HockeyĀ·SERIES TIED 2-2

Lightning cruise past Rangers to even Eastern Conference final

Nikita Kucherov scored on a breakaway and Andrei Vasilevskiy had 33 saves Tuesday night, helping the Tampa Bay Lightning shut down the visiting New York Rangers 4-1 and even the NHL's Eastern Conference final at two games apiece.

Game 5 in best-of-7 series is scheduled for Thursday night in New York

Ondrej Palat, left, scored a goal and added two assists to help the Lightning defeat the visiting Rangers 4-1 on Tuesday to even the Eastern Conference final at 2-2. (Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

The Tampa Bay Lightning delivered on a promise to play with a greater sense of urgency, storming back in the Eastern Conference finals against the New York Rangers and keeping their bid for a third straight Stanley Cup title alive.

Nikita Kucherov scored on a breakaway and Andrei Vasilevskiy had 33 saves Tuesday night, helping the two-time defending NHL champions shut down the Rangers 4-1 and even the best-of-seven series at two games apiece.

"We've got ourselves squared up in this series. It's great, much better than the position we were in a couple days ago. But this is where it gets down to the really tough stuff," Lightning captain Steven Stamkos said.

"These next couple of games, we have to go on the road and we have to find a way to win a game in their barn," Stamkos added. "We're looking forward to that challenge, but I really like where our game is now compared to where it was a couple days ago."

Kucherov took a pass from Ondrej Palat in the middle of the ice and skated in on goaltender Igor Shesterkin to give the Lightning a two-goal lead just over 13 minutes into the second period.

With Vasilevskiy back on his game following a slow start to the series, that turned out to be more than enough offensive support to hold off a Rangers team that's suddenly found it difficult to score.

"They did a great job in the neutral zone. They collapsed pretty good in the `D' zone. They blocked a lot of shots. They did the right things to win a hockey game," Rangers coach Gerard Gallant said of the Lightning.

Stamkos, Palat and Pat Maroon had goals for Tampa Bay, which has rebounded from losing the first two games of the series on the road to bolster its chances of becoming the first team in nearly 40 years to win three consecutive Stanley Cup championships.

Game 5 is Thursday night at Madison Square Garden, where the Rangers won Games 1 and 2 and are 8-1 this postseason.

"We've done a good job at home. I think if you look around the league a lot of teams play better in their home building," Gallant said.

"I'm disappointed tonight. I'm sure [the players]Ā are," the coach added. "But it's a best two out of three, we still have the home-ice advantage, so we have to make sure we're ready for the next game. The next one is big."

Vasilevskiy stopped 28 of 30 shots to win Game 3 and was even better Tuesday night, when he extended a stretch in which he did not give up a goal to nearly 67 minutes before New York's Artemi Panarin scored on the power play at 16:27 of the third period.

Until Vasilevskiy's bid for a shutout ended, the Rangers hadn't scored since Chris Kreider's power-play goal put them up 2-0 at 9:44 of the second period in Game 3.

It has been all Tampa Bay since then, with Kucherov and Stamkos scoring to wipe out the Game 3 deficit before Palat won it in the final minute.

The defending champs started faster Tuesday night, scoring on Maroon's rebound just 2:38 into the game.

It was the third goal of the playoffs for Maroon, a 34-year-old, fourth-line forward who's chasing a fourth consecutive Stanley Cup title after winning with St. Louis in 2019 and signing with Tampa Bay before the following season.

Stamkos' goal built the lead to 3-0 early in the third period. Palat added an empty-netter with 8.7 seconds remaining, finishing with a goal and two assists.

Shesterkin, who faced 51 shots in Game 3, stopped 27 of 30 shots Tuesday night.

"We've progressively gotten better, and I think we took some more positive steps tonight," Lightning coach Jon Cooper said. "We had a bit of a layoff, and I think now we're starting to find our game. Now, we just have to keep this going in New York."

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