May 17, 2012, New Jersey Devils-New York Rangers Game 2 Eastern Conference Final game story for Metro Newspaper in NYC
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PAUL BERESWILL/GETTY IMAGES
Travis Zajac celebrates David Clarkson's game-winner in the third period.
The Rangers got exactly what they deserved Wednesday night.
As a result, the Eastern Conference finals are tied, 1-1. The Rangers
were a step slow throughout their 3-2 loss in Game 2. The now
best-of-five series reconvenes with Game 3 Saturday afternoon at the
Prudential Center. The Rangers have dropped the second game in all three
series this postseason after winning Game 1.
“Tonight was one of those nights where we didn’t have it,” said Carl
Hagelin. “It was one of those nights where if you’re not ready to play
you’re going to lose battles.”
David Clarkson’s tip of Adam Henrique’s point shot 2:31 into the third period was the game-winning goal.
Collectively, the Rangers spoke after Tuesday’s practice of the
importance of playing with desperation. They did not. It was the Devils
that were the aggressors, pushed the tempo and seemingly won the
majority of battles.
“They played the same style [of game] as they did in the first game,”
Hagelin said. “Today we didn’t have that jump we need to get on pucks
first.
“No, I can’t,” Hagelin said when asked if he could put a finger on why he and his teammates were devoid of energy.
The Devils fired 23 shots in the opening period compared to the Rangers’ seven.
Ilya Kovalchuk opened the scoring 13:39 into the match by whipping a
power play wrist shot that beat Henrik Lundqvist high glove side.
Lundqvist yielded all three goals on 27 shots.
Despite their sluggish play, the Rangers did have a 2-1 lead late in the second period.
Marc Staal equalized 2:23 into the second with a goal that ricocheted
off Bryce Salvador, the end boards and Martin Brodeur (23 saves) before
it rolled into the goal. And Chris Kreider’s redirection of an Anton
Stralman wrister from the half boards at 12:19 gave the Rangers their
only lead of the game.
Kreider’s fourth goal of the playoffs tied him with Eddie Mazur for most
goals scored in the playoffs before scoring a regular season goal. The
goal was Kreider’s sixth point of the playoffs, which tied him with
Mazur and George McPhee for most points scored in a playoff season
before recording a regular season point.
Ryan Carter’s second of the playoffs evened the game at 2-2 at 18:09 of the second.
It did not help the Rangers’ cause that Marian Gaborik was a non-entity.
The 41-goal scorer in the regular season was benched for the first half
of the third period with the Rangers trailing by a goal. He was
minus-one with two shots in 14:28 of ice time in the first two periods.
“Well, you want to be there, obviously,” Gaborik said when asked if he
was frustrated that he was not on the ice in the final 1:30. Gaborik has
not scored a goal since Game 6 of the Washington series. His four goals
and 10 points rank second on the team behind Brad Richards.
Rangers head coach John Tortorella would not discuss his rationale for
benching Gaborik, instead opting to say that the Rangers “need to
improve as a hockey team.”
Follow Rangers beat writer Denis Gorman on Twitter @DenisGorman.
Follow Rangers beat writer Denis Gorman on Twitter @DenisGorman.
http://www.metro.us/newyork/sports/article/1143344--devils-even-up-series-with-win-at-msg
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