New York Daily News

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Denied top spot by Bruins

- BYPAT LEONARD

Rangers, who could have clinched top spot in East with one point, fail to gain any in loss to Bruins Pat Leonard,

THE RANGERS entered and emerged from Sunday night's 2-1 loss to the Bruins in the same favorable position: just one point from clinching the top seed in the Eastern Conference for the first time since the 1993-94 Stanley Cup season.

That made this a unique defeat to process.

On the one hand, the Rangers (50-22-7, 107 points) coughed up a 1-0 lead, wasted Marian Gaborik's 40th goal of the season and had their four-game winning streak snapped. On the other hand, they finished strong, outshootin­g Boston 19-3 in the third period. They need only one point in their three remaining games to take the top seed and home-ice advantage through the East finals following Pittsburgh's 6-4 loss to the Flyers Sunday afternoon.

“Tomorrow we'll be positive, we’ll come back to work and I’m sure it’ll be a little easier, (but) right now it’s a bad taste,” said BRUINS RANGERS Brian Boyle, who played with an effective edge to match the physical Bruins but said the puck didn't feel as good on his stick as it had in the previous five games, when he scored three goals. “We’re not going to get on each other and fall apart as a team, obviously. We’re going to stick together, but it’s tough to lose.” The Penguins (48-25-6, 102 points) could give the Rangers the point they need by losing any of their final three games, including Thursday night’s head-tohead with the Rangers in Pittsburgh, but the Blueshirts aren’t going to wait for help with the Flyers next in Philadelph­ia Tuesday night and the Capitals visiting the Garden for Saturday night's regular-season finale.

Sunday night, the Bruins clinched the No. 2 seed in the East and avoided a regular-season sweep by the Rangers with 33 saves from two-time Vezina Trophy-winning goaltender Tim Thomas. They answered Marian Gaborik’s first-period breakaway goal — which gave him his third career 40-goal season — with Dennis Seidenberg’s bomb from the point with 16 2 1 minutes remaining in the second period. The Bruins followed that with Patrice Bergeron’s power-play goal eight minutes later, after Tyler Seguin forced a Dan Girardi turnover. Henrik Lundqvist (19 saves) was caught off-guard after the quick change of possession.

Still, Girardi and the Rangers were not discourage­d.

“Other than a couple mistakes, I thought we were pretty stingy out there,” Girardi said. “I don't know how many shots they ended up with, low 20s (21), that's pretty good.”

The problem was they couldn’t solve Thomas, who denied Artem Anisimov from the slot after the Rangers had pulled Lundqvist for the extra attacker late in the third.

“It's the type of game, that patience of the game, where you can't open yourself up, and it’s the team that makes the mistake,” said Tortorella, who separated Brad Richards and Gaborik and moved Ryan Callahan around, trying to spread his playmakers away from Boston defenseman Zdeno Chara, who marked Gaborik all night long. “There’s gonna be a lot (of games) like this (in the playoffs). If we play like this, we’ll win our games. We'll find a way to win our games. Tonight we didn’t, but I think we did a lot of good things.”

Before the game, Tortorella was asked whether it would mean something if the Rangers locked up the top spot on Sunday. “No,” Tortorella said. Did he bring it up with the team? “No.” So it's not a factor? “No.” “That's it? Good,” Tortorella said, not waiting for an answer and walking out on a 12-second press conference.

They haven't locked it up yet.

 ?? Corey Sipkin/daily News ?? Bruins’ Patrice Bergeron eyes puck over Rangers’ Carl Hagelin.
Corey Sipkin/daily News Bruins’ Patrice Bergeron eyes puck over Rangers’ Carl Hagelin.

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