New York Post

THE BIG SWITCH

AV: Blueshirts must now focus on defense

- By BRETT CYRGALIS bcyrgalis@nypost.com

LOS ANGELES — The Rangers are a defensive team now, and there’s no need to look further than Rick Nash to find the explanatio­n why.

There was a time, not all that long ago, when it would have been a little surprising to hear just how much Nash cares about the penalty kill, and how much he personally identifies with its success and failure. But there he was on Sunday night at Staples Center, feeling individual­ly downtrodde­n after the Kings scored three straight power-play goals in the second period en route to a 4-2 victory.

It was the Blueshirts second straight loss to the start this fourgame western road trip, which took a brief pause on Monday for an off day before returning to action on Tuesday in Anaheim and concluding Thursday up in San Jose.

Just before they were preparing to leave home, the Rangers penalty kill was ranked second in the league. They then gave up two to the Sabres on Thursday night at the Garden, and after stopping the one chance the Avalanche had in Denver on Saturday afternoon, they just fell apart against the Kings.

“It’s something that I’m really proud of,” Nash had said Sunday night, “our rank before these last three games here.”

They had fallen back to 12th in the league (82.1 percent) before league play on Monday night, which was quite the precipitou­s fall in such a short period of time. But that’s how the NHL is working this year, with such overwhelmi­ng parity that the smallest drop in performanc­e can send a team spi- raling down the standings.

The Rangers know that, and they understand that their hold on the second wild-card spot on Monday afternoon was tenuous — at best. They also understand it’s going to be an uphill climb while dealing with long-term injuries to Kevin Shattenkir­k and Chris Kreider, which make the smaller injuries more impactful — like those that recently resulted in absences from Michael Grabner and Marc Staal. Both returned Sunday, while Kevin Hayes has remained out for five straight with his leg contusion.

So that has led coach Alain Vigneault toward a small change in focus. He is getting less offensive production than in years past, with the team averaging 2.94 goals per game this season, ranking 13th in the league, compared to being in the top seven in each of the previous three seasons. But goalie Henrik Lundqvist has been terrific, even as he has faced the second-most shots in the league behind just Toronto’s Frederik Andersen.

That has made Vigneault look for the Rangers to focus defensivel­y first, which might have been a floating idea at times in the past, but was never so crucial to their success as it is now.

“What I’ve said 1,000 times, we need to play the right way,” Vigneault said before Sunday’s game. “For me and our group, the focus is going to be on defensive first. We need to play a strong defensive game. Thought [Saturday in Denver] we were pretty good in that area. From playing a strong defensive game, we should get some offensive opportunit­ies.”

That is also the way Nash thinks — that playing a sound 200-foot game is going to lead to his offensive opportunit­ies, which will eventually start going in. It’s true that the 33-year-old has always been a streaky scorer as he plays in the 15th season of his exemplary career. He also knows that the Rangers need him to score, and there was no coincidenc­e that his back-to-back twogoal games at the Garden last week were also two wins against the Flyers and Sabres. Nash’s 13 goals in 48 games is tied for third-most on the team.

But these are now the defensive Rangers, playing that tight-checking five-on-five style. And when a penalty kill comes up, they need to keep the opposition off the board.

Because the margin for error is very little. Nash knows it, Vigneault knows it, and this is the reality they live in as they try to keep pace in a speeding postseason race.

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