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2009 Stanley Cup Final

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2009 ice hockey championship series

2009 Stanley Cup Final
1234567Total
Pittsburgh Penguins11440224
Detroit Red Wings33225113
Location(s)Pittsburgh:Mellon Arena (3, 4, 6)
Detroit:Joe Louis Arena (1, 2, 5, 7)
CoachesPittsburgh:Dan Bylsma
Detroit:Mike Babcock
CaptainsPittsburgh:Sidney Crosby
Detroit:Nicklas Lidstrom
National anthemsPittsburgh:Jeff Jimerson
Detroit:Karen Newman
RefereesPaul Devorski (1, 3, 5, 7)
Dennis LaRue (1, 3, 5)
Bill McCreary (2, 4, 6, 7)
Marc Joannette (2, 4, 6)
DatesMay 30 – June 12, 2009
MVPEvgeni Malkin (Penguins)
Series-winning goalMaxime Talbot(10:07, second, G7)
Hall of FamersRed Wings:
Chris Chelios (2013; did not play)
Pavel Datsyuk (2024)
Marian Hossa (2020)
Nicklas Lidstrom (2015)
Officials:
Bill McCreary (2014)
NetworksCanada:
(English):CBC
(French):RDS
United States:
(English):NBC (1–2, 5–7),Versus (3–4)
Announcers(CBC)Jim Hughson andCraig Simpson
(RDS)Pierre Houde andBenoit Brunet
(NBC/Versus)Mike Emrick andEddie Olczyk
(NHL International)Dave Strader andJoe Micheletti
← 2008Stanley Cup Final2010 →
A graph comparing the teams' points throughout the regular season.

The2009 Stanley Cup Final was thechampionship series of theNational Hockey League's (NHL)2008–09 season, and the culmination of the2009 Stanley Cup playoffs. It was contested between theEastern Conference championPittsburgh Penguins and theWestern Conference and defendingStanley Cup championDetroit Red Wings. It was Detroit's 24th appearance in the Finals and Pittsburgh's fourth appearance in the Finals. This was a rematch of the previous year'sStanley Cup Final where Detroit had defeated Pittsburgh in six games. This time, the Penguins defeated the Red Wings in seven games to win their first Stanley Cup title since1992 and their third overall. Until2025, this was the last time that both teams made it to the Stanley Cup Final in back to back years.

Pittsburgh'sEvgeni Malkin won theConn Smythe Trophy as the Most Valuable Player of the 2009 playoffs, becoming the first Russian-born player to win the trophy. Until2021, this was the last time the Finals were played entirely in theEastern Time Zone. Since the2013 realignment, it is impossible for both finalists to be from the Eastern Time Zone as every team that is based in that time zone is in the same conference. The lone exception to this occurred during the2020–21 NHL season when the league temporarily realigned for one season due to thecross-border travel restrictions caused by theCOVID-19 pandemic.

Road to Finals

[edit]

Detroit Red Wings

[edit]
Main article:2008–09 Detroit Red Wings season

Entering the 2008–09 season as the Stanley Cup Champions, the Detroit Red Wings signed head coachMike Babcock to three-year contract extension.[1]Marian Hossa signed with the Red Wings after turning down a $49 million offer from the Penguins, whom he played for throughout the 2007–08 playoffs.[2] The Red Wings also signedTy Conklin, who had played for the Penguins throughout the 2007–08 season.[3]

The Red Wings won theCentral Division title with 112 points before defeating theColumbus Blue Jackets 4–0,rivalAnaheim Ducks 4–3, andthen-division rivalChicago Blackhawks 4–1 to advance to the Stanley Cup Final for the sixth time in the past 14 seasons.

Pittsburgh Penguins

[edit]
Main article:2008–09 Pittsburgh Penguins season

The Pittsburgh Penguins were the reigning Eastern Conference Champions. After playing 57 games of the 2008–09 season, the Pittsburgh Penguins had a record of 27–25–5 and were five points out of playoff position.[4] The organization fired head coachMichel Therrien and replaced him withDan Bylsma, head coach of the organization'sAmerican Hockey League affiliate inWilkes-Barre.[5] Under Bylsma, the team went 18–3–4, including 10–1–2 in March, losing one home game.[6] Before thetrade deadline, the Penguins acquiredChris Kunitz andBill Guerin from theAnaheim Ducks and theNew York Islanders respectively.[7][8]

The Penguins qualified for the playoffs for their third consecutive season. They did not repeat as champions of theAtlantic Division, but earned the fourth seed in the Eastern Conference with 99 points. They began the2009 Stanley Cup playoffs on April 15 against theircross-state rivalPhiladelphia Flyers. They beat the Flyers 4–2,Washington Capitals 4–3, andCarolina Hurricanes 4–0 to earn a second-straight berth in the Stanley Cup Final.

Game summaries

[edit]
Number in parentheses represents the player's total in goals or assists to that point of the entire four rounds of the playoffs

Game one

[edit]
May 30Pittsburgh Penguins1–3Detroit Red WingsJoe Louis ArenaRecap

The Red Wings took game one, 3–1, as three different Detroit players scored goals off of unusual bounces.[9] The first period featured back and forth action, with each team having a variety of chances. Detroit scored the first goal of the game at 13:38 into the first period whenBrad Stuart's shot missed wide left, bounced off the end boards, and then deflected off the back of Pittsburgh goaltenderMarc-Andre Fleury's leg into the net. The Penguins tied the game at 18:37 when Red Wings goaltenderChris Osgood mishandled a shot byEvgeni Malkin, allowingRuslan Fedotenko to score. Malkin gained the initial opportunity after forcing defenceman Stuart into a turnover. The Penguins dominated the early portion of the second period, but Osgood kept the game even, including when he bailed his team out by stopping Malkin on a breakaway. The Red Wings bounced back and went ahead at 19:02 of the period afterBrian Rafalski's shot rebounded off the end boards toJohan Franzen, who banked a shot off Fleury and into the net. Detroit's third goal of the game came at 2:46 of the third period when, after a save by Fleury onVille Leino, the puck bounced high into the air and was swatted by Detroit rookieJustin Abdelkader from midair to his stick. Abdelkader then went around Pittsburgh'sJordan Staal (who had lost sight of the puck) and shot it above Fleury. Only three total penalties were called in the game, two on Detroit and one on Pittsburgh, but neither team could take advantage on their respective power plays as Osgood stopped 31 out of 32 shots while Fleury stopped 27 out of 30.[10][11]

Scoring summary
PeriodTeamGoalAssist(s)TimeScore
1stDETBrad Stuart (2)Unassisted13:381–0 DET
PITRuslan Fedotenko (7)Evgeni Malkin (17)18:371–1
2ndDETJohan Franzen (11)Brian Rafalski (7),Henrik Zetterberg (10)19:022–1 DET
3rdDETJustin Abdelkader (1)Ville Leino (1)2:463–1 DET
Penalty summary
PeriodTeamPlayerPenaltyTimePIM
1stNone
2ndDETBrett LebdaSlashing4:382:00
DETMikael SamuelssonHolding7:052:00
PITCraig AdamsHooking13:442:00
3rdNone
Shots by period
Team123Total
PIT7131232
DET1111830

Game two

[edit]
May 31Pittsburgh Penguins1–3Detroit Red WingsJoe Louis ArenaRecap

Game two was another 3–1 victory for Detroit. Pittsburgh started out the game strong, setting up numerous chances from behind the net that were stopped by Chris Osgood. The Penguins then struck first at 16:50 of the opening period. After the Red Wings'Niklas Kronwall was sent to the penalty box for cross checking, Evgeni Malkin fired from the slot, and a scramble in front of the net ensued after Osgood gave up a rebound. The puck eventually came to Malkin for a second crack, and the shot was inadvertently deflected by Brad Stuart into his own net. Detroit took over in the second period, dominating in shots and benefiting from some luck, such as when Bill Guerin's wrist shot hit the inside of the post but stayed out of the net.Jonathan Ericsson tied the game at 4:21 of the second period, moments after the Penguins were forced to ice the puck after a long shift. Pittsburgh promptly lost the ensuing faceoff in their zone, allowing Ericsson to score from the point. Then at 10:29, the Red Wings went ahead afterValtteri Filppula was able to backhand a shot from a difficult angle into the net. Filppula scored after Fleury had stopped bothTomas Holmstrom and Marian Hossa, but could not hold the rebounds.

At 1:39 of the third period,Sidney Crosby peeled out of the corner and fired a shot that bounced off the post and rolled along the Detroit goal line. The play was reviewed by video replay, but the ruling on the ice was upheld as a no goal. Then at 2:47, Justin Abdelkader gave the Red Wings their third goal of the game, as he moved in slowly against the Pittsburgh defence and blasted a shot that caught Marc-Andre Fleury off guard as it landed in the net. Tensions flared up near the end of the game at 19:41 of the third period.Maxime Talbot was called for slashing, which eventually led to a fight between Malkin and Detroit'sHenrik Zetterberg. Malkin received an instigator penalty and a misconduct penalty, but was not suspended by the league for the incident, despite Rule 47.22 (now Rule 46.21) of the NHL rulebook automatically imposing the suspension.[12]

Scoring summary
PeriodTeamGoalAssist(s)TimeScore
1stPITEvgeni Malkin (13) –ppKris Letang (7),Bill Guerin (8)16:501–0 PIT
2ndDETJonathan Ericsson (3)Jiri Hudler (6),Darren Helm (1)4:211–1
DETValtteri Filppula (2)Tomas Holmstrom (4) andMarian Hossa (7)10:292–1 DET
3rdDETJustin Abdelkader (2)Tomas Holmstrom (5) andMarian Hossa (8)2:473–1 DET
Penalty summary
PeriodTeamPlayerPenaltyTimePIM
1stDETNiklas KronwallCross Checking16:082:00
2ndPITEvgeni MalkinInterference8:152:00
3rdPITMaxime TalbotSlashing19:412:00
PITEvgeni MalkinFighting19:415:00
DETHenrik ZetterbergFighting19:415:00
PITEvgeni MalkinInstigator19:412:00
PITEvgeni MalkinMisconduct19:4110:00
Shots by period
Team123Total
PIT1291233
DET716326

Game three

[edit]
June 2Detroit Red Wings2–4Pittsburgh PenguinsMellon ArenaRecap


The Penguins won game three, 4–2, cutting their deficit in the series in half. Pittsburgh got off to a strong offensive start and scored first at 4:48 of the opening period when Evgeni Malkin set up Maxime Talbot, who fired a one-timed snapshot. Detroit answered less than two minutes later with a Henrik Zetterberg goal at 6:19 in the period. Zetterberg scored on a rebound after Ville Leino's wrap-around attempt was stopped by Marc-Andre Fleury. After Pittsburgh'sBrooks Orpik was called for interference, Johan Franzen responding by scoring a goal at 11:33 with under ten seconds left in the penalty. Franzen's score was a one-timer that resulted after Zetterberg fed him a pass around the goal crease. While Detroit dominated the middle of the first period, at one point firing nine straight shots, the Penguins caught a break when the officials missed a penalty for too many men when Pittsburgh had inadvertently created their own powerplay, and played with six men for nearly 30 seconds.[13] Pittsburgh then used a late holding call onDaniel Cleary to set up a game-tying power play goal. Defenceman Kris Letang fanned on a one-time attempt as he took a pass from Malkin, but regained control of the puck and fired a wrist shot into the net.

The score remained unchanged through the second period, although Detroit had numerous scoring chances. The Penguins' Fleury stopped 16 Detroit shots in the frame, and caught a break asMikael Samuelsson hit the post on a breakaway. The Penguins came out with strong defence in the third period, and the Detroit offence sputtered, at one point going over ten minutes without a shot. Midway through the third period, the Penguins earned a power play opportunity after Jonathan Ericsson was called for interference. At 10:29,Sergei Gonchar drilled a slapshot from near the blue line, which sailed through traffic and beat a screened Chris Osgood to give the Penguins the lead. Detroit could not mount a late surge with the extra attacker on the ice, and Talbot added an empty net goal at 19:03 for his second of the game to seal the victory.

Scoring summary
PeriodTeamGoalAssist(s)TimeScore
1stPITMaxime Talbot (5)Evgeni Malkin (18),Kris Letang (8)4:481–0 PIT
DETHenrik Zetterberg (10)Ville Leino (2),Johan Franzen (10)6:191–1
DETJohan Franzen (12) –ppHenrik Zetterberg (11),Niklas Kronwall (7)11:332–1 DET
PITKris Letang (4) –ppEvgeni Malkin (19),Sergei Gonchar (11)15:572–2
2ndNone
3rdPITSergei Gonchar (3) –ppEvgeni Malkin (20),Sidney Crosby (15)10:293–2 PIT
PITMaxime Talbot (6) –enRuslan Fedotenko (6)19:034–2 PIT
Penalty summary
PeriodTeamPlayerPenaltyTimePIM
1stPITBrooks OrpikInterference9:422:00
DETDaniel ClearyHolding14:462:00
DETJohan FranzenTripping18:022:00
2ndPITMiroslav SatanHolding15:352:00
3rdDETJonathan EricssonInterference9:462:00
Shots by period
Team123T
DET1214329
PIT741021

Game four

[edit]
June 4Detroit Red Wings2–4Pittsburgh PenguinsMellon ArenaRecap

The Penguins picked up a 4–2 win in game four, equalling their performance from the previous meeting. Detroit found themselves at an early disadvantage, as a tripping call on Niklas Kronwall gave Pittsburgh a power play just over a minute into the game. Evgeni Malkin scored with the man advantage at 2:39 to give the Penguins an early lead. The goal occurred after Chris Osgood stopped a Jordan Staal shot, then Kris Letang fired a rebound wide that was picked up by Malkin and deposited behind the outstretched goaltender. Detroit ended the first period on a relentless assault, but Marc-Andre Fleury held the fort in goal for Pittsburgh, including a sequence in which he stopped four Detroit shots seconds apart. On that shift, Fleury cancelled aDarren Helm wrap around attempt, stood up to stop Mikael Samuelsson's rebound one-timer, then stopped Daniel Cleary on two more rebound tries. With 19 shots in the period, Detroit would eventually score at 18:19, after Helm forcedRob Scuderi into a turnover on a clearing attempt, then fired a wrist shot into the goal.

Detroit took the lead early in the second period, after Henrik Zetterberg passed from behind the net to Brad Stuart at the point. Stuart's slap shot at 0:46 beat a screened Fleury, but provided one of the few sparks for Detroit in a nightmarish period. After Brooks Orpik was called for tripping, it was the Penguins who picked up great scoring opportunities during the Detroit power play. First, Osgood stopped Malkin on a breakaway. However, he was not able to keep Staal from scoring shorthanded. At 8:35, Staal lit the lamp after dragging the puck around Brian Rafalski by using his long reach. Just under two minutes later, Sidney Crosby finally scored his first goal of the series. Malkin stripped Brad Stuart, who had just mishandled a pass, and started a two-on-one with Crosby, who took the pass at 10:34 and shoved it into the net. At 14:12 in the period,Tyler Kennedy scored to extend the Pittsburgh lead. The play began when Kennedy beat Henrik Zetterberg to the puck on the forecheck. Chris Kunitz then took the puck and fed a pass to Crosby, who one-touched it to Kennedy for the goal, as Osgood was caught moving side-to-side. The third period featured several good chances by each team, but neither team was able to score and the game ended with a tied series.

Scoring summary
PeriodTeamGoalAssist(s)TimeScore
1stPITEvgeni Malkin (14) –ppKris Letang (9),Jordan Staal (5)2:391–0 PIT
DETDarren Helm (4)Unassisted18:191–1
2ndDETBrad Stuart (3)Henrik Zetterberg (12),Brian Rafalski (8)0:462–1 DET
PITJordan Staal (3) –shMaxime Talbot (4),Mark Eaton (3)8:352–2
PITSidney Crosby (15)Evgeni Malkin (21)10:343–2 PIT
PITTyler Kennedy (4)Sidney Crosby (16),Chris Kunitz (12)14:124–2 PIT
3rdNone
Penalty summary
PeriodTeamPlayerPenaltyTimePIM
1stDETNiklas KronwallTripping1:122:00
PITMark EatonCross-checking11:092:00
DETJonathan EricssonHigh-sticking16:272:00
PITBill GuerinHigh-sticking16:372:00
2ndPITEvgeni MalkinHooking5:442:00
PITBrooks OrpikTripping7:432:00
3rdDETNiklas KronwallHooking8:272:00
DETDaniel ClearyRoughing20:002:00
PITBrooks OrpikRoughing20:002:00
Shots by period
Team123T
DET1991139
PIT1111931

Game five

[edit]
June 6Pittsburgh Penguins0–5Detroit Red WingsJoe Louis ArenaRecap
Fleury is screened by Franzen during game five

Detroit gained a huge boost in game five, as star two-way playerPavel Datsyuk played for the first time in the series after returning from a foot injury. The Penguins were the team that began the match with energy, dominating the first five minutes, and producing a variety of chances from the Evgeni Malkin–Ruslan Fedotenko–Maxime Talbot line. However, the Red Wings rallied around a rejuvenated Datsyuk to take over the game midway through the period. Datsuyk's skating allowed Detroit to score at 13:32 of the period, as he fed a pass to Daniel Cleary during a three-on-three transition play. Cleary used Penguins' defenceman Brooks Orpik as a screen as he shot the puck past goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury. The Penguins began to unravel in the second period, committing five minor penalties in the frame. This undisciplined hockey allowed Detroit to score three power play goals and one marker that occurred seconds after a penalty had expired.

At 1:44 of the second, the Red Wings scored their second goal. On the final seconds of a power play, Fleury made a sprawling save on Datsuyk, the puck was cleared, and the penalty expired. However, as the Penguins attempted to make a line change, goaltender Chris Osgood fed a long pass for Detroit to Marian Hossa, who slipped a pass into the slot, enabling a streaking Valtteri Filppula to score on the backhand. Three straight penalty calls on Pittsburgh would then lead to Red Wing scores. A slashing minor on Sergei Gonchar eventually allowed a high wrist shot by Niklas Kronwall at 8:35 to find the back of the net. Kronwall scored after pinching into the corner and playing in a forward position. He then took a pass from Johan Franzen and patiently waited for Fleury to go down before lifting the puck. An elbowing penalty on Evgeni Malkin led to a Brian Rafalski goal at 11:34, which saw the defenceman take a pass from Datsyuk and score on a wrist shot from the right circle. A Chris Kunitz roughing penalty set up Henrik Zetterberg. At 15:40, Zetterberg took a shot-pass fromJiri Hudler and peeled to the front of the net to deposit the puck over Fleury's glove. After giving up the fifth goal, Fleury was replaced byMathieu Garon, and the Penguins committed two more penalties in the second to give Detroit a two-man advantage on which they did not convert. The third period was mostly uneventful and the score remained 5–0 until the end of the game.

Scoring summary
PeriodTeamGoalAssist(s)TimeScore
1stDETDaniel Cleary (9)Pavel Datsyuk (7),Brian Rafalski (9)13:321–0 DET
2ndDETValtteri Filppula (3)Marian Hossa (9),Chris Osgood (1)1:442–0 DET
DETNiklas Kronwall (2) –ppJohan Franzen (11),Henrik Zetterberg (13)8:353–0 DET
DETBrian Rafalski (3) –ppPavel Datsyuk (8),Nicklas Lidstrom (10)11:344–0 DET
DETHenrik Zetterberg (11) –ppJiri Hudler (7),Mikael Samuelsson (5)15:405–0 DET
3rdNone
Penalty summary
PeriodTeamPlayerPenaltyTimePIM
1stDETNiklas KronwallTripping7:162:00
PITChris KunitzGoaltender Interference19:392:00
2ndPITSergei GoncharSlashing5:532:00
PITEvgeni MalkinElbowing6:482:00
PITChris KunitzRoughing13:502:00
PITSidney CrosbySlashing17:372:00
PITMaxime TalbotSlashing17:572:00
3rdDETMarian HossaRoughing1:532:00
PITEvgeni MalkinHooking7:142:00
PITPascal DupuisHigh-sticking15:502:00
PITCraig AdamsMisconduct15:5010:00
PITEvgeni MalkinCross Checking18:082:00
PITMatt CookeMisconduct18:0810:00
DETBrett LebdaMisconduct18:0810:00
PITMaxime TalbotMisconduct18:0810:00
Shots by period
Team123Total
PIT106622
DET815629

Game six

[edit]
June 9Detroit Red Wings1–2Pittsburgh PenguinsMellon ArenaRecap
Osgood makes a save in game six

The Penguins defeated the Red Wings in game six, 2–1, to force a seventh and deciding game of the finals. The first period featured strong defensive play by both teams. Pittsburgh goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury made a big early save as he stopped a one-timer by Henrik Zetterberg, who had just received a pass from Pavel Datsyuk on a two-on-one rush. Detroit's Chris Osgood equalled Fleury's early brilliance, as he stopped Sidney Crosby on two separate power plays, first by stuffing his attempt to jam home a puck in the crease, then by denying him on a rush through the slot in transition. After a scoreless first period, Jordan Staal scored Pittsburgh's first goal at 0:51 in the second. Tyler Kennedy chipped a puck away from Valtteri Filppula in the Detroit zone, then passed the puck to Staal to start a two-on-one break. Osgood stopped Staal's first shot by tipping it with his glove, before the rebound was deposited into the net.

Pittsburgh dominated the second period, but did not score again in the frame. They also caught a break as Zetterberg's forehand shot from the slot hit the post and was then held by Fleury as it ricochet off his back. Kennedy gave the Penguins their second goal at 5:35 of the third after gaining the puck by cycling behind Detroit's net with Maxime Talbot. Two Red Wing defenders went to Talbot, which gave Kennedy a clear lane to walk in front of the net and lift a shot high over Osgood.Kris Draper cut the Pittsburgh lead at 8:01, beating Marc-Andre Fleury on a wrist shot. The goal came after Jonathan Ericsson's slapshot was kicked aside and Draper was able to take the rebound and glide into scoring position. The Red Wings found their stride late in the game, but were thwarted on two late scoring chances. With 1:42 remaining, Daniel Cleary raced into the Penguins zone on a breakaway, but his shot was turned aside by Fleury. In the final thirty seconds, an unlikely hero stepped up for the Penguins. After Fleury stopped Datsyuk's shot, the puck came to the goal mouth, where Johan Franzen was ready to pounce. However, with Fleury out of position, Pittsburgh defenceman Rob Scuderi stepped in front of the loose puck and blocked three Franzen shots with his skates to preserve a win. This was the last ever Stanley Cup Final game played at Mellon Arena.

Scoring summary
PeriodTeamGoalAssist(s)TimeScore
1stNone
2ndPITJordan Staal (4)Tyler Kennedy (4)Rob Scuderi (3)0:511–0 PIT
3rdPITTyler Kennedy (5)Maxime Talbot (5),Ruslan Fedotenko (7)5:352–0 PIT
DETKris Draper (1)Jonathan Ericsson (4),Nicklas Lidstrom (11)8:012–1 PIT
Penalty summary
PeriodTeamPlayerPenaltyTimePIM
1stDETHenrik ZetterbergGoaltender interference3:352:00
DETValtteri FilppulaTripping13:292:00
2ndNone
3rdPITEvgeni MalkinCross-checking9:182:00
PITBill GuerinHigh-sticking12:402:00
Shots by period
Team123Total
DET391426
PIT1212731

Game seven

[edit]
June 12Pittsburgh Penguins2–1Detroit Red WingsJoe Louis ArenaRecap
External videos
video iconGame 7 Full replay (NHL International's feed) on the NHL's official YouTube channel

For the first time, the Penguins played a game seven in the Stanley Cup Final, while the Red Wings made their seventh appearance in the deciding game. Detroit had split their six previous appearances in game sevens. Their last Stanley Cup Final game seven was in1964 where they lost against theToronto Maple Leafs.[14] Entering the contest, Red Wings head coach Mike Babcock joinedMike Keenan as the only men to coach a seventh game of the Stanley Cup Final with two different teams, having been with the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim when they lost to theNew Jersey Devils in2003.[15]

The opening half of the first period featured tentative play by both teams but with Pittsburgh outperforming Detroit offensively in the frame. However, the Red Wings got the best scoring chance, asKirk Maltby gained possession of a bouncing puck after a faceoff in the Penguins' zone. Maltby's shot was then stopped by the glove of goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury from point blank range. At 1:13 in the second period, Pittsburgh struck first, as Maxime Talbot scored following a turnover. The goal resulted after Brad Stuart attempted to clear the zone following a dump-in by Brooks Orpik into Detroit territory. Evgeni Malkin used his skates to block Stuart's pass, and the puck found its way to Talbot, who patiently waited to find a shooting lane behind goaltender Chris Osgood. Both teams gained chances through the middle of the period, with each goalie coming up strong. On one sequence, Brian Rafalski made a quick pass to Darren Helm in the left circle, where he was stopped by Fleury. As Rafalski set up for a rebound shot, he lost the puck to Pittsburgh'sMatt Cooke, who was then stuffed on a breakaway attempt. Soon afterward, Penguins captain Sidney Crosby was crunched into the boards by Johan Franzen and sustained a knee injury. He would be healthy enough to play only one shift for the remainder of the game.

Malkin, during the Penguins' victory parade, became the first Russian player to win theConn Smythe Trophy.

Talbot struck again at 10:07 in the period, as he curled the puck to fake a pass during a two-on-one break, then lifted it over Osgood's shoulder. The play began with Chris Kunitz splitting the Detroit defence with a pass in his own zone, allowing Talbot and Tyler Kennedy to move in on an odd man rush. The Penguins attempted to play conservatively in the third period and registered only one shot in the frame. At the same time, Detroit was able to sustain pressure on several occasions during the period. At 13:53, the Red Wings got on the board, as Jonathan Ericsson drilled a one-timed slapshot behind Fleury from near the blue line, after receiving a pass from Nicklas Lidstrom. Then, at 17:45, Detroit came within inches of pulling into a tie. However, Niklas Kronwall's wristshot from the right circle ricocheted off of Jordan Staal, hit the crossbar, then bounced away from any Red Wing skaters. Detroit gained one last chance on the final shift of the game. After stopping an initial Henrik Zetterberg shot from the right faceoff circle, the rebound came loose to Nicklas Lidstrom at the left faceoff circle, forcing Fleury to make a diving stop, considered one of the greatest saves in league history, with two seconds remaining to preserve the win and the championship.[16][17] Pittsburgh's Evgeni Malkin was awarded theConn Smythe Trophy after the game as the Most Valuable Player of the 2009 playoffs, becoming the first Russian-born player to win the trophy.

The Penguins became the first team since the1971Montreal Canadiens to win game seven of the Stanley Cup Final on the road. They were also the first road team to win game seven of a championship round in any major league sport since thePittsburgh Pirates defeated theBaltimore Orioles to win the1979 World Series.[18][19] For the Red Wings, it was the first time that they lost in the Finals since1995, when they were swept by theNew Jersey Devils. It was also the only time that the visiting team won the Cup atJoe Louis Arena in the venue's history, and the Penguins became the first visiting team to win the Cup in Detroit since the Canadiens did so in1966 at the now-demolishedOlympia Stadium. They were also the first team to win the Stanley Cup without finishing first in a division during the regular season since the Devils in 2000. This was the last ever Stanley Cup Final game played at Joe Louis Arena.

Scoring summary
PeriodTeamGoalAssist(s)TimeScore
1stNone
2ndPITMaxime Talbot (7)Evgeni Malkin (20)01:131–0 PIT
PITMaxime Talbot (8)Chris Kunitz (13),Rob Scuderi (4)10:072–0 PIT
3rdDETJonathan Ericsson (4)Nicklas Lidstrom (12),Jiri Hudler (8)13:532–1 PIT
Penalty summary
PeriodTeamPlayerPenaltyTimePIM
1stDETBrad StuartSlashing11:242:00
2ndPITJordan StaalHooking01:592:00
DETTomas HolmstromHolding01:592:00
PITHal GillHolding06:162:00
3rdPITMark EatonTripping02:362:00
Shots by period
Team123Total
PIT107118
DET611825

Officials

[edit]

The following officials worked the 2009 Stanley Cup Final:[20] (Bold-face indicates worked Game 7)

Television coverage

[edit]

In Canada, all games of the Finals were broadcast in English on theCBC and in French on the cable networkRDS. CBC had a new broadcast team calling the Finals withJim Hughson as play-by-play announcer, andCraig Simpson as colour commentator.

In the United States, this was the first time since1999 that game one of the Cup Finals aired on over-the-air television instead of on cable:NBC broadcast the first two and final three games of the series, whileVersus broadcast games three and four.[21] The first two games of the series were played on consecutive nights due to NBC's scheduling, specifically to avoid putting a contest on the network during the debut week ofThe Tonight Show with Conan O'Brien on June 1–5.[22][23][24] This was also done to help promote the game and keep the hockey viewership growing.[25][26] Games four and six ended up going head-to-head with games one and three of the2009 NBA Finals, respectively.[25][27][28]

Game seven was the last major sporting event onanalogue television in the United States, with theDTV transition finishing less than an hour-and-a-half after the game ended and just one hour after NBC coverage ended. NBC affiliatesWDIV-TV in Detroit andWPXI inPittsburgh – who months before the Stanley Cup playoffs began electing to keep their own respective analogue signals on until June 12, well past the original February 17 deadline – both remained on the air for game seven before cutting their analogue signals at 11:59EDT.

Ratings

[edit]

In the United States, with an average of eight million viewers, game seven was the most-watched NHL game in the United States since game six of the1973 Stanley Cup Final.[29]

In Canada, game seven drew an average of 3.529 million viewers to the CBC. However, it averaged 2.154 million viewers for the seven-game rematch, down 7% from the 2008 Finals.[29]

Records

[edit]

The Red Wings attempted to become the first team to successfully defend a championship since they did it in1998. The Red Wings were also the first defending Stanley Cup champions to reach the Finals since2001, when the2000 championsNew Jersey Devils lost to theColorado Avalanche.

The Penguins became the first team since theEdmonton Oilers in1984 to win the Stanley Cup after having lost in the Finals the year before; it was also the first instance of a Stanley Cup Final rematch since then. They were the first team in major professional sports to win a game seven of the championship round on the road since the1979 Pittsburgh Pirates ofMajor League Baseball. They also became the third team to win a game seven in the Stanley Cup Final as the visitor, the first since theMontreal Canadiens in1971 (theToronto Maple Leafs in1945 being the other).

Seeded fourth in the Eastern Conference, the Penguins became the lowest-seeded team to win the Cup since the fifth-seeded New Jersey Devils in 1995 (who also beat the Red Wings), and tied for eighth overall in the NHL, they became (along with the1991 Penguins and1995 Devils), the only teams in the post-1967 expansion era to finish outside the top six overall and win the Cup. The last team to win a Stanley Cup with fewer than 100 points in the season was the1997 Detroit Red Wings, with 94.

Crosby (right) and Fleury (left) with the Stanley Cup during the Penguins' victory parade. Pittsburgh became the first city to win a Super Bowl and Stanley Cup in the same year.

The Penguins' Cup victory, coupled with that of theSteelers inSuper Bowl XLIII four months earlier, gave the city of Pittsburgh the distinction of being the only city to win a Super Bowl and the Stanley Cup in the same year. However, Detroit holds the distinction of being the first city to haveNFL champions andNHL champions in the same city in the same year, 1952. Detroit sports fans also previously experienced a similar event in 1935 when theTigers andLions both won championships, and theRed Wings won the Stanley Cup in the 1935–36 season, a span of only 6 months and 4 days. The"City of Champions" gained multiple titles in the same year for the second time and first time in 30 years (thePirates won the1979 World Series in between the Steelers' victories inSuper Bowl XIII in January 1979 andSuper Bowl XIV in January 1980). It also gives the state ofPennsylvania three champions in the four major professional sports in a span of nine months, with thePhiladelphia Phillies winning theWorld Series the previous October.

This was the second consecutive year that two American-based NHL teams competed for the championship, and the first time that two teams met in theStanley Cup Final in consecutive seasons since theEdmonton Oilers and theNew York Islanders did so in1983 and1984.

The first two games were played at Joe Louis Arena in Detroit on consecutive weekend nights—May 30 and 31—the first time that Finals games have been played on consecutive days since1955 except that the former two games were played in different cities: Detroit and Montreal.[30]

Detroit's loss gave Mike Babcock the unfortunate distinction of being the first coach in NHL history to lose game seven of a Stanley Cup Final with two different teams.[15] Mike Keenan, the other to coach in two Finals game sevens with two different teams, had avoided the distinction by winning the second Finals game seven he coached. He was with thePhiladelphia Flyers in1987 when they lost to the Edmonton Oilers, and was with theNew York Rangers when they won the Cup in1994.

This was the last Stanley Cup Final played at bothMellon Arena andJoe Louis Arena, which was closed afterthe following season and the2016–17 season, respectively. The Penguins moved to theConsol Energy Center for the2010–11 season, and the Red Wings moved toLittle Caesars Arena for the2017–18 season. This was also the last Stanley Cup Final that was ever played entirely in one time zone, as the Eastern Conference now consists of all of the league's teams that are based in theEastern Time Zone, while the Western Conference consists entirely of the NHL's teams that are based outside of it.

Team rosters

[edit]

Detroit Red Wings

[edit]
Nicklas Lidstrom captained the Red Wings to the second-straight Finals appearance and sixth appearance in fourteen years

Roster on June 12, 2009.

No.NatPlayerPosS/GAgeAcquiredBirthplace
8United StatesJustin AbdelkaderCL222005Muskegon, Michigan
24United StatesChris CheliosDR471999Chicago, Illinois
11CanadaDaniel ClearyRWL302005Carbonear, Newfoundland and Labrador
29United StatesTy ConklinGL332008Phoenix, Arizona
13RussiaPavel Datsyuk (A)CL301998Sverdlovsk, Soviet Union
44CanadaAaron DowneyRWR342007Honeywood, Ontario
33CanadaKris Draper (A)CL381993Toronto, Ontario
52SwedenJonathan EricssonDL252002Karlskrona, Sweden
51FinlandValtteri FilppulaCL252002Vantaa, Finland
93SwedenJohan FranzenLWL292004Vetlanda, Sweden
43CanadaDarren HelmCL222005St. Andrews, Manitoba
96SwedenTomas HolmstromRWL361994Piteå, Sweden
81SlovakiaMarian HossaRWL302008Stará Ľubovňa, Czechoslovakia
35United StatesJimmy HowardGL252003Ogdensburg, New York
26Czech RepublicJiri HudlerLWL252002Olomouc, Czechoslovakia
46Czech RepublicJakub KindlDL222005Šumperk, Czechoslovakia
82SlovakiaTomas KopeckyLWL272000Ilava, Czechoslovakia
55SwedenNiklas KronwallDL282000Stockholm, Sweden
22United StatesBrett LebdaDL272004Buffalo Grove, Illinois
21FinlandVille LeinoLWL252008Savonlinna, Finland
5SwedenNicklas Lidstrom (C)DL391989Krylbo, Sweden
3SwedenAndreas LiljaDL332005Helsingborg, Sweden
18CanadaKirk MaltbyRWR361996Guelph, Ontario
14CanadaDerek MeechDL252002Winnipeg, Manitoba
30CanadaChris OsgoodGL362005Peace River, Alberta
28United StatesBrian RafalskiDR352007Dearborn, Michigan
37SwedenMikael SamuelssonRWR322005Mariefred, Sweden
23CanadaBrad StuartDL292008Rocky Mountain House, Alberta
40SwedenHenrik Zetterberg (A)CL281999Njurunda, Sweden

Pittsburgh Penguins

[edit]
Sidney Crosby captained the Penguins to their first Stanley Cup championship since1992

Roster on June 12, 2009.

No.NatPlayerPosS/GAgeAcquiredBirthplace
27CanadaCraig AdamsRWR322009Seria, Brunei
43CanadaPhilippe BoucherDR362008Saint-Apollinaire, Quebec
24CanadaMatt CookeLWL302008Belleville, Ontario
87CanadaSidney Crosby (C)CL212005Cole Harbour, Nova Scotia
9CanadaPascal DupuisLWL302008Laval, Quebec
7United StatesMark EatonDL322006Wilmington, Delaware
26UkraineRuslan FedotenkoLWL302008Kyiv, Soviet Union
29CanadaMarc-Andre FleuryGL242003Sorel, Quebec
32CanadaMathieu GaronGR312009Chandler, Quebec
2United StatesHal GillDL342008Concord, Massachusetts
28CanadaEric GodardRWR292008Vernon, British Columbia
3United StatesAlex GoligoskiDL232004Grand Rapids, Minnesota
55RussiaSergei Gonchar (A)DL352005Chelyabinsk, Soviet Union
13United StatesBill GuerinRWR382009Worcester, Massachusetts
48CanadaTyler KennedyCR222004Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario
14CanadaChris KunitzLWL292009Regina, Saskatchewan
58CanadaKris LetangDR222005Montreal, Quebec
71RussiaEvgeni Malkin (A)CL222004Magnitogorsk, Soviet Union
44United StatesBrooks OrpikDL282001San Francisco, California
81SlovakiaMiroslav SatanRWL342008Topoľčany, Czechoslovakia
4United StatesRob ScuderiDL301998Syosset, New York
11CanadaJordan StaalCL202006Thunder Bay, Ontario
17Czech RepublicPetr SykoraRWL322007Plzeň, Czechoslovakia
25CanadaMaxime TalbotCL252002LeMoyne, Quebec
15CanadaMichael ZigomanisCR282008Toronto, Ontario

Stanley Cup engraving

[edit]

The 2009 Stanley Cup was presented to Penguins captain Sidney Crosby byNHL CommissionerGary Bettman following the Penguins 2–1 win over the Red Wings in game seven.

The following Penguins players and staff had their names engraved on the Stanley Cup

2008–09 Pittsburgh Penguins

Players

  Centres
  Wingers
  Defencemen
  Goaltenders
  • * Played both centre and wing.
  • † Exemption granted to engrave the name of a player who did not automatically qualify.[a][A]

Coaching and administrative staff

  • Mario Lemieux (chairman/owner/alternate governor),[B]Ron Burkle (owner/alt. governor), Bill Kassling (director)
  • Tony Liberati (director/alt. governor), Tom Grealish (director), Ken Sawyer (chief executive officer/governor)
  • David Morehouse (president/alt. governor),Ray Shero (vice-president/general manager/alt. governor),Chuck Fletcher (assistant general manager),Eddie Johnston (sr. advisor, hockey operations)[C]
  • Jason Botterill (director of hockey administration),Dan Bylsma (head coach),Mike Yeo (assistant coach),Tom Fitzgerald (assistant coach)
  • Gilles Meloche (goaltending coach),[B] Mike Kadar (strength & conditioning coach), Travis Ramsay (video coach), Chris Stewart (athletic therapist)
  • Scott Adams (assistant athletic therapist), Mark Mortland (physical therapist), Dana Heinze (equipment manager)
  • Paul DeFazio (assistant equipment manager), Danny Kroll (assistant equipment manager), Frank Buonomo (Sr. Director of Team Operations & Communications)
  • Tom McMillian (vice-president, communications), Jay Heinbuck (director of amateur scouting), Dan MacKinnon (director of pro scouting)


Engraving notes

[edit]
  • ^A #15Michael Zigomanis (C) played in 22 regular season games and missed the whole playoffs due to injuries. Pittsburgh included his name on the Stanley Cup by petitioning for league approval.
  • ^B Mario Lemieux and Gilles Meloche are the only ones to have their names engraved on the Stanley Cup in the three Penguins championships of 1991, 1992, and 2009. (Kevin Stevens won as a player in '91 and '92, but was not engraved as aprofessional scout for the team in 2009.) However, Meloche is the only one to hold the same position for all three wins. Dr. Charles Burke was the only other member of the Penguins to win 3 Stanley Cup rings. However, his name is not on the Stanley Cup.
  • ^C Despite having served with the organization in various positions for a total of 25 years, this was Eddie Johnston's first Stanley Cup with the Penguins. (Also, his first in management, and his first since winning as a player with theBoston Bruins in1970, and1972.)
  • Dan Bylsma was the 13th rookie coach to win the Stanley Cup and the first since 1986. Bylsma only coached 25 regular season games, before leading Pittsburgh to the Stanley Cup Final. He is the second mid-season replacement rookie coach to win the Stanley Cup (See1971 Stanley Cup Final for the other coach,Al MacNeil). Bylsma was also a player under Mike Babcock on the 2002–03 and 2003-04 roster of the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim.

Player notes

[edit]
  • Six players on the roster during the Finals did not have their names engraved on the Stanley Cup due to not qualifying.[a][31] All six were included in the team picture.
    • #38Chris Minard (LW) – 20 regular season games
    • #42Dustin Jeffrey (C) – 14 regular season games
    • #22Jeff Taffe (LW) – 8 regular season games
    • #1John Curry (G) – 3 regular season games
    • #65Ben Lovejoy (D) – 2 regular season games
    • #30Brad Thiessen (G) – signed by the organization out ofNortheastern University in April, served as practice goaltender inWilkes-Barre/Scranton of theAmerican Hockey League before being called up to Pittsburgh in May to fulfill the same role. He was included in the team celebrations and official picture with the Cup, despite the fact that at the time, he still had yet to play in his first professional game of hockey and spent the whole season playing college hockey.

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^abAutomatic qualification for a player's name to be engraved on the Stanley Cup: Playing in (for a goaltender, dressing for) at least one Stanley Cup Final game or at least half of regular season games for the Stanley Cup winning team.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Babcock cashes in, gets new deal for 3 years".Detroit Free Press. June 11, 2008. Archived fromthe original on April 2, 2015. RetrievedJune 20, 2008.
  2. ^Keating, Steve; Mehaffey, John (May 29, 2009)."Hossa still waiting to see if move to Wings was right".Reuters. RetrievedMay 30, 2009.
  3. ^Burnside, Scott (July 1, 2008)."Cup champs bring in Conklin as backup for Osgood". ESPN. RetrievedJuly 2, 2008.
  4. ^Rossi, Rob (March 13, 2009)."Penguins rally for point in loss".Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. Archived fromthe original on March 15, 2009. RetrievedMarch 13, 2009.
  5. ^Molinari, Dave (February 15, 2009)."Therrien fired, Bylsma in as Penguins' interim head coach".Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Archived fromthe original on February 17, 2009. RetrievedFebruary 15, 2009.
  6. ^"2008–2009 Playoff Schedule/Results". PittsburghPenguins.com. Archived fromthe original on June 1, 2009. RetrievedMay 30, 2009.
  7. ^LeBrun, Pierre (February 26, 2009)."Sources: Penguins trade Whitney". ESPN.Archived from the original on March 1, 2009. RetrievedFebruary 26, 2009.
  8. ^Rossi, Rob (March 4, 2009)."Pens' get winger Bill Guerin in trade with Islanders".Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. Archived fromthe original on March 8, 2009. RetrievedMarch 4, 2009.
  9. ^Passan, Jeff (May 31, 2009)."Pens, Fleury get some bad bounces". Yahoo! Sports. RetrievedMay 31, 2009.
  10. ^Lage, Larry (May 30, 2009)."Red Wings beat Penguins 3–1 in Game 1 of finals". Yahoo! Sports.Archived from the original on June 14, 2009. RetrievedMay 31, 2009.
  11. ^Bailey, David (May 31, 2009). Ransom, Ian (ed.)."Osgood stars in Red Wings victory".Reuters.Archived from the original on June 1, 2009. RetrievedMay 31, 2009.
  12. ^"NHL.com – Recap: Penguins @ Red Wings – May 31, 2009".Archived from the original on August 6, 2009. RetrievedJune 1, 2009.
  13. ^Robinson, Alan (June 3, 2009)."It's a series: Penguins beat Wings 4–2 in Game 3". Yahoo! News. Associated Press. RetrievedJanuary 15, 2010.
  14. ^"Game 7!". MSNBC. Archived fromthe original on June 24, 2009. RetrievedJune 14, 2009.
  15. ^abPodell, Ira (June 13, 2009). "Penguin power: Pittsburgh motors away from Detroit with the silver Cup".Salt Lake Deseret News. Associated Press. p. D1.The Penguins...beat the defending champion Detroit Red Wings 2–1...in Game 7 and win the Stanley Cup for the third time...In 2003...the last series in which the home team won all seven games...the Mighty Ducks team that lost then was coached by current Red Wings bench boss Mike Babcock.
  16. ^"Penguins clip Red Wings to win Stanley Cup".Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. June 12, 2009.Archived from the original on June 16, 2009. RetrievedJune 13, 2009.
  17. ^"Fleury's save erased doubts about big-game ability".The Sports Network. September 16, 2009. Archived fromthe original on September 22, 2009. RetrievedSeptember 16, 2009.
  18. ^Kovacevic, Dejan (June 14, 2009)."Pirates Notebook: 1979 players applaud Penguins".Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. RetrievedJune 22, 2010.
  19. ^"Fleury robs Wings in final seconds to secure Stanley Cup for underdog Penguins". ESPN. Associated Press. June 12, 2009. Archived fromthe original on July 16, 2012. RetrievedJune 22, 2010.
  20. ^"National Hockey League Officials Association: Finals Officials". NHLOfficials.com. May 28, 2009. Archived fromthe original on June 6, 2009. RetrievedMay 31, 2010.
  21. ^"NBC to air Stanley Cup finals games". New York City: ESPN. Associated Press. March 7, 2009.Archived from the original on March 11, 2009. RetrievedMarch 7, 2009.
  22. ^Lewis, Jon (April 2009)."Stanley Cup Final to take on NBA Finals head-to-head".Sports Media Watch. RetrievedJune 4, 2003.
  23. ^Klein, Jeff Z. (May 28, 2009)."Stanley Cup Final to Start on Saturday and Sunday After Wings Win".Slap Shot. RetrievedMarch 3, 2025.
  24. ^"NHL considering changes to Cup finals schedule".ESPN.com. May 25, 2009. RetrievedMarch 3, 2025.
  25. ^abLewis, Jon (May 28, 2009)."Pens/Wings Game 2 start time reportedly depends on NBA".Sports Media Watch. RetrievedMarch 3, 2025.
  26. ^Albon, Mitch (May 30, 2009)."Commentary: NBC wrong to rush Stanley Cup final".Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. RetrievedJanuary 13, 2025.
  27. ^Lewis, Jon (April 2009)."More on Stanley Cup Final schedule".Sports Media Watch. RetrievedJune 4, 2003.
  28. ^Lewis, Jon (May 28, 2009)."Penguins/Red Wings rematch to start Saturday".Sports Media Watch. RetrievedMarch 3, 2025.
  29. ^ab"Deciding Game of Stanley Cup Draws More than 3.5 Million Viewers to CBC". National Hockey League. The Canadian Press. June 15, 2009. RetrievedJune 16, 2009.
  30. ^Hradek, E.J. (May 25, 2009)."NHL considering changes to Cup finals schedule".ESPN.com. RetrievedMarch 3, 2025.
  31. ^"Club Playing Roster".NHL.com. Detroit, Michigan: NHL. June 12, 2009. RetrievedJuly 25, 2025.

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