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NHL
Long Sheet


Monday, June 6


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


PITTSBURGH (62-30-0-11, 135 pts.) at SAN JOSE (59-35-0-9, 127 pts.) - 6/6/2016, 8:05 PM
There are no Top Trends with records of significance that apply to this game.


Head-to-Head Series History
PITTSBURGH is 5-4 (+0.7 Units) against the spread versus SAN JOSE over the last 3 seasons
PITTSBURGH is 5-4-0 straight up against SAN JOSE over the last 3 seasons
6 of 9 games in this series have gone UNDER THE TOTAL over the last 3 seasons . (Under=+2.4 Units)


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------








NHL
Armadillo's Write-Up


Monday, June 6


San Jose-Pittsburgh (P 2-1)
Sharks' Donskoi scored 12:18 into OT to keep series alive, after San Jose tied game 8:48 into the third period. San Jose lost four of last six games with Pittsburgh, but won eight of ten home playoff games. Seven of last 13 Shark-Penguin games went OT, four to shootout- six of last seven stayed under total. Pittsburgh is 5-4 on road in playoffs, Sharks are 6-5 on road. San Jose was 1-6 on power play in Games 1-2; Penguins 0-6. Pitt has a 113-74 edge in shots in first three games. Sharks are in Stanley Cup finals for first time; Penguins are in for first time since winning Cup in '09, its third Stanley Cup title.


Playoffs tally: 1st round-- Home: 23-24, Over: 16-17-14
2nd round-- Home: 16-9, Over: 11-5-9
Conference finals-- Home 6-7, Over 7-5-1
Home: 3-0 Over: 0-3








NHL


Monday, June 6


------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trend Report
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


8:00 PM
PITTSBURGH vs. SAN JOSE
Pittsburgh is 4-1 SU in its last 5 games
The total has gone UNDER in 6 of Pittsburgh's last 7 games when playing San Jose
San Jose is 8-1 SU in its last 9 games at home
San Jose is 16-7 SU in its last 23 games when playing Pittsburgh




NHL
Dunkel


Monday, June 6




Pittsburgh @ San Jose


Game 57-58
June 6, 2016 @ 8:00 pm


Dunkel Rating:
Pittsburgh
12.851
San Jose
11.357
Dunkel Team:
Dunkel Line:
Dunkel Total:
Pittsburgh
by 1 1/2
5
Vegas Team:
Vegas Line:
Vegas Total:
San Jose
-135
5 1/2
Dunkel Pick:
Pittsburgh
(+115); Under
 

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Preview: Penguins (48-26) at Sharks (46-30)
Date: June 06, 2016 8:00 PM EDT

SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) This is a Stanley Cup Final filled with stars who have won the Hart Trophy, Olympic gold medals and numerous other awards.


With players like Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin, Joe Thornton and Joe Pavelski, the final features some of the biggest names in hockey.


The one place where those players haven't showed up so far is on the goal-scoring sheet. In a series that has featured three straight one-goal games all decided either in the final three minutes of regulation or overtime, some of the lesser-known players have delivered the goals.


'You look through these playoffs and third-line, fourth-line guys have stepped up for both teams and scored big goals,' Sharks center Logan Couture said Sunday. 'It's not necessarily that the big guns have scored the huge goals for both teams. You need that when you get to this point.'


Sharks rookie Joonas Donskoi was the latest to get on that list when he scored the overtime winner in San Jose's 3-2 victory in Game 3 on Saturday night that cut Pittsburgh's series lead to 2-1. Game 4 is Monday night in San Jose.


Donskoi matched the overtime goal scored just one game earlier by Penguins rookie Conor Sheary. Before that, it had been 30 years since a rookie had scored in overtime in the final when Montreal's Brian Skrudland did it in Game 2 against Calgary.


But Donskoi and Sheary are far from the only unusual suspects to score in the first three games. Sharks defenseman Justin Braun has two goals in the past two games, matching his total from the previous 40 contests.


'I'm happy I can finally chip in offensively,' Braun said. 'A lot of other guys have done a lot of heavy lifting to get us here. I'm just trying to do my part.'


Pittsburgh defenseman Ben Lovejoy, who has 15 goals in 334 career regular season games, scored one of the Penguins' goals in Game 3 and set up the other that was deflected in by Patric Hornqvist.


Nick Bonino got the Game 1 winner for Pittsburgh when the other goals were scored by rookies Sheary and Bryan Rust.


And after three games, players like Crosby, Malkin, Thornton, Pavelski, Kris Letang, Logan Couture and Brent Burns are all still looking for their first goals.


'You just try to worry about yourself and make sure you're doing your job and as a team you're doing the things necessary to give yourself a chance to win games,' Crosby said. 'It's tight. Like I keep seeing year after year, there's a small margin of error. Just make sure you're competing and give yourself a chance to create and ultimately produce.'


It hasn't been like those players haven't performed well. Crosby was dominant the first two games and set up a pair of goals that helped Pittsburgh take the 2-0 lead. But he got much less generated on the road when the Sharks were able to match top defensive pair Marc-Edouard Vlasic and Justin Braun against him consistently. Even a few shifts with Malkin couldn't generate many chances for Pittsburgh.


'We're playing against good defensemen,' Malkin said. 'They play so close and so tight, it's tough to shoot sometimes.'


Thornton had a few good chances late, especially after Couture joined him and Pavelski on San Jose's top line. But Pavelski, who leads the NHL with 13 playoff goals, has been mostly silent with no points and only four shots on goal through three games.


'It's tough this time of year,' Sharks coach Peter DeBoer said. 'Every round, he's getting a lot of attention, just like Brent Burns is getting a lot of attention, just like Jumbo is getting a lot of attention. That's not an easy role to play. I have no doubt he's going to break through here. He has all year for us. It's just a matter of time.'


One of the factors limiting Pavelski's effectiveness has been Pittsburgh's propensity to block shots. The Penguins blocked 38 shots alone in Game 3, including 12 from Burns. With fewer point shots getting to the net, Pavelski has been unable to utilize his elite hand-eye coordination to deflect pucks like he was so successfully the first three rounds.


'We're creating some chances,' Pavelski said. 'It's just that end result hasn't been there. You just stay with it, keep trying to have the puck and play with it and get open. Try to get a few more.'


NOTES: Sharks F Tomas Hertl remains day to day with a lower-body injury. ... Penguins D Letang and Olli Maatta were given maintenance days and did not practice.


SERIES AT A GLANCE


GAME 1
Sharks at Penguins
Mon, May 30 Final 2 to 3
Recaps


GAME 2
Sharks at Penguins
Wed, Jun 1 Final 1 to 2
Recaps


GAME 3
Penguins at Sharks
Sat, Jun 4 Final 2 to 3
Recaps


GAME 4
Penguins at Sharks
Mon, Jun 6 - 8:00PM EDT


GAME 5
Sharks at Penguins
Thu, Jun 9 - 8:00PM EDT


GAME 6
Penguins at Sharks
Sun, Jun 12 - 8:00PM EDT


GAME 7
Sharks at Penguins
Wed, Jun 15 - 8:00PM EDT
 

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Sharks F Tomas Hertl to miss Game 4
June 6, 2016


SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) San Jose Sharks forward Tomas Hertl will miss his second straight game in the Stanley Cup Final with a lower-body injury.


Coach Peter DeBoer said Hertl will not be ready to play Game 4 on Monday night and remains day to day. Hertl got hurt late in Game 2 in Pittsburgh and missed the following game in San Jose.


The Sharks overcame his absence with a 3-2 overtime win that cut Pittsburgh's series lead to 2-1. Melker Karlsson took Hertl's place on the top line with Joe Thornton and Joe Pavelski and Dainius Zubrus returned to the lineup as a fourth-line forward.


Hertl has six goals and five assists in 20 playoff games this season.
 

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Penguins remain confident after Game 3
June 5, 2016


SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) The Pittsburgh Penguins have only lost twice this season when leading after two periods. The second time was Saturday night. As a result, the San Jose Sharks have new life in the Stanley Cup Final.


Matthew Murray made 23 saves and the Penguins blocked 38 shots, though it wasn't enough to continue their domination of the Sharks.


Joonas Donoski scored 12:18 into overtime to lift the Sharks to a 3-2 victory in Game 3. The Penguins - up 2-1 in the series, suddenly find themselves in a fight heading into Game 4 on Monday night in San Jose.


''It's one game of a seven-game series and we out played them,'' Murray said. ''I felt good about my game. Unfortunately the last one goes in.''


The Penguins have done an excellent job of keeping several of the Sharks' top scorers from reaching the scoresheet, with Joe Pavelski, Logan Couture and Brent Burns, one of the NHL's hardest shooters, relatively quiet.


A lot of that has to do with their willingness to block shots.


''They use the points a lot, then they look for those wrist shots, those half-slappers, and they're looking for deflections,'' Penguins coach Mike Sullivan said. ''That's a big part of how they generate offense. Part of the way to defend against it is to deny the opportunity of the puck to get to those areas. So when they use the points, we have to get in the lanes.''


Penguins defender Ben Lovejoy said the team is willing to do whatever it takes to win.


''We're ready to block shots at any time,'' he said. ''I'm ready to take a Brent Burns slapshot to my face.''


Penguins defender Olli Maata had six blocks, Lovejoy, Brian Dumoulin and Patric Hornqvist each blocked four.


''You have to defend well,'' Pittsburgh center Sidney Crosby said. ''They shoot from everywhere. The number of blocked shots might be higher because of where they shoot from.''


Joel Ward scored his first goal of the finals after a red hot finish in the conference finals, netting four goals in the last two games versus the St. Louis Blues. Joe Thornton had his first two assists.


''His release point was further out than usual on a slapshot and it dipped at the last second,'' Murray said about Ward. ''I just waved at it and got a little piece of it.''


Joe Pavelski, Couture, Burns and Thornton are a combined 0 for 28 on shots, though they have a total of six assists. They are responsible for a combined 292 career playoff points.


Pavelski had 13 goals and nine assists through the first three rounds and has yet to record a point against the Penguins.


Tomas Hertl, the Sharks' best player in the opening two contests in Pittsburgh, was not available for Game 3 because of a lower-body injury.


''We were good but we weren't great,'' Lovejoy said. ''We'd love to be 3-0 but we also know they would put up their best game. This is their home building and they've done a lot of winning here.''
 

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NHL MONEYLINE


NHL > (57) PITTSBURGH@ (58) SAN JOSE | 2016-06-06 20:05:00 - 2016-06-06 20:05:00
Play AGAINST SAN JOSE using money line in Home games after 3 or more consecutive unders
The record is 1 Wins and 8 Losses for the last two seasons (-12.1 units)


-------------------


NHL PUCKLINE


NHL > (57) PITTSBURGH@ (58) SAN JOSE | 2016-06-06 20:05:00 - 2016-06-06 20:05:00
Play AGAINST SAN JOSE in Home games after 3 or more consecutive unders
The record is 1 Wins and 8 Losses for the last two seasons (-12.1 units)


---------------------


NHL TOTALS


NHL > (57) PITTSBURGH@ (58) SAN JOSE | 2016-06-06 20:05:00 - 2016-06-06 20:05:00
Play UNDER PITTSBURGH on the totalin Road games revenging a loss versus opponent
The record is 9 Overs and 24 Unders for the last two seasons (+14.95 units)
 

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GAME # 3 RESULTS: 0 - 1......... - 1.00
GAME TOTAL: 0 - 1
OVERALL: 0 - 1



MONDAY, JUNE 6


GAME TIME(ET) PICK UNITS


PIT at SJ 08:00 PM


SJ -127


U 5.5 ***** 4 STAR PLAY




STARS = 100
 

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Armadillo: Thursday's six-pack


Odds to win the College World Series, with Super Regionals this week


-- 5-1-- Florida, Louisville, Mississippi State, Texas A&M


-- 6-1-- Miami-- Stadium is named after A-Rod, but he never played there.


-- 7-1-- LSU-- Les Miles should coach first for a couple innings.


-- 10-1-- Texas Tech-- Wouldn't want to pitch in Lubbock if wind is blowing out.


-- 12-1-- South Carolina-- Not a lot of northern teams on this list.


-- 25-1-- Coastal Carolina, Arizona, Cal-Santa Barbara


**********


Armadillo: Thursday's List of 13: Doing some thinking out loud......


13) Sauerkraut got a lot of support from e-mailers today, which baffles me, but that is what makes life interesting-- we like different things.


12) I was also informed that the world's largest sauerkraut factory is in Phelps, NY, near where a friend of mine's grandfather lives. You learrn new stuff every day.


11) Speaking of which, it is now illegal to sit on a sidewalk in Saratoga Springs, NY, where the six-week horse racing meet is held every summer. Not sure if the mayor is a guy who sells benches, but that seems like a dumb thing to have as a law.


10) Maria Sharapova was suspended for two years, which means she is likely to lose as much as $50M in income during that time. Sharapova has been the world's highest-paid female athlete for the last 11 years, but that streak is over now.


9) A Uber driver from Boulder, CO won $1M in a World Series of Poker tourney this week, after being down to one $500 chip at one point in the tournament. Something you rarely read about are people who try to become pro poker players and fail; this guy went bust couple years ago, moved to Colorado and started driving for Uber, then built up some cash and took a shot in this year's WSOP and hit it big. Good for him.


8) Jacksonville Jaguars paid WR Allen Hurns $40M for four years this offseason, now find out Hurns is allergic to grass; no bueno. Will they switch to Field Turf?


7) Washington 11, White Sox 4-- James Sheilds faced 17 batters in his White Sox debut and seven of them scored, not what the struggling Pale Hose needed. He threw 84 pitches and got six outs. Chicago is 6-20 in its last 26 games.


6) Braves' play-by play Chip Caray, grandson of Harry, son of Chip, has improved a lot as a play-play guy; he used to be awful. Haven't listened to Braves' games much the last few years because I don't have any Braves on my fantasy team, but I have this year and Chip is pretty good now. He has a very good partner in Joe Simpson.


5) Phillies young pitching star Vince Velasquez left Wednesday's game after two pitches, never a good sign. Apparently some kind of biceps issue. Last thing Phillies need right now is a pitching injury. Last thing anyone needs, actually.


4) Why I like Phil Martelli as a college hoop coach; St Joe's is 12-3 vs spread in its last 15 conference tournament games, 11-4 vs spread as a road underdog in conference games. He has good players and he lets them play, which gives them confidence.


3) Rumors in NYC this week that St John's assistant coach Barry Rohrssen is off to another job, possibly to be replaced by former NBA star Mitch Richmond. St John's gets to play the Big East tournament on its home court every year, yet they are 0-7 vs spread in last seven Big East tournament games.


Then there is Providence, which covered its last seven Big East tourney games.


2) Cavaliers 120, Warriors 90-- 10 of last 12 Cleveland games were decided by 11+ points. Golden State is 3-5 on the road in playoffs. Still think all playoff series should be best-of-3 and the Finals best-of-5. Much more dramatic that way.


1) Tonight was Golden State's 102nd game this season, not counting the handful of preseason games they play; it was Cleveland's 99th game. NBA is a long season, then the draft is June 23, and the NBA Summer League is in Las Vegas starting July 8. Not a lot of rest for the executives of the good teams.


Regular season ended in mid-April, so the lesser teams have had some time off.
 

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NHL

Thursday, June 9

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Thursday's NHL Stanley Cup finals Game 5 betting preview: Sharks at Penguins
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Pittsburgh pushed the Sharks to the brink of elimination with a 3-1 victory on Monday night to edge closer to its first Stanley Cup championship since 2009.

San Jose Sharks at Pittsburgh Penguins (A: +145, H: -155, O/U: 5)

Penguins lead series 3-1

The Pittsburgh Penguins are on the threshold of a milestone moment, needing one win to become the first major sports team in the city to win a championship at home since the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1960. Armed with a 3-1 series lead, the Penguins go for their fourth Stanley Cup title when they host the San Jose Sharks on Thursday night in Game 5.

Pittsburgh pushed the Sharks to the brink of elimination with a 3-1 victory at San Jose on Monday night to edge closer to its first Stanley Cup championship since 2009. "We have to try to do our best to ignore some of the noise surrounding the group and I think our players are well aware of it," Penguins coach Mike Sullivan said of the tantalizing opportunity of hoisting the Cup in front of the home fans. The Sharks are trying to become the second team in league history to win the Cup after facing a 3-1 series deficit -- a seemingly insurmountable task given that they have yet to hold a lead in regulation against Pittsburgh. "We want to win one game and get a Game 6 back here at home," San Jose coach Peter DeBoer said. "I think we would be comfortable in that spot that we could get it to go seven."

TV: 8 p.m. ET, NBC, CBC, TVAS

PROBABLE GOALIES:

Sharks - Martin Jones (W/L: 13-9, GAA: 2.06, SAVE %: .918)

Penguins - Matt Murray (W/L: 14-5, GAA: 2.09, SAVE %: .927)

ABOUT THE SHARKS (59-35-10, 51-42 O/U): After averaging a playoff-best 3.5 goals through the first three rounds of the postseason, San Jose has scored only seven times in four games versus Pittsburgh. Captain Joe Pavelski scored 13 goals and had a seven-game point streak entering the Finals, but he has been held off the scoresheet by the Penguins. "If it's different, if it's 3-1 and you don't have anything, it's a different story," Pavelski said. "But right now, with the hole we're [in], a goal or two probably changes the outcome. The way it's been going for most of the postseason, I feel like I should probably have a bit more." Forward Logan Couture has a postseason-best 26 points, but both he and defenseman Brent Burns have been limited to two assists in the Finals.

ABOUT THE PENGUINS (63-30-11, 45-41 O/U): Center Evgeni Malkin, the Conn Smythe Award winner in Pittsburgh's 2009 run to the Cup, admitted he wasn't producing enough through the first three games of the series and responded to his own "I want more" declaration by setting up one tally and scoring what proved to be the game-winner in Game 4. “We’ve seen him do it so many times,” Penguins forward Matt Cullen said. “He’s such a big part of the team. He demands a lot of himself, so to see him come out like that in a big game when he kind of called himself out a bit, it’s pretty impressive. That’s what good players do." Forward Phil Kessel is near the front of the line for this season's Conn Smythe after collecting a pair of assists Monday to boost his team-high total to 21 points.

TRENDS:

* Sharks are 8-2 in their last 10 road games vs. a team with a home winning % of greater than .600.
* Penguins are 6-0 in their last 6 home games vs. a team with a road winning % of greater than .600.
* Under is 12-3-2 in Penguins last 17 Stanley Cup Finals games.
* Under is 4-0 in the last 4 meetings in Pittsburgh.
* Sharks are 1-4 in the last 5 meetings in Pittsburgh.

CONSENSUS: At the time of publication of this preview, the Pittsburgh Penguins are grabbing 71 percent of the public picks and Over 5 is leading the way in totals wagering at 66 percent.
 

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NHL
Dunkel

Thursday, June 9


San Jose @ Pittsburgh

Game 59-60
June 9, 2016 @ 8:00 pm

Dunkel Rating:
San Jose
11.754
Pittsburgh
14.283
Dunkel Team:
Dunkel Line:
Dunkel Total:
Pittsburgh
by 2 1/2
7
Vegas Team:
Vegas Line:
Vegas Total:
Pittsburgh
-160
5
Dunkel Pick:
Pittsburgh
(-160); Over




NHL
Long Sheet

Thursday, June 9

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SAN JOSE (59-36-0-9, 127 pts.) at PITTSBURGH (63-30-0-11, 137 pts.) - 6/9/2016, 8:05 PM
There are no Top Trends with records of significance that apply to this game.

Head-to-Head Series History
PITTSBURGH is 6-4 (+1.9 Units) against the spread versus SAN JOSE over the last 3 seasons
PITTSBURGH is 6-4-0 straight up against SAN JOSE over the last 3 seasons
7 of 10 games in this series have gone UNDER THE TOTAL over the last 3 seasons . (Under=+3.6 Units)

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------




NHL
Short Sheet

Thursday, June 9

San Jose at Pittsburgh, 8:05 PM ET
San Jose: 11-3 SU in road games after having lost 2 of their last 3
Pittsburgh: 11-18 SU after 2 consecutive non-conference games




NHL
Armadillo's Write-Up

Thursday, June 9

San Jose-Pittsburgh (P 3-1)
Penguins can win 4th Stanley Cup here; would be first title Pittsburgh team has won at home since '60 World Series. San Jose lost five of last seven games with Pittsburgh, they lost three of last five playoff road games. Seven of last 14 Shark-Penguin games went OT, four to shootout- seven of last eight tilts stayed under total. San Jose is 1-8 on power play in series; Penguins 1-8. Pittsburgh has a 133-98 edge in shots in first four games. Sharks are in Stanley Cup finals for first time; Penguins are in for first time since winning Cup in '09, its third Stanley Cup title. Pittsburgh won its last three home games, giving up a total of four goals.

Playoffs tally: 1st round-- Home: 23-24, Over: 16-17-14
2nd round-- Home: 16-9, Over: 11-5-9
Conference finals-- Home 6-7, Over 7-5-1
Home: 3-1 Over: 0-4




NHL

Thursday, June 9

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trend Report
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

8:00 PM
SAN JOSE vs. PITTSBURGH
San Jose is 1-4 SU in its last 5 games when playing on the road against Pittsburgh
The total has gone UNDER in 7 of San Jose's last 8 games when playing Pittsburgh
The total has gone UNDER in 7 of Pittsburgh's last 8 games when playing San Jose
Pittsburgh is 5-1 SU in its last 6 game

 

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Preview: Sharks (46-30) at Penguins (48-26)
Date: June 09, 2016 8:00 PM EDT

PITTSBURGH -- The Stanley Cup was cradled by Sidney Crosby before 350,000 parade onlookers, dunked in Mario Lemieux's swimming pool, carried on a slippery ride across a baseball outfield by Bryan Trottier.


The one adventure that has never happened to the shiny silver cup in Pittsburgh is being lifted at center ice after a championship-clinching victory.


In fact, of the 11 major sports championships won by Pittsburgh teams since the Pirates claimed the 1960 World Series at Forbes Field -- six Super Bowls, three Stanley Cups, two other World Series -- not one was won on home turf or home ice.


But the Penguins, improbably, can win their fourth Stanley Cup in a quarter-century on Thursday night if they can close out the San Jose Sharks, who trail 3-1 in a finals in which Pittsburgh has never fallen behind in regulation.


And, even better for fans who are paying $1,000 for standing room tickets for Game 5 at Consol Energy Center, the Penguins have a chance to claim the Cup in Pittsburgh.


"We can feel like there's something big coming up here," Penguins forward Carl Hagelin said Wednesday. "Guys are ready to play. We've won games all year, and that's the plan (Thursday)."


Every game of the finals but one has been decided by one goal, yet the Penguins have had a clear advantage in shots, speed, scoring chances and, most visibly, momentum.


Now they have a clear path to the NHL championship -- the second of the Sidney Crosby-Evgeni Malkin era -- but it's one that is also fraught with danger. Lose Game 5 at home and the Penguins must trek back to the West Coast for a Game 6 on Sunday they most certainly don't want to play.


"It's been close, the line is so thin out there -- both teams are playing at a high level," Penguins center Matt Cullen said. "We've been able to get the big goal when we needed it.


"(But) the trick is nothing's been done yet. We've got a long ways to go. We haven't done anything yet, other than give ourselves a good opportunity."


Sharks coach Peter DeBoer, whose team lost Game 2 in Pittsburgh, knows that if San Jose can take Game 5 there, spoil the Penguins' party and make them go all the way back to the West Coast again, the series will take on a much different feel. Even if only one of the 32 teams that trailed 3-1 in the finals came back to win the cup -- and that took place 74 years ago.


"I think it's closer than it feels," said DeBoer, whose team had the NHL's best regular-season road record. "We've got to give ourselves an opportunity that if they stumble, we're going to jump on it."


Sharks forward Joel Ward doesn't think the assuredly frantic atmosphere at Consol will be a major disadvantage -- even if Pittsburghers have been waiting to celebrate another title at home since Bill Mazeroski's home run cleared the left-center field wall for the Pirates on Oct. 13, 1960.


"We're not worried about the hoopla, what they've got going on," Ward said. "It's just a matter of we've got to go out and execute. We've been playing with desperation all year."


To try to maintain steadiness and not create a sense of panic, DeBoer plans to keep his lines the same as in Game 4, which Pittsburgh won 3-1 on Monday night in San Jose. That means Melker Karlsson will skate on the top line with Joe Pavelski and Joe Thornton, with Tomas Hertl (lower body injury) still expected to be out.


Asked about Hertl's status, DeBoer said, "It's day to day" -- then reacting to media reports that Hertl is done for the playoffs, he said condescendingly, "In Czech, that means out for the season."


"They've (his players) been where Pittsburgh is sitting right now (in earlier rounds), saw how quickly that can turn if you lose a game or the momentum swings the other way," DeBoer said. "It can happen to anybody."


The Penguins aren't talking as if they plan on it happening to them.


"I'm not going to talk about what they're going to have," Hagelin said. "We're going to have a great desperation level."




SERIES AT A GLANCE


GAME 1
Sharks at Penguins
Mon, May 30 Final 2 to 3
Recaps


GAME 2
Sharks at Penguins
Wed, Jun 1 Final 1 to 2
Recaps


GAME 3
Penguins at Sharks
Sat, Jun 4 Final 2 to 3
Recaps


GAME 4
Penguins at Sharks
Mon, Jun 6 Final 3 to 1
Recaps


GAME 5
Sharks at Penguins
Thu, Jun 9 - 8:00PM EDT


GAME 6
Penguins at Sharks
Sun, Jun 12 - 8:00PM EDT


GAME 7
Sharks at Penguins
Wed, Jun 15 - 8:00PM EDT
 

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Pens look to close out Sharks in Game 5
June 8, 2016


PITTSBURGH (AP) Phil Kessel insists nothing has changed. Not his game. Not his attitude. Not the shape of his body or his commitment to winning.


Press all you want. Monkey with the wording of the questions. It doesn't matter. The Pittsburgh Penguins forward, hardened by years of taking the brunt of the criticism for an underachieving franchise in Toronto, refuses to buy into the narrative that he has somehow evolved while leading the Penguins to the cusp of winning the Stanley Cup.


''I just kind of play the same way I have for my whole career,'' Kessel said Wednesday.


It's everything else that's different. The coach. The talent surrounding him. The pressure that's no longer his to bear alone. Oh yeah, and the stakes are different, too. When Kessel's No. 81 appears on the ice at Consol Energy Center on Thursday night to face the San Jose Sharks in Game 5 of the final, he'll try his best to soak in - but not get lost in - a moment he was never quite sure would come during those challenging seasons with the Maple Leafs.


''It's a big change from where I was at before,'' Kessel said. ''Obviously it's pretty special.''


Kessel has certainly done his part. He has 10 goals and 11 assists over the last seven weeks, including setting up a pair of scores in Pittsburgh's 3-1 win in Game 4 that gave the Penguins a 3-1 lead in the best-of-seven series and provided the franchise an opportunity to win the Cup at home for the first time. The player who spent more than half a decade as a pariah in Toronto, usually for things far beyond his control, is a leading contender to win the Conn Smythe Trophy as the playoff's most valuable player.


''We're not here if it's not for him,'' Penguins reserve goaltender Jeff Zatkoff said. ''He's (risen) to the occasion. It's just something you've grown to expect from him now. These types of games, you know he's going to deliver.''


And Zatkoff isn't just talking about that wicked wrist shot like the one that tied the score in Game 5 of the opening round against the New York Rangers, the goal that steadied the Penguins on their way to a closeout win. There's the passing like the tape-to-tape laser from his spot in the right circle to Evgeni Malkin's stick at the side of the net in the second period of Game 4 on Monday night that gave Pittsburgh a 2-0 lead. There's the conscientious backchecking and his interest level at both ends of the ice.


''I see a guy that's working his butt off,'' said ESPN analyst Barry Melrose. ''He's competing a lot harder away from the puck than he ever has before.''


Penguins coach Mike Sullivan calls it ''playing the right way,'' something he challenged Kessel and his high-profile teammates to do since taking over in mid-December.


''We've asked him to improve in certain areas of his game away from the puck, in the battle areas, and he's embraced our message,'' Sullivan said.


Much in the same way the dressing room - one where he can be just one of the guys - embraced him after Pittsburgh acquired the three-time All-Star from the Maple Leafs last July. Kessel is only too happy to quietly look for the exit whenever the media descends on Sidney Crosby's nearby stall. He'd much prefer to let his play do the talking, something he can do here that he never could for the Maple Leafs.


''I mean for some reason lots of people don't like Phil Kessel,'' Penguins general manager Jim Rutherford said. ''He was only the best player Toronto had for (six) years, year in and year out and he got the blame for everything, which was terribly unfair.''


While Kessel is quick to brush off his chances of capturing the Conn Smythe, the Sharks would prefer to table the discussion for at least a few more days, if not entirely. No team has rallied from a 3-1 deficit to raise the Cup since the Maple Leafs did it in 1942. Yet San Jose is well aware that no lead is insurmountable. The Sharks were up 3-0 in the first round against Los Angeles two years ago only to drop four straight, a collapse it took a full season to get over.


''I think it's closer than it feels and we've got to give ourselves an opportunity that if they stumble, we're going to jump on it,'' San Jose coach Peter DeBoer said.


Something the Sharks have been unable to do through four games. They have yet to lead at any point during regulation, their only victory a comeback 3-2 triumph in overtime in Game 3. They insist they're a different team when playing from ahead, even if they're decidedly out of practice against a Penguins team that has led for an astonishing 435:46 of game time.


''Let's just go win a game,'' San Jose forward Logan Couture said. ''Let's just win three periods.''


The Sharks' only stretch of extended dominance came in the second period of the Game 1. Pittsburgh's edge hasn't been significant, but it's been enough. Yet the Penguins stress they're not quite there, that the midseason renaissance that coincided with Sullivan's arrival on Dec. 15 is not complete.


No Pittsburgh franchise has captured a championship within the city limits since Bill Mazeroski's walkoff home run in Game 7 of the 1960 World Series. Kessel and the rest of the guys in black-and-gold are not getting ahead of themselves even as tickets prices on the secondary market soared into the thousands while police are girding for what's sure to be a rowdy celebration.


''I'm just going out there playing, trying my best,'' Kessel said. ''We still have a long way to go here. We need this one.''
 

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Pens' Sullivan pushing the right buttons
June 7, 2016


PITTSBURGH (AP) There is no magic button, even if the correlation between Mike Sullivan's deft attempts to a get player's attention and that player almost immediately elevating his game is unmistakable.


The Pittsburgh Penguins coach insists he's just doing his job, one that has brought the underachieving team to within three periods of a Stanley Cup that seems as inevitable now as it seemed unlikely when he took over in mid-December.


Pittsburgh headed home Tuesday with a firm 3-1 lead over the San Jose Sharks in the tightly contested but ultimately one-sided best-of-seven after Evgeni Malkin picked up a goal and an assist in a 3-1 victory on Monday night. Malkin's performance came barely 36 hours after Sullivan praised the star center for his hard work while adding the team needed even more from him if the Penguins wanted to close out the franchise's fourth title.


And just like that, it happened.


There was Malkin getting the secondary assist on Ian Cole's opening goal. There was Malkin redirecting Phil Kessel's pass from the circle into the net for a 2-0 advantage. There was Malkin skating with purpose, breaking up passes on one end of the ice and looking for his shot at the other. His first goal of the Cup final came when he darted for the far post on the power play and found himself all alone when Kessel threaded it to him.


''It's not like great goal, but it's just go to net, you know, and stay close to net and try play around net,'' Malkin said. ''When I have puck, I'm try shoot. It's simple game tonight for me.''


A vintage one too. Ditto Sullivan, whose knack for drawing the best out of his players during Pittsburgh's thrillingly arduous playoff run is becoming so frequent it's tempting to ask him for lottery numbers.


He noticed rookie Conor Sheary looking fatigued during the Eastern Conference finals against Tampa Bay and sat him for Game 5. Sheary, rested and still confident after a brief talk with Sullivan, returned to his pest-like self and has scored twice during the Cup final, including the overtime winner in Game 2.


Sullivan pulled struggling defenseman Olli Maatta in the second round against Washington yet stressed to the 21-year-old Maatta he would eventually get another chance, one that arrived when Trevor Daley went down with an ankle injury. All Maatta has done since his return is become the best Pittsburgh defenseman not named Kris Letang.


A sluggish night by rookie goaltender Matt Murray in Game 4 of the Eastern Conference finals led to Sullivan's most risky decision. He awarded the Game 5 start to veteran Marc-Andre Fleury, a move he made after taking 10 minutes to explain the reasoning behind it to Murray. It made all the difference. When Fleury slipped late in an overtime loss, Sullivan went right back to Murray. The 22-year-old is 5-1 since returning to the lineup.


''Every player goes through their ups and downs, times when they're at the top of their game, and times where it can be a bit of a challenge,'' Sullivan said. ''I think that's just human nature. Our players are no different. It never changes our opinions of these guys or how we feel about them. It's our responsibility as their coaching staff to try to help them through the process.''


A responsibility that Sullivan takes seriously. The hyper-competitive forward who spent 11 seasons grinding out a career developed an appreciation for coaches who didn't mince words. He places a premium on transparency. There is very little guessing about what's on his mind, mostly because he doesn't hesitate to say what needs to be said and if you don't like the tone, well, that's on you though Sullivan makes it a point to never make it personal.


''When he needs to he can call you out and tell you that he wants more from you,'' Murray said.


And no one is immune, regardless of status. When Malkin failed to register anything on the scoresheet through the first three games of the Cup final, Sullivan decided it was time to speak up.


''He's been a big part of this playoff success,'' Sullivan said. ''But certainly I know that there's another level that he has to help us win.''


The comments came only after Sullivan spoke to Malkin, the new father - his daughter Nikita was born last Tuesday - well aware of his own inability to transfer his power and creativity into points. Given an opportunity to lift Pittsburgh to the cusp of a title, Malkin looked like the force of nature who bulled his way to the Conn Smythe Trophy the last time the Penguins won it all in 2009.


''When he turns it on, obviously what he can do for us is huge for our team,'' Cole said.


Then again, in Sullivan's mind that makes Malkin no different than any of the other 20 guys in black-and-gold. He tries to work phrases like ''play the right way'' and ''our group'' in to nearly every answer. His team's rise over the last six months is a collective effort, not a star-driven one.


''I've told these guys from day one that we believe in this group,'' Sullivan said. ''We believe in our players, and we know when the stakes are high, they're going to be at their best.''


No magic button required.
 

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Sharks face daunting task down 3-1
June 7, 2016


SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) The task facing the San Jose Sharks is daunting: No team in nearly three quarters of a century has rallied from a 3-1 deficit to win the Stanley Cup Final.


Before the Sharks can start figuring out how to accomplish that ultimate goal, they will need to take much smaller steps, starting with just getting a lead at any point in a game.


Through four games, the Sharks have yet to play with the lead. They allowed the first goal all four times and got their only win in Game 3 in an overtime game they never led until Joonas Donskoi's game-winner.


''We've got to find a way to stick one of those in early and put them in the spot where they're chasing the game a little bit, which we haven't done yet,'' coach Peter DeBoer said Tuesday.


Doing that would be a good start to what would be an improbable comeback if the Sharks could pull it off. Of the 32 team that have fallen behind 3-1 in the Stanley Cup Final since it became a best-of-seven series in 1939, 31 have ultimately lost the series. The only winner in that span came in 1942, when Toronto actually rallied from 3-0 down to beat Detroit.


DeBoer has been in a tough spot in the final before. In 2012 with New Jersey, his team lost the first three games to Los Angeles before rallying for two wins and ultimately losing in six games.


''Everyone was writing us off,'' he said. ''We took the approach of, `Why not us?' I don't care what the record book says, that only one or two teams have come back from this situation, whatever those numbers are. Why can't we be the first team to do it? It starts with one game. I think that's the approach we're going to take.''


The formula that got San Jose to its first Cup final has been missing. The Sharks jumped on teams early for most of the first three rounds and then wore them down with their forechecking and cycle game. The power play was potent, providing timely goals throughout and the Sharks managed to knock off Los Angeles, Nashville and St. Louis on the way to the final.


But little has worked against the Penguins, who have used their decided edge in speed to control play for most of the four games, often keeping the Sharks hemmed in their own zone.


Pittsburgh has shut down San Jose's top guns. Joe Pavelski, who leads the NHL with 13 playoff goals, has no points through four games. Brent Burns had two assists in Game 1 and hasn't recorded a point since. Logan Couture, who leads the NHL with 26 points this postseason, has just two against the Penguins.


''I thought every game we've created a little bit more chances to score,'' DeBoer said. ''I think our big guys have gotten more shots off and more looks as the series has gone on. We're doing some good stuff. But you can't change the fact that we've played behind the entire series. That's something that we have to get fixed.''


San Jose has trailed for 121:44 of the series, about 25 minutes less than they trailed over 18 games in the first round when the Sharks scored first in 13 games and forced the opponent to chase the game.


The Penguins haven't played from behind in what seems like ages. They have gone 435:46 of game time without playing with a deficit since losing Game 4 to Tampa Bay in the Eastern Conference final. Pittsburgh's only two losses since came in overtime games where they didn't trail until the final goal.


''We're doing our best to score first and get a lead. It hasn't happened yet,'' Couture said. ''I don't know how it would change their game. I imagine they would keep playing the same way. When we have the lead, we play good defense and keep it simple.''


NOTES: F Tomas Hertl remains day to day with a lower-body injury. ... DeBoer said he did not plan to shake up his lines for a spark to start Game 5 on Thursday.
 

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NHL MONEYLINE


NHL > (59) SAN JOSE@ (60) PITTSBURGH | 2016-06-09 20:05:00 - 2016-06-09 20:05:00
Play AGAINST SAN JOSE using money line in All games after 3 or more consecutive unders
The record is 2 Wins and 11 Losses for the last two seasons (-15.4 units)

NHL > (59) SAN JOSE@ (60) PITTSBURGH | 2016-06-09 20:05:00 - 2016-06-09 20:05:00
Play ON SAN JOSE using money line in Road games when playing against a team with a winning record
The record is 15 Wins and 5 Losses for the this season (+11.9 units)


---------------


NHL PUCKLINE


NHL > (59) SAN JOSE@ (60) PITTSBURGH | 2016-06-09 20:05:00 - 2016-06-09 20:05:00
Play AGAINST SAN JOSE in All games after 3 or more consecutive unders
The record is 2 Wins and 11 Losses for the last two seasons (-15.4 units)

NHL > (59) SAN JOSE@ (60) PITTSBURGH | 2016-06-09 20:05:00 - 2016-06-09 20:05:00
Play ON SAN JOSE in Road games when playing against a team with a winning record
The record is 15 Wins and 5 Losses for the this season (+11.9 units)
 

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NHL RESULTS OVERALL:


1 - 1 + 3.00



THURSDAY, JUNE 9


GAME TIME(ET) PICK UNITS


SJ at PIT 08:00 PM

SJ +144 ( 4 UNITS )


O 5.0 ( 2 UNITS )
 

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Sharks stave off elimination, top Pens
June 9, 2016



PITTSBURGH (AP) There's very little flash to Martin Jones. The San Jose Sharks goaltender speaks in a polite monotone, only too eager to deflect attention elsewhere. Call it a reflex action honed from years spent wearing a mask while intentionally standing in the way of a puck often fired at high speed.


Only this time he couldn't get out of the spotlight. Not after spoiling Pittsburgh's long-awaited house party with 60 minutes of the best hockey of his life.


The Sharks and the understated guy in net are heading back west for Game 6. So are the Penguins. The Stanley Cup, too. Blame Jones, who turned aside 44 shots in a 4-2 victory in Game 5 on Thursday night.


Outplayed but not outscored, San Jose heads home with a chance to even the best-of-seven series at 3-3 on Sunday.


''Joner bailed us out tonight,'' said San Jose defenseman Justin Braun.


Repeatedly. Their breakthrough season on the line after spending the better part of four games chasing - but not quite catching - the relentless Penguins, the Sharks responded by jumping on Pittsburgh rookie goaltender Matt Murray early then relying on Jones late.


Not that he wanted to talk about it, not even after becoming the first goaltender in the expansion era to win two games in the final while making at least 40 saves.


''I don't know, I felt good tonight,'' Jones said. ''I thought our (defense) did a good job in front of the net and we got a few bounces tonight.''


His teammates knew better. San Jose still has a chance to become the second team in NHL history to claw out of a 3-1 deficit in the final because Jones refused to serve as doorman for a coronation for Sidney Crosby and company.


''He was unbelievable,'' Braun said. ''He was calm. He doesn't flinch. He doesn't go after guys. He doesn't lose his cool. He's tapping us on the pads saying we did a good job and usually he bails us out. We need to give him a little more help.''


The Sharks, particularly their stars, gave him enough in the first period and Jones had all the wiggle room he would need.


Logan Couture had a goal and two assists while Brent Burns, Melker Karlsson and captain Joe Pavelski also scored for San Jose, which was outshot 46-22 but held firm after surviving a chaotic opening five minutes and playing capably after getting the lead in regulation for the first time in the series.


''We know we haven't scored many goals or any in this series and it's one of the reasons we're down 3-1,'' Couture said, ''(but) we didn't want our season to end.''


Evgeni Malkin and Carl Hagelin scored for Pittsburgh but the 22-year-old Murray, whose postseason play helped fuel Pittsburgh's return to the final after a seven-year break, faltered early and his high-profile teammates struggled to the puck by Jones.


''We were right there,'' Crosby said. ''We hit a few posts. We were in around the net. Guys were working hard.''


Just not enough to finish off the Sharks.


San Jose coach Peter DeBoer preached patience with his team in a hole only one club in NHL history has climbed out of to raise the Cup. He pointed to the Sharks' own first-round collapse two years ago against Los Angeles - when a three-game lead became a 4-3 loss that took an entire season to get over - as proof of how quickly the tenor of a series can change.


The Penguins stressed the final step in the long slog from the tumult of December - when Mike Johnston was fired and replaced with Mike Sullivan with the team languishing on the fringe of the playoff picture - would be the most difficult. Yet the prospect of celebrating the first title captured within the city limits in 56 years sent thousands into the streets around Consol Energy Center and ticket were going for well over $1,000.


Things were no different inside, with the largest crowd in the arena's brief history - a group that included Pirates Hall of Famer Bill Mazeroski, whose epic ninth-inning blast in Game 7 of the 1960 World Series at Forbes Field a couple miles up the street marked the last time a championship season ended in Pittsburgh - in a frenzy from the opening faceoff.


It took all of 64 seconds for the Sharks to quiet them and 2:53 to leave them stunned. Burns' first goal of the final, a wrist shot from the circle that didn't look unlike Joonas Donskoi's overtime winner in Game 3, put San Jose in front in regulation for the first time in the series. Couture doubled San Jose's advantage less than two minutes later with a redirect in front of the net.


The momentum evaporated quickly. Malkin scored on the power play 4:44 into the first and Hagelin followed 22 seconds later to tie it, the fastest opening four-goal sequence in the history of the final.


Things settled down - at least a little - until Karlsson's shot from in front with just under five minutes left in the first, set up by a pretty backhand feed from Couture.


The advantage set the stage for Jones, who spent a large portion of the second period fending off one odd-man rush after another as Pittsburgh's frenetic speed pinned the Sharks in their end for long stretches. Yet the goalie who watched as a backup behind Los Angeles star Jonathan Quick two years ago as the Kings roared back to stun San Jose on their way to a title gave the Sharks the spark they needed to extend their season for at least three more days and keeping their slim hopes of raising the Cup themselves alive.


''We played the way we needed to win the game,'' Murray said. ''But their goalie stood on his head.''
 

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Penguins miss out on opportunity to win Stanley Cup
June 10, 2016



PITTSBURGH (AP) Early nerves got the better of the Pittsburgh Penguins, who had a chance to win the Stanley Cup at home. Admittedly unsettled at the outset of Game 5, they allowed the San Jose Sharks just enough of an opportunity to capitalize.


San Jose took an early lead and Martin Jones made it stand stopping the final 31 shots he faced as the Sharks avoided elimination with a 4-2 victory on Thursday.


''The adrenaline was definitely going,'' Penguins' goaltender Matt Murray said. ''A little bit jittery, a little bit nervous at the start, but I really settled in after that.''


The normally reliable and unflappable Murray had won 14 of 20 games in the playoffs, but he struggled early, allowing three goals on seven first-period shots. The 22-year-old rookie settled down to stop the final 14 shots he faced, but his teammates couldn't solve Jones, who finished with 44 saves.


The Penguins had a chance to win their fourth Stanley Cup in franchise history and first since 2009. Pittsburgh remains in front, 3-2, in the best-of-seven series and will get another chance to win it all on Sunday.


''They were playing to try and get it back home,'' Penguins' captain Sidney Crosby said. ''I'm sure that was their mindset and we definitely wanted to close it out. It didn't happen, so we have to regroup and make sure we're ready for the next one.''


Brent Burns, Logan Couture and Melker Karlsson scored first-period goals for the Sharks. Joe Pavelski, the playoff leader in goals, sealed it with his first of the series and 14th of the playoffs. Evgeni Malkin and Carl Hagelin scored for Pittsburgh also in the first as San Jose held a 3-2 lead through two periods.


The Penguins held a 46-21 advantage in shots, but couldn't come up with the tying goal. Jones was the difference as he made a pad save on Nick Bonino from the top of the crease and later stopped Conor Sheary in the slot.


''He made some good saves,'' Crosby said. ''We were right there. ''I thought we did a lot of good things.''


Pittsburgh appeared primed to celebrate a championship on Thursday.


The teams played in front of the largest crowd in Consol Energy Center history, some fans paying well above $1,500 for standing-room-only tickets and their chance to witness history. City officials estimated an additional 20,000 residents flooded the area, shutting down streets outside the arena, while 10,000 more filed in at a second location to watch the game on big screens.


It would've been the first major championship won in the city of Pittsburgh since Bill Mazeroski's walkoff home run for the Pirates in Game 7 of the 1960 World Series.


Instead, the Sharks had other plans. San Jose, appearing in its first Stanley Cup Final, is trying to become the first team since Toronto in 1942 to rally from a 3-1 deficit to win the Stanley Cup.


''The elimination game is always the most difficult,'' Penguins' coach Mike Sullivan said.


The Penguins and Sharks combined for four goals in the first five minutes on Thursday, the fastest to start a Stanley Cup Final game in NHL history.


Burns opened the scoring 1:04 into the game, giving the Sharks their first lead of the Stanley Cup Final. It was the first time Pittsburgh trailed in regulation since Game 4 of the Eastern Conference Final against Tampa Bay. Couture tipped Justin Braun's shot behind Murray less than two minutes later to make it a 2-0 game.


Malkin quickly responded for Pittsburgh with a power-play goal and Hagelin tied the game 22 seconds later. Karlsson put the Sharks ahead after a wild first period, taking a no-look drop pass from Couture before putting a shot under Murray's glove from the slot.


That proved to be enough for the Sharks.


''We knew we were going to have to bring our best,'' Sullivan said. ''We did a lot of really good things out there.''
 

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The Latest: Sharks beat Pittsburgh, force Game 6
June 9, 2016



PITTSBURGH (AP) The Latest from Game 5 of the Stanley Cup Final between the Pittsburgh Penguins and the San Jose Sharks. The Penguins lead the series 3-2. (All times local):




11:40 p.m.


It's back to San Jose for Game 6 of the Stanley Cup Final on Sunday.


The Sharks are 2-0 this postseason when facing elimination. The Penguins squandered an opportunity to become the first Pittsburgh team to win a championship at home since the Pirates won Game 7 of the 1960 World Series over the New York Yankees on Bill Mazeroski's walk-off home run.


The Sharks trail the series 3-2 following a 4-2 win on Thursday. The only other time they faced elimination this postseason, San Jose defeated Nashville 5-0 in Game 7 of their second-round series.


Sharks captain Joe Pavelski earned his first point of the series by securing the victory with an empty-net goal.


---


11 p.m.


Martin Jones stopped 44 shots, Logan Couture had a goal and two assists and the San Jose Sharks avoided elimination by hanging on for a 4-2 win over the Pittsburgh Penguins in Game 5 of the Stanley Cup Final on Thursday night.


Melker Karlsson, Brent Burns and captain Joe Pavelski, into an empty net, also scored for the Sharks, who cut the Penguins' series lead to 3-2 and forced Game 6 at San Jose on Sunday.


Evgeni Malkin and Carl Hagelin scored 26 seconds apart in the first period of a game the Penguins outshot the Sharks 46-22.


Aside from Pavelski's goal, the rest of the scoring came in the first period, and included the teams combining to score two each in the first 5:06 to set a Cup final series record for fastest four goals to start a game.


The Sharks squandered a 2-0 lead before Karlsson scored the go-ahead goal with 5:13 left in the first. Set up in the slot by Couture's no-look pass, Karlsson snapped a shot that banked in off the bottom of goalie Matt Murray's glove.


---


10:25 p.m.


The Sharks are one period away from sending the Stanley Cup Final series back to San Jose for Game 6 on Sunday.


Up 3-2 on the Pittsburgh Penguins entering the third period, the Sharks are 8-0 this postseason when leading after two periods.


The Penguins, meanwhile, are 0-4 this postseason when trailing after two periods. Pittsburgh, which leads the series 3-1, is attempting to win its fourth Cup, and do it for the first time on home ice.


---


10:05 p.m.


Martin Jones stopped all 17 shots he faced in the second period in helping the San Jose Sharks preserve their 3-2 lead over the Pittsburgh Penguins. Jones was particularly sharp during a 50-second span beginning with about 5 minutes left in the frame.


First, he stopped Phil Kessel's shot from the left circle, and then kicked out his left pad to stop Nick Bonino attempting to backhand in the rebound from the slot. Off the next faceoff, Jones got a piece Connor Sheary's shot that was deflected in front. Finally, Jones stood his ground and got his blocker out just in time to stop Patric Hornqvist driving alone to the net and getting a shot off from his knees.


Jones has allowed two goals on 32 shots. Penguins rookie Matt Murray has given up three goals on 15 shots.


Pittsburgh leads the series 3-1 and was hoping to win the Cup at home Thursday night.


---


9:50 p.m.


Kentucky basketball coach John Calipari provided a thumbs-up to the up-tempo, high-scoring first period.


He posted a picture from the stands of the Consol Energy Center and a note on his Twitter account after the Penguins had scored twice in 22 seconds to tie the game at 2.


Referring to the goal surge as ''exciting stuff!'' Calipari added the Penguins' fast-break wouldn't look out of place at the Wildcats home, Rupp Arena.


---


9:40 p.m.


San Jose Sharks forward Logan Couture has regained his scoring touch in Game 5 of the Stanley Cup Final.


Couture has a goal and two assists in helping the Sharks build a 3-2 lead over the Penguins. That comes after Couture was held to just two assists this series, and held without a point the previous two games.


Couture has now upped his playoff-leading point total to 29 (nine goals, 20 points). He had already surpassed the Sharks' franchise record for playoff points set by Igor Larionov, who had 18 points in 14 games in 1994.


---


9:25 p.m.


The San Jose Sharks and Pittsburgh Penguins have set a Stanley Cup Final record by combining to score four goals in the first 5:06.


Each team scored twice in what were the fastest four goals scored to open a game in the final series, according to Elias Sports.


The Penguins were involved in setting the old mark in 1992 when they and the Chicago Blackhawks combined to score four goals in the first 6:51 of Game 4 of the final series. Pittsburgh went on to win the game 8-2 and complete a four-game sweep of the Blackhawks.


---


9:10 p.m.


Down 3-2 after the first period to San Jose, the Pittsburgh Penguins headed into intermission trailing on the scoreboard for the first time in three weeks.


The Sharks opened the scoring for the first time in this Stanley Cup Final on Brent Burns' goal just 1:04 into the game. Burns' goal also ended the Penguins streak of not trailing in a game at 436 minutes and 50 seconds. It was a run that began following a 4-3 loss to Tampa Bay in Game 4 of the Eastern Conference Final on May 20.


The Penguins have gone 5-2 since, with both losses coming in overtime.


The Sharks then opened a 2-0 lead on Logan Couture's redirection of Justin Braun's point shot. Pittsburgh responded with two goals in a span of 22 seconds as the two teams combined to score four times in the first 5:06.


San Jose regained the lead on Melker Karlsson's goal with 5:15 left in the period.


Penguins rookie goalie Matt Murray made just four saves on seven shots.


Sharks goalie Martin Jones stopped 13 of 15 shots.


---


8:55 p.m.


The San Jose Sharks have taken a 3-2 lead on Melker Karlsson's goal scored with 5:15 left in what's been a highly entertaining first period.


Logan Couture set up the goal with a no-look pass to a wide-open Karlsson in the slot. Karlsson quickly snapped a shot that banked in off the bottom of goalie Matt Murray's glove.


Couture now has a goal and two assists.


The posts have been ringing in Pittsburgh.


After erasing a two-goal deficit, the Pittsburgh Penguins took over the momentum. Chris Kunitz snapped a shot from the left circle that banged off the left post with 11 minutes left in the first period. Some 10 seconds later, Pittsburgh's Phil Kessel had a shot from near the same spot deflect off both posts. Kessel's shot first hit off the left post and then caromed across the crease and hit the right post, before deflecting out.


Both chances came during a power-play opportunity, with San Jose defenseman Brent Burns off for high-sticking.


---


8:30 p.m.


Goals are coming fast in Game 5 of the Stanley Cup final.


The Sharks scored goals 1:49 apart in the first period of Game 5 to take a 2-0 lead, stunning a Pittsburgh crowd eager to celebrate a Stanley Cup championship. The Penguins led the best-of-seven series 3-1 heading into Thursday night's game.


Brent Burns gave the Sharks their first lead of the final with a goal just 64 seconds into the game. Logan Couture then deflected in Justin Braun's shot from the right point to put the San Jose Sharks up 2-0 at the 2:53 mark.


It didn't last long: The Penguins answered with goals just 22 seconds apart. Evgeni Malkin cashed in on a power play and Carl Hagelin added another to make it 2-2 just 5:06 into the game.


---


7:55 p.m.


By the numbers:


Teams with a 3-1 series lead have gone on to win the Cup 31 of 32 times. The 1942 Toronto Maple Leafs are the lone NHL team to overcome a 3-0 deficit to win.


The Penguins have not trailed over past 435 minutes and 46 seconds of game time. They're 5-2 during that stretch, with both losses in overtime.


With 14 playoff wins, Penguins goalie Matt Murray is one shy of matching NHL rookie record for one postseason set by Patrick Roy in 1986, and matched by Ron Hextall in `87 and Cam Ward in 2006.


The Sharks set a franchise record with 28 regular-season road wins, though they're 5-6 on the road in the playoffs.


San Jose goalie Martin Jones has allowed 19 goals in his past seven games since posting consecutive shutouts against St. Louis in Games 2-3 of Western Conference final.


Both teams have converted just one of eight power-play chances.


With three Cup championships, Pittsburgh is tied for ninth on the list with New Jersey. The New York Rangers and Islanders are tied for seventh with four each.


---


7:20 p.m.


Pittsburgh is ready for the biggest party in 56 years.


Thousands of fans descended on the streets surrounding Consol Energy Center on Thursday ahead of Game 5 of the Stanley Cup Final. The Penguins can become the first Pittsburgh team to win a championship at home since Bill Mazeroski's epic ninth-inning home run against the New York Yankees in Game 7 of the 1960 World Series.


Scalpers were asking $1,500 just to get in the door, though business was slow two hours before game time. With temperatures around 70 degrees and little humidity, many decided against forking over a mortgage payment in exchange for a folding chair, a frosty beverage or two and starting ''Let's Go Pens!'' chants.


The city and team have worked together to put a massive big screen television outside an arena gate, and added a second viewing spot at a downtown shopping square about a mile away.


---


6:50 p.m.


Pittsburgh Penguins coach Mike Sullivan is hoping Evgeni Malkin's performance in Game 4 can carry over into Game 5 of the Stanley Cup Final against San Jose.


Malkin posted his first points of the series with a goal and assist in a 3-1 victory at San Jose on Monday night. The goal, which put Pittsburgh up 2-0, stood up as the winner.


Sullivan says he's seen Malkin's performance improving both offensively and defensively as the series progresses.


Sidney Crosby has just two assists against San Jose, and is in the midst of a five-game scoring drought.


Defenseman Kris Letang has three assists, all of them setting up eventual winning goals.


---


6:30 p.m.


San Jose Sharks coach Peter DeBoer has a simple objective when it comes to Game 5 of the Stanley Cup Final against the Pittsburgh Penguins.


Scoring first would be a welcome change, DeBoer told reporters earlier in the day.


That's something the Sharks haven't done yet in a series they trail 3-1.


DeBoer, however, didn't want to paint his team into a corner. Should the Sharks not score first, he said, ''we can't just back the bus up and head home.''


DeBoer at least cleared up one issue regarding his lineup by announcing center Tomas Hertl will miss his third straight game with a lower-body injury.


---


6:10 p.m.


Sidney Crosby and the Pittsburgh Penguins have an opportunity to accomplish something not done since the final months of the Dwight D. Eisenhower's presidency: Win a championship at home.


With a 3-1 Stanley Cup Final series lead over San Jose, the Penguins will get that opportunity at the Consol Energy Center on Thursday night.


Pittsburgh hasn't had a chance to celebrate a title on home soil since Oct. 13, 1960. That's when Bill Mazeroski led off the ninth inning with a home run to clinch a 10-9 Game 7 victory over the New York Yankees at Forbes Field.


The Penguins celebrated their previous three championship victories on the road: at Minnesota in 1991, at Chicago in `92 and at Detroit in 2009.


The Pirates clinched their previous two World Series titles at Baltimore, in 1979 and `71, both in Game 7, while the Steelers' six Super Bowl titles have all come at neutral sites.


---


6 p.m.


The Pittsburgh Penguins are one victory away from clinching their fourth Stanley Cup championship.


Pittsburgh returns home for Game 5 on Thursday night holding a 3-1 series lead over the San Jose Sharks.


Forward Phil Kessel leads the Penguins in the playoffs with 21 points (10 goals, 11 assists). Rookie goalie Matt Murray has allowed just seven goals in four games against the Sharks.


The Penguins are seeking to win their second title since 2009. The Sharks are attempting to avoid elimination in making the franchise's first Cup Final appearance.


The Sharks have yet to hold a lead this series. They rallied from a 2-0 deficit to beat Pittsburgh 3-2 in overtime in Game 3.


A Sharks victory would force Game 6 at San Jose on Sunday.
 

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nhl results last night: 2 - 0 + 7.76
overall playoff record: 3 - 1 + 10.76


see you on sunday !!
 

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Armadillo: Sunday's six-pack

Nolan Ryan threw seven no-hitters, to seven different catchers........

-- Jeff Torborg-- Became a manager when his playing days were done.

-- Art Kusyner-- Starting C Torborg broke his finger two days before this game.

-- Tom Egan-- Like Bob Uecker, a journeyman catcher with a career .200 BA.

-- Ellie Rodriguez-- Was All-Star rep for Royals in their first-ever season.

-- Alan Ashby-- Is now a broadcaster for the Astros.

-- John Russell-- Was Rangers' 3rd-string catcher when he caught the no-hitter.

-- Mike Stanley-- Best hitter of these seven, hit 187 HRs, had a .370 OB%.

**********

Armadillo: Saturday's List of 13: Wrapping up a sports Saturday......

13) Someone brought this up on Twitter Friday night and it took me a damn hour to unravel the whole thing in my mind:

Vince Carter was drafted by Golden State on June 24, 1988; he was traded later that night to Toronto for Antawn Jamison, but the pick that was used to draft him had already been traded twice, in 1993 and 1994-- the Anfernee Hardaway/Chris Webber deal in '93 and a deal involving Scott Skiles the next year.

In both trades, a pick Golden State later used to draft Todd Fuller (whoops) was also moved with the Carter pick.

12) Vince Carter scored 23,969 points in his NBA career, earned $165,575,296 in salary; the pick used to select him was traded when he was in 10th and 11th grade.

11) Barry Bonds was a great, great hitter; he hit 762 HRs, had a career OB% of .444.

Don Mattingly hit .307 in his fine career, with 222 homers, also a great hitter.

But playing isn't coaching; Mattingly is Marlins' manager, Bonds is a hitting coach and neither one of them can fix Giancarlo Stanton, who is going thru one of the worst hitting funks I've ever seen. Its like he has suddenly become Adam Dunn, except he never walks. Stanton is hitting .195 this season. No bueno.

With two strikes on him this season, Stanton is 9-112, with 14 walks, 77 strikeouts. Seeing as they still owe hm $325M or so down the road, they need to have coaches who can fix him, even if that coach wasn't a Hall of Fame player.

10) White Sox brought up SS prospect Tim Anderson and DFA'd Jimmy Rollins, making them younger, more athletic and probably better.

9) In Jose Quintana's last 17 losses, White Sox scored a total of 19 runs.

8) Cavan Biggio, son of the Astros' Hall of Famer, was a 5th-round draft pick of the Blue Jays. That pick was announced by Cavan's older brother, who is an intern in the commissioner's office. There is networking in baseball; your dad is a Hall of Famer, you have a better shot at an internship.

7) Red Sox have scored 54 more runs than any team in the AL; some credit has to go to hitting coach Chili Davis, who is very underrated. When he was in Oakland, the A's made the playoffs all three years. Probably not a coincidence.

6) New sliding rules at second base are hurting offenses; you get lot more double plays now, with runners not allowed to do anything remotely aggressive to break up a double play. Reducing contact around home plate probably helped scoring go up.

5) Golfer Jason Day threw out the first pitch at the Pirates game last night; he is in town for the US Open at Oakmont next week.

4) Chicago Cubs used a 6th-round pick on Chad Hockin, who is the grandson of the great hitter, the late Harmon Killebrew.

3) Klay Thompson wore a Dodgers' hat at a Giants' home game last night, normally not the best way to make friends in the Bay Area, but Thompson's brother plays for the Dodgers and if the Warriors win Monday night, it'll all be forgotten, I'm guessing.

2) CBS made a good move, dumped former referee Mike Carey as its rules expert; Carey wasn't good on TV, although he did improve last year.

1) I'd like to propose a change to how saves are tracked; the current system just isn't a good yardstick for how closers finish games.

-- Protect a one-run lead, 3 points. Lose a one-run lead, lose 1 point.
-- Protect a two-run lead, 2 points. Lose a two-run lead, lose 2 points.
-- Protect a three-run lead, 1 point. Lose a three-run lead, lose 3 points.

For instance, Huston Street entered the game last night with a 3-0 lead; he blew the lead, so he would lose three points. I think over the course of a season, this point system would be more telling than the current one.
 

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