Ankle injury may still bother Crosby


He hasn’t been himself since returning from injury.

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Sidney Crosby always has been No. 1.

The No. 1 most-watched youth player in Canada. A No. 1 draft pick. No. 1 in scoring in his second NHL season. The No. 1 player in the league by his fellow players’ votes last season.

Crosby’s career-long refusal to be anything but the best highlights the most surprising element to the Pittsburgh Penguins’ run to the Eastern Conference finals that start Friday night against Philadelphia. Evgeni Malkin, not Crosby, has been their No. 1 player in the postseason, and it’s been evident.

“I think Malkin right now the best player out of those three,” Flyers defenseman Kimmo Timonen, referring the conference’s Big 3 of Washington’s Alex Ovechkin, Malkin and Crosby. “Out of those guys I think Malkin has a little bit of an edge right now.”

It’s not as if Sid the Kid is stuck in a slump, although he has only two goals — one an empty-netter — as the Penguins have won eight of nine playoff games. His 12 assists lead the playoffs and his 14 points are one off the lead.

Still, Crosby looks uncharacteristically sluggish at times, unable to use his exceptionally strong lower body to fend off defenders. He’s not been nearly as explosive in his skating or on his quick bursts to the net to snap off hard wrist shots.

Imagine that: the 20-year-old Crosby is having the kind of playoffs very few players will experience, yet is being asked if he’s off his game.

“The middle part of the last series I wasn’t where I wanted to be, but the last game I was a lot better,” Crosby said Wednesday, referring to his two-assists Sunday as the Penguins eliminated the Rangers by winning 3-2 in overtime. “I think it’s just one of those things where you get a couple of games that are tougher and that’s just the case in the playoffs.”

What is uncertain is how much the high ankle sprain that sidelined Crosby for 28 of 31 games from mid-January on is affecting him.

Crosby insists he’s fine, but he said the same thing in the playoffs a year ago, when he masked a broken foot until the Penguins were eliminated.

Penguins goalie Marc-Andre Fleury also had a high ankle sprain in early December, or five months ago, and he occasionally feels twinges in his ankle even now.

“I think Sid’s the type of guy that always goes hard and he’s in the corners, is always on his feet battling, and I think those are tough things for guys with that ankle,” Fleury said. “At the same time, it’s good we always have a day off between every game [to rest], so that’s big.”

Crosby was the NHL’s leading scorer with 63 points in 46 games before he was hurt. Since returning, he has 23 points, but only six goals, in 16 games.

A reason for the Penguins to be alarmed with only four victories separating them from a chance to play for the Stanley Cup? Probably not. But a close-to-100 percent Crosby gives them a much better chance to eliminate a Flyers team that beat them in five of eight regular season games.

With accomplished scorers Malkin (6 goals, 14 points), Marian Hossa (5 goals, 10 points) and Petr Sykora (4 goals, 6 points) around him, Crosby isn’t convinced he must be the top goal-scorer for Pittsburgh to win.

“I want to score but it doesn’t always work out that way,” Crosby said. “I’d say my first responsibility is as a playmaker. As long as I’m doing that and creating things, it’s fine.”