Category Archives: Hockey News

Ducks take Game 5, push Predators to edge of elimination

ANAHEIM, Calif. - Ryan Garbutt scored the go-ahead goal in the second period for the Ducks, who beat the Nashville Predators 5-2 on Saturday for the first win by a home team in their first-round series, which Anaheim leads 3-2.

Nashville had won the first two games in Anaheim before the Ducks tied it with two wins on the Predators' home ice.

David Perron scored the tying goal earlier in the second and assisted on Garbutt's goal along with Ryan Getzlaf.

The Ducks added three goals in the third. Sami Vatanen scored on a breakaway, Cam Fowler had a power-play goal and Ryan Kesler added an empty-netter.

Frederik Andersen stopped 27 shots for the Ducks.

Game 6 is Monday in Nashville.

Pekka Rinne had 27 saves for the Predators, who closed within a goal at 3-2 in the third on Miikka Salomaki's wrist shot before the Ducks put the game out of reach with a pair of goals.

Ryan Johansen scored for Nashville 22 seconds before the Ducks tied it in the second.

After a scoreless first, the teams combined for three goals in a span of 2:10. Johansen's backhander gave Nashville a 1-0 lead at 14:13.

Perron scored his first playoff goal 22 seconds later on a slap shot from the point. The puck took a weird bounce, hitting defenseman Roman Josi before Rinne made a desperate stab with his left glove as it sailed over his head and into the net.

Garbutt gave the Ducks their first lead of the game at 16:23. He fought off two defenders while digging the puck out of the boards behind the net and stuffing it around the right post.

NOTES: The Ducks improved to 5-0-0 in postseason day games over the last 10 years. ... Nashville is 0-8 when losing three of the first five games in a playoff series. ... The Ducks had scored four goals in the first period of the series until Saturday. ... Anaheim has outscored Nashville 16-9 through five games.

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Lundqvist felt embarrassment, hopelessness against Penguins

There's no solace in being the most handsome man in the planet. That's how bad Henrik Lundqvist feels Saturday night.

The New York Rangers all-world goaltender somehow finished only two of his club's five games in the first round against the Pittsburgh Penguins, as he was injured in Game 1 and pulled in Games 4 and 5. It's Lundqvist's shortest spring since 2011, with the Rangers bowing out meekly in five games.

"In the second period, it was a feeling of embarrassment to give up that many goals," Lundqvist said, according to the New York Post's Brett Cyrgalis. "But also a sense of hopelessness. I think we played a team that was smarter, better, and (had) better goaltending."

The Penguins put up a four spot in the second, but "The King" graciously faced the media after his team's stunning first-round defeat Saturday, as the competitive window seemingly slammed shut in the Rangers' faces. It was a very un-Lundqvist-like postseason that saw him finish with an .867 save percentage in five games.

However, the truth is Lundqvist got no help. The Penguins scored their goals Saturday on 10-bell scoring chances, and the goaltender was left helpless by his teammates. It wouldn't have made a difference who was playing in the Rangers' crease on Saturday - they were losing that game, and losing it handily.

And so begins a summer of soul-searching for the Blueshirts, with Lundqvist having turned 34 in early March. He can still play - it's the rest of the roster that's the issue. While his playoffs were certainly a disappointment, the 2015-16 season was the seventh straight in which Lundqvist posted a save percentage of .920 or higher. He remains elite. The same cannot be said for New York's roster, as Pittsburgh proved.

Signed through 2019-20, if Lundqvist doesn't win a Stanley Cup when it's all said and done, he'll go down as one of the best to have never done so.

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Report: Panthers’ Bjugstad didn’t make trip to Brooklyn

The Florida Panthers are hoping to come home to Nick Bjugstad with the good news that Game 6 is still on.

After needing stitches to repair a head wound after he falling face-first into the boards Friday, the Sun Sentinel's Harvey Fialkov reports that Bjugstad didn't travel with his teammates to New York for Game 6 against the Islanders on Sunday, citing a source. The Panthers trail the series 3-2 after losing Game 5 at home in double overtime.

Panthers head coach Gerard Gallant said Saturday morning that Bjugstad was day-to-day, and he hoped the center would be able to make the trip. With or without Bjugstad, the job remains the same.

"We'll see what happens," Gallant said. "But we haven't made any excuses all year and we're not going to make one now."

Bjugstad missed time earlier this season with migraines, so he does have head-injury history, giving the report legs. Based on how serious the injury looked at the time - Bjugstad laying on the ice looking stunned after hitting the boards - not traveling north makes sense for the young forward.

It's a tough loss for the Panthers. Bjugstad has two goals and two assists in five games, with the 23-year-old clearly enjoying his first taste of the Stanley Cup Playoffs.

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Rangers’ Vigneault: ‘We all wanted and expected more’

The New York Rangers find themselves in unfamiliar territory - eliminated after the first round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs.

At the hands of a 6-3 loss to the Pittsburgh Penguins in Game 5 on Saturday afternoon, the Rangers were sent packing in the first round for the first time since 2011.

The stable blue line that anchored the Rangers to two of the last three conference finals didn't show up this spring, and Henrik Lundqvist unraveled as New York allowed at least three goals in every game of the series.

Rangers head coach Alain Vigneault knows the performance wasn't good enough.

"We all wanted and expected more," Vigneault told reporters after the game.

Captain Ryan McDonagh felt the same way.

"They played better, and simply put, they executed better in all facets of the game - power play, penalty kill, and five-on-five," McDonagh said. "We didn't play well enough. They were a lot better throughout the series, made us pay for our mistakes - and we made way too many. It's tough to grasp right now. We didn't play up to our potential."

Lundqvist, who annually is the Rangers' best player, wasn't in top form this postseason, and he knows it.

"You need to be extremely confident as a goalie to stop those types of shots," Lundqvist said, referring to the Penguins' high-percentage scoring chances in the series. "These last two games I wasn't strong enough to do that.

"The last two I have to be better. But also the way we played, the way we give up chances, it's going to be tough to win games," he added.

Now, the Rangers' front office faces an offseason filled with difficult decisions. Already pressed against the salary cap, New York has choices to make with unrestricted free agents Keith Yandle and Eric Staal - who New York added at the expense of future first-round picks - along with restricted depth players Chris Kreider, Kevin Hayes, and J.T. Miller.

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Crosby says Penguins grew through adversity

What doesn't kill you makes you stronger. Ask Sidney Crosby.

"We went through a lot of adversity throughout the year," the Pittsburgh Penguins captain said after his club sent the New York Rangers packing in five games, according to NHL.com's Wes Crosby. "I think we learned a lot about this group along the way."

Pittsburgh began the season with lofty expectations, but started extremely slow from the gate, especially Crosby, who had only a goal and four assists through the Penguins' first 11 games.

The club's slow start cost head coach Mike Johnston his job, the Penguins turning a corner after Mike Sullivan was given the position. Pittsburgh only got stronger as the season went on.

Crosby got better, too. He had 10 points in November, 12 in December, 14 in January, 18 in February, and 21 in March.

"I thought we really found our game (in March)," Crosby said. "I think that whole month, we built a lot of confidence."

The Penguins went 12-4 in March. They're peaking at the right time, and that they were able to send the Rangers home in only five games without their No. 1 goalie speaks to the talent and dedication of the club.

"It doesn't get any easier, that's for sure," Crosby said about the next round, and the month ahead. You have to think the Penguins will be just fine, though.

"Right now, they're probably the hottest team in the league and they're going to be a tough matchup," Rangers head coach Alain Vigneault said. He knows.

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Rangers’ Raanta replaces Lundqvist in 3rd period

Mercifully, Henrik Lundqvist has been pulled from the New York Rangers' net.

Backup goaltender Antti Raanta started the third period between the pipes in Game 5 against the Pittsburgh Penguins, facing a 6-2 deficit.

Pittsburgh exploded for four goals in the second period, but multiple defensive breakdowns were to blame rather than Lundqvist, who was hung out to dry repeatedly.

The disappointing performance dropped Lundqvist's save percentage to an uncharacteristic .867 for the postseason. He's stopped pucks at a .923 clip over his playoff career.

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Blues adamant about ending series in Game 6

On the verge of moving on to the second round for the first time since 2012, the St. Louis Blues still have a familiar thorn in their sides - the Chicago Blackhawks.

St. Louis squandered an opportunity to end the series on home ice in Game 5, and the Blues don't want to give the defending champions another chance.

"We don't want to wait until Monday to try to do this," Blues defenseman Kevin Shattenkirk said. "We're ready to come in tonight and play our best game of the series."

With Game 6 set for Saturday night at the United Center, the pressure is on the Blues to win in one of the most hostile arenas in the league, but that doesn't faze head coach Ken Hitchcock.

"We just want to win this series," Hitchcock said. "It doesn't matter when or where. We'll play them on the street if they want."

The Blackhawks are 12-4 when facing elimination since 2009, and have a record of 44-15 in Games 4-7 in that span.

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