Mogilny owns another Game 7 as Maple Leafs oust Senators
TORONTO -- The resilient Toronto Maple Leafs keep advancing in the
playoffs because Alexander Mogilny continues to score big goals in Game
7s.
Mogilny was at it again Tuesday night, scoring twice in a 3-0 victory
over Ottawa that advanced the Maple Leafs to the Eastern Conference
finals.
Curtis Joseph stopped 19 shots and Bryan McCabe also scored for the
Leafs, who will face the Hurricanes in a best-of-seven series that
opens at Carolina on Thursday.
It was the second straight seven-game series victory for Toronto, which
eliminated the New York Islanders with a 4-2 Game 7 win in the opening
round. And it's the second straight Game 7 in which Mogilny has scored
twice.
While the Air Canada Centre was still buzzing with "Go Leafs Go"
chants, Mogilny almost sounded subdued.
"I don't understand what the fuss is all about," Mogilny said. "There's
a bigger hurdle coming up. I don't know why everybody's so excited. The
last time I checked you have to win four series."
Perhaps, the excitement comes because almost everyone counted out the
banged-up and weary Maple Leafs, who were missing six regulars,
including captain Mats Sundin (broken wrist), and were playing their
12th game in 22 days.
"Whenever we face adversity, we don't pack it in at all," center Alyn
McCauley said. "It seems the longer the series goes on, the longer the
game goes on, the stronger we get. I don't know if that's the team
character or conditioning, but it seems that way.
"Maybe we're just the marathon runners and not the sprint runners."
The same cannot be said about the Senators, who continued to live down
to their reputation of folding under playoff pressure, blowing a 3-2
series advantage, and squandering leads in its three previous games --
including a 2-0 lead in an eventual 4-3 loss in Game 6 on Sunday.
This is also a Senators franchise that has never advanced past the
second round, dropped to 0-2 in Game 7s, and has now been eliminated in
three straight playoffs by Toronto.
"Failure to get it done. We had them on the ropes a few times," Ottawa
defenseman Wade Redden said. "You can look back at a number of things
throughout the series. We had them 2-1 at home, and Game 6 at home, and
we couldn't. . . ."
Redden's voice then trailed off.
"When we've got them by the throat, we've got to make sure we get them
down," he said.
Mogilny opened the scoring with a power-play goal 11:49 into the second
period.
Waiting with the puck in the right corner, Mogilny attempted to thread
a pass through the middle to McCabe, who was sneaking in from the
point. Instead, Mogilny's pass hit the side of Ottawa defender Sami
Salo's skate, and bounced in.
Mogilny made it 2-0, scoring on a delayed penalty 5:14 into the third
period. After Ottawa's Todd White bowled over Joseph, Tomas Kaberle led
a rush up the right side.
Kaberle's cross-ice pass found Mogilny, who lifted a shot over diving
Ottawa goalie Patrick Lalime.
McCabe finished the scoring win with 5:56 left.
The Senators displayed little of the poise and jump they had in the
previous six games. Ottawa came out tentatively, and proved even
flatter in the second period when the team set a franchise playoff low
in being limited to one shot on goal.
And that wasn't much of a shot when Salo's wrister from the right
boards was easily stopped by Joseph with 1:02 left in the period.
The one shot allowed matched a Maple Leafs playoff record set against
Los Angeles on May 17, 1993.
Ottawa finally started to press early in the third period, but were
then foiled by Joseph, who recorded his second shutout of the
postseason and 14th of his career, tying Jacques Plante for third on
the all-time list.
Joseph's best stops came 90 seconds into the third period, when he got
his right pad on Salo's shot from the point that was deflected in
front. Seconds later, Joseph stopped another shot by Salo, and covered
up the puck before Shawn McEachern could jam in the rebound.
Mogilny, who also scored the game-winner in Game 6, now has five goals
in games when Toronto faces elimination this postseason.
And yet he still refused to be referred to as a clutch performer.
"I never was," Mogilny said, when asked if he considered himself a
clutch player. "I'm just a hockey player. I'm not Steve Yzerman or
Mario Lemieux. I'm Alex Mogilny. . . . I accept who I am and I'm just
trying to be part of the group."
Notes: The Maple Leafs were playing their 106th playoff game since
1993, fourth among NHL teams. Colorado leads all teams over that span,
with 130 games. . . . Toronto advanced to the conference final for only
the fourth time since 1968 and first since 1999. . . . Led by Jyrki
Lumme, with six, the Leafs had 15 players that have played in a Game 7.
The Senators, in comparison, had only seven players -- led by
McEachern's four -- with Game 7 experience.