to poke away at the puck, and he whacked it past
Niemi's right leg pad and into the net as Marc-Edouard
Vlasic and Justin
Braun arrived too late. With the crowd still roaring, Williams
finished an odd-man rush and scored again at 7:08. Anze
Kopitar fed him a pass on the left side that Williams stopped and
snapped past Niemi. San Jose imploded with a pair of offensive zone
penalties 190 feet from its own net in the second period. Brent
Burns knocked down Robyn
Regehr to set up Williams' first goal, and Bracken
Kearns tripped Jake
Muzzin. At the other end, the Sharks could only nibble at Quick.
Matt Irwin
had a pair of shots that squirted wide through traffic and that was
about as close as the Sharks got. San Jose really needed captain Joe
Thornton to grab the game by his teeth but he finished with no
shots on goal. The Sharks' lack of depth ultimately was a factor.
Besides T.J. Galiardi in Game 6 and Raffi
Torres in Game 2 of the conference quarterfinals, San Jose did
not get goals from its bottom six forwards in the postseason. San
Jose scored 10 goals in the seven games. Quick and Galiardi moved
forward when they had a chat in the handshake line. Galiardi earlier
accused Quick of embellishment for contact in the crease. Quick was
actually given an unsportsmanlike penalty for embellishment in the
third period.
NHL coverage from the United Kingdom, by Hockey Nerd 'Sergei Adamov' Follow me on Facebook.com/Hockey-From-Across-the-Pond Twitter: @SergeiAdamov
Friday, 31 May 2013
Playoffs - Tue, May 28 - Results
San Jose v Los Angeles 1-2 - Game 7 - Justin
Williams resurrected his Stanley Cup Playoffs with two
second-period goals, and Jonathan
Quick turned in yet another Conn Smythe-worthy performance in a
2-1 victory against the San
Jose Sharks. The defending Stanley Cup champions advanced to the
conference finals against the Chicago Blackhawks or the Detroit Red
Wings, who play Game 7 of their series on Wednesday (8 p.m. ET,
NBCSN, CBC, RDS). A Chicago victory will send the Kings to United
Center for Games 1 and 2 on Saturday and Sunday; A Detroit win means
the Kings will host the Red Wings on Friday night. Sutter and the
Kings could afford to exhale. This marked halfway through one big
grind for L.A., which somehow advanced despite scoring 14 goals in
the seven games and 26 goals in 13 postseason games. Veteran
defenseman Matt
Greene was the first to embrace Quick at the buzzer. Down the
hall an emotional Logan
Couture expressed the disappointment of a San Jose team that had
an opportunity to eliminate their rival on L.A.'s ice for the second
time in three years, with the hockey world watching. The Kings take a
franchise-record 14-game home winning streak into the next round
thanks to their first Game 7 win since Wayne Gretzky's hat trick in
the 1993 conference finals against the Toronto Maple Leafs. Williams,
who previously owned up to his lack of production in this year's
playoffs as much as any King, came through with his first goals since
Game 4 of the first round. He rose to the moment and has five goals
in four career Game 7s, all wins. Quick continued to play the way he
did last spring. He set the tone with a glove save on Logan
Couture's backhander early in the second period and got his left
arm out while sprawled to stop Joe
Pavelski late in the third with L.A. protecting a 2-1 lead. Dan
Boyle scored for San Jose on a slap shot at 5:26 of the third
period, but Quick was perfect after that, finishing with a trio of
saves in the final 90 seconds with Sharks goaltender Antti
Niemi pulled for an extra attacker. He made 13 of his 25 saves in
the third period. Quick has a .948 save percentage in the playoffs,
even better than the .946 figure he posted in last year's postseason.
A 2-0 lead with Quick in net in Game 7? All seven games were won by
the team scoring first, and Williams opened the scoring 4:11 into the
second period during a power play on the Kings' first shot on goal in
nearly 19 minutes.
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