Penguins bounce back from 3-goal deficit, 5-4


Evgeni Malkin scored on a power play with 1:41 remaining.

PITTSBURGH (AP) — A memorable Pittsburgh comeback left the Penguins laughing at each other, an improbable victory accomplished. And left the New York Rangers, with their decided edge in experience, wondering how they possibly could lose such a big lead in such a big game.

Evgeni Malkin deflected Sidney Crosby’s one-timer from the right point on a Pittsburgh power play with 1:41 remaining to finish a frantic comeback, and the Penguins rallied from a three-goal deficit against the Rangers for a 5-4 victory in their second-round playoff series opener Friday night.

Petr Sykora and Marian Hossa scored 20 seconds apart early in the third period during Pittsburgh’s second such flurry of their rally, and the Penguins shook off Scott Gomez’s tying goal midway through the period to win it.

“A game is never finished for us,” Sykora said, referring to the Penguins’ wealth of scorers. “We have the power to score to score a lot of goals here. It doesn’t matter if we’re down one, two, three goals.”

The Rangers lost for the first time in four road games in these playoffs, an unexpected ending after they seized the momentum and, it seemed, control of the game with a 3-0 lead. But they couldn’t have guessed the Penguins would twice score two goals in 20 seconds or less against a team known for its defensive commitment and patience.

“Pittsburgh isn’t where they’re at because they’re a poor team and they don’t know how to bounce back,” coach Tom Renney said. “We were certainly aware of that — almost to a fault.”

Just when it appeared the two Atlantic Division rivals were headed to overtime, one of the many former Penguins who played a key role in the game, Martin Straka, was called for interference with 3:20 remaining.

Crosby took Ryan Whitney’s pass and, shooting beyond his normal range from beyond the right circle, put a slap shot on net that deflected off Malkin’s shin guard for the Penguins’ only power-play goal. The play was briefly reviewed to make sure Malkin didn’t kick the puck into the net.

“I saw it was going wide and I reached for it and it hit Malkin’s leg and went in,” goalie Henrik Lundqvist said. “We just have to forget this. I don’t want to think about it, I just want to move on.”

Crosby doesn’t own the best slap shot, so Malkin marveled at how he could take such a good one at such a key time.

“His slap shot is, uhh, not that good,” Malkin said through an interpreter. “That shot he just put everything in it, all the motion, all the power and he shot that puck that hard.”

So hard, they probably felt it in New York.

“(Ahead) 3-0 in the playoffs, you’d like to think it’s over, but what are you going to do?” Gomez said. “We can’t get in a track meet with those guys. It’s over, there’s nothing you can do about it.”

Game 2 is Sunday in Pittsburgh, where the Penguins have won their last 11.

“That one hurts. I thought we had it,” Rangers captain Jaromir Jagr said. “The second one is going to be even tougher, but we have to do it somehow.”