Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Goalies taking center stage in East

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When the difference between winning and losing is a puck shot from behind the goal line that goes in off his helmet, allHenrik Lundqvist can do is shake his head.

Among the 41 saves he made against the Senators, the Rangers goaltender knew all anyone wanted to know was howthat one crazy goalwent in. “That’s the life of a goalie,” Lundqvist said. Life as a goaltender in the Eastern Conference during the second round of the playoffs is complicate­d, whether it’s the matchup between Lundqvist and very capable Senators counterpar­t Craig Anderson or the Capitals’ reigning VezinaTrop­hy winner BradenHolt­by against thePenguin­s’ Marc-Andre Fleury. TheSenator­sandPengui­ns are eachup in their respective series going into Saturday’s Game 2s because of goaltendin­g, which will take on even greater importance­moving forward.

“If you don’t have the goalies, it’s hard to win,” Capitals coach Barry Trotz said Friday. “In a series there’s going to be games where the difference is going to be the goalie on the other side is going to make one more save or your goalie is going to make one more save.”

One more save by Holtby on Sidney Crosby or Nick Bonino in Game 1 would’ve made a difference even considerin­g his 18 other stops. Meanwhile Fleury stopped 33 of the 35 shots the Capitals put his way, including four without his stick during amad scramblein­thefinalmi­nutes that he called “fun.”

The Capitals outshot the Penguins 35-21 in their 3-2 loss in Game 1, and though Trotz thought Holtby was fine, the Vezina finalistwa­nted two of those goals back.

“I knowI need to be better ifwe’re going to have success, and that’s basically the bottom line,” Holtby said.

Lundqvist knows that pressure all too well after making 21 saves in the first period alone Thursday and keeping the Rangers in Game 1 before Erik Karlsson’s sharp-angle goal in the third. The Swedish star kicked himself for waiting and guessing too much on the Senators’ game-winner, but teammatesw­eren’t going toblamehim­for losing a2-1game.

“He was fantastic,” center Derek Stepan said. “We need him to be our best player, and hewas phenomenal again.”

Only problem is, sowas Anderson, who has phenomenal career numbers against the Rangers and is 5-2 with a 1.81 goals-against average and .930 save percentage so far in these playoffs. Anderson’s ability to stop breakaways sets him apart, and making the timely save is sometimes even more valuable than making a large quantity of them.

“He’s made those huge saves on those breakaways, and he’s made I think the key save at the right time,” coach Guy Boucher said. “That’s our goalie. He’s done that. We know we’ve got a good goalie. We know we’re playing against a good one, butwe knowwe got a good one.” AP

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