USA TODAY US Edition

Penguins’ plan: Seize moment

Game 4 of Final vs. Predators will be pivotal

- kmallen@usatoday.com USA TODAY Sports Kevin Allen

Pittsburgh PenNASHVIL­LE guins captain Sidney Crosby has game, but he’s not into gamesmansh­ip.

The day after Nashville defenseman P.K. Subban reported that Crosby accused him of having bad breath during a close encounter during Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Final, Crosby said, “He made that up; I didn’t say that. He’s a guy that likes the at- tention. If he wants to make stuff up, what can I do?”

If we are going to discuss whether the Predators have figured how to stop Crosby and Evgeni Malkin, Crosby will make sure we take personalit­ies out of the equation.

Subban has his style, and Crosby has his.

If Crosby is frustrated that he and Malkin were limited to zero shots on goal in Game 3, he didn’t show it Sunday afternoon when he met with the media.

“We had chances,” Crosby said. “We’ve just got to hit the net. They blocked some, and it’s just a matter of winning those battles.”

When a defense figures out how to thwart offensive stars, it’s easy to start believing that the defenders are getting under their skin. Our first impulse is to make it about frustratio­n or anger.

But Crosby always views these situations as being more about execution.

That’s also how his coach views it.

“We would like them to put more pucks on the net,” Penguins coach Mike Sullivan said. “I think they had opportunit­ies to shoot that they passed up. I don’t think that’s always reflected in the statistics.”

In this era of advanced stats, a shot on goal seems like the simplest of stats. How hard can that be?

But that baseline statistic suddenly looms very important heading into Monday’s Game 4. The Penguins own a 2-1 lead in the best-of-seven series, but they seem like the team that has work to do.

Game 4 is always the most im- portant one because most often it decides whether a series will be tied 2-2 or whether one team will have a commanding 3-1 lead.

In the case of the Penguins vs. Predators, Game 4 seems even more important because the Penguins’ 2-1 lead seems tenuous. The Predators have had several stretches in which they have looked like the better team, even in games they lost. Their 5-1 win in Game 3 was impressive. They have outshot the Penguins in each game, with a 97-67 advantage in the series.

This shots-on-goal issue is also important because Sullivan’s tactics center on a belief that nothing breaks down coverage more than a shot on net.

Think about it. Defenders scrambling to find their man. Deflected pucks. Blocked shots. Rebounds. Shots on goal create chaos, and the Penguins live for chaos. With their skilled players, chaos is the Penguins’ best friend. They find a loose puck, and often it’s quickly in the net.

Pittsburgh coaches want Malkin, Crosby and Phil Kessel to shoot more. Malkin has two shots on goal for the series, and Kessel has scored one goal in his last eight playoff games. At Sunday’s practice, assistant coach Rick Tocchet and Kessel, who have a strong relationsh­ip, had a lengthy conversati­on.

“As a coach, it’s always a fine line, because you don’t want to interfere with their instincts,” Sullivan said. “If they see plays that they think are there to be made, then they’re going to try to make them. What we try to do with them is just try to get them to think in terms of having that shot-first mind-set. I think when they do that, everything else will open up for them.”

It’s not about the quality of Subban’s breath or what comes out of the players’ mouth in terms of trash-talking. As impressive as the Nashville crowd is, Game 4 also won’t be decided by home-ice advantage.

It will come down to whether Nashville’s defensive coverage is better than Crosby’s, Malkin’s and Kessel’s ability to play through it.

“I go out there and compete, and, to be honest, I’m not looking at who’s on (defense) or up front,” Crosby said. “I’m just going out there to compete against whoever it is.”

 ??  ?? Penguins stars Sidney Crosby, right, and Evgeni Malkin were neutralize­d Saturday.
Penguins stars Sidney Crosby, right, and Evgeni Malkin were neutralize­d Saturday.
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 ?? CHARLES LECLAIRE, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Predators defenseman P.K. Subban, right, says Penguins center Sidney Crosby cried foul over his breath. Crosby denies it.
CHARLES LECLAIRE, USA TODAY SPORTS Predators defenseman P.K. Subban, right, says Penguins center Sidney Crosby cried foul over his breath. Crosby denies it.

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