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Red Wings Wary of Favorites Role

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From Associated Press

The nine Stanley Cup championship banners that hang in Joe Louis Arena don’t represent all the history the Carolina Hurricanes are up against in facing the Detroit Red Wings.

Featuring at least a half-dozen players bound for the Hall of Fame, and a coach who’s already there, Detroit has been favored all season to capture the Cup for the first time since 1998.

The Hurricanes, in the Stanley Cup finals for the first time, haven’t won in Detroit since the 1989-90 season, when they were the Hartford Whalers.

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The Red Wings have won five in a row over Carolina at home and are 16-3-0-1 against the Hurricanes the last 10 years.

The best-of-seven series opens at Detroit on Tuesday night.

“Luckily for us it’s 0-0 right now and that’s how we’re approaching it,” said Carolina’s Arturs Irbe, San Jose’s goalie in 1994 when the Sharks upset the heavily favored Red Wings in the opening round of the playoffs.

Yet the Red Wings don’t expect to win in a walk--not with the overachieving Hurricanes standing in their way.

“Carolina’s done a lot of good things to put themselves in this position,” Detroit’s Kris Draper said after Sunday’s practice.

“You’re not lucky to win a playoff series. And that’s what they’ve done in the East.”

The Red Wings clinched the Cup in the minds of many when they eliminated defending champion Colorado in the Western Conference finals--winning Game 7 on Friday, 7-0.

“I don’t think what you did before has any bearing on what you’re going to do,” Detroit Coach Scotty Bowman said, noting that Carolina has won five consecutive road playoff games.

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Each team has played 18 games this postseason.

Carolina reached its first finals by eliminating New Jersey, Montreal and Toronto, each in six games. The Hurricanes beat the Devils twice in overtime, the Canadiens once and the Maple Leafs three times.

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