The Texas Stars have won the Robert W. Clarke Trophy as the American Hockey League’s Western Conference champions for 2017-18, claiming the title with a 2-1 overtime victory over the Rockford IceHogs in Game 6 of their best-of-seven series at the H-E-B Center at Cedar Park on Monday night.
The Stars are heading to the Calder Cup Finals for the third time in the franchise’s nine-year history. They will take on the Eastern Conference champion Toronto Marlies in the best-of-seven Finals beginning Saturday afternoon.
Rookie Roope Hintz scored with 8.5 seconds left in the first overtime period to send the Stars to the Finals for the first time since they won the championship in 2014.
With time winding down in the extra frame, Texas lost an offensive-zone draw but was able to take the puck behind behind the net, where Colin Markison centered a feed to Hintz. Dallas’s second-round pick in the 2015 NHL Draft, Hintz wired a shot from between the hash marks that beat Jeff Glass.
Texas improved to a remarkable 7-2 in OT games this postseason, but nearly pulled out the Game 6 win in regulation.
The IceHogs’ attempt to come all the way back from a 3-0 series deficit seemed to be running out of steam with the Stars nursing a 1-0 lead. But with 1:34 left in regulation, Chris DiDomenico scored with Glass pulled for an extra attacker, tying the score and sending the teams to the fourth overtime game of the series.
Texas outshot Rockford by a count of 11-4 during the overtime period and 40-39 for the game.
Sheldon Dries broke a scoreless tie with 9:54 left in the second period when his centering pass from behind the Rockford net hit Glass in the back and trickled in. Dries’ goal was his seventh of the playoffs, tied for the AHL lead.
Mike McKenna (11-4) made 38 saves on the night, and will return to the Calder Cup Finals after backstopping Syracuse to the championship series last spring.
Glass (2-1) finished with 38 saves as well and wound up stopping 106 of the 111 shots he faced in the final three games of the series (1.48, .955).
No penalties were called in Game 6, the first penalty-free game in the AHL since Dec. 26, 2016.

You must be logged in to post a comment.