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Ducks show off Stanley Cup in celebration

Over 15,000, including Gov. Schwarzenegger, honor new NHL champions

Anaheim Ducks Stanley Cup Victory Celebration
Jeff Gross / Getty Images
Anaheim goalie Jean-Sebastien Giguere kisses the Stanley Cup during a celebration at the Ducks' arena on Saturday night.
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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
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updated 3:08 a.m. ET June 10, 2007

ANAHEIM, Calif. - Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and more than 15,000 fans celebrated the Anaheim Ducks’ Stanley Cup title Saturday night.

Some fans who jammed the south parking lot of the Honda Center brought homemade replicas of the cup, and some bought souvenir game pucks in Stanley Cup-shaped cases.

The Ducks won the NHL title with a 6-2 victory over the Ottawa Senators on Wednesday night, ending the series in five games in front of their home fans.

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Schwarzenegger told the crowd that he had spoken with Canada’s prime minister in Ottawa after the Ducks lost Game 3 and warned him that, “We’ll be back.”

“Then, when it came to the last game, it was, ’Hasta la vista, baby!”’ Schwarzenegger said.

Ducks players arrived in a black double-decker bus, escorted by an honor guard of motorcycle police and fire engines.

The cup was flown in by helicopter to the strains of Richard Wagner’s “Flight of the Valkyries.”

Once the helicopter landed, Ducks captain Scott Niedermayer took the cup and gave it to his teammates, who passed it around as they walked to a red-carpeted stage while being showered with confetti.

“Anybody who has won individual honors would trade them for the Stanley Cup,” said defenseman Chris Pronger, who won the Hart Trophy as the NHL’s most valuable player and the Norris Trophy as its best defenseman in 2000.

Teemu Selanne received the loudest cheers. Selanne, in his second stint with the Ducks, played on his first Stanley Cup champion after 13 seasons — and, at 36, he’s not sure if he’ll play last season.

Amid chants of “One more year!” Selanne declined to state whether he would retire.

“If I were Arnold, I would say ’I’ll be back,”’ Selanne said. “I’ve always dreamed about retiring on top, but the last two years here have been the best of my life.”

© 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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