New York Post

Vigneault keeping his cool

- By BRETT CYRGALIS

Rangers coach Alain Vigneault could have been upset Tuesday, but he decided to keep his opinions to himself.

Following the Blueshirts’ unsightly 4-1 win over the Ducks, Vigneault first could have been upset about a possible hit-frombehind from Anaheim forward Logan Shaw, burying alternate captain Derek Stepan face-first into the boards near the Ducks’ bench early in the third period.

The hit drew no penalty, the only infraction­s coming when Jimmy Vesey and Joseph Cramarossa went off for coinciding roughing minors following their little tussle — and the Rangers happened to score on the ensuing 4-on-4 to extend their lead to 3-1.

“They just felt it wasn’t a penalty,” Vigneault said.

Stepan briefly went to the locker room, but did not go through concussion protocol and returned shortly thereafter.

Later in the third, Kevin Hayes was called for delay of game when he flipped a puck over the Rangers bench, it hit the glass behind the bench and went out of play. The Rangers were trying to show the refs that it hit the glass before going out, but Hayes said the call came from league offices in Toronto which ruled otherwise.

“Replay for us showed that it did hit the glass, referees said it didn’t,” Vigneault said. “So what you have to do is kill the penalty, and that’s what we focused on doing.”

The Rangers’ penalty kill went 4-for-4 over eight minutes.

Hayes had an assist in his return to the lineup after missing the previous five games with a presumed left-knee injury. He went back to centering a line with J.T. Miller (two assists) and Michael Grabner (two goals), as the three fell right back into their roles as consistent contributo­rs.

“First couple shifts were basically just get it on my stick and get it off,” said Hayes, who finished with 16:35 of ice time, including 2:40 on the penalty kill. “Thought I had some good looks, tried to focus defensivel­y. Overall, I thought it was pretty good.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States