posted on Oct, 10 2006 @ 08:37 PM
The Philadelphia Flyers needed only three days to get back at the New York Rangers.
Flyers captain Peter Forsberg had a goal and two assists, and Antero Niittymaki made 25 saves as Philadelphia beat New York 4-2 Tuesday night for its
first win of the season.
"This was a huge win for us," said Niittymaki, who lost a 13-round shootout to the Rangers at home on Saturday. He bounced back quickly after allowing
Marcel Hossa to win the shootout with the only goal in the lengthy tiebreaker.
The Flyers returned the favor and handed the Rangers their first loss (2-1).
"We wanted to show that we wanted to win tonight," Forsberg said. "We know these are big games. We have to battle these guys all year."
In the rematch, Simon Gagne tipped Forsberg's right-circle feed under Henrik Lundqvist's pads on a 5-on-3 power play for his third goal of the season
at 12:25 of the second period that made it 4-1.
New Rangers forward Brendan Shanahan scored his third of the season -- all in New York's two home games -- with 29 seconds left in the middle period.
He fired in a hard slap shot off a nice feed from Michael Nylander during a power play to close the gap to 4-2.
It was the first power-play goal of the season for the Rangers.
"Obviously, our effort wasn't good enough and we know that," Shanahan said. "They came out as a team that deserved to win and expected to win. We came
out like a team waiting to see what they were going to do. We were spectators the first two periods."
Philadelphia scored twice within 59 seconds of the second period to take a 3-1 lead. Mike Knuble scored his first at 6:59, skating out unchecked from
the right corner and deking Lundqvist on a backhander from close range. Geoff Sanderson followed at 7:58, scoring on a 2-on-1 break for his second of
the season.
The Flyers came out aggressively at the start, swarming on the forecheck and forcing Lundqvist to make several difficult saves. Forsberg skated out of
the right corner along the goal line and scored his second goal on a high, sharp-angle wrist shot from close in at 3:15 to give Philadelphia a 1-0
lead.
"We fought the same way we finished off the last half of the game in Philadelphia," Flyers coach Ken Hitchcock said. "You're seeing our speed up front
really creating a lot of problems for teams. Our defense is getting better and better as a group. We're moving the puck better. We're in sync with
each other and we're playing hard."
Rangers defenseman Thomas Pock scored his first at 16:33 to make it 1-1. Petr Prucha started the play by blocking a point shot in the New York zone
and sending a nifty backhand pass off the sideboard as he fell to the ice to create a 2-on-1 break.
Shanahan skated down the left wing and sent a cross ice pass to Pock, who waited until Niittymaki went down and wristed the puck into the top of the
net.