Monthly Archives: May 2022

To The Conference Finals!

Rangers win the series 4-3

Rangers win Game 7, 6-2

The video says it all. The Rangers team showed up last night and by scoring first, they took control and never gave it up. Carolina was punished on their first penalty and got absolutely dunked on during their second penalty. The Rangers scored twice on 3 shots on goal.

The better team won, it’s that simple. Gallant outcoached Brind”Amour. Carolina’s special teams were terrible for the entire series and no adjustments were made. Twelve New York players got points last night. Ryan Lindgren is a superhero for the damage he takes and continues to play better than his opponents. No one thought he was coming back from leaving the ice after being boarded and he’s back in like 10 minutes.

Strome finally gets a legit goal, after missing a wide open net, which was a very Strome thing to do. Chytil planted his flag again right after Carolina scored their first goal to shut down any hope of a comeback. Igor continues to write his legacy with 37-39 saves.

This is unbelievable. The goal for the season was to make the playoffs and we’re seeing them make it to the Eastern Conference Finals! All the haters said there was no way the Rangers would get by Carolina and now it’s the same for Tampa.

Tampa is a way better team than the Hurricanes, so while it’s going to be a challenge, Tampa winning isn’t a given. The Rangers have been doubted all season and they keep proving themselves as competitors. The coaching staff is going to need to scout Tampa to make new battle plans, but after what we’ve seen in the last month, it’s game on tomorrow night!

Igor! Igor! Igor!

Rangers tie the series 3-3

Rangers 5-2

Put simply, this game was determined by goaltending and Igor Shesterkin won. This game was easily Antii Raanta’s worst game in this series. It started out well enough for Carolina: fast paced, a lot of possession time and shots on goal. The Rangers would get their shots here and there, Carolina would take it back, a lot of tension as so much was riding on this game. If the Rangers lost, the season was over. Igor made two wild saves in those opening minutes, and right after one such glorious save Tyler Motte was able to mosey into Carolina’s zone and fired one straight on Raanta….and he didn’t stop it. It slipped under his arm much like what happened to Igor a few games ago. He didn’t close his arm fast enough and boom, one team is up in Game 6 at Madison Square Garden.

And the fans were all about it. MSG was bumping all night long. The Rangers maintained the lead for the entire game. Mika Zibanejad sniped Raanta on a powerplay after embarrassing three Carolina players to make it 2-0. The rest of the first period was frantic as Carolina fought back at every opportunity. In the second period, Carolina scored but so did Chytil, twice! After missing an open net on a 2-1 breakaway one-timer, which I thought would come back to haunt us, Chytil got a second chance and buried it. That got Raanta pulled, After Carolina answered back quickly to cut the lead down 3-1, Chytil made it 4-1 a minute and half later. A styling backhander over the right shoulder of the goalie. In the last half of the period, Carolina got a garbage goal to cut the lead down to half.

The third period was full of chances on both sides along with a whole lotta penalties. Special shout out to Tony DeAngelo for negating a Carolina power play by getting a stupid unsportsman-like penalty. At the 12:17 mark, the Rangers were on the power play when Panarin scored a long overdue goal. Through the legs of one defender and the goalie. This game wrapped up with the Rangers’ commanding three-goal lead.

Carolina outshot New York 39-25 but it made no difference to Igor. He locked that net down and got two assists. His teammates did the work in front of him to get those goals to make Carolina chase them instead of the other way around. Special teams also showed up with the Rangers going 2-5 and Carolina 0-3.

Now we’re back to square one. One game decides it all and it’s in Raleigh. The Hurricanes haven’t lost a playoff game yet this year. Can they go 8-0? That record has to end some time right? There’s no reason to think it won’t happen next. The big thing is that Barclay Goodrow came back to play in this game and he made a noticeable difference. The Rangers are now stronger. Igor is in the zone. That is huge. And now the big question: Can Raanta bounce back from this bad game? If he falters again and lets the Rangers take the lead first, that means Carolina can’t play their suffocating trap defense game to hold on to the lead. It’s a huge part of their game.

Both teams will be going all out and it’s going to be nerve-wracking.

Wrong Way

Carolina leads the series 3-2

Carolina 3-1

This was basically a rerun of Game 1, which is not what we are looking for. A decent first period where the Hurricanes scored first but the Rangers quickly answered back to level the playing field. The first goal showed a problem though: a short-handed goal. This is the second one of the series the Rangers have given up. The Rangers did this to the Penguins so this is clearly another terrible break for the Rangers. For as good Jacob Trouba can be, he sure can make some stupid decisions that turn into goals against. He just turns it over and that created a breakaway that gave Carolina too many advantages.

A big problem of this game was turnovers by the Rangers, 2 of which turned into goals. There were an alarming amount of breakaways for Carolina. Plus, the Rangers looked slow. Too many times Carolina won races to the puck. I can’t even begin to count the number of times the Rangers were just out of range of receiving a pass or a rebound and it was just too far away to reach. That led to a lot of puck chasing which added to being on defense for too long.

The big dagger was Strome’s goal in the second period being taken away for being offsides. It was a huge moment because this broke the tie in the Rangers’ favor. The Hurricanes took proper control of the game in the second and when the Rangers managed to fight back on offense, with Strome really battling, they were rewarded with a hard-earned goal. That goal being removed really took the air out of the Rangers’ tires and they ran catchup for the rest of the game.

It also felt like Carolina had more of a plan in this game and executed it. They stifled many players on defense (I think Kreider had 2 shots on goal). They’ve also figured out what they need to do to get by Igor: get him to move as much as possible to open him up. All three goals were high quality, difficult to stop goals.

So now the Rangers’ backs are back up against the wall again. Home ice advantage seems to be everything in this series so it’s up to the Rangers to continue that trend and then figure out how to end Carolina in the final game. It’s going to be difficult and every player needs to contribute smart plays to get it done.

Line ’em Up and Knock ’em Down

Series tied 2-2

New York Rangers win 4-1

This was the most convincing win in the series so far. This wasn’t just a win for the Rangers, it was a statement. The only metrics Carolina ended up ahead in were shots in goal, 31-28, which is nothing. The big advantage continues to be face-off wins at 65%. High danger shots weren’t that great and their only goal came from a bad Rangers turnover in their end which turned into a sloppy scramble. That made it 3-1 and Andrew Copp wristed a puck past Raanta just a few plays later.

The Rangers took the lead and then a commanding lead in the first period and it felt like they were in control for most of the game. Trouba laid out Domi for his end of Game 3 antics, which really set the tone and commitment for the rest of the game. Carolina is going to have to fight for everything and be smart about it or it’s going to get worse for them. The Rangers went 1-4 on the power play and the Hurricanes went 0-3.

Copp had an incredible game, Zibanejad was dancing through the whole game, Fox was making move after move, Vatrano got back on the scoreboard, and gad zooks Ryan Lindgren! He might be the lighthouse for this team. He does everything he can on every single shift he’s on and it makes everyone better. He’s earning the title of co-captain at the very least.

Another brilliant game for Igor, he made a handful of wild saves, one of which was at the very start of the game. That could have changed the way the game went after that but he kept it tied at zero, the boys in front of him got back to work to snag the lead and never looked back.

This was an incredibly exciting game and now the pressure has been dumped on Carolina. They’ve blown a two game lead, the Rangers keep getting better and now they have to keep their home game-winning streak alive. The home crowd is wild in Raleigh, they show the Hurricanes tremendous support but if things break bad for them early, it could devastate the crowd and take them out of the equation. Then, back to MSG on Saturday for even greater pressure at a hostile arena. The Rangers have the real possibility to finish this in 6 games. Barclay Goodrow is skating at practice now so the return of the team’s best face-off man could be on the horizon.

Is This The Blueprint?

Carolina leads the series 2-1

Rangers win Game 3 3-1

The entire Rangers team showed up for this game and it made the difference. Mika Zibanejad skated the rink the entire 60 minutes and made play after play. Igor let one sneak by him but he kept his composure and held that door shut for the rest of the game.

The Rangers were more aggressive in this game, the much-needed adjustment that I was happy to see. They were also able to take advantage of the mistakes Carolina made, which ultimately won the game. The Hurricanes got sloppy with penalties and it was Fox, Panarin, and Zibanejad who made them pay for it. A perfect cross-ice pass from Panarin to a wide-open Zibanejad for the rocket speed one-timer. The first goal of the game in the first period put the Rangers in the lead and this time, they never let go.

Chris Kreider got a beautiful goal thanks to Zibanejad making Tony DeAngelo’s life more difficult. DeAngelo moves around Mika to cross the crease so he can chase Kreider, but Mika jack-knifed DeAngelo’s stick from below, sending it into orbit, thus turning him into a flopping fish in front of Kreider. Seeing the opening, Kreider sent the puck across Raanta’s face mask and in. DeAngelo had some turnovers, missed shots, and generally bad ideas for the entire game so, by the final horn, he had regressed into a giant baby. As he does.

The biggest advantage Carolina had in this game was shots on goal (44 to the Rangers’ 33) but Igor was in the zone and kept them at bay. The mind-boggling statistic from this game: in the last 25 games, Carolina is just under 10% on the power play. It’s like 9 out of 93. That is complete garbage. If the Rangers can shake their bad stretch of power play performance from Games 1 and 2, Carolina is in serious trouble. If Carolina wins this series and they play Tampa, they have no chance of winning without fixing that. That’s junior varsity numbers.

There was a big scare when Kreider missed the empty net with less than 2 minutes in the game left but Tyler Motte was able to rally back and put the game away with his terrific off-the-boards ENG.

The Rangers came into this game on a mission and were better able to expose Carolina’s weaknesses. If they can win again at the Garden tomorrow to tie this series up, all of Carolina’s momentum is gone. If they can beat Carolina in Raleigh in Game 5, that could completely tilt Carolina into making even more frequent dumb mistakes. They haven’t lost at home in the playoffs yet, so that could get into their heads and make them panic. The confidence in the Rangers winning tomorrow is bumped up a few notches with yesterday’s performance.

Where’s My Offense At?

2-0 Carolina

Not only is Carolina up 2 games in the series, but they also landed a 2-0 win last night to make a nice matching pair. The game was actually pretty close. New York and Carolina are heavy defensive teams and the shots on goal show that (21-20 Carolina) but Carolina kept the Rangers from getting any high scoring chances.

Blocked shots, interceptions, and turnovers happened from start to finish. Carolina got their first goal on a Rangers defensive mistake and that kept all momentum on their side. The Rangers didn’t get to capitalize on the very few forced errors they managed to get on Carolina. Both teams didn’t get a power play goal.

Here are the big problems:

  • Face-off wins are way too low. The majority of offensive face-offs were lost by the Rangers, allowing Carolina to quickly clear the puck. And when in the defensive zone, the Rangers were forced into defense. You can’t win a game if you’re on the wrong side of the rink for more than half the game.
  • Carolina’s penalty kill is way better than Pittsburgh’s. That’s handicapping the Rangers’ potential for goals, to say the least.
  • Carolina’s forecheck is aggressive and New York doesn’t know how to handle it.
  • The team’s all stars are not producing. Forget goals and assists, Kreider and Panarin didn’t have a shot on goal last night! Zibanejad had two. Strome can’t hit the damn net to save his life. Trouba isn’t a goal scorer. The guys that are getting paid the most aren’t doing anything in this series. Panarin has been so slow and bad (turnovers especially) that I’m convinced he’s hurt.

I also get the sense that the Rangers are afraid of being aggressive on offense out of fear of being punished by breakaways. But that’s how Carolina plays and it’s working for them. They cannot play so passive tomorrow or it’s going to be another loss. The open net chances HAVE to turn into actual goals. Strome needs to be able to shoot through the legs of someone standing 3 feet away from him instead of hitting them in the back! Absolutely infuriating.

Killing Me Softly

Carolina 1-0

For the first two periods, the Rangers controlled the game. This will likely be the “easiest” game of the series and the Rangers didn’t get far enough ahead to secure a win.

For whatever reason, it took the Carolina Hurricanes a long time to show up. They looked slow and their offense wasn’t working towards anything. Whether it was all on their effort or the Rangers’ defensive preparation keeping them on lockdown, for most of the game it looked like the Rangers had a handle on the game. With a goal nearly halfway through the first period by Chytil with an assist from Lafrenière thanks to Tony DeAngelo handing over the puck, things were going in the right direction for the Rangers. That lead lasted until the last 2:30 of the game.

And that was the problem. Even with near-complete domination (the Rangers kept the Hurricanes to an absurdly low shot count) the team didn’t manage to get another goal. Each team hit the crossbar a few times but the Rangers bungled 2 open net chances. Kappo Kakko’s chance was the most egregious. A one-goal lead is nothing in this league–especially in the playoffs–and that’s what did them in.

Were the Rangers playing too conservatively? Not really, the shot count shows the effort. But the 3rd line was the only one constantly generating offense. With an obviously poor-performing Carolina team, the extra effort to bury them didn’t materialize. For the entire lead, the game felt like it was on a tight rope. One goal still meant it was anyone’s game. And the turn happened at the start of the 3rd period.

That’s when Carolina started putting their game back together. They controlled everything for at least half the period, almost keeping the Rangers from taking any shots on goal. The Rangers managed to get some ground back but a defensive hole appeared and Carolina took advantage of it. Igor stopped the first shot but the rebound went right back to Aho who got around him because Igor’s sliding momentum stopped and he couldn’t move any farther over to stop the tip in. No Ranger followed Aho in for defense. Then in overtime, a goofy shot bounced off of Ryan Lindgren and went in. A brutal ending that the Rangers really should have had. Hard to say if this dagger in the heart was worse than Game 1 against the Penguins.

But that’s hockey. The Rangers robbed Pittsburg a bunch of times. New York had at least 2 fluke own-teammate deflections (Miller’s 2-2 tieing goal in Game 7 being the most recent). The key is…you have to score more than once. More than one line needs to be effective. One benefit from last night, is the Rangers only had one penalty called on them. That’s an improvement from the last series conga line of penalty box visits. Carolina only had one as well but I think we can all expect this won’t last as the competition cranks up a notch in each of the following games.

Rangers, Rangers, Rangers WIN!

History made May 16, 2022

Everyone knew this game was going to be insane and it was. I gave the odds at 50/50 for each team to win and the pattern of the game played out like the last 2 games in the series where the Rangers had to come from behind and won. Every second period of this series was chaos on ice. This was 60 minutes of non-stop battles with Crosby and Jarry back in the game, bringing Pittsburgh almost back to full strength.

Kreider opened up the scoring in the first period with a sweet set up from Zibanejad. The Penguins tied the game with about a minute left in the period.

Things, of course, went off the rails in the second. Guentzel kicked a pass up to himself for a ludicrous goal that gave the Penguins the lead halfway through the period. A wave of dread washed over MSG. On the next play, Igor made two outstanding back-to-back saves. This was key as this kept Pittsburgh from taking total control. Going down two in less than 90 seconds could have made too big a hill to climb, something Pittsburgh had done before. Igor did this numerous times on penalty kills, keeping multiple rebounds out of the net. The world’s best goalie planted his flag last night and it stood strong. I cannot stress enough how well he played last night, it was all the difference.

And then it happens less than a minute later: K’andre Miller ties it up with a wrist shot that bounces off two Penguins and rolls passed Jarry. It was ridiculous. He was down on his knees to block the shot that never went to him so he couldn’t move over fast enough to grab it. The period ends with a horrific turnover by Chytil at the end of a Rangers power play. I have no idea who he thought he was passing it to. It went right into Rodrigues who took off and Igor didn’t stop. Igor is typically excellent on breakaways, but not in this series.

The third period starts with the Rangers down one. More and more intensity. Halfway through the period, the score remains the same and the Penguins are on the power play. Tyler Motte is all over Crosby who sends the puck in Trouba’s direction for a turnover and Trouba makes a beautiful pass back to Motte who gets a breakaway but doesn’t score. Five minutes later,, play is in the Penguins’ zone and there’s a long battle along the boards. Clearing and pass attempts, but it bounces over to Zibanejad who quickly turns and fires on Jarry who is caught by surprise. Tie game with less than 6 minutes left. Absolute pandemonium.

In the opening minutes of OT, Miller gets a breakaway and is held during his shot. The Rangers go on the powerplay. You can see what happens in the video above. Panarin the game-winning hero! Insane comeback, and an insane win.

The next challenge: Round 2 vs the Carolina Hurricanes. The Rangers made a lot of mistakes last night and Carolina is much more likely to take better advantage of those blunders. 1/4 on the power play with Pittsburgh 2/5. That’s all the difference in a blowout vs a hair-raising comeback fight. The Rangers have to work on their defense in every situation. You cannot rely on Igor to do it all.

Another Comeback!

3-3

The Rangers force a Game 7. Clawing back from a 3-1 series deficit in the NHL Playoffs is rare. But once again, the Rangers don’t make it easy for themselves. A 2 goal deficit in the first is back again. On the first goal by Pittsburgh, Igor stopped the first shot and the following 2 rebounds with no help, which lead to the 3rd rebound going in. Then a scant time later, a wide-open cross-ice pass for a one-timer. Again. Awful first period. Then the Pens had an awful 2nd period and what I said needed to happen, happened. Zibanejad and Kreider came through and the special teams did their job.

In the first quarter of the second period, the Rangers go on a powerplay because of Ryan Lindgren. It took 5 seconds for the goal. Win a face off, the puck is passed twice to get to an open Mika and he one-times the rubber off his shot. Hit the back of the net before Domingue could react. That punched the whole arena in the gut, making them sweat that the lead was now cut in half. A few minutes later, the Rangers send the puck around the boards behind the net and Fox gets it to pass to Mika near the blue line. There are like 5 guys in front of Domingue and Mika snipes him dead. Clips Domingue and goes in. The place is dumbfounded. The Penguins get mad, and get called on a high sticking that draws blood, so that’s 4 more minutes in the box. Forty five seconds into the power play, the Penguins clear the puck and Igor comes way out to get it. On the clear, the Penguins went for a line change and Igor takes the advantage, making a perfect pass to Mika that had to have been 100ft. There are only 2 Penguins near enough to do anything. He races off with Kreider right behind him and to his left, the shot is stopped and Kreider is there to jam that meatball into the net with Domingue laid out on his side like a banana. Observation: Domingue isn’t good at staying on his feet with fast shots, he frequently falls to the side.

As rad as all of this, cue up a boneheaded move by the Rangers to ruin it. Actually it’s one Ranger. Jacob Trouba makes a mindboggling stupid pass that Malkin read like a book. He gets his tape right on the puck and takes off on a breakaway and Igor doesn’t stop it. The stuff of nightmares. That’s with a little more than 3 minutes left in the period. Malkin is now the hero.

The 3rd period starts with the game tied and you could feel that this was basically being treated like overtime. More cautious and reserved play. The Penguins had clearly gotten the message that taking a penalty likely means death. The period is a back and forth high wire act until the last 90 seconds. Penguins clear the puck, Rangers pass it back up and it gets to Kreider on the left side. He lets an innocuous slap shot go not far from the blue line and Domingue puts both of his hands in front of him. The knuckle puck rises to the top of his chest and it hits a small part of his glove near his thumb. The puck flips up and over his head. When the crowd realizes it’s going to land right behind him, they scream in horror. Domingue didn’t know where the puck went, maybe he thought he caught it, and it bounces right in front of the goal line and bounces in. 4-3 Rangers, and it’s unbelievable. I was stunned and it was in my team’s favor. Penguins pull the goalie for a last ditch effort and Copp gets the empty net. 5-3 Rangers win, off to the Garden tomorrow.

This crazy disappearing 2 goal lead has happened in almost every game this series. I still can’t believe they made another comeback after being destroyed in Game 4. All bets are off tomorrow. If Crosby feels 80% or better, there is no way he isn’t playing. He’s always on the ice when Zibanejad and Kreider or on the ice and look what happened. They both got two goals. The Rangers were 2/3 and the Penguins were 0/3 on the power play. That’s literally the game.

Game 7 will be one for the history books. The Rangers can’t afford another garbage first period. No bad periods, period! Sixty minutes of hard-fought, grinding hockey is necessary to put down the Penguins. The NY defense has to work smart. Trouba needs to pay attention. Miller has to have an outstanding game. Strome and Panarin need to score on one of their chances (I’d like to know what on Earth is going on with Panarin, he’s shooting everything wide or making crappy passes). Having Tyler Mott back is a huge boon as it ensures Nemeth doesn’t play.

Let’s Go Rangers!

Rebound!

3-2 Penguins

The Rangers don’t make anything easy.

In the first 30 seconds of the game, the Rangers got called on two penalties giving the Penguins a 5-3 man advantage for two minutes. That is a disaster but the Rangers’ PK did the work and made it a non-issue, keeping the Penguins at bay. That was a good sign. The Rangers did go down 1-0 by the end of the first but a one-goal lead is nothing at this level. Going down 2-0 was the problem. The Rangers pinched along the board on offense and that ended up backfiring as it turned into a breakaway with Letang taking a one-timer from Malkin that whipped by Igor. Bad vibes in the Garden until about 7 minutes later.

Fox snipes the hell out of Louis Domingue to cut the lead in half. Trouba hits Crosby when Crosby is looking down at the ice, ultimately sending him out for the rest of the game. The Rangers crank up the pressure and it pays off less than two minutes later with Lafrenière burying a one-timer from Kappo Kakko to tie it. About a minute later, Trouba makes possibly the most stylish goal of his career with a cut over the right circle to center ice and fires a backhanded shot past an oblivious Domingue. The roof of MSG almost blew off after that goal.

And then the Penguins scored 13 seconds later after a terrible turnover from Igor on the next play. Terrible, awful, no good. A total defensive blunder.

The hero play comes from long scorned Filip Chytil at the start of the 3rd period. After getting his game-winning goal in the first game overturned for goalie interference, his quick reaction shot on a power play surprised Domingue to the tune of a win. The Penguins pushed hard for the rest of the period but without Crosby, they looked rudderless. More penalties piled up on them giving the Rangers an easier time of killing the clock.

With a goalie pull, Lindgren made the security goal with 16 seconds left in the game. 5-3 Rangers, forcing game 6 tonight in Pittsburgh.

Ryan Lindgren rules, plain and simple. Missing the last 3 games made a huge difference in the Rangers’ defense and he came out strong as ever. He was targeted all night taking hits and block shots. He did everything he could in this game and he’s a major factor in why the team won. He makes everyone around him better. Keeping Nemeth off the ice is a benefit.

The so-called Kid Line had another great game. Our all-stars, Panarin, Kreider, and Zibenejad were quiet again. Tonight’s game will be unrelenting and the first line has to show up tonight. They have to lead the charge and get points. The end is on the line again and the chance to win this war in Game 7 at the Garden is the stuff of legends

That Was A Nightmare

3-1

This time, the score tells the whole story. 7-2 Penguins.

The Rangers played well for the first 10 minutes or so and then it went south. An early goal by Lafreniere got things off to a bright start and then halfway through the period, the Penguins scored on a power play. Again, the Rangers’ special teams failed to deliver.

In the second period, it all fell apart. Four goals, or 5. I can’t remember, my brain is currently blocking this game from my memory. Terrific time to have the worst game of the season. Deflections all over the place, turnovers like that’s a good thing you want to happen.

Straight up Pittsburgh has figured out the Rangers’ system and knows how to exploit it. It was basically 40 minutes of being overwhelmed. Fox without his linemate Lindgren is an obvious defensive hole. Goodrow is needed for face-offs and general playmaking. The first line was completely dead and now Pittsburgh is getting points from every line. A complete refocus and effort with the fundamentals of hockey from the entire team is necessary or the Rangers’ season is over tomorrow night.

Penguins take the lead 2-1

The 7-4 result doesn’t say how close game 3 was.

A slow start by the Rangers–something that’s bitten the Rangers all season long–almost turned into a complete wipeout. The Penguins scored very early in the first period with a weird bounce of the puck but the Rangers quickly answered back with a goal by Lafreniere and Kakko. It was a strong showing that didn’t last long. The Penguins scored on two power plays and then a shot that should have been stopped to make it 4-1 at the end of the first. In a period that was dominated by the Penguins, it was a depressing sight to see. Igor was pulled for the second with Georgiev put between the pipes. The second period was a complete turnaround.

In a series where momentum doesn’t seem to carry for long, the Rangers stormed back. Goals by Vatrano, Panarin, and Copp made tied the game by the end of the second period. It was a stunning change of pace with the Rangers taking total control and the Penguins making one mistake after another. One of those goals was short-handed! That’s two for the series!

This game was decided on the power play, full stop. The Rangers had 3 consecutive power plays and did not score. They did everything but score on the second, which was non-stop aggression that Domingue had to do cartwheels to stop. The third power play was a complete dud. That was pretty much where the Penguins took back control. With a botched defense and an out of position (and probably surprised at the shot coming) Georgiev, the Penguins snuck their 5th goal in. Everything the Rangers tried to do after that was largely stuffed shut. Two empty-net goals and the final score is 7-4.

Tonight the game is back on home ice for Pittsburgh who is feeling really good about themselves. It’s important to not get down and realize it’s still anyone’s series. The first 3 games have been razor close and if anyone lets up it will make losing easier. Focus and determination are being tested and I’m expecting a bounce-back game from the Rangers tonight. We’ve seen it before and it will happen again.