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Crosby doing it all again as Penguins close in on Cup

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PITTSBURGH: Sidney Crosby’s teammates keep saying nothing ever changes with the Pittsburgh Penguins captain. That the secret to his greatness is really no secret at all. The Penguins believe he remains the same player and the same person every shift, every night. In theory, yes. But not always in practice.

What separates Crosby is an ability to raise his play in lockstep with the stakes. His team’s grasp on a second straight Stanley Cup tenuous at best heading into Game 5 against Nashville on Thursday, Crosby did more than send a message. He took over. And he led. In more ways than one.

Sure, Crosby dished out three assists in Pittsburgh’s lopsided 6-0 win to give the Penguins a 3-2 lead in their increasing­ly coarse series with the Predators. Yet becoming the franchise’s all-time leader in points during this Stanley Cup Final (surpassing his boss, Mario Lemieux) captures only a slice of the brilliance and brawn (yes, really) that pushed Pittsburgh to the verge of a fifth title.

There was his quicksilve­r first shift, when Crosby split the Predators defense shortly after the opening faceoff, then rang shot off the left post while drawing a penalty from Nashville’s Ryan Ellis, who tried futilely to slow him down. Pittsburgh scored on the ensuing power play and never looked back.

There was his scrum behind the Nashville net late in the first period with frequent tormentor P.K. Subban. Crosby responded to the All-Star defenseman doing some “UFC move” on his right foot by trying to make Subban’s face a permanent part of the ice.

There was the slick blind backhand pass to Conor Sheary just 1:19 into the second period that made it 4-0. Oh, and does not forget the water bottle toss just moments before Phil Kessel’s first goal of the series pushed the lead to 5-0. He insists it was accidental.

Crosby only spent 18:03 on the ice during the rout. It just seemed like more.

“When he plays that way it’s awfully easy to follow him,” Penguins forward Matt Cullen said. “He’s pretty inspiratio­nal when he plays that way and he gets to a level that not many guys can get to.”

In the process Crosby moved into a tie for 19th on the all-time list for playoff points and is within one victory of celebratin­g a third championsh­ip with Pittsburgh, something even his Hall of Fame mentor was unable to do.

“Sid really understand­s the opportunit­y that this team has, and he’s not taking anything for granted,” Penguins coach Mike Sullivan said. “He doesn’t just show up to the rink and put his equipment on. He controls everything within his power to be the very best. He controls his diet. He lives the right way.”

And he typically plays the right way, though Crosby’s definition of “right” can be altered to fit the moment. One shift he is putting together a breathless end-toend rush, the next he is scrapping with Subban in a sequence that would have seemed out of character in January. It seems simply part of the territory in June.

Subban drew laughs when he attributed a Game 3 run-in with Crosby to a discussion about Subban’s bad breath. The chatty defenseman and his teammates took the joke and ran with it.

 ??  ?? Penguins’ Sidney Crosby in action against the Predators last week. (AFP)
Penguins’ Sidney Crosby in action against the Predators last week. (AFP)

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