
Rampage season ends in heartbreak
Published on April 28, 2008 under American Hockey League (AHL)
San Antonio Rampage News Release
TORONTO - You couldn't ask for much more from a Game 7.
Huge saves by each goaltender, a third-period rally and a season on the line for both teams heading into the final minute of play.
That's when Toronto winger Bates Battaglia potted the game-winner, firing a shot behind a screen from the right circle that found its way to the net with just 59 seconds remaining to give the Toronto Marlies a 2-1 victory in Game 7 over the San Antonio Rampage.
http://stats.theahl.com/stats/game-summary.php?game_id=1004725
Overall, the season was one to remember for the Rampage as they qualified for the
Calder Cup Playoffs for just the second time in team history. They finished with 94
points and 42 wins during the regular season, both franchise-records. Stay tuned to
sarampage.com Nothing came from either side in the opening period as they skated through a tight
first 20 minutes. Toronto took the lead with a Kris Newbury redirection on the power play halfway
through the second period. It was only the second power-play tally for Toronto in 34
chances in the series. It was also the first goal Tordjman allowed in 58 chances since the series shifted
back to Toronto for the final two games. Derrick Walser and Jiri Tlusty picked up
the assists. A potential Toronto goal was waved off later in the period by referee Brian
Pochmara, who ruled that the puck did not cross the goal-line, to keep the score
1-0. The team ahead after two periods won each of the previous six contests, but the
Rampage, who were tied for the most come-from-behind victories during the regular
season with nine when trailing after 40 minutes, had other plans in mind. The Rampage, tied for the second-most goals in the third period with 97 during the
regular season, came out aggressive by taking nine of the first 11 shots of the last
20 minutes The hard work eventually paid off when Enver Lisin fired a rocket from the left
point through traffic and into the net to make tie it at 1-1 at 6:51 of the final
frame. The power-play goal gave the Rampage a tally in six of the seven-game series
while on the man-advantage. Mike Zigomanis, a Toronto native, notched an assist. Josh Tordjman stopped 32 shots for the Rampage and limited Toronto to eight goals in
the final four games of the series, while posting a .951 save-percentage (154-162).
Scott Clemmensen made 37 saves on 38 shots for Toronto The Rampage outscored the Marlies 19-16 in the series, despite dropping the first
Game 7 in their six-year history. They also outshot Toronto 232-217 for the series,
and held the shot advantage in six of the seven games, including Monday night at
38-34. All four games the Rampage lost came by just one goal, and all five including
the regular season came by that margin. Toronto won the first Calder Cup series in
its history.
The opinions expressed in this release are those of the organization issuing it, and do not necessarily reflect the thoughts or opinions of OurSports Central or its staff.
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