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NHL Betting Info. 4/17

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  • NHL Betting Info. 4/17

    Preview: Blues (49-24) at Blackhawks (47-26)


    Date: April 17, 2016 3:00 PM EDT


    Ken Hitchcock believes the officiating went Chicago's way in Game 2 because the Blackhawks are the reigning Stanley Cup champions, and that's just the way things go.


    Video review clearly proved, though, that Jori Lehtera was offside before St. Louis scored what would've been the go-ahead goal in the third period. It was a bit more questionable when Hitchcock argued Andrew Shaw interfered with Brian Elliott when he put Chicago ahead shortly after.


    The Blues are understandably frustrated as this first-round clash between bitter rivals moves to the United Center for Game 3 on Sunday, which might only enhance Chicago's growing confidence.


    Blackhawks coach Joel Quenneville challenged the zone entry prior to Vladimir Tarasenko's goal with 7:46 remaining in the third, and the replay confirmed Lehtera crossed the blue line before the puck.


    Tarasenko slashed Shaw just over a minute later, and Shaw punched a loose puck past Elliott on the ensuing power play for a 2-1 lead. The officials discussed possible interference before upholding the goal, then Hitchcock lost his timeout following an unsuccessful challenge of the call.


    The Blackhawks went on to win 3-2, evening the series after the Blues won 1-0 in overtime Wednesday. Hitchcock wasn't pleased that such important moments in a tight series came down to officiating.


    Chicago also had four power-play chances to St. Louis' one.


    "When you play the defending Cup champions, you're going to have to fight through a lot of stuff," Hitchcock said. "Calls aren't going to go your way, you're not going to get the officiating you want. It's always going to seem like it's one-sided. Big deal, fight through it."


    Captain David Backes wasn't happy, either. He won Game 1 with an intended pass that bounced off Chicago defenseman Trevor van Riemsdyk's skate and into the net after the Blues were outshot 35-18. He feels robbed after they played much better in Game 2.


    Backes assisted on Kevin Shattenkirk's goal with less than two seconds left that meant little after Artemi Panarin potted an empty-netter about a minute prior.


    "I've seen that offsides a million times and ... we'll bite our tongues on it," Backes said. "I'm obviously a biased individual in what I think happened, but we've got to take it up another notch and continue to execute and continue to play. They found a way to get on the power play and found a way to get an ugly one."


    Duncan Keith's goal was anything but ugly. He played 30:59 in his return from a six-game suspension and scored with 4.4 seconds left in the second period, taking a faceoff win and blasting a shot through traffic over Elliott's left shoulder to tie the game.


    Chicago went nearly 5 1/2 periods without scoring to open the series, but Keith's goal certainly changed the momentum before the events that unfolded in the third.


    "If we're going to get a bounce, we'll wait as long as we have to, I guess," captain Jonathan Toews said. "There's no doubt that to a certain degree it takes a little bit away from the energy in the building."


    The Blues will try to do the same at the United Center, where the Blackhawks finished 2-3-2. St. Louis won five consecutive road games to end the regular season and has won three of its last four visits to the United Center, but it has lost three straight there in the playoffs.


    Elliott hasn't started a postseason game in Chicago. He's been fantastic to start this series, though, stopping 61 of 63 shots, including multiple breakaway chances.


    Corey Crawford has matched him, stopping 46 of 49 shots. He has a 1.95 goals-against average in 39 career playoff games at the United Center.

  • #2
    Re: NHL Betting Info. 4/17

    Preview: Lightning (46-31) at Red Wings (41-30)


    Date: April 17, 2016 7:00 PM EDT


    Getting to head home won't make much of a difference for the Detroit Red Wings if they don't get more going against Ben Bishop or slow down Tyler Johnson and his line.


    Neither notion has come easy for them in the past two years.


    After being pushed to the distance by the Red Wings in last year's first round, the Tampa Bay Lightning can take a big step toward making much quicker work of them Sunday night at Joe Louis Arena.


    Bishop led the league with a 2.06 goals-against average and allowed two in each of the first two games of this series as Tampa Bay won both at home. The 6-foot-7 veteran had 34 saves in the series opener before making 30 in Friday's 5-2 victory.


    "We threw pucks at (Bishop) and had some chances," Detroit veteran Henrik Zetterberg told his team's official website. "He's a big goalie and you just have to get in front of him."


    Zetterberg has scored only once in these teams' 17 games since the beginning of last season, all started by Bishop. He has a 1.88 GAA in that span, surrendering no more than two goals in eight straight going back to last year's opening-round series.


    As good as Bishop has been, the Lightning would not have a 2-0 series lead without the efforts of Johnson and the wingers who play alongside him, Nikita Kucherov and Alex Killorn. That trio has accounted for eight assists and all but one of Tampa Bay's eight goals.


    "It's two games and that line has been fabulous for us," coach John Cooper told the Lightning's official website.


    The second of Johnson's two assists in the series opener led to Killorn's winner in the third period, and the 25-year-old center followed with two goals and two assists Friday.


    "He is leading the way right now. It is huge for us," center Brian Boyle said.


    It seems if Johnson does well against Detroit, so does his team. He's compiled 10 goals and eight assists in Tampa Bay's 11 victories over the Red Wings since the start of last season. He didn't score and had only one assist in six losses, three of which came in last year's first round.


    The Lightning won Games 4 and 6 in Detroit before closing out that series in Tampa, but now they could wrap things up at Joe Louis Arena by winning Sunday and Tuesday. The Red Wings won both meetings there during the regular season, but the last one came in early November.


    Detroit is 11-3-1 at Joe Louis since the All-Star break.


    "We've got to take care of business at home," said Jimmy Howard, who has an .891 save percentage in the series.


    The Red Wings will have trouble doing so unless some key forwards step up. Zetterberg is on a 13-game goal drought, Pavel Datsyuk doesn't have one in 12 straight and neither has a point in this series. The same goes for Gustav Nyquist, who had 21 goals this season but has one in his last 19 games.


    "My No. 1 focus is on us playing good hockey," coach Jeff Blashill said. "We've got to make sure that we play with great intensity. We've got to make sure we control our emotions."


    Blashill was referencing not only the fact that his club has given up 11 power plays but also a bloody brawl toward the end of Game 2. Fourteen penalties were called, including a game misconduct on Detroit's Justin Abdelkader after a fight with Lightning winger Mike Blunden, who had his face bloodied but downplayed the potential of any ugly carryover.


    "It's just a scrum. It's just part of the game. It happens," Blunden said. "Emotions get high and unfortunately my visor came down and split me open. It's part of the game. It's part of the playoffs."

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: NHL Betting Info. 4/17

      Preview: Panthers (47-26) at Islanders (45-27)


      Date: April 17, 2016 8:00 PM EDT


      After a scoring outburst by both teams in the series opener, Roberto Luongo knuckled down and got the Florida Panthers even with the New York Islanders at a game apiece.


      The Atlantic Division champions will now try to reclaim home-ice advantage with a Game 3 win, but the Islanders expect to receive a huge lift from a raucous crowd when playoff hockey makes its debut at Barclays Center on Sunday night.


      Thursday's opener was a high-scoring affair the Islanders won 5-4, but the goal barrage screeched to a halt Friday with Luongo making 41 saves to pick up his first playoff victory in five years with a 3-1 win in Game 2.


      New York captain John Tavares ended Luongo's shutout bid with 3:33 remaining before Florida closed it out on Dmitry Kulikov's empty-netter in the waning seconds. Reilly Smith and Nick Bjugstad each had a goal and an assist for the Panthers.


      "It was important, obviously, to get one at home," said the 37-year-old Luongo, who hadn't won a playoff game since shutting out Boston 1-0 in Game 5 of the 2011 Stanley Cup final with Vancouver. "Complete team effort tonight. Typical playoff game, low-scoring, grinding down and we found a way to win."


      Luongo, who fell victim to a few defensive lapses by Florida in Game 1, made several outstanding saves to thwart an attacking Islanders offense which hadn't put at least 40 shots on goal since totaling 46 at Columbus on Feb. 9. He even kept the puck out of the net for a minute-long stretch without his stick after it was knocked from his hand.


      Lifting the Panthers to a playoff win came in his 456th appearance with the club.


      "Lu's big for us every night," Bjugstad said. "(Thursday) night, I thought those were good goals by them. Lu's so focused every day, he works so hard in practice, it pays off for him on the ice. So no, we weren't really surprised.


      "He's a veteran. He's been in these types of situations. Definitely makes us comfortable when he's in the net."


      Thomas Greiss also pitched in to quiet down the scoring with 28 saves for New York after stopping 42 shots in Game 1.


      "We played better tonight than we did (Thursday) night," Islanders coach Jack Capuano told the team's official website. "We should be going (home) 1-1 and we are. We're going back to Brooklyn and we know the atmosphere is going to be great."


      The club is anxious to see if the fans in its new barn can bring the noise the way they did from 1972-2015 at Nassau Coliseum, where New York raised four consecutive Stanley Cup championship banners in the early 1980s.


      "We know what kind of environment our fans can create and we're counting on them and we want to feed off them," said Tavares, who remains hot with a goal in six straight games and has 13 points with a plus-7 rating in that span.


      The Islanders' first season in Brooklyn resulted in a 25-11-5 home record, including a split of two meetings with Florida. The Panthers won 5-1 on Dec. 15 before New York earned a 3-2 win March 14. Jaroslav Halak, out for this series with a groin injury, was in net for the loss before Greiss made 23 saves in the win.


      Luongo was between the pipes for both contests and stopped 58 of 62 shots, improving his career goals-against average on the road against the Islanders to 2.30 and his save percentage to .933, though he's won just six of those 15 games.


      "It's a long series, so we'll enjoy tonight but it's back to work tomorrow," Luongo told the Panthers' official website. "I mean, they all feel good. It's playoffs, man."

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: NHL Betting Info. 4/17

        Preview: Predators (41-27) at Ducks (46-25)


        Date: April 17, 2016 10:30 PM EDT


        Nashville lost its last four road games of the regular season, entered this series having lost three in a row in Anaheim and had trouble solving the Ducks no matter the location over the last few campaigns.


        The Predators also hadn't opened the playoffs with a road victory in five years - when they beat Anaheim before winning the first series in franchise history.


        After stealing Game 1 from the Pacific Division champions, another win Sunday night at Honda Center would provide a significant edge before the series shifts to Nashville.


        James Neal's goal 35 seconds into Friday's contest set the tone early for a Predators team that had lost nine of the previous 12 meetings with Anaheim.


        They didn't panic when Ryan Kesler gave the Ducks the lead 48 seconds into the second period, responding seven minutes later on Colin Wilson's goal before Filip Forsberg's third-period tally gave them a 3-2 victory.


        It's the first series lead of any kind for Nashville since 2012, when it beat Detroit in five games in the first round. It also ended a six-game road losing streak in the playoffs after finishing the regular season 1-5-1 away from home.


        "You have to start somewhere," coach Peter Laviolette said. "We'll have our work cut out for us in Game 2. The challenge will be to go back and look at things to see what we can do better, and I'm sure they'll do the same thing. To get off to the right start is a good thing. There's so much hockey left to be played."


        That was the first meeting since Nov. 17, also a 3-2 Nashville victory when the Ducks were still going through an early season funk. Anaheim had been one of the league's hottest teams since Christmas and won the Pacific on the final day of the regular season, earning the right to face the wild-card Predators.


        The Ducks capitalized on only one of four power-play opportunities - Ryan Getzlaf's goal late in the first - and struggled to match Nashville's physical style. They're down 0-1 for just the second time in seven playoff series under coach Bruce Boudreau.


        "They outplayed us. I don't know if we didn't think they were as good as they are because we haven't played them in such a long time," Boudreau said. "We know they're a good hockey club. When we lose by a goal in the third period, it's one mistake and it's in your net."


        Pekka Rinne made 27 saves for the Predators, who are trying to win consecutive playoff games for the first time since that Detroit series four years ago. Rinne has stopped 92 of 97 shots while winning his last three starts against the Ducks.


        "It's going to be a hard-fought series," defenseman Ryan Ellis said. "We're going to war every single night. A 3-2 game is playoff hockey, and they're a great hockey team. We know we're going to get their best next game and we'll be bringing ours."


        Anaheim has been thin on the blue line with Kevin Bieksa missing the last 10 with an upper-body injury. Fellow defenseman Josh Manson left with an upper-body issue suffered on a hit by Forsberg, and his status for Game 2 is uncertain.


        Forwards Rickard Rakell and David Perron returned from injuries in Game 1, but neither got on the score sheet.


        John Gibson made 30 saves after getting the start ahead of Frederik Andersen, who returned from a concussion and shut out Washington in the regular-season finale.


        "We have to manage the puck a lot better," center Andrew Cogliano said. "We weren't nearly as good as we can be. We have no choice (but) to be (better) Sunday."

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: NHL Betting Info. 4/17

          “Stanley Cup Playoffs”
          Sunday’s NHL betting preview
          St. Louis Blues at Chicago Blackhawks (A: +131, H: -145, O/U: 5)
          Series tied 1-1
          The Chicago Blackhawks found themselves on the fortunate side of a pair of coach’s challenges en route to evening their first-round series with the St. Louis Blues at one victory apiece. The Blackhawks hope their good fortune travels up Interstate 55 to the United Center on Sunday afternoon as the bitter Central Division rivals play Game 3 of their set.
          “When you play the defending Cup champions, you’re going to have to fight through a lot of stuff,” St. Louis coach Ken Hitchcock said following a 3-2 setback on Friday. “Calls aren’t going to go your way, you’re not going to get the officiating you want. It’s always going to seem like it’s one-sided. Big deal, fight through it.” Vladimir Tarasenko scored his 11th career playoff goal and seventh in his past eight games to open the scoring, but his apparent second tally of the game midway into the third period was overturned by an offside call. St. Louis’ troubles continued 3 1/2 minutes later as Andrew Shaw’s tally was upheld by review in Toronto and again following a coach’s challenge for goaltender interference. The Blues failed to recover from the momentum shift and suffered the loss as the series heads to the United Center, which they have lost three straight playoff games.
          TV: 3 p.m. ET, NBC, TVAS, SN
          ABOUT THE BLUES:
          While Hitchcock’s comments received plenty of airtime, center Paul Stastny told reporters on Saturday that the team has moved on from the result. “If you worry too much about it, those are the teams that will be unsuccessful and kind of use that as an excuse,” Stastny told reporters. “It’s early in the series. It’s frustrating, yeah, but I think once we woke up this morning, we already forgot about it and we’re focused on (Sunday).” Captain David Backes scored in overtime of the series opener and had an assist on Friday to extend his point streak to six games (three goals, five assists).

          ABOUT THE BLACKHAWKS:
          Stud defenseman Duncan Keith returned with a flourish from his six-game suspension, collecting a goal and an assist on Friday while logging one second short of 31 minutes of ice time. “He’s a horse back there, so useful in all areas and he’s a threat in a lot of different ways,” coach Joel Quenneville told CSN Chicago. The same can be said for captain Jonathan Toews, who has recorded a team-high 11 shots and won 27-of-47 faceoffs (57.4 percent).

          TRENDS:
          * Blues are 13-3 in their last 16 road games.
          * Blackhawks are 9-3 in their last 12 Conference Quarterfinals games.
          * Over is 8-1-2 in Blues last 11 games playing on one days rest.
          * Over is 10-2-6 in Blackhawks last 18 games playing on one days rest.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: NHL Betting Info. 4/17

            Tampa Bay Lightning at Detroit Red Wings (A: +109, H: -120, O/U: 5)
            Lightning lead series 2-0
            The Detroit Red Wings have not found the answer to slowing down Tyler Johnson in the playoffs over the last two seasons and are running out of time as they host the Tampa Bay Lightning on Sunday for Game 3 of their first-round series. Johnson scored six times in last year’s seven-game battle and has a pair of goals to go with four assists in two victories to open the postseason in 2016.
            Lightning center Brian Boyle told reporters after Friday’s 5-2 victory in Game 2 that Johnson “has found another gear. He’s flying out there.” Johnson, along with linemates Nikita Kucherov and Alex Killorn, have combined for 15 points in the first two games and Detroit forward Dylan Larkin told reporters: “They’re opportunistic. … They get a lot of free space and you have to back check hard and play the body a little more. We’re not making it hard enough on them.” The Red Wings are also 1-for-10 on the power play and continue to give up too many Grade A chances at even strength. “We’re going to make some mistakes, that’s the reality of life,” Detroit coach Jeff Blashill told reporters. “But we’ve had opportunities in the last two games to win the hockey game and we didn’t win it.”
            TV: 7 p.m. ET, CNBC, CBC, TVAS, FSN Detroit, FSN Sun (Tampa Bay)
            ABOUT THE LIGHTNING:
            Johnson’s four points Friday tied a single-game franchise record in the playoffs set by Vincent Lecavalier in 2011, and Ryan Callahan told reporters: “He likes this time of year and he’s showing it.” The defense pairing of Braydon Coburn and Nikita Nesterov have raised their games, combining for three assists and a plus-5 rating in front of goaltender Ben Bishop (64 saves, 68 shots). Versatile forward J.T. Brown suffered an upper-body injury in Game 2 and is out indefinitely.

            ABOUT THE RED WINGS:
            Larkin responded after a quiet Game 1 with his first playoff goal and three hits Friday while veterans Pavel Datsyuk (eight shots) and captain Henrik Zetterberg (three) are looking for their first point. The Red Wings’ defense has recorded six of their 11 points in the first two games, led by Mike Green with a goal and an assist. Goalie Jimmy Howard has allowed seven goals on 64 shots and Blashill told reporters any decisions on lineup changes would be decided Sunday.

            TRENDS:
            * Home team is 7-0 in the last seven meetings.
            * Red Wings are 0-6 in their last six versus a team with a winning record.
            * Under is 4-1-1 in the last six meetings in Detroit.
            * Over is 8-1-1 in Lightning last 10 games following a win.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: NHL Betting Info. 4/17

              Florida Panthers at New York Islanders (A: +106, H: -117, O/U: 5)
              Series tied 1-1
              Postseason hockey will be on display for the first time at Barclays Center as the New York Islanders look to get the upper hand in the first-round series on Sunday when they host the Florida Panthers in Game 3. The Islanders split a pair of encounters with Atlantic Division-champion Florida in Brooklyn this season en route to posting a 25-11-5 mark at their new home.
              “We know what kind of environment our fans can create and we’re counting on them and we want to feed off them,” said New York captain John Tavares, who has scored a goal in six straight contests and has two tallies and two assists in the first two contests of this series. Tavares ended Roberto Luongo’s shutout bid late in the third period of Friday’s 3-1 setback, with the veteran goaltender recording 41 saves to snap a personal seven-game losing skid in the postseason. Reilly Smith continued his stellar series by joining Nick Bjugstad and defenseman Dmitry Kulikov with a goal and an assist in Game 2. “It seems like the puck is following me around a little bit,” Smith told the Miami Herald of the five points he’s record in the series, matching the sum total of his previous 12 playoff games.
              TV: 8 p.m. ET, NBCSN, SN, TVAS2, FSN Florida, MSG-Plus (New York)
              ABOUT THE PANTHERS:
              Veteran Jaromir Jagr may have lost a tooth during Game 2, but he was unable to gain a goal as Florida’s leading scorer has gone 33 consecutive postseason games without a tally. “Maybe it will bring me luck,” Jagr told the Miami Herald of the lost tooth as he’s looking for his first playoff goal since scoring in Game 2 of Philadelphia’s first-round series against Pittsburgh in 2012. Linemates Aleksander Barkov and Jonathan Huberdeau have yet to score in the series, but the former has a team high-tying 10 shots on goal while the latter has nine.

              ABOUT THE ISLANDERS:
              Defenseman Nick Leddy saw plenty of positives in his team despite the outcome of Friday’s contest, his assist on Tavares’ tally notwithstanding. “Our breakouts were good and we turned it on them (on Friday),” Leddy told Newsday. “We got pucks in deep, we worked their (defense). We’re doing the things we did at the end of the regular season, playing how we need to play.” Coach Jack Capuano had a harsher assessment of the game, going so far as to say that the team left Thomas Greiss “out to dry” on Florida’s first two tallies.

              TRENDS:
              * Panthers are 5-1 in their last six games playing on one days rest.
              * Panthers are 5-2 in the last seven meetings.
              * Over is 5-1-1 in Islanders last seven overall.
              * Over is 5-0-1 in the last six meetings in New York.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: NHL Betting Info. 4/17

                Nashville Predators at Anaheim Ducks (A: +144, H: -160, O/U: 5)
                Predators lead series 1-0
                Having wrested away home ice with a hard-fought victory in Game 1, the visiting Nashville Predators can put the Anaheim Ducks on the ropes when the teams continue their Western Conference first-round series Sunday night. Filip Forsberg’s third-period goal off a fluke deflection proved to be the difference in Nashville’s 3-2 victory on Friday night.
                The Predators have a chance to take command of the series with a second straight victory on the road but coach Peter Laviolette does not want his team looking ahead. “We’ll have our work cut out for us in Game 2,” Laviolette said. “To get off to the right start is a good thing. There’s so much hockey left to be played.” Anaheim, which clinched the Pacific Division title and No. 2 seed on the final day of the regular season, has not lost back-to-back home games since Nov. 11-13 and last faced the Predators on Nov. 17 prior to the series opener. “The one thing, when you haven’t seen a team since November and you get to see them now, at least you know what you’re up against,” Ducks coach Bruce Boudreau said. “We’ll reset and hopefully come out and play an awful lot better Sunday.”
                TV: 10:30 p.m. ET, NBCSN, TVAS, Sportsnet, FSN Tennessee (Nashville), FSN West (Anaheim)
                ABOUT THE PREDATORS:
                James Neal, who netted 31 goals during the regular season, scored 35 seconds into Game 1 and never slowed down, registering a game-high nine shots to help Nashville to a 33-29 edge. “For us, we just want to be in the offensive zone getting looks and I think we did that,” said Neal, who lauded linemate Ryan Johansen for his success. “He was making great plays. I like the way his game was. He gave me some great chances. I like the way our line played the first game.” Colin Wilson, who set a franchise record with five goals in a playoff series a year ago but scored only six times in the regular season, continued his postseason magic with a tally in Game 1.

                ABOUT THE DUCKS:
                Boudreau declined to announce his starter in net for Game 2 – “I don’t want to talk about my goalies” – after John Gibson (30 saves) got the nod in the opener, getting victimized by a one-handed redirection by Wilson and Forsberg’s tally that went off the skate of Ducks defenseman Shea Theodore. Fellow blue-liner Josh Manson (head/upper body) was knocked out of the game after absorbing a thunderous hit from Forsberg in the first period, leaving his status unknown for Game 2. Defenseman Kevin Bieksa, sidelined since March 24 due to an upper-body injury, was on the ice during Saturday’s optional skate and is “eligible to play” if Manson is unable to go, according to Boudreau.

                TRENDS:
                * Home team is 4-1 in the last five meetings.
                * Ducks are 6-1 in their last seven Conference Quarterfinals games.
                * Over is 17-4-5 in the last 26 meetings.
                * Over is 5-0-1 in the last six meetings in Anaheim.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: NHL Betting Info. 4/17

                  NY Islanders-Florida (1-1)
                  Islanders lost four of last six games with Florida; Panthers won three of last five visits here. Islanders lost three of last four home games; over is 5-1-1 in their last seven games overall. Panthers won six of last eight games (over 5-3-1 in last nine)- they won three of last four road games. So far in series, NY is 1-5 on power play, Florida 1-4; Panthers scored at least once in all six periods. Islanders had 42-31 edge in shots in Game 2, after being outshot 42-26 in opener.

                  Detroit-Tampa Bay (T2-0)
                  Home side won last seven Detroit-Tampa Bay games; under is 4-2-1 in those seven games. Lightning is 2-2 in last four visits to Motor City, losing 3-1/2-1 in last two- over is 2-0-1 in last three series games. Over is 4-0-2 in last six Tampa Bay games- Lightning won three of last four games, but lost three of last four on foreign ice. Detroit won its last three home games. Teams combined to go 2-20 on power play in Games 1-2, with both teams 1-10. Lightning scored a goal in all six periods.

                  St Louis-Chicago (1-1)
                  Blues won three of last four games with Chicago, with three wins all in OT/SO; under is 3-0-2 in last five series games. St Louis won three of its last four visits here. Chicago lost three of last four games overall, with all three losses in OT; they outshot Blues 64-49 in Games 1-2, 25-13 in third period/OT. Over is 4-2-1 in last seven Chicago games. Blues won eight of their last 11 games, winning three in row on road; over is 4-2-1 in their last seven games. St Louis is 0-5 on power play in series; Chicago 1-8.

                  Nashville-Anaheim (N1-0)
                  Ducks lost three of last four games with Nashville (over is 9-0-2 in last 11); Predators lost four of last six visits to Anaheim, but won Game 1 when Forsberg scored at 10:25 of 3rd period. Home side won four of last five series games. Nashville won three of last four games overall, but lost three of four on road; under is 3-1-1 in its last five games. Anaheim lost three of its last four at home-under is 4-1-1 in its last six home games. Lot of pressure on Ducks with series heading to Tennessee for Game 3.

                  Playoffs tally: Home: 9-6, Over; 5-5-5

                  Comment

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