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Canucks bounce to the brink of a title

With a fortunate bounce and a flawless goalie, the Canucks are heading back to Boston with the chance to hoist the Stanley Cup for the first time.

Maxim Lapierre celebrates with Alexander Edler and Manny Malhotra during Game 5. (AP Photo/The Canadian Press, Darryl Dyck)
Maxim Lapierre celebrates with Alexander Edler and Manny Malhotra during Game 5. (AP Photo/The Canadian Press, Darryl Dyck)Read more

With a fortunate bounce and a flawless goalie, the Canucks are heading back to Boston with the chance to hoist the Stanley Cup for the first time.

Maxim Lapierre scored on a carom off the back boards with 15 minutes, 25 seconds to play in the third peiod, Roberto Luongo stopped 31 shots in a stirring shutout after getting pulled from his last game, and host Vancouver moved to the brink of its first NHL championship with a 1-0 victory over Boston in Game 5 last night, taking a 3-2 series lead.

Luongo posted his fourth shutout of the playoffs and second of the Stanley Cup Finals after giving up 12 goals in less than four periods during two blowout losses in Boston. Game 6 is Monday night in Boston, and the Stanley Cup will be there.

The Canucks have scored just six goals in five games against brilliant Boston goalie Tim Thomas, yet they're one victory away from winning it all.

Neither team found an offensive flow in a Game 5 nail-biter, but Luongo kept Vancouver in it until Lapierre and defenseman Kevin Bieksa teamed up on a goal that set off a crazy celebration among tens of thousands of fans thronging downtown Vancouver.

Luongo was pulled from Game 4, but coach Alain Vigneault stuck with him for last night's game. The Olympic champion was only occasionally spectacular, but he still narrowly outplayed Thomas, who has received just two goals of support from his teammates in the three games in Vancouver.

Thomas made 24 saves but lost his shutout streak of 110 minutes, 42 seconds dating to Game 3. With injured forward Nathan Horton's jersey hanging in the visitors' locker room, the Bruins' power play regressed to its previous postseason struggles, going 0-for-4.

After two scoreless periods of stellar goaltending in which Boston went scoreless on four power plays, the Canucks finally connected with a supremely heady play by the veteran Bieksa, who used Thomas' aggressive style against him.

Bieksa deliberately put a long shot wide of the goal, and when Thomas instinctively moved to his glove side to play it, the puck ricocheted off the back boards straight to Lapierre, who put it behind Thomas for just his second goal of the postseason.

Lapierre was a late-season acquisition who largely serves as an agitator for the Canucks, not a scorer. He's never managed more than 15 goals in a season, and he had just six this season while playing for Montreal, Anaheim and Vancouver.

The Canucks hung on from there, winning their sixth straight home playoff game.