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Kiprusoff Controls the Sharks

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From Associated Press

Overtime suits the Calgary Flames -- particularly when their goalie seems determined to show his former teammates exactly what they gave up.

Steve Montador scored 18:43 into overtime, and Miikka Kiprusoff stopped 49 shots in Calgary’s 4-3 victory over the San Jose Sharks in Game 1 of the Western Conference finals on Sunday.

Kiprusoff called it the busiest game of his life, and he still was soaked in sweat when his teammates presented him with a hard hat -- the Flames’ reward for the hardest-working player in every game. Kiprusoff wore it proudly in the building where he was Evgeni Nabokov’s backup for three seasons.

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“It’s fun to be here against [the Sharks], but I don’t think it makes any difference,” Kiprusoff said. “It’s the finals. That’s enough.”

Alex Korolyuk scored with 3:21 left in regulation to force overtime for the Sharks, who set a franchise playoff record with 52 shots and controlled large stretches of play.

But Kiprusoff, who became a star after the Sharks traded him to Calgary last November, was tough to beat -- and the Flames took advantage of a botched line change to score the winner.

The Sharks held Calgary captain Jarome Iginla without a shot in regulation and dominated overtime, outshooting Calgary, 12-5, but Iginla made the game-winning pass to Montador. The low-scoring, seldom-used defenseman skated untouched into the slot, rapped his stick on the ice and beat Nabokov, who made 33 saves.

“I think the crowd was going, and I wanted to make sure that Jarome could hear me,” Montador said. “I just said, ‘Thanks for listening.’ ”

Game 2 is Tuesday night in San Jose.

Craig Conroy had two goals and Krzysztof Oliwa had one for the Flames, who won for the fourth consecutive time in five overtime playoff games.

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“We’ve been able to steal games while they’re all over us,” Conroy said. “Kipper gave us a chance. We have a whole different kind of confidence with him back there.”

Mike Ricci and Todd Harvey scored in the second period for the Sharks, who have lost two consecutive home playoff games after winning their first five to earn the franchise’s first trip to the conference finals.

“We’ve got more where that came from,” Shark Coach Ron Wilson said. “It’s disappointing to lose the game the way we did, on kind of a detail thing, a bad change. ... With 52 shots, I think we could have had 62 shots. We’ll play the same way the next game, take our chances.”

Both teams stuck to the strategies that propelled them into this unlikely matchup of teams that missed the playoffs last season.

San Jose rallied from 14th place in the conference last spring to the best season in franchise history, and the sixth-seeded Flames ended an eight-season playoff drought before upsetting Vancouver and Detroit.

“The bottom line is, I would bet it’s easier to win the first game in this building than it would be Game 7,” said Calgary Coach Darryl Sutter, the Sharks’ coach for 5 1/2 seasons before getting fired in December 2002.

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The Sharks got 18 shots in the opening 20 minutes, but Kiprusoff turned them away while the Flames got goals from Oliwa and Conroy.

Kiprusoff lost his scoreless streak of nearly 170 minutes on Ricci’s rebound goal midway through the second period, and Harvey tied it to take the momentum. Conroy beat Nabokov with a floating shot from the blue line, but San Jose then benefited from an extraordinary bit of luck. From the boards, Korolyuk absently flung the puck to the net -- but Nils Ekman completely screened Kiprusoff, who didn’t see the knuckling puck until it was floating over his shoulder.

“I thought we carried the play most of the night,” San Jose defenseman Scott Hannan said. “Kipper kept them in the game. ... We had a couple of mistakes, turnovers at the blue line. That’s what those guys take advantage of.”

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