December 17, 2010, Phoenix Coyotes-New York Rangers game story for Metro NYC Newspaper
 
     Rangers rally for shootout win
Rangers 4, Coyotes 3 (SO)
It was the perfect formula for a letdown.
The  Rangers had just come off impressive wins over Stanley Cup favorites  and HBO subjects Washington and Pittsburgh. A strange Western Conference  opponent was in the house for a match lacking appeal. And for the first  39:54 spanning the first two periods, the script played to form as the  Rangers appeared destined to enter the third trailing by two goals.
Enter Dan Girardi, Brandon Prust and Jason LaBarbera.
Girardi  grabbed a loose puck in the defensive zone and cleared the zone. It  rolled all the way down to LaBarbera. A former Ranger, LaBarbera  attempted to play the puck behind the net but got caught outside the  trapezoidal area and backed off.
That bit of indecision allowed  Prust to grab the puck and stickhandle past the goaltender and  defenseman Derek Morris before backhanding the puck into the net with  5.1 seconds left in the second period.
Prust’s NHL-high third  shorthanded goal sparked the Rangers to a 4-3 shootout win over the  Phoenix Coyotes Thursday night at the Garden. Erik Christensen scored  the lone goal in the penalty shot phase of the game. Girardi and Derek  Stepan scored goals for the Rangers. Stepan’s goal was his eighth of the  season and first at MSG. It tied the game at 3-3 with 5:43 remaining in  the third. Martin Biron stopped 30-of-33 shots in his first game in  goal since December 2 on Long Island. Taylor Pyatt, Adrian Aucoin and  Martin Hanzel scored goals for Phoenix. LaBarbera’s gaffe overshadowed a  strong 33 save-on-36 shots performance.
“I knew he was  in-between decisions and I kind of had a feeling he wasn’t going to get  the puck. He was slowing down, stopped in the triangle, and couldn’t  touch it” Prust explained. “I made up my mind I was going to the net.”
Prust’s  play was not aesthetically pleasing. It will never be compared to the  best of Wayne Gretzky, Mario Lemieux, Guy LaFleur, Alex Ovechkin or  Sidney Crosby. But it was a portrait of what the Rangers are: A  grind-it-out team that is creating opportunities to win—and making the  most of them. 
“He is part of our corps. He is not home grown;  from our minor league (system) and a draft pick, but he has joined in  with us. He does all of the things you ask of him: On the wall, killing  penalties, he’ll fight anybody. He is a big part of who we are,” John  Tortorella said. “You look at a Ryan Callahan, you look at a Prust, that  is what we are trying to be as a Ranger team. Little by little,  everybody is joining and we’re creating an identity.”
The hard  work ethos has shown itself in the Rangers hitting and shot-blocking  proficiency. The Rangers entered the game ranked first in the NHL with  967 hits and their 542 blocked shots trailed only Philadelphia. They  threw 21 hits and blocked 17 shots last night.
The players’  willingness to shot block and play a grind-it-out game has the Rangers  third in the Atlantic and fifth in the East with a 20-13-1 mark. But is  their style of game conducive to injuries?
Brandon Dubinsky  missed five weeks last season with a broken hand after blocking a shot  against the Flames. Drury played his first game of the season Wednesday  night in Pittsburgh after recovering from a broken left index finger,  which was suffered blocking a shot during training camp. Drury’s return  dovetailed with loss of Callahan, who broke his left hand blocking a  shot in the 4-1 win in Pittsburgh. The coach announced before the game  that the left wing won’t need surgery but estimated he will miss  six-to-eight weeks before praising his team's willingness to sacrifice  for each other.
“I think they’re doing things right. They’re  doing things that some players don’t like doing: and that’s blocking  shots. We always call it being big, not small. I see a lot of players in  this league get small; they’re blocking it but really don’t want to  block it. Our guys want to block the shots. This is the risk-reward you  get out of it,” Tortorella said. “We play a hard game.”    
A truism that was re-established by one buzzer-beating play.
What went right ...
1 Welcome back, Dru  — Captain Chris Drury made his home debut Thursday night and set up  Derek Stepan’s game-tying goal with 5:47 left in regulation.
2 Battle of backup keepers  — The first skater in the shootout, Erik Christensen, beat Jason  LaBarbera, while Martin Biron stopped all three shots for the Rangers.
3 Shorthanded  — Trailing 3-1, Dan Girardi corralled a loose puck in the defensive  zone and fired to the backboards late in the second. LaBarbera attempted  to play the puck, then stopped. Brandon Prust swooped in and backhanded  it into the cage with five seconds left.
DENIS GORMAN
http://www.metro.us/newyork/sports/article/722400--rangers-rally-for-shootout-win--page0


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