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NEW YORK — New Jersey Devils coach Lindy Ruff blamed a parade of penalties for breaking his team’s early momentum in Game 6, as the New York Rangers pushed their Eastern Conference first-round series to a seventh game after a 5-2 win on Saturday night.

“I thought the penalties took our best players away from the game. They had to spend too much time on the bench. That hurt us,” said Ruff, who watched the Rangers knot up the series at three games apiece.

The Devils’ discipline was one reason they entered Game 6 with a chance to eliminate the Rangers. In the first three games of the series, they handed New York 15 power-play opportunities; in the next two games, the Rangers had only five power plays combined.

But in Game 6, the Devils reverted to taking too many penalties and too many of them in the offensive zone. New Jersey was whistled for four minor penalties in the first 23:20 of Game 6.

“The penalties hurt us. Some of the calls I didn’t like, but you have to get through them,” Ruff said.

Those calls led to a Rangers power-play goal from Chris Kreider that tied the score 1-1 in the first period, giving New York its first goal with the man advantage since Game 2.

But more importantly, those penalties kept the Devils busy on special teams rather than building on the 5-on-5 play that saw them control the early part of the first period at Madison Square Garden.

“I think the first period we started really well. They didn’t have much at all,” Devils captain Nico Hischier said. “If you take penalties, that’s how you’re going to help them get into the game.”

The Rangers played desperate hockey and earned the win. Coach Gerard Gallant said the talk before the game was about “getting hungry” in the offensive zone. He made a series of changes to his lineup, including moving Vladimir Tarasenko up to play with Mika Zibanejad and Kreider, and most paid off.

“They battled hard. They competed hard. They got to the blue paint and scored some goals,” Gallant said.

The Devils got on the board first at 11:49 of the opening period as their fourth line generated a goal. Defenseman Kevin Bahl blasted a shot that Igor Shesterkin (34 saves) stopped, but forward Curtis Lazar was there to send home the rebound for his first of the playoffs.

The Rangers struck back at 19:35 of the first period, scoring on the power play for the first time since Game 2. Zibanejad’s shot deflected off forward Kreider and into the net. It was Kreider’s sixth goal of the playoffs and his fifth on the power play.

“They got puck luck on that goal,” Ruff said. “You deal with it and move on.”

Zibanejad finally connected for a goal of his own in the second period to break the 1-1 tie. As the Rangers forechecked in the Devils’ zone, New Jersey left Zibanejad alone in the slot and Kreider found him with a pass. He blasted a shot past Devils goalie Akira Schmid at 10:10 to give the Rangers their first lead since Game 2.

Tarasenko made it 3-1 at 18:25 of third period, as Schmid was beaten from the slot again. The onslaught continued for the Rangers in the third period, as the Devils could never get to their game. Barclay Goodrow scored his first of the series after the puck bounced off Schmid’s pad.

Schmid was pulled after Braden Schneider scored from the blue line to make it 5-1. Dawson Mercer of the Devils made it 5-2 with a late power-play goal.

Ruff said after the game that he pulled Schmid to “buy some time” for his players rather than use a timeout. But he didn’t definitively say whether Schmid would start Game 7, as Games 1 and 2 starter Vitek Vanecek — the Devils’ primary goaltender in the regular season — finished off Game 6.

Schmid was asked if he had done enough in the Devils’ three straight wins before Game 6 to earn the start in Game 7.

“It’s a tough question. Obviously, you try to prove yourself every day,” he said. “I mean, both of us I guess deserve the spot. And [third goaltender] Mackenzie [Blackwood] too. So we’ll see.”

Game 7 is Monday night at Prudential Center. For the Rangers, it’s another chance to rally from a 3-2 deficit to win a series, which is what they did in the first two rounds of the 2022 Eastern Conference playoffs. Gallant said his players learned from those comeback wins.

“They got some character and pride, and they didn’t like the way the last three games went,” Gallant said. “Obviously, we got outplayed. So tonight was a chance to redeem ourselves a little bit.”

For the Devils, it’s another chance to put their archrivals away after whiffing on one in Game 6.

“It definitely sucks right now, but I think effort was there,” Hischier said. “I don’t think it was a bad game at all. So we’ve got to take the good things out of here and see these guys in Newark.”

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Rangers fire Laviolette after missing postseason

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Rangers fire Laviolette after missing postseason

Once again, the New York Rangers are in search of a new head coach with the club announcing Saturday they have fired Peter Laviolette.

Dismissing Laviolette, who had a year remaining on his contract, comes just days after the Rangers completed what became a trying season that ended Thursday with the team failing to make the playoffs despite reaching the Eastern Conference Finals last season.

In addition to moving on from Laviolette, the Rangers also parted ways with associate coach Phil Housley.

This now means the Rangers are searching for their fourth coach since 2021 with Laviolette joining a list of fired bench bosses that includes David Quinn and Gerard Gallant.

“Today I informed Peter Laviolette and Phil Housley that we’re making a coaching change,” Rangers general manager Chris Drury said in a statement. “I want to thank them both and wish them and their families all the best going forward. Peter is first class all the way, both professionally and personally, and I am truly grateful for his passion and dedication to the Rangers in his time as head coach.”

Laviolette, who won a Stanley Cup as head coach of the Carolina Hurricanes back in 2005-06, was hired at the start of the 2023-24 season. He guided the Rangers to a 55-win season that also saw them lead the league with 114 points. They would advance to the Eastern Conference Finals where they lost to the eventual Stanley Cup champion Florida Panthers in six games.

Entering this season, the Rangers were once again among those teams that was expected to challenge for a Stanley Cup. They catapulted to a 12-4-1 start only to then lose five straight games, which started them down a path of struggling to find consistency.

By December, the Rangers made it known they were open for business. They traded captain Jacob Trouba, who had one year remaining on his contract, to the Anaheim Ducks. Less than two weeks later, they traded one-time prized prospect forward Kaapo Kakko to the Seattle Kraken in exchange for defenseman Will Borgen.

On Jan. 31, the Rangers signaled their intent for a playoff push when they re-acquired J.T. Miller in a trade with the Vancouver Canucks. The Rangers kept going with their roster reshuffle as the trade deadline drew closer. They traded defenseman Ryan Lindgren to the Colorado Avalanche and forward Reilly Smith back to the Vegas Golden Knights while getting defenseman Carson Soucy from the Canucks.

Even with those changes, the Rangers would lose four straight in early March before having two more stretches of three-game losing streaks which saw them fail to gain any sort of grasp in the Eastern Conference wild-card race.

Sources told ESPN’s Emily Kaplan that the Rangers would like to interview several candidates from outside of the organization, including Mike Sullivan and Rick Tocchet if they are available, Joel Quenneville, John Tortorella, Jay Woodcroft, Jay Leach and David Carle.

The Rangers’ firing Laviolette comes hours after the Ducks announced they had fired Greg Cronin. It now leaves the NHL with five head coaching vacancies with the Boston Bruins, Chicago Blackhawks and Philadelphia Flyers ending the regular season with interim coaches in place.

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Report: PWHL taps Vancouver as expansion city

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Report: PWHL taps Vancouver as expansion city

The PWHL’s first expansion team will be based in Vancouver with an announcement scheduled for next week, a person with knowledge of the decision confirmed to The Associated Press on Friday.

The person spoke on the condition of anonymity because the league has not revealed its plans. The Province newspaper in Vancouver first reported the city being selected for PWHL expansion.

On hold for now is the league announcing a second expansion city, with Seattle being considered, the person said. The league has other candidates for expansion if discussions break down with officials in Seattle, the person added.

The Vancouver expansion announcement is expected to be made Wednesday, with media invited to attend a news conference billed as being an “historic announcement for sport in Vancouver and British Columbia.” The new team is expected to be based out of the Pacific Coliseum, the former home of the NHL Canucks.

The PWHL declined to verify any details by saying: “We’re continuing to finalize decisions related to expansion and look forward to sharing more details soon.”

The six-team league is in the midst of completing its second season and has spent the past six months evaluating more than 20 markets for the potential to expand by as many as two franchises.

The decision to select Vancouver meets several key criteria for the women’s pro league founded by Dodgers owner Mark Walter, who serves as the PWHL’s financial backer, and tennis icon Billie Jean King in June 2023.

Aside from being a large market, the region has a growing girls’ hockey base, which was evident in January, when a PWHL neutral site game in Vancouver drew a sellout crowd of 19,038 — the fourth-largest turnout for a league game.

Geography also plays a factor with the league seeking to broaden its reach across North America. The league currently has five teams — New York, Boston, Montreal, Ottawa and Toronto — based in the northeast, and one in St. Paul, Minnesota.

PWHL officials have privately expressed concern of a start-up pro women’s league being launched on the West Coast.

Adding an expansion team in Seattle would make the most sense in part because of its proximity to Vancouver, while also already home to two pro women’s teams, the WNBA Storm and NWSL Reign FC. The PWHL’s neutral site game in Seattle in January drew a crowd of 12,608.

Other potential markets include Denver, Detroit and Quebec City, though it’s more likely the PWHL would desire a second expansion team based in the U.S.

The PWHL’s nine-city Takeover Tour of neutral games this season drew 123,601 fans in helping the league top the 1 million mark in attendance last month.

The PWHL’s regular season resumes next week — with each team having three games left — following a three-week break coinciding with the women’s world championships being held in Czechia (Czech Republic). The four-team playoffs are set to open in the first week of May.

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Ruff earns 900th win in Sabres’ season finale

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Ruff earns 900th win in Sabres' season finale

BUFFALO, N.Y. — Ryan McLeod scored a goal and added two assists, and Lindy Ruff became the NHL’s fifth coach to reach 900 wins in the Buffalo Sabres 5-4 victory over the Philadelphia Flyers in each team’s season finale Thursday night.

Ruff joined Florida‘s Paul Maurice (916 wins) as the NHL’s only active coaches with 900 or more wins. In his second stint coaching the Sabres, Ruff ranks second with 607 victories with one team, behind only Al Arbour, who had 740 with the Islanders.

Scotty Bowman (1,244), Joel Quenneville (969) and Barry Trotz (914) are the other coaches with at least 900 wins.

“It just means I’ve coached a lot of hockey games, had a lot of good players and a lot of good coaches and management that put a lot of trust in me,” Ruff said. “It isn’t about me, it’s about the teams that I’ve had and the people around me.”

Alex Tuch, JJ Peterka and Jack Quinn had a goal and assist each, and Peyton Krebs scored a short-handed goal for Buffalo. James Reimer made 21 saves for his eighth win in 10 starts to finish the season 10-10-2.

Flyers rookie Matvei Michkov snapped a six-game goal drought by scoring twice and Tyson Foerster and Bobby Brink had a goal and assist. Rookie Aleksei Kolosov stopped 26 shots, and the loss secured Philadelphia finishing last in the Eastern Conference standings for the second time in team history.

After nearly blowing a 4-1 second-period lead, McLeod sealed the win with an empty-netter with 48 seconds left in a game the Sabres never trailed.

Information from the Associated Press was used in this report.

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