Gallant emphasizes moving on and playing consistent for Game Two, Pens recall Alex D’ Orio, Games to Watch tonight

A day later coming off a very tough 4-3 loss in a long Game One that needed triple overtime to decide, the Rangers had the day off.

After playing over five periods, that’s to be expected. Especially when many players logged more minutes than they’re used to. Gerard Gallant discussed both last night’s game and what the keys are to evening the first round series against the Penguins.

“Consistency with our game. Play that battle. Play that heavy game for 60 minutes. We did some good things the first 25 minutes,” he told reporters earlier today.

While he liked how they started Tuesday’s game by coming out hitting and forechecking which helped lead to a 2-0 lead early in the second period, Gallant emphasized how his team must do it over 60 minutes.

He felt they allowed the Pens to start going tape to tape and come out of their zone too easily. That allowed them to open up the game and gain traction. They were able to pick up the pace and attack more.

Taking away the time and space of the skilled Pens will be a key to squaring the series. Sidney Crosby, Jake Guentzel and Bryan Rust had their way in Game One. Even when up against Mika Zibanejad, Chris Kreider and Frank Vatrano, they had the upper hand.

It’ll be interesting to see what adjustments Gallant makes when it comes to slowing the Crosby line down. Of course, it helps to forecheck that unit so they defend more. Something that Zibanejad indicated during last night’s postgame interview with teammate Ryan Strome.

They know they’ll have to be better. The key is consistency. While Turk likes playing that heavy style featuring Ryan Reaves, it’s not just about hitting. It’s about sustaining a forecheck with puck pressure down low. That’s how you can wear out the opposition over a seven-game series.

In regards to Ryan Lindgren, who missed most of the third period and didn’t play in the third overtime due to a lower-body injury, Gallant hinted that he expects him to be ready to go for tomorrow’s game.

“[Lindgren] banged up a little bit. But he’ll be there I’m sure. Just maintenance.”

As far as reviewing last night’s game, the coach was very diplomatic about the officiating. He didn’t like that the Pens got a five-on-three. That proved to be large due to Rust scoring off a tic-tac-toe play from Evgeni Malkin and Kris Letang with Jacob Trouba off for boarding Guentzel.

That power play goal negated a beautiful shorthanded goal from Chris Kreider that had put the Rangers up 3-2 on a Penguins five-on-four. A terrific play by Zibanejad who jumped on the puck and laid out a great pass that Kreider got to and beat Pens goalie Casey DeSmith with a backhand deke.

Had they avoided the extra penalty which I can’t disagree with, maybe it’s a different game. Instead, the Pens tied it up to regain momentum.

“There probably should’ve been a couple of calls made. Definitely when you go back and look at it,” Gallant said.

“But we’re going to go play our game. … That wasn’t the difference in the hockey game. We just gotta make sure we play better for 60 minutes.”

Perhaps he’s referring to the missed cross-check Crosby had in the first overtime. That definitely could’ve been called. But neither ref wanted to blow the whistle. Something that was noted in last night’s game story.

I didn’t have much issue with the officiating in sudden death. They let the teams play. It was very clean. Neither side forced the stripes to call an obvious stick infraction.

Gallant said he was happy with how Filip Chytil, Alexis Lafreniere and Kaapo Kakko played. They created some good looks off the cycle due to their speed and skill. Chytil missed on a couple.

Of course, Kakko nearly had Chytil set up for the potential winner with 3:10 left in regulation. An overturned goal that’s still being debated in hockey circles.

It remains split. Kind of like the 50/50 view that was referenced by Strome and Rangers studio analyst Henrik Lundqvist. It is interesting to note that Steve Valiquette is the only one who felt it should’ve counted. He made a good case.

There wasn’t much Kakko could’ve done. He made a good aggressive play driving hard to the net. He tried to score on a forehand deke, but bumped into DeSmith with some help from Brian Dumoulin.

Even though it didn’t count, the play Kakko made from his stomach to pass back for Chytil was outstanding. That along with his chance to win it in overtime should be a confidence boost. He played a good game.

Gallant felt bad that they got caught on for the Evgeni Malkin winner. It was unfortunate because he liked how the third line played. The positive is they didn’t look intimidated. Lafreniere had five hits including a couple of good ones early.

If anything, last night’s playoff introduction should be beneficial for the first round pick trio. Let’s see if they can build on it for tomorrow.

A player who must be better is Artemi Panarin. The time off that included missing the last couple of games seemed to throw his timing off. While the skating was there, the touch and feel wasn’t. He had trouble handling pucks and only finished with two shots on net.

The Pens gave the Bread Man special attention. That’ll continue to be an intriguing match-up. It’s up to Panarin to pick it up. He has to be sharper. Line mates Andrew Copp and Strome were. They need the straw that stirs the drink to raise his level.

If Lindgren is in for Game Two, that leaves Gallant two options. He can put Justin Braun in for Patrik Nemeth, who took two minors and was on for the winner. Or he could dress seven defensemen as insurance if Lindgren’s injury lingers.

If Turk went with seven D and 11 forwards, he can double shift his best players and mix in Barclay Goodrow and Ryan Reaves or Kevin Rooney. That’s not a bad way to go. My guess is if Lindgren is okay, Gallant will have Braun in for Nemeth and roll with the same four lines.

On the injury front, the Pens look like they’ll be without DeSmith. He left with 10:42 remaining in the second overtime. If it was cramping, he’d likely be available. He limped off the ice.

Apparently, the lower-body injury will prevent him from starting Game Two. The Penguins have recalled goalie Alex D’Orio.

That means Louis Domingue will be in net. He did a good job coming on in relief by stopping all 17 shots he faced to earn the win. He even admitted to being shocked when they told him he was going in.

If there’s one thing they must do differently, it’s getting traffic in front on Domingue, who’s a right glove. He had no trouble picking up some of the shots in sudden death. The Pens also defended well on front of him.

While they want to get as many shots through tomorrow, having players screening and looking for rebounds has to be a strategy. Ditto for deflections. The Rangers must make life difficult on Domingue.

Jason Zucker could also be ready for tomorrow. With Rickard Rakell unlikely to dress, look for Zucker to play in Game Two. He also has a nose for the net. So, they should pay attention to him.

One more thing. There were too many instances during overtime where you noticed the Pens’ secondary forwards creating chances like the tough backhand he got on Igor Shesterkin. Ditto for Evan Rodrigues.

They crashed the net and made it tough on Shesterkin. The defense must do a better job clearing the front. They reverted to October and November mode. Take care of business.

Two days of the postseason already have produced some interesting results. With the Caps shocking the Panthers last night, anything can happen. Ask Edmonton and Mike Smith.

That’s gonna do it for now. Enjoy tonight’s slate of games. I’ll be locked into Lightning/Leafs. It should be interesting to see how Tampa responds to the 5-0 Game One blowout loss in Toronto. I’m also curious to see how the Oilers respond to that 4-3 loss to the Kings.

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Malkin winner in triple overtime ends a classic, Pens lead series 1-0, Overturned Chytil goal late in regulation questionable, Shesterkin makes Rangers franchise record 79 saves

The first postseason game in five years was a classic. Almost five years to the day, the Rangers lost a heart breaker to the Penguins 4-3 in triple overtime.

Evgeni Malkin scored at 105:58 of the third overtime when he deflected home a John Marino point shot to send a disappointed sellout crowd at MSG home. The Pens took Game One to steal home ice away.

It was a crusher due to the circumstances. After playing so well early to build a two-goal lead on goals from Adam Fox and Andrew Copp, the Rangers were outplayed by a wide margin for almost the remainder of what turned into a six period marathon.

Perhaps most disappointing was even in a lopsided second period where they were outshot 25-8, Chris Kreider’s momentum shifting shorthanded goal was negated by a Bryan Rust five-on-three goal that really took the air out of the balloon.

Had they been able to regain their composure and get the key penalty kills after Jacob Trouba took an unnecessary boarding minor on Jake Guentzel, maybe it’s a different end result. Instead, the Rangers must move on and get ready to even the best-of-seven first round series on Cinco De Mayo.

By now, the overturned call on a potential Filip Chytil go-ahead goal with 3:10 left in regulation has been covered everywhere. The controversial ruling came after Kaapo Kakko drove the net and was pushed from behind by Pittsburgh defenseman Brian Dumoulin into Casey DeSmith.

Kakko made a great pass from his stomach for a Chytil finish that was called a goal by referee Chris Lee. But following a coach’s challenge by Mike Sullivan, they ruled in favor of the Pens very quickly. That doesn’t sit well. Why didn’t they take more time? Why no explanation on Rule 69.1?

Following the loss Ryan Strome indicated that it was a 50/50 call. Something Henrik Lundqvist echoed on the MSG postgame. Unfortunately, that reversal took away Chytil’s first postseason goal. Who knows how it would’ve played out. We can only wonder.

What can’t happen again on Thursday is the amount of shots the Pens got on Igor Shesterkin. He was unbelievable making a franchise record 79 saves on 83 shots in defeat.

The 79 are the second most in NHL history. Joonas Korpisalo made 85 in a five overtime loss to the Lightning. That also came in a Game One situation. A series the Blue Jackets lost to the Lightning. Let’s hope this isn’t a bad omen for the Rangers. Especially with how well Shesterkin played.

Neither can they allow the top line of Sidney Crosby, Jake Guentzel and Rust to dominate the way they did in the first game. The Pens’ most lethal line had their way throughout. They combined for three goals, seven points and 24 shots.

The worst part is they seemed to get stronger as the game went on. It didn’t matter who Gerard Gallant had matched up against them. They lost the battle. That important detail needs to change. Even if Ryan Lindgren can’t go. He missed significant portions of the game due to an injury that’s been nagging him. He didn’t return for the third overtime.

On the injury front, Lindgren also delivered a big hit that sent Rickard Rakell off for good late in the first period. After reviewing what was a major call, they ruled it two minutes for roughing. Sullivan had no update on the status of Rakell.

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Even more unpredictable, the Pens lost goalie Casey DeSmith at the halfway point of the second overtime. He limped off with what they termed a “lower-body” injury. He will be evaluated as will Rakell.

Most frustrating is that the Rangers allowed third string netminder Louis Domingue to come in relief and make 17 saves to pick up the win. He never faced a ton of pressure. Will Domingue be the starting goalie for the Pens in Game Two? That’s anyone’s guess.

Of course, you give credit to Domingue for coming in ice cold and being composed enough to stop 17 shots. However, the other side of the coin is that the Blueshirts didn’t create enough traffic on the journeyman. He was able to see the shots. That included maybe his best stop on Copp in tight during the latter part of the second overtime.

As well as they played during a splendid first period that saw them get 15 shots on DeSmith and deliver some crowd pleasing crunching hits including a few from Ryan Reaves that both Marino and Chad Ruhwedel felt, the Rangers let the Penguins off the hook.

They certainly started well. Urged on by the crowd, they came out aggressively. Able to finish checks and generate chances off the cycle, it was all Rangers early on. When Reaves and Alexis Lafreniere weren’t hitting, you had some good testers on DeSmith who held up well.

The third line nearly got one off a strong forecheck. On a good play by Lafreniere behind the net, he took the puck to the net and looked to attempt a backhand deke. But lost control of the puck right to Chytil, whose low shot went into DeSmith for a save.

Following that sequence, DeSmith got over to glove away Frank Vatrano’s shot off a good pass from Adam Fox. He then denied an early Copp bid.

On a strong move by Kakko in transition, Chytil was slashed by Teddy Blueger for the game’s first penalty. Out came the Rangers’ top unit. With the aggressive Pens’ killers overplaying Kreider, he moved the puck for Zibanejad who then got it up top for a Fox wrist shot that beat DeSmith on a Strome screen at 9:19.

It was Fox’s first career postseason goal. Oddly enough, it was also his first power play goal of the season. He didn’t score a single time on it. Go figure. The play doesn’t happen if not for Kreider and Strome winning board battles to keep the play alive.

They could’ve led by more. But DeSmith made the big saves to give his team a chance to settle down. Once they did, it turned into a great game. He finished with 48 saves on 51 shots before exiting with 10:42 left in the second overtime.

A turning point might’ve been the first of two Patrik Nemeth minor penalties. Even though the Pens didn’t score on it, they gained momentum. They finished the first better by finally testing Shesterkin.

The Lindgren roughing minor might not have been a penalty. It was a heavy hit where he went shoulder to chest on Rakell, who went down with 1:19 left. Once they ruled it a major penalty, you knew it was going to be at least a minor. Hitting is part of hockey. Especially in the playoffs. You hope Rakell is okay.

Eventually, Sullivan moved Kasperi Kapanen up to the Malkin line. It paid off. Kapanen went from the fourth line to the second line. That’s how effective he was. A good move by a very proven championship coach, who had a better night than Gallant.

Following a successful kill early in the second period, Copp got free in the slot to bury home a perfect feed from Strome at 3:08. On the play, Jacob Trouba moved the puck down low for Strome, who came out and found Copp to make it 2-0.

But before anyone could get comfortable, the Pens came right back. On a bad pinch from K’Andre Miller, the Rangers got caught scrambling around in their zone. After a remarkable save from a sprawling Shesterkin, they fell asleep.

Rust got a loose puck to Crosby, who then fed Guentzel all alone in front for his first of the game at 4:32. The momentum turning goal came 1:24 after Copp’s goal.

That changed the game. It was all Pens afterwards. They won every battle. Whatever the Rangers did right in the first, they were abysmal in the second. To allow an opponent to get 25 shots on goal in a period is unacceptable. It’s the playoffs.

The Crosby line did whatever they wanted. It didn’t matter who was matched against them. Gallant started the game with Zibanejad versus Crosby. Both Lindgren-Fox and Miller-Trouba saw plenty of shifts against them.

Even the checking line of Barclay Goodrow, Kevin Rooney and Reaves had some time. Though it didn’t make sense in sudden death. Sullivan dictated the match-ups. Something that must change for tomorrow night.

After they victimized Miller and Trouba, this time the Crosby line turned Lindgren and Fox into spectators on a Guentzel tying goal at 11:47. There was a lot of puck watching from all five skaters including Artemi Panarin, Copp and Strome. Eventually, Crosby drew both Lindgren and an out of position Fox up before sending in Guentzel to beat Shesterkin for his second of the postseason.

If not for some strong saves from Shesterkin, the Pens could’ve gone ahead. Instead, a Nemeth minor turned into a potential momentum shift. On a face-off win from Kreider, Zibanejad jumped on the puck and made a perfect lead pass for a streaking Kreider who blew the doors off with a beautiful shorthanded goal with 2:53 remaining.

The patience he showed is why he’s been special. Kreider came in at such a high speed easily beating Guentzel and then tucking in a backhand past DeSmith for the 3-2 lead. He certainly showed up posting a goal and assist.

While still shorthanded, Trouba caught Guentzel from behind boarding him to hand the Pens a two-man advantage. Sullivan wisely used his timeout. It worked. With time winding down on the five-on-three, Kris Letang started a perfect tic-tac-toe passing play to Malkin, who found Rust for the tap in to again tie it with 90 seconds left.

It was too easy. Braden Schneider was left to defend by himself. He couldn’t prevent the Malkin one touch pass for Rust’s easy finish for a huge power play goal. That really came back to bite the Rangers. They took too many undisciplined penalties. Another area that must be better.

One of the problems the coaching staff had was the sudden loss of Lindgren. That undisclosed injury he’s been in and out of the lineup with became a factor. He missed a lot of shifts, even going back to the locker room after testing it out.

That forced Gallant and Gord Murphy to shuffle the deck. He had to double shift Fox, Miller and Trouba. That meant a lot of tough assignments while Nemeth also had to step up and play with Fox. Miller saw some time with Schneider. It is a lot to ask. If Lindgren can’t go for Game Two, that means Justin Braun is in.

There are already casualties on both sides following last night’s marathon. The first triple overtime game at The Garden since Pete Stemkowski beat the Blackhawks on April 29, 1971.

The third period was much more guarded. As expected in a tie game, neither team wanted to make the one mistake that could cost them the game. That resulted in tighter checking.

There were still 23 total shots with the Pens holding a 12-11 edge. But the chances were earned. Both DeSmith and Shesterkin didn’t budge. It was like a gunfight at high noon.

Eventually, Kakko made a terrific defensive play in his end to create a great opportunity. With time and space, he took the puck hard to the tin and nearly beat DeSmith. But after Dumoulin pushed him from behind into the Pens goalie, Kakko made a heckuva pass for a Chytil finish into an open net with 3:10 left.

Just when you thought Chytil had the potential game-winner in Game One, a Sullivan challenge for goaltender interference was successful in record fashion. If I didn’t know any better, Toronto couldn’t wait to reverse it. Conspiracy theory be damned.

Obviously, there were a lot of boos and obligatory chants from the crowd about the refs. I too was incensed. But what can we do. That was the call. As hard as it was due to the third line playing well, the Rangers still had a chance to win it in overtime.

The first OT was their best opportunity. On a good Fox rush where he had a chance to shoot from the slot, he made the extra pass for Strome, who flubbed the potential winner. He didn’t expect it. Had he, we’re not talking about a gut wrenching loss. Even in a game he scored, Fox passed in that spot.

Too many Blueshirts passed. Especially Panarin, who had a night to forget. He was marked well by the Pens. They limited his time and space. But he had some bad turnovers even in sudden death that can’t happen. Held without a point, Panarin must turn the page.

The first overtime was by far their best. Kakko nearly won it on a good redirection only for DeSmith to make the huge save. Lafreniere also got a hard shot on DeSmith who shutdown the five-hole.

A Miller giveaway to Crosby nearly ended it. But Guentzel had his shot ring off the crossbar. That close to a playoff hat trick. The giveaways were a huge problem. The Rangers had 75 giveaways to the Penguins’ 45. Yikes. Only Kakko and Rooney didn’t have a giveaway.

As sudden death moved along, it became clear that it favored the Pens. They were more aggressive. Especially once DeSmith indicated to the officials that he couldn’t continue. They really went for it.

I thought the Rangers were far too passive. They were indecisive and fumbled pucks. Many passes were intercepted causing more attack time by the Pens. You can’t play that soft now. They got bodies in front and won most of the battles.

At one point following the mandatory 10-minute stoppage, Gallant sent out the fourth line for an offensive draw. This made no sense. You have to go for it after that break. Why not put out the Zibanejad or Panarin line? That same fourth line got caught out versus the Crosby line, who got two good chances.

By the start of the third OT, it looked like the Rangers were melting on ice. Think the Wicked Witch from Wizard Of Oz. It was only a matter of time before the Pens ended it.

Finally, Kapanen stole a puck from both Schneider and Chytil behind the Ranger net. He passed up for Marino, who patiently maneuvered around Lafreniere to get his point shot off. With nobody picking up Malkin, he tipped in the overtime winner at 5:58 of the sixth period.

There isn’t much else to add. They gave up 83 shots and way too many attempts. How much does a loss like that take out of our team? They’ve been resilient all year. It’s now time to see if they can do it with the stakes much higher.

Win Game Two and it’s all even headed back to Pittsburgh. They must get it done.

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2022 Stanley Cup Playoff Picks

I’m not real confident in some of these. That’s due to the balance that exists. There are some very evenly matched teams. Those series can go either way.

Expect a lot of brackets to be busted.

STANLEY CUP PLAYOFFS

Eastern Conference

First Round

Panthers over Caps in 5

Maple Leafs over Lightning in 7

Hurricanes over Bruins in 6

Rangers over Pens in 6

Second Round

Panthers over Leafs in 6

Hurricanes over Rangers in 7

Conference Final

Panthers over Hurricanes in 6

Western Conference

First Round

Avalanche over Predators in 6

Wild over Blues in 7

Flames over Stars in 5

Oilers over Kings in 6

Second Round

Avalanche over Wild in 7

Flames over Oilers in 6

Conference Final

Flames over Avalanche in 6

STANLEY CUP FINALS

Panthers over Flames in 7

Conn Smythe Winner: Aleksander Barkov

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Stanley Cup Playoff Preview: Who will be left standing in a hard to predict postseason?

They say that stories write themselves. In some cases, that’s true.

Take for example the Canadiens last year. They were left for dead after going down three games to one in the first round against the rival Maple Leafs. Then, they flipped the script to stun the Leafs, who again were eliminated early.

It turned into a great run before the Lightning stopped the Canadiens to win a second consecutive Stanley Cup. The first repeat champion since the Penguins (’16 & ’17). They earned it by getting past the Islanders in a tough seven-game rematch where Yanni Gourde’s shorthanded goal was the difference along with Conn Smythe winner Andrei Vasilevskiy.

But really, the Bolts are the ultimate team. Stars roll off the tongue. Led by captain Steven Stamkos, who went over 100 points and is red hot entering the 2022 Stanley Cup Playoffs that begin tonight, they have the championship pedigree. The ever clutch Brayden Point, Nikita Kucherov and Victor Hedman are part of a deeper core with high character players Anthony Cirelli, Ryan McDonagh, Alex Killorn, Ondrej Palat, Corey Perry, Pat Maroon and Erik Cernak.

After losing their entire third line of Gourde, Blake Coleman and Barclay Goodrow, who’s had a similar impact on the Rangers, the Bolts are hoping key additions Brandon Hagel and Nick Paul can play a part in becoming the first team to three-peat since the Islanders Dynasty (1980-83).

Ross Colton could be a breakout player if they can get past the Leafs in an electrifying first round match-up. Is this the year Toronto finally advances to the second round for the first time since ’04? League-leading goal scorer Auston Matthews (60 goals) and sidekick Mitch Marner know the time is now.

They won’t have Michael Bunting at the start of the series. A still eligible candidate for the Calder who they stole from the mindless Coyotes. There’s plenty of pressure on captain John Tavares and William Nylander to perform. But it’s Hart candidate Matthews and Marner who must erase last year by performing up to expectations.

Jack Campbell is going to be asked to make the big saves. If he isn’t up to it, virtual unknown Erik Kallgren is the only option for Sheldon Keefe. It could hinge on veteran defenseman Mark Giordano, who has stabilized a back end that features Morgan Rielly and Jake Muzzin.

There are other exciting series to keep an eye on. The Bruins challenge the Hurricanes, who’ll be without Freddie Andersen. His status still isn’t known. They play the same aggressive system in front of Antti Raanta, who is injury prone himself. Will Pyotr Kochetkov wind up in net?

The Canes are strong due to their puck possession skating style highlighted by Sebastian Aho, who is one of the game’s best overall centers. He, Andrei Svechnikov and blossoming rookie Seth Jarvis form a potent top line.

They’ll be tested by dynamic duo Patrice Bergeron and Brad Marchand. Split up from David Pastrnak, who still got 40 goals playing with Erik Haula and Taylor Hall, Bergeron and The Rat now have chemistry with Jake DeBrusk. By creating more balance, it makes Boston more formidable.

If you like contrast in styles, it’s the speed of the Canes versus the physicality of the Bruins. Look at the difference between Jaccob Slavin and Charlie McAvoy. Slavin is a shutdown first pair D who does it with superb skating and positioning. McAvoy is a meat and potatoes guy who will throw the big hit or make the key block. Both can contribute offensively.

If there’s one advantage for the Canes, it might be with Tony DeAngelo and Brady Skjei. Part of the Rangers South (Raanta, Stepan, Fast, Smith), they each can create offense in transition. DeAngelo is the bigger weapon who can do damage at both five-on-five and on the power play.

Skjei has rediscovered his offense by matching the 39 points he put up as a rookie. Partner Brett Pesce keeps opponents honest. The Bruins will lean on Matt Grzelcyk and Brandon Carlo to match up when McAvoy and veteran Hampus Lindholm can’t do the heavy lifting.

If you prefer depth, the Canes boast it with Nino Niederreiter and Vincent Trocheck two key scorers. Teuvo Teravainen plays on the second line. He’s a great passer who can be dangerous in transition. Marty Necas, Jesper Fast, Jordan Staal and Jesperi Kotkaniemi are solid secondary scorers with Staal, Fast and Niederreiter the reliable checking line.

The Bruins don’t have that. Craig Smith is a decent secondary scorer. But Charlie Coyle could be vital. Trent Frederic adds the grit factor.

It makes for an intriguing match-up. Are the Canes good enough to overcome the question in net? The Bruins counter with unproven duo Linus Ullmark and promising first-year man Jeremy Swayman. It should be a good series.

If ever a team has pressure, it’s the Panthers. They won the President’s Trophy for the first time. Boasting a plethora of scoring talent led by MVP candidate Jonathan Huberdeau and the tremendous Aleksander Barkov, this is a scary offense.

Nobody scored more goals. The Cats had 338. A remarkable amount thanks to their high flying style that not only emphasizes speed and skill, but physicality as well. Watch Mason Marchment, Sam Bennett and Patric Hornqvist.

Boasting four 30-goal scorers including Duclair and Sam Reinhart (82 points), they are never out of a game. However, it’s advisable not to fall behind at this time of year.

If Aaron Ekblad is ready, that’s a huge difference from last year when they fell in six hard fought games to the Lightning. They activate their D which include MacKenzie Weegar, Brandon Montour and Gustav Forsling. Radko Gudas provides all the nuts and bolts.

Anton Lundell is a good two-way rookie forward already. He centers the third line. Adding proven performer Claude Giroux makes them even more lethal. Especially on the man-advantage. He will find open teammates.

There’s some pressure on Sergei Bobrovsky to make the key stops. He bounced back by winning 39 games. But his numbers aren’t overly impressive. Partially due to how the Panthers play. There’ll be moments where Bobrovsky must come through. If not, then it’s on the young shoulders of Spencer Knight.

Florida has never advanced past the first round since their unbelievable run to the ’96 Stanley Cup Finals. They are the favorites to come out of an ultra competitive Eastern Conference.

The Capitals are limping in. Alex Ovechkin is expected to be ready for Game One. If he isn’t or not close to himself after that hard crash into the boards, forget about it. They need 50-goal Ovi to be a threat against the Panthers. He is the biggest reason they’re still a playoff team.

John Carlson and Evgeny Kuznetsov had strong seasons. They’ll both need to produce along with everyone’s favorite Tom Wilson. What are they getting from Nicklas Backstrom and T.J. Oshie? They can’t pull the upset without both being factors.

The Caps don’t really have a clear cut number one goalie. It says here Vitek Vanecek should be the guy over Ilya Samsonov, who hasn’t taken the leap just yet. If it becomes musical goalies, warm up the clubs for the golf course.

Can Anthony Mantha or Garnet Hathaway be key performers? Mantha is a streaky scorer while Hathaway is that unique combination of energy and strength that can thrive in this environment.

On paper, it looks like a mismatch. It’s the Panthers’ series to win or lose.

Perhaps the most intriguing first round series is the Rangers taking on the Penguins. They had a remarkable year to finish second in the Metro Division.

Highlighted by Vezina lock Igor Shesterkin, they have the edge in net. The Pens will not have Tristan Jarry for the start of the series. So, it’s up to Casey DeSmith. How much stock do you put into Shesterkin’s dominance versus the Pens? It depends on how he performs in his first NHL postseason.

Sidney Crosby can’t ever be considered an underdog. He’s still quite remarkable. Sidekick Jake Guentzel is the top finisher. Of course, Evgeni Malkin is part of the equation. He was kept quiet during the season series except for a power play goal that decided one game.

Kris Letang is expected to log the heavy minutes and bring offense. Brian Dumoulin does the defensive work. They’re quite similar to Adam Fox and Ryan Lindgren. Fox being the constant offensive threat who makes terrific outlets and runs the power play. Lindgren the stay at home type who doesn’t mind getting the jersey dirty.

The Pens are banking on Rickard Rakell to provide key scoring along with Bryan Rust. A player who didn’t have a good finish, but must be accounted for. Malkin is particularly dangerous on the power play. Twenty of his 42 points came on it. He’s a trigger man.

The Rangers are a much improved club. Since the additions of Andrew Copp and Frank Vatrano, they now boast two scoring lines that have better balance. Copp fits in well with Artemi Panarin and Ryan Strome. Both Panarin and Copp practiced and will be ready tomorrow. But the injuries make it interesting.

Chris Kreider led the Rangers with 52 goals and 26 power play goals. He’s become the consistent net front presence that opponents have to plan for. He’s so good around the net at tipping and deflecting shots that he’s turned it into an art. Any rebound and the defacto captain will pounce. Obviously, he must continue to perform along with sidekick Mika Zibanejad if they’re to make a run.

Perhaps the one notable difference is the Rangers’ physicality. Jacob Trouba not only can supply additional offense from the blue line. But he’s a locomotive. Trouba delivers hard hits and blocks shots. He could become a target during scrums due to his no-nonsense approach.

Partner K’Andre Miller has grown as a second-year player. He is the better skater with the long reach. But he’s added a physical element. Maybe playing with Trouba has rubbed off. Miller also is capable of using his skill to lead the rush. He could be the key to the series. There are moments he can get caught out of position, but recover. Look for the Pens to test him.

If you’re looking for a wildcard, it’s Alexis Lafreniere and Barclay Goodrow on the Manhattan side. Lafreniere has gotten better as the season has gone on. He’s a finisher at this stage. All 19 of his goals have come at even strength. Goodrow is the do everything intangibles player who can play third or fourth line. He will wind up taking key face-offs and be moved up and down as Gerard Gallant sees fit. He’s also an excellent penalty killer.

From a Pittsburgh perspective, they’ll look to Jeff Carter and Brian Boyle. They bring lots of experience. Carter anchors the third line. He still is a good skater. Boyle plays fourth line yet still can contribute. He doesn’t shy away from the net front.

The Pens will look to Mike Matheson for extra offense on the back end. He can get his shot through. John Marino, Chad Ruhwedel and Marcus Pettersson mostly concentrate on defense.

If you want to make a case for the Pens, aside from the obvious, it might be secondary guys like Kasperi Kapanen, Danton Heinen, Teddy Blueger, Brock McGinn and Jason Zucker (if he plays). Even Evan Rodrigues isn’t shy about shooting the puck.

The Rangers will look to grind the Penguins down. While Ryan Reaves might not see action early, he can always be inserted to provide a spark. The fourth line will likely be Goodrow, Kevin Rooney and Dryden Hunt, who Gerard Gallant prefers over Jonny Brodzinski.

If they get anything out of Filip Chytil or Kaapo Kakko, that bodes well. Ditto for Braden Schneider, whose poise could be overlooked.

If I went a bit longer on the Rangers, it’s because that’s who I cover and root for. Plus the Pens won’t be easy. Anyone who thinks that is delusional. I expect it to be hard fought and close.

The Western Conference might be easier to predict. It’s not as strong. Though that first round between the Blues and Wild promises to deliver. I can’t wait to see that when the Rangers aren’t on.

I feel like the Predators can give the Avalanche a series. I don’t like how Colorado looked coming in. They were sloppy. Maybe it’s due to getting Nazem Kadri back along with Devon Toews. Two key players if they’re to go far. Not just the second round.

The Preds are a bit top heavy. Roman Josi led them with 96 points. He basically carried them into the final wildcard. He is my Norris winner. Along with forty-goal scorers Filip Forsberg and Matt Duchene, that star trio can be a handful on the power play. Ryan Johansen also had a good year. They will count on production from their upper echelon players.

The Avalanche boast the soon to be reunited line of Nathan MacKinnon, Gabriel Landeskog and the explosive Mikko Rantanen. It could depend on Landeskog, who’s the same kind of emotional leader Kreider is in NYC. Except Landeskog is more proven. How healthy is he?

If you’re looking for a young defenseman who’ll take your breath away, that’s Cale Makar. He scored 28 goals. He is always a shooting threat. Makar is the polar opposite of Fox, who thinks pass first. They’re both great players. But Makar can find the openings for his dangerous shot. He is also a great skater and can play a little bit in his end.

When you can have both Josi and Makar going head to head in a Norris battle, that’s exciting. Duchene will be hearing the boos as he’s a former Av who they traded to speed up their rebuild. I’m sure he’d love nothing better than to silence that crowd.

For the Predators to have a chance, they need Juuse Saros (out for Games 1 and 2) to return at some point. He is that important. If not, then the net is likely left to David Rittich. The Avalanche are counting on Darcy Kuemper to deliver. He was shaky down the stretch, which coincided with their losing streak.

If Kadri plays to form, he gives Colorado a huge edge at center. As long as he avoids another suspension, he should be a factor. So too will secondary scorers Andre Burakovsky, Val Nichushkin, Artturi Lehkonen and J.T. Compher.

The Preds will rely on the physical Tanner Jeannot. He hits everything. Jeannot can also finish and play shorthanded. He has the perfect style for the postseason. It’s his brand of hockey along with Luke Kunin and Yakov Trenin that make Nashville fun to watch. Think smash mouth hockey.

Give the Avs the edge on defense with Toews one of the best at the position. Think the Islanders wish they could’ve kept him? Adding Josh Manson to a blue line anchored by Makar and Toews helps. Sam Girard and Erik Johnson are healthy too.

After Josi, the Preds have Mattias Ekholm, Alexandre Carrier and Dante Fabbro to round out the top four. They’ll log big minutes.

Mikael Granlund and Phiip Tomasino are keys offensively for Nashville. But all bets are off if Saros can’t return.

The Wild and Blues are evenly matched. You also could see all four goalies. Minnesota boasts the proven Marc-Andre Fleury and Cam Talbot. St. Louis counters with former 2019 Cup champ Jordan Binnington and unproven Ville Husso. I would guess Fleury for the Wild. I don’t know know who the Blues will go with.

Who do you prefer? A Wild offense led by Hart candidate Kirill Kaprizov, Kevin Fiala and Mats Zuccarello. Or a more balanced Blues attack highlighted by Vladimir Tarasenko, Pavel Buchnevich, Robert Thomas, Jordan Kyrou and Ivan Barbashev.

It’s not that Minnesota doesn’t have secondary scoring. Fiala plays on the second line. He’s been on fire. Ryan Hartman anchors the top line which is magic due to Kaprizov, whose chemistry with Zuccarello is undeniable.

It could hinge on Joel Eriksson Ek, Jordan Greenway and Marcus Foligno, who somehow is available despite limping off with a knee injury against Colorado. Frederick Gaudreau is a key player along with rookie Matt Boldy.

The Blues also boast playoff proven winners Ryan O’Reilly and Brayden Schenn. There’s also David Perron and Brandon Saad. They have a bit more depth. That’s why they’re explosive. But the Wild can score too and love to finish checks. Expect this series to be nasty.

Both teams have solid blue lines. Although I’d give the edge to St. Louis due to the battle tested Colton Parayko, who anchors it with Justin Faulk. Torey Krug is also proven along with veteran pickup Nick Leddy and Marco Scandella.

The Wild are led by captain Jared Spurgeon and Jonas Brodin. There’s also Matt Dumba and Alex Goligoski. Plus Dmitry Kulikov.

This has all the makings of a classic series. I think it goes the distance. Flip a coin.

If there’s a series I think that won’t go as far, it’s the Flames against the Stars. No disrespect to Dallas. But they probably can’t match the firepower of Calgary.

Johnny Gaudreau, Elias Lindholm and Matthew Tkachuk all scored 40 or more goals and went a combined plus-182. Gaudreau should be up for the Hart. They are the best scoring line at five-on-five entering the tournament. The unique combination of skating, skill and tenacity make this cohesive trio a nightmare.

Who can the Stars use to match up? Miro Heiskanen is a good enough skater who’s had success against Connor McDavid. He will be asked to line up against them. Maybe it’ll be a job assigned to both Heiskanen and vet Ryan Suter. Esa Lindell is also a defensive defenseman. Perhaps he too.

The Stars will need Jason Robertson (41 goals), Roope Hintz and Joe Pavelski to deliver offensively. Jamie Benn and Tyler Seguin are big keys along with Denis Gurianov, who didn’t have the best season scoring. Maybe Jacob Peterson can provide a lift.

John Klingberg is still the Stars’ top offensive defenseman and power play quarterback. He also can be exploited in his end. Think about the heavy forecheck the Flames play. It could be disastrous.

In order to have any shot, they’ll need great goaltending from Jake Oettinger. He won 30 games to get them into the postseason. He’s a bit streaky. But has a good glove. Oettinger will face a lot of pressure.

Jacob Markstrom should be up for the Vezina. He had a brilliant year for Calgary. The thing is they also play well in front of him. That’s due to how Darryl Suter coaches. He should be up for the Jack Adams along with Gallant.

As dynamic as the top line is for Calgary, Andrew Mangiapane can finish and Coleman is a pest as we saw with the Bolts. Mikael Backlund is a key contributor along with Dillon Dube. Tyler Toffoli is a good addition who can be trusted in any role.

The blue line is underrated. With both Rasmus Andersson and Noah Hanifin delivering big seasons along with Oliver Kylington, it’s a new era for Calgary. They have enough offense from an active back end to keep opponents pinned in. Chris Tanev, Nikita Zadorov and Erik Gudbranson supply the grit.

The Stars will need to get one of the first two in a crazy environment in Alberta. If not, it’ll be a short stay.

In the other Western match-up, it pits the high flying Oilers against the stingy Kings. Obviously, Edmonton boasts the ridiculous scoring duo in McDavid and Leon Draisaitl. They are playing well since the addition of the polarizing Evander Kane.

At one point, the playoffs look like a stretch for Edmonton. They struggled mightily. That forced GM Ken Holland to make a coaching change. Since Jay Woodcroft replaced Dave Tippett, they’ve been on a roll. The turnaround coincided with Kane, who has been a major factor. He’ll need to be for the Oilers to go far.

As much pressure as Matthews and Marner have in Toronto, it might be even more scrutinized for McDavid and Draisaitl who are the game’s best duo. They have to win this series. If they do, it could set up a Battle Of Alberta.

One thing Woodcroft will do is double shift his best players. That means they’ll see a lot of Phillip Danault. He was instrumental in the Habs’ run a year ago. The checking center will be a key factor if the Kings advance. Trevor Moore and Viktor Arvidsson (missed Game One) are part of that equation.

Anze Kopitar remains one of the game’s true gems. The LA captain is still centering the top line playing significant minutes. He and top finisher Adrian Kempe must find offense. Especially against the explosive Oilers who also feature Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, Zach Hyman, Kailer Yamamoto, Tyson Barrie, Darnell Nurse and Evan Bouchard.

Keep an eye on Arthur Kaliyev and Alex Iafallo. Two Kings who can help in a supporting role. Kaliyev has a great shot that can be unleashed on the power play. Iafallo is a solid role player.

Without ace defenseman Drew Doughty, the Kings have gotten a lot out of Matt Roy and veteran Alex Edler. They do it by committee with Mikey Anderson and Jordan Spence logging key minutes along with Olli Maatta.

Ryan McLeod and Zack Kassian provide energy for Edmonton. It’s mostly going to hinge on McDavid, Draisaitl and Kane. There’s a dynamic since Kane arrived that’s made them harder to play against. He provides a lot of the grit that they lacked.

At the moment, it’s Mike Smith versus Jonathan Quick in net. Advantage Kings. Quick has won two Cups and a Conn Smythe. He hasn’t been in this position in a while. He got hot down the stretch to get Los Angeles in. As for Smith, one screw-up and Mikko Koskinen could replace him.

It is the final hurrah for Dustin Brown. A proud veteran of both Kings’ Cups who’s been through the playoff wars, he has lasted two decades as a hard-nosed physical player who lasted this long due to his work ethic. He’ll give it everything he has. That could be some extra incentive for the Kings.

You can’t always account for experience. Maybe LA has the edge in that department due to Brown, Kopitar and Quick. Three holdovers from both Cups along with the injured Doughty.

If I’m Edmonton, I want a short series. Don’t give LA any hope. The longer it goes, the worse it could be. But they do have a home Game Seven at Rogers Place if it comes to that. The crowd will be rocking.

Breaking down the 16 participants isn’t easy. There’s a lot of competitive balance. It’ll be hard to predict the playoffs. That’s where the game is. You can make several cases for teams going deep.

Not just Cup favorites Florida and Colorado. A lot can happen. It probably will.

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Rangers end regular season with one-goal win over Capitals, Lafreniere gets 19th, Kakko two assists, Georgiev strong in possible last game as Blueshirt

In what was a good way to conclude the regular season, the Rangers defeated the Capitals 3-2 on Friday night at The Garden. They came back for a one-goal win over an old Patrick Division rival.

On Fan Appreciation Night, goals from Alexis Lafreniere and Dryden Hunt helped them come back for a final time during the 82-game schedule. Lafreniere got his 19th while Hunt finished off his sixth for the game-winner.

In what might’ve been his final game as a Blueshirt, Alex Georgiev made 34 saves on 36 shots. Somehow, the clueless media didn’t vote him as the game’s First Star. Instead, it went to Hunt. Do they actually watch these games?

A couple of days removed from not his best start in a tough 4-3 home loss to the Canadiens, Georgiev turned in one of his better performances of what’s been a challenging season. It isn’t easy to take a back seat to Igor Shesterkin, who deservedly won Team MVP earlier in the day.

Despite having periods of inactivity due to the special year from Shesterkin, whose .935 save percentage ranks third in NHL history among goalies who played a minimum of 50 games, Georgiev managed to finish ’21-22 better. He won eight of his last nine decisions.

That included going 4-1-0 with a 2.00 GAA and .927 save percentage plus a shutout in April. For sure, the way the 26-year old Bulgarian wanted to end the season. Overall, Georgiev won 15 games against 10 defeats with two overtime losses. In 33 games, he posted a 2.92 GAA, .898 save percentage and two shutouts.

If that’s indeed it, he finishes his Rangers career 58-48-11 with a 2.94 GAA, .908 save percentage and eight shutouts over 129 appearances (117 starts). Not bad for a guy that wasn’t drafted. For anyone who says he didn’t contribute, they’re flat out wrong. He won 15 games including the remarkable 44-save virtuoso performance over Carolina on Mar. 20.

In the 82nd game, only Artemi Panarin (upper-body) and Andrew Copp (lower-body) rested. Panarin led the team in scoring for the third straight year. His 96 points were a career high along with a Rangers’ best 74 assists to set a new record by forwards over a season.

Copp posted 18 points (8-10-18) in 16 games post trade deadline to become a key pickup. He will play a pivotal role on the Panarin line with Ryan Strome when they face the Penguins in the first round. That series starts next Tuesday at MSG with game time after 7 PM. It’s every other day.

NHL FIRST ROUND SERIES

(2) New York Rangers vs. (3) Pittsburgh Penguins

Tuesday May 3 Pens at Rangers 7 PM

Thursday May 5 Pens at Rangers 7 PM

Saturday May 7 Rangers at Pens 7 PM

Monday May 9 Rangers at Pens 7 PM

*Wednesday May 11 Pens at Rangers TBD

*Friday May 13 Rangers at Pens TBD

*Sunday May 15 Pens at Rangers TBD

Unfortunately, that means no Game One for us. Bummer. Just how the schedule works out. Had it been Monday, there would’ve been live playoff hockey to see at MSG. I’m really disappointed for Justin and Dad. Especially my brother. Hopefully, there’ll be a date that works.

As far as facing the Pens, it’ll be tough. They’re coming in healthy. They play more of a playoff style than the Caps, who still don’t know the Game One status of Alex Ovechkin when they begin their first round series against the President’s Trophy winning Panthers. Ovechkin had a good time up in the press box as only he can.

Ovechkin is a classic. Hopefully for his team, he’ll be ready to go. If not, they could get bounced out quickly. That series looks like a mismatch. However, the games must still be played. You never know. It’s the playoffs.

In terms of other special awards the team handed out, both Barclay Goodrow and Jacob Trouba shared Player’s Player. Both were equally deserving for how they each carried themselves on and off the ice. For sure, team leaders who really handled things and stepped in for teammates.

The John Halligan Award recognizes the one Rangers player who is very easy to deal with for the media. That went to Strome, who really is a terrific interview. He is superb at breaking down the game, and always a good quote. This is a nice honor for a good team guy.

If you don’t know who John Halligan is, I suggest you look him up. He was an outstanding photographer and publicist who worked for the Rangers in Public Relations and Communications. I even recall meeting him once while interning for Stan Fischler. A wonderful man who was the ultimate professional.

If you wanted a look at a different award the organization used to present, Sean McCaffrey of bluecollarblueshirts.com has you covered on the Frank Boucher Trophy. He has filled in the missing seasons since they stopped handing it out in 2010. I agree with his extensive list and explanations for which players he selected.

As far as the final tuneup before the calendar turns to May, it was nice to see the boys go out the right way. They ended a season high three-game losing streak in regulation.

In doing so, the Rangers finish with 52 wins to tie for the most in franchise history. They went 52-24-6 with 110 points. A tremendous season under Jack Adams candidate Gerard Gallant. Now, business picks up. Something Jim Ross would say. Turk will earn his money.

Players that dressed included Chris Kreider, Mika Zibanejad, Adam Fox, Ryan Lindgren and Trouba. All who sat out on Wednesday when they presented Kreider as the inaugural winner of the Rod Gilbert Award.

Mr. Ranger must’ve been proud watching from above. He was a big fan of Kreider. Maybe it explains his career year of 52 goals including a new club record in power play goals (26) and game-winning goals (11). The 77 points he finished with are a career high. He also tied his career best in assists (25).

Although he didn’t add to his total, he looked good. Especially on the penalty kill with sidekick Zibanejad, who narrowly missed getting number 30 with the Washington net vacated in the closing minute.

A positive was the play of Kaapo Kakko. He still isn’t shooting the puck enough. But he distributed it to pick up a pair of primary assists. That included a smart play along the boards where he pushed a puck towards Filip Chytil, who managed to catch Ilya Samsonov napping for his eighth at 3:26 of the second period.

But before PA announcer Joe Tolleson could reveal the game’s first goal, the Caps came right back on the next shift. On a play where the kid line of Kakko, Chytil and Lafreniere were far too passive, they let Trevor van Riemsdyk cut in and get a good shot that rebounded off Georgiev right to Justin Schultz for the tying goal just 35 seconds later.

Thirteen seconds afterwards, Kevin Rooney tripped up Garnet Hathaway. On their third power play after getting nothing done on an early one in the second, T.J. Oshie and Evgeny Kuznetsov combined to pass up top for an open John Carlson. He let go of a rocket that beat Georgiev through traffic high and far side to give the Caps the lead.

Now trailing by one, Gallant made a lineup adjustment. He moved Lafreniere off the Chytil line and up with Strome and Goodrow. It was a smart move. That trio played well together. Goodrow adds that grit factor. It’s why I believe he must play on the third line over Kakko. He wins face-offs and creates space.

After a few key saves from Georgiev, the Rangers took full advantage of a rare bad turnover by Carlson. As he wound up to make a pass in the neutral zone, the veteran defenseman missed the puck completely. It was like watching Joey Gallo at the plate for the Yankees.

Following the Carlson whiff that took him out of the play, Braden Schneider picked up the puck and moved it for Lafreniere, who started a two-on-one with Strome. It became a perfect give and go with Strome returning a pass for an easy Lafreniere finish on the doorstep to tie the score at 15:44.

The funny aspect is after he scored his 19th goal (all even strength), a smiling Lafreniere adjusted his helmet behind the net as he received congrats. Something that amused teammates along with Sam Rosen and Joe Micheletti. If only he could’ve gotten one more for 20.

I believe Lafreniere will get 30 next year. In fact, I’m on record. Don’t believe me? I’m a man of my word.

In the third, all you were looking for is a good period and a goal to get a win. They got both.

When Gallant switched his lines, he made another wise change by shifting Hunt on the third line. It worked. You can’t not have some sandpaper with Chytil, Lafreniere or Kakko.

In this case, the grinding Hunt was the ingredient who got rewarded for his hustle. Following a good pass from Fox to Kakko that kept a play alive, it was Kakko who found Hunt open down low. One-on-one with an aggressive Samsonov, he made a great move by patiently maneuvering around the Caps goalie and tucking in the puck on the forehand for his sixth.

That gave the Rangers a one-goal lead with 13:18 remaining. For a no frills guy who is best suited on the fourth line, Hunt’s had a good year. The 26-year old forward has set new career highs across the board in games played (76), goals (6), assists (11) and points (17). He’s also posted 52 penalty minutes and 153 hits.

Give credit to Gallant for believing in him. He liked his work ethic. Hunt isn’t going to blow anyone away. But more often than not, he gets his nose dirty. That’s a good thing. If he plays on the checking line next week, Hunt knows what his role is.

Still nursing a one-goal lead, the Blueshirts made a couple of mistakes that could’ve allowed the Caps to tie it. Most notably, K’Andre Miller lost the puck in the neutral zone. That allowed Tom Wilson to sneak behind and get in on Georgiev, who made a great sliding pad save to deny his backhand attempt.

He would make some more key stops in crunch time. That included a couple on a late Caps’ power play. Goodrow was off for hooking Dmitry Orlov.

There were some flat-out denials by Georgiev, who looked more confident as the game went on. He stopped a cool dozen shots in a busy third to earn the victory.

With Samsonov lifted for an extra attacker that at one point gave them a six-on-four, the Caps searched for the equalizer. It never came.

With the open net to shoot at, Kreider made a long attempt from his own end shorthanded. But it missed the net. A bit later, Zibanejad had a good look at a closer shot. But his backhand hit the goalpost.

It didn’t matter. The Rangers did enough to send the Garden crowd home happy. Several lucky fans got autographed jerseys as part of the team tradition. It’s ridiculous that they couldn’t meet and greet their heroes on the ice. Pandemic nonsense.

I like the way they have the players stay on the ice along with whoever is scratched coming down to present their jerseys to fans. That’s always been great. I wish they could’ve been presented in person.

It doesn’t make a whole lot of sense. There are no more restrictions. Why not. It could be a better question for both MSG, the Rangers and the NHL. I wonder if that applies to every arena. Who knows.

What is exciting is that it’s not over. There will be a postseason. We know it won’t be easy. I’m not going to go in detail in this post. I’ll save that for my series preview. I’ll also as usual have a full NHL Playoff Preview.

Keep an eye out for it over the weekend. Believe it or not, there is still one more game for the Kraken and Jets to make up on Sunday. While neither team is in the playoffs, it makes sense to have them play it. That way all 32 teams play a full 82.

Kudos to the NHL on getting through a still partially COVID interrupted season. They did a good job making up the games. It’s nice to see the league complete a full season. Something I had my doubts about during the cold winter with all the postponements.

Now comes the best part. The Stanley Cup Playoffs. Congrats to the Rangers on a successful season. Now, it’s time for the true test. It’s sure to be exciting. Let’s embrace it.

THREE STARS 🌟 🤩 ✨️

3rd 🌟 Braden Schneider NYR 2 assists, +2 in 14:57

2nd 🌟 Kaapo Kakko NYR 2 assists, 2 SOG, +1 in 14:03

1st 🌟 Alex Georgiev NYR 34 saves on 36 shots including 12/12 stops in 3rd

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Kreider wins first ever Rod Gilbert Award as Mr. Ranger

Prior to last night’s game, the Rangers presented a special new award. The Rod Gilbert Award goes to the player who exemplifies what being a Ranger is all about.

Rod Gilbert is probably the most iconic Blueshirt. As part of the memorable GAG Line, he spent his entire Hall Of Fame career on Broadway, scoring 406 goals with 615 assists for a franchise best 1021 points.  Nobody had more goals or points as a New York Ranger. Gilbert also is the franchise leader in even strength goals (298) and game-winning goals (52).

It was not only his consistency as a player that made him a fan favorite. But how he conducted himself off the ice. Gilbert always interacted with the fans. He became the Rangers Ambassador. A role he held with pride by representing the team well.

Many fans had memorable experiences with the legendary Hockey Hall Of Famer. That’s who Gilbert was. Always greeting everyone with a smile and even discussing the game with the fans. Dad met him plenty of times. I got a photo with him too at a team event. Awesome stuff.

It is for that reason that following his passing last summer that the organization decided to create an award named for Rod Gilbert. One that would honor his memory and everything he meant to the franchise.

Before the Rangers hosted the Canadiens on a night they also acknowledged recently passed hockey legend Guy Lafleur, who spent one year in Manhattan following a distinguished career with Montreal, they had a special presentation.

Adam Graves joined Rod’s wife Judy Christy who made the announcement. Before revealing the first ever winner, she mentioned how big a fan her late husband was of this player. Then, said how proud she was to present the Rod Gilbert Award to Chris Kreider.

Rod Gilbert Award Winner Chris Kreider gives interview on MSG Network. Photo by New York Rangers

A night removed from being near tears after winning the Steven McDonald Award as voted by the fans, a happier Kreider smiled as he came out on the ice in street clothes before hugging Judy and taking a picture. It was wonderful.

With nothing on the line for the Rangers, Kreider was one of seven regulars Gerard Gallant decided to rest. Andrew Copp, Adam Fox, Ryan Lindgren, Artemi Panarin,  Jacob Trouba and Mika Zibanejad all sat out. A deserved night off for all.

Especially Kreider, whose 52 goals matched Graves for the second most by a Ranger in a season. His 77 points are a career high and 26 power play goals along with 11 game-winners are new team records for a single season.

It sure has been a special year for the Boston, Massachusetts kid who once was selected 19th overall in the 2009 NHL Draft. Having never reached 30 goals with 28 the most, Kreider has been a model of consistency.

With the departure of Pavel Buchnevich, who has had a career year in St. Louis, it’s been Kreider that has stepped to the forefront. He’s led by example on and off the ice. The only thing left for him to receive is the captaincy. Something that looks like a foregone conclusion once 2022-23 begins. That’s a long way off.

Right now, there’s plenty of business for the Rangers to take care of. After tonight’s slate of games with both the Caps and Pens in action, we’ll have a better idea how much meaning tomorrow’s season finale against Washington will mean. It’ll either be them or Pittsburgh in the first round starting either next Monday or Tuesday.

It’s been an exciting season. One that’s restored pride to the Rangers jersey. There’ll be a real postseason. The first in five long years. Zibanejad still hasn’t forgotten how 2017 ended. Good. Holdovers like him and Kreider shouldn’t. They want to make this year special.

Seeing the success of those two in particular has been great to watch. The growth and maturity of the Broadway dynamic duo are a big reason for the team’s success. They are two of the biggest leaders. Along with Fox, Trouba, Artemi Panarin, Ryan Strome and key addition Barclay Goodrow, there are plenty of high character players who have been instrumental.

Igor Shesterkin also didn’t play on Wednesday. The Vezina favorite got a night off. It remains to be seen if he’ll get the final start of the regular season tomorrow. He’s been unbelievable. The certain Team MVP is the most important player headed into the playoffs. They wouldn’t be here without him.

That sure is true of Chris Kreider. Congratulations to him on such special honors. It is well deserved.

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Hurricanes storm past Rangers to capture Metro Division, Kreider wins Steven McDonald Award, Late comeback falls short, Copp and Panarin exit early for precaution, MSG broadcast disappoints

There’s a lot to get to tonight. In losing 4-3 to the Hurricanes despite being down both Artemi Panarin and Andrew Copp the final two periods, the Rangers gave a valiant effort.

Ultimately, it’ll go down as a one-goal loss to the first place Hurricanes. They wrapped up the Metro Division by coming into The Garden and laying claim to their second straight division title. That means Carolina will be the first seed and likely face the Bruins in the first round. The NHL Playoffs begin next Monday, May 2.

There’s no shame in losing. Especially when Gerard Gallant had to scramble his lines once Panarin and Copp exited to protect minor injuries. It’s upper-body for Panarin and lower-body for Copp. If this were next week, Gallant indicated they would’ve played. Better to proceed with caution with what’s ahead.

Despite using only 10 forwards while the Canes had a baker’s dozen and the full allotment on the back end, the Blueshirts managed to slice a 4-1 deficit to one thanks to Alexis Lafreniere scoring his 18th at 18:58 with Igor Shesterkin on the bench.

They didn’t go down easy. Not on a special night where they honored the memory of Steven McDonald by having son Conor present the prestigious Award to a very deserving Chris Kreider. The NYPD Sergeant who followed in his late father’s footsteps, said he was very happy to see Kreider receive the award.

Emotions ran high before opening face-off at 33rd and 7th. The Steven McDonald Award embodies everything you want to see from a Ranger who goes above and beyond the call of duty like the many police officers who sacrifice their lives to protect this city everyday.

It’s been in existence since 1987-88. We all know the story of former NYPD patrolman Steven McDonald, who was shot in the line of duty by a teenager in 1986. He was paralyzed from the neck down and a quadriplegic due to the unfortunate circumstances. Somehow, he found it deep in his heart to forgive the teen who eventually apologized.

It’s that tremendous character and human spirit that made McDonald so synonymous with the fabric of New York City. I always looked forward to his speeches near the end of the season. He truly was amazing. Although he’s since passed on over five years ago, his spirit and legacy lives on in our hearts.

Seeing a homegrown kid like Kreider win the award was special. The longest tenured Ranger who’s close to the family, showed a lot of emotion when Conor announced him as the winner. In an interview with Dave Maloney during intermission following a wonderful first period, he teared up while speaking about how much it meant to him to win.

In a season where he’s been unbelievable, it was fitting that Kreider scored a goal during the second period to cut the deficit to 2-1. That goal gave him 52 for the season. He’s now tied Adam Graves for the second most goals ever scored by a Blueshirt in a season. With two games remaining against Montreal and Washington, he needs two to tie record holder Jaromir Jagr. Three to pass him.

It’s hard to think about anything else aside from how Kreider reacted to winning the Steven McDonald Extra Effort Award. There was a game that they lost. But to see him score a beauty of a goal by out maneuvering Pyotr Kochetkov for a sweet backhand tuck, that was magical. Poetic too when you think about what the true captain has meant to this team.

As much as we recognize the remarkable play of Shesterkin for where they are, Kreider has 52 goals. That’s insane! The next closest is Mika Zibanejad with 29. Where would they be without the consistent production of Kreider, who at 30 has finally gotten rewarded for all his hard work? 52 goals. 26 power play goals. 11 game-winners. 77 points.

It speaks for itself. Shesterkin is the Team MVP. Even if he allowed four goals on 36 shots against a tough opponent, he remains a virtual lock for his first Vezina. Something that would be well deserved for the electrifying 26-year old Russian. He made a bevy of big saves to give our team a chance. Of course he did.

With them now knowing they can do no better than second place in the division with a date guaranteed featuring either the Caps or Pens next week, it’s possible that Gallant might opt to rest Shesterkin for Game One.

Alex Georgiev should definitely get the start tonight against the Canadiens, who are coming off a very emotional tribute to legend Guy Lafleur. If you haven’t seen it, please do. It was amazing. A 10-minute standing ovation following the emotional video tribute which was perfect. The Habs care about their history and tradition.

I wish I could say the same for Madison Square Garden and the Rangers organization. They really did a former legend a disservice during the third period of tonight’s broadcast on MSG. It was abominable.

As far as the game versus the Carolina Rangers [six dressed including Antti Raanta as the backup], I had no complaints. The first period delivered some of the best hockey we’ve seen. Playoff intensity. Splendid goaltending. Great skating. Edge. Scoring chances.

At the start, the first good chance was created by Zibanejad. He skated around the net and fed Frank Vatrano in front for a good opportunity that Kochetkov denied in tight. For a 22-year old with less than two games of NHL experience, the Canes’ goalie prospect played well. Kochetkov finished with 31 saves on 34 shots.

Following some early stops from his younger Russian counterpart, it was Shesterkin’s turn to make the big saves. On a bad clearing attempt by Filip Chytil, the dangerous Teuvo Teravainen got in and made two fakes that Shesterkin didn’t go for. He came up with the clutch stop on a tough backhand.

Nino Niederreiter would later ring one off the far goalpost. Always a pleasant sound for goalies. Not shooters. Niederreiter would be heard from later in a different aspect.

While pressuring booing target Tony DeAngelo, who earned them in this one, Vatrano got his stick into the Canes’ defenseman to earn a tripping minor. That gave the Canes a power play.

On it, they had a couple of good looks. They move the puck well. That created a chance for Martin Necas, who instead of shooting went for the pass. It didn’t work. Then Igor stoned rookie Seth Jarvis, who’ll be seeing him in his dreams after tonight. He was robbed several times.

After dodging the Carolina power play, then it was the Rangers’ turn to finally get some attack time. It was quite memorable. You had Panarin put on a series of moves on proven shutdown defenseman Jaccob Slavin. With the crowd loving it, Panarin made one final dance move and nearly had Zibanejad for the first goal. Credit Kochetkov for tracking the play and making the key stop.

One thing I noticed in a high shooting period where the teams combined for 25 shots (14-11 Canes) is Kochetkov took away the bottom part of the net. That’s what most of these goalies do. If there was an area they could’ve been better at, it was getting traffic. They didn’t test Kochetkov enough upstairs.

Part of that was due to how well the Hurricanes defended the net front. They didn’t allow many unchecked Blueshirts to get free. There weren’t many rebounds either. They were kept to the outside by a well schooled team.

The refs then got tricked into calling Ryan Reaves for holding on Brady Skjei. He pulled the old Jamie Langenbrunner Special. That’s where a player pulls an opponent’s stick into them and gets the call. Langenbrunner was the master at that. But it was usually hooking.

It should’ve been two each. Utterly ridiculous. Not coincidentally, Skjei got a real tough shot on Shesterkin where the Canes peppered him on their second man-advantage. He stopped eight power play shots in total in the period.

Finally, the Rangers got a call. This time, Skjei was nabbed for a hook on Zibanejad, who made sure to sell it to the blind duo of Corey Syvret and the always unreliable Chris Lee. Lee has been brutal for years. I don’t bash officials often. But I can’t stand Lee. He and Syvret had a bad night.

This moment got to me. That would be a teary-eyed Kreider talking to Maloney about the significance of the McDonald Award. It was something.

Following a successful kill that freed Skjei, who had a good game, the Canes were penalized again. Jordan Staal hooked into Jacob Trouba enough to hand the Rangers a second consecutive power play early on in the second period.

If there was one noticeable difference, it was the aggressive nature of the Canes’ penalty killers. They really do a good job pressuring up top. The Rangers got a couple of chances down low. But passes for Kreider just missed. That was due to the Canes’ aggressiveness.

Then Necas took down Barclay Goodrow for a third consecutive penalty. This really was the opportunity the home side blew. Kreider had the best chance, but Kochetkov denied him point blank by closing it up.

Following that save, Adam Fox made a nice move at the Carolina blue line and got tripped. No call. He hustled to keep the play alive. But eventually, the Canes’ relentless pressure led to Sebastian Aho nearly setting up Teravainen shorthanded. Shesterkin made a tough save on a high labeler.

It was following that kill where things unraveled. The Canes really upped the intensity. They started forechecking and keeping our players pinned in. Eventually, it led to Vincent Trocheck breaking the ice after Ryan Lindgren fell down. Skjei found Trocheck open for a one-timer into an open side with K’Andre Miller caught in no man’s land.

It was following that goal where I was incensed. Fox was blatantly tripped. This one had to be called. But in typical fashion, it wasn’t. I know the power play stunk. But that should’ve been a five-on-four.

At that point, both Copp and Panarin were done for the night. I still would’ve loved to see what Gallant could’ve come up with had they gotten a fourth straight power play in that spot. They were only down a goal.

Of course, right after the miss came a second Canes’ goal. Fittingly, it was Derek Stepan who took a weird shot from the slot that took a funny deflection off of Jordan Martinook in front to make it 2-0 at 13:48.

Give Chris Lee and his partner the assist for blindness. They weren’t finished messing up the game.

Even with things working against them, you had a spark from the Zibanejad line. Twice, Kreider was stopped by Kochetkov. However, he would finally break through when off a broken play, he took a Vatrano lead and went backhand deke to slip home number 52 at 16:56.

But with the crowd that included Dad and his friend Tommy back into it, they fell asleep on the next Canes’ goal. Another subtle play by Skjei was followed by a tip pass from Trocheck leading to Teravainen finally getting one past Shesterkin high blocker for a crusher with 1:41 left.

That made it 3-1. With a few seconds to go, chaos ensued behind Kochetkov’s net. After Skjei got physical with Zibanejad after a late bid with a strong check, Niederreiter got involved. He shoved down Zibanejad.

Somehow, he didn’t get an extra for this. Instead, they gave Fox and him matching roughing minors. This was absolute madness. It’s some of the worst officiating I’ve seen this year.

Also getting involved was DeAngelo at the buzzer. He gave Miller a chop to the leg. This enraged the Rangers bench. Reaves came over and exchanged words with DeAngelo, who really drew the ire of the fans. If he wasn’t the enemy before, he sure is now. DeAngelo embraced being the heel. The boos were louder in the third.

Maybe the most disappointing part was that before they could get going, Aho scored his 37th only 32 seconds into the final period. He was set up by Jarvis and Slavin.

That goal really was too much to overcome. It made it 4-1. For most of the third, it felt like a glorified exhibition. The Blueshirts seemed to pull back while the Hurricanes finished every check. That irked me.

But in a game where Shesterkin made many great saves to keep it from being a blowout, the Rangers never quit. They never do. It’s not in this team’s DNA.

Even without two of their best forwards, they found a way to get back in it. On a good Zibanejad forecheck, he got the puck over for Miller who found Trouba for a long point shot that took a good carom off Jesper Fast. That made it 4-2 with 6:48 remaining.

The goal for Trouba gave him a new career high with 11. He’s one point away from 40. It would be the second time if he got it. He hit 50 for the only time with the Jets in ’18-19.

With no more penalties or nastiness, the Blueshirts kept coming at Kochetkov. Eventually with Shesterkin off, Lafreniere was able to put home a Kreider feed to make it 4-3 with 62 seconds to go.

It was a valiant effort. Even though they never found the tying goal, they forced the healthier Canes to hold on for the win. They made them earn it.

My biggest disappointment with the home broadcast was the complete ignorance of Bill Cook. They even put up a graphic showing that Kreider with his 229th goal was now ninth on the all-time franchise list.

Even Sam Rosen didn’t mention Cook by name. It’s like he doesn’t exist. This is an organizational failure from the top. They only care about 1994 and acknowledge the 1971-72 team due to what it meant to fans like our Dad growing up.

Believe it or not, there was plenty of Rangers history before Rod Gilbert, Jean Ratelle and Vic Hadfield. It isn’t only Ed Giacomin, Harry Howell, Andy Bathgate (Dad’s favorite Ranger), Brad Park or any of the retired ’94 heroes we love.

How many of our fans know about Camille Henry being sixth on the all-time franchise goal scoring list ahead of Brian Leetch and Mark Messier? Dad could tell you all about him.

Without those who came before them, there are no New York Rangers or any Madison Square Garden at 34th Street Penn Station. That’s not where they originated. History is all but ignored like the plague by the organization.

Despite all the great things they do which include a night like tonight honoring Steven McDonald, the jersey retirements, the Garden Of Dreams, it is a total disservice to true fans of the team to not acknowledge the entire history.

The Bread Line of Bill and Bun Cook with Frank Boucher are responsible for so much of the franchise’s success. So is Lorne Chabot, Dave Kerr and Lester Patrick. Sean McCaffrey of bluecollarblueshirts.com has harped on this for a while. He has a book covering the full history.

They never even thought to honor Emile Francis for what he did restoring pride to the Rangers in the 60’s to set up the 70’s. They let him pass away and made one acknowledgment. Brutal.

We all love seeing Henrik Lundqvist add his excellent views on what’s coming up for this team. He’s a joy to watch just like his playing days. He’s a King. I wish they didn’t overlook their own rich history. That’s where they won three of four Cups.

I’m done. I find myself disappointed over this oversight. Shame on the fools who run the statistics and history of the Rangers. They suck!

There’s another game tonight. It’s against a true Original Six franchise who recognizes their entire history.

THREE STARS 🌟 🤩 ✨️

3rd 🌟 Pyotr Kochetkov Canes 31 saves on 34 shots

2nd 🌟 Brady Skjei Canes 2 assists, 4 SOG, +1 in 21:40, a pest throughout

1st 🌟 Chris Kreider NYR goal number 52 to tie Graves for 2nd most in a season by a Ranger, assist, 6 SOG, Steven McDonald Award Winner

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Devils 2021-22 season recap: Another season of more valleys than peaks

Yes I know there are still three games left in the 2021-22 season, but for all intents and purposes our season was over three months ago. Two of these games left are also against non-playoff teams and the other one against Carolina we could only possibly play spoiler on seeding if you care about that (Derek might), but it’s unlikely – especially after the Devils shockingly clamped down the Canes for fifty-four minutes yesterday, then suffered a complete meltdown blowing a 2-0 lead and losing in OT. So basically what you’re looking at is an early start for the 2022-23 preseason, complete with auditions for younger players like Nolan Foote, Kevin Bahl, Nikita Okhotyuk and Fabian Zetterlund who’ve debuted in the last few weeks to mixed results – mostly good for Okhotyuk and Zetterlund, okay for Bahl and ugly for Foote.

I already took a look back (and forward) at players and coaches in my last post, so this will be more of a general team overview month-by-month, with as much enthusiasm as I can muster for a season where the team has 62 points in 79 games, and that’s with eight OT/SO losses added in.

October (record: 4-2-1) – For the second year in a row things got off to a promising start as the Devils won their first two games of the year at home including arguably the highlight of the season on Opening Night, Jack Hughes’ OT winner (and stick-throwing celebration) against the Blackhawks. Unfortunately after getting their second win against the expansion Kraken four nights later, Hughes suffered a shoulder injury (missing approximately six weeks), in what proved to be a harbinger for the rest of the season for both player and team. New Jersey lost two of the next three games, including the lowlight of the month against Calgary – giving up four goals in less than twelve minutes to start the game, though they eventually made it a game somehow, losing 5-3. Still, wins over the Sabres – with rookie Nico Daws having a spectacular debut – and Penguins helped the Devils stay above water for the month.

November (record: 5-5-3) – Even without Hughes, the Devils were able to keep their strong start going through mid-November after an impressive three-game winning streak against the Sharks, Panthers and Islanders saw the Devils reach their high-water mark at 7-3-2, eerily similar to the Devils’ 6-3-2 start to last season before the roof fell in. For the next month, the script repeated itself as the Devils went 3-12-3 through a Christmas/COVID break in December, closing November winning only two of their last eight games, one against a Flyer team on a ten-game losing streak of its own. Clearly the highlight of the month was the Devils blistering a hot Panther team with goals in a 7-3 home win, while the lowlight was our tenuous goaltending situation coming to a head with Jonathan Bernier going on IR for good after hip surgery, and losing Scott Wedgewood on waivers meant we only had Mackenzie Blackwood left, and he went on and off of IR all year until mid-January when he disappeared nearly for good until the Devils announced he would return for two of the final three games this season, whoopdie damn doo.

December (record: 3-8-1) – There weren’t too many highlights this month as the Devils lost nine of their first ten games, including six straight in regulation – before the Omicron variant ravaged the Devils and most of the rest of the NHL enough to cancel and postpone a myriad of games around the Christmas break. Despite Hughes’ return the offense was just pedestrian ‘led’ by a miserable power play that prompted chants of firing assistant coach Mark Recchi – a first as far as I can tell, while the goaltending continued to struggle apart from Blackwood’s second shutout of the season (the team’s only pair of goose eggs). I guess you have to say the highlight of the month was our wild 6-5 OT win against the Oilers on New Year’s Eve, despite blowing four leads and needing a late Yegor Sharangovich goal just to get to OT, before Hughes scored yet another 3-on-3 winner, sans stick toss this time. Our lowlight was clearly the six-game losing streak that pretty much ended any semblance of a season.

January (record: 3-9) – After closing December with two wins coming off their extended holiday break and COVID recuperation the Devils actually continued their mini-surge with two wins in their first three games of January, but of course the good times wouldn’t last as the Devils would lose ten of their next eleven games. Our only win in that stretch was a shocking 7-4 pond hockey party against the division-leading Hurricanes on the 22nd. Three days earlier however, we saw the lowlight of the month when the Devils suffered a terrible loss at the Rock against Arizona, and it proved to be Blackwood’s last game for over three months as he finally went on IR and hasn’t come back until this Tuesday, allegedly. Another important injury occured early in January when Dougie Hamilton went on the shelf with a broken jaw, concussion and eventually his own COVID stint. All told, Hamilton missed six weeks and the player who came back hasn’t been the same guy who played up until then.

February (record: 4-5) – Compared to the previous two and a half months, going 4-5 doesn’t seem so bad, but the month got off to a particularly inauspicious start when the Devils were hammered 7-1 by the Leafs, then after the All-Star break Hughes came back with COVID, so he missed a couple more games. At least the team temporarily started treading water, mostly thanks to an offense which started heating up and scoring 7, 7, 6 and 7 goals in the Devils’ four wins of the month. Which they pretty much needed to do since our goaltending – by now some combination of journeyman Jon Gillies and raw rookie Daws – was floundering even worse. Our high point of the month was a two-game stretch in early February where we beat the Canadiens and Blues, scoring seven goals in each game and causing Montreal to make a change at head coach after our 7-1 blowout emasculated them.

March (record: 5-9) – Starting the month 3-3 continued our brief surge of .500 hockey, highlighted by a rousing comeback from 3-0 against the West-leading Avalanche to win 5-3 at the Rock. That game came in the middle of a surprisingly solid homestand where the Devils won three of four, only losing a tight 2-1 game against Winnipeg. Of course when the team went back on the road then things went off the rails again, with eight straight losses away from the Prudential Center in March – including a Western Canada swing where the scores looked like a Novak Djokovic first-round match at Wimbledon (6-3, 6-3, 6-3), and the low point of the month if not the season…an 8-1 drubbing at Boston on the last day of March.

April (current record: 3-6-3) – Our road meltdown in March carried over to the Prudential Center in April as the Devils began the month with four straight home defeats, including my least favorite of the season…the meltdown against the Panthers where the Devils held a 6-2 lead in the third period then somehow, someway through hideous goaltending and a prevent defense, it all disappeared in the New Jersey smog as the Devils lost 7-6 in a game that was more symbolic and annoying than meaningful.

Ironically, April’s been the inverse of March so far with the team looking competent on the road after a 3-1-1 trip while losing seven straight games at the Rock heading into Friday’s Fan Appreciation Day finale. Hughes and defensive revelation Jonas Siegenthaler getting injured and missing the rest of the season didn’t help either. If there was a highlight to this point it was probably the win in Vegas where the Devils played major spoiler to a Golden Knights team on the bubble, but being this is April and the team was way out of it I didn’t bother to watch any of the West Coast swing games.

Well that’s all I got…onto Fan Appreciation Day and the draft I guess, and probably not much posting here unless there’s actual news perhaps (i.e. a decision is made on the coaching staff).

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First place no longer on the line Tuesday, health the key for Rangers in final week, NHL hypocrisy on injuries

It was a missed opportunity for the Rangers this weekend. Without forwards Andrew Copp and Filip Chytil, they lost to the Bruins 3-1 on Saturday.

Combined with the Hurricanes sweeping the Devils and Islanders, the Rangers now trail them by four points with three games left in the final week of the regular season. First place won’t be up for grabs when they do battle this Tuesday in Manhattan.

In order for them to still have a chance at first in the Metro, the Rangers need to win and get help. That would mean the Devils beating Carolina on Thursday. At the moment, the Canes have 112 points and are two up in regulation wins (45-43), which is the first tiebreaker. They also have the ROW (regulation overtime wins) sealed off.

Essentially, the Rangers would have to finish with more points than the Canes to grab the top spot in the division. It’s still possible. With three games remaining including the critical one on Tuesday, they can still catch the Hurricanes. A regulation win and then another versus Montreal the following night at MSG would draw them even with both teams having one left.

Then, it would come down to the final game. While the Canes host the Devils on Thursday, the Blueshirts battle potential first round opponent Washington this Friday.

The edge would probably go to Carolina in terms of the match-ups. But you never know. Although it looks like the Devils are in full tank mode following a 3-0 shutout at home to the Red Wings, the game still has to be played.

At this point, all of this might not matter. What does is that the Rangers have guaranteed home ice for the first round. If it’s the Penguins or Capitals, having a deciding Game Seven at The Garden is a good thing. So is having the first two games. But as we know, anything can happen in the playoffs. Especially considering how competitive the Eastern Conference is.

Regarding yesterday’s loss to the Bruins, I wasn’t too surprised. After learning that both Copp and Chytil suffered injuries during the third period of the blowout win over the Islanders (figures), that meant a weaker lineup. For reasons only known to him, Gerard Gallant dressed Julien Gauthier over Jonny Brodzinski. Greg McKegg also played. At least he can play penalty kill and take face-offs.

While our side was down a couple of key regulars, the Bruins got back top sniper David Pastrnak and key defenseman Hampus Lindholm. That gave them a boost. Pastrnak scored in his return. Taylor Hall also did when he got behind Ryan Lindgren for a breakaway goal beating Igor Shesterkin top shelf.

It wasn’t the best defensive effort from Adam Fox, who got caught cheating up. That left Lindgren chasing Hall for what proved to be the game-winner. On the Pastrnak goal, he beat both K’Andre Miller and Jacob Trouba.

The third Boston goal saw Craig Smith use his speed to get a shot on Shesterkin that turned into a rebound for Trent Frederic. On that one, it was the third pair of Patrik Nemeth and Braden Schneider who were beat.

That came after Mika Zibanejad got his 15th power play goal from Chris Kreider and Alexis Lafreniere. Lafreniere also drew a delayed call with a great move inside. That allowed Kreider to set up Zibanejad for his 29th that made things interesting.

However, the second consecutive power play was abysmal. They got nothing going. The Bruins did a better job on the penalty kill. They didn’t allow any setup time. The entries were bad. So was the puck management.

Usually, Gallant will use his timeout to rest his top unit for a key power play. He opted not to. They just didn’t get it done. They did pull Shesterkin down a pair late. But even following a Zibanejad face-off win that led to puck possession time, they really couldn’t get anything done. Credit Boston.

I liked the effort from our players late. You had Artemi Panarin make a save on an empty net attempt. There was some hustle shown. Brad Marchand still got a wide open look. But he hit the goalpost. Maybe having gone nine straight without a goal played mind games. Ironic when it comes to The Rat, who looked disgusted when he returned to the bench.

It isn’t like the Rangers didn’t create scoring chances. They did. Linus Ullmark made some superb saves. He had Zibanejad’s number on a few during the first two periods.

Ullmark also got over to rob Frank Vatrano on a good pass from Zibanejad. Vatrano always puts himself in good position to do damage. A tremendous pickup by Chris Drury to complete the Zibanejad line. Frankie V has that shoot first mentality which makes Zibanejad and Kreider even better players.

Without the good Copp, Turk opted to play Dryden Hunt on the Panarin line with Ryan Strome. As we’ve seen during the season, that isn’t a good option. Nothing against Hunt, who plays an honest grinding style which fits perfectly on the fourth line. But it’s a big drop off.

Eventually, Gallant moved up Lafreniere onto the Bread Man line. It was a nice reward by the coach after Lafreniere was instrumental on the Zibanejad tally. Speaking of which, one more goal and he gets 30. It would be the third time in his career.

Considering what a well rounded player he’s become, Zibanejad deserves it. He’s had more explosive years. The ’19-20 season comes to mind when he caught fire scoring 41 along with 75 points over 57 contests before Covid.

However, he’s never been a better player than now. Gallant recently heaped praise on Mika by calling him, the team’s best 200-foot player. A huge compliment for the center, who now looks like a bargain with his next contract an AAV of $8.5 million beginning next season.

Who would you rather have now? Zibanejad or Jack Eichel. It isn’t even a debate. Funny how sometimes, the best moves you make are the ones you don’t. Thank God.

As far as what happens with Strome and Copp, I’m not concerned about it. It’s all about now for the Blueshirts. As in what they have the potential to accomplish the rest of this season.

It all starts in May. If Copp needs another game off, you rest him. Think big picture. Ditto for Chytil, who can’t seem to avoid the injury bug. I feel like it’s how he’s built. If he wants to survive over the long-term in the NHL, he’ll need to get stronger. The setbacks have hurt his development.

As for Kaapo Kakko, your guess is as good as mine. Gallant hinted that he could get back in for a game before the conclusion of the regular season. We’ll see. I’m not holding my breath. When it comes to transparency, this organization may as well be related to Benedict Arnold. They can’t be taken at their word.

Unfortunately, that’s most teams now. Everything is “lower-body”, “upper-body” or “undisclosed.” It’s all top secret. How is this still a thing when they push a zillion gambling promotions during games? It’s hypocritical. I’m no fan of prop betting or wagering. But it is what it is. There needs to be more clarity on injuries. When will the NHL change their policy?

Not only does it hurt the addicted gamblers. But affects fantasy hockey. You never know how long a player is out. They’re listed as week to week or day-to-day. That really helps. The whole dishonesty is a disservice to fans. It’s so hard to get a timetable.

All of this is confusing. When it comes to the Rangers, the final three games are all about health. They don’t want to be in a tough situation like the Hurricanes.

Playing without starter Freddie Andersen already, they lost Antti Raanta to a lower-body injury during today’s game. He went to get across on a Kyle Palmieri wrap try, but landed awkwardly. It looked like a tweak to possibly the groin. Howie’s assertion in our Twitter thread.

The Canes wound up using new rookie Pyotr Kochetkov for the second straight day. He came in relief and stopped seven of eight shots. An unproven goalie prospect who was taken in the second round of the 2019 NHL Draft, it’s a tough spot for Kochetkov to he in. He’ll likely be facing the Rangers on Tuesday.

https://twitter.com/FriedgeHNIC/status/1518295322358951936?t=OA_w_MZ9Yvom2d-kqbG5SA&s=19

As much as I’d love to see Kreider chase down Jaromir Jagr and get the three goals to tie his record for a season, or even pass him, it’s all about the postseason.

That goes for all of the Blueshirts. How many starts will Shesterkin make this week? It probably depends on Tuesday. Expect him to be in versus the Canes. The Habs could be a potential opponent for Alex Georgiev. But that assumes a lot.

What about resting Adam Fox? I doubt they’d do it. But they can manage his minutes if necessary. It all depends on how things shake out.

Individual statistics are secondary to team goals. The ’21-22 New York Rangers have a big one. Let’s enjoy the last three games for what they are. It’s part of something much bigger.

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History Made: Panarin sets record for most assists by a Ranger forward, Kreider ties Cook on all-time franchise list

It’s been a history making year for the Rangers. In their latest win- a satisfying 6-3 triumph over the Islanders- Artemi Panarin made some history.

The 30-year old Russian assisted on all three of Andrew Copp’s goals during the first period. After setting up the first two with great passes, he started the play that led to Copp recording a natural hat trick late in the period.

On a Panarin lead pass to Ryan Strome, who made a perfect backdoor feed for a Copp tap in, that scoring play allowed the Bread Man to set a new team record for the most assists by a Ranger forward in a season.

His third helper of the period allowed him to pass Hall Of Famers Wayne Gretzky and Mark Messier. Both of who each had 72 helpers in different seasons. Messier did it in ’91-92 when he won the Hart Trophy in his first season on Broadway. Gretzky achieved it in ’96-97 when he teamed with Messier and single season record holder Brian Leetch to lead the team to the Conference Finals.

Before the night concluded, Panarin added a fourth assist on a Strome goal in the second period. That gives him 74 with four games left. Only Sergei Zubov and Leetch are ahead of him for the most assists in a season. Zubov recorded 77 during ’93-94 while Leetch set the franchise record with 80 apples in ’91-92.

This leaves four games on the remaining schedule for Panarin to try to catch Leetch. He also needs four points to become the seventh Blueshirt to reach 100 over a season. The last player to hit the century mark was Leetch when he had 102 points (22-80-102) in ’91-92. The year he won the first of two Norris Trophies.

For ’21-22, Panarin leads the Rangers I’m scoring with 96 points (22-74-96). A new career high established on Thursday night which eclipsed the 95 he totaled in ’19-20. The Covid shortened season where he went 32-63-95 in 69 games before the NHL paused play.

Also continuing to make history in a career year is Chris Kreider. At 30, the former 2009 first round pick has already established career bests in goals (51), points (74), power play goals (26), game-winners (11) and shots (245).

Late in the second period, Kreider scored goal number 51 when he converted a rebound of an Adam Fox shot on the power play. It padded his team record to 26 power play goals. His goal also became the game-winning goal. A team record 11th for a single season.

With the goal, Kreider also made some history by tying Hall Of Famer Bill Cook for 10th on the all-time franchise list. It was the 228th goal of his career. That puts Kreider in a tie with Cook. A nice achievement for the career Ranger.

The 51 goals are the third most by a Blueshirt in a season. By scoring on the man-advantage, he passed Vic Hadfield (50). With four games remaining, he is one away from tying Adam Graves (52) and needs three to tie record holder Jaromir Jagr (54).

With three assists, Adam Fox became the fourth Ranger to have 70 points in ’21-22. It’s the first time that’s happened since ’93-94 when Zubov, Messier, Leetch and Graves all went over 70 in ’93-94. As a team, the Rangers have done it four times including in ’71-72 and ’91-92.

Fox is also the first Ranger defenseman to eclipse 70 points since Leetch in ’00-01 when he had 79 (21-58-79). With four games left, Fox has 72 points (11-61-72). He played in his 200th career game Thursday night. In 200 games, Fox has 161 points (24-137-161).

MOST ASSISTS IN SEASON (NYR)

1. Brian Leetch 80 ’91-92

2. Sergei Zubov 77 ’93-94

3. Artemi Panarin 74 ’21-22

MOST ASSISTS BY FORWARD SEASON (NYR)

1. Artemi Panarin 74 ’21-22

2. Mark Messier 72 ’91-92

3. Wayne Gretzky 72 ’96-97

MOST PPG SEASON (NYR)

1. Chris Kreider 26 ’21-22

2. Jaromir Jagr 24 ’05-06

3. Vic Hadfield 23 ’71-72

MOST GWG SEASON (NYR)

1. Chris Kreider 11 ’21-22

2. Don Maloney 9 ’80-81

3. Mark Messier 9 ’96-97

4. Jaromir Jagr 9 ’05-06

5. Ryan Callahan 9 ’11-12

6. Brad Richards 9 ’11-12

7. Rick Nash 9 ’13-14

ALL-TIME FRANCHISE GOAL SCORING LIST (NYR)

T10. Bill Cook 228

T10. Chris Kreider 228

9. Brian Leetch 240

8. Steve Vickers 246

7. Mark Messier 250

6. Camille Henry 256

FOUR 70-POINT SCORERS FRANCHISE HISTORY (NYR)

1. 1971-72 Jean Ratelle (109), Vic Hadfield (106), Rod Gilbert (97), Brad Park (73)

2. 1991-92 Mark Messier (107), Brian Leetch (102), Mike Gartner (81), James Patrick (71)

3. 1993-94 Sergei Zubov (89), Mark Messier (84), Adam Graves (79), Brian Leetch (79)

4. 2021-22 Artemi Panarin (96), Mika Zibanejad (79), Chris Kreider (74), Adam Fox (72)

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