Boston Herald

Pens send Flyers home

Guentzel nets 4 in wild Game 6

- SCHEDULE SUMMARIES

Jake Guentzel dropped to his right knee and slid on the ice in celebratio­n, not only for his second career postseason hat trick, but for the goal that assured Pittsburgh was moving on in the playoffs.

He has establishe­d his playoff pedigree as a sensationa­l scorer in just two seasons and helped keep a third straight championsh­ip in sight for the Penguins.

Guentzel scored four straight goals to help send the two-time defending Stanley Cup champion Pittsburgh Penguins into the next round with an 8-5 win over the Flyers in Game 6 yesterday in Philadelph­ia.

The Penguins play the winner of the Washington-Columbus series in the Eastern Conference semifinals. Washington leads that best-of-seven series 3-2.

Guentzel scored six goals in the series and added another hat trick to pair with the one he had as a rookie in a first-round series last season against the Blue Jackets.

“He has the ability to play his best when the stakes are the highest. We have a team that does that,” Penguins coach Mike Sullivan said. “They embrace adversity. They embrace the struggle. Our team doesn’t get rattled. They embrace the challenge.”

Guentzel had the third four-goal playoff game in team history, joining Mario Lemieux in 1989 and Kevin Stevens in 1991.

“This is what you want to play in,” Guentzel said. “You grow up dreaming about this and this is definitely fun. When the bounces start going your way, you just try and run with it.”

Sean Couturier had the 24th playoff hat trick for the Flyers, who haven’t won a Stanley Cup since 1975. Couturier said he played with a torn right MCL suffered in a collision with a teammate at practice last week.

“I couldn’t move that well, so I just tried to be well-positioned, have good sticks,” he said.

Guentzel, not Sidney Crosby, Phil Kessel or the injured Evgeni Malkin, won the game for the Penguins with goals off costly Flyers turnovers, leading them to their ninth straight playoff series win.

He tied the game 4-4 with 54 seconds left in the second period off a Flyers turnover. He scored 30 seconds into the third for the lead off another giveaway, and sealed one more lopsided win over the Flyers with two goals 10 seconds apart late in the period.

It was 2-2 after one period, 4-4 after two, and nothing was decided in the fiercest game of the series between the longstandi­ng rivals until Guentzel took control.

The Flyers, who survived a 10-game losing streak just to make the playoffs, lost all three games at home and not even a solid start could help them get out of the first round for the first time since 2012.

Couturier had been the Flyers’ postseason savior, returning from a serious leg injury to score the Game 5 winner and then open Game 6 with his third goal of the series just 2:15 into the game.

Predators 5, Avalanche 0— Mattias Ekholm ignited the offense early with the first goal by a Nashville defenseman in the series, Pekka Rinne stopped 22 shots and the top-seeded Predators advanced to the second round with a shutout over Colorado in Game 6 in Denver.

Austin Watson, Filip Forsberg, Nick Bonino and Viktor Arvidsson also scored to help the Predators move on to face Winnipeg. They were 3-1-1 against the Jets in the regular season.

Nashville removed any sort of drama with two goals in the opening period and two more in the second to hush the capacity crowd. Rinne was on his game in notching his fourth career postseason shutout.

Andrew Hammond ran out of magic in net, allowing five goals. The thirdstrin­g goaltender nicknamed “Hamburglar” had 44 saves during a Game 5 win in Nashville to extend the series. But he couldn’t turn back a formidable Nashville offense that won a second straight playoff contest in Denver. Before this, the Avalanche hadn’t lost two straight at the Pepsi Center since early December.

Watson tormented Colorado with four goals and seven points in the series. In all, 11 of Nashville’s forwards had at least a point over six games.

The closest Colorado came to scoring on Rinne was in the second period, when Nikita Zadorov sent in a shot, but it was waved off due to goaltender interferen­ce on Carl Soderberg.

It was quite a bounce-back season for Colorado, which boasts one of the youngest teams in the league. The Avalanche went from a 48-point team in 2016-17 to 95 points this season, earning the last playoff spot on the final day of the regular season.

Elsewhere in the NHL — Vancouver right winger Brock Boeser, New York Islanders center Mathew Barzal and Arizona Coyotes center Clayton Keller are the finalists for the Calder Memorial Trophy for the NHL’s rookie of the year.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? MOVING FORWARD: Jake Guentzel (center) celebrates one of his four goals with teammates Sidney Crosby (left) and Kris Letang as the Penguins prevailed in a wild Game 6 with an 8-5 victory in Philadelph­ia, eliminatin­g the Flyers.
AP PHOTO MOVING FORWARD: Jake Guentzel (center) celebrates one of his four goals with teammates Sidney Crosby (left) and Kris Letang as the Penguins prevailed in a wild Game 6 with an 8-5 victory in Philadelph­ia, eliminatin­g the Flyers.

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