The Big House was a sea of blue and red. Snow fell throughout the afternoon. There were coaches in fedoras, goalies wearing retro-looking pads and toques, and kids playing shinny on a small rink that could have been mistaken for a pond. The images of the 2014 Bridgestone NHL Winter Classic on Wednesday were as intoxicating as the conditions were frigid. The temperature was 13 degrees Fahrenheit at the start of the game. The wind chill sent it below zero as the game progressed. The announced crowd of 105,491 teeth-chattering fans jammed into the 96 rows of bleacher seats at Michigan Stadium took it all in; their senses no doubt overwhelmed.
"It was a home run for hockey,"
said Detroit coach Mike Babcock.
Roughly half of the fans crossed the border into
Canada happy after the Toronto
Maple Leafs beat the Detroit
Red Wings 3-2 in a shootout to win what, at the end of the day,
was a regular-season game between Atlantic Division rivals who
entered the afternoon with 45 points each through 41 games. Tyler
Bozak scored the shootout winner with a low, stick-side shot in
the bottom half of the third round after Tomas
Tatar lost the puck while trying to stick handle through the snow
and failed to score in the first half of the round. Pavel
Datsyuk and Joffrey
Lupul traded goals in the second round after Daniel
Alfredsson and James
van Riemsdyk couldn't score in the first round.
"It's another game that we want to get
points on the board, but it's different because we're going to
remember this for the rest of our lives," Maple Leafs
defenseman Jake
Gardiner said. "People will ask, 'Did you ever play in an
outdoor game?' We can say, 'Yeah.' They'll say, 'Did you win?' We can
say, 'Yes, we won 3-2 in a shootout.' It's great to be able to say
that and just to be a part of this whole thing."
Even the Red Wings, who fell into fifth place in
the Atlantic Division, one point behind the Maple Leafs, were
praising the day and smiling after the game. Red Wings defenseman
Niklas
Kronwall said he thought the experience was better than the 2009
Winter Classic at Wrigley Field, where the Red Wings beat the Chicago
Blackhawks, 6-4. Brendan
Smith used the words "amazing," "exciting"
and "unbelievable" when describing the Winter
Classic.
"It was the best experience I probably
ever had playing hockey," said Detroit forward Justin
Abdelkader, whose fifth goal of the season tied the game at 2-2
with 5:32 left in regulation. "It was awesome. It brings you
back to your childhood days when you're out on the pond or playing in
the backyard. It was a lot of fun."
The snow and wind made the conditions difficult
for the goaltenders, but they didn't seem deterred at all. Maple
Leafs goalie Jonathan
Bernier made a NHL outdoor-game record 41 saves, including 39
through regulation, to earn first-star honors in his fourth straight
start. Bernier had never started four straight games in his career
before his current stretch. Detroit goalie Jimmy
Howard wasn't as busy, but still had to make 24 saves, 22 in
regulation.
"Definitely it was something really
special," Bernier said. "As hockey players we're
never going to forget that. Having 105,000 people screaming and
yelling for us is really amazing."
Bozak brought the Big House down with his shootout
winner. He had just watched Tatar lose the puck as he tried to make
some moves to get Bernier moving, so Bozak decided he simply just had
to go down with speed and shoot the puck.
"Tyler is a player that our coaching staff
trusts, pretty simple," Toronto coach Randy Carlyle said.
"And when coaches trust people, they put them in situations
where you believe the player will get the job done."
Bozak also got the job done early in the third
period, when he scored his fifth goal of the season to give the Maple
Leafs a 2-1 lead. He got his stick up, but just low enough to make it
legal, and deflected captain Dion
Phaneuf's shot from the left point down and past Howard. The play
was reviewed because the officials had to determine if Bozak
deflected the puck with a high stick, but the call on the ice was
confirmed. The Maple Leafs tied the game on van Riemsdyk's 15th goal
of the season with 36.5 seconds left in the second period. He batted
the puck out of the air and into the net from the right side.
"We knew going in there weren't going to
be too many pretty goals, the ice got pretty snowy pretty fast,"
Bozak said. "They did a good job keeping it clean, though.
JVR made a great play on his and I was lucky enough to get a stick on
it to keep it low enough."
The roar in Michigan Stadium was unlike anything
Alfredsson had ever heard when he scored to give the Red Wings a 1-0
lead at the 13:14 mark of the second period. He converted on a 2-on-1
with Henrik
Zetterberg against Gardiner, whose defense partner, Cody
Franson, was caught pinching in too deep in the offensive zone,
creating the odd-man rush.
"In the playoffs it's very loud and it's
intense, but you add another 85,000 people it brings another
dimension," Alfredsson said. "It was really cool and
something I'll always remember."
The Michigan faithful were heard again when
Abdelkader, one of their own, a Muskegon native and Red Wings
forward, scored to tie the game late in the third period. Abdelkader
started the play on the left-wing half-wall by moving the puck deep.
Maple Leafs defenseman Paul
Ranger got the puck, but didn't rim it hard enough around the
wall and Smith was able to beat van Riemsdyk to it on the right-wing
half-wall. Abdelkader went to the net, got inside position on Franson
and used his backhand to deflect the puck past Bernier.
"We talked about getting pucks to the net
and making simple plays because with the snow on the ice it wasn't
easy," Abdelkader said. "I knew he was going to try
to get it to the front there, so I had to get position and get my
stick on it."
But the fans in blue chanting "Go Leafs
Go" were standing at the end of a frigid, snowy,
unforgettable afternoon at the Big House. Bozak and Bernier brought
them to their feet. The Winter Classic experience sent them home with
memories that should last forever.
"It's a regular-season game, but you're
playing outside in front of 105,000 people," Phaneuf said.
"It's just an unbelievable experience as a player and one
I'll never forget, but it makes it that much more special when you
win it."
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