Winners of 18 straight, Heat try to stay focused (Yahoo! Sports)

MIAMI (AP) — LeBron James once carried a team to 66 wins. Ray Allen played for a club that won 19 consecutive games. Dwyane Wade led a team that finished with the Eastern Conference’s best record.

For each, it’s a footnote in seasons where no championship was won.

There’s no arguing that the Miami Heat are playing better than any other team in the NBA right now. They’ve won 18 straight games, are sitting atop the league standings and have a very real chance of wrapping up the No. 1 seed in the East playoffs by the end of the month. While all that sounds good, it’s not changing the singular priority of this Heat season.

Championship-or-bust was the thinking Miami carried into this year, and not even the seventh-longest winning streak in NBA history has changed that.

”It’s not our goal,” James said. ”Our goal isn’t to win games consecutive. Our goal is to win a championship. Right now, our goal is to get better each and every game, to continue to improve. That was never one of our goals coming into the season, see how many games we’d win in a row. Our goal is to win a championship and not take any shortcuts in that process.”

Miami will try for its 19th straight win on Tuesday night, when the Heat play host to the Atlanta Hawks – a team that’s 0-3 against the reigning NBA champions this season. After that, a trip to Philadelphia awaits on Wednesday, to face a 76ers team that has lost 13 straight regular-season meetings against Miami.

Win on Tuesday, and the Heat would match the fifth-longest winning streak in NBA history.

Win Tuesday and Wednesday, and then it becomes truly rarefied air, because Miami would be just the fourth team to ever win 20 straight in the same season.

”You don’t want to take a team like this for granted,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. ”We’ve talked about this with our group for the last few days. It’s a special group. It’s a special opportunity. Nothing is guaranteed. We’re going after something that’s an unknowable future. But we have an opportunity, a legitimate opportunity, so we have to make the most of every day we have together.”

Ask the Heat, and they’ll say they respect the historical aspects of what’s going on, but they’ll also be quick to point out that the Larry O’Brien Trophy doesn’t get awarded after epic winning streaks.

”We know what our prize is,” Allen said. ”And it’s waiting for us.”

The streak’s latest addition came on Sunday night, when even on a rare subpar scoring night from James, the Heat rolled past Indiana 105-91 in a game where Miami took control with a huge start to the third quarter and was never seriously threatened again.

Sunday’s win was significant for many reasons, namely that the Pacers are the closest thing the Heat have to a nemesis these days in the East, that they were 2-0 against Miami this season and that they were the last team to beat the defending champions way back on Feb. 1.

In the five-plus weeks since, all the Heat have done is take what was a close race in the East and make it a total runaway, assume the top spot in the NBA standings and become the first team to clinch a playoff spot – not that getting one was ever, ever in doubt.

”Right now, honestly, it doesn’t really feel like we are on this kind of win streak,” Wade said. ”We are just coming in and we’re just taking care of business. We come in every day when coach calls us in, and we do our work and we come back and we just play. We’re not in the locker room saying, ‘Aw, we’re on this win streak and it’s amazing.’ To us, we’re just playing basketball.”

So how, Wade was asked, will the Heat not get bored when the games down the stretch of the regular season inevitably become less-than-significant in terms of the East playoff race?

”Keep showing up at the gym,” Wade said. ”We’re a focused team. We’re a veteran team. We have a goal. The biggest thing for us is to come in and continue to go through this process.”

The numbers during this 18-game streak are staggering.

James is averaging 27.2 points on 60 percent shooting. Wade is averaging 24.3 points on 55 percent shooting. Chris Bosh is at 16.6 points on 54 percent shooting.

And they haven’t been doing it alone, either. Some nights, it’s Shane Battier hitting big shots to be the difference-maker. Sometimes, it’s Allen, who seems to be hitting his stride again. On Sunday, it was Mario Chalmers, who scored 26 points on only nine shots to help carry the Heat past the Pacers.

James will likely be the NBA’s MVP again, but he’s hardly had to be the lone star for the Heat.

”I know you can’t win an Oscar unless everybody does their job,” Wade said.

At some point, the streak will end. It might happen Tuesday. It might happen Wednesday. It might happen next week or next month. Whenever it does, the goal then will be the same goal the Heat have now.

That doesn’t mean the Heat aren’t enjoying these moments. It simply means they aren’t losing sight of the bigger picture.

”I understand the history of the game,” James said. ”We should be happy and excited about the opportunity right now.”

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Tigers cruises to win at Doral

DORAL, Fla. — You saw the same person everywhere you looked at the WGC-Cadillac Championship at Doral, a polarizing mega-millionaire who loves golf and flits about in his own air taxi. Donald Trump — celebrity boss, birther, entrepreneur, sparring partner of The New York Times and Vanity Fair — bought Doral last year and hired architect Gil Hanse to revamp it starting now, but you can already see the Trump touch in two new water features. Huge fountains at the resort entrance and behind the practice green are replete with rearing horses, old men with tridents, cherubs, two-headed fish, and Atlas with his celestial sphere.
 
You saw the same person everywhere you looked at the WGC-Cadillac Championship at Doral, a polarizing mega-millionaire who loves golf and flits about in his own air taxi. Tiger Woods is the de facto owner of the place after winning the windswept Cadillac on Sunday, making this the fourth Tour event he’s won at least seven times. (Torrey Pines, Bay Hill and Bridgestone are the others.) It marked his 76th career victory, six behind all-time leader Sam Snead, and makes him the favorite to win the Masters just one month from now. Woods, who started the day with a four-shot lead over playing partner Graeme McDowell and a five-stroke cushion over Phil Mickelson and the semi-retired Steve Stricker, bogeyed 18 to shoot 71 and beat Stricker by two.

“It feels good,” Woods said, “especially to play that well this entire week, on a difficult setup. The greens got really quick out there today. If you left the ball in the correct spot, though, you could be pretty aggressive and shoot a good number.”
 
The result looked closer than it was. Woods missed right off the 18th tee, hit a lay-up and nearly hit his third shot in the water. He got up and down for bogey.
 
“He’s been solid with 54-hole leads over his career that you just don’t think he’s going to come back [to the field],” Stricker said, “and he didn’t again.”

(RELATED: Look back at Tiger’s 17 wins in WGC events)
 
Although the forecast called for high winds, the breeze stayed mostly benign. McDowell birdied the first two holes but Woods, wearing his usual Sunday red shirt over black slacks, birdied the second to keep a comfortable, three-stroke cushion. He birdied the par-3 fourth hole, too, building his lead back to four shots, and from there on in it was a familiar race for second place. McDowell shot 72 to finish five shots behind Woods, with whom he played both Saturday and Sunday.
 
Adam Scott shot 64, the low round of the week, and Sergio Garcia had 69 to join McDowell and Mickelson (71) in a four-way tie for third place.

“He was going to be tough to catch, anyway,” said McDowell, who never holed enough putts on the weekend and double-bogeyed the tough 18th hole.
 
One shot spoke volumes: Woods’s third at the par-5 12th hole, where he hit a bunker shot with both feet outside the greenside bunker. It was the kind of shot he might have had trouble with when he was pained by knee and Achilles injuries, but he stayed down through it and watched as his ball trickled 12 feet past the pin. He missed the birdie putt, but that was almost beside the point.
 
For the record, Woods re-asserted his supremacy not at plain old “Doral” but “TPC Blue Monster at Trump Doral,” a name from the Department of Redundancy Department, which was fitting. We’ve seen this movie a million times. Yes, he is back, and no, there was never a doubt he’d win. Going into Sunday he’d converted 50 of 54 third-round leads on Tour, including 19 of the last 20. He had never lost a Tour event he’d led by four or more strokes going into the final round, and while McDowell had made up a four-shot margin and upended Woods in a playoff at the unofficial Chevron Challenge in 2010, that was a lesser Woods — a man whose swing changes had yet to solidify, and whose short game was a shadow of what it was at Doral, where his 100 putts beat his career best over 72 holes.

(RELATED: Classic photos of Tiger’s life and career)
 
The tournament effectively ended midway through the third round Saturday. That’s when McDowell, having closed the gap to one stroke, three-putted the 10th hole for par after Woods had birdied, and then, rattled, dumped his approach shot in the bunker and missed a six-and-a-half-foot par putt on 11. Woods’s lead was suddenly back to three shots, and while there was mild drama — Woods losing his tee shot in a tree, McDowell making a late eagle — the Cadillac was all but over and the only remaining question was how you felt about Woods’s reemergence.
 
Just as The Donald split the vote all week at Doral — players admired his helicopter while journalists ridiculed his hair — you can safely assume Woods did, too. Get used to it; we’re going to be seeing a lot of him in 2013. He’s making putts again, the result, in part, of a pre-tournament lesson from his old pal Steve Stricker.
 
“That was nice of him,” said a droll McDowell.
 
Woods’s trap-cut off the tee is mostly working, and he has finally dialed in the distances he’s hitting his short irons, a weakness that was woefully apparent at last year’s majors. Asked after the third round if his game is as good as ever, he said, “I don’t want it to be good. That was never the intent. I want it to be better.”
 
Is Woods better than he was in 2000? No, but the idea of it suddenly seems far from ludicrous. The last three times he won at Torrey Pines and Doral to start the season, as he has this season, he went on to six- (’05), eight- (’06), and seven-win seasons (’07). He won nine times, including three majors, in 2000.
 
“It’s going to be hard for him to dominate because these guys are so good,” said Damon Green, Zach Johnson’s caddie and a pro himself on the Champions Tour. “But, yeah, I could see him winning seven or eight tournaments this year.”
 
Winning seven or eight tournaments would be dominant. And Woods, who is finally 100 percent healthy and whose lone remaining flaw is his occasionally wild tee shot, was dominant at Doral. He led wire-to-wire for his 17th World Golf Championship victory, his first since 2009. His resurgence is a result of not only his work ethic — he closed down the range as night fell Friday — but also, in some small way, the dizzying, early-season swoon of Rory McIlroy.
 
Woods’s old rival, Mickelson, could have been a threat at Doral had he not missed some short putts and failed to birdie three of the four par-5s Saturday, but Lefty’s brilliance always fades in and out. He birdied the first two holes and shot 71 Sunday to tie for fourth. Woods was supposed to have to worry more about his new rival, McIlroy, who was a steadier, more potent threat, until he wasn’t.
 
At the Cadillac, McIlroy apologized for quitting mid-round at the previous week’s Honda Classic, saying he needed to stop pressing and start enjoying golf again after a missed cut in Abu Dhabi, a first-round loss in Tucson, and the WD in West Palm. Sure enough he smiled around Doral, where he saw “a lot of positive signs,” but it was odd to watch Woods drum him by 11 shots over 36 holes — Luke Donald was the third member of their group — and by 15 over the first 54.
 
McIlroy shot by far his best round Sunday, a 7-under 65.
 
“I was pretty down about my game coming into this week,” he said, “but a few days like I’ve played, you know, it does my confidence a world of good.”
 
Still just 23, still No. 1 in the world, McIlroy is trying to fix a glitch in his swing, a tendency to take the club back too far outside and get stuck. He politely dispelled rumors that his romance with tennis pro Caroline Wozniacki is on the rocks, and said it’s just a coincidence that his swing flaw popped up only after he had signed a megabucks deal to switch to Nike clubs in 2013. Critics howled at the equipment switch, but the 65 will buy him at least a day or two of peace and quiet. He’ll get just one more start, at the Shell Houston Open in three weeks, before the Masters in April.
 
Nike, of course, is Tiger’s brand, yet another illustration of how seemingly everything in the game has begun to once again orbit around the 14-time major winner, future Hall of Famer, and 37-year-old divorced father of two. Bubba Watson revealed at Doral that his new manse at Isleworth — which he and his wife and son will move into later this week — is Tiger’s old manse, totally remodeled.
 
We’re still attracted to and repelled by Woods; we know too little and too much. The Miami Herald reported he was “all business” during a “full-body workout” at Equinox South Beach last Thursday, overshadowing actor Kelsey Grammer, who “stuck to cardio” nearby. Woods “said hello to people as he left.”
 
Also in the news: Woods, who lives about 100 miles north in Jupiter, spent the week on his yacht, Privacy, which was docked near the aforementioned gym. What other golfer commands such attention? By taming Trump’s new real estate bauble, again, Woods made a compelling argument that golf’s new one and only is golf’s old one and only — all jokes about his hair and eccentricities aside.

“That’s how I know I can play,” he said. “That’s the thing. To be able to bring it out a couple times this year, and then able to close and get the Ws on top of that, that’s nice. Any time I can win prior to Augusta, it always feels good.”

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Alex Ferguson wants Wayne Rooney extension

Manchester United manager Alex Ferguson has revealed he hopes striker Wayne Rooney will extend his contract at Old Trafford.

Premier League

AssociatedAlex Ferguson wants Wayne Rooney to stay at Old Trafford

The Red Devils have had to warn off rumours the 27-year-old was heading for the exit door after Ferguson started him on the bench in the club’s Champions League 2-1 loss to Real Madrid.

And Ferguson has made it clear Rooney remains an important figure in his future plans, hoping the England international will renew his contract with the club.

“There’s no issue with his contract, when it has to be renegotiated it will be,” Ferguson said. “We don’t want players to leave.”

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QPR 3-1 Sunderland

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BARCLAYS PREMIER LEAGUE

Loftus Road

Attendance: 18169

* Local time based on your geographic location.

Queens Park Rangers

  • Loïc Remy 30′
  • Andros Townsend 70′
  • Jermaine Jenas 90′

Andros Townsend celebrates after blasting home QPR’s second goal against Sunderland

January acquisitions Andros Townsend and Jermaine Jenas struck exquisite half-volleys as QPR’s survival hopes received a boost with a 3-1 win over Sunderland.

The pair may not have got much of a look in under Harry Redknapp when he was at Tottenham but they more than proved their worth as Rangers earned another invaluable three points.

While QPR remain bottom of the Premier League and four points adrift of safety, back-to-back victories for the first time since their top-flight return could prove a major catalyst in their survival quest.

There had been fears last weekend’s 2-1 win at Southampton could prove to be a flash in the pan, especially when Steven Fletcher put Sunderland ahead after 20 minutes.

However, the hosts rallied and levelled on the half-hour mark as a deflected long-range Townsend effort fell kindly for Loic Remy to slot home.

It had looked like the spoils would be shared as both sides struggled in the second half, only for Townsend’s moment of magic to change the game.

Substitute Jenas rubbed salt into the wound with an equally-impressive strike late on as Rangers earned a fourth league win of the campaign.

Redknapp spoke of the need for his side to put in a shift in his programme notes and got the desired response in the opening 20 minutes.

After Park Ji-sung charged down a Sebastian Larsson strike, QPR pushed forward and were unfortunate to see Junior Hoilett strike wide in the fourth minute.

The winger, rejuvenated under Redknapp’s tutelage, wriggled free down the left and snuck past makeshift right-back Craig Gardner before firing across the face of goal.

Hoilett continued that duel shortly afterwards, again darting past Gardner before striking wide.

Townsend on the opposite flank was another full of life in the early stages and saw a strike miss the target while Bobby Zamora saw penalty claims for a push by John O’Shea waved away.

It was the visitors, though, that broke the deadlock when Adam Johnson picked up a Stephane Sessegnon cross at the back post. The former Manchester City winger sent in a fierce cross-shot, which Fletcher turned home with ease from close range.

The Scotland international’s 11th goal of the season was harsh on the R’s, who could have fallen further behind seven minutes later when Christopher Samba slipped and Danny Graham was allowed a free header on goal.

Fortunately for the hosts the January signing could not direct his header on goal, allowing QPR to draw parity soon after.

Townsend’s long-range strike fortuitously deflected off O’Shea into the path of Remy, who swept home with ease from close range to the delighted of the home support.

The Frenchman’s third goal in English football seemed to kick QPR into gear as they dominated the remaining 15 minutes of the first period.

Zamora saw a flick header impressively denied by Simon Mignolet before the forward cut back for strike partner Remy.

The France international could only fire over, with former Marseille team-mate Stephane Mbia next to get a shot away, with Mignolet only able to stop a powerful drive at the second attempt.

The half-time break allowed Sunderland time to settle and they returned strongly.

Barely a minute into second half, Samba had to be alert to deny Graham before Johnson put a fizzing drive narrowly wide.

Clint Hill cleared a threatening Larsson cross as the Black Cats continued to press, switching to a 4-4-1-1 formation as they looked to regain the lead.

Danny Rose came on for Graham as Martin O’Neill shuffled the pack, with the left-back gifting QPR a first chance of the second half soon after coming on.

The 22-year-old was dispossessed by Townsend, another man on loan from Tottenham, who drove forward only to see a long-range strike blocked by O’Shea.

The winger would not be denied for long, though, firing QPR ahead in stunning fashion.

Sunderland cleared a Jose Bosingwa cross out of the box, only for Townsend to control the ball on his chest before firing home a superb 25-yard half volley as Loftus Road erupted.

Bosingwa curled a free-kick wide of near post as the hosts edged a tense final 15 minutes, which came to life once again when Jenas, only on 10 minutes earlier, struck home in style.

Fellow replacement Jamie Mackie saw a late shot saved by Mignolet as the R’s ended on top.

  • Queens Park Rangers
  • Sunderland
Loïc Remy (30′)
Andros Townsend (70′)
Jermaine Jenas (90′)
  • Queens Park Rangers
  • Sunderland
15(6) Shots (on goal) 9(2)
4 Fouls 19
4 Corner kicks 5
0 Offsides 0
50% Time of Possession 50%
0 Yellow Cards 2
0 Red Cards 0
1 Saves 3

  • Queens Park Rangers
  • Sunderland
Alfred Ndiaye (60′)
Craig Gardner (72′)

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Anquan Boldin reportedly given Ravens’ ultimatum

Wide receiver Anquan Boldin said he would retire if released by the Baltimore Ravens. Well, it looks like he’ll either take a pay cut or hang up the cleats.

The Ravens have asked Boldin to reduce his $6 million base salary. He’ll be released if he declines, according to FoxSports.com’s Alex Marvez. Boldin counts $7.5 million against the cap.

There’s not much optimism, as sources told the Baltimore Sun’s Aaron Wilson, “Unless something dramatic happens, it’s an absolutely done deal that Anquan will be released.”

Boldin has been a perfect fit in Baltimore. He’s been the sure-handed, crisp route-running complement to Torrey Smith‘s deep threat. Boldin caught six passes for 104 yards and a touchdown in the Super Bowl and had 65 receptions for 921 yards and four touchdowns during the regular season.

The Ravens are working for cap room, but the three-time Pro Bowl selection might have the strongest hands in the league — even at 32 years old. The offense will miss Boldin if an agreement isn’t reached. Jacoby Jones is next on the depth chart.

It’s hard to imagine that Boldin would actually retire, considering he would be a legit top-two receiver on most teams.

Follow Kareem Copeland on Twitter @kareemcopeland.

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Petr Cech: Chelsea can re-launch at United

Chelsea goalkeeper Petr Cech believes Sunday’s FA Cup quarter-final against Manchester United is the ideal opportunity for the Blues to re-launch their stuttering season.

Petr Cech Chelsea

PA PhotosPetr Cech says Chelsea can re-launch its season against United.

• Preview: Manchester Utd v Chelsea
• Lythell: Lifeless Chelsea stumble

After a shock Europa League defeat against Steaua Bucharest in Romania on Thursday night, Chelsea’s trophy hopes may well be on the line when they travel to Old Trafford, but Cech suggests the challenge is ready made for his team to revive their fortunes.

“We are still the holders of the FA Cup and we want to keep our trophy for as long as we can,” he told Chelsea TV. “The best way for us to forget about the defeat (in Romania) is to get into another game.

“There will not be much time for us to prepare, but hopefully we’ll have a good performance on Sunday. The games are coming thick and fast, but we are used to that.

“United are the favourites for the game, but it’s the FA Cup and in the FA Cup not every time do the favourites win. We have big players in our dressing room who are at their best in the big games. We have to show it again.”

Meanwhile, Cech is convinced Chelsea can make it a cup double in the next few days, as he is backing Rafael Benitez’s men to secure a Europa League quarter-final berth with a comeback win against Steaua Bucharest next Thursday.

“We’ve turned a much bigger deficit than 1-0, so I think this is nothing dramatic,” he added. “You just need to make sure you score goals, you don’t concede. We will be at home and it will be a different story.

“We had more chances in Romania, better chances, more shots. The only moment they really were dangerous was when they had the penalty and they converted it, but we get a second chance and we have to take it.”

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Blackhawks look back with pride after Avalanche end their record points streak with 6-2 rout

DENVER – The Chicago Blackhawks aren’t about to mourn the end of their streak.

“We’re proud of it, but it’ll be nice to move on now,” defenceman Duncan Keith said after the Blackhawks’ 6-2 loss to the Colorado Avalanche on Friday night.

The loss was Chicago’s first in regulation this season and ended a remarkable run in which they earned at least one point in their first 24 games, an NHL record.

“It’s hockey. We’ve lost games before in our lives. It’s not like we’re going to sit here and cry,” Keith said.

Instead, they’ll sit back and celebrate, said coach Joel Quenneville, who told his team afterward “that they should be very proud of what they accomplished. They found different ways to win, night in and night out, and everyone contributed to something that hadn’t been done. It’s a great feather in our cap, but let’s move forward here and try to get better. Certainly it was a lot of fun up to today.”

So, they left the ice without a point for once but also with their heads held high.

The Blackhawks (21-1-3) hadn’t lost in regulation since a 6-1 rout by Nashville on March 25, 2012, and their last loss in regulation on the road came more than a year ago, with a 5-1 defeat at St. Louis on March 6, 2012.

Dating to last year’s regular season, the streak was 30 games.

“That’s just mind-boggling,” Avalanche centre Paul Stastny said. “That’s two full months without losing. Hats off to them. But to be the team that was able to stop them — we had a chance last time and didn’t do it — but the way our schedule was we knew we had back-to-back games and would have two chances to stop it. And that’s what we wanted to do, stop their streak and get one going for us.”

Chicago’s overall points streak was the second-longest in NHL history. The 1979-80 Philadelphia Flyers set the league record with a staggering 35-game unbeaten streak that included 25 wins and 10 ties — all in the same season.

“It’s special,” said Matt Duchene, who had a goal and a career-best three assists. “It’s obviously something no one had done yet. But what a run by them. I mean, first of all, congratulations to them. What a run they had. I don’t think they’re going to slow down because of this. But it’s pretty special. It’s a good feeling in here. We’re pretty happy.”

Ryan O’Reilly got his first goal since his contract dispute was resolved more than a week ago and assisted on another score in a four-goal onslaught in the second period that turned a 1-1 tie into a laugher. Stastny collected three points.

Duchene, John Mitchell and Jamie McGinn also put pucks past Corey Crawford in the second period for the Avalanche, who had lost six of their previous seven, including a 3-2 heartbreaker at Chicago 48 hours earlier.

Crawford (11-1-3) allowed five goals on 19 shots before being replaced in net by Ray Emery to start the third period.

“I didn’t have it tonight,” Crawford said. “Didn’t give our guys a chance.”

Semyon Varlamov had 30 saves for Colorado.

The Avalanche nearly ended the spectacular streak in Chicago on Wednesday night before the Blackhawks pulled out the win when Daniel Carcillo scored the tiebreaking goal with 49.3 seconds left. Chicago was skating without three key forwards and playing its second game in two nights then.

There was no such comeback Friday night at the Pepsi Center for Chicago, which hadn’t allowed more than four goals in a game this season or even trailed by more than two goals until the Avs’ spectacular second period.

“It’s a great confidence booster,” Duchene said. “It shows us we can play with anybody in this league.”

The crowd chanted, “End of streak! End of streak!” over the final minutes after P.A. Parenteau’s 10th goal of the season made it 6-2.

Bryan Bickell‘s goal with 11:07 pulled the Blackhawks to 5-2 and he nearly scored again from the same spot 90 seconds later, but Varlamov smothered the shot — and that was that.

The teams got into a scuffle with 5:04 left after Bickell squared off with Gabriel Landeskog, who had checked Keith in the back.

Chicago’s Jonathan Toews got the scoring started when he knocked the puck past Varlamov after a turnover on a give-and-go with forward Marian Hossa, who returned from an upper-body injury.

But Colorado scored the next five goals.

Duchene’s goal between Crawford’s legs made it 2-1. Just 33 seconds later, Mitchell scored on an assist from O’Reilly, who was signed to a two-year $10 million deal last week after the Avalanche matched Calgary’s offer sheet following a nasty contract dispute.

O’Reilly’s goal came on a slap shot from the top of the right circle 4 seconds into another power play. Duchene set him up with a pass after Stastny won the faceoff.

Duchene got his third assist when he dug out a loose puck from the boards in a scramble with Keith and kicked it out to McGinn, who put made it 5-1.

Remarkable though it was, the streak had become somewhat of a burden for the Blackhawks.

“It’s gained a lot of momentum over the last little while and our opponents, they treated it like it was a very important game,” Quenneville said. “You look at the standings and everyone has a meaningful game, but it seemed like there was added incentive as we’ve gone along. We welcomed the challenge.”

After a while, it seemed the streak had taken on a life of its own.

“I’d say the last handful of games the talk about it kind of got out of control,” Toews said. “The guys in our locker room, we always focused on the same thing, being prepared to play our team game. We never really got distracted by that. Maybe it does take a little bit of pressure off us and we can sit back and look at the good things we’ve done.”

The Blackhawks’ run comes with somewhat of an asterisk because they actually lost three games along the way — all in shootouts. Under NHL rules, that’s still worth a point, but that makes it different from what the Flyers accomplished nearly a quarter-century ago.

During the Flyers’ streak there was no overtime until the playoffs, and the shootout was still a far-off creation. If the teams were tied after 60 minutes, that’s how it ended and each got a point.

Nowadays, both teams still receive a point if the game is tied at the end of regulation. Then, the team that scores in a five-minute, four-skaters-a-side overtime period or wins the shootout gets an extra point.

“It’s over,” Crawford said. “Move on to the next game.”

NOTES: Avalanche D Erik Johnson returned to the lineup after missing 11 games with a head injury. … The Blackhawks were without F Patrick Sharp, who left Wednesday’s home win over the Avalanche with a shoulder injury after being checked along the boards by Colorado’s Ryan O’Byrne.

___

Follow Arnie Melendrez Stapleton on Twitter: http://twitter.com/arniestapleton

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COED Sits Down With Adrianne Palicki To Talk About North Korea, Mystery Deaths, and Neckbeards [VIDEO]

Courtesy of Axe Face, we sat next to Adrianne Palicki. We even got to talk to her!

Check out what she has to say about her upcoming movie GI Joe: Retaliation, which types of facial hair she prefers, and what happened when she blew up Detroit.

Adrianne made her choice between the two of us, now it’s your turn to pick which mug you like more on Axe FaceScore.

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K.C. Chiefs eye extension for LT Branden Albert

When the Kansas City Chiefs cut right tackle Eric Winston on Wednesday, almost everyone assumed it signaled a plan to draft a left tackle with the No. 1 overall selection in April’s NFL Draft — even Branden Albert.

Albert, the incumbent left tackle, tweeted Wednesday he had zero interested in playing anywhere else on the line (he has since deactivated his Twitter account). It turns out he might have jumped the gun with his assumption.

Harrison: Team needs in free agency

With free agency set to kick off at 4 p.m. ET on Tuesday, March 12, Elliot Harrison identifies priorities for all 32 NFL teams. More …

NFL.com’s Ian Rapoport reported Thursday that the Chiefs are continuing to work out a long-term deal with the franchise-tagged Albert on the assumption he will be their left tackle of the future. The Chiefs are still interested in drafting a tackle to fill the right side of the line.

Andy Reid values right and left tackle similarly, so the line of thinking follows that the Chiefs could draft either Luke Joeckel or Eric Fisher — the two highest-rated offensive tackles, according to NFl Network draft expert Mike Mayock — and slide either of them in at right tackle. With the rookie wage scale, the Chiefs could be replacing Winston with a younger, less-expensive player.

Scouts will get another look at Joeckel at Texas A&M’s pro day today, and the Chiefs might be deciphering whether he can play both sides of the offensive line.

Follow Kevin Patra on Twitter @kpatra.

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See Her Tonight [Kate Micucci On THE BIG BANG THEORY]

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Kate Micucci on The Big Bang Theory

(8 PM EST, CBS)

Make your Thursday evening extra special by checking out the beauty that is Kate Micucci on The Big Bang Theory. Kate plays the character Lucy on an all new episode that features Sheldon, Leonard and Howard promoting careers in science before a group of junior-high girls.

The lovely Miss Micucci is not only an actress but a comedian and musician as well as she comprises one half of the musical/comedy duo, Garfunkel and Oates. You have also seen her before as Stephanie Gooch on Scrubs and Shelly in Raising Hope. Say hello and give her a follow on that Twitter thing @katemicucci.

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