Czar Igor crowned as Vezina winner at NHL Awards, Shestyorkin finishes third for Hart a decade after Lundqvist, Matthews sweeps the Hart and Lindsay, Makar edges Josi for Norris, Drury up for GM of The Year

On Tuesday night in Tampa Bay, Igor Shestyorkin was recognized by most normal general managers when he easily won his first Vezina as the league’s best goalie at the NHL Awards on ESPN.

After a memorable ’21-22 season that saw him win 36 games while leading the league in GAA (2.07), save percentage (.935) with six shutouts, Czar Igor (credit to Sean McCaffrey of bluecollarblueshirts.com) was crowned The Vezina winner. He received 29 first place votes from the 32 GM’s who voted. Three cast votes for their goalie including former recipient Andrei Vasilevskiy of the Lightning, Frederik Andersen of the Hurricanes, and Ilya Sorokin of the Islanders.

I’ll save the rant about how out of touch the Godfather Lou Lamoriello is. He is a bitter old man. It is what it is. I feel no such animosity towards Julien BriseBois or Don Waddell, who both voted for two of the game’s best netminders. How Andersen wasn’t third over Saros I don’t understand. No disrespect meant. Saros meant a lot to the Predators, who were no match against Colorado without him.

For Shestyorkin, it was a nice coronation that recognized his achievements. He made 52 starts and appeared in 53 games. Both career highs along with the 36 victories, 2.07 GAA, .935 save percentage and six shutouts. The 26-year old Russian netminder who the Rangers stole in the fourth round of the 2014 NHL Draft with pick number 118 spoke in English when he received the prestigious award from Kevin Weekes.

Thanking the Rangers organization along with teammates and specifically goalie coach Benoit Allaire for believing in him, Shestyorkin made sure to mention his wife who is pregnant with their first baby. He also paid his respect to both Markstrom and Saros for their outstanding seasons.

It was nice to see him opt to speak exclusively in English. He did well in speaking eloquently at the podium. He also would get an interview with the very busy ESPN reporter Emily Kaplan. There was a lot to like about how Igor handled himself on what was a great occasion. He also has a dry sense of humor as Kaplan found out.

Without his brilliant play, the Rangers don’t reach the Eastern Conference Final for the first time in seven years. Similar to former franchise goalie Henrik Lundqvist in 2012, Shestyorkin carried them as far as possible. He won five elimination games including three in a row during the first round to lead a 3-1 comeback to beat the Penguins.

It was his splendid play in the second round that made the difference in the Rangers taking the final two games including a second consecutive Game Seven to eliminate the Hurricanes in enemy territory. Although they fell short in losing four straight to the two-time defending champion Lightning in gut wrenching fashion to drop the Conference Final four games to two, Shestyorkin provided plenty of critical saves to give them a chance at the upset.

For the postseason, he finished 10-9 in 20 starts with a 2.59 GAA and .929 save percentage. The 720 shots faced along with the 669 saves made still lead all goalies this playoffs. It speaks to the high volume of shots he faced.

No more so than in his postseason debut when he made 79 saves on 83 shots in a 4-3 triple overtime loss to the Pens on May 3. An incredible effort despite Evgeni Malkin getting the winner on a deflection. Despite a couple of tough games in Pittsburgh that put the team in a 3-1 hole, Shestyorkin never wavered in confidence. He was able to move on and backstop the Rangers to their first series win since defeating the Canadiens in 2017.

Although he finished a distant third for the Hart Trophy which went to Auston Matthews, whose 60 goals and 106 points were hard to ignore while leading the Maple Leafs, Shestyorkin being recognized as a top three player for league MVP is a great honor. It’s not often goalies get recognized by the voters over skaters. Connor McDavid finished a distant runner-up behind Matthews, who also was recognized by his peers by winning the Ted Lindsay Award as voted on by the players.

Johnny Gaudreau, Jonathan Huberdeau and Kirill Kaprizov finished fourth, fifth and sixth. They got it right.

In a very close vote, the Norris went to Cale Makar of the Avalanche. He outdistanced Roman Josi, who actually received more first place votes. The difference was that Makar got more second place votes by the writers. Adam Fox was fifth despite playing through an injury. Boston’s Charlie McAvoy finished fourth.

Personally, I felt Josi deserved it for carrying the Predators to the playoffs. He had 96 points and was unbelievable down the stretch. Makar might’ve gotten some home cooking from the Canadian contingent. He’s a great player. But this feels similar to when Ray Bourque edged Scott Stevens. That was even closer.

The Calder went to Detroit defenseman Moritz Seider. He won comfortably over runner-up Trevor Zegras and Michael Bunting. It was the right call by voters to give the Rookie of The Year to the multidimensional Seider, who should challenge for the Norris in the future. Teammate Lucas Raymond finished fourth.

They also highlighted other awards that were already announced during the playoffs. That included Patrice Bergeron winning a record fifth Selke for the NHL’s top defensive forward. As huge a fan of Bergeron as I am which dates back to his rookie season after Boston took him number 45 in 2003, I hope he comes back. He’s still got something left.

Although I don’t care for his on ice antics which now include dangerous slewfoots and trips that seriously injure players like Sammy Blais, I have no issue with P.K. Subban winning the King Clancy for all his off ice work in the community. He’s a very unselfish player who’s had a great foundation since 2014 when he was with the Canadiens. Subban won’t be back with the Devils. It’ll be interesting to see if he catches on elsewhere. He has a future in broadcasting when it’s over.

As much as I love and respect Carey Price for overcoming his substance abuse issues to return to the net for Montreal, I feel that Kevin Hayes deserved to win the Masterton for what he endured following the tragic death of brother Jimmy Hayes. Both were strong candidates. What Kevin had to handle was even harder and more personal than Price. My heart goes out to the Hayes family.

Aside from Kenan Thompson amusing viewers with his wit and funny bits, he knows the sport. What would you expect from the current SNL star who first came to fame as Russ Tyler in Mighty Ducks 2 with the knuckle puck? He also was part of Kenan and Kel and originally from All That on Nickelodeon. A funny and talented comedian whose career has taken off.

I thought overall, ESPN did a good job. Even if it was only limited to an hour with them cutting away at the end for precious WNBA action, the event was live for the first time in three years.

Thompson and co-host Ashley Brewer were good at presenting awards and bringing attention to special human interest stories such as the courageous Chris Snow of Calgary. He’s battling ALS. Seeing him walk up on stage and speak with his wife and two kids was touching. He’s a true inspiration.

I also loved seeing Brian “Red” Hamilton come up with Nadia Popovici, who saved the life of Hamilton by noticing he had a cancerous mole on the back of his neck while sitting behind the Canucks equipment manager at a Kraken game. The med student and Seattle Kraken fan is special. It’s a remarkable story. They presented the Hart to Matthews.

Rangers Team President and GM Chris Drury is also up for the Jim Gregory Award as GM of the Year. With a strong season that included key additions Barclay Goodrow, Ryan Reaves, Andrew Copp, Frank Vatrano, Tyler Motte and Justin Braun, plus hiring Gerard Gallant who guided the Rangers to 52 wins and 110 points to finish third for the Jack Adams, Drury is a deserving candidate.

Drury is up against Tampa GM Julien BriseBois and Colorado GM Joe Sakic. While both are good choices, their teams had lofty expectations. They’re supposed to be where they are facing each other for the Stanley Cup. The Rangers over achieved and were the third team remaining in their first Stanley Cup Playoffs since 2017. A credit to both Drury and Gallant along with the players.

Speaking of the Cup, the Avalanche had their 2-0 series lead cut in half by the Lightning, who responded to a 7-0 drubbing by returning the favor with a big 6-2 win on home ice to take Game Three. They can tie the series later tonight in Game Four.

In the first two games, the Avalanche outscored the Lightning 11-3. After Andre Burakovsky won Game One in overtime, they put up a touchdown and kicked an extra point to win Game Two convincingly. Valeri Nichushkin and Cale Makar scored twice while Burakovsky added a goal and assist. Andrei Vasilevskiy gave up a playoff worst seven goals on 30 shots.

Playing without Brayden Point again back home, the Bolts got big games from Steven Stamkos and Ondrej Palat the other night. Each had a goal and assist. Anthony Cirelli notched a goal. Pat Maroon had a goal and helper. Nikita Kucherov added two assists as did Victor Hedman.

Kucherov was cross-checked by Devon Toews in the third period and left early. He will play tonight along with Corey Perry, who made history by becoming the only player to score a goal for four different teams in the Stanley Cup Finals (Ducks, Stars, Canadiens, Lightning).

Point isn’t expected to return tonight. Riley Nash will dress for a second straight game and play on the fourth line. Nazem Kadri might return for Game Four. If he can, that would be a good boost for the Avs.

Darcy Kuemper will get the start after being chased for five goals on 22 shots. That’ll be an interesting subplot with Vasilevskiy turning it around by stopping 37 of 39 shots in Game Three.

That’s going to do it. It was nice to talk Rangers with Igor getting the Vezina to join Lundqvist, Vanbiesbrouck, Giacomin/Villemure and Kerr. Had they awarded the Vezina differently in 1949-50, Chuck Rayner would’ve also won it. He was the Hart winner that season after going 28-30-11 with a 2.62 GAA and six shutouts in 69 games. Emile Francis was the backup getting into one game.

Rayner would backstop the Rangers to within a goal of winning the Cup. Thet fell in double overtime 4-3 to the Red Wings. Rayner went 7-5 with a 2.25 GAA and one shutout during the playoffs. They defeated the Canadiens in five games and lost to the Red Wings in seven.

Congrats again to Shestyorkin! Хорошего вам дня.

Posted in NHL, NYRangers | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

HARD HITS: A Father’s Day Hockey Celebration

By show of hands, how many fans got into hockey due to their Dad’s? It might not apply to all. But there are certainly plenty of hockey fans who love the sport because our fathers taught us about it.

On a Father’s Day on June 19 where the temperature isn’t sweltering at least here in Staten Island, New York, they’ve played two games of the Stanley Cup Finals. The high powered Avalanche have overwhelmed the two-time defending champion Lightning by taking Games 1-2 by a combined score of 11-3.

Of course, it looks much worse due to Colorado dominating Tampa Bay last night by blowing them out 7-0 in an uncompetitive Game Two. The crazy part is the Bolts got two goals in succession during the second period of Game One to force overtime. But Andre Burakovsky scored early in sudden death to give the Avalanche a huge first win to start the series.

They did whatever they wanted on Saturday night. The seven goals were the most Andrei Vasilevskiy has ever given up in the postseason. A brilliant performer who has always been very mentally tough, the former Vezina and Conn Smythe winner will have to move on very quickly as will his Lightning teammates when a pivotal Game Three takes place tomorrow night at Amalie Arena.

Whether they lost by a goal or a touchdown and extra point last night, it’s still an 0-2 series deficit for the Bolts. They were in this exact scenario against the Rangers during the Eastern Conference Final. Trailing by a pair, they rose up by getting two power play goals from Nikita Kucherov and Steven Stamkos before Ondrej Palat scored the game-winner with 41.6 seconds remaining for a gutsy 3-2 win in Game Three.

The rest is history. The Lightning reeled off four in a row to stun the Rangers and make their third straight appearance in the Stanley Cup Final. It’s still a numb feeling over a week later after what happened in Game Five. The goal by Ryan Lindgren from a near impossible angle beating Vasilevskiy high short side, only to see Mikhail Sergachev tie matters on a similar play. Palat again delivering the crushing blow late in regulation. They’d wrap it up on a fluky Stamkos goal that answered a Frank Vatrano miracle off a face-off win.

Unlike Game Five where I went for a ride after the empty netter from Brandon Hagel, I sat there in stunned disbelief as the Lightning celebrated their hard fought 2-1 clincher in front of the home crowd that included Ranger fans who live down south. They blanketed Mika Zibanejad, who was a hero when he scored the tying goal to force extras in Game Seven of the first round against Pittsburgh.

Zibanejad led the Rangers in scoring with 10 goals, 14 assists and 24 points. One better than Adam Fox. However, neither hit the score sheet over the final three games. The Lightning shut them down along with Chris Kreider, whose memorable season saw him match Adam Graves for the most combined goals (62) by a Ranger for the regular season and postseason. Artemi Panarin, whose memorable overtime clincher on the power play that beat the Penguins, also was kept in check. It wasn’t easy to watch him struggle.

Still, it was a great season and run. One where pride was restored to the Blueshirts. An Original Six franchise I’ve followed for over three decades. All because of Dad. His loyalty to a team that hasn’t had much success since he was a kid in the 50’s, is part of the tradition when it comes to the Rangers.

Dad’s favorite players are Andy Bathgate, Rod Gilbert, Jean Ratelle, Ed Giacomin and Brad Park. He could tell you all about Bathgate, who is one of two Rangers to win the Hart Trophy over the last 63 years. He won it in 1958-59. The other is the legendary Mark Messier, who took league MVP in 1991-92. The Captain as he’s affectionately known by fans delivered on his promise by leading the Rangers to the Stanley Cup in ’93-94. The only one this franchise has seen since World War II back in 1940.

As tough a history as our beloved Blueshirts have with only one Cup over the last 81 years (80 seasons due to ’04-05 cancelation), we stay true to the only team we’ve known growing up. It’s in our blood. So, I can still rattle off names like Vanbiesbrouck (Beezer), Sandstrom, Kisio, Granato, Miller, Mullen from the late 80’s. That’s really when I started following the Rangers. They actually had some games televised on the old WWOR, Channel 9 with the legendary Marv Albert on the call.  I even recall Bob Froese as a backup goalie. Talk about a name.

I wouldn’t be the passionate Rangers fan I am today without Dad. He went to games while at St. John’s where he graduated and earned a degree in accounting. He’d also stay and get his Masters.

It was in 1972 that the Rangers had their best chance to win their first Cup in 32 years. But a broken foot to Ratelle saw him miss most of the playoffs before returning for the Stanley Cup Final where he was a shell of himself in a gut wrenching six-game series loss to the hated Bruins. Bobby Orr skated with the Cup at MSG as Dad watched among the crowd. A story that’s been told many times to me and Justin throughout the years.

A huge missed opportunity for a team that boasted the famous GAG Line. It featured Gilbert, Ratelle and Vic Hadfield. The greatest scoring line in Rangers franchise history. Although you could get some debate from hockey historian Stan Fischler, whose knowledge dates back to the Bread Line that featured Bill Cook, brother Bun Cook and Frank Boucher. They won two of the team’s three Cups while playing together.

One thing is certain about that era under the late Emile Francis, who turned the franchise around by rebuilding in the 60’s to form a tremendous team that seriously challenged in the 70’s. While some modern historians view it differently, Dad absolutely hated the blockbuster trade that sent Ratelle and Park to the Bruins for Phil Esposito and Carol Vadnais. Although both Espo and Vadnais had success on Broadway with both helping a rebuilt 1978-79 Rangers upset the Islanders on the way to a Stanley Cup appearance against the mighty Canadiens, all-time fans like Dad never got over trading two of the greatest players in franchise history.

The one that broke the camel’s back was the misguided trade of Rick Middleton to Boston for a washed up Ken Hodge. While the longtime former Bruins teammate of Esposito had nothing left and promptly hung up the skates, Middleton went onto a great career with the old rival Bruins. It really is mystifying that he’s never made the Hockey Hall Of Fame. But they’ll put in checker Guy Carbonneau due to his Cups with Montreal.

Middleton for Hodge might be the worst trade ever made by the Rangers. Of course, there are others. I hated trading Ray Ferraro, Ian Laperierre, Mattias Norstrom and Nathan Lafayette to the Kings for Jari Kurri, Marty McSorley and Shane Churla. A move by then GM Neil Smith that ruined the chemistry the ’95-96 team had. To this day, Ferraro doesn’t understand the trade. After coming back from two down to eliminate Montreal in six, the Rangers were dismantled by both Lemieux and Jagr as the Penguins won in five games.

It’s these kind of moves that stick with you when it comes to rooting for the Rangers. Maybe that’s been instilled in me from our Dad. As close as they came to winning the Cup which also included the memorable Pete Stemkowski goal in triple overtime to beat the Blackhawks in Game Six of the Semifinals at The Garden, the Rangers went onto lose that series in seven games.

The tales of such games are etched in Rangers lore. Even though they fell short. I wonder to this day what it was like for our father to witness Orr, Esposito and the Bruins celebrating their second Cup in three years at MSG. An Orr who was at the peak of his dominance. Whenever we discuss the game’s greatest players, he always puts Orr at the top of the list over Gretzky and Howe, who he of course loved growing up.

Having seen enough clips of Orr, he was something special. He changed the way the game was played by revolutionizing the sport for defensemen. The skating combined with the speed, skill and instincts define why Number 4 is the greatest player at the position. Imagine if he had stayed healthy what he could’ve done. For six years, he dominated by winning two Cups, three consecutive Harts and six of eight straight Norris Trophies. Plus an Art Ross.

It’s astonishing to think injuries to his knee finished Orr at 27. His final season in Boston was only 10 games. He put up 18 points. He’d finish his career with the Blackhawks by playing only 26 more games. When they show highlights, Orr’s overtime winner at 40 seconds to win the Cup over the Blues in 1970 is replayed. It’s an airborne Orr flying in the air in celebration after he scored. A famous shot that is a beautiful image. Like art.

As great as it is to hear Dad talk about Orr, my favorite moment will always be Game Seven of the ’94 Eastern Conference Final. We were all crammed into his office watching the game on our old TV. The Rangers led 1-0 on a brilliant goal by Brian Leetch. They held the one-goal lead throughout a tense third period. But in classic Ranger fashion, they allowed the Devils to tie it when Valeri Zelepukin scored with 7.7 seconds remaining in regulation. It was unbelievable.

In what felt like an eternity, the Rangers and Devils went two overtimes to decide the well played series. There were some close calls along the way. If you watched (who hasn’t?) Sam Rosen’s, “Where’s The Puck,” call it was nerve racking. Luckily, Steve Larmer cleared it out of harm’s way. You also had Mike Richter stop Bobby Holik on a breakaway. He was only able to chip the puck on goal. On the opposite end, Martin Brodeur robbed Mark Messier of a sure winner on the doorstep.

It finally ended when Stephane Matteau got to a loose puck in the Devils’ end and skated around the net where he fortunately had his wrap-around bounce off a sliding Slava Fetisov past Brodeur for the series clincher at 4:24 of the second overtime. I was the first to notice that the puck was in. I had to tell Dad that Matteau scored and they won. I’ll never forget his reaction. Total shock. It was a great moment.

Of course, they blew a three games to one lead against the Canucks, who forced a winner take all Game Seven at MSG on June 14, 1994. I can still recall our history teacher even getting involved by having a friendly little classroom pool on the big game. I opted not to participate due to my playoff superstition. The only thing I knew was that the final score would be 3-2. It was just a feeling. Yes. I had our team winning by a goal. Little did I know how much anxiety it would cause.

Watching Game Seven was intense. You could feel your stomach in knots. But being able to watch it on MSG Network as called by Sam and JD (the great John Davidson) was a treat. At that time, we didn’t know it would be the final year home networks could televise the Cup. It was a very different time. A better one. I’m not exactly a fan of national TV having exclusive rights from Round Two on. That’s garbage.

The ultimate seventh game sure delivered. Sergei Zubov made a great pass for a wide open Leetch, who took his time before firing into an open side with Kirk McLean out of position for the first goal. Then, Alexei Kovalev was able to take a great Zubov pass and feed Adam Graves for a power play goal that made it 2-0 in a great first period.

Easy. Right? Not so fast. You had an unbelievable individual effort by Trevor Linden, who was able to beat Richter for a shorthanded goal that cut the deficit in half for Vancouver. But on what amounted to a mad scramble in front with both Messier and Brian Noonan parked there, the Captain was credited with a power play goal that made it 3-1. To this day, I don’t believe he ever touched it. It looked like Noonan’s goal. Regardless, the Rangers led by two. They were closing in on the Cup.

If you’ve followed this team for a while, then you understand by now that nothing ever comes easy for them. That’s the Rangers Way. When Linden buried his second on a power play early in the third, it was nervous time. There were still over 15 minutes left for the Canucks to tie it. Given how the Devils series was where three games needed sudden death, it wouldn’t have surprised us.

They sure made it interesting. Martin Gelinas came close. But he hit the near goalpost. Then, you had the same Nathan Lafayette all set up for the tying goal. However, his one-timer from the slot rang off the crossbar with Richter fully outstretched. At the time, it looked like he got a piece of it with his glove. It made for quite a nervous call by Rosen. He was at his best along with Davidson, whose signature call, “Oh Baby,” appropriately became the title for the Rangers’ Stanley Cup video on something called VHS. I miss those days.

Following that close call, the Rangers defended better. As they drew closer to winning their first Cup in 54 years, you still had Kevin Collins calling an icing on a Steve Larmer clear where the puck slowed down to the point of Pavel Bure looking defeated. He thought it was over. So did Rosen. The crowd booed. Yet with 1.6 seconds remaining, you still were waiting for the other shoe to drop.

Aside from Rosen’s memorable call that included, “The waiting is over. This one will last a lifetime,” you had Davidson talk about how long these players and fans had waited. I think he was referencing former players like himself. It was JD who backstopped the ’78-79 Rangers to the huge upset of the Islanders before losing in five to the Canadiens Dynasty. He sure understood along with Rosen what it had been like for fans and players.

My favorite part was seeing our proud father reduced to tears of joy. He couldn’t believe it. He thought he’d never see it. That Stanley Cup were for longtime fans like him and even the older generation. Those were the diehards. The ones who stuck it out. Never wavered in their loyalty and support. I look back now and think how lucky Justin and I were to see them win that Cup while we were younger.

Now, it’s almost 30 years later. We’re still waiting for another Cup celebration. They came close in 2014. That was a great run inspired by the death of Marty St. Louis’ Mom France. They dug deep to rally back from a 3-1 second round deficit to beat the Penguins behind Henrik Lundqvist. Then defeated the Canadiens in six. Game Six is the best game we ever attended. A 1-0 clincher. Brian Boyle to Dominic Moore for the game’s only goal, which followed a ridiculous save by Lundqvist on Thomas Vanek.

I never thought in all the seasons we went to games that they’d ever clinch the Prince of Wales Trophy to advance to the Stanley Cup Finals. That was truly special. I guess we haven’t been as fortunate as Devils fans on the other side of the Hudson. Even though their team is in a bad way, they’ve seen them win three times including ’03 which Hasan attended Game Seven. That must be like going to heaven. I can only imagine.

Since the heartbreaking loss in 2015 to the Lightning, I no longer care if I’m ever in the building for such a big game. At this point, I just want to see them win another Cup while we’re all around. The run they gave us was exciting. Especially after five years out of the playoffs. Seeing guys like Mika Zibanejad, Chris Kreider, Adam Fox, Ryan Lindgren and Igor Shesterkin blossom throughout the season and especially in the postseason was pretty special. Especially with so much of the core homegrown. That includes K’Andre Miller, Braden Schneider, Alexis Lafreniere, Filip Chytil and Kaapo Kakko.

For the first time in a while, things are looking up. I can’t say for sure what will happen with the off-season. But our team will be back. They can use the experience they got in the postseason as motivation. They went a lot further than many believed. The heart and character they showed in coming back to beat both the Pens and Hurricanes to reach their first Conference Finals in seven years was tremendous.

To quote the legendary Biggie Smalls, “The sky’s the limit.”

I hope one day soon we can celebrate one more Cup with our Dad. The best person I know. To all out there, Happy Father’s Day!!!!! 💜✨️⭐️

Posted in Column | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Never Say Die Blueshirts gave us something special

As I sit here listening to and enjoying a classic show from Eric Clapton and Steve Winwood from MSG back in February ’08 in a time I went with Dad to see them, I’m in a moment of reflection.

Love and appreciation are two of the best things you can have. There are times in life that are truly special. A birthday, a graduation, a new job, a memorable concert or even a great game. It all connects.

For us, Game Six of the Eastern Conference Final back in 2014 versus the Canadiens was that magic moment as a fan of this team. The celebration at the end in our old section 411 was awesome. High fives. Hugs. Plenty of screaming. I once captured it on one of my old mobile phones. No idea what happened to the footage.

Eight years later, it stays with you. For the fortunate long-time Ranger fans, that could be Game Six or Seven from the unbelievable Conference Finals against the Devils in ’94. Or perhaps it’s the deciding Game Seven versus the Canucks. Those who were lucky enough to be at The Garden back then know.

Fans like Anthony Cinque, who made the Stanley Cup video that came out where fans were featured. He’s become one of our favorites due to his incredible knowledge and passion for the sport. The best kind of fan of our beloved Blueshirts. I’m glad over two decades later, we still see him occasionally. Although it was Dad who did this season. I didn’t go back. Maybe next year.

I mention this because before the five-year playoff drought, there was a seven-year itch that lasted almost a decade. All due to greed. That cold stretch between ’98 through ’04 was some of the worst hockey the franchise has ever played. They would tease you to death. Yet we had fun and laughed at how bad they were. Back when MSG was fan friendly.

Not everyone is old enough to go back to those Dark Ages. Even when we had Gretzky take his final lap on a legendary career that will never be equalled, it was in an overtime loss with future Ranger Jaromir Jagr scoring the winner. That at least was special. There were many uglier nights ahead. The term, “Thrashed,” close friend Brian Sanborn used referred to the former Atlanta Thrashers. If you were there, you know.

When I look back at the ugliest moments I’ve been witness to, they include bitter losses to the Devils and Islanders where you even had rival fans feeling sorry for us. How sad. So, when they decided to commit to a rebuild with The Letter, I was good with it. It was time to say goodbye to Ryan McDonagh, Mats Zuccarello, Dan Girardi and eventually Henrik Lundqvist. All staples of those Black and Blueshirts teams we loved.

Who knew that Igor Shestyorkin would supplant Lundqvist as the next great goalie? Of course, I followed him closely just as I had Henrik before he came over from Sweden. I knew Igor was pretty good. I liked tracking our team’s top prospects. They don’t all pan out. But if the goalie lives up to expectations, it can turnaround quickly.

Gone are the gloomy days of the David Quinn Error along with the stench from the conclusion of Alain Vigneault when they stuck with him one season too long following the bitter disappointment in the playoffs five years ago. Gerard Gallant replaced Quinn and turned this team around along with Chris Drury, who got help from former architects Jeff Gorton and the always beloved John Davidson.

I can’t think of too many people who weren’t for hiring Gallant last summer. He was a guy who got dismissed by a greedy Golden Knights, who lost their identity. He had also once been left outside to fetch a taxi by the Panthers. It didn’t make sense. Here was a good coach who’s had success in the league, having guided the expansion Knights to the Stanley Cup Finals their inaugural season.

The Rangers were in need of a more experienced coach behind the bench who could be a step up from Quinn. Not that everything he did was bad. He was able to get more from Mika Zibanejad, who has now become one of the game’s better overall players. Adam Fox and Ryan Lindgren developed under his watch. Chris Kreider grew in stature to take on more of a leadership role once Marc Staal left.

Featuring Artemi Panarin, Zibanejad, Kreider, Fox and Shesterkin, who took over the reigns from Lundqvist, the pieces were in place. Even if at times Quinn made puzzling lineup decisions on where to play Filip Chytil, Kaapo Kakko and Alexis Lafreniere, you could see that the future was bright. At least he paired up K’Andre Miller with Jacob Trouba. A pair that improved leaps and bounds under Gallant in what turned into a great season.

It was during ’21-22 that things started to take shape. Key additions Barclay Goodrow and Ryan Reaves helped change the dynamic. Adding veteran pieces strengthened the locker room and changed the way the Rangers played. Even though they lost Sammy Blais to a serious injury, Gallant was able to get his team to buy in. They didn’t lose three games in a row in regulation until the final week after they wrapped up second place in the Metropolitan Division.

By that point, Drury made critical upgrades with the acquisitions of Andrew Copp, Frank Vatrano and Justin Braun to supply Gallant with a more complete roster that could go far in the playoffs. But even after a Vezina season from Shestyorkin, they dug out of a 3-1 series hole to rally and defeat the Penguins in a closely fought first round.

It was the way they did it that really stood out. With so many doubters who picked against them due to the battle tested Pens led by Sidney Crosby, Jake Guentzel, Evgeni Malkin and Kris Letang, the Blueshirts picked themselves off the deck to come back and win Games 5-7 to make history. No team had ever rallied from such a deficit by trailing in each pressure packed elimination game.

They did it in epic fashion. By getting a game-tying goal from Zibanejad with 5:45 left in regulation on a make shift line that included Copp and Lafreniere, they found a way to force overtime. It was Panarin who won it at 4:46 of sudden death on the power play to send the Rangers and Garden into a frenzy. His seeing eye shot snuck past Tristan Jarry, who had just returned from injury to play Game Seven. That clutch goal for a visibly banged up Panarin allowed the Rangers to believe they could make a run.

They then battled the division champion Hurricanes in a closely fought second round series. Unlike the Penguins, who opened it up more and crashed the net to make life tough on Shesterkin, the defensive minded Canes shrunk the ice. They took away time and space from Zibanejad, Kreider, Fox, Panarin, Vatrano, Ryan Strome and Copp.

Even tougher, the Rangers blew a one-goal lead after two periods to lose in tough fashion 2-1 in overtime on a goal from Ian Cole to start the series. They then couldn’t generate much offense in a 2-0 loss where former Ranger Brendan Smith scored the shorthanded winner to help Antti Raanta get the shutout. That put them in an 0-2 hole with the next two games at MSG.

With their backs to the wall, all the resilient and scrappy Blueshirts did was sweep Games 3-4 by outscoring the Hurricanes 7-2. Although Game Three was close, they got goals from Zibanejad and Kreider with Motte sealing it with an empty netter. All in support of Shestyorkin, who came up huge by making 43 saves.

In a more complete game where they jumped on the Canes, who got into penalty trouble, the Rangers easily took Game Four 4-1 to square the series. But there was no momentum due to home ice. After Zibanejad notched a power play goal to tie up Game Five late in the first period, it was all Hurricanes. Goals from Teuvo Teravainen and Andrei Svechnikov along with a dominant defense held them to just 17 shots as Carolina put the Rangers on the brink.

Facing elimination for the fourth time, they rose up to the challenge by taking Game Six at home 5-2. Never seriously threatened following first period tallies from Motte and Zibanejad on a shaky Raanta, Chytil scored twice in the second as they evened it up to send the series back to Raleigh for a do or die Game Seven.

It was during the seventh and deciding game that they played their best game. Taking advantage of undisciplined penalties by the Canes, Fox and Kreider cashed in on the power play. With Shestyorkin locked in, Strome buried a two-on-one short side on injury replacement Pyotr Kochetkov to help break it open.

A highlight reel breakaway goal from Kreider early in the third provided some cushion. Chytil would get his third goal in two games to answer a Vincent Trocheck power play goal to really finish the Canes off. Even after Max Domi tallied to cut it to two with 3:57 remaining, Copp got an empty netter to seal the big second round win.

It was a series that came down to Igor and special teams. The Rangers were better in each key area to prevail. They also had more skill and scoring depth with the Kid Line of Chytil, Lafreniere and Kakko providing offense at critical moments.

They also got strong play out of Lindgren, who battled an ankle injury throughout the playoffs. The Rangers’ warrior got stronger as it went on. So did Miller, whose poise really shined in the second round victory by teaming with Trouba to help neutralize Sebastian Aho and Teravainen. Trouba’s big hit that concussed rookie Seth Jarvis really hurt the Canes in Game Seven. He was their best forward.

The run wouldn’t have been possible without Lindgren returning in the first round with the Rangers trailing three games to one. His grit and intangibles really made a big difference on the blue line. Motte being able to return for the conclusion of that series and Goodrow doing the same for the second round really made a noticeable difference. Having those key depth players who are strong defensively and on the penalty kill were pivotal.

When your team makes a deep run like the Rangers did, it’s not only the top guns who lead the way. It’s also about having enough high character role players who are effective and provide energy. While Zibanejad, Kreider and Fox received most of the accolades along with Panarin, it was the support provided by Copp, Vatrano, Strome (prior to pelvis injury that really limited him vs Tampa), Lafreniere, Chytil, Kakko, Motte, Goodrow and Braun that really gave the team a lift.

By getting everyone to play their roles, Turk got the franchise back to the Conference Finals for the first time in seven years. They met the championship Lightning in the Eastern Conference Final.

Early on, it looked like the Rangers would prevail. Their younger legs were noticeable early in the series. After dismantling the Lightning 6-2 in a great Game One where Chytil and Vatrano continued to score, the second game was more like how it was supposed to go. On the strength of goals from Miller, Kakko and Zibanejad, they hung on for a 3-2 win over the Bolts, who came on in the second half to make it close.

The turning point wouldn’t come until they were up by two midway through Game Three in Tampa. On power play goals from Zibanejad and Kreider, they were leading 2-0 in the second period. One more goal and they’d have surely gone up three-zip with Shestyorkin in the series.

Instead, a Trouba penalty really flipped the script. After Steven Stamkos set up Nikita Kucherov on the power play over a minute later, a second Trouba minor in the first minute of the third came back to haunt them. When Stamkos tied the game with a laser, it was all Lightning. They finally got the crushing game-winner from Ondrej Palat with 41.6 seconds left to take Game Three. That foreshadowed an even darker script full of Lightning Bolts.

After they played even better to win Game Four 4-1 with both Kucherov and Stamkos all over the score sheet with Palat, they sent the series back to MSG tied at two. It set up a pivotal Game Five on Broadway.

For a while, it really looked like the first goal would matter. When Lindgren snuck a shot past Andrei Vasilevskiy high blocker from an impossible angle with Vatrano in front, it felt like luck was on the Rangers’ side. But a Kevin Rooney clearing attempt around the boards was intercepted by Mikhail Sergachev, whose shot snuck past Shestyorkin with 2:26 left in the second to tie it up.

Predictably, the third period was carefully played by both sides. Neither wanted to make a mistake that could cause their demise. It was understandable.

The best chance came when Lindgren again had an opening in front. But his rebound of a wide Fox shot off the end boards was denied by a sprawling Vasilevskiy. Strome would get a great chance down low. But he couldn’t quite one-time the Copp backhand pass that just was a bit behind. While many clueless fans gave him a lot of crap for that miss, they had no idea how hurt he was. That would be revealed earlier the next week.

Everyone knew that the next goal would decide the intensely fought game. Unfortunately, some Lightning forecheck pressure led to a seeing eye shot from Sergachev deflecting in off of Palat for the gut wrenching winner with 1:50 left in regulation. Brandon Hagel would score into an open net with under a minute to go to send the building home.

I was so defeated that I immediately left the house and took a ride to a familiar quiet place I’d once visited in 2012. So, I missed Lafreniere losing a scrap to Stamkos and the other chaos that transpired. It didn’t matter. It was that kind of hard defeat in the biggest game this team has played since another crushing home loss to the same opponent some seven years ago.

Everyone has their own unique way in dealing with such a loss. That’s sports in a nutshell. Deep down, I knew it was over the moment Palat scored. The Lightning are a great team for a reason. They’ve won two consecutive Stanley Cups in a cap era where they lost their whole third line that included Goodrow, who was on our side. It’s a credit to that organization along with Jon Cooper that they are trying to make history against a formidable opponent in the Avalanche for a three-peat. I respect it.

Game Six would be the end of the road for our beloved heroes. Running on empty, Gallant chose to dress a banged up Strome and play Dryden Hunt with Kakko and Reaves sitting out. The less said about it, the better.

Even though the same tired questions were asked following the 2-1 defeat that saw Stamkos get one of the luckiest bounces I’ve ever seen after Vatrano tied it, they weren’t winning that game unless the top guns stepped up. They couldn’t.

That’s how well the Lightning played. There was literally no time or space for Zibanejad, Kreider, Panarin or Fox operate. Even with Gallant splitting up Zibanejad and Kreider for two periods, nothing worked. They were dominated at five-on-five by the checking line of Anthony Cirelli, Hagel and Alex Killorn. It was the play of that trio along with Stamkos between Palat and Kucherov that altered the series.

Sometimes, you simply get beat. In the end, the Lightning proved they were the better team. But as they protected their one-goal lead to advance to a third straight Stanley Cup Finals, all I could think about was how proud I was of our team.

It was on display during the handshake line between the two teams. You could see the respect shown by the Lightning players and coaches with Cooper later paying a high compliment to what the Rangers did. Going seven in the first two rounds and then having the champs on the ropes was admirable. They just didn’t have enough left to get it done.

Let’s not forget where this team was. They weren’t in the playoffs the last five years. I don’t count the silly Qualifying Series they got blitzed in two long years ago. That really feels like longer due to how the time has moved. That was then. This is now.

I’ll readily admit that I struggled to find the words to finish this post. I needed some time off to compose my thoughts. I also only caught half of Game One the other night. It is much harder to watch the Stanley Cup when the Rangers were so close. It’s definitely a great match-up. I’d like to see the Lightning make history. I respect the heck out of that franchise. They’re built the way our team is going to be.

I feel like most of the true fans of our team have class. We aren’t bitter sore losers like another unnamed rival team who are stuck in the past. That’s not me anyway.

In some poetic way, I was actually relieved there was no game on June 14th due to ESPN. That would’ve been unbearable. I also hope Sean McDonough never works this far again for hockey. He isn’t exciting enough to be the lead announcer. Ray Ferraro is great in his role. Despite the foolish nature that he’s anti Ranger. Gee wiz.

I have nothing but praise for how the leaders of this team handled this season. They never panicked. Seeing Zibanejad become the trusted top center who can lead the way in such big games was great. He and Kreider were the definition of on an off ice leaders of our T-E-A-M.

So too were Fox, Trouba, Strome and Lindgren, who deserves an ‘A’ on his jersey. He leads by example on the ice. Kind of like Jeff Beukeboom and Dan Girardi.

I excluded Panarin because he had an unsteady postseason. While he did have the clutch series clicher against the Pens, and wound up with 16 points, he was too predictable. Whether it was due to the rumored shoulder issue he had, Panarin was too hesitant to shoot the puck and turned the puck over far too much. He’s likely going to have a new center with Strome likely gone. More is expected of our highest paid star player.

With Drury already making moves in the off-season by re-signing Vitaly Kravtsov to a one-year, $875,000 one-way deal and getting Blais re-upped for a shade over $1.5 million, he’s proactive. That’s positive. He isn’t wasting no time getting started.

I’ll be curious to see what happens with Kakko, who’s a restricted free agent this summer. He expressed disappointment with being a scratch for the final game and wants to use it as motivation. Good. He shouldn’t get more than a bridge deal around $2 million per. Prove yourself.

We know certain players won’t be back. The organization has tough decisions ahead with a choice between Strome and the younger Copp, who should get a little more due to his age and versatility. He fit in well. So did Vatrano. At best, maybe they can bring back half of the four key veteran forwards. I would lean towards Copp and Motte, who brings an element to the bottom line that’s needed.

I’m also interested to see if Drury can dump Patrik Nemeth and his $2.5 million salary by adding either a pick or prospect to free up necessary space. He was a bust. They’ll still need a veteran D to help Braden Schneider and either Zac Jones or Matthew Robertson.

Alex Georgiev will move on. Only restricted this summer before he can turn unrestricted next year, he won’t be back. They can either see if a team is interested in coughing up a mid-round pick and then extend him, or turn him loose. There might not be much interest due to that scenario. Likely destinations are Edmonton, Detroit, Montreal and Buffalo.

It’s going to be strange for a while. It’s definitely different without being able to watch the Rangers play a big game. This run was truly special. It’s too bad they can’t keep everyone. But with the salary cap only increasing by a million up to $82.5 million, that’s the reality.

Is Kravtsov really going to return or will Drury trade him? He can’t have a lot of value. It might make more sense to keep him and see what he is capable of in training camp and beyond. We’ll see. I don’t see Kakko going anywhere. Not unless there’s another young player coming back like Kirby Dach.

Thanks again go out to the Rangers for a great season. #NoQuitInNY

#LGR

Posted in Column | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Eastern Conference Final: Lightning eliminate tired Rangers with a 2-1 win in Game Six to take the series, Shesterkin brilliant in defeat, Bolts go for three-peat versus Avalanche

Losing sucks. It’s tough when your team comes so close. Sometimes, you have to lose in heartbreaking fashion to finally win.

Unfortunately, that’s what happened to the Rangers tonight in Tampa. Playing their sixth elimination game after losing Game Five in gut wrenching fashion, they were thoroughly dominated by the two-time defending champion Lightning, who won 2-1 in Game Six to advance to their third consecutive Stanley Cup Finals.

Even though they lost by a single goal to drop the Eastern Conference Final in six games, it wasn’t even that close. They were never in control. The Lightning played a great game to defeat a lethargic looking Rangers, who didn’t have a lot left in the tank.

The absurd aspect is they only trailed 1-0 when Alexis Lafreniere drew a holding minor on Steven Stamkos with 8:15 left. Given a second chance on the five-on-four, they found a way to tie the game. Off a clean face-off win by Andrew Copp, Frank Vatrano beat Andrei Vasilevskiy with a one-timer for a power play goal to tie the score with 6:53 remaining in the third period.

But just as quickly as his shot beat Vasilevskiy, the Rangers’ comeback chances were gone. It took the Lightning only 21 seconds to surge back ahead. Stamkos took a feed from Ondrej Palat and had his shot go off Igor Shesterkin and bounce over and in for the crushing series clincher with 6:32 left in regulation.

On a night Shesterkin was truly special by making several ridiculous saves on his way to 29 in a lopsided game, Stamkos made the difference by beating him twice. The sad part is both goals were of the fluky variety. It speaks to how utterly brilliant Igor was. He turned away Anthony Cirelli and other Bolts on breakaways with ease.

To be blunt, it should’ve been a blowout. That’s how well the Lightning played. They were much faster, stronger and grittier than the Rangers, who looked like a punch drunk boxer out on their feet. They played for the 20th time over 40 days. If fatigue was a factor in losing the last four games of the series, not everyone admitted it.

Gerard Gallant acknowledged that it could’ve been a factor in his team only scoring one five-on-five goal the final four games. That’s 240 minutes. However, leading scorer Mika Zibanejad, who was held off the score sheet the last three games with Chris Kreider, wouldn’t take the bait. Close to tears, he said it had nothing to do with fatigue.

We know several key players played through injuries. None more so than Ryan Lindgren, who overcame what was ailing him to will himself through after missing time in the first round. Without the ultimate warrior, the Rangers don’t get this far. He was an inspiration.

One question Gallant will have to answer is why he played a clearly hurt Ryan Strome on Saturday night. He could barely skate. Eventually, the soon to be unrestricted free agent center tapped out. He couldn’t go anymore in the third after leaving the bench during the second.

While Turk was justified in not answering that question following such a tough series defeat, he does need to further explain himself. Some of his lineup decisions were puzzling. In fact, even the Rangers beat writers were confused as to whether Strome was in or out. He tried to gut it out.

That meant Kaapo Kakko was a healthy scratch. A decision that didn’t make sense. He had good chemistry with Lafreniere and Filip Chytil, who were key contributors during this run. Was it worth sitting Kakko out to break up the Kid Line? A line that was effective at even strength.

Also dressing after sitting out the last 16 games was Dryden Hunt. I don’t get the fascination with him. He’s an honest player. But hardly played during the postseason. Why insert him over Ryan Reaves, who up until Game Five had played the whole playoffs? Very bizarre.

Kevin Rooney was in again on the fourth line with Tyler Motte and Hunt. The top line was broken up. It was Zibanejad in between Lafreniere and Vatrano. Kreider was on a third line with Chytil and Barclay Goodrow.

The mismatched lines didn’t help. Eventually, Gallant reunited Kreider with Zibanejad and Vatrano. He also tried Artemi Panarin up on the first line. It was too little, too late. If not for the second power play they converted on a face-off play, they’d have been shutout. That’s how bad the offense was.

The mind-boggling part is Stamkos’ second was actually stopped by Shesterkin. However, the puck took a funny hop up in the air and just over past the goal line as the Lightning captain’s skate made contact with Igor. But the video review by the league confirmed the obvious. It was an unlucky break.

Considering how well they forechecked and defended, that was enough of a cushion to beat the Rangers. They even had trouble pulling Shesterkin due to the Lightning pressure. Once they did, all that got through was a tough Zibanejad low one-timer that Vasilevskiy padded away with nine seconds remaining. The final seconds ticked off as the Rangers could only hang their heads.

It was that kind of game. One that confused many before it started. With nobody knowing whether or not Strome would play, Kakko was penciled in on the second line. But that turned out to be false. Even the Rangers On MSG had it wrong.

Imagine how fans felt. Nobody knew what the heck was going on. Only that for some reason, Hunt was listed on the fourth line in a do or die game. It was mystifying. Gallant had lines he never even tried during the entire season. Why?

I could understand splitting up Zibanejad and Kreider to try to balance the lineup out. But subtracting Kakko just left a funny feeling. Not that he would’ve been the difference. But why separate a good line in such a big game.

It was also painfully obvious to everyone that the second line wasn’t the same with a visibly hobbled Strome. That’s the line that needed an adjustment. But Gallant didn’t. Even with Panarin skating well again, he had little help. It made it easier for the Lightning to defend.

At the start of the game, Gallant had the new Zibanejad line against the Anthony Cirelli line who dominated them over the last four games. It was that adjustment from Jon Cooper along with shifting Stamkos back to center between Palat and Nikita Kucherov that turned it around. Cirelli dominated the match-up against Zibanejad.

In fact, the Cirelli line with Brandon Hagel and Alex Killorn spent several long shifts deep in the Rangers’ zone. That put Zibanejad, Lafreniere and Vatrano on the defensive throughout a lopsided first period that saw the Lightning dictate the terms.

After an initial first shot from Lafreniere on Vasilevskiy, the Cirelli unit pinned them in often. It didn’t matter which defense pair was out. K’Andre Miller and Jacob Trouba had a tough time getting pucks out due to the Zibanejad line struggles. They turned over the puck repeatedly.

Much of the Bolts’ work was done along the boards. They won most of the battles for loose pucks and really made life difficult. This was a theme. They’d cycle the puck and set up good shots with traffic in front of Shesterkin. That tenacious style wore on the Rangers.

Although they didn’t get to Shesterkin early, the Lightning were shooting pucks often and doubled up the Rangers in attempts (25-12) during the first. They held an 11-7 edge in shots and out-chanced the Rangers by a wide margin.

That included a few dangerous opportunities for Cirelli and Killorn on a strong shift where they had the Zibanejad line, Lindgren and Adam Fox on the ropes. Unfortunately, that was a common occurrence.

Stamkos was flying during this game. He got a tough backhand that Shesterkin handled to keep it scoreless. His line with Palat and Kucherov would buzz throughout.

After spending very little time in the Lightning end, the new third line had a good shift. They actually were able to generate a forecheck. It led to a Chytil backhand up high that Vasilevskiy stayed with. He then turned aside Goodrow. Kreider provided a lot of grunt work during that shift.

Whenever Strome was on the ice for a shift with Panarin and Copp, he was noticeably struggling. It was sad to watch him. He really shouldn’t have played. He’s been a good team guy and very good Ranger since Jeff Gorton stole him from Edmonton. It’s too bad this is probably the way he’ll go out. I wish him luck.

When Cirelli, Hagel and Killorn weren’t circling around the Rangers’ zone like killer bees, there was plenty of physicality. You had Trouba finish a check on Cirelli. He was a booing target of the fans. Erik Cernak lined up Lafreniere. He had a solid series playing his usual gritty style.

One of the best chances came halfway through the period. Pierre-Edouard Bellemare was able to get a tricky deflection on Shesterkin that he padded away. Ross Colton then missed a rebound.

The best opportunity the Rangers had was when Lafreniere got behind the Tampa defense for a backhand that Vasilevskiy turned away. It was his best save of the first.

On more sustained pressure, Cirelli came in on Shesterkin for a breakaway and tried to slide a backhand around him. But he easily got across to make the kick save to keep it scoreless with over a minute left.

Despite the Lightning having a clear edge in play, the game was tied. During the intermission segment on ESPN, Mark Messier didn’t like the Rangers’ energy. He also second guessed Gallant’s lines that were put in a blender. It was good insight.

Even following time off, the Rangers immediately allowed Cirelli to walk in and get another point blank chance 18 seconds into the second period. However, Shesterkin again robbed him. After a pair of Miller shot blocks, Hagel had a shot go off the goalpost. That line was by far the best.

The Bolts continued to press the attack. On a two-on-one, Stamkos had Kucherov for what looked like a sure goal. But Shesterkin somehow managed to get across to deny the Kucherov backhand redirect for a fantastic save. He was incredible in this game.

While the Lightning came in waves to generate quality chances, it was a lot of one and none done for the Blueshirts. They looked like they were skating in quicksand. The only player who got good shots on Vasilevskiy was Chytil. He had a very good postseason. His stock is up.

Following a routine save for Vasilevskiy on a long try from Hunt, Rooney got into a scrum with Game Five hero Mikhail Sergachev. They each got the gate for roughing, leading to some four-on-four.

Even this was awful. The Rangers were tentative. Zibanejad and Kreider were reunited, but did zilch against Cirelli and Killorn. Panarin got a shot that Vasilevskiy stopped when he and Copp worked together against Stamkos and Kucherov. It was a whole lot of nothing.

Following a Shesterkin stop on Sergachev, Chytil got a third shot on Vasilevskiy that he handled. On that shift, Lafreniere joined Goodrow and Chytil due to Kreider taking a shift with Zibanejad at four-on-four. It really would’ve made better sense to keep Lafreniere there.

As the offense continued to go at a snails pace, the Bolts kept coming close. Cirelli had another chance sail wide. He could’ve easily had two or three goals. Then, a bad turnover allowed Pat Maroon to get a shot in front that Shesterkin denied. He was in a zone.

Just when you thought you’d seen it all, a harmless rush by Stamkos led to an innocent looking shot from the outside beating Shesterkin stick side at 10:43 of the second. On the play, Palat got the puck up for him at center. Strome pulled up. But Lindgren was on Stamkos when he let go of his wrist shot that fooled Shesterkin.

It was very hard to figure out what happened. Maybe Stamkos’ shot fooled him due to him getting it off with Lindgren there. He didn’t pick it up until it was too late. That really felt like game over. That’s how dominant the Lightning were at five-on-five.

Refs Chris Rooney and Jean Hebert were letting everything go. They missed a pair of Lightning infractions in the first. Then let go of two Rangers’ penalties in the second. That included a huge hit by Trouba where he caught Corey Perry on the train tracks. The live view made it look like the puck was there. But it was interference. Dave Jackson said those are hard to pick up.

When Trouba wasn’t getting booed, you had Shesterkin doing his best to keep the Rangers alive. He made a good stop on a Zach Bogosian backhand. He really held up his end of the bargain. Too bad the Ranger offense looked allergic to shooting and forechecking. It was hard to watch.

Panarin then got his stick up on Cernak to hand the Lightning the game’s first power play. But like most of the series except for the turning point in Game Three (they’ll regret that one for sure), they didn’t do a whole lot with it. Credit the Rangers penalty kill for holding them to one shot.

Predictably, they were again way more dangerous at even strength. Palat nearly got one. He really killed our team. It was his game-winner with 41.6 seconds left in Game Three that changed things. Then his backbreaking winner that decided Game Five. He was the best player in the series. No disrespect to Kucherov or Stamkos. It wss Palat that delivered in crunch time.

Shesterkin would also deny Killorn in tight. Ray Ferraro couldn’t believe some of the saves Igor was making. It was special. It’s too bad it didn’t lead to them stealing this game and forcing a deciding Game Seven.

With under two minutes left, Vasilevskiy made a rare stop on Vatrano. He was one of the most effective forwards. He didn’t look slow. For the period, the Rangers only got six shots through. They were being outshot 23-12 through two periods.

In the third, the Lightning again got the quick start. This time, Shesterkin victimized Hagel, who like his line mates had to be wondering what they had to do to score a goal.

Nearly two and a half minutes into the period, Perry high-sticked Chytil. He was lucky it didn’t draw blood. It was pretty reckless. Instead, it was a two-minute minor.

How to describe the first power play? Hideous. Way too predictable. Even though the top unit with Chytil replacing Strome had setup time, they got five shots blocked by a bunch of determined Bolts. One of which included Ryan McDonagh. He was very good defensively blocking six shots. Cernak also blocked Zibanejad twice.

When play returned to even strength, Lindgren rejected a Stamkos shot following a hit. He led the Rangers with four blocks in 22:33. What a gamer. Maybe next year, we’ll see an ‘A’ sewed on his jersey. He deserves one of the alternates.

Following yet another clutch save from Shesterkin on Hagel, the Rangers finally had their one shot at scoring. Trouba took a good low shot that rebounded off Vasilevskiy right to Copp. But his backhand was denied by the pad of Vasilevskiy with 13:16 remaining to cheers.

That felt like it. But the Lightning kept missing on scoring chances. Colton and Nick Paul missed the net. Then Cirelli was robbed again by Igor. He never allowed them to get any breathing room.

Eventually, Lafreniere sucked Stamkos into grabbing him for a holding minor with 8:15 left. Even though he didn’t like the call, it made up for the misses earlier in the game.

The top unit nearly drew even. But Kreider couldn’t quite tip in a Zibanejad shot pass from his spot at the side. Normally, that’s money. It just wouldn’t go in what was Kreider’s 100th career playoff game as a Ranger. Only Dan Girardi and Marc Staal have more.

When it looked like it was hopeless after Vasilevskiy stopped a Zibanejad shot, out came the second unit. This time, Copp beat Bellemare clean to get the puck back for a quick Vatrano one-timer that beat Vasilevskiy to tie the game with 6:53 left.

It was shocking. I don’t know about anyone else in our Rangers Twitter chat group that includes Moka. I didn’t expect it. It happened so fast that I couldn’t believe it. A miracle.

But before you could even think another improbable comeback by the never say die Blueshirts, they gave it right back. On a play through the neutral zone, Stamkos dusted Trouba to receive a Kucherov feed on a two-on-one. His initial shot was saved by Shesterkin. But somehow, the puck hopped up and over to go in with 6:32 left.

It was hard to fathom. Both Stamkos goals weren’t the kind you’d have expected. Eerily similar to the Sergachev goal and Palat winner last game. Maybe that’s the only way to beat Shesterkin. He was superb. Look at the last four Bolts’ goals that got past him. All very fluky.

That’s hockey. It’s a game of inches. Sometimes, the bounces go your way. Sometimes, they don’t. One thing I want to make clear. The Lightning were better than the Rangers. They earned it.

Following Stamkos’ second that answered Vatrano only 21 seconds later, the Lightning went for the kill. But Shesterkin wasn’t having it. He again stopped Hagel and then made a save on Kucherov.

After a delay in the action due to a repair of the glass, Lafreniere had a shot go high and over the top. Then Copp missed.

There weren’t many chances in the last five minutes. The Lightning checked very well. They took a lot of ice away. It’s a big reason they shutdown Zibanejad, Kreider, Panarin and Fox. They found it hard to do anything.

With Shesterkin finally off for an extra attacker, Panarin got a long shot on Vasilevskiy that he handled. Both he and Zibanejad had shots blocked. Gallant took his timeout with 17 seconds left.

Copp was able to win the offensive draw from Stamkos. That allowed Fox to make one more pass across for a Zibanejad shot that Vasilevskiy kicked away. As they scrambled behind the net, time wound down.

As the Lightning celebrated on the ice by congratulating Vasilevskiy, all the Rangers could do was look skyward and wonder what could’ve been. Zibanejad and Lafreniere both had somber looks. It really was too bad it had to end. But that’s sports.

They captured the traditional handshake. During it, Shesterkin got plenty of love from Lightning players including Vasilevskiy and Kucherov. Kreider and McDonagh had a nice moment. Zibanejad got some respect from countryman Victor Hedman, who missed the end of the second due to getting clipped by Lafreniere.

Goodrow was last in line. He shared some warm embraces with his former teammates, who love and respect him. It wss nice. It’s gotta be tough to be on the other side. The Rangers don’t get this far without Goodrow, who showed a lot of heart coming back from the bad foot. Ditto Motte, who I hope they keep.

Those are the kind of gritty players you need to reach this stage. It might not have gone their way. But the Rangers gave us a great season. They provided fans with many exciting moments. The first time back in the playoffs and they showed so much heart and character.

In the end, they really lived up to their nickname. #NoQuitInNY … thank you to the 2021-22 New York Rangers for an amazing run. Ig-or! Ig-or! Ig-or!

https://twitter.com/BattleOfHudson/status/1535837107708735490?t=7M5moR5qstngppL3Pd0oRw&s=19

The Lightning now go for a three-peat. Something unheard of these days. They will go up against the well rested Avalanche in the Stanley Cup Finals. A very fast and skilled team that might be without Nazem Kadri. The Bolts made it minus Brayden Point. He may or may not be back.

As much as it hurts right now, that should be a great series. Lots of star power. Maybe I’ll do a preview if I feel up to it. I’d like to see the Lightning make history. I have friends on that side. I respect the team they have. It’s so hard to get back. They lost their whole third line due to the cap. If they pull it off, it’s right up there with any Dynasty.

I have written enough. I’ll be back in two days with more. Once we know what the injuries were, it’ll help put into the perspective what this team accomplished. Thank you to our Blueshirts for an unbelievable year! I can’t wait for 2023. I think we can win it all next season. Why not!

Posted in NYRangers | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Lightning Strikes: Palat’s winner with 1:50 left in regulation puts Rangers on the brink in gut wrenching Game Five, Offense continues to fire blanks, Do or Die in Game Six

If this was the plan, it sure didn’t go well. On another crushing goal from Ranger killer Ondrej Palat with 1:50 left in regulation, the Rangers lost a heartbreaking Game Five to the Lightning 3-1 before a stunned MSG.

Gone is the record eight-game winning streak that they set this postseason. Also gone is any wiggle room. The Rangers are now facing playoff extinction against the stingy defending champs who have held them to one five-on-five goal over the last three games.

They trail the series three games to two. It’s do or die when they play Game Six at Tampa on Saturday. It’ll be their sixth elimination game. The Rangers will put their 5-0 record on the line when the Eastern Conference Final returns to Amalie Arena. They must show the same determination and resiliency to force a deciding Game Seven back at home on Tuesday, June 14.

That is a long way off. So is the suddenly slumping offense that only has beaten Andrei Vasilevskiy four times on the last 90 shots over the last three losses. He made 24 saves on 25 shots tonight to win his third straight game against hard luck loser Igor Shesterkin (24 saves on 26 shots).

Once again, Mika Zibanejad and Chris Kreider couldn’t get anything going. Gerard Gallant allowed them to be matched up during several shifts by Jon Cooper’s second line comprised of Anthony Cirelli, Alex Killorn and Brandon Hagel. Zibanejad and Kreider couldn’t get free. Frank Vatrano had the best chance in a tie game, but his backhand wrap-around was denied by Vasilevskiy in the third period.

Although he didn’t register a point, Artemi Panarin had his best game of the series. He was around the puck a lot making plays both offensively and defensively. However, despite three shots including a very tough shot through a screen when the Rangers led by a goal that Vasilevskiy made a big save on, he wasn’t able to make the difference.

Neither were Andrew Copp or Ryan Strome. The best opportunity came when Copp took a Panarin feed and had Strome open down low. But his backhand pass just missed connecting for a go-ahead goal. That was the best chance they had.

Instead, the Lightning found a way to finally establish puck pressure down low. After the Rangers failed to clear the zone twice, Victor Hedman got a pass across for a Mikhail Sergachev shot that changed direction off Palat to beat Shesterkin with 1:50 left in the third period. It was eerily similar to Sergachev’s tying goal that came with 2:26 remaining in the second period.

Sergachev picked an opportunistic time to have his best game. He had a goal and assist in 22:46 to help lift the Bolts to the first road victory of the series. He got extended time due to Ryan McDonagh missing 14 minutes due to an injury sustained on a battle behind his net with Kreider. But he did return to play down the stretch.

The only goal scored by a Ranger came from Ryan Lindgren, who surprised Vasilevskiy from a tough angle to beat him high blocker side unassisted at 10:29 of the second. He had Tyler Motte in front battling for position when he got his first career postseason goal.

It looked like that goal might be the difference. But as it turned out, it was a huge Vasilevskiy save on Panarin that really helped the Lightning come back. That and ironically another key save to deny Lindgren on the doorstep in a tie game during the third proved to be the turning points.

On a night they got back both Strome and Filip Chytil, it wasn’t enough to get a win. Gallant also opted to healthy scratch Ryan Reaves for the first time this postseason. He kept Kevin Rooney in to play on the fourth line with Barclay Goodrow and Motte. Goodrow hasn’t been as effective in this round. Maybe that blocked shot he had isn’t helping. He’s a gamer.

Adam Fox was again held in check by the Lightning. He did create one good opportunity on a forecheck during the third. But had his shot missed wide before Vasilevskiy got over to make the clutch stop on a pinching Lindgren down low. That sequence was one they’ll rue if they can’t win Game Six.

Ditto for the Copp to Strome play that he just couldn’t get into position for to bury the pass. There was also a near perfect passing play earlier in the game where Alexis Lafreniere and Kaapo Kakko nearly had Chytil down low for a put away. Those are the ones they needed to score on.

The crazy part is if you look at the three goals each side got at even strength, they were on fluky plays. Lindgren who connected on his first from a near impossible angle with Motte creating a distraction in front.

The tying Sergachev goal where he intercepted a Rooney clear and fired a seeing eye shot past a Corey Perry screen that Shesterkin never picked up. Then the Palat game-winner where it was another innocent looking Sergachev shot that the gritty Palat somehow got a piece of to put the Bolts up a goal at 18:10.

With the Rangers scrambling around as Shesterkin came off for Lafreniere, Hagel salted it away on a Nikita Kucherov pass with 59 seconds left to send the fans to the exits. What a tough way to lose. Especially when overtime was looming.

In many ways, this reminded me of Games Five and Seven in 2015. The only difference being that in those excruciating losses, the Rangers never scored. In this one, they got the first goal. But were unable to build upon it. They let the championship caliber Lightning hang around long enough to steal it.

There’s something about Jon Cooper. He just figures out a way to take away a team strength. The Rangers’ biggest is their speed. They’ve been unable to get any odd-man rushes the last two games and were limited to one power play on Thursday night. Although refs Wes McCauley and Jean Hebert missed an obvious grab by Jan Rutta on Kakko that should’ve been called.

Outside of that miss, I don’t have any complaints about the officiating. They let the two teams play. Even if I didn’t particularly care for the call on K’Andre Miller, who continues to play like a savvy veteran, the Rangers killed off that penalty. They went two-for-two.

https://twitter.com/BattleOfHudson/status/1535113343064846336?t=ZzW_q3MUvkuV8VI-5RxzwQ&s=19

It isn’t about the special teams. It’s about five-on-five. They aren’t creating enough shots or chances to win this series. Save the excuses. Stop trying to pin it on the refs. If they can’t fix the scoring issue at even strength by Saturday night, that’ll be why this run ends.

It’s nitty-gritty time. They have to dig deeper than ever before. Get a game at their barn where Cooper will dictate the match-ups. That means Zibanejad and Kreider better step up along with Panarin and Fox. Their best players have to be their best players regardless of all of that.

Think back to Game Six at East Rutherford in 1994. That’s what they’re facing. It’ll require a maximum effort to win this game and force it seven. Can they do it? Sure they can. It will take their absolute best.

Following another superb rendition of the national anthem by John Brancy, the puck was dropped for Game Five at 33rd and 7th. The fans were certainly into it. So were the Rangers who still had Reaves in street clothes screaming, “Shesty, release us!” Great team guy. I’m sure he’ll be back in for Game Six.

Gallant started the fourth line against the Cirelli line. Cooper had Hedman with Erik Cernak, who has quietly been effective by finishing checks and blocking shots. It was Miller and Jacob Trouba for the Rangers.

There weren’t many shots in the early going. The Lightning only had one shot in the first half of the period, but hit two goalposts. On a Steven Stamkos wide dump in, the puck came right to Kucherov whose slap shot rang off the far post.

Vasilevskiy made his first save on a long Braden Schneider shot off a face-off win by Zibanejad. It wasn’t a great night for Schneider, who took a penalty (hooking) even though most fans and even the bench didn’t agree. They killed it off.

On a play where Trouba pinched up, Miller raced back to break up a two-on-one. He left his feet and got his stick down to break up the play. It was a tremendous defensive read. Miller has made a lot of great plays during this postseason. He continues to excel.

With the Kid Line reunited, the cohesive trio of Lafreniere, Kakko and Chytil nearly hooked up for the game’s first goal. Lafreniere made a good pass to find Kakko in the slot area. His pass down low for Chytil, who just missed a tip-in. That close.

On a good forecheck by the second line, Panarin missed wide on a shot with traffic in front of Vasilevskiy. That line with Strome and Copp cycled the puck effectively. They just weren’t rewarded.

After a slow start, the Bolts put together consecutive strong shifts to get it going. Shesterkin made two saves including one with the pesky Perry fishing for a rebound that wasn’t there. Fox took care of him.

Nick Paul then got a counter attack off a misplay inside the Tampa zone. He was able to get off a good shot that had Shesterkin beat high glove. But it hit the post. It marked the second time in the period a Lightning shot drew iron.

Panarin nearly got one on another good shift. But his slap shot was denied by Vasilevskiy, who then stopped Chytil on a rebound chance. A bit later, Lafreniere nearly had Kakko. But the pass just missed. It typified the kind of game it was. Frustrating.

With two and a half minutes left, Pat Maroon nearly had Pierre-Edouard Bellemare, whose shot in the slot missed wide. The Rangers were fortunate. Following that close call, a strong Miller got out of trouble.

https://twitter.com/BattleOfHudson/status/1535064996404596736?t=M6bl_PvjZm8Ydql467Yotg&s=19

In the second period, it was the Lightning who picked up their play. After only having three shots during the first, they got six of the first seven shots to start the period.

That included Palat using his speed in transition to get a shot on Shesterkin after Trouba got caught pinching in. The speedy Palat would also draw a tacky hooking minor on Schneider, who he had a step on. By the way it’s called now, it’s a penalty. I could understand Gallant’s frustration.

However, Shesterkin wasn’t called on to make too many saves. However, he did anticipate well a Stamkos pass across for a Kucherov one-timer from his spot to make the pad save on the Lightning power play.

He also made two good stops on Maroon previously when the Bolts’ second power play unit started. For some reason, Maroon is very effective in these games. Maybe it’s because he plays a simple game and is always around the net. He has been a positive factor in all three of Tampa’s wins.

Following a successful kill, Kreider finally able to create a wide open look for Zibanejad. But he missed his one-timer high and wide. Those are the ones he must connect on. He and Kreider need to come up big on Saturday night.

Following a Shesterkin save, he alertly moved the puck up to center ice to catch the Lightning in a bad change. They were called for a bench minor. This was the only power play of the game for the Rangers.

It wasn’t good enough. A face-off loss to Cirelli allowed him to clear down the ice. He also got the best chance when he moved in and forced Shesterkin into a difficult save shorthanded. He’s a very good player. One of the best defensive forwards in the game.

The only two shots the Rangers got on the power play came from Fox and Trouba from distance. Vasilevskiy had no problem handling either. Hardly enough pressure.

After Shesterkin stopped Kucherov on one of his few good scoring chances, here came Lindgren who pinched down during a strong shift from the fourth line. With Motte battling Zach Bogosian in front, he threw a tricky high shot that snuck past Vasilevskiy short side at 10:29 to put the Rangers ahead.

It was just a smart play by Lindgren. He was able to find high blocker on Vasilevskiy, who’s had difficulty with that area during the postseason. The goal was unassisted.

But right after that goal, here came the Bolts. Shesterkin made a save on Sergachev. Then Miller was tracking back on Perry. He went for the stick lift, but got called for hooking. He wasn’t happy. I thought it was a garbage call myself.

The Rangers still kept the Lightning from tying it. Shesterkin made three saves on the power play. That included stops on Hedman and Paul. It really felt like maybe they could win if they took the one-goal lead to the locker room after two.

Instead, they never quite got there. Following Riley Nash having his backhand hit the outside of the post, the Lightning were able to get a good shift from their third line. The forecheck looked to be contained. But Rooney’s clear around the boards was intercepted by Sergachev, who then had his shot sneak past Shesterkin to tie the game with 2:26 left in the second.

It was another strange play that allowed Sergachev to score unassisted. Rooney thought he had an out by going around. But Sergachev made a good pinch and just found enough room to have his seeing eye shot go through a Perry screen into the net.

https://twitter.com/BattleOfHudson/status/1535076770080526337?t=uC9kBm-0aLrGx5i1tBMHCw&s=19

How to describe the third period? Remember seven years ago. It was that eerie uncomfortable feeling. The same exact opponent with the same coach. They still have holdovers from that team.

Playing a low-scoring one-goal game at five-on-five versus that team isn’t the best formula. There’s a reason they’ve won back-to-back Cups. They play well in tightly contested games like this.

Early in the period, the Lightning were playing a more simplified game. That led to some shots and chances.

However, Vatrano did get open on a solid shift by the Zibanejad line. But he whistled his shot wide. That’s how it’s gone for that line the last three games. They must move on. They’ll be needed to win this next game.

Shesterkin made a strong save on Palat. He would also get across the crease to turn away a Maroon backhand wrap-around.

The Lightning continued to threaten to go ahead. But Shesterkin stopped Cirelli, who’s getting closer and closer to scoring. He also just missed on a two-on-one earlier in the contest where he had the upper portion of the net.

While Panarin came back hard defensively, Strome finally got a shot on Vasilevskiy near the halfway mark. He didn’t see much rubber at that point. The Rangers picked it up afterwards.

After that, that’s where Fox had some daylight on the short side. But his shot missed wide behind the net. A pinching Lindgren recovered the puck, came out in front and was robbed by Vasilevskiy of his second goal with 9:37 remaining.

The sequence was shocking. That it was Lindgren and not a forward who had that kind of golden opportunity to put the Rangers back ahead was startling. Copp was also in the vicinity on a makeshift line witu Panarin and Zibanejad.

Rooney would get a couple of shots that Vasilevskiy handled including one from inside. But the Tampa netminder easily gloved it away. The Big Cat was not going to allow another goal unless it came off a screen or deflection. The Rangers better take notice for next game if they want this series to go the distance.

On what was another shift Chytil, Lafreniere and Kakko spent inside the Lightning zone, Kakko was grabbed by Rutta, who threw his arms up. No call. The crowd booed. It was an obvious penalty. McCauley and Hebert simply put their whistles away.

Then came the biggest scoring chance of the period. On a great pass by Panarin to Copp at the slot, it was a two-on-one down low. Instead of shooting, he realized he had Strome open for a potential put away at the side. But his backhand feed was missed by Strome, who couldn’t quite get his stick down.

If they don’t come back to win the series, they’ll be talking about that for a while. It was that close. I love Strome. I just wish he could bury those. He will get another chance with Copp and Panarin, who really deserved better than what he got last night.

With 4:45 left, Ryan McDonagh returned after missing almost 15 minutes. He got into a battle with Kreider behind his net and skated off. But of course, he returned.

Following an icing, an offensive zone draw was won by Stamkos against Chytil. Following a Miller block and Kucherov wide shot, the Rangers had two chances to get out of trouble. They failed to do so.

With the crowd nervously groaning, Hedman kept the puck in. He then found Sergachev, who had enough time to send another wrist shot towards the net. This time, Palat got a piece of it to score his eighth of the postseason with 1:50 remaining.

I knew it was over. I couldn’t contain my disgust. Why this team. Why can’t they beat them? Even after Shesterkin went off the ice for a six-on-five, Lafreniere’s centering pass from behind the net went nowhere.

Kucherov pushed the puck ahead for a Hagel empty netter at 19:01. I didn’t stay home to see Lafreniere take a beating from Stamkos at the end. I was too disgusted.

Instead, I went for a ride and wound up back at our old public schoolyard. It’s the first time I’ve been back there after a playoff defeat since 2012. Only that was series over. It isn’t over yet. But it feels like it. I hope I’m wrong.

I must’ve been in that schoolyard for almost 20 minutes just sitting and thinking. I don’t want the season to end tomorrow. It’s been too special. If this team has the true character I think they do, then they’ll do everything they can to get back home for a deciding Game Seven.

For now, we’ll have to wait and see. It could take a shutout by Shesterkin to get there. He doesn’t have one yet. They’re going to need him to be special. Think Mike Richter at The Meadowlands 28 years ago. Without him, there’s no Messier natural hat trick or Guarantee. No Cup either.

Do or Die.

https://twitter.com/BattleOfHudson/status/1535102680275853313?t=RfHN4JRyeNp1_UB7U4RM5A&s=19

https://twitter.com/BattleOfHudson/status/1535108370126057472?t=CNAR655k6PZmSU50ftDfjQ&s=19

Posted in NYRangers | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Chytil and Strome are in for Game Five

When the puck drops for Game Five tonight, both Filip Chytil and Ryan Strome are in.

That’s a relief. After leaving Game Three with a lower-body injury, Strome missed Game Four of the Eastern Conference Final. A game the Rangers lost decidedly 4-1 to the rejuvenated Lightning who evened the series.

It was also late in the second period of that loss that Chytil left with an upper-body injury after taking a good hit by Lightning defenseman Victor Hedman. After not returning the other night, he’ll be available for tonight’s pivotal game.

Certainly, the Rangers need both key centers for tonight. Having not scored an even strength goal over the two losses at Tampa, it should provide a boost for Gerard Gallant’s lineup.

It wasn’t ideal having a shortened bench in either of the previous two games. Neither did it help that once Chytil went down on Tuesday night, Gallant had to mix and match lines. Barclay Goodrow wasn’t as effective centering Artemi Panarin and Andrew Copp. Neither was Kevin Rooney, who anchored the checking line..

With things less than ideal, Turk even split up his number one line. Mika Zibanejad and Chris Kreider have been inseparable. But with Kreider not going, he found himself out of place with Copp and Frank Vatrano.

Let’s just say nothing went right at Amalie Arena. It’s time to flip the script when Game Five drops at MSG later. That means the more familiar lines Gallant trusts. By getting both Strome and Chytil back, he can play the lineup that has better chemistry.

Update: Scratch that. It’ll be Rooney in for Ryan Reaves centering line four. I’ll have more on why later.

Kreider-Zibanejad-Vatrano

Panarin-Strome-Copp

Lafreniere-Chytil-Kakko

Motte-RooneyReaves Goodrow

Lindgren-Fox

Miller-Trouba

Braun-Schneider

Shesterkin

That also means we should see Strome back on the top power play unit with Zibanejad, Kreider, Panarin and Adam Fox. Chytil will be back on the second unit with Copp, Vatrano, Lafreniere and Jacob Trouba.

No matter what, the Rangers must play a lot better. There can’t be any passengers. They must be the aggressor and get in on the forecheck against the Tampa D. They didn’t do enough in the last two games and were mostly reduced to the outside by the Bolts.

Use the Garden crowd early. They’ll be behind them. It’s the biggest game this team’s played in a long time. It’s a chance to go up three games to two on the defending champs. Protect home ice.

They must do a better job against Nikita Kucherov, Steven Stamkos and Ondrej Palat. They were huge in Games Three and Four. Slow them down. The best way is to win that match-up by making them defend. Similar to what Anthony Cirelli, Alex Killorn and Brandon Hagel were able to do against the Zibanejad line.

Match-ups matter. Winning them are keys. So too is the Kid Line. They sure missed Chytil after he left. It’s that cohesive trio with Lafreniere and Kaapo Kakko who provide energy by being able to cycle pucks down low and generate scoring chances.

Discipline remains a key. In Game Three, it was the Trouba penalties that really hurt the Blueshirts. The Bolts scored twice on the power play to come from behind to win Game Three with Palat getting the crusher with 41.6 seconds left in regulation.

Maintaining discipline isn’t just about avoiding the penalty box. It’s also about managing the puck. Defending well. The Rangers must get back to playing like a five-man unit to be successful. Do that and their chances increase.

Igor vs Vasy. By now, everyone knows how important the goalie match-up is. Featuring the game’s top two netminders, Igor Shesterkin and Andrei Vasilevskiy have taken care of business at home. Now, it’s a huge Game Five at The Garden. Whoever can make the key saves tonight will likely give their team an edge.

Fox and Hedman. In the first two games, it went to Fox. He controlled play and impacted both wins at home. However, he was held in check in the two losses at Tampa where it was Hedman who stepped up. They’re two of the best defensemen in the game. Fox will need to have a stronger night.

Clear the net. The past two games, the Lightning had a lot more success crashing Igor’s crease and making it tough by taking extra whacks after whistles. The Blueshirts must take care of that by pushing them out. Knock players down. But don’t take penalties.

Make life harder on Vasy. There’s no question Vasilevskiy was in a zone once his team fell behind two games. Especially when they gave up consecutive power play goals to trail by two in the all important third game. He was locked in and made the big stops. However, he hardly had to work in Game Four due to the lack of traffic. The Rangers have to make life harder on the Big Cat. Screen and get tips. Win those battles.

Undoubtedly, it’ll come down to who executes better. There will be urgency on both sides. But for the Rangers, it’s very important to win this game. They must be hungry. Win those loose pucks and board battles. They must out-work and out-grind the Lightning.

I’ll have more later.

Posted in Column, NYRangers | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Eastern Conference Final: Rangers put to sleep by stifling Lightning in Game Four snooze fest, Bolts tie series, Chytil hurt, Kucherov the difference

It’s all even. The Lightning made life miserable for the Rangers. In what was a sleep inducing Game Four at Amalie Arena, they were put to sleep by a dominant Lightning who won 4-1 to send the series back to MSG tied.

It wasn’t even close. Despite having an edge in shots, the Blueshirts never were in sync. It showed. A bad start saw Pat Maroon score the game’s first goal only 2:38 in when he steered in a rebound following a strong move by Zach Bogosian that Igor Shesterkin stopped.

That scoring play was indicative of how bad the Rangers played. Bogosian went around Ryan Reaves and then toe dragged Justin Braun to force Shesterkin into a tough save. With the puck loose in the slot, an unchecked Maroon backhanded it in while the rest of the fourth line and third pair watched.

They entered the game without Ryan Strome, who tried to give it a go in warm-ups. But he was in obvious pain. Barclay Goodrow moved up to center the second line. Kevin Rooney came in to fill the fourth line center role. Both lines were weakened without Strome, who it turns out is more important than some fans think.

It got even worse. With over six minutes left in the second period, Filip Chytil took a big Victor Hedman hit along the boards. He would leave the contest with 3:03 left due to an upper-body injury. Along with the setback to Strome, the center position is now a big concern going into a pivotal Game Five.

The only positive is that they’ll have two days off to get ready for that big game back at MSG. The extra day of rest could help Strome and Chytil. It’s obvious that both are needed if they’re going to knock off the two-time defending champs. Maybe that can also aid the team because they looked lost tonight.

Five-on-five is becoming a problem in the Eastern Conference Final. In fact, if they don’t figure out a way to improve at even strength, they can’t win this series. Jon Cooper has turned it into a tight checking affair with little space. A defensive style he’s used before. See 2015. Same round.

Now, it’s up to Gerard Gallant to find a formula to beat it. He will have the benefit of the last change which can help offset the match-up of Anthony Cirelli against Mika Zibanejad. One that’s been tilted in favor of the Bolts. Since Cooper put Cirelli between Alex Killorn and Brandon Hagel, they’ve blanketed Zibanejad, Chris Kreider and Frank Vatrano.

In fact, Gallant was so disturbed by what he saw that he split up Zibanejad and Kreider. Kreider had a bad night. He was unable to get much done and took two penalties in the third period. At one point, Artemi Panarin was up with Zibanejad and Alexis Lafreniere. That was the only time the Rangers showed a pulse. Lafreniere was denied by Andrei Vasilevskiy late in the second on one of the only chances.

Without Chytil, it forced Gallant to do more line tweaking. It was a mixed bag. Nothing worked. That’s how well the Lightning played. They defended and made it easy on Andrei Vasilevskiy. He finished with 33 saves on 34 shots.

Shesterkin allowed three goals on 30 shots. It wasn’t about him. It was all on how inept the Rangers were. That’s why the best-of-seven series is now all even at two apiece. They must dig deeper than they ever have to knock off the NHL version of Jason and Michael Myers.

They can’t just rely on what they’ve done at home thus far. They’ve won a franchise record eight straight games at MSG in the playoffs. Getting the ninth will come down to sheer will and determination. Heart and guts. The character this team has displayed throughout.

In regards to the lineup, you had one key change. Rooney in for Strome. That meant tweaks to the second and fourth lines. Neither of which were good. Not that the Zibanejad line was either. The only line who looked decent was the Kid Line. Eventually, Gallant was forced to break them up.

Adam Fox was again shutdown. The Lightning were very stingy and took away the stretch pass. A familiar script that Cooper was able to successfully do seven years ago. Of the six defensemen, K’Andre Miller was the best. But he did get beat on the third goal. Partner Jacob Trouba had seven shots to lead the team. But that’s not a good thing.

The Bolts stuck with their revised lineup from Game Three. It worked again. They neutralized the Rangers while executing better at five-on-five to score three times. Following a late Panarin power play goal on a six-on-four, Ondrej Palat put it away with an empty netter. He was their best player finishing with a goal and two assists.

Following another great anthem, it was third line versus third line. Once again, the Chytil line with Lafreniere and Kaapo Kakko spent some time in the Tampa zone. It led to Trouba getting a long shot on Vasilevskiy. He would then have a second attempt blocked by Victor Hedman, who again was strong for the Bolts.

Immediately, the Cirelli line put pressure on the Zibanejad line. They had the puck in their end. This has become a theme the last two games. Cirelli is a very good skater and two-way pivot who does a lot well. He might not have scored, but his line impacted the game.

After some initial zone time by the checking line which led to Vasilevskiy stopping Rooney, they fell apart in their end. On a play started by Pierre-Edouard Bellemare following a face-off win over Tyler Motte, he moved the puck up for Bogosian.

It then turned into a disaster. Not known for his offense, the physical defenseman eluded the lazy check of Reaves and then slipped around Braun to force Shesterkin into a save. The puck came right to Maroon, who chipped it in while all five Rangers stood around. That goal at 2:38 set the tone.

The rough start continued. The Lightning fourth line again buzzed around Shesterkin’s net. Following a save on Bellemare, Jan Rutta just missed. But the goal horn went off causing the refs to stop play to make sure it didn’t go in.

Another bad shift by Reaves resulted in him taking a lazy tripping minor on Bogosian. The Bolts came close on the power play. After he made a tough save on a Kucherov deflection and dove to cover the puck, they blew the play dead with the annoying Corey Perry digging for a rebound.

They would go to video review. But the call on the ice was the right one. Shesterkin had the puck underneath his pads when they whistled play dead. He was close to the goal line. But by then, the play was over.

If there’s been a recurring theme in these two games, it’s been the Lightning’s willingness to attack the net. They’re constantly taking extra whacks at Shesterkin to get underneath his skin. He’s held up well. You had Palat and Perry do it early. The Rangers must respond by protecting him better. Go on the offensive against Vasilevskiy.

With the hitting and blocked shots again picking up, there wasn’t a lot of prime real estate. Despite getting more shots in the period (10-8), the Blueshirts didn’t exactly make Vasilevskiy work too hard.

On the flip side, the Lightning used their passing to stretch the ice. That included Steven Stamkos getting behind for a near breakaway. But Zibanejad hustled back to prevent a potential goal. He came back hard.

When they finally spent some time in the Lightning end, the Zibanejad line still wasn’t able to get enough done offensively. He got away with one when he took a player down in the neutral zone to groans from the Tampa crowd.

There were too many shifts where the fourth line were losing the battle to the Lightning checking line of Maroon, Bellemare and Riley Nash. They seemed to ways be caught on with Braun and Braden Schneider. That can’t happen when the series returns to NYC.

On a shift where the second line had the puck in the Lightning zone, Panarin tried one of those low percentage backhand centering passes through the middle that got intercepted. Frustrating. He would be better off hanging onto the puck and skating around the net. You can’t turnover pucks against the Bolts.

After a save from Shesterkin on Cirelli, the fourth line finally created something in the final minute. Ryan Lindgren had a shot redirected by Motte on goal that Vasilevskiy made a good stop on. Probably his best of the period.

That’s how the period ended. Although they led 10-8 in shots, anyone could see who was in control. The Lightning led by a goal, had at least five more scoring chances and were slowing down the Rangers’ speed and transition game.

The second started better. Lafreniere was able to hold a puck in and get an early tester on Vasilevskiy from the outside. With Panarin moved up with Zibanejad and Frank Vatrano, they spent some time in the Tampa end. That led to a long Miller shot on Vasilevskiy. He would also recover defensively to break up a play.

Then you had some foolhardy Tampa fans with their own, “Igor Sucks,” chant. Just as ridiculous as the “Igor’s Better” one fans at MSG had. They’re both outstanding goalies. The best two in the game. Even some cool Bolts fans I follow couldn’t understand it.

https://twitter.com/morganbolts/status/1534346251243765760?t=u52G1_MGsw-PF0qeCR760A&s=19

Vasilevskiy made a good save on a tricky Trouba shot with Andrew Copp standing right in front. At that point, I concluded that it was going to be tough to score. It was due to how the Lightning were defending and Vasilevskiy being locked in. Not that he had to stand on his head.

Maybe if Chytil had been able to hit the net on a backhand prior, I might’ve felt differently. I could tell that one more goal and the game was over. It was the kind of game where you could’ve dozed off and not missed anything.

https://twitter.com/BattleOfHudson/status/1534353578768453632?t=VOPq2wRY0H_9OW1MqpIiGg&s=19

With nothing happening and Gallant having changed his lines, Vatrano decided to take on Hagel. It was a spirited hockey fight. Vatrano landed some punches. Hagel went back at him. Who would’ve thought that would be the highlight of the game for the Rangers?

On a play where Copp, Lindgren and Fox were caught out for a long shift, Jan Rutta moved the puck to Palat, who led Kucherov in for a breakaway goal that made it 2-0 with 6:53 left. It was a well executed play that allowed the dangerous Kucherov to move in and shoot five-hole on Shesterkin.

On the next shift, Chytil absorbed a heavy hit from Hedman where he went hard into the boards. Once he left the game, this was clear advantage Bolts. But with Gallant throwing his lines into the blender, he nearly came up with a winning combo.

On one late shift where Lafreniere joined Zibanejad and Panarin, he got one of their best opportunities. On a good pass from Panarin, Lafreniere fired a tough shot on Vasilevskiy with one of his defensemen sliding into him. He tried to go short side top. But the Lightning ace made the big save with 3:02 left.

Shortly after, Shesterkin got across to rob Kucherov of his second on a one-timer. He made the smooth pad save. The way the game was going, if it had gone in, you could’ve turned your TV sets off. Which would’ve meant no more of listening to Sean McDonough on the call. God. How is he ESPN’s top guy for hockey?

I only had one thought after the first two periods that made any sense. Sorry if I was right.

https://twitter.com/BattleOfHudson/status/1534356384132866048?t=0z1uQ1vdH7Zm5eWRCpHNdQ&s=19

I didn’t even bother paying close attention to the third. Without Chytil and Zibanejad blanketed by Cirelli, it was pointless. You had more different lines tried by a desperate Gallant, who was looking for anything.

As if to prove my point, Kreider took a lazy tripping minor on Stamkos only 67 seconds into the third. Although they successfully killed the penalty, it wouldn’t matter.

On a nothing play, Palat came off the wall beating two Rangers and got a good shot that Shesterkin couldn’t handle. With Miller unable to turnaround in time, Stamkos buried the rebound for his seventh at 4:56 to put it out of reach.

Even with lots of time left, this one was finished. The Lightning continued to play stifling defense and let Vasilevskiy see the shots. Unlike the first two games, he’s seeing the puck well and making the stops. We’ve seen him do this before. The Rangers are going to have to find a way to make it harder on him.

Then, after getting slashed by Mikhail Sergachev, Reaves hacked at him. Although Sergachev got an extra for interference that Perry served, Vasilevskiy twice denied Zibanejad including once from Ovi territory. The shot wasn’t where he wanted it.

Kreider took an interference minor on Erik Cernak that evened it up less than a minute later. This was an off night for him. Hopefully, he can do what good players do and put it behind him. They’re gonna need big games from Kreider and Zibanejad to win this series.

Shesterkin turned away Cirelli twice on the Tampa five-on-four. Hedman also missed twice before getting one on Shesterkin, who could’ve sued for run support. He must’ve felt like Jordan Montgomery.

Although they kept firing away on Vasilevskiy, he wasn’t allowing anything to get by him at five-on-five. An area that must improve if the Rangers have any Stanley Cup plans against what will be a well rested Avalanche following their sweep of the over-matched Oilers.

Of all the players, Trouba kept getting shots through. He had seven on goal. None beat Vasilevskiy, who seemed to be headed for his eighth postseason shutout.

But a Killorn holding minor with 3:52 left gave the Rangers one last chance. Gallant was aggressive by lifting Shesterkin for the six-on-four. On a Kreider shot that Vatrano got a piece of, the puck bounced right to Panarin, who shelved his sixth for a power play goal with 3:33 remaining.

Although Shesterkin stayed on the bench for a six-on-five, Trouba wasn’t able to beat Vasilevskiy. Ryan McDonagh blocked two shots to help protect the Bolts’ two-goal lead.

Eventually, the Rangers lost the puck at center. With time winding down, Palat scored into an open net at 19:51 to put the exclamation point on the Lightning victory.

The less said about it, the better. This was a wasted exercise. I would’ve had more fun watching something on History Channel.

Three Stars 🌟 ✨️ 🤩

3rd 🌟 Anthony Cirelli Lightning 4 SOG, 6 attempts, 2 hits, takeaway, block, 6-for-13 on draws in 20:45, shutdown Zibanejad

2nd 🌟 🤩 Nikita Kucherov Lightning breakaway goal (7), 4 SOG, 5 attempts, +3 in 19:53

1st 🌟 🤩 ⭐️ Ondrej Palat Lightning goal (7) plus 2 assists (5, 6), 2 SOG, 4 attempts, 3 hits, +3 in 16:26

Posted in NYRangers | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Eastern Conference Final: Palat’s dagger with 41.6 seconds left completes comeback to take Game Three, Bad third costly, Strome leaves game, Missed opportunity for Rangers who lead Lightning in series 2-1

In the end, they burned and crashed. Unable to hold a lead in a lopsided third period, the Rangers blew it. They let the Lightning come back to win Game Three 3-2 at Amalie Arena in Tampa.

Ondrej Palat scored the dagger with 41.6 seconds left in regulation. He was able to take a slick Nikita Kucherov pass and beat Igor Shesterkin short side for the game-winner. It was the only even strength goal in the game.

A lousy third period cost them an opportunity to grab a stranglehold of the Eastern Conference Final. With their backs literally against the wall still down a goal, the Lightning rose up to the challenge by outscoring the Rangers 2-0. They outshot them 19-6.

When push came to shove, the two-time defending champs showed more urgency to grab Game Three. They are now back in it and trail the Rangers two games to one.

That makes Game Four on Tuesday pretty significant. It’s simple. Either play better and win on the road to pull within one game of the Stanley Cup Finals or lose and the series goes back to MSG tied with a pivotal Game Five on Thursday.

The way they played the third period, they got what they deserved. No excuses. When you have a wounded champion down, you have to finish them off. Instead, the Bolts delivered in crunch time and should be feeling much better about themselves.

Adam Fox, who didn’t distinguish himself in this one, summarized it up well. They didn’t play good enough in the third. Instead, the second of three mindless Jacob Trouba minor penalties led directly to Steven Stamkos tying the game from Corey Perry and Kucherov at only 1:22 into the period.

Trouba had a miserable day. He took undisciplined penalties. Twice, the Lightning took full advantage. It was foolish for Trouba to take an interference minor on Palat right after Chris Kreider had converted their second power play goal that put them up 2-0.

That penalty swung the momentum. Kucherov scored on the man-advantage from Victor Hedman and Stamkos to immediately cut the lead in half. From that point on, the game changed. It went the Lightning’s way.

After getting 32 shots on Shesterkin over the first two periods, the Lightning were all over his crease in the deciding third. One where a lack of killer instinct doomed the Blueshirts.

Even after they killed off a questionable goaltender interference penalty on Frank Vatrano, who was shoved into Andrei Vasilevskiy by Ryan McDonagh, the Rangers blew a chance to go back ahead.

They failed to capitalize on an errant high-stick by Kucherov that cut Mika Zibanejad. Instead of cashing in on the power play for the third time, they couldn’t get much done before another Trouba penalty killed whatever chance they had of regaining the lead.

From there, the more desperate Lightning played to win the game. Exactly what they did by concluding a dominant game at five-on-five by getting Palat’s stunner at 19:18 to make it a series.

Before I dissect the particulars on this one, I want to make a point about how ridiculous these reporters are who cover the games. At one point during his postgame press conference, Gerard Gallant was asked about the Lightning’ goalie tactics. This was absurd. I roasted it and got a lot of attention for being honest.

https://twitter.com/BattleOfHudson/status/1533576967940886530?t=mPmVoLFshfM–gcsB3gPWw&s=19

It’s the third round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs. By now, you should know what to expect. I hinted at what the Lightning would do in a post prior to the game. If you’re not getting traffic on a great goalie, you probably won’t have much success. I don’t see the big deal.

Shesterkin felt the pressure and took a dive to draw one on Perry. I don’t care for embellishment. If you’re not a blogger who is objective, then take the rose-colored blue shades off. I call it like I see it. In the end, it balanced out. I didn’t like the call on Trouba that led to Stamkos tying it.

It’s time to break down where it went wrong. Why it’s now two games to one instead of three-zip.

Prior to the game start, everyone knew Jon Cooper would alter his lineup. He’d been going with the unorthodox seven defensemen, 11 forwards since Brayden Point went down in the seventh game of the first round. However, it was obvious he had to change it up for this game.

Cooper decided to dress Riley Nash and scratch Cal Foote. That way he had a regular 12 forward, six defensemen alignment. He also went with better lines by moving Stamkos back to center between Palat and Kucherov. Anthony Cirelli centered a second line that had Alex Killorn and Brandon Hagel on it. They blanketed the Rangers’ top line of Zibanejad, Kreider and Vatrano at even strength.

While Cooper made adjustments to get his team going, Gallant stuck with the lineup that’s been rolling since the end of the second round. Here’s how they looked.

Kreider-Zibanejad-Vatrano

Panarin-Strome-Copp

Lafreniere-Chytil-Kakko

Motte-Goodrow-Reaves

Lindgren-Fox

Miller-Trouba

Braun-Schneider

Shesterkin

Following a nice tribute to a veteran which is something I’ve noticed the Lightning do better than any other team, you had a wonderful anthem sung by the woman who does it. She’s really good.

Then came the drop of the puck. At the beginning, the match-up was established with the Cirelli line against the Zibanejad line. Ryan McDonagh and Erik Cernak were lined up against that line.

Being on the road allows the opponent to dictate what happens. Gallant never worries about that. If they don’t improve at even strength halfway through next game, it’s something to think about.

I’m terms of the start, the Lightning revealed part of their strategy on the game’s opening shift. Killorn finished an early check on K’Andre Miller. It was a physical game. Hitting was fierce throughout.

Another thing that was noticeable was they put pucks on Shesterkin from everywhere. McDonagh was more visible. When he wasn’t checking, he was firing shots on net. Shesterkin stopped him three minutes in.

On an active shift where he hit Ryan Lindgren and Hagel got Zibanejad, Cirelli got a long shot on Shesterkin that he froze. He was okay with stopping play to get face-offs. That’s due to his team having more success in the dots this round.

Following a good offensive shift for the second line where both Andrew Copp and Ryan Strome forced Vasilevskiy into saves, Shesterkin made one on Kucherov from the outside. Both goalies were on this game.

The Kid Line came out of their end and were able to generate something against the new Tampa third line of Nick Paul, Ross Colton and Nash. After Alexis Lafreniere tool a Mikhail Sergachev hit, Filip Chytil was able to get a good shot on Vasilevskiy that he turned away. On that same shift, Lafreniere had a tip-in blocked by Sergachev, who had a solid game.

It would be some pressure from the checking line of Barclay Goodrow, Tyler Motte and Ryan Reaves that helped set up two more point shots. After Miller went wide on one, Trouba had his denied by Vasilevskiy.

The action continued to pick up. Shesterkin made a strong denial on Kucherov to keep it scoreless. But at the end of his shift, he high-sticked Artemi Panarin.

Unfortunately, the Rangers couldn’t take advantage. Their first power play was abysmal. Paul dominated his shorthanded shifts by being aggressive along with Cirelli, who remains one of the most unheralded players. He got plenty of Selke votes. That went to Patrice Bergeron. A player I love.

Following a Copp shot that Vasilevskiy repelled, Trouba had his attempt blocked by McDonagh. He then sent a good outlet to lead Kucherov out of the box for a breakaway. But Shesterkin kicked it out with the right pad to keep the game scoreless. He looked so confident too.

The checking line then all were able to get looks on a strong shift. After absorbing a Sergachev hit, Goodrow stayed with it to force Vasilevskiy into one save. He then denied both Motte and Reaves. He was sharp. This was the world’s best goalie.

The teams continued to find open ice and test each netminder. On one side, Kucherov passed across for a Bogosian shot that Shesterkin handled. He also stopped Pierre-Edouard Bellemare and would later deny a rebound.

Following a few more Shesterkin saves, Trouba and Copp would have a two-on-one. But rather than take the open shot, Trouba telegraphed a pass across that a hustling Hedman made a great play on to break it up.

After a block from Trouba, Miller made a great rush into the Lightning zone and took a good shot on Vasilevskiy that he handled. Of all our defensemen, he was by far the best in this game. He made good reads, played physical defense and was very active. He continues to grow as a player.

You had your usual feisty play from pest Pat Maroon. The gritty veteran forward who’s won three straight Cups was a nuisance throughout. He finished checks including one on Trouba, who returned the favor.

If there was a turning point that would later impact the game, it had to be when during a late shift from the Panarin line, Strome got knocked down by Rutta after searching for a rebound of a Trouba shot. In the second period, he only took one shift before exiting the game for good.

Despite a high octane period where the teams combined for 27 shots in favor of the Bolts (15-12), there was no score. But it has plenty of action. The Bolts also were up 21-14 in hits. The Rangers led in face-offs 13-7 with Zibanejad going six-for-nine against Cirelli. Here was my input.

https://twitter.com/BattleOfHudson/status/1533539835784437763?t=IsUZ6CDnwgW0gKGZ34H2Zw&s=19

Maybe I noticed it early on. There was a different level of intensity from the Lightning. It wasn’t surprising. In essence, this was their season hanging in the balance.

It didn’t take long for an injury to effect the game. Strome was on for the second shift of period two. Then, he left the ice for the locker room hobbled. After returning to the bench once, he exited for good. It really threw the lines out of wack.

Gallant had Goodrow move up to take some shifts with Panarin and Copp. After a Shesterkin save on Hagel, that new line had some opportunities. Panarin was denied twice by Vasilevskiy. Then Goodrow once.

With Chytil struggling to win draws, Lafreniere took one instead. He didn’t win it against Paul, who’s a good overall player. But during that shift, Colton swatted at Shesterkin even though he stopped Perry. Lindgren responded. Both earned minors to cause four-on-four.

Not long into it, a turnover in the neutral zone led to Zibanejad interfering with Killorn. That gave the Lightning a four-on-three.

Despite some good movement, the Rangers penalty killers were superb. In particular, Miller who after a takeaway led a two-on-one with Goodrow, whose shorthanded bid hit the far goalpost.

With time winding down, Perry took a little hack at Shesterkin, who was out on the edge of his crease. He made light contact with Shesterkin, who went down as if he’d been shot. It was a penalty on Perry. But the embellishment from Igor was absurd. They easily could’ve given him one for the acting.

Following a pair of saves on Paul, out came the Rangers’ top unit. Only this time, it had Chytil on in place of Strome. The result was the same. On another great passing play between Panarin and Fox, they set up an open Zibanejad for a rocket blaster past Vasilevskiy at 7:37.

That gave them a 1-0 lead. It was the 10th of the postseason for Zibanejad on the power play from Fox and Panarin. Zibanejad has been on a roll. He would later add an assist to tack on two more points. His 24 (10-14-24) rank third in the playoffs trailing only Leon Draisaitl and leader Connor McDavid. Both are about to go bye-bye due to how bad Edmonton is. Colorado can sweep them tomorrow night.

After Nash bumped into Shesterkin for a legit goaltender interference call that some Tampa fans booed, things were looking up for the Rangers. After three saves from Vasilevskiy, this time a Zibanejad one-timer rebounded right for Kreider to bang home for his 10th at 9:44 for a two-goal lead.

The goal was the 34th of Kreider’s postseason career. In scoring it, he tied all-time great Rod Gilbert for first on the Rangers scoring list in the playoffs. Fittingly, it also gives him 62 combined between the regular season and postseason. That matches Adam Graves, who also went for 52 plus 10 in 1994. One more goal and Kreider will be all alone.

But when it felt like they had all the momentum, Trouba took an unnecessary minor for interference on Palat 25 seconds later to put Tampa on the power play. This was the turning point. There are moments where you can’t take penalties. I talked about Trouba needing to avoid the bad ones to win this series.

Right on cue, the Lightning perfectly executed their first power play goal on Sunday. After receiving a pass from Stamkos, Hedman made a good diagonal feed for a Kucherov one-timer past Shesterkin at 10:50. That quickly, they pulled within one with 9:10 left in the period.

Able to gain momentum from the Kucherov goal, the Lightning started to come. They had more possession time in the Rangers’ end. Shesterkin would stop a Sergachev shot with 6:04 left.

As they got into the final five minutes, it was back and forth similar to Game One. Vasilevskiy made a good save on Trouba. Chytil would then have his deflection go wide. After Shesterkin stopped McDonagh on one end, Chytil was denied by Vasilevskiy. Then, Shesterkin made a save on Bogosian.

On another effective shift from the Kid Line, Lafreniere was denied by Vasilevskiy, who wouldn’t give in. It was a passing play where Chytil and Kakko combined to get the puck over for Lafreniere, whose low shot was taken care of. That was a big opportunity.

Paul, whose been one of the Bolts’ most consistent players, then just missed tying it with over a minute left. With the seconds winding down, Maroon got one last hit on Zibanejad along the boards as the buzzer sounded. You didn’t have to like it. But he sure was a lot more noticeable than Reaves (1 hit). Maroon had six for the game.

Maybe I should’ve known right there what was in store for the third. If you don’t think those hits matter, you’re not paying attention. It set the tone before the Lightning even went to the locker room.

Sure enough, the Cirelli line buzzed on the first shift of the third period. They got three shots on Shesterkin with the last one from Hagel leading to another bad Trouba moment. He was called for holding Cirelli. It wasn’t much.

After one save by Shesterkin on Hedman, Copp came the opposite way and got a shorthanded chance that Vasilevskiy had. No problem. Right? Wrong. Led by Kucherov up ice, he handed for Perry, who then was allowed too much time to find a wide open Stamkos for his hammer past Shesterkin at 1:22.

Stamkos’ sixth was the Bolts’ second power play goal. Suddenly, it was all even at two with 19:38 left. At that point, every goal came on the man-advantage. Both teams were getting it done on the power play.

The problem was the poor start really came back to hurt. The Rangers never recovered. It was all Lightning. They got nine of the first 11 shots.

Every once in a while, the Rangers would get a look. It was one and done. While their offense fizzled, the Lightning sizzled. Everyone was shooting pucks on their side. They didn’t have to be told by Cooper. They also kept attacking Shesterkin’s crease. There wasn’t enough push back from the guys in the white jerseys.

Vatrano probably had their best scoring chance. After taking a feed, he cut in on Vasilevskiy and got off a tough backhand that he stopped. But he came together with McDonagh and bumped into the Lightning goalie. They called him for interference. It’s a 50/50 play. I hate that call.

On the kill again, this time an inspired defensive effort from Goodrow wouldn’t allow the Bolts to get shots through. Initially, Perry had two that were saved by Shesterkin.

Then, it turned into a block party highlighted by a diving Goodrow leaving his feet to reject Hedman. He could barely stand. Eventually, he got to the bench and limped off for repairs. Then returned. I love Goody. He’s all heart. Tampa fans still appreciate him.

By then, the shots were 44-26. Shesterkin was making the saves to give his team a chance to steal it. After a Cernak miss wide on sustained pressure by the Lightning, Kucherov lost his discipline by high-sticking Zibanejad for a double minor with 9:06 left.

Instead of making him pay, they didn’t. It was the Lightning’s turn to play strong on the kill. That included Fox absorbing an iffy hit from Cernak on the boards. It sure looked like his elbow came up.

They still had an extended five-on-four. But only Zibanejad got a shot on that Vasilevskiy saved. Kakko then missed on a tip-in. Not long after came the Bolts shorthanded led by who else but Paul. Chytil denied him. Trouba then had to take a penalty on Killorn. That was the moment I kind of felt the game was lost. It was only a matter of time.

As Tampa began to press the action at five-on-five, Gallant shortened his bench in a tie game. I could understand sitting Reaves. But why didn’t Braden Schneider get a shift? He doesn’t trust him now? I really disagree with what Turk did. He shortchanged himself and overworked the top guys.

Remember. He didn’t have Strome either. This was a bad job by a coach who’s done so much right. Your team was up two games. Not the other way around. He can’t be so conservative. Let’s hope it won’t bite him in the ass. They can win next game.

Aside from offering little in Vasilevskiy’s path, the Rangers iced the puck. They were exhausted. Not the other way around as some misguided foolish banter had claimed after the first two games. It felt like they were hanging on. As if they could rely on overtime. They never made it.

Instead, on just a superb play started by Cernak, he got the puck across to Hedman. He then passed to a tightly guarded Kucherov, who fooled everyone by one touching the puck over for a Palat one-timer short side on Shesterkin with 41.6 seconds remaining.

Game over. By the time they got Shesterkin off, all that was left was the Rangers scrambling around following a Tampa clear.

It was a bitter defeat. But they earned it. Outshot 19-6. 52-30 for the game. So add a save to Shesterkin’s line. He made 49 saves on 52 shots. Vasilevskiy stopped 28.

A noticeable difference was the Lightning’s edge at even strength. They held a 40-21 edge in shots with Palat getting his 10th career game-winner in the postseason.

As hard a loss as this was, it isn’t the end of the world. Zibanejad took the blame for puck watching on the play that led to Palat scoring. But he has been brilliant. It was simply a fantastic play by a clutch player. Kucherov made a great pass. Shesterkin was surprised by it too.

https://twitter.com/BattleOfHudson/status/1533569953403641856?t=YtAOcTGvRTnZGjC-DXLomw&s=19

Posted in NYRangers | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Reaves sums up the significance of Game Three later today

In a few hours, the Rangers and Lightning will drop the puck on Game Three of the Eastern Conference Final in Tampa.

It’ll be an opportunity for the Rangers to grab a stranglehold of the series. If they can win for the third straight time against the two-time defending champs, they’ll be one game away from reaching the Stanley Cup Finals.

In order for that to happen, they’ll have to be at their absolute best this afternoon. The Lightning are back home where they’ll have strong support from their fans, who have come to appreciate what they’ve accomplished. Expect them to lift the Lightning up.

There’s been a lot of talk since the Rangers held off a late Lightning surge for a 3-2 win in Game Two. Whether it’s about the Bolts looking tired, or missing key center Brayden Point (of course he’s missed), that doesn’t matter.

What does is that there’s still work to be done. A series doesn’t end after two games. All the Blueshirts did was take care of home ice. The Lightning get the same opportunity starting after 3 PM today on ESPN. A win and they’re right back in it.

Before asking Igor Shesterkin if he feels any differently because he beat fellow Russian Andrei Vasilevskiy twice, how about using some common sense. That doesn’t apply to most New York media who cover the team.

Thankfully, Shesterkin handled it well. He respects Vasilevskiy and understands that it takes four wins in a seven-game series to advance. He’s still chasing a guy he looks up to. They’re rivals on the ice. But once it ends, it’s different. There’s a respect factor.

All of this leads up to the main storyline for this afternoon. Do the Rangers have the killer instinct to nail down a must win situation for the Lightning in enemy territory? Even if they’ll have some support from our fans who live in the area, we have to wait and see what happens.

For all the discussion from both sides yesterday, Ryan Reaves made the most sense. Regarding the significance of Game Three, the gritty fourth line energizer nailed it when he spoke to Mollie Walker of the New York Post earlier.

Considering his experience with Vegas, Reaves knows full well how important today’s game is. Things can turn quickly. The Rangers are living proof of that. They pulled it off last round. It didn’t come easy. They had to go into Carolina and win a Game Seven.

That win gave them more confidence entering this big match-up. It proved that they can come out with the victory on the road. But remember something else. In each of the first two rounds, it took them until their last try to get the wins needed to get here.

This is a different scenario. They’re leading the series two games to none. It’s the Lightning with their backs to the wall. They will have plenty of urgency. Make no mistake about it. The team we saw on Friday won’t exist today.

That’s why it’s a requirement for the Blueshirts to heed Reaves’ message. That’s a battle call. Expect there to be plenty of battles in the trenches. A lot more edge. Maybe a slower pace since the Rangers’ speed has given the Lightning problems.

They’ll look to dictate the pace. That probably means establishing more of a forecheck and getting traffic on Shesterkin. It likely signals a more structured defensive game. Something the Bolts can do. They executed it to perfection to frustrate the Maple Leafs.

Figure them to target Adam Fox. He’s been the most dynamic player in the first two games. He’s been given a lot of time and space, making the most of it. I would expect them to finish checks on Fox on soft dumps in the corner.

The Lightning will probably look to pinch their D more to keep pucks in the Rangers’ end. They’ll have to maintain their focus. That requires strong puck management and discipline. They had four power plays to the Bolts’ one last game. That could change.

It really comes down to competing for every loose puck and ounce of space. Chipping pucks out. Avoiding bad penalties. Withstanding the early push. It’s now or never for the Lightning. They know what today’s game means.

In terms of Nikita Kucherov and Steven Stamkos, the Rangers must know where they are at all times. There can’t be any wide open looks. Ditto Victor Hedman, who was heavily criticized for a bad Game Two. He’s a great player. There should be a strong response.

I would expect the gritty Lightning forwards like Anthony Cirelli, Ondrej Palat, Nick Paul, Corey Perry and Pat Maroon to be parked in front of Shesterkin. Those are tough players. It’ll be up to the Rangers to check well and continue a trend of clearing the slot area.

This is uncharted territory for most of the Blueshirts. Using the big game experience of Chris Kreider can help. Ditto for Reaves, Barclay Goodrow, Justin Braun and coach Gerard Gallant. They know about these kind of games.

It should be interesting. We’ll see if they have what it takes to end any suspense.

Posted in Column, NYRangers | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Eastern Conference Final: Rangers go two up on Lightning by holding on for a 3-2 win to take Game Two, Fox and Miller lead the way

That’s two. The Rangers are two wins away from reaching the Stanley Cup Finals. They followed up a 6-2 win by holding on for a 3-2 victory over the Lightning to take Game Two at MSG.

Leading by two thanks to a big goal from Mika Zibanejad in the third period, they held on at the end to earn a hard fought one-goal win. With Jon Cooper lifting Andrei Vasilevskiy with 3:49 left, the move worked when Nick Paul was able to get behind and beat Igor Shesterkin to cut it to 3-2 with 2:02 left.

One thing about the Rangers. It’s never easy. You’d think some of the fans who continued the misguided “Igor’s Better,” chant would know that. A different crowd that doesn’t appreciate the franchise history.

So, when Paul did score at 17:58 to make it a one-goal game, it got tense. Having been under the weather, I opted to listen to Sam Rosen call the final 2:02 on ESPN Radio. I had the broadcast on for the whole game with the radio. But after seeing Paul’s goal on the delay, I decided to shut the ESPN television feed off.

Call it superstition. Call it whatever you will. It worked. Listening to Rosen call that final frantic 122 seconds with Dave Maloney was nerve racking. Exactly how it’s supposed to be.

After a couple of close calls with the Lightning centering a puck through the crease, they went offside with less than six seconds remaining. You could hear a sigh of relief on both Rosen and Maloney when one more clear sealed the victory on home ice.

Phew. That’s how it felt following key saves from Shesterkin on Nikita Kucherov and Steven Stamkos with under a minute left. The Lightning pressed for the equalizer. But it never came.

Now, the Rangers lead the Eastern Conference Final two games to none with the series shifting to Tampa Bay for the next two. Game Three is Sunday at 3 PM. A rare afternoon game. That will probably determine what happens.

One thing is history. The Lightning’s win streak following losses in the postseason, which dates back to 2020. They were 18-0 after losing a playoff game. It had to end sometime. Credit the Rangers for doing so.

By winning Games One and Two, all they have done is hold serve by protecting home ice. We’ve been through this already last round against the Hurricanes. They should know full well that this series is far from over. Look what they did to Carolina after falling behind 2-0 and 3-2.

Now, the pressure is squarely on the Lightning. The two-time defending champs have not been in this situation the past two years. However, there’ll be plenty of urgency when the puck drops for Game Three. Something Cooper emphasized in a revealing postgame where he indicated that he felt his team didn’t manage the puck well enough.

The Tampa coach was dissatisfied with how the Bolts played during the first half of last night’s game. He thought the Rangers were better at managing pucks and limiting turnovers. Although Tampa picked it up in the second half including following the key Zibanejad goal 1:21 into the third, it wasn’t enough to come back.

For a second consecutive game, Shesterkin was better than Vasilevskiy. He made 29 saves on 31 shots including stopping 13 of 14 in the third period to win for the 10th time this postseason.

Vasilevskiy finished with 25 saves on 28 shots. Although he kept his team in it during a lopsided stretch in the second period, he’d probably want the Zibanejad goal back. It beat him high, stick side. An area that the Rangers have hit a few times already in the first two games.

The interesting aspect of Friday’s win was that it was their five-on-five play that made the difference. Indeed, all three of the Rangers’ goals were at even strength. They were opportunistic scoring three on 19 shots.

Vasilevskiy was superb on the penalty kill. He made nine saves on all four power plays. That allowed the Lightning to hang around. Even on a night he fought the puck on a few stops, the former Vezina and Conn Smythe winner gave his team a chance at the comeback.

For once, special teams wasn’t a strength. The Rangers went 0-for-4 on the power play and allowed a power play goal on the Lightning’s only man-advantage. Good thing they didn’t take anymore penalties.

Following another wonderful national anthem by John Brancy, who really should replace the now gone legend John Amirante (always forever in our hearts), the Rangers started their top line with K’Andre Miller and Trouba.

While the Gerard Gallant stuck with the same lineup, Cooper didn’t. He changed things up by having Anthony Cirelli between Ondrej Palat and Kucherov. I was surprised. That top line started the game with Victor Hedman paired up with Jan Rutta in another shakeup.

Maybe it’s just me. I thought Cooper panicked a little by splitting up Kucherov and Stamkos. My guess is they’ll be back together with Cirelli for Game Three.

Unlike the first game, Game Two had a different feel to it. It was more quiet. However, once the fourth lines were sent out, it didn’t take long for Ryan Reaves and Pat Maroon to start jostling. Before the face-off, it continued. For some reason, Reaves got the only penalty for slashing. Ticky tac.

On an early power play, it only took the Lightning 16 seconds to get the first goal. After Cirelli moved the puck up top for Hedman, he passed for a Kucherov shot that beat Shesterkin with Corey Perry in front at 2:41.

The first replay seemed to indicate that perhaps Perry tipped it. But after he was given credit, they changed it back to Kucherov.

After the goal, the Bolts picked it up after with more aggressive play. That included two misses from Alex Killorn and Stamkos. Following an icing, Cirelli went at Ryan Lindgren. Your usual playoff battles at this crucial time of year.

The Rangers would get a scoring chance on an Artemi Panarin steal that led to a good shot on Vasilevskiy. A couple of shifts later, the Kid Line buzzed in the Tampa zone. Kaapo Kakko missed a shot high and Filip Chytil had one right on Vasilevskiy, who shut it down.

Following a face-off, the Mika Zibanejad line got it going. Off a Killorn turnover, Chris Kreider and Frank Vatrano were able to lead Miller into the Lightning zone. After Brandon Hagel made a diving block, the puck came right back to Miller who beat Vasilevskiy by the glove with two players in front at 5:59.

That tied the game. It was a good response. Miller got his second of the postseason from Vatrano and Kreider. Good work by all three. Miller got a nice bounce to score on Vasilevskiy to tie it up.

A strong shift by fourth line led to Tyler Motte missing wide. It was a good forecheck from Motte, Barclay Goodrow and Reaves.

On a play that started inside his own zone, Stamkos had a good rush up ice that forced Shesterkin to make a tough save. On what was a two-on-two, the Lightning captain got behind Lindgren and Fox. He took a pass and was one-on-one with Shesterkin. But Stamkos was robbed by a great toe save by Igor to keep the game tied.

Following that key stop, Erik Cernak was called for roughing Zibanejad. This was another penalty that they didn’t call in Game One. Something Maloney alluded to on the radio.

The Rangers’ power play got some looks. After Vasilevskiy stifled a long Panarin try from the point, the top unit had some good movement. Following a wide Zibanejad try they retrieved, his shot pass for a Kreider tip-in was denied by Vasilevskiy.

After a Cirelli miss at one end, Motte countered the other way. With Hedman breathing down his neck, he still managed to get a backhand off that hit the goalpost. Braden Schneider then stepped up and missed wide. He would draw a slashing minor on Stamkos.

The second power play was more about the Lightning penalty kill. Paul, who earlier had a shorthanded attempt blocked, broke up a Ryan Strome shot. After a Vasilevskiy save on Zibanejad, Alexis Lafreniere had his tip try miss. The second unit actually had better pressure despite no shots.

When he returned, Stamkos got a nice hit on Andrew Copp. Old fashioned hockey. While the hitting picked up, there weren’t many shots. It was a defensive struggle. My main takeaway was that the game would be decided by the forecheck. How prophetic that was.

On a shift where he just passed the puck, Kucherov got knocked down by Miller. While Kucherov looked at the refs, they weren’t buying it. It was a clean hit. Miller really asserted himself throughout. It was one of his best games.

Out came the Kid Line. After Lafreniere hit the post on one chance, Kaapo Kakko tipped in an Adam Fox pass to put the Blueshirts up 2-1 with 2:28 left. The play was all about the brilliance of Fox. He got the puck from Chytil, faked and then moved it across for an easy Kakko finish. What a play.

Kakko now has points in three straight games. It was his second postseason goal. It’s nice to see him gaining confidence. He’s catching up to Chytil and Lafreniere.

With the period almost over, Trouba made a good recovery after Cirelli beat Miller. He blocked his shot. A superb read. Following a light turnaround shot from Palat that Shesterkin easily handled, the first came to a close.

Cal Foote got together with Miller and Trouba. Frustration. You could tell the Bolts were in this game.

In the second period, it was mostly Rangers early. Following some sustained pressure from the Lightning, Lafreniere was stopped by Vasilevskiy on a good opportunity. He then had an issue with a Motte backhand. But Perry helped freeze the puck.

Vasilevskiy continued to make saves. On a strong shift from the Zibanejad line, he stopped Fox on a backhand. One thing that’s noticeable so far is the Rangers’ speed. It’s causing problems for the Lightning, who aren’t as fast as the Hurricanes.

During another scrum, Foote was nabbed for roughing Copp. Pretty iffy. Very similar to the call on Reaves. Soft.

On their third power play, Panarin had a good rush up ice. After receiving an outlet from Shesterkin, he got a good shot on Vasilevskiy, who would also deny Chytil before it expired. At one point, the shots were 9-1 Rangers.

Shesterkin finally made a save on Pierre-Edouard Bellemare. He would also stop Rutta later. The Lightning started to pick it up in the second half of the period. But they weren’t exactly getting the kind of scoring chances they did last game.

On a good defensive play by Panarin, he started a three-on-one. But a great play by Ryan McDonagh broke up a Copp pass.

The Kid Line continued to generate chances. Chytil was stopped by Vasilevskiy, who then made a save on Kakko. Right now, the Lightning have no answer for that line. Their confidence is high.

With over five minutes left, both Paul and Ross Colton were denied by a sharp Shesterkin. He would then make a tough save on a Cirelli deflection.

Shesterkin made a pair of good saves on Mikhail Sergachev. As the second period concluded, the fans were on their feet at The Garden.

Although the Lightning got nine of the last fourteen shots to close to within 22-19 overall, you never felt any pressure. At least, I didn’t. It didn’t sound like they played well. It’s a little different listening to the call with the ESPN feed delayed on Wi-Fi.

In the third, after an initial push by the Bolts, Zibanejad came back with a goal following a missed two-on-one by Vatrano. Kreider got the puck to Fox, who quickly gained the Lightning zone. In transition, his pass to Zibanejad allowed him to go high blocker on Vasilevskiy at 1:21. Not a goal you expect him to give up.

Zibanejad’s ninth of the playoffs gave the Rangers a much needed two-goal lead with 18:39 remaining. It was another example of Fox making the difference with a great read that led to the critical game-winner.

The Lightning would respond with more urgency. They had some pressure. But it was the secondary players who had the best chances. Hagel was stopped by Shesterkin. Colton missed on a couple. He’s a key scorer for the Bolts.

Following a bad Goodrow turnover, Maroon had a point blank chance. But he barely did anything with it. Shesterkin did get credit for the save. Motte then cleared the zone.

A Hedman turnover resulted in Lafreniere getting a chance. But Vasilevskiy made the save. It’s been that kind of series so far for the Lightning. They’ve turned pucks over. Part of it is the Rangers. Their ability to get in on the forecheck has been prevalent.

In what was one of the best plays of the game, Miller forced Stamkos wide. Stamkos came in with speed and tried to get around, but Miller was in good position to force him behind the net. That defensive play really shows how far he’s come. Miller is only 22.

As things escalated, Trouba leveled Cirelli at the Rangers’ blue line. He caught him with a clean shoulder to send the gritty Bolts’ center to the ice. Some Lightning fans didn’t like it. But there was nothing wrong with the hit. Leave it to bitter Pens fans who are still upset over Trouba’s hit on Sidney Crosby. Also clean.

Some more good work from Lafreniere in the neutral zone led to a bogus tripping minor on Hedman. This was a total fake out. Maloney even said it on the radio. Lafreniere was going down and then got back up. What a soft call.

With a chance to put it away, they couldn’t. The power play didn’t do much. Panarin had the only good shot that Vasilevskiy handled. Trouba would get a long try near the end.

As time began running out, Cooper knew he had to be aggressive pulling his goalie. That was due to how the Rangers defended the net front. They took care of the slot area. With 3:49 remaining, Vasilevskiy went to the bench for a six-on-five.

It looked like the Rangers would not give up much. They defended well only allowing a Stamkos shot in 90 seconds. But a quick up from Kucherov to Perry allowed him to find an open Paul in front. He was able to deke Shesterkin and tuck it into the net on the forehand at 17:58 to make things interesting.

Before he lifted his goalie again, Cooper had to wait until his team got possession. Once they did, off Vasilevskiy went for the extra attacker. It really got hectic in the final countdown.

With the desperate Lightning searching for the equalizer, Shesterkin stopped both Kucherov and Stamkos in the final minute. After an icing, Cooper took his timeout with 37 seconds to go.

Following another icing, Stamkos won an offensive draw from Goodrow. Hedman was able to get a shot on from the outside that Shesterkin stopped. Then came a hairy sequence where the Bolts came close. You could tell by Rosen’s call.

But they went offside with only six seconds to spare. After one more draw between Goodrow and Stamkos, another clear killed the remaining seconds to clinch a Rangers win.

It’s crazy how close the Lightning came to forcing overtime. Can you even imagine what that building would’ve been like? I think JD said it best in our group chat.

The bottom line is they got it done. Even if the Bolts made it stressful, that’s how it’s supposed to be. These games should have drama. The Rangers were victorious because they were better overall.

Now, we find out what happens when the series moves to Tampa. Don’t count the Lightning out. There’s a narrative out there about them looking tired. I doubt they’ll be tomorrow afternoon in a must win situation. It’ll take a great effort for the Rangers to get Game Three.

It sure is nice to be leading a series two games to none. Now, we find out about this team’s killer instinct. As Mark Messier once said, “Go for the throat.” Don’t let the two-time defending champs off the hook. It sure sets up a pivotal Game Three.

Three Stars 🌟 🤩 ✨️

3rd 🌟 Mika Zibanejad game-winner (9th of postseason), 4 attempts, 9-for-19 on face-offs, +2 in 24 shifts (20:29)

2nd 🌟 🤩 K’Andre Miller NYR goal (2nd of postseason), 3 takeaways, 2 blocks in 29 shifts (23:15)

1st 🌟 🤩 ⭐️ Adam Fox NYR 2 primary assists, 4 attempts, 4 takeaways, +2 in 27 shifts (25:12)

Posted in NYRangers | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment