Advertisement
Advertisement
Pittsburgh Penguins’ Conor Sheary celebrates after scoring the game-winning goal to defeat the San Jose Sharks 2-1 in game two of the 2016 NHL Stanley Cup Finals. Photo: AFP

Penguins march on: Pittsburgh take 2-0 Stanley Cup lead with overtime win against San Jose Sharks

Conor Sheary scored an overtime winner to lift the Penguins to a 2-1 victory over the Sharks in game two of the Stanley Cup final on Wednesday night and a 2-0 lead in the series

Conor Sheary started the season in the minor leagues.

Safe to say the Pittsburgh rookie is not heading back there anytime soon. If ever.

Sheary’s shot from just inside the left circle zipped by Martin Jones’ glove and into the net 2:35 into overtime to give the Penguins a 2-1 victory over the San Jose Sharks on Wednesday night and a 2-0 lead in the Stanley Cup Final. Game three is Sunday morning (Hong Kong time) in San Jose.

Sharks defenceman Justin Braun tied it with 4:05 left in regulation but San Jose fell to 0-4 when pushed to overtime in the play-offs. Sidney Crosby won a face off in the San Jose zone and dropped it to Kris Letang. Letang feigned a shot and instead fed it to Sheary, who quickly whipped it by Jones for his fourth of the postseason and second of the series.

Phil Kessel picked up his 10th goal of the play-offs for Pittsburgh and Matt Murray made 21 saves to help the Penguins moved within two victories of their fourth championship.

Phil Kessel scores to put the Penguins in front. Photo: AFP

The Sharks blamed themselves for their shaky start in game one, with defenceman Brent Burns admitting the spectacle of playing the franchise’s first Finals led to spending a large portion of the first period standing around and watching the Penguins take an early lead on the way to an eventual 3-2 victory.

Burns and his teammates promised repeatedly they would be sharper and more focused faced with the prospect of heading home in a 2-0 hole, pointing to their 5-1 record this postseason in games immediately following a loss as proof of their resilience.

While the Sharks were better on Wednesday, the sustained push the Penguins were expecting from the western conference champions failed to materialise until it was nearly too late. Pittsburgh did the two things that have been the club’s hallmark since coach Mike Sullivan took over for Mike Johnston in mid-December, controlling the puck and forcing San Jose to go a full 200 feet to create chances.

Most of the night, the Sharks struggled to make it halfway there.

Pittsburgh’s forecheck made San Jose labour just to get the puck in the offensive zone and once there, the Penguins kept throwing black-and-gold glad bodies in the way.
Pittsburgh’s Matt Murray tends goal during the first period against the San Jose Sharks in game two of the 2016 NHL Stanley Cup Final. Photo: AFP

San Jose stressed the way to get pressure on the 22-year-old Murray was by creating second chances. The Sharks instead were often one and one, if they managed to get the puck on the net at all. Outside of three separate shots from Tomas Hertl that clanked off the post and out of harm’s way, Murray was rarely tested for the first 50 minutes.

Still, it took time for Pittsburgh’s heady and hectic play to translate into a goal, with the group that’s been Pittsburgh’s best line for the last three months finally breaking through against Jones just before the midway point.

Thrust together as an experiment when Evgeni Malkin went out with a left elbow injury in mid-February, Kessel, Carl Hagelin and Nick Bonino have rapidly evolved into Pittsburgh’s most dangerous line during the postseason. They began the night with 90 combined points in 34 games, and added to it during another typically aggressive shift when Hagelin stripped it from San Jose defenceman Roman Polak and slipped it to Bonino in the slot.
Pittsburgh fans cheer as their team takes a 2-0 lead in the Stanley Cup final. Photo: AFP

Bonino, who put in the game one winner with 2:33 remaining from a similar spot, slipped it to Kessel on the door step. The pass was heading for the net but Kessel nudged it in anyway just to be sure.

It appeared as if it would be enough to wrap things up in regulation until Braun found a moment of joy in the midst of a difficult time for his family. Braun’s father-in-law, former Flames and Blackhawks centre Tom Lysiak, died Monday following a lengthy fight with leukaemia.

Braun remained with the team, pledging to pay his respects to Lysiak before game three. His second career play-off goal – a shot from just outside the top of the right circle that made its way under Murray’s glove and off the post before crossing the line to give the Sharks a needed jolt with their chances at a first championships teetering.

The momentum didn’t last and San Jose headed home down two games. Only five teams in the history of the Stanley Cup Final have managed to dig out of a 2-0 hole to win.

Post