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Spirit of St. Louis
Martin St. Louis scores twice, including once short-handed during the second period, to help the Lightning win its second in a row in Washington and even the series at 2.
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[Times photo: Dirk Shadd]
Martin St. Louis awaits Vinny Prospal after giving the Lightning a 1-0 lead in the second period. St. Louis has three goals and two assists in the past two games, both Lightning wins.
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By DAMIAN CRISTODERO, Times Staff Writer
© St. Petersburg Times
published April 17, 2003
WASHINGTON -- Come on, admit it. After the Lightning lost the first two games of the East quarterfinals at home, you figured the season was just about over.
It's okay, you weren't alone. That continuous thumping you heard was fans and media jumping off the bandwagon. The players, though, stuck around for the ride.
"We don't really care what other people think," center Vinny Lecavalier said. "When you're down two to nothing, people expect you to lose. We didn't listen to that."
Well, listen to this. With a 3-1 victory against the Capitals on Wednesday at the MCI Center, the Lightning tied the best-of-seven series at two with Friday's Game 5 at the St. Pete Times Forum.
Martin St. Louis continued to emerge from a post-All Star Game slump with two goals, including a short-handed winner that broke a 1-1 tie with 2:20 left in the second period. Lecavalier's goal 1:24 into the third period gave both players three goals in the past two games.
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[Times photo: Dirk Shadd]
Brendan Witt loses his helmet while landing on top of Dave Andreychuk. Andreychuk's pass to Martin St. Louis led to the Lightning taking a 2-1 lead in the second period.
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And how about Dave Andreychuk?
The captain, 39, played 19:02, won nine of 14 faceoffs and made the game's biggest play when he stole the puck from Kip Miller and led a two-on-one capped by St. Louis' winner.
"The resiliency that we've had all year long is that when our backs have been against a wall, we've responded. We've played in big games," Andreychuk said. "(Wednesday), we showed a lot of discipline. That's something we didn't do in Games 1 and 2."
Now if Tampa Bay can only get Nikolai Khabibulin back in form. The goalie was solid in the third period and made 22 saves overall. But he was shaky in the first two periods and had to come up huge on Jaromir Jagr in the second after he fumbled the puck at the side of the net.
"This one is real disappointing," Capitals goalie Olaf Kolzig said. "We had our opportunities. It's now a best of three, and we can't be the team that plays like a deer caught in the headlights. We have to get back to the team that we were down in Tampa. We've got to be the resilient team now and raise our level."
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[Times photo: Dirk Shadd]
From left, Vinny Prospal, Vinny Lecavalier, Pavel Kubina and Jassen Cullimore celebrate Lecavalier's third-period goal, which made it 3-1, in front of dejected Capitals fans.
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It apparently helps to be booed unmercifully before and during the game.
The visiting team has not only won each game, it has scored first.
Coach John Tortorella said he wanted to start the series on the road so his players could get a feel for the postseason without the pressure of home-ice expectations.
"It's one of the screwiest sports as far as home ice," Tortorella said. "No one wants it. But that's our situation now. A big plus for us is that we've played four games, and we're beginning to understand it. I think our composure was way better (Wednesday). We're learning our lessons as we go through it, and hopefully, we can get something done in the next game."
Home ice, road ice. Lecavalier said it doesn't matter.
"It's not playing in Tampa that made us nervous," he said. "It was just the first two games. We want to play the same way. We need to work just as hard."
As hard as Andreychuk, whose defensive work sparked St. Louis' second goal, which came 2:01 after Peter Bondra's tip-in tied the game at 1.
As hard as St. Louis, whose first goal gave the Lightning a 1-0 lead 11:55 into the period and featured stick-handling so sweet, Capitals defenseman Brendan Witt is still swiping at a puck that seemed to be on a string.
That play began when defensemen Stan Neckar and Cory Sarich showed patience in the defensive zone handling the puck before Sarich sprung St. Louis with a pass.
Defenseman Pavel Kubina continued his good work on Jagr, was plus-2 and played a team-high 23:34.
"What we've done is we've given ourselves a lot better chance of winning the series," Andreychuk said. "We haven't played very well at home this series, so we've got to be ready to go. We've got home ice back again. We've got to take advantage of it."
Back to the Lightning
Today's lineup LightningSpirit of St. Louis
Khabibulin shaky, but still winner
In the end, Lecavalier's best move was no move
Slapshots
Sound bites
John Romano: Let youngsters have points; Andreychuk makes plays
RaysPiniella ensures Rays get message
Options few for struggling staff
BucsDwight Smith arrested
McKay not worried Glazer will sell Bucs
Other sports
Colleges
Brand new ideas
Meet the NCAA president
NFL
Seau finds soft, warm place to play in Miami
Baseball
Goodwill visit a pain in the butt
MLB to scrutinize park security
NL: Rookie aids resurgent Braves
AL: Fans stay in seats in Chisox win
Bosox shock reliever with rapid callup
NHL
Ducks eliminate defending champs in OT
College basketball
KU petitions UNC to stifle Williams
NBA
Milwaukee edges Orlando to finish seventh in the East
Bittersweet end to Jordan's career
WNBA
WNBA's season, possibly future, on shaky ground
Golf
Weir's long road started left
Angels deal takes flight
Leaders prove length isn't the only factor
In brief
QB Dosh to transfer out of UF
Preps
Panthers' depth overpowers Terriers
Plant breaks through in ninth
Passion keeps county crew teams afloat
One day to decide it all
Hurricanes pass test at county meet
Bowling
Queens victory gives Macpherson 6th major
Outdoors
Daily fishing report
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