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season and only five times in the last seven years. Dan Rosen and Shawn P. Roarke combine to look at how the teams match up offensively, defensively, in goal, on special teams and behind the bench.Malhotra gets the OK to playTwo months ago, the Vancouver Canucks were telling everyone that Manny Malhotra wouldn’t play again this season after taking a puck in the eye during a game on March 16. But Malhotra began skating couple of weeks ago -- and on Saturday, the Canucks announced that he’s been cleared to play. As Dhiren Mahiban reports, coach Alain Vigneault isn’t saying whether Malhotra will play in Game 1 -- but the Canucks are delighted to have him ready to go.Canucks ready to face unfamiliar opponentLike everyone else, the Vancouver Canucks didn’t know who they’d be facing in the Stanley Cup Final until late Friday night. Dhiren Mahiban reports on their reaction to seeing the Bruins, a team they’ve historically struggled against.Thomas took long route to the FinalVancouver fans aside, it’s hard not to root for Boston goaltender Tim Thomas. The 37-year-old has taken a circuitous (to say the least) route to the Stanley Cup Final, with stops in three minor leagues, three hitches in Finland and another in Sweden -- and even after winning the Vezina Trophy in 2009, he began this season as a backup. John Kreiser looks at one of the few players who seems to be getting better as he gets older.Lightning disappointed but proud after playoff runThe Tampa Bay Lightning progressed by leaps and bounds in 2010-11 -- after all, coming within a game of the Stanley Cup Final is pretty good for a team that hadn’t made the playoffs sinceventually face their natural enemies: America's war fighters, and the silent warriors of our Intelligence Community," CIA Director Leon Panetta wrote in a Memorial Day message to agency employees. These silent warriors took very different paths to Nairobi. Hardy was a divorced mom from Valdosta, Ga., who raised a daughter as she travelled to Asia, South America and Africa over a lengthy career. At the CIA station in Kenya, she handled the office finances, including the CIA's stash of money used to pay sources and carry out spying operations. She was a new grandmother and was eager to get back home when Al Qaeda struck. Shah took an unpredictable route to the nation's clandestine service. He was not a solider or a Marine, a linguist or an Ivy Leaguer. He was a musician from the Midwest. But his story, and the secret mission that brought him to Africa, was straight out of a Hollywood spy movie. "He was a vivacious, upbeat guy who had a very poignant, self-deprecating sense of humor," said Dan McDevitt, a classmate and close friend from St. Xavier High School in Cincinnati, where Shah was a standout trumpet player. Shah — his given name was Uttamlal — was the only child of an Indian immigrant father and an American mother, McDevitt said. He had a fascination with international affairs. He participated in the school's model United Nations and, in the midst of the Cold War, was one of the school's first students to learn Russian. From time to time, he went to India with his father, giving him a rare world perspective. "At the time, that was unheard of. You might as well have gone to Mars," said McDevitt, who lost touch with his high school friend long before he joined the agency. Shah graduated from Berklee College of Music in Boston and Ball State University's music school. He taught music classes and occasionally played in backup bands for entertainers Red Skelton, Perry Como and Jim Nabors. His doctoral thesis at Indiana's Ball State offered no hints about the career he would pursue: "The Solo Songs of Edward MacDowell: An Examination of Style and Literary Influence." "He was one of our outstanding people," said Kirby Koriath, the graduate student adviser at Ball State. Shah and his wife, Linda, were married in 1983, the year he received his master's degree. In 1987, after earning his doctorate, Shah joined the U.S. government. On paper, he had become a diplomat. In reality, he was shipped to the Farm, the CIA's spy school in Virginia. He received the usual battery of training in surveillance, counterespionage and the art of building sources. The latter is particularly hard to teach, but it came naturally to Shah, former officials said. Shah was regarded as one of the top members of his class and was assigned to the Near East Division, which covers the Middle East. He spoke fluent Hindi and decent Russian when he arrived and quickly showed a knack for languages by learning Arabic. He worked in Cairo and Damascus and, though he was young, former colleagues said he was quickly proving himself one of the agency's most promising stars. In 1997, he was dispatched to headquarters as part of the Iraq Operations Group, the CIA team that ran spying campaigns against Saddam Hussein's regime. Around that time, the CIA became convinced that a senior Iraqi official was willing to provide intelligence in exchange for a new life in America. Before the U.S. could make that deal, it had to be sure the information was credible and the would-be defector wasn't really a double agent. But even talking to him was a risky move. If a meeting with the CIA was discovered, the Iraqi would be killed for sure. Somebody had to meet with the informant, somebody who knew the Middle East and could be trusted with such a sensitive mission. A senior officer recommended Shah. The meetings were set up in Kenya, former officials said, because it was considered relatively safe from Middle East intelligence services. It was perhaps the most important operation being run under the Africa Division at the time, current and former officials said. Among the agency managers overseeing it was John Bennett, the deputy chief of the division. He and his operations chief, who remains undercover, were seasoned Africa hands and veterans of countless spying operations. Because of the mission's sensitivity, Shah bottled up his normally outgoing and friendly personality while at the embassy. "This is the glory and