Two scuffling teams starving for a win met at the Garden on Monday.
It wasn’t always pretty, but the Rangers eventually satisfied their hunger, at least for a night.
After coughing up three different leads and then falling behind, the Rangers saved their best hockey for the third period, scoring three unanswered goals to secure a 6-4 win over the Blues.
“Our approach right now is every game is a must-win,” Chris Kreider said. “That approach is going to make us better. We’ve been talking about it, we’ve been finding ways to lose. That builds in a lot of ways. But the challenge is leaving that behind and starting fresh. … It’s up to us to be resilient and we were resilient tonight.”
Alexis Lafreniere delivered the decisive goal, tipping in a shot from Mika Zibanejad at 8:16 of the third period to put the Rangers ahead for good. Lafreniere had started the night on the third line but finished it on the top line alongside Zibanejad and Kaapo Kakko, a move that paid off for coach Gerard Gallant.
Kreider then added shorthanded insurance at 14:04 to give the Rangers the two-goal lead they had been unable to take all night.
New York Rangers center Vincent Trocheck #16 celebrates a goal with his teammates during the second period. Charles Wenzelberg / New York PostThe Rangers (12-10-5) improved to 2-4-1 over their last seven games while the Blues (11-14-0) fell to 1-6-0 over their last seven.
Even though they led 1-0, 2-1 and 3-2, the Rangers had just 12 shots on goal through the first two periods and entered the third trailing 4-3. But they responded in a big way, putting 12 shots on net over the final 20 minutes to escape with the win.
“It was three completely different periods,” Gallant said. “We’ll take the W. It was a big win for us. But it wasn’t a perfect game by no means for either team. … It meant a lot. Obviously the streak we’ve been in the last two weeks hasn’t been good. So to get a win tonight, it’s positive moving forward.”
New York Rangers goaltender Igor Shesterkin #31 makes a save as St. Louis Blues center Ivan Barbashev #49 waits for the rebound during the second period. Charles Wenzelberg / New York PostK’Andre Miller found a key time for his first goal of the year, unleashing a shot from inside the blue line that found a way past Jordan Binnington to tie it 4-4 at 4:48 of the third period.
The Rangers’ 1-0 lead (from Braden Schneider) lasted just 70 seconds late in the first period until former Blueshirt Pavel Buchnevich tied it. But Adam Fox answered before the period ended, striking six seconds into a power play for the 2-1 advantage.
That lead disappeared even quicker than the first one, this time 40 seconds, as the Blues took advantage of poor puck management by the Rangers, which allowed Vladimir Tarasenko to take a shot that deflected off Fox’s stick and in to tie it 2-2 just 12 seconds into the second period.
New York Rangers center Vincent Trocheck #16 takes a shot on goal as St. Louis Blues goaltender Jordan Binnington #50 defends Charles Wenzelberg / New York PostThe Rangers responded quickly again, less than a minute later, when Vincent Trocheck tipped in a shot from Artemi Panarin to regain a 3-2 lead.
But after the Rangers wasted a pair of shorthanded chances — including one with a slick deke from Kakko that just lacked the finishing touch — the Blues tied it back up on a power-play goal by Jordan Kyrou midway through the period.
The Blues then took their first lead of the game just over a minute later at 12:33 when Ryan O’Reilly cleaned up a rebound for the 4-3 advantage. As the final seconds of the period ticked off, boos rained down on the Rangers from their home crowd.
But they turned the tide in the third period, making sure they sent their fans home happy.
“That one’s huge,” Miller said. “The last couple games haven’t gone the way we wanted, but sticking with it and doing the little things to get us to this point is the biggest thing.”



