The Bergen Record

Shesterkin’s big save preserves Rangers’ win

- Vincent Z. Mercoglian­o Vincent Z. Mercoglian­o is the New York Rangers beat reporter for the USA TODAY Network. Read more of his work at lohud.com/sports/rangers/ and follow him on Twitter @vzmercogli­ano.

NEW YORK - A nervous Madison Square Garden crowd held its collective breath as Jason Zucker approached Igor Shesterkin.

The outcome of Monday’s home opener hung in the balance, but the Rangers’ goalie never flinched.

He stuck out his right pad at the perfect time, calmly stopping the dramatic penalty shot to preserve a 2-1 win over the Arizona Coyotes.

“I feel it,” Shesterkin said of the pressure. “But on the penalty shot, it’s more like mind games. When he moved on right side, I was ready for a shot on the other side.”

The Garden erupted, as did the Rangers’ bench. Peter Laviolette was spotted letting out an exuberant scream and fist pump, feeding off the howling crowd in his first MSG game as head coach of the home team.

“That save a pumps the building up,” he said. “If it goes the other way, then you’ve got to go back to work and the game is now back to even and you’ve got to find a way. There’s a chance for a team to catch momentum off of that, one way or the other.”

It was the Rangers in this case, who have seen Shesterkin come through for them time after time as he begins his fifth NHL season.

The save on Zucker with 4:48 remaining made him a perfect 4-for-4 in his career against penalty shots, adding to teammates’ confidence that the former Vezina Trophy winner will come through for them in those situations.

“You can almost say that I’d rather them have a penalty shot than a power play,” center Vincent Trocheck said. “Two minutes can create a lot of momentum, and when you have a guy like Shesty back there, he’s going to save a lot of those.”

Chris Kreider stays hot

After the opening-night excitement led to some initial sloppiness, the Rangers settled in to play a first period that looked a lot like what we saw in Thursday’s 5-1 season-opening win in Buffalo.

They took control as the period wore on, led by the top line of Chris Kreider, Mika Zibanejad and Kaapo Kakko.

Kreider is off to another hot start, but all three of his goals in the first two games came on special teams. At five-on-five, that trio had yet to click in the way it looked like they might at the end of the preseason.

That changed to begin Monday’s contest, with their line producing five scoring chances in the first period without allowing any, according to Natural Stat Trick. For the game, they out-shot the Coyotes, 8-3, and produced the only 5v5 goal.

It culminated with a two-on-one rush in which Zibanejad used his signature hesitation leg lift before gliding a pass to Kreider for the easy finish.

“To me, it’s been a really good, positive line,” Laviolette said.

That made it four goals in three games for Kreider, who could tie the franchise record for longest seasonopen­ing goal streak with another in Thursday’s 7 p.m. home game against the Nashville Predators.

“He’s a noticeable, impactful player for us,” Laviolette said.

Second period filled with whistles

Kreider gave the Rangers a 1-0 lead heading into intermissi­on, but they went cold in between periods.

They managed only one shot on goal at 5v5 in the second. Then again, they only allowed three.

That’s because much of the period was spent on special teams, with the Blueshirts racking up five penalties in the first 40 minutes of play to disrupt the flow of the game. At the five-minute mark, Clayton Keller scored a power-play goal to tie the score at 1-1.

“It was kind of a PK type feeling throughout that whole period,” captain Jacob Trouba said. “There wasn’t a ton of momentum for us or offense going.”

A few of those calls were questionab­le, particular­ly an unsportsma­nlike penalty on Ryan Lindgren that immediatel­y followed a fairly weak slashing whistle on Alexis Lafrenière. The crowd let the refs hear it after that sequence.

That gave the Coyotes a five-on-three opportunit­y with 1:19 left in the second period, and while it began with Nick Schmaltz hitting the post, it turned into a momentum-altering kill for the Rangers.

“I do think they can create a buzz,” Laviolette said of the PK. “There’s nothing that goes up on the scoreboard from a five-on-three kill, but I do think that everybody else feeds off.”

Vincent Trocheck comes through on PP

The Blueshirts avoided costly mistakes in the third, then took advantage of a cross-checking penalty on Arizona defenseman Matt Dumba.

A well-placed stick from Trocheck put them on top for good with 11:34 to play.

He got just enough of Artemi Panarin’s wrist shot to tip it past Coyotes goalie Connor Ingram, propelling New York to a strong finish and its second win in the first three games of the season.

The Rangers have now scored at least one powerplay goal in each of those contests.

“Mika, (Panarin) and (Adam Fox) are moving a lot up top,” Trocheck said. “They’re creating a little bit of confusion for the PK. I think after that, it’s just simplicity. I think we’re shooting a lot more pucks, getting pucks back, playing a little bit more like a five-on-five (possession).”

Barclay Goodrow’s holding call setup Zucker’s penalty shot opportunit­y, but Shesterkin had his back. He finished with 26 saves, with none bigger than that one.

It was part of a gutsy overall effort in which the Rangers showed resilience and adaptabili­ty as they continue to be molded into Laviolette’s vision.

“It would be great if every game if you can get 50 shots and 100 attempts, but sometimes you’ve got to play the game that’s dealt,” the coach said. “What I liked is that we didn’t get frustrated about it. We didn’t try to over press. We didn’t try to go outside of our shoes. We just kept playing the game.”

Ryan Lindgren returns

It may have taken a Mack Truck to keep Lindgren off the ice for the home opener. Or, perhaps, a superhero.

“He’s Ironman,” Shesterkin quipped. “Robert Downey Jr. needs to be ready before he takes his job.”

The 25-year-old defenseman missed Saturday’s 5-3 loss to the Columbus Blue Jackets with an upperbody injury and was considered a game-time decision heading into Monday, but when the Rangers emerged for warmups, no one was surprised to see No. 55 out there.

He took an early hit from Lawson Crouse behind the New York net that left him in obvious discomfort, but returned for his very next shift and played the entire game.

Laviolette, who noted that Lindgren has “something that he is dealing (with),” credited him with “61 minutes” after a postgame scrum that Lindgren found himself right in the middle of.

“He’s a warrior,” Trocheck said. “He’ll be playing through stuff, it feels like, all year. He gets in the battle every night, so he’s one of those guys can get you some momentum from just based off of his energy and his play.”

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