Blackhawks’ Panarin scores 2nd-period buzzer beater

That's not how the St. Louis Blues wanted to end the second period Thursday.

Already trailing by one, the home team allowed a late goal from Artemi Panarin of the Chicago Blackhawks, assisted beautifully by Patrick Kane.

The box score will read 19:59, but it was even closer to the buzzer than that.

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Ducks roll over Predators, knot series at 2

NASHVILLE, Tenn. - Nate Thompson and Jamie McGinn scored nearly 2 minutes apart late in the second period, and the Anaheim Ducks beat the Nashville Predators 4-1 on Thursday night to even up their first-round series at 2-2.

Ryan Getzlaf and Andrew Cogliano also scored as the road team stayed perfect in this best-of-seven series.

Goalie Frederik Andersen picked up his second straight win by making 30 saves and setting a career shutout streak of 91 minutes, 26 seconds.

Mike Fisher scored his first goal of the series.

Nashville lost a 2-0 series lead despite outshooting the Ducks for a second straight game, this time with a 31-25 edge in shots. But the Predators went 0 of 6 with the man advantage and are 1 of 19 on the power play in this series against the NHL's best penalty killers in the regular season.

Game 5 is Saturday in Anaheim.

The Predators, who use country star Tim McGraw's hit ''I Like It, I Love It'' as their goal song, brought McGraw before the puck dropped to wave a towel and rile up the home crowd. The Predators certainly started playing with more energy than in Game 3.

But Anaheim just missed out on the Stanley Cup finals last spring after losing Game 7 on its own ice, and these Ducks have been through plenty of adversity this season after being 16 points back in the Pacific before rallying to win the division.

Getzlaf put the Ducks up 1-0 just 62 seconds into the game when he poked the puck past Rinne off a shot from David Perron. Coming off his 3-0 shutout in Game 3, Andersen stopped the seven shots the Ducks didn't block in the first period. That gave him a career-high 80-minute shutout streak in the postseason and Anaheim a 1-0 lead after the first period.

The Predators dominated in the second, pressuring Andersen with shot after shot. Finally, Fisher scored his first goal of the series on a snap shot from the right side off a pass from Colin Wilson, beating Andersen to the far side of the net at 11:26 to tie it up.

At that point, Nashville outshot Anaheim 12-1 only to see the Ducks close out the period.

Thompson, stopped twice earlier in the period by Rinne, put a wrister past the Nashville goalie to put Anaheim up 2-1 at 17:04 for his second goal of the series. Then McGinn tapped in a rebound off Chris Stewart's shot at 18:56 for a 3-1 lead.

The Ducks killed off two more penalties in the third, helping Andersen by blocking more shots and flooding the slot in front of their goalie. Then Cogliano sealed the win with his second goal of the series at 16:52.

Notes: Andersen's previous high had been 72 minutes, 51 seconds. ... The Ducks blocked 25 shots. Titans coach Mike Mularkey and GM Jon Robinson were on hand for the game. ... Nashville honored Prince, who died earlier Thursday, playing his songs throughout the game and putting his photo on the video board during a break in the third period to ''Purple Rain.''

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Predators’ Ribeiro tags Ducks’ Perry with spear

Corey Perry became prey for Nashville Predators center Mike Ribeiro during Thursday's Game 4.

Ribeiro caught the Anaheim Ducks winger with a spear to the midsection, earning himself a minor penalty for slashing.

The NHL has fined players for similar incidents in the past, meaning the Department of Player Safety may take a closer look at the incident.

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Red Wings’ Datsyuk will wait to decide on future

Detroit Red Wings forward Pavel Datsyuk may have played his final NHL game Thursday.

The Red Wings dropped a heartbreaking 1-0 decision in Game 5 to the Tampa Bay Lightning, spelling their exit from the postseason. With the Red Wings season concluded, eyes turn to Datsyuk, who's suggested he may be heading to Russia to play next season.

However, minutes after partaking in the ceremonial handshake with the Lightning, Datsyuk suggested he's going to take some time before he makes a final decision.

Earlier this month, it was reported Datsyuk would leave for Russia after the postseason, but since the reports surfaced, the 37-year-old has remained adamant he's not made a final decision regarding his future.

Datsyuk is still under contract with the Red Wings for the 2016-17 season with a cap hit of $7.5 million.

If Datsyuk has indeed played his final game, he will finish his career sixth on the franchise's all-time scoring list.

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Watch: Lightning’s Killorn scores series clincher off Mrazek misplay

Game 5 appeared set for extra time - until this happened.

Detroit Red Wings goaltender Petr Mrazek's attempt to play the puck behind his net late in Thursday's third period was intercepted by Tampa Bay Lightning forward Ryan Callahan, who dished it to Alex Killorn out front.

Puck in net, 1-0 lead held until the final buzzer, series over.

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Malkin, Murray shine as Penguins blowout Rangers in Game 4

NEW YORK - Flashing his old brilliance, Evgeni Malkin scored two goals and set up two others and the Pittsburgh Penguins pushed the New York Rangers to the brink of playoff elimination with a 5-0 victory Thursday night.

Malkin, whose four points tied his single-game high in the postseason, assisted on two of the Penguins' three first-period goals in helping Pittsburgh dominate the Rangers for the second consecutive game and take a 3-1 lead in the best-of-seven, first-round series.

Sidney Crosby, who added two assists, and the red-hot Penguins can wrap up things in Game 5 in Pittsburgh on Saturday.

Rookie goaltender Matt Murray, who returned to the lineup for Game 3, made 31 saves in posting his first playoff shutout.

Eric Fehr, Patric Hornqvist and Conor Sheary also scored as the Penguins tallied four times on 18 shots against Henrik Lundqvist, who was lifted early in the second period.

Related: Lundqvist yanked early in 2nd period after allowing 4 goals

Pittsburgh converted 3 of 6 power plays, and is 7 of 19 in the series with the extra man.

The Rangers, who have lost five straight home playoffs games dating to last season, came into Game 4 vowing to pick things up after being totally outplayed in a 3-1 loss Tuesday night.

They brought tenor John Amirante out of retirement to sing the national anthem and the crowd at Madison Square Garden was buzzing when the puck was dropped.

The excitement disappeared 69 seconds into the game when Lundqvist gave up a juicy rebound on a slap shot by Ben Lovejoy and Fehr charged down the middle of the ice to poke the rebound into the net. Malkin made the pass that set up Lovejoy's big shot.

The big Russian, who hurt an arm in early March and didn't return to the lineup until Saturday, helped push the lead to 2-0 at 7:11 with a shot from the point on a power play. Crosby deflected the shot on the way in and Hornqvist tipped it again standing in front of Lundqvist for his fourth goal of the postseason.

Sheary hushed the crowd and made them start to realize this might be the final home game of the season, when he blocked a point shot by defenseman Kevin Klein, skated down the left wing and beat Lundqvist badly on a shot from the circle for a 3-0 lead at 16:12. It was his first NHL playoff goal.

Related: Watch: Sheary snipes Penguins' 3rd 1st-period goal on Lundqvist

By the final minute of the period time, the Penguins' near perfect play had the Rangers' fans booing the team that went to the Cup Finals two years ago and the Eastern Conference finals last season.

Malkin, who had a goal waved off late in the first period for an obvious goaltender interference call, stretched the lead to 4-0 with another power-play goal at 4:00 of the second period. It was scored with a rocket from the point after the Penguins refused to let the Rangers clear the puck out of the offensive zone.

A little more than two minutes after the goal, Rangers coach Alain Vigneault lifted Lundqvist after giving up four goals on 18 shots. Antti Raanta finished up.

Malkin added his second of the game and 44th of his postseason career on deflection in front in the third period with Pittsburgh on another power play.

The only thing remaining after that was to see if Murray got his shutout, and the Penguins made sure he did.

The Rangers had some scoring chances. Murray stopped Eric Staal on a rebound late in the first period and Chris Kreider missed the net after being set up in close.

In the second period, Dominic Moore could not convert on a short-handed 2-on-1 with Viktor Stalberg, who played despite losing three teeth in a high-sticking incident with Kris Letang in Game 3.

NOTES: The Rangers made one lineup change, inserting rookie Oscar Lindberg and sitting Kevin Hayes. Lindberg played on the fourth line with Moore and Tanner Glass. Stalberg moved up to third line with Eric Staal and J.T. Miller. ... Crosby and Malkin played in their 104th playoff game, passing Kevin Stevens for third in franchise history.

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Lightning beat Red Wings in 5, advance to 2nd round of Stanley Cup Playoffs

TAMPA, Fla. - Ben Bishop stopped 34 shots, Alex Killorn scored with less than two minutes remaining and the Tampa Bay Lightning advanced to the second round of the Stanley Cup playoffs with a 1-0 victory over the Detroit Red Wings on Thursday night.

Killorn's second winning goal of the series was set up by Ryan Callahan, who retrieved goalie Petr Mrazek's bad pass behind the Detroit net and centered the puck in the crease for Killorn's backhander at 18:17 of the third period.

Related - Watch: Lightning's Killorn scores series clincher off Mrazek misplay

Tampa Bay eliminated the Red Wings in the first round for the second straight year. Detroit pushed the defending Eastern Conference champions to seven games a year ago, but could only beat them once in five attempts this time, with Killorn, Tyler Johnson and Nikita Kucherov picking up the offensive slack for Tampa Bay with star Steven Stamkos injured.

Detroit only scored eight goals in the series, though not because of a lack of opportunities.

The Red Wings finished 1 for 25 on the power play, and their futility was never more evident than Thursday night, when they failed to even get a shot on goal during a 5-on-3 advantage early in the opening period.

The closest they came during that first power-play was Pavel Datsyuk hitting the post. The Lightning were fortunate again late in the period, when Detroit's Danny Dekeyser also hit the post before the puck glanced off Bishop's right arm.

Just as frustrating was an inability to crack Bishop in the second period, when the Tampa Bay goalie rejected Riley Sheahan, Darren Helm and Dylan Larkin on breakaways that could have snapped a scoreless tie.

Bishop sopped 14 shots in the second and 11 more in the third, two in the closing seconds with Detroit on its fourth power play of the night. Mrazek wasn't tested as often but his teammates played a hand in that by limiting the line of Johnson, Kucherov and Killorn to a combined two shots heading into the final period.

Mrazek, who replaced Jimmy Howard after the Red Wings lost the first two games of the series on the road, finished with 23 saves. He won Game 3 in Detroit 2-0 - his third career playoff shutout - all against the Lightning - but contributed to his own demise this time when he went behind the net but failed to clear the puck.

Notes: Bishop has allowed two or fewer goals in 10 of his last 11 playoff starts, dating to last season. ... Detroit has trailed 3-1 in a playoff series 21 times, but only rallied to win twice - in the first round vs. Toronto in 1987 and vs. the Minnesota North Stars in 1992. ... Earlier Thursday, the Red Wings assigned D Xavier Ouellet to the Grand Rapids Griffins of the AHL, which begins a first-round playoff series against the Milwaukee Admirals on Friday night.

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Grabner empathizes with Red Wings’ breakaway woes

Watching the NHL playoffs from the comfort of home, Michael Grabner knows all too well how the Detroit Red Wings are feeling.

Grabner witnessed several breakaway opportunities thwarted by Tampa Bay Lightning goalie Ben Bishop during Thursday's Game 5, prompting the free-agent forward - who's notoriously ineffective when in all alone - to empathize and educate.

Still, that Bishop guy is pretty good.

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