MiHockeyMag - July 22, 2013

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GRAND RAPIDS GRIFFINS

THIS BELONGS TO THE CITY FOREVER GRIFFINS CAPTURE FIRST PRO HOCKEY TITLE FOR GRAND RAPIDS

BY MATT GAJTKA SYRACUSE, N.Y. - The Syracuse Crunch had a lot going for them in the Calder Cup Final: back-to-back wins, a rabid home crowd for Game 6, 10 players with championship experience and a tie game in the third period. None of it matters anymore, because the Grand Rapids Griffins have the hardware. For the first time, a Grand Rapids pro hockey team has won a championship, as the Griffins clinched the American Hockey League crown with a 5-2 triumph over the Crunch at Onondaga County War Memorial Arena. By winning the best-of-seven Calder Cup Final four games to two, the Griffins delivered in the seventh trip to a title series by a Grand Rapids-based team. The Rockets (three times), Owls (twice) and IHL Griffins all finished one step short of the mountaintop. “This is so fulfilling,” said team captain Jeff Hoggan amid a raucous celebration on the ice after the final buzzer sounded. “It’s a special group. We were tested throughout the year, but we were confident and persevered. Now we get to share this for a lifetime.” After taking the top spot in the AHL’s Midwest Division, the Griffins finished the postseason at 15-9, featuring series victories over Houston (five games), Toronto (six) and Oklahoma City (seven) on their way to the final round. “This has been such an enjoyable journey,” said firstyear Griffins coach Jeff Blashill, a Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., native. “Life’s all about moments and I’m really excited for the players. All the games [in this series] were extremely close. We were able to put a couple plays together in the end to win it.” Grand Rapids took the first three games against Syracuse, including a pair of wins in upstate New York to start the matchup, before the Crunch held off elimination twice at Van Andel Arena to bring the series back east. “We were a little deflated to have to come back here, because Grand Rapids has been waiting so long for this,”

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said Hoggan, who also won an AHL title with Houston in 2003. “It would’ve been special to win at home, but in the end, people aren’t going to look back and wonder where we won it. “This belongs to the city forever.” The Crunch, who went 11-1 in emerging from the Eastern Conference side of the playoff bracket, looked on the verge of forcing a winner-take-all Game 7. Defenseman Andrej Sustr connected with a long-range goal to tie the game 2-2 early in Game 6’s third period, and Syracuse appeared poised to go ahead. However, Grand Rapids blueliner Brennan Evans scored just the 16th goal of his 10-year pro career midway through the final frame, restoring the visitors’ advantage. Mitch Callahan set Evans up at the top of the left circle, giving the 31-year-old first-year Griffin enough time to rattle a slap shot off the body of Crunch goalie Cedrick Desjardins. From there, 21-year-old Griffins rookie goalie Petr Mrazek showed how much he’s grown by standing up to fierce Crunch pressure. The 6-foot-1 Czech, who started the year in the ECHL with Toledo before quickly ascending Detroit’s organizational depth chart, used his athleticism and poise to squelch multiple late scrambles around his crease. “Petr’s been great all season with the game on the line,” said Blashill of Mrazek, who finished with 24 saves. “He’s been a huge part of our success.” With the help of several Griffins diving to block shots and clear pucks, Mrazek preserved the 3-2 lead until Gustav Nyquist drew a slashing penalty to put Grand Rapids on a much-needed power play with 2:13 to play. The Griffins played keep-away for much of the remaining time, eventually breaking free for empty-net goals by Tomas Tatar and Joakim Andersson in the final minute. With the seconds ticking down, the joyous Grand

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Rapids players, coaches and support staff hollered loud enough for all 6,375 fans in the arena to hear, then spilled on the ice for a pulsating postgame celebration. Tatar finished the night with two goals, including a power-play marker in the second that put the Griffins up 2-1. The 23-year-old Slovakian winger was awarded the playoff MVP trophy for compiling 16 goals and five assists in 24 postseason games. “Everybody played their role on the team this year,” said Tatar, Detroit’s second-round draft pick in 2009. “We have a great coaching staff and a great organization. I’m glad I could help do this.” Nyquist, 23, finished an abbreviated playoff run with a two-assist night, giving him seven points (two goals) in 10 playoff games. He and fellow Swedish forward Andersson (eight points) joined the Griffins’ Calder Cup chase in the Western Conference final after Detroit was eliminated from the Stanley Cup playoffs. Callahan, one of 13 Griffins to skate in all 24 postseason contests, netted the Griffins’ first goal in addition to his assist on Evans’ Cup-winner. Landon Ferraro earned two helpers to give him 16 playoff points. Like most of his players, Blashill was reflective of what the championship moment meant to West Michigan and when he knew the 2012-13 Griffins could be something special. “I knew right from the start we had a lot of character on this team,” said Blashill, the former Ferris State goalie whose remarkable coaching career includes time as a Red Wings assistant, a head coaching spot at Western Michigan University and a previous championship in the USHL with the Indiana Ice. “I’m happy for the ownership of this team, all the employees who’ve put in so much work over a long period of time. It’s been unreal to have the opportunity to coach some great talent in a great city like Grand Rapids.”

July 22, 2013 V.23 : I.20


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