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Heading into the 2023 Stanley Cup playoffs, one series that grabbed the attention of many fans was the No. 2 vs. No. 3 matchup in the Metropolitan Division, pitting the New Jersey Devils against the New York Rangers in the latest edition of the Battle of the Hudson.

Thus far, it’s been a one-sided affair, with the visiting Rangers winning both Games 1 and 2 by 5-1 scores. According to ESPN Stats & Information, the Rangers are the second team in Stanley Cup playoff history to win the first two games on the road by four or more goals. The other club was the 1970 Boston Bruins, who did so in the Stanley Cup Final against the St. Louis Blues. Boston would sweep that series.

As talented as the Devils are, a comeback is certainly a possibility. They will attempt to start one in the Game 3 clash Sunday at Madison Square Garden.

To help get you ready for the game, we’ve put together a guide on what to watch from each team, including keys to victory from senior writer Greg Wyshynski, and in-depth statistical insights from ESPN Stats & Information.

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Line: NYR -140 | O/U: 5.5

Wyshynski’s keys to victory

The young Devils are making their first playoff appearance since 2018 after the most successful regular season in franchise history. But they have looked nothing like that team through two games. The experienced Rangers have overwhelmed their neighbors, outscoring them 10-2.

Still, New Jersey forward Erik Haula said not to count them out yet.

“We’re not done. We’re far from done. We’re not defeated. We’re going to keep pressing,” he said.

Here are three keys for Game 3:


Is the Devils’ deficit too large?

Losing the first two games of a series always puts a team’s collective back against a wall. Losing the first two games on home ice is a recipe for disaster.

According to the NHL, teams that take a 2-0 lead in a best-of-seven series when starting on the road hold a series record of 85-20 (.810). The last time it happened was in the 2022 Stanley Cup playoffs, when the Tampa Bay Lightning took the first two games in Sunrise against the Florida Panthers and swept them.

The Devils were tied for the second highest points percentage on the road this season (.732), winning 28 of 41 road games. They had a win and an overtime loss at Madison Square Garden this season.

“The fact that we haven’t gotten the results we wanted, we still have the ability to do something special,” Devils coach Lindy Ruff said. “We win one game, we turn this series around.”


Kreider time

The biggest factor in this series so far has been the Rangers’ power-play dominance.

The Rangers scored two power-play goals in each of the first two games, some of them coming at soul crushing times. In Game 1, a power-play goal gave the Rangers a 2-0 lead just 9:30 into the game. In Game 2, a power-play tally boosted the Rangers’ advantage in the second period just 4:04 after they had tied the score.

The Devils have been short-handed 10 times in two games after averaging 2.85 times per game being short-handed at home in the regular season.

“I don’t think we’re playing very well. We’re taking terrible penalties. Everyone’s gotta play better,” center Jack Hughes said.

One way to be more effective on the penalty kill would be to find a way — any way — to stop the Rangers’ Chris Kreider, who scored all four of their power-play goals.

“I just happened to be the open guy a couple of times,” he said.

Coach Lindy Ruff said Kreider had “some fortunate [goals]” on friendly bounces, but stressed that his team had to be better.

“We have to take his stick away. We had blown coverage [in Game 2],” Ruff said. “Our forward at the top can do a better job of being in that shot lane.”

That’s easier said than done. Kreider believes that the Rangers’ power-play success has been slowly building after the trade deadline acquisitions of Patrick Kane and Vladimir Tarasenko.

“It’s not a video game. You can’t just throw together lines and expect them to work,” said Kreider, who had eight power-play goals in 79 regular-season games. “We’ve been working as a group on the power play and 5-on-5. It’s starting to come.”


Changes for Devils

Like almost everything else in this series, the Devils’ regular-season success at even strength hasn’t transferred to the postseason. They were fourth in 5-on-5 goals (197). This series, they’ve yet to score a goal at even strength.

In an effort to generate offense, Ruff mixed lines again at practice ahead of Game 3. He moved Ondrej Palat up with Nico Hischier and Jesper Bratt; moved Hughes in the middle with Tomas Tatar and Haula; and dropped trade deadline coup Timo Meier down to a line with Michael McLeod and Dawson Mercer.

The real intrigue is in the crease. Vitek Vanecek has an .827 save percentage in two games. The Devils have 26-year-old Mackenzie Blackwood and 22-year-old Akira Schmid waiting in the wings.

“We’ve used all three goalies this year,” Ruff said. “So if we decide we’re going with a different goalie, it’s because they’ve been part of our group and helped us win games all year.”

Notes from ESPN Stats & Information

Devils

  • The Devils’ only series win after falling behind 2-0 in a best-of-seven came in the 1994 conference semifinals against the Bruins. They dropped a pair of one-goal games at home before winning the next four, including three in Boston. Their reward for winning that series was a conference finals date with their Hudson River rivals. The Rangers won in a memorable seven-game series.

  • The Devils’ four power-play scoring chances have come from Haula (two), Hischier and McLeod. This means none from Hughes, Bratt, Dougie Hamilton or Meier, who combined to score 29 power-play goals for the Devils this season.

  • The Rangers have disrupted the Devils’ passing lanes in every zone (New Jersey has 28 giveaways in two games after averaging 9.07 per game during the regular season), but especially when New Jersey is in the offensive zone. According to Stathletes, New York is averaging 17.0 defensive zone deflection causing turnovers per game in the series (14.5 in the regular season; 11th in NHL).

  • Vanecek has allowed nine goals on 52 shots and ranks at the bottom among playoff goaltenders in goals saved above expected (-4.01).

  • Rookie Schmid was on the bench as the backup for the first two games, and Blackwood is also available, though neither has any playoff experience. If Schmid gets the nod, he would be the first Devils rookie goalie to start a playoff game since Martin Brodeur in Game 7 of 1994 Eastern Conference finals, which was against the Rangers at Madison Square Garden.

  • According to Stathletes, the Devils were the top team in generating scoring chances off the rush during the regular season at 5.1 per game. Bratt (first) and Hughes (third) were among the top three in the NHL in rush scoring chances per 60 minutes during the regular season (Colorado’s Evan Rodrigues was second), but have combined for just five scoring chances (and no goals) off the rush in the first two games.


Rangers

  • The Rangers won just twice on the road in last season’s Stanley Cup playoffs, which ended for them in Game 6 of the Eastern Conference finals against the Lightning. The Rangers matched that total before the first week of this season’s playoffs ended.

  • Tarasenko has gotten the Rangers on the board with a goal in each of the two games. He is the seventh player in Rangers playoff history, and the first since Steve Vickers in 1978, to open the scoring in two straight games to open a postseason (no Rangers player has done so in three consecutive games).

  • Tarasenko has scored 43 playoff goals since 2014 and ranks third in the league over that span behind only Nikita Kucherov (53) and Palat (48).

  • Kane has been the difference-maker the Rangers had hoped when he was acquired from the Chicago Blackhawks in February. He is seeking to become the first active skater to win four Stanley Cup titles and possibly add another Conn Smythe, which he won in 2013. In Game 2, Kane scored his 53rd career playoff goal, matching Jeremy Roenick for fourth-most on the league’s all-time list among U.S.-born players behind Joe Pavelski (64), Joe Mullen (60) and Mike Modano (58).

  • Kreider has been the story for the Blueshirts, becoming the first player in NHL history with four power-play goals through the first two games of a playoff series. The last skater to have just three PPG through the first two games was Bill Guerin in 1998 with the Edmonton Oilers.

  • The only Rangers skater with five power-play goals in a single playoff series is Adam Graves in the 1996 conference quarterfinals vs. the Canadiens (six games). The NHL record for most PPG in one series is six by Chris Kontos (Los Angeles Kings) in the 1989 division semifinals against the Oilers (seven games). The record for most power-play goals scored in a single playoff run is nine by Mike Bossy (New York Islanders) in 1981 and Cam Neely (Boston Bruins) in 1991.

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Notre Dame could have ‘gone sideways,’ instead it’s still fighting

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Notre Dame could have 'gone sideways,' instead it's still fighting

MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — On Sept. 7, Notre Dame fell to Northern Illinois, a 28-point underdog, in one of the most stunning defeats in the program’s storied history.

The then-No. 5 Fighting Irish not only lost to the Huskies at home, but they were manhandled by a Mid-American Conference program that had never beaten an AP top-10 opponent. Northern Illinois outgained the Irish 388-286 in total yardage, converted twice as many first downs, allowed just two plays longer than 19 yards and blocked two field goals.

For the Fighting Irish, who had won 23-13 at Texas A&M in their opener a week before, their season could have been over as it barely started.

“It could have gone sideways fast,” Notre Dame defensive coordinator Al Golden said.

Four months later, the Fighting Irish are somehow one victory away from capturing their first national championship in 36 years.

Notre Dame defeated Penn State 27-24 on Mitch Jeter‘s 41-yard field goal with seven seconds left in a College Football Playoff semifinal at the Capital One Orange Bowl on Thursday night.

The No. 7 Fighting Irish will play the winner of Friday’s other semifinal between No. 5 Texas and No. 8 Ohio State at the Goodyear Cotton Bowl Classic in the Jan. 20 CFP National Championship presented by AT&T.

The team that couldn’t beat a four-touchdown underdog at home has now won 13 consecutive games — with a chance for one more, the biggest of them all.

“I often tell them, in your lowest moments you find out the most about yourself,” Notre Dame coach Marcus Freeman said. “We’ve had low moments, but we had a really low moment Week 2, and these guys battled. We’ve got great leaders. We’ve got great players that chose to put this university and this football program in front of themselves.”

Notre Dame’s coaches and players credit Freeman, who turned 39 at midnight after the game, with keeping the Irish on track after their stunning loss to Northern Illinois. It was an arduous task for a former defensive coordinator who had never been a head coach until he was promoted on Dec. 3, 2021, to replace Brian Kelly, who left for LSU.

“He handled it magnificently,” Golden said. “Just being in that situation, being in that chair like that, that’s tough. There’s no escape from it, but it never got to the locker room. It never got to the team meeting room. He handled all the stress and all the pressure internally, and was the leader that we all needed at that moment.”

Freeman didn’t want the Fighting Irish to wipe the pain of losing to Northern Illinois from their memory. He wanted them to embrace the adversity to remember that they can never take anything for granted.

Freeman’s message to his team was simple: Keep the pain. Don’t let it go.

“I think it really caused us to lock the locker room door and say, ‘Hey, it’s just us. The people in this room are the only things that matter,'” linebacker Jack Kiser said. “I think Coach Freeman’s message and mentality through the rest of the year kind of echoed that.”

The day after the loss to Northern Illinois, defensive tackle Howard Cross III huddled with Freeman and quarterback Riley Leonard.

“It’s the second game of the season,” Cross told them. “I’m not going to go belly up in the second game of the season. We need to keep pushing.”

The Irish won their next 12 games by an average of 27.5 points. Only one of them, a 31-24 victory over Louisville, was decided by fewer than 10.

After reaching the CFP, Notre Dame defeated Indiana 27-17 in a first-round game on Dec. 20, then Georgia 23-10 in a quarterfinal game at the Allstate Sugar Bowl on Jan. 2.

“I think you learn the most about your team and the guys around you at the lowest points, and we showed who we were after that game,” said receiver Jordan Faison. “After that loss, it was devastating. Everyone felt bad about it, but being able to bounce back kind of shows the team and the grit we’ve got.”

The scar tissue from 124 days ago is what helped the Irish overcome season-ending injuries to several of their best players, including All-American cornerback Benjamin Morrison and star pass rusher Rylie Mills.

It’s what helped them overcome injuries in their victory over Penn State. With the Irish trailing 10-0 late in the first half, Leonard had to leave the game after he was hit by defensive tackle Dvon J-Thomas on an incomplete pass. They lost two starting offensive linemen, left tackle Anthonie Knapp and right guard Rocco Spindler, to injuries as well.

While Leonard was being examined for a potential concussion, backup quarterback Steve Angeli came off the bench and led the Irish on a 13-play scoring drive. Jeter kicked a 41-yard field goal on the final play of the half to make it 10-3.

Angeli had attempted only 28 passes this season before Thursday. He completed 6 of 7 attempts for 44 yards on his lone possession.

“We had a lot of confidence in Steve and what he can do, and we weren’t just going to put him in there to hand the ball off,” Freeman said. “We were going to go to try to score, and we ended up scoring three points.”

Leonard cleared concussion protocol at halftime and returned in the second half. He scored on a 3-yard run on the opening drive to tie the score at 10.

The Irish went ahead 17-10 on Jeremiyah Love‘s 2-yard run on the third play of the fourth quarter. But then Penn State tied the score on Nicholas Singleton’s 7-yard run with 10:20 to play.

After Leonard threw his second interception on the next play, Singleton scored again to give the Nittany Lions a 24-17 lead with 7:55 to play.

With less than five minutes remaining, Leonard threw a 54-yard touchdown to Jaden Greathouse, who was wide open after cornerback Cam Miller fell down. Greathouse juked safety Jaylen Reed and ran into the end zone to tie the score at 24.

Leonard completed 15 of 23 passes for 223 yards with one touchdown and two interceptions. He led the Irish on four scoring drives in the second half.

“He’s a competitor, and competitors find a way to win, and that’s what Riley does,” Freeman said. “That’s what this team does.”

It seemed like the game was headed to overtime after both teams punted in the final minutes.

But with 35 seconds left, Penn State quarterback Drew Allar tried to throw a pass away. Safety Jaylen Sneed hit Allar as he threw, and cornerback Christian Gray intercepted the ball at the Penn State 42 to set up Jeter’s winning field goal.

“That’s what Christian Gray does,” Freeman said. “He makes plays when it matters the most.”

The Fighting Irish will have to make a few more big plays against Ohio State or Texas if they’re going to win their first national championship since 1988. They’ll likely be underdogs in Atlanta, especially if they’re playing the high-powered Buckeyes, but they wouldn’t have it any other way.

“To see how far we’ve come after the hiccup early on, just to know that we have one more guaranteed, one last one guaranteed, it’s just so exciting,” Kiser said.

The Fighting Irish believe they wouldn’t be playing for a national title if they hadn’t been tested like few other teams.

The team that wouldn’t quit somehow keeps winning.

“The time you’re tested the most is when you’re at your lowest point,” Freeman said. “We lose to Northern Illinois and you’ve got a decision: Do I want to be selfless, or am I going to put individual glory ahead of myself? I hope the nation sees no matter what the situation was, this team continues to put Notre Dame in front of [itself].”

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Notre Dame outduels Penn St. to reach CFP final

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Notre Dame outduels Penn St. to reach CFP final

MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — Penn State quarterback Drew Allar said he was trying to throw the ball into the ground. Notre Dame defensive back Christian Gray dove for it anyway and — luck of the Irish — the ball ended up right in his hands.

A few seconds later, Gray and Notre Dame found themselves with a spot in the national title game after a thrill-a-minute 27-24 victory over Penn State on Thursday night in the Orange Bowl.

Gray’s snag of Allar’s ill-advised pass across the middle at the Nittany Lions’ 42 with 33 seconds left set up a 19-yard drive that ended with Mitch Jeter‘s winning 41-yard field goal.

The Irish (14-1), seeded seventh in this, the first 12-team college playoff, will have a chance to bring their 12th title and first since 1988 back under the Golden Dome with a game Jan. 20 in Atlanta. Their opponent will be the winner Friday night of the Texas-Ohio State semifinal in the Cotton Bowl.

“Just catch the ball. Just catch the ball,” Gray said about his interception. “That was going through my mind, and I knew I was going to make a play.”

Allar explained he saw his first two options covered on the play, then wanted to throw the ball into the turf. But the throw, under pressure and across his body, didn’t have enough zip on it to reach either receiver Omari Evans or the ground before Gray slid in.

“Honestly, I was trying to throw it at his feet,” said the junior quarterback, considered by some to be a first-round pick if he leaves for the NFL. “I should’ve thrown it away when I saw the first two progressions were not open. I didn’t execute.”

It was the most memorable play of a game that was the best of what has been a sleepy few weeks of playoff football. It featured three ties, three lead changes and 31 points in the fourth quarter alone.

In the final, Irish coach Marcus Freeman will try to become the first Black head coach to win the title at college football’s highest level. Freeman, whose mother is South Korean, also is the first coach of Asian heritage to get this far.

“We found a way to make a play when it mattered the most,” Freeman said. “In my opinion, great teams, great programs, find a way to do that.”

Penn State coach James Franklin fell to 4-20 with the Nittany Lions against teams ranked in the AP Top 10.

“Everyone wants to look at a specific play,” Franklin said. “But there’s probably eight to 12 plays in that game that could have made a difference. I’m not going to call out specific plays or specific players. There are a ton of plays where we could have done better.”

Notre Dame quarterback Riley Leonard shook off a hit late in the second quarter that sent him to the medical tent to be checked for a concussion. He came back and led the Irish on four scoring drives in the second half, including the last one.

“He’s a competitor and competitors find a way to win, and that’s what Riley does,” Freeman said. “That’s what this team does.”

Leonard finished with 223 yards passing, including a key 10-yard dart to Jaden Greathouse to convert third-and-3 on the last drive. Leonard also had 35 yards rushing, and passed and ran for a score each.

With 4:38 left in the game, the senior quarterback hit Greathouse for a 54-yard score to tie it at 24 after a defender slipped.

The game started slow, but Riley’s injury injected life into things. He led Notre Dame on TD drives of 75 and 72 yards in the third quarter to take a 17-10 lead.

At that point, the fun was just getting started.

Penn State had its chances, and Allar, along with all those Nittany Lions fans, will spend the offseason reliving that last throw — or trying to forget it.

Penn State forced a Notre Dame punt and looked assured of at least going to overtime when it took over at their 15 with 47 seconds left.

After a gain of 13, Allar dropped to pass and had pressure coming. He threw across his body to the middle of the field, where Gray dove for the pick.

A review showed it was a catch, and the Irish were onto the next step on a road that looked all but impossible when they fell 16-14 to Northern Illinois back in September.

Nick Singleton ran for 84 yards and all three Penn State touchdowns. Off target for much of the day, Allar finished 12 for 23 for 135 yards with the interception.

“He’s hurting right now. He should be. We’re all hurting,” Franklin said.

The quarterback didn’t duck questions about the play or his role in the loss.

“We didn’t win the game so it wasn’t good enough, it’s plain and simple,” Allar said. “I’ll try to learn from it, do everything in my power to get better and just grow from it.”

When Leonard went out, backup Steve Angeli came in and injected life into the Fighting Irish offense on the way to its first score.

Angelli went 6 for 7 for 44 yards and moved Notre Dame to field goal range to trim its deficit to 10-3 just before halftime.

“We have a lot of confidence in Steve,” Freeman said when asked why he allowed the Irish to play aggressively when he entered.

The kickoff temperature was 56 degrees, unseasonably cool for South Florida — and making it the second-coldest Orange Bowl ever, next to the Georgia Tech-Iowa game in 2010 that started at 49 and felt like the upper 30s.

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Horns’ Ewers leads ‘new era’ of college football

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Horns' Ewers leads 'new era' of college football

ARLINGTON, Texas — Texas coach Steve Sarkisian said Thursday that quarterback Quinn Ewers, with the emergence of name, image and likeness and the transfer portal, has become the face of this “new era of college football.”

Ewers initially committed to Texas, but he then opted to skip his senior year of high school and reclassify to the 2021 recruiting class before enrolling a year early and joining Ohio State during preseason practice.

Still the nation’s No. 1 ranked overall prospect, Ewers landed one of the first marquee NIL deals worth $1.4 million.

Ewers, who lasted one season with the Buckeyes before transferring to Texas, will square off against Ohio State on Friday night in the Goodyear Cotton Bowl with a trip to the College Football Playoff national championship on the line.

“It’s not been an easy journey for him,” Sarkisian said Thursday. “There’s been ups, there’s been downs, there’s been injuries, there’s been great moments, there’s been tough moments. … But at the end of the day, he’s always stayed true to who he is. The guy’s been a steady sea for us.”

Ewers has been making college football headlines since Ohio State offered him a scholarship when he was just in middle school. This week, Buckeyes coach Ryan Day recalled meeting Ewers for the first time when he was an eighth-grader visiting a Buckeyes football camp.

“He was a boy at the time really, who just had a tremendous release,” Day recalled. “And I remember grabbing him and grabbing his dad and said, ‘Man, you got a bright future ahead of you. I don’t know if this is good or bad, but we’re going to offer you a scholarship to Ohio State.'”

C.J. Stroud, who has since led the Houston Texans to the NFL playoffs, emerged as a star quarterback for the Buckeyes then, prompting Ewers to transfer to Texas.

“Boy, it was strange how it all shook out,” Day said. “He decided he really wanted to play. And it was disappointing for us, but we certainly understood. From afar I’ve watched him. He’s a really good player. He comes from a great family, and he’s had a great career at Texas and a lot of people here still have good relationships with him and think the world of him.”

At Texas, Ewers has started in 27 wins and led the Longhorns to back-to-back playoff appearances. This season, he has thrown for 3,189 yards and 29 touchdowns with 11 interceptions.

Ewers noted that the “coolest part” of the NIL era is being able to provide for his parents. He has even hired his mom, making her CFO of his finances while giving her a salary.

“Which is nice just because all the effort and work they put into me growing up,” he said. “I mean, when we were living in South Texas, they both quit their jobs and moved up to Southlake [to support Ewers’ budding athletic career].”

Whatever happens in the playoff — whether it be a loss Friday or a national championship victory against the winner of Notre DamePenn State on Jan. 20 — Ewers’ career at Texas figures to be coming to a close.

Though Ewers still has one season of eligibility remaining, blue-chip quarterback prospect Arch Manning appears primed to finally take over in Austin next season.

Manning, the nephew of NFL quarterback greats Peyton and Eli Manning, who could become the No. 1 overall prospect for the 2026 NFL draft, has backed up Ewers for two seasons waiting for his opportunity. Sarkisian even momentarily benched Ewers in favor of Manning during Texas’ 30-15 loss to Georgia on Oct. 19.

Still, Ewers figures to have options.

ESPN football analyst Mel Kiper Jr. ranks him as the No. 6 quarterback prospect eligible for the upcoming draft. Rumors have also emerged recently that Ewers could put off the NFL for another year and transfer to a third school for millions more in NIL money.

Amid those distractions, Ewers has thrived in the playoff bouncing back from oblique and ankle injuries from earlier in the year to complete 69% of his passes with four touchdowns in Texas’ two victories.

In the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl quarterfinal, Ewers tossed 29- and 25-yard touchdown passes in the overtimes, lifting Texas to the 39-31 win over Arizona State.

“I’ve just been proud of him,” Sarkisian said, “because he’s found a source for him that has been a motivating factor, where he can play free and play loose and play confident.”

Ewers added that, whatever the future holds, even contemplating it now would be “selfish,” with a national title still in reach for him and the Longhorns.

“I owe my teammates the best version of me right now,” he said. “I can’t be looking forward or I’ll trip on the rock that’s sitting right in front of me. I’ve got to be locked in on what’s right here.”

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