WESTERN SEMI-FINALS

GAME SUMMARIES
GAME 2:
#1 DALLAS STARS vs #5 ST. LOUIS BLUES
Dallas leads 2-0
Next Game: Monday May 10th, 1999 7:30pm at St. Louis
Now the Dallas Stars know what they missed by not having Joe Nieuwendyk in the playoffs last year.
Nieuwendyk's goal with 11:38 left in overtime gave the Dallas Stars a 5-4 victory over the St. Louis Blues on Saturday night and a 2-0 lead in their Western Conference semifinal series. It was his third game-winning goal in the playoffs. The teams will meet at St. Louis on Monday night in the third game of the best-of-7 series.
Nieuwendyk took a perfect pass from Sergei Zubov as both teams played a man short in a four-on-four situation and whipped a shot from just inside the right circle past the glove of goaltender Grant Fuhr. It was Nieuwendyk's second goal of the game to go along with an assist.
He suffered a damaging knee injury last year in the first period of the Stars' first playoff game and they missed his offense when Detroit knocked them out. Nieuwendyk was on the 1989 Calgary team that won the Stanley Cup.
"Zuby gave me a nice pass and I was able to take it wide which is something I like to do," Nieuwendyk said."I hit the crossbar in the third period in a similar situation. This time it went straight in."
Dallas coach Ken Hitchcock said Nieuwendyk has been the team's catalyst.
"He's making up for lost time," Hitchcock said. "He is a very focused individual. He's a very determined player right now."
Dallas struck early in the third period to tie the game at 4 when Jere Lehtinen scored on a rebound after a shot by Mike Modano to send the game into overtime.
Pavol Demitra scored his second goal of the game in the second period with just one second left on a 5-on-3 power play to give the Blues a 4-3 lead. Al MacInnis fed Demitra a perfect centering pass and Demitra found the open side of the net to beat a diving Ed Belfour.
"My goals don't matter because we lost," Demitra said. "It was a very tough game for us to lose but we have plenty of games left. It was good to finally get some goals against them, and scoring is what I have to do."
Scott Young and Pierre Turgeon got the other two goals in a productive second period for the Blues. Turgeon played although he had a sore leg after being slashed by Pat Verbeek in the first game of the series.
Nieuwendyk and Mike Keane scored for the Stars in the wild second period when both teams broke away on numerous odd-man rushes.
The Stars and Blues traded goals in the first. Jamie Langenbrunner got Dallas on top with a slap shot from the top of the circle that went between Fuhr's legs. Langenbrunner was set up on a crisp pass from Nieuwendyk.
The Blues retaliated with just 32.8 seconds left in the period when Demitra skated free and got off a 45-foot shot that got between Belfour's legs. It was the first goal that Belfour had yielded in 152 minutes and 24 seconds.
Both Verbeek of the Stars and Jamal Mayers of the Blues weren't available because of the one-game suspensions they drew for slashing incidents in Dallas' 3-0 victory on Thursday night in the first game of the series.
The game marked the return of the Stars' Derian Hatcher, who was suspended seven games for breaking the jaw of Phoenix's Jeremy Roenick on April 14.
The wild game upset Hitchcock, who likes sound positional hockey.
"I hope I never see this kind of game again," he said. "It was a tough day for goaltenders."
#2 COLORADO AVALANCHE vs #3 DETROIT RED WINGS
Detroit leads 2-0
Next Game: Tuesday May 11th, 1999 7:30pm at Detroit
On his 34th birthday, Steve Yzerman lit two candles -- at the expense of Colorado goaltender Patrick Roy. Yzerman scored two goals and Bill Ranford gained his fourth career playoff shutout as the Detroit Red Wings beat Colorado 4-0 on Sunday to take a 2-0 series lead.
Games 3 and 4 of the Western Conference semifinal are scheduled for Detroit on Tuesday and Thursday.
"I have spent better birthdays," Yzerman said teasingly, "but I won't tell you what happened. It wasn't with a bunch of sports reporters."
In a game featuring the sort of fierce hitting that has come to define this rivalry, the Red Wings stayed unbeaten in these playoffs. They registered their sixth straight playoff victory and 11th straight since last year's postseason.
Detroit, seeking a third consecutive Stanley Cup title, gave coach Scotty Bowman his 200th career playoff win -- extending his NHL record.
Bowman, who entered this year's playoffs with 194 wins, said, "I knew if we won six games this year, I'd feel very good. If not, I'd feel very bad. Somebody reminded me before the playoffs, but that's the only time I've thought about it. I worry more about the 111 losses."
Yzerman, the Red Wings' captain, scored in each of the first two periods, giving him eight goals in the playoffs to equal a career high. Nicklas Lidstrom and Wendel Clark added power-play goals in the final period.
Ranford, the 1990 NHL playoff MVP with Edmonton, started his second straight game in goal in place of the injured Chris Osgood, who is out with a sprained right knee. He had 28 saves, preserving his shutout with a diving save to rob Peter Forsberg late in the first period and with back-to-back stops on Theo Fleury and Sylvain Lefebvre in the third.
Yzerman chided the media for dismissing Ranford, a late-season acquisition from Tampa Bay.
"You've got to remember that this guy has won a couple of Cups," Yzerman said. "He is a Conn Smythe winner. Just because he hasn't been in the playoffs in a couple of years, you guys sound like you are amazed. He is a great, quality goaltender."
Ranford insisted he was "lucky. The guys played unbelievably in front of me. There were times when I didn't see the puck, and they were able to block it out for me. That first power-play goal we got in the third period took the wind out of their sails."
Roy had 33 saves.
In what could be the final hockey game at McNichols Arena -- which will be replaced by the new Pepsi Center next fall -- the Avalanche went meekly, generating few serious scoring chances and again failing to get production from their third and fourth lines.
Since scoring two goals in the first period of Game 1, the Avalanche's scoreless streak has extended to 111 minutes, 44 seconds.
Colorado had 32 minutes in penalties compared to Detroit's 16, but coach Bob Hartley said, "Undisciplined play didn't cost us the game today. The bottom line is they outplayed us. They were the better team. Today was a no-contest.
"They have lots of depth and speed, and today our execution was not there. When they took the 2-0 lead, they really closed down the neutral zone. They're playing with lots of energy. They're playing better as a team than we are right now."
Avalanche defenseman Aaron Miller offered a blunt assessment: "We are in trouble. We're not getting to the net. We got outworked and we took stupid penalties. We've got to play as a team. Twenty great players running around isn't going to win anything."
Miller suggested that his team "totally forget about it and play Game 3 like it's Game 1 and let it all hang out."
Colorado is 1-4 at home in the playoffs this season but 3-0 on the road.
"We never talked about going home up 2-0," Yzerman said. "By no means can we relax. They could get back into this one if we aren't careful. Remember, the Avalanche have a great road record, better than at home."
Yzerman, the beneficiary of crisp passing, put Detroit ahead at 6:11 of the first period. Brendan Shanahan passed from behind the goal to Sergei Fedorov in the left circle, and Fedorov fed Yzerman just right of the crease.
Yzerman scored again at 5:35 of the second period. After a faceoff in the Avalanche zone, Shanahan's pass from along the boards found Yzerman in the right circle.
In the third period, as Colorado continued to misfire on its power play, Detroit got two. With Tomas Holmstrom screening Roy, Lidstrom scored at 10:45.
Less than a minute later, Clark redirected a shot by Lidstrom at 11:23.
A power outage in Fox-TV's production truck interrupted that network's coverage of the game during the second period.
