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  • #31
    Pens wary, Preds confident entering Game 2
    May 30, 2017


    PITTSBURGH (AP) The winning team went nearly two full periods without a shot. The hottest goaltender in the playoffs was only tested 11 times in 58 minutes - and lost.

    No wonder Pittsburgh Penguins coach Mike Sullivan described his team's 5-3 victory over Nashville in Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final as ''bizarre.''

    And that doesn't even include the catfish tossed onto the ice by a Predators fan at PPG Paints Arena in the middle of a second period. The fish that splatted on the Nashville blue line earned the thrower three misdemeanor charges and also came as close to Predators goaltender Pekka Rinne as anything the Penguins managed during 20 minutes in which the highest-scoring team in the league couldn't even muster a single shot.

    ''It's not always pretty,'' Sullivan said Tuesday. ''We don't get points for style. But what I love about our team is that we find ways to win, we compete.''

    True, though for the majority of Game 1, the competition was pretty one-sided. The Predators controlled the pace and the puck, just not the scoreboard. It left the guys from ''Smashville'' in a new position for the first time since they began their mad dash to the final a month ago: chaser instead of chasee as Game 2 looms on Wednesday night.

    ''Now we face a little adversity,'' said defenseman Ryan Ellis, who scored the first Stanley Cup Final goal in team history. ''We see what kind of group and character we have to bounce back.''

    The Predators haven't dropped consecutive games in the postseason and their four previous losses were pretty easy to explain. What happened on Monday night was not. The only area where Nashville wasn't markedly better than the defending Stanley Cup champions is the only one that really matters.

    ''Everything was there that we liked but the result,'' Ellis said.

    Ellis described the Predators as more disappointed than mad. You can probably add baffled to the list. Nashville became the first team since the NHL began tracking the stat in 1957 to hold a team without a shot for an entire period during the Stanley Cup Final. The gulf actually stretched 37 minutes in all, which sounds like a perfect way for the opponent to win.

    Except the streak was bookended by goals. The first, a ricochet off Nashville defenseman Mattias Ekholm, gave the Penguins a 3-0 lead with 17 seconds left in the first period. The second, a sniper shot by Penguins rookie Jake Guentzel exactly 37 minutes later, put Pittsburgh back in front to stay at 4-3.

    The angst Nashville felt isn't new to those who face the Penguins. Pittsburgh was outshot throughout the first two rounds of the playoffs. It didn't stop the Penguins from knocking off Columbus in five games and Washington in seven. There's a bit of a changeling quality to this group as opposed to the one that beat San Jose in six games to win the Cup last spring.

    Sullivan calls it the ability to ''win games different ways,'' but what happened in Game 1 seems borderline impossible. The Penguins understand they were equal parts lucky and good. They also understand they can't afford to have their offense go dormant for nearly two periods.

    Only a handful of Penguins participated in a skate on Tuesday, though the video room was crowded while they searched for ways to make sure a funk like that doesn't happen again.

    ''We know that's not necessarily the way you want to play the game every night,'' Crosby said.

    The Predators are more focused on the process than the end product. Save for a bumpy stretch near the end of the first period where the Penguins scored three times, Nashville did exactly what it wanted to do. Defenseman P.K. Subban pointed to the response after falling behind by three as proof the stage is not too big.

    ''It's easy in a Stanley Cup game to come back in the room, everybody is quiet, nerves,'' Subban said. ''But that's not our hockey club. We know how good we can be. The way we responded was typical Nashville Predators.''

    Typical for everyone except Rinne. The 34-year-old goalie is the main reason Nashville's season will extend into June for the first time. Yet his iffy play in Game 1 continued a troubling trend. He came into the series 1-5-2 with a .880 save percentage and 3.57 goals-against average in his career against the Penguins, numbers that ticked in the wrong direction even though he spent a majority of three periods standing in his crease with nothing to do while his teammates were at work at the other end of the ice.

    Rinne's teammates rallied to his defense. They're well aware that without him they likely would have traded their sticks for golf clubs long ago.

    ''Looking back since I came here a couple years ago, he's been the best player in almost all of the games played,'' Filip Forsberg said. ''We have all the belief in Pekks we can ever have. I'm looking forward to see him play next game.''
    Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

    Comment


    • #32
      NHL notebook: Senators' Brassard to miss 4-5 months after shoulder surgery
      May 30, 2017


      Ottawa Senators forward Derick Brassard will undergo shoulder surgery that will likely sideline him for four to five months, the team announced Tuesday.

      Brassard has a torn rotator cuff in his right shoulder. The recovery timeframe could cause Brassard to miss the beginning of next season.

      Brassard, 29, tallied 39 points (14 goals, 25 assists) this season, his first with the Senators. He scored 141 goals and registered 382 points in 10 NHL seasons.

      --Columbus Blue Jackets center Brandon Dubinsky underwent wrist surgery and will be sidelined approximately three months.

      "Brandon had been experiencing discomfort in his wrist since the season ended and after an examination last week it was determined that surgery was the best course of action at this time," Columbus general manager Jarmo Kekalainen said.

      Dubinsky, 31, scored 41 points (12 goals, 29 assists) last season.Overall, Dubinsky has scored 141 goals and 408 points over 11 NHL campaigns.

      --The New York Islanders announced that Scott Gomez has been named an assistant coach.

      Gomez, who retired after the 2015-16 season after 16 NHL seasons, won a Calder Memorial Trophy in 1999-00 as the league's top rookie, as well as two Stanley Cup Championships with the New Jersey Devils (2000, 2003).

      A two-time NHL All-Star, Gomez scored 181 goals and added 575 assists with the Devils, New York Rangers, Montreal Canadiens, San Jose Sharks, Florida Panthers, St. Louis Blues and Ottawa Senators.

      --The Minnesota Wild announced that assistant coach Scott Stevens resigned from his position so he can spend more time with his family.

      Stevens, a hard-hitting Hall-Of-Fame defenseman in his playing days, spent one season as an assistant coach with Minnesota. The Wild went 49-25-8 during the 2016-17 regular season, setting franchise records for most wins and points (106) in a season.

      Before joining the Wild, Stevens served as an analyst for NHL Network. He was named co-coach for New Jersey on Dec. 27, 2014, after serving two seasons (2012-14) as an assistant coach for the Devils.

      The defenseman spent 13 of his 22 NHL seasons with New Jersey and captained the team to three Stanley Cup Championships in 1995, 2000, and 2003.

      --The Los Angeles Kings named Dave Lowry as an assistant coach.

      Lowry's coaching resume includes experience at the NHL and Western Hockey League (WHL) levels.

      Most recently, Lowry served as the head coach for the Victoria Royals (WHL) for the last five seasons. His club posted a winning record each season and the club made the playoffs all five years. Overall, the team posted a 209-124-27 record under Lowry.

      In 2003-04, Lowry concluded his NHL playing career. He broke in with the Vancouver Canucks in 1985 and went on to play for the St. Louis Blues, Florida Panthers, San Jose Sharks and Calgary Flames, where he served as team captain. In his 1,084 career NHL regular season games, Lowry totaled 351 points and 1191 penalty minutes.
      Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

      Comment


      • #33
        Letang had trouble watching Stanley Cup opener
        May 30, 2017


        PITTSBURGH -- If the Pittsburgh Penguins found parts of Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final against the Nashville Predators difficult to navigate, and if their fans found it hard to watch at times, perhaps they should all be grateful they were not sitting with Kris Letang.

        "I think when I'm sitting in the (press) box up there, the people sitting next to me don't really like me," the injured Penguins defenseman said with a grin Tuesday, the first time he has spoken publicly since he had season-ending surgery the second week of April for a herniated disc in his neck.

        "I'm screaming. I don't work the best way by watching."

        Letang, 30, Pittsburgh's top defenseman, is a smooth-skating, two-way blue-liner who plays big minutes and whose puck-moving skills help with breakouts and production -- despite several injury and illness setbacks, he is approaching 300 assists and 400 points in his career.

        Letang also has 18 goals, 68 points in 116 career playoff games.

        The Penguins surely could have used him Monday night. Perhaps their 5-3 victory might have come a bit more easily.

        The Predators spotted Pittsburgh an early three-goal lead, then mounted a comeback to tie it while holding the Penguins without a shot for 37 minutes, including all of the second period and most of the third.

        Letang said his recovery is going well and he hopes to get clearance to get back on the ice soon, but with an original four- to six-month recovery time, there is no chance he will play in this series.

        Game 2 is Wednesday at PPG Paints Arena.

        His absence led a lot of prognosticators to say the same about Pittsburgh's chances of making a deep postseason run or winning the Cup -- no chance.

        The Penguins have made conscious adjustments with their defense, most conspicuously spreading minutes fairly evenly rather than asking any player to step into Letang's go-to role.

        Letang, shortly before his surgery, swore his belief in his teammates, particularly team offensive and spiritual leaders such as Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin.

        He predicted Pittsburgh could win the Cup for the second straight year.

        "For the people who were rolling their eyes, you've all seen Sidney Crosby's demeanor, what he wants to accomplish," Letang said. "He's a guy that you can look up to. I was confident to say that in front of a lot of people."

        Coach Mike Sullivan has recruited Letang to help in other ways.

        Letang, popular with his teammates, is encouraged to be around the club. He travels to road games. He announces the starting lineup before each game in the locker room.

        On a more practical level, Letang sits in on some coaches' meetings and has informal conversations with the defensemen, whether it's individually, by the pairing or with the full group, according to Sullivan.

        "We wish we had him in the lineup, but in the absence of that he's a great set of eyes," Sullivan said. "He has so much to offer this group, both our coaching staff and the team as a whole, even though he's not in our lineup."

        Letang just might be coaching himself, too.

        "You kind of realize things that you don't really see at the ice level," he said. "I think as a player, I'm going to learn a lot, too, watching in different situations. It's easy now to go down and tell those guys, 'Hey, this is open. You might not feel like it, but this is open.'

        "It's a different aspect. I always try to think when you're watching a game, you're actually getting better, you're learning more."

        Except how to remain calm in the press box.
        Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

        Comment


        • #34
          Wednesday's NHL Stanley Cup Final Game 2 Betting Preview: Predators at Penguins

          Jake Guentzel ended an eight-game drought and tied Claude Lemieux (1986) and Chris Drury (1999) for the most game-winning goals by a rookie in the playoffs with four.

          Nashville Predators at Pittsburgh Penguins (-150, 5.5)

          Pens lead series 1-0

          If it were a boxing match, the referee may have stopped the fight. Fortunately for the Pittsburgh Penguins, their heavyweight showdown versus Nashville was scored by the quality of the blows that they landed, allowing them to take a 1-0 series lead into Game 2 of the Stanley Cup Final against the visiting Predators on Wednesday night.

          Pittsburgh's 5-3 victory Monday night came in inexplicable fashion -- the Penguins built and blew a three-goal lead before Jake Guentzel delivered the late tiebreaking tally after his team went more than 37 minutes without registering a shot on net. "It's not textbook," said Pittsburgh captain Sidney Crosby after the Penguins finished with the fewest shots on goal (12) by a winning team in Stanley Cup history. "We've got some things we need to improve on." The Predators, who are trailing in a series for the first time this postseason, are trying to avoid losing back-to-back games for the first time before the best-of-seven set shifts to Nashville. "I thought our guys played great," Predators coach Peter Laviolette said after Monday's game. "We hate the score, we hate the result, but we'll move forward."

          TV: 8 p.m. ET, NBC, CBC, Sportsnet, TVAS

          LINE HISTORY: The Penguins opened as -170 home favorites for Game 2 and the public must have liked what they saw from the Preds in the opener because by Tuesday night the moneyline was down to -150. The total opened at 5 and was quickly bumped up to 5.5.

          GOALIE MATCHUP: Pekka Rinne (NAS) vs. Matt Murray (PIT)

          Rinne - GP: 17, W/L: 12-5, 1.83 GAA, .934 SAVE %, 2 SO
          Murray - GP: 6, W/L: 4-1, 1.62 GAA, .936 SAVE %, 1 SO

          INJURY REPORT:

          Predators - LW C. Wilson (Questionable, undisclosed), C R. Johansen (Out For Season, thigh), LW K. Fiala (Out For Season, leg).

          Penguins - RW T. Kuhnhackl (Questionable, lower body), D C. Ruhwedel (Questionable, concussion), D K. Letang (Out for season, neck).

          ABOUT THE PREDATORS (53-33-9-4, 45-42 O/U): Pekka Rinne's save percentage has steady decreased since opening the postseason with consecutive shutouts in Chicago, but he's eager to atone after allowing four goals on 11 shots Monday. "That's the best part in the playoffs," Rinne said. "You always get another opportunity, and that's going to happen on Wednesday, so I'm looking forward to that." Colton Sissons continues to shine in place of injured No. 1 center Ryan Johansen with four goals in two games while center Mike Fisher returned from injury to collect two assists -- his first points of the playoffs.

          ABOUT THE PENGUINS (63-26-8-5, 56-39 O/U):
          Pittsburgh received the secondary scoring it had been missing as Conor Sheary, a 23-goal scorer during the regular season, notched his first of the playoffs and Guentzel registered his 10th of the postseason to lead all goal scorers. Guentzel ended an eight-game drought and tied Claude Lemieux (1986) and Chris Drury (1999) for the most game-winning goals by a rookie in the playoffs with four. Crosby matched Chris Kunitz with a pair of assists for his 55th career multiple-point game in the postseason, eclipsing Joe Sakic for sixth place on the all-time list.

          TRENDS:

          * Predators are 0-4 in their last 4 vs. Eastern Conference.
          * Penguins are 1-9 in their last 10 when their opponent allows 5 goals or more in their previous game.
          * Over is 5-1 in Predators last 6 after allowing 5 goals or more in their previous game.
          * Under is 8-2 in Penguins last 10 Stanley Cup Finals games.
          * Predators are 2-9 in the last 11 meetings.

          CONSENSUS:
          60 percent of users are siding with the home favorite Penguins and 52 percent of the totals wagers are on the Under.
          Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

          Comment


          • #35
            High-scoring hockey has been followed by Under results in Stanley Cup final

            Going back to the 2011 Stanley Cup final, playing the Under following an Over result is a perfect 7-0 winner. Game 2's total is at 5.5 goals.

            A wild and crazy Game 1 of the Stanley Cup final produced a total of eight goals Monday night – the highest scoring Stanley Cup final game since Game 2 of the 2014 final and just the 21st time a Cup final game has gone Over the betting total since the 2005 NHL lockout.

            The Pittsburgh Penguins jumped out to a 3-0 lead in the first period then were locked down by the Nashville Predators, who stormed back to tie the game 3-3 before conceding the game-winning goal and an empty net marker in the closing minutes of the third period. And that was without a first-period score from Nashville that was disallowed after review.

            That 5-3 final score eclipsed the 5.5-goal total for Game 1 and sets up an interesting angle for total bettors heading into Game 2 Wednesday night, which opened with the total at 5.5 goals.

            Since the lockout, Stanley Cup final games following an Over result are 4-12-1 Over/Under (75 percent Under), with three Over results coming in the deciding game of a series (no following game). The average combined score in those contests following an Over is just 4.3 goals.
            Hockey betting action heating up in Vegas as puck drops on Stanley Cup final: Live From Las Vegas
            The puck drops on the Stanley Cup final, and Las Vegas sportsbooks are bracing for a burst of betting action in the hours before Game 1. We talk to Johnny Avello, executive director of race and sports at the Wynn Las Vegas, about the Penguins and Predators and which team the bettors like to hoist Lord Stanley's Cup.

            In fact, going back to the 2011 Stanley Cup final, playing the Under following an Over has produced a perfect 7-0 streak. And, if you take the 2010 final out of the equation – which saw the Chicago Blackhawks and Philadelphia Flyers top the total in five of six games – you get a Over/Under record of 1-11-1 in Cup final games following an Over since 2006.

            Before Game 1, the Penguins entered the Cup final with a 8-9-2 Over/Under record in the NHL playoffs while the Predators posted a 3-7-6 O/U mark in their first three postseason series. Pittsburgh is 3-3-1 O/U following an Over in these playoffs, with Nashville going 1-1-1 O/U after an Over result.

            Game 2 opened with the total at 5.5 goals (Over +110, Under -130).
            Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

            Comment


            • #36
              NHL
              Dunkel

              Wednesday, May 31



              Nashville @ Pittsburgh

              Game 3-4
              May 31, 2017 @ 8:00 pm

              Dunkel Rating:
              Nashville
              14.124
              Pittsburgh
              10.665
              Dunkel Team:
              Dunkel Line:
              Dunkel Total:
              Nashville
              by 3 1/2
              4
              Vegas Team:
              Vegas Line:
              Vegas Total:
              Pittsburgh
              -145
              5
              Dunkel Pick:
              Nashville
              (+125); Under





              NHL
              Long Sheet

              Wednesday, May 31


              --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

              NASHVILLE (53-33-0-13, 119 pts.) at PITTSBURGH (63-26-0-13, 139 pts.) - 5/31/2017, 8:00 PM
              Top Trends for this game.
              NASHVILLE is 30-35 ATS (-18.6 Units) in non-conference games over the last 2 seasons.
              PITTSBURGH is 127-81 ATS (+42.6 Units) in all games over the last 2 seasons.
              PITTSBURGH is 84-49 ATS (-3.5 Units) second half of the season over the last 2 seasons.
              PITTSBURGH is 47-30 ATS (+9.8 Units) when playing against a team with a winning record in the second half of the season over the last 2 seasons.
              NASHVILLE is 242-194 ATS (+32.3 Units) revenging a loss versus opponent since 1996.
              NASHVILLE is 33-20 ATS (+11.6 Units) when playing against a team with a winning record this season.
              NASHVILLE is 25-13 ATS (+11.5 Units) when playing against a team with a winning record in the second half of the season this season.

              Head-to-Head Series History
              PITTSBURGH is 5-2 (+2.5 Units) against the spread versus NASHVILLE over the last 3 seasons
              PITTSBURGH is 5-2-0 straight up against NASHVILLE over the last 3 seasons
              4 of 7 games in this series have gone OVER THE TOTAL over the last 3 seasons . (Over=+1.1 Units)

              --------------------------------------------------------------------------------




              NHL
              Armadillo's Write-Up

              Wednesday, May 31


              Pittsburgh didn’t get a shot on goal for 37:09 stretch in Game 1, still won 5-3. Nashville won five of last eight games overall- they’re 2-3 in last five road games. Under is 6-3-2 in their last 11 games. Penguins won last four home games by combined score of 16-5. Under is 4-3-2 in their last nine games. Pittsburgh is 9-2 in its last 11 games with the Predators; last four series games went over total. Nashville lost five of last six visits here. Penguins won Cup LY and in 2009; they’re 4-1 overall in Stanley Cup final series. Nashville is in its first Stanley Cup final.

              Stanley Cup final
              Nashville-Pittsburgh
              Pitt 5-3, -$160, O5.5




              NHL

              Wednesday, May 31


              ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
              Trend Report
              ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

              8:00 PM
              NASHVILLE vs. PITTSBURGH
              The total has gone OVER in 5 of Nashville's last 7 games when playing on the road against Pittsburgh
              Nashville is 12-5 SU in its last 17 games
              The total has gone OVER in 5 of Pittsburgh's last 7 games when playing at home against Nashville
              Pittsburgh is 5-1 SU in its last 6 games when playing at home against Nashville
              Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

              Comment


              • #37
                Prosecutors to drop charges in Stanley Cup dead catfish toss
                May 31, 2017


                PITTSBURGH (AP) Prosecutors are dropping charges filed against a Tennessee man for throwing a catfish onto the rink in Pittsburgh during the opening of the Stanley Cup Final.

                Thirty-six-year-old Jacob Waddell was charged in Allegheny County with disorderly conduct, possessing instruments of crime and disrupting meetings or processions after tossing the dead fish over the glass surrounding the rink Monday night during the Nashville Predators-Pittsburgh Penguins game.

                District Attorney Stephen Zappala said in a Facebook post Wednesday that Waddell's actions ''do not rise to the level of criminal charges'' so the charges ''will be withdrawn in a timely manner.''

                Nashville Mayor Megan Barry had called for the charges to be ''quickly dismissed.''

                Waddell called himself ''a dumb redneck with a bad idea'' in a conversation with Nashville radio station WGFX-FM .

                He says he sneaked the fish into the arena by hiding it between layers of underwear, running the fish over with his truck several times to make it easier to pack.
                Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                Comment


                • #38
                  WEDNESDAY, MAY 31

                  GAME TIME(ET) PICK UNITS

                  NAS at PIT 08:00 PM

                  NAS +130

                  U 5.5
                  Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                  Comment


                  • #39
                    Guentzel-led Pens take 2-0 lead vs. Preds
                    May 31, 2017


                    PITTSBURGH (AP) By coach Peter Laviolette's math, the Nashville Predators have been pretty good for all but 10 minutes of the Stanley Cup Final.

                    It's not much. Unless you're playing the Pittsburgh Penguins. Then it's too much. Way too much.

                    The defending Stanley Cup champions needed just over three minutes at the start of the third period to turn a taut Game 2 into a runaway, beating Pekka Rinne three times in a 4-1 victory on Wednesday night to inch closer to becoming the first team in nearly 20 years to win back-to-back titles.

                    The barrage started with Jake Guentzel. Mired in an eight-game goal drought heading into the series, the 22-year-old Nebraska-born rookie provided the winner in Game 1 and again in Game 2 when he pounded home a rebound just 10 seconds into the third for his third of the series and 12th of the playoffs.

                    ''It's crazy,'' said Guentzel, who has an NHL rookie record five game-winning goals this postseason. ''You can't even put into words what it feels. But we know the ultimate goal is two more wins and they're going to be tough to get.''

                    Only if Rinne turns back into Rinne. The 34-year-old spent the first three rounds of the playoffs helping carry Nashville to the Final for the first time. Now he's the biggest reason the Predators head back to ''Smashville'' for Game 3 on Saturday night reeling. After giving up four goals on 11 shots in Game 1, he allowed four more on 25 shots in Game 2. He was pulled when Evgeni Malkin ended Pittsburgh's surge with his ninth of the playoffs 3:28 into the third.

                    Rinne entered the series with a .947 save percentage in the postseason. Against Pittsburgh, it's at .777 and he remains winless in his career against the Penguins in games he's started.

                    ''The limited chances they've had they've done a good job,'' Rinne said. ''Overall these two games, like I said, it's disappointing to be down 2-0 but we have to be feeling still positive with the way we played as a whole and creating chances.''

                    Asked twice afterward if he was committed to starting Rinne on Saturday, Laviolette stressed Rinne has been ''terrific,'' adding there are plenty of things the Predators can do better in front of him like stopping the odd-man rushes that allowed the Penguins to take charge.

                    ''There's a stretch they're able to gain some momentum, able to capitalize and be opportunistic and that swung two games in their favor,'' he said.

                    Pontus Aberg scored the lone goal for the Predators , who were once again undone by a sudden barrage from the NHL's highest-scoring team, though they haven't lost faith in Rinne. Defenseman P.K. Subban said the team was ''extremely confident'' and in the prospect of going home, where the Predators are 7-1 during the playoffs.

                    ''We're going to win the next game and then we'll see what happens from there,'' Subban said.

                    It wouldn't take much to be better than what happened in Pittsburgh.

                    In Game 1, the Penguins pushed three goals by Rinne in a span of 4:11 in the first period to build a 3-0 lead. The Predators rallied to tie before Guentzel's go-ahead goal with 3:17 remaining put the Penguins ahead to stay.

                    This time, Pittsburgh's flurry came a little bit later. And it was once again led by the baby-faced son of a coach who has no problem shouldering the responsibility of playing alongside star Sidney Crosby.

                    The game was tied at 1 at the start of the third period when Guentzel jumped on a rebound to put Pittsburgh ahead. It was 1 second shy of the fastest goal to start a period in Final history.

                    Wilson was credited with his third of the playoffs just over 3 minutes later when a centering pass caromed off Nashville's Vernon Fiddler and by Rinne. Malkin's shot sent Rinne to the bench in favor of backup Juuse Saros, who made his playoff debut.

                    ''When we score one, we don't stop,'' Malkin said. ''We want to score more. The first shift in the third period, we score. We want more. It's our game. Never stop.''

                    Pittsburgh vowed to put more pressure on Rinne than it managed in their 5-3 victory in Game 1, a win they managed despite going 37 minutes without throwing a single puck Rinne's way and none in the second period, the first time that's happened since the NHL started tracking shots in 1957.

                    The Penguins matched their entire shot total from the opener (12) by the end of the first period but still found themselves trying to keep up with the Predators. The Stanley Cup newbies were disappointed but not dismayed by their Game 1 loss, pointing to the way they carried play for long stretches as tangible proof they weren't just happy to be here.

                    The result was the kind of up-and-down play that showcased the speed on both sides and included more than a dash of antagonism, particularly early.

                    Nashville's Matt Irwin drilled Pittsburgh's Matt Cullen from behind into the boards in the first period, a hit that left the 40-year-old Cullen headed down the runway for a quick check but didn't result in a penalty. Minutes later, Penguins forward Chris Kunitz became tangled up with P.K. Subban and ended up cross-checking Subban in the head, part of a sequence that saw Malkin go off for hooking. Malkin and Subban even ended up fighting in the third period when things got out of hand.

                    It was a scene hard to imagine through the first two taut and chippy periods.

                    Pittsburgh stayed in it thanks to Matt Murray (37 saves) and when Pittsburgh returned to the ice for the start of the third they, as coach Mike Sullivan is fond of saying, ''got to their game.''

                    A style that now has the Penguins two victories away from the cusp of a dynasty.
                    Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                    Comment


                    • #40
                      Thursday’s six-pack

                      — Astros 17, Twins 6— In nine innings vs Minnesota bullpen this week, Astros scored 28 runs.

                      — A’s 3, Indians 1— Chad Pinder homered twice for a team that really needed a win.

                      — Padres 2, Cubs 1— Chicago lost its eight road games; this was an 0-6 road trip.

                      — Brewers 7, Mets 1— You walk Eric Sogard three times, you deserve to lose.

                      — They sell roasted grasshoppers at Mariner games in Seattle. Seriously.

                      — Mike Tirico will replace Al Michaels on Thursday Night Football this fall.

                      *****************************

                      Thursday’s Den: How MLB teams do in series openers……

                      Series records for major league teams (thru May 31):

                      Road-Home/Total

                      National League

                      Ariz: 1-4-2…..7-2….8-6-2
                      All: 4-5-1…2-3-2…6-8-3
                      Chi: 4-4….5-2-1….9-6-1
                      Cin: 4-3-1…3-4-2…7-7-3
                      Col: 7-0-1…5-2-1…12-2-2
                      LA: 1-4-2…5-1-3….6-5-5
                      Mia: 2-5-2…2-5-1…4-10-3
                      Mil: 4-2-1…3-5-1…7-7-2
                      NY: 4-3……4-5……8-8
                      Phil: 1-7……3-5……4-12
                      Pitt: 2-5-2….5-3…..7-8-2
                      StL: 3-3-1…3-5-1…6-8-1
                      SD: 3-6….2-4-2…5-10-2
                      SF: 2-6-1…4-2-1…6-8-2
                      Wsh: 4-4…..8-9……12-13

                      American League

                      Balt: 2-4-2….7-1…..9-5-2
                      Bos: .3-4….6-2-2…9-6-2
                      Chi: 4-4-1…3-3-1…7-7-2
                      Clev: 5-3-1….2-6…..7-9-1
                      Det: 2-4-3….4-2-1…6-6-4
                      Hst: 6-1……7-2…..13-3
                      KC: 3-5…..2-4-2….5-9-2
                      LAA: 1-6-2…3-2-2….4-8-4
                      Min: 6-1……3-6……9-7
                      NY: 3-4-1…..7-1….10-5-1
                      A’s: 1-7…..5-1-2….6-8-2
                      Sea: 3-7……5-2…….8-9
                      TB: 4-4…..4-3-2….8-7-2
                      Tex: 2-6-1…..5-3.….7-9-1
                      Tor: 2-5-2…..4-4…..6-9-2
                      Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

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                      • #41
                        NHL playoffs
                        Game 3


                        Pittsburgh won first two Finals games at home; they’re 10-2 in last 12 games with Nashville- four of last five series games went over. Predators won four of its last five home games; under is 7-3-2 in their last 11 games, 3-1-1 in last five at home. Pittsburgh is 2-3 in last five road games, scoring total of nine goals. Under is 4-3-2 in their last nine games. Penguins won Cup LY and in 2009; they’re 4-1 overall in Stanley Cup final series. Nashville is in its first Stanley Cup final.

                        Stanley Cup final


                        Nashville-Pittsburgh
                        Pitt 5-3, -$160, O5.5
                        Pitt 4-1, -$140, U5.5
                        Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

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                        • #42
                          Nashville's Rinne's struggles continue
                          May 31, 2017


                          PITTSBURGH (AP) The Nashville Predators insist goaltender Pekka Rinne isn't to blame for the 2-0 series deficit against the defending champion Pittsburgh Penguins in the Stanley Cup Final.

                          Rinne is just looking to put both games in the past.

                          Pittsburgh overwhelmed Rinne and the rest of the Predators with a three-goal blitz in the first 3:18 of the third period during a 4-1 win Wednesday night, a game that ended with Nashville's star goaltender on the bench after he was pulled by coach Peter Laviolette. The coach did not commit to starting him when the series resumes this weekend, though he praised his goaltender throughout the postgame news conference.

                          ''When you lose a couple games and get pulled, you're not happy about how things went,'' Rinne said. ''But you have to put those things behind and focus on the things you can control and that's Game 3.''

                          That game is Saturday night in Nashville, and Rinne and the Predators are counting on a big dose of energy from a wild fan base that will be seeing the franchise's first Stanley Cup Final game at home.

                          ''Our focus is Game 3 and going home to a crowd that's going to be electric,'' Predators' captain Mike Fisher said. ''We're going to feed off that energy and we're going to be ready.''

                          Fifty teams have taken a 2-0 lead since the final went to a best-of-seven format in 1939. Of those, 90 percent went on to win the Stanley Cup, including Pittsburgh last season. Boston, in 2011, was the last team to come back from a 2-0 deficit in the Final, rallying to defeat Vancouver in seven games. Pittsburgh also did it in 2009, losing both games on the road against Detroit.

                          ''It's obviously very disappointing right now, but it's a series and we're down 2-0 going home,'' Rinne said. ''I think we're looking forward to playing in front of our fans.''

                          Rinne was 4-0 in the playoffs following a loss, but he watched the majority of the third period as backup Juuse Saros made his playoff debut. The Penguins beat Rinne four times on just 11 shots in Game 1 and scored four goals on 25 shots Wednesday for their 2-0 series lead.

                          Rinne is a three-time Vezina Trophy finalist who entered the final as the hottest goaltender in the playoffs with a .947 save percentage. But he has never started and won a game against the Penguins, and he has looked decidedly shaky, posting a .777 save percentage, in the first two games of the biggest series of his life.

                          ''For me, this is a once in a lifetime opportunity,'' Rinne said ''I've played a long time and this is my first time having a chance to play for the Cup. I think you have to bury these two games, move ahead and just find a way to have some success.''

                          It hasn't been easy against Pittsburgh.

                          Rinne is now 1-7-2 lifetime against Pittsburgh - his lone win came in relief at Nashville - and he entered the series with a .880 save percentage and a 3.57 goals-against average. Those numbers ballooned after the first two games against the Penguins.

                          Rinne is now winless in five career starts at Pittsburgh and looking to change his luck in Nashville where the Predators are 7-1 in the playoffs.

                          ''Pekka's been excellent for us all year long,'' Laviolette said. ''There's things we could've done. all three goals in the third period were odd-man rushes.''

                          Rinne stopped 18 of the first 19 shots faced through the first two periods, but he allowed a shaky goal in the first period to Jake Guentzel, the Game 1 hero for Pittsburgh, who squeezed a rebound between Rinne's arm and body while he hugged the post.

                          Guentzel struck again 10 seconds into the third period to put Pittsburgh in front for good.

                          Rinne kicked a Bryan Rust rebound to the slot where Guentzel scored his 12th of the playoffs and second of the game. Pittsburgh scored soon after to make it 3-1, a goal that was credited to Scott Wilson, who got a piece of the puck before it went off the skate of Nashville forward Vernon Fiddler and between Rinne's pads.

                          Evgeni Malkin extended Pittsburgh's lead to 4-1 just 15 seconds later, beating Rinne with a wrist shot during a two-on-one.

                          That was enough to end Rinne's night, but the Predators aren't blaming their goaltender for the series deficit.

                          ''He's the reason why we're here,'' Fisher said. ''It's not his fault by any means. We need to be better in front of him.''
                          Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

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                          • #43
                            Date W-L-T % Units Record

                            05/31/2017................... 1-1-0 ....................50.00%.................... +0

                            05/29/2017................... 0-2-0..................... 0.00%.................. -1050
                            Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

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                            • #44
                              NHL notebook: Predators' Laviolette tight-lipped on Game 3 goalie
                              June 1, 2017


                              Nashville Predators coach Peter Laviolette on Thursday declined to specify whether franchise goaltender Pekka Rinne will start in Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Final against the Pittsburgh Penguins.

                              That doesn't mean that backup Juuse Saros will start Saturday night at Bridgestone Arena after he replaced Rinne in the third period of Wednesday's Game 2 for his first career playoff appearance. That seems unlikely.

                              It does, however, illustrate the hard times the Predators face as they trail Pittsburgh 2-0 with their top goalie struggling.

                              Rinne has been described by his teammates throughout the postseason as Nashville's best player and MVP, but the Penguins have scored eight goals on 36 shots against him.

                              --Shawn Thornton has a new job title as the Florida Panthers named the recently retired forward as their vice president of business operations.

                              A two-time Stanley Cup champion, Thornton collected 102 points (42 goals, 60 assists) in 705 career games with the Chicago Blackhawks, Anaheim Ducks, Boston Bruins and Panthers. He had two goals and two assists in 50 games with Florida this past season.

                              --The Panthers signed forwards Henrik Haapala and Maxim Mamin to two-year entry-level contracts.

                              Haapala, 23, appeared in 51 games with Tampere Tappara of Finland's Liiga, recording a league-leading 45 assists to go along with 15 goals. He was awarded the Veli-Pekka Ketola Trophy as Liiga's points leader.

                              Mamin, 22, appeared in 42 games with CSKA Moscow of the KHL, scoring 12 goals and adding 13 assists before producing three points in nine playoff games.

                              --A day after acquiring his rights from the Tampa Bay Lightning, the Los Angeles Kings signed 20-year-old forward Bokondji Imama to a three-year entry-level contract on Thursday.

                              Imama, a 6-foot-1, 221-pound forward, played in 66 regular-season games with the Saint John Sea Dogs of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League this past season, recording 41 goals and 55 points to go along with 105 penalty minutes and a plus-11 rating.

                              --The San Jose Sharks will retain the rights to 2016 draft picks forward Noah Gregor and defenseman Mark Shoemaker after issuing them offers.

                              Gregor, 18, scored 27 goals and added 34 assists to go along with a plus-5 rating in 52 WHL games with Moose Jaw in 2016-17.

                              Shoemaker, 19, recorded 16 assists and 22 penalty minutes in 68 games with North Bay of the Ontario Hockey League in 2016-17. He was selected by San Jose in the sixth round.

                              Defenseman Adam Parsells, a 2015 draft pick, was not signed to a contract by the June 1 deadline and will re-enter the draft.

                              --The Washington Capitals re-signed left winger Nathan Walker to a two-year, two-way contract.

                              Walker, 23, scored 11 goals with 12 assists and a plus-11 rating in 58 games with AHL Hershey during the 2016-17 season.

                              --The Vegas Golden Knights signed Czech Republic free agent forward Tomas Hyka to an entry-level contract on Thursday.

                              The 24-year-old most recently played for his hometown club of Mlada Boleslav in the Czech Extraliga. Last season, Hyka skated in 48 regular-season games and led his team with 17 goals and 21 assists.

                              In 130 career regular-season games with Mlada Boleslav, he scored 37 goals with 42 assists while adding nine goals and three assists in 24 postseason contests.
                              Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

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                              • #45
                                Guentzel climbing record book
                                June 1, 2017


                                PITTSBURGH (AP) The fresh-faced, 22-year-old rookie who leads the NHL in playoff goals - a hot streak that has him in the middle of the Conn Smythe Trophy conversation given to the postseason MVP - was once too embarrassed to shoot the puck.

                                So Jake Guentzel didn't. Not in any sort of great quantity. Better to use his uncanny vision to set up teammates than be greedy. It's a mindset that helped the budding Pittsburgh Penguins star set a school record for assists during his freshman year at Nebraska-Omaha three years ago, a selflessness coach Dean Blais tried to change, with mixed results.

                                ''You want to be unselfish,'' Blais said told Guentzel over and over during Guentzel's three years with the Mavericks. ''But when you've got the opportunity to bury it, you bury it.''

                                Consider the message finally received.

                                Guentzel beat Nashville's Pekka Rinne twice in Pittsburgh's 4-1 win in Game 2 of the Stanley Cup Final on Wednesday as the Penguins took a 2-0 lead in the best-of-seven series. The Nebraska-born, Minnesota-raised son of a coach who spent most of his childhood trying to keep up with older brothers Ryan and Gabe now has a dozen goals during the postseason. That's the most ever by an American-born rookie and within two of Dino Ciccarelli's NHL rookie record set while playing for the Minnesota North Stars in 1981. Oh, and his five game-winning goals so far are tops among first-year players in a league that dates back a century.

                                ''Someone that would have dreamed this is lying,'' Blais said with a laugh.

                                Maybe, but this is hardly a fluke. Painting the beginning of Guentzel's NHL career as charmed - he did happen to score on his first two shots in his NHL debut in a loss against the New York Rangers in November - doesn't do justice to his talent and work ethic.

                                Sure, there's a little puck luck involved, but not much. You don't pour in 28 goals and 24 assists in 61 games thanks to a bounce or two.

                                ''He's been given a lot of responsibility and he's done a great job of just continuing to improve and compete,'' Penguins captain Sidney Crosby said.

                                It's not a coincidence Pittsburgh's equipment manager Dana Heinze put Guentzel in a stall adjacent to Crosby's when the rookie was called up for good in January.

                                It's a practice the team uses to give young players a chance to get acclimated to life in the NHL while sitting next to the face of the game. Putting a newbie next to Crosby also creates minimal distraction for the rest of the room during the daily media crush around the two-time Hart Trophy winner.

                                Eventually, however, the crowd breaks up. It's in those quiet moments that Crosby becomes equal parts mentor and teammate.

                                ''I think Sid has a really nice way of making those guys feel comfortable when they come into our dressing room,'' Penguins coach Mike Sullivan said. ''The influence he has on these kids goes a long way to giving these kids the confidence that they need.''

                                Not that Guentzel has ever lacked confidence (his Twitter handle is the playful jakenbake20 ), even if he doesn't exactly fit the physical profile of an elite goal scorer at 5-feet-11 and 180 pounds. Yet he's thrived anyway thanks to a preternatural sense of timing and a hockey IQ gleaned from a lifetime around the game. He was never the biggest in his family but found a way to keep up with Gabe (six years older) and Ryan (eight years older) anyway.

                                ''He got the puck taken away from him a lot,'' Blais said. ''So he learned how to move it. How to protect it. He was always one step ahead.''

                                In some ways, he still is.

                                Guentzel's winner in Game 1 against Nashville is a testament to his vision and patience. He was at center ice when the puck was pinched along the wall. He began sprinting toward the Nashville zone before teammate Brian Dumoulin even had it. By the time Guentzel collected Matt Cullen's one-touch pass, he was racing in on Rinne. Rather than just fling the puck at the goaltender, he pulled it back , allowing Nashville's Ryan Ellis to inadvertently screen Rinne. The goaltender could only wave his glove at it as it ripped into the net to put Pittsburgh ahead to stay.

                                The player who never wanted to shoot now can't seem to stop. Blais can't help but laugh. Maybe the problem before wasn't the message but the messengers.

                                ''I might say it, Sullivan says it,'' Blais said. ''But when Sid tells you to shoot the puck, you better shoot the puck.''

                                Guentzel had an eight-game goal drought that lasted from Game 6 of the second round against Washington until the opener of the Final. Sullivan opted to keep Guentzel in the lineup, though he briefly took him off Crosby's line in hopes of a reset.

                                The two were reunited during the latter portions of Game 2. Guentzel's rebound goal 10 seconds into the third period came on a set play of sorts. Bryan Rust came in on the rush and flipped the puck at Rinne. The rebound went right to Guentzel waiting in the slot. He had no problem powering it into the open net .

                                ''When the plays are there, his instincts will take over,'' Sullivan said. ''He's a real talented kid.''

                                When he was at Omaha, Guentzel would arrive two hours early to practice, meticulously preparing his gear, then going to pick the brain of the coaching staff until his teammates showed up.

                                ''He'd want to know what was going on,'' Blais said.

                                That kind of focus has served Guentzel well during his transition to the NHL. He doesn't think too much about the big picture, just the little ones. That attention to detail helped him earn a captaincy with the Mavericks and when Blais describes Guentzel's leadership style, it sounds an awful lot like the guy Guentzel hangs his No. 59 sweater next to every day.

                                ''He'll say things to the point and not be a `rah rah' type guy,'' Blais said. ''He'll just say the right thing. He prepares himself for success.''

                                Good thing, because it's coming. Fast.
                                Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

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