New York Post

N.C. YOU TONIGHT

Rangers handle Devils with trip to Raleigh to face Canes up next

- By MOLLIE WALKER RANGERS DEVILS 3 Summary 1 Page 37 Mwalker1@nypost.com

The Rangers’ game Monday night may have been against the Devils, but it was all about the Hurricanes on Tuesday.

Earning two points in a 3-1 win over a Devils team that ended their season last year and are now on the outside looking in at the playoffs is satisfying. Though it was imperative to do so if the Rangers, now four points ahead of Carolina in the Metropolit­an Division standings, wanted an opportunit­y to further separate themselves from the Canes in Tuesday’s contest in Raleigh, N.C.

A straightfo­rward victory over the Devils — their third of the season — set the Rangers up to do just that.

“[The Hurricanes are] right behind us,” said Ryan Lindgren, who played an integral role in killing off the Devils’ five-minute power play in the second period after Matt Rempe got thrown out for the second time against the Devils for contact to the head.

“Obviously, they’ve been playing some really good hockey as of late. Every point is huge and [Tuesday] will be a big one, for sure.”

Jonathan Quick made it happen with a 20-save performanc­e, which allowed the 38-year-old netminder to tie Domini Hasek for the 15th-most wins in NHL history with 389. As a result, the Hurricanes will have to face Igor Shesterkin in goal on Tuesday as they look to keep pace with the first-place Rangers.

This particular back-to-back slate came at a critical time when teams are starting to eye playoff position.

The Rangers have been the No. 1 team in the Metro since Oct. 24 and the Hurricanes are currently the only team within reach. Expect Carolina to approach the game as such, and then some, when the two clubs meet or the third and final time this regular season.

“A team that we’re battling with for that spot,” said Mika Zibanejad, who scored his first five-onfive goal since Dec. 23 in the victory. “It’s going to be a tough game and a good challenge.”

The Devils continue to adjust to the departure of head coach Lindy Ruff and the promotion of assistant Travis Green, which tilted the ice in the Blueshirts’ favor for a majority of the 60-minute contest.

After Zibanejad opened the scoring by backhandin­g the puck

past new Devils goalie Kaapo Kahkonen, the Rangers’ lead was doubled on a shot from Erik Gustafsson at the top of the zone while Rempe was screening in front.

Rempe, skating in his 10th career contest, was again assessed a major penalty and a game misconduct while playing the Devils for a high-elbowed hit he threw on Jonas Siegenthal­er. The Devils took exception, just like they did when the 21-year-old bashed Nathan Bastian 13 seconds into his shift in Newark on Feb. 22.

The 6-foot-8 ¹/₂ forward, who is likely facing a suspension for the hit, then waved to the Devils as he was escorted off the ice by an official.

That gives Rempe a stat line of 32 penalty minutes and two ejections in 5:01 of ice time against the Devils in his short NHL career.

“I thought he was playing a really strong game, total credit on the goal for him,” head coach Peter Laviolette said of Rempe. “He had a good shift going, got back, got to the front of the net and we ended up leaving him out there. I think he was just tracking the hit. I don’t want to comment too much on it until I get to see it again.”

Tuesday could be the night the Knicks’ frontline starts to get whole again.

OG Anunoby has been upgraded from out to questionab­le for the rematch of Sunday’s ugly loss against the 76ers — and he could make his first appearance since Jan. 27 due to an elbow injury that required cleanup surgery.

The valuable twoway wing has been scrimmagin­g with the Knicks for several days, and Tom Thibodeau described Anunoby as “real close” to returning to the lineup.

“I think it’s a normal protocol. He’s had to meet markers along the way. And the final one is going back to the doctor to make sure he signs off on it, as well,” Thibodeau said after practice Monday in Tarrytown.

“Our medical people, the doctors, him. It’s a combinatio­n of everybody. He’s real close. We have to let it play itself out.

“But I feel good watching the way he’s progressed, just everything that he has been cleared to do. He’s taken contact. He’s gone through practice. His conditioni­ng is good. We are hopeful.”

The Knicks had posted a 12-2 record with Anunoby in the lineup following his late-December arrival in a trade with the Raptors, but he and Julius Randle (dislocated shoulder) have missed the past 18 games.

Thibodeau’s undermanne­d team won its first three games without them, but the Knicks (37-27) have dropped 10 of 15 since Feb. 3, including the lowest offensive output in the league this season and 21 committed turnovers in Sunday’s 79-73 loss to the Sixers.

“I don’t think we can play as s---ty as we did [Sunday], so on to the next one, we got the same opponent [Tuesday], so it’s just move on,” Josh Hart said. “We know where we made mistakes, and we just gotta come out and be aggressive.”

Despite the recent 5-10 stretch, the Knicks somehow have clung to fourth place in the tight-in-the-middle Eastern Conference. They are a half-game ahead of the Magic, a full game ahead of No. 6 Philadelph­ia and 1 ¹/₂ clear of the seventh-seeded Pacers for the play-in cutoff.

“You definitely pay attention [to the standings],” Jalen Brunson said. “It’s not weird, because you have so many great players and so many great teams and so many great coaches in this league. It makes you prepare to be ready every single night . ... You just have to be ready to go.

“In game, you can’t worry about what place you are in or if this happens or that team loses and we win. When we are in the game, we focus on the game.”

The All-Star point guard had called his performanc­e “dogs--t” after shooting 1-for-9 from 3-point range against the Sixers, and Hart, who committed six turnovers, offered a similar assessment.

“I’m still stuck on [Sunday’s loss]. That one just didn’t sit well with me,” Hart added Monday. “But in the big picture, when guys went down, you had to have guys step up, and I feel like we’ve kind of kept it afloat a little bit.

“I feel like there was some games that we should have won, i.e. [Sunday] that we kind of let slip . ... But I feel like we did as good of a job with injuries that we could have. I feel like we probably could have done a better job in terms of letting a couple of games slip away, but at the end of the day, definitely excited to hopefully get those guys back soon.”

With Randle and Robinson still not cleared to resume full contact, Anunoby figures to be the first to return, possibly as early as Tuesday night.

“I think at one point we were like, 2-8 or 3-7 in the last 10 or whatever it was. So to struggle like that, and still be a top-four seed in the conference, I think it speaks volumes to the character of guys that we have here and the culture that we have here,” Hart said. “So that’s something that we’re proud of.

“Obviously, we can’t get stuck on that and can’t expect to just fall right into place when everyone gets back. It’s gonna be a couple of little growing pains, but I think we’ll be good.”

 ?? ??
 ?? N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg ?? GET IN HERE! Matt Rempe and Jimmy Vesey surround Erik Gustafsson after his goal proved decisive in the Rangers’ 3-1 win over the Devils on Monday.
N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg GET IN HERE! Matt Rempe and Jimmy Vesey surround Erik Gustafsson after his goal proved decisive in the Rangers’ 3-1 win over the Devils on Monday.
 ?? N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg ?? LISTED AS ‘QUESTIONAB­LE’: Forward OG Anunoby has been scrimmagin­g against his Knicks teammates in practice, but will need to get a final OK from doctors before returning to game action, according to coach Tom Thibodeau.
N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg LISTED AS ‘QUESTIONAB­LE’: Forward OG Anunoby has been scrimmagin­g against his Knicks teammates in practice, but will need to get a final OK from doctors before returning to game action, according to coach Tom Thibodeau.

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