The Province

Rangers aim to keep momentum going after tense Game 3 win

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WASHINGTON — The New York Rangers played what amounted to two games over two days just to get one win against the Washington Capitals.

Each team scored a goal in the second period, then skated up and down the ice for 83 minutes before Marian Gaborik gave the Rangers a 2-1 victory at 14:41 of the third overtime to end the 20thlonges­t game in the history of the Stanley Cup playoffs, a tense matchup that began Wednesday night and spilled into Thursday.

If it was the decisive game of this tight Eastern Conference series, Rangers coach John Tortorella might have been far more enthusiast­ic about the outcome. Instead, he looked at the win for exactly what it was: A gritty performanc­e that provided New York with a 2-1 lead in a best-of-seven confrontat­ion that doesn’t seem destined to end anytime soon.

“It’s one game,” Tortorella said in a conference call. “You take the good things out of it and try to keep momentum on your side.”

It’s impossible to say whether the good feeling the Rangers derived from the victory will carry into Saturday, when the teams meet in Washington for Game 4.

The Capitals trailed Boston 2-1 in games before winning in seven, so they have no reason to believe this loss to New York will be any more difficult to overcome.

“We have confidence in our team,” Washington’s Troy Brouwer said. “We played a real good game, I thought, holding them to one goal, almost, for two whole hockey games. I mean, if we continue playing like we did, creating offence, blocking shots, you know, playing good, patient hockey, we’ll be successful.”

Capitals’ coach Dale Hunter played in a four-overtime game and now has stood behind the bench over a three-overtime thriller. He lost both games, but neither of them ended a series.

“Well, you go into triple overtime it’s a special game,” Hunter said in the wee hours of Thursday morning. “But it’s just one game and you got to bounce back.”

Rangers goaltender Henrik Lundqvist was too exhausted to let out a yell afterward.

“It’s a feeling where, usually, I scream because I’m so excited. I was just too tired,” Lundqvist said after his 45-save performanc­e. “I kept saying ‘Oh my God, it’s over.’ I mean, oh my God. It felt like it was never going to end.”

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES ?? Rangers players celebrate after Marian Gaborik scored the game-winner in triple overtime early Thursday.
— GETTY IMAGES Rangers players celebrate after Marian Gaborik scored the game-winner in triple overtime early Thursday.

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