Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Rocking Friday night in Nashville

Predators demolished at home

- MIKE DEFABO Mike DeFabo: mdefabo@post-gazette.com and Twitter @MikeDeFabo.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — The Penguins probably expected to see Nashville’s second goalie, Juuse Saros, at some point this weekend.

After all, with games against the Predators on back-to-back nights, it’s only logical that Nashville would give Pekka Rinne a night off — likely on the second half of the two games.

Turned out, it didn’t take that long. Less than 15 minutes into the first period, Rinne took the skate of shame from the crease to the bench. His stat line was not pretty — six shots on goal, three allowed.

By the time he traded his mask for a ball cap, the stage had been set for the Penguins’ 5-2 victory at Bridgeston­e Arena. The Penguins improved to 22-11-4 on the season. And they now are 12-5-3 without their captain Sidney Crosby.

That second part is a remarkable statistic. To understand how the Penguins have weathered the injury to Crosby so gracefully over the past six weeks, just look at the goal-scorers: Dominik Simon, Alex Galchenyuk, Teddy Blueger, Bryan Rust and Juuso Riikola.

Aside from Rust, who is on pace to shatter his career best for goals in a season, those aren’t exactly the Penguins’ biggest guns. Not even close. And that’s the point.

Add them up. Players who entered the game with a combined eight goals — Blueger (four), Galchenyuk (two), Simon (two) and Riikola (zero) — tallied three goals in the first 20 minutes and four in the first 40.

“We showed our depth tonight,” Rust said. “A lot of guys stepped up.”

Coach Mike Sullivan has consistent­ly talked about the team-oriented approach his club has taken and the contributi­ons he has been getting up and down the lineup. Typically, that comes in the form of plays that are often overlooked. A blocked shot here. A key penalty-kill there.

Friday night, the contributi­ons were obvious just from looking at the stat sheet.

“When you get offense throughout your lineup like that, it gives you a much better chance to win,” Sullivan said.

“That’s what it takes, especially given the circumstan­ces we’re in right now. It’s a good win for us. I thought our guys played hard.”

Simon hadn’t scored since the Oct. 29 rout of Philadelph­ia. Friday night, he flicked a harmless-looking shot at Rinne that trickled through the goalie’s five hole for the first goal.

Galchenyuk, acquired this offseason in the Phil Kessel trade, started his Penguins tenure slowly and disappoint­ingly. A third overall pick who once scored 30 goals in 2015-16, he had found the back of the net just twice through the Penguins’ first 36 games.

But just as a Nashville penalty was expiring Friday, Marcus Pettersson ripped a shot from the point. Galchenyuk shoveled away to poke the puck into the net.

“There’s no secret I want to produce more,” Galchenyuk said. “Every game I go out there and try to create something. It paid off today.

“But I’ve got to stick with it and keep working.”

Not even a minute later, before the broadcaste­r could announce Galchenyuk’s goal, Blueger whacked in a rebound. That was it for Rinne.

After Rust added a fourth goal, Riikola made it 5-1. The Finnish defenseman had been forced to play forward earlier this season because of the rash of injuries. He showed off that offensive prowess by racing to the front of the net and smacking home his own rebound.

While Nashville’s goaltender called it an early night, the Penguins got another solid performanc­e from what’s essentiall­y become their new No. 1, Tristan Jarry.

Friday marked his eighth start in 10 games in December. He stopped 30 Nashville shots, showing pretty clearly why Sullivan has continued to ride the hot hand.

“We were lucky to get some pucks in early,” Jarry said. “That always helps to ease the nerves a little bit, especially after a break. You might not be feeling the greatest [after] a couple days off. It always helps.”

The Penguins will complete the second half of the back-to-back Saturday at PPG Paints Arena. If Sullivan sticks to his tendencies, Matt Murray is likely to get just his third start of December.

Time will tell who makes the start in goal for Nashville … or how long he remains there.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Penguins center Dominik Simon (12) moves the puck down the ice with center Sam Lafferty (37) ahead of Nashville Predators defenseman Mattias Ekholm (14) Friday in Nashville, Tenn.
Associated Press Penguins center Dominik Simon (12) moves the puck down the ice with center Sam Lafferty (37) ahead of Nashville Predators defenseman Mattias Ekholm (14) Friday in Nashville, Tenn.
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