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    Ducks win in overtime

    STANLEY CUP FINALS: Anaheim stunned New Jersey by overcoming the Devils after Ruslan Salei scored his second goal of the playoffs and the biggest of his career

    AP , ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA
    Monday, Jun 02, 2003, Page 20

    Ruslan Salei scored off Adam Oates' faceoff win at 6:59 into overtime and the Anaheim Mighty Ducks, taking advantage of one of the biggest misplays of Martin Brodeur's career, beat the New Jersey Devils 3-2 in Game 3 of the Stanley Cup finals Saturday night.

    Oates the puck off the faceoff to Salei at the top of the slot, and Brodeur barely reacted to his one-timer as the Mighty Ducks improved to 6-0 in playoff overtimes. The Devils are 2-2.

    It was essentially a must-win game for the Ducks, who played with the desperation expected of a team that trailed 2-0 in the series and almost certainly would have had no chance to raise the cup had it lost.

    Salei's was his second of the playoffs and, no doubt, the biggest of his career.

    Game will be Monday night, when the Devils can either take a commanding 3-1 lead or the Mighty Ducks will tie a series they seemed out of following two dominating Devils wins in New Jersey.

    Overtime wins have largely been responsible for Anaheim's remarkable playoff run, which began with three consecutive series-opening overtime victories.

    Goalie Jean-Sebastien Giguere has been unbeatable in overtime, with an NHL-record overtime scoreless streak of 166 minutes, 4 seconds. He broke Patrick Roy's record of 162:56 early in the overtime. Giguere turned aside 29 of 31 shots in by far his best game of the finals.

    The Devils trailed 2-1 in the second after Brodeur lost his stick and couldn't defend Sandis Ozolinsh's seemingly harmless shot as it trickled in from the blue line.

    But the Devils tied it at 2 when Scott Gomez deflected Grant Marshall's wrister from above the right circle past Giguere at 9:11 of the third. Gomez has two goals in the finals after scoring only once in 16 games.

    That might have won it had Brodeur not made a grievous mistake on a play that couldn't have been more routine.

    Only seconds after the Devils' Patrik Elias tied it at 1, Giguere fed the puck up ice to Ozolinsh who, draped by two Devils, pushed it toward the net.

    Brodeur, positioned at the left of the crease, began to scramble over to play the puck, only to drop his stick. With Brodeur unable to defend, the puck trickled into the side of the net as the goalie dropped to his knees, raising his hand to his head in disbelief.

    It was a perfectly awful play by the goalie who was near perfect for the first seven periods of the series.

    The maddening misplay at 14:47 of the second came slightly more than 11 minutes after Ozolinsh set up Anaheim's first goal of the series, by the infrequently used Marc Chouinard. That goal at 3:39 of the second ended Brodeur's scoreless streak of 143 minutes, 39 seconds, the second-longest to start the finals.

    Ozolinsh the puck toward the net from along the boards, and it deflected off Chouinard's stick and past Brodeur to the glove side. The Devils scored the first goal in each of the first two games on their home ice, and the Ducks never challenged after that in either game.

    Chouinard scratched for the Ducks' last five games before the finals and had only three goals all season.

    The first period was scoreless for the third straight game, but the tempo was much different from the first two games. The Mighty Ducks, challenged Friday by Giguere to be more emotional and physical, were both -- sometimes to their disadvantage.

    Steve Thomas, playing in his first finals at age 39, tried to set the tone from the start, only to draw a cross-checking penalty 15 seconds in. Mike Leclerc drew another for slashing about 3 1/2 minutes later.

    However, New Jersey's power play, the second-worst in the league during the regular season, didn't convert either time. The Devils' power play is only 11-of-72 in the playoffs.

    Anaheim Paul Kariya, held without a shot in Game 3 for the first time in 30 playoff games, had his best scoring chance of the series with about four minutes left in the first period, but Brodeur stopped his rebound attempt from along the goal line.

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