Belfour not popular in San Jose Associated Press
SAN JOSE, Calif. -- Ed Belfour is a hated man in San Jose,
and it's not just because he shut out the Sharks in the first two
games of their playoff series with the Dallas Stars.
The Dallas goalie is regarded as a traitor by Sharks fans
because he spurned a contract offer after getting traded to San
Jose in 1997, playing just 13 games for the Sharks before signing a
free-agent deal with the Stars.
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Tue, April 2
If there's any possible way Owen Nolan will play, he'll play. This game is the whole series. If the Sharks don't win, they don't win the series. It all depends on Nolan. Coach Darryl Sutter will keep the kids in the lineup (Patrick Marleau, Alexander Korolyuk, Marco Sturm) because they played well in Game 2.
Another key for San Jose is the power play. The only game Dallas lost in the playoffs was against Edmonton when the Oilers scored two power-play goals. If the power play doesn't get going, the Sharks aren't going to win.
In terms of Ed Belfour playing in the hostile environment of San Jose, it shouldn't be too much of a problem. The only way it could be trouble is if Eddie lets up a few early goals.
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Whenever Belfour has returned to San Jose since then, he has
been the focus of anger by Sharks fans. He will be even more
reviled this time because he has led the Stars to 4-0 and 1-0 wins
over the Sharks in the first two games of the series.
"I think every time I've come back there, they've been hard on
me," Belfour said. "It's definitely satisfying when you have good
games in buildings where the fans are on you. I like challenges. I
like to play my best in those type of games."
Belfour will face such challenges when the best-of-seven Western
Conference semifinal series moves to San Jose for Game 3 on Tuesday
night and Game 4 on Friday night.
Belfour was serenaded with chants of "Ed-die, Ed-die" from
thankful Dallas fans on Sunday night as he extended his scoreless
streak to 138 minutes, 53 seconds. He has 10 postseason shutouts.
He'll hear similar chants in San Jose, though with a decidedly
derisive tone.
Dallas coach Ken Hitchcock said Belfour is used to dealing with
hostile crowds on the road, such as Game 3 of this year's
first-round series in Edmonton. The Oilers scored five times on
Belfour in the first two periods in that game, their only victory
in the series against Dallas.
"I'm sure they're going to be on him, but I just don't see
anything that could be worse than Edmonton. If we can get by that
scene in Edmonton, we can get by anything," Hitchcock said. "The
atmosphere was almost chaotic at times, it was so emotional. It was
a very volatile area and we handled it well."
The Sharks, who upset St. Louis in seven games in the first
round, have more than Belfour to worry about as they try to score
their first goal of the series. They likely will be missing top
scorer Owen Nolan, who missed Sunday's Game 2 at Dallas.
| | Belfour won't be a popular man when he takes the ice in San Jose. |
Nolan scored a San Jose-record 44 goals in the regular season,
one-fifth of the team's total. He had six of the Sharks' 20 goals
in the first-round series with St. Louis.
Nolan missed four of the last five regular-season games with a
shoulder injury. Then, in Game 7 of the first round, he took a
slapshot from Al MacInnis off his foot. It left him hobbling and
ineffective in Game 1 against the Stars.
Sharks coach Darryl Sutter told his team Sunday not to expect
Nolan back this year.
"You lose your captain, your physical presence, your leading
goal-scorer and your top minutes man," Sutter said. "It's all
fairly obvious what he means to our club."
Whereas Dallas' Mike Modano has at least a point in six straight
games, including the only goal on Sunday, the Sharks will have to
search for a new offensive leader if Nolan cannot return.
"He's their best player," Modano said. "He's the heart and
soul of their team. He carried them through the first round against
St. Louis."
The Sharks, who won four of six games against Dallas during the
regular season, tried to remain upbeat.
"We know we can beat this team. We need to get some breaks and
find a way to beat Belfour," center Vincent Damphousse said. "We
know it's going to be loud in our building. We know our fans will
be on him. Hopefully, we can rile him a little bit." |