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After Mika Zibanejad was placed into COVID-19 protocol and held out of Rangers practice Saturday morning, the team later announced it was a false positive.

Zibanejad cleared COVID-19 protocol and will be available for Sunday’s matchup with the Sabres at Madison Square Garden.

The Rangers seemed rather confident Zibanejad would be good to go while they waited for further results, with Chris Kreider saying he was “pretty sure he’s going to be able to play.” When asked if this was just a reminder of how the coronavirus pandemic is still looming, Kreider said it was important for the Rangers to stay smart.

“We’ve seen what’s happened with Ottawa,” Kreider said, referring to the Senators’ recent COVID-19 outbreak that canceled three of their games, including Saturday’s against the Rangers. “So just continuing to be smart. The team is going good, seems like we’re getting better every day, every game.

“There’s no reason to put ourselves in a position to have to make changes, make adjustments, when we don’t have to. A lot of times those are things we can’t control, stuff like that happens over the course of the season.”

Greg McKegg, who has been recalled five separate times so far this season, took Zibanejad’s spot on the top line in between Chris Kreider and Barclay Goodrow during practice. The rest of the lines looked the same as they did in Toronto on Thursday.


  The Rangers’ Mika Zibanejad is in COVID-19 protocol. NHLI via Getty Images The Rangers’ Mika Zibanejad is in COVID-19 protocol. NHLI via Getty Images

This was the second time Zibanejad entered COVID-19 protocol since he spent a majority of last season’s training camp battling the virus. As he worked his way back to feeling 100 percent healthy, Zibanejad ultimately endured one of his slowest starts to a season since he entered the NHL in 2011.

“It was hard, it wasn’t easy and everyone reacts to it differently,” Zibanejad admitted on a Zoom call last season. “I wasn’t feeling very good. I told you guys I was fine, but it was just for my sake. I didn’t want to create anything around that or put that in my own head really.”

Zibanejad, who signed an eight-year, $68 million contract extension with the Rangers last month, has scored four goals and dished 10 assists in 17 games.

Kreider has logged 18:17 of shorthanded time so far this season, which he acknowledged is the most he’s played on the penalty kill in his NHL career.

“It’s a fun challenge,” he said. “It’s something that I haven’t done since college. And it’s a copycat league, so a lot of teams kill the same way. But a decade ago, we definitely didn’t kill the way that we kill now. There’s a lot to learn, a lot to soak up, and I’m just trying to pick Mika’s brain, Barclay’s, [Kevin Rooney’s].

“There a lot to learn and a lot to improve on. It’s been fun. Something that I want to continue to improve at and another way that I can help the team.”

Heading into their seventh game of the season at Madison Square Garden on Sunday when they face the Sabres, the Rangers are tied for the second-fewest home contests of any NHL team. They are 4-1-1 for nine points at home with a points percentage of .750, which ranks No. 7 in the league.

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