• Thu. Dec 26th, 2024

Penguins Clip Rangers 3-1 in Game 3

avatar

ByRick Buker

Apr 20, 2016

It was a delicious win. One that featured a little bit of everything for the Pittsburgh Penguins. Timely scoring, clutch goaltending, superb penalty killing, a relentless forecheck…even physical play.

pp0607

Indeed, last night’s 3-1 victory over the New York Rangers in Game 3 of the Eastern Conference quarterfinals reflected a return to the form that resulted in 14 wins for the black and gold during their final 16 regular-season contests.

Credit Mike Sullivan and the coaching staff. In the wake of an alarming Game 2 loss on Saturday, he refused to push the panic button. He stuck with young defenseman Olli Maatta, who’s skating seemed suspect since returning from an undisclosed lower-body injury. A glaring giveaway aside, Maatta rewarded Sully with 21-plus minutes of reasonably sound defense.

The Pens’ skipper had the good sense to make one big change. He replaced Jeff Zatkoff, who’d done an admirable job between the pipes in Games 1 and 2, with Matt Murray. The supercool rookie proved to be a most welcome addition. Murray turned aside 16 of 17 shots to earn his first-ever playoff victory and the game’s No. 3 star.

“I thought he was real solid,” Sullivan said. “He’s got a real calm demeanor in there. I think he reads plays well. He was tracking the puck. When he needed to make the timely saves for us, he did.”

Still feeling their oats following an impressive performance in Game 2, the Rangers appeared to draw first blood on a power-play goal by Chris Kreider at 12:56 of the opening frame. But Sullivan won a coach’s challenge, claiming Pittsburgh native J.T. Miller was offside on the play. The goal was disallowed.

Undaunted, New York snatched the lead for real on the opening shift of the second period when Rick Nash rambled into the Pens’ zone and beat Murray on a shorthanded breakaway. The locals continued to play on the edge when Trevor Daley and Evgeni Malkin were whistled for minor infractions early in the period.

Led by Nick Bonino, the Penguins’ penalty-killers rose to the occasion. Slowly but surely the momentum began to shift. Aided by what assistant coach Rick Tocchet called “sticky play” in the traffic areas, the Pens began to pressure the New York net.

Initially Henrik Lundqvist (28 saves) was up to the task, stopping Kris Letang on a dazzling spin-o-rama attempt. But the Pens, aided by a hooking call on Marc Staal at the 19-minute mark, finally broke through.

Forty-two seconds before the horn Phil Kessel threaded a seeing-eye pass through Rangers defender Ryan McDonagh to Sidney Crosby at the far post. In a remarkable display of skill, the Pens’ captain deadened his hands and redirected Kessel’s hard feed past Lundqvist to knot the score. It was Sid’s first postseason power-play tally since 2013.

“It was a great pass,” Crosby said. “I didn’t think [Kessel] could get it through. I had my stick on the ice and I don’t know how he got it through. It just found a way to hit my stick and go in.”

The Pens continued to dominate with a chip ‘n’ chase attack in the final period, while holding the Rangers to a paltry four shots on goal. At 4:16 they grabbed the lead on a play by veteran Matt Cullen that was pure hustle.

Skating with his typical verve, No. 7 swatted a loose puck away from colliding Rangers defensemen Dan Boyle and Keith Yandle high in the New York end. Cullen turned on the jets and beat Lundqvist through the five hole for the eventual game winner.

Following several failed attempts at a vacant Rangers net, Letang potted an empty-netter in the closing seconds to make the final score 3-1. The victory earned the Pens a 2-1 series lead.

“It goes back to playing the game the right way,” Sullivan said afterward. “I thought we did a real good job of puck management.”

Line Juggling

Sullivan reunited the Cullen-Tom KuhnhacklBryan Rust trio that worked so well down the homestretch. Eric Fehr moved to right wing on a line with Malkin and Conor Sheary. The speedy Sheary also saw considerable ice time alongside Crosby and Patric Hornqvist, while Malkin occasionally shared the ice with old linemates Kessel and Carl Hagelin.

The result? The Pens had more balance and flow while matching their Game 2 output of 31 shots on goal.

2 thoughts on “Penguins Clip Rangers 3-1 in Game 3”
  1. Hey Rick,
    That indeed was a great game between two very good teams last night. The Rangers are no push overs and they deserve to be where they are in the playoffs. Having said that, the play of the Penguins in the third period was out of this world. It was as good as it could possibly be given the opponent.
    I was watching on Hockey Night in Canada and they do some very good camera work especially up close and in that third period most of the time there were 5 Penguins chasing the puck on the TV screen. ( It is hard to explain verbally,but the Camera angle shows about 20% of the ice surface and there were 3 Blue shirts and 5 Penguins on the screen on almost every play.) Even the HNIC commentators said that the third period was a ” clinic” in team defense by the Pens and every team in the playoffs should watch it.
    So my point was the Penguins were all playing as a 5 man unit and it worked superbly. Their speed and tenacity gave the Rangers fits in the third period and they never let up. Great transition game. Let’s keep it up !!
    Cullen’s goal made King Henry look very ordinary ?? We may not have MAF but the King is in danger of losing his throne !

    Cheers.

    1. Hey Jim,

      I agree, 100%, about the Rangers. They didn’t earn 101 points this season for nothing. They’re a very good hockey team, led by a very good coach (Alain Vigneault). And after Game 2, I thought they may have had our number.

      Even though we had more shots, I thought New York was the better team through the first 30 minutes of Game 3. Frankly, I wasn’t feeling real positive about our chances up ‘til then. We weren’t supporting the puck in the offensive zone. And if you don’t get pucks and bodies to the net against Lundqvist—as Mike Sullivan preaches—you don’t beat the Rangers.

      I thought our penalty killers really helped turn the tide. Then we finally got our speed game in gear. As you noted, the Pens were a sight to behold in the third period. There was one sequence, in particular, where Conor Sheary completely outworked the much larger Kevin Klein along the boards.

      Beautiful to watch.

      Let’s hope we can keep it going in Game 4. I really don’t want the Rangers to linger.

Comments are closed.