Oilers Top Ducks, Win Series in 5 Games

Oilers 2, Mighty Ducks 1

By BETH HARRIS
The Associated Press
Sunday, May 28, 2006; 1:26 AM

ANAHEIM, Calif. -- The Anaheim Mighty Ducks outshot the Edmonton Oilers in every game of the Western Conference finals. What the Oilers did with all those shots _ blocking, screening and clogging the shooting lanes _ proved the difference.

Raffi Torres scored the go-ahead goal on a tipped shot in the second period, helping Edmonton eliminate the Ducks 2-1 Saturday night and advance to the Stanley Cup finals.


Edmonton Oilers
Oilers' Radek Dvorak and Steve Staios, right, congratulate teammate Ethan Moreau, center, after he scores Edmonton's first goal. (Paul Chiasson - AP)

The eighth-seeded Oilers won the conference finals 4-1 and will play for the Cup for the first time since winning it in 1990 for the fifth time in seven seasons.

"This team is similar to our 1990 team because this is so unexpected and we have good goal scoring," said Oilers coach Craig MacTavish, who played on that squad. "Our goaltending was terrific the whole series. Our special teams were outstanding. This is the third series we have won that battle."

Edmonton awaits either Carolina or Buffalo, whose Eastern Conference finals series is tied 2-2. The Oilers are the lowest-seeded team to ever reach the finals in the current playoff format.

"It's awesome as a team," goalie Dwayne Roloson said. "We came from the eighth spot, but it doesn't mean anything now."

The Ducks outshot the Oilers in all five games, including a 33-25 advantage Saturday. But Anaheim returned to the offensive slump it was in the first two games, when the Ducks scored two goals, after combining to score 10 in Games 3 and 4.

"It was a strange series that way, where three of those games we just couldn't find the back of the net," defenseman Scott Niedermayer said.

Roloson stopped 32 shots and earned his NHL-leading 12th postseason victory for Edmonton, which won the first three games of the series before losing at home Thursday night.

"I felt great, healthy again and a lot of energy, where I didn't have it in the last game," said Roloson, who had been hit by the flu bug that infected the Oilers' locker room.

Edmonton has won eight of nine since falling behind San Jose 2-0 in the previous series.

Jean-Sebastien Giguere was in the Anaheim goal for his second straight game after being benched since the opening round against Calgary, but he couldn't spark the sixth-seeded Ducks again.


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