New York Post

Blueshirts don’t bite on Neil’s instigatin­g antics

- By BRETT CYRGALIS

OTTAWA—The Senators once again tried to goad the Rangers into a physical game, this time by changing their lineup. And once again, the Rangers didn’t bite.

Ottawa coach Guy Boucher decided to bring in long-time agitator Chris Neil to make his debut this postseason, and despite him hardly contributi­ng with just five agitating shifts and one bad penalty, the Senators were able to win, 5-4 in over- time, taking Game 5 of the second-round series on Saturday afternoon at Canadian Tire Centre. It gave the Senators a 3-2 lead in this bestof-seven contest, putting the Rangers on the brink of eliminatio­n going into a must-win Game 6 at the Garden on Tuesday night.

“I really want our group to focus on playing a smart game, playing a hard game, playing whistle-to-whistle,” Rangers coach Alain Vigneault had said Saturday morning when asked about the possibilit­y of playing against an agitator like Neil. “Whoever is in the lineup is in the lineup.”

Neil had played one game in the past two months, Ottawa’s regular-season finale on April 9 against the Islanders. His most recent game before that was Feb. 26, but Senators coach Guy Boucher didn’t see that as a problem.

“I’m not concerned,” Boucher had said before he made Ryan Dzingel a healthy scratch and played Neil on a line with Zach Smith and Tom Pyatt.

Neil first tried to start a fight with the Rangers’ resident tough guy, Tanner Glass, early in the first period — but Glass just skated away to his bench, laughing. Early in the second, Glass hit Dion Phaneuf behind the Ottawa net and was going to get called for interferen­ce, and Neil decided to take excep- tion, jumping Glass from behind. It nullified the Senators’ coming power play, and earned Neil a roughing minor and a 10-minute misconduct, despite appearing to warrant an instigator penalty.

It was Neil’s final shift of the game, totaling just 2:26 of ice time.

It wasn’t quite as drastic as some previous games, but Rangers rookie defenseman Brady Skjei still didn’t see the ice over the final 5:04 of regulation. The two defen- semen on the ice when Derick Brassard scored the game-tying goal with 1:26 left were Marc Staal and Brendan Smith, while the Rangers’ forwards were Glass, Derek Stepan and Mats Zuccarello.

Skjei did get a regular turn in the overtime, but finished with 19:02 of total ice.

Rookie winger Jimmy Vesey had a goal and an assist while getting just 14:01 of total ice time, the fourthfewe­st minutes on the team.

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