Cincinnati.Com
NKY.COM  |  ENQUIRER  |  CIN WEEKLY  |  Classifieds  |  Cars  |  Homes  |  Jobs  |  Help
Currently:
12°F
Light Snow
Weather | Traffic
The Enquirer
HOME
NEWS
ENTERTAINMENT
SPORTS
REDS
BENGALS
LOCAL GUIDE
MULTIMEDIA
ARCHIVES
SEARCH
 
 TODAY'S ENQUIRER 
 Front Page 
 Local News 
-- Sports 
 Business 
 Editorials 
 Tempo 
 Home Style 
 Travel 
 Health 
 Technology 
 Weather 
 Back Issues 
 Search 
 Subscribe 

 SPORTS 
 Bearcats 
 Bengals 
 High School 
 Reds 
 Xavier 

 VIEWPOINTS 
 Jim Borgman 
 Columnists 
 Readers' views 

 ENTERTAINMENT 
 Movies 
 Dining 
 Horoscopes 
 Lottery Results 
 Local Events 
 Video Games 

 CINCINNATI.COM 
 Giveaways 
 Maps/Directions 
 Send an E-Postcard 
 Coupons 
 Visitor's Guide 
 Web Directory 

 CLASSIFIEDS 
 Jobs 
 Cars 
 Homes 
 Obituaries 
 General 
 Place an ad 

 HELP 
 Feedback 
 Subscribe 
 Search 
 Newsroom Directory 



 
Wednesday, April 23, 2003

Flyers 6, Maple Leafs 1



By Rob Maaddi
The Associated Press

PHILADELPHIA - With their season on the line and memories of recent playoff failures on their minds, the Philadelphia Flyers came through with their most dominant performance.

Mark Recchi scored twice and Justin Williams had a goal and two assists, leading the Flyers to a series-clinching 6-1 rout of the Toronto Maple Leafs on Tuesday night.

"We needed our best game and we got it," Flyers coach Ken Hitchcock said. "I've never seen a team in such a stressful situation act so calm."

The Flyers, advancing to the second round for the first time in three years, will play Ottawa in the Eastern Conference semifinals, starting Friday night. The Senators beat the Flyers in five games in the first round last year, holding them to a record-low two goals.

The Maple Leafs had won four straight first-round series.

Simon Gagne and Keith Primeau also scored for Philadelphia, which lost in the opening round four of the last five years. It was the Flyers' first victory in a Game 7 since they beat Pittsburgh in the second round in 1989.

"There was immense pressure on our club and certain individuals," Primeau said. "I don't know if I was ever this nervous before a game."

Gary Roberts scored Toronto's only goal.

"Maybe they finally made a step that they know how to play when the pressure is on," Leafs coach Pat Quinn said of Philadelphia.

For the first time since the 1950 Stanley Cup finals, Games 6 and 7 were played on consecutive nights. The Maple Leafs beat the Flyers 2-1 in double overtime Monday night.

Weary from the grueling loss just 24 hours earlier, the Flyers got a boost from their two youngest players in uniform. Gagne, 23, and Williams, 21, scored 2:45 apart late in the first period for a 2-0 lead.

"We were tired when we got here, but when we got on the ice, we found the energy," Gagne said.

Roman Cechmanek stopped 18 shots, winning his first playoff series in three tries.

Gagne gave the Flyers a 1-0 lead on his third goal of the series with 3:37 left in the first period. Primeau set up the goal by keeping the puck in Toronto's zone and passing to Williams behind the net. Williams centered in front to Gagne, who wristed a shot past Ed Belfour into the top left corner.

Belfour, who had 72 saves in Philadelphia's 3-2 triple-overtime victory in Game 4, stopped just 30 of 36 shots.

Williams made it 2-0 with 52 seconds left in the period, redirecting a pass from Claude Lapointe over Belfour's glove for his first career playoff goal in 11 games.

The line of Gagne, Williams and Primeau finished with six points.

"We had been effective in the series, but it just wasn't indicative on the score sheet," Williams said.

Primeau, criticized for his lack of offensive production in the playoffs, made it 3-0 midway through the second period. He scored just one second after Toronto killed a power play that included a two-man advantage for 1:05.

It was Primeau's ninth goal in 104 playoff games, and his first since he scored the winner in the fifth overtime against Pittsburgh on May 4, 2000.

The Leafs cut it to 3-1 on Roberts' goal. But Recchi scored his fifth and sixth goals of the series 3:06 apart late in the middle period to give the Flyers a four-goal lead.

Recchi's second goal came during a two-man advantage. Recchi's first shot from the side of the net was blocked, but the puck went right back to him and he lifted it over Belfour.

A physical series since the start, both teams, probably tired from the back-to-back games, lacked the aggressiveness they displayed in other games. There were several mishandled pucks early, a couple players tripped over their own skates and few hard checks were thrown.

"There's no excuse," Roberts said. "Both teams were playing under the same circumstances. We just didn't get geared up to play."

Lapointe capped the scoring midway through the third period with his first playoff goal since scoring his only other two for Quebec in 1993.

Notes

The Flyers hadn't played a seventh game since losing at home to New Jersey in the 2000 conference finals after wasting a 3-1 series lead. That was Eric Lindros' last game with the Flyers. ... This was just Philadelphia's second Game 7 in 14 years. The Flyers are 6-5 in Game 7s, including 5-3 at home. ... Toronto is 11-8 in Game 7s. The Maple Leafs won two seventh games last year on the way to the conference finals. ... Alexander Mogilny had five goals in the first three games, but none since missing Game 4 with concussion symptoms.




REDS
Dodgers 2, Reds 1
Reitsma grateful for return to Reds
Roberts makes up for rare error
Reds notebook: Griffey, Larkin on the mend
Louisville 13, Indianapolis 4

MORE BASEBALL
Padres dispute Gwynn's claim of 'rampant' drug use
Rickey to play indie league ball
Man pleads innocent in cell phone-throwing incident
NL: Expos win home opener
AL: Cameron's slam rallies M's
Notes from Tuesday's games
Glanville pondering surgery

BENGALS
Lewis: Palmer talks on track
Bengals notebook: Lewis may take RB in 2nd round

MORE FOOTBALL
Draft: Scouting the offense
Draft: Scouting the defense
Penn State back ready to try his luck
Man who drafted Elway: Don't forget class of '57
Grossman just hoping to be wanted
Coaches hold Clarett from spring game
Draft day comes one year early for Buckeyes' seniors

PREP SPORTS
Prep track polls, leaders
Tuesday's results
Wednesday's games

XAVIER
For recruits, coach's future matters

BASKETBALL
Bucks fix mistakes, even Nets series
McGrady oozing confidence
Crean signs new deal to stay at Marquette
Davis surprises, then impresses Drake player
NKU's Stowers honored in Div. II

NHL PLAYOFFS
Wild 3, Avalanche 2, OT
Flyers 6, Maple Leafs 1
Canucks 4, Blues 1

IN THE TRISTATE
UK players, coaches to appear here
Schott, Fehr tapped
Kentucky tracks end early wagering cutoff

PLAN YOUR DAY
Wednesday's sports on TV, radio

 

Latest Headline News
Updated Every 30 Minutes
SPORTS NEWS

49ers Look to Relocate New Stadium

Paterno Won't Coach Penn St.-Temple Game

San Francisco 2016 Games Bid in Jeopardy

NCAA: Athletes Graduating at Higher Rate

Mauresmo Advances at WTA Championships

Randhawa Takes Lead at HSBC Champions

Bob Knight Approaches Winning Milestone

Bears-Giants a Key Game Despite Injuries

Spurrier Shadow Looms Large in Florida

A's, Cisco Reach Deal to Build Ballpark


Cincinnati.Com
Search our site by keyword:  
Search also: News | Jobs | Homes | Cars | Classifieds | Obits | Coupons | Events | Dining
Movies/DVDs | Video Games | Hotels | Golf | Visitor's Guide | Maps/Directions | Yellow Pages

  CINCINNATI.COM  |  NKY.COM  |  ENQUIRER  |  CIN WEEKLY  |  Classifieds  |  Cars  |  Homes  |  Jobs  |  Help


Search | Questions/help | News tips | Letters to the editors | Subscribe
Newspaper advertising | Web advertising | Place a classified | Circulation

Copyright 1995-2007. The Cincinnati Enquirer, a Gannett Co. Inc. newspaper.
Use of this site signifies agreement to terms of service updated 12/19/2002.