
Game One to Chicago as Larsen haunts former coach
April 19, 2005 - American Hockey League (AHL)
Houston Aeros News Release
ROSEMONT, Ill. â Brad Larsen, who played junior hockey for Aeros head coach Todd McLellan, notched two goals and an assist and Kari Lehtonen made 22 saves, as the Chicago Wolves pulled away for a 4-1 victory over Houston in Game 1 of the West Division Semifinals at Allstate Arena. Stephen Weiss added a goal and a helper, Karl Stewart also scored and former Aero Cory Larose supplied two assists for the Wolves, who outshot the Aeros 40-23. Larsen had five goals in 10 regular-season games against Houston, including a hat trick in February.
Game 2 is in Chicago on Thursday at 7 p.m.
Kyle Wanvig scored and Josh Harding stopped 36 shots for the Aeros, who lost Game 1 of a seven-game series for just the second time in team history. Houston kept it close until the third, when it was held without a shot for more than the first 10 minutes after taking a pair of high-sticking majors.
Games 3 (A), 4 (B) and 5 (C), if necessary, are at Toyota Center on Saturday, Sunday and Tuesday. Saturday's game will begin at 7:05 p.m. Click here for playoff tickets, or call 1.866.GO.AEROS.
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Chicago took little time getting on the board, as Weiss pushed the rebound of a Larose shot off the post and into the net at 5:23 of the first.
The team to score first won only four of the teams' 10 regular-season meetings.
Houston got a chance to tie things up on a power play midway through the period, but a tripping penalty to Rickard Wallin stopped the man advantage after only 20 seconds.
Later, with the Aeros on the power play and six minutes left in the first, Lehtonen went post-to-post to rob Houston's leading goal-getter, Kirby Law.
Harding had his turn at brilliance late in the first with the teams 4-on-4, as he snared a Tommi Santala rocket from the left circle with his glove. A minute later, Wolves veteran Steve Maltais hit the post with Harding down.
The Aeros had another power play cut short in the final two minutes, as Wallin was whistled for holding just 30 seconds after Stewart went off for holding the stick.
After Harding helped keep the Aeros in the game by stopping a flurry of shots on the Wolves power play, Wanvig evened things up at 8:15 of the second. Matt Foy beat the defense to the puck in the left corner, and he swung the puck behind the net all the way to Zbynek Michalek at the left point. Michalek ripped a shot on net, and Lehtonen made the original save but left the rebound on the deck. Wanvig hopped on the puck and poked it by Lehtonen, giving him goals in each of the last three games.
Larsen, who played for McLellan with WHL Swift Current, put the Wolves back on top for good with 4:43 left in the middle period. Weiss stole the puck and fed Larsen, who put a shot by Harding.
Larsen scored again against Harding with 2:40 gone in the third, roofing a rebound at a tough angle over Harding. Larose and former Aeros teammate Travis Roche assisted on Larsen's goal.
The teams came together 33 seconds later in a fracas that ended with the Aeros on the power play. But again, 33 seconds in, a Wallin penalty cut the man advantage short. The high-sticking major came at 3:46 and put the Wolves on a lengthy power play.
Harding kept the lead at two, twice stoning NHL defenseman Joe Corvo. But Ray Giroux got a five-minute high-sticking major, giving Chicago 2:05 of a 5-on-3, plus three more minutes of man advantage time. Harding watched a Ben Simon shot go off the post, but then made a great save and kept the puck under his body.
Stewart ended the scoring by finishing off a 2-on-1 with Derek MacKenzie with 6:30 remaining.
Law hit the post with 5:00 remaining and the Aeros in desperation mode on the power play.
Houston finished 0-for-7 on the power play, including three advantages that were cut short after 33 seconds or less, while Chicago went 0-for-8. The Wolves are 1-for-44 on the power play in their last six games, and haven't scored against Houston in the last 28 attempts. The Aeros haven't scored on their last 39 post-season opportunities versus the Wolves, dating back to the 2002 Western Conference Finals.
Notes:
The Aeros scratched Joey Tetarenko, Erik Reitz, Maxime Fortunus, Bill Kinkel, Ryan Stokes, Stephane Veilleux, Christoph Brandner, and Marius Holtet.
Wanvig's goal moved him into a seventh place tie with Jean-Guy Trudel on the team's all-time playoff goal list with seven.
Chicago's Kip Brennan, who was suspended for the final 15 games of the regular season thanks to a pre-game altercation versus Manitoba, returned to the Wolves lineup.
Wanvig's three-game goal streak is a season-high. Prior to this run, he had scored goals in back-to-back games once this season, back in October.
The only other time the Aeros dropped the opener of a seven-game series, the 2000 Western Conference Semifinals versus Utah, they stormed back with four straight wins to claim the series.
Houston has dropped four straight playoff games at Allstate Arena, and it hasn't won in regulation in Rosemont in the last 16 tries.
The Aeros had won all three Game 1's versus Chicago.
Thirteen of Houston's 23 shots came from defensemen.
American Hockey League Stories from April 19, 2005
- Game One to Chicago as Larsen haunts former coach - Houston Aeros
- Phantoms to open East Division semifinals on Fri vs Norfolk - Adirondack Phantoms
- Dennis Seidenberg Named Toyota Phantoms Player of the Month for April - Adirondack Phantoms
- Leafs prepare to face Moose - Toronto Marlies
- Falcons Players and Coaches at Yankee Candle Thursday - Springfield Falcons
- Cleveland Barons Season Recap - Cleveland Barons
- Maple Leafs Announce Year End Award Winners - Toronto Marlies
- Aeros take on arch-rival Wolves in Game One tonight - Houston Aeros
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