SAN JOSE - Joe Pavelski scored 2:44 p.m. into overtime to give San Jose a 3-2 win against the Los Angeles Kings in Game 1 of their all-California opening round playoff series Thursday night.
Pavelski took a pass from Kyle Wellwood as the trailer on an advantage of three against two and fired a forehand past Jonathan Quick goal of his career double overtime in the playoffs.
Dany Heatley and Logan Couture also scored for the Sharks, who lost five of their last six series opens. Antti Niemi made 33 saves.
Dustin Brown and Justin Williams scored for the Kings, who have won a playoff series since going to the Stanley Cup finals with Wayne Gretzky in 1993. Quick made 42 saves.
Remember when Dallas won a playoff a couple of elusive star of sharks? Of course you do.
We're talking about Darryl Sutter years when the Sharks had a wish for long, but a bit 'raw materials. Sutter stars also cited as an example of how to build a contender.
"Look at Dallas," said a couple of months after the Stars had run in his first Sharks team to the playoffs 13 years ago. "They (stuffing) hunted for years They keep their children ... - (Mike) Modano, (Derian) Hatcher (Jamie) Langenbrunner And they were right for them is the biggest battle we are fighting there, and Jeff Friesen (sharks) have not had a project that developed the first minister of the player. "
Not to make you feel old or anything, but Modano, 40, and a skating season with Detroit last hooray, announced his retirement at the end of the last game of the Red Wings. Hatcher has been out of the league for three seasons. Langenbrunner joined Dallas in February, after a night of nine years in New Jersey. Scored nine goals this season, his lowest total since he was 20 - The return of Bill Clinton's first term.
Although Friesen are long gone. Sharks invited him to training camp two seasons ago but it does not stick - the team had too many players who were better house. Now the Sharks are the second seed in the West, and the stars are at home after losing a win and get in-game the last day of the regular season. They just fired
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Coach Marc Crawford and find a way to avoid the (stuffing) kicked out of them next season. You could do worse than quote the sharks as a model of how to build a competitor.
The point here? Things are changing faster than you think. So what we propose is a moment of reflection before the playoffs is too melodramatic. And we recognize, however ephemeral, that it is the good old days in San Jose. Yes, we understand concern right now scratch that itch for the Stanley Cup, the score down Joe Thornton, death penalty and bla bla bla, huh? We also understand that 26 other teams would have skated on the ice Thursday night as No. 2 seed in the conference.
Or if you had forgotten that Colorado was once also a series destined to fail for the Sharks? Avalanche was a ridiculous amount of talent, enough to win two Stanley Cups in six years. Remember people like Patrick Roy, Joe Sakic, Milan Hejduk, Peter Forsberg and Adam Foote? Of course you do.
We recall the greeting box print colleagues before Game 1 of the second round series between the Sharks and the Avalanche in 1999. She seemed unusually restrained.
"I just cross the local hall of Colorado," he said. "They even scare me."
Now, to scare anyone. The Sharks swept the first round last spring. Two months ago ACP traded goaltender Craig Anderson, their best player this time last year in Ottawa. They lost 30 of their last 36 games. Roy, who recorded his 100 series victory in this game a long time, was in the Hall of Fame in five years.
Sharks? They pulled off the goalkeeper, who won the Stanley Cup against Los Angeles in Game 1 on Thursday. They claimed to be a 30 goal rookie Logan Couture last year's MLS Golden Joe Pavelski, Douglas Murray defender, who has hit so hard he called the crankshaft, and the second defender Dan Boyle, who is a smooth skater, the call "... Well, let's just say that she deserves better than water cylinder.
Sure. None of the above guarantees of future performance, but we have this habit of looking at the number of hours and forget to enjoy life. Remember, we're not mocking anyone painted their faces black and teal to hide what they thought of the anxiety game Thursday.
But imagine how they feel in St. Louis, where the Blues have not won a playoff game since the sharks who bounced from the tournament in 2004. Or where the Edmonton Oilers have not been used since the number of sharks as a springboard for the finals of the Stanley Cup in 2006. Not even the Red Wings are as scary as they used to be.
It turns out that times are good for hockey in the Bay Area. Consider for a moment. Now you can come back to bite the nails of the stumps.
Pavelski took a pass from Kyle Wellwood as the trailer on an advantage of three against two and fired a forehand past Jonathan Quick goal of his career double overtime in the playoffs.
Dany Heatley and Logan Couture also scored for the Sharks, who lost five of their last six series opens. Antti Niemi made 33 saves.
Dustin Brown and Justin Williams scored for the Kings, who have won a playoff series since going to the Stanley Cup finals with Wayne Gretzky in 1993. Quick made 42 saves.
Remember when Dallas won a playoff a couple of elusive star of sharks? Of course you do.
We're talking about Darryl Sutter years when the Sharks had a wish for long, but a bit 'raw materials. Sutter stars also cited as an example of how to build a contender.
"Look at Dallas," said a couple of months after the Stars had run in his first Sharks team to the playoffs 13 years ago. "They (stuffing) hunted for years They keep their children ... - (Mike) Modano, (Derian) Hatcher (Jamie) Langenbrunner And they were right for them is the biggest battle we are fighting there, and Jeff Friesen (sharks) have not had a project that developed the first minister of the player. "
Not to make you feel old or anything, but Modano, 40, and a skating season with Detroit last hooray, announced his retirement at the end of the last game of the Red Wings. Hatcher has been out of the league for three seasons. Langenbrunner joined Dallas in February, after a night of nine years in New Jersey. Scored nine goals this season, his lowest total since he was 20 - The return of Bill Clinton's first term.
Although Friesen are long gone. Sharks invited him to training camp two seasons ago but it does not stick - the team had too many players who were better house. Now the Sharks are the second seed in the West, and the stars are at home after losing a win and get in-game the last day of the regular season. They just fired
Advertisement
Coach Marc Crawford and find a way to avoid the (stuffing) kicked out of them next season. You could do worse than quote the sharks as a model of how to build a competitor.
The point here? Things are changing faster than you think. So what we propose is a moment of reflection before the playoffs is too melodramatic. And we recognize, however ephemeral, that it is the good old days in San Jose. Yes, we understand concern right now scratch that itch for the Stanley Cup, the score down Joe Thornton, death penalty and bla bla bla, huh? We also understand that 26 other teams would have skated on the ice Thursday night as No. 2 seed in the conference.
Or if you had forgotten that Colorado was once also a series destined to fail for the Sharks? Avalanche was a ridiculous amount of talent, enough to win two Stanley Cups in six years. Remember people like Patrick Roy, Joe Sakic, Milan Hejduk, Peter Forsberg and Adam Foote? Of course you do.
We recall the greeting box print colleagues before Game 1 of the second round series between the Sharks and the Avalanche in 1999. She seemed unusually restrained.
"I just cross the local hall of Colorado," he said. "They even scare me."
Now, to scare anyone. The Sharks swept the first round last spring. Two months ago ACP traded goaltender Craig Anderson, their best player this time last year in Ottawa. They lost 30 of their last 36 games. Roy, who recorded his 100 series victory in this game a long time, was in the Hall of Fame in five years.
Sharks? They pulled off the goalkeeper, who won the Stanley Cup against Los Angeles in Game 1 on Thursday. They claimed to be a 30 goal rookie Logan Couture last year's MLS Golden Joe Pavelski, Douglas Murray defender, who has hit so hard he called the crankshaft, and the second defender Dan Boyle, who is a smooth skater, the call "... Well, let's just say that she deserves better than water cylinder.
Sure. None of the above guarantees of future performance, but we have this habit of looking at the number of hours and forget to enjoy life. Remember, we're not mocking anyone painted their faces black and teal to hide what they thought of the anxiety game Thursday.
But imagine how they feel in St. Louis, where the Blues have not won a playoff game since the sharks who bounced from the tournament in 2004. Or where the Edmonton Oilers have not been used since the number of sharks as a springboard for the finals of the Stanley Cup in 2006. Not even the Red Wings are as scary as they used to be.
It turns out that times are good for hockey in the Bay Area. Consider for a moment. Now you can come back to bite the nails of the stumps.