The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Rangers topple skidding Devils

-

NEWARK, N.J. — Ryan Strome scored twice and the streaking New York Rangers beat the Devils 6-3 Saturday, sending New Jersey to its fifth straight loss and eighth in nine games.

Adam Fox, Kevin Rooney, Libor Hajek and Filip Chytil also scored as the Rangers won their seasonhigh third straight and sixth in eight games.

“If you’re going to have a chance, you’ve got to string together wins,” coach David Quinn said. “You got to go on some sort of streak and some sort of run. We really hadn’t done that up to this point. We’re creeping up on the halfway point of the season so our guys realize what’s in front of us. They realize that with each passing day, you want to continue to gain momentum and continue to move forward.”

Alexandar Georgiev had 24 saves while filling in for the injured Igor Shesterkin, who sustained a groin injury in a 6-1 win over New Jersey Thursday night.

P.K. Subban and Mikhail Maltsev scored in a 17second first-period span to give the slumping Devils some hope after falling behind 2-0.

The hope lasted less than two minutes. Rooney, a former Devil who signed with New York this season, capped a 2-on-1 with Chytil flipping a cross-ice pass over Mackenzie Blackwood for a 3-2 lead.

Hajek stretched the lead to two goals 65 seconds in the second period with a short that deflected off Devils forward Janne Kuokkanen. It was his first point of the season and first goal since getting his first in the NHL against New Jersey on Mar. 9, 2019.

Chytil scored in close in the third period as the Rangers scored 12 goals in sweeping the two games against their Hudson River rivals.

Nathan Bastian closed the gap to 5-3, but Strome iced the game with an empty net goal.

“If we’re going to play like that, we’re going to lose, we’ll lose every night,” Devils coach Lindy Ruff said. “Our puck play wasn’t good, our attention to detail wasn’t good enough. We had some 50-50 battles that I you know I believe that we could have won, that we didn’t. The desperatio­n I think along the walls to compete, no situation, was good enough.”

What’s impressive about the Rangers’ current run is they are winning with top forward Artemi Panarin (personal leave) and top defenseman Jacob Trouba (broken thumb) sidelined, and Chytil just returning to the lineup.

Strome said the Rangers have worked hard all season but could not string together wins.

“I think lately we’re finding a way,” he said. “I don’t think the last two wins were pretty. But today was a pretty solid effort. I think all around we got to be pretty pleased with, the contributi­ons of everyone. Just a solid game.”

ISLANDERS 5, SABRES 2

UNIONDALE, N.Y. — Mathew Barzal and Scott Mayfield each had a goal and an assist and New York beat Buffalo for its fourth straight victory.

Semyon Varlamov made 20 saves as the Islanders improved to 9-0-2 at Nassau Coliseum this season and 14-6-4 overall. Cal Clutterbuc­k, Brock Nelson and Anders Lee also scored.

New York beat Buffalo for the fifth straight time this season, outscoring the Islanders 19-7 in those five meetings. The teams meet again Sunday for their third game in four days in the same venue.

Buffalo dropped its sixth straight game. Sam Reinhart and Jacob Bryson scored for the Sabres, and Carter Hutton made 24 saves.

Bryson put Buffalo in front when he scored his first career goal 33 seconds into his sixth game. The 23-year-old defenseman was selected by the Sabres in the fourth round of the 2017 draft.

But the Islanders responded with four goals in the second, including a memorable play by the speedy Barzal.

The 23-year-old Barzal tied it at 3:51 with his ninth of the season. After outracing and outmusclin­g Sabres defenseman Rasmus Ristolaine­n for the puck, Barzal hesitated in front of the net and then backhanded the puck between his legs to himself before flicking it past Hutton on his forehand.

“Once I knew I had body position, I took it to the net,” Barzal said. ”I felt like Hutton was down. It was a lot of instinct, just being in the moment and reacting. I’d probably put it in my top two or three.”

Barzal has three goals and four assists in the last six games. He leads the Islanders with 22 points.

“Barzy scoring that goal the way he did, that lit a little bit of a fire for us,” Lee said. “We had a flurry after that and kept it going.”

Brock Nelson made it 2-1 at 5:16, taking a cross-ice pass from Anthony Beauvillie­r and firing a high shot past Hutton for his seventh goal.

Cal Clutterbuc­k extended the lead at 8:45, sending a wrist shot past Hutton for his second goal this season.

ATLANTA — Get ready for another season — hopefully, the last — of the most hapless act in sports.

Pitchers trying to pass themselves off as hitters.

Pity those like Atlanta phenom Ian Anderson, who’s not exactly looking forward to stepping into the batter’s box for the first time since the 2019 Double-A season, when he went 0 for 15 with 11 strikeouts.

“I think my first at-bat was my hardest-hit and it kind of went downhill from that,” Anderson recalled. “I haven’t hit in quite some time. So don’t expect too much.”

It didn’t have to be this way. Major League Baseball and the players union could have come to a reasonable compromise that allowed the designated hitter in both leagues, as they did during the pandemic-shortened 2020 season.

But, of course, the two sides managed to botch the talks. Now, the DH isn’t expected to come up again until next winter, when it will be part of the knockdown, drag-out brawl over a new labor agreement.

For National League pitchers, that means it’s back to the batting cage to work on their feeble swings.

“Hitting a round ball with a round bat is already hard enough,” said NL MVP Freddie Freeman. “To give guys a whole year and a half off from doing that — and they’re not good hitters anyway — is going to make it even worse.”

His advice?

“Just try to hit the ball,” he said, chuckling, “and if there’s a guy on first, bunt him over. That’s all I’ve got.”

There’s still a slight chance to avoid this farce before Opening Day, but MLB has no plans to make another offer to the union, so it looks like the DH will be used only in the American League this season.

Leave it to baseball to go back to a dual, unnecessar­y system that is totally out of touch with the times and only favored by the handful of pitchers who have some idea what they’re doing with a bat in their hands.

“Guys don’t grow up hitting like they used to,” Braves manager Brian Snitker said Friday. “Pitchers used to be better hitters because they grew up hitting. Nowadays, pitchers don’t even pick up a bat when they’re growing up.”

A season without the DH is just a what baseball doesn’t need as it tries to modernize and lure a younger fan base to the game.

“We’ve got to continue to be progressiv­e in MLB,” Miami Marlins manager Don Mattingly said. “We’ve got to continue to put a product out there that people want to see, that has action, and continues to hold our attention.”

That’s increasing­ly important in today’s increasing­ly fragmented world, where so many sports fans have turned away from the national pastime.

“In the NFL and NBA, you watch the rules change,” Mattingly says. “You don’t want to change the core of the game. But we have to be open-minded to change to make this a product people want to see.”

Full disclosure: I was long opposed to the DH, or at the very least, comfortabl­e with the idea of having different rules for the two leagues. But watching even a shortened season with the universal DH easily persuaded me that the game is much better off with nine legitimate hitters in the order.

Freeman followed a similar path to DH enlightenm­ent — especially after seeing all the run-producing opportunit­ies he was afforded batting second in a Braves lineup that was stacked from top to bottom.

He finished with 53 RBIs in 60 games.

“I was always that National League guy who thought there’s so many different strategies you can do with the pitcher hitting,” Freeman said. “But every single time I came up last season, it seemed like there were guys on first and second. There are so many more RBI opportunit­ies when you have a real hitter down there in the nine hole.”

Baseball’s pipeline has changed so much that it’s no longer reasonable to require pitchers to take a turn with a bat.

The DH is used almost exclusivel­y throughout the minors, giving pitchers few chances to hit on their way to the big leagues. Teams certainly don’t want their prized arms to be risking injury by taking a swing, or getting hit by a pitch, or even the rare possibilit­y of being forced to run the bases.

While pitchers have always been viewed as the weakest link in the batting order, there was a time when they weren’t automatic outs.

Hall of Famer Bob Gibson was renowned for his hitting skills, totaling 24 homers over his career and finishing with a respectabl­e average of .206 — including a career-best .303 in 124 plate appearance­s during the 1970 season. He famously homered in his Game 7 victory over the Red Sox in the 1967 World Series.

They’re are still a few pitchers who enjoy stepping into the batter’s box.

“I always considered myself a pretty good hitter,” San Diego starter Joe Musgrove said. “I don’t see myself as just a pitcher. We get to play once every five days, so when I’m on the field I’m trying to do as much as I can to help the team win.”

By a pitcher’s standards, Musgrove is indeed a decent hitter.

But his career average is still a puny .149, with as many sacrifice bunts as hits (13 apiece) in 102 plate appearance­s. He’s yet to hit a homer, and has just three RBIs.

Baseball gets little value out of requiring Musgrove — or any other pitcher — to step into the box.

Back in 1973, with attendance dwindling and offenses struggling, the AL first instituted the DH to widespread ridicule from those who felt it made a mockery of the game.

The NL has long resisted, but it now seems inevitable that it will follow the junior circuit’s lead.

Not soon enough, however.

Which means if you’re able to attend a game at an NL ballpark this season, be prepared for a stiff summer breeze.

The pitchers will be swinging away.

Just don’t expect them to hit anything.

 ?? Elsa / Getty Images ?? The Rangers’ Ryan Strome, right, is congratula­ted by teammate Adam Fox after Strome scored an empty net goal in the third period against the New Jersey Devils at Prudential Center on Saturday in Newark, N.J.
Elsa / Getty Images The Rangers’ Ryan Strome, right, is congratula­ted by teammate Adam Fox after Strome scored an empty net goal in the third period against the New Jersey Devils at Prudential Center on Saturday in Newark, N.J.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States