The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Rangers head into offseason dealing with another deafeat

- By Vin A. Cherwoo

GREENBURGH, N.Y. >> Two days after their season ended with a loss to Ottawa in the second round of the playoffs, the New York Rangers are still dealing with the defeat.

“We all believe we should still be playing,” coach Alain Vigneault said Thursday. “We’re not. It’s very, very disappoint­ing. It is going to take some time to get over.”

After again falling short of their own lofty expectatio­ns, the players were at the team’s suburban practice facility for a day of individual meetings with Vigneault and general manager Jeff Gorton before dispersing for the summer.

“There’s no question it’s a tough time right now,” captain Ryan McDonagh said. “You get to that second round and that’s when you really start to believe. You’re one step closer to where you want to be, what you’re playing for. To see that opportunit­y missed, it really hurt our team.”

It was another disappoint­ment for a team perenniall­y expected to compete for a Stanley Cup, which it has won once in the last 77 years — in 1994.

“At the end of the day we needed a lot better play out of the majority of the group,” McDonagh said.

When the Rangers return for training camp in September, the core group that reached three conference finals in four years, including a run to the Stanley Cup Final in 2014 before a firstround exit to eventual champion Pittsburgh a year ago and now Ottawa in the second round, is certain to have undergone some changes. There could be some trades and signings, and the team will likely lose a player in the expansion draft.

“We always expect changes, that’s part of the business,” veteran goalie Henrik Lundqvist said. “But what changes, we’ll have to wait and see. It’s up to management ... it’s part of the business, obviously, to see some guys go and new faces come in.”

The Rangers had ups and downs on their way to finishing with 102 points. They were the league’s best road team with 27 wins away from home, but had their struggles at Madison Square Garden, including losing eight straight (0-5-3) on home ice down the stretch.

By earning the Eastern Conference’s top wild card, the Rangers had a seemingly easier path to the conference finals through the Atlantic Division teams, avoiding Washington, Pittsburgh and Columbus — three of the top four teams in the league — in the first two rounds. However, after getting past Montreal, they fell short against Ottawa.

The strong road play that carried them through the season and the first round deserted them against the Senators. The Rangers lost all three games in Ottawa, twice blowing two-goal leads and allowing the tying goal in the closing minutes of regulation before losing in overtime.

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