Penguins' rapid response buries Ottawa, 6-3
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From the book of don't blink or you'll miss it, the Ottawa Senators came out and dominated the Penguins Friday night at Consol Energy Center.
Kept the puck in the Penguins end. Got a cycle going. Scored a quick goal.
The domination lasted nearly 90 seconds. Then, in most meaningful ways, it ended as the Penguins flipped things quickly and decisively in a 6-3 win.
As it turned out, Kaspars Daugavins' backhand goal on a rebound 1:19 into regulation didn't so much give the Senators a boost as it provided the Penguins with inspiration.
Chris Kunitz scored 27 seconds later on a one-timer to tie it, 1-1, the first of four first-period goals and five unanswered ones for the Penguins.
- Game: Penguins vs. Canadiens.
- When: 7:08 p.m.
- Where: Bell Centre, Montreal
- TV: Root Sports.
"There was talk on our bench right away about a response, and, before you could hear the echo, we had responded with a rush play from [Sidney] Crosby to Kunitz," Penguins coach Dan Bylsma said. "It continued from there."
The game drew 18,610, the largest hockey crowd to date at the arena, which opened in August 2010. It was the end of a 2-0-1 homestand and made the Penguins 7-0-1 in their past eight home games.
Crosby, playing in his third game after missing more than 10 months because of a concussion, had three assists. Tyler Kennedy had a goal -- his ninth in 14 games against Ottawa -- and two assists. And Evgeni Malkin had a goal and an assist. Paul Martin, playing in his 500th NHL game, had two assists.
"Even though they got the first goal, we were right back at them and got a lot of big goals right away. And then we controlled the game from there," said goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury, who made 24 saves but also did something else.
Fleury picked up his ninth career assist on Kennedy's goal, the Penguins' second of the game, making him one of 12 Penguins who had at least one point.
"They scored pretty early, and we knew we had a lot of time left and we could still get back in the game," Crosby said. "Everyone responded well."
So well that Bylsma decided it was an ideal game to experiment with his forward lines.
After goals by Kunitz, Kennedy, Steve Sullivan on a power play and Malkin before the end of the first period, the lines got shuffled.
First Published November 26, 2011 12:00 am











