By WILL GRAVES By WILL GRAVES ADVERTISING Associated Press PITTSBURGH — Marc-Andre Fleury restored order to his goal crease and his team’s Stanley Cup hopes. Fleury turned aside 24 shots — a dozen in a frantic third period — and
By WILL GRAVES
Associated Press
PITTSBURGH — Marc-Andre Fleury restored order to his goal crease and his team’s Stanley Cup hopes.
Fleury turned aside 24 shots — a dozen in a frantic third period — and the Penguins fended off elimination with a 3-2 comeback victory over the Philadelphia Flyers on Friday night in Game 5 of the Eastern Conference quarterfinal series.
“He won them the game, plain and simple,” Philadelphia forward Scott Hartnell said.
Facing elimination, Fleury had no choice. The Flyers spent the game’s final 15 minutes doing everything they could to rattle him, bowling him over on more than one occasion and forcing him to make stops with one or two players draped around his white pads.
Yet after four wild games in which his goals-against average and his confidence took a beating, Fleury stood tall to trim Philadelphia’s lead to 3-2 in the best-of-seven series. Game 6 is Sunday in Philadelphia.
“(Fleury) was on and he made some huge ones,” Pittsburgh captain Sidney Crosby said. “It definitely was the difference in the game. It’s the time of year when you need those and he came up big for us.”
Steve Sullivan, Jordan Staal and Tyler Kennedy scored for Pittsburgh, which won on a night stars Crosby and Evgeni Malkin were held pointless. The Penguins dug in, however, after another shaky start to keep their hopes alive of becoming the fourth team in NHL history to rally from a three-game deficit.
“Our defense made hard and good plays,” Pittsburgh coach Dan Bylsma said. “We finally got what looks like a playoff game a little bit more tonight.”
It was a welcome change for the Penguins, who have struggled to keep up with the Flyers during a series more suited to a video game than the Stanley Cup. The teams combined for a record 45 goals in the first four games. The goal light — which malfunctioned briefly in the third period — only came on five times Friday as the wide open sheets of ice that marked the first week of the series suddenly disappeared.
“The pace was still fast and furious,” Philadelphia coach Peter Laviolette said. “It was physical … we just couldn’t get it in the back of the net as often. We had opportunities. We had good looks at it. Their goaltender made big saves at the end.”
Hartnell and Matt Carle scored power-play goals in the first period for Philadelphia, but the Flyers failed to close out Pittsburgh for the second straight game. Ilya Bryzgalov stopped 20 shots, playing much steadier two days after getting yanked in the second period of a 10-3 loss in Game 4.
Staal had a hat trick in the rout, but his goal Friday might have been more important. The Flyers had the lead and momentum when Staal beat Bryzgalov over the glove 6:15 into the second period to tie it and give the Penguins an energy boost in front of the largest crowd in the Consol Energy Center’s brief history.
Kennedy put Pittsburgh in front to stay just over 3 minutes later, ripping a slap shot past Bryzgalov for his third goal of the playoffs.
And for once, a one-goal advantage in this unpredictable series was enough.
Fleury, who came in with an unsightly 5.43 goals-against average and an .817 save percentage overcame four games of shabby play with 20 brilliant minutes in the third period.
He made seven saves alone during a Philadelphia power play early in the third period to give Pittsburgh’s maligned special teams a break, one they needed after the Flyers pumped in two goals with the man advantage in the first.
Carle scored his first goal of the postseason from the point with 2 seconds left on a power play to put the Flyers up 1-0 just over 8 minutes into the game.
Going ahead early has been a dubious honor in this series. The team that scored first has gone on to lose every time. And in typical fashion, it didn’t take the Penguins long to respond.
Sullivan saved a sloppy Pittsburgh power play — including one sequence in which Crosby and Malkin slammed into each other — by tapping in a pass from Kris Letang to tie it.
The Penguins, however, failed to play with the composure that highlighted the final two periods of Game 4. Malkin and Craig Adams went to the box with penalties, and Hartnell scored on the ensuing 5 on 3.
On the brink of having a season with Stanley Cup hopes come to a stunningly quick end, however, the Penguins responded by ditching flashy play for more basic, responsible hockey.
It was enough to send the series back to Philadelphia, where the pressure will be squarely on the Flyers, who are hoping to avoid the same fate as the 2010 Boston Bruins.
Philadelphia lost the first three games of its Eastern Conference semifinal series only to roar back and win on its way to an appearance in the Stanley Cup finals. The Flyers know the Penguins are brimming with confidence. They’re hardly worried even though they haven’t scored an even strength goal since the third period of Game 3.
“We’ve got to find a way to get that fourth one,” Philadelphia forward Claude Giroux said. “It’s probably the hardest game to win. We’ve just got to get it done.”