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Rangers' most memorable regular-season games from 2000-25, including Mika Zibanejad's 5-goal night

Rangers' most memorable regular-season games from 2000-25, including Mika Zibanejad's 5-goal night

Yahoo21 hours ago
The New York Rangers played 2016 regular-season games from 2000-01 through 2024-25. The first quarter of the 21st century included one trip to the Stanley Cup Final (2014), two Presidents' Trophy-winning seasons (2014-15 and 2023-24), three division titles (2011-12, 2014-15 and 2023-24) and 15 trips to the Stanley Cup Playoffs (including the 2020 Qualifiers).
The Rangers had some of the most memorable individual performances in their history during the past 25 seasons, including the third five-goal game since they joined the NHL in 1926. There was also a sensational 42-save shutout performance by a Hall of Fame goalie, a record-breaking night by a future Hall of Famer, and memorable comeback wins — including one in the 2024 Stadium Series.
Here's a look at five regular-season games from the first quarter of this century that Rangers fans won't forget for a long time.
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March 5, 2020: Mika Zibanejad caps 5-goal night with OT winner
Mika Zibanejad was in the midst of a career year when he had a career night and powered the Rangers to a 6-5 overtime win against the Washington Capitals at Madison Square Garden.
Zibanejad joined Don Murdoch and Mark Pavelich as the only players in Rangers history to score five goals in a game. And he became the second NHL player to complete a five-goal game with an overtime goal, joining Sergei Fedorov for the Detroit Red Wings against the Capitals on Dec. 26, 1996.
Zibanejad wouldn't have made all that history if it weren't for Washington's Alex Ovechkin. The Rangers center completed a hat trick 12 seconds into the third period, only to have Ovechkin tie the game at 9:22. Zibanejad put the Rangers ahead with his fourth goal of the night at 18:18, but the Caps got even again when Ovechkin scored 59 seconds later.
Luckily for the Rangers, overtime is sudden death – so when Zibanejad scored 33 seconds into OT, it was all over.
Zibanejad was greeted by an empty locker room when he entered after his big night — until his teammates came out of hiding and quickly mobbed him.
'The puck followed me today, I guess,' Zibanejad said postgame. 'You look at the goals, some unbelievable plays were being made. Today I was at the right spot at the right time.'
March 29, 2006: Jaromir Jagr breaks Rangers points record
Jean Ratelle's single-season team record for points (109) had stood since 1972 when the NHL resumed play in the fall of 2005 after a lockout wiped out the 2004-05 season. The Rangers hadn't made the Stanley Cup Playoffs since 1996-97. Both droughts ended in 2005-06 thanks to one man: Jaromir Jagr.
New Rangers coach Tom Renney put Jagr on the right side of a line with Martin Straka on the left and Michael Nylander in the middle – and the trio clicked right away. Jagr, a five-time NHL scoring champion and then in his age-34 season, produced like he was in his prime again.
Jagr led the NHL in scoring for much of the season, and came to the Nassau Coliseum on March 29 looking to make franchise history – after he had already tied Ratelle's record for points and Adam Graves' mark of 52 goals, set in 1993-94. He blew past Ratelle with a four-primary assist night in the Rangers' 5-1 win over their archrivals.
No. 68 surpassed Ratelle's mark 7:23 into the game when he assisted on Petr Prucha's goal, then set up all three goals in Straka's natural hat trick. He could have broken Graves' record as well but missed on a third-period breakaway. However, he got goal No. 53 against the Boston Bruins on April 6 and finished with 54.
Still, Jagr was elated to set the team mark for points; his season total of 123 is still a Rangers record, as is his goals mark.
'It's a big honor when you consider all the great players who've played for his organization,' he remarked postgame. 'It could have been a lot more points. We had a lot of chances. I had a lot of chances.'
Feb. 14, 2012: 'The King' reigns supreme in Boston
Henrik Lundqvist is the greatest goaltender in Rangers history, as well as the only 21st-century Blueshirt to earn induction into the Hockey Hall of Fame. His 459 wins are sixth in NHL history and by far the most by a Ranger.s goalie His 64 shutouts are also a team record.
But it was his 42nd career shutout, at TD Garden in Boston on Valentine's Day in 2012, that, perhaps, ranks as the best performance of his career.
The 3-0 final score doesn't do justice to Lundqvist's play that night. After Ryan Callahan and Ryan McDonagh scored for the Rangers in the first period, the Bruins took over the game everywhere but on the scoreboard. The Bruins outshot the Rangers 14-5 in the second period and 18-3 in the third, when they had 34 shot attempts to five for the Rangers (including a goal by Artem Anisimov early in the period). They finished with 79 shot attempts to 31 for the Rangers.
Boston's 32-8 margin in shots over the final 40 minutes and 42-20 for the game meant nothing on a night when 'The King' was flawless. Perhaps his best save came in the second period, when he was flat on his back but had a blast by Bruins defenseman Zdeno Chara from the slot that hit the back of his helmet or between his shoulder blades and deflectt to the corner. He preserved his shutout late in the third period with a spectacular glove save on Tyler Seguin on a power-play breakaway.
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Nov. 23, 2019: Rangers overcome 4-goal deficit to win in Montreal
Facing the Canadiens in Montreal has always been a nightmare for the Rangers. They are 70-210-2 with 40 ties against the Canadiens since entering the NHL 99 years ago and have had multiple double-figure losing and winless streaks. That includes an 0-21-4 streak in the early 1950s. More recently, the Rangers were 2-13-2 at Bell Centre from October 2009 through Dec. 1, 2018.
So when the Canadiens jumped to a 4-0 lead against the Blueshirts on the Saturday before Thanksgiving in 2019, the sellout crowd in Montreal was confident the night would end as it usually did when the Rangers were in town – with a Habs win.
But this time was different.
Down 4-0 less than three minutes into the second period, the Rangers scored three times before the midway mark of the period to cut the deficit to one. Montreal's Artturi Lehkonen and New York's Artemi Panarin exchanged goals 31 seconds apart early in the third period, but Brendan Lemieux tied it with a shorthanded goal at 8:40 before Jacob Trouba scored the game-winner at 12:10.
'It's just an unreal feeling that the guys kept at it, nobody gave up,' said Rangers goalie Alexandar Georgiev, who made 38 saves. 'It's rare that you get to come back from 4-0.'
How rare? It was just the fourth time in their history the Rangers won after trailing by four goals, and the first since Dec. 26, 1991, against the Capitals. They haven't done it since.
Feb. 18, 2024: Comeback win keeps Rangers perfect outdoors
The Rangers will take a 5-0-0 record in outdoor games into the 2026 NHL Winter Classic against the two-time defending Stanley Cup champion Florida Panthers at loanDepot Park on Jan. 2. They're the only team that's played more than three outdoor games without losing – and the reason is their refusal to roll over in their most recent one, against the Islanders at MetLife Stadium in the 2024 Stadium Series.
Eric Gustavsson gave the Rangers a 1-0 lead 1:28 into the game, but the Islanders scored the next four goals and led 4-1 just 1:03 into the second period. Vincent Trocheck scored twice to make it a one-goal game after two periods, but Alexander Romanov's goal early in the third looked like it had put the game away.
But the Isles couldn't stay out of the penalty box down the stretch, and the Rangers took advantage. With Igor Shesterkin off for an extra skater, Chris Kreider's goal made it 5-3 with 4:08 left. Scott Mayfield's tripping penalty with 2:28 remaining gave Rangers coach Peter Laviolette another chance to pull Shesterkin for a 6-on-4 opportunity. The move paid off again when Zibanejad beat Ilya Sorokin for the tying goal with 1:29 to play.
The reeling Islanders managed to get the game to overtime, but Panarin took the puck away from Noah Dobson and scored 10 seconds into OT for a stunning 6-5 win.
'I was flooded with emotions,' Panarin said. 'I had to hold back tears. It was so much of a spectacle.'
It was the first outdoor win in five tries for Laviolette.
'These games that take place are special, I've been fortunate enough to be a part of them,' he said. 'There have been some good ones but this one has to be up there, near the top of the list.'
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How will Edmonton Oilers deploy new-look winger depth charts in 2025-26?
How will Edmonton Oilers deploy new-look winger depth charts in 2025-26?

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

How will Edmonton Oilers deploy new-look winger depth charts in 2025-26?

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After 15-year absence, an emotional Barry Brennan returns to Blue Jackets' staff
After 15-year absence, an emotional Barry Brennan returns to Blue Jackets' staff

New York Times

time2 hours ago

  • New York Times

After 15-year absence, an emotional Barry Brennan returns to Blue Jackets' staff

COLUMBUS, Ohio — In the summer of 2001, the Columbus Blue Jackets hired Barry Brennan to be the strength and conditioning coach for their American Hockey League team in Syracuse, N.Y. Part of the gig was to help with the NHL club's development camp in early July. 'I drove all night — 12 hours — from Ottawa to Columbus to get there early in the morning, because I couldn't freaking wait to get started,' Brennan said. 'I got to the rink (Nationwide Arena), was walking around trying to find the dressing room, and just pinching myself that I was working in an NHL rink. Advertisement 'When I finally found the dressing room, a guy was sitting on a chair right next to the door. The guy. I knew exactly who it was, and I honestly almost fainted.' There aren't many Blue Jackets coaches or staff who have been with the organization long enough to have had a personal interaction with franchise founder John H. McConnell, who died in 2009. But Brennan is one of the lucky few. And it's a big reason Brennan was so excited — almost to the point of tears, he said — to return to the Blue Jackets on Thursday, when GM Don Waddell announced his hiring as the club's new strength and conditioning coach. He last held the job in 2010. 'This whole time, through the interview process and in the last day or so since I found out I was coming back, I've been thinking about that (interaction) with Mr. Mac,' Brennan said. 'He reached out his hand, shook mine and said, 'You must be Barry. Happy you're here.' 'It was so genuine. What owner does that? I was a minor-league guy, a peon. It was so meaningful to me, and I walked away saying to myself, 'This is where I belong, and I'm going to do everything I can for that man and his hockey team.' I will never forget it. 'This place just means so much to me. I mean … I'm getting emotional, but it does. This city, this organization … these fans. To get this opportunity … I'm just so freakin' thrilled about what we're going to get done here, and I can't wait to get started.' Waddell said he was sent 'so, so many' applications for the job, which came open shortly after the season ended in April when previous strength and conditioning coach Kevin Collins was among a wave of support staff whose contracts were not renewed. He spent months cutting the list down to four or five candidates, then went into hyperdrive talking to mutual contacts around the league. Advertisement NHL legend Sergei Fedorov, who played for the Blue Jackets when Brennan was working in Columbus, crafted a handwritten letter to persuade Waddel. Fedorov admired Brennan's work so much that he took him along to Russia as strength and conditioning coach when Fedorov was general manager, and later coach, of CSKA Moscow. It also meant a phone call from Waddell's longtime compatriot Rick Dudley, along with other Blue Jackets luminaries — director of player personnel Rick Nash, assistant coach Jared Boll, team services director Aarron Johnson, broadcaster Jody Shelley — who were all players when Brennan ran the Blue Jackets' weight room. 'Usually when you talk to as many people as I talked to, you're going to find somebody who has some kind of a complaint or an issue with somebody,' Waddell said. 'I talked to a lot of people. Not just people in this building, but all around the league, around hockey. Nobody had anything negative to say. It was all glowing. 'His track record is impressive. You don't put that together without knowing what you're doing. And his work ethic is tremendous. But his passion for the job … and his passion specifically for Columbus, really stood out.' 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The Jackets had 309 man-games lost to injury last season, fourth-most in the NHL. That marked the fifth time in six seasons they exceeded 300 man-games lost in a season, including a franchise-record 563 in 2022-23. Ryan Gadbois, an assistant under Collins the last four seasons, will remain in that capacity under Brennan, although Waddell said he was impressed with how Gadbois handled summer workout instruction with players over the summer, during development camp, etc. Ben Eaves will enter his sixth season as the AHL Cleveland strength and conditioning coach. 'I told (Gadbois) and (Eaves) that we're all going to work together, all pulling the rope in the right direction,' said Brennan, 62. 'They're going to be the guys who take over for me, so I want to help show them the path and let them run. It's a group effort.' Advertisement Even as the years ticked by, Brennan said, he always had a strange sense that his time in Columbus wasn't finished. When he returned to Columbus for a Bruce Springsteen concert in the spring of 2024, Johnson showed Brennan the refurbished dressing room at Nationwide Arena, and the fire burned even hotter. The last couple of days, Brennan said, have been emotional. 'I watched every Blue Jackets game I could, even when I was over in Russia,' Brennan said. 'I poured everything into Columbus. That place means everything to me. Everything. To come back there … man, I can't even begin to describe it. 'I'm coming back to finish the job we started. From the day I left, I wanted to come back here and help this team get to the playoffs. I feel like this team is right on the edge. There's some work to do, absolutely, but this can be special. I want a Stanley Cup for Columbus. To be part of that would be the dream of a lifetime.' (Top photo of Barry Brennan with Alexander Radulov: Courtesy of Barry Brennan)

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