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Datsyuk's hat trick leads Red Wings to 3-0 Western Final lead over Stars

Red Wings' Jiri Hudler, right, celebrates a goal with Darren Helm (43). THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/Tony Gutierrez

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Red Wings' Jiri Hudler, right, celebrates a goal with Darren Helm (43). THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/Tony Gutierrez

DALLAS - Pavel Datsyuk and the Detroit Red Wings got the best retaliation against Mike Ribeiro and the Dallas Stars - a record-setting victory.

Datsyuk scored twice in the first period then again with 2:41 left, and the Red Wings beat the Stars 5-2 Monday night to take a 3-0 lead in the Western Conference finals.

This was Detroit's ninth straight win, its most ever in a single post-season and the longest in the NHL since Montreal won 11 in a row in 1993. More importantly, the Red Wings will go into Game 4 on Wednesday night with the chance to skate into the Stanley Cup finals for the fifth time since 1995.

Datsyuk's first career hat trick overshadowed important goals by his teammates. Jiri Hudler converted a breakaway in the second period and Henrik Zetterberg scored a short-handed goal early in the third period for a daunting two-goal lead. Zetterberg also had the primary assist on two of Datsyuk's goals.

As promised, Detroit players came out more focused on the scoreboard than settling a score with Ribeiro for his two-handed baseball swing of his stick into the chest of Red Wings goalie Chris Osgood as Game 2 ended. Ribeiro was ticked off that Osgood popped him in the chops with the handle of his stick. The league fined both players, but neither was suspended.

Dallas was back home for the first time since a four-overtime victory against San Jose that ended the previous round. The Stars dominated the first six minutes, but didn't have anything to show for it as Datsyuk scored midway through the opening period, then scored again just 11 seconds after Dallas tied it.

The Stars are now facing the long odds of trying to wipe out an 0-3 deficit, something that's happening only three times in NHL history. A more tangible goal might be taking the lead - something they've yet to do this series.

Dallas goalie Marty Turco fell to 2-4-3 against Detroit at home. He's 2-13-5 against the Red Wings overall.

Osgood stopped 16 shots to improve to 9-0 this post-season.

Detroit was without Johan Franzen, whose 12 playoff goals are tops in the NHL, for a second straight game because of concussion-like symptoms but it hardly mattered.

Niklas Kronvall set up Hudler's goal with a long outlet pass that caught the Stars changing personnel, letting him skate right at Turco. Zetterberg set up his own goal with a steal during a penalty kill, then skating away from Brad Richards and beating Turco on his stick side. Tomas Holmstrom had the primary assist on Datsyuk's second goal and Brian Rafalski got the second assist on both of Datsyuk's first-period goals.

Datsyuk doesn't always score in playoff games, but he often gets more than one when he does. He's had multiple goals in four of the last five post-season games in which he's scored.

Dallas was missing all-around star Jere Lehtinen from its top line because of a leg injury. Steve Ott filled in most of the time, but Mike Modano took over for a shift in the first period and it ended with Nicklas Grossman scoring his first career playoff goal. Richards also scored for the Stars, tying it at two in the second period when a centring pass went off the skate of a Detroit defenceman and Osgood couldn't react to the quirky flight in time.

Ribeiro took just one shot in 24:30 and went 0-for-2 on faceoffs.

Notes: Detroit has led after the first period in 11 of its 13 playoff games. ... Richards' goal was his first in seven games, even though he leads the team in shots this post-season. ... The Red Wings won 11 straight post-season games over the 1952 and '53 post-seasons, then matched it in 1998 and '99. ... Stars captain Brenden Morrow and his wife, the daughter of Montreal coach Guy Carbonneau, had twins Sunday, a boy and a girl. ... Chris Conner was active in place of Lehtinen, marking his post-season debut. He didn't take a shot in 4:17.

bri-man (Posted 2008-05-13 17:30:50)
wings talent,skill,expeirence is way above any team left,it's not even close they are unbeatable this year,there new guns datsyuk,franzen,zetterberg,huddler,kronwall etc.. are better this year (expeirence) and hungry for the cup (plus osgood has been great),welcome back stanley, number 4 since 97 :) pens remind me of wings team in 95 (first time there)then they played the expeirenced devils and got creamed same here watch...

Moe Patton (Posted 2008-05-13 15:06:11)
In the regular season, the Red Wings were the best team over all. They finished number one in near all the meaningful statisics. In the play-offs so far of both the West and East conferences, they are the same. Number one in near every meaningful statistic. They are by all combined measures used to rate a NHL hockey team today, the best team in the NHL all this season and in the play-offs to this point. They are the favorites to go all the way and bring the cup home to Detroit again. They are so because they have proven this all year and so far in the play-offs. No team can show stats making them arguably the equal of the Red Wings so far in the play-offs not even the Penguins. Penguins are a fine team and certainly have the capacity to win the cup this year. But they are the ones that have to come prove it. Red Wings have been proving it all year and are poised to finish it all off. Debate hitting and finesse puck control all you want. Red Wings have shown clearly how they do it, is the real deal in hockey this year. Unless the Penguins can show something they have not yet shown this year, it will be the Red Wings with the cup hoisted above their heads in 08.

Dave G. (Posted 2008-05-13 12:40:22)
Live it up, Detroit, until Pittsburgh takes you out! I love how the Detroit Red Wings have suddenly proven how European-dominated teams are so great. Geez, was anyone watching hockey in 2006-7, 2005-6 and 2003-4, when SIX Canadian-dominated teams played for the Cup? In those three years, the Ducks (led by Pronger, Getzlaf, Perry, Niedermayer and Giguere), Carolina (led by Brind' Amour, Staal, Ward, Williams and Stillman) and Tampa (led by Lecavalier, Boyle, Richards, St. Louis and Andreychuck) won the Cup. Now, suddenly, you don't need a Canadian-dominated team to win the Cup? Wait for it, Red Wing fans, IF you have any long-term fans left since Yzerman and Shanny left (you might have temporary bandwagon-jumpers right now, but attendance has been really sagging since they left). Ditto for the all-Euro-all-the-time-Habs, who couldn't sign a Canadian player if their life depended on it, especially not an impact French-Canadian. No, Brian Burke is right; you build a long-term winner with Canadian heart AND talent, which is on full display with the Nash-Getzlaf-Heatley line at the World's!

jim Foley (Posted 2008-05-13 06:08:32)
I agree with you Keith,Detroit is too much for anyone this year & i'm from Sid's backyard!!

Michael Blanton (Posted 2008-05-13 04:13:23)
Dallas beat Hank & Pav unmerciffully. I don't think so. They hardly touched em. They should have been doing to 'em what they DID do to Dallas Drake. Knock their blocks off and pummel 'em into the boards. Istead of taking the body, they kept on trying to steal the puck from 'em. Big mistake. Detroit on the other hand knocked the crap out of Modano twice and where was Brandon Morrow? Dallas' tough guy and leader has completely disappeared. Only Ott and Lundquist seem to understand that Dallas needs to get physical with Detroit, not try to out finesse 'em. It's too late now for the Stars. Hopefully Roberts, Laraque, Orpick, Ruutu et al will punish Detroit's pretty boys, Hank & Pav, from the get go.

keith (Posted 2008-05-13 02:17:30)
anyone besides me think that pittsburgh is a year away from being able to contend with the wings?

Joe (Posted 2008-05-12 23:34:53)
I never cease to be amazed at Detroit's dynamic duo of Hank and Pav. Dallas beat them unmercifully and yet Detroit got stronger and became even more effective as the game went on. The harder Dallas tried, the more Detroit buried the knife into Dallas' heart. Zetterberg's shorthanded goal was spectacular, but for some reason, I knew it would not be the last goal of the night for Detroit.

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