 |
Characterizing a ferociously and at times, unbridled physical game, Cleve Kinley battles for a loose puck with Las Vegas' Kelly Czuy in Game 5. (photo by George Steckler) |
Both teams battled through a scoreless tie in the first period, with Thunder goaltender
Parker Van Buskirk turning aside 11 Las Vegas shots. Fisher, making his first appearance in the series since Game 2 and facing his former Thunder teammates for the third time in the postseason, made eight saves in the first which included a point-blank chance by
Cory Urquhart which was denied by Fisher's right pad.
A physical game which featured an interference penalty from J.D. Watt's check away from the play and a scrum between the Thunder's
Ryan Huddy and counterpart Tyler Mosienko highlighted a game combining for 19 penalty infractions.
Watt, who took the ferocious penalty in the previous frame, scored his third goal of the postseason to put Las Vegas ahead 1-0 with 6:37 gone in the second period, sneaking a one-timer from the base of the left circle under Van Buskirk's blocker on a pass by Mike Hamilton from the slot.
Miller's re-direction at the goal mouth of a Kelly Czuy centering pass put the Wranglers ahead 2-0 with 9:42 gone on a shorthanded goal, but Surma answered with his first goal of the game with 6:47 left in the period on a delayed penalty, unleashing a one-timer between the circles that beat Fisher to the glove side.
Las Vegas hiked the lead to 3-1 on Spang's power-play goal in a scramble from the slot, roofing a wrist shot under the crossbar with 4:32 left in the period.
Surma answered again just 1:26 later to cut the deficit to 3-2 when he took a rebound from behind the goal line and put the puck in the net off Fisher's skate.
The Thunder pressed for the equalizer in the third period, firing 15 shots on goal which included a
Kenny MacAulay blast from the slot that was snared by Fisher's glove.
Yet the Wranglers escaped with the win when Scott McCulloch outraced the Thunder defense on a clearing attempt and slipped in an empty net goal with 30.5 seconds remaining to put his team up by two goals.
Van Buskirk dropped his record to 5-4 in the postseason with a 29-save effort.
NOTES: Before the game, the Thunder activated
Igor Gongalsky off injured reserve and placed center
Judd Blackwater on the three-day injured reserve list ... the Thunder scratched
Andrew Perugini (injury, day-to-day),
Adam Huxley (healthy),
Mike Lalonde (injured reserve),
Matt O'Dette (injured reserve), Blackwater and
Sebastien Bisaillon (healthy) ...
James Bates was held scoreless in the game, which ended his ECHL postseason-best eight-game scoring streak ... Stockton was kept to an 0-for-4 clip on the power-play ... the Thunder dropped to 2-2, lifetime in Game 5 contests.
The Thunder and Wranglers return to play for Game 6 of the series tomorrow at Orleans Arena, starting at 7:30 p.m. The game is available on radio at 1420 KSTN and is available for viewing online (audio is free-of-charge) for a $7 charge at
http://www.stocktonthunder.com/ (courtesy of B2 Networks).
The proud ECHL affiliate of the National Hockey League's Edmonton Oilers and American Hockey League's Springfield Falcons, the Thunder was voted
"Best Local Sports Team" by readers of the
San Joaquin Magazine, has led the ECHL in attendance for four consecutive seasons and drew 223,854 fans to Stockton Arena in 2008-09. Season tickets for 2009-10 and Kelly Cup Playoff ticket packages are on sale now. For more information about tickets, merchandise, or other inquiries contact the Stockton Thunder offices at (209) 373-1500 or visit
http://www.stocktonthunder.com/.
Three Stars 1.
LV - 35 Glenn Fisher
2.
LV - 12 Dan Spang
3.
LV - 15 Kelly Czuy