Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Devils look to ‘Rock’ Kings

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NEWARK, N.J. — There was a time when home-ice advantage wasn’t the New Jersey Devils’ best friend.

If either the rival Rangers or Flyers were in New Jersey, there would be as many New York or Philadelph­ia jerseys in the crowd as Devils’ colors. Not anymore, at least not in the playoffs this year.

The Devils have been tough at the Prudential Center, known as the “The Rock,” and they need one more big effort tonight in Game 5 of the Stanley Cup final to keep their championsh­ip hopes alive and prevent the Los Angeles Kings from capturing their first NHL title since coming into the league in 1967.

It’s a tough task. The Kings haven’t lost on the road since the playoffs started two months ago. They are 10-0, including two overtime victories in New Jersey in Games 1 and 2.

A bounce or two here or there, and New Jersey might be the one leading the bestof-seven series 3-1.

That’s wishful thinking for Devils fans. The reality is New Jersey has some momentum coming off a 3-1 victory on Wednesday night, and they need to keep winning or else.

New Jersey is 6-4 in the playoffs at home after posting a 24-13-4 mark in the regular season.

“We’re winning, that’s the bottom line,” Devils goaltender Martin Brodeur said. “I think we’ve played hard and got some success. It’s hard when you don’t win for our fans to be involved and do what they’d like to do, especially the last few years when we played the Rangers and Flyers [in the postseason]. It’s tough in this area to play some rivals if you don’t have success, their fans take over the building. But we got the success this year and that made a big difference why we feel a lot more comfortabl­e playing.”

Coming into this season, the Devils had posted a 3-7 postseason mark at the Prudential Center, which opened for the 2007-2008 season.

Veteran defenseman Andy Greene said the Devils are just a better team overall this season.

“I think going into the playoffs we were playing good hockey,” Greene said. “The few years before that, I don’t want to say we stumbled into the playoffs, but we probably weren’t where we needed to be heading into the playoffs. We’ve been playing the right way and the crowd has been great. We’re feeling their energy and feeding off it. It’s been great.”

It’s hard to say whether the Kings notice the opposing crowd. They won all three games in Vancouver in the first round, two in St. Louis in the second and three in Phoenix in the third. They are 15-3 overall, with all three losses coming in potential series-clinching Game 4s at home.

Now they get another chance to win on the road. And this one will be the biggest of all for a franchise that had only made the Cup final once before: 1993, losing to Montreal in five games.

Los Angeles goaltender Jonathan Quick, who might be the front-runner for the Conn Smythe Trophy as the postseason MVP, was asked if he was familiar with the Prudential Center after two games.

“No, it’s like any arena,” he said. “You’ve got about 18,000 people that want you to lose no matter where you go.”

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