NHL ROUNDUP \ Saturday's games



Rangers 7, Penguins 1
NEW YORK -- Jaromir Jagr shook off the effects of a severe cold and had two third-period goals and an assist, helping New York overcome Sidney Crosby's 25th goal. The teams were tied 1-1 after one period, but the Rangers turned it on and finished with a 51-14 shots advantage. They scored twice in the second frame while out-shooting Pittsburgh 16-2, then netted four more goals in the third. When Jagr scored his 32nd of the season on a power play with 9:28 left, New York was out-shooting Pittsburgh 44-10. The Penguins, who recorded only 16 shots Thursday in a shootout loss to the New York Islanders, lost for the 12th time in 13 games. Martin Rucinsky had a goal and two assists, and Jason Ward had one of each for the Rangers, who have won four of five. Rookie goalie Henrik Lundqvist improved to 21-7-5. Ward gave New York a 1-0 lead in the first period and helped set up Rucinsky's tiebreaking goal in the second. Michal Rozsival scored less than 2 minutes after Rucinsky to push the lead to 3-1. Jagr, who missed two days of practice this week due to illness, made it 4-1 at 6:47 of the third. Crosby became the third NHL rookie to reach 25 goals this season, joining Washington's Alexander Ovechkin and Colorado's Marek Svatos. He is second in rookie points, four behind Ovechkin. New York's Petr Prucha became the fourth rookie with 25 when he gave New York a 5-1 lead with 11:08 left. Jason Strudwick finished Marc-Andre Fleury's tough day by beating him with New York's 50th shot with 2:33 left, making it 7-1. The Penguins showed the effects of a long, taxing week. In addition to the losses, Pittsburgh also had to deal with the sudden retirement of Mario Lemieux, who walked away from the game on Tuesday.
NEW YORK -- Jaromir Jagr shook off the effects of a severe cold and had two third-period goals and an assist, helping New York overcome Sidney Crosby's 25th goal. The teams were tied 1-1 after one period, but the Rangers turned it on and finished with a 51-14 shots advantage. They scored twice in the second frame while out-shooting Pittsburgh 16-2, then netted four more goals in the third. When Jagr scored his 32nd of the season on a power play with 9:28 left, New York was out-shooting Pittsburgh 44-10. The Penguins, who recorded only 16 shots Thursday in a shootout loss to the New York Islanders, lost for the 12th time in 13 games. Martin Rucinsky had a goal and two assists, and Jason Ward had one of each for the Rangers, who have won four of five. Rookie goalie Henrik Lundqvist improved to 21-7-5. Ward gave New York a 1-0 lead in the first period and helped set up Rucinsky's tiebreaking goal in the second. Michal Rozsival scored less than 2 minutes after Rucinsky to push the lead to 3-1. Jagr, who missed two days of practice this week due to illness, made it 4-1 at 6:47 of the third. Crosby became the third NHL rookie to reach 25 goals this season, joining Washington's Alexander Ovechkin and Colorado's Marek Svatos. He is second in rookie points, four behind Ovechkin. New York's Petr Prucha became the fourth rookie with 25 when he gave New York a 5-1 lead with 11:08 left. Jason Strudwick finished Marc-Andre Fleury's tough day by beating him with New York's 50th shot with 2:33 left, making it 7-1. The Penguins showed the effects of a long, taxing week. In addition to the losses, Pittsburgh also had to deal with the sudden retirement of Mario Lemieux, who walked away from the game on Tuesday.
Stars 2, Red Wings 1, SO
DALLAS -- Mike Modano pounded a shot into the top of the net in the first extra round of a shootout, giving Dallas the victory. Dallas goalie Marty Turco beat Detroit for the first time in 11 tries.
Lightning 6, Flyers 0
PHILADELPHIA -- Fredrik Modin scored three goals and Sean Burke made 38 saves for his 36th career shutout to help Tampa Bay win for the fifth time in six games. Dan Boyle, Vaclav Prospal and Ryan Craig also scored for the defending Stanley Cup champion Lightning. The Atlantic Division-leading Flyers have lost seven of 10, including five of six at home.
Mighty Ducks 6, Kings 2
LOS ANGELES -- Corey Perry had two goals and an assist, Scott Niedermayer added a goal and two assists, and Anaheim tied a franchise record with four power-play goals.
Associated Press