Games

Recap
 
Ruutu helps Penguins complete sweep of Senators
PITTSBURGH 3, OTTAWA 1
 

OTTAWA (Ticker) -- Unfortunately for the Ottawa Senators, they
were not the same team that represented the Eastern Conference
in last year's Stanley Cup Finals. They also learned that the
Pittsburgh Penguins are not the same club that they eliminated
in the 2007 conference quarterfinals.

Jarkko Ruutu snapped a tie late in the second period and the
Penguins went on to complete a sweep of their best-of-seven
conference quarterfinal series with the Senators with a 3-1
victory in Game Four on Wednesday.

Superstars Evgeni Malkin and Sidney Crosby also tallied for
second-seeded Pittsburgh, which outscored Ottawa, 16-5, in
gaining revenge for last postseason's five-game elimination.

"It was a different situation last year, and we definitely went
through some learning experiences," Crosby said. "I think we
responded well, and in this series, we worked hard and we
deserved to win. For us, it's our first playoff series victory
together, and it feels great."

Penguins left wing Ryan Malone believed the team was more
interested in just winning the series, regardless of the
opponent.

"I don't think we were too focused on them," Malone said. "We
were more focused on playing our style and bringing our game to
them."

Crosby added an assist and Marc-Andre Fleury made 21 saves for
the Penguins, who last swept a best-of-seven series against the
Chicago Blackhawks in the 1992 Stanley Cup Finals.

"This is obviously a big win for us against the team that
knocked us out last year," Fleury said. "Everything went well
for us, but I think we played a great series, and now we'll get
ready to move on."

"It's a good feeling however you win, whether it's in seven
(games) or four," Crosby said. "It's just great to win the
series. We worked hard for four games and earned it, so it's
nice that we're able to be rewarded for it."

Cory Stillman netted the lone goal for the Senators, who went
1-for-13 on the power play in the series.

"The turnovers, the poor finishing, the inability at times to
get the puck out of our own end. That became a factor as the
series went on," Ottawa coach Bryan Murray said.

"Confidence was a big factor," Senators right wing Martin
Lapointe added. "I think our confidence level wasn't quite
there. And when you're down 3-0 in the series, it's tough to
come back."

Senators defenseman Wade Redden, who can become an unrestricted
free agent this summer, was disappointed with the difference
between last season's team and the one that just was eliminated.

"It's hard to say why it happens," Redden said. "We got off to
a great start (this campaign), but then we were up and down for
the rest of the year. I guess we just never became a team like
we did last year. It's hard to pinpoint the reason."

With the game even at 1-1, the Penguins moved in front for good
with 4:32 remaining in the middle period.

With defenseman Brian Lee draped all over him, Ruutu lost full
control of the puck during a partial breakaway. But the Finn
spun around and put a backhander past goaltender Martin Gerber
from the doorstep for his second career playoff tally and a 2-1
edge.

"I took the pass and got a half-breakaway," Ruutu said. "As I
was trying to cut to the middle, I kind of lost (the puck) a
little bit. But I still had the reach and I just turned around
and tried to put it at the net, and it went in."

After a scoreless first period, Malkin gave Pittsburgh the lead
early in the second with a power-play goal.

Crosby made a cross-slot pass from the right faceoff circle to
Malkin, whose first shot was stopped by Gerber. However, the
Russian swept his own rebound past the netminder at 1:40 while
holding his stick with one hand for a 1-0 lead.

Ottawa pulled even midway through the period as a bouncing puck
in the crease found its way to Stillman, who punched it into the
net from the right side at 10:31 for his second goal of the
series and the 19th of his postseason career.

The Senators nearly forged another tie with 2:59 to go in the
period. But following a lengthy video review, it was determined
that Antoine Vermette intentionally kicked the rebound of
captain Daniel Alfredsson's shot from the right circle into a
vacant left side of the net, nullifying the goal and keeping
Ottawa behind by one.

Despite outshooting Pittsburgh, 9-4, in the third, Ottawa was
unable to get the equalizer past Fleury.

"I felt good tonight, but the guys played great in front of me,"
Fleury said. "In the first two periods, they didn't have many
shots or good chances. But they came hard in the third, so it
was nice to be able to make some big saves and get the win."

"Fleury was there for us right from Game One," Crosby said.
"When they had chances, he stood tall, and that's what it's
going to take throughout the playoffs."

Crosby sealed the victory with an empty-netter with eight
seconds remaining as the Penguins snapped an eight-game losing
streak in Game Fours. Pittsburgh also improved to 5-3 in Game
Fours of series in which it established a three-games-to-none
lead.

For Crosby and many of his teammates, however, it's the first
step in learning how to win in the postseason.

"We have guys with a great attitude and some great experience
who can definitely lead by example," the 20-year-old captain
said. "I think if we take anything out of this, it's that the
difference between winning and losing a game is very small. If
you don't kill a couple of penalties or you make a couple of
turnovers that result in goals, that can mean a loss. It's such
a small margin for error."

"Every guy gave it their all, and it was a great team effort in
all four games," added Malone, the hero of Game Two. "The next
round is going to be one heck of a challenge, so we've got to be
ready for that. Get a little refreshment mentally and get
ready for the next round."

The Senators failed to get production from their top three
scorers as Alfredsson, Dany Heatley and Jason Spezza combined
for two assists in the series.

"It's very disappointing," Heatley said. "Sometimes things go
well and everything you shoot goes in the net, and sometimes you
can't buy a goal. That's the way it goes sometimes. When it's
not going well, you've got to battle out of it. ... The bottom
line is that when things weren't going good, we couldn't battle
out of it."

"When we started losing, it seemed like we just kept losing,"
Spezza said. "It felt like the walls were closing in on us,
like we were running out of time."

Alfredsson, who missed the first two games of the series with a
knee injury, was upset the Senators couldn't record a victory in
front of the crowd at Scotiabank Place.

"It's disappointing. Our chance to go further and play for the
(Stanley) Cup is over," the Swede said. "The fans really got
going, but obviously, losing here like this is tough."


 
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