Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Comeback Rangers ready to face Penguins in Game 7

- By Vin A. Cherwoo

When the New York Rangers came back from Pittsburgh earlier in the week, they were on the brink of being eliminated by the Penguins after two bad losses on the road.

Following two spirited comeback wins, they return home for a deciding Game 7 at Madison Square Garden on Sunday night (7 p.m., TBS) with some momentum on their side.

“Game 7 is huge for us and now we’ve got to make sure we finish it off tomorrow and play the right way,” Rangers coach Gerard Gallant said Saturday. “We worked hard to get back. I think everybody’s really excited . ... It’s a big game, for sure. It’s a lot of fun and I look forward to it.”

After falling into a 3-1 series hole, the Rangers have a pair of 5-3 wins — at home and then back on the road — to even the series. In

each of the last two wins, they fell behind 2-0 before surging ahead with three consecutiv­e goals in the second periods and letting the Penguins tie it again. New York then

pulled away in the third periods.

Clawing back from a deficit is nothing new for these Rangers. During the regular season, they had 27 comeback wins — just two fewer than the league-leading Florida Panthers.

The Penguins have been through this before as it’s they are 3-0 in Game 7s under coach Mike Sullivan, including the deciding game on the road against Washington in the second round of the 2017 playoffs.

“We’re confident in our game plan,” Pittsburgh forward Jeff Carter said. “If you go in with the right mindset and you leave it all out there, most of the time you’re going to come out on top. That’s what we’ll look to do.”

The Penguins could get a boost with the possible return injured players Sidney Crosby, Tristan Jarry and Rickard Rakell. They all practiced Saturday and will travel to New York for the series finale. Jarry has not played since April 14, Rakell was injured in Game 1 of this series, and Crosby left in the second period of Game 5.

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The wild-card Stars won Game 6 at home to force the fifth Game 7 of the first round, trailing only the 1992 division semifinals (six) for the most in a single round of the playoffs in NHL history.

“The league wants to make it competitiv­e and tight, they got it,” Dallas coach Rick Bowness said. “It’s a tough league and it shows how the competitiv­e balance is there. I know we’re not supposed to still be playing. We’re supposed to be on a golf vacation right now, but that wasn’t our intention going in. We didn’t get in the playoffs to be someone else’s steppingst­one for the second round.”

Though the Flames will be playing their first Game 7 since the first round of the 2008 playoffs against San Jose, coach Darryl Sutter is a master of the deciding games. At 7-3, he’s the league leader in coaching wins in a Game 7 and will become the leader for the most Game 7 appearance­s.

 ?? GENE J. PUSKAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Pittsburgh’s Jeff Carter, back right, can’t block the puck from going across the goal line behind Penguins goaltender Louis Domingue for the winning goal in Game 6 in Pittsburgh on Friday.
GENE J. PUSKAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pittsburgh’s Jeff Carter, back right, can’t block the puck from going across the goal line behind Penguins goaltender Louis Domingue for the winning goal in Game 6 in Pittsburgh on Friday.

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