Cape Breton Post

Devils goalie Schneider makes most of rare start

- BY TOM CANAVAN

Cory Schneider is no longer the forgotten man on the New Jersey Devils.

It’s amazing what a good game in the playoffs can do for a veteran goaltender relegated to a backup role over the past month because Keith Kinkaid had been playing so well in leading the Devils to their first playoff berth since 2012.

The 32-year-old Schneider got his chance to play in a meaningful game when the Tampa Bay Lightning smoked the Devils in the opening two games of the first-round series, outscoring them 10-5.

The Devils turned to Schneider for Game 3 on Monday night and he made the most of it. He stopped 34 shots in a 5-2 win that allowed New Jersey to cut the Lightning lead in the series to 2-1 with Game 4 scheduled for Wednesday night.

It was his first win since late December and snapped a 0-10-2 personal skid for the likable Devils’ mainstay who was never the same in the final months of the season after sustaining hip and groin injuries in the latter part of January.

“Your job in these situations is to come in and win,” Schneider said Tuesday after not taking part in a skate mostly for players who were scratched on Monday.

“I have said all along, I haven’t tried to veer from what I have been doing. It hasn’t gone my way recently for a number of reasons we don’t have to get into. I just viewed the playoffs as a fresh start, a new season and it didn’t matter what happened before.”

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? New Jersey Devils goaltender Cory Schneider blocks a shot from the Tampa Bay Lightning during NHL playoff action Monday night in Newark, N.J.
AP PHOTO New Jersey Devils goaltender Cory Schneider blocks a shot from the Tampa Bay Lightning during NHL playoff action Monday night in Newark, N.J.

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