Crosby Sets Up Two Goals As Penguins Top Rangers
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PITTSBURGH — Evgeni Malkin skated off the ice with a nasty gash on his left cheek, a souvenir from a game that was better suited for May than for March. For the Pittsburgh Penguins, who are close to full strength for the first time in weeks, the playoffs already seem to have arrived.
Sidney Crosby set up goals by Marian Hossa and Malkin and the Penguins, on the verge of clinching their division, moved into first place in the Eastern Conference by beating the penalty-prone Rangers 3–1 yesterday.
The Rangers, missing an opportunity to move into fifth place in the conference, controlled much of the play during the final two periods but couldn’t score in the final 56 minutes as goalie Marc-Andre Fleury stopped 26 of 27 shots. The Penguins, closing out an unbeaten March at home and winning their 10th in 13 games, moved ahead of idle Montreal 99–98 in the conference race with three games remaining for each team. The Penguins need to win only once in their final three games to clinch their first division title in 10 years, and can do so as early as their rematch with the Rangers in Madison Square Garden tonight. “I can’t wait for about 10 days, to start this thing (the playoffs),” said Max Talbot, who scored in the final minute. “It’s good that it’s all (division) games like this until the end of the season. Every little play can change the game and that’s playoff hockey, and that’s what we’re in right now.”
One more victory gives the Penguins 101 points, a total that only one division rival, New Jersey, could match. However, the Devils can’t surpass the Penguins in victories — the first tiebreaker — unless Pittsburgh loses its final three and New Jersey wins its last four. The Penguins won the season series from New Jersey 4–3–1.
“We control our own destiny to win the conference,” Ryan Whitney said. “If we can win out, we finish first in the conference and that’s been our goal all year.”
Malkin, second in the league in scoring with 104 points, left briefly after being cut on the left cheek by Rangers center Brandon Dubinsky’s skate with 6 minutes remaining in the second period, but returned for the third period.
“I saw that big cut, and that’s really scary — it’s really close to his eye,” Crosby said. “But he came back and got away with only some stitches.”
Pittsburgh was 1-for-8 on the power play, but Rangers coach Tom Renney said all those penalties were disruptive during only the third regulation loss in 21 games for his team. However, the Rangers have five overtime losses during that stretch.