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The Official 2010-2011 NHL PLAYOFFS thread.

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Merlot

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YAAAAAAHOOOOOOOO ALL,



BOSTON BRUINS
2011
Stanley Cup Champions!

...and Sedin falls silent. The Bruins now join the Red Sox (2), Patriots (3), and Celtics (1) for championships since 2001

VANCOUVER, B.C.

The Boston Bruins had waited 39 long years for another drink from the Stanley Cup, and Tim Thomas was awfully thirsty.

When the Bruins and their brilliant goalie barged into a hostile Canadian rink surrounded by another 100,000 screaming fans outside for Game 7, they emerged with the championship they wanted.

Thomas made 37 saves in the second shutout of his landmark finals performance, Patrice Bergeron and rookie Brad Marchand scored two goals apiece, and the Bruins beat the Vancouver Canucks 4-0 Wednesday night for their first championship since 1972.

''I think I went even further than I thought,'' Thomas said. ''I never envisioned three Game 7s in one playoff series and still being able to come out on top.''

Bergeron scored the eventual game-winner in the first period and added a short-handed score in the second to keep the Cup away from the Canucks, who have never won it in nearly 41 years of existence. Star goalie Roberto Luongo again failed to match Thomas' brilliance, giving up 18 goals in the last five games of the finals.

Mark Messier and the New York Rangers won Game 7 in Vancouver's last finals appearance in 1994. This time, Thomas silenced the NHL's highest-scoring team, erased nearly four decades of Bruins playoff blunders and crushed an entire Canadian city desperate to take the Stanley Cup to Stanley Park.

Thomas limited the Canucks to eight goals in seven spectacular games in the finals, blanking Vancouver in two of the last four. Boston dropped the first two games in Vancouver but became just the third team since 1966 to overcome that deficit.

''All the physical work we'd done throughout the whole series added up,'' Thomas said. ''Being the last series, we didn't save anything, and we used that physicality again and that was the difference.''

Bergeron added a Stanley Cup ring to his gold medals from the Olympics and the world championships with his biggest game of a quiet series. He scored his first goal of the finals late in the first period on a shot Luongo saw too late, and Marchand added his 10th goal of the postseason in the second before Bergeron's short-handed goal, which inexplicably slid under Luongo.

The Bruins are the first team in NHL history to win a Game 7 three times in the same postseason, and they drew another dose of inspiration from forward Nathan Horton, whose concussion in Game 3 irrevocably changed the series' momentum.

Horton attended Game 7, and he apparently poured a bottle of Boston water onto the ice in front of the Bruins' bench 90 minutes before warmups. He joined his teammates in the raucous postgame celebration, putting on his skates and taking a celebratory turn with the Stanley Cup held high above his head.

Horton was lost for the series with a concussion on a big hit from Vancouver's Aaron Rome. The Bruins rallied for four wins in five games after Horton's injury.

During a two-week Stanley Cup finals that ranks among the NHL's weirdest in recent years, the only predictable aspect had been the home teams' dominance. Vancouver eked out three one-goal victories at home, while the Bruins won three blowouts in Boston.

The loss capped a spectacular collapse by Luongo, the enigmatic goalie who backstopped Canada to Olympic gold medals on this same ice sheet a year ago. Luongo was pulled from the Canucks' last two games in Boston after giving up 15 goals on the road, and he was fatally shaky in Game 7.

Luongo praised his own positional game earlier in the series, but he didn't recover in time to stop Marchand's second-period goal. Five minutes later, he inexplicably failed to close his legs on a slowly sliding puck on Bergeron's goal - the seventh allowed by Luongo on the last 21 shots he faced dating back to Game 4.

Luongo wasn't alone in deserving Vancouver's blame: The Sedin twins are the NHL's last two scoring champions, but they capped a disastrous finals by being on the ice for ALL of Boston's goals. Captain Henrik Sedin, last season's MVP, scored just one goal in the series, while Daniel Sedin had two goals and two assists, scoring in just two of the seven games.

Boston overcame more than the Vancouver crowd and the NHL's highest-scoring team to win this Cup. Starting in the first round, when the Bruins rallied past Montreal after losing the series' first two games at home, this team has showed a resilience and tenacity that hasn't been seen much in the self-professed Hub of Hockey in four decades.

The Bruins failed in their five previous trips to the finals since Bobby Orr led them to championships in 1970 and 1972, losing every time. Remarkable players such as Cam Neely came and went without a Cup, while Ray Bourque had to go to Colorado to get his only ring 10 years ago.

Boston declined to schedule a viewing party for the game at TD Garden, worried about logistics and crowd control. Instead, the party will rage in bars and neighborhoods - but it'll pale in comparison to the party that the Bruins ruined in Vancouver.

More than 100,000 Canucks fans packed downtown during Game 5, and even more were expected for the clincher. The picturesque city was dotted with blue jerseys from the early morning, with fans arriving by the hundreds on every train into downtown from the suburbs.

Both teams opened Game 7 at a fantastic pace, forechecking and hitting with boundless energy in both clubs' 107th game of the season.

After both teams' top lines missed decent early scoring chances, Bergeron put the Bruins ahead with a one-timer in the slot on a sharp pass from Brad Marchand, the rookie who has emerged remarkably in the finals. Luongo couldn't be blamed for his teammates' soft checking when Bergeron's shot caught the goalpost and ricocheted home.

Bergeron, who won a gold medal with Canada on this same rink last year, hadn't scored a goal in Boston's last nine playoff games, including the entire finals.

Marchand hit Luongo's crossbar early in the second period, and he scored from behind the net several minutes later with ample help from the diving Luongo, who knocked the puck into the net after getting pushed by his scrambling teammate, Daniel Sedin.

Rogers Arena deflated with that score, and the Canucks' suddenly problematic power play allowed Bergeron essentially to finish them off. He got a loose puck at his blue line and outskated two Canucks toward Luongo, and the puck skittered underneath the goalie while Bergeron went to the ice.

Thomas was unflappable in the third period, and Marchand added an empty-net goal with 2:44 to play.

NOTES: Boston's Zdeno Chara became the second European born-and-trained captain to raise the Stanley Cup, joining Detroit's Nicklas Lidstrom. ... Bruins D Dennis Seidenberg had two assists. He is the second German to earn a spot on the Stanley Cup, joining Uwe Krupp. ... The NBA finals ended before the Stanley Cup finals for the first time since 2002, when the Los Angeles Lakers beat the Detroit Red Wings to their respective titles.


God bless our team,

Merlot
 
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Jman47

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Congrats to the B's and their fans!

Now can we get on to baseball...there's another team in town that has been kicking some serious ass for over a month now...:D
 

JH Fan

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Hey Hey ! Congrats to all Bruins Fan !
Specially my buddies out there !

Was worth to pull your leg all along to see you brag about it :)
 

Robert 21

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"Well I love that dirty water
Oh, Boston, you're my home (oh, you're the Number One place)".....The Standells - Dirty Water

Let's Go B's!
Thanks for the Ride.................See You @ the Parade!
 

lgna69xxx

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Congrats to the bruins.... and i am glad for Tomas Kaberle for getting a ring, good luck with whomever you sign with this summer.

Kinda funny hearing Gary Bettman getting boo'ed out of the arena like usual..

Well, this is something i never expected to see from Vancouver fans, they are rioting outside the arena. I expected more from Canuck fans, but then again, it only takes a few bad ones to ruin it for the good ones.






Vancouver management, a note to you......... You let Brain Burke go a little to soon, as well as Dave Nonis. Had you not and let them finish the job they started, your fans would be lighting up victory cigars right now instead of lighting cars on fire. Oh well, the Leafs thank you :thumb:
 

Maddogwill

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If their riots in the city I rather not win since theres been 3 deaths in the city because of a championship. If u want fo celebrate do it nice and peacefully nothing is worth if one life is lost
 

Octavian

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Congrats to the Bruins and their fans, you guys have been waiting long enough. Very deserving cup. :thumb: :thumb:
 

Merlot

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Tragic,

World takes notice of Vancouver hockey riots


Several here were expecting rioting after the Stanley Cup Finals and they did happen; BUT they happened in Vancouver. The mood of the Canucks fans was obvious when they booed almost incessantly last night, until hometown boy Milan Lucic held up the trophy. In Boston WEEI is reporting just 6 arrests.

http://www.metronews.ca/edmonton/sports/article/891420--world-takes-notice-of-vancouver-hockey-riots

TORONTO - The grim spectacle of Vancouver coming under siege from rioters is on display around the world as the aftermath of the city's Stanley Cup loss makes major news around the world.

Media outlets like the New York Times and CNN played reports about the chaos prominently on their websites, alongside reports of the Game 7 victory by the Boston Bruins.

"Trouble in Vancouver’s Streets After Defeat" topped the lead story in the online sports section of the Times, while the CNN site gave prominent play to fiery video images from downtown.

The Washington Post headline, "Riots erupt in Vancouver after Canucks lose to Bruins," was accompanied by a photo of a fan waving a Canadian flag with a burning pickup truck in the background.

The riot was also noticed in Australia, where the front page of the sports section of the Brisbane Times website displayed photos of the riot under the headline: "Hockey fans hopping mad."

The Sydney Morning Herald also displayed riot photos and the headline: "Violence in Vancouver after Canucks lose Stanley Cup final."

The rioting story was also picked up in India on the website of the Hindustan Times.

Mainstream media outlets were, however, just part of the story.

Social media sites like Twitter and Facebook were teeming with citizen dispatches from the scene, as well as expressions of disgust from Canadians — and Canucks fans in particular.

Mayor Gregor Richardson called the rioting "despicable," while NBA star Steve Nash of Victoria, B.C., said, "Vancouver is being embarrassed."






One Vancouver fan in that city WEEI has been chatting with throughout the finals named "Har" is reporting at 6:56 this morning that rioters have burned cars, looted stores, and he can see smoke rising this morning from his side of the river.

WEEI is also reporting police fired rubber bullets into crowds, let loose riot dogs, and many other incidents with a final cost to the city that will likely exceed the 1994 riots. Question...how bad would it have been if they had won??? A worldwide black eye for Vancouver, if not Canadians and all hockey fans.

Sadly,

Merlot
 
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Techman

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Merlot said:
The mood of the Canucks fans was obvious when they booed almost incessantly last night, until hometown boy Milan Lucic held up the trophy.

If you were paying attention, the Bruins in general received a decent ovation from the crowd. Sure there were a couple of players who didn't and that was to be expected but the majority of the boos were directed at Bettman whenever the little weasel opened his mouth, not the Bruins. Congrats to the Bruins for winning their first cup in 39 years. They owe a big thank you to the Leafs. :nod:

I'm not a fan of either team so I don't care who won, but overall this year's playoffs had some of the worst officiating I ever saw. The league really has a lot of work to do in that area and I hope they take a long hard look at things before next season starts.
 
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Merlot

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If you were paying attention, the Bruins in general received a decent ovation from the crowd. Sure there were a couple of players who didn't and that was to be expected but the majority of the boos were directed at Bettman whenever the little weasel opened his mouth, not the Bruins. Congrats to the Bruins for winning their first cup in 49 years. They owe a big thank you to the Leafs.

I'm not a fan of either team so I don't care who won, but overall this year's playoffs had some of the worst officiating I ever saw. The league really has a lot of work to do in that area and I hope they take a long hard look at things before next season starts.

"Worst officiating I ever saw"...for every team, IF you are implying it favored the Bruins.

I saw the whole thing Techman. The boos for Bettman were expected for various reasons win or lose, but I saw Bruin after Bruin lift the trophy during significant booing, including when Tim Thomas received the Conn Smythe Trophy, with some cheers barely breaking through, obviously NOT from Canucks fans. Canucks fans and players were crushed by this loss. The booing was loud as the Cup passed between most Bruins.

Not that it matters much now, but it's been 39 years, and according to Iggy the Leafs totally snookered the Bruins...that must be why the Bruins are the hockey champions of the world and the Leafs are all home still hoping.

IN THE MEANTIME:







Was it in the stars? Last night was the first full solar eclipse since October 27, 2004, the night the Red Sox won their first World Series in 86 years.
Tim Thomas: A TRULY EPIC PERFORMANCE.

Tim Thomas, was not certain to be Bostons number 1 goalie at the start of the season. He faced a challenge from Tuukka Rask and had hip surgery prior to the season, yet at the age of 37 Thomas had one of the most dominating and heroic seasons in all of NHL history, leading the team to 3 7-game series victories against the Montreal Canadiens, Tampa Bay Lightning, the Vancouver Canucks (twice coming back from 0-2 game deficits), and a 4-game revenge sweep of the Philadelphia Flyers...and still shutout the Canucks in Vancouver in game 7 to win it all. :peace:

In the 2010–2011 season, Tim Thomas broke the NHL record for save percentage, beating Dominik Hasek's record of .937, with a .938 percentage. On Friday, April 22, 2011, Thomas was named a finalist for the 2010–2011 Vezina Trophy. On Friday, May 27, 2011, Thomas posted a shutout victory over the Tampa Bay Lightning in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference Finals, sending the Boston Bruins to their first Stanley Cup appearance since 1990. In the Finals, Thomas again posted a shutout victory in Game 7 against the Vancouver Canucks. He was selected as the Conn Smythe Trophy winner, being only the second American-born NHL player to ever win the award, and the first in 17 years. During the Bruin's playoff run, at 37 years, 62 days, he set the record for most saves in a single Post Season with 798, faced the most shots 849, and the most saves in a Stanley Cup series with 238; while posting a 1.15 GAA, and .967 SV% in the finals.

Il a été tout simplement MAGNIFIQUE!!! :amen: :nod: :thumb: :cool: :wave:

Merlot

BTW...for those who used that..."bring the Cup back to Canada" line, there are 20 Canadian-born players on the STANLEY CUP CHAMPION BOSTON BRUINS...and we love them all. Long live Canada..
 
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JLB

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I didn't watch any of the finals but I do follow with interest. it seems bizarre looking back over the entire year of hockey to say the Boston Bruins are the best team in the league this year. They obviously earned it in the playoffs but I would have picked many other teams over Boston to emerge as the winner - Philly, Washington, Pittsburgh, San Jose, Vancouver, Detroit, Chicago again.

But the Boston Bruins are the best team in the NHL in 2010-2011
 

G1GBallday

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I just saw this as Merlot posted. Can anyone tell me whether the guy in the foreground of this photo is wearing a Canucks jersey? I cannot make it out:

http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/gallery/enlargePhoto?id=6667088&story=6666608
http://sports.espn.go.com/nhl/playoffs/2011/news/story?id=6666608

He's wearing the white version of the flying skate which was their home sweater between 1989-97.

As far as the winner goes I'm happy for Mark Recchi who can go out on top and especially Tim Thomas who travelled a long hard road to the NHL.

BTW who was the idiot that gave Luongo that 6.75 million a year contract? :lol:
 

Techman

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Yes, Merlot...I meant worst officiating for every team and every game. I guess that's why I used the word "overall" in my post. If the NHL wants to be taken seriously, they can't change the way the rules are enforced depending on the importance of the game or whether it's the regular season or the playoffs. Sorry about adding 10 extra years. I must've had the Leafs in mind and when thinnking about the Leafs inability to win the cup, what's an extra decade or so? ;)
 

JH Fan

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Here's my recap :

1-Canucks best team of the regular season... as I said many times... doesn't count when comes the playoffs.

2-Boston best team of the playoffs... they won the cup.

3-Unlike some uneducated hockey fan who said the Habs were gutless, they're the ones who really came closer to win against the best team of the playoffs.

4-Many of you still living in wonderland... woke up to a riot in Vancouver which was bound to happen.

5-Congrats to all Bostonians and for those who think this would not happen in Boston and always have good excuses when stupid rioting happens everywhere else than Boston... there's one I kept just for you :

Celtic 2008
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YEqwt81wiN4
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mwrt5q815FE&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MMHyq79itj0&NR=1

Oh ! I forgot !

Cheers :D
 
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EagerBeaver

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He's wearing the white version of the flying skate which was their home sweater between 1989-97.

GIG,

Thanks for the clarification on this photo:

http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/gallery/enlargePhoto?id=6667088&story=6666608

It appears to me that this heavily inebriated Canucks fan is flashing a victory signal with his right hand and he apparently did not get the memo that the Bruins won the series.

If you ask me Luongo and the Sedins were beyond awful in this series. Their reputations as winning players have taken a major hit. On the other hand I feel as though Tim Thomas, Brad Marchand and to some extent Zdeno Chara distinguished themselves in this series. Chara moreso with his presence than his production. I think Vancouver became too preoccupied with him. Sometimes it's best to let star players prove they are star players in pressure packed games on the big stage, rather than treat them like star players.
 

Merlot

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Hmmm,

"Sometimes it's best to let star players prove they are star players in pressure packed games on the big stage, rather than treat them like star players."

According to WEEI, in a game where it was all or nothing and some Bruins players like Marchand seemed to have nearly total freedom of movement, Dan Sedin never put a hit on anyone...THAT'S NO HITS AT ALL. The Sedin brothers played up to about 20% of their reputation as "stars", being extremely indecisive factors at best.

As for Luongo, who has 11 years left on a 12-year $64 million contract he flopped in crunch time, and is already being nicknamed "LaBrongo" as another overrated star who couldn't cut it with everything on the line. "Less than 20 minutes after the worst loss of his career, a 4-0 blanking in Game 7 of the Stanley Cup finals, Vancouver's $10-million goalie pledged he and his team would bounce back and return to compete for the Cup again." Don't count on it. A couple of changes here or there and your team changes, but overall you never know if you ever get another chance if you fail to seize the opportunity at hand. I remember very well John Hannah of the Patriots saying the same thing after Super Bowl XXII versus the Bears. How many other have said exactly this a never got another chance.

And how about Marchand! I can't imagine how any "genius" let him get away. :eyebrows:

Well, I've got Championship memorabilia to buy, a parade (in Boston Canucks fans) to go to, and when I get back to Montreal some lucky lady will share some champagne for this day. :cool:

Cheers,

Merlot
 
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Special K

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Congrats to the Bruins and their fans, you guys have been waiting long enough. Very deserving cup. :thumb: :thumb:

You had it 4-1 and almost called it right on Octavian! Much appreciated. :)
 

lgna69xxx

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Actually merlot, there is no need to thank the Leafs, Kaberle was not a difference maker for the bruins since he got there and actually made their powerplay worse. Most nights he was the #6 dman and have many people wondering if the bruins will even re sign him. The bruins already had a great team before Kabby, and long term, the picks and player the Leafs got for him should pan out to be much better assets, especially for a young team that is so close. As far as Kessel and Seguin, well, Seguin was also NOT a difference maker this season, and had you still had Kessel last season, you probably would of been celebrating 2 cups in a row last night. Seguin could be a good player, time will tell, Kessel already is. Congrats to the bruins again, now onto the NHL awards show in Las Vegas, and then the draft in Minnesota next fri/sat.... July 1st, (the beginning of free agency) the following week.

Again, Congrats to the Bruins, last year Chicago, now Boston, Yup, time for original 6's that havnt won in years, shhhhhhhhhh Leafs are next? :thumb: Hey ya never know.... (not next season but i could see a cup run 2-3 years from now) we sure know it wont be detroit (old and time to rebuild somewhat) or Montreal (to small and getting older) Questions, will become answers. This thread has run it's course, Ciao :wave:
 
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joelcairo

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People thanking Brian Burke: Kaberle, Seguin, all other Boston players, Boston ownership, Boston management, Boston fans.

People cursing Brian Burke: intelligent Leaf fans (if any exist?), intelligent Vancouver fans.

And perhaps the most striking thing about the Boston victory is that they made it all the way to the top just one year after pulling the biggest fade in the history of professional sports when they collapsed against the Flyers. Nice comeback by the B's and very satisfying to see the classy Mark Recchi go out on top!
 
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