Palmieri scores OT winner as Isles down Penguins to take Game 1
Crosby picks up 69th career playoff goal in losing effort with sublime deflection
The New York Islanders brought Kyle Palmieri home at the trade deadline believing his mix of grit and scoring touch would make a difference in the playoffs.
So far, so very good.
Palmieri knocked a fluttering puck past Tristan Jarry 16:30 into overtime to give the Islanders a 4-3 victory over Pittsburgh in Game 1 of their first-round series on Sunday.
The Long Island native collected a pass from Jean-Gabriel Pageau near the goal line and lifted it over Jarry's left shoulder as New York beat the Penguins for the first time in five tries at PPG Paints Arena this season.
"I was brought here to try to help this team win," Palmieri said. "Obviously, it's just one game. Tomorrow, we'll get back to work and get ready for Game 2. But it's nice to start off on the right foot."
Pageau and Brock Nelson also scored for the Islanders. Rookie goaltender Ilya Sorokin made 39 saves in his playoff debut and New York handed Pittsburgh its 10th loss in the franchise's last 11 postseason games.
WATCH | Stanley Cup Playoff preview: East Division:
Game 2 is Tuesday night in Pittsburgh.
Sidney Crosby, Frederick Gaudreau and Kasperi Kapanen scored for the Penguins, but the East Division champions couldn't capitalize despite controlling play for most of the first two periods.
Jarry finished with 37 saves but had issues with his glove side. All four of New York goals sailed over, around or seemingly through Jarry's left arm, though Pittsburgh coach Mike Sullivan declined to place blame for the loss at the feet of a netminder making just his second playoff start.
The Islanders came in on their heels after finishing the regular season in a 6-6-3 funk, with none of the victories coming against playoff qualifiers.
In the end, it ultimately didn't matter. Sorokin — just the second rookie goaltender in Islanders history to start the first game of the postseason — played spectacularly at times while filling in for injured Semyon Varlamov to help New York steal home-ice advantage.
"He's a goalie, he's a person, that has a lot of confidence and is super calm," Pageau said of Sorokin. "You see him in practice, he's a competitive guy. ... He's a huge part of that win tonight."
Even if it didn't seem as if it would go that way at the outset.
The 25-year-old Russian appeared a little shaky early. While Palmieri gave the Islanders the early lead with a wrist shot from the right circle that Jarry couldn't snag, Gaudreau tied it 11:10 into the first when he collected a rebound off his own shot and ripped it by Sorokin.
Crosby then picked up his 69th career playoff goal — and 190th career postseason point — with a sublime deflection in which he fended off New York defenseman Andy Greene and redirected the puck with just the tip of his stick.
The goal — which moved Crosby into a tie with Hall of Famer Brett Hull for seventh on the NHL's career postseason scoring list — gave the Penguins a 2-1 lead 3:47 into the second.
"Just tried to get my stick on it," Crosby said. "Didn't know which way it was going to go. Fortunately, [Brian Dumoulin] put it in a good spot."
Sorokin responded by settling in and giving his teammates time to collect themselves. New York eventually found its footing, playing the heavy, thudding game favored by coach Barry Trotz. The Islanders pinned the Penguins down in their own end and kept firing away at Jarry.
Malkin did not play in Game 1
Pageau's wrist shot from the left circle zipped over Jarry's glove 3:33 into the third to tie it and when Nelson knuckled the puck by Jarry, the Islanders appeared ready to steal the series opener.
Kapanen, however, responded less than a minute later. His fifth career playoff goal with 3:39 remaining shook the Penguins out of their doldrums and forced the extra period.
The teams traded chances for most of overtime until Palmieri found room down low to end the longest-ever playoff game in six all-time series between the two clubs.
The Penguins played without Russian star Evgeni Malkin. The three-time Stanley Cup winner missed 23 games during the regular season with a lower-body injury but did appear in Pittsburgh's final four games.
He was limited at times during practice last week and did not take the ice for pregame warmups. The Penguins — who went 17-4-2 without him — hardly appeared bothered while dominating the first 30 minutes or so.
Yet Sorokin's play allowed New York to stick around and Palmieri's quick hands did the rest.
"I know [Palmieri] probably put a little new pressure during the regular season when he joined us," Trotz said. "We knew that when the games got tight and you have to go to the dirty areas, a guy like him is capable of producing. He was able to do that tonight."