New York Daily News

Goals at end of regulation put Blueshirts on brink

- BY PAT LEONARD LIGHTNING RANGERS

The Rangers will have to win on the road again to stay alive.

Tampa Bay Lightning defenseman Mikhail Sergachev scored in the second period and Ondrej Palat added the game-winner with just over two minutes left in Thursday night’s 3-1 Rangers loss at the Garden, snapping an eight-game Blueshirts win streak at home this postseason.

Sergachev’s 55-foot wrist shot through an Ondrej Palat screen at 18:10 of the third period snapped a 1-1 tie and quieted the crowd, before Brandon Hagel added an empty netter at 19:01.

Igor Shesterkin (24 saves) was screened on both goals.

The reigning two-time Stanley Cup champion Lightning now lead this Eastern Conference Final series, 3-2, with Game 6 set for Saturday night at Tampa’s Amalie Arena. Tampa has won three straight in response to the Rangers taking the first two games.

The Blueshirts are 2-7 on the road in the postseason, though their two wins came in Game 7s at Pittsburgh and Carolina, respective­ly, in eliminatio­n scenarios.

Lightning goalie Andrei Vasilevski­y (24 saves) made the saves of Thursday’s game at 10:21 and 10:23 of the third period with the game tied at one.

He used his stick to stop Adam Fox’s wrister over his right-hand blocker, then stretched back across the crease to make an incredible left pad save on Ryan Lindgren coming back in front with a rebound.

Ryan Strome then blew an amazing scoring chance about 14 minutes in off terrific passing from Artemi Panarin and Andrew Copp. Strome just couldn’t sweep his stick quickly enough to guide the puck in from the doorstep.

The Rangers hadn’t lost at home since May 3, a 4-3 overtime defeat to the Pittsburgh Penguins in Game 1 of their first round series. They’ll now have to win in Tampa for the first time in this series to stay alive.

Their backs are now against the wall again, and if they can pull it out in Tampa, they’ll have home ice for Game 7 on Tuesday night.

Thursday’s result was especially disappoint­ing after the positive pregame news that injured topnine centers Strome and Filip Chytil would both be in the lineup.

Strome had missed Game 4, and Chytil had left that 4-1 loss in the second period with an upper body injury. Gallant scratched fourth-line winger

Ryan Reaves and kept both Kevin Rooney and Tyler Motte in the lineup seemingly as insurance for one of his top guys going down again.

High-flying wingers Chris Kreider and Artemi Panarin also had strong first periods to help their team play with pace and possession out of the gate following two straight disappoint­ing defeats in Tampa in Games 3 and 4.

The Rangers just didn’t find the back of the net enough.

The dynamic defenseman Fox looked hobbled, too. He wasn’t moving his feet, and it seemed obvious he was playing through something. Defensemen Lindgren and Mikhail Sergachev both scored unassisted for the Rangers and Lightning in the second period, respective­ly, to send the game to the third tied at 1-1.

Lindgren caught Vasilevski­y off guard from the left boards 10:29 in, pinching to fire a quick shot from the half wall over the Tampa goalie’s right blocker shoulder for a 1-0 Ranger lead.

The home team’s penalty kill also snuffed out two Lightning power plays compared to one scoreless Blueshirt man advantage in the second, which led to a 13-8 Tampa shot advantage.

One Tampa power play was earned on a questionab­le hooking call against K’Andre Miller by referee Eric Furlatt at 11:07.

The smooth-skating Sergachev knotted the game at one apiece, however, with a 51-foot wrist shot from the point. Shesterkin was screened by three of his Ranger teammates, and the shot beat him low to the right corner past his left pad.

The Rangers had controlled the puck a lot in the first period, but they had no goals to show for it.

They outshot the Lightning, 8-3, in the first 20 minutes, and all three of their top lines generated good offensive zone time and chances.

Panarin and Kreider both created offense, and Chytil pushed a tic-tac-toe pass from Kaapo Kakko just wide off the rush.

Referees Wes McCauley and Furlatt swallowed their whistles on an obvious Corey Perry neutral zone trip of Rangers defenseman Jacob Trouba, however, denying the home team a much-needed early power play.

Tampa generated rush chances to keep the Blueshirts honest, too.

Miller slid early in the first to break up a 2-on-1 Lightning rush. Nikita Kucherov and Nick Paul both hit posts on sharp shots that had beaten Shesterkin. And Pierre-Edouard Bellemare missed the net point blank from the low slot late in the first off a feed from Pat Maroon.

But the Lightning eventually broke through.

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