Hockey Night Punjabi aces another ‘Bonino! Bonino! Bonino!’ game-winning call

Take a deep breath and say it with the Hockey Night Punjabi crew: "Bonino! Bonino! Bonino! Bonino! Bonino! Bonino!"

Pittsburgh Penguins forward Nick Bonino scored the game-winning goal in Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final on Monday, and the call is now taking on a life of its own. The Pens themselves have taken notice:

Bonino now has four goals and 12 assists in the playoffs, while only notching nine goals and 20 assists during the regular season.

He was clearly waiting for spring.

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Penguins’ Sullivan: Sidney Crosby was a ‘force out there all night’

After his team's 3-2 Game 1 victory over the San Jose Sharks, Pittsburgh Penguins head coach Mike Sullivan lauded captain Sidney Crosby for his exceptional effort Monday.

"You can see his hunger to win. It's inspiring," Sullivan said of his star forward in a post-game interview. "I thought he was a force out there all night."

Crosby dominated in 20:40 of ice time, firing four shots on goal and recording an incredible assist on Conor Sheary's goal that doubled the Penguins' lead midway through the first period.

"Every time he jumps over the boards, we feel like he's a threat to score, just a threat as far as putting pressure on our opponent's defense," Sullivan continued. "He has that twinkle in his eye."

With Crosby firing on all cylinders, the Penguins' offense becomes even more difficult to handle, which could spell trouble for the Sharks as the Stanley Cup Final wears on.

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Penguins’ Rust day to day after ‘blindside hit to the head’

The Pittsburgh Penguins came away with a big 3-2 victory over the San Jose Sharks in Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final, but it came at a price.

Playoff sensation Bryan Rust left Monday's game after a high hit from Sharks forward Patrick Marleau, and is listed as day to day with an upper body injury.

Penguins coach Mike Sullivan was less than enthused about the collision.

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Watch: Penguins’ Bonino nets eventual Game 1 winner

The San Jose Sharks and Pittsburgh Penguins were tied 2-2 late in the third period in Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final when Nick Bonino provided some late-game heroics.

The 28-year-old flicked his fourth goal of the playoffs and second game-winner over the right shoulder of Martin Jones, with just under three minutes remaining.

Bonino added to his reputation as a clutch playoff performer by recording the fifth postseason game-winner of his career - with his last four all coming in either the final three minutes of regulation or overtime, according to ESPN.

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Penguins edge Sharks in thrilling Game 1 of Stanley Cup Final

PITTSBURGH - Nick Bonino's main job for the Pittsburgh Penguins is to get to the front of the net and create chaos. The well-bearded forward executed perfectly in his debut in the Stanley Cup Final.

Bonino took a pretty feed from the corner by Kris Letang and beat Martin Jones from in close with 2:33 remaining to lift the Penguins to a 3-2 victory over the San Jose Sharks in Game 1 on Monday night.

Rookies Bryan Rust and Conor Sheary staked Pittsburgh to an early two-goal lead before the Sharks tied it in the second period on goals by Tomas Hertl and Patrick Marleau. The Penguins responded by upping the pressure in the final period and it paid off with Bonino's fourth goal of the playoffs after he darted to the San Jose net in time to knuckle Letang's pass by Jones for the winner.

Game 2 is Wednesday night in Pittsburgh.

Matt Murray finished with 24 saves for Pittsburgh, which began its bid for the fourth title in franchise history by peppering Jones constantly in the first and final periods. Jones made 38 stops but couldn't get his blocker on Bonino's wrist shot. The Penguins threw 41 shots at Jones, well over the 28 he faced on average during San Jose's playoff run.

The Sharks made it to the first Stanley Cup Final in franchise history by rebuilding themselves on the fly. Two years removed from a brutal collapse from a 3-0 series lead in the first round against Los Angeles, San Jose ended a 9,005 day wait to play in the NHL's championship round by relying on a tough, aggressive style that squeezes opponents with a relentless forecheck while limiting chances in front of Jones.

Yet veterans Marleau and Joe Thornton - the top two picks in the 1997 draft held in Pittsburgh who had waited nearly two decades to make it to the league's biggest stage - insisted the Sharks were hardly satisfied after dispatching St. Louis in a cathartic Western Conference finals.

Maybe, but the Sharks looked a step slow - maybe two steps slow - while searching for their footing against the Penguins, who rallied from a 3-2 deficit to edge the Tampa Bay Lightning in seven games to advance to their first Cup Final since 2009.

Rust, who surprisingly made the team out of training camp and became an unlikely playoff star by scoring both of Pittsburgh's goals in Game 7 against the Lightning, gave the Penguins the lead 12:46 into the first when he slammed home a rebound off a Justin Schultz shot for his sixth of the postseason, a franchise record for playoff goals by a rookie.

Less than a minute later Sheary, who didn't become a regular until the middle of January, made it 2-0 when Sidney Crosby whipped a blind backhand cross-ice pass to Sheary's stick. The rookie's wrist shot from the right circle zipped by Jones and the Penguins appeared to be in complete command by overwhelming the Sharks in a way few have in months.

San Jose and its group of Cup newcomers regained its composure in the intermission and responded with a big surge. Hertl jammed a shot from just outside the crease between Murray's legs on the power play 3:02 into the second to give the Sharks momentum. Late in the second, Marleau collected a rebound off a Brent Burns one-timer behind the Pittsburgh net and then beat Murray on a wraparound to the far post that caromed off Murray's extended right leg and into the net.

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Penguins’ Rust leaves game after high hit from Sharks’ Marleau

The Stanley Cup Final has its first questionable hit, and it involved a pair of goal-scorers from earlier in Game 1.

San Jose Sharks forward Patrick Marleau was given a two-minute minor for an illegal check to the head of Pittsburgh Penguins forward Bryan Rust, whose head jolted back as a result of the third-period hit.

Following a brief trip to his team's dressing room, Rust returned to the game. He managed to play for one shift before heading back down the tunnel, ending his night for good.

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Watch: Marleau ties it up in his 1st Cup Final game

Patrick Marleau has waited his entire career for this.

In his first appearance in a Stanley Cup Final, Marleau - the longest serving member of the San Jose Sharks - buried a crafty wraparound to knot the score at 2-2 in the second period.

San Jose erased a 2-0 deficit, and tilted the ice for a 13-8 shot advantage in the second frame after being outshot 15-4 in the first.

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