Games

Recap
 
Rangers top Devils, advance to conference semifinals
NY RANGERS 5, NEW JERSEY 3
 

By Joe Rizzo
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

NEWARK, New Jersey (Ticker) -- The New York Rangers beat the New
Jersey Devils in free agency in July, and it made all the
difference when the teams met on the ice - with a little help
from their goaltender.

Henrik Lundqvist stopped John Madden on a potential game-tying
penalty shot with 7:08 left in the third period and former Devil
Scott Gomez had a goal and keyed the Rangers' dominance of his
former team as New York eliminated New Jersey with a 5-3 victory
in Game Five of their Eastern Conference quarterfinals series
Friday.

Gomez had three goals and four assists in the series for the
Rangers, who advanced to the conference semifinals for the
second straight season. With Gomez switching sides, New York
mastered New Jersey, winning seven of the eight regular-season
meetings and four of five in the playoffs.

"When you get the chance to close it out, you have to jump on
it," said Gomez, who played for the Devils from 1999-2007,
winning two Stanley Cups. "It doesn't matter who you're
playing."

Lundqvist's success in shootouts played a part in the Rangers'
success against the Devils during the campaign, and he needed
that experience when Madden was awarded a penalty shot in a 4-3
game after he was taken down from behind by defenseman Dan
Girardi while on a breakaway.

Madden tried a backhander, but Lundqvist got his left pad on it
to preserve the lead.

"I came in, faked a little forehand and went to my backhand -
got him to open up," Madden said. "Just as I went to the
backhand, (the puck) kind of rolled up and went into his pads.
I thought I had him. Of course I thought (about the score). I
wish I could have that over. If I score there, it changes the
game completely. I was kind of surprised it didn't go in.
That's been the story this year."

"We had a lot of shootouts this year," Lundqvist said. "I try
to be ready for everything. I just tried to not make the first
move."

Defenseman Michal Rozsival, captain Jaromir Jagr, Chris Drury
and Brandon Dubinsky also scored for New York, which is now 4-1
in playoff series against New Jersey. The Rangers had not
beaten the Devils in the postseason since the 1997 conference
semifinals and were swept in the quarterfinals in 2006.

New York never has lost a series in which it built a
three-games-to-one advantage, going 12-for-12 - including a
five-game win over New Jersey in 1997.

"You could see it," Jagr said. "We took it over today. From
the first shift, even though they scored the first goal, I knew
we were going to win it. I just knew it. You just had the
feeling they didn't have the legs. You could see it - all of a
sudden, one team hitting the wall, and it's over if you play
smart and don't give them any chances."

Brian Gionta, blue-liner Bryce Salvador and Patrik Elias scored
for the Devils, who were trying to become the 21st team in NHL
history to rally from a 3-1 deficit. But they were unable to
accomplish the feat despite doing so in the 2000 conference
finals against the Philadelphia Flyers and are now 1-7 when
losing three of the first four games of a playoff series.

It was the fourth straight season in which the Devils fell
behind, 3-1, in a series.

"We dug ourselves too big of a hole to come back from," Elias
said. "(We made) mistakes again, untimely mistakes. They found
a way to win, we found a way to lose."

The Rangers improved to 10-6 in Game Fives that were potential
clinchers.

The Devils opened the scoring 4:40 into the game, when Gionta
took a feed in the slot from Travis Zajac and one-timed the puck
over Lundqvist's glove. But the Rangers tied it just 18
seconds later on a nearly identical goal by Rozsival off a feed
from Jagr.

Jagr took advantage of a power play less than two minutes
afterward, beating goaltender Martin Brodeur between the pads
with a wrist shot from the far edge of the right faceoff circle
at 6:38.

Gomez netted his third goal of the series with 1:59 left in the
opening period, lifting a loose puck over a prone Brodeur from
close range to the left of the netminder to make it 3-1.

"He was playing excellent," Jagr said of Gomez. "It's not easy
playing against the team you used to play for. I hate it, and I
still do. The booing, the bad energy, it's not easy. It
affects you. Even if you say it doesn't, it does. He did a
great job. People remember him with New Jersey. He won a lot
of stuff (there)."

Sean Avery, whose on-ice tormenting, antics and scoring - as
well as his decision not to talk to the media - made him the
center of attention, set up the goal by controlling the puck
behind the net.

Avery finally broke his silence and addressed a huge media
throng after the game. In the traditional post-series
handshake, Avery offered his hand to Brodeur, who did not even
acknowledge the agitator's presence and proceeded to shake the
hand of the next Ranger in line.

The snub was a result of Avery's unsportsmanlike tactics in Game
Three, when he repeatedly waved his stick in the face of
Brodeur with his back to the play in an attempt to throw the
goalie off his game.

"He forgot to shake my hand - I don't know if you saw that,"
said Avery, who scored a goal in each of the first three games
of the series. "I don't really know what goes on outside of
when I get to the rink. I've said it a million times - I read
Vogue, not the sports pages, so I have really no idea what went
on (in the media)."

Drury, the other big-name free agent that joined the Rangers
along with Gomez last summer, boosted the lead to 4-1 at 5:35 of
the second period, when he took a pass from the left corner by
Nigel Dawes and blasted it past Brodeur from the right circle.

The Devils caught a break midway through the second, when
Salvador took a slap shot from outside the blue line that hit
Dubinsky's glove, deflected off the left goalpost, hit Lundqvist
in the back of the right shoulder and trickled into the net to
cut the deficit to 4-2. It counted as New Jersey's first shot
of the period.

The strategy of shooting in pucks off Rangers continued to work
for the Devils as Elias converted a 5-on-3 advantage during a
goalmouth scramble by chipping the puck off New York defenseman
Fedor Tyutin and by Lundqvist's glove at 13:50 to close the gap
to 4-3.

The Rangers then went into a defensive shell as the Devils
rushed wave after wave but could not connect for the tying goal,
even with the help of the penalty shot. New Jersey outshot New
York, 11-3, in the third period.

New York's opponent in the conference semifinals is not
determined because the NHL re-seeds after each round. The only
remaining team the fifth-seeded Rangers cannot meet in the next
round is the Boston Bruins.

"Bring it," Jagr said of the chance to play his former team, the
second-seeded Pittsburgh Penguins, who were the first to
advance. "I'm ready. They're going to be big favorites, but
who cares?"

 
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