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Ducks deliver Cup to California for first time

Anaheim routs Ottawa in Game 5; Selanne, Pronger finally sip from Stanley

Image: Niedermayer
Shaun Best / Reuters
Anaheim captain Scott Niedermayer raises the Stanley Cup after his team's 6-2 Game 5 win over Ottawa on Wednesday. Niedermayer also was named the Conn Smythe Trophy winner as most valuable player of the playoffs.
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Brotherly love
June 6: Ducks captain Scott Niedermayer says handing the Stanley Cup to his brother Rob the highlight of his career.

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'Dream come true'
June 6: Likely Hall of Famer Teemu Selanne on why winning his first Stanley Cup is special.

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updated 5:54 a.m. ET June 7, 2007

ANAHEIM, Calif. - The Anaheim Ducks were born on the silver screen and came of age by capturing the shiniest of silver cups.

They dropped the mighty from their name, but not their game and skated off with the first Stanley Cup championship in California history.

The 14-year-old Ducks captured the NHL title with a 6-2 victory over the Ottawa Senators on Wednesday night, ending the series in five games in front of the home folks again.

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For the first time, the Stanley Cup can enjoy an NHL western home, and the Ducks’ victory came at the expense of Canada. The cherished trophy was born in Ottawa, but no team north of the border has won it since Montreal in 1993.

“Canada loves their hockey, and from what I heard out there, we have quite a few fans who love their hockey out here, too,” said captain Scott Niedermayer, a four-time champion from British Columbia and this year’s Conn Smythe Trophy winner.

Calgary, Edmonton and now Ottawa — in its first trip since the Senators were reborn in 1992 — had three straight chances only to be done in by U.S. clubs from the sun belt. Tampa Bay, Carolina and Anaheim aren’t traditional hockey hotbeds but they have been the Cup’s warm weather homes since 2004.

Wayne Gretzky made the game a happening in Southern California when he came to Los Angeles in 1988, the Ducks made it legit two decades later. No longer Disney’s darlings, the Mighty Ducks’ movie days are gone. A victory rally awaits the new Ducks on Saturday.

Niedermayer brought his brother Rob and teammates Teemu Selanne and Chris Pronger along for the ride for their first Stanley Cup. Rob Niedermayer is one of three Ducks left from the losing side in 2003 when Scott and the New Jersey Devils captured their third title in Game 7.

Only goalie Jean-Sebastien Giguere had something to smile about then when he was given the Conn Smythe. This was so much sweeter as he stopped 11 shots in the clincher. The biggest roar for him came when Antoine Vermette had the puck slide wide of the post during a third-period penalty shot, the 10th in finals history.

Scott Niedermayer finally earned the MVP award many thought he deserved four years ago. His biggest thrill came when he handed the Cup off to Rob, a big reason he came to Anaheim before last season.

“I don’t think I’ll ever have a better feeling than that in my career,” Rob said. “When he came here, I know he turned down a lot from New Jersey and he had a lot of fond memories there.

“I never touched it when he won. He’s won so much, but he’s never been a guy whose ever rubbed it in a guy’s face. He’s been rooting for me my whole career, and I’m just lucky to have him as a brother.”

The 36-year-old Selanne, the Ducks’ leading scorer this season, waited 14 seasons to become a champion. Pronger was on Edmonton last season when the Oilers lost in seven games to Carolina. He returned to the lineup for the clincher after serving a one-game suspension.

A perfect finish after demanding a trade from Edmonton last summer.

“This is a special moment,” he said. “It’s always worth it when you win it.”

Pronger became a target because of his Game 3 hit on Dean McAmmond that knocked the Ottawa forward out of the series with a concussion and drew the one-game suspension. Pronger absorbed a hard shot behind the Anaheim net from Antoine Vermette in the first period, leaving him with a separated shoulder.

“I just kind of got hit awkwardly there and went into the boards funny and separated it,” Pronger told TSN of Canada.

He played the rest of the game, following a brief absence, before returning.

“I was going to be on the ice, no question,” he said.

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Ducks' Niedermayer raises the Stanley Cup after his team's win against the Senators during Game 5 of the 2007 NHL Stanley Cup Finals hockey series in Anaheim
California Cup
A visual tour of the Ducks’ series victory over the Senators

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Sticks and gloves flew in front of Giguere when it ended. Fireworks went off and streamers fell as the Ducks rushed off the bench to celebrate.

Selanne bounced on his skates and shook the Cup after Pronger handed it to him on the opposite side of the ice from where a banner dropped signifying the Ducks’ championship. Heavy showers of confetti fell to the ice.

“I was just like, ’I couldn’t believe it, it’s going to happen,”’ Selanne said. “So much hard work, so many years to dream about that moment.

“There has been times I didn’t know if it was ever going to happen.”

Senators forward Daniel Alfredsson, the first European captain in finals history, came up short of his first championship in 11 seasons. He supplied all the Ottawa offense despite feeling the wrath of fans, who booed him all night in response to his shooting the puck at Scott Niedermayer in Game 4.

Andy McDonald started the scoring 3:41 into the first period with a power-play goal, his third tally in two games, and Rob Niedermayer made it 2-0 with 2:19 left. Travis Moen had two goals, one that never touched his stick and another in conventional fashion.

Alfredsson scored twice in the second period, including a short-handed goal that cut Anaheim’s lead to one for a second time, but the Senators couldn’t shake off a fluke goal that defenseman Chris Phillips put into his own net with a pass off the skates of goalie Ray Emery.

That one was credited to Moen.

  Mark Spector on the NHL

'Second-place' Selanne finally sips from Cup, likely to retire on top

When Francois Beauchemin scored a power-play goal with 1:32 left in the second, the Ducks’ two-goal lead was back and the excited crowd anticipated an appearance by the Stanley Cup.

By then it was just a matter of time for the Ducks, 8-0 at home in series-clinching games — including 4-0 this year. Anaheim is 6-0 at home during the finals.

“They had more depth than us in this series,” Alfredsson said. “We didn’t play our best. We tried to come back in the second period, but that didn’t last. It seemed like they were better than us.”

In the middle of the third, the buzzing and quacking crowd serenaded Emery, called for the now-polished Cup, and bellowed with delight after each whistle.

The Ducks played five games above the minimum in the postseason and went past five games only in the Western Conference finals when they won three straight to wipe out Detroit in six.

Ottawa also had a quick run to the finals, needing only five games in each previous series. But the Ducks proved too tough with their hard-hitters and tight checkers shutting down the Senators’ top forward line that was broken up after holding the top three spots in NHL playoff scoring.

“We had some guys that didn’t play to what they were playing,” said Senators coach Bryan Murray, a former coach and GM of the Ducks. “I think that’s most disappointing and what we and they have to live with through the summer.”


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