Ranger’s look for answers after epic performance by Igor Shesterkin is wasted in Game 1 loss

May 3, 2022; New York, New York, USA; New York Rangers goaltender Igor Shesterkin (31) follow the puck against Pittsburgh Penguins left wing Jake Guentzel (59) during the third period in game one of the third round of the 2022 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-USA TODAY Sports

The New York Rangers game one loss to the Pittsburgh Penguins was a result of a horrid second period that the team could not overcome physically or mentally.

The New York Rangers‘ loss to the Pittsburgh Penguins in triple overtime last night will be forgotten the next time the Blueshirts hit the ice. What shouldn’t be forgotten was the total collapse the team suffered allowing the Pens to battle back from two leads in the second period.

A 1-0 first intermission lead for the Rangers turned to 2-0 early in the second period when Andrew Copp scored at 3:08 of the period.  The Penguins then found another gear, heck another two gears, and dominated play putting  Rangers on their heels and in their zone for almloost the whole period.

Poor 2nd Period costs lead

Pittsburgh put 18 shots on Igor Shesterkin in the first 12 minutes of the second period and tied the game at 2-2 at on two Jake Guentzel goals before the halfway mark of that period.  The Pens would take 25 shots, scoring three goals, with the third period ending tied 3-3.

The stellar play of Igor Shestrkin was the only reason this game was close making as he made 79 saves in the loss. The 79 saves were the second-most in NHL history (Joonas Korpisalo made 85 saves for the Columbus Blue Jackets against the Lightning in Game 1 of the 2020 first round, won by the Lightning 3-2 in the fifth overtime).

Shesterkin surpassed the 56 saves performance from Gump Worsley (April 5, 1962) for the most in franchise history.

Center  Ryan Strome acknowledged the caliber of play by Shesterkin following the loss,

“I mean, he made like 80 saves or whatever it was, so obviously he was good,”  “He’s done it all year. Our best player, and he showed it tonight. He [did] everything he had to do, and we couldn’t get one for him obviously.”

Head coach Gerrard Gallant, coaching his first playoff game with the Rangers, liked what he saw early on in the game

“Great game by two teams, thought the first 25 minutes we were real good, dominated that part of the game and then they come back in the second and they played really well after that. It was one of those games, three overtime periods, it’s tough to lose like that, but you get back on the horse and get ready for the next game.”

The club played a textbook first period, but somewhere after they scored their second goal, they took their foot off the pedal and it probably cost them a victory.

“I think we learned a lesson a little bit in the second period,” said Ryan Strome, who set up Andrew Copp for the one-timer in the slot for the two-goal lead. “When you’re up 2-0, you like to think that you can shut them down a little more, but they clawed back in so. It’s tough to remember the second period, it feels like so long ago, but I thought we battled hard. We did a lot of good things.

Many believe the Rangers overturned goal by Filip Chytil late in the third was the reason the team lost game one. In reality, the loss could be attributed because the team was unable to sustain the forecheck and hitting they displayed in the first period along with some poor shooting decisions in the overtime.

Game two is Thursday night and as the head coach said, it’s time to get back on the horse.

Notes

Follow Frank Curto on Twitter at @RangerProud.

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