China Daily (Hong Kong)

How Swede it is for Rangers Lundqvist shakes off early jitters to blank Canadiens in series opener

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MONTREAL — New York Rangers goalie Henrik Lundqvist got over his troubles with the Montreal Canadiens in a hurry.

The Swedish veteran survived a shaky first period and finished with 31 saves in Wednesday’s 2-0 victory in the opening game of their Eastern Conference quarterfin­al series in the Stanley Cup playoffs.

It will be up to the Canadiens to come up with an answer in Game 2 on Friday night at Bell Centre, or risk heading to New York down two games in the best-of-seven series.

“We didn’t think Hank was going to have a hard time here,” New York coach Alain Vigneault said. “We’ve always had a lot of confidence in his game and what he did tonight was what we expected.”

Montreal went 3-0-0 against Lundqvist and the Rangers during the regular season, continuing the trend of their games over the past two campaigns in which Canadiens goalie Carey Price has shone while Lundqvist has labored.

When New York knocked off the Canadiens in six games in 2014, a series in which Price was injured in the opening game, Lundqvist was pulled for Game 5, but bounced back with a Game 6 shutout.

His shutout on Wednesday put him in the career lead among active NHL goalies, with 10.

“We know Hank’s going to bring it,” Rangers captain Ryan McDonagh said. “His focus and determinat­ion really fed to the rest of the team.”

Tanner Glass scored in the first period. Montreal pulled Price late in the third, but Michael Grabner settled the issue with an empty-net goal with 1:10 left.

Montreal outshot New York 16-5 in the first period, but couldn’t beat Lundqvist.

The Canadiens were all over New York in the opening period, but it was the Rangers who struck first, on only their third shot, at 9:20.

Montreal’s Tomas Plekanec won a draw in his own zone, but fourth-line winger Glass pounced on it and lifted a backhand from the slot over Price’s shoulder.

“That goal helped to settle us down and get back to making the plays we needed to make,” McDonagh said.

“A great play by (Glass). It’s just working hard. It’s great to see him get rewarded like that.”

Montreal coach Claude Julien said he wants to make “little adjustment­s” for Game 2.

“We can definitely get better in the board battles,” Julien said.

“Little details here and there made the difference. We had some chances in the first and came out of it down 1-0 when we should have been up. That’s what happens in the playoffs. What you need to do is keep your composure. You face adversity along the way, but you regroup and go back to work.”

New York turned the tables in the first half of the second frame, but Price held Montreal in the game. The Rangers had a two-man advantage late in the period but couldn’t get a second goal.

“It was more about finish,” Julien said. “There were loose pucks there. It’s about winning the little battles for loose pucks and making sure you pounce on them and finish it off.”

Marc-Andre Fleury spent the regular season saying all the right things — and just as importantl­y, doing all the right things — while watching Matt Murray take his job as starting goaltender for the Pittsburgh Penguins.

It wasn’t easy. Yet the goalie with more wins than any other in the history of the franchise handled the demotion with grace. He never moaned about playing time and did his best to help the 22-year-old Murray adjust to the grind during his first full season in the NHL.

The Penguins held on to Fleury at the trade deadline, keenly aware that a time might come when they would need him to conjure up a little more magic.

That time arrived on Wednesday night against Columbus, after Murray tweaked

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