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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted at 12:11 p.m., Saturday, April 26, 2008

NHL: Franzen's hat trick lifts Red Wings past Avs

By LARRY LAGE
AP Sports Writer

DETROIT — Johan Franzen and the Detroit Red Wings are kicking the Colorado Avalanche when they're down.

Franzen scored three times to lift Detroit to a 5-1 victory today over the banged-up Avs, giving the NHL's top-seeded team a 2-0 lead in the Western Conference semifinal.

Franzen — a 6-foot-3, 220-pound center known as "Mule" — redirected a shot in front of the net early in the game, scored on a wraparound in the second period and whacked a rebound out of the air in the third for his first career hat trick.

He had two goals in Detroit's series-opening win.

Colorado's Ian Laperriere scored early in the third period, avoiding a shutout.

Game 3 is Tuesday night in Colorado.

Chris Osgood made 19 saves for the Red Wings.

Colorado's Jose Theodore gave up four goals on 20 shots and was pulled for a second straight game. Peter Budaj stopped all 12 shots he faced in the second period and finished with 19 saves.

The sixth-seeded Avs can only hope two days off and home ice will help them when the series resumes.

They were without center Peter Forsberg (groin), defenseman Scott Hannan (lower-body injury) and winger Wojtek Wolski (upper-body injury) in Game 2.

Forsberg skated before Saturday's game, but was scratched from the lineup. Hannan was out because of a lower-body injury from Thursday night. Wolski is not expected to return in the second-round series because of an upper-body injury that knocked him out of Game 1.

Theodore was back on the ice after being replaced and sent to the hotel during the series opener because he was sick, but he didn't last long in Game 2.

The Red Wings chased him midway in the second period after Franzen scored his first two goals and Valtteri Filppula and Henrik Zetterberg added goals.

At the other end, Detroit didn't give the Avs much of a chance to have success.

Its swarming defense held Colorado to four shots in the first, six in the second and 10 in the third as it opened up the offense to take more chances trying to come back.