Los Angeles Kings clash against Phoenix Coyotes in the Eastern Conference Finals – Game 2 (9:00 PM ET, May 17, 2012) at Staples Center, Los Angeles, CA. Los Angeles leads best-of-seven series by 2-0. The Kings return home after dominating Games 1 and 2 in Glendale, Ariz. The best betting odds from various sportsbook have Coyotes (7/4), while Kings (1/2).
Since Wayne Gretzky did it against Toronto in 1993, they won 4-2 in Game 1 and 4-0 in Game 2 with Jeff Carter recording the club’s first playoff hat trick. In the conference quarterfinals, they are 10-1 in the playoffs and they have won seven games dating back to Game 5 against Vancouver. In Game 2, the Coyotes committed 13 penalties totaling 56 minutes. They have been outshot 98-51 through two games.
Carter scored a pair of 5-on-3 goals to take complete control in the series, therefore Coyotes lost their cool in Game 2 and it cost them. Now Phoenix might have to play without 6-foot-6 center Martin Hanzal and the Kings have already exerted their size to make the Coyotes look small in the series. With the NHL’s Department of Player Safety on Wednesday for his boarding major on Dustin Brown in the third period of Game 2, he will have a disciplinary hearing.
Determined to complete the trifecta of eliminating the top three seeds in the Western Conference in just 13 games, the Kings are looking like a team on a mission. The Kings have an opportunity on their home ice to sweep the Coyotes as well after beating the Canucks in five and the Blues in four. In Game 1, it was the line of Anze Kopitar, Dustin Brown and Justin Williams that dominated. It was the trio of Mike Richards, Carter and Dustin Penner that dominated the Game 2. Penner and Richards each had an assist, while Carter had a hat-trick. They also combined for 12 shots on goal.
Coyotes’ defenseman Adrian Aucoin has a lower-body injury and he has missed the last two games. The Kings’ does not think forward Simon Gagne (concussion) will be available until next season, although he was cleared for contact. Against Vancouver, the Kings’ shorthanded units have killed off 28 straight power plays dating back to Game 5. The Coyotes, in 11 of their 13 playoff games have been outshot. Phoenix is 4-1 on the road this postseason.







Vancouver Canucks soon to hoist the Stanley Cup – 2011 edition
Image via Wikipedia
The Vancouver Canucks are now sitting back, chilling and enjoying the view as they wait for the Stanley Cup Finals to begin June 1st, in Vancouver, BC, Canada. And while they wait, they get some of their banged up bodies time to heal, players such as Ryan Kesler, Aaron Rome, Christian Erhoff and Manny Malhotra.
Manny Maholtra? Yes, Malhotra! Having had his eye almost sucked out of the socket, talk was that he may never return to play professional hockey again. Now it’s looking that he’ll likely come back to play sometime during the Cup Finals. What an added dimension he will give an already deep Canuck team that led the league in: goals for, goals against, power play and faceoff percentage. So now with Henrik Sedin, Kesler, Max Lapierre and Malhotra taking draws, the Canucks will have another significant advantage, starting with the puck the majority of the time.
So things are really looking up for an organization that is looking to capture its first-ever NHL Championship, having gone 40 season watching neophyte organizations such as Tampa Bay, Carolina, and Anaheim win Lord Stanley’s holy grail. It’s very much looking like everything is lining up this year for the 2011 President Trophy champions.
The first line with the Sedins and Burrows is back on fire, the second line is led by all-world centre Kesler, the third line has been extremely solid with Lapierre, Raffi Torres and Janick Hansen. The layer in Malhotra along with a plethora of other wingers ranging from Glass and Oreskovich to Hodgson and Tambellini. The factor in simply the deepest, most skilled group of defencemen in the league, along with Luongo in net, who’s playing better with each passing round. It simply all adds up to a four or five game series win for the Orcans from the left coast of Canada.
For the first time since the Habs lifted the Cup, Canada will once again be the proud owner of Lord Stanley mug. Good on ‘ya Vancouver.
Related articles