They had battled back from a two-goal deficit. Alexis Lafreniere banked in the tying goal early in the third period.
But with a chance to end this second round series, the Rangers weren’t good enough. They only totaled five shots against a shaky Frederik Andersen. Instead, it was the more desperate Hurricanes who got a Brady Skjei power-play goal with 3:11 left in regulation to pull out a 4-3 win in Game 4 at PNC Arena.
The Hurricanes then locked it down to stay alive. There’ll be a Game 5 at Madison Square Garden on Monday night. They only allowed one shot down the stretch to make life easier on Andersen. He needed it after allowing a bad goal to Lafreniere over two minutes in that quieted the Caniacs.
There was a nervous energy in the building. Instead of applying pressure, the Rangers backed off too much. They were unable to establish any consistency. Much of that was due to a disappointing game from Artemi Panarin. He wasn’t alone. Neither he nor Vincent Trocheck had much of an impact. Aside from a tough hit, Chris Kreider wasn’t noticeable. Mika Zibanejad was okay.
When their best players aren’t their best, the Rangers will struggle to win games. Panarin was caught on for all three Hurricanes’ goals in a bad first period that saw the Rangers fall behind 3-1. He didn’t have it. He was held to one shot.
One of the biggest differences was the Canes staying out of the penalty box. They only put the Rangers on one power play. There were just three in the whole game. It was an aggressive Carolina forecheck that forced Ryan Lindgren into a turnover and bad penalty with 3:43 left in regulation.
Lindgren struggled mightily. The Canes pressured him every chance they got. He finally took down Jordan Martinook to put the Rangers shorthanded. Unlike most of the series, the penalty kill was unable to get it done.
Hurricanes coach Rod Brind’Amour adjusted both his units. He went with more left-handed shots on one. It paid dividends in crunch time. Andrei Svechnikov retrieved a loose puck and got it over to Teuvo Teravainen. He then set up Skjei for a one-timer that beat Igor Shesterkin with Seth Jarvis parked in front.
A poor start cost the Rangers. Before the game was two minutes old, they fell behind. Barclay Goodrow had trouble handling a tough pass from Erik Gustafsson. He then turned the puck over to Evgeny Kuznetsov, who used Jacob Trouba as a screen to sneak a wrist shot past Shesterkin high blocker at 1:51.
Before they found their footing, the Rangers went down by two. The Hurricanes’ second line put together a good shift against the Trocheck line. Following a couple of misses, Teuvo Teravainen took a Tony DeAngelo pass down low and shot low on Shesterkin for a rebound that came right to Stefan Noesen. His backhand made it 2-0 with 13:27 left in the first period.
Noesen came off the bench and beat Trocheck to the rebound. Both Panarin and Trouba failed to get the puck out. First, Panarin turned it over at the blue line. Then, Trouba’s pass up the middle was intercepted by Teravainen. DeAngelo sent the puck in deep for a Teravainen turnaround shot that Shesterkin mishandled. That allowed Noesen to make it a two-goal game.
Following his goal, Shesterkin made two stops on Jake Guentzel. That seemed to settle down his team. They built some momentum on a good shift from the Zibanejad line. Andersen made a couple of saves to keep them off the scoreboard.
After a hit from Erik Gustafsson on DeAngelo, he moved the puck up to Kaapo Kakko. He then made a great lead pass to send Will Cuylle in on a breakaway. Cuylle beat Andersen by going high glove for his first career postseason goal. That cut the deficit to one with under 12 minutes left.
Suddenly, with the momentum, the Rangers came close to tying it. Lafreniere missed wide on a backhand attempt. A bit later, Kreider went wide in the slot. The best opportunity came when the third line had the Hurricanes pinned in. However, Cuylle sent a shot from the middle high and over the top. The Canes survived.
Carolina re-took a two-goal lead thanks to Sebastian Aho. On a Brent Burns dump in behind the Rangers’ net, Guentzel found an open Aho in front for an easy one-timer that made it 3-1 with 4:31 remaining.
On the goal, Panarin let Aho go. Trouba chased Guentzel, which allowed him to make the pass in front. Trocheck was also in the vicinity. There were too many breakdowns. At that point, Panarin and Trouba were both minus-3. Trocheck and Lafreniere were minus-2.
Trailing by two, it was the play of the third line that continued to generate offense. Kakko was stopped by Andersen on a chance. The line centered by Alex Wennberg had a strong game. Reunited due to Jonny Brodzinski being inserted into the lineup for an ill Filip Chytil, they were superb on the forecheck, and made things happen.
With two and a half minutes left, Aho took Zibanejad down to send the Rangers on the power play. Unlike the previous three games in the series, they couldn’t do anything. The Canes were more aggressive on the penalty kill.
In the second period, Carolina made a push early. Following a couple of Shesterkin stops on Guentzel, Lafreniere came very close to scoring. His shot hit the goalpost. The Rangers had that happen again later.
With the Canes still leading by two, Zibanejad went off for holding the stick of Svechnikov. Their top penalty killing forward was lost for two minutes. Fortunately, the rest of the penalty killers picked him up. That included Wennberg and Jimmy Vesey, who came on after Trocheck and Goodrow.
The best chance was created by the Rangers. Lindgren found himself open on a back pass. His high shot was stopped by a sprawling Andersen.
With the power play set to expire, Noesen came close on a wrap-around. It hit the outside of the goalpost. Shesterkin then stopped Kuznetsov.
Back at even strength, Lafreniere continued to get chances. Following one Andersen save, he sent another shot wide. He was the most dangerous Ranger in the game. In fact, Lafreniere has been the best forward in the series.
With the offense struggling, Peter Laviolette flipped Lafreniere and Jack Roslovic. He even tried Panarin and Lafreniere with Zibanejad. It almost worked.
A little later, a heads-up stretch pass from Shesterkin up to Kakko almost led to a goal. After receiving the pass at the Canes’ blue line with Carolina caught in a line change, Kakko passed across for a Wennberg shot that hit the right goalpost.
Even though they were ahead by two, the Hurricanes were guilty of some sloppy turnovers. For the game, they had 22 giveaways. The Rangers didn’t make them pay for it.
With under eight minutes remaining, the fourth line delivered a big goal. Andersen gave up a rebound on a Vesey shot. Instead of covering it up, he let DeAngelo throw the puck away around the boards. Vesey intercepted it and fed Braden Schneider for a wrist shot at the point that Goodrow tipped in with 7:17 left to make it 3-2.
The Hurricanes tried to go back ahead by two. But Shesterkin made key saves on Svechnikov. Jaccob Slavin missed wide on a rebound.
On the opposite end, Lafreniere sent a dangerous shot over the net. He was very good the entire night.
With only 14 seconds left in the period, Shesterkin stopped Guentzel. What followed was interesting. Lafreniere exchanged words with Aho. He had a hold of him as the refs interjected. Trocheck and Burns exchanged blows. Both earned two minutes for roughing. The four-on-four carried over to the third period.
Following a tentative start, Lafreniere finally got rewarded for his hard work. After taking a Trouba feed, Zibanejad sent a pass across for Lafreniere. As he was going behind the net, he noticed that Andersen was off his goalpost. Lafreniere wisely banked the puck off Andersen and in to tie the score.
Lafreniere now has four goals in the9j series. He’s been on fire. Over the last five games dating back to Game 4 against the Capitals, he has a five-game point streak (4-3-7). Six of those seven points have come against the Hurricanes. They’ve had no answer for him. Lafreniere is up to 10 points (4-6-10) in the postseason.
If there was a disappointing part of the comeback, the Rangers took their foot off the accelerator. They backed off. It was the Canes who played with more urgency. They were facing elimination. They knew that the next goal probably meant their season. They played like it.
Carolina didn’t have a lot of good chances. But they controlled play at five-on-five. The Rangers spent too much time defending instead of attacking. They can’t do that again if they’re in a similar position on Monday.
Shesterkin made a save on a Dmitry Orlov backhand. He also stopped Martin Necas from distance. It was more cautiously played. Maybe that worked in the Canes’ favorite. They also backed up when they led by two.
For the period, the shots were 8-5 Hurricanes. There wasn’t enough attack time from the Rangers. It was almost like they played for overtime. It never got there.
Every time Lindgren was out for a defensive shift, he was pressured. He had issues handling the Canes’ forecheck. When he backed himself into a corner and lost the puck, it was troublesome. The Rangers escaped.
However, Lindgren later lost a battle to Martinook. He took down Martinook with 3:43 remaining. This time, the Hurricanes found the winning formula on the power play.
After taking a pass from Svechnikov, Teravainen and Skjei played catch. Then, Teravainen laid a perfect pass for Skjei to blast past Shesterkin for the game-winner.
Trailing by one late, the Rangers could only muster a long Panarin shot that Andersen easily handled. With Shesterkin on the bench for an extra attacker, they never got anything through. The Canes got in the lanes and blocked shots to earn the victory.
Now, it’s onto Game 5.
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