Sidney Crosby was a clear winner in a battle between the NHL's top two scorers. Crosby had a goal and two assists Thursday night to rally the Pittsburgh Penguins from an early two-goal deficit for a 6-4 victory against the New York Islanders at Nassau Coliseum. The Islanders led 2-0 before the game was eight-and-a-half minutes old. But that's when Crosby took over, setting up a goal by Chris Kunitz and scoring one himself to get the Penguins even before the first intermission, then setting up a power-play goal by Kris Letang late in the second period after rookie Olli Maatta had put the Penguins ahead 5:35 into the middle period. Crosby has 25 goals and 83 points in 45 regular-season games against the Islanders, the most he's had against any team. Islanders coach Jack Capuano among those impressed by Crosby.
"You watch 87 out there, he was chipping
pucks and going after them, he wasn't overhandling the puck and he's
the best player in the world," he said. "Not
everybody had a good night for us."
Capuano might have been referring to his top line.
New York captain John
Tavares, who entered the game with 62 points, seven behind Crosby
in the League scoring race, had an assist on Kyle
Okposo's third-period goal. But he and linemates Okposo and
Thomas Vanek,
who entered the night as the NHL's hottest trio, struggled to
generate offense for most of the night. Kunitz also had two assists
for the Penguins (36-13-2), who are 15-3-1 in their past 19 games. He
and Crosby were on the ice for all four Pittsburgh goals in the first
two periods. Backup goaltender Jeff
Zatkoff survived New York's early blitz and finished with 30
saves. He is 8-0-1 in his past nine decisions.
"It wasn't the prettiest game for your
numbers, but it's a hard-fought game," Zatkoff said. "That's
the kind of game you're going to be in against the Islanders."
Kevin
Poulin made 23 saves for the Islanders (21-25-7), who lost for
the League-high eighth time this season after leading by two or more
goals, including both of the Penguins' visits to Long Island.
"We scored enough to win,"
Penguins defenseman Matt
Niskanen said. "That team really pressures you and they
know how to score. We did enough battle at the end to hold on."
Each team scored two goals on nine shots in a
first period that saw them take turns dominating play. The Islanders
came out with lots of jump and needed only 1:39 after the opening
faceoff to grab the lead. Thomas
Hickey kept the puck in at the left point and flung it toward the
net. Michael
Grabner picked up the bouncing puck to the left of the slot and
whipped it past Zatkoff. It was Grabner's eighth goal of the season
but his first at the Coliseum. New York made it 2-0 at 8:21. Cal
Clutterbuck bumped Penguins defenseman Paul
Martin off the puck at the red line between the benches, and
Grabner picked it up to start a 2-on-1 break. He carried into the
Pittsburgh zone and dropped to Brock
Nelson, who zipped a shot between Zatkoff and the left post for
his ninth of the season. But the Islanders have had trouble all
season holding on to two-goal leads, and Nelson's goal appeared to
wake up the Penguins, who needed only 71 seconds to cut the deficit
in half. Crosby outfought two Islanders to control a dump-in behind
the net and found Kunitz for a one-timer from the left circle for his
25th of the season. The Penguins continued to press and tied it at
11:24 when Crosby deflected home a pass from Kunitz for his 27th of
the season. Pittsburgh did not allow a shot on goal while killing off
a cross-checking penalty to Maatta early in the second period. The
rookie defenseman then made amends for his infraction by scoring his
fifth goal of the season at 5:35. Maatta started the play with a
breakout pass and ended it by taking a feed from Kunitz, weaving
through the defense, and sliding a backhander from the slot past
Poulin to give the Penguins their first lead of the game. The
Penguins' League-leading power play burned the NHL's 30th-ranked
penalty-killing unit to make it 4-2 at 17:44. Pittsburgh kept control
of the puck after Matt
Martin's hooking penalty at 16:16, not allowing New York to clear
the zone, before Crosby's pass across the zone found Letang in the
lower left circle for a one-timer that beat Poulin easily for his
10th of the season.
"We came out really well and then we
didn't play well until the last 12 minutes of the game,"
Tavares said. "They played a good road game, and they did a
lot of the little things and executed better than us for most of the
game."
Josh
Bailey gave the Islanders a spark when he scored on a breakaway
3:10 into the third period. It was his first goal in 38 games since
Oct. 25, when he also scored against the Penguins. But Evgeni
Malkin converted a pass from James
Neal at 5:59 after a New York turnover to restore Pittsburgh's
two-goal margin.
"You can't give Kunitz, Crosby, Malkin,
[James] Neal and [Kris] Letang - the list goes on - time and space
because they are going to make plays," Capuano said. "They
are a high-powered team."
Okposo jammed home a loose puck in the crease with
9:05 remaining to cut the deficit back to one, and Tavares drew
back-to-back penalties on Letang and Tanner
Glass, giving the Islanders a 5-on-3 power play for 50 seconds.
But Zatkoff made five saves during the 3:10 of power-play time,
including a game-saver on Frans
Nielsen during the two-man advantage, to preserve the lead.
"We had a couple of great looks,"
Tavares said. "When you get those chances, you have to
put them in."
Brandon
Sutter hit the empty net with 3.1 seconds left for the final
margin. "We knew what we had to do," said Sutter,
one of the three penalty-killers during the 5-on-3. "Lately,
we've done a good job killing penalties. Getting that in the last few
minutes was a confidence booster."
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