The Denver Post

SENATORS TIE SERIES

Game 7 is Thursday night

- By The Associated Press

ottawa» Mike Hoffman scored the tiebreakin­g goal early in the third period to give the Ottawa Senators a 2-1 victory over the Pittsburgh Penguins on Tuesday night and force a decisive Game 7 in the Eastern Conference finals.

Hoffman fired a slap shot through traffic off a pass from Fredrik Claesson to put the Senators ahead at 1:34 of the third.

Bobby Ryan also scored a rare power-play goal for Ottawa and Craig Anderson stopped 45 shots, including 22 in the second period.

Evgeni Malkin gave Pittsburgh, vying for its second straight trip to the Stanley Cup Final, the lead early in the second period and Matt Murray finished with 28 saves.

The Senators managed to quickly forget a 7-0 loss two days earlier in Game 5 and extend their season for one more shot at a return to the Stanley Cup Final for the first time in 10 years.

Ottawa was primarily looking for a return to structure in Game 6, beginning with a smoother start — which they got. Notable in a scoreless opening period were two effective penalty kills, one of which saw Viktor Stalberg get the best opportunit­y short-hand- ed.

Pittsburgh had four shots with the man advantage, but Anderson stopped them all. The 35-year-old struggled through Games 4 and 5 — allowing seven goals — but it was evident early that he had his game back in this one.

He stopped Nick Bonino off a rebound in transition, Scott Wilson off a deflected shot by Phil Kessel, and Bonino again when Kyle Turris gave the puck away.

Murray was also sharp. The 22-year-old, who replaced Marc-Andre Fleury after Game 3, made maybe his finest save of the first on Derick Brassard, who found an open lane down the middle of the ice after a pass from Ryan.

The Penguins appeared to have opened the scoring just over three minutes into the second, but Trevor Daley was deemed to have interfered with Anderson after an Ottawa challenge.

Less than two minutes later, though, Pittsburgh took the 1-0 lead anyway off a few moments of brilliance from Malkin.

Malkin, the playoff scoring leader (24 points), bounced off a check from Zack Smith behind the goal and after being stopped on his drive to the net, followed up with a nifty backhand rebound to beat Anderson.

It was the 153rd career playoff point in 142 games for Malkin — three behind Sidney Crosby for second among active players behind Jaromir Jagr — who had been jawing with Hoffman a few minutes earlier.

 ??  ?? Chris Widema, center, and Bobby Ryan of the Ottawa Senators celebrate after defeating the Pittsburgh Penguins 2-1 in Game 6 of the Eastern Conference finals. Minas Panagiotak­is, Getty Images
Chris Widema, center, and Bobby Ryan of the Ottawa Senators celebrate after defeating the Pittsburgh Penguins 2-1 in Game 6 of the Eastern Conference finals. Minas Panagiotak­is, Getty Images

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