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BOX SCORE
NEW YORK (AP) -- Each game is so important to the Montreal Canadiens' playoff drive that Eric Weinrich felt he had to play -- broken foot and all.
| | Mathieu Schneider introduces Turner Stevenson of the Canadiens to the boards. |
Weinrich, who had missed five games, returned Wednesday night and had an assist in the Canadiens' 3-0 victory over the New York Rangers that vaulted Montreal back into a playoff spot with two games left in the regular season.
"I'd rather be out there making a mistake than not playing
right now," the defenseman said. "I feel like I can go and I want
to help the team however I can."
Jeff Hackett made 31 saves for his 22nd career shutout as the Canadiens, with 81 points, moved past Carolina into an eighth-place
tie with Buffalo in the race for the Eastern Conference's final
postseason berth.
"All we can do is win our games and keep our fingers crossed,"
Weinrich said.
Buffalo has a game in hand over Montreal, which has home games
remaining against Tampa Bay and Ottawa.
"It's going to go down to the wire," coach Alain Vigneault
said. "It's been interesting, it's been fun, and we're going to
compete very hard."
Montreal, which missed the playoffs last season, has not been
out of the postseason in consecutive years since failing in three
straight from 1920-22.
"Tonight was a do-or-die situation for us," Vigneault said. "We had to win. We found a way to do it."
Brian Savage and Sergei Zholtok scored first-period goals and Martin Rucinsky scored his 25th in the second period for the injury-ravaged Canadiens, who continued their improbable drive to
the playoffs despite losing 531 man-games to injury.
Weinrich rushed back to the lineup so the number wouldn't go
higher.
"I've never played on a team that faced this much adversity,"
he said.
Hackett, who has three shutouts this season, faced little
pressure from the Rangers. New York, already eliminated from
postseason contention, was shut out at home for the second straight
game -- the second time this season that has occurred.
The Rangers lost 6-0 to Detroit on March 27, the night before
the dismissals of general manager Neil Smith and coach John
Muckler. New York, 1-10-2 in 13 games, is 0-2-1 since the firings.
Interim coach John Tortorella lost his home debut for the
Rangers, who have not won at Madison Square Garden since March 3,
when they beat Florida. Those fans who came to the game voiced
their displeasure throughout.
"We're trying to keep it as positive as we can," Tortorella
said. "It's awful difficult to do. We put ourselves here and we
deserve what we're getting."
Jean-Francois Labbe made his NHL debut in goal for the Rangers.
Labbe, recalled Tuesday from Hartford of the AHL, settled down
after a shaky first period, but was trailing 2-0 by then.
"It is my first game so I was a little bit nervous," Labbe
said. "I felt a little bit better in the second half of the
game."
Savage scored his 17th goal when he deflected in Weinrich's shot
from the point. Zholtok gave the Canadiens a two-goal advantage,
scoring his 26th goal. Dainius Zubrus picked up a rebound of Oleg
Petrov's shot and moved the puck to Zholtok standing to the left of
Labbe.
Rucinsky made it 3-0 early in the third from the left circle.
"I was a little bit upset after the third goal," Labbe said.
"I told myself that there was nothing I could do, so I said 'Just
keep having fun out there and just play."'
Labbe, who made 19 saves, is serving as the backup to Kirk
McLean. Mike Richter, the Rangers' All-Star goalie, underwent
successful surgery Wednesday to repair a torn ligament in his left
knee. His rehabilitation will last six months, which means it could
carry into next season.
Richter played through pain in the knee since February, when he
was injured in the skills competition during NHL All-Star weekend.
"It's one thing to go ahead and try to play," Richter said by
telephone on the Rangers' telecast. "It's another thing if you are
really helping your team or not. That was frustrating for me."
New York went 0-for-6 on the power play Wednesday.
"I thought the difference was our goaltending," Vigneault
said. "Our goaltender was better than their's tonight. He
especially made the difference in the penalty-killing."
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ALSO SEE
NHL Scoreboard
Montreal Clubhouse
NY Rangers Clubhouse
RECAPS
Florida 6 Boston 3
Montreal 3 NY Rangers 0
Pittsburgh 4 Toronto 2
St. Louis 6 Calgary 5
Chicago 5 Anaheim 2
Colorado 3 Edmonton 2
Phoenix 3 Nashville 2
Los Angeles 1 Vancouver 1
San Jose 5 Dallas 2
AUDIO/VIDEO
Brian Savage beats Jean-Francois Labbe for the goal.
avi: 335 k
RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN | T1
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