New York Post

Don’t Mika fuss

Quinn downplays Zibanejad benching

- By MOLLIE WALKER

David Quinn was candid while explaining his reasons for benching struggling veteran Mika Zibanejad for a majority of the second period in the Rangers’ 6-1 victory over the Devils on Thursday night, but the head coach said everything was business as usual between the two in practice Friday.

“The same vibes, nothing has changed from my end with him,” Quinn said. “Listen, he and I have had plenty of conversati­ons, there’s no surprises here. Like I said, I was happy with the uptick in his play after he sat for a little bit.”

It’s an unavoidabl­e topic of conversati­on when the team’s top-line center has just two goals (one an empty-netter) and a mere eight points through the first 21 games of the season. But once Quinn seemingly had seen enough and limited Zibanejad’s ice time in the first period Thursday to a startling 3:59, it became the topic of conversati­on.

Quinn didn’t deploy the 27year-old Swede until 10:46 of the second period. By that time, the Blueshirts had tied it 1-1 on Chris Kreider’s power-play goal, his first of three tallies in the victory.

“I didn’t love his game, I didn’t love what we were seeing, I didn’t love a lot about our first period. But obviously he’s had a tough start to the season and maybe sitting him for a while would give him a little jolt and give our team a little jolt,” Quinn said of Zibanejad after the game, adding that he thought the stats and pressure were beginning to slow him down. “I did like what I saw when he came back out.

“I was just going to see how he was playing, how he was competing, how he was skating. If I thought I saw an uptick in his play, I was going to continue to play him and if not, he was going to continue to sit. That’s really what it came down to.”

➤ The pace of the NHL is beginning to slow down for Alexis Lafreniere.

Currently riding a fourgame point streak with two goals and two assists, the 2020 first-overall pick has a weightless­ness about him that’s infectious, Kreider pointed out after the Rangers’ win Thursday.

Lafreniere has started to develop chemistry with his first-line teammates, Zibanejad and Pavel Buchnevich, which has allowed the top trio to generate more highdanger opportunit­ies in the last handful of games than they have all season.

“I’m getting chemistry with my linemates for sure,” he said. “We’ve been playing a couple of games together, so that helps. And they’re really good players. I just have to get open and they’re going to find me I think.”

 ??  ?? MIKA ZIBANEJAD
MIKA ZIBANEJAD

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States