The Pittsburgh Penguins had yet to win coming out of the break for the 2014 Sochi Olympics. In two games, the Penguins yielded 10 goals and suffered a thrashing at the hands of the Chicago Blackhawks in a Stadium Series game at Soldier Field on Saturday. Tuesday against the Nashville Predators, the Penguins got things back in order. Defenseman Matt Niskanen scored two goals, including the game-winner on a power play at 7:29 of the third period, in a 3-1 win that spoiled the return of goalie Pekka Rinne. Sidney Crosby assisted on each of the three Pittsburgh goals; he leads the NHL with 54 assists and 83 points. The win was the first in four games for Pittsburgh (41-16-4).
"We weren't happy," said
Niskanen, who logged a team-high 23:39 of time on ice and was plus-1.
"This has been going on for a while. We've had some bad
habits creep into our game, and I think we addressed some things and
made some adjustments tonight and guys were really focused in. It was
good to see. You saw a lot of effort, second-effort-type stuff out
there tonight. Guys were really competitive. Good, detailed effort
and good road win."
Nashville's David
Legwand was whistled for hooking Chris
Kunitz at 6:47 of the third period as Legwand attempted to
prevent a 3-on-2 by Pittsburgh. Directly preceding Niskanen's
game-winner was an odd sequence when Pittsburgh goalie Marc-Andre
Fleury skated far out of his crease to prevent a breakaway by
Paul Gaustad.
The two made glancing contact and the puck popped up in the air.
Fleury came up with it and started the breakout that led to
Niskanen's slap-shot goal, his ninth of the season. Fleury said his
heart was racing as he and Gaustad reached the puck at the same time,
jamming it into the air.
"I thought I could get there maybe a
little quicker," said Fleury, who made 18 saves in his
NHL-leading 32nd win.
Pittsburgh, owner of the League's top power play,
failed to connect on its first two Tuesday, even though it moved the
puck well and created good chances. The Penguins finished 1-for-5
with the man-advantage.
"We had a couple of pretty good looks,"
Niskanen said. "We screwed it up ourselves a couple of times.
Just didn't connect on a pass or they pressured us hard on the first
couple of power plays. We were able to find some space on the next
couple. Had some good looks and got the one we needed at the right
time."
The game was the first for Rinne since Oct. 22,
when a hip infection sidelined him. Rinne was sharp throughout but no
more so than in the first period when he went across the crease to
stop Kunitz's bid with his right pad on a 2-on-1 set up by Crosby. He
finished with 16 saves.
"It's great to be back," Rinne
said. "It was a good way to start the game, but if I get
another chance I would like to get at least another one of those
goals back and give us a better chance to have a push at the end. We
played hard, but the chances they got were on the power plays and,
obviously, 5-on-4 is tough."
After Rinne held the Penguins off the board in the
first period, Niskanen scored 27 seconds into the second. His slap
shot from the right faceoff dot eluded Rinne low to the glove side
after Crosby fed him from behind the net. Nashville tied the game 12
seconds later. Fleury and defenseman Olli
Maatta misplayed the puck behind the net, and it ended up coming
to the point, where Mike
Fisher shot it on goal. Patric
Hornqvist put in the rebound for his 12th goal, his second in
three games. The Predators had a goal disallowed with 3:14 to go in
the first period following a lengthy review; it was ruled Gaustad
kicked it into the net. Forward Nick
Spaling, in his first game back after more than a month off with
a lower-body injury, outraced Maatta to the puck and his wrist shot
bounced off Fleury's chest. Gaustad crashed the net and the puck
bounced off his lower right leg over the goal line. One of the keys
for Pittsburgh was holding Nashville's seventh-ranked power play
scoreless in four chances. Before the game, Pittsburgh coach Dan
Bylsma talked about how it would require courage to block the shot of
Nashville defenseman Shea
Weber, who has one of the hardest in the NHL. During one power
play, Pittsburgh's Tanner
Glass, whose stick was broken, twice blocked Weber's shot in
quick succession. Bylsma said three players stood up on the bench in
excitement and that Glass' courage provided the team with an
emotional lift.
"I thought our [penalty kill] was
exceptional," Bylsma said. "We saw Tanner
Glass come up with the huge blocks in the first period on Shea
Weber. … on probably the hardest shot in the League, taking
those. They did a great job."
Glass said he had some lingering stings from the
blocks but "nothing too serious." Kunitz scored his
28th goal with 2:55 remaining. Nashville (26-26-10; 1-3-2 in its past
six) began the day six points behind the Dallas Stars for the final
Stanley Cup Playoff wild-card spot in the Western Conference. That
margin did not change; the Stars lost 4-2 to the Columbus Blue
Jackets. Nashville has scored one goal in each of its past two games,
regulation losses, and was 0-for-10 combined on the power play.
"I think every game is in itself a
microcosm," Predators coach Barry Trotz said. "In
the Winnipeg game (a 3-1 loss on Saturday), it was [goalie Ondrej
Pavelec]. He was fantastic and probably took a couple of goals. Today
we hit a couple of posts."
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