The Bergen Record

Kakko, Shesterkin propel Rangers to 8th straight win

- Vincent Z. Mercoglian­o Columnist

NEW YORK — In analyzing his underwhelm­ing point total this season, Kaapo Kakko offered this blunt assessment.

“I feel I’ve been passing too much sometimes,” the Rangers’ forward said last week. “I need to shoot more.”

Validation came in Tuesday’s 3-1 win over the Stars at Madison Square Garden.

Kakko ripped a top-shelf wrist shot into a tight window over Dallas goalie Scott Wedgewood’s right shoulder for his seventh goal of the season, four of which have come in the past nine games.

“I got a good chance right before that,” Kakko said. “(Jonny Brodzinski) passed it to me behind the net and I couldn’t see the puck, so I didn’t shoot when I got it. Then I got the chance again, and I thought it was a good lane. I tried to shoot.”

It turned out to the decisive tally in the Blueshirts’ victory over the firstplace team in the Central Division, tying the 23-year-old’s career-high point streak at five games.

With that production has come an obvious uptick in confidence.

Kakko’s been buzzing around recently and was particular­ly noticeable Tuesday, whether that was protecting pucks in the offensive zone or tracking back hard on defense.

“This is the best he’s looked,” head coach Peter Laviolette said prior to the game.

“To me, he’s moving his feet, he’s creating, he’s playing with some attitude and some edge out there. The line (with Jonny Brodzinski and Will Cuylle) has been good, but I think he’s a big part of driving that line. Since he’s been back from the (left-leg) injury, he just seems to be getting stronger and stronger inside of his game.”

Continuing to build on this streak will be critical in the Rangers’ effort to lengthen their lineup, especially after losing veteran right-winger Blake Wheeler for at least the rest of the regular season.

The next step for Laviolette is finding more ways to utilize Kakko, who was limited to a modest total of 12:21 time on ice Tuesday and hasn’t eclipsed 14:11 in a month.

“He had another strong game,” the coach said. “I gotta find a way to put him out there more. That’s on me, because he’s playing well right now . ... The shot on the short side — most of the night we went glove, when we needed to go blocker. He went on the short side of that and the blocker and made a really nice goal. I do think that confidence plays into that. I see that.

He’s looking confident on the ice. He’s demanding the puck, and when he has it, it’s hard to take it from him. He’s trying to find the areas to score goals and be effective.”

Avoiding an emotional letdown

Kakko isn’t the only one riding high lately.

The Rangers (37-16-3) have won a season-high eight straight — their longest streak since 2015-16 — and avoided falling into a trap coming off Sunday’s epic 6-5 overtime win against the Islanders in the NHL Stadium Series.

“It (would have been) easy for us after that emotional win to maybe have a little letdown with our energy here,” defenseman Adam Fox said. “But I thought we were on from the start.”

They rode that momentum right into the matchup with the Stars and came out flying.

They dished out 15 hits in the first period alone, including a few from giant rookies Adam Edström and Matt Rempe that riled up the MSG crowd. They were limited to 7:47 and 5:08 TOI, respective­ly, but made their presence felt when they were on the ice.

“Their minutes are not a reflection of them not playing well,” said Laviolette, who noted that a total of eight penalties between the two teams disrupted the line rotation. “They were noticeable. I’m happy with the way they played. They definitely bought a physical presence right off the bat. They get it on the forecheck, they put it behind you, and they’re coming — and they’re going to bang bodies.”

The Rangers also created dangerous scoring chances in that spirited first period.

As usual, the Artemi Panarin-Vincent Trocheck-Alexis Lafrenière line was at the center of a few of them — on their way to out-chancing the Stars by a 9-2 margin, according to Natural Stat Trick — and helped create the goal that provided an early 1-0 lead.

It was scored by Fox, who’s been catching fire with seven points (one goal and six assists) in his last three games, but wouldn’t have happened without Lafrenière battling in front to get Wedgewood out of position and Panarin sneaking around the backside of the net for the primary assist.

That score held until Kakko doubled the lead at the 8:23 mark in the second period, which was quickly followed by a power-play goal from Miro Heiskanen to cut Stars’ deficit to 2-1. But that would be extent of the Dallas scoring.

“We’ve been winning in different ways,” Fox said. “This is the time where you see points are so crucial. You kind of start getting a playoff picture, and you see win eight straight, and teams are still right there with you. You can’t take your foot off the gas, and I think we recognize that.”

 ?? BRUCE BENNETT/GETTY IMAGES ?? Kaapo Kakko (24) and Erik Gustafsson of the Rangers celebrate Kakko’s second-period goal against the Dallas Stars at Madison Square Garden on Tuesday in New York City.
BRUCE BENNETT/GETTY IMAGES Kaapo Kakko (24) and Erik Gustafsson of the Rangers celebrate Kakko’s second-period goal against the Dallas Stars at Madison Square Garden on Tuesday in New York City.
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