Rangers silence Capitals
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Henrik Lundqvist had his teammates digging deep to describe his performance that put the New York Rangers on the verge of advancing in the Stanley Cup playoffs for the third straight year.
"He's like Tina Turner," forward Brandon Dubinsky said, "He's 'Simply the Best.' "
Lundqvist tied a career playoff high with 38 saves - half of them in the second period - and the seventh-seeded Rangers put the Washington Capitals on the brink of elimination with a 2-1 victory last night in New York.
Lundqvist, who posted a 1-0 shutout win in Game 2, was on top of his game as the Capitals controlled play from the second period to the end - outshooting New York, 39-21. But it's the Rangers who hold a 3-1 lead in the best-of-seven series.
"He's amazing, he's our heartbeat, and he gives everyone confidence that is playing in front of him," said defenseman Paul Mara, who staked the Rangers to a 1-0 lead in the first period. "He's awesome. We love him. He's the king."
Mara snapped the Rangers' scoring drought at 126 minutes, 11 seconds with 6:05 left in the opening period, scoring just the second goal against Simeon Varlamov, the 20-year-old rookie who has stopped 75 of 78 shots since taking over for Jose Theodore after New York's 4-3 win in Game 1.
Chris Drury added his first goal of the series. It turned out to be his 17th postseason winner.
"He is an easy guy to pull for," Rangers coach John Tortorella said. "He is an important guy in the locker room. He is much healthier, improving the last couple of days. I think he has things figured out."
Varlamov got Washington back into the series with a 4-0 win Monday night, but now the Capitals - the No. 2 seed in the Eastern Conference - could be out of the playoffs tomorrow night when they host Game 5.
Washington erased a 3-1 hole against Philadelphia in the first round last year, before falling in overtime of Game 7.
"It's not done yet," said Capitals forward Alex Ovechkin, who scored his first goal of the series. "We were in this situation last year and we came back. We got that experience and it was good experience."
Flames 6, Blackhawks 4 - Eric Nystrom scored off a rebound with 6:56 remaining as host Calgary evened its first-round series at Chicago at 2-2.
Nystrom also had two assists, Olli Jokinen scored the first two goals of his playoff career, Jarome Iginla completed a two-goal game with an empty-netter, and Adrian Aucoin added a goal for the Flames.
Patrick Kane, Kris Versteeg, Cam Barker, and Samuel Pahlsson scored for Chicago. The Blackhawks overcame a 4-1 deficit in the second period to tie it.![]()



