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October 5, 2007 ArchivesOctober 5
Brenden Morrow scored off an assist from Mike Modano, Marty Turco allowed only a power-play goal and the Dallas Stars won another home opener, beating the Boston Bruins 4-1 Friday night. While Modano got career point No. 1,227, five shy of matching Phil Housley for the most by an American-born player, rookie defenseman Matt Niskanen assisted on the first two Dallas goals. Sergei Zubov had a goal and an assist. The Stars, who started the season with a 4-3 loss at Colorado on Wednesday night, won their fifth straight home opener — they are 8-0-1 the last nine. Boston played its season opener with Claude Julien, the third coach in a year, and Manny Fernandez, a former Stars backup who is the latest to enter the Bruins’ revolving door of goaltenders the past few seasons. Even with the newcomers, it was the same bad result for the Bruins. The finished last season with six straight losses and haven’t won a season opener since 2001 (0-4-1 in that span). The Bruins couldn’t even turn the momentum with a pair of hard-slugging fights right after Nicklas Hagman got behind the Boston defense and pushed a backhander past Fernandez early in the second period to put Dallas up 2-0. It was Hagman’s second goal this season. On the faceoff, Bruins winger Shawn Thornton got into it with Todd Fedoruk. Once they were in the penalty box, and the puck was dropped again, Milan Lucic — the Bruins rookie in his first NHL game — dropped his gloves and fought with Brad Winchester. Boston had a power-play chance a couple of minutes after that, but Turco stopped a shot from the right circle. The Stars then went ahead 3-0 when Morrow, the second-year captain who missed nearly three months last season after being stepped on with a skate and severing two tendons in his right wrist, scored from the middle of the right circle on a pass from Zubov on the break with Modano. Zubov’s power-play goal with 16:21 left made it 4-1. A bench minor penalty against Dallas for having too many men on the ice led to Boston’s only goal late in the second period. Turco stopped a couple of point-blank shots but there was nothing he could when Peter Schaefer passed from the right side of the net to Patrice Bergeron, who poked the puck past the sprawling goalie. Fernandez stopped 14 shots. He was in the Stars organization for six seasons and played 24 games as Eddie Belfour’s backup for the 1999-2000 team that went to the Stanley Cup, then was traded to Minnesota. He stayed with the Wild until being dealt to Boston this summer. Dallas took a 1-0 lead on Joel Lundqvist’s one-timer from the edge of the circle, a shot that went over Fernandez’s left shoulder and hit high in the net with 4:41 left in the first. Notes: The Bruins play their first five games on the road against Pacific Division teams. After that, they don’t play another game this season outside the Eastern time zone. ... Both teams play again Saturday night, their first back-to-backs of the season. The Stars are at Nashville and the Bruins at Phoenix. ... A shot by Zubov late in the first period snapped Chuck Kobasew’s stick. --AP
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Narragansett's Anna Grzebien, a former NCAA Individual Champion and All-American at Duke, finished tied for second and advanced to the final stage of LPGA Qualifying School at the Plantation Golf and Country Club in Venice, Fla. Grzebien carded rounds of 71, 69, 71 and 72 for a 5-under par total. Grzebien, who graduated from Duke in 2007 this past spring, will attempt to obtain her LPGA card Nov. 28 - Dec. 2 at the LPGA International. Grzebien is familiar with the course, as she led the Blue Devils to their third consecutive NCAA Championship there back in May. “I played well all week and was just consistent with fairways and greens,” said the 22-year-old Grzebien. “It was good to come out here and play solid.” The top 30 and ties advanced to the final stage of qualifying. Grzebien was the 2005 NCAA Individual Champion and three-time All-America for the Blue Devils over her career. Her play in Sunriver, Ore., in 2005 guided Duke to its third NCAA Championship and started the streak of three in a row that the Blue Devils currently have. Her 26 career top 10 finishes at Duke ranks tied for fourth, while her only two wins of her stellar career came in the 2005 NCAA East Regional and NCAA Championship.
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PROVIDENCE -- Reade Seligmann will see a familiar face on the sidelines when he joins his Brown University teammates for a lacrosse scrimmage Sunday. Seligmann is one of the three former lacrosse Duke players falsely accused of rape. He has transferred to Brown, and his new team will host Bryant University in a scrimmage Sunday. That team is coached by Mike Pressler, who coached Seligmann at Duke. Pressler says he's looking forward to the reunion and plans to greet Seligmann with a hug. Brown coach Lars Tiffany says Seligmann has already been embraced at Brown. Seligmann is returning to college lacrosse for the first time since the 2006 season, when an exotic dancer hired to perform at a team party alleged that she had been raped. Seligmann and two other players were indicted, but state prosecutors dismissed all charges in April and said the rape had never occurred. Today, Seligmann and two other players filed suit against the prosecutor in the case and against the city of Durham, S.C. -- The Associated Press
Click here to listen to today's edition of projo SoxTalk with Sean McAdam. Today's topics: Daisuke Matsuzaka's pre-playoff preparation; the Angels' first crack at Dice-K; Kelvim Escobar's health; Vladimir Guerrero back in right field; the benefits and drawbacks of extra time off after a win; and the high-scoring playoff games on Thursday. We'll post excerpts from Sean's comments later this afternoon on the SoxBlog.
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