Sutter's Cup plan reaching fruition
Canadian Press
6/4/2004
CALGARY (CP) - The plan that has brought the Calgary Flames to where they are today was devised by Darryl Sutter as he drove along a lonely stretch of two-lane Alberta highway.
It was during the NHL all-star break in early February and the Flames coach and general manager was returning from Cranbrook, B.C., where he watched his son, Brett, play for the WHL's Kootenay Ice.
Along the 100-kilometre stretch in the rolling Rocky Mountain foothills between the Frank Slide, where 76 people were buried alive under tons of massive limestone boulders when Turtle Mountain collapsed in 1903 after being weakened by coal mining, and Longview, the town where Clint Eastwood filmed the movie Unforgiven, Sutter had his brainwave.
His team had 28 regular-season games left and was battling for its first playoff berth in eight years. Why not break the remaining games into four segments and try to win each as if it were a playoff series?
``Between Frank Slide and Longview, it's about, geez, you can think about lots of stuff,'' said Sutter.
Now, four months later, the Flames lead the Tampa Bay Lightning 3-2 and can become the lowest-seeded team in hockey's modern era to win the Stanley Cup (CBC, 8 p.m. EDT).
The grand plan - we'll call it the Slide to Stanley Program - pointed Sutter's players in the right direction.
``They all wanted to make the playoffs so bad,'' he said Friday. ``You have to remember, we had a lot of guys that weren't in the playoffs the year before or had never been in the playoffs.
``It was sort of an endless journey for them. So, to able to break that up for them, that gave them a focus.''
It's simple, says defenceman Robyn Regehr.
``We bought in because we knew that's what we had to do just to make it into the playoffs,'' said Regehr. ``Once we made it into the playoffs, we knew that's what we had to do to continue to be successful.''
Defenceman Andrew Ference agrees.
``We had a set goal we had to achieve,'' said Ference. ``In doing that, we all learned very valuable things about the importance of big games.''
Few have been bigger than the next game. Calgary can become the first Canadian team in 11 years to win the title.
Whether Shean Donovan is involved remains to be seen. The second-line winger limped off the ice during the second period Thursday, tried three shifts in the third period, and finally conceded he couldn't skate well enough to continue. Sutter declined to provide an update on the injury.
``Well, there's Cory Stillman and Brad Lukowich, got an update for me yet?'' he replied, referring to Lightning players who sat out Game 5, when asked about Donovan's status.
Donovan is optimistic.
``We'll see how it feels,'' he said. ``I'll do anything to play.
``I think there's a good chance.''
It's the fourth straight round in which the Flames have had the chance to eliminate an opponent in a Game 6. They failed in the first round and had to go to Vancouver to win a Game 7 to advance. They then eliminated Detroit and San Jose in Pengrowth Saddledome in Game 6 showdowns after winning the previous game on the road - the exact scenario they face Saturday.
Even now, Sutter maintains his game-at-a-time philosophy.
``I don't even look at it as if it's that big a deal,'' he said of being one win away from taking the Stanley Cup.
The Flames will have to jump onto the ice with as heightened a sense of determination as they displayed in Game 5 or they'll be right back to Tampa for a Game 7. They need to keep forechecking aggressively and taking the body at every opportunity. If they outwork their opponent they will be champions, which is saying a lot for a group of players given a scant 75-1 chance of winning it all before the season began.
``I don't know how other guys on other teams felt when they won but I know how proud I would be about doing something that I knew was so tough for our team to do,'' said Ference. ``I know how hard I work, game in and game out, and the cool thing is that I can look across the room at every single guy and know that they work just as hard and that the effort that has gone into our successes hasn't just been a couple of lucky bounces or that the other team didn't play very good.''
It's a team on an even keel. It doesn't get too high or too low on itself.
``I don't see any reason why that won't happen again,'' Regehr said of the mindset going into Game 6. ``I don't see any reason why we shouldn't be able to approach this game in a similar fashion.''
Oleg Saprykin scored the overtime winner Thursday, and Martin (The Eliminator) Gelinas, who scored the series-winning goal in the three previous rounds, is ready to try for four.
``I hope there's another new hero (Saturday),'' said centre Marcus Nilson. ``But it doesn't really matter who ends up putting the puck in the net.
``When you win, you win with 20 guys, and that's 20 heroes.''
The Lightning need more from Vincent Lecavalier, who didn't score in the first five games and is due. Lightning captain Dave Andreychuk expects him to deliver.
``He's the type of guy that goes out every shift and something is going to happen,'' said Andreychuk. ``He's thriving. He wants to take charge of games.''
They also need more from their special teams. They trail in the series in power-play efficiency, 26.3 per cent to 16 per cent, and in penalty killing, 84 per cent to 73.7 per cent.
Coach John Tortorella suggested Friday they might have suffered from stage fright in Game 5.
``You start to anticipate what is going to happen getting closer to that Cup,'' he explained. ``That was part of our problem a little bit.
``I'm not sure if nervous is the right word, but you start anticipating. Calgary is going to do that (Saturday).''
Tortorella said his players will remain in the city overnight Saturday so they can get a good night's sleep before flying home to prepare for Game 7. The high-strung American, clad in an athletic track suit, briskly left the interview area when his time was up.
Meanwhile, Sutter remains the happy go lucky face of the Flames.
``Have a good day and don't get sunburned,'' he said when his news conference ended.
Cheers,
Aquaman