Games

Recap
 
Malkin paces Penguins to early series lead
PITTSBURGH 4, PHILADELPHIA 2
 

PITTSBURGH (Ticker) -- Evgeni Malkin wasted little time
exploiting the absence of Kimmo Timonen on the Philadelphia
Flyers' blue line.

Malkin snapped a tie in the waning seconds of the first period
and added a shorthander early in the second as the Pittsburgh
Penguins drew first blood in the Eastern Conference finals on
Friday with a 4-2 victory over the Flyers in Game One.

Petr Sykora and captain Sidney Crosby also scored and Malkin
added an assist for the second-seeded Penguins, who improved to
6-0 at home this postseason.

"When we get our chances, we scored goals," Sykora said. "Geno
(Malkin) was great again tonight. He took over."

Marc-Andre Fleury made 26 saves for Pittsburgh, which hosts Game
Two of the best-of-seven series on Sunday.

"I think it's a big win for us, but it's just a start," Penguins
defenseman Hal Gill said. "That's the only way we can look at
it, is as a good start."

Mike Richards netted both goals and R.J. Umberger collected two
assists for the sixth-seeded Flyers, who have dropped Game One
in each of their three playoff series.

"It's a position we've been in before," Richards said. "We'll
just have to come back with another solid effort. Hopefully,
we'll do that on Sunday."

"The first game always seems like the toughest for us,"
Philadelphia's Daniel Briere added. "But we've been in this
situation before, so hopefully we can find a way to bounce
back."

An All-Star this season, Timonen was expected to spend most of
the conference finals opposite Malkin in an attempt to limit the
Hart Trophy finalist's scoring chances. However, the Finnish
defenseman was diagnosed with a blood clot in his left foot on
Thursday and will miss the entire series, and likely the Stanley
Cup Finals should the Flyers advance.

"When you look at any team and you lose a key guy on the blue
line, any team's going to miss that, and obviously they miss
him, too," Pittsburgh's Marian Hossa said.

Philadelphia's chances of advancing took a hit Friday, as Malkin
recorded his second two-goal performance of the postseason and
fourth three-point effort.

"We capitalized on their mistakes a few times," Penguins coach
Michel Therrien said. "It was important for us to pursue the
puck, put (Philadelphia's defensemen) in a tough position. That
was part of our plan, and they stuck to the plan."

With the game even at 2-2 and time winding down in the first
period, Malkin received a cross-ice pass from defenseman Ryan
Whitney at Philadelphia's blue line following a turnover in the
neutral zone. The Russian skated into the offensive end and
wristed a shot from the right faceoff circle that sailed just
inside the left goalpost with 6.5 seconds left, giving
Pittsburgh the lead for good.

"You get the puck in the neutral zone, we don't get it deep,"
Flyers coach John Stevens said. "We get caught in transition.
Washington, Montreal and Pittsburgh might be three of the better
transition teams in the league, especially late in the period.
That's a stressed attack. We had people back, but it was kind
of a stressed 3-on-2, and those are killers."

"It gave us confidence when we attacked the second period,"
Therrien said of Malkin's late tally.

The goal proved to be the game-winner, Malkin's third of the
playoffs.

Penguins blue-liner Brooks Orpik was called for holding 3 1/2
minutes into the second session, giving the Flyers a chance to
draw even. Instead, Pittsburgh doubled its advantage while
shorthanded.

Hanging near the Flyers' blue line, Malkin received a pass from
defenseman Sergei Gonchar and skated in alone on Martin Biron.
From between the hash marks, the 21-year-old beat the goaltender
to the stick side with a slap shot at 4:50 for his eighth of
the postseason.

"It was really last-second decision," Malkin said of the
slapper. "All my penalty shots wasn't that great all the time,
pretty much. So in the last second, I just decided to shoot the
puck as hard as I can. I didn't think about it, where to
shoot, and to make any moves. Just (shoot) as hard as I can."

"You have to expect the unexpected with the top players, and
he's one of those," Biron said. "You have to expect anything."

Crosby admitted he may have made the same shot selection had he
been in Malkin's position.

"Hey, it worked," Crosby said. "If I had the shot, I'd do the
same thing, I think. With that amount of time, and I think at
the end of the shift like that, he was pretty tired."

Gonchar did not expect to see Malkin alone in the neutral zone
before making the pass.

"I was surprised he was there by himself," the All-Star
defenseman said. "Not when you're playing four against five do
you see one guy standing at the blue line and get breakaways. I
was happy he was there and even happier he scored on it."

Philadelphia never recovered, generating very few scoring
chances the rest of the way. Its best opportunity came with
5:40 remaining in the third, when defenseman Randy Jones' shot
from the left point rang off the crossbar.

"When we took the lead, we were concentrating on shutting them
down," Therrien said. "We put (on) a really tight-checking,
defensive game after that."

"They got the momentum and then they just started shutting
things down," Biron said. "After that, it was hard to get our
legs moving."

Looking to match its longest home winning streak in one playoff
year, Pittsburgh opened the scoring just 6:19 into the contest.

Malkin and Ryan Malone broke into the offensive zone on the left
side, drawing several defenders toward them. Alertly, Malone
sent a cross-slot pass to Sykora, who from alone on the right
side moved the puck to his backhand and lifted it past Biron for
his fifth goal of the playoffs.

"I just went back to the other side and went upstairs," Sykora
said.

Richards answered just over two minutes later with his fifth
postseason tally.

After gaining possession behind the net, Richards rushed to the
right goalpost for a stuff attempt. The puck caromed off a
sprawled Fleury and into the net, but referee Mike Hasenfratz
waved off the goal.

However, after a brief video review, the replay officials
awarded the tally to Richards, knotting the game at 1-1.

A captain in the making, Richards put Philadelphia ahead with
7:10 to go in the first. After Joffrey Lupul failed in several
attempts to jam the puck past Fleury from the doorstep, Richards
gathered it, moved to his right and fired it into a vacant net
for his second of the contest.

"We knew they had some offensive power," Hossa said. "We just
didn't play well in front of Fleury and we just spotted them
those two goals."

"Things weren't going well at first, but our guys adapted and
kept working at it," Fleury said. "And with the type of players
we have, you know you can always get those goals back and get
back into the game."

The lead lasted less than two minutes as Crosby cashed in after
a miscue by Biron.

Attempting to backhand the puck up the left wing boards from
behind his net instead of leaving it for his defenseman, Biron
gave it right to Hossa. The Slovakian made a quick pass to
Crosby, who redirected it past Biron from in front at 14:11 to
forge a 2-2 tie.

"I made a bad play on the second goal," Biron admitted. "I made
some terrible plays in the first period with the puck. I
personally was responsible for the goal. I've got to make
better plays, I've got to help my (defensemen)."

"Usually that's uncharacteristic of the playoffs to make
mistakes like that early on," Crosby said. "We did a great job
of capitalizing."

Stevens cited a miscommunication as the reason Biron made the
poor decision that led to Crosby's goal.

"The building is loud, the communication on the handoff there
obviously didn't take place or didn't get executed," Stevens
said. "The puck turns over into the net. Those are goals you
don't want to give up. Those are almost self-inflicted wounds
that you have to try to avoid. It was a big momentum-builder
for them."

A native of Pittsburgh, Umberger had a golden opportunity to
regain the lead for Philadelphia. But after stealing the puck
from Sykora at the Penguins' blue line, Umberger was unable to
get off a shot on his short breakaway as Fleury brilliantly
poke-checked the puck away.

"I tried to surprise him," Fleury said.

Biron finished with 17 saves.


 
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