Sidney Crosby steers Penguins to 2-0 series lead | CBC Sports - Action News
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Sidney Crosby steers Penguins to 2-0 series lead

Sidney Crosby had a goal and two assists, Marc-Andre Fleury stayed sharp in his second straight playoff start and the Pittsburgh Penguins pulled away for a 4-1 victory over the Columbus Blue Jackets on Friday night in Game 2 of their first-round playoff series.

Pittsburgh star tallies 3 points in win over Columbus

Crosby powers Penguins in Game 2 win over Blue Jackets

8 years ago
Duration 0:27
Sidney Crosby had a goal and two assists in Pittsburgh's 4-1 win over Columbus. The Penguins take a 2-0 series lead with the victory.

Mike Sullivan's decision to throw together Sidney Crosby, Conor Sheary and Jake Guentzel was two parts pragmatism and one part experimentation.

The Pittsburgh Penguins were banged up in mid-March and needed a spark. So Sullivan put the best player in the game alongside a couple of 20-somethings who make up for in energy and intelligence what they lack in pedigree.

"Sid and the Kids" are growing up on the job. And the defending Stanley Cup champions are only too happy to ride the wave.

Crosby had a goal and two assists, Guentzel scored his first NHL playoff goal. and Sheary added a brilliant secondary assist as the Penguins rolled by the frustrated Columbus Blue Jackets 4-1 on Friday in Game 2 of their first-round series.

"When they're in that offensive zone, they're as dangerous an offensive line as there is in the game for me," Sullivan said.

Sure looked like it. Sheary's determination set up Crosby's 50th playoff goal to give Pittsburgh a first-period lead and Guentzel buried a cross-ice pass from Crosby to put the Penguins ahead near the game's midpoint as the Penguins went up 2-0 in the best-of-seven series.

"I'm trying to keep up with them for the most part," Crosby said. "They're pretty fast and they have a lot of skill. I think we're just trying to read off each other. This time of year there's not a lot of time and space but tonight we were able to get a good number of chances. It was good to see some go in."

Evgeni Malkin scored his first goal of the post-season, and Patric Hornqvist pushed in an empty-net goal. Marc-Andre Fleury finished with 39 saves while filling in for the injured Matt Murray, and received plenty of help. The Penguins blocked 23 shots before they even got to their goaltender.

Columbus can't cash in

Brandon Saad scored for Columbus, and Sergei Bobrovsky stopped 28 shots but the Blue Jackets continued to have issues offensively. Columbus has scored more than three goals just once in its last 13 games.

"We played the game we wanted to, we just weren't able to bury our chances and they did," Blue Jackets forward Brandon Dubinsky said.

Fleury admitted to some jitters when he was suddenly thrust into the lineup with barely 20 minutes to prepare after Murray was a late scratch before Game 1 with a lower-body injury and responded with a 31-save masterpiece. Murray is out indefinitely, returning Fleury to the spot he held for a decade while becoming the winningest goaltender in franchise history.

His club-record 102nd playoff appearance looked an awful lot like his 101st, when he held the Blue Jackets in check during an early push then waited for NHL's best offence to find its footing.

The awakening came earlier than in the series opener. Crosby turned Pittsburgh's first shot of the game into a 1-0 lead , though he had the easy part: settling the puck at the doorstep then flipping it home. Sheary did the hard part: poke-checking the puck away from Bobrovsky behind the Columbus net and getting it to Guentzel in front. Guentzel then slid it to Crosby and the Penguins were in control.

"I thought if I could get on [Bobrovsky]quick he'd have to make a quick decision," Sheary said. "He eventually just held onto it and I was able to create a turnover."

Calvert loses his cool

Columbus, one of the more physical teams in the league, briefly lost its cool late. Forward Matt Calvert cross-checked Pittsburgh's Tom Kuhnhackl across the head with the game well out of reach late. Boone Jenner and Scott Harrington received misconduct penalties after the final horn.

Not that it bothered coach John Tortorella, who has 48 hours to revive the Blue Jackets' chances of winning its first playoff series in franchise history.

"I don't have one [complaint]about the team," Tortorella said. "Not one. Anxious to get our suits on again and get back in the building."