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Lightning team dentists count teeth not goals

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By Lane DeGregory, Times Staff Writer
Friday, May 20, 2011

TAMPA — Before Thursday's game, while the hockey fans were filing into the arena and the players were lacing their skates, Dr. Tony Castro and his colleagues sat at a table outside the Lightning locker room, eating roast beef from plastic plates — and talking teeth.

Most of the players' mouths are in great shape. This season, the team has lost only 15 teeth. Most of the guys have been wearing mouth guards. Not much to worry about tonight, the team dentists decided.

Center Nate Thompson, who had a front tooth knocked out during Game 4 against the Capitals, still has a gap — but the hole healed well.

And they would keep an eye on Marty St. Louis. A stick blade to the mouth in Game 1 against the Penguins had loosened the forward's teeth, necessitating a double root canal. In Game 2 of the Capitals series, he got whacked again twice, requiring the dentist to cement three of his teeth back in.

There isn't time to finish St. Louis' root canals until after the season. So team dentist Sam Caranante built a tooth cast of reinforced resin, stuffed some cotton around St. Louis' gums and tried to ease his pain.

"For a little guy," Castro said, "that Marty is real tough."

Ten minutes before the face-off, Castro set out to talk to the team trainer.

St. Louis was still a little uncomfortable. But nothing that would affect his play. Castro went upstairs and took his seat near the center of the rink, five rows up, just to the right of the players' box.

If anyone gets whacked by a puck or a stick or a fist, he can climb over the railing, down into the tunnel, and try to fix up the player right there.

"Our job during the game," Castro said, "is basically to just stop the bleeding and get them back out on the ice."

• • •

Once, hockey players considered gap-toothed grins a badge of honor. Missing teeth meant playing hard, being willing to sacrifice your smile.

But in these days of televised games, advertising spreads and trophy wives, "Players worry about what they look like now," said team dentist Vince Caranante, 77.

Every NHL team has a dentist. The Lightning have three, plus two oral surgeons, who rotate being on-call for home games. If a Lightning player is hurt on the road, the opposing team's dentist patches him up until he gets back to Tampa.

Caranante and his brother Sam, 68, have been taking care of the players since the franchise's inception. Gil Rivera, 35, who bought their practice, also works the games. Besides repairing hockey injuries, the dentists give the guys regular checkups, fill cavities and build crowns.

Castro and Dr. Bob Orta are the team's oral and maxillofacial surgeons. They stitch players' split lips, pop fractured jaws back in place.

In the training room, the dentists and doctors work on players still standing in their skates or sit them on benches. They have an x-ray machine, mirrors and lights, tools and temporary cement, syringes and Novocain. If the dentist or surgeon can't fix something during the game, he brings the player back to his Tampa office afterward.

"Hockey pucks are pretty nasty," Orta said. "They're frozen solid, coming at you at 100 miles per hour. That can really do some damage to a face."

Sticks aren't quite as hard, but cut with brute force. And many of the players' mouth injuries are from opponents' fists.

"I always tell them, it's better to take a hit straight on and mess up your teeth," Castro said. "Teeth are much easier to fix than if you turn your head and take a Sunday punch to the jaw."

• • •

Hang out with the Lightning's dental team and you'll hear surprising statistics, stories so gruesome they make your teeth hurt.

• About half of the players have lost teeth. Goalies almost never get mouth injuries because their helmets have a cage.

• When a high stick broke off Nate Thompson's front tooth, the trainer found it on the ice. Sometimes, if you wash a tooth right away you can pop it back in. But Thompson's split at the root. So Rivera said, "I had to just take out what was left."

• Of all the hockey horror, team dentists agreed, Craig MacDonald's was the worst. On Dec. 20, 2007, a puck smashed into MacDonald's face, fracturing nine teeth, only three of which could be salvaged. He also required 25–30 stitches to close a cut in his tongue and an additional 50 inside his lip and gums. MacDonald underwent three root canal surgeries the next morning.

"It took me a total of 10 appointments, four hours each, just to make his mouth make sense," Rivera said.

• • •

After Thursday's game, while the hockey fans filed out of the arena and the players unlaced their skates, the surgeon and dentist met in the training room.

The Lighting had lost to the Bruins. No one had been hurt.

But St. Louis' teeth were still aching. Behind the cotton packing, his gums were swollen. Castro and Sam Caranante worked on the forward for 40 minutes, draining pus and trying to stabilize his teeth.

They don't know if he will be able to keep all three. But they patched him up enough to get him back out on the ice tonight.

"He isn't worried. He just doesn't want the distraction," the dentist said. "He kept going, 'At least it's not a knee or a shoulder. It's just teeth.' "

Lane DeGregory can be reached at ldegregory@sptimes.com or (727) 893-8825.


Captain's Corner: Tarpon tricks

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By Jay Mastry, Times Correspondent
Friday, May 20, 2011

What's hot: Tarpon fishing during full moon tides this week provided plenty of action at a couple of the most popular spots. As they typically do, tarpon ganged up at the Sunshine Skyway bridge and some in the passes on each side of Egmont Key to ambush crabs, particularly on the afternoon outgoing tides. To avoid a crowd, head to the beach and find your own bunch to fish. Projected easterly winds will calm the nearshore gulf, and schools of migrating tarpon will be easy to spot rolling on the surface.

Technique: Offer a variety of baits to schools along beaches. Often finicky, tarpon can be coaxed into chewing by mixing it up. I get well ahead of an oncoming school and anchor. We'll throw four bottom rods out in each direction to cover an area loaded with fresh dead shad. A couple of live baits suspended beneath corks help cover the water column. A fly-lined crab or frisky greenback will round out the smorgasbord.

Jay Mastry charters Jaybird out of St. Petersburg. Call (727) 321-2142.

Thunder confident in using any mix

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Times wires
Friday, May 20, 2011

DALLAS — With Game 2 of the Western Conference final on the line, Thunder coach Scott Brooks either had to stick with a lineup of four reserves who were playing well or switch to the group he usually trusts late in the fourth quarter.

He bet on the backups Thursday night. And now the series enters tonight's Game 3 in Oklahoma City tied at 1.

James Harden, Eric Maynor, Nick Collison and Daequan Cook teamed with Kevin Durant to build a healthy lead late in the fourth quarter, then made it hold up for a 106-100 victory over the Mavericks.

"We've always felt confident in the bench," Brooks said. "They really did a good job. But it's always a team effort when you win."

All-Star point guard Russell Westbrook sat as Maynor guided the offense down the stretch. Serge Ibaka and Kendrick Perkins cheered Collison as he tried to slow Dirk Nowitzki. And while Durant was the lone starter in with the backups, he was the offensive liability — he made 2 of 6 shots, compared to 9 of 11 for the other guys.

Harden scored 23, Maynor 13, Cook eight and Collison six.

"Their reserves came out swinging and really took it to us," Nowitzki said.

Oklahoma City went into the fourth quarter leading by one. The guys who were asked to protect that slim lead stretched it to 10 with 3:15 left after a 14-5 spurt.

"You can't mess that chemistry up," said Durant, who led the Thunder with 24 points. "Coach made a good decision."

Although Westbrook was agitated immediately after being pulled, he said all the right things afterward. "My main focus is we got this far because the team is doing well, not if I'm doing good or bad," he said.

The Mavs, who swept out the Lakers, won't overlook the Thunder again.

"Sometimes you need to get hit on the chin and get woke up," Dallas center Tyson Chandler said Friday. "(Thursday) night, they hit us on the chin. Hopefully, that woke us up."

Heat-Bulls: Winning Game 2 of the Eastern Conference finals in Chicago came with a bonus for the Heat: the road to the title now goes through Miami, which wrested homecourt advantage from the Bulls and would also have it in the NBA Finals against either Dallas or Oklahoma City. Miami is the only team still unbeaten at home in these playoffs.

"If we defend homecourt from here on out, you can do the math," Heat forward Chris Bosh said.

But then there's this: Every team left in this postseason is 1-0 on Miami's home floor this year. Game 3 of the East final is Sunday night in Miami.

West to Warriors: The Warriors hired Lakers Hall of Fame player and respected executive Jerry West to work with the front office in an advisory role.

Preakness Stakes lineup

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Times wires
Friday, May 20, 2011

Tampa Bay Lightning-Boston Bruins news and notes

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By Damian Cristodero, Times Staff Writer
Friday, May 20, 2011

Hungry for more

For six months, Lightning television announcers Rick Peckham and Bobby "The Chief" Taylor call practically every game. But now that Tampa Bay is playing its biggest games of the season, Peckham and Taylor are reduced to spectators. That's because the conference finals are being carried nationally by NBC and Versus, leaving the local broadcasters off the air. "It's like you do all this preparation for the barbecue and all you can eat is the salad," Taylor said. "It's like you're told, 'You can't have any of the steak.' " It will get worse for them next season, when NBC/Versus takes over exclusive coverage of the playoffs beginning in the second round.

Free Cheap Trick concert today

The rock band Cheap Trick will perform on the west plaza of the St. Pete Times Forum after today's Game 4. The concert is free. Fans without a ticket to the 1:30 p.m. game can watch on a big screen on the plaza and stick around for the show.

No tomorrow

If you are reading this, the prediction of elderly California pastor Harold Camping that the world would end today has been a miss so far. A couple of Lightning players, though, were not taking any chances and Friday shared their final plans. "I'm going to go home to my family, play with my kids and make love to my wife one last time," W Ryan Malone said. Said G Mike Smith: "I might drive my car really, really fast on the Gandy Bridge, like, faster than it's ever gone before." So what if he was caught? "Throw me in jail," Smith said. Not that anyone was really worried. "If the world comes to an end," Malone said, "what can we do?"

Quote to note

"You could tell just by his skating and his battles that he really felt good. And to us — to me, anyway — watching him from behind the bench, he looked like a guy who never missed a game. He was right where he left off. … He wasn't cautious. He was confident. He knew he felt good. He knew he was okay and went out there and played like nothing happened."

Bruins coach Claude Julien, on star C Patrice Bergeron, above, who played Game 3 after missing two games with concussion symptoms

Tickets

Today's Game 4 and a potential Game 6 at the St. Pete Times Forum are sold out. Unused team tickets might be released on game days. Check with the box office at (813) 301-6600 and Ticketmaster (outlets, ticketmaster.com, toll-free 1-800-745-3000).

The series

Bruins lead 2-1

Game 1, Lightning 5, Bruins 2: Three goals in 1:25 of the first spark Lightning.

Game 2, Bruins 6, Lightning 5: Bruins score five in the second.

Game 3, Bruins 2, Lightning 0: Bruins prevail in tight defensive game.

Today: at Tampa, 1:30, Ch. 8

Monday: at Boston, 8, Versus

Wednesday: at Tampa, 8, Versus *

Friday: at Boston, 8, Versus *

Radio: 970-AM, except Wednesday, which is 620-AM

* If necessary

Rangers enforcer died of toxic mix

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Times wires
Friday, May 20, 2011

MINNEAPOLIS — The death of Rangers enforcer Derek Boogaard was an accident, caused by a toxic mix of alcohol and the morphine-like painkiller oxycodone, the Hennepin County Medical Examiner's Office announced Friday.

It was unclear exactly when Boogaard, 28, died, the office said. He was found dead in his Minneapolis apartment May 13.

Boogaard's family released a statement in which it said the 6-foot-7, 265-pound wing struggled with pain and addiction, and confirmed newspaper reports he had been involved in the substance abuse program run by the league and the players association.

"After repeated courageous attempts at rehabilitation and with the full support of the New York Rangers, the NHLPA and the NHL, Derek had been showing tremendous improvement but was ultimately unable to beat this opponent," the family said.

Oxycodone is better known by its commercial name, OxyContin. Drinking alcohol while taking strong painkillers such as oxycodone can result in breathing problems and increase the risk of an overdose, the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism says.

"Regardless of the cause, Derek's passing is a tragedy," league spokesman Frank Brown said in an e-mail to the Associated Press.

The Rangers had no comment. Neither did the Wild, the team for which Boogaard played for five seasons before signing a $6.5 million, four-year deal with the Rangers in July.

Boogaard played 22 games for New York before being sidelined for the rest of the season with a concussion and a shoulder problem sustained in a fight with the Senators' Matt Carkner on Dec. 9.

Boogaard's agent, Ron Salcer, said his client had been doing much better and "turning a corner" in his treatment.

Boogaard's funeral is today in Regina, Saskatchewan.

Winnipeg mayor: Move 'matter of time'

Winnipeg Mayor Sam Katz said it's just "a matter of time" before a deal to move the Thrashers to his city is finalized and announced.

Katz said he has been in touch with True North Sports and Entertainment, the Winnipeg company negotiating to buy the team, and had been told nothing was official yet.

True North has been negotiating with Thrashers ownership about moving the team. Despite a report Thursday that a deal is done, the league and True North have said nothing has been decided.

The Winnipeg Jets moved to Arizona in 1996 and became the Coyotes. Since then, the city has built an arena — the MTS Centre, owned by True North — and argued it can support a franchise once again.

Thrashers goaltender Chris Mason told the Canadian Press members of the team have not been given an indication where they will be based next season, despite reports that some have been told the team will be moved.

"We're sitting on the edge of our seats waiting to see what's going to happen, too," Mason said.

Today the Thrashers will still hold their scheduled select-a-seat day for season-ticket holders for next season.

Sharks get first win in West final

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Times wires
Friday, May 20, 2011

SAN JOSE, Calif. — Patrick Marleau scored twice in the first period and Antti Niemi made the early lead stand up with 27 saves to get the Sharks back into the Western Conference final with a 4-3 victory over the Canucks in Game 3 on Friday.

Ryane Clowe and Dan Boyle also scored and Joe Thornton had three assists for the Sharks, who trail the series 2-1.

San Jose looked like a different team than the one that was outscored 10-5 in losing the first two games in Vancouver. The Sharks scored three times in the first period and had 15 of the first 16 shots on goal to snap an eight-game losing streak in the conference final, including a sweep last year to Chicago.

The Canucks nearly rallied from a three-goal deficit in the third, thanks to a five-minute boarding call on Jamie McGinn against Aaron Rome that led to power-play goals from Dan Hamhuis and Kevin Bieksa to cut San Jose's lead to 4-3 with 3:56 left.

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First — 1, SJ, Marleau 6 (Thornton, Setoguchi), 3:56 (pp). 2, SJ, Clowe 5 (Boyle, I.White), 8:22 (pp). 3, SJ, Marleau 7 (Thornton), 17:25. PenaltiesLapierre, Van (roughing), 2:03; Ehrhoff, Van, double minor (high-sticking), 6:54.

Second None. PenaltiesRome, Van (hooking), 3:20; Bieksa, Van (hooking), 6:34; Pavelski, SJ (interference), 7:47; Bieksa, Van (cross-checking), 10:30; Desjardins, SJ (holding stick), 14:27; Thornton, SJ (holding stick), 15:01; Desjardins, SJ (tripping), 16:32.

Third 4, Vancouver, Burrows 5, 1:09. 5, SJ, Boyle 3 (Marleau, Thornton), 6:46 (pp). 6, Vancouver, Hamhuis 1 (H.Sedin), 13:39 (pp). 7, Vancouver, Bieksa 4 (Raymond, Hansen), 16:04 (pp). PenaltiesKesler, Van (tripping), 5:02; Burrows, Van (tripping), 5:27; Rome, Van (cross-checking), 8:27; McGinn, SJ, major-game misconduct (boarding), 11:22; Lapierre, Van, misconduct, 19:09; Bieksa, Van (hooking), 19:09; Kesler, Van (slashing), 20:00. Shots on GoalVancouver 8-13-9—30. SJ 16-14-8—38. Power-play opportunitiesVancouver 2 of 7; SJ 3 of 10. Goalies—Vancouver, Luongo 10-6-0 (38 shots-34 saves). SJ, Niemi 8-7-0 (30-27).

Rangers enforcer died of toxic mix

The death of Rangers enforcer Derek Boogaard was an accident, caused by a toxic mix of alcohol and the morphine-like painkiller oxycodone, the Hennepin County (Minn.) Medical Examiner's Office said.

Boogaard, 28, was found dead in his Minneapolis apartment May 13. His family released a statement in which it said the wing struggled with pain and addiction, and confirmed newspaper reports he had been involved in the substance abuse program run by the league and the players association.

"After repeated courageous attempts at rehabilitation … Derek had been showing tremendous improvement but was ultimately unable to beat this opponent," the family said.

"Regardless of the cause, Derek's passing is a tragedy," league spokesman Frank Brown said.

The Rangers had no comment.. Boogaard played 22 games for them after signing as a free agent last offseason. He was sidelined for the rest of the season with a concussion and a shoulder problem sustained in a fight with the Senators' Matt Carkner on Dec. 9. His funeral is today in Regina, Saskatchewan.

Thrashers-Winnipeg: Winnipeg Mayor Sam Katz said it's just "a matter of time" before a deal to move the team to his city is finalized. Katz said he has been in touch with True North Sports and Entertainment, the company negotiating to buy the team and move it, and had been told nothing was official, despite a report otherwise Thursday. The Winnipeg Jets moved to Arizona in 1996. Since then, the city has built an arena — the MTS Centre — and argued it can support a franchise again. Today the Thrashers will still hold in Atlanta their scheduled select-a-seat day for season-ticket holders for next season.

Auto racing fun stuff

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Times wires
Friday, May 20, 2011

Quote of the week

"I'm still confused on whether I am on probation or not on probation. So, I can't answer that; I don't really know."

Kevin Harvick, right, when asked Friday about how hard he'd race if tonight's All-Star Race came down to him against rival Kyle Busch. Both are on probation for an incident two weeks ago. Late Friday, NASCAR met with Harvick to remind him that the probation for both drivers does include the non-points All-Star Race.

Number of the week

3 Record for most victories in the NASCAR Sprint Cup All-Star Race, shared by Dale Earnhardt (who won in 1987, '90 and '93) and Jeff Gordon (1995, '97 and 2001).


N. Ireland's McIlroy, McDowell facing off

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Times wires
Friday, May 20, 2011

CASARES, Spain — Seven months after helping Europe reclaim the Ryder Cup, Northern Irish duo Rory McIlroy and Graeme McDowell will meet in the final 16 at the World Match Play Championship.

McDowell claimed Group D with two straight wins, while McIlroy was second in Group E after a 3-and-2 defeat to Nicolas Colsaerts on Friday.

The two will face off in a competitive match for the first time today, with a spot in the quarterfinals at stake.

"It's going to be hard, but you've got to leave your friendship on the sideline," said fifth-ranked McDowell, who added that it's usually a one-sided affair when he faces McIlroy in practice, even though his friend is a spot below him in the rankings.

"I stopped playing him because he's too good," the U.S Open champion said. "I'm more of an observer, and he just tends to beat me up. I'm sure he'll expect to beat me again."

McIlroy said he'd treat the match like any other: "I'm sure we'll chat around the course, and it will be a friendly game. But I'm here to win a tournament, and to win it, I need to get through him."

Meanwhile, top-ranked Lee Westwood takes on fellow Englishman Ian Poulter after beating Aaron Baddeley 4 and 3 to win Group A.

Luke Donald and Martin Kaymer, who could supplant Westwood as No. 1 if they win the tournament, also advanced as unbeaten group winners. Second-ranked Donald beat Ross Fisher 3 and 1 in Group B, and third-ranked Kaymer beat Noh Seung-yul 2 and 1 in Group C.

PGA: David Toms shot a second straight 8-under 62 at Colonial in Fort Worth, Texas, matching the tour record for the first 36 holes to open a seven-stroke lead. Toms tied the mark of 124 set by Pat Perez in the 2009 Bob Hope Classic. Unaffected by a 2½-hour weather delay, Toms had four birdies on the eight holes he completed after play resumed. Steven Bowditch (64) and Charlie Wi (67), who finished before the delay, were tied for second with Mark Wilson (66) and John Senden (66).

LPGA: Cristie Kerr, Paula Creamer and Michelle Wie won second-round matches to lead six Americans into the final 16 of the Sybase Match Play Championship in Gladstone, N.J. Angela Stanford, Stacy Lewis and Brittany Lang were the other Americans to advance, along with top-seeded Na Yeon Choi of South Korea. Third-seeded Kerr had the most impressive victory, overwhelming rookie Belen Mozo 7 and 6.

FC Tampa Bay vs. Montreal Impact preview capsule

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By Bryan Burns, Times Staff Writer
Friday, May 20, 2011

Tonight

FC Tampa Bay vs. Montreal Impact

Records: Tampa Bay 1-2-3; Montreal 1-3-1

When/where: 7; Al Lang Field, St. Petersburg

How to follow: Live stream at fctampabay.com; live radio broadcast on 1010-AM

Promotion: Tampa Bay is hosting its second annual Military Appreciation Night. … Former Rowdies Derek Backman and Kevin Clinton will sign autographs on the concourse from 6:15 p.m. to 6:45 p.m.

Postgame on the field: Fans can watch the nearby fireworks display from Vinoy Park, scheduled to begin at 9:45 p.m.

Previous meetings: Tampa Bay played its best game of the season April 23 at Montreal, coach Ricky Hill said, but settled for a 0-0 draw. That was Tampa Bay's third game. In the opener, Takuya Yamada scored a late goal in the 86th minute to lift Tampa Bay over Montreal for its only victory.

Last time out: Tampa Bay was seconds from win No. 2 on May 11 against FC Edmonton but surrendered a stoppage-time goal, and the match finished 1-1. Tampa Bay's match at Fort Lauderdale last weekend was postponed until June 29 because of inclement weather. … Montreal lost a home match 2-1 last weekend to Carolina, a disappointing result considering the Impact defeated MLS's New York Red Bulls 1-0 in a home friendly before that.

Skinny: Hill said his biggest disappointment this season has been the team's inability to finish. Tampa Bay ranks seventh in the NASL with four goals, ahead of only Atlanta (three). … Tampa Bay is one of three teams without a multiple-goal scorer. … D Andres Arango is questionable after reinjuring his right ankle Tuesday in practice. The initial injury kept him out of Tampa Bay's past two matches. Arango returned to practice Friday. … Defender Frankie Sanfilippo has received a yellow card in each of the past two games and has a team-high three. According to NASL rules, when a player accumulates five, he is suspended for one match. … Outside of defenders J.P. Rodrigues, Omar Jarun and Sanfilippo, who have been forced into extended action because of injuries to others, only M Tony McManus and F/M Pascal Millien have started every game. … GK Daryl Sattler ranks second in the league with a 0.64 GAA despite an ACL tear that ended his season in Game 4 vs. Atlanta (April 30).

Tickets: (813) 287-1539, fctampabay.com or at the stadium box office on game day, which opens at 4 p.m.

Bryan Burns, Times staff writer

Game 4 of East final could be real "must-win" for Tampa Bay Lightning

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By Damian Cristodero, Times Staff Writer
Friday, May 20, 2011

TAMPA — When discussing Game 4 of the Eastern Conference final with the Bruins, Lightning players had several accurate, if not unique, ways of describing a contest that might be the turning point of the series.

"An important game," wing Sean Bergenheim said.

"A big game," defenseman Mattias Ohlund said.

But no one called the game a must-win — that is, except coach Guy Boucher, who used the term to compromise the idea.

"It's always a must-win," he said. "It's a must-win because it's the beginning of the series. It's a must-win if you don't win the first game. It's a must-win because it's 1-1 or 2-0 for the opponent. They're all must-wins."

But Game 4 today at the St. Pete Times Forum might really be one for Tampa Bay.

If the Lightning wins, the series is tied two games apiece. If Tampa Bay loses, it will be behind 3-1 in the best-of-seven series and facing elimination in Game 5 on Monday in Boston.

There is something to be said for the way Tampa Bay overcame a 3-1 deficit to beat the Penguins in the East quarterfinal. But the Bruins are a different animal.

"Yeah," wing Ryan Malone said, "it's a big bear."

Jokes aside, the Bruins are a more complete team, a more physical team with a better goaltender, and a team that, unlike Pittsburgh, can score.

That makes the difference between 2-2 and 3-1 enormous. It also makes Game 4 a must-win for the Lightning, doesn't it?

"You never want to go down 3-1, but it's the playoffs, so every game should be desperation," Malone said, sidestepping slightly. "Play hard, smart and stay even keel. It's a long road."

"It's four out of seven," Boucher said. "One of these two teams has to win four. It's not two, and it's not three. So we're still expecting a long series."

If that is to happen, Tampa Bay needs to make some improvements after Thursday's 2-0 Game 3 loss in which it seemed slower on the attack.

"We were slower," Boucher said. "We're a team that's used to driving the net extremely hard. Guys are relentless, usually going to the net and having their sticks heavy there and fighting, and we weren't as good."

Tampa Bay also is losing the puck-possession battle, and that starts with losing faceoffs. The Lightning won just 60 of 138 the past two games, a worrisome 43.5 percent.

And when the team did have the puck in Game 3, it did not get enough traffic in front of Bruins goaltender Tim Thomas, mainly because it could not consistently get through the Bruins' box-out defense.

"We have to throw pucks at him from everywhere," Malone said of Thomas, "take his eyes away, like we do in every other series."

"We know that they're going to come out hard the next game, and we've got to be ready for that," Bruins right wing Michael Ryder said. "It would be nice to go home 3-1, but it's going to take our A game."

Bottom line, Ohlund said, "it's a challenge. We've been challenged, all of us, tons of times. It's no different (today)."

Except Tampa Bay must win.

Damian Cristodero can be reached at cristodero@sptimes.com.

Game 4 of East final could be real "must-win" for Tampa Bay Lightning

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By Damian Cristodero, Times Staff Writer
Friday, May 20, 2011

TAMPA — When discussing Game 4 of the Eastern Conference final with the Bruins, Lightning players had several accurate, if not unique, ways of describing a contest that might be the turning point of the series.

"An important game," wing Sean Bergenheim said.

"A big game," defenseman Mattias Ohlund said.

But no one called the game a must-win — that is, except coach Guy Boucher, who used the term to compromise the idea.

"It's always a must-win," he said. "It's a must-win because it's the beginning of the series. It's a must-win if you don't win the first game. It's a must-win because it's 1-1 or 2-0 for the opponent. They're all must-wins."

But Game 4 today at the St. Pete Times Forum might really be one for Tampa Bay.

If the Lightning wins, the series is tied two games apiece. If Tampa Bay loses, it will be behind 3-1 in the best-of-seven series and facing elimination in Game 5 on Monday in Boston.

There is something to be said for the way Tampa Bay overcame a 3-1 deficit to beat the Penguins in the East quarterfinal. But the Bruins are a different animal.

"Yeah," wing Ryan Malone said, "it's a big bear."

Jokes aside, the Bruins are a more complete team, a more physical team with a better goaltender, and a team that, unlike Pittsburgh, can score.

That makes the difference between 2-2 and 3-1 enormous. It also makes Game 4 a must-win for the Lightning, doesn't it?

"You never want to go down 3-1, but it's the playoffs, so every game should be desperation," Malone said, sidestepping slightly. "Play hard, smart and stay even keel. It's a long road."

"It's four out of seven," Boucher said. "One of these two teams has to win four. It's not two, and it's not three. So we're still expecting a long series."

If that is to happen, Tampa Bay needs to make some improvements after Thursday's 2-0 Game 3 loss in which it seemed slower on the attack.

"We were slower," Boucher said. "We're a team that's used to driving the net extremely hard. Guys are relentless, usually going to the net and having their sticks heavy there and fighting, and we weren't as good."

Tampa Bay also is losing the puck-possession battle, and that starts with losing faceoffs. The Lightning won just 60 of 138 the past two games, a worrisome 43.5 percent.

And when the team did have the puck in Game 3, it did not get enough traffic in front of Bruins goaltender Tim Thomas, mainly because it could not consistently get through the Bruins' box-out defense.

"We have to throw pucks at him from everywhere," Malone said of Thomas, "take his eyes away, like we do in every other series."

"We know that they're going to come out hard the next game, and we've got to be ready for that," Bruins right wing Michael Ryder said. "It would be nice to go home 3-1, but it's going to take our A game."

Bottom line, Ohlund said, "it's a challenge. We've been challenged, all of us, tons of times. It's no different (today)."

Except Tampa Bay must win.

Damian Cristodero can be reached at cristodero@sptimes.com.

Indians lose second star in one week

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Times wires
Friday, May 20, 2011

CLEVELAND — The Indians put DH Travis Hafner on the DL with a strained side muscle Friday. This week, CF Grady Sizemore went on the DL with a bruised right knee.

Manager Manny Acta said an MRI exam taken on Hafner showed "issues" with his right oblique and he will be out for at least three weeks.

Hafner, hitting .345 with five homers and 22 RBIs, was hurt taking a swing during batting practice Wednesday in Chicago.

"It's a 6-foot-3, 240-pound blow," Acta said. "Obviously, he's a big part of our lineup, and he's been swinging the bat so good from Day 1. But you know what? We have to deal with it. Every team is dealing with some type of injury, and it's an opportunity for somebody to step up."

Acta said filling out his lineup card without Hafner and Sizemore (hitting .282 with six homers) is challenging. He added he will rotate Shelley Duncan and Travis Buck at DH.

"It's kind of tough to substitute those two guys the way they were swinging the bat," he said.

A's: RH starters Brandon McCarthy and Tyson Ross went on the DL. McCarthy has a stress reaction in his throwing shoulder that has sidelined him in the past. Ross left Thursday's game with a strained left side after throwing seven pitches. Ross took the spot in the rotation vacated by LHP Dallas Braden, who had season-ending shoulder surgery this week.

Blue Jays: RHP Jesse Litsch, a graduate of St. Petersburg's Dixie Hollins High, went on the DL with an impingement (rotator cuff pain) in his right shoulder.

Dodgers: MLB is looking into photos of RF Andre Ethier making an obscene gesture during batting practice before Monday's home game. Ethier said Thursday that he was frustrated with repeated camera clicks from one photographer and apologized, calling it a "dumb incident." … SS Rafael Furcal will have his knee examined today and could return Monday. He has been out with a broken thumb since April 11 and banged his knee while sliding during a rehab game Tuesday.

Nationals: GM Mike Rizzo said he is not under investigation for confronting umpires after Thursday's 1-0 loss to the Mets. The Nationals were upset after Jayson Werth was ruled out at first in the ninth. Replays showed he was safe, and after the game, manager Jim Riggleman, C Ivan Rodriguez and third-base coach Bo Porter hollered at the umpires as they left the field. Rizzo spoke to the umpires under the stands. He said he spoke to Joe Torre, MLB's vice president of operations, but declined to divulge details of the conversation. Torre said only he expects to have a resolution "in the next few days."

Phillies: Ex-Pasco High star OF Domonic Brown was called up from Triple A. Brown, 23, started the season on the DL after breaking his right hand in spring training. He hit .341 with two homers and 10 RBIs in 11 games for Lehigh Valley. Brown replaces CF Shane Victorino, who went on the DL with a hamstring injury after missing four games.

Red Sox: RH reliever Dan Wheeler was activated after being out since May 5 with a strained left calf.

Rockies: 1B Todd Helton (stiff back) and LF Carlos Gonzalez (groin) sat. Manager Jim Tracy said both are fine but he wanted to give them an extra day of rest.

How much of an Animal?

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Lexington (Ky.) Herald-Leader
Friday, May 20, 2011

BALTIMORE — Barry Irwin has had 14 days to digest and analyze what took place at Churchill Downs on May 7, but that doesn't mean the founder of Team Valor International is any closer to a clear explanation for it.

How could Animal Kingdom, a colt who had never raced on dirt with a pedigree built for grass, win the Kentucky Derby in going-away fashion?

How is it despite having to chase some of the slowest fractions in the race's history, the son of Leroidesanimaux was able to close with such ease?

"He's not bred to run on the dirt. Why he can run on the dirt, why he is this good, I have no idea," Irwin said. "I'm not one of these guys who believes in fate. But some force has given us this horse that is way beyond me."

Trying to figure out just what 2-1 favorite Animal Kingdom is made of has become a popular debate in racing circles. At the least, today's 136th Preakness Stakes at Pimlico Race Course will determine if that talk intensifies for the next 21 days leading into the Belmont Stakes or peters out.

Animal Kingdom's 2¾-length Kentucky Derby triumph gave him the greatest distinction of his career, but it hasn't silenced those who wonder if he is on his way to being a one-race wonder.

Although the Preakness field is not viewed as the toughest assembly of 3-year-olds this year, the fact Animal Kingdom was such an unknown factor heading into the Derby because of his prior starts over turf and synthetic surfaces has contributed to the mix of admiration and skepticism regarding his form.

"I'll become a fan of Animal Kingdom if he keeps going on," said trainer Nick Zito, who will bring 9-2 choice Dialed In into the Preakness off an eighth-place finish in the Derby. "He's done so many things that are unusual. He just may be a very good horse. Hopefully our little guy has something to say about it."

Instead of focusing on what history or his pedigree says Animal Kingdom should or shouldn't be able to do, his connections are letting the colt inspire them with his impressive efforts and behavior.

In five career starts, he has never been worse than second, with his lone loss this year coming in a 1-mile turf race at Gulfstream Park on March 3.

"I'm not sure we've seen the best of him," said trainer Graham Motion, who has saddled three previous Preakness starters. "Whether we'll see the best of him or more (today) I don't know but I'm thrilled with how he's doing."

A notion that has been floated is that the Derby resembled a turf race from a pace standpoint: slow fractions leading to a fast finish.

"If he runs the same way and reacts the same way as he did in the Derby, he'll be very tough," jockey John Velazquez said. "He was so calm, even with the hoopla he showed no stress. In the race, he ran like he had run on the dirt 20 times."

On paper, Animal Kingdom should have an easier time unleashing his run, as there is likely to be a quicker pace in the 1 3/16-mile race.

Midnight Interlude is expected to be much closer to the front than he was during his 16th-place finish in the Kentucky Derby. And Derby third-place finisher Mucho Macho Man is also expected to be in the mix when the field hits the top of the stretch.

If Animal Kingdom does not regress, his connections won't be the only ones thinking they're in the company of a uniquely special animal.

"The Derby winner gets all the respect and that's the way it should be," said five-time Preakness-winning trainer Bob Baffert, who conditions Midnight Interlude. "We're just here to try and turn the tables and just maybe throw out the Derby. That's all you can do."

Phillies 3, Rangers 2

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Times wires
Friday, May 20, 2011

Phillies 3, Rangers 2

PHILADELPHIA — Ben Francisco and Raul Ibanez homered to help Roy Halladay end a two-game skid. David Murphy was caught stealing at second to end the game. Francisco hit a two-run shot in the second and Ibanez a solo shot in the fourth. Halladay lost his previous two starts despite allowing a combined four earned runs over 16 innings. Philadelphia had lost five of six and hadn't scored more than three runs in any of them. Its win came 2-1 over Colorado.


Dale Earnhardt Jr. needs All-Star spot, either by racing in or fan vote

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Times wires
Friday, May 20, 2011

CONCORD, N.C. — Dale Earnhardt Jr. doesn't really want to watch the All-Star race on television at home while drinking a beer.

But in saying last week that he'd be okay doing that should he fail to qualify for tonight's $1 million race, Earnhardt gave the impression he didn't much care to participate.

That's not how he meant it, he insisted Friday.

"I did probably not word that correctly and gave people the wrong impression, I guess; I do care about being here," he said. "I'm unassuming about my role and accept my fate whatever it might be."

Earnhardt is no longer guaranteed a starting spot because his 10-year exemption for winning the race in 2000 expired. His last chance to earn a spot was last week at Dover, but his losing streak stretched to 104 races.

Now he must race his way into the event in the qualifier, the Sprint Showdown, or fill the spot selected by a fan vote.

The fan vote, Earnhardt explained, is "a tricky subject." As eight-time defending winner of NASCAR's most popular driver contest, it's assumed he's a lock to win the fan vote tonight.

Many teams used social media last year to lobby for their drivers, but Earnhardt being part of the voting field led to drastically scaled down campaigning this year.

But Earnhardt refuses to take the fan vote as a given: "I wasn't taking it for granted that I had won the fan vote and I was locked in and there was nothing to worry about," he said.

Earnhardt's attitude has not changed all season. When Charlotte Motor Speedway officials filmed a promotional All-Star commercial on his property this year, he declined to participate because he didn't have a guaranteed spot in the race.

He's always approached the event as if he'd earn a spot by winning a points race. But he didn't.

"I'm just going to run as hard as that car can go," Earnhardt said. "I would love to get into the All-Star race outright."

Earnhardt qualified 13th in the 27-car field for the Showdown. In a second qualifying session for the 18 drivers already in the All-Star Race, Kyle Busch earned the pole.

The main race has four segments. The first is 50 laps, then a 20-lap second segment with an optional pit stop. Next up is a 20-lap segment, followed by a 10-lap finale where the restart order is set by how the cars come off pit road on the final stop.

Trainer hopes things align for Astrology

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Times wires
Friday, May 20, 2011

BALTIMORE — Four years ago trainer Steve Asmussen won the Preakness Stakes with Curlin, a lightly raced colt who developed into a two-time horse of the year. Two years ago, he won with horse of the year Rachel Alexandra, the first filly to win the Preakness since Nellie Morse in 1924.

Asmussen will try again today at Pimlico, this time with Astrology, who drew the rail and was 15-1 on the morning line.

Sickness cost Astrology a month of training, prompting a decision to skip the Kentucky Derby.

"He has the right pedigree, and the right look, and he needs to win the right race," Asmussen said.

FEELING MACHO: Trainer Kathy Ritvo is doing the talking for Mucho Macho Man.

"I think he'll be sharper, more aggressive," Ritvo said. "He seems to get along at any racetrack, any surface. Bring it on. He's ready."

Mucho Macho Man finished third to Animal Kingdom in the Kentucky Derby.

Black-Eyed Susan: Royal Delta rallied to beat Buster's Ready by 2½ lengths Friday in the $250,000 Black-Eyed Susan Stakes for 3-year-old fillies at Pimlico Race Course. Jose Lezcano was aboard for trainer Bill Mott as Royal Delta got her third win in four starts. Fourth early on, Royal Delta came off the rail to score her first stakes win.

To stud: Archarcharch, the colt who had surgery after injuring his left front ankle in the Kentucky Derby, left Churchill Downs for Spendthrift Farm in Lexington, Ky., where he will stand at stud next year.

Mets 2, Yankees 1

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Times wires
Friday, May 20, 2011

Mets 2, Yankees 1

NEW YORK — R.A. Dickey confounded the Yankees with his knuckleball and was helped by Daniel Murphy's tiebreaking homer. Justin Turner tied it for the Mets in the fourth with a double to give him RBIs in six consecutive games. And Francisco Rodriguez, working in the Mets' fifth consecutive game, converted his 15th consecutive save. The Mets have won 10 of 14. The Yankees have lost six in a row at home for the first time since 2003.

Pirates 10, Tigers 1

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Times wires
Friday, May 20, 2011

Pirates 10, Tigers 1

PITTSBURGH — Neil Walker homered and drove in a career-high five in the Pirates' third consecutive win (matching their longest win streak of the year). Walker's two-run double capped a six-run sixth, and he added a three-run homer in the ninth. Pittsburgh's Jeff Karstens retired the first 14 batters he faced in his best start of the season.

Astros 5, Blue Jays 2

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Times wires
Friday, May 20, 2011

Astros 5, Blue Jays 2

TORONTO — Chris Johnson hit a tiebreaking two-run homer in the ninth for the Astros, who ended a five-game skid. Toronto lefty Jo-Jo Reyes looked poised to end a 26-start winless streak after pitching seven shutout innings. But Hunter Pence tied it with a two-run, two-out double off Jon Rauch in the eighth. Since June 13, 2008, Reyes is 0-12 with a 6.41 ERA.

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