MELLON ARENA Lemieux's five points sparks Pens' 1st win



Pittsburgh trailed by four goals before scoring seven straight.
PITTSBURGH (AP) -- At age 40, Mario Lemieux still has some big games left in him. This one came exactly when the Pittsburgh Penguins needed it, down four goals in a game that was quickly developing into their 10th consecutive loss.
Lemieux scored twice during a five-point night and the Penguins scored seven consecutive goals, including a club record-tying six on the power play, to beat the reeling Atlanta Thrashers 7-5 Thursday and win for the first time this season.
The Penguins, in danger of a blowout loss after Ilya Kovalchuk scored once and set up three goals in the opening 9:50, needed 10 games for their first victory -- the longest season-opening stretch in franchise history.
The Penguins have gotten at least one point in all but four games, but are 1-4-5.
"It's been frustrating for all of us," Lemieux said. "It was scary early in the game but we stayed in there and made a game of it. But it didn't look good early, that's for sure."
Power play works
Lemieux, Sergei Gonchar and John LeClair scored twice on the power play as all but one of the Penguins' seven consecutive goals against goalie Steve Shields in his first start of the season came with a man advantage.
The only other time in their 39-season history the Penguins scored six power-play goals was Dec. 12, 1986, against Toronto in an 8-3 victory.
Pittsburgh went 6-for-11 on the power play two nights after going 2-of-12 in a 4-3 overtime loss to Florida. Those 12 chances tied a club record.
"We talked after that game about moving the puck faster, the last couple of weeks we've been standing still too much on the power play and we wanted some more movement," Lemieux said.
The Thrashers fell behind the Penguins in the overall standings by losing their sixth in seven games -- using their fifth goaltender in 10 contests. Shields, called up from Chicago (AHL) earlier in the day, gave up three goals in a span of 1 minute, 16 seconds and four in 4:10 in the second period.
After Penguins coach Eddie Olczyk called a timeout with the Penguins down 4-0 before they had taken their first shot, LeClair did the talking. According to Lemieux, LeClair yelled at his teammates, "We've got to step up because nobody's going to get us out of this but ourselves."
Two goals
Lemieux, scoreless in six of his first nine games, then got the Penguins back in the game by scoring twice on the power play in the first period, his fourth and fifth goals. The first goal came 18 seconds after the timeout.
"It was 4-0 and we let them have two bad goals and things got out of control from there," Thrashers coach Bob Hartley said.
Gonchar, off to a slow start after signing a $25 million contract, tied it with power-play goals 2:54 apart midway through the second. Sidney Crosby set up the tying goal, sailing a pass across the slot to Gonchar in the left circle.
"When you lose nine in a row, you don't have that confidence," Gonchar said. "But the good thing about this club is we stayed together. When it's 4-0, we had all the excuses to lose, but we didn't panic. We all needed this, because there was a lot of pressure on us, with all the talent here and we weren't winning."
With the momentum back on the Penguins' side and Shields clearly fighting himself, LeClair put the Penguins ahead for only the third time this season at 5-4 by tapping Ryan Malone's shot across the goal line after it squirted between Shields' pads.
"That's the way the game is played now, games are won on the power play and today was no different," Shields said.
LeClair's first goal came only 31 seconds after Gonchar's second goal, and Ric Jackman followed 45 seconds later for Pittsburgh's only even-strength goal.
Copyright 2005 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.