Unreal! Crosby can get away with murder. It's disgusting. @NHL @penguins #stanleycup pic.twitter.com/ya4wHUz1Hj
— Blueshirtsnation.com (@NYRangerFanclub) June 9, 2017
Bad-tempered blowout puts Pittsburgh Penguins on cusp of Stanley Cup victory against Nashville Predators
Six different players scored and Sidney Crosby had three assists as the Penguins thrashed the Predators 6-0 in game five
Pekka Rinne’s struggles in Pittsburgh have his Nashville Predators on the brink of elimination.
The Penguins overwhelmed Rinne and the Predators again, sending Nashville’s star goaltender to the bench in Pittsburgh for a second straight game in the Stanley Cup final. He was pulled after the first period by coach Peter Laviolette after surrendering half the goals in a 6-0 rout by the Penguins in foul-tempered game five on Thursday night.
The Predators are in a 3-2 hole with game six coming up Sunday night in Nashville.
“It wasn’t good,” Laviolette said. “It’s not the first period that we were looking for and it didn’t really get much better after that. Definitely things we could’ve done better defensively.”
Nashville rallied from a 2-0 deficit to tie the best-of-seven series and the home team has won all five games. Nashville are also a comfortable 9-1 in the play-offs at home, and teams that lost game five of a tied final have won the Stanley Cup four of the last eight times, including Pittsburgh in 2009.
But the Predators had little to enjoy from this one.
Phil Kessel scored his eighth of the play-offs and added two assists, while Sidney Crosby tallied three assists. Evgeni Malkin scored his 10th and had an assist, while Ron Hainsey also had a goal and an assist. Justin Schultz, Bryan Rust and Conor Sheary also scored for the Penguins, who have outscored Nashville 15-4 in Pittsburgh.
Rinne made six saves on nine shots, while Juuse Saros, making his second career play-off appearance, stopped 12 shots.
Rinne, the play-off leader in wins and goals-against average, rebounded in a big way for games three and four in Nashville, limiting Pittsburgh to a just two goals on 52 shots as the Predators evened the series.
But Rinne struggled again Thursday in Pittsburgh, a place where he’s never started and won in six career games. He gave up two goals in the first 6:43 of the game and it never got better.
“We’ve got to be better in front of him. ... I don’t think that necessarily they were bad goals,” Laviolette said. “Our guys have a tremendous amount of confidence him. We just have to do a better job in front of him.”
Rust beat Rinne to the glove side with a backhander a little more than five minutes later and Malkin made it 3-0 with 10.2 seconds left in the first period.
Saros relieved Rinne to start the second, but Pittsburgh upped its lead to 4-0 just 1:19 into the period on Sheary’s goal from Crosby. Kessel scored his first in six games, making it 5-0 later in the period, while Hainsey capped Pittsburgh’s second three-goal period of the game.